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+Project Gutenberg's Superstition In All Ages (1732), by Jean Meslier
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Superstition In All Ages (1732)
+ Common Sense
+
+Author: Jean Meslier
+
+Commentator: Voltaire
+
+Translator: Anna Knoop
+
+Release Date: January 25, 2006 [EBook #17607]
+[Last updated: July 2, 2011]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUPERSTITION IN ALL AGES (1732) ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Gary Klein
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SUPERSTITION IN ALL AGES
+
+By Jean Meslier
+
+1732
+
+
+A ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST, WHO, AFTER A PASTORAL SERVICE OF THIRTY YEARS
+AT ETREPIGNY IN CHAMPAGNE, FRANCE, WHOLLY ABJURED RELIGIOUS DOGMAS, AND
+LEFT AS HIS LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT TO HIS PARISHIONERS, AND TO THE
+WORLD, TO BE PUBLISHED AFTER HIS DEATH, THE FOLLOWING PAGES, ENTITLED:
+COMMON SENSE.
+
+
+Translated from the French original by Miss Anna Knoop
+
+
+1878
+
+
+
+
+LIFE OF JEAN MESLIER BY VOLTAIRE.
+
+Jean Meslier, born 1678, in the village of Mazerny, dependency of the
+duchy of Rethel, was the son of a serge weaver; brought up in the
+country, he nevertheless pursued his studies and succeeded to the
+priesthood. At the seminary, where he lived with much regularity, he
+devoted himself to the system of Descartes.
+
+Becoming curate of Etrepigny in Champagne and vicar of a little annexed
+parish named Bue, he was remarkable for the austerity of his habits.
+Devoted in all his duties, every year he gave what remained of his salary
+to the poor of his parishes; enthusiastic, and of rigid virtue, he was
+very temperate, as much in regard to his appetite as in relation to
+women.
+
+MM. Voiri and Delavaux, the one curate of Varq, the other curate of
+Boulzicourt, were his confessors, and the only ones with whom he
+associated.
+
+The curate Meslier was a rigid partisan of justice, and sometimes
+carried his zeal a little too far. The lord of his village, M. de
+Touilly, having ill-treated some peasants, he refused to pray for him in
+his service. M. de Mailly, Archbishop of Rheims, before whom the case
+was brought, condemned him. But the Sunday which followed this decision,
+the abbot Meslier stood in his pulpit and complained of the sentence of
+the cardinal. "This is," said he, "the general fate of the poor country
+priest; the archbishops, who are great lords, scorn them and do not
+listen to them. Therefore, let us pray for the lord of this place. We
+will pray for Antoine de Touilly, that he may be converted and granted
+the grace that he may not wrong the poor and despoil the orphans." His
+lordship, who was present at this mortifying supplication, brought new
+complaints before the same archbishop, who ordered the curate Meslier to
+come to Donchery, where he ill-treated him with abusive language.
+
+There have been scarcely any other events in his life, nor other
+benefice, than that of Etrepigny. He died in the odor of sanctity in the
+year 1733, fifty-five years old. It is believed that, disgusted with
+life, he expressly refused necessary food, because during his sickness
+he was not willing to take anything, not even a glass of wine.
+
+At his death he gave all he possessed, which was inconsiderable, to his
+parishioners, and desired to be buried in his garden.
+
+They were greatly surprised to find in his house three manuscripts, each
+containing three hundred and sixty-six pages, all written by his hand,
+signed and entitled by him, "My Testament." This work, which the author
+addressed to his parishioners and to M. Leroux, advocate and procurator
+for the parliament of Meziers, is a simple refutation of all the
+religious dogmas, without excepting one. The grand vicar of Rheims
+retained one of the three copies; another was sent to Monsieur
+Chauvelin, guardian of the State's seal; the third remained at the
+clerk's office of the justiciary of St. Minehould. The Count de Caylus
+had one of those three copies in his possession for some time, and soon
+afterward more than one hundred were at Paris, sold at ten Louis-d'or
+apiece. A dying priest accusing himself of having professed and taught
+the Christian religion, made a deeper impression upon the mind than the
+"Thoughts of Pascal."
+
+The curate Meslier had written upon a gray paper which enveloped the
+copy destined for his parishioners these remarkable words: "I have seen
+and recognized the errors, the abuses, the follies, and the wickedness
+of men. I have hated and despised them. I did not dare say it during my
+life, but I will say it at least in dying, and after my death; and it is
+that it may be known, that I write this present memorial in order that
+it may serve as a witness of truth to all those who may see and read it
+if they choose."
+
+At the beginning of this work is found this document (a kind of
+honorable amend, which in his letter to the Count of d'Argental of May
+31, 1762, Voltaire qualifies as a preface), addressed to his
+parishioners.
+
+"You know," said he, "my brethren, my disinterestedness; I do not
+sacrifice my belief to any vile interest. If I embraced a profession so
+directly opposed to my sentiments, it was not through cupidity. I obeyed
+my parents. I would have preferred to enlighten you sooner if I could
+have done it safely. You are witnesses to what I assert. I have not
+disgraced my ministry by exacting the requitals, which are a part of it.
+
+"I call heaven to witness that I also thoroughly despised those who
+laughed at the simplicity of the blind people, those who furnished
+piously considerable sums of money to buy prayers. How horrible this
+monopoly! I do not blame the disdain which those who grow rich by your
+sweat and your pains, show for their mysteries and their superstitions;
+but I detest their insatiable cupidity and the signal pleasure such
+fellows take in railing at the ignorance of those whom they carefully
+keep in this state of blindness. Let them content themselves with
+laughing at their own ease, but at least let them not multiply their
+errors by abusing the blind piety of those who, by their simplicity,
+procured them such an easy life. You render unto me, my brethren, the
+justice that is due me. The sympathy which I manifested for your
+troubles saves me from the least suspicion. How often have I performed
+gratuitously the functions of my ministry. How often also has my heart
+been grieved at not being able to assist you as often and as abundantly
+as I could have wished! Have I not always proved to you that I took more
+pleasure in giving than in receiving? I carefully avoided exhorting you
+to bigotry, and I spoke to you as rarely as possible of our unfortunate
+dogmas. It was necessary that I should acquit myself as a priest of my
+ministry, but how often have I not suffered within myself when I was
+forced to preach to you those pious lies which I despised in my heart.
+What a disdain I had for my ministry, and particularly for that
+superstitious Mass, and those ridiculous administrations of sacraments,
+especially if I was compelled to perform them with the solemnity which
+awakened all your piety and all your good faith. What remorse I had for
+exciting your credulity! A thousand times upon the point of bursting
+forth publicly, I was going to open your eyes, but a fear superior to my
+strength restrained me and forced me to silence until my death."
+
+The abbot Meslier had written two letters to the curates of his
+neighborhood to inform them of his Testament; he told them that he had
+consigned to the chancery of St. Minnehould a copy of his manuscript in
+366 leaves in octavo; but he feared it would be suppressed, according to
+the bad custom established to prevent the poor from being instructed and
+knowing the truth.
+
+The curate Meslier, the most singular phenomenon ever seen among all the
+meteors fatal to the Christian religion, worked his whole life secretly
+in order to attack the opinions he believed false. To compose his
+manuscript against God, against all religion, against the Bible and the
+Church, he had no other assistance than the Bible itself, Moreri
+Montaigne, and a few fathers.
+
+While the abbot Meslier naively acknowledged that he did not wish to be
+burned till after his death, Thomas Woolston, a doctor of Cambridge,
+published and sold publicly at London, in his own house, sixty thousand
+copies of his "Discourses" against the miracles of Jesus Christ.
+
+It was a very astonishing thing that two priests should at the same time
+write against the Christian religion. The curate Meslier has gone
+further yet than Woolston; he dares to treat the transport of our
+Saviour by the devil upon the mountain, the wedding of Cana, the bread
+and the fishes, as absurd fables, injurious to divinity, which were
+ignored during three hundred years by the whole Roman Empire, and
+finally passed from the lower class to the palace of the emperors, when
+policy obliged them to adopt the follies of the people in order the more
+easily to subjugate them. The denunciations of the English priest do not
+approach those of the Champagne priest. Woolston is sometimes indulgent,
+Meslier never. He was a man profoundly embittered by the crimes he
+witnessed, for which he holds the Christian religion responsible. There
+is no miracle which to him is not an object of contempt and horror; no
+prophecy that he does not compare to those of Nostredamus. He wrote thus
+against Jesus Christ when in the arms of death, at a time when the most
+dissimulating dare not lie, and when the most intrepid tremble. Struck
+with the difficulties which he found in Scripture, he inveighed against
+it more bitterly than the Acosta and all the Jews, more than the famous
+Porphyre, Celse, Iamblique, Julian, Libanius, and all the partisans of
+human reason.
+
+There were found among the books of the curate Meslier a printed
+manuscript of the Treatise of Fenelon, Archbishop of Cambray, upon the
+existence of God and His attributes, and the reflections of the Jesuit
+Tournemine upon Atheism, to which treatise he added marginal notes
+signed by his hand.
+
+
+DECREE
+
+of the NATIONAL CONVENTION upon the proposition to erect a statue to the
+curate Jean Meslier, the 27 Brumaire, in the year II. (November 17,
+1793). The National Convention sends to the Committee of Public
+Instruction the proposition made by one of its members to erect a statue
+to Jean Meslier, curate at Etrepigny, in Champagne, the first priest who
+had the courage and the honesty to abjure religious errors.
+
+PRESIDENT AND SECRETARIES.
+
+SIGNED--P. A. Laloy, President; Bazire, Charles Duval, Philippeaux,
+Frecine, and Merlin (de Thionville), Secretaries.
+
+Certified according to the original.
+
+MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTEE OF DECREES AND PROCESS-VERBAL.
+
+SIGNED--Batellier, Echasseriaux, Monnel, Becker, Vernetey, Pérard, Vinet,
+Bouillerot, Auger, Cordier, Delecloy, and Cosnard.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE OF THE AUTHOR.
+
+When we wish to examine in a cool, calm way the opinions of men, we are
+very much surprised to find that in those which we consider the most
+essential, nothing is more rare than to find them using common sense;
+that is to say, the portion of judgment sufficient to know the most
+simple truths, to reject the most striking absurdities, and to be
+shocked by palpable contradictions. We have an example of this in
+Theology, a science revered in all times, in all countries, by the
+greatest number of mortals; an object considered the most important, the
+most useful, and the most indispensable to the happiness of society. If
+they would but take the trouble to sound the principles upon which this
+pretended science rests itself, they would be compelled to admit that
+the principles which were considered incontestable, are but hazardous
+suppositions, conceived in ignorance, propagated by enthusiasm or bad
+intention, adopted by timid credulity, preserved by habit, which never
+reasons, and revered solely because it is not comprehended. Some, says
+Montaigne, make the world believe that which they do not themselves
+believe; a greater number of others make themselves believe, not
+comprehending what it is to believe. In a word, whoever will consult
+common sense upon religious opinions, and will carry into this
+examination the attention given to objects of ordinary interest, will
+easily perceive that these opinions have no solid foundation; that all
+religion is but a castle in the air; that Theology is but ignorance of
+natural causes reduced to a system; that it is but a long tissue of
+chimeras and contradictions; that it presents to all the different
+nations of the earth only romances devoid of probability, of which the
+hero himself is made up of qualities impossible to reconcile, his name
+having the power to excite in all hearts respect and fear, is found to
+be but a vague word, which men continually utter, being able to attach
+to it only such ideas or qualities as are belied by the facts, or which
+evidently contradict each other. The notion of this imaginary being, or
+rather the word by which we designate him, would be of no consequence
+did it not cause ravages without number upon the earth. Born into the
+opinion that this phantom is for them a very interesting reality, men,
+instead of wisely concluding from its incomprehensibility that they are
+exempt from thinking of it, on the contrary, conclude that they can not
+occupy themselves enough about it, that they must meditate upon it
+without ceasing, reason without end, and never lose sight of it. The
+invincible ignorance in which they are kept in this respect, far from
+discouraging them, does but excite their curiosity; instead of putting
+them on guard against their imagination, this ignorance makes them
+positive, dogmatic, imperious, and causes them to quarrel with all those
+who oppose doubts to the reveries which their brains have brought forth.
+What perplexity, when we attempt to solve an unsolvable problem! Anxious
+meditations upon an object impossible to grasp, and which, however, is
+supposed to be very important to him, can but put a man into bad humor,
+and produce in his brain dangerous transports. When interest, vanity,
+and ambition are joined to such a morose disposition, society
+necessarily becomes troubled. This is why so many nations have often
+become the theaters of extravagances caused by nonsensical visionists,
+who, publishing their shallow speculations for the eternal truth, have
+kindled the enthusiasm of princes and of people, and have prepared them
+for opinions which they represented as essential to the glory of
+divinity and to the happiness of empires. We have seen, a thousand
+times, in all parts of our globe, infuriated fanatics slaughtering each
+other, lighting the funeral piles, committing without scruple, as a
+matter of duty, the greatest crimes. Why? To maintain or to propagate
+the impertinent conjectures of enthusiasts, or to sanction the knaveries
+of impostors on account of a being who exists only in their imagination,
+and who is known only by the ravages, the disputes, and the follies
+which he has caused upon the earth.
+
+Originally, savage nations, ferocious, perpetually at war, adored, under
+various names, some God conformed to their ideas; that is to say, cruel,
+carnivorous, selfish, greedy of blood. We find in all the religions of
+the earth a God of armies, a jealous God, an avenging God, an
+exterminating God, a God who enjoys carnage and whose worshipers make it
+a duty to serve him to his taste. Lambs, bulls, children, men, heretics,
+infidels, kings, whole nations, are sacrificed to him. The zealous
+servants of this barbarous God go so far as to believe that they are
+obliged to offer themselves as a sacrifice to him. Everywhere we see
+zealots who, after having sadly meditated upon their terrible God,
+imagine that, in order to please him, they must do themselves all the
+harm possible, and inflict upon themselves, in his honor, all imaginable
+torments. In a word, everywhere the baneful ideas of Divinity, far from
+consoling men for misfortunes incident to their existence, have filled
+the heart with trouble, and given birth to follies destructive to them.
+How could the human mind, filled with frightful phantoms and guided by
+men interested in perpetuating its ignorance and its fear, make
+progress? Man was compelled to vegetate in his primitive stupidity; he
+was preserved only by invisible powers, upon whom his fate was supposed
+to depend. Solely occupied with his alarms and his unintelligible
+reveries, he was always at the mercy of his priests, who reserved for
+themselves the right of thinking for him and of regulating his conduct.
+
+Thus man was, and always remained, a child without experience, a slave
+without courage, a loggerhead who feared to reason, and who could never
+escape from the labyrinth into which his ancestors had misled him; he
+felt compelled to groan under the yoke of his Gods, of whom he knew
+nothing except the fabulous accounts of their ministers. These, after
+having fettered him by the ties of opinion, have remained his masters or
+delivered him up defenseless to the absolute power of tyrants, no less
+terrible than the Gods, of whom they were the representatives upon the
+earth. Oppressed by the double yoke of spiritual and temporal power, it
+was impossible for the people to instruct themselves and to work for
+their own welfare. Thus, religion, politics, and morals became
+sanctuaries, into which the profane were not permitted to enter. Men had
+no other morality than that which their legislators and their priests
+claimed as descended from unknown empyrean regions. The human mind,
+perplexed by these theological opinions, misunderstood itself, doubted
+its own powers, mistrusted experience, feared truth, disdained its
+reason, and left it to blindly follow authority. Man was a pure machine
+in the hands of his tyrants and his priests, who alone had the right to
+regulate his movements. Always treated as a slave, he had at all times
+and in all places the vices and dispositions of a slave.
+
+These are the true sources of the corruption of habits, to which
+religion never opposes anything but ideal and ineffectual obstacles;
+ignorance and servitude have a tendency to make men wicked and unhappy.
+Science, reason, liberty, alone can reform them and render them more
+happy; but everything conspires to blind them and to confirm them in
+their blindness. The priests deceive them, tyrants corrupt them in order
+to subjugate them more easily. Tyranny has been, and will always be, the
+chief source of the depraved morals and habitual calamities of the
+people. These, almost always fascinated by their religious notions or by
+metaphysical fictions, instead of looking upon the natural and visible
+causes of their miseries, attribute their vices to the imperfections of
+their nature, and their misfortunes to the anger of their Gods; they
+offer to Heaven vows, sacrifices, and presents, in order to put an end
+to their misfortunes, which are really due only to the negligence, the
+ignorance, and to the perversity of their guides, to the folly of their
+institutions, to their foolish customs, to their false opinions, to
+their unreasonable laws, and especially to their want of enlightenment.
+Let the mind be filled early with true ideas; let man's reason be
+cultivated; let justice govern him; and there will be no need of
+opposing to his passions the powerless barrier of the fear of Gods. Men
+will be good when they are well taught, well governed, chastised or
+censured for the evil, and justly rewarded for the good which they have
+done to their fellow-citizens. It is idle to pretend to cure mortals of
+their vices if we do not begin by curing them of their prejudices. It is
+only by showing them the truth that they can know their best interests
+and the real motives which will lead them to happiness. Long enough have
+the instructors of the people fixed their eyes on heaven; let them at
+last bring them back to the earth. Tired of an incomprehensible
+theology, of ridiculous fables, of impenetrable mysteries, of puerile
+ceremonies, let the human mind occupy itself with natural things,
+intelligible objects, sensible truths, and useful knowledge. Let the
+vain chimeras which beset the people be dissipated, and very soon
+rational opinions will fill the minds of those who were believed fated
+to be always in error. To annihilate religious prejudices, it would be
+sufficient to show that what is inconceivable to man can not be of any
+use to him. Does it need, then, anything but simple common sense to
+perceive that a being most clearly irreconcilable with the notions of
+mankind, that a cause continually opposed to the effects attributed to
+him; that a being of whom not a word can be said without falling into
+contradictions; that a being who, far from explaining the mysteries of
+the universe, only renders them more inexplicable; that a being to whom
+for so many centuries men addressed themselves so vainly to obtain their
+happiness and deliverance from their sufferings; does it need, I say,
+more than simple common sense to understand that the idea of such a
+being is an idea without model, and that he is himself evidently not a
+reasonable being? Does it require more than common sense to feel that
+there is at least delirium and frenzy in hating and tormenting each
+other for unintelligible opinions of a being of this kind? Finally, does
+it not all prove that morality and virtue are totally incompatible with
+the idea of a God, whose ministers and interpreters have painted him in
+all countries as the most fantastic, the most unjust, and the most cruel
+of tyrants, whose pretended wishes are to serve as rules and laws for
+the inhabitants of the earth? To discover the true principles of
+morality, men have no need of theology, of revelation, or of Gods; they
+need but common sense; they have only to look within themselves, to
+reflect upon their own nature, to consult their obvious interests, to
+consider the object of society and of each of the members who compose
+it, and they will easily understand that virtue is an advantage, and
+that vice is an injury to beings of their species. Let us teach men to
+be just, benevolent, moderate, and sociable, not because their Gods
+exact it, but to please men; let us tell them to abstain from vice and
+from crime, not because they will be punished in another world, but
+because they will suffer in the present world. There are, says
+Montesquieu, means to prevent crime, they are sufferings; to change the
+manners, these are good examples. Truth is simple, error is complicated,
+uncertain in its gait, full of by-ways; the voice of nature is
+intelligible, that of falsehood is ambiguous, enigmatical, and
+mysterious; the road of truth is straight, that of imposture is oblique
+and dark; this truth, always necessary to man, is felt by all just
+minds; the lessons of reason are followed by all honest souls; men are
+unhappy only because they are ignorant; they are ignorant only because
+everything conspires to prevent them from being enlightened, and they
+are wicked only because their reason is not sufficiently developed.
+
+
+
+
+COMMON SENSE.
+
+Detexit quo dolose Vaticinandi furore sacerdotes mysteria, illis spe
+ignota, audactur publicant.--PETRON. SATYR.
+
+
+
+
+I.--APOLOGUE.
+
+There is a vast empire governed by a monarch, whose conduct does but
+confound the minds of his subjects. He desires to be known, loved,
+respected, and obeyed, but he never shows himself; everything tends to
+make uncertain the notions which we are able to form about him. The
+people subjected to his power have only such ideas of the character and
+the laws of their invisible sovereign as his ministers give them; these
+suit, however, because they themselves have no idea of their master, for
+his ways are impenetrable, and his views and his qualities are totally
+incomprehensible; moreover, his ministers disagree among themselves in
+regard to the orders which they pretend emanated from the sovereign
+whose organs they claim to be; they announce them diversely in each
+province of the empire; they discredit and treat each other as impostors
+and liars; the decrees and ordinances which they promulgate are obscure;
+they are enigmas, made not to be understood or divined by the subjects
+for whose instruction they were intended. The laws of the invisible
+monarch need interpreters, but those who explain them are always
+quarreling among themselves about the true way of understanding them;
+more than this, they do not agree among themselves; all which they
+relate of their hidden prince is but a tissue of contradictions,
+scarcely a single word that is not contradicted at once. He is called
+supremely good, nevertheless not a person but complains of his decrees.
+He is supposed to be infinitely wise, and in his administration
+everything seems contrary to reason and good sense. They boast of his
+justice, and the best of his subjects are generally the least favored.
+We are assured that he sees everything, yet his presence remedies
+nothing. It is said that he is the friend of order, and everything in
+his universe is in a state of confusion and disorder; all is created by
+him, yet events rarely happen according to his projects. He foresees
+everything, but his foresight prevents nothing. He is impatient if any
+offend him; at the same time he puts every one in the way of offending
+him. His knowledge is admired in the perfection of his works, but his
+works are full of imperfections, and of little permanence. He is
+continually occupied in creating and destroying, then repairing what he
+has done, never appearing to be satisfied with his work. In all his
+enterprises he seeks but his own glory, but he does not succeed in being
+glorified. He works but for the good of his subjects, and most of them
+lack the necessities of life. Those whom he seems to favor, are
+generally those who are the least satisfied with their fate; we see them
+all continually revolting against a master whose greatness they admire,
+whose wisdom they extol, whose goodness they worship, and whose justice
+they fear, revering orders which they never follow. This empire is the
+world; its monarch is God; His ministers are the priests; their subjects
+are men.
+
+
+
+
+II.--WHAT IS THEOLOGY?
+
+There is a science which has for its object only incomprehensible
+things. Unlike all others, it occupies itself but with things unseen.
+Hobbes calls it "the kingdom of darkness." In this land all obey laws
+opposed to those which men acknowledge in the world they inhabit. In
+this marvelous region light is but darkness, evidence becomes doubtful
+or false, the impossible becomes credible, reason is an unfaithful
+guide, and common sense changed into delirium. This science is named
+Theology, and this Theology is a continual insult to human reason.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+By frequent repetition of if, but, and perhaps, we succeed in forming an
+imperfect and broken system which perplexes men's minds to the extent of
+making them forget the clearest notions, and to render uncertain the
+most palpable truths. By the aid of this systematic nonsense, all nature
+has become an inexplicable enigma for man; the visible world has
+disappeared to give place to invisible regions; reason is obliged to
+give place to imagination, which can lead us only to the land of
+chimeras which she herself has invented.
+
+
+
+
+IV.--MAN BORN NEITHER RELIGIOUS NOR DEISTICAL.
+
+All religious principles are founded upon the idea of a God, but it is
+impossible for men to have true ideas of a being who does not act upon
+any one of their senses. All our ideas are but pictures of objects which
+strike us. What can the idea of God represent to us when it is evidently
+an idea without an object? Is not such an idea as impossible as an
+effect without a cause? An idea without a prototype, is it anything but
+a chimera? Some theologians, however, assure us that the idea of God is
+innate, or that men have this idea from the time of their birth. Every
+principle is a judgment; all judgment is the effect of experience;
+experience is not acquired but by the exercise of the senses: from which
+it follows that religious principles are drawn from nothing, and are not
+innate.
+
+
+
+
+V.--IT IS NOT NECESSARY TO BELIEVE IN A GOD, AND THE MOST REASONABLE
+THING IS NOT TO THINK OF HIM.
+
+No religious system can be founded otherwise than upon the nature of God
+and of men, and upon the relations they bear to each other. But, in
+order to judge of the reality of these relations, we must have some idea
+of the Divine nature. But everybody tells us that the essence of God is
+incomprehensible to man; at the same time they do not hesitate to assign
+attributes to this incomprehensible God, and assure us that man can not
+dispense with a knowledge of this God so impossible to conceive of. The
+most important thing for men is that which is the most impossible for
+them to comprehend. If God is incomprehensible to man, it would seem
+rational never to think of Him at all; but religion concludes that man
+is criminal if he ceases for a moment to revere Him.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--RELIGION IS FOUNDED UPON CREDULITY.
+
+We are told that Divine qualities are not of a nature to be grasped by
+limited minds. The natural consequence of this principle ought to be
+that the Divine qualities are not made to employ limited minds; but
+religion assures us that limited minds should never lose sight of this
+inconceivable being, whose qualities can not be grasped by them: from
+which we see that religion is the art of occupying limited minds with
+that which is impossible for them to comprehend.
+
+
+
+
+VII.--EVERY RELIGION IS AN ABSURDITY.
+
+Religion unites man with God or puts them in communication; but do you
+say that God is infinite? If God is infinite, no finite being can have
+communication or any relation with Him. Where there are no relations,
+there can be no union, no correspondence, no duties. If there are no
+duties between man and his God, there exists no religion for man. Thus
+by saying that God is infinite, you annihilate, from that moment, all
+religion for man, who is a finite being. The idea of infinity is for us
+in idea without model, without prototype, without object.
+
+
+
+
+VIII.--THE NOTION OF GOD IS IMPOSSIBLE.
+
+If God is an infinite being, there can be neither in the actual world or
+in another any proportion between man and his God; thus the idea of God
+will never enter the human mind. In the supposition of a life where men
+will be more enlightened than in this one, the infinity of God will
+always place such a distance between his idea and the limited mind of
+man, that he will not be able to conceive of God any more in a future
+life than in the present. Hence, it evidently follows that the idea of
+God will not be better suited to man in the other life than in the
+present. God is not made for man; it follows also that intelligences
+superior to man--such as angels, archangels, seraphims, and saints--can
+have no more complete notions of God than has man, who does not
+understand anything about Him here below.
+
+
+
+
+IX.--ORIGIN OF SUPERSTITION.
+
+How is it that we have succeeded in persuading reasonable beings that
+the thing most impossible to understand was the most essential for them.
+It is because they were greatly frightened; it is because when men are
+kept in fear they cease to reason; it is because they have been
+expressly enjoined to distrust their reason. When the brain is troubled,
+we believe everything and examine nothing.
+
+
+
+
+X.--ORIGIN OF ALL RELIGION.
+
+Ignorance and fear are the two pivots of all religion. The uncertainty
+attending man's relation to his God is precisely the motive which
+attaches him to his religion. Man is afraid when in darkness--physical or
+moral. His fear is habitual to him and becomes a necessity; he would
+believe that he lacked something if he had nothing to fear.
+
+
+
+
+XI.--IN THE NAME OF RELIGION CHARLATANS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE WEAKNESS
+OF MEN.
+
+He who from his childhood has had a habit of trembling every time he
+heard certain words, needs these words, and needs to tremble. In this
+way he is more disposed to listen to the one who encourages his fears
+than to the one who would dispel his fears. The superstitious man wants
+to be afraid; his imagination demands it. It seems that he fears nothing
+more than having no object to fear. Men are imaginary patients, whom
+interested charlatans take care to encourage in their weakness, in order
+to have a market for their remedies. Physicians who order a great number
+of remedies are more listened to than those who recommend a good
+regimen, and who leave nature to act.
+
+
+
+
+XII.--RELIGION ENTICES IGNORANCE BY THE AID OF THE MARVELOUS.
+
+If religion was clear, it would have fewer attractions for the ignorant.
+They need obscurity, mysteries, fables, miracles, incredible things,
+which keep their brains perpetually at work. Romances, idle stories,
+tales of ghosts and witches, have more charms for the vulgar than true
+narrations.
+
+
+
+
+XIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+In the matter of religion, men are but overgrown children. The more
+absurd a religion is, and the fuller of marvels, the more power it
+exerts; the devotee thinks himself obliged to place no limits to his
+credulity; the more inconceivable things are, the more divine they
+appear to him; the more incredible they are, the more merit he gives
+himself for believing them.
+
+
+
+
+XIV.--THERE WOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN ANY RELIGION IF THERE HAD NEVER BEEN
+ANY DARK AND BARBAROUS AGES.
+
+The origin of religious opinions dates, as a general thing, from the
+time when savage nations were yet in a state of infancy. It was to
+coarse, ignorant, and stupid men that the founders of religion addressed
+themselves in all ages, in order to present them with Gods, ceremonies,
+histories of fabulous Divinities, marvelous and terrible fables. These
+chimeras, adopted without examination by the fathers, have been
+transmitted with more or less changes to their polished children, who
+often do not reason more than their fathers.
+
+
+
+
+XV.--ALL RELIGION WAS BORN OF THE DESIRE TO DOMINATE.
+
+The first legislators of nations had for their object to dominate, The
+easiest means of succeeding was to frighten the people and to prevent
+them from reasoning; they led them by tortuous paths in order that they
+should not perceive the designs of their guides; they compelled them to
+look into the air, for fear they should look to their feet; they amused
+them upon the road by stories; in a word, they treated them in the way
+of nurses, who employ songs and menaces to put the children to sleep, or
+to force them to be quiet.
+
+
+
+
+XVI.--THAT WHICH SERVES AS A BASIS FOR ALL RELIGION IS VERY UNCERTAIN.
+
+The existence of a God is the basis of all religion. Few people seem to
+doubt this existence, but this fundamental principle is precisely the
+one which prevents every mind from reasoning. The first question of
+every catechism was, and will always be, the most difficult one to
+answer.
+
+
+
+
+XVII.--IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO BE CONVINCED OF THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
+
+Can one honestly say that he is convinced of the existence of a being
+whose nature is not known, who remains inaccessible to all our senses,
+and of whose qualities we are constantly assured that they are
+incomprehensible to us? In order to persuade me that a being exists, or
+can exist, he must begin by telling me what this being is; in order to
+make me believe the existence or the possibility of such a being, he
+must tell me things about him which are not contradictory, and which do
+not destroy one another; finally, in order to convince me fully of the
+existence of this being, he must tell me things about him which I can
+comprehend, and prove to me that it is impossible that the being to whom
+he attributes these qualities does not exist.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+A thing is impossible when it is composed of two ideas so antagonistic,
+that we can not think of them at the same time. Evidence can be relied
+on only when confirmed by the constant testimony of our senses, which
+alone give birth to ideas, and enable us to judge of their conformity or
+of their incompatibility. That which exists necessarily, is that of
+which the non-existence would imply contradiction. These principles,
+universally recognized, are at fault when the question of the existence
+of God is considered; what has been said of Him is either unintelligible
+or perfectly contradictory; and for this reason must appear impossible
+to every man of common sense.
+
+
+
+
+XIX.--THE EXISTENCE OF GOD IS NOT PROVED.
+
+All human intelligences are more or less enlightened and cultivated. By
+what fatality is it that the science of God has never been explained?
+The most civilized nations and the most profound thinkers are of the
+same opinion in regard to the matter as the most barbarous nations and
+the most ignorant and rustic people. As we examine the subject more
+closely, we will find that the science of divinity by means of reveries
+and subtleties has but obscured it more and more. Thus far, all religion
+has been founded on what is called in logic, a "begging of the
+question;" it supposes freely, and then proves, finally, by the
+suppositions it has made.
+
+
+
+
+XX.--TO SAY THAT GOD IS A SPIRIT, IS TO SPEAK WITHOUT SAYING ANYTHING AT
+ALL.
+
+By metaphysics, God is made a pure spirit, but has modern theology
+advanced one step further than the theology of the barbarians? They
+recognized a grand spirit as master of the world. The barbarians, like
+all ignorant men, attribute to spirits all the effects of which their
+inexperience prevents them from discovering the true causes. Ask a
+barbarian what causes your watch to move, he will answer, "a spirit!"
+Ask our philosophers what moves the universe, they will tell you "it is
+a spirit."
+
+
+
+
+XXI.--SPIRITUALITY IS A CHIMERA.
+
+The barbarian, when he speaks of a spirit, attaches at least some sense
+to this word; he understands by it an agent similar to the wind, to the
+agitated air, to the breath, which produces, invisibly, effects that we
+perceive. By subtilizing, the modern theologian becomes as little
+intelligible to himself as to others. Ask him what he means by a spirit?
+He will answer, that it is an unknown substance, which is perfectly
+simple, which has nothing tangible, nothing in common with matter. In
+good faith, is there any mortal who can form the least idea of such a
+substance? A spirit in the language of modern theology is then but an
+absence of ideas. The idea of spirituality is another idea without a
+model.
+
+
+
+
+XXII.--ALL WHICH EXISTS SPRINGS FROM THE BOSOM OF MATTER.
+
+Is it not more natural and more intelligible to deduce all which exists,
+from the bosom of matter, whose existence is demonstrated by all our
+senses, whose effects we feel at every moment, which we see act, move,
+communicate, motion, and constantly bring living beings into existence,
+than to attribute the formation of things to an unknown force, to a
+spiritual being, who can not draw from his ground that which he has not
+himself, and who, by the spiritual essence claimed for him, is incapable
+of making anything, and of putting anything in motion? Nothing is
+plainer than that they would have us believe that an intangible spirit
+can act upon matter.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII.--WHAT IS THE METAPHYSICAL GOD OF MODERN THEOLOGY?
+
+The material Jupiter of the ancients could move, build up, destroy, and
+propagate beings similar to himself; but the God of modern theology is a
+sterile being. According to his supposed nature he can neither occupy
+any place, nor move matter, nor produce a visible world, nor propagate
+either men or Gods. The metaphysical God is a workman without hands; he
+is able but to produce clouds, suspicions, reveries, follies, and
+quarrels.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV.--IT WOULD BE MORE RATIONAL TO WORSHIP THE SUN THAN A SPIRITUAL GOD.
+
+Since it was necessary for men to have a God, why did they not have the
+sun, the visible God, adored by so many nations? What being had more
+right to the homage of mortals than the star of the day, which gives
+light and heat; which invigorates all beings; whose presence reanimates
+and rejuvenates nature; whose absence seems to plunge her into sadness
+and languor? If some being bestowed upon men power, activity,
+benevolence, strength, it was no doubt the sun, which should be
+recognized as the father of nature, as the soul of the world, as
+Divinity. At least one could not without folly dispute his existence, or
+refuse to recognize his influence and his benefits.
+
+
+
+
+XXV.--A SPIRITUAL GOD IS INCAPABLE OF WILLING AND OF ACTING.
+
+The theologian tells us that God does not need hands or arms to act, and
+that He acts by His will alone. But what is this God who has a will? And
+what can be the subject of this divine will? Is it more ridiculous or
+more difficult to believe in fairies, in sylphs, in ghosts, in witches,
+in were-wolfs, than to believe in the magical or impossible action of
+the spirit upon the body? As soon as we admit of such a God, there are
+no longer fables or visions which can not be believed. The theologians
+treat men like children, who never cavil about the possibilities of the
+tales which they listen to.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI.--WHAT IS GOD?
+
+To unsettle the existence of a God, it is only necessary to ask a
+theologian to speak of Him; as soon as he utters one word about Him, the
+least reflection makes us discover at once that what he says is
+incompatible with the essence which he attributes to his God. Therefore,
+what is God? It is an abstract word, coined to designate the hidden
+forces of nature; or, it is a mathematical point, which has neither
+length, breadth, nor thickness. A philosopher [David Hume] has very
+ingeniously said in speaking of theologians, that they have found the
+solution to the famous problem of Archimedes; a point in the heavens
+from which they move the world.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII.--REMARKABLE CONTRADICTIONS OF THEOLOGY.
+
+Religion puts men on their knees before a being without extension, and
+who, notwithstanding, is infinite, and fills all space with his
+immensity; before an almighty being, who never executes that which he
+desires; before a being supremely good, and who causes but displeasure;
+before a being, the friend of order, and in whose government everything
+is in disorder. After all this, let us conjecture what this God of
+theology is.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII.--TO ADORE GOD IS TO ADORE A FICTION.
+
+In order to avoid all embarrassment, they tell us that it is not
+necessary to know what God is; that we must adore without knowing; that
+it is not permitted us to turn an eye of temerity upon His attributes.
+But if we must adore a God without knowing Him, should we not be assured
+that He exists? Moreover, how be assured that He exists without having
+examined whether it is possible that the diverse qualities claimed for
+Him, meet in Him? In truth, to adore God is to adore nothing but
+fictions of one's own brain, or rather, it is to adore nothing.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX.--THE INFINITY OF GOD AND THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF KNOWING THE DIVINE
+ESSENCE, OCCASIONS AND JUSTIFIES ATHEISM.
+
+Without doubt the more to perplex matters, theologians have chosen to
+say nothing about what their God is; they tell us what He is not. By
+negations and abstractions they imagine themselves composing a real and
+perfect being, while there can result from it but a being of human
+reason. A spirit has no body; an infinite being is a being which is not
+finite; a perfect being is a being which is not imperfect. Can any one
+form any real notions of such a multitude of deficiencies or absence of
+ideas? That which excludes all idea, can it be anything but nothingness?
+To pretend that the divine attributes are beyond the understanding of
+the human mind is to render God unfit for men. If we are assured that
+God is infinite, we admit that there can be nothing in common between
+Him and His creatures. To say that God is infinite, is to destroy Him
+for men, or at least render Him useless to them.
+
+God, we are told, created men intelligent, but He did not create them
+omniscient: that is to say, capable of knowing all things. We conclude
+that He was not able to endow him with intelligence sufficient to
+understand the divine essence. In this case it is demonstrated that God
+has neither the power nor the wish to be known by men. By what right
+could this God become angry with beings whose own essence makes it
+impossible to have any idea of the divine essence? God would evidently
+be the most unjust and the most unaccountable of tyrants if He should
+punish an atheist for not knowing that which his nature made it
+impossible for him to know.
+
+
+
+
+XXX.--IT IS NEITHER LESS NOR MORE CRIMINAL TO BELIEVE IN GOD THAN NOT TO
+BELIEVE IN HIM.
+
+For the generality of men nothing renders an argument more convincing
+than fear. In consequence of this fact, theologians tell us that the
+safest side must be taken; that nothing is more criminal than
+incredulity; that God will punish without mercy all those who have the
+temerity to doubt His existence; that His severity is just; since it is
+only madness or perversity which questions the existence of an angry
+monarch who revenges himself cruelly upon atheists. If we examine these
+menaces calmly, we shall find that they assume always the thing in
+question. They must commence by proving to our satisfaction the
+existence of a God, before telling us that it is safer to believe, and
+that it is horrible to doubt or to deny it. Then they must prove that it
+is possible for a just God to punish men cruelly for having been in a
+state of madness, which prevented them from believing in the existence
+of a being whom their enlightened reason could not comprehend. In a
+word, they must prove that a God that is said to be full of equity,
+could punish beyond measure the invincible and necessary ignorance of
+man, caused by his relation to the divine essence. Is not the
+theologians' manner of reasoning very singular? They create phantoms,
+they fill them with contradictions, and finally assure us that the
+safest way is not to doubt the existence of those phantoms, which they
+have themselves invented. By following out this method, there is no
+absurdity which it would not be safer to believe than not to believe.
+
+All children are atheists--they have no idea of God; are they, then,
+criminal on account of this ignorance? At what age do they begin to be
+obliged to believe in God? It is, you say, at the age of reason. At what
+time does this age begin? Besides, if the most profound theologians lose
+themselves in the divine essence, which they boast of not comprehending,
+what ideas can common people have?--women, mechanics, and, in short,
+those who compose the mass of the human race?
+
+
+
+
+XXXI.--THE BELIEF IN GOD IS NOTHING BUT A MECHANICAL HABITUDE OF
+CHILDHOOD.
+
+Men believe in God only upon the word of those who have no more idea of
+Him than they themselves. Our nurses are our first theologians; they
+talk to children of God as they talk to them of were-wolfs; they teach
+them from the most tender age to join the hands mechanically. Have the
+nurses clearer notions of God than the children, whom they compel to
+pray to Him?
+
+
+
+
+XXXII.--IT IS A PREJUDICE WHICH HAS BEEN HANDED FROM FATHER TO CHILDREN.
+
+Religion is handed down from fathers to children as the property of a
+family with the burdens. Very few people in the world would have a God
+if care had not been taken to give them one. Each one receives from his
+parents and his instructors the God which they themselves have received
+from theirs; only, according to his own temperament, each one arranges,
+modifies, and paints Him agreeably to his taste.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII.--ORIGIN OF PREJUDICES.
+
+The brain of man is, especially in infancy, like a soft wax, ready to
+receive all the impressions we wish to make on it; education furnishes
+nearly all his opinions, at a period when he is incapable of judging for
+himself. We believe that the ideas, true or false, which at a tender age
+were forced into our heads, were received from nature at our birth; and
+this persuasion is one of the greatest sources of our errors.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV.--HOW THEY TAKE ROOT AND SPREAD.
+
+Prejudice tends to confirm in us the opinions of those who are charged
+with our instruction. We believe them more skillful than we are; we
+suppose them thoroughly convinced themselves of the things they teach
+us. We have the greatest confidence in them. After the care they have
+taken of us when we were unable to assist ourselves, we judge them
+incapable of deceiving us. These are the motives which make us adopt a
+thousand errors without other foundation than the dangerous word of
+those who have educated us; even the being forbidden to reason upon what
+they tell us, does not diminish our confidence, but contributes often to
+increase our respect for their opinions.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV.--MEN WOULD NEVER HAVE BELIEVED IN THE PRINCIPLES OF MODERN THEOLOGY
+IF THEY HAD NOT BEEN TAUGHT AT AN AGE WHEN THEY WERE INCAPABLE OF
+REASONING.
+
+The instructors of the human race act very prudently in teaching men
+their religious principles before they are able to distinguish the true
+from the false, or the left hand from the right. It would be as
+difficult to tame the spirit of a man forty years old with the
+extravagant notions which are given us of Divinity, as to banish these
+notions from the head of a man who has imbibed them since his tenderest
+infancy.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI.--THE WONDERS OF NATURE DO NOT PROVE THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
+
+We are assured that the wonders of nature are sufficient to a belief in
+the existence of a God, and to convince us fully of this important
+truth. But how many persons are there in this world who have the
+leisure, the capacity, the necessary taste, to contemplate nature and to
+meditate upon its progress? The majority of men pay no attention to it.
+A peasant is not at all moved by the beauty of the sun, which he sees
+every day. The sailor is not surprised by the regular movements of the
+ocean; he will draw from them no theological inductions. The phenomena
+of nature do not prove the existence of a God, except to a few
+forewarned men, to whom has been shown in advance the finger of God in
+all the objects whose mechanism could embarrass them. The unprejudiced
+philosopher sees nothing in the wonders of nature but permanent and
+invariable law; nothing but the necessary effects of different
+combinations of diversified substance.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII.--THE WONDERS OF NATURE EXPLAIN THEMSELVES BY NATURAL CAUSES.
+
+Is there anything more surprising than the logic of so many profound
+doctors, who, instead of acknowledging the little light they have upon
+natural agencies, seek outside of nature--that is to say, in imaginary
+regions--an agent less understood than this nature, of which they can at
+least form some idea? To say that God is the author of the phenomena
+that we see, is it not attributing them to an occult cause? What is God?
+What is a spirit? They are causes of which we have no idea. Sages! study
+nature and her laws; and when you can from them unravel the action of
+natural causes, do not go in search of supernatural causes, which, very
+far from enlightening your ideas, will but entangle them more and more
+and make it impossible for you to understand yourselves.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII--CONTINUATION.
+
+Nature, you say, is totally inexplicable without a God; that is to say,
+in order to explain what you understand so little, you need a cause
+which you do not understand at all. You pretend to make clear that which
+is obscure, by magnifying its obscurity. You think you have untied a
+knot by multiplying knots. Enthusiastic philosophers, in order to prove
+to us the existence of a God, you copy complete treatises on botany; you
+enter into minute details of the parts of the human body; you ascend
+into the air to contemplate the revolutions of the stars; you return
+then to earth to admire the course of the waters; you fly into ecstasies
+over butterflies, insects, polyps, organized atoms, in which you think
+to find the greatness of your God; all these things will not prove the
+existence of this God; they will only prove that you have not the ideas
+which you should have of the immense variety of causes and effects that
+can produce the infinitely diversified combinations, of which the
+universe is the assemblage. This will prove that you ignore nature, that
+you have no idea of her resources when you judge her incapable of
+producing a multitude of forms and beings, of which your eyes, even by
+the aid of the microscope, see but the least part; finally, this will
+prove, that not being able to know the sensible and comprehensible
+agents, you find it easier to have recourse to a word, by which you
+designate an agent, of whom it will always be impossible for you to form
+any true idea.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX.--THE WORLD HAS NOT BEEN CREATED, AND MATTER MOVES BY ITSELF.
+
+They tell us gravely that there is no effect without a cause; they
+repeat to us very often that the world did not create itself. But the
+universe is a cause, not an effect; it is not a work, has not been made,
+because it was impossible that it should be made. The world has always
+been, its existence is necessary. It is the cause of itself. Nature,
+whose essence is visibly acting and producing, in order to fulfill her
+functions, as we see she does, needs no invisible motor far more unknown
+than herself. Matter moves by its own energy, by the necessary result of
+its heterogeneity; the diversity of its movements or of its ways of
+acting, constitute only the diversity of substances; we distinguish one
+being from another but by the diversity of the impressions or movements
+which they communicate to our organs.
+
+
+
+
+XL.--CONTINUATION.
+
+You see that everything in nature is in a state of activity, and you
+pretend that nature of itself is dead and without energy! You believe
+that all this, acting of itself, has need of a motor! Well! who is this
+motor? It is a spirit, that is to say, an absolutely incomprehensible
+and contradictory being. Conclude then, I say to you, that matter acts
+of itself, and cease to reason about your spiritual motor, which has
+nothing that is necessary to put it into motion. Return from your
+useless excursions; come down from an imaginary into a real world; take
+hold of second causes; leave to theologians their "First Cause," of
+which nature has no need in order to produce all the effects which you
+see.
+
+
+
+
+XLI.--OTHER PROOFS THAT MOTION IS IN THE ESSENCE OF MATTER, AND THAT IT
+IS NOT NECESSARY TO SUPPOSE A SPIRITUAL MOTOR.
+
+It is but by the diversity of impressions or of effects which substances
+or bodies make upon us, that we feel them, that we have perceptions and
+ideas of them, that we distinguish them one from another, that we assign
+to them peculiarities. Moreover, in order to perceive or to feel an
+object, this object must act upon our organs; this object can not act
+upon us without exciting some motion in us; it can not produce any
+motion in us if it is not itself in motion. As soon as I see an object,
+my eyes must be struck by it; I can not conceive of light and of vision
+without a motion in the luminous, extended, and colored body which
+communicates itself to my eye, or which acts upon my retina. As soon as
+I smell a body, my olfactory nerve must be irritated or put into motion
+by the parts exhaled from an odorous body. As soon as I hear a sound,
+the tympanum of my ear must be struck by the air put in motion by a
+sonorous body, which could not act if it was not moved of itself. From
+which it follows, evidently, that without motion I can neither feel,
+see, distinguish, compare, nor judge the body, nor even occupy my
+thought with any matter whatever. It is said in the schools, that the
+essence of a being is that from which flow all the properties of that
+being. Now then, it is evident that all the properties of bodies or of
+substances of which we have ideas, are due to the motion which alone
+informs us of their existence, and gives us the first conceptions of it.
+I can not be informed or assured of my own existence but by the motions
+which I experience within myself. I am compelled to conclude that motion
+is as essential to matter as its extension, and that it can not be
+conceived of without it. If one persists in caviling about the evidences
+which prove to us that motion is an essential property of matter, he
+must at least acknowledge that substances which seemed dead or deprived
+of all energy, take motion of themselves as soon as they are brought
+within the proper distance to act upon each other. Pyrophorus, when
+enclosed in a bottle or deprived of contact with the air, can not take
+fire by itself, but it burns as soon as exposed to the air. Flour and
+water cause fermentation as soon as they are mixed. Thus dead substances
+engender motion of themselves. Matter has then the power to move itself,
+and nature, in order to act, does not need a motor whose essence would
+hinder its activity.
+
+
+
+
+XLII.--THE EXISTENCE OF MAN DOES NOT PROVE THAT OF GOD.
+
+Whence comes man? What is his origin? Is he the result of the fortuitous
+meeting of atoms? Was the first man formed of the dust of the earth? I
+do not know! Man appears to me to be a production of nature like all
+others she embraces. I should be just as much embarrassed to tell you
+whence came the first stones, the first trees, the first elephants, the
+first ants, the first acorns, as to explain the origin of the human
+species. Recognize, we are told, the hand of God, of an infinitely
+intelligent and powerful workman, in a work so wonderful as the human
+machine. I would admit without question that the human machine appears
+to me surprising; but since man exists in nature, I do not believe it
+right to say that his formation is beyond the forces of nature. I will
+add, that I could conceive far less of the formation of the human
+machine, when to explain it to me they tell me that a pure spirit, who
+has neither eyes, nor feet, nor hands, nor head, nor lungs, nor mouth,
+nor breath, has made man by taking a little dust and blowing upon it.
+The savage inhabitants of Paraguay pretend to be descended from the
+moon, and appear to us as simpletons; the theologians of Europe pretend
+to be descended from a pure spirit. Is this pretension more sensible?
+
+Man is intelligent, hence it is concluded that he must be the work of an
+intelligent being, and not of a nature devoid of intelligence. Although
+nothing is more rare than to see man use this intelligence, of which he
+appears so proud, I will admit that he is intelligent, that his
+necessities develop in him this faculty, that the society of other men
+contributes especially to cultivate it. But in the human machine and in
+the intelligence with which it is endowed, I see nothing that shows in a
+precise manner the infinite intelligence of the workman who has the
+honor of making it. I see that this admirable machine is subject to
+derangement; that at that time this wonderful intelligence is
+disordered, and sometimes totally disappears; from this I conclude that
+human intelligence depends upon a certain disposition of the material
+organs of the body, and that, because man is an intelligent being, it is
+not well to conclude that God must be an intelligent being, any more
+than because man is material, we are compelled to conclude that God is
+material. The intelligence of man no more proves the intelligence of God
+than the malice of men proves the malice of this God, of whom they
+pretend that man is the work. In whatever way theology is taken, God
+will always be a cause contradicted by its effects, or of whom it is
+impossible to judge by His works. We shall always see evil,
+imperfections, and follies resulting from a cause claimed to be full of
+goodness, of perfections, and of wisdom.
+
+
+
+
+XLIII.--HOWEVER, NEITHER MAN NOR THE UNIVERSE IS THE EFFECT OF CHANCE.
+
+Then you will say that intelligent man and even the universe and all it
+encloses, are the effects of chance. No, I answer, the universe is not
+an effect; it is the cause of all effects; all the beings it embraces
+are the necessary effects of this cause which sometimes shows to us its
+manner of acting, out which often hides from us its way. Men may use the
+word "chance" to cover their ignorance of the true causes; nevertheless,
+although they may ignore them, these causes act, but by certain laws.
+There is no effect without a cause.
+
+Nature is a word which we make use of to designate the immense
+assemblage of beings, diverse substances, infinite combinations, and all
+the various motions which we see. All bodies, whether organized or not
+organized, are the necessary results of certain causes, made to produce
+necessarily the effects which we see. Nothing in nature can be made by
+chance; all follow fixed laws; these laws are but the necessary union of
+certain effects with their causes. An atom of matter does not meet
+another atom by accident or by hazard; this rencounter is due to
+permanent laws, which cause each being to act by necessity as it does,
+and can not act otherwise under the same circumstances. To speak about
+the accidental coming together of atoms, or to attribute any effects to
+chance, is to say nothing, if not to ignore the laws by which bodies
+act, meet, combine, or separate.
+
+Everything is made by chance for those who do not understand nature, the
+properties of beings, and the effects which must necessarily result from
+the concurrence of certain causes. It is not chance that has placed the
+sun in the center of our planetary system; it is by its very essence,
+the substance of which it is composed, that it occupies this place, and
+from thence diffuses itself to invigorate the beings who live in these
+planets.
+
+
+
+
+XLIV.--NEITHER DOES THE ORDER OF THE UNIVERSE PROVE THE EXISTENCE OF A
+GOD.
+
+The worshipers of a God find, especially in the order of the universe,
+an invincible proof of the existence of an intelligent and wise being
+who rules it. But this order is only a result of motions necessarily
+brought on by causes or by circumstances which are sometimes favorable
+and sometimes injurious to ourselves; we approve the former and find
+fault with the latter.
+
+Nature follows constantly the same progress; that is to say, the same
+causes produce the same effects, as long as their action is not
+interrupted by other causes which occasion the first ones to produce
+different effects. When the causes, whose effects we feel, are
+interrupted in their action by causes which, although unknown to us, are
+no less natural and necessary, we are stupefied, we cry out miracles:
+and we attribute them to a cause far less known than all those we see
+operating before us. The universe is always in order; there can be no
+disorder for it. Our organization alone is suffering if we complain
+about disorder. Bodies, causes, beings, which this world embraces, act
+necessarily in the manner in which we see them act, whether we approve
+or disapprove their action. Earthquakes, volcanoes, inundations,
+contagions, and famines are effects as necessary in the order of nature
+as the fall of heavy bodies, as the course of rivers, as the periodical
+movements of the seas, the blowing of the winds, the abundant rains, and
+the favorable effects for which we praise and thank Providence for its
+blessings.
+
+To be astonished that a certain order reigns in the world, is to be
+surprised to see the same causes constantly producing the same effects.
+To be shocked at seeing disorder, is to forget that the causes being
+changed or disturbed in their action, the effects can no longer be the
+same. To be astonished to see order in nature, is to be astonished that
+anything can exist; it is to be surprised at one's own existence. What
+is order for one being, is disorder for another. All wicked beings find
+that everything is in order when they can with impunity put everything
+into disorder; they find, on the contrary, that everything is in
+disorder when they are prevented from exercising their wickedness.
+
+
+
+
+XLV.--CONTINUATION.
+
+Supposing God to be the author and the motor of nature, there could be
+no disorder relating to Him; all causes which He would have made would
+necessarily act according to their properties the essences and the
+impulsions that He had endowed them with. If God should change the
+ordinary course of things, He would not be immutable. If the order of
+the universe--in which we believe we see the most convincing proof of His
+existence, of His intelligence, His power, and His goodness--should be
+inconsistent, His existence might be doubted; or He might be accused at
+least of inconstancy, of inability, of want of foresight, and of wisdom
+in the first arrangement of things; we would have a right to accuse Him
+of blundering in His choice of agents and instruments. Finally, if the
+order of nature proves the power and the intelligence, disorder ought to
+prove the weakness, inconstancy, and irrationality of Divinity. You say
+that God is everywhere; that He fills all space; that nothing was made
+without Him; that matter could not act without Him as its motor. But in
+this case you admit that your God is the author of disorder; that it is
+He who deranges nature; that He is the Father of confusion; that He is
+in man; and that He moves man at the moment when he sins. If God is
+everywhere, He is in me; He acts with me; He is deceived when I am
+deceived; He questions with me the existence of God; He offends God with
+me. Oh, theologians! you never understand yourselves when you speak of
+God.
+
+
+
+
+XLVI.--A PURE SPIRIT CAN NOT BE INTELLIGENT, AND TO ADORE A DIVINE
+INTELLIGENCE IS A CHIMERA.
+
+To be what we call intelligent, we must have ideas, thoughts, will; to
+have ideas, thoughts, and will, we must have organs; to have organs, we
+must have a body; to act upon bodies, we must have a body; to experience
+trouble, we must be capable of suffering; from which it evidently
+follows that a pure spirit can not be intelligent, and can not be
+affected by that which takes place in the universe.
+
+Divine intelligence, divine ideas, divine views, you say, have nothing
+in common with those of men. So much the better! But in this case, how
+can men judge of these views--whether good or evil--reason about these
+ideas, or admire this intelligence? It would be to judge, to admire, to
+adore that of which we can form no idea. To adore the profound views of
+divine wisdom, is it not to worship that of which it is impossible for
+us to judge? To admire these same views, is it not admiring without
+knowing wry? Admiration is always the daughter of ignorance. Men admire
+and worship only what they do not understand.
+
+
+
+
+XLVII.--ALL THE QUALITIES WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES TO ITS GOD ARE CONTRARY TO
+THE VERY ESSENCE WHICH IT SUPPOSES HIM TO HAVE.
+
+All these qualities which are given to God are not suited to a being
+who, by His own essence, is devoid of all similarity to human beings. It
+is true, they think to find this similarity by exaggerating the human
+qualities with which they have clothed Divinity; they thrust them upon
+the infinite, and from that moment cease to understand themselves. What
+is the result of this combination of man with God, or of this
+theanthropy? Its only result is a chimera, of which nothing can be
+affirmed without causing the phantom to vanish which they had taken so
+much trouble to conjure up.
+
+Dante, in his poem of Paradise, relates that the Divinity appeared to
+him under the figure of three circles, which formed an iris, whose
+bright colors arose from each other; but having wished to retain its
+brilliant light, the poet saw only his own face. In worshiping God, man
+adores himself.
+
+
+
+
+XLVIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+The slightest reflection suffices to prove to us that God can not have
+any of the human qualities, virtues, or perfections. Our virtues and our
+perfections are the results of our temperament modified. Has God a
+temperament like ours? Our good qualities are our habits relative to the
+beings in whose society we live. God, according to you, is a solitary
+being. God has no one like Him; He does not live in society; He has no
+need of any one; He enjoys a happiness which nothing can alter. Admit,
+then, upon your own principles, that God can not possess what we call
+virtues, and that man can not be virtuous in regard to Him.
+
+
+
+
+XLIX.--IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT THE HUMAN RACE IS THE OBJECT AND THE END
+OF CREATION.
+
+Man, charmed with his own merits, imagines that it is but his own kind
+that God proposed as the object and the end in the formation of the
+universe. Upon what is this so flattering opinion based? It is, we are
+told, upon this: that man is the only being endowed with an intelligence
+which enables him to know the Divine nature, and to render to it homage
+worthy of it. We are assured that God created the world for His own
+glory, and that the human race was included in His plan, in order that
+He might have somebody to admire and glorify Him in His works. But by
+these intentions has not God visibly missed His end?
+
+1. According to you, it would always be impossible for man to know his
+God, and he would be kept in the most invincible ignorance of the Divine
+essence.
+
+2. A being who has no equals, can not be susceptible of glory. Glory can
+result but from the comparison of his own excellence with that of
+others.
+
+3. If God by Himself is infinitely happy and is sufficient unto Himself,
+why does He need the homage of His feeble creatures?
+
+4. In spite of all His works, God is not glorified; on the contrary, all
+the religions of the world show Him to us as perpetually offended; their
+great object is to reconcile sinful, ungrateful, and rebellious man with
+his wrathful God.
+
+
+
+
+L.--GOD IS NOT MADE FOR MAN, NOR MAN FOR GOD.
+
+If God is infinite, He is created still less for man, than man is for
+the ants. Would the ants of a garden reason pertinently with reference
+to the gardener, if they should attempt to occupy themselves with his
+intentions, his desires, and his projects? Would they reason correctly
+if they pretended that the park of Versailles was made but for them, and
+that a fastidious monarch had had as his only object to lodge them
+superbly? But according to theology, man in his relation to God is far
+beneath what the lowest insect is to man. Thus by the acknowledgment of
+theology itself, theology, which does but occupy itself with the
+attributes and views of Divinity, is the most complete of follies.
+
+
+
+
+LI.--IT IS NOT TRUE THAT THE OBJECT OF THE FORMATION OF THE UNIVERSE WAS
+TO RENDER MEN HAPPY.
+
+It is pretended, that in forming the universe, God had no object but to
+render man happy. But, in a world created expressly for him and governed
+by an all-mighty God, is man after all very happy? Are his enjoyments
+durable? Are not his pleasures mingled with sufferings? Are there many
+people who are contented with their fate? Is not mankind the continual
+victim of physical and moral evils? This human machine, which is shown
+to us as the masterpiece of the Creator's industry, has it not a
+thousand ways of deranging itself? Would we admire the skill of a
+mechanic, who should show us a complicated machine, liable to be out of
+order at any moment, and which would after a while destroy itself?
+
+
+
+
+LII.--WHAT IS CALLED PROVIDENCE IS BUT A WORD VOID OF SENSE.
+
+We call Providence the generous care which Divinity shows in providing
+for our needs, and in watching over the happiness of its beloved
+creatures. But, as soon as we look around, we find that God provides for
+nothing. Providence neglects the greatest part of the inhabitants of
+this world. Against a very small number of men, who are supposed to be
+happy, what a multitude of miserable ones are groaning beneath
+oppression, and languishing in misery! Whole nations are compelled to
+starve in order to indulge the extravagances of a few morose tyrants,
+who are no happier than the slaves whom they oppress! At the same time
+that our philosophers energetically parade the bounties of Providence,
+and exhort us to place confidence in it, do we not see them cry out at
+unforeseen catastrophes, by which Providence plays with the vain
+projects of men; do we not see that it overthrows their designs, laughs
+at their efforts, and that its profound wisdom pleases itself in
+misleading mortals? But how can we place confidence in a malicious
+Providence which laughs at and sports with mankind? How can I admire the
+unknown course of a hidden wisdom whose manner of acting is inexplicable
+to me? Judge it by its effects! you will say; it is by these I do judge
+it, and I find that these effects are sometimes useful and sometimes
+injurious to me.
+
+We think to justify Providence by saying, that in this world there are
+more blessings than evil for each individual man. Let us suppose that
+the blessings which this Providence makes us enjoy are as one hundred,
+and that the evils are as ten per cent.; would it not always result that
+against these hundred degrees of goodness, Providence possesses a tenth
+degree of malignity?--which is incompatible with the perfection we
+suppose it to have.
+
+All the books are filled with the most flattering praises of Providence,
+whose attentive care is extolled; it would seem to us, as if in order to
+live happy here below, man would have no need of exerting himself.
+However, without labor, man could scarcely live a day. In order to live,
+I see him obliged to sweat, work, hunt, fish, toil without relaxation;
+without these secondary causes, the First Cause (at least in the
+majority of countries) could provide for none of his needs. If I examine
+all parts of this globe, I see the uncivilized as well as the civilized
+man in a perpetual struggle with Providence; he is compelled to ward off
+the blows which it sends in the form of hurricanes, tempests, frost,
+hail, inundations, sterility, and the divers accidents which so often
+render all their labors useless. In a word, I see the human race
+continually occupied in protecting itself from the wicked tricks of this
+Providence, which is said to be busy with the care of their happiness. A
+devotee admired Divine Providence for having wisely made rivers to flow
+through all the places where men had built large cities. Is not this
+man's way of reasoning as sensible as that of many learned men who do
+not cease from telling us of Final Causes, or who pretend to perceive
+clearly the benevolent views of God in the formation of things?
+
+
+
+
+LIII.--THIS PRETENDED PROVIDENCE IS LESS OCCUPIED IN CONSERVING THAN IN
+DISTURBING THE WORLD--MORE AN ENEMY THAN A FRIEND OF MAN.
+
+Do we see, then, that Divine Providence manifests itself in a sensible
+manner in the conservation of its admirable works, for which we honor
+it? If it is Divine Providence which governs the world, we find it as
+much occupied in destroying as in creating; in exterminating as in
+producing. Does it not at every instant cause thousands of those same
+men to perish, to whose preservation and well-being it is supposed to
+give its continual attention? Every moment it loses sight of its beloved
+creatures; sometimes it tears down their dwellings; sometimes it
+destroys their harvests, inundates their fields, devastates by a
+drought, arms all nature against man, sets man against man, and finishes
+by causing him to expire in pain. Is this what you call preserving a
+universe? If we attempted to consider without prejudice the equivocal
+conduct of Providence relative to mankind and to all sentient beings, we
+should find that very far from resembling a tender and careful mother,
+it rather resembles those unnatural mothers who, forgetting the
+unfortunate fruits of their illicit amours, abandon their children as
+soon as they are born; and who, pleased to have conceived them, expose
+them without mercy to the caprices of fate.
+
+The Hottentots--wiser in this particular than other nations, who treat
+them as barbarians--refuse, it is said, to adore God, because if He
+sometimes does good, He as often does harm. Is not this reasoning more
+just and more conformed to experience than that of so many men who
+persist in seeing in their God but kindness, wisdom, and foresight; and
+who refuse to see that the countless evils, of which the world is the
+theater, must come from the same Hand which they kiss with transport?
+
+
+
+
+LIV.--NO! THE WORLD IS NOT GOVERNED BY AN INTELLIGENT BEING.
+
+The logic of common sense teaches us that we should judge a cause but by
+its effects. A cause can not be reputed as constantly good, except when
+it constantly produces good, useful, and agreeable effects. A cause
+which produces good at one time, and evil at another, is a cause which
+is sometimes good and sometimes bad. But the logic of Theology destroys
+all this. According to it, the phenomena of nature, or the effects which
+we see in this world, prove to us the existence of an infinitely good
+Cause, and this Cause is God. Although this world is full of evils,
+although disorder reigns here very often, although men groan every
+moment under the fate which oppresses them, we ought to be convinced
+that these effects are due to a benevolent and immutable Cause; and many
+people believe it, or pretend to believe it!
+
+Everything which takes place in the world proves to us in the clearest
+way that it is not governed by an intelligent being. We can judge of the
+intelligence of a being but by the means which he employs to accomplish
+his proposed design. The aim of God, it is said, is the happiness of our
+race; however, the same necessity regulates the fate of all sentient
+beings--which are born to suffer much, to enjoy little, and to die. Man's
+cup is full of joy and of bitterness; everywhere good is side by side
+with evil; order is replaced by disorder; generation is followed by
+destruction. If you tell me that the designs of God are mysteries, and
+that His views are impossible to understand, I will answer, that in this
+case it is impossible for me to judge whether God is intelligent.
+
+
+
+
+LV.--GOD CAN NOT BE CALLED IMMUTABLE.
+
+You pretend that God is immutable! But what is it that occasions the
+continual instability in this world, which you claim as His empire? Is
+any state subject to more frequent and cruel revolutions than that of
+this unknown monarch? How can we attribute to an immutable God, powerful
+enough to give solidity to His works, the government of a world where
+everything is in a continual vicissitude? If I think to see a God
+unchanging in all the effects advantageous to my kind, what God can I
+discover in the continual misfortunes by which my kind is oppressed? You
+tell me that it is our sins that force Him to punish us. I will answer
+that God, according to yourselves, is not immutable, because the sins of
+men compel Him to change His conduct in regard to them. Can a being who
+is sometimes irritated, and sometimes appeased, be constantly the same?
+
+
+
+
+LVI.--EVIL AND GOOD ARE THE NECESSARY EFFECTS OF NATURAL CAUSES. WHAT IS
+A GOD WHO CAN CHANGE NOTHING?
+
+The universe is but what it can be; all sentient beings enjoy and suffer
+here: that is to say, they are moved sometimes in an agreeable, and at
+other times in a disagreeable way. These effects are necessary; they
+result from causes that act according to their inherent tendencies.,
+These effects necessarily please or displease me, according to my own
+nature. This same nature compels me to avoid, to remove, and to combat
+the one, and to seek, to desire, and to procure the other. In a world
+where everything is from necessity, a God who remedies nothing, and
+allows things to follow their own course, is He anything else but
+destiny or necessity personified? It is a deaf God who can effect no
+change on the general laws to which He is subjected Himself. What do I
+care for the infinite power of a being who can do but a very few things
+to please me? Where is the infinite kindness of a being who is
+indifferent to my happiness? What good to me is the favor of a being
+who, able to bestow upon me infinite good, does not even give me a
+finite one?
+
+
+
+
+LVII.--THE VANITY OF THEOLOGICAL CONSOLATIONS
+IN THE TROUBLES OF THIS LIFE. THE HOPE OF A HEAVEN, OF A FUTURE LIFE,
+IS BUT IMAGINARY.
+
+When we ask why, under a good God, so many are wretched, we are reminded
+that the present world is but a pass-way, designed to conduct man to a
+happier sphere; we are assured that our sojourn on the earth, where we
+live, is for trial; they silence us by saying that God would not impart
+to His creatures either the indifference to the sufferings of others, or
+the infinite happiness which He reserved for Himself alone. How can we
+be satisfied with these answers?
+
+1. The existence of another life has no other guaranty than the
+imagination of men, who, in supposing it, have but manifested their
+desire to live again, in order to enter upon a purer and more durable
+state of happiness than that which they enjoy at present.
+
+2. How can we conceive of a God who, knowing all things, must know to
+their depths the nature of His creatures, and yet must have so many
+proofs in order to assure Himself of their proclivities?
+
+3. According to the calculations of our chronologists, the earth which
+we inhabit has existed for six or seven thousand years; during this time
+the nations have, under different forms, experienced many vicissitudes
+and calamities; history shows us that the human race in all ages has
+been tormented and devastated by tyrants, conquerors, heroes; by wars,
+inundations, famines, epidemics, etc. Is this long catalogue of proofs
+of such a nature as to inspire us with great confidence in the hidden
+views of the Divinity? Do such constant evils give us an exalted idea of
+the future fate which His kindness is preparing for us?
+
+4. If God is as well-disposed as they assure us He is, could He not at
+least, without bestowing an infinite happiness upon men, communicate to
+them that degree of happiness of which finite beings are susceptible? In
+order to be happy, do we need an Infinite or Divine happiness?
+
+5. If God has not been able to render men happier than they are here
+below, what will become of the hope of a Paradise, where it is pretended
+that the elect or chosen few will rejoice forever in ineffable
+happiness? If God could not or would not remove evil from the earth (the
+only sojourning place we know of), what reason could we have to presume
+that He can or will remove it from another world, of which we know
+nothing? More than two thousand years ago, according to Lactance, the
+wise epicure said: "Either God wants to prevent evil, and can not, or He
+can and will not; or He neither can nor will, or He will and can. If He
+wants to, without the power, He is impotent; if He can, and will not, He
+is guilty of malice which we can not attribute to Him; if He neither can
+nor will, He is both impotent and wicked, and consequently can not be
+God; if He wishes to and can, whence then comes evil, or why does He not
+prevent it?" For more than two thousand years honest minds have waited
+for a rational solution of these difficulties; and our theologians teach
+us that they will not be revealed to us until the future life.
+
+
+
+
+LVIII.--ANOTHER IDLE FANCY.
+
+We are told of a pretended scale for human beings; it is supposed that
+God has divided His creatures into different classes, each one enjoying
+the degree of happiness of which he is susceptible. According to this
+romantic arrangement, all beings, from the oyster to the angel, enjoy
+the happiness which belongs to them. Experience contradicts this sublime
+revery. In the world where we are, we see all sentient beings living and
+suffering in the midst of dangers. Man can not step without wounding,
+tormenting, crushing a multitude of sentient beings which he finds in
+his path, while he himself, at every step, is exposed to a throng of
+evils seen or unseen, which may lead to his destruction. Is not the very
+thought of death sufficient to mar his greatest enjoyment? During the
+whole course of his life he is subject to sufferings; there is not a
+moment when he feels sure of preserving his existence, to which he is so
+strongly attached, and which he regards as the greatest gift of
+Divinity.
+
+
+
+
+LIX.--IN VAIN DOES THEOLOGY EXERT ITSELF TO ACQUIT GOD OF MAN'S DEFECTS.
+EITHER THIS GOD IS NOT FREE, OR HE IS MORE WICKED THAN GOOD.
+
+The world, it will be said, has all the perfection of which it was
+susceptible; by the very reason that the world was not the God who made
+it, it was necessary that it should have great qualities and great
+defects. But we will answer, that the world necessarily having great
+defects, it would have been better suited to the nature of a good God
+not to create a world which He could not render completely happy. If
+God, who was, according to you, supremely happy before the world was
+created, had continued to be supremely happy in the created world, why
+did He not remain in peace? Why must man suffer? Why must man exist What
+is his existence to God? Nothing or something. If his existence is not
+useful or necessary to God, why did He not leave him in nothingness? If
+man's existence is necessary to His glory, He then needed man, He lacked
+something before this man existed!
+
+We can forgive an unskillful workman for doing imperfect work, because
+he must work, well or ill, or starve; this workman is excusable; but
+your God is not. According to you, He is self-sufficient; in this case,
+why does He create men? He has, according to you, all that is necessary
+to render man happy; why, then, does He not do it? You must conclude
+that your God has more malice than goodness, or you must admit that God
+was compelled to do what He has done, without being able to do
+otherwise. However, you assure us that your God is free; you say also
+that He is immutable, although beginning in time and ceasing in time to
+exercise His power, like all the inconstant beings of this world. Oh,
+theologians! you have made vain efforts to acquit your God of all the
+defects of man; there is always visible in this God so perfect, "a tip
+of the [human] ear."
+
+
+
+
+LX.--WE CAN NOT BELIEVE IN A DIVINE PROVIDENCE, IN AN INFINITELY GOOD AND
+POWERFUL GOD.
+
+Is not God the master of His favors? Has He not the right to dispense
+His benefits? Can He not take them back again? His creature has no right
+to ask the reason of His conduct; He can dispose at will of the works of
+His hands. Absolute sovereign of mortals, He distributes happiness or
+unhappiness, according to His pleasure. These are the solutions which
+theologians give in order to console us for the evils which God inflicts
+upon us. We would tell them that a God who was infinitely good, would
+not be the master of His favors, but would be by His own nature obliged
+to distribute them among His creatures; we would tell them that a truly
+benevolent being would not believe he had the right to abstain from
+doing good; we would tell them that a truly generous being does not take
+back what he has given, and any man who does it, forfeits gratitude, and
+has no right to complain of ingratitude. How can the arbitrary and
+whimsical conduct which theologians ascribe to God, be reconciled with
+the religion which supposes a compact or mutual agreement between this
+God and men? If God owes nothing to His creatures, they, on their part,
+can not owe anything to their God. All religion is founded upon the
+happiness which men believe they have a right to expect from the
+Divinity, who is supposed to tell them: "Love, adore, obey me, and I
+will render you happy!" Men on their side say to Him: "Make us happy, be
+faithful to your promises, and we will love you, we will adore you, we
+will obey your laws!" In neglecting the happiness of His creatures, in
+distributing His favors and His graces according to His caprice, and
+taking back His gifts, does not God violate the contract which serves as
+a base for all religion?
+
+Cicero has said with reason that if God does not make Himself agreeable
+to man, He can not be his God. [Nisi Deus homini placuerit, Deus non
+erit.] Goodness constitutes Divinity; this Goodness can manifest itself
+to man only by the advantages he derives from it. As soon as he is
+unfortunate, this Goodness disappears and ceases to be Divinity. An
+infinite Goodness can be neither partial nor exclusive. If God is
+infinitely good, He owes happiness to all His creatures; one unfortunate
+being alone would be sufficient to annihilate an unlimited goodness.
+Under an infinitely good and powerful God, is it possible to conceive
+that a single man could suffer? An animal, a mite, which suffers,
+furnishes invincible arguments against Divine Providence and its
+infinite benefactions.
+
+
+
+
+LXI.--CONTINUATION.
+
+According to theologians, the afflictions and evils of this life are
+chastisements which culpable men receive from Divinity. But why are men
+culpable? If God is Almighty, does it cost Him any more to say, "Let
+everything remain in order!"--"let all my subjects be good, innocent,
+fortunate!"--than to say, "Let everything exist?" Was it more difficult
+for this God to do His work well than to do it so badly? Was it any
+farther from the nonexistence of beings to their wise and happy
+existence, than from their non-existence to their insensate and
+miserable existence? Religion speaks to us of a hell--that is, of a
+fearful place where, notwithstanding His goodness, God reserves eternal
+torments for the majority of men. Thus, after having rendered mortals
+very miserable in this world, religion teaches them that God can make
+them much more wretched in another. They meet our objections by saying,
+that otherwise the goodness of God would take the place of His justice.
+But goodness which takes the place of the most terrible cruelty, is not
+infinite kindness. Besides, a God who, after having been infinitely
+good, becomes infinitely wicked, can He be regarded as an immutable
+being? A God filled with implacable fury, is He a God in whom we can
+find a shadow of charity or goodness?
+
+
+
+
+LXII.--THEOLOGY MAKES OF ITS GOD A MONSTER OF NONSENSE, OF INJUSTICE, OF
+MALICE, AND ATROCITY--A BEING ABSOLUTELY HATEFUL.
+
+Divine justice, such as our theologians paint it, is, without doubt, a
+quality intended to make us love Divinity. According to the notions of
+modern theology, it appears evident that God has created the majority of
+men with the view only of punishing them eternally. Would it not have
+been more in conformity with kindness, with reason, with equity, to
+create but stones or plants, and not sentient beings, than to create men
+whose conduct in this world would cause them eternal chastisements in
+another? A God so perfidious and wicked as to create a single man and
+leave him exposed to the perils of damnation, can not be regarded as a
+perfect being, but as a monster of nonsense, injustice, malice, and
+atrocity. Far from forming a perfect God, the theologians have made the
+most imperfect of beings. According to theological ideas, God resembles
+a tyrant who, having deprived the majority of his slaves of their
+eyesight, would confine them in a cell where, in order to amuse himself
+he could observe incognito their conduct through a trap-door, in order
+to have occasion to cruelly punish all those who in walking should hurt
+each other; but who would reward splendidly the small number of those to
+whom the sight was spared, for having the skill to avoid an encounter
+with their comrades. Such are the ideas which the dogma of gratuitous
+predestination gives of Divinity!
+
+Although men repeat to us that their God is infinitely good, it is
+evident that in the bottom of their hearts they can believe nothing of
+it. How can we love anything we do not know? How can we love a being,
+the idea of whom is but liable to keep us in anxiety and trouble? How
+can we love a being of whom all that is told conspires to render him
+supremely hateful?
+
+
+
+
+LXIII.--ALL RELIGION INSPIRES BUT A COWARDLY AND INORDINATE FEAR OF THE
+DIVINITY.
+
+Many people make a subtle distinction between true religion and
+superstition; they tell us that the latter is but a cowardly and
+inordinate fear of Divinity, that the truly religious man has confidence
+in his God, and loves Him sincerely; while the superstitious man sees in
+Him but an enemy, has no confidence in Him, and represents Him as a
+suspicious and cruel tyrant, avaricious of His benefactions and prodigal
+of His chastisements. But does not all religion in reality give us these
+same ideas of God? While we are told that God is infinitely good, is it
+not constantly repeated to us that He is very easily offended, that He
+bestows His favors but upon a few, that He chastises with fury those to
+whom He has not been pleased to grant them?
+
+
+
+
+LXIV.--THERE IS IN REALITY NO DIFFERENCE BETWEEN RELIGION AND THE MOST
+SOMBRE AND SERVILE SUPERSTITION.
+
+If we take our ideas of God from the nature of the things where we find
+a mixture of good and evil, this God, according to the good and evil
+which we experience, does naturally appear to us capricious, inconstant,
+sometimes good, sometimes wicked, and in this way, instead of exciting
+our love, He must produce suspicion, fear, and uncertainty in our
+hearts. There is no real difference between natural religion and the
+most sombre and servile superstition. If the Theist sees God but on the
+beautiful side, the superstitious man looks upon Him from the most
+hideous side. The folly of the one is gay of the other is lugubrious;
+but both are equally delirious.
+
+
+
+
+LXV.--ACCORDING TO THE IDEAS WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES OF DIVINITY, TO LOVE
+GOD IS IMPOSSIBLE.
+
+If I take my ideas of God from theology, God shows Himself to me in such
+a light as to repel love. The devotees who tell us that they love their
+God sincerely, are either liars or fools who see their God but in
+profile; it is impossible to love a being, the thought of whom tends to
+excite terror, and whose judgments make us tremble. How can we face
+without fear, a God whom we suppose sufficiently barbarous to wish to
+damn us forever? Let them not speak to us of a filial or respectful fear
+mingled with love, which men should have for their God. A son can not
+love his father when he knows he is cruel enough to inflict exquisite
+torments upon him; in short, to punish him for the least faults. No man
+upon earth can have the least spark of love for a God who holds in
+reserve eternal, hard, and violent chastisements for ninety-nine
+hundredths of His children.
+
+
+
+
+LXVI.--BY THE INVENTION OF THE DOGMA OF THE ETERNAL TORMENTS OF HELL,
+THEOLOGIANS HAVE MADE OF THEIR GOD A DETESTABLE BEING, MORE WICKED THAN
+THE MOST WICKED OF MEN, A PERVERSE AND CRUEL TYRANT WITHOUT AIM.
+
+The inventors of the dogma of eternal torments in hell, have made of the
+God whom they call so good, the most detestable of beings. Cruelty in
+man is the last term of corruption. There is no sensitive soul but is
+moved and revolts at the recital alone of the torments which the
+greatest criminal endures; but cruelty merits the greater indignation
+when we consider it gratuitous or without motive. The most sanguinary
+tyrants, Caligula, Nero, Domitian, had at least some motive in
+tormenting their victims and insulting their sufferings; these motives
+were, either their own safety, the fury of revenge, the design to
+frighten by terrible examples, or perhaps the vanity to make parade of
+their power, and the desire to satisfy a barbarous curiosity. Can a God
+have any of these motives? In tormenting the victims of His wrath, He
+would punish beings who could not really endanger His immovable power,
+nor trouble His felicity, which nothing can change. On the other hand,
+the sufferings of the other life would be useless to the living, who can
+not witness them; these torments would be useless to the damned, because
+in hell is no more conversion, and the hour of mercy is passed; from
+which it follows, that God, in the exercise of His eternal vengeance,
+would have no other aim than to amuse Himself and insult the weakness of
+His creatures. I appeal to the whole human race! Is there in nature a
+man so cruel as to wish in cold blood to torment, I do not say his
+fellow-beings, but any sentient being whatever, without fee, without
+profit, without curiosity, without having anything to fear? Conclude,
+then, O theologians! that according to your own principles, your God is
+infinitely more wicked than the most wicked of men. You will tell me,
+perhaps, that infinite offenses deserve infinite chastisements, and I
+will tell you that we can not offend a God whose happiness is infinite.
+I will tell you further, that offenses of finite beings can not be
+infinite; that a God who does not want to be offended, can not consent
+to make His creatures' offenses last for eternity; I will tell you that
+a God infinitely good, can not be infinitely cruel, nor grant His
+creatures infinite existence solely for the pleasure of tormenting them
+forever.
+
+It could have been but the most cruel barbarity, the most notorious
+imposition, but the blindest ambition which could have created the dogma
+of eternal damnation. If there exists a God who could be offended or
+blasphemed, there would not be upon earth any greater blasphemers than
+those who dare to say that this God is perverse enough to take pleasure
+in dooming His feeble creatures to useless torments for all eternity.
+
+
+
+
+LXVII.--THEOLOGY IS BUT A SERIES OF PALPABLE CONTRADICTIONS.
+
+To pretend that God can be offended with the actions of men, is to
+annihilate all the ideas that are given to us of this being. To say that
+man can disturb the order of the universe, that he can grasp the
+lightning from God's hand, that he can upset His projects, is to claim
+that man is stronger than his God, that he is the arbiter of His will,
+that it depends on him to change His goodness into cruelty. Theology
+does nothing but destroy with one hand that which it builds with the
+other. If all religion is founded upon a God who becomes angry, and who
+is appeased, all religion is founded upon a palpable contradiction.
+
+All religions agree in exalting the wisdom and the infinite power of the
+Divinity; but as soon as they expose His conduct, we discover but
+imprudence, want of foresight, weakness, and folly. God, it is said,
+created the world for Himself; and so far He has not succeeded in making
+Himself properly respected! God has created men in order to have in His
+dominion subjects who would render Him homage; and we continually see
+men revolt against Him!
+
+
+
+
+LXVIII.--THE PRETENDED WORKS OF GOD DO NOT PROVE AT ALL WHAT WE CALL
+DIVINE PERFECTION.
+
+We are continually told of the Divine perfections; and as soon as we ask
+the proofs of them, we are shown the works in which we are assured that
+these perfections are written in ineffaceable characters. All these
+works, however, are imperfect and perishable; man, who is regarded as
+the masterpiece, as the most marvelous work of Divinity, is full of
+imperfections which render him disagreeable in the eyes of the Almighty
+workman who has formed him; this surprising work becomes often so
+revolting and so odious to its Author, that He feels Himself compelled
+to cast him into the fire. But if the choicest work of Divinity is
+imperfect, by what are we to judge of the Divine perfections? Can a work
+with which the author himself is so little satisfied, cause us to admire
+his skill? Physical man is subject to a thousand infirmities, to
+countless evils, to death; the moral man is full of defects; and yet
+they exhaust themselves by telling us that he is the most beautiful work
+of the most perfect of beings.
+
+
+
+
+LXIX.--THE PERFECTION OF GOD DOES NOT SHOW TO ANY MORE ADVANTAGE IN THE
+PRETENDED CREATION OF ANGELS AND PURE SPIRITS.
+
+It appears that God, in creating more perfect beings than men, did not
+succeed any better, or give stronger proofs of His perfection. Do we not
+see in many religions that angels and pure spirits revolted against
+their Master, and even attempted to expel Him from His throne? God
+intended the happiness of angels and of men, and He has never succeeded
+in rendering happy either angels or men; pride, malice, sins, the
+imperfections of His creatures, have always been opposed to the wishes
+of the perfect Creator.
+
+
+
+
+LXX.--THEOLOGY PREACHES THE OMNIPOTENCE OF ITS GOD, AND CONTINUALLY SHOWS
+HIM IMPOTENT.
+
+All religion is visibly founded upon the principle that "God proposes
+and man disposes." All the theologies of the world show us an unequal
+combat between Divinity on the one side, and His creatures on the other.
+God never relies on His honor; in spite of His almighty power, He could
+not succeed in making the works of His hands as He would like them to
+be. To complete the absurdity, there is a religion which pretends that
+God Himself died to redeem the human race; and, in spite of His death,
+men are not in the least as this God would desire them to be!
+
+
+
+
+LXXI.--ACCORDING TO ALL THE RELIGIOUS SYSTEMS OF THE EARTH, GOD WOULD BE
+THE MOST CAPRICIOUS AND THE MOST INSENSATE OF BEINGS.
+
+Nothing could be more extravagant than the role which in every country
+theology makes Divinity play. If the thing was real, we would be obliged
+to see in it the most capricious and the most insane of beings; one
+would be obliged to believe that God made the world to be the theater of
+dishonoring wars with His creatures; that He created angels, men,
+demons, wicked spirits, but as adversaries, against whom He could
+exercise His power. He gives them liberty to offend Him, makes them
+wicked enough to upset His projects, obstinate enough to never give up:
+all for the pleasure of getting angry, and being appeased, of
+reconciling Himself, and of repairing the confusion they have made. Had
+Divinity formed at once His creatures such as they ought to be in order
+to please Him, what trouble He might have spared Himself! or, at least,
+how much embarrassment He might have saved to His theologians! According
+to all the religious systems of the earth, God seems to be occupied but
+in doing Himself injury; He does it as those charlatans do who wound
+themselves, in order to have occasion to show the public the value of
+their ointments. We do not see, however, that so far Divinity has been
+able to radically cure itself of the evil which is caused by men.
+
+
+
+
+LXXII.--IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT EVIL DOES NOT COME FROM GOD.
+
+God is the author of all; still we are assured that evil does not come
+from God. Whence, then, does it come? From men? But who has made men? It
+is God: then that evil comes from God. If He had not made men as they
+are, moral evil or sin would not exist in the world. We must blame God,
+then, that man is so perverse. If man has the power to do wrong or to
+offend God, we must conclude that God wishes to be offended; that God,
+who has created man, resolved that evil should be done by him: without
+this, man would be an effect contrary to the cause from which he derives
+his being.
+
+
+
+
+LXXIII.--THE FORESIGHT ATTRIBUTED TO GOD, WOULD GIVE TO GUILTY MEN WHOM
+HE PUNISHES, THE RIGHT TO COMPLAIN OF HIS CRUELTY.
+
+The faculty of foresight, or the ability to know in advance all which is
+to happen in the world, is attributed to God. But this foresight can
+scarcely belong to His glory, nor spare Him the reproaches which men
+could legitimately heap upon Him. If God had the foresight of the
+future, did He not foresee the fall of His creatures whom He had
+destined to happiness? If He resolved in His decrees to allow this fall,
+there is no doubt that He desired it to take place: otherwise it would
+not have happened. If the Divine foresight of the sin of His creatures
+had been necessary or forced, it might be supposed that God was
+compelled by His justice to punish the guilty; but God, enjoying the
+faculty of foresight and the power to predestinate everything, would it
+not depend upon Himself not to impose upon men these cruel laws? Or, at
+least, could He not have dispensed with creating beings whom He might be
+compelled to punish and to render unhappy by a subsequent decree? What
+does it matter whether God destined men to happiness or to misery by a
+previous decree, the effect of His foresight, or by a subsequent decree,
+the effect of His justice. Does the arrangement of these decrees change
+the fate of the miserable? Would they not have the right to complain of
+a God who, having the power of leaving them in oblivion, brought them
+forth, although He foresaw very well that His justice would force Him
+sooner or later to punish them?
+
+
+
+
+LXXIV.--ABSURDITY OF THE THEOLOGICAL FABLES UPON ORIGINAL SIN AND UPON
+SATAN.
+
+Man, say you, issuing from the hands of God, was pure, innocent, and
+good; but his nature became corrupted in consequence of sin. If man
+could sin, when just leaving the hands of God, his nature was then not
+perfect! Why did God permit him to sin, and his nature to become
+corrupt? Why did God allow him to be seduced, knowing well that he would
+be too weak to resist the tempter? Why did God create a Satan, a
+malicious spirit, a tempter? Why did not God, who was so desirous of
+doing good to mankind, why did He not annihilate, once for all, so many
+evil genii whose nature rendered them enemies of our happiness? Or
+rather, why did God create evil spirits, whose victories and terrible
+influences upon the human race He must have foreseen? Finally, by what
+fatality, in all the religions of the world, has the evil principle such
+a marked advantage over the good principle or over Divinity?
+
+
+
+
+LXXV.--THE DEVIL, LIKE RELIGION, WAS INVENTED TO ENRICH THE PRIESTS.
+
+We are told a story of the simple-heartedness of an Italian monk, which
+does him honor. This good man preaching one day felt obliged to announce
+to his auditory that, thanks to Heaven, he had at last discovered a sure
+means of rendering all men happy. "The devil," said he, "tempts men but
+to have them as comrades of his misery in hell. Let us address
+ourselves, then, to the Pope, who possesses the keys of paradise and of
+hell; let us ask him to beseech God, at the head of the whole Church, to
+reconcile Himself with the devil; to take him back into His favor; to
+re-establish him in His first rank. This can not fail to put an end to
+his sinister projects against mankind." The good monk did not see,
+perhaps, that the devil is at least fully as useful as God to the
+ministers of religion. These reap too many benefits from their
+differences to lend themselves willingly to a reconciliation between the
+two enemies ties, upon whose contests their existence and their revenues
+depend. If men would cease to be tempted and to sin, the ministry of
+priests would become useless to them. Manicheism is evidently the
+support of all religions; but unfortunately the devil, being invented to
+remove all suspicion of malice from Divinity, proves to us at every
+moment the powerlessness or the awkwardness of his celestial Adversary.
+
+
+
+
+LXXVI.--IF GOD COULD NOT RENDER HUMAN NATURE SINLESS, HE HAS NO RIGHT TO
+PUNISH MAN.
+
+Man's nature, it is said, must necessarily become corrupt. God could not
+endow him with sinlessness, which is an inalienable portion of Divine
+perfection. But if God could not render him sinless, why did He take the
+trouble of creating man, whose nature was to become corrupt, and which,
+consequently, had to offend God? On the other side, if God Himself was
+not able to render human nature sinless, what right had He to punish men
+for not being sinless? It is but by the right of might. But the right of
+the strongest is violence; and violence is not suited to the most Just
+of Beings. God would be supremely unjust if He punished men for not
+having a portion of the Divine perfections, or for not being able to be
+Gods like Himself.
+
+Could not God have at least endowed men with that sort of perfection of
+which their nature is susceptible? If some men are good or render
+themselves agreeable to their God, why did not this God bestow the same
+favor or give the same dispositions to all beings of our kind? Why does
+the number of wicked exceed so greatly the number of good people? Why,
+for every friend, does God find ten thousand enemies in a world which
+depended upon Him alone to people with honest men? If it is true that
+God intends to form in heaven a court of saints, of chosen ones, or of
+men who have lived in this world according to His views, would He not
+have had a court more numerous, more brilliant, and more honorable to
+Him, if it were composed of all the men to whom, in creating them, He
+could have granted the degree of goodness necessary to obtain eternal
+happiness? Finally, were it not easier not to take man from nothingness
+than to create him full of defects, rebellious to his Creator,
+perpetually exposed to lose himself by a fatal abuse of his liberty?
+Instead of creating men, a perfect God ought to have created only docile
+and submissive angels. The angels, it is said, are free; a few among
+them have sinned; but all of them have not sinned; all have not abused
+their liberty by revolting against their Master. Could not God have
+created only angels of the good kind? If God could create angels who
+have not sinned, could He not create men sinless, or those who would
+never abuse their liberty by doing evil. If the chosen ones are
+incapable of sinning in heaven, could not God have made sinless men upon
+the earth?
+
+
+
+
+LXXVII.--IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT GOD'S CONDUCT MUST BE A MYSTERY TO MAN,
+AND THAT HE HAS NO RIGHT TO EXAMINE AND JUDGE IT.
+
+We are told that the enormous distance which separates God from men,
+makes God's conduct necessarily a mystery for us, and that we have no
+right to interrogate our Master. Is this statement satisfactory? But
+according to you, when my eternal happiness is involved, have I not the
+right to examine God's own conduct? It is but with the hope of happiness
+that men submit to the empire of a God. A despot to whom men are
+subjected but through fear, a master whom they can not interrogate, a
+totally inaccessible sovereign, can not merit the homage of intelligent
+beings. If God's conduct is a mystery to me, it is not made for me. Man
+can not adore, admire, respect, or imitate a conduct of which everything
+is impossible to conceive, or of which he can not form any but revolting
+ideas; unless it is pretended that he should worship all the things of
+which he is forced to be ignorant, and then all that he does not
+understand becomes admirable.
+
+Priests! you teach us that the designs of God are impenetrable; that His
+ways are not our ways; that His thoughts are not our thoughts; that it
+is folly to complain of His administration, whose motives and secret
+ways are entirely unknown to us; that there is temerity in accusing Him
+of unjust judgments, because they are incomprehensible to us. But do you
+not see that by speaking in this manner, you destroy with your own hands
+all your profound systems which have no design but to explain the ways
+of Divinity that you call impenetrable? These judgments, these ways, and
+these designs, have you penetrated them? You dare not say so; and,
+although you season incessantly, you do not understand them more than we
+do. If by chance you know the plan of God, which you tell us to admire,
+while there are many people who find it so little worthy of a just,
+good, intelligent, and rational being; do not say that this plan is
+impenetrable. If you are as ignorant as we, have some indulgence for
+those who ingenuously confess that they comprehend nothing of it, or
+that they see nothing in it Divine. Cease to persecute for opinions
+which you do not understand yourselves; cease to slander each other for
+dreams and conjectures which are altogether contradictory; speak to us
+of intelligible and truly useful things; and no longer tell us of the
+impenetrable ways of a God, about which you do nothing but stammer and
+contradict yourselves.
+
+In speaking to us incessantly of the immense depths of Divine wisdom, in
+forbidding us to fathom these depths by telling us that it is insolence
+to call God to the tribunal of our humble reason, in making it a crime
+to judge our Master, the theologians only confess the embarrassment in
+which they find themselves as soon as they have to render account of the
+conduct of a God, which they tell us is marvelous, only because it is
+totally impossible for them to understand it themselves.
+
+
+
+
+LXXVIII.--IT IS ABSURD TO CALL HIM A GOD OF JUSTICE AND GOODNESS, WHO
+INFLICTS EVIL INDISCRIMINATELY ON THE GOOD AND THE WICKED, UPON THE
+INNOCENT AND THE GUILTY; IT IS IDLE TO DEMAND THAT THE UNFORTUNATE
+SHOULD CONSOLE THEMSELVES FOR THEIR MISFORTUNES, IN THE VERY ARMS OF THE
+ONE WHO ALONE IS THE AUTHOR OF THEM.
+
+Physical evil commonly passes as the punishment of sin. Calamities,
+diseases, famines, wars, earthquakes, are the means which God employs to
+chastise perverse men. Therefore, they have no difficulty in attributing
+these evils to the severity of a just and good God. However, do we not
+see these plagues fall indiscriminately upon the good and the wicked,
+upon the impious and the pious, upon the innocent and the guilty? How
+can we be made to admire, in this proceeding, the justice and the
+goodness of a being, the idea of whom appears so consoling to the
+unfortunate? Doubtless the brain of these unfortunate ones has been
+disturbed by their misfortunes, since they forget that God is the
+arbiter of things, the sole dispenser of the events of this world. In
+this case ought they not to blame Him for the evils for which they would
+find consolation in His arms? Unfortunate father! you console yourself
+in the bosom of Providence for the loss of a cherished child or of a
+wife, who made your happiness! Alas! do you not see that your God has
+killed them? Your God has rendered you miserable; and you want Him to
+console you for the fearful blows He has inflicted upon you.
+
+The fantastic and supernatural notions of theology have succeeded so
+thoroughly in overcoming the simplest, the clearest, the most natural
+ideas of the human spirit, that the pious, incapable of accusing God of
+malice, accustom themselves to look upon these sad afflictions as
+indubitable proofs of celestial goodness. Are they in affliction, they
+are told to believe that God loves them, that God visits them, that God
+wishes to try them. Thus it is that religion changes evil into good!
+Some one has said profanely, but with reason: "If the good God treats
+thus those whom He loves, I beseech Him very earnestly not to think of
+me." Men must have formed very sinister and very cruel ideas of their
+God whom they call so good, in order to persuade themselves that the
+most frightful calamities and the most painful afflictions are signs of
+His favor! Would a wicked Genii or a Devil be more ingenious in
+tormenting his enemies, than sometimes is this God of goodness, who is
+so often occupied with inflicting His chastisements upon His dearest
+friends?
+
+
+
+
+LXXIX.--A GOD WHO PUNISHES THE FAULTS WHICH HE COULD HAVE PREVENTED, IS A
+FOOL, WHO ADDS INJUSTICE TO FOOLISHNESS.
+
+What would we say or a father who, we are assured, watches without
+relaxation over the welfare of his feeble and unforeseeing children, and
+who, however, would leave them at liberty to go astray in the midst of
+rocks, precipices, and waters; who would prevent them but rarely from
+following their disordered appetites; who would permit them to handle,
+without precaution, deadly arms, at the risk of wounding themselves
+severely? What would we think of this same father, if, instead of
+blaming himself for the harm which would have happened to his poor
+children, he should punish them for their faults in the most cruel way?
+We would say, with reason, that this father is a fool, who joins
+injustice to foolishness. A God who punishes the faults which He could
+have prevented, is a being who lacks wisdom, goodness, and equity. A God
+of foresight would prevent evil, and in this way would be saved the
+trouble of punishing it. A good God would not punish weaknesses which He
+knows to be inherent in human nature. A just God, if He has made man,
+would not punish him for not being strong enough to resist his desires.
+To punish weakness, is the most unjust tyranny. Is it not calumniating a
+just God, to say that He punishes men for their faults, even in the
+present life? How would He punish beings whom He alone could correct,
+and who, as long as they had not received grace, can not act otherwise
+than they do?
+
+According to the principles of theologians themselves, man, in his
+actual state of corruption, can do nothing but evil, for without Divine
+grace he has not the strength to do good. Moreover, if man's nature,
+abandoned to itself, of destitute of Divine help, inclines him
+necessarily to evil, or renders him incapable of doing good, what
+becomes of his free will? According to such principles, man can merit
+neither reward nor punishment; in rewarding man for the good he does,
+God would but recompense Himself; in punishing man for the evil he does,
+God punishes him for not having been given the grace, without which it
+was impossible for him to do better.
+
+
+
+
+LXXX.--FREE WILL IS AN IDLE FANCY.
+
+Theologians tell and repeat to us that man is free, while all their
+teachings conspire to destroy his liberty. Trying to justify Divinity,
+they accuse him really of the blackest injustice. They suppose that,
+without grace, man is compelled to do evil: and they maintain that God
+will punish him for not having been given the grace to do good! With a
+little reflection, we will be obliged to see that man in all things acts
+by compulsion, and that his free will is a chimera, even according to
+the theological system. Does it depend upon man whether or not he shall
+be born of such or such parents? Does it depend upon man to accept or
+not to accept the opinions of his parents and of his teachers? If I were
+born of idolatrous or Mohammedan parents, would it have depended upon me
+to become a Christian? However, grave Doctors of Divinity assure us that
+a just God will damn without mercy all those to whom He has not given
+the grace to know the religion of the Christians.
+
+Man's birth does not depend upon his choice; he was not asked if he
+would or would not come into the world; nature did not consult him upon
+the country and the parents that she gave him; the ideas he acquired,
+his opinions, his true or false notions are the necessary fruits of the
+education which he has received, and of which he has not been the
+master; his passions and his desires are the necessary results of the
+temperament which nature has given him, and of the ideas with which he
+has been inspired; during the whole course of his life, his wishes and
+his actions are determined by his surroundings, his habits, his
+occupations, his pleasures, his conversations, and by the thoughts which
+present themselves involuntarily to him; in short, by a multitude of
+events and accidents which are beyond his control. Incapable of
+foreseeing the future, he knows neither what he will wish, nor what he
+will do in the time which must immediately follow the present. Man
+passes his life, from the moment of his birth to that of his death,
+without having been free one instant. Man, you say, wishes, deliberates,
+chooses, determines; hence you conclude that his actions are free. It is
+true that man intends, but he is not master of his will or of his
+desires. He can desire and wish only what he judges advantageous for
+himself; he can not love pain nor detest pleasure. Man, it will be said,
+sometimes prefers pain to pleasure; but then, he prefers a passing pain
+in the hope of procuring a greater and more durable pleasure. In this
+case, the idea of a greater good determines him to deprive himself of
+one less desirable.
+
+It is not the lover who gives to his mistress the features by which he
+is enchanted; he is not then the master to love or not to love the
+object of his tenderness; he is not the master of the imagination or the
+temperament which dominates him; from which it follows, evidently, that
+man is not the master of the wishes and desires which rise in his soul,
+independently of him. But man, say you, can resist his desires; then he
+is free. Man resists his desires when the motives which turn him from an
+object are stronger than those which draw him toward it; but then, his
+resistance is necessary. A man who fears dishonor and punishment more
+than he loves money, resists necessarily the desire to take possession
+of another's money. Are we not free when we deliberate?--but has one the
+power to know or not to know, to be uncertain or to be assured?
+Deliberation is the necessary effect of the uncertainty in which we find
+ourselves with reference to the results of our actions. As soon as we
+believe ourselves certain of these results, we necessarily decide; and
+then we act necessarily according as we shall have judged right or
+wrong. Our judgments, true or false, are not free; they are necessarily
+determined by ideas which we have received, or which our mind has
+formed. Man is not free in his choice; he is evidently compelled to
+choose what he judges the most useful or the most agreeable for himself.
+When he suspends his choice, he is not more free; he is forced to
+suspend it till he knows or believes he knows the qualities of the
+objects presented to him, or until he has weighed the consequence of his
+actions. Man, you will say, decides every moment on actions which he
+knows will endanger him; man kills himself sometimes, then he is free. I
+deny it! Has man the ability to reason correctly or incorrectly? Do not
+his reason and his wisdom depend either upon opinions that he has
+formed, or upon his mental constitution? As neither the one nor the
+other depends upon his will, they can not in any wise prove his liberty.
+
+If I make the wager to do or not to do a thing, am I not free? Does it
+not depend upon me to do or not to do it? No; I will answer you, the
+desire to win the wager will necessarily determine you to do or not to
+do the thing in question. "But if I consent to lose the wager?" Then the
+desire to prove to me that you are free will have become to you a
+stronger motive than the desire to win the wager; and this motive will
+necessarily have determined you to do or not to do what was understood
+between us. But you will say, "I feel myself free." It is an illusion
+which may be compared to that of the fly in the fable, which, lighting
+on the shaft of a heavy wagon, applauded itself as driver of the vehicle
+which carried it. Man who believes himself free, is a fly who believes
+himself the master-motor in the machine of the universe, while he
+himself, without his own volition, is carried on by it. The feeling
+which makes us believe that we are free to do or not to do a thing, is
+but a pure illusion. When we come to the veritable principle of our
+actions, we will find that they are nothing but the necessary results of
+our wills and of our desires, which are never within our power. You
+believe yourselves free because you do as you choose; but are you really
+free to will or not to will, to desire or not to desire? Your wills and
+your desires, are they not necessarily excited by objects or by
+qualities which do not depend upon you at all?
+
+
+
+
+LXXXI.--WE SHOULD NOT CONCLUDE FROM THIS THAT SOCIETY HAS NOT THE RIGHT
+TO CHASTISE THE WICKED.
+
+If the actions of men are necessary, if men are not free, what right has
+society to punish the wicked who infest it? Is it not very unjust to
+chastise beings who could not act otherwise than they did? If the wicked
+act from the impulse of their corrupt nature, society in punishing them
+acts necessarily on its side from the desire to preserve itself. Certain
+objects produce in us the feeling of pain; therefore our nature compels
+us to hate them, and incites us to remove them. A tiger pressed by
+hunger, attacks the man whom he wishes to devour; but the man is not the
+master of his fear of the tiger, and seeks necessarily the means of
+exterminating it.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXII.--REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENTS IN FAVOR OF FREE WILL.
+
+If everything is necessary, if errors, opinions, and ideas of men are
+fated, how or why can we pretend to reform them? The errors of men are
+the necessary results of their ignorance; their ignorance, their
+obstinacy, their credulity, are the necessary results of their
+inexperience, of their indifference, of their lack of reflection; the
+same as congestion of the brain or lethargy are the natural effects of
+some diseases. Truth, experience, reflection, reason, are the proper
+remedies to cure ignorance, fanaticism, and follies; the same as
+bleeding is good to soothe congestion of the brain. But you will say,
+why does not truth produce this effect upon many of the sick heads?
+There are some diseases which resist all remedies; it is impossible to
+cure obstinate patients who refuse to take the remedies which are given
+them; the interest of some men and the folly of others naturally oppose
+them to the admission of truth. A cause produces its effect only when it
+is not interrupted in its action by other causes which are stronger, or
+which weaken the action of the first cause or render it useless. It is
+entirely impossible to have the best arguments accepted by men who are
+strongly interested in error; who are prejudiced in its favor; who
+refuse to reflect; but it must necessarily be that truth undeceives the
+honest souls who seek it in good faith. Truth is a cause; it produces
+necessarily its effect when its impulse is not interrupted by causes
+which suspend its effects.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+To take away from man his free will, is, we are told, to make of him a
+pure machine, an automaton without liberty; there would exist in him
+neither merit nor virtue What is merit in man?
+
+It is a certain manner of acting which renders him estimable in the eyes
+of his fellow beings. What is virtue? It is the disposition that causes
+us to do good to others. What can there be contemptible in automatic
+machines capable of producing such desirable effects? Marcus Aurelius
+was a very useful spring to the vast machine of the Roman Empire. By
+what right will a machine despise another machine, whose springs would
+facilitate its own play? Good people are springs which assist society in
+its tendency to happiness; wicked men are badly-formed springs, which
+disturb the order, the progress, and harmony of society. If for its own
+interests society loves and rewards the good, she hates, despises, and
+removes the wicked, as useless or dangerous motors.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXIV.--GOD HIMSELF, IF THERE WAS A GOD, WOULD NOT BE FREE; HENCE THE
+USELESSNESS OF ALL RELIGION.
+
+The world is a necessary agent; all the beings which compose it are
+united to each other, and can not do otherwise than they do, so long as
+they are moved by the same causes and possessed of the same qualities.
+If they lose these qualities, they will act necessarily in a different
+way. God Himself (admitting His existence a moment) can not be regarded
+as a free agent; if there existed a God, His manner of acting would
+necessarily be determined by the qualities inherent in His nature;
+nothing would be able to alter or to oppose His wishes. This considered,
+neither our actions nor our prayers nor our sacrifices could suspend or
+change His invariable progress and His immutable designs, from which we
+are compelled to conclude that all religion would be entirely useless.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXV.--EVEN ACCORDING TO THEOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES, MAN IS NOT FREE ONE
+INSTANT.
+
+If theologians were not constantly contradicting each other, they would
+know, from their own hypotheses, that man can not be called free for an
+instant. Is not man supposed to be in a continual dependence upon God?
+Is one free, when one could not have existed or can not live without
+God, and when one ceases to exist at the pleasure of His supreme will?
+If God created man of nothing, if the preservation of man is a continual
+creation, if God can not lose sight of His creature for an instant, if
+all that happens to him is a result of the Divine will, if man is
+nothing of himself, if all the events which he experiences are the
+effects of Divine decrees, if he can not do any good without assistance
+from above, how can it be pretended that man enjoys liberty during one
+moment of his life? If God did not save him in the moment when he sins,
+how could man sin? If God preserves him, God, therefore, forces him to
+live in order to sin.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXVI.--ALL EVIL, ALL DISORDER, ALL SIN, CAN BE ATTRIBUTED BUT TO GOD;
+AND CONSEQUENTLY, HE HAS NO RIGHT TO PUNISH OR REWARD.
+
+Divinity is continually compared to a king, the majority of whose
+subjects revolt against Him and it is pretended that He has the right to
+reward His faithful subjects, and to punish those who revolt against
+Him. This comparison is not just in any of its parts. God presides over
+a machine, of which He has made all the springs; these springs act
+according to the way in which God has formed them; it is the fault of
+His inaptitude if these springs do not contribute to the harmony of the
+machine in which the workman desired to place them. God is a creating
+King, who created all kinds of subjects for Himself; who formed them
+according to His pleasure, and whose wishes can never find any
+resistance. If God in His empire has rebellious subjects, it is God who
+resolved to have rebellious subjects. If the sins of men disturb the
+order of the world, it is God who desired this order to be disturbed.
+Nobody dares to doubt Divine justice; however, under the empire of a
+just God, we find nothing but injustice and violence. Power decides the
+fate of nations. Equity seems to be banished from the earth; a small
+number of men enjoy with impunity the repose, the fortunes, the liberty,
+and the life of all the others. Everything is in disorder in a world
+governed by a God of whom it is said that disorder displeases Him
+exceedingly.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXVII.--MEN'S PRAYERS TO GOD PROVE SUFFICIENTLY THAT THEY ARE NOT
+SATISFIED WITH THE DIVINE ECONOMY.
+
+Although men incessantly admire the wisdom the goodness, the justice,
+the beautiful order of Providence, they are, in fact, never contented
+with it. The prayers which they continually offer to Heaven, prove to us
+that they are not at all satisfied with God's administration. Praying to
+God, asking a favor of Him, is to mistrust His vigilant care; to pray
+God to avert or to suppress an evil, is to endeavor to put obstacles in
+the way of His justice; to implore the assistance of God in our
+calamities, means to appeal to the very author of these calamities in
+order to represent to Him our welfare; that He ought to rectify in our
+favor His plan, which is not beneficial to our interests. The optimist,
+or the one who thinks that everything is good in the world, and who
+repeats to us incessantly that we live in the best world possible, if he
+were consistent, ought never to pray; still less should he expect
+another world where men will be happier. Can there be a better world
+than the best possible of all worlds? Some of the theologians have
+treated the optimists as impious for having claimed that God could not
+have made a better world than the one in which we live; according to
+these doctors it is limiting the Divine power and insulting it. But do
+not theologians see that it is less offensive for God, to pretend that
+He did His best in creating the world, than to say that He, having the
+power to produce a better one, had the malice to make a very bad one? If
+the optimist, by his system, does wrong to the Divine power, the
+theologian, who treats him as impious, is himself a reprobate, who
+wounds the Divine goodness under pretext of taking interest in God.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXVIII.--THE REPARATION OF THE INIQUITIES AND THE MISERIES OF THIS
+WORLD IN ANOTHER WORLD, IS AN IDLE CONJECTURE AND AN ABSURD SUPPOSITION.
+
+When we complain of the evils of which this world is the theater, we are
+referred to another world; we are told that there God will repair all
+the iniquities and the miseries which He permits for a time here below.
+However, if leaving His eternal justice to sleep for a time, God could
+consent to evil during the period of the existence of our globe, what
+assurance have we that during the existence of another globe, Divine
+justice will not likewise sleep during the misfortunes of its
+inhabitants? They console us in our troubles by saying, that God is
+patient, and that His justice, although often very slow, is not the less
+certain. But do you not see, that patience can not be suited to a being
+just, immutable, and omnipotent? Can God tolerate injustice for an
+instant? To temporize with an evil that one knows of, evinces either
+uncertainty, weakness, or collusion; to tolerate evil which one has the
+power to prevent, is to consent that evil should be committed.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXIX.--THEOLOGY JUSTIFIES THE EVIL AND INJUSTICE PERMITTED BY ITS GOD,
+ONLY BY CONCEDING TO THIS GOD THE RIGHT OF THE STRONGEST, THAT IS TO
+SAY, THE VIOLATION OF ALL RIGHTS, OR IN COMMANDING FROM MEN A STUPID
+DEVOTION.
+
+I hear a multitude of theologians tell me on all sides, that God is
+infinitely just, but that His justice is not that of men! Of what kind,
+or of what nature is this Divine justice then? What idea can I form of a
+justice which so often resembles human injustice? Is it not confounding
+all our ideas of justice and of injustice, to tell us that what is
+equitable in God is iniquitous in His creatures? How can we take as a
+model a being whose Divine perfections are precisely contrary to human
+perfections? God, you say, is the sovereign arbiter of our destinies;
+His supreme power, that nothing can limit, authorizes Him to do as He
+pleases with His works; a worm, such as man, has not the right to murmur
+against Him. This arrogant tone is literally borrowed from the language
+which the ministers of tyrants hold, when they silence those who suffer
+by their violences; it can not, then, be the language of the ministers
+of a God of whose equity they boast. It can not impose upon a being who
+reasons. Ministers of a just God! I tell you then, that the greatest
+power is not able to confer even upon your God Himself the right to be
+unjust to the vilest of His creatures. A despot is not a God. A God who
+arrogates to Himself the right to do evil, is a tyrant; a tyrant is not
+a model for men. He ought to be an execrable object in their eyes. Is it
+not strange that, in order to justify Divinity, they made of Him the
+most unjust of beings? As soon as we complain of His conduct, they think
+to silence us by claiming that God is the Master; which signifies that
+God, being the strongest, He is not subjected to ordinary rules. But the
+right of the strongest is the violation of all rights; it can pass as a
+right but in the eyes of a savage conqueror, who, in the intoxication of
+his fury, imagines he has the right to do as he pleases with the
+unfortunate ones whom he has conquered; this barbarous right can appear
+legitimate only to slaves, who are blind enough to think that everything
+is allowed to tyrants, who are too strong for them to resist.
+
+By a foolish simplicity, or rather by a plain contradiction of terms, do
+we not see devotees exclaim, amidst the greatest calamities, that the
+good Lord is the Master? Well, illogical reasoners, you believe in good
+faith that the good Lord sends you the pestilence; that your good Lord
+gives war; that the good Lord is the cause of famine; in a word, that
+the good Lord, without ceasing to be good, has the will and the right to
+do you the greatest evils you can endure! Cease to call your Lord good
+when He does you harm; do not say that He is just; say that He is the
+strongest, and that it is impossible for you to avert the blows which
+His caprice inflicts upon you. God, you say, punishes us for our highest
+good; but what real benefit can result to a nation in being exterminated
+by contagion, murdered by wars, corrupted by the examples of perverse
+masters, continually pressed by the iron scepter of merciless tyrants,
+subjected to the scourge of a bad government, which often for centuries
+causes nations to suffer its destructive effects? The eyes of faith must
+be strange eyes, if we see by their means any advantage in the most
+dreadful miseries and in the most durable evils, in the vices and
+follies by which our kind is so cruelly afflicted!
+
+
+
+
+XC.--REDEMPTION, AND THE CONTINUAL EXTERMINATIONS ATTRIBUTED TO JEHOVAH
+IN THE BIBLE, ARE SO MANY ABSURD AND RIDICULOUS INVENTIONS WHICH
+PRESUPPOSE AN UNJUST AND BARBAROUS GOD.
+
+What strange ideas of the Divine justice must the Christians have who
+believe that their God, with the view of reconciling Himself with
+mankind, guilty without knowledge of the fault of their parents,
+sacrificed His own innocent and sinless Son! What would we say of a
+king, whose subjects having revolted against him, in order to appease
+himself could find no other expedient than to put to death the heir to
+his crown, who had taken no part in the general rebellion? It is, the
+Christian will say, through kindness for His subjects, incapable of
+satisfying themselves of His Divine justice, that God consented to the
+cruel death of His Son. But the kindness of a father to strangers does
+not give him the right to be unjust and cruel to his son. All the
+qualities that theology gives to its God annul each other. The exercise
+of one of His perfections is always at the expense of another.
+
+Has the Jew any more rational ideas than the Christian of Divine
+justice? A king, by his pride, kindles the wrath of Heaven. Jehovah
+sends pestilence upon His innocent people; seventy thousand subjects are
+exterminated to expiate the fault of a monarch that the kindness of God
+resolved to spare.
+
+
+
+
+XCI.--HOW CAN WE DISCOVER A TENDER, GENEROUS, AND EQUITABLE FATHER IN A
+BEING WHO HAS CREATED HIS CHILDREN BUT TO MAKE THEM UNHAPPY?
+
+In spite of the injustice with which all religions are pleased to
+blacken the Divinity, men can not consent to accuse Him of iniquity;
+they fear that He, like the tyrants of this world, will be offended by
+the truth, and redouble the weight of His malice and tyranny upon them.
+They listen, then, to their priests, who tell them that their God is a
+tender Father; that this God is an equitable Monarch, whose object in
+this world is to assure Himself of the love, obedience, and respect of
+His subjects; who gives them the liberty to act, in order to give them
+occasion to deserve His favors and to acquire eternal happiness, which
+He does not owe them in any way. In what way can we recognize the
+tenderness of a Father who created the majority of His children but for
+the purpose of dragging out a life of pain, anxiety, and bitterness upon
+this earth? Is there any more fatal boon than this pretended liberty
+which, it is said, men can abuse, and thereby expose themselves to the
+risk of eternal misery?
+
+
+
+
+XCII.--THE LIFE OF MORTALS, ALL WHICH TAKES PLACE HERE BELOW, TESTIFIES
+AGAINST MAN'S LIBERTY AND AGAINST THE JUSTICE AND GOODNESS OF A
+PRETENDED GOD.
+
+In calling mortals into life, what a cruel and dangerous game does the
+Divinity force them to play! Thrust into the world without their wish,
+provided with a temperament of which they are not the masters, animated
+by passions and desires inherent in their nature, exposed to snares
+which they have not the skill to avoid, led away by events which they
+could neither foresee nor prevent, the unfortunate beings are obliged to
+follow a career which conducts them to horrible tortures.
+
+Travelers assert that in some part of Asia reigns a sultan full of
+phantasies, and very absolute in his will. By a strange mania this
+prince spends his time sitting before a table, on which are placed six
+dice and a dice-box. One end of the table is covered with a pile of
+gold, for the purpose of exciting the cupidity of the courtiers and of
+the people by whom the sultan is surrounded. He, knowing the weak point
+of his subjects, speaks to them in this way: "Slaves! I wish you well;
+my aim is to enrich you and render you all happy. Do you see these
+treasures? Well, they are for you! try to win them; let each one in turn
+take this box and these dice; whoever shall have the good luck to raffle
+six, will be master of this treasure; but I warn you that he who has not
+the luck to throw the required number, will be precipitated forever into
+an obscure cell, where my justice exacts that he shall be burned by a
+slow fire." Upon this threat of the monarch, they regarded each other in
+consternation; no one willing to take a risk so dangerous. "What!" said
+the angry sultan, "no one wants to play? Oh, this does not suit me! My
+glory demands that you play. You will raffle then; I wish it; obey
+without replying!" It is well to observe that the despot's dice are
+prepared in such a way, that upon a hundred thousand throws there is but
+one that wins; thus the generous monarch has the pleasure to see his
+prison well filled, and his treasures seldom carried away. Mortals! this
+Sultan is your God; His treasures are heaven; His cell is hell; and you
+hold the dice!
+
+
+
+
+XCIII.--IT IS NOT TRUE THAT WE OWE ANY GRATITUDE TO WHAT WE CALL
+PROVIDENCE.
+
+We are constantly told that we owe an infinite gratitude to Providence
+for the countless blessings It is pleased to lavish upon us. They boast
+above all that our existence is a blessing. But, alas! how many mortals
+are really satisfied with their mode of existence? If life has its
+sweets, how much of bitterness is mingled with it? Is not one bitter
+trouble sufficient to blight all of a sudden the most peaceful and happy
+life? Is there a great number of men who, if it depended upon them,
+would wish to begin, at the same sacrifice, the painful career into
+which, without their consent, destiny has thrown them? You say that
+existence itself is a great blessing. But is not this existence
+continually troubled by griefs, fears, and often cruel and undeserved
+maladies. This existence, menaced on so many sides, can we not be
+deprived of it at any moment? Who is there, after having lived for some
+time, who has not been deprived of a beloved wife, a beloved child, a
+consoling friend, whose loss fills his mind constantly? There are very
+few mortals who have not been compelled to drink from the cup of
+bitterness; there are but few who have not often wished to die. Finally,
+it did not depend upon us to exist or not to exist. Would the bird be
+under such great obligations to the bird-catcher for having caught it in
+his net and for having put it into his cage, in order to eat it after
+being amused with it?
+
+
+
+
+XCIV.--TO PRETEND THAT MAN IS THE BELOVED CHILD OF PROVIDENCE, GOD'S
+FAVORITE, THE ONLY OBJECT OF HIS LABORS, THE KING OF NATURE, IS FOLLY.
+
+In spite of the infirmities, the troubles, the miseries to which man is
+compelled to submit in this world; in spite of the danger which his
+alarmed imagination creates in regard to another, he is still foolish
+enough to believe himself to be God's favorite, the only aim of all His
+works. He imagines that the entire universe was made for him; he calls
+himself arrogantly the king of nature, and ranks himself far above other
+animals. Poor mortal! upon what can you establish your high pretensions?
+It is, you say, upon your soul, upon your reason, upon your sublime
+faculties, which place you in a condition to exercise an absolute
+authority over the beings which surround you. But weak sovereign of this
+world, art thou sure one instant of the duration of thy reign? The least
+atoms of matter which you despise, are they not sufficient to deprive
+you of your throne and life? Finally, does not the king of animals
+terminate always by becoming food for the worms?
+
+You speak of your soul. But do you know what your soul is? Do you not
+see that this soul is but the assemblage of your organs, from which life
+results? Would you refuse a soul to other animals who live, who think,
+who judge, who compare, who seek pleasure, and avoid pain even as you
+do, and who often possess organs which are better than your own? You
+boast of your intellectual faculties, but these faculties which render
+you so proud, do they make you any happier than other creatures? Do you
+often make use of this reason which you glory in, and which religion
+commands you not to listen to? Those animals which you disdain because
+they are weaker or less cunning than yourself, are they subject to
+troubles, to mental anxieties, to a thousand frivolous passions, to a
+thousand imaginary needs, of which your heart is continually the prey?
+Are they, like you, tormented by the past, alarmed for the future?
+
+Limited solely to the present, what you call their instinct, and what I
+call their intelligence, is it not sufficient to preserve and to defend
+them and to provide for their needs? This instinct, of which you speak
+with disdain, does it not often serve them much better than your
+wonderful faculties? Their peaceable ignorance, is it not more
+advantageous than these extravagant meditations and these futile
+investigations which render you miserable, and for which you are driven
+to murdering beings of your own noble kind? Finally, these animals, have
+they, like mortals, a troubled imagination which makes them fear not
+only death, but even eternal torments? Augustus, having heard that
+Herod, king of Judea, had murdered his sons, cried out: "It would be
+better to be Herod's pig than his son!" We can say as much of men; this
+beloved child of Providence runs much greater risks than all other
+animals. After having suffered a great deal in this world, do we not
+believe ourselves in danger of suffering for eternity in another?
+
+
+
+
+XCV.--COMPARISON BETWEEN MAN AND ANIMALS.
+
+What is the exact line of demarcation between man and the other animals
+which he calls brutes? In what way does he essentially differ from the
+beasts? It is, we are told, by his intelligence, by the faculties of his
+mind, by his reason, that man is superior to all the other animals,
+which in all they do, act but by physical impulsions, reason taking no
+part. But the beasts, having more limited needs than men, do very well
+without these intellectual faculties, which would be perfectly useless
+in their way of living. Their instinct is sufficient for them, while all
+the faculties of man are hardly sufficient to render his existence
+endurable, and to satisfy the needs which his imagination, his
+prejudices, and his institutions multiply to his torment.
+
+The brute is not affected by the same objects as man; it has neither the
+same needs, nor the same desires, nor the same whims; it early reaches
+maturity, while nothing is more rare than to see the human being
+enjoying all of his faculties, exercising them freely, and making a
+proper use of them for his own happiness.
+
+
+
+
+XCVI.--THERE ARE NO MORE DETESTABLE ANIMALS IN THIS WORLD THAN TYRANTS.
+
+We are assured that the human soul is a simple substance; but if the
+soul is such a simple substance, it ought to be the same in all the
+individuals of the human race, who all ought to have the same
+intellectual faculties; however, this is not the case; men differ as
+much in qualities of mind as in the features of the face. There are in
+the human race, beings as different from one another as man is from a
+horse or a dog. What conformity or resemblance do we find between some
+men? What an infinite distance between the genius of a Locke, of a
+Newton, and that of a peasant, of a Hottentot, or of a Laplander!
+
+Man differs from other animals but by the difference of his
+organization, which causes him to produce effects of which they are not
+capable. The variety which we notice in the organs of individuals of the
+human race, suffices to explain to us the difference which is often
+found between them in regard to the intellectual faculties. More or less
+of delicacy in these organs, of heat in the blood, of promptitude in the
+fluids, more or less of suppleness or of rigidity in the fibers and the
+nerves, must necessarily produce the infinite diversities which are
+noticeable in the minds of men. It is by exercise, by habitude, by
+education, that the human mind is developed and succeeds in rising above
+the beings which surround it; man, without culture and without
+experience, is a being as devoid of reason and of industry as the brute.
+A stupid individual is a man whose organs are acted upon with
+difficulty, whose brain is hard to move, whose blood circulates slowly;
+a man of mind is he whose organs are supple, who feels very quickly,
+whose brain moves promptly; a learned man is one whose organs and whose
+brain have been exercised a long while upon objects which occupy him.
+
+The man without culture, experience, or reason, is he not more
+despicable and more abominable than the vilest insects, or the most
+ferocious beasts? Is there a more detestable being in nature than a
+Tiberius, a Nero, a Caligula? These destroyers of the human race, known
+by the name of conquerors, have they better souls than those of bears,
+lions, and panthers? Are there more detestable animals in this world
+than tyrants?
+
+
+
+
+XCVII.--REFUTATION OF MAN'S EXCELLENCE.
+
+Human extravagances soon dispel, in the eyes of reason, the superiority
+which man arrogantly claims over other animals. Do we not see many
+animals show more gentleness, more reflection and reason than the animal
+which calls itself reasonable par excellence? Are there amongst men, who
+are so often enslaved and oppressed, societies as well organized as
+those of ants, bees, or beavers? Do we ever see ferocious beasts of the
+same kind meet upon the plains to devour each other without profit? Do
+we see among them religious wars? The cruelty of beasts against other
+species is caused by hunger, the need of nourishment; the cruelty of man
+against man has no other motive than the vanity of his masters and the
+folly of his impertinent prejudices. Theorists who try to make us
+believe that everything in the universe was made for man, are very much
+embarrassed when we ask them in what way can so many mischievous animals
+which continually infest our life here, contribute to the welfare of
+men. What known advantage results for God's friend to be bitten by a
+viper, stung by a gnat, devoured by vermin, torn into pieces by a tiger?
+Would not all these animals reason as wisely as our theologians, if they
+should pretend that man was made for them?
+
+
+
+
+XCVIII.--AN ORIENTAL LEGEND.
+
+At a short distance from Bagdad a dervis, celebrated for his holiness,
+passed his days tranquilly in agreeable solitude. The surrounding
+inhabitants, in order to have an interest in his prayers, eagerly
+brought to him every day provisions and presents. The holy man thanked
+God incessantly for the blessings Providence heaped upon him. "O Allah,"
+said he, "how ineffable is Thy tenderness toward Thy servants. What have
+I done to deserve the benefactions which Thy liberality loads me with!
+Oh, Monarch of the skies! oh, Father of nature! what praises could be
+worthy to celebrate Thy munificence and Thy paternal cares! O Allah, how
+great are Thy gifts to the children of men!" Filled with gratitude, our
+hermit made a vow to undertake for the seventh time the pilgrimage to
+Mecca. The war, which then existed between the Persians and the Turks,
+could not make him defer the execution of his pious enterprise. Full of
+confidence in God, he began his journey; under the inviolable safeguard
+of a respected garb, he passed through without obstacle the enemies'
+detachments; far from being molested, he receives at every step marks of
+veneration from the soldiers of both sides. At last, overcome by
+fatigue, he finds himself obliged to seek a shelter from the rays of the
+burning sun; he finds it beneath a fresh group of palm-trees, whose
+roots were watered by a limpid rivulet. In this solitary place, where
+the silence was broken only by the murmuring of the waters and the
+singing of the birds, the man of God found not only an enchanting
+retreat, but also a delicious repast; he had but to extend the hand to
+gather dates and other agreeable fruits; the rivulet can appease his
+thirst; very soon a green plot invites him to take sweet repose. As he
+awakens he performs the holy cleansing; and in a transport of ecstasy,
+he exclaimed: "O Allah! HOW GREAT IS THY GOODNESS TO THE CHILDREN OF
+MEN!" Well rested, refreshed, full of life and gayety, our holy man
+continues on his road; it conducts him for some time through a
+delightful country, which offers to his sight but blooming shores and
+trees filled with fruit. Softened by this spectacle, he worships
+incessantly the rich and liberal hand of Providence, which is everywhere
+seen occupied with the welfare of the human race. Going a little
+farther, he comes across a few mountains, which were quite hard to
+ascend; but having arrived at their summit, a hideous sight suddenly
+meets his eyes; his soul is all consternation. He discovers a vast plain
+entirely devastated by the sword and fire; he looks at it and finds it
+covered with more than a hundred thousand corpses, deplorable remains of
+a bloody battle which had taken place a few days previous. Eagles,
+vultures, ravens, and wolves were devouring the dead bodies with which
+the earth was covered. This sight plunges our pilgrim into a sad
+reverie. Heaven, by a special favor, had made him understand the
+language of beasts. He heard a wolf, gorged with human flesh, exclaim in
+his excessive joy: "O Allah! how great is Thy kindness for the children
+of wolves! Thy foreseeing wisdom takes care to send infatuation upon
+these detestable men who are so dangerous to us. Through an effect of
+Thy Providence which watches over Thy creatures, these, our destroyers,
+murder each other, and thus furnish us with sumptuous repasts. O Allah!
+HOW GREAT IS THY GOODNESS TO THE CHILDREN OF WOLVES!"
+
+
+
+
+XCIX.--IT IS FOOLISH TO SEE IN THE UNIVERSE ONLY THE BENEFACTIONS OF
+HEAVEN, AND TO BELIEVE THAT THIS UNIVERSE WAS MADE BUT FOR MAN.
+
+An exalted imagination sees in the universe but the benefactions of
+Heaven; a calm mind finds good and evil in it. I exist, you will say;
+but is this existence always a benefit? You will say, look at this sun,
+which shines for you; this earth, which is covered with fruits and
+verdure; these flowers, which bloom for our sight and smell; these
+trees, which bend beneath the weight of fruits; these pure streams,
+which flow but to quench your thirst; these seas, which embrace the
+universe to facilitate your commerce; these animals, which a foreseeing
+nature produces for your use! Yes, I see all these things, and I enjoy
+them when I can. But in some climates this beautiful sun is most always
+obscured from me; in others, its excessive heat torments me, produces
+storm, gives rise to dreadful diseases, dries up the fields; the meadows
+have no grass, the trees are fruitless, the harvests are scorched, the
+springs are dried up; I can scarcely exist, and I sigh under the cruelty
+of a nature which you find so benevolent. If these seas bring me spices,
+riches, and useless things, do they not destroy a multitude of mortals
+who are dupes enough to go after them?
+
+Man's vanity persuades him that he is the sole center of the universe;
+he creates for himself a world and a God; he thinks himself of
+sufficient consequence to derange nature at his will, but he reasons as
+an atheist when the question of other animals is involved. Does he not
+imagine that the individuals different from his species are automatons
+unworthy of the cares of universal Providence, and that the beasts can
+not be the objects of its justice and kindness? Mortals consider
+fortunate or unfortunate events, health or sickness, life and death,
+abundance or famine, as rewards or punishments for the use or misuse of
+the liberty which they arrogate to themselves. Do they reason on this
+principle when animals are taken into consideration? No; although they
+see them under a just God enjoy and suffer, be healthy and sick, live
+and die, like themselves, it does not enter their mind to ask what
+crimes these beasts have committed in order to cause the displeasure of
+the Arbiter of nature. Philosophers, blinded by their theological
+prejudices, in order to disembarrass themselves, have gone so far as to
+pretend that beasts have no feelings!
+
+Will men never renounce their foolish pretensions? Will they not
+recognize that nature was not made for them? Will they not see that this
+nature has placed on equal footing all the beings which she produced?
+Will they not see that all organized beings are equally made to be born
+and to die, to enjoy and to suffer? Finally, instead of priding
+themselves preposterously on their mental faculties, are they not
+compelled to admit that they often render them more unhappy than the
+beasts, in which we find neither opinions, prejudices, vanities, nor the
+weaknesses which decide at every moment the well-being of men?
+
+
+
+
+C.--WHAT IS THE SOUL? WE KNOW NOTHING ABOUT IT. IF THIS PRETENDED SOUL
+WAS OF ANOTHER ESSENCE FROM THAT OF THE BODY, THEIR UNION WOULD BE
+IMPOSSIBLE.
+
+The superiority which men arrogate to themselves over other animals, is
+principally founded upon the opinion of possessing exclusively an
+immortal soul. But as soon as we ask what this soul is, they begin to
+stammer. It is an unknown substance; it is a secret force distinguished
+from their bodies; it is a spirit of which they can form no idea. Ask
+them how this spirit, which they suppose like their God, totally
+deprived of a physical substance, could combine itself with their
+material bodies? They will tell you that they know nothing about it;
+that it is a mystery to them; that this combination is the effect of the
+Almighty power. These are the clear ideas which men form of the hidden,
+or, rather, imaginary substance which they consider the motor of all
+their actions! If the soul is a substance essentially different from the
+body, and which can have no affinity with it, their union would be, not
+a mystery, but a thing impossible. Besides, this soul, being of an
+essence different from that of the body, ought to act necessarily in a
+different way from it. However, we see that the movements of the body
+are felt by this pretended soul, and that these two substances, so
+different in essence, always act in harmony. You will tell us that this
+harmony is a mystery; and I will tell you that I do not see my soul,
+that I know and feel but my body; that it is my body which feels, which
+reflects, which judges, which suffers, and which enjoys, and that all of
+its faculties are the necessary results of its own mechanism or of its
+organization.
+
+
+
+
+CI.--THE EXISTENCE OF A SOUL IS AN ABSURD SUPPOSITION, AND THE EXISTENCE
+OF AN IMMORTAL SOUL IS A STILL MORE ABSURD SUPPOSITION.
+
+Although it is impossible for men to have the least idea of the soul, or
+of this pretended spirit which animates them, they persuade themselves,
+however, that this unknown soul is exempt from death; everything proves
+to them that they feel, think, acquire ideas, enjoy or suffer, but by
+the means of the senses or of the material organs of the body. Even
+admitting the existence of this soul, one can not refuse to recognize
+that it depends wholly on the body, and suffers conjointly with it all
+the vicissitudes which it experiences itself; and however it is imagined
+that it has by its nature nothing analogous with it; it is pretended
+that it can act and feel without the assistance of this body; that
+deprived of this body and robbed of its senses, this soul will be able
+to live, to enjoy, to suffer, be sensitive of enjoyment or of rigorous
+torments. Upon such a tissue of conjectural absurdities the wonderful
+opinion of the immortality of the soul is built.
+
+If I ask what ground we have for supposing that the soul is immortal:
+they reply, it is because man by his nature desires to be immortal, or
+to live forever. But I rejoin, if you desire anything very much, is it
+sufficient to conclude that this desire will be fulfilled? By what
+strange logic do they decide that a thing can not fail to happen because
+they ardently desire it to happen? Man's childish desires of the
+imagination, are they the measure of reality? Impious people, you say,
+deprived of the flattering hopes of another life, desire to be
+annihilated. Well, have they not just as much right to conclude by this
+desire that they will be annihilated, as you to conclude that you will
+exist forever because you desire it?
+
+
+
+
+CII.--IT IS EVIDENT THAT THE WHOLE OF MAN DIES.
+
+Man dies entirely. Nothing is more evident to him who is not delirious.
+The human body, after death, is but a mass, incapable of producing any
+movements the union of which constitutes life. We no longer see
+circulation, respiration, digestion, speech, or reflection. It is
+claimed then that the soul has separated itself from the body. But to
+say that this soul, which is unknown, is the principle of life, is
+saying nothing, unless that an unknown force is the invisible principle
+of imperceptible movements. Nothing is more natural and more simple than
+to believe that the dead man lives no more, nothing more absurd than to
+believe that the dead man is still living.
+
+We ridicule the simplicity of some nations whose fashion is to bury
+provisions with the dead--under the idea that this food might be useful
+and necessary to them in another life. Is it more ridiculous or more
+absurd to believe that men will eat after death than to imagine that
+they will think; that they will have agreeable or disagreeable ideas;
+that they will enjoy; that they will suffer; that they will be conscious
+of sorrow or joy when the organs which produce sensations or ideas are
+dissolved and reduced to dust? To claim that the souls of men will be
+happy or unhappy after the death of the body, is to pretend that man
+will be able to see without eyes, to hear without ears, to taste without
+a palate, to smell without a nose, and to feel without hands and without
+skin. Nations who believe themselves very rational, adopt, nevertheless,
+such ideas.
+
+
+
+
+CIII.--INCONTESTABLE PROOFS AGAINST THE SPIRITUALITY OF THE SOUL.
+
+The dogma of the immortality of the soul assumes that the soul is a
+simple substance, a spirit; but I will always ask, what is a spirit? It
+is, you say, a substance deprived of expansion, incorruptible, and which
+has nothing in common with matter. But if this is true, how came your
+soul into existence? how did it grow? how did it strengthen? how weaken
+itself, get out of order, and grow old with your body? In reply to all
+these questions, you say that they are mysteries; but if they are
+mysteries, you understand nothing about them. If you do not understand
+anything about them, how can you positively affirm anything about them?
+In order to believe or to affirm anything, it is necessary at least to
+know what that consists of which we believe and which we affirm. To
+believe in the existence of your immaterial soul, is to say that you are
+persuaded of the existence of a thing of which it is impossible for you
+to form any true idea; it is to believe in words without attaching any
+sense to them; to affirm that the thing is as you claim, is the highest
+folly or assumption.
+
+
+
+
+CIV.--THE ABSURDITY OF SUPERNATURAL CAUSES, WHICH THEOLOGIANS CONSTANTLY
+
+
+
+CALL TO THEIR AID.
+
+Are not theologians strange reasoners? As soon as they can not guess the
+natural causes of things, they invent causes, which they call
+supernatural; they imagine them spirits, occult causes, inexplicable
+agents, or rather words much more obscure than the things which they
+attempt to explain. Let us remain in nature when we desire to understand
+its phenomena; let us ignore the causes which are too delicate to be
+seized by our organs; and let us be assured that by seeking outside of
+nature we can never find the solution of nature's problems. Even upon
+the theological hypothesis--that is to say, supposing an Almighty motor
+in matter--what right have theologians to refuse their God the power to
+endow this matter with thought? Would it be more difficult for Him to
+create combinations of matter from which results thought, than spirits
+which think? At least, in supposing a substance endowed with thought, we
+could form some idea of the object of our thoughts, or of what thinks in
+us; while attributing thought to an immaterial being, it is impossible
+for us to form the least idea of it.
+
+
+
+
+CV.--IT IS FALSE THAT MATERIALISM CAN BE DEBASING TO THE HUMAN RACE.
+
+Materialism, it is objected, makes of man a mere machine, which is
+considered very debasing to the human race. But will the human race be
+more honored when it can be said that man acts by the secret impulsions
+of a spirit, or a certain something which animates him without his
+knowing how? It is easy to perceive that the superiority which is given
+to mind over matter, or to the soul over the body, is based upon the
+ignorance of the nature of this soul; while we are more familiarized
+with matter or the body, which we imagine we know, and of which we
+believe we have understood the springs; but the most simple movements of
+our bodies are, for every thinking man, enigmas as difficult to divine
+as thought.
+
+
+
+
+CVI.--CONTINUATION.
+
+The esteem which so many people have for the spiritual substance,
+appears to result from the impossibility they find in defining it in an
+intelligible way. The contempt which our metaphysicians show for matter,
+comes from the fact that "familiarity breeds contempt." When they tell
+us that the soul is more excellent and noble than the body, they tell us
+nothing, except that what they know nothing about must be more beautiful
+than that of which they have some faint ideas.
+
+
+
+
+CVII.--THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFE IS USEFUL BUT FOR THOSE WHO PROFIT BY IT
+AT THE EXPENSE OF THE CREDULOUS PUBLIC.
+
+We are constantly told of the usefulness of the dogma of life hereafter.
+It is pretended that even if it should be a fiction, it is advantageous,
+because it imposes upon men and leads them to virtue. But is it true
+that this dogma renders men wiser and more virtuous? The nations where
+this fiction is established, are they remarkable for the morality of
+their conduct? Is not the visible world always preferred to the
+invisible world? If those who are charged to instruct and to govern men
+had themselves enlightenment and virtue, they would govern them far
+better by realities than by vain chimeras; but deceitful, ambitious, and
+corrupt, the legislators found it everywhere easier to put the nations
+to sleep by fables than to teach them truths; than to develop their
+reason; than to excite them to virtue by sensible and real motives; than
+to govern them in a reasonable way.
+
+Theologians, no doubt, have had reasons for making the soul immaterial.
+They needed souls and chimeras to populate the imaginary regions which
+they have discovered in the other life. Material souls would have been
+subjected, like all bodies, to dissolution. Moreover, if men believe
+that everything is to perish with the body, the geographers of the other
+world would evidently lose the chance of guiding their souls to this
+unknown abode. They would draw no profits from the hopes with which they
+feast them, and from the terrors with which they take care to overwhelm
+them. If the future is of no real utility to the human race, it is at
+least of the greatest advantage to those who take upon themselves the
+responsibility of conducting mankind thither.
+
+
+
+
+CVIII.--IT IS FALSE THAT THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFE CAN BE CONSOLING; AND
+IF IT WERE, IT WOULD BE NO PROOF THAT THIS ASSERTION IS TRUE.
+
+But, it will be said, is not the dogma of the immortality of the soul
+consoling for beings who often find themselves very unhappy here below?
+If this should be an illusion, is it not a sweet and agreeable one? Is
+it not a benefit for man to believe that he can live again and enjoy,
+sometime, the happiness which is refused to him on earth? Thus, poor
+mortals! you make your wishes the measure of the truth! Because you
+desire to live forever, and to be happier, you conclude from thence that
+you will live forever, and that you will be more fortunate in an unknown
+world than in the known world, in which you so often suffer! Consent,
+then, to leave without regret this world, which causes more trouble than
+pleasure to the majority of you. Resign yourselves to the order of
+destiny, which decrees that you, like all other beings, should not
+endure forever. But what will become of me? you ask! What you were
+several millions of years ago. You were then, I do not know what; resign
+yourselves, then, to become again in an instant, I do not know what;
+what you were then; return peaceably to the universal home from which
+you came without your knowledge into your material form, and pass by
+without murmuring, like all the beings which surround you!
+
+We are repeatedly told that religious ideas offer infinite consolation
+to the unfortunate; it is pretended that the idea of the immortality of
+the soul and of a happier life has a tendency to lift up the heart of
+man and to sustain him in the midst of the adversities with which he is
+assailed in this life. Materialism, on the contrary, is, we are told, an
+afflicting system, tending to degrade man, which ranks him among brutes;
+which destroys his courage, whose only hope is complete annihilation,
+tending to lead him to despair, and inducing him to commit suicide as
+soon as he suffers in this world. The grand policy of theologians is to
+blow hot and to blow cold, to afflict and to console, to frighten and to
+reassure.
+
+According to the fictions of theology, the regions of the other life are
+happy and unhappy. Nothing more difficult than to render one worthy of
+the abode of felicity; nothing easier than to obtain a place in the
+abode of torments that Divinity prepares for the unfortunate victims of
+His eternal fury. Those who find the idea of another life so flattering
+and so sweet, have they then forgotten that this other life, according
+to them, is to be accompanied by torments for the majority of mortals?
+Is not the idea of total annihilation infinitely preferable to the idea
+of an eternal existence accompanied with suffering and gnashing of
+teeth? The fear of ceasing to exist, is it more afflicting than the
+thought of having not always been? The fear of ceasing to be is but an
+evil for the imagination, which alone brought forth the dogma of another
+life.
+
+You say, O Christian philosophers, that the idea of a happier life is
+delightful; we agree; there is no one who would not desire a more
+agreeable and a more durable existence than the one we enjoy here below.
+But, if Paradise is tempting, you will admit, also, that hell is
+frightful. It is very difficult to merit heaven, and very easy to gain
+hell. Do you not say that one straight and narrow path leads to the
+happy regions, and that a broad road leads to the regions of the
+unhappy? Do you not constantly tell us that the number of the chosen
+ones is very small, and that of the damned is very large? Do we not
+need, in order to be saved, such grace as your God grants to but few?
+Well! I tell you that these ideas are by no means consoling; I prefer to
+be annihilated at once rather than to burn forever; I will tell you that
+the fate of beasts appears to me more desirable than the fate of the
+damned; I will tell you that the belief which delivers me from
+overwhelming fears in this world, appears to me more desirable than the
+uncertainty in which I am left through belief in a God who, master of
+His favors, gives them but to His favorites, and who permits all the
+others to render themselves worthy of eternal punishments. It can be but
+blind enthusiasm or folly that can prefer a system which evidently
+encourages improbable conjectures, accompanied by uncertainty and
+desolating fear.
+
+
+
+
+CIX.--ALL RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES ARE IMAGINARY. INNATE SENSE IS BUT THE
+EFFECT OF A ROOTED HABIT. GOD IS AN IDLE FANCY, AND THE QUALITIES WHICH
+ARE LAVISHED UPON HIM DESTROY EACH OTHER.
+
+All religious principles are a thing of imagination, in which experience
+and reason have nothing to do. We find much difficulty in conquering
+them, because imagination, when once occupied in creating chimeras which
+astonish or excite it, is incapable of reasoning. He who combats
+religion and its phantasies by the arms of reason, is like a man who
+uses a sword to kill flies: as soon as the blow is struck, the flies and
+the fancies return to the minds from which we thought to have banished
+them.
+
+As soon as we refuse the proofs which theology pretends to give of the
+existence of a God, they oppose to the arguments which destroy them, an
+innate conviction, a profound persuasion, an invincible inclination
+inherent in every man, which brings to him, in spite of himself, the
+idea of an Almighty being which he can not altogether expel from his
+mind, and which he is compelled to recognize in spite of the strongest
+reasons that we can give him. But if we wish to analyze this innate
+conviction, upon which so much weight is placed, we will find that it is
+but the effect of a rooted habit, which, making them close their eyes
+against the most demonstrative proofs, leads the majority of men, and
+often the most enlightened ones, back to the prejudices of childhood.
+What can this innate sense or this ill-founded persuasion prove against
+the evidence which shows us that what implies contradiction can not
+exist?
+
+We are told, very gravely, that it is not demonstrated that God does not
+exist. However, nothing is better demonstrated, notwithstanding all that
+men have told us so far, than that this God is an idle fancy, whose
+existence is totally impossible, as nothing is more evident or more
+clearly demonstrated than that a being can not combine qualities so
+dissimilar, so contradictory, so irreconcilable as those which all the
+religions of the earth ascribe to Divinity. The theologian's God, as
+well as the God of the theist, is He not evidently a cause incompatible
+with the effects attributed to Him? In whatever light we may look upon
+it, we must either invent another God, or conclude that the one which,
+for so many centuries, has been revealed to mortals, is at the same time
+very good and very wicked, very powerful and very weak, immutable and
+changeable, perfectly intelligent and perfectly destitute of reason, of
+plan, and of means; the friend of order and permitting disorder; very
+just and very unjust; very skillful and very awkward. Finally, are we
+not obliged to admit that it is impossible to reconcile the discordant
+attributes which are heaped upon a being of whom we can not say a single
+word without falling into the most palpable contradictions? Let us
+attempt to attribute but a single quality to Divinity, and what is said
+of it will be contradicted immediately by the effects we assign to this
+cause.
+
+
+
+
+CX.--EVERY RELIGION IS BUT A SYSTEM IMAGINED FOR THE PURPOSE OF
+RECONCILING CONTRADICTIONS BY THE AID OF MYSTERIES.
+
+Theology could very properly be defined as the science of
+contradictions. Every religion is but a system imagined for the purpose
+of reconciling irreconcilable ideas. By the aid of habitude and terror,
+we come to persist in the greatest absurdities, even when they are the
+most clearly exposed. All religions are easy to combat, but very
+difficult to eradicate. Reason can do nothing against habit, which
+becomes, as is said, a second nature. There are many persons otherwise
+sensible, who, even after having examined the ruinous foundations of
+their belief, return to it in spite of the most striking arguments.
+
+As soon as we complain of not understanding religion, finding in it at
+every step absurdities which are repulsive, seeing in it but
+impossibilities, we are told that we are not made to conceive the truths
+of the religion which is proposed to us; that wandering reason is but an
+unfaithful guide, only capable of conducting us to perdition; and what
+is more, we are assured that what is folly in the eyes of man, is wisdom
+in the eyes of God, to whom nothing is impossible. Finally, in order to
+decide by a single word the most insurmountable difficulties which
+theology presents to us on all sides, they simply cry out: "Mysteries!"
+
+
+
+
+CXI.--ABSURDITY AND INUTILITY OF THE MYSTERIES FORGED IN THE SOLE
+INTEREST OF THE PRIESTS.
+
+What is a mystery? If I examine the thing closely, I discover very soon
+that a mystery is nothing but a contradiction, a palpable absurdity, a
+notorious impossibility, on which theologians wish to compel men to
+humbly close the eyes; in a word, a mystery is whatever our spiritual
+guides can not explain to us.
+
+It is advantageous for the ministers of religion that the people should
+not comprehend what they are taught. It is impossible for us to examine
+what we do not comprehend. Every time that we can not see clearly, we
+are obliged to be guided. If religion was comprehensible, priests would
+not have so many charges here below.
+
+No religion is without mysteries; mystery is its essence; a religion
+destitute of mysteries would be a contradiction of terms. The God which
+serves as a foundation to natural religion, to theism or to deism, is
+Himself the greatest mystery to a mind wishing to dwell upon Him.
+
+
+
+
+CXII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+All the revealed religions which we see in the world are filled with
+mysterious dogmas, unintelligible principles, of incredible miracles, of
+astonishing tales which seem imagined but to confound reason. Every
+religion announces a concealed God, whose essence is a mystery;
+consequently, it is just as difficult to conceive of His conduct as of
+the essence of this God Himself. Divinity has never spoken to us but in
+an enigmatical and mysterious way in the various religions which have
+been founded in the different regions of our globe. It has revealed
+itself everywhere but to announce mysteries, that is to say, to warn
+mortals that it designs that they should believe in contradictions, in
+impossibilities, or in things of which they were incapable of forming
+any positive idea.
+
+The more mysteries a religion has, the more incredible objects it
+presents to the mind, the better fitted it is to please the imagination
+of men, who find in it a continual pasturage to feed upon. The more
+obscure a religion is, the more it appears divine, that is to say, in
+conformity to the nature of an invisible being, of whom we have no idea.
+
+It is the peculiarity of ignorance to prefer the unknown, the concealed,
+the fabulous, the wonderful, the incredible, even the terrible, to that
+which is clear, simple, and true. Truth does not give to the imagination
+such lively play as fiction, which each one may arrange as he pleases.
+The vulgar ask nothing better than to listen to fables; priests and
+legislators, by inventing religions and forging mysteries from them,
+have served them to their taste. In this way they have attracted
+enthusiasts, women, and the illiterate generally. Beings of this kind
+resign easily to reasons which they are incapable of examining; the love
+of the simple and the true is found but in the small number of those
+whose imagination is regulated by study and by reflection. The
+inhabitants of a village are never more pleased with their pastor than
+when he mixes a good deal of Latin in his sermon. Ignorant men always
+imagine that he who speaks to them of things which they do not
+understand, is a very wise and learned man. This is the true principle
+of the credulity of nations, and of the authority of those who pretend
+to guide them.
+
+
+
+
+CXIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+To speak to men to announce to them mysteries, is to give and retain, it
+is to speak not to be understood. He who talks but by enigmas, either
+seeks to amuse himself by the embarrassment which he causes, or finds it
+to his advantage not to explain himself too clearly. Every secret
+betrays suspicion, weakness, and fear. Princes and their ministers make
+a mystery of their projects for fear that their enemies in penetrating
+them would cause them to fail. Can a good God amuse Himself by the
+embarrassment of His creatures? A God who enjoys a power which nothing
+in the world can resist, can He apprehend that His intentions could be
+thwarted? What interest would He have in putting upon us enigmas and
+mysteries? We are told that man, by the weakness of his nature, is not
+capable of comprehending the Divine economy which can be to him but a
+tissue of mysteries; that God can not unveil secrets to him which are
+beyond his reach. In this case, I reply, that man is not made to trouble
+himself with Divine economy, that this economy can not interest him in
+the least, that he has no need of mysteries which he can not understand;
+finally, that a mysterious religion is not made for him, any more than
+an eloquent discourse is made for a flock of sheep.
+
+
+
+
+CXIV.--A UNIVERSAL GOD SHOULD HAVE REVEALED A UNIVERSAL RELIGION.
+
+Divinity has revealed itself in the different parts of our globe in a
+manner of such little uniformity, that in matters of religion men look
+upon each other with hatred and disdain. The partisans of the different
+sects see each other very ridiculous and foolish. The most respected
+mysteries in one religion are laughable for another. God, having
+revealed Himself to men, ought at least to speak in the same language to
+all, and relieve their weak minds of the embarrassment of seeking what
+can be the religion which truly emanated from Him, or what is the most
+agreeable form of worship in His eyes.
+
+A universal God ought to have revealed a universal religion. By what
+fatality are so many different religions found on the earth? Which is
+the true one amongst the great number of those of which each one
+pretends to be the right one, to the exclusion of all the others? We
+have every reason to believe that not one of them enjoys this advantage.
+The divisions and the disputes about opinions are indubitable signs of
+the uncertainty and of the obscurity of the principles which they
+profess.
+
+
+
+
+CXV.--THE PROOF THAT RELIGION IS NOT NECESSARY, IS THAT IT IS
+UNINTELLIGIBLE.
+
+If religion was necessary to all men, it ought to be intelligible to all
+men. If this religion was the most important thing for them, the
+goodness of God, it seems, ought to make it for them the clearest, the
+most evident, and the best demonstrated of all things. Is it not
+astonishing to see that this matter, so essential to the salvation of
+mortals, is precisely the one which they understand the least, and about
+which, during so many centuries, their doctors have disputed the most?
+Never have priests, of even the same sect, come to an agreement among
+themselves about the manner of understanding the wishes of a God who has
+truly revealed Himself to them. The world which we inhabit can be
+compared to a public place, in whose different parts several charlatans
+are placed, each one straining himself to attract customers by
+depreciating the remedies offered by his competitors. Each stand has its
+purchasers, who are persuaded that their empiric alone possesses the
+good remedies; notwithstanding the continual use which they make of
+them, they do not perceive that they are no better, or that they are
+just as sick as those who run after the charlatans of another stand.
+Devotion is a disease of the imagination, contracted in infancy; the
+devotee is a hypochondriac, who increases his disease by the use of
+remedies. The wise man takes none of it; he follows a good regimen and
+leaves the rest to nature.
+
+
+
+
+CXVI.--ALL RELIGIONS ARE RIDICULED BY THOSE OF OPPOSITE THOUGH EQUALLY
+INSANE BELIEF.
+
+Nothing appears more ridiculous in the eyes of a sensible man than for
+one denomination to criticize another whose creed is equally foolish. A
+Christian thinks that the Koran, the Divine revelation announced by
+Mohammed, is but a tissue of impertinent dreams and impostures injurious
+to Divinity. The Mohammedan, on his side, treats the Christian as an
+idolater and a dog; he sees but absurdities in his religion; he imagines
+he has the right to conquer his country and force him, sword in hand, to
+accept the faith of his Divine prophet; he believes especially that
+nothing is more impious or more unreasonable than to worship a man or to
+believe in the Trinity. The Protestant Christian, who without scruple
+worships a man, and who believes firmly in the inconceivable mystery of
+the Trinity, ridicules the Catholic Christian because the latter
+believes in the mystery of the transubstantiation. He treats him as a
+fool, as ungodly and idolatrous, because he kneels to worship the bread
+in which he believes he sees the God of the universe. All the Christian
+denominations agree in considering as folly the incarnation of the God
+of the Indies, Vishnu. They contend that the only true incarnation is
+that of Jesus, Son of the God of the universe and of the wife of a
+carpenter. The theist, who calls himself a votary of natural religion,
+is satisfied to acknowledge a God of whom he has no conception; indulges
+himself in jesting upon other mysteries taught by all the religions of
+the world.
+
+
+
+
+CXVII.--OPINION OF A CELEBRATED THEOLOGIAN.
+
+Did not a famous theologian recognize the absurdity of admitting the
+existence of a God and arresting His course? "To us," he said, "who
+believe through faith in a true God, an individual substance, there
+ought to be no trouble in believing everything else. This first mystery,
+which is no small matter of itself, once admitted, our reason can not
+suffer violence in admitting all the rest. As for myself, it is no more
+trouble to accept a million of things that I do not understand, than to
+believe the first one."
+
+Is there anything more contradictory, more impossible, or more
+mysterious, than the creation of matter by an immaterial Being, who
+Himself immutable, causes the continual changes that we see in the
+world? Is there anything more incompatible with all the ideas of common
+sense than to believe that a good, wise, equitable, and powerful Being
+presides over nature and directs Himself the movements of a world which
+is filled with follies, miseries, crimes, and disorders, which He could
+have foreseen, and by a single word could have prevented or made to
+disappear? Finally, as soon as we admit a Being so contradictory as the
+theological God, what right have we to refuse to accept the most
+improbable fables, the most astonishing miracles, the most profound
+mysteries?
+
+
+
+
+CXVIII.--THE DEIST'S GOD IS NO LESS CONTRADICTORY, NO LESS FANCIFUL, THAN
+THE THEOLOGIAN'S GOD.
+
+The theist exclaims, "Be careful not to worship the ferocious and
+strange God of theology; mine is much wiser and better; He is the Father
+of men; He is the mildest of Sovereigns; it is He who fills the universe
+with His benefactions!" But I will tell him, do you not see that
+everything in this world contradicts the good qualities which you
+attribute to your God? In the numerous family of this mild Father I see
+but unfortunate ones. Under the empire of this just Sovereign I see
+crime victorious and virtue in distress. Among these benefactions, which
+you boast of, and which your enthusiasm alone sees, I see a multitude of
+evils of all kinds, upon which you obstinately close your eyes.
+
+
+
+Compelled to acknowledge that your good God, in contradiction with
+Himself, distributes with the same hand good and evil, you will find
+yourself obliged, in order to justify Him, to send me, as the priests
+would, to the other life. Invent, then, another God than the one of
+theology, because your God is as contradictory as its God is. A good God
+who does evil or who permits it to be done, a God full of equity and in
+an empire where innocence is so often oppressed; a perfect God who
+produces but imperfect and wretched works; such a God and His conduct,
+are they not as great mysteries as that of the incarnation? You blush,
+you say, for your fellow beings who are persuaded that the God of the
+universe could change Himself into a man and die upon a cross in a
+corner of Asia. You consider the ineffable mystery of the Trinity very
+absurd Nothing appears more ridiculous to you than a God who changes
+Himself into bread and who is eaten every day in a thousand different
+places.
+
+Well! are all these mysteries any more shocking to reason than a God who
+punishes and rewards men's actions? Man, according to your views, is he
+free or not? In either case your God, if He has the shadow of justice,
+can neither punish him nor reward him. If man is free, it is God who
+made him free to act or not to act; it is God, then, who is the
+primitive cause of all his actions; in punishing man for his faults, He
+would punish him for having done that which He gave him the liberty to
+do. If man is not free to act otherwise than he does, would not God be
+the most unjust of beings to punish him for the faults which he could
+not help committing? Many persons are struck with the detail of
+absurdities with which all religions of the world are filled; but they
+have not the courage to seek for the source whence these absurdities
+necessarily sprung. They do not see that a God full of contradictions,
+of oddities, of incompatible qualities, either inflaming or nursing the
+imagination of men, could create but a long line of idle fancies.
+
+
+
+
+CXIX.--WE DO NOT PROVE AT ALL THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD BY SAYING THAT IN
+ALL AGES EVERY NATION HAS ACKNOWLEDGED SOME KIND OF DIVINITY.
+
+They believe, to silence those who deny the existence of a God, by
+telling them that all men, in all ages and in all centuries, have
+believed in some kind of a God; that there is no people on the earth who
+have not believed in an invisible and powerful being, whom they made the
+object of their worship and of their veneration; finally, that there is
+no nation, no matter how benighted we may suppose it to be, that is not
+persuaded of the existence of some intelligence superior to human
+nature. But can the belief of all men change an error into truth? A
+celebrated philosopher has said with all reason: "Neither general
+tradition nor the unanimous consent of all men could place any
+injunction upon truth." [Bayle.] Another wise man said before him, that
+"an army of philosophers would not be sufficient to change the nature of
+error and to make it truth." [Averroës]
+
+There was a time when all men believed that the sun revolved around the
+earth, while the latter remained motionless in the center of the whole
+system of the universe; it is scarcely more than two hundred years since
+this error was refuted. There was a time when nobody would believe in
+the existence of antipodes, and when they persecuted those who had the
+courage to sustain it; to-day no learned man dares to doubt it. All
+nations of the world, except some men less credulous than others, still
+believe in sorcerers, ghosts, apparitions, spirits; no sensible man
+imagines himself obliged to adopt these follies; but the most sensible
+people feel obliged to believe in a universal Spirit!
+
+
+
+
+CXX.--ALL THE GODS ARE OF A BARBAROUS ORIGIN; ALL RELIGIONS ARE ANTIQUE
+MONUMENTS OF IGNORANCE, SUPERSTITION, AND FEROCITY; AND MODERN RELIGIONS
+ARE BUT ANCIENT FOLLIES REVIVED.
+
+All the Gods worshiped by men have a barbarous origin; they were visibly
+imagined by stupid nations, or were presented by ambitious and cunning
+legislators to simple and benighted people, who had neither the capacity
+nor the courage to examine properly the object which, by means of
+terrors, they were made to worship. In examining closely the God which
+we see adored still in our days by the most civilized nations, we are
+compelled to acknowledge that He has evidently barbarous features. To be
+barbarous is to recognize no right but force; it is being cruel to
+excess; it is but following one's own caprice; it is a lack of
+foresight, of prudence, and reason. Nations, who believe yourselves
+civilized! do you not perceive this frightful character of the God to
+whom you offer your incense? The pictures which are drawn of Divinity,
+are they not visibly borrowed from the implacable, jealous, vindictive,
+blood-thirsty, capricious, inconsiderate humor of man, who has not yet
+cultivated his reason? Oh, men! you worship but a great savage, whom you
+consider as a model to follow, as an amiable master, as a perfect
+sovereign.
+
+The religious opinions of men in every country are antique and durable
+monuments of ignorance credulity, of the terrors and the ferocity of
+their ancestors. Every barbarian is a child thirsting for the wonderful,
+which he imbibes with pleasure, and who never reasons upon that which he
+finds proper to excite his imagination; his ignorance of the ways of
+nature makes him attribute to spirits, to enchantments, to magic, all
+that appears to him extraordinary; in his eyes his priests are
+sorcerers, in whom he supposes an Almighty power; before whom his
+confused reason humiliates itself, whose oracles are for him infallible
+decrees, to contradict which would be dangerous. In matters of religion
+the majority of men have remained in their primitive barbarity. Modern
+religions are but follies of old times rejuvenated or presented in some
+new form. If the ancient barbarians have worshiped mountains, rivers,
+serpents, trees, fetishes of every kind; if the wise Egyptians worshiped
+crocodiles, rats, onions, do we not see nations who believe themselves
+wiser than they, worship with reverence a bread, into which they imagine
+that the enchantments of their priests cause the Divinity to descend? Is
+not the God-bread the fetish of many Christian nations, as little
+rational in this point as that of the most barbarous nations?
+
+
+
+
+CXXI.--ALL RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES BEAR THE SEAL OF STUPIDITY OR BARBARITY.
+
+In all times the ferocity, the stupidity, the folly of savage men were
+shown in religious customs which were often cruel and extravagant. A
+spirit of barbarity has come down to our days; it intrudes itself into
+the religions which are followed by the most civilized nations. Do we
+not still see human victims offered to Divinity? In order to appease the
+wrath of a God whom we suppose as ferocious, as jealous, as vindictive,
+as a savage, do not sanguinary laws cause the destruction of those who
+are believed to have displeased Him by their way of thinking?
+
+Modern nations, at the instigation of their priests, have even excelled
+the atrocious folly of the most barbarous nations; at least do we not
+find that it never entered into a savage's mind to torment for the sake
+of opinions, to meddle in thought, to trouble men for the invisible
+actions of their brains? When we see polished and wise nations, such as
+the English, French, German, etc., notwithstanding all their
+enlightenment, continue to kneel before the barbarous God of the Jews,
+that is to say, of the most stupid, the most credulous, the most savage,
+the most unsocial nation which ever was on the earth; when we see these
+enlightened nations divide themselves into sects, tear one another, hate
+and despise each other for opinions, equally ridiculous, upon the
+conduct and the intentions of this irrational God; when we see
+intelligent persons occupy themselves foolishly in meditating on the
+wishes of this capricious and foolish God; we are tempted to exclaim,
+"Oh, men! you are still savages! Oh, men! you are but children in the
+matter of religion!"
+
+
+
+
+CXXII.--THE MORE ANCIENT AND GENERAL A RELIGIOUS OPINION IS, THE GREATER
+THE REASON FOR SUSPECTING IT.
+
+Whoever has formed true ideas of the ignorance, credulity, negligence,
+and sottishness of common people, will always regard their religious
+opinions with the greater suspicion for their being generally
+established. The majority of men examine nothing; they allow themselves
+to be blindly led by custom and authority; their religious opinions are
+specially those which they have the least courage and capacity to
+examine; as they do not understand anything about them, they are
+compelled to be silent or put an end to their reasoning. Ask the common
+man if he believes in God. He will be surprised that you could doubt it.
+Then ask him what he understands by the word God. You will confuse him;
+you will perceive at once that he is incapable of forming any real idea
+of this word which he so often repeats; he will tell you that God is
+God, and you will find that he knows neither what he thinks of Him, nor
+the motives which he has for believing in Him.
+
+All nations speak of a God; but do they agree upon this God? No! Well,
+difference of opinion does not serve as evidence, but is a sign of
+uncertainty and obscurity. Does the same man always agree with himself
+in his ideas of God? No! This idea varies with the vicissitudes of his
+life. This is another sign of uncertainty. Men always agree with other
+men and with themselves upon demonstrated truths, regardless of the
+position in which they find themselves; except the insane, all agree
+that two and two make four, that the sun shines, that the whole is
+greater than any one of its parts, that Justice is a benefaction, that
+we must be benevolent to deserve the love of men, that injustice and
+cruelty are incompatible with goodness. Do they agree in the same way if
+they speak of God? All that they think or say of Him is immediately
+contradicted by the effects which they wish to attribute to Him. Tell
+several artists to paint a chimera, each of them will form different
+ideas of it, and will paint it differently; you will find no resemblance
+in the features each of them will have given to a portrait whose model
+exists nowhere. In painting God, do any of the theologians of the world
+represent Him otherwise than as a great chimera, upon whose features
+they never agree, each one arranging it according to his style, which
+has its origin but in his own brain? There are no two individuals in the
+world who have or can have the same ideas of their God.
+
+
+
+
+CXXIII.--SKEPTICISM IN THE MATTER OF RELIGION, CAN BE THE EFFECT OF BUT A
+SUPERFICIAL EXAMINATION OF THEOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES.
+
+Perhaps it would be more truthful to say, that all men are either
+skeptics or atheists, than to pretend that they are firmly convinced of
+the existence of a God. How can we be assured of the existence of a
+being whom we never have been able to examine, of whom it is impossible
+to form any permanent idea, whose different effects upon ourselves
+prevent us from forming an invariable judgment, of whom no idea can be
+uniform in two different brains? How can we claim to be completely
+persuaded of the existence of a being to whom we are constantly obliged
+to attribute a conduct opposed co the ideas which we had tried to form
+of it? Is it possible firmly to believe what we can not conceive? In
+believing thus, are we not adhering to the opinions of others without
+having one of our own? The priests regulate the belief of the vulgar;
+but do not these priests themselves acknowledge that God is
+incomprehensible to them? Let us conclude, then, that the conviction of
+the existence of a God is not as general as it is affirmed to be.
+
+To be a skeptic, is to lack the motives necessary to establish a
+judgment. In view of the proofs which seem to establish, and of the
+arguments which combat the existence of a God, some persons prefer to
+doubt and to suspend their judgment; but at the bottom, this uncertainty
+is the result of an insufficient examination. Is it, then, possible to
+doubt evidence? Sensible people deride, and with reason, an absolute
+pyrrhonism, and even consider it impossible. A man who could doubt his
+own existence, or that of the sun, would appear very ridiculous, or
+would be suspected of reasoning in bad faith. Is it less extravagant to
+have uncertainties about the non-existence of an evidently impossible
+being? Is it more absurd to doubt of one's own existence, than to
+hesitate upon the impossibility of a being whose qualities destroy each
+other? Do we find more probabilities for believing in a spiritual being
+than for believing in the existence of a stick without two ends? Is the
+notion of an infinitely good and powerful being who permits an infinity
+of evils, less absurd or less impossible than that of a square triangle?
+
+
+
+Let us conclude, then, that religious skepticism can be but the effect
+of a superficial examination of theological principles, which are in a
+perpetual contradiction of the clearest and best demonstrated
+principles! To doubt is to deliberate upon the judgment which we should
+pass. Skepticism is but a state of indecision which results from a
+superficial examination of subjects. Is it possible to be skeptical in
+the matter of religion when we design to return to its principles, and
+look closely into the idea of the God who serves as its foundation?
+Doubt arises ordinarily from laziness, weakness, indifference, or
+incapacity. To doubt, for many people, is to dread the trouble of
+examining things to which one attaches but little interest. Although
+religion is presented to men as the most important thing for them in
+this world as well as in the other, skepticism and doubt on this subject
+can be for the mind but a disagreeable state, and offers but a
+comfortable cushion. No man who has not the courage to contemplate
+without prejudice the God upon whom every religion is founded, can know
+what religion to accept; he does not know what to believe and what not
+to believe, to accept or to reject, what to hope or fear; finally, he is
+incompetent to judge for himself.
+
+Indifference upon religion can not be confounded with skepticism; this
+indifference itself is founded upon the assurance or upon the
+probability which we find in believing that religion is not made to
+interest us. The persuasion which we have that a thing which is
+presented to us as very important, is not so, or is but indifferent,
+supposes a sufficient examination of the thing, without which it would
+be impossible to have this persuasion. Those who call themselves
+skeptics in regard to the fundamental points of religion, are generally
+but idle and lazy men, who are incapable of examining them.
+
+
+
+
+CXXIV.--REVELATION REFUTED.
+
+In all parts of the world, we are assured that God revealed Himself.
+What did He teach men? Does He prove to them evidently that He exists?
+Does He tell them where He resides? Does He teach them what He is, or of
+what His essence consists? Does He explain to them clearly His
+intentions and His plan? What He says of this plan, does it agree with
+the effects which we see? No! He informs us only that "He is the One
+that is," [I am that I am, saith the Lord] that He is an invincible God,
+that His ways are ineffable, that He becomes furious as soon as one has
+the temerity to penetrate His decrees, or to consult reason in order to
+judge of Him or His works. Does the revealed conduct of God correspond
+with the magnificent ideas which are given to us of His wisdom,
+goodness, justice, of His omnipotence? Not at all; in every revelation
+this conduct shows a partial, capricious being, at least, good to His
+favorite people, an enemy to all others. If He condescends to show
+Himself to some men, He takes care to keep all the others in invincible
+ignorance of His divine intentions. Does not every special revelation
+announce an unjust, partial, and malicious God?
+
+Are the revealed wishes of a God capable of striking us by the sublime
+reason or the wisdom which they contain? Do they tend to the happiness
+of the people to whom Divinity has declared them? Examining the Divine
+wishes, I find in them, in all countries, but whimsical ordinances,
+ridiculous precepts, ceremonies of which we do not understand the aim,
+puerile practices, principles of conduct unworthy of the Monarch of
+Nature, offerings, sacrifices, expiations, useful, in fact, to the
+ministers of God, but very onerous to the rest of mankind. I find also,
+that they often have a tendency to render men unsocial, disdainful,
+intolerant, quarrelsome, unjust, inhuman toward all those who have not
+received either the same revelations as they, or the same ordinances, or
+the same favors from Heaven.
+
+
+
+
+CXXV.--WHERE, THEN, IS THE PROOF THAT GOD DID EVER SHOW HIMSELF TO MEN OR
+SPEAK TO THEM?
+
+Are the precepts of morality as announced by Divinity truly Divine, or
+superior to those which every rational man could imagine? They are
+Divine only because it is impossible for the human mind to see their
+utility. Their virtue consists in a total renunciation of human nature,
+in a voluntary oblivion of one's reason, in a holy hatred of self;
+finally, these sublime precepts show us perfection in a conduct cruel to
+ourselves and perfectly useless to others.
+
+How did God show Himself? Did He Himself promulgate His laws? Did He
+speak to men with His own mouth? I am told that God did not show Himself
+to a whole nation, but that He employed always the organism of a few
+favored persons, who took the care to teach and to explain His
+intentions to the unlearned. It was never permitted to the people to go
+to the sanctuary; the ministers of the Gods always alone had the right
+to report to them what transpired.
+
+
+
+
+CXXVI.--NOTHING ESTABLISHES THE TRUTH OF MIRACLES.
+
+If, in the economy of all Divine revelations, I am unable to recognize
+either the wisdom, the goodness, or the equity of a God; if I suspect
+deceit, ambition, selfish designs in the great personages who have
+interposed between Heaven and us, I am assured that God has confirmed,
+by splendid miracles, the mission of those who have spoken for Him. But
+was it not much easier to show Himself, and to explain for Himself? On
+the other hand, if I have the curiosity to examine these miracles, I
+find that they are tales void of probability, related by suspicious
+people, who had the greatest interest in making others believe that they
+were sent from the Most High.
+
+What witnesses are referred to in order to make us believe incredible
+miracles? They call as witnesses stupid people, who have ceased to exist
+for thousands of years, and who, even if they could attest the miracles
+in question, would be suspected of having been deceived by their own
+imagination, and of permitting themselves to be seduced by the illusions
+which skillful impostors performed before their eyes. But, you will say,
+these miracles are recorded in books which through constant tradition
+have been handed down to us. By whom were these books written? Who are
+the men who have transmitted and perpetuated them? They are either the
+same people who established these religions, or those who have become
+their adherents and their assistants. Thus, in the matter of religion,
+the testimony of interested parties is irrefragable and can not be
+contested!
+
+
+
+
+CXXVII.--IF GOD HAD SPOKEN, IT WOULD BE STRANGE THAT HE HAD SPOKEN
+DIFFERENTLY TO ALL THE ADHERENTS OF THE DIFFERENT SECTS, WHO DAMN EACH
+OTHER, WHO ACCUSE EACH OTHER, WITH REASON, OF SUPERSTITION AND IMPIETY.
+
+God has spoken differently to each nation of the globe which we inhabit.
+The Indian does not believe one word of what He said to the Chinaman;
+the Mohammedan considers what He has told to the Christian as fables;
+the Jew considers the Mohammedan and the Christian as sacrilegious
+corruptors of the Holy Law, which his God has given to his fathers. The
+Christian, proud of his more modern revelation, equally damns the Indian
+and the Chinaman, the Mohammedan, and even the Jew, whose holy books he
+holds. Who is wrong or right? Each one exclaims: "It is I!" Every one
+claims the same proofs; each one speaks of his miracles, his saints, his
+prophets, his martyrs. Sensible men answer, that they are all delirious;
+that God has not spoken, if it is true that He is a Spirit who has
+neither mouth nor tongue; that the God of the Universe could, without
+borrowing mortal organism, inspire His creatures with what He desired
+them to learn, and that, as they are all equally ignorant of what they
+ought to think about God, it is evident that God did not want to
+instruct them. The adherents of the different forms of worship which we
+see established in this world, accuse each other of superstition and of
+ungodliness. The Christians abhor the superstition of the heathen, of
+the Chinese, of the Mohammedans. The Roman Catholics treat the
+Protestant Christians as impious; the latter incessantly declaim against
+Roman superstition. They are all right. To be impious, is to have unjust
+opinions about the God who is adored; to be superstitious, is to have
+false ideas of Him. In accusing each other of superstition, the
+different religionists resemble humpbacks who taunt each other with
+their malformation.
+
+
+
+
+CXXVIII.--OBSCURE AND SUSPICIOUS ORIGIN OF ORACLES.
+
+The oracles which the Deity has revealed to the nations through His
+different mediums, are they clear? Alas! there are not two men who
+understand them alike. Those who explain them to others do not agree
+among themselves; in order to make them clear, they have recourse to
+interpretations, to commentaries, to allegories, to parables, in which
+is found a mystical sense very different from the literal one. Men are
+needed everywhere to explain the wishes of God, who could not or would
+not explain Himself clearly to those whom He desired to enlighten. God
+always prefers to use as mediums men who can be suspected of having been
+deceived themselves, or having reasons to deceive others.
+
+
+
+
+CXXIX.--ABSURDITY OF PRETENDED MIRACLES.
+
+The founders of all religions have usually proved their mission by
+miracles. But what is a miracle? It is an operation directly opposed to
+the laws of nature. But, according to you, who has made these laws? It
+is God. Thus your God, who, according to you, has foreseen everything,
+counteracts the laws which His wisdom had imposed upon nature! These
+laws were then defective, or at least in certain circumstances they
+were but in accordance with the views of this same God, for you tell us
+that He thought He ought to suspend or counteract them.
+
+An attempt is made to persuade us that men who have been favored by the
+Most High have received from Him the power to perform miracles; but in
+order to perform a miracle, it is necessary to have the faculty of
+creating new causes capable of producing effects opposed to those which
+ordinary causes can produce. Can we realize how God can give to men the
+inconceivable power of creating causes out of nothing? Can it be
+believed that an unchangeable God can communicate to man the power to
+change or rectify His plan, a power which, according to His essence, an
+immutable being can not have himself? Miracles, far from doing much
+honor to God, far from proving the Divinity of religion, destroy
+evidently the idea which is given to us of God, of His immutability, of
+His incommunicable attributes, and even of His omnipotence. How can a
+theologian tell us that a God who embraced at once the whole of His
+plan, who could make but perfect laws, who can change nothing in them,
+should be obliged to employ miracles to make His projects successful, or
+grant to His creatures the faculty of performing prodigies, in order to
+execute His Divine will? Is it probable that a God needs the support of
+men? An Omnipotent Being, whose wishes are always gratified, a Being who
+holds in His hands the hearts and the minds of His creatures, needs but
+to wish, in order to make them believe all He desires.
+
+
+
+
+CXXX.--REFUTATION OF PASCAL'S MANNER OF REASONING AS TO HOW WE SHOULD
+JUDGE MIRACLES.
+
+What should we say of religions that based their Divinity upon miracles
+which they themselves cause to appear suspicious? How can we place any
+faith in the miracles related in the Holy Books of the Christians, where
+God Himself boasts of hardening hearts, of blinding those whom He wishes
+to ruin; where this God permits wicked spirits and magicians to perform
+as wonderful miracles as those of His servants; where it is prophesied
+that the Anti-Christ will have the power to perform miracles capable of
+destroying the faith even of the elect? This granted, how can we know
+whether God wants to instruct us or to lay a snare for us? How can we
+distinguish whether the wonders which we see, proceed from God or the
+Devil? Pascal, in order to disembarrass us, says very gravely, that we
+must judge the doctrine by miracles, and the miracles by the doctrine;
+that doctrine judges the miracles, and the miracles judge the doctrine.
+If there exists a defective and ridiculous circle, it is no doubt in
+this fine reasoning of one of the greatest defenders of the Christian
+religion. Which of all the religions in the world does not claim to
+possess the most admirable doctrine, and which does not bring to its aid
+a great number of miracles?
+
+Is a miracle capable of destroying a demonstrated truth? Although a man
+should have the secret of curing all diseases, of making the lame to
+walk, of raising all the dead of a city, of floating in the air, of
+arresting the course of the sun and of the moon, will he be able to
+convince me by all this that two and two do not make four; that one
+makes three and that three makes but one; that a God who fills the
+universe with His immensity, could have transformed Himself into the
+body of a Jew; that the eternal can perish like man; that an immutable,
+foreseeing, and sensible God could have changed His opinion upon His
+religion, and reform His own work by a new revelation?
+
+
+
+
+CXXXI.--EVEN ACCORDING TO THE PRINCIPLES OF THEOLOGY ITSELF, EVERY NEW
+REVELATION SHOULD BE REFUTED AS FALSE AND IMPIOUS.
+
+According to the principles of theology itself, whether natural or
+revealed, every new revelation ought to be considered false; every
+change in a religion which had emanated from the Deity ought to be
+refuted as ungodly and blasphemous. Does not every reform suppose that
+God did not know how at the start to give His religion the required
+solidity and perfection? To say that God in giving a first law
+accommodated Himself to the gross ideas of a people whom He wished to
+enlighten, is to pretend that God neither could nor would make the
+people whom He enlightened at that time, as reasonable as they ought to
+be to please Him.
+
+
+
+
+Christianity is an impiety, if it is true that Judaism as a religion
+really emanated from a Holy, Immutable, Almighty, grid Foreseeing God.
+
+
+
+Christ's religion implies either defects in the law that God Himself
+gave by Moses, or impotence or malice in this God who could not, or
+would not make the Jews as they ought to be to please Him. All
+religions, whether new, or ancient ones reformed, are evidently founded
+on the weakness, the inconstancy, the imprudence, and the malice of the
+Deity.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXII.--EVEN THE BLOOD OF THE MARTYRS, TESTIFIES AGAINST THE TRUTH OF
+MIRACLES AND AGAINST THE DIVINE ORIGIN WHICH CHRISTIANITY CLAIMS.
+
+If history informs me that the first apostles, founders or reformers of
+religions, performed great miracles, history teaches me also that these
+reforming apostles and their adherents have been usually despised,
+persecuted, and put to death as disturbers of the peace of nations. I am
+then tempted to believe that they have not performed the miracles
+attributed to them. Finally, these miracles should have procured to them
+a great number of disciples among those who witnessed them, who ought to
+have prevented the performers from being maltreated. My incredulity
+increases if I am told that the performers of miracles have been cruelly
+tormented or slain. How can we believe that missionaries, protected by a
+God, invested with His Divine Power, and enjoying the gift of miracles,
+could not perform the simple miracle of escaping from the cruelty of
+their persecutors?
+
+Persecutions themselves are considered as a convincing proof in favor of
+the religion of those who have suffered them; but a religion which
+boasts of having caused the death of many martyrs, and which informs us
+that its founders have suffered for its extension unheard-of torments,
+can not be the religion of a benevolent, equitable, and Almighty God. A
+good God would not permit that men charged with revealing His will
+should be misused. An omnipotent God desiring to found a religion, would
+have employed simpler and less fatal means for His most faithful
+servants. To say that God desired that His religion should be sealed by
+blood, is to say that this God is weak, unjust, ungrateful, and
+sanguinary, and that He sacrifices unworthily His missionaries to the
+interests of His ambition.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXIII.--THE FANATICISM OF THE MARTYRS, THE INTERESTED ZEAL OF
+MISSIONARIES, PROVE IN NOWISE THE TRUTH OF RELIGION.
+
+To die for a religion does not prove it true or Divine; this proves at
+most that we suppose it to be so. An enthusiast in dying proves nothing
+but that religious fanaticism is often stronger than the love of life.
+An impostor can sometimes die with courage; he makes then, as is said,
+"a virtue of necessity." We are often surprised and affected at the
+sight of the generous courage and the disinterested zeal which have led
+missionaries to preach their doctrine at the risk even of suffering the
+most rigorous torments. We draw from this love, which is exhibited for
+the salvation of men, deductions favorable to the religion which they
+have proclaimed; but in truth this disinterestedness is only apparent.
+"Nothing ventured, nothing gained!" A missionary seeks fortune by the
+aid of his doctrine; he knows that if he has the good fortune to retail
+his commodity, he will become the absolute master of those who accept
+him as their guide; he is sure to become the object of their care, of
+their respect, of their veneration; he has every reason to believe that
+he will be abundantly provided for. These are the true motives which
+kindle the zeal and the charity of so many preachers and missionaries
+who travel all over the world.
+
+To die for an opinion, proves no more the truth or the soundness of this
+opinion than to die in a battle proves the right of the prince, for
+whose benefit so many people are foolish enough to sacrifice themselves.
+The courage of a martyr, animated by the idea of Paradise, is not any
+more supernatural than the courage of a warrior, inspired with the idea
+of glory or held to duty by the fear of disgrace. What difference do we
+find between an Iroquois who sings while he is burned by a slow fire,
+and the martyr St. Lawrence, who while upon the gridiron insults his
+tyrant?
+
+The preachers of a new doctrine succumb because they are not the
+strongest; the apostles usually practice a perilous business, whose
+consequences they can foresee; their courageous death does not prove any
+more the truth of their principles or their own sincerity, than the
+violent death of an ambitious man or a brigand proves that they had the
+right to trouble society, or that they believed themselves authorized to
+do it. A missionary's profession has been always flattering to his
+ambition, and has enabled him to subsist at the expense of the common
+people; these advantages have been sufficient to make him forget the
+dangers which are connected with it.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXIV.--THEOLOGY MAKES OF ITS GOD AN ENEMY OF COMMON SENSE AND OF
+ENLIGHTENMENT.
+
+You tell us, O theologians! that "what is folly in the eyes of men, is
+wisdom before God, who is pleased to confound the wisdom of the wise."
+But do you not pretend that human wisdom is a gift from Heaven? In
+telling us that this wisdom displeases God, is but folly in His eyes,
+and that He wishes to confound it, you proclaim that your God is but the
+friend of unenlightened people, and that He makes to sensible people a
+fatal gift, for which this perfidious Tyrant promises to punish them
+cruelly some day. Is it not very strange that we can not be the friend
+of your God but by declaring ourselves the enemy of reason and common
+sense?
+
+
+
+
+CXXXV.--FAITH IS IRRECONCILABLE WITH REASON, AND REASON IS PREFERABLE TO
+FAITH.
+
+Faith, according to theologians, is consent without evidence. From this
+it follows that religion exacts that we should firmly believe, without
+evidence, in propositions which are often improbable or opposed to
+reason. But to challenge reason as a judge of faith, is it not
+acknowledging that reason can not agree with faith? As the ministers of
+religion have determined to banish reason, they must have felt the
+impossibility of reconciling reason with faith, which is visibly but a
+blind submission to those priests whose authority, in many minds,
+appears to be of a greater importance than evidence itself, and
+preferable to the testimony of the senses. "Sacrifice your reason; give
+up experience; distrust the testimony of your senses; submit without
+examination to all that is given to you as coming from Heaven." This is
+the usual language of all the priests of the world; they do not agree
+upon any point, except in the necessity of never reasoning when they
+present principles to us which they claim as the most important to our
+happiness.
+
+I will not sacrifice my reason, because this reason alone enables me to
+distinguish good from evil, the true from the false. If, as you pretend,
+my reason comes from God, I will never believe that a God whom you call
+so good, had ever given me reason but as a snare, in order to lead me to
+perdition. Priests! in crying down reason, do you not see that you
+slander your God, who, as you assure us, has given us this reason?
+
+I will not give up experience, because it is a much better guide than
+imagination, or than the authority of the guides whom they wish to give
+me. This experience teaches me that enthusiasm and interest can blind
+and mislead them, and that the authority of experience ought to have
+more weight upon my mind than the suspicious testimony of many men whom
+I know to be capable of deceiving themselves, or very much interested in
+deceiving others.
+
+I will not distrust my senses. I do not ignore the fact that they can
+sometimes lead me into error; but on the other hand, I know that they do
+not deceive me always. I know very well that the eye shows the sun much
+smaller than it really is; but experience, which is only the repeated
+application of the senses, teaches me that objects continually diminish
+by reason of their distance; it is by these means that I reach the
+conclusion that the sun is much larger than the earth; it is thus that
+my senses suffice to rectify the hasty judgments which they induced me
+to form. In warning me to doubt the testimony of my senses, you destroy
+for me the proofs of all religion. If men can be dupes of their
+imagination, if their senses are deceivers, why would you have me
+believe in the miracles which made an impression upon the deceiving
+senses of our ancestors? If my senses are faithless guides, I learn that
+I should not have faith even in the miracles which I might see performed
+under my own eyes.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXVI.--HOW ABSURD AND RIDICULOUS IS THE SOPHISTRY OF THOSE WHO WISH TO
+SUBSTITUTE FAITH FOR REASON.
+
+You tell me continually that the "truths of religion are beyond reason."
+Do you not admit, then, that these truths are not made for reasonable
+beings? To pretend that reason can deceive us, is to say that truth can
+be false, that usefulness can be injurious. Is reason anything else but
+the knowledge of the useful and the true? Besides, as we have but our
+reason, which is more or less exercised, and our senses, such as they
+are, to lead us in this life, to claim that reason is an unsafe guide,
+and that our senses are deceivers, is to tell us that our errors are
+necessary, that our ignorance is invincible, and that, without extreme
+injustice, God can not punish us for having followed the only guides
+which He desired to give us. To pretend that we are obliged to believe
+in things which are beyond our reason, is an assertion as ridiculous as
+to say that God would compel us to fly without wings. To claim that
+there are objects on which reason should not be consulted, is to say
+that in the most important affairs, we must consult but imagination, or
+act by chance.
+
+Our Doctors of Divinity tell us that we ought to sacrifice our reason to
+God; but what motives can we have for sacrificing our reason to a being
+who gives us but useless gifts, which He does not intend that we should
+make use of? What confidence can we place in a God who, according to our
+Doctors themselves, is wicked enough to harden hearts, to strike us with
+blindness, to place snares in our way, to lead us into temptation?
+Finally, how can we place confidence in the ministers of this God, who,
+in order to guide us more conveniently, command us to close our eyes?
+
+
+
+
+CXXXVII.--HOW PRETEND THAT MAN OUGHT TO BELIEVE VERBAL TESTIMONY ON WHAT
+IS CLAIMED TO BE THE MOST IMPORTANT THING FOR HIM?
+
+Men persuade themselves that religion is the most serious affair in the
+world for them, while it is the very thing which they least examine for
+themselves. If the question arises in the purchase of land, of a house,
+of the investment of money, of a transaction, or of some kind of an
+agreement, you will see each one examine everything with care, take the
+greatest precautions, weigh all the words of a document, to beware of
+any surprise or imposition. It is not the same with religion; each one
+accepts it at hazard, and believes it upon verbal testimony, without
+taking the trouble to examine it. Two causes seem to concur in
+sustaining men in the negligence and the thoughtlessness which they
+exhibit when the question comes up of examining their religious
+opinions. The first one is, the hopelessness of penetrating the
+obscurity by which every religion is surrounded; even in its first
+principles, it has only a tendency to repel indolent minds, who see in
+it but chaos, to penetrate which, they judge impossible. The second is,
+that each one is afraid to incommode himself by the severe precepts
+which everybody admires in the theory, and which few persons take the
+trouble of practicing. Many people preserve their religion like old
+family titles which they have never taken the trouble to examine
+minutely, but which they place in their archives in case they need them.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXVIII.--FAITH TAKES ROOT BUT IN WEAK, IGNORANT, OR INDOLENT MINDS.
+
+The disciples of Pythagoras had an implicit faith in their Master's
+doctrine: "HE HAS SAID IT!" was for them the solution of all problems.
+The majority of men act with as little reason. A curate, a priest, an
+ignorant monk, will become in the matter of religion the master of one's
+thoughts. Faith relieves the weakness of the human mind, for whom
+application is commonly a very painful work; it is much easier to rely
+upon others than to examine for one's self; examination being slow and
+difficult, it is usually unpleasant to ignorant and stupid minds as well
+as to very ardent ones; this is, no doubt, why faith finds so many
+partisans.
+
+The less enlightenment and reason men possess, the more zeal they
+exhibit for their religion. In all the religious factions, women,
+aroused by their directors, exhibit very great zeal in opinions of which
+it is evident they have not the least idea. In theological quarrels
+people rush like a ferocious beast upon all those against whom their
+priest wishes to excite them. Profound ignorance, unlimited credulity, a
+very weak head, an irritated imagination, these are the materials of
+which devotees, zealots, fanatics, and saints are made. How can we make
+those people understand reason who allow themselves to be guided without
+examining anything? The devotees and common people are, in the hands of
+their guides, only automatons which they move at their fancy.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXIX.--TO TEACH THAT THERE EXISTS ONE TRUE RELIGION IS AN ABSURDITY,
+AND A CAUSE OF MUCH TROUBLE AMONG THE NATIONS.
+
+Religion is a thing of custom and fashion; we must do as others do. But,
+among the many religions in the world, which one ought we to choose?
+This examination would be too long and too painful; we must then hold to
+the faith of our fathers, to that of our country, or to that of the
+prince, who, possessing power, must be the best. Chance alone decides
+the religion of a man and of a people. The French would be to-day as
+good Mussulmen as they are Christians, if their ancestors had not
+repulsed the efforts of the Saracens. If we judge of the intentions of
+Providence by the events and the revolutions of this world, we are
+compelled to believe that it is quite indifferent about the different
+religions which exist on earth. During thousands of years Paganism,
+Polytheism, and Idolatry have been the religions of the world; we are
+assured today, that during this period the most flourishing nations had
+not the least idea of the Deity, an idea which is claimed, however, to
+be so important to all men. The Christians pretend that, with the
+exception of the Jewish people, that is to say, a handful of unfortunate
+beings, the whole human race lived in utter ignorance of its duties
+toward God, and had but imperfect ideas of Divine majesty. Christianity,
+offshoot of Judaism, which was very humble in its obscure origin, became
+powerful and cruel under the Christian emperors, who, driven by a holy
+zeal, spread it marvelously in their empire by sword and fire, and
+founded it upon the ruins of overthrown Paganism. Mohammed and his
+successors, aided by Providence, or by their victorious arms, succeeded
+in a short time in expelling the Christian religion from a part of Asia,
+Africa, and even of Europe itself; the Gospel was compelled to surrender
+to the Koran. In all the factions or sects which during a great number
+of centuries have lacerated the Christians, "THE REASON OF THE STRONGEST
+WAS ALWAYS THE BEST;" the arms and the will of the princes alone decided
+upon the most useful doctrine for the salvation of the nations. Could we
+not conclude by this, either that the Deity takes but little interest in
+the religion of men, or that He declares Himself always in favor of
+opinions which best suit the Authorities of the earth, in order that He
+can change His systems as soon as they take a notion to change?
+
+A king of Macassar, tired of the idolatry of his fathers, took a notion
+one day to leave it. The monarch's council deliberated for a long time
+to know whether they should consult Christian or Mohammedan Doctors. In
+the impossibility of finding out which was the better of the two
+religions, it was resolved to send at the same time for the missionaries
+of both, and to accept the doctrine of those who would have the
+advantage of arriving first. They did not doubt that God, who disposes
+of events, would thus Himself explain His will. Mohammed's missionaries
+having been more diligent, the king with his people submitted to the law
+which he had imposed upon himself; the missionaries of Christ were
+dismissed by default of their God, who did not permit them to arrive
+early enough. God evidently consents that chance should decide the
+religion of nations.
+
+Those who govern, always decide the religion of the people. The true
+religion is but the religion of the prince; the true God is the God whom
+the prince wishes them to worship; the will of the priests who govern
+the prince, always becomes the will of God. A jester once said, with
+reason, that "the true faith is always the one which has on its side
+'the prince and the executioner.'"
+
+Emperors and executioners for a long time sustained the Gods of Rome
+against the God of the Christians; the latter having won over to their
+side the emperors, their soldiers and their executioners succeeded in
+suppressing the worship of the Roman Gods. Mohammed's God succeeded in
+expelling the Christian's God from a large part of the countries which
+He formerly occupied. In the eastern part of Asia, there is a large
+country which is very flourishing, very productive, thickly populated,
+and governed by such wise laws, that the most savage conquerors adopted
+them with respect. It is China! With the exception of Christianity,
+which was banished as dangerous, they followed their own superstitious
+ideas; while the mandarins or magistrates, undeceived long ago about the
+popular religion, do not trouble themselves in regard to it, except to
+watch over it, that the bonzes or priests do not use this religion to
+disturb the peace of the State. However, we do not see that Providence
+withholds its benefactions from a nation whose chiefs take so little
+interest in the worship which is offered to it. The Chinese enjoy, on
+the contrary, blessings and a peace worthy of being envied by many
+nations which religion divides, ravages, and often destroys. We can not
+reasonably expect to deprive a people of its follies; but we can hope to
+cure of their follies those who govern the people; these will then
+prevent the follies of the people from becoming dangerous. Superstition
+is never to be feared except when it has the support of princes and
+soldiers; it is only then that it becomes cruel and sanguinary. Every
+sovereign who assumes the protection of a sect or of a religious
+faction, usually becomes the tyrant of other sects, and makes himself
+the must cruel perturbator in his kingdom.
+
+
+
+
+CXL.--RELIGION IS NOT NECESSARY TO MORALITY AND TO VIRTUE.
+
+We are constantly told, and a good many sensible persons come to believe
+it, that religion is necessary to restrain men; that without it there
+would be no check upon the people; that morality and virtue are
+intimately connected with it: "The fear of the Lord is," we are told,
+"the beginning of wisdom." The terrors of another life are salutary
+terrors, and calculated to subdue men's passions. To disabuse us in
+regard to the utility of religious notions, it is sufficient to open the
+eyes and to consider what are the morals of the most religious people.
+We see haughty tyrants, oppressive ministers, perfidious courtiers,
+countless extortioners, unscrupulous magistrates, impostors, adulterers,
+libertines, prostitutes, thieves, and rogues of all kinds, who have
+never doubted the existence of a vindictive God, or the punishments of
+hell, or the joys of Paradise.
+
+Although very useless for the majority of men, the ministers of religion
+have tried to make death appear terrible to the eyes of their votaries.
+If the most devoted Christians could be consistent, they would pass
+their whole lives in tears, and would finally die in the most terrible
+alarms. What is more frightful than death to those unfortunate ones who
+are constantly reminded that "it is a fearful thing to fall into the
+hands of a living God;" that they should "seek salvation with fear and
+trembling!" However, we are assured that the Christian's death has great
+consolations, of which the unbeliever is deprived. The good Christian,
+we are told, dies with the firm hope of enjoying eternal happiness,
+which he has tried to deserve. But this firm assurance, is it not a
+punishable presumption in the eyes of a severe God? The greatest saints,
+are they not to be in doubt whether they are worthy of the love or of
+the hatred of God Priests who console us with the hope of the joys of
+Paradise, and close your eyes to the torments of hell, have you then had
+the advantage of seeing your names and ours inscribed in the book of
+life?
+
+
+
+
+CXLI.--RELIGION IS THE WEAKEST RESTRAINT THAT CAN BE OPPOSED TO THE
+PASSIONS.
+
+To oppose to the passions and present interests of men the obscure
+notions about a metaphysical God whom no one can conceive of; the
+incredible punishments of another life; the pleasures of Heaven, of
+which we can not form an idea, is it not combating realities with
+chimeras? Men have always but confused ideas of their God; they see Him
+only in the clouds; they never think of Him when they wish to do wrong.
+Whenever ambition, fortune, or pleasure entices them or leads them away,
+God, and His menaces, and His promises weigh nothing in the balance. The
+things of this life have for men a degree of certainty, which the most
+lively faith can never give to the objects of another life.
+
+Every religion, in its origin, was a restraint invented by legislators
+who wished to subjugate the minds of the common people. Like nurses who
+frighten children in order to put them to sleep, ambitious men use the
+name of the gods to inspire fear in savages; terror seems well suited to
+compel them to submit quietly to the yoke which is to be imposed upon
+them. Are the ghost stories of childhood fit for mature age? Man in his
+maturity no longer believes in them, or if he does, he is troubled but
+little by it, and he keeps on his road.
+
+
+
+
+CXLII.--HONOR IS A MORE SALUTARY AND A STRONGER CHECK THAN RELIGION.
+
+There is scarcely a man who does not fear more what he sees than what he
+does not see; the judgments of men, of which he experiences the effects,
+than the judgments of God, of whom he has but floating ideas. The desire
+to please the world, the current of custom, the fear of being ridiculed,
+and of "WHAT WILL THEY SAY?" have more power than all religious
+opinions. A warrior with the fear of dishonor, does he not hazard his
+life in battles every day, even at the risk of incurring eternal
+damnation?
+
+The most religious persons sometimes show more respect for a servant
+than for God. A man that firmly believes that God sees everything, knows
+everything, is everywhere, will, when he is alone, commit actions which
+he never would do in the presence of the meanest of mortals. Those even
+who claim to be the most firmly convinced of the existence of a God, act
+every instant as if they did not believe anything about it.
+
+
+
+
+CXLIII.--RELIGION IS CERTAINLY NOT A POWERFUL CHECK UPON THE PASSIONS OF
+KINGS, WHO ARE ALMOST ALWAYS CRUEL AND FANTASTIC TYRANTS BY THE EXAMPLE
+OF THIS SAME GOD, OF WHOM THEY CLAIM TO BE THE REPRESENTATIVES; THEY USE
+RELIGION BUT TO BRUTALIZE THEIR SLAVES SO MUCH THE MORE, TO LULL THEM TO
+SLEEP IN THEIR FETTERS, AND TO PREY UPON THEM WITH THE GREATER FACILITY.
+
+"Let us tolerate at least," we are told, "the idea of a God, which alone
+can be a restraint upon the passions of kings." But, in good faith, can
+we admire the marvelous effects which the fear of this God produces
+generally upon the mind of the princes who claim to be His images? What
+idea can we form of the original, if we judge it by its duplicates?
+Sovereigns, it is true, call, themselves the representatives of God, His
+lieutenants upon earth. But does the fear of a more powerful master than
+themselves make them attend to the welfare of the peoples that
+Providence has confided to their care? The idea of an invisible Judge,
+to whom alone they pretend to be accountable for their actions, should
+inspire them with terror! But does this terror render them more
+equitable, more humane, less avaricious of the blood and the goods of
+their subjects, more moderate in their pleasures, more attentive to
+their duties? Finally, does this God, by whom we are assured that kings
+reign, prevent them from vexing in a thousand ways the peoples of whom
+they ought to be the leaders, the protectors, and fathers? Let us open
+our eyes, let us turn our regards upon all the earth, and we shall see,
+almost everywhere, men governed by tyrants, who make use of religion but
+to brutalize their slaves, whom they oppress by the weight of their
+vices, or whom they sacrifice without mercy to their fatal
+extravagances. Far from being a restraint to the passions of kings,
+religion, by its very principles, gives them a loose rein. It transforms
+them into Divinities, whose caprices the nations never dare to resist.
+At the same time that it unchains princes and breaks for them the ties
+of the social pact, it enchains the minds and the hands of their
+oppressed subjects. Is it surprising, then, that the gods of the earth
+believe that all is permitted to them, and consider their subjects as
+vile instruments of their caprices or of their ambition?
+
+Religion, in every country, has made of the Monarch of Nature a cruel,
+fantastic, partial tyrant, whose caprice is the rule. The God-monarch is
+but too well imitated by His representatives upon the earth. Everywhere
+religion seems invented but to lull to sleep the people in fetters, in
+order to furnish their masters the facility of devouring them, or to
+render them miserable with impunity.
+
+
+
+
+CXLIV.--ORIGIN OF THE MOST ABSURD, THE MOST RIDICULOUS, AND THE MOST
+ODIOUS USURPATION, CALLED THE DIVINE RIGHT OF KINGS. WISE COUNSELS TO
+KINGS.
+
+In order to guard themselves against the enterprises of a haughty
+Pontiff who desired to reign over kings, and in order to protect their
+persons from the attacks of the credulous people excited by their
+priests, several princes of Europe pretended to have received their
+crowns and their rights from God alone, and that they should account to
+Him only for their actions. Civil power in its battles against spiritual
+power, having at length gained the advantage, and the priests being
+compelled to yield, recognized the Divine right of kings and preached it
+to the people, reserving to themselves the right to change opinions and
+to preach revolution, every time that the divine rights of kings did not
+agree with the divine rights of the clergy. It was always at the expense
+of the people that peace was restored between the kings and the priests,
+but the latter maintained their pretensions notwithstanding all
+treaties.
+
+Many tyrants and wicked princes, whose conscience reproaches them for
+their negligence or their perversity, far from fearing their God, rather
+like to bargain with this invisible Judge, who never refuses anything,
+or with His priests, who are accommodating to the masters of the earth
+rather than to their subjects. The people, when reduced to despair,
+consider the divine rights of their chiefs as an abuse. When men become
+exasperated, the divine rights of tyrants are compelled to yield to the
+natural rights of their subjects; they have better market with the gods
+than with men. Kings are responsible for their actions but to God, the
+priests but to themselves; there is reason to believe that both of them
+have more faith in the indulgence of Heaven than in that of earth. It is
+much easier to escape the judgments of the gods, who can be appeased at
+little expense, than the judgments of men whose patience is exhausted.
+If you take away from the sovereigns the fear of an invisible power,
+what restraint will you oppose to their misconduct? Let them learn how
+to govern, how to be just, how to respect the rights of the people, to
+recognize the benefactions of the nations from whom they obtain their
+grandeur and power; let them learn to fear men, to submit to the laws of
+equity, that no one can violate without danger; let these laws restrain
+equally the powerful and the weak, the great and the small, the
+sovereign and the subjects.
+
+The fear of the Gods, religion, the terrors of another life--these are
+the metaphysical and supernatural barriers which are opposed to the
+furious passions of princes! Are these barriers sufficient? We leave it
+to experience to solve the question! To oppose religion to the
+wickedness of tyrants, is to wish that vague speculations should be more
+powerful than inclinations which conspire to fortify them in it from day
+to day.
+
+
+
+
+CXLV.--RELIGION IS FATAL TO POLITICS; IT FORMS BUT LICENTIOUS AND
+PERVERSE DESPOTS, AS WELL AS ABJECT AND UNHAPPY SUBJECTS.
+
+We are told constantly of the immense advantages which religion secures
+to politics; but if we reflect a moment, we will see without trouble
+that religious opinions blind and lead astray equally the rulers and the
+people, and never enlighten them either in regard to their true duties
+or their real interests. Religion but too often forms licentious,
+immoral tyrants, obeyed by slaves who are obliged to conform to their
+views. From lack of the knowledge of the true principles of
+administration, the aim and the rights of social life, the real
+interests of men, and the duties which unite them, the princes are
+become, in almost every land, licentious, absolute, and perverse; and
+their subjects abject unhappy, and wicked. It was to avoid the trouble
+of studying these important subjects, that they felt themselves obliged
+to have recourse to chimeras, which so far, instead of being a remedy,
+have but increased the evils of the human race and withdrawn their
+attention from the most interesting things. Does not the unjust and
+cruel manner in which so many nations are governed here below, furnish
+the most visible proofs, not only of the non-effect produced by the fear
+of another life, but of the non-existence of a Providence interested in
+the fate of the human race? If there existed a good God, would we not be
+forced to admit that He strangely neglects the majority of men in this
+life? It would appear that this God created the nations but to be toys
+for the passions and follies of His representatives upon earth.
+
+
+
+
+CXLVI.--CHRISTIANITY EXTENDED ITSELF BUT BY ENCOURAGING DESPOTISM, OF
+WHICH IT, LIKE ALL RELIGION, IS THE STRONGEST SUPPORT.
+
+If we read history with some attention, we shall see that Christianity,
+fawning at first, insinuated itself among the savage and free nations of
+Europe but by showing their chiefs that its principles would favor
+despotism and place absolute power in their hands. We see, consequently,
+barbarous kings converting themselves with a miraculous promptitude;
+that is to say, adopting without examination a system so favorable to
+their ambition, and exerting themselves to have it adopted by their
+subjects. If the ministers of this religion have since often moderated
+their servile principles, it is because the theory has no influence upon
+the conduct of the Lord's ministers, except when it suits their temporal
+interests.
+
+
+
+
+Christianity boasts of having brought to men a happiness unknown to
+preceding centuries. It is true that the Grecians have not known the
+Divine right of tyrants or usurpers over their native country. Under the
+reign of Paganism it never entered the brain of anybody that Heaven did
+not want a nation to defend itself against a ferocious beast which
+insolently ravaged it. The Christian religion, devised for the benefit
+of tyrants, was established on the principle that the nations should
+renounce the legitimate defense of themselves. Thus Christian nations
+are deprived of the first law of nature, which decrees that man should
+resist evil and disarm all who attempt to destroy him. If the ministers
+of the Church have often permitted nations to revolt for Heaven's cause,
+they never allowed them to revolt against real evils or known violences.
+
+It is from Heaven that the chains have come to fetter the minds of
+mortals. Why is the Mohammedan everywhere a slave? It is because his
+Prophet subdued him in the name of the Deity, just as Moses before him
+subjugated the Jews. In all parts of the world we see that priests were
+the first law-givers and the first sovereigns of the savages whom they
+governed. Religion seems to have been invented but to exalt princes
+above their nations, and to deliver the people to their discretion. As
+soon as the latter find themselves unhappy here below, they are silenced
+by menacing them with God's wrath; their eyes are fixed on Heaven, in
+order to prevent them from perceiving the real causes of their
+sufferings and from applying the remedies which nature offers them.
+
+
+
+
+CXLVII.--THE ONLY AIM OF RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES IS TO PERPETUATE THE
+TYRANNY OF KINGS AND TO SACRIFICE THE NATIONS TO THEM.
+
+By incessantly repeating to men that the earth is not their true
+country; that the present life is but a passage; that they were not made
+to be happy in this world; that their sovereigns hold their authority
+but from God, and are responsible to Him alone for the misuse of it;
+that it is never permitted to them to resist, the priesthood succeeded
+in perpetuating the misconduct of the kings and the misfortunes of the
+people; the interests of the nations have been cowardly sacrificed to
+their chiefs. The more we consider the dogmas and the principles of
+religion, the more we shall be convinced that their only aim is to give
+advantage to tyrants and priests; not having the least regard for the
+good of society. In order to mask the powerlessness of these deaf Gods,
+religion has succeeded in making mortals believe that it is always
+iniquity which excites the wrath of Heaven. The people blame themselves
+for the disasters and the adversities which they endure continually. If
+disturbed nature sometimes causes the people to feel its blows, their
+bad governments are but too often the immediate and permanent causes
+from which spring the continual calamities that they are obliged to
+endure. Is it not the ambition of kings and of the great, their
+negligence, their vices, their oppression, to which are generally due
+sterility, mendacity, wars, contagions, bad morals, and all the
+multiplied scourges which desolate the earth?
+
+In continually directing the eyes of men toward Heaven, making them
+believe that all their evils are due to Divine wrath, in furnishing them
+but inefficient and futile means of lessening their troubles, it would
+appear that the only object of the priests is to prevent the nations
+from dreaming of the true sources of their miseries, and to perpetuate
+them. The ministers of religion act like those indigent mothers, who, in
+need of bread, put their hungry children to sleep by songs, or who
+present them toys to make them forget the want which torments them.
+
+Blinded from childhood by error, held by the invincible ties of opinion,
+crushed by panic terrors, stupefied at the bosom of ignorance, how could
+the people understand the true causes of their troubles? They think to
+remedy them by invoking the gods. Alas! do they not see that it is it
+the name of these gods that they are ordered to present their throat to
+the sword of their pitiless tyrants, in whom they would find the most
+visible cause of the evils under which they groan, and for which they
+uselessly implore the assistance of Heaven? Credulous people! in your
+adversities redouble your prayers, your offerings, your sacrifices;
+besiege your temples, strangle countless victims, fast in sackcloth and
+in ashes, drink your own tears; finally, exhaust yourselves to enrich
+your gods: you will do nothing but enrich their priests; the gods of
+Heaven will not be propitious to you, except when the gods of the earth
+will recognize that they are men like yourselves, and will give to your
+welfare the care which is your due.
+
+
+
+
+CXLVIII.--HOW FATAL IT IS TO PERSUADE KINGS THAT THEY HAVE ONLY GOD TO
+FEAR IF THEY INJURE THE PEOPLE.
+
+Negligent, ambitious, and perverse princes are the real causes of public
+adversities, of useless and unjust wars continually depopulating the
+earth, of greedy and despotic governments, destroying the benefactions
+of nature for men. The rapacity of the courts discourages agriculture,
+blots out industry, causes famine, contagion, misery; Heaven is neither
+cruel nor favorable to the wishes of the people; it is their haughty
+chiefs, who always have a heart of brass.
+
+It is a notion destructive to wholesome politics and to the morals of
+princes, to persuade them that God alone is to be feared by them, when
+they injure their subjects or when they neglect to render them happy.
+Sovereigns! It is not the Gods, but your people whom you offend when you
+do evil. It is to these people, and by retroaction, to yourselves, that
+you do harm when you govern unjustly.
+
+Nothing is more common in history than to see religious tyrants; nothing
+more rare than to find equitable, vigilant, enlightened princes. A
+monarch can be pious, very strict in fulfilling servilely the duties of
+his religion, very submissive to his priests, liberal in their behalf,
+and at the same time destitute of all the virtues and talents necessary
+for governing. Religion for the princes is but an instrument intended to
+keep the people more firmly under the yoke. According to the beautiful
+principles of religious morality, a tyrant who, during a long reign,
+will have done nothing but oppress his subjects, rob them of the fruits
+of their labor, sacrifice them without pity to his insatiable ambition;
+a conqueror who will have usurped the provinces of others, who will have
+slaughtered whole nations, who will have been all his life a real
+scourge of the human race, imagines that his conscience can be
+tranquillized, if, in order to expiate so many crimes, he will have wept
+at the feet of a priest, who will have the cowardly complaisance to
+console and reassure a brigand, whom the most frightful despair would
+punish too little for the evil which he has done upon earth.
+
+
+
+
+CLXIX.--A RELIGIOUS KING IS A SCOURGE TO HIS KINGDOM.
+
+A sincerely religious sovereign is generally a very dangerous chief for
+a State; credulity always indicates a narrow mind; devotion generally
+absorbs the attention which the prince ought to give to the ruling of
+his people. Docile to the suggestions of his priests, he constantly
+becomes the toy of their caprices, the abettor of their quarrels, the
+instrument and the accomplice of their follies, to which he attaches the
+greatest importance. Among the most fatal gifts which religion has
+bestowed upon the world, we must consider above all, these devoted and
+zealous monarchs, who, with the idea of working for the salvation of
+their subjects, have made it their sacred duty to torment, to persecute,
+to destroy those whose conscience made them think otherwise than they
+do. A religious bigot at the head of an empire, is one of the greatest
+scourges which Heaven in its fury could have sent upon earth. One
+fanatical or deceitful priest who has the ear of a credulous and
+powerful prince, suffices to put a State into disorder and the universe
+into combustion.
+
+In almost all countries, priests and devout persons are charged with
+forming the mind and the heart of the young princes destined to govern
+the nations. What enlightenment can teachers of this stamp give? Filled
+themselves with prejudices, they will hold up to their pupil
+superstition as the most important and the most sacred thing, its
+chimerical duties as the most holy obligations, intolerance, and the
+spirit of persecution, as the true foundations of his future authority;
+they will try to make him a chief of party, a turbulent fanatic, and a
+tyrant; they will suppress at an early period his reason; they will
+premonish him against it; they will prevent truth from reaching him;
+they will prejudice him against true talents, and prepossess him in
+favor of despicable talents; finally they will make of him an imbecile
+devotee, who will have no idea of justice or of injustice, of true glory
+or of true greatness, and who will be devoid of the intelligence and
+virtue necessary to the government of a great kingdom. Here, in brief,
+is the plan of education for a child destined to make, one day, the
+happiness or the misery of several millions of men.
+
+
+
+
+CL.--THE SHIELD OF RELIGION IS FOR TYRANNY, A WEAK RAMPART AGAINST THE
+DESPAIR OF THE PEOPLE. A DESPOT IS A MADMAN, WHO INJURES HIMSELF AND
+SLEEPS UPON THE EDGE OF A PRECIPICE.
+
+Priests in all times have shown themselves supporters of despotism, and
+the enemies of public liberty. Their profession requires vile and
+submissive slaves, who never have the audacity to reason. In an absolute
+government, their great object is to secure control of the mind of a
+weak and stupid prince, in order to make themselves masters of the
+people. Instead of leading the people to salvation, priests have always
+led them to servitude.
+
+For the sake of the supernatural titles which religion has forged for
+the most wicked princes, the latter have generally united with the
+priests, who, sure of governing by controlling the opinion of the
+sovereign himself, have charge of tying the hands of the people and of
+keeping them under their yoke. But it is vain that the tyrant, protected
+by the shield of religion, flatters himself with being sheltered from
+all the blows of fate. Opinion is a weak rampart against the despair of
+the people. Besides, the priest is the friend of the tyrant only so long
+as he finds his profit by the tyranny; he preaches sedition and
+demolishes the idol which he has made, when he considers it no longer in
+conformity with the interests of Heaven, which he speaks of as he
+pleases, and which never speaks but in behalf of his interests. No doubt
+it will be said, that the sovereigns, knowing all the advantages which
+religion procures for them, are truly interested in upholding it with
+all their strength. If religious opinions are useful to tyrants, it is
+evident that they are useless to those who govern according to the laws
+of reason and of equity. Is there any advantage in exercising tyranny?
+Does not tyranny deprive princes of true power, the love of the people,
+in which is safety? Should not every rational prince perceive that the
+despot is but an insane man who injures himself? Will not every
+enlightened prince beware of his flatterers, whose object is to put him
+to sleep at the edge of the precipice to which they lead him?
+
+
+
+
+CLI.--RELIGION FAVORS THE ERRORS OF PRINCES, BY DELIVERING THEM FROM FEAR
+AND REMORSE.
+
+If the sacerdotal flatteries succeed in perverting princes and changing
+them into tyrants, the latter on their side necessarily corrupt the
+great men and the people. Under an unjust master, without goodness,
+without virtue, who knows no law but his caprice, a nation must become
+necessarily depraved. Will this master wish to have honest, enlightened,
+and virtuous men near him? No! he needs flatterers in those who
+approach him, imitators, slaves, base and servile minds, who give
+themselves up to his taste; his court will spread the contagion of vice
+to the inferior classes. By degrees all will be necessarily corrupted,
+in a State whose chief is corrupt himself. It was said a long time ago
+that the princes seem ordained to do all they do themselves. Religion,
+far from being a restraint upon the sovereigns, entitles them, without
+fear and without remorse, to the errors which are as fatal to themselves
+as to the nations which they govern. Men are never deceived with
+impunity. Tell a prince that he is a God, and very soon he will believe
+that he owes nothing to anybody. As long as he is feared, he will not
+care much for love; he will recognize no rights, no relations with his
+subjects, nor obligations in their behalf. Tell this prince that he is
+responsible for his actions to God alone, and very soon he will act as
+if he was responsible to nobody.
+
+
+
+
+CLII.--WHAT IS AN ENLIGHTENED SOVEREIGN?
+
+An enlightened sovereign is he who understands his true interests; he
+knows they are united to those of his nation; he knows that a prince can
+be neither great, nor powerful, nor beloved, nor respected, so long as
+he will command but miserable slaves; he knows that equity, benevolence,
+and vigilance will give him more real rights over men than fabulous
+titles which claim to come from Heaven. He will feel that religion is
+useful but to the priests; that it is useless to society, which is often
+troubled by it; that it must be limited to prevent it from doing injury;
+finally, he will understand that, in order to reign with glory, he must
+make good laws, possess virtues, and not base his power on impositions
+and chimeras.
+
+
+
+
+CLIII.--THE DOMINANT PASSIONS AND CRIMES OF PRIESTCRAFT. WITH THE
+ASSISTANCE OF ITS PRETENDED GOD AND OF RELIGION, IT ASSERTS ITS PASSIONS
+AND COMMITS ITS CRIMES.
+
+The ministers of religion have taken great care to make of their God a
+terrible, capricious, and changeable tyrant; it was necessary for them
+that He should be thus in order that He might lend Himself to their
+various interests. A God who would be just and good, without a mixture
+of caprice and perversity; a God who would constantly have the qualities
+of an honest man or of a compliant sovereign, would not suit His
+ministers. It is necessary to the priests that we tremble before their
+God, in order that we have recourse to them to obtain the means to be
+quieted. No man is a hero to his valet de chambre. It is not surprising
+that a God clothed by His priests in such a way as to cause others to
+fear Him, should rarely impose upon those priests themselves, or exert
+but little influence upon their conduct. Consequently we see them behave
+themselves in a uniform way in every land; everywhere they devour
+nations, debase souls, discourage industry, and sow discord under the
+pretext of the glory of their God. Ambition and avarice were at all
+times the dominating passions of the priesthood; everywhere the priest
+places himself above the sovereign and the laws; everywhere we see him
+occupied but with the interests of his pride, his cupidity, his despotic
+and vindictive mood; everywhere he substitutes expiations, sacrifices,
+ceremonies, and mysterious practices; in a word, inventions lucrative to
+himself for useful and social virtues. The mind is confounded and reason
+interdicted with the view of ridiculous practices and pitiable means
+which the ministers of the gods invented in every country to purify
+souls and render Heaven favorable to nations. Here, they practice
+circumcision upon a child to procure it Divine benevolence; there, they
+pour water upon his head to wash away the crimes which he could not yet
+have committed; in other places he is told to plunge himself into a
+river whose waters have the power to wash away all his impurities; in
+other places certain food is forbidden to him, whose use would not fail
+to excite celestial indignation; in other countries they order the
+sinful man to come periodically for the confession of his faults to a
+priest, who is often a greater sinner than he.
+
+
+
+
+CLIV.--CHARLATANRY OF THE PRIESTS.
+
+What would we say of a crowd of quacks, who every day would exhibit in a
+public place, selling their remedies and recommending them as
+infallible, while we should find them afflicted with the same
+infirmities which they pretend to cure? Would we have much confidence in
+the recipes of these charlatans, who would bawl out: "Take our remedies,
+their effects are infallible--they cure everybody except us?" What would
+we think to see these same charlatans pass their lives in complaining
+that their remedies never produce any effect upon the patients who take
+them? Finally, what idea would we form of the foolishness of the common
+man who, in spite of this confession, would continue to pay very high
+for remedies which will not be beneficial to him? The priests resemble
+alchemists, who boldly assert that they have the secret of making gold,
+while they scarcely have clothing enough to cover their nudity.
+
+The ministers of religion incessantly declaim against the corruption of
+the age, and complain loudly of the little success of their teachings,
+at the same time they assure us that religion is the universal remedy,
+the true panacea for all human evils. These priests are sick themselves;
+however, men continue to frequent their stands and to have faith in
+their Divine antidotes, which, according to their own confession, cure
+nobody!
+
+
+
+
+CLV.--COUNTLESS CALAMITIES ARE PRODUCED BY RELIGION, WHICH HAS TAINTED
+MORALITY AND DISTURBED ALL JUST IDEAS AND ALL SOUND DOCTRINES.
+
+Religion, especially among modern people, in taking possession of
+morality, totally obscured its principles; it has rendered men unsocial
+from a sense of duty; it has forced them to be inhuman toward all those
+who did not think as they did. Theological disputes, equally
+unintelligible for the parties already irritated against each other,
+have unsettled empires, caused revolutions, ruined sovereigns,
+devastated the whole of Europe; these despicable quarrels could not be
+extinguished even in rivers of blood. After the extinction of Paganism
+the people established a religious principle of going into a frenzy,
+every time that an opinion was brought forth which their priests
+considered contrary to the holy doctrine. The votaries of a religion
+which preaches externally but charity, harmony, and peace, have shown
+themselves more ferocious than cannibals or savages every time that
+their instructors have excited them to the destruction of their
+brethren. There is no crime which men have not committed in the idea of
+pleasing the Deity or of appeasing His wrath. The idea of a terrible God
+who was represented as a despot, must necessarily have rendered His
+subjects wicked. Fear makes but slaves, and slaves are cowardly, low,
+cruel, and think they have a right to do anything when it is the
+question of gaining the good-will or of escaping the punishments of the
+master whom they fear. Liberty of thought can alone give to men humanity
+and grandeur of soul. The notion of a tyrant God can create but abject,
+angry, quarrelsome, intolerant slaves. Every religion which supposes a
+God easily irritated, jealous, vindictive, punctilious about His rights
+or His title, a God small enough to be offended at opinions which we
+have of Him, a God unjust enough to exact uniform ideas in regard to
+Him, such a religion becomes necessarily turbulent, unsocial,
+sanguinary; the worshipers of such a God never believe they can, without
+crime, dispense with hating and even destroying all those whom they
+designate as adversaries of this God; they would believe themselves
+traitors to the cause of their celestial Monarch, if they should live on
+good terms with rebellious fellow-citizens. To love what God hates,
+would it not be exposing one's self to His implacable hatred? Infamous
+persecutors, and you, religious cannibals! will you never feel the folly
+and injustice of your intolerant disposition? Do you not see that man is
+no more the master of his religious opinions, of his credulity or
+incredulity, than of the language which he learns in childhood, and
+which he can not change? To tell men to think as you do, is it not
+asking a foreigner to express his thoughts in your language? To punish a
+man for his erroneous opinions, is it not punishing him for having been
+educated differently from yourself? If I am incredulous, is it possible
+for me to banish from my mind the reasons which have unsettled my faith?
+If God allows men the freedom to damn themselves, is it your business?
+Are you wiser and more prudent than this God whose rights you wish to
+avenge?
+
+
+
+
+CLVI.--EVERY RELIGION IS INTOLERANT, AND CONSEQUENTLY DESTRUCTIVE OF
+BENEFICENCE.
+
+There is no religious person who, according to his temperament, does not
+hate, despise, or pity the adherents of a sect different from his own.
+The dominant religion (which is never but that of the sovereign and the
+armies) always makes its superiority felt in a very cruel and injurious
+manner toward the weaker sects. There does not exist yet upon earth a
+true tolerance; everywhere a jealous God is worshiped, and each nation
+believes itself His friend to the exclusion of all others.
+
+Every nation boasts itself of worshiping the true God, the universal
+God, the Sovereign of Nature; but when we come to examine this Monarch
+of the world, we perceive that each organization, each sect, each
+religious party, makes of this powerful God but an inferior sovereign,
+whose cares and kindness extend themselves but over a small number of
+His subjects who pretend to have the exclusive advantage of His favors,
+and that He does not trouble Himself about the others.
+
+The founders of religions, and the priests who maintain them, have
+intended to separate the nations which they indoctrinated, from other
+nations; they desired to separate their own flock by distinctive
+features; they gave to their votaries Gods inimical to other Gods as
+well as the forms of worship, dogmas, ceremonies, separately; they
+persuaded them especially that the religions of others were ungodly and
+abominable. By this infamous contrivance, these ambitious impostors took
+exclusive possession of the minds of their votaries, rendered them
+unsocial, and made them consider as outcasts all those who had not the
+same ideas and form of worship as their own. This is the way religion
+succeeded in closing the heart, and in banishing from it that affection
+which man ought to have for his fellow-being. Sociability, tolerance,
+humanity, these first virtues of all morality are totally in compatible
+with religious prejudices.
+
+
+
+
+CLVII.--ABUSE OF A STATE RELIGION.
+
+Every national religion has a tendency to make man vain, unsocial, and
+wicked; the first step toward humanity is to permit each one to follow
+peacefully the worship and the opinions which suit him. But such a
+conduct can not please the ministers of religion, who wish to have the
+right to tyrannize over even the thoughts of men. Blind and bigoted
+princes, you hate, you persecute, you devote heretics to torture,
+because you are persuaded that these unfortunate ones displease God. But
+do you not claim that your God is full of kindness? How can you hope to
+please Him by such barbarous actions which He can not help disapproving
+of? Besides, who told you that their opinions displease your God? Your
+priests told you! But who guarantees that your priests are not deceived
+themselves or that they do not wish to deceive you? It is these same
+priests! Princes! it is upon the perilous word of your priests that you
+commit the most atrocious and the most unheard-of crimes, with the idea
+of pleasing the Deity!
+
+
+
+
+CLVIII.--RELIGION GIVES LICENSE TO THE FEROCITY OF THE PEOPLE BY
+
+
+
+LEGITIMIZING IT, AND AUTHORIZES CRIME BY TEACHING THAT IT CAN BE USEFUL
+TO THE DESIGNS OF GOD.
+
+"Never," says Pascal, "do we do evil so thoroughly and so willingly as
+when we do it through a false principle of conscience." Nothing is more
+dangerous than a religion which licenses the ferocity of the people, and
+justifies in their eyes the blackest crimes; it puts no limits to their
+wickedness as soon as they believe it authorized by their God, whose
+interests, as they are told, can justify all their actions. If there is
+a question of religion, immediately the most civilized nations become
+true savages, and believe everything is permitted to them. The more
+cruel they are, the more agreeable they suppose themselves to be to
+their God, whose cause they imagine can not be sustained by too much
+zeal. All religions of the world have authorized countless crimes. The
+Jews, excited by the promises of their God, arrogated to themselves the
+right of exterminating whole nations; the Romans, whose faith was
+founded upon the oracles of their Gods, became real brigands, and
+conquered and ravaged the world; the Arabians, encouraged by their
+Divine preceptor, carried the sword and the flame among Christians and
+idolaters. The Christians, under pretext of spreading their holy
+religion, covered the two hemispheres a hundred times with blood. In all
+events favorable to their own interests, which they always call the
+cause of God, the priests show us the finger of God. According to these
+principles, religious bigots have the luck of seeing the finger of God
+in revolts, in revolutions, massacres, regicides, prostitutions,
+infamies, and, if these things contribute to the advantage of religion,
+we can say, then, that God uses all sorts of means to secure His ends.
+Is there anything better calculated to annihilate every idea of morality
+in the minds of men, than to make them understand that their God, who is
+so powerful and so perfect, is often compelled to use crime to
+accomplish His designs?
+
+
+
+
+CLIX.--REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENT, THAT THE EVILS ATTRIBUTED TO RELIGION
+ARE BUT THE SAD EFFECTS OF THE PASSIONS OF MEN.
+
+When we complain about the violence and evils which generally religion
+causes upon earth, we are answered at once, that these excesses are not
+due to religion, but that they are the sad effect of men's passions. I
+would ask, however, what unchained these passions? It is evidently
+religion; it is a zeal which renders inhuman, and which serves to cover
+the greatest infamy. Do not these disorders prove that religion, instead
+of restraining the passions of men, does but cover them with a cloak
+that sanctifies them; and that nothing would be more beneficial than to
+tear away this sacred cloak of which men make such a bad use? What
+horrors would be banished from society, if the wicked were deprived of a
+pretext so plausible for disturbing it!
+
+Instead of cherishing peace among men, the priests stirred up hatred and
+strife. They pleaded their conscience, and pretended to have received
+from Heaven the right to be quarrelsome, turbulent, and rebellious. Do
+not the ministers of God consider themselves to be wronged, do they not
+pretend that His Divine Majesty is injured every time that the
+sovereigns have the temerity to try to prevent them from doing injury?
+The priests resemble that irritable woman, who cried out fire! murder!
+assassins! while her husband was holding her hands to prevent her from
+beating him.
+
+
+
+
+CLX.--ALL MORALITY IS INCOMPATIBLE WITH RELIGIOUS OPINIONS.
+
+Notwithstanding the bloody tragedies which religion has so often caused
+in this world, we are constantly told that there can be no morality
+without religion. If we judge theological opinions by their effects, we
+would be right in assuming that all morality is perfectly incompatible
+with the religious opinions of men. "Imitate God," is constantly
+repeated to us. Ah! what morals would we have if we should imitate this
+God! Which God should we imitate? Is it the deist's God? But even this
+God can not be a model of goodness for us. If He is the author of all,
+He is equally the author of the good and of the bad we see in this
+world; if He is the author of order, He is also the author of disorder,
+which would not exist without His permission; if He produces, He
+destroys; if He gives life, He also causes death; if He grants
+abundance, riches, prosperity, and peace, He permits or sends famines,
+poverty, calamities, and wars. How can you accept as a model of
+permanent beneficence the God of theism or of natural religion, whose
+favorable intentions are at every moment contradicted by everything that
+transpires in the world? Morality needs a firmer basis than the example
+of a God whose conduct varies, and whom we can not call good but by
+obstinately closing the eyes to the evil which He causes, or permits to
+be done in this world.
+
+Shall we imitate the good and great Jupiter of ancient Paganism? To
+imitate such a God would be to take as a model a rebellious son, who
+wrests his father's throne from him and then mutilates his body; it is
+imitating a debauchee and adulterer, an incestuous, intemperate man,
+whose conduct would cause any reasonable mortal to blush. What would
+have become of men under the control of Paganism if they had imagined,
+according to Plato, that virtue consisted in imitating the gods?
+
+Must we imitate the God of the Jews? Will we find a model for our
+conduct in Jehovah? He is truly a savage God, really created for an
+ignorant, cruel, and immoral people; He is a God who is constantly
+enraged, breathing only vengeance; who is without pity, who commands
+carnage and robbery; in a word, He is a God whose conduct can not serve
+as a model to an honest man, and who can be imitated but by a chief of
+brigands.
+
+Shall we imitate, then, the Jesus of the Christians? Can this God, who
+died to appease the implacable fury of His Father, serve as an example
+which men ought to follow? Alas! we will see in Him but a God, or rather
+a fanatic, a misanthrope, who being plunged Himself into misery, and
+preaching to the wretched, advises them to be poor, to combat and
+extinguish nature, to hate pleasure, to seek sufferings, and to despise
+themselves; He tells them to leave father, mother, all the ties of life,
+in order to follow Him. What beautiful morality! you will say. It is
+admirable, no doubt; it must be Divine, because it is impracticable for
+men. But does not this sublime morality tend to render virtue
+despicable? According to this boasted morality of the man-God of the
+Christians, His disciples in this lower world are, like Tantalus,
+tormented with burning thirst, which they are not permitted to quench.
+Do not such morals give us a wonderful idea of nature's Author? If He
+has, as we are assured, created everything for the use of His creatures,
+by what strange caprice does He forbid the use of the good things which
+He has created for them? Is the pleasure which man constantly desires
+but a snare that God has maliciously laid in his path to entrap him?
+
+
+
+
+CLXI.--THE MORALS OF THE GOSPEL ARE IMPRACTICABLE.
+
+The votaries of Christ would like to make us regard as a miracle the
+establishment of their religion, which is in every respect contrary to
+nature, opposed to all the inclinations of the heart, an enemy to
+physical pleasures. But the austerity of a doctrine has a tendency to
+render it more wonderful to the ignorant. The same reason which makes us
+respect, as Divine and supernatural, inconceivable mysteries, causes us
+to admire, as Divine and supernatural, a morality impracticable and
+beyond the power of man. To admire morals and to practice them, are two
+very different things. All the Christians continually admire the morals
+of the Gospel, but it is practiced but by a small number of saints;
+admired by people who themselves avoid imitating their conduct, under
+the pretext that they are lacking either the power or the grace.
+
+The whole universe is infected more or less with a religious morality
+which is founded upon the opinion that to please the Deity it is
+necessary to render one's self unhappy upon earth. We see in all parts
+of our globe penitents, hermits, fakirs, fanatics, who seem to have
+studied profoundly the means of tormenting themselves for the glory of a
+Being whose goodness they all agree in celebrating. Religion, by its
+essence, is the enemy of joy and of the welfare of men. "Blessed are
+those who suffer!" Woe to those who have abundance and joy! These are
+the rare revelations which Christianity teaches!
+
+
+
+
+CLXII.--A SOCIETY OF SAINTS WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE.
+
+In what consists the saint of all religions? It is a man who prays,
+fasts, who torments himself, who avoids the world, who, like an owl, is
+pleased but in solitude, who abstains from all pleasure, who seems
+frightened at every object which turns him a moment from his fanatical
+meditations. Is this virtue? Is a being of this stamp of any use to
+himself or to others? Would not society be dissolved, and would not men
+retrograde into barbarism, if each one should be fool enough to wish to
+be a saint?
+
+It is evident that the literal and rigorous practice of the Divine
+morality of the Christians would lead nations to ruin. A Christian who
+would attain perfection, ought to drive away from his mind all that can
+alienate him from heaven--his true country. He sees upon earth but
+temptations, snares, and opportunities to go astray; he must fear
+science as injurious to faith; he must avoid industry, as it is a means
+of obtaining riches, which are fatal to salvation; he must renounce
+preferments and honors, as things capable of exciting his pride and
+calling his attention away from his soul; in a word, the sublime
+morality of Christ, if it were not impracticable, would sever all the
+ties of society.
+
+A saint in the world is no more useful than a saint in the desert; the
+saint has an unhappy, discontented, and often irritable, turbulent
+disposition; his zeal often obliges him, conscientiously, to disturb
+society by opinions or dreams which his vanity makes him accept as
+inspirations from Heaven. The annals of all religions are filled with
+accounts of anxious, intractable, seditious saints, who have
+distinguished themselves by ravages that, for the greater glory of God,
+they have scattered throughout the universe. If the saints who live in
+solitude are useless, those who live in the world are very often
+dangerous. The vanity of performing a role, the desire of distinguishing
+themselves in the eyes of the stupid vulgar by a strange conduct,
+constitute usually the distinctive characteristics of great saints;
+pride persuades them that they are extraordinary men, far above human
+nature; beings who are more perfect than others; chosen ones, which God
+looks upon with more complaisance than the rest of mortals. Humility in
+a saint is, is a general rule, but a pride more refined than that of
+common men. It must be a very ridiculous vanity which can determine a
+man to continually war with his own nature!
+
+
+
+
+CLXIII.--HUMAN NATURE IS NOT DEPRAVED; AND A MORALITY WHICH CONTRADICTS
+THIS FACT IS NOT MADE FOR MAN.
+
+A morality which contradicts the nature of man is not made for him. But
+you will say that man's nature is depraved. In what consists this
+pretended depravity? Is it because he has passions? But are not passions
+the very essence of man? Must he not seek, desire, love that which is,
+or that which he believes to be, essential to his happiness? Must he not
+fear and avoid that which he judges injurious or fatal to him? Excite
+his passions by useful objects; let him attach himself to these same
+objects, divert him by sensible and known motives from that which can do
+him or others harm, and you will make of him a reasonable and virtuous
+being. A man without passions would be equally indifferent to vice and
+to virtue.
+
+Holy doctors! you constantly tell us that man's nature is perverted; you
+tell us that the way of all flesh is corrupt; you tell us that nature
+gives us but inordinate inclinations. In this case you accuse your God,
+who has not been able or willing to keep this nature in its original
+perfection. If this nature became corrupted, why did not this God repair
+it? The Christian assures me that human nature is repaired, that the
+death of his God has reestablished it in its integrity. How comes it
+then, that human nature, notwithstanding the death of a God, is still
+depraved? Is it, then, a pure loss that your God died? What becomes of
+His omnipotence and His victory over the Devil, if it is true that the
+Devil still holds the empire which, according to you, he has always
+exercised in the world?
+
+Death, according to Christian theology, is the penalty of sin. This
+opinion agrees with that of some savage Negro nations, who imagine that
+the death of a man is always the supernatural effect of the wrath of the
+Gods. The Christians firmly believe that Christ has delivered them from
+sin, while they see that, in their religion as in the others, man is
+subject to death. To say that Jesus Christ has delivered us from sin, is
+it not claiming that a judge has granted pardon to a guilty man, while
+we see him sent to torture?
+
+
+
+
+CLXIV.--OF JESUS CHRIST, THE PRIEST'S GOD.
+
+If, closing our eyes upon all that transpires in this world, we should
+rely upon the votaries of the Christian religion, we would believe that
+the coming of our Divine Saviour has produced the most wonderful
+revolution and the most complete reform in the morals of nations. The
+Messiah, according to Pascal, [See Thoughts of Pascal] ought of Himself
+alone to produce a great, select, and holy people; conducting and
+nourishing it, and introducing it into the place of repose and sanctity,
+rendering it holy to God, making it the temple of God, saving it from
+the wrath of God, delivering it from the servitude of sin, giving laws
+to this people, engraving these laws upon their hearts, offering Himself
+to God for them, crushing the head of the serpent, etc. This great man
+has forgotten to show us the people upon whom His Divine Messiah has
+produced the miraculous effects of which He speaks with so much
+emphasis; so far, it seems, they do not exist upon the earth!
+
+If we examine ever so little the morals of the Christian nations, and
+listen to the clamors of their priests, we will be obliged to conclude
+that their God, Jesus Christ, preached without fruit, without success;
+that His Almighty will still finds in men a resistance, over which this
+God either can not or does not wish to triumph. The morality of this
+Divine Doctor which His disciples admire so much, and practice so
+little, is followed during a whole century but by half a dozen of
+obscure saints, fanatical and ignorant monks, who alone will have the
+glory of shining in the celestial court; all the remainder of mortals,
+although redeemed by the blood of this God, will be the prey of eternal
+flames.
+
+
+
+
+CLXV.--THE DOGMA OF THE REMISSION OF SINS HAS BEEN INVENTED IN THE
+INTEREST OF THE PRIESTS.
+
+When a man has a great desire to sin, he thinks very little about his
+God; more than this, whatever crimes he may have committed, he always
+flatters himself that this God will mitigate the severity of his
+punishments. No mortal seriously believes that his conduct can damn him.
+Although he fears a terrible God, who often makes him tremble, every
+time he is strongly tempted he succumbs and sees but a God of mercy, the
+idea of whom quiets him. Does he do evil? He hopes to have the time to
+correct himself, and promises earnestly to repent some day.
+
+There are in the religious pharmacy infallible receipts for calming the
+conscience; the priests in every country possess sovereign secrets for
+disarming the wrath of Heaven. However true it may be that the anger of
+Deity is appeased by prayers, by offerings, by sacrifices, by
+penitential tears, we have no right to say that religion holds in check
+the irregularities of men; they will first sin, and afterward seek the
+means to reconcile God. Every religion which expiates, and which
+promises the remission of crimes, if it restrains any, it encourages the
+great number to commit evil. Notwithstanding His immutability, God is,
+in all the religions of this world, a veritable Proteus. His priests
+show Him now armed with severity, and then full of clemency and
+gentleness; now cruel and pitiless, and then easily reconciled by the
+repentance and the tears of the sinners. Consequently, men face the
+Deity in the manner which conforms the most to their present interests.
+An always wrathful God would repel His worshipers, or cast them into
+despair. Men need a God who becomes angry and who can be appeased; if
+His anger alarms a few timid souls, His clemency reassures the
+determined wicked ones who intend to have recourse sooner or later to
+the means of reconciling themselves with Him; if the judgments of God
+frighten a few faint-hearted devotees who already by temperament and by
+habitude are not inclined to evil, the treasures of Divine mercy
+reassure the greatest criminals, who have reason to hope that they will
+participate in them with the others.
+
+
+
+
+CLXVI.--THE FEAR OF GOD IS POWERLESS AGAINST HUMAN PASSIONS.
+
+The majority of men rarely think of God, or, at least, do not occupy
+themselves much with Him. The idea of God has so little stability, it is
+so afflicting, that it can not hold the imagination for a long time,
+except in some sad and melancholy visionists who do not constitute the
+majority of the inhabitants of this world. The common man has no
+conception of it; his weak brain becomes perplexed the moment he
+attempts to think of Him. The business man thinks of nothing but his
+affairs; the courtier of his intrigues; worldly men, women, youth, of
+their pleasures; dissipation soon dispels the wearisome notions of
+religion. The ambitious, the avaricious, and the debauchee sedulously
+lay aside speculations too feeble to counterbalance their diverse
+passions.
+
+Whom does the idea of God overawe? A few weak men disappointed and
+disgusted with this world; some persons whose passions are already
+extinguished by age, by infirmities, or by reverses of fortune. Religion
+is a restraint but for those whose temperament or circumstances have
+already subjected them to reason. The fear of God does not prevent any
+from committing sin but those who do not wish to sin very much, or who
+are no longer in a condition to sin. To tell men that Divinity punishes
+crime in this world, is to claim as a fact that which experience
+contradicts constantly The most wicked men are usually the arbiters of
+the world, and those whom fortune blesses with its favors. To convince
+us of the judgments of God by sending us to the other life, is to make
+us accept conjectures in order to destroy facts which we can not
+dispute.
+
+
+
+
+CLXVII.--THE INVENTION OF HELL IS TOO ABSURD TO PREVENT EVIL.
+
+No one dreams about another life when he is very much absorbed in
+objects which he meets on earth. In the eyes of a passionate lover, the
+presence of his mistress extinguishes the fires of hell, and her charms
+blot out all the pleasures of Paradise. Woman! you leave, you say, your
+lover for your God? It is that your lover is no longer the same in your
+estimation; or your lover leaves you, and you must fill the void which
+is made in your heart. Nothing is more common than to see ambitious,
+perverse, corrupt, and immoral men who are religious, and who sometimes
+exhibit even zeal in its behalf; if they do not practice religion, they
+promise themselves they will practice it some day; they keep it in
+reserve as a remedy which, sooner or later, will be necessary to quiet
+the conscience for the evil which they intend yet to do. Besides,
+devotees and priests being a very numerous, active, and powerful party,
+it is not astonishing to see impostors and thieves seek for its support
+in order to gain their ends. We will be told, no doubt, that many honest
+people are sincerely religious without profit; but is uprightness of
+heart always accompanied with intelligence? We are cited to a great
+number of learned men, men of genius, who are very religious. This
+proves that men of genius can have prejudices, can be pusillanimous, can
+have an imagination which seduces them and prevents them from examining
+objects coolly. Pascal proves nothing in favor of religion, except that
+a man of genius can possess a grain of weakness, and is but a child when
+he is weak enough to listen to prejudices. Pascal himself tells us "that
+the mind can be strong and narrow, and just as extended as it is weak."
+He says more: "We can have our senses all right, and not be equally able
+in all things; because there are men who, being right in a certain
+sphere of things, lose themselves in others."
+
+
+
+
+CLXVIII.--ABSURDITY OF THE MORALITY AND OF THE RELIGIOUS VIRTUES
+ESTABLISHED SOLELY IN THE INTEREST OF THE PRIESTS.
+
+What is virtue according to theology? It is, we are told, the conformity
+of men's actions with the will of God. But who is God? He is a being
+whom no one is able to conceive of, and whom, consequently, each one
+modifies in his own way. What is the will of God? It is what men who
+have seen God, or whom God has inspired, have told us. Who are those who
+have seen God? They are either fanatics, or scoundrels, or ambitious
+men, whose word we can not rely upon. To found morality upon a God that
+each man represents differently, that each one composes by his own idea,
+whom everybody arranges according to his own temperament and his own
+interest, is evidently founding morality upon the caprice and upon the
+imagination of men; it is basing it upon the whims of a sect, faction,
+or party, who, excluding all others, claim to have the advantage of
+worshiping the true God.
+
+To establish morality, or the duties of man, upon the Divine will, is
+founding it upon the wishes, the reveries, or the interests of those who
+make God talk without fear of contradiction. In every religion the
+priests alone have the right to decide upon what pleases or displeases
+their God; we may rest assured that they will decide upon what pleases
+or displeases themselves.
+
+The dogmas, ceremonies, the morality and the virtues which all religions
+of the world prescribe, are visibly calculated only to extend the power
+or to increase the emoluments of the founders and of the ministers of
+these religions; the dogmas are obscure, inconceivable, frightful, and,
+thereby, very liable to cause the imagination to wander, and to render
+the common man more docile to those who wish to domineer over him; the
+ceremonies and practices procure fortune or consideration to the
+priests; the religious morals and virtues consist in a submissive faith,
+which prevents reasoning; in a devout humility, which assures to the
+priests the submission of their slaves; in an ardent zeal, when the
+question of religion is agitated; that is to say, when the interest of
+these priests is considered, all religious virtues having evidently for
+their object the advantage of the priests.
+
+
+
+
+CLXIX.--WHAT DOES THAT CHRISTIAN CHARITY AMOUNT TO, SUCH AS THEOLOGIANS
+TEACH AND PRACTICE?
+
+When we reproach the theologians with the sterility of their religious
+virtues, they praise, with emphasis, charity, that tender love of our
+neighbor which Christianity makes an essential duty for its disciples.
+But, alas! what becomes of this pretended charity as soon as we examine
+the actions of the Lord's ministers? Ask if you must love your neighbor
+if he is impious, heretical, and incredulous, that is to say, if he does
+not think as they do? Ask them if you must tolerate opinions contrary to
+those which they profess? Ask them if the Lord can show indulgence to
+those who are in error? Immediately their charity disappears, and the
+dominating clergy will tell you that the prince carries the sword but to
+sustain the interests of the Most High; they will tell you that for love
+of the neighbor, you must persecute, imprison, exile, or burn him. You
+will find tolerance among a few priests who are persecuted themselves,
+but who put aside Christian charity as soon as they have the power to
+persecute in their turn.
+
+The Christian religion which was originally preached by beggars and by
+very wretched men, strongly recommends alms-giving under the name of
+charity; the faith of Mohammed equally makes it an indispensable duty.
+Nothing, no doubt, is better suited to humanity than to assist the
+unfortunate, to clothe the naked, to lend a charitable hand to whoever
+needs it. But would it not be more humane and more charitable to foresee
+the misery and to prevent the poor from increasing? If religion, instead
+of deifying princes, had but taught them to respect the property of
+their subjects, to be just, and to exercise but their legitimate rights,
+we should not see such a great number of mendicants in their realms. A
+greedy, unjust, tyrannical government multiplies misery; the rigor of
+taxes produces discouragement, idleness, indigence, which, on their
+part, produce robbery, murders, and all kinds of crime. If the
+sovereigns had more humanity, charity, and justice, their States would
+not be peopled by so many unfortunate ones whose misery becomes
+impossible to soothe.
+
+The Christian and Mohammedan States are filled with vast and richly
+endowed hospitals, in which we admire the pious charity of the kings and
+of the sultans who erected them. Would it not have been more humane to
+govern the people well, to procure them ease, to excite and to favor
+industry and trade, to permit them to enjoy in safety the fruits of
+their labors, than to oppress them under a despotic yoke, to impoverish
+them by senseless wars, to reduce them to mendicity in order to gratify
+an immoderate luxury, and afterward build sumptuous monuments which can
+contain but a very small portion of those whom they have rendered
+miserable? Religion, by its virtues, has but given a change to men;
+instead of foreseeing evils, it applies but insufficient remedies. The
+ministers of Heaven have always known how to benefit themselves by the
+calamities of others; public misery became their element; they made
+themselves the administrators of the goods of the poor, the distributors
+of alms, the depositaries of charities; thereby they extended and
+sustained at all times their power over the unfortunates who usually
+compose the most numerous, the most anxious, the most seditious part of
+society. Thus the greatest evils are made profitable to the ministers
+of the Lord.
+
+The Christian priests tell us that the goods which they possess are the
+goods of the poor, and pretend by this title that their possessions are
+sacred; consequently, the sovereigns and the people press themselves to
+accumulate lands, revenues, treasures for them; under pretext of
+charity, our spiritual guides have become very opulent, and enjoy, in
+the sight of the impoverished nations, goods which were destined but for
+the miserable; the latter, far from murmuring about it, applaud a
+deceitful generosity which enriches the Church, but which very rarely
+alleviates the sufferings of the poor.
+
+According to the principles of Christianity, poverty itself is a virtue,
+and it is this virtue which the sovereigns and the priests make their
+slaves observe the most. According to these ideas, a great number of
+pious Christians have renounced with good-will the perishable riches of
+the earth; have distributed their patrimony to the poor, and have
+retired into a desert to live a life of voluntary indigence. But very
+soon this enthusiasm, this supernatural taste for misery, must surrender
+to nature. The successors to these voluntary poor, sold to the religious
+people their prayers and their powerful intercession with the Deity;
+they became rich and powerful; thus, monks and hermits lived in
+idleness, and, under the pretext of charity, devoured insultingly the
+substance of the poor. Poverty of spirit was that of which religion made
+always the greatest use. The fundamental virtue of all religion, that is
+to say, the most useful one to its ministers, is faith. It consists in
+an unlimited credulity, which causes men to believe, without
+examination, all that which the interpreters of the Deity wish them to
+believe. With the aid of this wonderful virtue, the priests became the
+arbiters of justice and of injustice; of good and of evil; they found it
+easy to commit crimes when crimes became necessary to their interests.
+Implicit faith has been the source of the greatest outrages which have
+been committed upon the earth.
+
+
+
+
+CLXX.--CONFESSION, THAT GOLDEN MINE FOR THE PRIESTS, HAS DESTROYED THE
+TRUE PRINCIPLES OF MORALITY.
+
+He who first proclaimed to the nations that, when man had wronged man,
+he must ask God's pardon, appease His wrath by presents, and offer Him
+sacrifices, obviously subverted the true principles of morality.
+According to these ideas, men imagine that they can obtain from the King
+of Heaven, as well as from the kings of the earth, permission to be
+unjust and wicked, or at least pardon for the evil which they might
+commit.
+
+Morality is founded upon the relations, the needs, and the constant
+interests of the inhabitants of the earth; the relations which subsist
+between men and God are either entirely unknown or imaginary. The
+religion associating God with men has visibly weakened or destroyed the
+ties which unite men.
+
+Mortals imagine that they can, with impunity, injure each other by
+making a suitable reparation to the Almighty Being, who is supposed to
+have the right to remit all the injuries done to His creatures. Is there
+anything more liable to encourage wickedness and to embolden to crime,
+than to persuade men that there exists an invisible being who has the
+right to pardon injustice, rapine, perfidy, and all the outrages they
+can inflict upon society? Encouraged by these fatal ideas, we see the
+most perverse men abandon themselves to the greatest crimes, and expect
+to repair them by imploring Divine mercy; their conscience rests in
+peace when a priest assures them that Heaven is quieted by sincere
+repentance, which is very useless to the world; this priest consoles
+them in the name of Deity, if they consent in reparation of their faults
+to divide with His ministers the fruits of their plunderings, of their
+frauds, and of their wickedness. Morality united to religion, becomes
+necessarily subordinate to it. In the mind of a religious person, God
+must be preferred to His creatures; "It is better to obey Him than men!"
+The interests of the Celestial Monarch must be above those of weak
+mortals. But the interests of Heaven are evidently the interests of the
+ministers of Heaven; from which it follows evidently, that in all
+religions, the priests, under pretext of Heaven's interest's, or of
+God's glory, will be able to dispense with the duties of human morals
+when they do not agree with the duties which God is entitled to impose.
+
+Besides, He who has the power to pardon crimes, has He not the right to
+order them committed?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXI.--THE SUPPOSITION OF THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD IS NOT NECESSARY TO
+MORALITY.
+
+We are constantly told that without a God, there can be no moral
+obligation; that it is necessary for men and for the sovereigns
+themselves to have a lawgiver sufficiently powerful to compel them to be
+moral; moral obligation implies a law; but this law arises from the
+eternal and necessary relations of things among themselves, which have
+nothing in common with the existence of a God. The rules which govern
+men's conduct spring from their own nature, which they are supposed to
+know, and not from the Divine nature, of which they have no conception;
+these rules compel us to render ourselves estimable or contemptible,
+amiable or hateful, worthy of reward or of punishments, happy or
+unhappy, according to the extent to which we observe them. The law that
+compels man not to harm himself, is inherent in the nature of a sensible
+being, who, no matter how he came into this world, or what can be his
+fate in another, is compelled by his very nature to seek his welfare and
+to shun evil, to love pleasure and to fear pain. The law which compels a
+man not to harm others and to do good, is inherent in the nature of
+sensible beings living in society, who, by their nature, are compelled
+to despise those who do them no good, and to detest those who oppose
+their happiness. Whether there exists a God or not, whether this God has
+spoken or not, men's moral duties will always be the same so long as
+they possess their own nature; that is to say, so long as they are
+sensible beings. Do men need a God whom they do not know, or an
+invisible lawgiver, or a mysterious religion, or chimerical fears in
+order to comprehend that all excess tends ultimately to destroy them,
+and that in order to preserve themselves they must abstain from it; that
+in order to be loved by others, they must do good; that doing evil is a
+sure means of incurring their hatred and vengeance? "Before the law
+there was no sin." Nothing is more false than this maxim. It is enough
+for a man to be what he is, to be a sensible being in order to
+distinguish that which pleases or displeases him. It is enough that a
+man knows that another man is a sensible being like himself, in order
+for him to know what is useful or injurious to him. It is enough that
+man needs his fellow-creature, in order that he should fear that he
+might produce unfavorable impressions upon him. Thus a sentient and
+thinking being needs but to feel and to think, in order to discover that
+which is due to him and to others. I feel, and another feels, like
+myself; this is the foundation of all morality.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXII.--RELIGION AND ITS SUPERNATURAL MORALITY ARE FATAL TO THE PEOPLE,
+AND OPPOSED TO MAN'S NATURE.
+
+We can judge of the merit of a system of morals but by its conformity
+with man's nature. According to this comparison, we have a right to
+reject it, if we find it detrimental to the welfare of mankind. Whoever
+has seriously meditated upon religion and its supernatural morality,
+whoever has weighed its advantages and disadvantages, will become
+convinced that they are both injurious to the interests of the human
+race, or directly opposed to man's nature.
+
+"People, to arms! Your God's cause is at stake! Heaven is outraged!
+Faith is in danger! Down upon infidelity, blasphemy, and heresy!"
+
+By the magical power of these valiant words, which the people never
+understand, the priests in all ages were the leaders in the revolts of
+nations, in dethroning kings, in kindling civil wars, and in imprisoning
+men. When we chance to examine the important objects which have excited
+the Celestial wrath and produced so many ravages upon the earth, it is
+found that the foolish reveries and the strange conjectures of some
+theologian who did not understand himself, or, the pretensions of the
+clergy, have severed all ties of society and inundated the human race in
+its own blood and tears.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXIII.--HOW THE UNION OF RELIGION AND POLITICS IS FATAL TO THE PEOPLE
+AND TO THE KINGS.
+
+The sovereigns of this world in associating the Deity in the government
+of their realms, in pretending to be His lieutenants and His
+representatives upon earth, in admitting that they hold their power from
+Him, must necessarily accept His ministers as rivals or as masters. Is
+it, then, astonishing that the priests have often made the kings feel
+the superiority of the Celestial Monarch? Have they not more than once
+made the temporal princes understand that the greatest physical power is
+compelled to surrender to the spiritual power of opinion? Nothing is
+more difficult than to serve two masters, especially when they do not
+agree upon what they demand of their subjects. The union of religion
+with politics has necessarily caused a double legislation in the States.
+The law of God, interpreted by His priests, is often contrary to the law
+of the sovereign or to the interest of the State. When the princes are
+firm, and sure of the love of their subjects, God's law is sometimes
+obliged to comply with the wise intentions of the temporal sovereign;
+but more often the sovereign authority is obliged to retreat before the
+Divine authority, that is to say, before the interests of the clergy.
+Nothing is more dangerous for a prince, than to meddle with
+ecclesiastical affairs (to put his hands into the holy-water pot), that
+is to say, to attempt the reform of abuses consecrated by religion. God
+is never more angry than when the Divine rights, the privileges, the
+possessions, and the immunities of His priests are interfered with.
+
+Metaphysical speculations or the religious opinions of men, never
+influence their conduct except when they believe them conformed to their
+interests. Nothing proves this truth more forcibly than the conduct of a
+great number of princes in regard to the spiritual power, which we see
+them very often resist. Should not a sovereign who is persuaded of the
+importance and the rights of religion, conscientiously feel himself
+obliged to receive with respect the orders of his priests, and consider
+them as commandments of the Deity? There was a time when the kings and
+the people, more conformable, and convinced of the rights of the
+spiritual power, became its slaves, surrendered to it on all occasions,
+and were but docile instruments in its hands; this happy time is no
+more. By a strange inconsistency, we sometimes see the most religious
+monarchs oppose the enterprises of those whom they regard as God's
+ministers. A sovereign who is filled with religion or respect for his
+God, ought to be constantly prostrate before his priests, and regard
+them as his true sovereigns. Is there a power upon the earth which has
+the right to measure itself with that of the Most High?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXIV.--CREEDS ARE BURDENSOME AND RUINOUS TO THE MAJORITY OF NATIONS.
+
+Have the princes who believe themselves interested in propagating the
+prejudices of their subjects, reflected well upon the effects which are
+produced by privileged demagogues, who have the right to speak when they
+choose, and excite in the name of Heaven the passions of many millions
+of their subjects? What ravages would not these holy haranguers cause
+should they conspire to disturb a State, as they have so often done?
+
+Nothing is more onerous and more ruinous for the greatest part of the
+nations than the worship of their Gods! Everywhere their ministers not
+only rank as the first order in the State, but also enjoy the greater
+portion of society's benefits, and have the right to levy continual
+taxes upon their fellow-citizens. What real advantages do these organs
+of the Most High procure for the people in exchange for the immense
+profits which they draw from them? Do they give them in exchange for
+their wealth and their courtesies anything but mysteries, hypotheses,
+ceremonies, subtle questions, interminable quarrels, which very often
+their States must pay for with their blood?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXV.--RELIGION PARALYZES MORALITY.
+
+Religion, which claims to be the firmest support of morality, evidently
+deprives it of its true motor, to substitute imaginary motors,
+inconceivable chimeras, which, being obviously contrary to common sense,
+can not be firmly believed by any one. Everybody assures us that he
+believes firmly in a God who rewards and punishes; everybody claims to
+be persuaded of the existence of a hell and of a Paradise; however, do
+we see that these ideas render men better or counterbalance in the minds
+of the greatest number of them the slightest interest? Each one assures
+us that he is afraid of God's judgments, although each one gives vent to
+his passions when he believes himself sure of escaping the judgments of
+men. The fear of invisible powers is rarely as great as the fear of
+visible powers. Unknown or distant sufferings make less impression upon
+people than the erected gallows, or the example of a hanged man. There
+is scarcely any courtier who fears God's anger more than the displeasure
+of his master. A pension, a title, a ribbon, are sufficient to make one
+forget the torments of hell and the pleasures of the celestial court. A
+woman's caresses expose him every day to the displeasure of the Most
+High. A joke, a banter, a bon-mot, make more impression upon the man of
+the world than all the grave notions of his religion. Are we not assured
+that a true repentance is sufficient to appease Divinity? However, we do
+not see that this true repentance is sincerely expressed; at least, we
+very rarely see great thieves, even in the hour of death, restore the
+goods which they know they have unjustly acquired. Men persuade
+themselves, no doubt, that they will submit to the eternal fire, if they
+can not guarantee themselves against it. But as settlements can be made
+with Heaven by giving the Church a portion of their fortunes, there are
+very few religious thieves who do not die perfectly quieted about the
+manner in which they gained their riches in this world.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXVI.--FATAL CONSEQUENCES OF PIETY.
+
+Even by the confession of the most ardent defenders of religion and of
+its usefulness, nothing is more rare than sincere conversions; to which
+we might add, nothing is more useless to society. Men do not become
+disgusted with the world until the world is disgusted with them; a woman
+gives herself to God only when the world no longer wants her. Her vanity
+finds in religious devotion a role which occupies her and consoles her
+for the ruin of her charms. She passes her time in the most trifling
+practices, parties, intrigues, invectives, and slander; zeal furnishes
+her the means of distinguishing herself and becoming an object of
+consideration in the religious circle. If the bigots have the talent to
+please God and His priests, they rarely possess that of pleasing society
+or of rendering themselves useful to it. Religion for a devotee is a
+veil which covers and justifies all his passions, his pride, his bad
+humor, his anger, his vengeance, his impatience, his bitterness.
+Religion arrogates to itself a tyrannical superiority which banishes
+from commerce all gentleness, gaiety, and joy; it gives the right to
+censure others; to capture and to exterminate the infidels for the glory
+of God; it is very common to be religious and to have none of the
+virtues or the qualities necessary to social life.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXVII.--THE SUPPOSITION OF ANOTHER LIFE IS NEITHER CONSOLING TO MAN NOR
+NECESSARY TO MORALITY.
+
+We are assured that the dogma of another life is of the greatest
+importance to the peace of society; it is imagined that without it men
+would have no motives for doing good. Why do we need terrors and fables
+to teach any reasonable man how he ought to conduct himself upon earth?
+Does not each one of us see that he has the greatest interest in
+deserving the approbation, esteem, and kindness of the beings which
+surround him, and in avoiding all that can cause the censure, the
+contempt, and the resentment of society? No matter how short the
+duration of a festival, of a conversation, or of a visit may be, does
+not each one of us wish to act a befitting part in it, agreeable to
+himself and to others? If life is but a passage, let us try to make it
+easy; it can not be so if we lack the regards of those who travel with
+us.
+
+Religion, which is so sadly occupied with its gloomy reveries,
+represents man to us as but a pilgrim upon earth; it concludes that in
+order to travel with more safety, he should travel alone; renounce the
+pleasures which he meets and deprive himself of the amusements which
+could console him for the fatigues and the weariness of the road. A
+stoical and morose philosophy sometimes gives us counsels as senseless
+as religion; but a more rational philosophy inspires us to strew flowers
+on life's pathway; to dispel melancholy and panic terrors; to link our
+interests with those of our traveling companions; to divert ourselves by
+gaiety and honest pleasures from the pains and the crosses to which we
+are so often exposed. We are made to feel, that in order to travel
+pleasantly, we should abstain from that which could become injurious to
+ourselves, and to avoid with great care that which could make us odious
+to our associates.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXVIII.--AN ATHEIST HAS MORE MOTIVES FOR ACTING UPRIGHTLY, MORE
+
+
+
+CONSCIENCE, THAN A RELIGIOUS PERSON.
+
+It is asked what motives has an atheist for doing right. He can have the
+motive of pleasing himself and his fellow-creatures; of living happily
+and tranquilly; of making himself loved and respected by men, whose
+existence and whose dispositions are better known than those of a being
+impossible to understand. Can he who fears not the Gods, fear anything?
+He can fear men, their contempt, their disrespect, and the punishments
+which the laws inflict; finally, he can fear himself; he can be afraid
+of the remorse that all those experience whose conscience reproaches
+them for having deserved the hatred of their fellow-beings. Conscience
+is the inward testimony which we render to ourselves for having acted in
+such a manner as to deserve the esteem or the censure of those with whom
+we associate. This conscience is based upon the knowledge which we have
+of men, and of the sentiments which our actions must awaken in them. A
+religious person's conscience persuades him that he has pleased or
+displeased his God, of whom he has no idea, and whose obscure and
+doubtful intentions are explained to him only by suspicious men, who
+know no more of the essence of Divinity than he does, and who do not
+agree upon what can please or displease God. In a word, the conscience
+of a credulous man is guided by men whose own conscience is in error, or
+whose interest extinguishes intelligence.
+
+
+
+
+Can an atheist have conscience? What are his motives for abstaining from
+secret vices and crimes of which other men are ignorant, and which are
+beyond the reach of laws? He can be assured by constant experience that
+there is no vice which, in the nature of things, does not bring its own
+punishment. If he wishes to preserve himself, he will avoid all those
+excesses which can be injurious to his health; he would not desire to
+live and linger, thus becoming a burden to himself and others. In regard
+to secret crimes, he would avoid them through fear of being ashamed of
+himself, from whom he can not hide. If he has reason, he will know the
+price of the esteem that an honest man should have for himself. He will
+know, besides, that unexpected circumstances can unveil to the eyes of
+others the conduct which he feels interested in concealing. The other
+world gives no motive for doing well to him who finds no motive for it
+here.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXIX.--AN ATHEISTICAL KING WOULD BE PREFERABLE TO ONE WHO IS RELIGIOUS
+AND WICKED, AS WE OFTEN SEE THEM.
+
+The speculating atheist, the theist will tell us, may be an honest man,
+but his writings will cause atheism in politics. Princes and ministers,
+being no longer restrained by the fear of God, will give themselves up
+without scruple to the most frightful excesses. But no matter what we
+can suppose of the depravity of an atheist on a throne, can it ever be
+any greater or more injurious than that of so many conquerors, tyrants,
+persecutors, of ambitious and perverse courtiers, who, without being
+atheists, but who, being very often religious, do not cease to make
+humanity groan under the weight of their crimes? Can an atheistical king
+inflict more evil on the world than a Louis XI., a Philip II., a
+Richelieu, who have all allied religion with crime? Nothing is rarer
+than atheistical princes, and nothing more common than very bad and very
+religious tyrants.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXX.--THE MORALITY ACQUIRED BY PHILOSOPHY IS SUFFICIENT TO VIRTUE.
+
+Any man who reflects can not fail of knowing his duties, of discovering
+the relations which subsist between men, of meditating upon his own
+nature, of discerning his needs, his inclinations, and his desires, and
+of perceiving what he owes to the beings necessary to his own happiness.
+These reflections naturally lead to the knowledge of the morality which
+is the most essential for society. Every man who loves to retire within
+himself in order to study and seek for the principles of things, has no
+very dangerous passions; his greatest passion will be to know the truth,
+and his greatest ambition to show it to others. Philosophy is beneficial
+in cultivating the heart and the mind. In regard to morals, has not he
+who reflects and reasons the advantage over him who does not reason?
+
+If ignorance is useful to priests and to the oppressors of humanity, it
+is very fatal to society. Man, deprived of intelligence, does not enjoy
+the use of his reason; man, deprived of reason and intelligence, is a
+savage, who is liable at any moment to be led into crime. Morality, or
+the science of moral duties, is acquired but by the study of man and his
+relations. He who does not reflect for himself does not know true
+morals, and can not walk the road of virtue. The less men reason, the
+more wicked they are. The barbarians, the princes, the great, and the
+dregs of society, are generally the most wicked because they are those
+who reason the least. The religious man never reflects, and avoids
+reasoning; he fears examination; he follows authority; and very often an
+erroneous conscience makes him consider it a holy duty to commit evil.
+The incredulous man reasons, consults experience, and prefers it to
+prejudice. If he has reasoned justly, his conscience becomes clear; he
+finds more real motives for right-doing than the religious man, who has
+no motives but his chimeras, and who never listens to reason. Are not
+the motives of the incredulous man strong enough to counterbalance his
+passions? Is he blind enough not to recognize the interests which should
+restrain him? Well! he will be vicious and wicked; but even then he will
+be no worse and no better than many credulous men who, notwithstanding
+religion and its sublime precepts, continue to lead a life which this
+very religion condemns. Is a credulous murderer less to be feared than a
+murderer who does not believe anything? Is a religious tyrant any less a
+tyrant than an irreligious one?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXI.--OPINIONS RARELY INFLUENCE CONDUCT.
+
+There is nothing more rare in the world than consistent men. Their
+opinions do not influence their conduct, except when they conform to
+their temperament, their passions, and to their interests. Religious
+opinions, according to daily experience, produce much more evil than
+good; they are injurious, because they very often agree with the
+passions of tyrants, fanatics, and priests; they produce no effect,
+because they have not the power to balance the present interests of the
+majority of men. Religious principles are always put aside when they are
+opposed to ardent desires; without being incredulous, they act as if
+they believed nothing. We risk being deceived when we judge the opinions
+of men by their conduct or their conduct by their opinions. A very
+religious man, notwithstanding the austere and cruel principles of a
+bloody religion, will sometimes be, by a fortunate inconsistency,
+humane, tolerant, moderate; in this case the principles of his religion
+do not agree with the mildness of his disposition. A libertine, a
+debauchee, a hypocrite, an adulterer, or a thief will often show us that
+he has the clearest ideas of morals. Why do they not practice them? It
+is because neither their temperament, their interests, nor their habits
+agree with their sublime theories. The rigid principles of Christian
+morality, which so many attempt to pass off as Divine, have but very
+little influence upon the conduct of those who preach them to others. Do
+they not tell us every day to do what they preach, and not what they
+practice?
+
+The religious partisans generally designate the incredulous as
+libertines. It may be that many incredulous people are immoral; this
+immorality is due to their temperament, and not to their opinions. But
+what has their conduct to do with these opinions? Can not an immoral man
+be a good physician, a good architect, a good geometer, a good logician,
+a good metaphysician? With an irreproachable conduct, one can be
+ignorant upon many things, and reason very badly. When truth is
+presented, it matters not from whom it comes. Let us not judge men by
+their opinions, or opinions by men; let us judge men by their conduct;
+and their opinions by their conformity with experience, reason, and
+their usefulness for mankind.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXII.---REASON LEADS MEN TO IRRELIGION AND TO ATHEISM, BECAUSE
+RELIGION IS ABSURD, AND THE GOD OF THE PRIESTS IS A MALICIOUS AND
+FEROCIOUS BEING.
+
+Every man who reasons soon becomes incredulous, because reasoning proves
+to him that theology is but a tissue of falsehoods; that religion is
+contrary to all principles of common sense; that it gives a false color
+to all human knowledge. The rational man becomes incredulous, because he
+sees that religion, far from rendering men happier, is the first cause
+of the greatest disorders, and of the permanent calamities with which
+the human race is afflicted. The man who seeks his well-being and his
+own tranquillity, examines his religion and is undeceived, because he
+finds it inconvenient and useless to pass his life in trembling at
+phantoms which are made but to intimidate silly women or children. If,
+sometimes, libertinage, which reasons but little, leads to irreligion,
+the man who is regular in his morals can have very legitimate motives
+for examining his religion, and for banishing it from his mind. Too weak
+to intimidate the wicked, in whom vice has become deeply rooted,
+religious terrors afflict, torment, and burden imaginative minds. If
+souls have courage and elasticity, they shake off a yoke which they bear
+unwillingly. If weak or timorous, they wear the yoke during their whole
+life, and they grow old, trembling, or at least they live under
+burdensome uncertainty.
+
+The priests have made of God such a malicious, ferocious being, so ready
+to be vexed, that there are few men in the world who do not wish at the
+bottom of their hearts that this God did not exist. We can not live
+happy if we are always in fear. You worship a terrible God, O religious
+people! Alas! And yet you hate Him; you wish that He was not. Can we
+avoid wishing the absence or the destruction of a master, the idea of
+whom can but torment the mind? It is the dark colors in which the
+priests paint the Deity which revolt men, moving them to hate and
+reject Him.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXIII.--FEAR ALONE CREATES THEISTS AND BIGOTS.
+
+If fear has created the Gods, fear still holds their empire in the mind
+of mortals; they have been so early accustomed to tremble even at the
+name of the Deity, that it has become for them a specter, a goblin, a
+were-wolf which torments them, and whose idea deprives them even of the
+courage to attempt to reassure themselves. They are afraid that this
+invisible specter will strike them if they cease to be afraid. The
+religious people fear their God too much to love Him sincerely; they
+serve Him as slaves, who can not escape His power, and take the part of
+flattering their Master; and who, by continually lying, persuade
+themselves that they love Him. They make a virtue of necessity. The love
+of religious bigots for their God, and of slaves for their despots, is
+but a servile and simulated homage which they render by compulsion, in
+which the heart has no part.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXIV.--CAN WE, OR SHOULD WE, LOVE OR NOT LOVE GOD?
+
+The Christian Doctors have made their God so little worthy of love, that
+several among them have thought it their duty not to love Him; this is a
+blasphemy which makes less sincere doctors tremble. Saint Thomas, having
+asserted that we are under obligation to love God as soon as we can use
+our reason, the Jesuit Sirmond replied to him that that was very soon;
+the Jesuit Vasquez claims that it is sufficient to love God in the hour
+of death; Hurtado says that we should love God at all times; Henriquez
+is content with loving Him every five years; Sotus, every Sunday. "Upon
+what shall we rely?" asks Father Sirmond, who adds: "that Suarez desires
+that we should love God sometimes. But at what time? He allows you to
+judge of it; he knows nothing about it himself; for he adds: 'What a
+learned doctor does not know, who can know?'" The same Jesuit Sirmond
+continues, by saying: "that God does not command us to love Him with
+human affection, and does not promise us salvation but on condition of
+giving Him our hearts; it is enough to obey Him and to love Him, by
+fulfilling His commandments; that this is the only love which we owe
+Him, and He has not commanded so much to love Him as not to hate Him."
+[See "Apology, Des Lettres Provinciales," Tome II.] This doctrine
+appears heretical, ungodly, and abominable to the Jansenists, who, by
+the revolting severity which they attribute to their God, render Him
+still less lovable than their adversaries, the Jesuits. The latter, in
+order to make converts, represent God in such a light as to give
+confidence to the most perverse mortals. Thus, nothing is less
+established among the Christians than the important question, whether we
+can or should love or not love God. Among their spiritual guides some
+pretend that we must love God with all the heart, notwithstanding all
+His severity; others, like the Father Daniel, think that an act of pure
+love of God is the most heroic act of Christian virtue, and that human
+weakness can scarcely reach so high. The Jesuit Pintereau goes still
+further; he says: "The deliverance from the grievous yoke of Divine love
+is a privilege of the new alliance."
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXV.--THE VARIOUS AND CONTRADICTORY IDEAS WHICH EXIST EVERYWHERE UPON
+GOD AND RELIGION, PROVE THAT THEY ARE BUT IDLE FANCIES.
+
+It is always the character of man which decides upon the character of
+his God; each one creates a God for himself, and in his own image. The
+cheerful man who indulges in pleasures and dissipation, can not imagine
+God to be an austere and rebukeful being; he requires a facile God with
+whom he can make an agreement. The severe, sour, bilious man wants a God
+like himself; one who inspires fear; and regards as perverse those that
+accept only a God who is yielding and easily won over. Heresies,
+quarrels, and schisms are necessary. Can men differently organized and
+modified by diverse circumstances, agree in regard to an imaginary being
+which exists but in their own brains? The cruel and interminable
+disputes continually arising among the ministers of the Lord, have not a
+tendency to attract the confidence of those who take an impartial view
+of them. How can we help our incredulity, when we see principles about
+which those who teach them to others, never agree? How can we avoid
+doubting the existence of a God, the idea of whom varies in such a
+remarkable way in the mind of His ministers? How can we avoid rejecting
+totally a God who is full of contradictions? How can we rely upon
+priests whom we see continually contending, accusing each other of being
+infidels and heretics, rending and persecuting each other without mercy,
+about the way in which they understand the pretended truths which they
+reveal to the world?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXVI.--THE EXISTENCE OF GOD, WHICH IS THE BASIS OF ALL RELIGION, HAS
+NOT YET BEEN DEMONSTRATED.
+
+However, so far, this important truth has not yet been demonstrated, not
+only to the incredulous, but in a satisfactory way to theologians
+themselves. In all times, we have seen profound thinkers who thought
+they had new proofs of the truth most important to men. What have been
+the fruits of their meditations and of their arguments? They left the
+thing at the same point; they have demonstrated nothing; nearly always
+they have excited the clamors of their colleagues, who accuse them of
+having badly defended the best of causes.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXVII.--PRIESTS, MORE THAN UNBELIEVERS, ACT FROM INTEREST.
+
+The apologists of religion repeat to us every day that the passions
+alone create unbelievers. "It is," they say, "pride, and a desire to
+distinguish themselves, that make atheists; they seek also to efface the
+idea of God from their minds, because they have reason to fear His
+rigorous judgments." Whatever may be the motives which cause men to be
+irreligious, the thing in question is whether they have found truth. No
+man acts without motives; let us first examine the arguments--we shall
+examine the motives afterward--and we shall find that they are more
+legitimate, and more sensible, than those of many credulous devotees who
+allow themselves to be guided by masters little worthy of men's
+confidence.
+
+You say, O priests of the Lord! that the passions cause unbelievers; you
+pretend that they renounce religion through interest, or because it
+interferes with their irregular inclinations; you assert that they
+attack your Gods because they fear their punishments. Ah! yourselves in
+defending this religion and its chimeras, are you, then, really exempt
+from passions and interests? Who receive the fees of this religion, on
+whose behalf the priests are so zealous? It is the priests. To whom does
+religion procure power, credit, honors, wealth? To the priests! In all
+countries, who make war upon reason, science, truth, and philosophy and
+render them odious to the sovereigns and to the people? Who profit by
+the ignorance of men and their vain prejudices? The priests! You are, O
+priests, rewarded, honored, and paid for deceiving mortals, and you
+punish those who undeceive them. The follies of men procure you
+blessings, offerings, expiations; the most useful truths bring to those
+who announce them, chains, sufferings, stakes. Let the world judge
+between us.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXVIII.--PRIDE, PRESUMPTION, AND CORRUPTION OF THE HEART ARE MORE
+OFTEN FOUND AMONG PRIESTS THAN AMONG ATHEISTS AND UNBELIEVERS.
+
+Pride and vanity always were and always will be the inherent vices of
+the priesthood. Is there anything that has a tendency to render men
+haughty and vain more than the assumption of exercising Heavenly power,
+of possessing a sacred character, of being the messengers of the Most
+High? Are not these dispositions continually increased by the credulity
+of the people, by the deference and the respect of the sovereigns, by
+the immunities, the privileges, and the distinctions which the clergy
+enjoy? The common man is, in every country, more devoted to his
+spiritual guides, whom he considers as Divine men, than to his temporal
+superiors, whom he considers as ordinary men. Village priests enjoy more
+honor than the lord or the judge. A Christian priest believes himself
+far above a king or an emperor. A Spanish grandee having spoken hastily
+to a monk, the latter said to him, arrogantly, "Learn to respect a man
+who has every day your God in his hands and your queen at his feet."
+
+Have the priests any right to accuse the unbelievers of pride? Do they
+distinguish themselves by a rare modesty or profound humility? Is it not
+evident that the desire to domineer over men is the essence of their
+profession? If the Lord's ministers were truly modest, would we see them
+so greedy of respect, so easily irritated by contradictions, so prompt
+and so cruel in revenging themselves upon those whose opinions offend
+them? Does not modest science impress us with the difficulty of
+unraveling truth? What other passion than frenzied pride can render men
+so ferocious, so vindictive, so devoid of toleration and gentleness?
+What is more presumptuous than to arm nations and cause rivers of blood,
+in order to establish or to defend futile conjectures?
+
+You say, O Doctors of Divinity! that it is presumption alone which makes
+atheists. Teach them, then, what your God is; instruct them about His
+essence; speak of Him in an intelligible way; tell of Him reasonable
+things, which are not contradictory or impossible! If you are not in the
+condition to satisfy them; if, so far, none of you have been able to
+demonstrate the existence of a God in a clear and convincing way; if,
+according to your own confession, His essence is as much hidden from you
+as from the rest of mortals, pardon those who can not admit that which
+they can neither understand nor reconcile. Do not accuse of presumption
+and vanity those who have the sincerity to confess their ignorance;
+accuse not of folly those who find it impossible to believe in
+contradictions. You should blush at the thought of exciting the hatred
+of the people and the vengeance of the sovereigns against men who do not
+think as you do upon a Being of whom you have no idea yourselves. Is
+there anything more audacious and more extravagant than to reason about
+an object which it is impossible to conceive of?
+
+You tell us it is corruption of the heart which produces atheists; that
+they shake off the yoke of the Deity because they fear His terrible
+judgments. But why do you paint your God in such black colors? Why does
+this powerful God permit that such corrupt hearts should exist? Why
+should we not make efforts to break the yoke of a Tyrant who, being able
+to make of the hearts of men what He pleases, allows them to become
+perverted and hardened; blinds them; refuses them His grace, in order to
+have the satisfaction of punishing them eternally for having been
+hardened, blinded, and not having received the grace which He refused
+them? The theologians and the priests must feel themselves very sure of
+Heaven's grace and of a happy future, in order not to detest a Master so
+capricious as the God whom they announce to us. A God who damns
+eternally must be the most odious Being that the human mind could
+imagine.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXIX.--PREJUDICES ARE BUT FOR A TIME, AND NO POWER IS DURABLE EXCEPT
+IT IS BASED UPON TRUTH, REASON, AND EQUITY.
+
+No man on earth is truly interested in sustaining error; sooner or later
+it is compelled to surrender to truth. General interest tends to the
+enlightenment of mortals; even the passions sometimes contribute to the
+breaking of some of the chains of prejudice. Have not the passions of
+some sovereigns destroyed, within the past two centuries in some
+countries of Europe, the tyrannical power which a haughty Pontiff
+formerly exercised over all the princes of his sect? Politics, becoming
+more enlightened, has despoiled the clergy of an immense amount of
+property which credulity had accumulated in their hands. Should not this
+memorable example make even the priests realize that prejudices are but
+for a time, and that truth alone is capable of assuring a substantial
+well-being?
+
+Have not the ministers of the Lord seen that in pampering the
+sovereigns, in forging Divine rights for them, and in delivering to them
+the people, bound hand and foot, they were making tyrants of them? Have
+they not reason to fear that these gigantic idols, whom they have raised
+to the skies, will crush them also some day? Do not a thousand examples
+prove that they ought to fear that these unchained lions, after having
+devoured nations, will in turn devour them?
+
+We will respect the priests when they become citizens. Let them make
+use, if they can, of Heaven's authority to create fear in those princes
+who incessantly desolate the earth; let them deprive them of the right
+of being unjust; let them recognize that no subject of a State enjoys
+living under tyranny; let them make the sovereigns feel that they
+themselves are not interested in exercising a power which, rendering
+them odious, injures their own safety, their own power, their own
+grandeur; finally, let the priests and the undeceived kings recognize
+that no power is safe that is not based upon truth, reason, and equity.
+
+
+
+
+CXC.--HOW MUCH POWER AND CONSIDERATION THE MINISTERS OF THE GODS WOULD
+HAVE, IF THEY BECAME THE APOSTLES OF REASON AND THE DEFENDERS OF
+LIBERTY!
+
+The ministers of the Gods, in warring against human reason, which they
+ought to develop, act against their own interest. What would be their
+power, their consideration, their empire over the wisest men; what would
+be the gratitude of the people toward them if, instead of occupying
+themselves with their vain quarrels, they had applied themselves to the
+useful sciences; if they had sought the true principles of physics, of
+government, and of morals. Who would dare reproach the opulence and
+credit of a corporation which, consecrating its leisure and its
+authority to the public good, should use the one for studying and
+meditating, and the other for enlightening equally the minds of the
+sovereigns and the subjects?
+
+Priests! lay aside your idle fancies, your unintelligible dogmas, your
+despicable quarrels; banish to imaginary regions these phantoms, which
+could be of use to you only in the infancy of nations; take the tone of
+reason, instead of sounding the tocsin of persecution against your
+adversaries; instead of entertaining the people with foolish disputes,
+of preaching useless and fanatical virtues, preach to them humane and
+social morality; preach to them virtues which are really useful to the
+world; become the apostles of reason, the lights of the nations, the
+defenders of liberty, reformers of abuses, the friends of truth, and we
+will bless you, we will honor you, we will love you, and you will be
+sure of holding an eternal empire over the hearts of your fellow-beings.
+
+
+
+
+CXCI.--WHAT A HAPPY AND GREAT REVOLUTION WOULD TAKE PLACE IN THE
+UNIVERSE, IF PHILOSOPHY WAS SUBSTITUTED FOR RELIGION!
+
+Philosophers, in all ages, have taken the part that seemed destined for
+the ministers of religion. The hatred of the latter for philosophy was
+never more than professional jealousy. All men accustomed to think,
+instead of seeking to injure each other, should unite their efforts in
+combating errors, in seeking truth, and especially in dispelling the
+prejudices from which the sovereigns and subjects suffer alike, and
+whose upholders themselves finish, sooner or later, by becoming the
+victims.
+
+In the hands of an enlightened government the priests would become the
+most useful of citizens. Could men with rich stipends from the State,
+and relieved of the care of providing for their own subsistence, do
+anything better than to instruct themselves in order to be able to
+instruct others? Would not their minds be better satisfied in
+discovering truth than in wandering in the labyrinths of darkness? Would
+it be any more difficult to unravel the principles of man's morals, than
+the imaginary principles of Divine and theological morals? Would
+ordinary men have as much trouble in understanding the simple notions of
+their duties, as in charging their memories with mysteries,
+unintelligible words, and obscure definitions which are impossible for
+them to understand? How much time and trouble is lost in trying to teach
+men things which are of no use to them. What resources for the public
+benefit, for encouraging the progress of the sciences and the
+advancement of knowledge, for the education of youth, are presented to
+well-meaning sovereigns through so many monasteries, which, in a great
+number of countries devour the people's substance without an equivalent.
+But superstition, jealous of its exclusive empire, seems to have formed
+but useless beings. What advantage could not be drawn from a multitude
+of cenobites of both sexes whom we see in so many countries, and who are
+so well paid to do nothing. Instead of occupying them with sterile
+contemplations, with mechanical prayers, with monotonous practices;
+instead of burdening them with fasts and austerities, let there be
+excited among them a salutary emulation that would inspire them to seek
+the means of serving usefully the world, which their fatal vows oblige
+them to renounce. Instead of filling the youthful minds of their pupils
+with fables, dogmas, and puerilities, why not invite or oblige the
+priests to teach them true things, and so make of them citizens useful
+to their country? The way in which men are brought up makes them useful
+but to the clergy, who blind them, and to the tyrants, who plunder them.
+
+
+
+
+CXCII.--THE RETRACTION OF AN UNBELIEVER AT THE HOUR OF DEATH, PROVES
+NOTHING AGAINST INCREDULITY.
+
+The adherents of credulity often accuse the unbelievers of bad faith
+because they sometimes waver in their principles, changing opinions
+during sickness, and retracting them at the hour of death. When the body
+is diseased, the faculty of reasoning is generally disturbed also. The
+infirm and decrepit man, in approaching his end, sometimes perceives
+himself that reason is leaving him, he feels that prejudice returns.
+There are diseases which have a tendency to lessen courage, to make
+pusillanimous, and to enfeeble the brain; there are others which, in
+destroying the body, do not affect the reason. However, an unbeliever
+who retracts in sickness, is not more rare or more extraordinary than a
+devotionist who permits himself, while in health, to neglect the duties
+that his religion prescribes for him in the most formal manner.
+
+Cleomenes, King of Sparta, having shown little respect for the Gods
+during his reign, became superstitious in his last days; with the view
+of interesting Heaven in his favor, he called around him a multitude of
+sacrificing priests. One of his friends expressing his surprise,
+Cleomenes said: "What are you astonished at? I am no longer what I was,
+and not being the same, I can not think in the same way."
+
+The ministers of religion in their daily conduct, often belie the
+rigorous principles which they teach to others, so that the unbelievers
+in their turn think they have a right to accuse them of bad faith. If
+some unbelievers contradict, in sight of death or during sickness, the
+opinions which they entertained in health, do not the priests in health
+belie opinions of the religion which they hold? Do we see a great
+multitude of humble, generous prelates devoid of ambition, enemies of
+pomp and grandeur, the friends of poverty? In short, do we see the
+conduct of many Christian priests corresponding with the austere
+morality of Christ, their God and their model?
+
+
+
+
+CXCIII.--IT IS NOT TRUE THAT ATHEISM SUNDERS ALL THE TIES OF SOCIETY.
+
+Atheism, we are told, breaks all social ties. Without belief in God,
+what becomes of the sacredness of the oath? How can we bind an atheist
+who can not seriously attest the Deity? But does the oath place us under
+stronger obligations to the engagements which we make? Whoever dares to
+lie, will he not dare to perjure himself? He who is base enough to
+violate his word, or unjust enough to break his promises in contempt of
+the esteem of men, will not be more faithful for having taken all the
+Gods as witnesses to his oaths. Those who rank themselves above the
+judgments of men, will soon put themselves above the judgments of God.
+Are not princes, of all mortals, the most prompt in taking oaths, and
+the most prompt in violating them?
+
+
+
+
+CXCIV.--REFUTATION OF THE ASSERTION THAT RELIGION IS NECESSARY FOR THE
+MASSES.
+
+Religion, they tell us, is necessary for the masses; that though
+enlightened persons may not need restraint upon their opinions, it is
+necessary at least for the common people, in whom education has not
+developed reason. Is it true, then, that religion is a restraint for the
+people? Do we see that this religion prevents them from intemperance,
+drunkenness, brutality, violence, frauds, and all kinds of excesses?
+
+Could a people who had no idea of the Deity, conduct itself in a more
+detestable manner than many believing people in whom we see dissolute
+habits, and the vices most unworthy of rational beings? Do we not see
+the artisan or the man of the people go from his church and plunge
+headlong into his usual excesses, persuading himself all the while that
+his periodical homage to God gives him the right to follow without
+remorse his vicious practices and habitual inclinations? If the people
+are gross and ignorant, is not their stupidity due to the negligence of
+the princes who do not attend to the public education, or who oppose the
+instruction of their subjects? Finally, is not the irrationality of the
+people plainly the work of the priests, who, instead of interesting them
+in a rational morality, do nothing but entertain them with fables,
+phantoms, intrigues, observances, idle fancies, and false virtues, upon
+which they claim that everything depends?
+
+Religion is, for the people, but a vain attendance upon ceremonies, to
+which they cling from habit, which amuses their eyes, which enlivens
+temporarily their sleepy minds, without influencing the conduct, and
+without correcting their morals. By the confession even of the ministers
+at the altars, nothing is more rare than the interior and spiritual
+religion, which is alone capable of regulating the life of man, and of
+triumphing over his inclinations. In good faith, among the most numerous
+and the most devotional people, are there many capable of understanding
+the principles of their religious system, and who find them of
+sufficient strength to stifle their perverse inclinations?
+
+Many people will tell us that it is better to have some kind of a
+restraint than none at all. They will pretend that if religion does not
+control the great mass, it serves at least to restrain some individuals,
+who, without it, would abandon themselves to crime without remorse. No
+doubt it is necessary for men to have a restraint; but they do not need
+an imaginary one; they need true and visible restraints; they need real
+fears, which are much better to restrain them than panic terrors and
+idle fancies. Religion frightens but a few pusillanimous minds, whose
+weakness of character already renders them little to be dreaded by their
+fellow-citizens. An equitable government, severe laws, a sound morality,
+will apply equally to everybody; every one would be forced to believe in
+it, and would feel the danger of not conforming to it.
+
+
+
+
+CXCV.--EVERY RATIONAL SYSTEM IS NOT MADE FOR THE MULTITUDE.
+
+We may be asked if atheism can suit the multitude? I reply, that every
+system which demands discussion is not for the multitude. What use is
+there, then, in preaching atheism? It can at least make those who
+reason, feel that nothing is more extravagant than to make ourselves
+uneasy, and nothing more unjust than to cause anxiety to others on
+account of conjectures, destitute of all foundation. As to the common
+man, who never reasons, the arguments of an atheist are no better suited
+to him than a philosopher's hypothesis, an astronomer's observations, a
+chemist's experiments, a geometer's calculations, a physician's
+examinations, an architect's designs, or a lawyer's pleadings, who all
+labor for the people without their knowledge.
+
+The metaphysical arguments of theology, and the religious disputes which
+have occupied for so long many profound visionists, are they made any
+more for the common man than the arguments of an atheist? More than
+this, the principles of atheism, founded upon common sense, are they not
+more intelligible than those of a theology which we see bristling with
+insolvable difficulties, even for the most active minds? The people in
+every country have a religion which they do not understand, which they
+do not examine, and which they follow but by routine; their priests
+alone occupy themselves with the theology which is too sublime for them.
+If, by accident, the people should lose this unknown theology, they
+could console them selves for the loss of a thing which is not only
+entirely useless, but which produces among them very dangerous
+ebullitions.
+
+It would be very foolish to write for the common man or to attempt to
+cure his prejudices all at once. We write but for those who read and
+reason; the people read but little, and reason less. Sensible and
+peaceable people enlighten themselves; their light spreads itself
+gradually, and in time reaches the people. On the other hand, those who
+deceive men, do they not often take the trouble themselves of
+undeceiving them?
+
+
+
+
+CXCVI.--FUTILITY AND DANGER OF THEOLOGY. WISE COUNSELS TO PRINCES.
+
+If theology is a branch of commerce useful to theologians, it has been
+demonstrated to be superfluous and injurious to the rest of society. The
+interests of men will succeed in opening their eyes sooner or later. The
+sovereigns and the people will some day discover the indifference and
+the contempt that a futile science deserves which serves but to trouble
+men without making them better. They will feel the uselessness of many
+expensive practices, which do not at all contribute to public welfare;
+they will blush at many pitiful quarrels, which will cease to disturb
+the tranquillity of the States as soon as they cease to attach any
+importance to them.
+
+Princes! instead of taking part in the senseless contentions of your
+priests, instead of espousing foolishly their impertinent quarrels,
+instead of striving to bring all your subjects to uniform opinions,
+occupy yourselves with their happiness in this world, and do not trouble
+yourselves about the fate which awaits them in another. Govern them
+justly, give them good laws, respect their liberty and their property,
+superintend their education, encourage them in their labors, reward
+their talents and their virtues, repress their licentiousness, and do
+not trouble yourselves upon what they think about objects useless to
+them and to you. Then you will no longer need fictions to make
+yourselves obeyed; you will become the only guides of your subjects;
+their ideas will be uniform about the feelings of love and respect which
+will be your due. Theological fables are useful but to tyrants, who do
+not understand the art of ruling over reasonable beings.
+
+
+
+
+CXCVII.--FATAL EFFECTS OF RELIGION UPON THE PEOPLE AND THE PRINCES.
+
+Does it require the efforts of genius to comprehend that what is beyond
+man, is not made for men; that what is supernatural, is not made for
+natural beings; that impenetrable mysteries are not made for limited
+minds? If theologians are foolish enough to dispute about subjects which
+they acknowledge to be unintelligible to themselves, should society take
+a part in their foolish quarrels? Must human blood flow in order to give
+value to the conjectures of a few obstinate visionists? If it is very
+difficult to cure the theologians of their mania and the people of their
+prejudices, it is at least very easy to prevent the extravagances of the
+one and the folly of the other from producing pernicious effects. Let
+each one be allowed to think as he chooses, but let him not be allowed
+to annoy others for their mode of thinking. If the chiefs of nations
+were more just and more sensible, theological opinions would not disturb
+the public tranquillity any more than the disputes of philosophers,
+physicians, grammarians, and of critics. It is the tyranny of princes
+which makes theological quarrels have serious consequences. When kings
+shall cease to meddle with theology, theological quarrels will no longer
+be a thing to fear.
+
+Those who boast so much upon the importance and usefulness of religion,
+ought to show us its beneficial results, and the advantages that the
+disputes and abstract speculations of theology can bring to porters, to
+artisans, to farmers, to fishmongers, to women, and to so many depraved
+servants, with whom the large cities are filled. People of this kind are
+all religious, they have implicit faith; their priests believe for them;
+they accept a faith unknown to their guides; they listen assiduously to
+sermons; they assist regularly in ceremonies; they think it a great
+crime to transgress the ordinances to which from childhood they have
+been taught to conform. What good to morality results from all this?
+None whatever; they have no idea of morality, and you see them indulge
+in all kinds of rogueries, frauds, rapine, and excesses which the law
+does not punish. The masses, in truth, have no idea of religion; what is
+called religion, is but a blind attachment to unknown opinions and
+mysterious dealings. In fact, to deprive the people of religion, is
+depriving them of nothing. If we should succeed in destroying their
+prejudices, we would but diminish or annihilate the dangerous confidence
+which they have in self-interested guides, and teach them to beware of
+those who, under the pretext of religion, very often lead them into
+fatal excesses.
+
+
+
+
+CXCVIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+Under pretext of instructing and enlightening men, religion really holds
+them in ignorance, and deprives them even of the desire of understanding
+the objects which interest them the most. There exists for the people no
+other rule of conduct than that which their priests indicate to them.
+Religion takes the place of everything; but being in darkness itself, it
+has a greater tendency to misguide mortals, than to guide them in the
+way of science and happiness. Philosophy, morality, legislation, and
+politics are to them enigmas. Man, blinded by religious prejudices,
+finds it impossible to understand his own nature, to cultivate his
+reason, to make experiments; he fears truth as soon as it does not agree
+with his opinions. Everything tends to render the people devout, but all
+is opposed to their being humane, reasonable, and virtuous. Religion
+seems to have for its object only to blunt the feeling and to dull the
+intelligence of men.
+
+The war which always existed between the priests and the best minds of
+all ages, comes from this, that the wise men perceived the fetters which
+superstition wished to place upon the human mind, which it fain would
+keep in eternal infancy, that it might be occupied with fables, burdened
+with terrors, and frightened by phantoms which would prevent it from
+progressing. Incapable of perfecting itself, theology opposed
+insurmountable barriers to the progress of true knowledge; it seemed to
+be occupied but with the care to keep the nations and their chiefs in
+the most profound ignorance of their true interests, of their relations,
+of their duties, of the real motives which can lead them to prosperity;
+it does but obscure morality; renders its principles arbitrary, subjects
+it to the caprices of the Gods, or of their ministers; it converts the
+art of governing men into a mysterious tyranny which becomes the scourge
+of nations; it changes the princes into unjust and licentious despots,
+and the people into ignorant slaves, who corrupt themselves in order to
+obtain the favor of their masters.
+
+
+
+
+CXCIX.--HISTORY TEACHES US THAT ALL RELIGIONS WERE ESTABLISHED BY THE AID
+OF IGNORANCE, AND BY MEN WHO HAD THU EFFRONTERY TO STYLE THEMSELVES THE
+ENVOYS OF DIVINITY.
+
+If we take the trouble to follow the history of the human mind, we will
+discover that theology took care not to extend its limits. It began by
+repeating fables, which it claimed to be sacred truths; it gave birth to
+poesy, which filled the people's imagination with puerile fictions; it
+entertained them but with its Gods and their incredible feats; in a
+word, religion always treated men like children, whom they put to sleep
+with tales that their ministers would like still to pass as
+incontestable truths. If the ministers of the Gods sometimes made useful
+discoveries, they always took care to hide them in enigmas and to
+envelope them in shadows of mystery. The Pythagorases and the Platos, in
+order to acquire some futile attainments, were obliged to crawl to the
+feet of the priests, to become initiated into their mysteries, to submit
+to the tests which they desired to impose upon them; it is at this cost
+that they were permitted to draw from the fountain-head their exalted
+ideas, so seducing still to all those who admire what is unintelligible.
+It was among Egyptian, Indian, Chaldean priests; it was in the schools
+of these dreamers, interested by profession in dethroning human reason,
+that philosophy was obliged to borrow its first rudiments. Obscure or
+false in its principles, mingled with fictions and fables, solely made
+to seduce imagination, this philosophy progressed but waveringly, and
+instead of enlightening the mind, it blinded it, and turned it away from
+useful objects. The theological speculations and mystical reveries of
+the ancients have, even in our days, the making of the law in a great
+part of the philosophical world. Adopted by modern theology, we can
+scarcely deviate from them without heresy; they entertain us with aerial
+beings, with spirits, angels, demons, genii, and other phantoms, which
+are the object of the meditations of our most profound thinkers, and
+which serve as a basis to metaphysics, an abstract and futile science,
+upon which the greatest geniuses have vainly exercised themselves for
+thousands of years. Thus hypotheses, invented by a few visionists of
+Memphis and of Babylon, continue to be the basis of a science revered
+for the obscurity which makes it pass as marvelous and Divine. The first
+legislators of nations were priests; the first mythologists and poets
+were priests; the first philosophers were priests; the first physicians
+were priests. In their hands science became a sacred thing, prohibited
+to the profane; they spoke only by allegories, emblems, enigmas, and
+ambiguous oracles--means well-suited to excite curiosity, to put to work
+the imagination, and especially to inspire in the ignorant man a holy
+respect for those whom he believed instructed by Heaven, capable of
+reading the destinies of earth, and who boldly pretended to be the
+organs of Divinity.
+
+
+
+
+CC.--ALL RELIGIONS, ANCIENT AND MODERN, HAVE MUTUALLY BORROWED THEIR
+ABSTRACT REVERIES AND THEIR RIDICULOUS PRACTICES.
+
+The religions of these ancient priests have disappeared, or, rather,
+they have changed their form. Although our modern theologians regard the
+ancient priests as impostors, they have taken care to gather up the
+scattered fragments of their religious systems, the whole of which does
+not exist any longer for us; we will find in our modern religions, not
+only the metaphysical dogmas which theology has but dressed in another
+form, but we still find remarkable remains of their superstitious
+practices, of their theurgy, of their magic, of their enchantments.
+
+Christians are still commanded to regard with respect the monuments of
+the legislators, the priests, and the prophets of the Hebrew religion,
+which, according to appearances, has borrowed from Egypt the fantastic
+notions with which we see it filled. Thus the extravagances invented by
+frauds or idolatrous visionists, are still regarded as sacred opinions
+by the Christians!
+
+If we but look at history, we see striking resemblances in all
+religions. Everywhere on earth we find religious ideas periodically
+afflicting and rejoicing the people; everywhere we see rites, practices
+often abominable, and formidable mysteries occupying the mind, and
+becoming objects of meditation. We see the different superstitions
+borrowing from each other their abstract reveries and their ceremonies.
+Religions are generally unformed rhapsodies combined by new Doctors of
+Divinity, who, in composing them, have used the materials of their
+predecessors, reserving the right of adding or subtracting what suits or
+does not suit their present views. The religion of Egypt served
+evidently as a basis for the religion of Moses, who expunged from it the
+worship of idols. Moses was but an Egyptian schismatic, Christianity is
+but a reformed Judaism. Mohammedanism is composed of Judaism, of
+Christianity, and of the ancient religion of Arabia.
+
+
+
+
+CCI.--THEOLOGY HAS ALWAYS TURNED PHILOSOPHY FROM ITS TRUE COURSE.
+
+From the most remote period theology alone regulated the march of
+philosophy. What aid has it lent it? It changed it into an
+unintelligible jargon, which only had a tendency to render the clearest
+truth uncertain; it converted the art of reasoning into a science of
+words; it threw the human mind into the aerial regions of metaphysics,
+where it unsuccessfully occupied itself in sounding useless and
+dangerous abysses. For physical and simple causes, this philosophy
+substituted supernatural causes, or, rather, causes truly occult; it
+explained difficult phenomena by agents more inconceivable than these
+phenomena; it filled discourse with words void of sense, incapable of
+giving the reason of things, better suited to obscure than to enlighten,
+and which seem invented but to discourage man, to guard him against the
+powers of his own mind, to make him distrust the principles of reason
+and evidence, and to surround the truth with an insurmountable barrier.
+
+
+
+
+CCII.---THEOLOGY NEITHER EXPLAINS NOR ENLIGHTENS ANYTHING IN THE WORLD OR
+IN NATURE.
+
+If we would believe the adherents of religion, nothing could be
+explicable in the world without it; nature would be a continual enigma;
+it would be impossible for man to comprehend himself. But, at the
+bottom, what does this religion explain to us? The more we examine it,
+the more we find that theological notions are fit but to perplex all our
+ideas; they change all into mysteries; they explain to us difficult
+things by impossible things. Is it, then, explaining things to attribute
+them to unknown agencies, to invisible powers, to immaterial causes? Is
+it really enlightening the human mind when, in its embarrassment, it is
+directed to the "depths of the treasures of Divine Wisdom," upon which
+they tell us it is in vain for us to turn our bold regards? Can the
+Divine Nature, which we know nothing about, make us understand man's
+nature, which we find so difficult to explain?
+
+Ask a Christian philosopher what is the origin of the world. He will
+answer that God created the universe. What is God? We do not know
+anything about it. What is it to create? We have no idea of it! What is
+the cause of pestilences, famines, wars, sterility, inundations,
+earthquakes? It is God's wrath. What remedies can prevent these
+calamities? Prayers, sacrifices, processions, offerings, ceremonies,
+are, we are told, the true means to disarm Celestial fury. But why is
+Heaven angry? Because men are wicked. Why are men wicked? Because their
+nature is corrupt. What is the cause of this corruption? It is, a
+theologian of enlightened Europe will reply, because the first man was
+seduced by the first woman to eat of an apple which his God had
+forbidden him to touch. Who induced this woman to do such a folly? The
+Devil. Who created the Devil? God! Why did God create this Devil
+destined to pervert the human race? We know nothing about it; it is a
+mystery hidden in the bosom of the Deity.
+
+Does the earth revolve around the sun? Two centuries ago a devout
+philosopher would have replied that such a thought was blasphemy,
+because such a system could not agree with the Holy Book, which every
+Christian reveres as inspired by the Deity Himself. What is the opinion
+to-day about it? Notwithstanding Divine Inspiration, the Christian
+philosophers finally concluded to rely upon evidence rather than upon
+the testimony of their inspired books.
+
+What is the hidden principle of the actions and of the motions of the
+human body? It is the soul. What is a soul? It is a spirit. What is a
+spirit? It is a substance which has neither form, color, expansion, nor
+parts. How can we conceive of such a substance? How can it move a body?
+We know nothing about it. Have brutes souls? The Carthusian assures you
+that they are machines. But do we not see them act, feel, and think in a
+manner which resembles that of men? This is a pure illusion, you say.
+But why do you deprive the brutes of souls, which, without understanding
+it, you attribute to men? It is that the souls of the brutes would
+embarrass our theologians, who, content with the power of frightening
+and damning the immortal souls of men, do not take the same interest in
+damning those of the brutes. Such are the puerile solutions which
+philosophy, always guided by the leading-strings of theology, was
+obliged to bring forth to explain the problems of the physical and moral
+world.
+
+
+
+
+CCIII.--HOW THEOLOGY HAS FETTERED HUMAN MORALS AND RETARDED THE PROGRESS
+OF ENLIGHTENMENT, OF REASON, AND OF TRUTH.
+
+How many subterfuges and mental gymnastics all the ancient and modern
+thinkers have employed, in order to avoid falling out with the ministers
+of the Gods, who in all ages were the true tyrants of thought! How
+Descartes, Malebranche, Leibnitz, and many others have been compelled to
+invent hypotheses and evasions in order to reconcile their discoveries
+with the reveries and the blunders which religion had rendered sacred!
+With what prevarications have not the greatest philosophers guarded
+themselves even at the risk of being absurd, inconsistent, and
+unintelligible whenever their ideas did not correspond with the
+principles of theology! Vigilant priests were always ready to extinguish
+systems which could not be made to tally with their interests. Theology
+in every age has been the bed of Procrustes upon which this brigand
+extended his victims; he cut off the limbs when they were too long, or
+stretched them by horses when they were shorter than the bed upon which
+he placed them.
+
+What sensible man who has a love for science, and is interested in the
+welfare of humanity, can reflect without sorrow and pain upon the loss
+of so many profound, laborious, and subtle heads, who, for many
+centuries, have foolishly exhausted themselves upon idle fancies that
+proved to be injurious to our race? What light could have been thrown
+into the minds of many famous thinkers, if, instead of occupying
+themselves with a useless theology, and its impertinent disputes, they
+had turned their attention upon intelligible and truly important
+objects. Half of the efforts that it cost the genius that was able to
+forge their religious opinions, half of the expense which their
+frivolous worship cost the nations, would have sufficed to enlighten
+them perfectly upon morality, politics, philosophy, medicine,
+agriculture, etc. Superstition nearly always absorbs the attention, the
+admiration, and the treasures of the people; they have a very expensive
+religion; but they have for their money, neither light, virtue, nor
+happiness.
+
+
+
+
+CCIV.--CONTINUATION.
+
+Some ancient and modern philosophers have had the courage to accept
+experience and reason as their guides, and to shake off the chains of
+superstition. Lucippe, Democritus, Epicurus, Straton, and some other
+Greeks, dared to tear away the thick veil of prejudice, and to deliver
+philosophy from theological fetters. But their systems, too simple, too
+sensible, and too stripped of wonders for the lovers of fancy, were
+obliged to surrender to the fabulous conjectures of Plato, Socrates, and
+Zeno. Among the moderns, Hobbes, Spinoza, Bayle, and others have
+followed the path of Epicurus, but their doctrine found but few votaries
+in a world still too much infatuated with fables to listen to reason.
+
+In all ages one could not, without imminent danger, lay aside the
+prejudices which opinion had rendered sacred. No one was permitted to
+make discoveries of any kind; all that the most enlightened men could do
+was to speak and write with hidden meaning; and often, by a cowardly
+complaisance, to shamefully ally falsehood with truth. A few of them had
+a double doctrine--one public and the other secret. The key of this last
+having been lost, their true sentiments often became unintelligible and,
+consequently, useless to us. How could modern philosophers who, being
+threatened with the most cruel persecution, were called upon to renounce
+reason and to submit to faith--that is to say, to priestly authority--I
+say, how could men thus fettered give free flight to their genius,
+perfect reason, or hasten human progress? It was but in fear and
+trembling that the greatest men obtained glimpses of truth; they rarely
+had the courage to announce it; those who dared to do it have generally
+been punished for their temerity. Thanks to religion, it was never
+permitted to think aloud or to combat the prejudices of which man is
+everywhere the victim or the dupe.
+
+
+
+
+CCV.--WE COULD NOT REPEAT TOO OFTEN HOW EXTRAVAGANT AND FATAL RELIGION
+IS.
+
+Every man who has the boldness to announce truths to the world, is sure
+to receive the hatred of the priests; the latter loudly call upon the
+powers that be, for assistance; they need the assistance of kings to
+sustain their arguments and their Gods. These clamors show the weakness
+of their cause.
+
+"They are in embarrassment when they cry for help."
+
+It is not permitted to err in the matter of religion; on every other
+subject we can be deceived with impunity; we pity those who go astray,
+and we have some liking for the persons who discover truths new to us.
+But as soon as theology supposes itself concerned, be it in errors or
+discoveries, a holy zeal is kindled; the sovereigns exterminate; the
+people fly into frenzy; and the nations are all stirred up without
+knowing why. Is there anything more afflicting than to see public and
+individual welfare depend upon a futile science, which is void of
+principles, which has no standing ground but imagination, and which
+presents to the mind but words void of sense? What good is a religion
+which no one understands; which continually torments those who trouble
+themselves about it; which is incapable of rendering men better; and
+which often gives them the credit of being unjust and wicked? Is there a
+more deplorable folly, and one that ought more to be abated, than that
+which, far from doing any good to the human race, does but blind it,
+cause transports, and render it miserable, depriving it of truth, which
+alone can soften the rigor of fate?
+
+
+
+
+CCVI.--RELIGION IS PANDORA'S BOX, AND THIS FATAL BOX IS OPEN.
+
+Religion has in every age kept the human mind in darkness and held it in
+ignorance of its true relations, of its real duties and its true
+interests. It is but in removing its clouds and phantoms that we may
+find the sources of truth, reason, morality, and the actual motives
+which inspire virtue. This religion puts us on the wrong track for the
+causes of our evils, and the natural remedies which we can apply. Far
+from curing them, it can but multiply them and render them more durable.
+
+Let us, then, say, with the celebrated Lord Bolingbroke, in his
+posthumous works: "Theology is the Box of Pandora; and if it is
+impossible to close it, it is at least useful to give warning that this
+fatal box is open."
+
+*****
+
+I believe, my dear friends, that I have given you a sufficient
+preventative against all these follies. Your reason will do more than my
+discourses, and I sincerely wish that we had only to complain of being
+deceived! But human blood has flowed since the time of Constantine for
+the establishment of these horrible impositions. The Roman, the Greek,
+and the Protestant churches by vain, ambitious, and hypocritical
+disputes have ravaged Europe, Asia, and Africa. Add to these men, whom
+these quarrels murdered, the multitudes of monks and of nuns, who became
+sterile by their profession, and you will perceive that the Christian
+religion has destroyed half of the human race.
+
+I conclude with the desire that we may return to Nature, whose declared
+enemy the Christian religion is, and which necessarily instructs us to
+do unto others as we would wish them to do unto us. Then the universe
+will be composed of good citizens, just fathers, obedient children,
+tender friends. Nature has given us this Religion, in giving us Reason.
+May fanaticism pervert it no more! I die filled with these desires more
+than with hope.
+
+ETREPIGNY, March 15, 1732
+
+JOHN MESLIER
+
+
+
+
+
+ABSTRACT OF THE TESTAMENT OF JOHN MESLIER
+
+By Voltaire;
+
+OR, SENTIMENTS OF THE CURATE OF ETREPIGNY ADDRESSED TO HIS PARISHIONERS.
+
+
+
+
+I.--OF RELIGIONS.
+
+As there is no one religious denomination which does not pretend to be
+truly founded upon the authority of God, and entirely exempt from all
+the errors and impositions which are found in the others, it is for
+those who purpose to establish the truth of the faith of their sect, to
+show, by clear and convincing proofs, that it is of Divine origin; as
+this is lacking, we must conclude that it is but of human invention, and
+full of errors and deceptions; for it is incredible that an Omnipotent
+and Infinitely good God would have desired to give laws and ordinances
+to men, and not have wished them to bear better authenticated marks of
+truth, than those of the numerous impostors. Moreover, there is not one
+of our Christ-worshipers, of whatever sect he may be, who can make us
+see, by convincing proofs, that his religion is exclusively of Divine
+origin; and for want of such proof they have been for many centuries
+contesting this subject among themselves, even to persecuting each other
+by fire and sword to maintain their opinions; there is, however, not one
+sect of them all which could convince and persuade the others by such
+witnesses of truth; this certainly would not be, if they had, on one
+side or the other, convincing proofs of Divine origin. For, as no one of
+any religious sect, enlightened and of good faith, pretends to hold and
+to favor error and falsehood; and as, on the contrary, each, on his
+side, pretends to sustain truth, the true means of banishing all errors,
+and of uniting all men in peace in the same sentiments and in the same
+form of religion, would be to produce convincing proofs and testimonies
+of the truth; and thus show that such religion is of Divine origin, and
+not any of the others; then each one would accept this truth; and no
+person would dare to question these testimonies, or sustain the side of
+error and imposition, lest he should be, at the same time, confounded by
+contrary proofs: but, as these proofs are not found in any religion, it
+gives to impostors occasion to invent and boldly sustain all kinds of
+falsehoods.
+
+Here are still other proofs, which will not be less evident, of the
+falsity of human religions, and especially of the falsity of our own.
+Every religion which relies upon mysteries as its foundation, and which
+takes, as a rule of its doctrine and its morals, a principle of errors,
+and which is at the same time a source of trouble and eternal divisions
+among men, can not be a true religion, nor a Divine Institution. Now,
+human religions, especially the Catholic, establish as the basis of
+their doctrine and of their morals, a principle of errors; then, it
+follows that these religions can not be true, or of Divine origin. I do
+not see that we can deny the first proposition of this argument; it is
+too clear and too evident to admit of a doubt. I pass to the proof of
+the second proposition, which is, that the Christian religion takes for
+the rule of its doctrine and its morals what they call faith, a blind
+trust, but yet firm, and secured by some laws or revelations of some
+Deity. We must necessarily suppose that it is thus, because it is this
+belief in some Deity and in some Divine Revelations, which gives all the
+credit and all the authority that it has in the world, and without which
+we could make no use of what it prescribes. This is why there is no
+religion which does not expressly recommend its votaries to be firm in
+their faith. ["Estate fortes in fide!"] This is the reason that all
+Christians accept as a maxim, that faith is the commencement and the
+basis of salvation, that it is the root of all justice and of all
+sanctification, as it is expressed at the Council of Trent.--Sess. 6,
+Ch. VIII.
+
+Now it is evident that a blind faith in all which is proposed in the
+name and authority of God, is a principle of errors and falsehoods. As a
+proof, we see that there is no impostor in the matter of religion, who
+does not pretend to be clothed with the name and the authority of God,
+and who does not claim to be especially inspired and sent by God. Not
+only is this faith and blind belief which they accept as a basis of
+their doctrine, a principle of errors, etc., but it is also a source of
+trouble and division among men for the maintenance of their religion.
+There is no cruelty which they do not practice upon each other under
+this specious pretext.
+
+Now then, it is not credible that an Almighty, All-Kind, and All-Wise
+God desired to use such means or such a deceitful way to inform men of
+His wishes; for this would be manifestly desiring to lead them into
+error and to lay snares in their way, in order to make them accept the
+side of falsehood. It is impossible to believe that a God who loved
+unity and peace, the welfare and the happiness of men, would ever have
+established as the basis of His religion, such a fatal source of trouble
+and of eternal divisions among them. Such religions can not be true,
+neither could they have been instituted by God. But I see that our
+Christ-worshipers will not fail to have recourse to their pretended
+motives for credulity, and that they will say, that although their faith
+and belief may be blind in one sense, they are nevertheless supported by
+such clear and convincing testimonies of truth, that it would be not
+only imprudence, but temerity and folly not to surrender one's self.
+They generally reduce these pretended motives to three or four leading
+features. The first, they draw from the pretended holiness of their
+religion, which condemns vice, and which recommends the practice of
+virtue. Its doctrine is so pure, so simple, according to what they say,
+that it is evident it could spring but from the sanctity of an
+infinitely good and wise God.
+
+The second motive for credulity, they draw from the innocence and the
+holiness of life in those who embraced it with love, and defended it by
+suffering death and the most cruel torments, rather than forsake it: it
+not being credible that such great personages would allow themselves to
+be deceived in their belief, that they would renounce all the advantages
+of life, and expose themselves to such cruel torments and persecutions,
+in order to maintain errors and impositions. Their third motive for
+credulity, they draw from the oracles and prophecies which have so long
+been rendered in their favor, and which they pretend have been
+accomplished in a manner which permits no doubt. Finally, their fourth
+motive for credulity, which is the most important of all, is drawn from
+the grandeur and the multitude of the miracles performed, in all ages,
+and in every place, in favor of their religion.
+
+But it is easy to refute all these useless reasonings and to show the
+falsity of all these evidences. For, firstly, the arguments which our
+Christ-worshipers draw from their pretended motives for credulity can
+serve to establish and confirm falsehood as well as truth; for we see
+that there is no religion, no matter how false it may be, which does not
+pretend to have a sound and true doctrine, and which, in its way, does
+not condemn all vices and recommend the practice of all virtues; there
+is not one which has not had firm and zealous defenders who have
+suffered persecution in order to maintain their religion; and, finally,
+there is none which does not pretend to have wonders and miracles that
+have been performed in their favor. The Mohammedans, the Indians, the
+heathen, as well as the Christians, claim miracles in their religions.
+If our Christ-worshipers make use of their miracles and their
+prophecies, they are found no less in the Pagan religions than in
+theirs. Thus the advantage we might draw from all these motives for
+credulity, is found about the same in all sorts of religions. This being
+established, as the history and practice of all religions demonstrate,
+it evidently follows that all these pretended motives for credulity,
+upon which our Christ-worshipers place so much value, are found equally
+in all religions; and, consequently, can not serve as reliable evidences
+of the truth of their religion more than of the truth of any other. The
+result is clear.
+
+Secondly. In order to give an idea of the resemblance of the miracles of
+Paganism to those of Christianity, could we not say, for example, that
+there would be more reason to believe Philostratus in what he recites of
+the life of Apollonius than to believe all the evangelists in what they
+say of the miracles of Jesus Christ; because we know, at least that
+Philostratus was a man of intelligence, eloquence, and fluency; that he
+was the secretary of the Empress Julia, wife of the Emperor Severus, and
+that he was requested by this empress to write the life and the
+wonderful acts of Apollonius? It is evident that Apollonius rendered
+himself famous by great and extraordinary deeds, since an empress was
+sufficiently interested in them to desire a history of his life. This is
+what can not be said of Jesus Christ, nor of those who have furnished us
+His biography, for they were but ignorant men of the common people, poor
+workmen, fishermen, who had not even the sense to relate consistently
+the facts which they speak of, and which they mutually contradict very
+often. In regard to the One whose life and actions they describe, if He
+had really performed the miracles attributed to Him, He would have
+rendered Himself notable by His beautiful acts; every one would have
+admired Him, and there would be statues erected to Him as was done for
+the Gods; but instead of that, He was regarded as a man of no
+consequence, as a fanatic, etc. Josephus, the historian, after having
+spoken of the great miracles performed in favor of his nation and his
+religion, immediately diminishes their credibility and renders it
+suspicious by saying that he leaves to each one the liberty of believing
+what he chooses; this evidently shows that he had not much faith in
+them. It also gives occasion to the more judicious to regard the
+histories which speak of this kind of things as fabulous narrations.
+[See Montaigne, and the author of the "Apology for Great Men."] All that
+can be said upon this subject shows us clearly that pretended miracles
+can be invented to favor vice and falsehood as well as justice and
+truth.
+
+I prove it by the evidence of what even our Christ-worshipers call the
+Word of God, and by the evidence of the One they adore; for their books,
+which they claim contain the Word of God, and Christ Himself, whom they
+adore as a God-made man, show us explicitly that there are not only
+false prophets--that is to say, impostors--who claim to be sent by God,
+and who speak in His name, but which show as explicitly that these false
+prophets can perform such great and prodigious miracles as shall deceive
+the very elect. [See Matthew, chapter xxiv., verses 5, 21-27.] More than
+this, all these pretended performers of miracles wish us to put faith
+only in them, and not in those who belong to an opposite party.
+
+On one occasion one of these pretended prophets, named Sedecias, being
+contradicted by another, named Michea, the former struck the latter and
+said to him, pleasantly, "By what way did the Spirit of God pass from me
+to you?"
+
+But how can these pretended miracles be the evidences of truth? for it
+is clear that they were not performed. For it would be necessary to
+know: Firstly, If those who are said to be the first authors of these
+narrations truly are such. Secondly, If they were honest men, worthy of
+confidence, wise and enlightened; and to know if they were not
+prejudiced in favor of those of whom they speak so favorably. Thirdly,
+If they have examined all the circumstances of the facts which they
+relate; if they know them well; and if they make a faithful report of
+them. Fourthly, If the books or the ancient histories which relate all
+these great miracles have not been falsified and changed in course of
+time, as many others have been?
+
+If we consult Tacitus and many other celebrated historians, in regard to
+Moses and his nation, we shall see that they are considered as a horde
+of thieves and bandits. Magic and astrology were in those days the only
+fashionable sciences; and as Moses was, it is said, instructed in the
+wisdom of the Egyptians, it was not difficult for him to inspire
+veneration and attachment for himself in the rustic and ignorant
+children of Jacob, and to induce them to accept, in their misery, the
+discipline he wished to give them. That is very different from what the
+Jews and our Christ-worshipers wish to make us believe. By what certain
+rule can we know that we should put faith in these rather than in the
+others? There is no sound reason for it. There is as little of certainty
+and even of probability in the miracles of the New Testament as in those
+of the Old.
+
+It will serve no purpose to say that the histories which relate the
+facts contained in the Gospels have been regarded as true and sacred;
+that they have always been faithfully preserved without any alteration
+of the truths which they contain; since this is perhaps the very reason
+why they should be the more suspected, having been corrupted by those
+who drew profit from them, or who feared that they were not sufficiently
+favorable to them.
+
+Generally, authors who transcribe this kind of histories, take the right
+to enlarge or to retrench all they please, in order to serve their own
+interests. This is what even our Christ-worshipers can not deny; for,
+without mentioning several other important personages who recognized the
+additions, the retrenchments, and the falsifications which have been
+made at different times in their Holy Scriptures, their saint Jerome, a
+famous philosopher among them, formally said in several passages of his
+"Prologues," that they had been corrupted and falsified; being, even in
+his day, in the hands of all kinds of persons, who added and suppressed
+whatever they pleased; so, "Thus there were," said he, "as many
+different models as different copies of the Gospels."
+
+In regard to the books of the Old Testament, Esdras, a priest of the
+law, testifies himself to having corrected and completed wholly the
+pretended sacred books of his law, which had partly been lost and partly
+corrupted. He divided them into twenty-two books, according to the
+number of the Hebraic letters, and wrote several other books, whose
+doctrine was to be revealed to the learned men alone. If these books
+have been partly lost and partly corrupted, as Esdras and St. Jerome
+testify in so many passages, there is then no certainty in regard to
+what they contain; and as for Esdras saying he had corrected and
+compiled them by the inspiration of God Himself there is no certainty of
+that, since there is no impostor who would not make the same claim. All
+the books of the law of Moses and of the prophets which could be found,
+were burned in the days of Antiochus. The Talmud, considered by the Jews
+as a holy and sacred book, and which contains all the Divine laws, with
+the sentences and notable sayings of the Rabbins, of their
+interpretation of the Divine and of the human laws, and a prodigious
+number of other secrets and mysteries in the Hebraic language, is
+considered by the Christians as a book made up of reveries, fables,
+impositions, and ungodliness. In the year 1559 they burned in Rome,
+according to the command of the inquisitors of the faith, twelve hundred
+of these Talmuds, which were found in a library in the city of Cremona.
+The Pharisees, a famous sect among the Jews, accepted but the five books
+of Moses, and rejected all the prophets. Among the Christians, Marcion
+and his votaries rejected the books of Moses and the prophets, and
+introduced other fashionable Scriptures. Carpocrates and his followers
+did the same, and rejected the whole of the Old Testament, and contended
+that Jesus Christ was but a man like all others. The Marcionites
+repudiated as bad, the whole of the Old Testament, and rejected the
+greater part of the four Gospels and the Epistles of St. Paul. The
+Ebionites accepted but the Gospel of St. Matthew, rejecting the three
+others, and the Epistles of St. Paul. The Marcionites published a Gospel
+under the name of St. Matthias, in order to confirm their doctrine. The
+apostles introduced other Scriptures in order to maintain their errors;
+and to carry out this, they made use of certain Acts, which they
+attributed to St. Andrew and to St. Thomas.
+
+The Manicheans wrote a gospel of their own style, and rejected the
+Scriptures of the prophets and the apostles. The Etzaites sold a certain
+book which they claimed to have come from Heaven; they cut up the other
+Scriptures according to their fancy. Origen himself, with all his great
+mind, corrupted the Scriptures and forged changes in the allegories
+which did not suit him, thus corrupting the sense of the prophets and
+apostles, and even some of the principal points of doctrine. His books
+are now mutilated and falsified; they are but fragments collected by
+others who have appeared since. The Ellogians attributed to the heretic
+Corinthus the Gospel and the Apocalypse of St. John; this is why they
+reject them. The heretics of our last centuries reject as apocryphal
+several books which the Roman Catholics consider as true and sacred--such
+as the books of Tobias, Judith, Esther, Baruch, the Song of the Three
+Children in the Furnace, the History of Susannah, and that of the Idol
+Bel, the Wisdom of Solomon, Ecclesiasticus, the first and second book of
+Maccabees; to which uncertain and doubtful books we could add several
+others that have been attributed to the other apostles; as, for example,
+the Acts of St. Thomas, his Circuits, his Gospel, and his Apocalypse;
+the Gospel of St. Bartholomew, that of St. Matthias, of St. Jacques, of
+St. Peter and of the Apostles, as also the Deeds of St. Peter, his book
+on Preaching, and that of his Apocalypse; that of the Judgment, that of
+the Childhood of the Saviour, and several others of the same kind, which
+are all rejected as apocryphal by the Roman Catholics, even by the Pope
+Gelasee, and by the S. S. F. F. of the Romish Communion. That which most
+confirms that there is no foundation of truth in regard to the authority
+given to these books, is that those who maintain their Divinity are
+compelled to acknowledge that they have no certainty as a basis, if
+their faith did not assure them and oblige them to believe it. Now, as
+faith is but a principle of error and imposture, how can faith, that is
+to say, a blind belief, render the books reliable which are themselves
+the foundation of this blind belief? What a pity and what insanity! But
+let us see if these books have of themselves any feature of truth; as,
+for example, of erudition, of wisdom, and of holiness, or some other
+perfections which are suited only to a God; and if the miracles which
+are cited agree with what we ought to think of the grandeur, goodness,
+justice, and infinite wisdom of an Omnipotent God.
+
+There is no erudition, no sublime thought, nor any production which
+surpasses the ordinary capacities of the human mind. On the contrary, we
+shall see on one side fabulous tales similar to that of a woman formed
+of a man's rib; of the pretended terrestrial Paradise; of a serpent
+which spoke, which reasoned, and which was more cunning than man; of an
+ass which spoke, and reprimanded its master for ill-treating it; of a
+universal deluge, and of an ark where animals of all kinds were
+inclosed; of the confusion of languages and of the division of the
+nations, without speaking of numerous other useless narrations upon low
+and frivolous subjects which important authors would scorn to relate.
+All these narrations appear to be fables, as much as those invented
+about the industry of Prometheus, the box of Pandora, the war of the
+Giants against the Gods, and similar others which the poets have
+invented to amuse the men of their time.
+
+On the other hand we will see a mixture of laws and ordinances, or
+superstitious practices concerning sacrifices, the purifications of the
+old law, the senseless distinctions in regard to animals, of which it
+supposes some to be pure and others to be impure. These laws are no more
+respectable than those of the most idolatrous nations. We shall see but
+simple stories, true or false, of several kings, princes, or
+individuals, who lived right or wrong, or who performed noble or mean
+actions, with other low and frivolous things also related.
+
+From all this, it is evident that no great genius was required, nor
+Divine Revelations to produce these things. It would not be creditable
+to a God.
+
+Finally, we see in these books but the discourses, the conduct, and the
+actions of those renowned prophets who proclaimed themselves especially
+inspired by God. We will see their way of acting and speaking, their
+dreams, their illusions, their reveries; and it will be easy to judge
+whether they do not resemble visionaries and fanatics much more than
+wise and enlightened persons.
+
+There are, however, in a few of these books, several good teachings and
+beautiful maxims of morals, as in the Proverbs attributed to Solomon, in
+the book of Wisdom and of Ecclesiastes; but this same Solomon, the
+wisest of their writers, is also the most incredulous; he doubts even
+the immortality of the soul, and concludes his works by saying that
+there is nothing good but to enjoy in peace the fruits of one's labor,
+and to live with those whom we love.
+
+How superior are the authors who are called profane, such as Xenophon,
+Plato, Cicero, the Emperor Antoninus, the Emperor Julian, Virgil, etc.,
+to the books which we are told are inspired of God. I can truly say that
+the fables of Aesop, for example, are certainly more ingenious and more
+instructive than all these rough and poor parables which are related in
+the Gospels.
+
+But what shows us that this kind of books is not of Divine Inspiration,
+is, that aside from the low order, coarseness of style, and the lack of
+system in the narrations of the different facts, which are very badly
+arranged, we do not see that the authors agree; they contradict each
+other in several things; they had not even sufficient enlightenment or
+natural talents to write a history.
+
+Here are some examples of the contradictions which are found among them.
+The Evangelist Matthew claims that Jesus Christ descended from king
+David by his son Solomon through Joseph, reputed to be His father; and
+Luke claims that He is descended from the same David by his son Nathan
+through Joseph.
+
+Matthew says, in speaking of Jesus, that, it being reported in Jerusalem
+that a new king of the Jews was born, and that the wise men had come to
+adore Him, the king Herod, fearing that this pretended new king would
+rob him of his crown some day, caused the murder of all the new-born
+children under two years, in all the neighborhood of Bethlehem, where he
+had been told that this new king was born; and that Joseph and the
+mother of Jesus, having been warned in a dream by an angel, of this
+wicked intention, took flight immediately to Egypt, where they stayed
+until the death of Herod, which happened many years afterward.
+
+On the contrary, Luke asserts that Joseph and the mother of Jesus lived
+peaceably during six weeks in the place where their child Jesus was
+born; that He was circumcised according to the law of the Jews, eight
+days after His birth; and when the time prescribed by the law for the
+purification of His mother had arrived, she and Joseph, her husband,
+carried Him to Jerusalem in order to present Him to God in His temple,
+and to offer at the same time a sacrifice which was ordained by God's
+law; after which they returned to Galilee, into their town of Nazareth,
+where their child Jesus grew every day in grace and in wisdom. Luke goes
+on to say that His father and His mother went every year to Jerusalem on
+the solemn days of their Easter feast, but makes no mention of their
+flight into Egypt, nor of the cruelty of Herod toward the children of
+the province of Bethlehem. In regard to the cruelty of Herod, as neither
+the historians of that time speak of it, nor Josephus, the historian who
+wrote the life of this Herod, and as the other Evangelists do not
+mention it, it is evident that the journey of those wise men, guided by
+a star, this massacre of little children, and this flight to Egypt, were
+but absurd falsehoods. For it is not credible that Josephus, who blamed
+the vices of this king, could have been silent on such a dark and
+detestable action, if what the Evangelist said had been true.
+
+In regard to the duration of the public life of Jesus Christ, according
+to what the first three Evangelists say, there could be scarcely more
+than three months from the time of His baptism until His death,
+supposing He was thirty years old when He was baptized by John,
+according to Luke, and that He was born on the 25th of December. For,
+from this baptism, which was in the year 15 of Tiberius Caesar, and in
+the year when Anne and Caiaphas were high-priests, to the first Easter
+following, which was in the month of March, there was but about three
+months; according to what the first three Evangelists say, He was
+crucified on the eve of the first Easter following His baptism, and the
+first time He went to Jerusalem with His disciples; because all that
+they say of His baptism, of His travels, of His miracles, of His
+preaching, of His death and passion, must have taken place in the same
+year of His baptism, for the Evangelists speak of no other year
+following, and it appears even by the narration of His acts that He
+performed them consecutively immediately after His baptism, and in a
+very short time, during which we see but an interval of six days before
+his Transfiguration; during these six days we do not see that He did
+anything. We see by this that He lived but about three months after His
+baptism, from which, if we subtract the forty days and forty nights
+which He passed in the desert immediately after His baptism, it would
+follow that the length of His public life from His first preaching till
+His death, would have lasted but about six weeks; and according to what
+John says, it would have lasted at least three years and three months,
+because it appears by the Gospel of this apostle, that, during the
+course of His public life He might have been three or four times at
+Jerusalem at the Easter feast which happened but once a year.
+
+Now if it is true that He had been there three or four times after His
+baptism, as John testifies, it is false that He lived but three months
+after His baptism, and that He was crucified the first time He went to
+Jerusalem.
+
+If it is said that these first three Evangelists really mean but one
+year, but that they do not indicate distinctly the others which elapsed
+since His baptism; or that John understood that there was but one
+Easter, although he speaks of several, and that he only anticipated the
+time when he repeatedly tells us that the Easter feast of the Jews was
+near at hand, and that Jesus went to Jerusalem, and, consequently, that
+there is but an apparent contradiction upon this subject between the
+Evangelists, I am willing to accept this; but it is certain that this
+apparent contradiction springs from the fact, that they do not explain
+themselves in all the circumstances that are noted in the narration
+which they make. Be that as it may, there will always be this inference
+made, that they were not inspired by God when they wrote their
+biographies of Christ.
+
+Here is another contradiction in regard to the first thing which Jesus
+
+Christ did immediately after His baptism; for the first three
+Evangelists state, that He was transported immediately by the Spirit
+into the desert, where He fasted forty days and forty nights, and where
+He was several times tempted by the Devil; and, according to what John
+says, He departed two days after His baptism to go into Galilee, where
+He performed His first miracle by changing water into wine at the
+wedding of Cana, where He found Himself three days after His arrival in
+Galilee, more than thirty leagues from the place in which He had been.
+
+In regard to the place of His first retreat after His departure from the
+desert, Matthew says that He returned to Galilee, and that leaving the
+city of Nazareth, He went to live at Capernaum, a maritime city; and
+Luke says, that He came at first to Nazareth, and afterward went to
+Capernaum.
+
+They contradict each other in regard to the time and manner in which the
+apostles followed Him; for the first three say that Jesus, passing on
+the shore of the Sea of Galilee, saw Simon and Andrew his brother, and
+that He saw at a little distance James and his brother John with their
+father, Zebedee. John, on the contrary, says that it was Andrew, brother
+of Simon Peter, who first followed Jesus with another disciple of John
+the Baptist, having seen Him pass before them, when they were with their
+Master on the shores of the Jordan.
+
+In regard to the Lord's Supper, the first three Evangelists note that
+Jesus Christ instituted the Sacrament of His body and His blood, in the
+form of bread and wine, the same as our Roman Christ-worshipers say; and
+John does not mention this mysterious sacrament. John says that after
+this supper, Jesus washed His apostles' feet, and commanded them to do
+the same thing to each other, and relates a long discourse which He
+delivered then. But the other Evangelists do not speak of the washing of
+the feet, nor of the long discourse He gave them then. On the contrary,
+they testify that immediately after this supper, He went with His
+apostles upon the Mount of Olives, where He gave up His Spirit to
+sadness, and was in anguish while His apostles slept, at a short
+distance. They contradict each other upon the day on which they say the
+Lord's Supper took place; because on one side, they note that it took
+place Easter-eve, that is, the evening of the first day of Azymes, or of
+the feast of unleavened bread; as it is noted (1) in Exodus, (2) in
+Leviticus, and (3) in Numbers; and, on the other hand, they say that He
+was crucified the day following the Lord's Supper, about midday after
+the Jews had His trial during the whole night and morning. Now,
+according to what they say, the day after this supper took place, ought
+not to be Easter-eve. Therefore, if He died on the eve of Easter, toward
+midday, it was not on the eve of this feast that this supper took place.
+There is consequently a manifest error.
+
+They contradict each other, also, in regard to the women who followed
+Jesus from Galilee, for the first three Evangelists say that these
+women, and those who knew Him, among whom were Mary Magdalene, and Mary,
+mother of James and Joseph, and the mother of Zebedee's children, were
+looking on at a distance when He was hanged and nailed upon the cross.
+John says, on the contrary, that the mother of Jesus and His mother's
+sister, and Mary Magdalene were standing near His cross with John, His
+apostle. The contradiction is manifest, for, if these women and this
+disciple were near Him, they were not at a distance, as the others say
+they were.
+
+They contradict each other upon the pretended apparitions which they
+relate that Jesus made after His pretended resurrection; for Matthew
+speaks of but two apparitions: the one when He appeared to Mary
+Magdalene and to another woman, also named Mary, and when He appeared to
+His eleven disciples who had returned to Galilee upon the mountain where
+He had appointed to meet them. Mark speaks of three apparitions: The
+first, when He appeared to Mary Magdalene; the second, when He appeared
+to His two disciples, who went to Emmaus; and the third, when He
+appeared to His eleven disciples, whom He reproaches for their
+incredulity. Luke speaks of but two apparitions the same as Matthew; and
+John the Evangelist speaks of four apparitions, and adds to Mark's
+three, the one which He made to seven or eight of His disciples who were
+fishing upon the shores of the Tiberian Sea.
+
+They contradict each other, also, in regard to the place of these
+apparitions; for Matthew says that it was in Galilee, upon a mountain;
+Mark says that it was when they were at table; Luke says that He brought
+them out of Jerusalem as far as Bethany, where He left them by rising to
+Heaven; and John says that it was in the city of Jerusalem, in a house
+of which they had closed the doors, and another time upon the borders of
+the Tiberian Sea.
+
+Thus is much contradiction in the report of these pretended apparitions.
+They contradict each other in regard to His pretended ascension to
+heaven; for Luke and Mark say positively that He went to heaven in
+presence of the eleven apostles, but neither Matthew nor John mentions
+at all this pretended ascension. More than this, Matthew testifies
+sufficiently that He did not ascend to heaven; for he said positively
+that Jesus Christ assured His apostles that He would be and remain
+always with them until the end of the world. "Go ye," He said to them,
+in this pretended apparition, "and teach all nations, and be assured
+that I am with you always, even unto the end of the world." Luke
+contradicts himself upon the subject; for in his Gospel he says that it
+was in Bethany where He ascended to heaven in the presence of His
+apostles, and in his Acts of the Apostles (supposing him to have been
+the author) he says that it was upon the Mount of Olives. He contradicts
+himself again about this ascension; for he notes in his Gospel that it
+was the very day of His resurrection, or the first night following, that
+He ascended to heaven; and in the Acts of the Apostles he says that it
+was forty days after His resurrection; this certainly does not
+correspond. If all the apostles had really seen their Master gloriously
+rise to heaven, how could it be possible that Matthew and John, who
+would have seen it as well as the others, passed in silence such a
+glorious mystery, and which was so advantageous to their Master,
+considering that they relate many other circumstances of His life and of
+His actions which are much less important than this one? How is it that
+Matthew does not mention this ascension? And why does Christ not explain
+clearly how He would live with them always, although He left them
+visibly to ascend to heaven? It is not easy to comprehend by what secret
+He could live with those whom He left.
+
+I pass in silence many other contradictions; what I have said is
+sufficient to show that these books are not of Divine Inspiration, nor
+even of human wisdom, and, consequently, do not deserve that we should
+put any faith in them.
+
+
+
+
+II.--OF MIRACLES.
+
+But by what privilege do these four Gospels, and some other similar
+books, pass for Holy and Divine more than several others, which bear no
+less the title of Gospels, and which have been published under the name
+of some other apostles? If it is said that the reputed Gospels are
+falsely attributed to the apostles, we can say the same of the first
+ones; if we suppose the first ones to be falsified and changed, we can
+think the same of the others. Thus there is no positive proof to make us
+discern the one from the other; in spite of the Church, which assumes to
+deride the matter, it is not credible.
+
+In regard to the pretended miracles related in the Old Testament, they
+could have been performed but to indicate on the part of God an unjust
+and odious discrimination between nations and between individuals;
+purposely injuring the one in order to especially favor the other. The
+vocation and the choice which God made of the Patriarchs, Abraham,
+Isaac, and Jacob, in order to make for Himself of their posterity a
+people which He would sanctify and bless above all other peoples of the
+earth, is a proof of it. But it will be said God is the absolute master
+of His favors and of His benefits; He can grant them to whomsoever He
+pleases, without any one having the right to complain or to accuse Him
+of injustice. This reason is useless; for God, the Author of nature, the
+Father of all men, ought to love them all alike as His own work, and,
+consequently, He ought to be equally their protector and their
+benefactor; giving them life, He ought to give all that is necessary for
+the well-being of His creatures.
+
+If all these pretended miracles of the Old and of the New Testament were
+true, we could say that God would have had more care in providing for
+the least good of men than for their greatest and principal good; that
+He would have punished more severely trifling faults in certain persons
+than He would have punished great crimes in others; and, finally, that
+He would not have desired to show Himself as beneficent in the most
+pressing needs as in the least. This is easy enough to show as much by
+the miracles which it is pretended that He performed, as by those which
+He did not perform, and which He would have performed rather than any
+other, if it is true that He performed any at all. For example, it is
+claimed that God had the kindness to send an angel to console and to
+assist a simple maid, while He left, and still leaves every day, a
+countless number of innocents to languish and starve to death; it is
+claimed that He miraculously preserved during forty years the clothes
+and the shoes of a few people, while He will not watch over the natural
+preservation of the vast quantities of goods which are useful and
+necessary for the subsistence of great nations, and that are lost every
+day by different accidents. It is claimed that He sent to the first
+beings of the human race, Adam and Eve, a devil, or a simple serpent, to
+seduce them, and by this means ruin all men. This is not credible! It is
+claimed, that by a special providence, He prevented the King of Gerais,
+a Pagan, from committing sin with a strange woman, although there would
+be no results to follow; and yet He did not prevent Adam and Eve from
+offending Him and falling into the sin of disobedience--a sin which,
+according to our Christ-worshipers was to be fatal, and cause the
+destruction of the human race. This is not credible!
+
+Let us come to the pretended miracles of the New Testament. They
+consist, as is pretended, in this: that Jesus Christ and His apostles
+cured, through the Deity, all kinds of diseases and infirmities, giving
+sight to the blind, hearing to the deaf, speech to the dumb, making the
+lame to walk, curing the paralytics, driving the devils from those who
+were possessed, and bringing the dead to life.
+
+We find several of these miracles in the Gospels, but we see a good many
+more of them in the books that our Christ-worshipers have written of the
+admirable lives of their saints; for in these lives we nearly everywhere
+read that these pretended blessed ones cured diseases and infirmities,
+expelled the devils wherever they encountered them, solely in the name
+of Jesus or by the sign of the cross; that they controlled the elements;
+that God favored them so much that He even preserved to them His Divine
+power after their death, and that this Divine power could be
+communicated even to the least of their clothing, even to their shadows,
+and even to the infamous instruments of their death. It is said that the
+shoe of St. Honorius raised a dead man on the sixth of January; that the
+staff of St. Peter, that of St. James, and that of St. Bernard performed
+miracles. The same is said of the cord of St. Francis, of the staff of
+St. John of God, and of the girdle of St. Melanie. It is said that St.
+Gracilien was divinely instructed as to what he ought to believe and to
+teach, and that he, by the influence of his prayer, removed a mountain
+which prevented him from building a church; that from the sepulchre of
+St. Andrew flowed incessantly a liquor which cured all sorts of
+diseases; that the soul of St. Benedict was seen ascending to Heaven
+clothed with a precious cloak and surrounded by burning lamps; that St.
+Dominic said that God never refused him anything he asked; that St.
+Francis commanded the swallows, swans, and other birds to obey him, and
+that often the fishes, rabbits, and the hares came and placed themselves
+on his hands and on his lap; that St. Paul and St. Pantaleon, having
+been beheaded, there flowed milk instead of blood; that the blessed
+Peter of Luxembourg, in the first two years after his death (1388 and
+1389), performed two thousand four hundred miracles, among which
+forty-two dead were brought to life, not including more than three
+thousand other miracles which he has performed since; that the fifty
+philosophers whom St. Catherine converted, having all been thrown into a
+great fire, their whole bodies were afterward found and not a single
+hair was scorched; that the body of St. Catherine was carried off by
+angels after her death, and buried by them upon Mount Sinai; that the
+day of the canonization of St. Antoine de Padua, all the bells of the
+city of Lisbon rang of themselves, without any one knowing how it was
+done; that this saint being once near the sea-shore, and calling the
+fishes, they came to him in a great multitude, and raised their heads
+out of the water and listened to him attentively. We should never come
+to an end if we had to report all this idle talk; there is no subject,
+however vain, frivolous, and even ridiculous, on which the authors of
+these "LIVES OF THE SAINTS" do not take pleasure in heaping miracles
+upon miracles, for they are skillful in forging absurd falsehoods.
+
+It is certainly not without reason that we consider these things as
+lies; for it is easy to see that all these pretended miracles have been
+invented but by imitating the fables of the Pagan poets. This is
+sufficiently obvious by the resemblance which they bear one to another.
+
+
+
+
+III.--SIMILARITY BETWEEN ANCIENT AND MODERN MIRACLES.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers claim that God endowed their saints with power
+to perform the miracles related in their lives, some of the Pagans claim
+also that the daughters of Anius, high-priest of Apollo, had really
+received from the god Bacchus the power to change all they desired into
+wheat, into wine, or into oil, etc.; that Jupiter gave to the nymphs who
+took care of his education, a horn of the goat which nursed him in his
+infancy, with this virtue, that it could give them an abundance of all
+they wished for.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers assert that their saints had the power of
+raising the dead, and that they had Divine revelations, the Pagans had
+said before them that Athalide, son of Mercury, had obtained from his
+father the gift of living, dying, and coming to life whenever he wished,
+and that he had also the knowledge of all that transpired in this world
+as well as in the other; and that Esculapius, son of Apollo, had raised
+the dead, and, among others, he brought to life Hyppolites, son of
+Theseus, by Diana's request; and that Hercules, also, raised from the
+dead Alceste, wife of Admetus, King of Thessalia, to return her to her
+husband.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers say that Christ was miraculously born of a
+virgin, the Pagans had said before them that Remus and Romulus, the
+founders of Rome, were miraculously born of a vestal virgin named Ilia,
+or Silvia, or Rhea Silvia; they had already said that Mars, Argus,
+Vulcan, and others were born of the goddess Juno without sexual union;
+and, also, that Minerva, goddess of the sciences, sprang from Jupiter's
+brain, and that she came out of it, all armed, by means of a blow which
+this god gave to his own head.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers claim that their saints made water gush from
+rocks, the Pagans pretend also that Minerva made a fountain of oil
+spring forth from a rock as a recompense for a temple which had been
+dedicated to her.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers boast of having received images from Heaven
+miraculously, as, for example, those of Notre-Dame de Loretto, and of
+Liesse and several other gifts from Heaven, as the pretended Holy Vial
+of Rheims, as the white Chasuble which St. Ildefonse received from the
+Virgin Mary, and other similar things: the Pagans boasted before them of
+having received a sacred shield as a mark of the preservation of their
+city of Rome, and the Trojans boasted before them of having received
+miraculously from Heaven their Palladium, or their Idol of Pallas, which
+came, they said, to takes its place in the temple which they had erected
+in honor of this Goddess.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers pretend that Jesus Christ was seen by His
+apostles ascending to Heaven, and that several of their pretended saints
+were transported to Heaven by angels, the Roman Pagans had said before
+them, that Romulus, their founder, was seen after his death; that
+Ganymede, son of Troas, king of Troy, was transported to Heaven by
+Jupiter to serve him as cup-bearer that the hair of Berenice, being
+consecrated to the temple of Venus, was afterward carried to Heaven;
+they say the same thing of Cassiope and Andromedes, and even of the ass
+of Silenus.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers pretend that several of their saints' bodies
+were miraculously saved from decomposition after death, and that they
+were found by Divine Revelations, after having been lost for a long
+time, the Pagans say the same of the holy of Orestes, which they pretend
+to have found through an oracle, etc.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers say that the seven sleeping brothers slept
+during one hundred and seventy-seven years, while they were shut up in a
+cave, the Pagans claim that Epimenides, the philosopher, slept during
+fifty-seven years in a cave where he fell asleep.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers claim that several of their saints continued to
+speak after losing the head, or having the tongue cut out, the Pagans
+claim that the head of Gambienus recited a long poem after separation
+from his body.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers glorify themselves that their temples and
+churches are ornamented with several pictures and rich gifts which show
+miraculous cures performed by the intercession of their saints, we also
+see, or at least we formerly saw in the temple of Esculapius at
+Epidaurus, many paintings of miraculous cures which he had performed.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers claim that several of their saints have been
+miraculously preserved in the flames without having received any injury
+to their bodies or their clothing, the Pagans claim that the Holy women
+of the temple of Diana walked upon burning coals barefooted without
+burning or hurting their feet, and that the priests of the Goddess
+Feronie and of Hirpicus walked in the same way upon burning coals in the
+fires which were made in honor of Apollo.
+
+If the angels built a chapel for St. Clement at the bottom of the sea,
+the little house of Baucis and of Philemon was miraculously changed into
+a superb temple as a reward of their piety. If several of their saints,
+as St. James and St. Maurice, appeared several times in their armies,
+mounted and equipped in ancient style, and fought for them, Castor and
+Pollux appeared several times in battles and fought for the Romans
+against their enemies; if a ram was miraculously found to be offered as
+a sacrifice in the place of Isaac, whom his father Abraham was about to
+sacrifice, the Goddess Vesta also sent a heifer to be sacrificed in the
+place of Metella, daughter of Metellus: the Goddess Diana sent a hind in
+the place of Iphigenie when she was at the stake to be sacrificed to
+her, and by this means Iphigenie was saved.
+
+If St. Joseph went into Egypt by the warning of an angel, Simonides, the
+poet, avoided several great dangers by miraculous warnings which had
+been given to him.
+
+If Moses forced a stream of water to flow from a rock by striking it
+with his staff, the horse Pegasus did the same: by striking a rock with
+his foot a fountain issued.
+
+If St. Vincent Ferrier brought to life a dead man hacked into pieces,
+whose body was already half roasted and half broiled, Pelops, son of
+Tantalus king of Phrygia, having been torn to pieces by his father to be
+sacrificed to the Gods, they gathered all the pieces, joined them, and
+brought them to life.
+
+If several crucifixes and other images have miraculously spoken and
+answered, the Pagans say that their oracles have spoken and given
+answers to those who consulted them, and that the head of Orpheus and
+that of Policrates gave oracles after their death.
+
+If God revealed by a voice from Heaven that Jesus Christ was His Son, as
+the Evangelists say, Vulcan showed by the apparition of a miraculous
+flame, that Coceculus was really his son.
+
+If God has miraculously nourished some of His saints, the Pagan poets
+pretend that Triptolemus was miraculously nourished with Divine milk by
+Ceres, who gave him also a chariot drawn by two dragons, and that
+Phineus, son of Mars, being born after his mother's death, was
+nevertheless miraculously nourished by her milk.
+
+If several saints miraculously tamed the ferocity of the most cruel
+beasts, it is said that Orpheus attracted to him, by the sweetness of
+his voice and by the harmony of his instruments, lions, bears, and
+tigers, and softened the ferocity of their nature; that he attracted
+rocks and trees, and that even the rivers stopped their course to listen
+to his song.
+
+Finally, to abbreviate, because we could report many others, if our
+Christ-worshipers pretend that the walls of the city of Jericho fell by
+the sound of their trumpets, the Pagans say that the walls of the city
+of Thebes were built by the sound of the musical instruments of
+Amphion; the stones, as the poets say, arranging themselves to the
+sweetness of his harmony; this would be much more miraculous and more
+admirable than to see the walls demolished.
+
+There is certainly a great similarity between the Pagan miracles and our
+own. As it would be great folly to give credence to these pretended
+miracles of Paganism, it is not any the less so to have faith in those
+of Christianity, because they all come from the same source of error. It
+was for this that the Manicheans and the Arians, who existed at the
+commencement of the Christian Era, derided these pretended miracles
+performed by the invocation of saints, and blamed those who invoked them
+after death and honored their relics.
+
+Let us return at present to the principal end which God proposed to
+Himself, in sending His Son into the world to become man; it must have
+been, as they say, to redeem the world from sin and to destroy
+entirely the works of the pretended Devil, etc. This is what our
+Christ-worshipers claim also, that Jesus Christ died for them according
+to His Father's intention, which is plainly stated in all the pretended
+Holy Books. What! an Almighty God, who was willing to become a mortal
+man for the love of men, and to shed His blood to the last drop, to save
+them all, would yet have limited His power to only curing a few diseases
+and physical infirmities of a few individuals who were brought to Him;
+and would not have employed His Divine goodness in curing the
+infirmities of the soul! that is to say, in curing all men of their
+vices and their depravities, which are worse than the diseases of their
+bodies! This is not credible. What! such a good God would desire to
+preserve dead corpses from decay and corruption; and would not keep from
+the contagion and corruption of vice and sin the souls of a countless
+number of persons whom He sought to redeem at the price of His blood,
+and to sanctify by His grace! What a pitiful contradiction!
+
+
+
+
+IV.--OF THE FALSITY OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.
+
+Let us proceed to the pretended visions and Divine Revelations, upon
+which our Christ-worshipers establish the truth and the certainty of
+their religion.
+
+In order to give a just idea of it, I believe it is best to say in
+general, that they are such, that if any one should dare now to boast of
+similar ones, or wish to make them valued, he would certainly be
+regarded as a fool or a fanatic.
+
+Here is what the pretended Visions and Divine Revelations are:
+
+God, as these pretended Holy Books claim, having appeared for the first
+time to Abraham, said to him: "Get thee out of thy country, and from thy
+kindred and from thy father's house, into a land that I will show thee."
+Abraham, having gone there, God, says the Bible, appeared the second
+time to him, and said, "Unto thy seed will I give this land," and there
+builded he an altar unto the Lord, who appeared unto him. After the
+death of Isaac, his son, Jacob going one day to Mesopotamia to look for
+a wife that would suit him, having walked all the day, and being tired
+from the long distance, desired to rest toward evening; lying upon the
+ground, with his head resting upon a few stones, he fell asleep, and
+during his sleep he saw a ladder set upon the earth, and the top of it
+reached to Heaven; and beheld the angels of God ascending and descending
+on it. And behold, the Lord stood above it, and said: "I am the Lord,
+God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac; the land whereon thou
+liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy seed. And thy seed shall be as
+the dust of the earth, and thou shalt spread abroad to the west and to
+the east, and to the north and to the south and in thee and in thy seed
+shall all the nations of the earth be blessed. And behold, I am with
+thee and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest, and will bring
+thee again into this land: for I will not leave thee until I have done
+that which I have spoken to thee of." And Jacob awaked out of his sleep,
+and he said: "Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not." And
+he was afraid, and said: "How dreadful is this place! this is none other
+than the house of God, and this is the gate of Heaven." And Jacob rose
+up early in the morning, and took the stone that he had put for his
+pillow, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil on the top of it, and
+made at the same time a vow to God, that if he should return safe and
+sound, he would give Him a tithe of all he might possess.
+
+Here is yet another vision. Watching the flocks of his father-in-law,
+Laban, who had promised him that all the speckled lambs produced by his
+sheep should be his recompense, he dreamed one night that he saw all the
+males leap upon the females, and all the lambs they brought forth were
+speckled. In this beautiful dream, God appeared to him, and said: "Lift
+up now thine eyes and see that the rams which leap upon the cattle are
+ring-streaked, speckled, and grizzled; for I have seen all that Laban
+does unto thee. Now arise, get thee out from this land, and return unto
+the land of thy kindred." As he was returning with his whole family, and
+with all he obtained from his father-in-law, he had, says the Bible, a
+wrestle with an unknown man during the whole night, until the breaking
+of the day, and as this man had not been able to subdue him, He asked
+him who he was. Jacob told Him his name; and He said: "Thy name shall be
+called no more Jacob, but Israel; for as a prince hast thou power with
+God and with men, and hast prevailed."
+
+This is a specimen of the first of these pretended Visions and Divine
+Revelations. We can judge of the others by these. Now, what appearance
+of Divinity is there in dreams so gross and illusions so vain? As if
+some foreigners, Germans, for instance, should come into our France,
+and, after seeing all the beautiful provinces of our kingdom, should
+claim that God had appeared to them in their country, that He had told
+them to go into France, and that He would give to them and to their
+posterity all the beautiful lands, domains, and provinces of this
+kingdom which extend from the rivers Rhine and Rhone, even to the sea;
+that He would make an everlasting alliance with them, that He would
+multiply their race, that He would make their posterity as numerous as
+the stars of Heaven and as the sands of the sea, etc., who would not
+laugh at such folly, and consider these strangers as insane fools!
+
+Now there is no reason to think otherwise of all that has been said by
+these pretended Holy Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in regard to
+the Divine Revelations which they claim to have had. As to the
+institution of bloody sacrifices, the Holy Scriptures attribute it to
+God. As it would be too wearisome to go into the disgusting details of
+this kind of sacrifices, I refer the reader to Exodus. [See chapters
+xxv., xxvii., xxyiii., and xxix.]
+
+Were not men insane and blind to believe they were honoring God by
+tearing into pieces, butchering, and burning His own creatures, under
+the pretext of offering them as sacrifices to Him? And even now, how is
+it that our Christ-worshipers are so extravagant as to expect to please
+God the Father, by offering up to Him the sacrifice of His Divine Son,
+in remembrance of His being shamefully nailed to a cross upon which He
+died? Certainly this can spring only from an obstinate blindness of
+mind.
+
+In regard to the detail of the sacrifices of animals, it consists but in
+colored clothing, blood, plucks, livers, birds' crops, kidneys, claws,
+skins, in the dung, smoke, cakes, certain measures of oil and wine, the
+whole being offered and infected by dirty ceremonies as filthy and
+contemptible as the most extravagant performances of magic. What is most
+horrible of all this is, that the law of this detestable Jewish people
+commanded that even men should be offered up as sacrifices. The
+barbarians, whoever they were, who introduced this horrible law,
+commanded to put to death any man who had been consecrated to the God of
+the Jews, whom they called Adonai: and it is according to this execrable
+precept that Jephthah sacrificed his daughter, and that Saul wanted to
+sacrifice his son.
+
+But here is yet another proof of the falsity of these revelations of
+which we have spoken. It is the lack of the fulfillment of the great and
+magnificent promises by which they were accompanied, for it is evident
+that these promises never have been fulfilled.
+
+The proof of this consists in three principal points:
+
+Firstly. Their posterity was to be more numerous than all the other
+nations of the world.
+
+Secondly. The people who should spring from their race were to be the
+happiest, the holiest, and the most victorious of all the people of the
+earth.
+
+Thirdly. His covenant was to be everlasting, and they should possess
+forever the country He should give them. Now it is plain that these
+promises-never were fulfilled.
+
+Firstly. It is certain that the Jewish people, or the people of
+Israel--which is the only one that can be regarded as having descended
+from the Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the only ones to whom
+these promises should have been fulfilled--have never been so numerous
+that it could be compared with the other nations of the earth, much less
+with the sands of the sea, etc., for we see that in the very time when
+it was the most numerous and the most flourishing, it never occupied
+more than the little sterile provinces of Palestine and its environs,
+which are almost nothing in comparison with the vast extent of a
+multitude of flourishing kingdoms which are on all sides of the earth.
+
+Secondly. They have never been fulfilled concerning the great blessings
+with which they were to be favored; for, although they won a few small
+victories over some poor nations whom they plundered, this did not
+prevent them from being conquered and reduced to servitude; their
+kingdom destroyed as well as their nation, by the Roman army; and even
+now the remainder of this unfortunate nation is looked upon as the
+vilest and most contemptible of all the earth, having no country, no
+dominion, no superiority.
+
+Finally, these promises have not been fulfilled in respect to this
+everlasting covenant, which God ought to have fulfilled to them; because
+we do not see now, and we have never seen, any evidence of this
+covenant; and, on the contrary, they have been for many centuries
+excluded from the possession of the small country they pretended God had
+promised that they should enjoy forever. Thus, since these pretended
+promises were never fulfilled, it is certain evidence of their falsity;
+which proves, plainly, that these pretended Holy Books which contain
+them were not of Divine inspiration. Therefore it is useless for our
+Christ-worshipers to pretend to make use of them as infallible testimony
+to prove the truth of their religion.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.
+
+
+
+
+V.--(1) OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
+
+Our Christ-worshipers add to their reasons for credulity and to the
+proofs of the truth of their testimony, the prophecies which are, as
+they pretend, sure evidences of the truth of the revelations or
+inspirations of God, there being no one but God who could predict future
+events so long before they came to pass, as those which have been
+predicted by the prophets.
+
+Let us see, then, who these pretended prophets are, and if we ought to
+consider them as important as our Christ-worshipers pretend they are.
+These men were but visionaries and fanatics, who acted and spoke
+according to the impulsions of their ruling passions, and who imagined
+that it was the Spirit of God by which they spoke and acted; or they
+were impostors who feigned to be prophets, and who, in order to more
+easily deceive the ignorant and simple-minded, boasted of acting and
+speaking by the Spirit of God. I would like to know how an Ezekiel would
+be received who should say that God made him eat for his breakfast a
+roll of parchment; commanded him to be tied like an insane man, and lie
+three hundred and ninety days upon his right side, and forty days upon
+his left, and commanded him to eat man's dung upon his bread, and
+afterward, as an accommodation, cow's dung? I ask how such a filthy
+statement would be received by the most stupid people of our provinces?
+
+What can be yet a greater proof of the falsity of these pretended
+prophecies, than the violence with which these prophets reproach each
+other for speaking falsely in the name of God, reproaches which they
+claim to make in behalf of God. All of them say, "Beware of the false
+prophets!" as the quacks say, "Beware of the counterfeit pills!" How
+could these insane impostors tell the future? No prophecy in favor of
+their Jewish nation was ever fulfilled. The number of prophecies which
+predict the prosperity and the greatness of Jerusalem is almost
+innumerable; in explanation of this, it will be said that it is very
+natural that a subdued and captive people should comfort themselves in
+their real afflictions by imaginary hopes--as a year after King James was
+deposed, the Irish people of his party forged several prophecies in
+regard to him.
+
+But if these promises made to the Jews had been really true, the Jewish
+nation long ago would have been, and would still be, the most numerous,
+the most powerful, the most blessed, and the most victorious of all
+nations.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--(2) THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+
+Let us examine the pretended prophecies which are contained in the
+Gospels.
+
+Firstly. An angel having appeared in a dream to a man named Joseph,
+father, or at least so reputed, of Jesus, son of Mary, said unto him:
+
+"Joseph, thou son of David fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for
+that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost. And she shall bring
+forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name JESUS; for He shall save His
+people from their sins." This angel said also to Mary:
+
+"Fear not, Mary, for thou hast found favor with God. And behold, thou
+shalt conceive in thy womb and bring forth a Son, and shalt call His
+name Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the
+Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of His father
+David. And He shall reign over the house of Jacob forever; and of His
+kingdom there shall be no end!" Jesus began to preach and to say:
+
+"Repent, for the kingdom of Heaven is at hand. Take no thought for your
+life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink, nor yet for your body
+what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the body than
+raiment, for your Heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these
+things. But seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and
+all these things shall be added unto you."
+
+Now, let every man who has not lost common sense, examine if this Jesus
+ever was a king, or if His disciples had abundance of all things. This
+Jesus promised to deliver the world from sin. Is there any prophecy
+which is more false? Is not our age a striking proof of it? It is said
+that Jesus came to save His people. In what way did He save it? It is
+the greatest number which rules any party. For example, one dozen or two
+of Spaniards or Frenchmen do not constitute the French or Spanish
+people; and if an army of a hundred and twenty thousand men were taken
+prisoners of war by an army of enemies which was stronger, and if the
+chief of this army should redeem only a few men, as ten or twelve
+soldiers or officers, by paying their ransom, it could not be claimed
+that he had delivered or redeemed his army. Then, who is this God who
+has been sacrificed, who died to save the world, and leaves so many
+nations damned? What a pity! and what horror!
+
+Jesus Christ says that we have but to ask and we shall receive, and to
+seek and we shall find. He assures us that all we ask of God in His name
+shall be granted, and that if we have faith as a grain of mustard-seed,
+we could by one word remove mountains. If this promise is true, nothing
+appears impossible to our Christ-worshipers who have faith in Jesus.
+However, the contrary happens. If Mohammed had made the promises to his
+votaries that Christ made to His, without success, what would not be
+said about it. They would cry out, "Ah, the cheat! ah, the impostor!"
+These Christ-worshipers are in the same condition: they have been blind,
+and have not even yet recovered from their blindness; on the contrary,
+they are so ingenious in deceiving themselves, that they pretend that
+these promises have been fulfilled from the beginning of Christianity;
+that at that time it was necessary to have miracles, in order to
+convince the incredulous of the truth of religion; but that this
+religion being sufficiently established, the miracles were no longer
+necessary. Where, then, is their proof of all this?
+
+Besides, He who made these promises did not limit them to a certain
+time, or to certain places, or to certain persons; but He made them
+generally to everybody. The faith of those who believe, says He, shall
+be followed by these miracles; "They shall cast out devils in My name,
+they shall speak in divers tongues, they shall handle serpents," etc.
+
+In regard to the removal of mountains, He positively says that "whoever
+shall say to a mountain: 'Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the
+sea;' it shall be done;" provided that he does not doubt in his heart,
+but believes all he commands will be done. Are not all these promises
+given in a general way, without restriction as to time, place, or
+persons?
+
+It is said that all the sects which are founded in errors and imposture
+will come to a shameful end. But if Jesus Christ intends to say that He
+has established a society of followers who will not fall either into
+vice or error, these words are absolutely false, as there is in
+Christendom no sect, no society, and no church which is not full of
+errors and vices, especially the Roman Church, although it claims to be
+the purest and the holiest of all. It was born into error, or rather it
+was conceived and formed in error; and even now it is full of delusions
+which are contrary to the intentions, the sentiments, or the doctrine of
+its Founder, because it has, contrary to His intention, abolished the
+laws of the Jews, which He approved, and which He came Himself, as He
+said, to fulfill and not to destroy. It has fallen into the errors and
+idolatry of Paganism, as is seen by the idolatrous worship which is
+offered to its God of dough, to its saints, to their images, and to
+their relics.
+
+I know well that our Christ-worshipers consider it a lack of
+intelligence to accept literally the promises and prophecies as they are
+expressed; they reject the literal and natural sense of the words, to
+give them a mystical and spiritual sense which they call allegorical and
+figurative; claiming, for example, that the people of Israel and Judea,
+to whom these promises were made, were not understood as the Israelites
+after the body, but the Israelites in spirit: that is to say, the
+Christians which are the Israel of God, the true chosen people that by
+the promise made to this enslaved people, to deliver it from captivity,
+it is understood to be not the corporal deliverance of a single captive
+people, but the spiritual deliverance of all men from the servitude of
+the Devil, which was to be accomplished by their Divine Saviour; that by
+the abundance of riches, and all the temporal blessings promised to this
+people, is meant the abundance of spiritual graces; and finally, that by
+the city of Jerusalem, is meant not the terrestrial Jerusalem, but the
+spiritual Jerusalem, which is the Christian Church.
+
+But it is easy to see that these spiritual and allegorical meanings
+having only a strange, imaginary sense, being a subterfuge of the
+interpreters, can not serve to show the truth or the falsehood of a
+proposition, or of any promises whatever. It is ridiculous to forge such
+allegorical meanings, since it is only by the relations of the natural
+and true sense that we can judge of their truth or falsehood. A
+proposition, a promise, for example, which is considered true in the
+proper and natural sense of the terms in which it is expressed, will not
+become false in itself under cover of a strange sense, one which does
+not belong to it. By the same reasoning, that which is manifestly false
+in its proper and natural sense, will not become true in itself,
+although we give it a strange sense, one foreign to the true.
+
+We can say that the prophecies of the Old Testament adjusted to the New,
+would be very absurd and puerile things. For example, Abraham had two
+wives, of which the one, who was but a servant, represented the
+synagogue, and the other one, his lawful wife, represented the Christian
+Church; and that this Abraham had two sons, of which the one born of
+Hagar, the servant, represented the Old Testament; and the other, born
+of Sarah, the wife, represented the New Testament. Who would not laugh
+at such a ridiculous doctrine?
+
+Is it not amusing that a piece of red cloth, exhibited by a prostitute
+as a signal to spies, in the Old Testament is made to represent the
+blood of Jesus Christ shed in the New? If--according to this manner of
+interpreting allegorically all that is said, done, and practiced in the
+ancient law of the Jews--we should interpret in the same allegorical way
+all the discourses, the actions, and the adventures of the famous Don
+Quixote de la Mancha, we would find the same sort of mysteries and
+ridiculous figures.
+
+It is nevertheless upon this absurd foundation that the whole Christian
+religion rests. Thus it is that there is scarcely anything in this
+ancient law that the Christ-worshiping doctors do not try to explain in
+a mystical way to build up their system. The most false and the most
+ridiculous prophecy ever made is that of Jesus, in Luke, where it is
+pretended that there will be signs in the sun and in the moon, and that
+the Son of Man will appear in a cloud to judge men; and this is
+predicted for the generation living at that time. Has it come to pass?
+Did the Son of Man appear in a cloud?
+
+
+
+
+VII.--ERRORS OF DOCTRINE AND OF MORALITY.
+
+The Christian Apostolical Roman Religion teaches, and compels belief,
+that there is but one God, and, at the same time, that there are three
+Divine persons, each one being God. This is absurd; for if there are
+three who are truly God, then there are three Gods. It is false, then,
+to say that there is but one God; or if this is true, it is false to say
+that there are really three who are God, for one and three can not be
+claimed to be one and the same number. It is also said that the first of
+these pretended Divine persons, called the Father, has brought forth the
+second person, which is called the Son, and that these first two persons
+together have produced the third, which is called the Holy Ghost, and,
+nevertheless, these three pretended Divine persons do not depend the one
+upon the other, and even that one is not older than the other. This,
+too, is manifestly absurd; because one thing can not receive its
+existence from another thing without some dependence on this other; and
+a thing must necessarily exist in order to give birth to another. If,
+then, the Second and the Third persons of Divinity have received their
+existence from the First person, they must necessarily depend for their
+existence on this First person, who gave them birth, or who begot them,
+and it is necessary also that the First person of the Divinity, who gave
+birth to the two other persons, should have existed before them; because
+that which does not exist can not beget anything. Nevertheless, it is
+repugnant as well as absurd to claim that anything could be begotten
+or born without having had a beginning. Now, according to our
+Christ-worshipers, the Second and Third persons of Divinity were
+begotten and born; then they had a beginning, and the First person had
+none, not being begotten by another; it therefore follows necessarily
+that one existed before the other.
+
+Our Christ-worshipers, who feel these absurdities and can not avoid them
+by any good reasoning, have no other resource than to say that we must
+ignore human reason and humbly adore these sublime mysteries without
+wishing to understand them; but that which they call faith is refuted
+when they tell us that we must submit; it is telling us that we must
+blindly believe that which we do not believe. Our Christ-worshipers
+condemn the blindness of the ancient Pagans, who worshiped several
+Gods; they deride the genealogy of those Gods, their birth, their
+marriages, and the generating of their children; yet they do not observe
+that they themselves say things which are much more ridiculous and
+absurd.
+
+If the Pagans believed that there were Goddesses as well as Gods, that
+these Gods and Goddesses married and begat children, they thought of
+nothing, then, but what is natural; for they did not believe yet that
+the Gods were without body or feeling; they believed they were similar
+to men. Why should there not be females as well as males? It is not more
+reasonable to deny or to recognize the one than the other; and supposing
+there were Gods and Goddesses, why should they not beget children in the
+ordinary way? There would be certainly nothing ridiculous or absurd in
+this doctrine, if it were true that their Gods existed. But in the
+doctrine of our Christ-worshipers there is something absolutely
+ridiculous and absurd; for besides claiming that one God forms Three,
+and that these Three form but One, they pretend that this Triple and
+Unique God has neither body, form, nor face; that the First person of
+this Triple and Unique God, whom they call the Father, begot of Himself
+a Second person, which they call the Son, and which is the same as His
+Father, being, like Him, without body, form, or face. If this is true,
+why is it that the First one is called Father rather than mother, or the
+Second called Son rather than daughter? For if the First one is really
+father instead of mother, and if the Second is son instead of daughter,
+there must be something in both of these two persons which causes the
+one to be father rather than mother, and the other to be son rather than
+daughter. Now who can assert that they are males and not females? But
+how should they be rather males than females, as they have neither body,
+form, nor face? That is not an imaginable thing, and destroys itself. No
+matter, they claim chat these two Persons, without body, form, or face,
+and, consequently, without difference of sex, are nevertheless Father
+and Son, and that they produced by their mutual love a third person,
+whom they called the Holy Ghost, who has, like the other two, no body,
+no form, and no face. What abominable nonsense!
+
+As our Christ-worshipers limit the power of God the Father to begetting
+but one Son, why do they not desire that this Second person, and the
+Third, should have the same power to beget a Son like themselves? If
+this power to beget a son is perfection in the First person, it is,
+then, a perfection and a power which does not exist in the Second and in
+the Third person. Thus these two Persons, lacking a perfection and a
+power which is found in the First one, they are consequently not equal
+with Him. If, on the contrary, they say that this power to beget a son
+is no perfection, they should not attribute it, then, to the First
+person any more than to the other two; for we should attribute
+perfections only to an absolutely perfect being. Besides, they would not
+dare to say that the power to beget a Divine person is not a perfection;
+and if they claim that this First person could have begotten several
+sons and daughters, but that He desired but this only Son, and that the
+two other persons did not desire to beget any others, we could ask them,
+firstly, from whence they know this, for we do not see in their
+pretended Holy Scriptures that any One of these Divine personages
+reveals any such assertions; how, then, can our Christ-worshipers know
+anything about it? They speak but according to their ideas and to their
+hollow imaginations. Secondly, we could not avoid saying, that if these
+pretended Divine personages had the power of begetting several children,
+and did not wish to make use of it, the consequence would be that this
+Divine power was ineffectual. It would be entirely without effect in the
+Third person, who did not beget or produce any, and would be almost
+without effect in the two others, because they limited it. Then this
+power of begetting or producing an unlimited number of children would
+remain idle and useless; it would be inconsistent to suppose this of
+Divine Personages, One of whom had already produced a Son.
+
+Our Christ-worshipers blame and condemn the Pagans because they
+attribute Divinity to mortal men, and worship them as Gods after their
+death; they are right in doing this. But these Pagans did only what our
+Christ-worshipers still do in attributing Divinity to their Christ;
+doing which, they condemn themselves also, because they are in the same
+error as these Pagans, in that they worship a man who was mortal, and so
+very mortal that He died shamefully upon a cross.
+
+It would be of no use for our Christ-worshipers to say that there was a
+great difference between their Jesus Christ and the Pagan Gods, under
+the pretense that their Christ was, as they claim, really God and man at
+the same time, while the Divinity was incarnated in Him, by means of
+which, the Divine nature found itself united personally, as they say,
+with human nature; these two natures would have made of Jesus Christ a
+true God and a true man; this is what never happened, they claim, in the
+Pagan Gods.
+
+But it is easy to show the weakness of this reply; for, on the one hand,
+was it not as easy to the Pagans as to the Christians, to say that the
+Divinity was incarnated in the men whom they worshiped as Gods? On the
+other hand, if the Divinity wanted to incarnate and unite in the human
+nature of their Jesus Christ, how did they know that this Divinity would
+not wish to also incarnate and unite Himself personally to the human
+nature of those great men and those admirable women, who, by their
+virtue, by their good qualities, or by their noble actions, have
+excelled the generality of people, and made themselves worshiped as Gods
+and Goddesses? And if our Christ-worshipers do not wish to believe that
+Divinity ever incarnated in these great personages, why do they wish to
+persuade us that He was incarnated in their Jesus? Where is the proof?
+Their faith and their belief; but as the Pagans rely on the same proof,
+we conclude both to be equally in error.
+
+But what is more ridiculous in Christianity than in Paganism, is that
+the Pagans have generally attributed Divinity but to great men, authors
+of arts and sciences, and who excelled in virtues useful to their
+country. But to whom do our God-Christ-worshipers attribute Divinity? To
+a nobody, to a vile and contemptible man, who had neither talent,
+science, nor ability; born of poor parents, and who, while He figured in
+the world, passed but for a monomaniac and a seditious fool, who was
+disdained, ridiculed, persecuted, whipped, and, finally, was hanged like
+most of those who desired to act the same part, when they had neither
+the courage nor skill. About that time there were several other
+impostors who claimed to be the true promised Messiah; amongst others a
+certain Judas, a Galilean, a Theodorus, a Barcon, and others who, under
+this vain pretext, abused the people, and tried to excite them, in order
+to win them, but they all perished.
+
+Let us pass now to His discourses and to some of His actions, which are
+the most singular of this kind: "Repent," said He to the people, "for
+the kingdom of Heaven is at hand; believe these good tidings." And He
+went all over Galilee preaching this pretended approach of the kingdom
+of Heaven. As no one has seen the arrival of this kingdom of Heaven, it
+is evident that it was but imaginary. But let us see other predictions,
+the praise, and the description of this beautiful kingdom.
+
+Behold what He said to the people:
+
+The kingdom of Heaven is likened unto a man who sowed good seed in his
+field. But while he slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the
+wheat, and went his way. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like unto
+treasure hidden in a field, the which, when a man has found, he hideth
+again, and for joy thereof goes and sells all that he has, and buys that
+field. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like unto a merchantman seeking
+goodly pearls, who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and
+sold all he had, and bought it. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like
+unto a net that was cast into the sea, and gathered of every kind;
+which, when it was full, they drew to shore, and sat down and gathered
+the good into vessels, but cast the bad away. It is like a grain of
+mustard-seed, which a man took and sowed in his field which, indeed, is
+the least of all seeds, but when it is grown it is the greatest among
+herbs, etc.
+
+Is this a language worthy of a God? We will pass the same judgment upon
+Him if we examine His actions more closely. Because, firstly, He is
+represented as running all over a country preaching the approach of a
+pretended kingdom; Secondly, as having been transported by the Devil
+upon a high mountain, from which He believed He saw all the kingdoms of
+the world; this could only happen to a visionist; for it is certain,
+there is no mountain upon the earth from which He could see even one
+entire kingdom, unless it was the little kingdom of Yvetot, which is in
+France; thus it was only in imagination that He saw all these kingdoms,
+and was transported upon this mountain, as well as upon the pinnacle of
+the temple. Thirdly, when He cured the deaf-mute, spoken of in St. Mark,
+it is said that He placed His fingers in the ears, spit, and touched his
+tongue, then casting His eyes up to Heaven, He sighed deeply, and said
+unto him: "Ephphatha!" Finally, let us read all that is related of Him,
+and we can judge whether there is anything in the world more ridiculous.
+
+Having considered some of the silly things attributed to God by our
+Christ-worshipers, let us look a little further into their mysteries.
+They worship one God in three persons, or three persons in one God, and
+they attribute to themselves the power of forming Gods out of dough, and
+of making as many as they want. For, according to their principles, they
+have only to say four words over a certain quantity of wine or over
+these little images of paste, to make as many Gods of them as they
+desire. What folly! With all the pretended power of their Christ, they
+would not be able to make the smallest fly, and yet they claim the
+ability to produce millions of Gods. One must be struck by a strange
+blindness to maintain such pitiable things, and that upon such vain
+foundation as the equivocal words of a fanatic. Do not these blind
+theologians see that it means opening a wide door to all sorts of
+idolatries, to adore these paste images under the pretext that the
+priests have the power of consecrating them and changing them into Gods?
+
+Can not the priests of the idols boast of having a similar ability?
+
+Do they not see, also, that the same reasoning which demonstrates the
+vanity of the gods or idols of wood, of stone, etc., which the Pagans
+worshiped, shows exactly the same vanity of the Gods and idols of paste
+or of flour which our Christ-worshipers adore? By what right do they
+deride the falseness of the Pagan Gods? Is it not because they are but
+the work of human hands, mute and insensible images? And what kind of
+Gods are those which we preserve in boxes for fear of the mice?
+
+What are these boasted resources of the Christ-worshipers? Their
+morality? It is the same as in all religions, but their cruel dogmas
+produced and taught persecution and trouble. Their miracles? But what
+people has not its own, and what wise men do not disdain these fables?
+Their prophecies? Have we not shown their falsity? Their morals? Are
+they not often infamous? The establishment of their religion? but did
+not fanaticism begin, and has not intrigue visibly sustained this
+edifice? The doctrine? but is it not the height of absurdity?
+
+End Of The Abstract By Voltaire.
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHER'S PREFACE.
+
+By translating into both the English and German languages Le Bon Sens,
+containing the Last Will and Testament of the French curate JEAN
+MESLIER, Miss Anna Knoop has performed a most useful and meritorious
+task, and in issuing a new edition of this work, it is but justice to
+her memory [Miss Knoop died Jan. 11, 1889.] to state that her
+translation has received the endorsement of our most competent critics.
+
+In a letter dated Newburyport, Mass., Sep. 23, 1878, Mr. James Parton,
+the celebrated author, commends Miss Knoop for "translating Meslier's
+book so well," and says that:
+
+"This work of the honest pastor is the most curious and the most
+powerful thing of the kind which the last century produced. . . . .
+Paine and Voltaire had reserves, but Jean Meslier had none. He keeps
+nothing back; and yet, after all, the wonder is not that there should
+have been one priest who left that testimony at his death, but that all
+priests do not. True, there is a great deal more to be said about
+religion, which I believe to be an eternal necessity of human nature,
+but no man has uttered the negative side of the matter with so much
+candor and completeness as Jean Meslier."
+
+The value of the testimony of a catholic priest, who in his last moments
+recanted the errors of his faith and asked God's pardon for having
+taught the catholic religion, was fully appreciated by Voltaire, who
+highly commended this grand work of Meslier. He voluntarily made every
+effort to increase its circulation, and even complained to D' Alembert
+"that there were not as many copies in all Paris as he himself had
+dispersed throughout the mountains of Switzerland." [See Letter 504,
+Voltaire to D'Alembert] He earnestly entreats his associates to print
+and distribute in Paris an edition of at least four or five thousand
+copies, and at the suggestion of D'Alembert, made an abstract or
+abridgment of The Testament "so small as to cost no more than five
+pence, and thus to be fitted for the pocket and reading of every
+workman." [Letter 146, from D'Alembert.]
+
+The Abbé Barruel claims in his Memoirs [See History of Jacobinism by the
+Abbé Barruel, 4 vols. 8 VO, translated by the Hon. Robert Clifford, F.
+R. S., and printed in London in 1798. The learned Abbé defines
+Jacobinism as "the error of every man who, judging of all things by the
+standard of his own reason, rejects in religious matters every authority
+that is not derived from the light of nature. It is the error of every
+man who denies the possibility of any mystery beyond the limits of his
+reason, of every one who, discarding revelation in defence of the
+pretended rights of Reason, Equality, and Liberty, seeks to subvert the
+whole fabric of the Christian religion." B. 4.] to detect in the
+writings of Voltaire and of the leading Encyclopedists, a conspiracy not
+only against the Altar but also against the Throne. He severely
+denounces the "Last Will of Jean Meslier,--that famous Curate of
+Etrepigni,--whose apostasy and blasphemies made so strong an impression
+on the minds of the populace," and he styles the plan of D'Alembert for
+circulating a few thousand copies of the Abstract of the Will, as a "base
+project against the doctrines of the Gospel." [Ibid, page 145] He even
+asserts his belief that:
+
+"The Jacobins will one day declare that all men are free, that all men
+are equal; and as a consequence of this Equality and Liberty they will
+conclude that every man must be left to the light of reason. That every
+religion subjecting man's reason to mysteries, or to the authority of
+any revelation speaking in God's name, is a religion of constraint and
+slavery; that as such it should be annihilated in order to reestablish
+the indefeasible rights of Equality and Liberty as to the belief or
+disbelief of all that the reason of man approves or disapproves: and
+they will call this Equality and Liberty the reign of Reason and the
+empire of Philosophy." [History of Jacobinism, page 51.]
+
+The results which the Abbé Barruel so clearly foresaw have at length
+been realized. The labors of the Jacobins have not been in vain, and the
+Revolution they incited has restored France to the government of the
+people!
+
+"With ardent hope for the future," says President Carnot in his
+centennial address, May 5, 1889, "I greet in the palace of the monarchy
+the representatives of a nation that is now in complete possession of
+herself, that is mistress of her destinies, and that is in the full
+splendor and strength of liberty. The first thoughts on this solemn
+meeting turn to our fathers. The immortal generation of 1789, by dint
+of courage and many sacrifices, secured for us benefits which we must
+bequeath to our sons as a most precious inheritance. Never can our
+gratitude equal the grandeur of the services rendered by our fathers to
+France and to the human race. . . . The Revolution was based upon the
+rights of man. It created a new era in history and founded modern
+society."
+
+This is literally true. The freethinkers of France have taught mankind
+the doctrines of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity. They have taught the
+dignity of human reason, and the sacredness of human rights. They have
+broken the bondage of the altar, and severed the shackles of the throne;
+and it is to be regretted that at the centennial celebration held in
+this city on April 30th, 1889, the appointed orator [See the Centennial
+Address of the Hon. Chauncey M. Depew.] did not realize the grandeur of
+the occasion, and did not, like Carnot, pay a just tribute to our
+allies, the reformers of Europe, as well as to the fathers of the
+republic. But the people of America will remember what the politician
+has forgotten. They will remember the names and deeds of their foreign
+benefactors as well as of the American patriots of '76. When they recall
+the illustrious Europeans who fought for our liberties they will
+remember the name of Lafayette; when they think of the Declaration of
+Independence they will not forget the name of Thomas Jefferson; and when
+they speak of "the times that tried men's souls" they will recall with
+gratitude the name of Thomas Paine.
+
+Although the ecclesiastical conclave at Rome claims the power of working
+miracles in defiance of Nature's laws, yet with or without miracles,
+they have never answered the simple arguments advanced by Jean Meslier;
+although they claim to hold the keys of Paradise, and bind on earth the
+souls that are to be bound in heaven, yet year by year their waning
+power refutes their senseless boast; although they boldly assert the
+dogma of popish infallibility, yet the loss of the temporal power once
+wielded by Rome, and the death of each succeeding pontiff, attest both
+the Pope's fallibility and the Pope's mortality. Indeed, the successor
+of St. Peter is but human--the sacred college at Rome is but mortal; and
+faith and dogma cannot forever resist the influence of light and
+knowledge. The power of Catholicism is surely declining throughout
+Europe; and if it has become aggressive in our American cities, is it
+not because the friends of freedom have forgotten the well-known axiom
+that "eternal vigilance is the price of liberty"?
+
+PETER ECKLER.
+
+New York, May 21, 1889.
+
+
+
+
+PREFATORY NOTE BY THE TRANSLATOR
+
+Some years ago a copy of John Meslier fell into my hands. I was struck
+with the simple truthfulness of his arguments, and the thought never
+left me of the happy change that would be produced all over the world
+when the religious prejudices should be dispelled, and when all the
+different nations and sects would unite and lend each other a friendly
+hand.
+
+Since I had the opportunity of hearing the speeches and lectures of
+liberal men, it has seemed to me that the time has come for this work of
+John Meslier to be appreciated, and I concluded to translate it into the
+language of my adopted country, presuming that many would be happy to
+study it.
+
+In this faith I offer it now to the public, and I hope that the name of
+John Meslier will be honored as one of the greatest benefactors of
+humanity.
+
+ANNA KNOOP.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE OF THE EDITOR OF THE FRENCH EDITION OF 1830.
+
+It is said that truth is generally revealed by dying lips. When men full
+of health and enjoying all the pleasures of life, exert themselves
+without ceasing, to excite minds and to take advantage of their
+fanaticism by wearing the mask of religion, it will not be without
+interest or importance to know what other men, invested with the same
+ministry, have taught under the impulse of a conscience quickened by the
+approach of the final hour. Their confessions are more valuable because
+they carry with them the spirit of contrition. It is then that the
+truth, which is no longer obscured by narrow passions and sordid
+interests, presents itself in all its brilliancy, and imposes upon him
+who has kept it hidden during his life, the duty, and even the
+necessity, of unveiling it fully at his death. It is then that human
+speech, losing in a measure its terrestrial nature, becomes persuasive
+and convincing.
+
+We know this fact of a celebrated preacher who in the beginning of the
+Revolution stood in the same pulpit which we are pleased to call the
+pulpit of truth, and with his hand upon his heart declared that till
+then he had taught only falsehood. He did more; he implored his
+parishioners to forgive him for the gross errors in which he had kept
+them, and congratulated them upon having at last arrived at a period
+when it was permitted to establish the empire of reason upon the ruins
+of prejudice. Times have changed very much, it is true; however, so long
+as the press shall be able to combat the fatal errors of religious
+fanaticism, and perhaps even to some extent prevent its violence, it
+will be the duty of every friend of humanity to reproduce continually
+the full retractions which opposed the sincerity and conscience of the
+dying to the bad faith and hypocritical avidity of the living. Guided by
+this intention, and ashamed to see the human race, in a land just freed
+from the yoke of prejudice, give birth to a disgraceful juggling which
+will terminate in dominating authority, and associate itself with the
+persecutions of which our incredulous or dissenting ancestors were the
+sad victims, we believe it useful to reprint the last lessons of a
+priest--an honest man--bequeathed to his fellow-citizens and to posterity.
+The service we render to Philosophy will be so much the greater when we
+can consider as immutable, perpetual, permanent, and ready to appear in
+the hour of need, the edition which we are preparing of "COMMON SENSE,
+BY THE PRIEST JEAN MESLIER, AND HIS DYING CONFESSION."
+
+To do justice to these two works, to which we have added analytical
+notes, which will greatly facilitate our researches, we will limit
+ourselves by giving the imposing approbation of two philosophers of the
+eighteenth century--Voltaire and d'Alembert. They certainly understood
+much better the sublimity of evangelical morality, and spoke of it in a
+manner more worthy of its author, than did those who deified it to
+profit by its divinity, and who abused so cruelly the ignorance and
+barbarity of the first centuries, to establish, in the interest of their
+fortunes and power, so many base prejudices, so many puerile and
+superstitious practices.
+
+Here is what Voltaire and d'Alembert thought of the curate Meslier and
+of his work. Their letters are presented here in order to excite
+curiosity and convince the judgment:
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
+
+FERNEY, February, 1762.
+
+They have printed in Holland the Testament of Jean Meslier. I trembled
+with horror in reading it. The testimony of a priest, who, in dying,
+asks God's pardon for having taught Christianity, must be a great weight
+in the balance of Liberals. I will send you a copy of this Testament of
+the anti-Christ, because you desire to refute it. You have but to tell
+me by what manner it will reach you. It is written with great
+simplicity, which unfortunately resembles candor.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+FERNEY, February 25, 1762.
+
+Meslier also has the wisdom of the serpent. He sets an example for you;
+the good grain was hidden in the chaff of his book. A good Swiss has
+made a faithful abstract and this abstract can do a great deal of good.
+What an answer to the insolent fanatics who treat philosophers like
+libertines. What an answer to you, wretches that you are, this testimony
+of a priest, who asks God's pardon for having been a Christian!
+
+
+D'ALEMBERT'S ANSWER.
+
+PARIS, March 31, 1762.
+
+A misunderstanding has been the cause, my dear philosopher, that I
+received but a few days since the work of Jean Meslier, which you had
+sent almost a month ago. I waited till I received it to write to you. It
+seems to me that we could inscribe upon the tombstone of this curate:
+"Here lies a very honest priest, curate of a village in Champagne, who,
+in dying, asks God's pardon for having been a Christian, and who has
+proved by this, that ninety-nine sheep and one native of Champagne do
+not make a hundred beasts." I suspect that the abstract of his work is
+written by a Swiss, who understands French very well, though he affects
+to speak it badly. This is neat, earnest, and concise, and I bless the
+author of the abstract, whoever he may be. "It is of the Lord to
+cultivate the vine." After all, my dear philosopher, a little longer,
+and I do not know whether all these books will be necessary, and whether
+man will not have enough sense to comprehend by himself that three do
+not make one, and that bread is not God. The enemies of reason are
+playing a very foolish part at this moment, and I believe that we can
+say as in the song:
+
+"To destroy all these people
+You should let them alone."
+
+I do not know what will become of the religion of Christ, but its
+professors are in false garb. What Pascal, Nicole, and Arnaud could not
+do, there is an appearance that three or four absurd and ignorant
+fanatics will accomplish. The nation will give this vigorous blow
+within, while she is doing so little outside, and we will put in the
+abbreviated chronological pages of the year 1762: "This year France lost
+all its colonies and expelled the Jesuits." I know nothing but powder,
+which with so little apparent force, could produce such great results.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
+
+DELICES, July 12, 1762.
+
+It appears to me that the Testament of Jean Meslier has a great effect;
+all those who read it are convinced; this man discusses and proves. He
+speaks in the moment of death, at the moment when even liars tell the
+truth fully. This is the strongest of all arguments. Jean Meslier is to
+convert the world. Why is his gospel in so few hands? How lukewarm you
+are at Paris! You hide your light under a bushel!
+
+
+D'ALEMBERT'S ANSWER.
+
+PARIS, July 31, 1762.
+
+You reproach us with lukewarmness, but I believe I have told you already
+that the fear of the fagot is very cooling. You would like us to print
+the Testament of Jean Meslier and distribute four or five thousand
+copies. The infamous fanaticism, for infamous it is, would lose little
+or nothing, and we should be treated as fools by those whom we would
+have converted. Man is so little enlightened to-day only because we had
+the precaution or the good fortune to enlighten him little by little. If
+the sun should appear all of a sudden in a cave, the inhabitants would
+perceive only the harm it would do their eyes. The excess of light would
+result only in blinding them.
+
+
+D'ALEMBERT TO VOLTAIRE.
+
+PARIS, July 9, 1764.
+
+Apropos, they have lent me that work attributed to St. Evremont, and
+which is said to be by Dumarsais, of which you spoke to me some time
+ago; it is good, but the Testament of Meslier is still better!
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
+
+FERNEY, July 16, 1764.
+
+The Testament of Meslier ought to be in the pocket of all honest men; a
+good priest, full of candor, who asks God's pardon for deceiving
+himself, must enlighten those who deceive themselves.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE COUNT D'ARGENTAL.
+
+AUX DELICES, February 6, 1762.
+
+But no little bird told me of the infernal book of that curate, Jean
+Meslier; a very important work to the angels of darkness. An excellent
+catechism for Beelzebub. Know that this book is very rare; it is a
+treasure!
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+AUX DEUCES, May 31, 1762.
+
+It is just that I should send you a copy of the second edition of
+Meslier. In the first edition they forgot the preface, which is very
+strange. You have wise friends who would not be sorry to have this book
+in their secret cabinet. It is excellent to form youthful minds. The
+book, which was sold in manuscript form for eight Louis-d'or, is
+illegible. This little abstract is very edifying. Let us thank the good
+souls who give it gratuitously, and let us pray God to extend His
+benedictions upon this useful reading.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO D'AMILAVILLE.
+
+AUX DEUCES, February 8, 1762.
+
+My brother shall have a Meslier soon as I shall have received the order;
+it would seem that my brother has not the facts. Fifteen to twenty years
+ago the manuscript of this work sold for eight Louis-d'or; it was a very
+large quarto. There are more than a hundred copies in Paris. Brother
+Thiriot understands the facts. It is not known who made the abstract,
+but it is taken wholly, word for word, from the original. There are
+still many persons who have seen the curate Meslier. It would be very
+useful to make a new edition of this little work in Paris; it can be
+done easily in three or four days.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+FERNEY, December 6, 1762.
+
+But I believe there will never be another impression of the little book
+of Meslier. Think of the weight of the testimony of one dying, of a
+priest, of a good man.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+FERNEY, July 6, 1764.
+
+Three hundred Mesliers distributed in a province have caused many
+conversions. Ah, if I was assisted!
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+FERNEY, September 29, 1764.
+
+There are too few Mesliers and too many swindlers.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+AUX DELICES, October 8, 1764.
+
+Names injure the cause; they awaken prejudice. Only the name of Jean
+Meslier can do good, because the repentance of a good priest in the hour
+of death must make a great impression. This Meslier should be in the
+hands of all the world.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO MADAM DE FLORIAN.
+
+AUX DELICES, May 20, 1762.
+
+My dear niece, it is very sad to be so far from you. Read and read again
+Jean Meslier; he is a good curate.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE MARQUIS D'ARGENCE.
+
+March 2, 1763.
+
+I have found a Testament of Jean Meslier, which I send you. The
+simplicity of this man, the purity of his manners, the pardon which he
+asks of God, and the authenticity of his book, must produce a great
+effect. I will send you as many copies as you want of the Testament of
+this good curate.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO HELVETIUS.
+
+AUX DEUCES, May 1, 1763.
+
+They have sent me the two abstracts of Jean Meslier. It is true that it
+is written in the style of a carriage-horse, but it is well suited to
+the street. And what testimony! that of a priest who asks pardon in
+dying, for having taught absurd and horrible things! What an answer to
+the platitudes of fanatics who have the audacity to assert that
+philosophy is but the fruit of libertinage!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Superstition In All Ages (1732), by Jean Meslier
+
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+ <head>
+ <meta content="pg2html (binary v0.17)" name="linkgenerator" />
+ <title>
+ Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
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+Project Gutenberg's Superstition In All Ages (1732), by Jean Meslier
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Superstition In All Ages (1732)
+ Common Sense
+
+Author: Jean Meslier
+
+Commentator: Voltaire
+
+Translator: Anna Knoop
+
+Release Date: January 25, 2006 [EBook #17607]
+Last Updated: January 25, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUPERSTITION IN ALL AGES (1732) ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Gary Klein; HTML version by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ SUPERSTITION IN ALL AGES
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Jean Meslier
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ 1732
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ A ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST, WHO, AFTER A PASTORAL SERVICE OF THIRTY YEARS AT
+ ETREPIGNY IN CHAMPAGNE, FRANCE, WHOLLY ABJURED RELIGIOUS DOGMAS, AND LEFT
+ AS HIS LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT TO HIS PARISHIONERS, AND TO THE WORLD, TO
+ BE PUBLISHED AFTER HIS DEATH, THE FOLLOWING PAGES, ENTITLED: COMMON SENSE.
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Translated from the French original by Miss Anna Knoop
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ 1878
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> LIFE OF JEAN MESLIER BY VOLTAIRE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE OF THE AUTHOR. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> COMMON SENSE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> I.</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;APOLOGUE. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> II</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHAT IS THEOLOGY? <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> III.</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> IV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MAN BORN NEITHER RELIGIOUS
+ NOR DEISTICAL. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> V</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT
+ IS NOT NECESSARY TO BELIEVE IN A GOD <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0009"> VI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION IS FOUNDED UPON
+ CREDULITY. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> VII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EVERY
+ RELIGION IS AN ABSURDITY. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> VIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ NOTION OF GOD IS IMPOSSIBLE. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0012">
+ IX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ORIGIN OF SUPERSTITION. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0013"> X</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ORIGIN OF ALL RELIGION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> XI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IN THE NAME OF RELIGION
+ CHARLATANS TAKE ADVANTAGE <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION
+ ENTICES IGNORANCE BY THE AID OF THE MARVELOUS. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0016"> XIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> XIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THERE WOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN
+ ANY RELIGION IF . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> XV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL
+ RELIGION WAS BORN OF THE DESIRE TO DOMINATE. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0019"> XVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THAT WHICH SERVES AS A BASIS
+ FOR ALL RELIGION IS VERY UNCERTAIN. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0020"> XVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO BE
+ CONVINCED OF THE EXISTENCE OF GOD. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0021"> XVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> XIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE EXISTENCE OF GOD IS NOT
+ PROVED. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> XX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;TO
+ SAY THAT GOD IS A SPIRIT, IS TO SPEAK WITHOUT SAYING ANYTHING <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> XXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;SPIRITUALITY IS A CHIMERA.
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> XXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL WHICH
+ EXISTS SPRINGS FROM THE BOSOM OF MATTER. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0026"> XXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHAT IS THE METAPHYSICAL GOD
+ OF MODERN THEOLOGY? <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> XXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT
+ WOULD BE MORE RATIONAL TO WORSHIP THE SUN THAN A SPIRITUAL GOD. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> XXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A SPIRITUAL GOD IS
+ INCAPABLE OF WILLING AND OF ACTING. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0029"> XXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHAT IS GOD? <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> XXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REMARKABLE CONTRADICTIONS
+ OF THEOLOGY. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> XXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;TO
+ ADORE GOD IS TO ADORE A FICTION. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0032">
+ XXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE INFINITY OF GOD AND THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF KNOWING
+ THE DIVINE <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> XXX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT
+ IS NEITHER LESS NOR MORE CRIMINAL TO BELIEVE IN GOD THAN NOT TO <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> XXXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE BELIEF IN GOD IS
+ NOTHING BUT A MECHANICAL HABITUDE <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0035"> XXXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS A PREJUDICE WHICH HAS
+ BEEN HANDED FROM FATHER TO CHILDREN <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0036"> XXXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ORIGIN OF PREJUDICES. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> XXXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW THEY TAKE ROOT AND
+ SPREAD. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> XXXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MEN
+ WOULD NEVER HAVE BELIEVED IN THE PRINCIPLES OF MODERN THEOLOGY <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> XXXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE WONDERS OF NATURE DO
+ NOT PROVE THE EXISTENCE OF GOD. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0040">
+ XXXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE WONDERS OF NATURE EXPLAIN THEMSELVES BY
+ NATURAL CAUSES. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> XXXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION.
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> XXXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE WORLD
+ HAS NOT BEEN CREATED, AND MATTER MOVES BY ITSELF. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0043"> XL</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0044"> XLI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OTHER PROOFS THAT MOTION IS
+ IN THE ESSENCE OF MATTER <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0045"> XLII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ EXISTENCE OF MAN DOES NOT PROVE THAT OF GOD. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0046"> XLIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOWEVER, NEITHER MAN NOR THE
+ UNIVERSE IS THE EFFECT OF CHANCE. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0047"> XLIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;NEITHER DOES THE ORDER OF THE
+ UNIVERSE PROVE THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0048"> XLV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0049"> XLVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A PURE SPIRIT CAN NOT BE
+ INTELLIGENT <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0050"> XLVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL
+ THE QUALITIES WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES TO ITS GOD ARE CONTRARY <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0051"> XLVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0052"> XLIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT
+ THE HUMAN RACE IS THE OBJECT AND THE END <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0053"> L</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GOD IS NOT MADE FOR MAN, NOR MAN
+ FOR GOD. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0054"> LI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT
+ IS NOT TRUE THAT THE OBJECT OF THE FORMATION OF THE . . . <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0055"> LII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHAT IS CALLED PROVIDENCE
+ IS BUT A WORD VOID OF SENSE. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0056">
+ LIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THIS PRETENDED PROVIDENCE IS LESS OCCUPIED IN
+ CONSERVING . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0057"> LIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;NO!
+ THE WORLD IS NOT GOVERNED BY AN INTELLIGENT BEING. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0058"> LV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GOD CAN NOT BE CALLED
+ IMMUTABLE. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0059"> LVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EVIL
+ AND GOOD ARE THE NECESSARY EFFECTS OF NATURAL CAUSES <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0060"> LVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE VANITY OF THEOLOGICAL
+ CONSOLATIONS <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0061"> LVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ANOTHER
+ IDLE FANCY. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0062"> LIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IN
+ VAIN DOES THEOLOGY EXERT ITSELF TO ACQUIT GOD OF MAN'S DEFECTS. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0063"> LX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WE CAN NOT BELIEVE IN A
+ DIVINE PROVIDENCE <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0064"> LXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION.
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0065"> LXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THEOLOGY
+ MAKES OF ITS GOD A MONSTER OF NONSENSE, OF INJUSTICE <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0066"> LXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL RELIGION INSPIRES BUT A
+ COWARDLY AND INORDINATE FEAR <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0067">
+ LXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THERE IS IN REALITY NO DIFFERENCE BETWEEN . . .
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0068"> LXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ACCORDING
+ TO THE IDEAS WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES OF DIVINITY <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0069"> LXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;BY THE INVENTION OF THE DOGMA
+ OF THE ETERNAL TORMENTS OF HELL <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0070">
+ LXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THEOLOGY IS BUT A SERIES OF PALPABLE
+ CONTRADICTIONS. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0071"> LXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ PRETENDED WORKS OF GOD DO NOT PROVE AT ALL . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0072"> LXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE PERFECTION OF GOD DOES
+ NOT SHOW TO ANY MORE ADVANTAGE . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0073"> LXX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THEOLOGY PREACHES THE
+ OMNIPOTENCE OF ITS GOD <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0074"> LXXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ACCORDING
+ TO ALL THE RELIGIOUS SYSTEMS OF THE EARTH <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0075"> LXXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT
+ EVIL DOES NOT COME FROM GOD. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0076">
+ LXXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE FORESIGHT ATTRIBUTED TO GOD <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0077"> LXXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ABSURDITY OF THE THEOLOGICAL
+ FABLES UPON ORIGINAL SIN <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0078"> LXXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ DEVIL, LIKE RELIGION, WAS INVENTED TO ENRICH THE PRIESTS. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0079"> LXXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IF GOD COULD NOT RENDER
+ HUMAN NATURE SINLESS, HE HAS NO RIGHT . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0080"> LXXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT
+ GOD'S CONDUCT MUST BE A MYSTERY TO MAN <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0081"> LXXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS ABSURD TO CALL HIM A
+ GOD OF JUSTICE AND GOODNESS <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0082">
+ LXXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A GOD WHO PUNISHES THE FAULTS WHICH HE COULD HAVE
+ PREVENTED <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0083"> LXXX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FREE
+ WILL IS AN IDLE FANCY. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0084"> LXXXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WE
+ SHOULD NOT CONCLUDE FROM THIS THAT SOCIETY HAS NOT THE RIGHT . . . <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0085"> LXXXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REFUTATION OF THE
+ ARGUMENTS IN FAVOR OF FREE WILL. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0086">
+ LXXXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0087"> LXXXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GOD HIMSELF, IF THERE WAS A
+ GOD, WOULD NOT BE FREE <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0088"> LXXXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EVEN
+ ACCORDING TO THEOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES, MAN IS NOT FREE <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0089"> LXXXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL EVIL, ALL DISORDER, ALL
+ SIN, CAN BE ATTRIBUTED BUT TO GOD <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0090"> LXXXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MEN'S PRAYERS TO GOD PROVE
+ SUFFICIENTLY THAT THEY ARE NOT . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0091"> LXXXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE REPARATION OF THE
+ INIQUITIES AND THE MISERIES OF THIS <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0092"> LXXXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THEOLOGY JUSTIFIES THE EVIL
+ AND INJUSTICE PERMITTED BY ITS GOD, <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0093"> XC</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REDEMPTION, AND THE CONTINUAL
+ EXTERMINATIONS ATTRIBUTED TO JEHOVAH <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0094"> XCI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW CAN WE DISCOVER A TENDER,
+ GENEROUS, AND EQUITABLE FATHER <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0095">
+ XCII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE LIFE OF MORTALS, ALL WHICH TAKES PLACE HERE
+ BELOW <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0096"> XCIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT
+ IS NOT TRUE THAT WE OWE ANY GRATITUDE TO WHAT WE CALL . . . <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0097"> XCIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;TO PRETEND THAT MAN IS THE
+ BELOVED CHILD OF PROVIDENCE <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0098">
+ XCV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;COMPARISON BETWEEN MAN AND ANIMALS. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0099"> XCVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THERE ARE NO MORE
+ DETESTABLE ANIMALS IN THIS WORLD THAN TYRANTS. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0100"> XCVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REFUTATION OF MAN'S
+ EXCELLENCE. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0101"> XCVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AN
+ ORIENTAL LEGEND. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0102"> XCIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT
+ IS FOOLISH TO SEE IN THE UNIVERSE ONLY THE BENEFACTIONS OF GOD <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0103"> C</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHAT IS THE SOUL? WE KNOW
+ NOTHING ABOUT IT <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0104"> CI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ EXISTENCE OF A SOUL IS AN ABSURD SUPPOSITION <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0105"> CII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS EVIDENT THAT THE WHOLE
+ OF MAN DIES. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0106"> CIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;INCONTESTABLE
+ PROOFS AGAINST THE SPIRITUALITY OF THE SOUL. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0107"> CIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE ABSURDITY OF SUPERNATURAL
+ CAUSES <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0108"> CV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS
+ FALSE THAT MATERIALISM CAN BE DEBASING TO THE HUMAN RACE. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0109"> CVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0110"> CVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFE
+ IS USEFUL BUT FOR THOSE WHO PROFIT BY IT <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0111"> CVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS FALSE THAT THE DOGMA
+ OF ANOTHER LIFE CAN BE CONSOLING <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0112">
+ CIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES ARE IMAGINARY <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0113"> CX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EVERY RELIGION IS BUT A
+ SYSTEM IMAGINED FOR THE PURPOSE . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0114"> CXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ABSURDITY AND INUTILITY OF THE
+ MYSTERIES <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0115"> CXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION.
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0116"> CXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION.
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0117"> CXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+ UNIVERSAL GOD SHOULD HAVE REVEALED A UNIVERSAL RELIGION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0118"> CXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE PROOF THAT RELIGION IS
+ NOT NECESSARY <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0119"> CXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL
+ RELIGIONS ARE RIDICULED BY THOSE OF OPPOSITE . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0120"> CXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OPINION OF A CELEBRATED
+ THEOLOGIAN. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0121"> CXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ DEIST'S GOD IS NO LESS CONTRADICTORY . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0122"> CXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WE DO NOT PROVE AT ALL THE
+ EXISTENCE OF A GOD BY SAYING . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0123"> CXX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL THE GODS ARE OF A
+ BARBAROUS ORIGIN; ALL RELIGIONS ARE . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0124"> CXXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES BEAR
+ THE SEAL OF STUPIDITY OR BARBARITY. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0125"> CXXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE MORE ANCIENT AND GENERAL
+ A RELIGIOUS OPINION IS . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0126">
+ CXXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;SKEPTICISM IN THE MATTER OF RELIGION <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0127"> CXXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REVELATION REFUTED. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0128"> CXXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHERE, THEN, IS THE PROOF
+ THAT GOD DID EVER SHOW HIMSELF TO MEN <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0129"> CXXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;NOTHING ESTABLISHES THE
+ TRUTH OF MIRACLES. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0130"> CXXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IF
+ GOD HAD SPOKEN, IT WOULD BE STRANGE THAT HE HAD SPOKEN <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0131"> CXXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OBSCURE AND SUSPICIOUS
+ ORIGIN OF ORACLES. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0132"> CXXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ABSURDITY
+ OF PRETENDED MIRACLES. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0133"> CXXX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REFUTATION
+ OF PASCAL'S MANNER OF REASONING <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0134">
+ CXXXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EVEN ACCORDING TO THE PRINCIPLES OF THEOLOGY ITSELF
+ . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0136"> CXXXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EVEN
+ THE BLOOD OF THE MARTYRS, TESTIFIES . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0137"> CXXXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE FANATICISM OF THE
+ MARTYRS <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0138"> CXXXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THEOLOGY
+ MAKES OF ITS GOD AN ENEMY OF COMMON SENSE <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0139"> CXXXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FAITH IS IRRECONCILABLE WITH
+ REASON <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0140"> CXXXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW
+ ABSURD AND RIDICULOUS IS THE SOPHISTRY OF THOSE . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0141"> CXXXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW PRETEND THAT MAN OUGHT
+ TO BELIEVE VERBAL TESTIMONY <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0142">
+ CXXXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FAITH TAKES ROOT BUT IN WEAK, IGNORANT, OR
+ INDOLENT MINDS. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0143"> CXXXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;TO
+ TEACH THAT THERE EXISTS ONE TRUE RELIGION IS AN ABSURDITY, <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0144"> CXL</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION IS NOT NECESSARY
+ TO MORALITY AND TO VIRTUE. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0145">
+ CXLI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION IS THE WEAKEST RESTRAINT THAT CAN BE
+ OPPOSED . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0146"> CXLII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HONOR
+ IS A MORE SALUTARY AND A STRONGER CHECK THAN RELIGION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0147"> CXLIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION IS CERTAINLY
+ NOT A POWERFUL CHECK UPON THE PASSIONS <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0148"> CXLIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ORIGIN OF THE MOST ABSURD,
+ THE MOST RIDICULOUS, AND . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0149">
+ CXLV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION IS FATAL TO POLITICS; IT FORMS BUT
+ LICENTIOUS . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0150"> CXLVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRISTIANITY
+ EXTENDED ITSELF BUT BY ENCOURAGING DESPOTISM <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0152"> CXLVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE ONLY AIM OF RELIGIOUS
+ PRINCIPLES IS TO PERPETUATE . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0153"> CXLVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW FATAL IT IS TO
+ PERSUADE KINGS THAT THEY HAVE ONLY GOD . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0154"> CLXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A RELIGIOUS KING IS A
+ SCOURGE TO HIS KINGDOM. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0155"> CL</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ SHIELD OF RELIGION IS FOR TYRANNY <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0156"> CLI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION FAVORS THE ERRORS OF
+ PRINCES <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0157"> CLII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHAT
+ IS AN ENLIGHTENED SOVEREIGN? <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0158">
+ CLIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE DOMINANT PASSIONS AND CRIMES OF PRIESTCRAFT.
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0159"> CLIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHARLATANRY
+ OF THE PRIESTS. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0160"> CLV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;COUNTLESS
+ CALAMITIES ARE PRODUCED BY RELIGION <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0161"> CLVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EVERY RELIGION IS INTOLERANT,
+ AND CONSEQUENTLY DESTRUCTIVE OF <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0162">
+ CLVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ABUSE OF A STATE RELIGION. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0163"> CLVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION GIVES LICENSE TO
+ THE FEROCITY OF THE PEOPLE <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0164">
+ CLIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENT, THAT THE EVILS
+ ATTRIBUTED TO RELIGION <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0165"> CLX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL
+ MORALITY IS INCOMPATIBLE WITH RELIGIOUS OPINIONS. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0166"> CLXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE MORALS OF THE GOSPEL ARE
+ IMPRACTICABLE. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0167"> CLXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+ SOCIETY OF SAINTS WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0168"> CLXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HUMAN NATURE IS NOT
+ DEPRAVED <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0169"> CLXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF
+ JESUS CHRIST, THE PRIEST'S GOD. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0170">
+ CLXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE DOGMA OF THE REMISSION OF SINS HAS BEEN INVENTED
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0171"> CLXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE FEAR
+ OF GOD IS POWERLESS AGAINST HUMAN PASSIONS. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0172"> CLXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE INVENTION OF HELL IS
+ TOO ABSURD TO PREVENT EVIL. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0173">
+ CLXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ABSURDITY OF THE MORALITY AND OF THE RELIGIOUS
+ VIRTUES <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0174"> CLXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHAT
+ DOES THAT CHRISTIAN CHARITY AMOUNT TO <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0175"> CLXX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONFESSION, THAT GOLDEN MINE
+ FOR THE PRIESTS <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0176"> CLXXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ SUPPOSITION OF THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD IS NOT NECESSARY <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0177"> CLXXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION AND ITS
+ SUPERNATURAL MORALITY ARE FATAL TO THE PEOPLE <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0178"> CLXXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW THE UNION OF RELIGION
+ AND POLITICS IS FATAL TO THE PEOPLE <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0179"> CLXXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CREEDS ARE BURDENSOME AND
+ RUINOUS TO THE MAJORITY OF NATIONS. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0180"> CLXXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION PARALYZES MORALITY.
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0181"> CLXXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FATAL
+ CONSEQUENCES OF PIETY. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0182"> CLXXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ SUPPOSITION OF ANOTHER LIFE IS NEITHER CONSOLING TO MAN . . . <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0183"> CLXXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AN ATHEIST HAS MORE
+ MOTIVES FOR ACTING UPRIGHTLY <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0185">
+ CLXXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AN ATHEISTICAL KING WOULD BE PREFERABLE TO ONE WHO
+ IS RELIGIOUS <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0186"> CLXXX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ MORALITY ACQUIRED BY PHILOSOPHY IS SUFFICIENT TO VIRTUE. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0187"> CLXXXI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OPINIONS RARELY
+ INFLUENCE CONDUCT. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0188"> CLXXXII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;-REASON
+ LEADS MEN TO IRRELIGION AND TO ATHEISM <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0189"> CLXXXIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FEAR ALONE CREATES
+ THEISTS AND BIGOTS. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0190"> CLXXXIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CAN
+ WE, OR SHOULD WE, LOVE OR NOT LOVE GOD? <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0191"> CLXXXV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE VARIOUS AND
+ CONTRADICTORY IDEAS WHICH EXIST EVERYWHERE <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0192"> CLXXXVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE EXISTENCE OF GOD,
+ WHICH IS THE BASIS OF ALL RELIGION <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0193"> CLXXXVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;PRIESTS, MORE THAN
+ UNBELIEVERS, ACT FROM INTEREST. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0194">
+ CLXXXVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;PRIDE, PRESUMPTION, AND CORRUPTION OF THE HEART
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0195"> CLXXXIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;PREJUDICES
+ ARE BUT FOR A TIME, AND NO POWER IS DURABLE <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0196"> CXC</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW MUCH POWER AND
+ CONSIDERATION THE MINISTERS OF THE GODS . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0197"> CXCI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHAT A HAPPY AND GREAT
+ REVOLUTION WOULD TAKE PLACE . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0198"> CXCII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE RETRACTION OF AN
+ UNBELIEVER AT THE HOUR OF DEATH <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0199">
+ CXCIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IT IS NOT TRUE THAT ATHEISM SUNDERS ALL THE TIES
+ OF SOCIETY. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0200"> CXCIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REFUTATION
+ OF THE ASSERTION THAT RELIGION IS NECESSARY <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0201"> CXCV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EVERY RATIONAL SYSTEM IS NOT
+ MADE FOR THE MULTITUDE. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0202"> CXCVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FUTILITY
+ AND DANGER OF THEOLOGY. WISE COUNSELS TO PRINCES. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0203"> CXCVII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FATAL EFFECTS OF RELIGION
+ UPON THE PEOPLE AND THE PRINCES. <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0204">
+ CXCVIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0205"> CXCIX</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HISTORY TEACHES US THAT ALL
+ RELIGIONS WERE ESTABLISHED . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0206">
+ CC</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ALL RELIGIONS, ANCIENT AND MODERN, HAVE MUTUALLY
+ BORROWED . . . <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0207"> CCI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THEOLOGY
+ HAS ALWAYS TURNED PHILOSOPHY FROM ITS TRUE COURSE. <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0208"> CCII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;-THEOLOGY NEITHER EXPLAINS
+ NOR ENLIGHTENS ANYTHING IN THE WORLD <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0209"> CCIII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW THEOLOGY HAS FETTERED
+ HUMAN MORALS AND RETARDED THE PROGRESS <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0210"> CCIV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONTINUATION. <br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0211"> CCV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WE COULD NOT REPEAT TOO
+ OFTEN HOW EXTRAVAGANT AND FATAL RELIGION <br /><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0212"> CCVI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION IS PANDORA'S BOX,
+ AND THIS FATAL BOX IS OPEN. <br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0213">
+ ABSTRACT OF THE TESTAMENT OF JOHN MESLIER </a> <br /> <br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0214"> I</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF RELIGIONS.<br /> <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0215"> II</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF MIRACLES.<br /> <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0216"> III</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;SIMILARITY BETWEEN ANCIENT AND
+ MODERN MIRACLES.<br /> <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0217"> IV</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF
+ THE FALSITY OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.<br /> <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0219"> V</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE HOLY SCRIPTURES. (1) OF THE
+ OLD TESTAMENT.<br /> <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0220"> VI</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ HOLY SCRIPTURES. (2) THE NEW TESTAMENT.<br /> <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0221"> VII</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ERRORS OF
+ DOCTRINE AND OF MORALITY. <br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0222">
+ PUBLISHER'S PREFACE. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0223"> PREFATORY NOTE
+ BY THE TRANSLATOR </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_PREF2"> PREFACE OF THE
+ EDITOR OF THE FRENCH EDITION OF 1830. </a><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ LIFE OF JEAN MESLIER BY VOLTAIRE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Jean Meslier, born 1678, in the village of Mazerny, dependency of the
+ duchy of Rethel, was the son of a serge weaver; brought up in the country,
+ he nevertheless pursued his studies and succeeded to the priesthood. At
+ the seminary, where he lived with much regularity, he devoted himself to
+ the system of Descartes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becoming curate of Etrepigny in Champagne and vicar of a little annexed
+ parish named Bue, he was remarkable for the austerity of his habits.
+ Devoted in all his duties, every year he gave what remained of his salary
+ to the poor of his parishes; enthusiastic, and of rigid virtue, he was
+ very temperate, as much in regard to his appetite as in relation to women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MM. Voiri and Delavaux, the one curate of Varq, the other curate of
+ Boulzicourt, were his confessors, and the only ones with whom he
+ associated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The curate Meslier was a rigid partisan of justice, and sometimes carried
+ his zeal a little too far. The lord of his village, M. de Touilly, having
+ ill-treated some peasants, he refused to pray for him in his service. M.
+ de Mailly, Archbishop of Rheims, before whom the case was brought,
+ condemned him. But the Sunday which followed this decision, the abbot
+ Meslier stood in his pulpit and complained of the sentence of the
+ cardinal. "This is," said he, "the general fate of the poor country
+ priest; the archbishops, who are great lords, scorn them and do not listen
+ to them. Therefore, let us pray for the lord of this place. We will pray
+ for Antoine de Touilly, that he may be converted and granted the grace
+ that he may not wrong the poor and despoil the orphans." His lordship, who
+ was present at this mortifying supplication, brought new complaints before
+ the same archbishop, who ordered the curate Meslier to come to Donchery,
+ where he ill-treated him with abusive language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There have been scarcely any other events in his life, nor other benefice,
+ than that of Etrepigny. He died in the odor of sanctity in the year 1733,
+ fifty-five years old. It is believed that, disgusted with life, he
+ expressly refused necessary food, because during his sickness he was not
+ willing to take anything, not even a glass of wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At his death he gave all he possessed, which was inconsiderable, to his
+ parishioners, and desired to be buried in his garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were greatly surprised to find in his house three manuscripts, each
+ containing three hundred and sixty-six pages, all written by his hand,
+ signed and entitled by him, "My Testament." This work, which the author
+ addressed to his parishioners and to M. Leroux, advocate and procurator
+ for the parliament of Meziers, is a simple refutation of all the religious
+ dogmas, without excepting one. The grand vicar of Rheims retained one of
+ the three copies; another was sent to Monsieur Chauvelin, guardian of the
+ State's seal; the third remained at the clerk's office of the justiciary
+ of St. Minehould. The Count de Caylus had one of those three copies in his
+ possession for some time, and soon afterward more than one hundred were at
+ Paris, sold at ten Louis-d'or apiece. A dying priest accusing himself of
+ having professed and taught the Christian religion, made a deeper
+ impression upon the mind than the "Thoughts of Pascal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The curate Meslier had written upon a gray paper which enveloped the copy
+ destined for his parishioners these remarkable words: "I have seen and
+ recognized the errors, the abuses, the follies, and the wickedness of men.
+ I have hated and despised them. I did not dare say it during my life, but
+ I will say it at least in dying, and after my death; and it is that it may
+ be known, that I write this present memorial in order that it may serve as
+ a witness of truth to all those who may see and read it if they choose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the beginning of this work is found this document (a kind of honorable
+ amend, which in his letter to the Count of d'Argental of May 31, 1762,
+ Voltaire qualifies as a preface), addressed to his parishioners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know," said he, "my brethren, my disinterestedness; I do not
+ sacrifice my belief to any vile interest. If I embraced a profession so
+ directly opposed to my sentiments, it was not through cupidity. I obeyed
+ my parents. I would have preferred to enlighten you sooner if I could have
+ done it safely. You are witnesses to what I assert. I have not disgraced
+ my ministry by exacting the requitals, which are a part of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I call heaven to witness that I also thoroughly despised those who
+ laughed at the simplicity of the blind people, those who furnished piously
+ considerable sums of money to buy prayers. How horrible this monopoly! I
+ do not blame the disdain which those who grow rich by your sweat and your
+ pains, show for their mysteries and their superstitions; but I detest
+ their insatiable cupidity and the signal pleasure such fellows take in
+ railing at the ignorance of those whom they carefully keep in this state
+ of blindness. Let them content themselves with laughing at their own ease,
+ but at least let them not multiply their errors by abusing the blind piety
+ of those who, by their simplicity, procured them such an easy life. You
+ render unto me, my brethren, the justice that is due me. The sympathy
+ which I manifested for your troubles saves me from the least suspicion.
+ How often have I performed gratuitously the functions of my ministry. How
+ often also has my heart been grieved at not being able to assist you as
+ often and as abundantly as I could have wished! Have I not always proved
+ to you that I took more pleasure in giving than in receiving? I carefully
+ avoided exhorting you to bigotry, and I spoke to you as rarely as possible
+ of our unfortunate dogmas. It was necessary that I should acquit myself as
+ a priest of my ministry, but how often have I not suffered within myself
+ when I was forced to preach to you those pious lies which I despised in my
+ heart. What a disdain I had for my ministry, and particularly for that
+ superstitious Mass, and those ridiculous administrations of sacraments,
+ especially if I was compelled to perform them with the solemnity which
+ awakened all your piety and all your good faith. What remorse I had for
+ exciting your credulity! A thousand times upon the point of bursting forth
+ publicly, I was going to open your eyes, but a fear superior to my
+ strength restrained me and forced me to silence until my death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abbot Meslier had written two letters to the curates of his
+ neighborhood to inform them of his Testament; he told them that he had
+ consigned to the chancery of St. Minnehould a copy of his manuscript in
+ 366 leaves in octavo; but he feared it would be suppressed, according to
+ the bad custom established to prevent the poor from being instructed and
+ knowing the truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The curate Meslier, the most singular phenomenon ever seen among all the
+ meteors fatal to the Christian religion, worked his whole life secretly in
+ order to attack the opinions he believed false. To compose his manuscript
+ against God, against all religion, against the Bible and the Church, he
+ had no other assistance than the Bible itself, Moreri Montaigne, and a few
+ fathers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the abbot Meslier naively acknowledged that he did not wish to be
+ burned till after his death, Thomas Woolston, a doctor of Cambridge,
+ published and sold publicly at London, in his own house, sixty thousand
+ copies of his "Discourses" against the miracles of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a very astonishing thing that two priests should at the same time
+ write against the Christian religion. The curate Meslier has gone further
+ yet than Woolston; he dares to treat the transport of our Saviour by the
+ devil upon the mountain, the wedding of Cana, the bread and the fishes, as
+ absurd fables, injurious to divinity, which were ignored during three
+ hundred years by the whole Roman Empire, and finally passed from the lower
+ class to the palace of the emperors, when policy obliged them to adopt the
+ follies of the people in order the more easily to subjugate them. The
+ denunciations of the English priest do not approach those of the Champagne
+ priest. Woolston is sometimes indulgent, Meslier never. He was a man
+ profoundly embittered by the crimes he witnessed, for which he holds the
+ Christian religion responsible. There is no miracle which to him is not an
+ object of contempt and horror; no prophecy that he does not compare to
+ those of Nostredamus. He wrote thus against Jesus Christ when in the arms
+ of death, at a time when the most dissimulating dare not lie, and when the
+ most intrepid tremble. Struck with the difficulties which he found in
+ Scripture, he inveighed against it more bitterly than the Acosta and all
+ the Jews, more than the famous Porphyre, Celse, Iamblique, Julian,
+ Libanius, and all the partisans of human reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were found among the books of the curate Meslier a printed
+ manuscript of the Treatise of Fenelon, Archbishop of Cambray, upon the
+ existence of God and His attributes, and the reflections of the Jesuit
+ Tournemine upon Atheism, to which treatise he added marginal notes signed
+ by his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DECREE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ of the NATIONAL CONVENTION upon the proposition to erect a statue to the
+ curate Jean Meslier, the 27 Brumaire, in the year II. (November 17, 1793).
+ The National Convention sends to the Committee of Public Instruction the
+ proposition made by one of its members to erect a statue to Jean Meslier,
+ curate at Etrepigny, in Champagne, the first priest who had the courage
+ and the honesty to abjure religious errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PRESIDENT AND SECRETARIES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIGNED&mdash;P. A. Laloy, President; Bazire, Charles Duval, Philippeaux,
+ Frecine, and Merlin (de Thionville), Secretaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certified according to the original.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTEE OF DECREES AND PROCESS-VERBAL.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIGNED&mdash;Batellier, Echasseriaux, Monnel, Becker, Vernetey, Pérard,
+ Vinet, Bouillerot, Auger, Cordier, Delecloy, and Cosnard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE OF THE AUTHOR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When we wish to examine in a cool, calm way the opinions of men, we are
+ very much surprised to find that in those which we consider the most
+ essential, nothing is more rare than to find them using common sense; that
+ is to say, the portion of judgment sufficient to know the most simple
+ truths, to reject the most striking absurdities, and to be shocked by
+ palpable contradictions. We have an example of this in Theology, a science
+ revered in all times, in all countries, by the greatest number of mortals;
+ an object considered the most important, the most useful, and the most
+ indispensable to the happiness of society. If they would but take the
+ trouble to sound the principles upon which this pretended science rests
+ itself, they would be compelled to admit that the principles which were
+ considered incontestable, are but hazardous suppositions, conceived in
+ ignorance, propagated by enthusiasm or bad intention, adopted by timid
+ credulity, preserved by habit, which never reasons, and revered solely
+ because it is not comprehended. Some, says Montaigne, make the world
+ believe that which they do not themselves believe; a greater number of
+ others make themselves believe, not comprehending what it is to believe.
+ In a word, whoever will consult common sense upon religious opinions, and
+ will carry into this examination the attention given to objects of
+ ordinary interest, will easily perceive that these opinions have no solid
+ foundation; that all religion is but a castle in the air; that Theology is
+ but ignorance of natural causes reduced to a system; that it is but a long
+ tissue of chimeras and contradictions; that it presents to all the
+ different nations of the earth only romances devoid of probability, of
+ which the hero himself is made up of qualities impossible to reconcile,
+ his name having the power to excite in all hearts respect and fear, is
+ found to be but a vague word, which men continually utter, being able to
+ attach to it only such ideas or qualities as are belied by the facts, or
+ which evidently contradict each other. The notion of this imaginary being,
+ or rather the word by which we designate him, would be of no consequence
+ did it not cause ravages without number upon the earth. Born into the
+ opinion that this phantom is for them a very interesting reality, men,
+ instead of wisely concluding from its incomprehensibility that they are
+ exempt from thinking of it, on the contrary, conclude that they can not
+ occupy themselves enough about it, that they must meditate upon it without
+ ceasing, reason without end, and never lose sight of it. The invincible
+ ignorance in which they are kept in this respect, far from discouraging
+ them, does but excite their curiosity; instead of putting them on guard
+ against their imagination, this ignorance makes them positive, dogmatic,
+ imperious, and causes them to quarrel with all those who oppose doubts to
+ the reveries which their brains have brought forth. What perplexity, when
+ we attempt to solve an unsolvable problem! Anxious meditations upon an
+ object impossible to grasp, and which, however, is supposed to be very
+ important to him, can but put a man into bad humor, and produce in his
+ brain dangerous transports. When interest, vanity, and ambition are joined
+ to such a morose disposition, society necessarily becomes troubled. This
+ is why so many nations have often become the theaters of extravagances
+ caused by nonsensical visionists, who, publishing their shallow
+ speculations for the eternal truth, have kindled the enthusiasm of princes
+ and of people, and have prepared them for opinions which they represented
+ as essential to the glory of divinity and to the happiness of empires. We
+ have seen, a thousand times, in all parts of our globe, infuriated
+ fanatics slaughtering each other, lighting the funeral piles, committing
+ without scruple, as a matter of duty, the greatest crimes. Why? To
+ maintain or to propagate the impertinent conjectures of enthusiasts, or to
+ sanction the knaveries of impostors on account of a being who exists only
+ in their imagination, and who is known only by the ravages, the disputes,
+ and the follies which he has caused upon the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Originally, savage nations, ferocious, perpetually at war, adored, under
+ various names, some God conformed to their ideas; that is to say, cruel,
+ carnivorous, selfish, greedy of blood. We find in all the religions of the
+ earth a God of armies, a jealous God, an avenging God, an exterminating
+ God, a God who enjoys carnage and whose worshipers make it a duty to serve
+ him to his taste. Lambs, bulls, children, men, heretics, infidels, kings,
+ whole nations, are sacrificed to him. The zealous servants of this
+ barbarous God go so far as to believe that they are obliged to offer
+ themselves as a sacrifice to him. Everywhere we see zealots who, after
+ having sadly meditated upon their terrible God, imagine that, in order to
+ please him, they must do themselves all the harm possible, and inflict
+ upon themselves, in his honor, all imaginable torments. In a word,
+ everywhere the baneful ideas of Divinity, far from consoling men for
+ misfortunes incident to their existence, have filled the heart with
+ trouble, and given birth to follies destructive to them. How could the
+ human mind, filled with frightful phantoms and guided by men interested in
+ perpetuating its ignorance and its fear, make progress? Man was compelled
+ to vegetate in his primitive stupidity; he was preserved only by invisible
+ powers, upon whom his fate was supposed to depend. Solely occupied with
+ his alarms and his unintelligible reveries, he was always at the mercy of
+ his priests, who reserved for themselves the right of thinking for him and
+ of regulating his conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus man was, and always remained, a child without experience, a slave
+ without courage, a loggerhead who feared to reason, and who could never
+ escape from the labyrinth into which his ancestors had misled him; he felt
+ compelled to groan under the yoke of his Gods, of whom he knew nothing
+ except the fabulous accounts of their ministers. These, after having
+ fettered him by the ties of opinion, have remained his masters or
+ delivered him up defenseless to the absolute power of tyrants, no less
+ terrible than the Gods, of whom they were the representatives upon the
+ earth. Oppressed by the double yoke of spiritual and temporal power, it
+ was impossible for the people to instruct themselves and to work for their
+ own welfare. Thus, religion, politics, and morals became sanctuaries, into
+ which the profane were not permitted to enter. Men had no other morality
+ than that which their legislators and their priests claimed as descended
+ from unknown empyrean regions. The human mind, perplexed by these
+ theological opinions, misunderstood itself, doubted its own powers,
+ mistrusted experience, feared truth, disdained its reason, and left it to
+ blindly follow authority. Man was a pure machine in the hands of his
+ tyrants and his priests, who alone had the right to regulate his
+ movements. Always treated as a slave, he had at all times and in all
+ places the vices and dispositions of a slave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are the true sources of the corruption of habits, to which religion
+ never opposes anything but ideal and ineffectual obstacles; ignorance and
+ servitude have a tendency to make men wicked and unhappy. Science, reason,
+ liberty, alone can reform them and render them more happy; but everything
+ conspires to blind them and to confirm them in their blindness. The
+ priests deceive them, tyrants corrupt them in order to subjugate them more
+ easily. Tyranny has been, and will always be, the chief source of the
+ depraved morals and habitual calamities of the people. These, almost
+ always fascinated by their religious notions or by metaphysical fictions,
+ instead of looking upon the natural and visible causes of their miseries,
+ attribute their vices to the imperfections of their nature, and their
+ misfortunes to the anger of their Gods; they offer to Heaven vows,
+ sacrifices, and presents, in order to put an end to their misfortunes,
+ which are really due only to the negligence, the ignorance, and to the
+ perversity of their guides, to the folly of their institutions, to their
+ foolish customs, to their false opinions, to their unreasonable laws, and
+ especially to their want of enlightenment. Let the mind be filled early
+ with true ideas; let man's reason be cultivated; let justice govern him;
+ and there will be no need of opposing to his passions the powerless
+ barrier of the fear of Gods. Men will be good when they are well taught,
+ well governed, chastised or censured for the evil, and justly rewarded for
+ the good which they have done to their fellow-citizens. It is idle to
+ pretend to cure mortals of their vices if we do not begin by curing them
+ of their prejudices. It is only by showing them the truth that they can
+ know their best interests and the real motives which will lead them to
+ happiness. Long enough have the instructors of the people fixed their eyes
+ on heaven; let them at last bring them back to the earth. Tired of an
+ incomprehensible theology, of ridiculous fables, of impenetrable
+ mysteries, of puerile ceremonies, let the human mind occupy itself with
+ natural things, intelligible objects, sensible truths, and useful
+ knowledge. Let the vain chimeras which beset the people be dissipated, and
+ very soon rational opinions will fill the minds of those who were believed
+ fated to be always in error. To annihilate religious prejudices, it would
+ be sufficient to show that what is inconceivable to man can not be of any
+ use to him. Does it need, then, anything but simple common sense to
+ perceive that a being most clearly irreconcilable with the notions of
+ mankind, that a cause continually opposed to the effects attributed to
+ him; that a being of whom not a word can be said without falling into
+ contradictions; that a being who, far from explaining the mysteries of the
+ universe, only renders them more inexplicable; that a being to whom for so
+ many centuries men addressed themselves so vainly to obtain their
+ happiness and deliverance from their sufferings; does it need, I say, more
+ than simple common sense to understand that the idea of such a being is an
+ idea without model, and that he is himself evidently not a reasonable
+ being? Does it require more than common sense to feel that there is at
+ least delirium and frenzy in hating and tormenting each other for
+ unintelligible opinions of a being of this kind? Finally, does it not all
+ prove that morality and virtue are totally incompatible with the idea of a
+ God, whose ministers and interpreters have painted him in all countries as
+ the most fantastic, the most unjust, and the most cruel of tyrants, whose
+ pretended wishes are to serve as rules and laws for the inhabitants of the
+ earth? To discover the true principles of morality, men have no need of
+ theology, of revelation, or of Gods; they need but common sense; they have
+ only to look within themselves, to reflect upon their own nature, to
+ consult their obvious interests, to consider the object of society and of
+ each of the members who compose it, and they will easily understand that
+ virtue is an advantage, and that vice is an injury to beings of their
+ species. Let us teach men to be just, benevolent, moderate, and sociable,
+ not because their Gods exact it, but to please men; let us tell them to
+ abstain from vice and from crime, not because they will be punished in
+ another world, but because they will suffer in the present world. There
+ are, says Montesquieu, means to prevent crime, they are sufferings; to
+ change the manners, these are good examples. Truth is simple, error is
+ complicated, uncertain in its gait, full of by-ways; the voice of nature
+ is intelligible, that of falsehood is ambiguous, enigmatical, and
+ mysterious; the road of truth is straight, that of imposture is oblique
+ and dark; this truth, always necessary to man, is felt by all just minds;
+ the lessons of reason are followed by all honest souls; men are unhappy
+ only because they are ignorant; they are ignorant only because everything
+ conspires to prevent them from being enlightened, and they are wicked only
+ because their reason is not sufficiently developed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ COMMON SENSE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Detexit quo dolose Vaticinandi furore sacerdotes mysteria, illis spe
+ ignota, audactur publicant.&mdash;PETRON. SATYR.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I.&mdash;APOLOGUE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is a vast empire governed by a monarch, whose conduct does but
+ confound the minds of his subjects. He desires to be known, loved,
+ respected, and obeyed, but he never shows himself; everything tends to
+ make uncertain the notions which we are able to form about him. The people
+ subjected to his power have only such ideas of the character and the laws
+ of their invisible sovereign as his ministers give them; these suit,
+ however, because they themselves have no idea of their master, for his
+ ways are impenetrable, and his views and his qualities are totally
+ incomprehensible; moreover, his ministers disagree among themselves in
+ regard to the orders which they pretend emanated from the sovereign whose
+ organs they claim to be; they announce them diversely in each province of
+ the empire; they discredit and treat each other as impostors and liars;
+ the decrees and ordinances which they promulgate are obscure; they are
+ enigmas, made not to be understood or divined by the subjects for whose
+ instruction they were intended. The laws of the invisible monarch need
+ interpreters, but those who explain them are always quarreling among
+ themselves about the true way of understanding them; more than this, they
+ do not agree among themselves; all which they relate of their hidden
+ prince is but a tissue of contradictions, scarcely a single word that is
+ not contradicted at once. He is called supremely good, nevertheless not a
+ person but complains of his decrees. He is supposed to be infinitely wise,
+ and in his administration everything seems contrary to reason and good
+ sense. They boast of his justice, and the best of his subjects are
+ generally the least favored. We are assured that he sees everything, yet
+ his presence remedies nothing. It is said that he is the friend of order,
+ and everything in his universe is in a state of confusion and disorder;
+ all is created by him, yet events rarely happen according to his projects.
+ He foresees everything, but his foresight prevents nothing. He is
+ impatient if any offend him; at the same time he puts every one in the way
+ of offending him. His knowledge is admired in the perfection of his works,
+ but his works are full of imperfections, and of little permanence. He is
+ continually occupied in creating and destroying, then repairing what he
+ has done, never appearing to be satisfied with his work. In all his
+ enterprises he seeks but his own glory, but he does not succeed in being
+ glorified. He works but for the good of his subjects, and most of them
+ lack the necessities of life. Those whom he seems to favor, are generally
+ those who are the least satisfied with their fate; we see them all
+ continually revolting against a master whose greatness they admire, whose
+ wisdom they extol, whose goodness they worship, and whose justice they
+ fear, revering orders which they never follow. This empire is the world;
+ its monarch is God; His ministers are the priests; their subjects are men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II.&mdash;WHAT IS THEOLOGY?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is a science which has for its object only incomprehensible things.
+ Unlike all others, it occupies itself but with things unseen. Hobbes calls
+ it "the kingdom of darkness." In this land all obey laws opposed to those
+ which men acknowledge in the world they inhabit. In this marvelous region
+ light is but darkness, evidence becomes doubtful or false, the impossible
+ becomes credible, reason is an unfaithful guide, and common sense changed
+ into delirium. This science is named Theology, and this Theology is a
+ continual insult to human reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By frequent repetition of if, but, and perhaps, we succeed in forming an
+ imperfect and broken system which perplexes men's minds to the extent of
+ making them forget the clearest notions, and to render uncertain the most
+ palpable truths. By the aid of this systematic nonsense, all nature has
+ become an inexplicable enigma for man; the visible world has disappeared
+ to give place to invisible regions; reason is obliged to give place to
+ imagination, which can lead us only to the land of chimeras which she
+ herself has invented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV.&mdash;MAN BORN NEITHER RELIGIOUS NOR DEISTICAL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All religious principles are founded upon the idea of a God, but it is
+ impossible for men to have true ideas of a being who does not act upon any
+ one of their senses. All our ideas are but pictures of objects which
+ strike us. What can the idea of God represent to us when it is evidently
+ an idea without an object? Is not such an idea as impossible as an effect
+ without a cause? An idea without a prototype, is it anything but a
+ chimera? Some theologians, however, assure us that the idea of God is
+ innate, or that men have this idea from the time of their birth. Every
+ principle is a judgment; all judgment is the effect of experience;
+ experience is not acquired but by the exercise of the senses: from which
+ it follows that religious principles are drawn from nothing, and are not
+ innate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V.&mdash;IT IS NOT NECESSARY TO BELIEVE IN A GOD, AND THE MOST REASONABLE
+ THING IS NOT TO THINK OF HIM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ No religious system can be founded otherwise than upon the nature of God
+ and of men, and upon the relations they bear to each other. But, in order
+ to judge of the reality of these relations, we must have some idea of the
+ Divine nature. But everybody tells us that the essence of God is
+ incomprehensible to man; at the same time they do not hesitate to assign
+ attributes to this incomprehensible God, and assure us that man can not
+ dispense with a knowledge of this God so impossible to conceive of. The
+ most important thing for men is that which is the most impossible for them
+ to comprehend. If God is incomprehensible to man, it would seem rational
+ never to think of Him at all; but religion concludes that man is criminal
+ if he ceases for a moment to revere Him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI.&mdash;RELIGION IS FOUNDED UPON CREDULITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are told that Divine qualities are not of a nature to be grasped by
+ limited minds. The natural consequence of this principle ought to be that
+ the Divine qualities are not made to employ limited minds; but religion
+ assures us that limited minds should never lose sight of this
+ inconceivable being, whose qualities can not be grasped by them: from
+ which we see that religion is the art of occupying limited minds with that
+ which is impossible for them to comprehend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII.&mdash;EVERY RELIGION IS AN ABSURDITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Religion unites man with God or puts them in communication; but do you say
+ that God is infinite? If God is infinite, no finite being can have
+ communication or any relation with Him. Where there are no relations,
+ there can be no union, no correspondence, no duties. If there are no
+ duties between man and his God, there exists no religion for man. Thus by
+ saying that God is infinite, you annihilate, from that moment, all
+ religion for man, who is a finite being. The idea of infinity is for us in
+ idea without model, without prototype, without object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII.&mdash;THE NOTION OF GOD IS IMPOSSIBLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If God is an infinite being, there can be neither in the actual world or
+ in another any proportion between man and his God; thus the idea of God
+ will never enter the human mind. In the supposition of a life where men
+ will be more enlightened than in this one, the infinity of God will always
+ place such a distance between his idea and the limited mind of man, that
+ he will not be able to conceive of God any more in a future life than in
+ the present. Hence, it evidently follows that the idea of God will not be
+ better suited to man in the other life than in the present. God is not
+ made for man; it follows also that intelligences superior to man&mdash;such
+ as angels, archangels, seraphims, and saints&mdash;can have no more
+ complete notions of God than has man, who does not understand anything
+ about Him here below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX.&mdash;ORIGIN OF SUPERSTITION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ How is it that we have succeeded in persuading reasonable beings that the
+ thing most impossible to understand was the most essential for them. It is
+ because they were greatly frightened; it is because when men are kept in
+ fear they cease to reason; it is because they have been expressly enjoined
+ to distrust their reason. When the brain is troubled, we believe
+ everything and examine nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X.&mdash;ORIGIN OF ALL RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Ignorance and fear are the two pivots of all religion. The uncertainty
+ attending man's relation to his God is precisely the motive which attaches
+ him to his religion. Man is afraid when in darkness&mdash;physical or
+ moral. His fear is habitual to him and becomes a necessity; he would
+ believe that he lacked something if he had nothing to fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI.&mdash;IN THE NAME OF RELIGION CHARLATANS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE
+ WEAKNESS OF MEN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ He who from his childhood has had a habit of trembling every time he heard
+ certain words, needs these words, and needs to tremble. In this way he is
+ more disposed to listen to the one who encourages his fears than to the
+ one who would dispel his fears. The superstitious man wants to be afraid;
+ his imagination demands it. It seems that he fears nothing more than
+ having no object to fear. Men are imaginary patients, whom interested
+ charlatans take care to encourage in their weakness, in order to have a
+ market for their remedies. Physicians who order a great number of remedies
+ are more listened to than those who recommend a good regimen, and who
+ leave nature to act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII.&mdash;RELIGION ENTICES IGNORANCE BY THE AID OF THE MARVELOUS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If religion was clear, it would have fewer attractions for the ignorant.
+ They need obscurity, mysteries, fables, miracles, incredible things, which
+ keep their brains perpetually at work. Romances, idle stories, tales of
+ ghosts and witches, have more charms for the vulgar than true narrations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the matter of religion, men are but overgrown children. The more absurd
+ a religion is, and the fuller of marvels, the more power it exerts; the
+ devotee thinks himself obliged to place no limits to his credulity; the
+ more inconceivable things are, the more divine they appear to him; the
+ more incredible they are, the more merit he gives himself for believing
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIV.&mdash;THERE WOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN ANY RELIGION IF THERE HAD NEVER
+ BEEN ANY DARK AND BARBAROUS AGES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The origin of religious opinions dates, as a general thing, from the time
+ when savage nations were yet in a state of infancy. It was to coarse,
+ ignorant, and stupid men that the founders of religion addressed
+ themselves in all ages, in order to present them with Gods, ceremonies,
+ histories of fabulous Divinities, marvelous and terrible fables. These
+ chimeras, adopted without examination by the fathers, have been
+ transmitted with more or less changes to their polished children, who
+ often do not reason more than their fathers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XV.&mdash;ALL RELIGION WAS BORN OF THE DESIRE TO DOMINATE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The first legislators of nations had for their object to dominate, The
+ easiest means of succeeding was to frighten the people and to prevent them
+ from reasoning; they led them by tortuous paths in order that they should
+ not perceive the designs of their guides; they compelled them to look into
+ the air, for fear they should look to their feet; they amused them upon
+ the road by stories; in a word, they treated them in the way of nurses,
+ who employ songs and menaces to put the children to sleep, or to force
+ them to be quiet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVI.&mdash;THAT WHICH SERVES AS A BASIS FOR ALL RELIGION IS VERY
+ UNCERTAIN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The existence of a God is the basis of all religion. Few people seem to
+ doubt this existence, but this fundamental principle is precisely the one
+ which prevents every mind from reasoning. The first question of every
+ catechism was, and will always be, the most difficult one to answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVII.&mdash;IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO BE CONVINCED OF THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Can one honestly say that he is convinced of the existence of a being
+ whose nature is not known, who remains inaccessible to all our senses, and
+ of whose qualities we are constantly assured that they are
+ incomprehensible to us? In order to persuade me that a being exists, or
+ can exist, he must begin by telling me what this being is; in order to
+ make me believe the existence or the possibility of such a being, he must
+ tell me things about him which are not contradictory, and which do not
+ destroy one another; finally, in order to convince me fully of the
+ existence of this being, he must tell me things about him which I can
+ comprehend, and prove to me that it is impossible that the being to whom
+ he attributes these qualities does not exist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVIII.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A thing is impossible when it is composed of two ideas so antagonistic,
+ that we can not think of them at the same time. Evidence can be relied on
+ only when confirmed by the constant testimony of our senses, which alone
+ give birth to ideas, and enable us to judge of their conformity or of
+ their incompatibility. That which exists necessarily, is that of which the
+ non-existence would imply contradiction. These principles, universally
+ recognized, are at fault when the question of the existence of God is
+ considered; what has been said of Him is either unintelligible or
+ perfectly contradictory; and for this reason must appear impossible to
+ every man of common sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIX.&mdash;THE EXISTENCE OF GOD IS NOT PROVED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All human intelligences are more or less enlightened and cultivated. By
+ what fatality is it that the science of God has never been explained? The
+ most civilized nations and the most profound thinkers are of the same
+ opinion in regard to the matter as the most barbarous nations and the most
+ ignorant and rustic people. As we examine the subject more closely, we
+ will find that the science of divinity by means of reveries and subtleties
+ has but obscured it more and more. Thus far, all religion has been founded
+ on what is called in logic, a "begging of the question;" it supposes
+ freely, and then proves, finally, by the suppositions it has made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XX.&mdash;TO SAY THAT GOD IS A SPIRIT, IS TO SPEAK WITHOUT SAYING ANYTHING
+ AT ALL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By metaphysics, God is made a pure spirit, but has modern theology
+ advanced one step further than the theology of the barbarians? They
+ recognized a grand spirit as master of the world. The barbarians, like all
+ ignorant men, attribute to spirits all the effects of which their
+ inexperience prevents them from discovering the true causes. Ask a
+ barbarian what causes your watch to move, he will answer, "a spirit!" Ask
+ our philosophers what moves the universe, they will tell you "it is a
+ spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXI.&mdash;SPIRITUALITY IS A CHIMERA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The barbarian, when he speaks of a spirit, attaches at least some sense to
+ this word; he understands by it an agent similar to the wind, to the
+ agitated air, to the breath, which produces, invisibly, effects that we
+ perceive. By subtilizing, the modern theologian becomes as little
+ intelligible to himself as to others. Ask him what he means by a spirit?
+ He will answer, that it is an unknown substance, which is perfectly
+ simple, which has nothing tangible, nothing in common with matter. In good
+ faith, is there any mortal who can form the least idea of such a
+ substance? A spirit in the language of modern theology is then but an
+ absence of ideas. The idea of spirituality is another idea without a
+ model.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXII.&mdash;ALL WHICH EXISTS SPRINGS FROM THE BOSOM OF MATTER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Is it not more natural and more intelligible to deduce all which exists,
+ from the bosom of matter, whose existence is demonstrated by all our
+ senses, whose effects we feel at every moment, which we see act, move,
+ communicate, motion, and constantly bring living beings into existence,
+ than to attribute the formation of things to an unknown force, to a
+ spiritual being, who can not draw from his ground that which he has not
+ himself, and who, by the spiritual essence claimed for him, is incapable
+ of making anything, and of putting anything in motion? Nothing is plainer
+ than that they would have us believe that an intangible spirit can act
+ upon matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIII.&mdash;WHAT IS THE METAPHYSICAL GOD OF MODERN THEOLOGY?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The material Jupiter of the ancients could move, build up, destroy, and
+ propagate beings similar to himself; but the God of modern theology is a
+ sterile being. According to his supposed nature he can neither occupy any
+ place, nor move matter, nor produce a visible world, nor propagate either
+ men or Gods. The metaphysical God is a workman without hands; he is able
+ but to produce clouds, suspicions, reveries, follies, and quarrels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIV.&mdash;IT WOULD BE MORE RATIONAL TO WORSHIP THE SUN THAN A SPIRITUAL
+ GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Since it was necessary for men to have a God, why did they not have the
+ sun, the visible God, adored by so many nations? What being had more right
+ to the homage of mortals than the star of the day, which gives light and
+ heat; which invigorates all beings; whose presence reanimates and
+ rejuvenates nature; whose absence seems to plunge her into sadness and
+ languor? If some being bestowed upon men power, activity, benevolence,
+ strength, it was no doubt the sun, which should be recognized as the
+ father of nature, as the soul of the world, as Divinity. At least one
+ could not without folly dispute his existence, or refuse to recognize his
+ influence and his benefits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXV.&mdash;A SPIRITUAL GOD IS INCAPABLE OF WILLING AND OF ACTING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The theologian tells us that God does not need hands or arms to act, and
+ that He acts by His will alone. But what is this God who has a will? And
+ what can be the subject of this divine will? Is it more ridiculous or more
+ difficult to believe in fairies, in sylphs, in ghosts, in witches, in
+ were-wolfs, than to believe in the magical or impossible action of the
+ spirit upon the body? As soon as we admit of such a God, there are no
+ longer fables or visions which can not be believed. The theologians treat
+ men like children, who never cavil about the possibilities of the tales
+ which they listen to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVI.&mdash;WHAT IS GOD?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To unsettle the existence of a God, it is only necessary to ask a
+ theologian to speak of Him; as soon as he utters one word about Him, the
+ least reflection makes us discover at once that what he says is
+ incompatible with the essence which he attributes to his God. Therefore,
+ what is God? It is an abstract word, coined to designate the hidden forces
+ of nature; or, it is a mathematical point, which has neither length,
+ breadth, nor thickness. A philosopher [David Hume] has very ingeniously
+ said in speaking of theologians, that they have found the solution to the
+ famous problem of Archimedes; a point in the heavens from which they move
+ the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVII.&mdash;REMARKABLE CONTRADICTIONS OF THEOLOGY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Religion puts men on their knees before a being without extension, and
+ who, notwithstanding, is infinite, and fills all space with his immensity;
+ before an almighty being, who never executes that which he desires; before
+ a being supremely good, and who causes but displeasure; before a being,
+ the friend of order, and in whose government everything is in disorder.
+ After all this, let us conjecture what this God of theology is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVIII.&mdash;TO ADORE GOD IS TO ADORE A FICTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In order to avoid all embarrassment, they tell us that it is not necessary
+ to know what God is; that we must adore without knowing; that it is not
+ permitted us to turn an eye of temerity upon His attributes. But if we
+ must adore a God without knowing Him, should we not be assured that He
+ exists? Moreover, how be assured that He exists without having examined
+ whether it is possible that the diverse qualities claimed for Him, meet in
+ Him? In truth, to adore God is to adore nothing but fictions of one's own
+ brain, or rather, it is to adore nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIX.&mdash;THE INFINITY OF GOD AND THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF KNOWING THE
+ DIVINE ESSENCE, OCCASIONS AND JUSTIFIES ATHEISM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Without doubt the more to perplex matters, theologians have chosen to say
+ nothing about what their God is; they tell us what He is not. By negations
+ and abstractions they imagine themselves composing a real and perfect
+ being, while there can result from it but a being of human reason. A
+ spirit has no body; an infinite being is a being which is not finite; a
+ perfect being is a being which is not imperfect. Can any one form any real
+ notions of such a multitude of deficiencies or absence of ideas? That
+ which excludes all idea, can it be anything but nothingness? To pretend
+ that the divine attributes are beyond the understanding of the human mind
+ is to render God unfit for men. If we are assured that God is infinite, we
+ admit that there can be nothing in common between Him and His creatures.
+ To say that God is infinite, is to destroy Him for men, or at least render
+ Him useless to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God, we are told, created men intelligent, but He did not create them
+ omniscient: that is to say, capable of knowing all things. We conclude
+ that He was not able to endow him with intelligence sufficient to
+ understand the divine essence. In this case it is demonstrated that God
+ has neither the power nor the wish to be known by men. By what right could
+ this God become angry with beings whose own essence makes it impossible to
+ have any idea of the divine essence? God would evidently be the most
+ unjust and the most unaccountable of tyrants if He should punish an
+ atheist for not knowing that which his nature made it impossible for him
+ to know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXX.&mdash;IT IS NEITHER LESS NOR MORE CRIMINAL TO BELIEVE IN GOD THAN NOT
+ TO BELIEVE IN HIM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For the generality of men nothing renders an argument more convincing than
+ fear. In consequence of this fact, theologians tell us that the safest
+ side must be taken; that nothing is more criminal than incredulity; that
+ God will punish without mercy all those who have the temerity to doubt His
+ existence; that His severity is just; since it is only madness or
+ perversity which questions the existence of an angry monarch who revenges
+ himself cruelly upon atheists. If we examine these menaces calmly, we
+ shall find that they assume always the thing in question. They must
+ commence by proving to our satisfaction the existence of a God, before
+ telling us that it is safer to believe, and that it is horrible to doubt
+ or to deny it. Then they must prove that it is possible for a just God to
+ punish men cruelly for having been in a state of madness, which prevented
+ them from believing in the existence of a being whom their enlightened
+ reason could not comprehend. In a word, they must prove that a God that is
+ said to be full of equity, could punish beyond measure the invincible and
+ necessary ignorance of man, caused by his relation to the divine essence.
+ Is not the theologians' manner of reasoning very singular? They create
+ phantoms, they fill them with contradictions, and finally assure us that
+ the safest way is not to doubt the existence of those phantoms, which they
+ have themselves invented. By following out this method, there is no
+ absurdity which it would not be safer to believe than not to believe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All children are atheists&mdash;they have no idea of God; are they, then,
+ criminal on account of this ignorance? At what age do they begin to be
+ obliged to believe in God? It is, you say, at the age of reason. At what
+ time does this age begin? Besides, if the most profound theologians lose
+ themselves in the divine essence, which they boast of not comprehending,
+ what ideas can common people have?&mdash;women, mechanics, and, in short,
+ those who compose the mass of the human race?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXI.&mdash;THE BELIEF IN GOD IS NOTHING BUT A MECHANICAL HABITUDE OF
+ CHILDHOOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Men believe in God only upon the word of those who have no more idea of
+ Him than they themselves. Our nurses are our first theologians; they talk
+ to children of God as they talk to them of were-wolfs; they teach them
+ from the most tender age to join the hands mechanically. Have the nurses
+ clearer notions of God than the children, whom they compel to pray to Him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXII.&mdash;IT IS A PREJUDICE WHICH HAS BEEN HANDED FROM FATHER TO
+ CHILDREN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Religion is handed down from fathers to children as the property of a
+ family with the burdens. Very few people in the world would have a God if
+ care had not been taken to give them one. Each one receives from his
+ parents and his instructors the God which they themselves have received
+ from theirs; only, according to his own temperament, each one arranges,
+ modifies, and paints Him agreeably to his taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXIII.&mdash;ORIGIN OF PREJUDICES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The brain of man is, especially in infancy, like a soft wax, ready to
+ receive all the impressions we wish to make on it; education furnishes
+ nearly all his opinions, at a period when he is incapable of judging for
+ himself. We believe that the ideas, true or false, which at a tender age
+ were forced into our heads, were received from nature at our birth; and
+ this persuasion is one of the greatest sources of our errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXIV.&mdash;HOW THEY TAKE ROOT AND SPREAD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Prejudice tends to confirm in us the opinions of those who are charged
+ with our instruction. We believe them more skillful than we are; we
+ suppose them thoroughly convinced themselves of the things they teach us.
+ We have the greatest confidence in them. After the care they have taken of
+ us when we were unable to assist ourselves, we judge them incapable of
+ deceiving us. These are the motives which make us adopt a thousand errors
+ without other foundation than the dangerous word of those who have
+ educated us; even the being forbidden to reason upon what they tell us,
+ does not diminish our confidence, but contributes often to increase our
+ respect for their opinions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXV.&mdash;MEN WOULD NEVER HAVE BELIEVED IN THE PRINCIPLES OF MODERN
+ THEOLOGY IF THEY HAD NOT BEEN TAUGHT AT AN AGE WHEN THEY WERE INCAPABLE OF
+ REASONING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The instructors of the human race act very prudently in teaching men their
+ religious principles before they are able to distinguish the true from the
+ false, or the left hand from the right. It would be as difficult to tame
+ the spirit of a man forty years old with the extravagant notions which are
+ given us of Divinity, as to banish these notions from the head of a man
+ who has imbibed them since his tenderest infancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXVI.&mdash;THE WONDERS OF NATURE DO NOT PROVE THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are assured that the wonders of nature are sufficient to a belief in
+ the existence of a God, and to convince us fully of this important truth.
+ But how many persons are there in this world who have the leisure, the
+ capacity, the necessary taste, to contemplate nature and to meditate upon
+ its progress? The majority of men pay no attention to it. A peasant is not
+ at all moved by the beauty of the sun, which he sees every day. The sailor
+ is not surprised by the regular movements of the ocean; he will draw from
+ them no theological inductions. The phenomena of nature do not prove the
+ existence of a God, except to a few forewarned men, to whom has been shown
+ in advance the finger of God in all the objects whose mechanism could
+ embarrass them. The unprejudiced philosopher sees nothing in the wonders
+ of nature but permanent and invariable law; nothing but the necessary
+ effects of different combinations of diversified substance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXVII.&mdash;THE WONDERS OF NATURE EXPLAIN THEMSELVES BY NATURAL CAUSES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Is there anything more surprising than the logic of so many profound
+ doctors, who, instead of acknowledging the little light they have upon
+ natural agencies, seek outside of nature&mdash;that is to say, in
+ imaginary regions&mdash;an agent less understood than this nature, of
+ which they can at least form some idea? To say that God is the author of
+ the phenomena that we see, is it not attributing them to an occult cause?
+ What is God? What is a spirit? They are causes of which we have no idea.
+ Sages! study nature and her laws; and when you can from them unravel the
+ action of natural causes, do not go in search of supernatural causes,
+ which, very far from enlightening your ideas, will but entangle them more
+ and more and make it impossible for you to understand yourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXVIII&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Nature, you say, is totally inexplicable without a God; that is to say, in
+ order to explain what you understand so little, you need a cause which you
+ do not understand at all. You pretend to make clear that which is obscure,
+ by magnifying its obscurity. You think you have untied a knot by
+ multiplying knots. Enthusiastic philosophers, in order to prove to us the
+ existence of a God, you copy complete treatises on botany; you enter into
+ minute details of the parts of the human body; you ascend into the air to
+ contemplate the revolutions of the stars; you return then to earth to
+ admire the course of the waters; you fly into ecstasies over butterflies,
+ insects, polyps, organized atoms, in which you think to find the greatness
+ of your God; all these things will not prove the existence of this God;
+ they will only prove that you have not the ideas which you should have of
+ the immense variety of causes and effects that can produce the infinitely
+ diversified combinations, of which the universe is the assemblage. This
+ will prove that you ignore nature, that you have no idea of her resources
+ when you judge her incapable of producing a multitude of forms and beings,
+ of which your eyes, even by the aid of the microscope, see but the least
+ part; finally, this will prove, that not being able to know the sensible
+ and comprehensible agents, you find it easier to have recourse to a word,
+ by which you designate an agent, of whom it will always be impossible for
+ you to form any true idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXIX.&mdash;THE WORLD HAS NOT BEEN CREATED, AND MATTER MOVES BY ITSELF.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ They tell us gravely that there is no effect without a cause; they repeat
+ to us very often that the world did not create itself. But the universe is
+ a cause, not an effect; it is not a work, has not been made, because it
+ was impossible that it should be made. The world has always been, its
+ existence is necessary. It is the cause of itself. Nature, whose essence
+ is visibly acting and producing, in order to fulfill her functions, as we
+ see she does, needs no invisible motor far more unknown than herself.
+ Matter moves by its own energy, by the necessary result of its
+ heterogeneity; the diversity of its movements or of its ways of acting,
+ constitute only the diversity of substances; we distinguish one being from
+ another but by the diversity of the impressions or movements which they
+ communicate to our organs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XL.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ You see that everything in nature is in a state of activity, and you
+ pretend that nature of itself is dead and without energy! You believe that
+ all this, acting of itself, has need of a motor! Well! who is this motor?
+ It is a spirit, that is to say, an absolutely incomprehensible and
+ contradictory being. Conclude then, I say to you, that matter acts of
+ itself, and cease to reason about your spiritual motor, which has nothing
+ that is necessary to put it into motion. Return from your useless
+ excursions; come down from an imaginary into a real world; take hold of
+ second causes; leave to theologians their "First Cause," of which nature
+ has no need in order to produce all the effects which you see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLI.&mdash;OTHER PROOFS THAT MOTION IS IN THE ESSENCE OF MATTER, AND THAT
+ IT IS NOT NECESSARY TO SUPPOSE A SPIRITUAL MOTOR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is but by the diversity of impressions or of effects which substances
+ or bodies make upon us, that we feel them, that we have perceptions and
+ ideas of them, that we distinguish them one from another, that we assign
+ to them peculiarities. Moreover, in order to perceive or to feel an
+ object, this object must act upon our organs; this object can not act upon
+ us without exciting some motion in us; it can not produce any motion in us
+ if it is not itself in motion. As soon as I see an object, my eyes must be
+ struck by it; I can not conceive of light and of vision without a motion
+ in the luminous, extended, and colored body which communicates itself to
+ my eye, or which acts upon my retina. As soon as I smell a body, my
+ olfactory nerve must be irritated or put into motion by the parts exhaled
+ from an odorous body. As soon as I hear a sound, the tympanum of my ear
+ must be struck by the air put in motion by a sonorous body, which could
+ not act if it was not moved of itself. From which it follows, evidently,
+ that without motion I can neither feel, see, distinguish, compare, nor
+ judge the body, nor even occupy my thought with any matter whatever. It is
+ said in the schools, that the essence of a being is that from which flow
+ all the properties of that being. Now then, it is evident that all the
+ properties of bodies or of substances of which we have ideas, are due to
+ the motion which alone informs us of their existence, and gives us the
+ first conceptions of it. I can not be informed or assured of my own
+ existence but by the motions which I experience within myself. I am
+ compelled to conclude that motion is as essential to matter as its
+ extension, and that it can not be conceived of without it. If one persists
+ in caviling about the evidences which prove to us that motion is an
+ essential property of matter, he must at least acknowledge that substances
+ which seemed dead or deprived of all energy, take motion of themselves as
+ soon as they are brought within the proper distance to act upon each
+ other. Pyrophorus, when enclosed in a bottle or deprived of contact with
+ the air, can not take fire by itself, but it burns as soon as exposed to
+ the air. Flour and water cause fermentation as soon as they are mixed.
+ Thus dead substances engender motion of themselves. Matter has then the
+ power to move itself, and nature, in order to act, does not need a motor
+ whose essence would hinder its activity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLII.&mdash;THE EXISTENCE OF MAN DOES NOT PROVE THAT OF GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Whence comes man? What is his origin? Is he the result of the fortuitous
+ meeting of atoms? Was the first man formed of the dust of the earth? I do
+ not know! Man appears to me to be a production of nature like all others
+ she embraces. I should be just as much embarrassed to tell you whence came
+ the first stones, the first trees, the first elephants, the first ants,
+ the first acorns, as to explain the origin of the human species.
+ Recognize, we are told, the hand of God, of an infinitely intelligent and
+ powerful workman, in a work so wonderful as the human machine. I would
+ admit without question that the human machine appears to me surprising;
+ but since man exists in nature, I do not believe it right to say that his
+ formation is beyond the forces of nature. I will add, that I could
+ conceive far less of the formation of the human machine, when to explain
+ it to me they tell me that a pure spirit, who has neither eyes, nor feet,
+ nor hands, nor head, nor lungs, nor mouth, nor breath, has made man by
+ taking a little dust and blowing upon it. The savage inhabitants of
+ Paraguay pretend to be descended from the moon, and appear to us as
+ simpletons; the theologians of Europe pretend to be descended from a pure
+ spirit. Is this pretension more sensible?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man is intelligent, hence it is concluded that he must be the work of an
+ intelligent being, and not of a nature devoid of intelligence. Although
+ nothing is more rare than to see man use this intelligence, of which he
+ appears so proud, I will admit that he is intelligent, that his
+ necessities develop in him this faculty, that the society of other men
+ contributes especially to cultivate it. But in the human machine and in
+ the intelligence with which it is endowed, I see nothing that shows in a
+ precise manner the infinite intelligence of the workman who has the honor
+ of making it. I see that this admirable machine is subject to derangement;
+ that at that time this wonderful intelligence is disordered, and sometimes
+ totally disappears; from this I conclude that human intelligence depends
+ upon a certain disposition of the material organs of the body, and that,
+ because man is an intelligent being, it is not well to conclude that God
+ must be an intelligent being, any more than because man is material, we
+ are compelled to conclude that God is material. The intelligence of man no
+ more proves the intelligence of God than the malice of men proves the
+ malice of this God, of whom they pretend that man is the work. In whatever
+ way theology is taken, God will always be a cause contradicted by its
+ effects, or of whom it is impossible to judge by His works. We shall
+ always see evil, imperfections, and follies resulting from a cause claimed
+ to be full of goodness, of perfections, and of wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLIII.&mdash;HOWEVER, NEITHER MAN NOR THE UNIVERSE IS THE EFFECT OF
+ CHANCE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Then you will say that intelligent man and even the universe and all it
+ encloses, are the effects of chance. No, I answer, the universe is not an
+ effect; it is the cause of all effects; all the beings it embraces are the
+ necessary effects of this cause which sometimes shows to us its manner of
+ acting, out which often hides from us its way. Men may use the word
+ "chance" to cover their ignorance of the true causes; nevertheless,
+ although they may ignore them, these causes act, but by certain laws.
+ There is no effect without a cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nature is a word which we make use of to designate the immense assemblage
+ of beings, diverse substances, infinite combinations, and all the various
+ motions which we see. All bodies, whether organized or not organized, are
+ the necessary results of certain causes, made to produce necessarily the
+ effects which we see. Nothing in nature can be made by chance; all follow
+ fixed laws; these laws are but the necessary union of certain effects with
+ their causes. An atom of matter does not meet another atom by accident or
+ by hazard; this rencounter is due to permanent laws, which cause each
+ being to act by necessity as it does, and can not act otherwise under the
+ same circumstances. To speak about the accidental coming together of
+ atoms, or to attribute any effects to chance, is to say nothing, if not to
+ ignore the laws by which bodies act, meet, combine, or separate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything is made by chance for those who do not understand nature, the
+ properties of beings, and the effects which must necessarily result from
+ the concurrence of certain causes. It is not chance that has placed the
+ sun in the center of our planetary system; it is by its very essence, the
+ substance of which it is composed, that it occupies this place, and from
+ thence diffuses itself to invigorate the beings who live in these planets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLIV.&mdash;NEITHER DOES THE ORDER OF THE UNIVERSE PROVE THE EXISTENCE OF
+ A GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The worshipers of a God find, especially in the order of the universe, an
+ invincible proof of the existence of an intelligent and wise being who
+ rules it. But this order is only a result of motions necessarily brought
+ on by causes or by circumstances which are sometimes favorable and
+ sometimes injurious to ourselves; we approve the former and find fault
+ with the latter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nature follows constantly the same progress; that is to say, the same
+ causes produce the same effects, as long as their action is not
+ interrupted by other causes which occasion the first ones to produce
+ different effects. When the causes, whose effects we feel, are interrupted
+ in their action by causes which, although unknown to us, are no less
+ natural and necessary, we are stupefied, we cry out miracles: and we
+ attribute them to a cause far less known than all those we see operating
+ before us. The universe is always in order; there can be no disorder for
+ it. Our organization alone is suffering if we complain about disorder.
+ Bodies, causes, beings, which this world embraces, act necessarily in the
+ manner in which we see them act, whether we approve or disapprove their
+ action. Earthquakes, volcanoes, inundations, contagions, and famines are
+ effects as necessary in the order of nature as the fall of heavy bodies,
+ as the course of rivers, as the periodical movements of the seas, the
+ blowing of the winds, the abundant rains, and the favorable effects for
+ which we praise and thank Providence for its blessings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be astonished that a certain order reigns in the world, is to be
+ surprised to see the same causes constantly producing the same effects. To
+ be shocked at seeing disorder, is to forget that the causes being changed
+ or disturbed in their action, the effects can no longer be the same. To be
+ astonished to see order in nature, is to be astonished that anything can
+ exist; it is to be surprised at one's own existence. What is order for one
+ being, is disorder for another. All wicked beings find that everything is
+ in order when they can with impunity put everything into disorder; they
+ find, on the contrary, that everything is in disorder when they are
+ prevented from exercising their wickedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLV.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Supposing God to be the author and the motor of nature, there could be no
+ disorder relating to Him; all causes which He would have made would
+ necessarily act according to their properties the essences and the
+ impulsions that He had endowed them with. If God should change the
+ ordinary course of things, He would not be immutable. If the order of the
+ universe&mdash;in which we believe we see the most convincing proof of His
+ existence, of His intelligence, His power, and His goodness&mdash;should
+ be inconsistent, His existence might be doubted; or He might be accused at
+ least of inconstancy, of inability, of want of foresight, and of wisdom in
+ the first arrangement of things; we would have a right to accuse Him of
+ blundering in His choice of agents and instruments. Finally, if the order
+ of nature proves the power and the intelligence, disorder ought to prove
+ the weakness, inconstancy, and irrationality of Divinity. You say that God
+ is everywhere; that He fills all space; that nothing was made without Him;
+ that matter could not act without Him as its motor. But in this case you
+ admit that your God is the author of disorder; that it is He who deranges
+ nature; that He is the Father of confusion; that He is in man; and that He
+ moves man at the moment when he sins. If God is everywhere, He is in me;
+ He acts with me; He is deceived when I am deceived; He questions with me
+ the existence of God; He offends God with me. Oh, theologians! you never
+ understand yourselves when you speak of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLVI.&mdash;A PURE SPIRIT CAN NOT BE INTELLIGENT, AND TO ADORE A DIVINE
+ INTELLIGENCE IS A CHIMERA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To be what we call intelligent, we must have ideas, thoughts, will; to
+ have ideas, thoughts, and will, we must have organs; to have organs, we
+ must have a body; to act upon bodies, we must have a body; to experience
+ trouble, we must be capable of suffering; from which it evidently follows
+ that a pure spirit can not be intelligent, and can not be affected by that
+ which takes place in the universe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Divine intelligence, divine ideas, divine views, you say, have nothing in
+ common with those of men. So much the better! But in this case, how can
+ men judge of these views&mdash;whether good or evil&mdash;reason about
+ these ideas, or admire this intelligence? It would be to judge, to admire,
+ to adore that of which we can form no idea. To adore the profound views of
+ divine wisdom, is it not to worship that of which it is impossible for us
+ to judge? To admire these same views, is it not admiring without knowing
+ wry? Admiration is always the daughter of ignorance. Men admire and
+ worship only what they do not understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0050" id="link2H_4_0050">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLVII.&mdash;ALL THE QUALITIES WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES TO ITS GOD ARE
+ CONTRARY TO THE VERY ESSENCE WHICH IT SUPPOSES HIM TO HAVE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All these qualities which are given to God are not suited to a being who,
+ by His own essence, is devoid of all similarity to human beings. It is
+ true, they think to find this similarity by exaggerating the human
+ qualities with which they have clothed Divinity; they thrust them upon the
+ infinite, and from that moment cease to understand themselves. What is the
+ result of this combination of man with God, or of this theanthropy? Its
+ only result is a chimera, of which nothing can be affirmed without causing
+ the phantom to vanish which they had taken so much trouble to conjure up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dante, in his poem of Paradise, relates that the Divinity appeared to him
+ under the figure of three circles, which formed an iris, whose bright
+ colors arose from each other; but having wished to retain its brilliant
+ light, the poet saw only his own face. In worshiping God, man adores
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLVIII.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The slightest reflection suffices to prove to us that God can not have any
+ of the human qualities, virtues, or perfections. Our virtues and our
+ perfections are the results of our temperament modified. Has God a
+ temperament like ours? Our good qualities are our habits relative to the
+ beings in whose society we live. God, according to you, is a solitary
+ being. God has no one like Him; He does not live in society; He has no
+ need of any one; He enjoys a happiness which nothing can alter. Admit,
+ then, upon your own principles, that God can not possess what we call
+ virtues, and that man can not be virtuous in regard to Him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0052" id="link2H_4_0052">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLIX.&mdash;IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT THE HUMAN RACE IS THE OBJECT AND THE
+ END OF CREATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Man, charmed with his own merits, imagines that it is but his own kind
+ that God proposed as the object and the end in the formation of the
+ universe. Upon what is this so flattering opinion based? It is, we are
+ told, upon this: that man is the only being endowed with an intelligence
+ which enables him to know the Divine nature, and to render to it homage
+ worthy of it. We are assured that God created the world for His own glory,
+ and that the human race was included in His plan, in order that He might
+ have somebody to admire and glorify Him in His works. But by these
+ intentions has not God visibly missed His end?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. According to you, it would always be impossible for man to know his
+ God, and he would be kept in the most invincible ignorance of the Divine
+ essence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. A being who has no equals, can not be susceptible of glory. Glory can
+ result but from the comparison of his own excellence with that of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. If God by Himself is infinitely happy and is sufficient unto Himself,
+ why does He need the homage of His feeble creatures?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. In spite of all His works, God is not glorified; on the contrary, all
+ the religions of the world show Him to us as perpetually offended; their
+ great object is to reconcile sinful, ungrateful, and rebellious man with
+ his wrathful God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ L.&mdash;GOD IS NOT MADE FOR MAN, NOR MAN FOR GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If God is infinite, He is created still less for man, than man is for the
+ ants. Would the ants of a garden reason pertinently with reference to the
+ gardener, if they should attempt to occupy themselves with his intentions,
+ his desires, and his projects? Would they reason correctly if they
+ pretended that the park of Versailles was made but for them, and that a
+ fastidious monarch had had as his only object to lodge them superbly? But
+ according to theology, man in his relation to God is far beneath what the
+ lowest insect is to man. Thus by the acknowledgment of theology itself,
+ theology, which does but occupy itself with the attributes and views of
+ Divinity, is the most complete of follies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0054" id="link2H_4_0054">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LI.&mdash;IT IS NOT TRUE THAT THE OBJECT OF THE FORMATION OF THE UNIVERSE
+ WAS TO RENDER MEN HAPPY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is pretended, that in forming the universe, God had no object but to
+ render man happy. But, in a world created expressly for him and governed
+ by an all-mighty God, is man after all very happy? Are his enjoyments
+ durable? Are not his pleasures mingled with sufferings? Are there many
+ people who are contented with their fate? Is not mankind the continual
+ victim of physical and moral evils? This human machine, which is shown to
+ us as the masterpiece of the Creator's industry, has it not a thousand
+ ways of deranging itself? Would we admire the skill of a mechanic, who
+ should show us a complicated machine, liable to be out of order at any
+ moment, and which would after a while destroy itself?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0055" id="link2H_4_0055">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LII.&mdash;WHAT IS CALLED PROVIDENCE IS BUT A WORD VOID OF SENSE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We call Providence the generous care which Divinity shows in providing for
+ our needs, and in watching over the happiness of its beloved creatures.
+ But, as soon as we look around, we find that God provides for nothing.
+ Providence neglects the greatest part of the inhabitants of this world.
+ Against a very small number of men, who are supposed to be happy, what a
+ multitude of miserable ones are groaning beneath oppression, and
+ languishing in misery! Whole nations are compelled to starve in order to
+ indulge the extravagances of a few morose tyrants, who are no happier than
+ the slaves whom they oppress! At the same time that our philosophers
+ energetically parade the bounties of Providence, and exhort us to place
+ confidence in it, do we not see them cry out at unforeseen catastrophes,
+ by which Providence plays with the vain projects of men; do we not see
+ that it overthrows their designs, laughs at their efforts, and that its
+ profound wisdom pleases itself in misleading mortals? But how can we place
+ confidence in a malicious Providence which laughs at and sports with
+ mankind? How can I admire the unknown course of a hidden wisdom whose
+ manner of acting is inexplicable to me? Judge it by its effects! you will
+ say; it is by these I do judge it, and I find that these effects are
+ sometimes useful and sometimes injurious to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We think to justify Providence by saying, that in this world there are
+ more blessings than evil for each individual man. Let us suppose that the
+ blessings which this Providence makes us enjoy are as one hundred, and
+ that the evils are as ten per cent.; would it not always result that
+ against these hundred degrees of goodness, Providence possesses a tenth
+ degree of malignity?&mdash;which is incompatible with the perfection we
+ suppose it to have.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the books are filled with the most flattering praises of Providence,
+ whose attentive care is extolled; it would seem to us, as if in order to
+ live happy here below, man would have no need of exerting himself.
+ However, without labor, man could scarcely live a day. In order to live, I
+ see him obliged to sweat, work, hunt, fish, toil without relaxation;
+ without these secondary causes, the First Cause (at least in the majority
+ of countries) could provide for none of his needs. If I examine all parts
+ of this globe, I see the uncivilized as well as the civilized man in a
+ perpetual struggle with Providence; he is compelled to ward off the blows
+ which it sends in the form of hurricanes, tempests, frost, hail,
+ inundations, sterility, and the divers accidents which so often render all
+ their labors useless. In a word, I see the human race continually occupied
+ in protecting itself from the wicked tricks of this Providence, which is
+ said to be busy with the care of their happiness. A devotee admired Divine
+ Providence for having wisely made rivers to flow through all the places
+ where men had built large cities. Is not this man's way of reasoning as
+ sensible as that of many learned men who do not cease from telling us of
+ Final Causes, or who pretend to perceive clearly the benevolent views of
+ God in the formation of things?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0056" id="link2H_4_0056">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LIII.&mdash;THIS PRETENDED PROVIDENCE IS LESS OCCUPIED IN CONSERVING THAN
+ IN DISTURBING THE WORLD&mdash;MORE AN ENEMY THAN A FRIEND OF MAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Do we see, then, that Divine Providence manifests itself in a sensible
+ manner in the conservation of its admirable works, for which we honor it?
+ If it is Divine Providence which governs the world, we find it as much
+ occupied in destroying as in creating; in exterminating as in producing.
+ Does it not at every instant cause thousands of those same men to perish,
+ to whose preservation and well-being it is supposed to give its continual
+ attention? Every moment it loses sight of its beloved creatures; sometimes
+ it tears down their dwellings; sometimes it destroys their harvests,
+ inundates their fields, devastates by a drought, arms all nature against
+ man, sets man against man, and finishes by causing him to expire in pain.
+ Is this what you call preserving a universe? If we attempted to consider
+ without prejudice the equivocal conduct of Providence relative to mankind
+ and to all sentient beings, we should find that very far from resembling a
+ tender and careful mother, it rather resembles those unnatural mothers
+ who, forgetting the unfortunate fruits of their illicit amours, abandon
+ their children as soon as they are born; and who, pleased to have
+ conceived them, expose them without mercy to the caprices of fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hottentots&mdash;wiser in this particular than other nations, who
+ treat them as barbarians&mdash;refuse, it is said, to adore God, because
+ if He sometimes does good, He as often does harm. Is not this reasoning
+ more just and more conformed to experience than that of so many men who
+ persist in seeing in their God but kindness, wisdom, and foresight; and
+ who refuse to see that the countless evils, of which the world is the
+ theater, must come from the same Hand which they kiss with transport?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0057" id="link2H_4_0057">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LIV.&mdash;NO! THE WORLD IS NOT GOVERNED BY AN INTELLIGENT BEING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The logic of common sense teaches us that we should judge a cause but by
+ its effects. A cause can not be reputed as constantly good, except when it
+ constantly produces good, useful, and agreeable effects. A cause which
+ produces good at one time, and evil at another, is a cause which is
+ sometimes good and sometimes bad. But the logic of Theology destroys all
+ this. According to it, the phenomena of nature, or the effects which we
+ see in this world, prove to us the existence of an infinitely good Cause,
+ and this Cause is God. Although this world is full of evils, although
+ disorder reigns here very often, although men groan every moment under the
+ fate which oppresses them, we ought to be convinced that these effects are
+ due to a benevolent and immutable Cause; and many people believe it, or
+ pretend to believe it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything which takes place in the world proves to us in the clearest way
+ that it is not governed by an intelligent being. We can judge of the
+ intelligence of a being but by the means which he employs to accomplish
+ his proposed design. The aim of God, it is said, is the happiness of our
+ race; however, the same necessity regulates the fate of all sentient
+ beings&mdash;which are born to suffer much, to enjoy little, and to die.
+ Man's cup is full of joy and of bitterness; everywhere good is side by
+ side with evil; order is replaced by disorder; generation is followed by
+ destruction. If you tell me that the designs of God are mysteries, and
+ that His views are impossible to understand, I will answer, that in this
+ case it is impossible for me to judge whether God is intelligent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0058" id="link2H_4_0058">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LV.&mdash;GOD CAN NOT BE CALLED IMMUTABLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ You pretend that God is immutable! But what is it that occasions the
+ continual instability in this world, which you claim as His empire? Is any
+ state subject to more frequent and cruel revolutions than that of this
+ unknown monarch? How can we attribute to an immutable God, powerful enough
+ to give solidity to His works, the government of a world where everything
+ is in a continual vicissitude? If I think to see a God unchanging in all
+ the effects advantageous to my kind, what God can I discover in the
+ continual misfortunes by which my kind is oppressed? You tell me that it
+ is our sins that force Him to punish us. I will answer that God, according
+ to yourselves, is not immutable, because the sins of men compel Him to
+ change His conduct in regard to them. Can a being who is sometimes
+ irritated, and sometimes appeased, be constantly the same?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LVI.&mdash;EVIL AND GOOD ARE THE NECESSARY EFFECTS OF NATURAL CAUSES. WHAT
+ IS A GOD WHO CAN CHANGE NOTHING?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The universe is but what it can be; all sentient beings enjoy and suffer
+ here: that is to say, they are moved sometimes in an agreeable, and at
+ other times in a disagreeable way. These effects are necessary; they
+ result from causes that act according to their inherent tendencies., These
+ effects necessarily please or displease me, according to my own nature.
+ This same nature compels me to avoid, to remove, and to combat the one,
+ and to seek, to desire, and to procure the other. In a world where
+ everything is from necessity, a God who remedies nothing, and allows
+ things to follow their own course, is He anything else but destiny or
+ necessity personified? It is a deaf God who can effect no change on the
+ general laws to which He is subjected Himself. What do I care for the
+ infinite power of a being who can do but a very few things to please me?
+ Where is the infinite kindness of a being who is indifferent to my
+ happiness? What good to me is the favor of a being who, able to bestow
+ upon me infinite good, does not even give me a finite one?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0060" id="link2H_4_0060">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LVII.&mdash;THE VANITY OF THEOLOGICAL CONSOLATIONS IN THE TROUBLES OF THIS
+ LIFE. THE HOPE OF A HEAVEN, OF A FUTURE LIFE, IS BUT IMAGINARY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When we ask why, under a good God, so many are wretched, we are reminded
+ that the present world is but a pass-way, designed to conduct man to a
+ happier sphere; we are assured that our sojourn on the earth, where we
+ live, is for trial; they silence us by saying that God would not impart to
+ His creatures either the indifference to the sufferings of others, or the
+ infinite happiness which He reserved for Himself alone. How can we be
+ satisfied with these answers?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The existence of another life has no other guaranty than the
+ imagination of men, who, in supposing it, have but manifested their desire
+ to live again, in order to enter upon a purer and more durable state of
+ happiness than that which they enjoy at present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. How can we conceive of a God who, knowing all things, must know to
+ their depths the nature of His creatures, and yet must have so many proofs
+ in order to assure Himself of their proclivities?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. According to the calculations of our chronologists, the earth which we
+ inhabit has existed for six or seven thousand years; during this time the
+ nations have, under different forms, experienced many vicissitudes and
+ calamities; history shows us that the human race in all ages has been
+ tormented and devastated by tyrants, conquerors, heroes; by wars,
+ inundations, famines, epidemics, etc. Is this long catalogue of proofs of
+ such a nature as to inspire us with great confidence in the hidden views
+ of the Divinity? Do such constant evils give us an exalted idea of the
+ future fate which His kindness is preparing for us?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. If God is as well-disposed as they assure us He is, could He not at
+ least, without bestowing an infinite happiness upon men, communicate to
+ them that degree of happiness of which finite beings are susceptible? In
+ order to be happy, do we need an Infinite or Divine happiness?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. If God has not been able to render men happier than they are here
+ below, what will become of the hope of a Paradise, where it is pretended
+ that the elect or chosen few will rejoice forever in ineffable happiness?
+ If God could not or would not remove evil from the earth (the only
+ sojourning place we know of), what reason could we have to presume that He
+ can or will remove it from another world, of which we know nothing? More
+ than two thousand years ago, according to Lactance, the wise epicure said:
+ "Either God wants to prevent evil, and can not, or He can and will not; or
+ He neither can nor will, or He will and can. If He wants to, without the
+ power, He is impotent; if He can, and will not, He is guilty of malice
+ which we can not attribute to Him; if He neither can nor will, He is both
+ impotent and wicked, and consequently can not be God; if He wishes to and
+ can, whence then comes evil, or why does He not prevent it?" For more than
+ two thousand years honest minds have waited for a rational solution of
+ these difficulties; and our theologians teach us that they will not be
+ revealed to us until the future life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0061" id="link2H_4_0061">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LVIII.&mdash;ANOTHER IDLE FANCY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are told of a pretended scale for human beings; it is supposed that God
+ has divided His creatures into different classes, each one enjoying the
+ degree of happiness of which he is susceptible. According to this romantic
+ arrangement, all beings, from the oyster to the angel, enjoy the happiness
+ which belongs to them. Experience contradicts this sublime revery. In the
+ world where we are, we see all sentient beings living and suffering in the
+ midst of dangers. Man can not step without wounding, tormenting, crushing
+ a multitude of sentient beings which he finds in his path, while he
+ himself, at every step, is exposed to a throng of evils seen or unseen,
+ which may lead to his destruction. Is not the very thought of death
+ sufficient to mar his greatest enjoyment? During the whole course of his
+ life he is subject to sufferings; there is not a moment when he feels sure
+ of preserving his existence, to which he is so strongly attached, and
+ which he regards as the greatest gift of Divinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0062" id="link2H_4_0062">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LIX.&mdash;IN VAIN DOES THEOLOGY EXERT ITSELF TO ACQUIT GOD OF MAN'S
+ DEFECTS. EITHER THIS GOD IS NOT FREE, OR HE IS MORE WICKED THAN GOOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The world, it will be said, has all the perfection of which it was
+ susceptible; by the very reason that the world was not the God who made
+ it, it was necessary that it should have great qualities and great
+ defects. But we will answer, that the world necessarily having great
+ defects, it would have been better suited to the nature of a good God not
+ to create a world which He could not render completely happy. If God, who
+ was, according to you, supremely happy before the world was created, had
+ continued to be supremely happy in the created world, why did He not
+ remain in peace? Why must man suffer? Why must man exist What is his
+ existence to God? Nothing or something. If his existence is not useful or
+ necessary to God, why did He not leave him in nothingness? If man's
+ existence is necessary to His glory, He then needed man, He lacked
+ something before this man existed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We can forgive an unskillful workman for doing imperfect work, because he
+ must work, well or ill, or starve; this workman is excusable; but your God
+ is not. According to you, He is self-sufficient; in this case, why does He
+ create men? He has, according to you, all that is necessary to render man
+ happy; why, then, does He not do it? You must conclude that your God has
+ more malice than goodness, or you must admit that God was compelled to do
+ what He has done, without being able to do otherwise. However, you assure
+ us that your God is free; you say also that He is immutable, although
+ beginning in time and ceasing in time to exercise His power, like all the
+ inconstant beings of this world. Oh, theologians! you have made vain
+ efforts to acquit your God of all the defects of man; there is always
+ visible in this God so perfect, "a tip of the [human] ear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0063" id="link2H_4_0063">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LX.&mdash;WE CAN NOT BELIEVE IN A DIVINE PROVIDENCE, IN AN INFINITELY GOOD
+ AND POWERFUL GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Is not God the master of His favors? Has He not the right to dispense His
+ benefits? Can He not take them back again? His creature has no right to
+ ask the reason of His conduct; He can dispose at will of the works of His
+ hands. Absolute sovereign of mortals, He distributes happiness or
+ unhappiness, according to His pleasure. These are the solutions which
+ theologians give in order to console us for the evils which God inflicts
+ upon us. We would tell them that a God who was infinitely good, would not
+ be the master of His favors, but would be by His own nature obliged to
+ distribute them among His creatures; we would tell them that a truly
+ benevolent being would not believe he had the right to abstain from doing
+ good; we would tell them that a truly generous being does not take back
+ what he has given, and any man who does it, forfeits gratitude, and has no
+ right to complain of ingratitude. How can the arbitrary and whimsical
+ conduct which theologians ascribe to God, be reconciled with the religion
+ which supposes a compact or mutual agreement between this God and men? If
+ God owes nothing to His creatures, they, on their part, can not owe
+ anything to their God. All religion is founded upon the happiness which
+ men believe they have a right to expect from the Divinity, who is supposed
+ to tell them: "Love, adore, obey me, and I will render you happy!" Men on
+ their side say to Him: "Make us happy, be faithful to your promises, and
+ we will love you, we will adore you, we will obey your laws!" In
+ neglecting the happiness of His creatures, in distributing His favors and
+ His graces according to His caprice, and taking back His gifts, does not
+ God violate the contract which serves as a base for all religion?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cicero has said with reason that if God does not make Himself agreeable to
+ man, He can not be his God. [Nisi Deus homini placuerit, Deus non erit.]
+ Goodness constitutes Divinity; this Goodness can manifest itself to man
+ only by the advantages he derives from it. As soon as he is unfortunate,
+ this Goodness disappears and ceases to be Divinity. An infinite Goodness
+ can be neither partial nor exclusive. If God is infinitely good, He owes
+ happiness to all His creatures; one unfortunate being alone would be
+ sufficient to annihilate an unlimited goodness. Under an infinitely good
+ and powerful God, is it possible to conceive that a single man could
+ suffer? An animal, a mite, which suffers, furnishes invincible arguments
+ against Divine Providence and its infinite benefactions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0064" id="link2H_4_0064">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXI.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ According to theologians, the afflictions and evils of this life are
+ chastisements which culpable men receive from Divinity. But why are men
+ culpable? If God is Almighty, does it cost Him any more to say, "Let
+ everything remain in order!"&mdash;"let all my subjects be good, innocent,
+ fortunate!"&mdash;than to say, "Let everything exist?" Was it more
+ difficult for this God to do His work well than to do it so badly? Was it
+ any farther from the nonexistence of beings to their wise and happy
+ existence, than from their non-existence to their insensate and miserable
+ existence? Religion speaks to us of a hell&mdash;that is, of a fearful
+ place where, notwithstanding His goodness, God reserves eternal torments
+ for the majority of men. Thus, after having rendered mortals very
+ miserable in this world, religion teaches them that God can make them much
+ more wretched in another. They meet our objections by saying, that
+ otherwise the goodness of God would take the place of His justice. But
+ goodness which takes the place of the most terrible cruelty, is not
+ infinite kindness. Besides, a God who, after having been infinitely good,
+ becomes infinitely wicked, can He be regarded as an immutable being? A God
+ filled with implacable fury, is He a God in whom we can find a shadow of
+ charity or goodness?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0065" id="link2H_4_0065">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXII.&mdash;THEOLOGY MAKES OF ITS GOD A MONSTER OF NONSENSE, OF INJUSTICE,
+ OF MALICE, AND ATROCITY&mdash;A BEING ABSOLUTELY HATEFUL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Divine justice, such as our theologians paint it, is, without doubt, a
+ quality intended to make us love Divinity. According to the notions of
+ modern theology, it appears evident that God has created the majority of
+ men with the view only of punishing them eternally. Would it not have been
+ more in conformity with kindness, with reason, with equity, to create but
+ stones or plants, and not sentient beings, than to create men whose
+ conduct in this world would cause them eternal chastisements in another? A
+ God so perfidious and wicked as to create a single man and leave him
+ exposed to the perils of damnation, can not be regarded as a perfect
+ being, but as a monster of nonsense, injustice, malice, and atrocity. Far
+ from forming a perfect God, the theologians have made the most imperfect
+ of beings. According to theological ideas, God resembles a tyrant who,
+ having deprived the majority of his slaves of their eyesight, would
+ confine them in a cell where, in order to amuse himself he could observe
+ incognito their conduct through a trap-door, in order to have occasion to
+ cruelly punish all those who in walking should hurt each other; but who
+ would reward splendidly the small number of those to whom the sight was
+ spared, for having the skill to avoid an encounter with their comrades.
+ Such are the ideas which the dogma of gratuitous predestination gives of
+ Divinity!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although men repeat to us that their God is infinitely good, it is evident
+ that in the bottom of their hearts they can believe nothing of it. How can
+ we love anything we do not know? How can we love a being, the idea of whom
+ is but liable to keep us in anxiety and trouble? How can we love a being
+ of whom all that is told conspires to render him supremely hateful?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0066" id="link2H_4_0066">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXIII.&mdash;ALL RELIGION INSPIRES BUT A COWARDLY AND INORDINATE FEAR OF
+ THE DIVINITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Many people make a subtle distinction between true religion and
+ superstition; they tell us that the latter is but a cowardly and
+ inordinate fear of Divinity, that the truly religious man has confidence
+ in his God, and loves Him sincerely; while the superstitious man sees in
+ Him but an enemy, has no confidence in Him, and represents Him as a
+ suspicious and cruel tyrant, avaricious of His benefactions and prodigal
+ of His chastisements. But does not all religion in reality give us these
+ same ideas of God? While we are told that God is infinitely good, is it
+ not constantly repeated to us that He is very easily offended, that He
+ bestows His favors but upon a few, that He chastises with fury those to
+ whom He has not been pleased to grant them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0067" id="link2H_4_0067">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXIV.&mdash;THERE IS IN REALITY NO DIFFERENCE BETWEEN RELIGION AND THE
+ MOST SOMBRE AND SERVILE SUPERSTITION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If we take our ideas of God from the nature of the things where we find a
+ mixture of good and evil, this God, according to the good and evil which
+ we experience, does naturally appear to us capricious, inconstant,
+ sometimes good, sometimes wicked, and in this way, instead of exciting our
+ love, He must produce suspicion, fear, and uncertainty in our hearts.
+ There is no real difference between natural religion and the most sombre
+ and servile superstition. If the Theist sees God but on the beautiful
+ side, the superstitious man looks upon Him from the most hideous side. The
+ folly of the one is gay of the other is lugubrious; but both are equally
+ delirious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0068" id="link2H_4_0068">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXV.&mdash;ACCORDING TO THE IDEAS WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES OF DIVINITY, TO
+ LOVE GOD IS IMPOSSIBLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If I take my ideas of God from theology, God shows Himself to me in such a
+ light as to repel love. The devotees who tell us that they love their God
+ sincerely, are either liars or fools who see their God but in profile; it
+ is impossible to love a being, the thought of whom tends to excite terror,
+ and whose judgments make us tremble. How can we face without fear, a God
+ whom we suppose sufficiently barbarous to wish to damn us forever? Let
+ them not speak to us of a filial or respectful fear mingled with love,
+ which men should have for their God. A son can not love his father when he
+ knows he is cruel enough to inflict exquisite torments upon him; in short,
+ to punish him for the least faults. No man upon earth can have the least
+ spark of love for a God who holds in reserve eternal, hard, and violent
+ chastisements for ninety-nine hundredths of His children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0069" id="link2H_4_0069">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXVI.&mdash;BY THE INVENTION OF THE DOGMA OF THE ETERNAL TORMENTS OF HELL,
+ THEOLOGIANS HAVE MADE OF THEIR GOD A DETESTABLE BEING, MORE WICKED THAN
+ THE MOST WICKED OF MEN, A PERVERSE AND CRUEL TYRANT WITHOUT AIM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The inventors of the dogma of eternal torments in hell, have made of the
+ God whom they call so good, the most detestable of beings. Cruelty in man
+ is the last term of corruption. There is no sensitive soul but is moved
+ and revolts at the recital alone of the torments which the greatest
+ criminal endures; but cruelty merits the greater indignation when we
+ consider it gratuitous or without motive. The most sanguinary tyrants,
+ Caligula, Nero, Domitian, had at least some motive in tormenting their
+ victims and insulting their sufferings; these motives were, either their
+ own safety, the fury of revenge, the design to frighten by terrible
+ examples, or perhaps the vanity to make parade of their power, and the
+ desire to satisfy a barbarous curiosity. Can a God have any of these
+ motives? In tormenting the victims of His wrath, He would punish beings
+ who could not really endanger His immovable power, nor trouble His
+ felicity, which nothing can change. On the other hand, the sufferings of
+ the other life would be useless to the living, who can not witness them;
+ these torments would be useless to the damned, because in hell is no more
+ conversion, and the hour of mercy is passed; from which it follows, that
+ God, in the exercise of His eternal vengeance, would have no other aim
+ than to amuse Himself and insult the weakness of His creatures. I appeal
+ to the whole human race! Is there in nature a man so cruel as to wish in
+ cold blood to torment, I do not say his fellow-beings, but any sentient
+ being whatever, without fee, without profit, without curiosity, without
+ having anything to fear? Conclude, then, O theologians! that according to
+ your own principles, your God is infinitely more wicked than the most
+ wicked of men. You will tell me, perhaps, that infinite offenses deserve
+ infinite chastisements, and I will tell you that we can not offend a God
+ whose happiness is infinite. I will tell you further, that offenses of
+ finite beings can not be infinite; that a God who does not want to be
+ offended, can not consent to make His creatures' offenses last for
+ eternity; I will tell you that a God infinitely good, can not be
+ infinitely cruel, nor grant His creatures infinite existence solely for
+ the pleasure of tormenting them forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It could have been but the most cruel barbarity, the most notorious
+ imposition, but the blindest ambition which could have created the dogma
+ of eternal damnation. If there exists a God who could be offended or
+ blasphemed, there would not be upon earth any greater blasphemers than
+ those who dare to say that this God is perverse enough to take pleasure in
+ dooming His feeble creatures to useless torments for all eternity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0070" id="link2H_4_0070">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXVII.&mdash;THEOLOGY IS BUT A SERIES OF PALPABLE CONTRADICTIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To pretend that God can be offended with the actions of men, is to
+ annihilate all the ideas that are given to us of this being. To say that
+ man can disturb the order of the universe, that he can grasp the lightning
+ from God's hand, that he can upset His projects, is to claim that man is
+ stronger than his God, that he is the arbiter of His will, that it depends
+ on him to change His goodness into cruelty. Theology does nothing but
+ destroy with one hand that which it builds with the other. If all religion
+ is founded upon a God who becomes angry, and who is appeased, all religion
+ is founded upon a palpable contradiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All religions agree in exalting the wisdom and the infinite power of the
+ Divinity; but as soon as they expose His conduct, we discover but
+ imprudence, want of foresight, weakness, and folly. God, it is said,
+ created the world for Himself; and so far He has not succeeded in making
+ Himself properly respected! God has created men in order to have in His
+ dominion subjects who would render Him homage; and we continually see men
+ revolt against Him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0071" id="link2H_4_0071">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXVIII.&mdash;THE PRETENDED WORKS OF GOD DO NOT PROVE AT ALL WHAT WE CALL
+ DIVINE PERFECTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are continually told of the Divine perfections; and as soon as we ask
+ the proofs of them, we are shown the works in which we are assured that
+ these perfections are written in ineffaceable characters. All these works,
+ however, are imperfect and perishable; man, who is regarded as the
+ masterpiece, as the most marvelous work of Divinity, is full of
+ imperfections which render him disagreeable in the eyes of the Almighty
+ workman who has formed him; this surprising work becomes often so
+ revolting and so odious to its Author, that He feels Himself compelled to
+ cast him into the fire. But if the choicest work of Divinity is imperfect,
+ by what are we to judge of the Divine perfections? Can a work with which
+ the author himself is so little satisfied, cause us to admire his skill?
+ Physical man is subject to a thousand infirmities, to countless evils, to
+ death; the moral man is full of defects; and yet they exhaust themselves
+ by telling us that he is the most beautiful work of the most perfect of
+ beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0072" id="link2H_4_0072">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXIX.&mdash;THE PERFECTION OF GOD DOES NOT SHOW TO ANY MORE ADVANTAGE IN
+ THE PRETENDED CREATION OF ANGELS AND PURE SPIRITS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It appears that God, in creating more perfect beings than men, did not
+ succeed any better, or give stronger proofs of His perfection. Do we not
+ see in many religions that angels and pure spirits revolted against their
+ Master, and even attempted to expel Him from His throne? God intended the
+ happiness of angels and of men, and He has never succeeded in rendering
+ happy either angels or men; pride, malice, sins, the imperfections of His
+ creatures, have always been opposed to the wishes of the perfect Creator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0073" id="link2H_4_0073">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXX.&mdash;THEOLOGY PREACHES THE OMNIPOTENCE OF ITS GOD, AND CONTINUALLY
+ SHOWS HIM IMPOTENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All religion is visibly founded upon the principle that "God proposes and
+ man disposes." All the theologies of the world show us an unequal combat
+ between Divinity on the one side, and His creatures on the other. God
+ never relies on His honor; in spite of His almighty power, He could not
+ succeed in making the works of His hands as He would like them to be. To
+ complete the absurdity, there is a religion which pretends that God
+ Himself died to redeem the human race; and, in spite of His death, men are
+ not in the least as this God would desire them to be!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0074" id="link2H_4_0074">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXI.&mdash;ACCORDING TO ALL THE RELIGIOUS SYSTEMS OF THE EARTH, GOD WOULD
+ BE THE MOST CAPRICIOUS AND THE MOST INSENSATE OF BEINGS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could be more extravagant than the role which in every country
+ theology makes Divinity play. If the thing was real, we would be obliged
+ to see in it the most capricious and the most insane of beings; one would
+ be obliged to believe that God made the world to be the theater of
+ dishonoring wars with His creatures; that He created angels, men, demons,
+ wicked spirits, but as adversaries, against whom He could exercise His
+ power. He gives them liberty to offend Him, makes them wicked enough to
+ upset His projects, obstinate enough to never give up: all for the
+ pleasure of getting angry, and being appeased, of reconciling Himself, and
+ of repairing the confusion they have made. Had Divinity formed at once His
+ creatures such as they ought to be in order to please Him, what trouble He
+ might have spared Himself! or, at least, how much embarrassment He might
+ have saved to His theologians! According to all the religious systems of
+ the earth, God seems to be occupied but in doing Himself injury; He does
+ it as those charlatans do who wound themselves, in order to have occasion
+ to show the public the value of their ointments. We do not see, however,
+ that so far Divinity has been able to radically cure itself of the evil
+ which is caused by men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0075" id="link2H_4_0075">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXII.&mdash;IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT EVIL DOES NOT COME FROM GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ God is the author of all; still we are assured that evil does not come
+ from God. Whence, then, does it come? From men? But who has made men? It
+ is God: then that evil comes from God. If He had not made men as they are,
+ moral evil or sin would not exist in the world. We must blame God, then,
+ that man is so perverse. If man has the power to do wrong or to offend
+ God, we must conclude that God wishes to be offended; that God, who has
+ created man, resolved that evil should be done by him: without this, man
+ would be an effect contrary to the cause from which he derives his being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0076" id="link2H_4_0076">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXIII.&mdash;THE FORESIGHT ATTRIBUTED TO GOD, WOULD GIVE TO GUILTY MEN
+ WHOM HE PUNISHES, THE RIGHT TO COMPLAIN OF HIS CRUELTY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The faculty of foresight, or the ability to know in advance all which is
+ to happen in the world, is attributed to God. But this foresight can
+ scarcely belong to His glory, nor spare Him the reproaches which men could
+ legitimately heap upon Him. If God had the foresight of the future, did He
+ not foresee the fall of His creatures whom He had destined to happiness?
+ If He resolved in His decrees to allow this fall, there is no doubt that
+ He desired it to take place: otherwise it would not have happened. If the
+ Divine foresight of the sin of His creatures had been necessary or forced,
+ it might be supposed that God was compelled by His justice to punish the
+ guilty; but God, enjoying the faculty of foresight and the power to
+ predestinate everything, would it not depend upon Himself not to impose
+ upon men these cruel laws? Or, at least, could He not have dispensed with
+ creating beings whom He might be compelled to punish and to render unhappy
+ by a subsequent decree? What does it matter whether God destined men to
+ happiness or to misery by a previous decree, the effect of His foresight,
+ or by a subsequent decree, the effect of His justice. Does the arrangement
+ of these decrees change the fate of the miserable? Would they not have the
+ right to complain of a God who, having the power of leaving them in
+ oblivion, brought them forth, although He foresaw very well that His
+ justice would force Him sooner or later to punish them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0077" id="link2H_4_0077">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXIV.&mdash;ABSURDITY OF THE THEOLOGICAL FABLES UPON ORIGINAL SIN AND
+ UPON SATAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Man, say you, issuing from the hands of God, was pure, innocent, and good;
+ but his nature became corrupted in consequence of sin. If man could sin,
+ when just leaving the hands of God, his nature was then not perfect! Why
+ did God permit him to sin, and his nature to become corrupt? Why did God
+ allow him to be seduced, knowing well that he would be too weak to resist
+ the tempter? Why did God create a Satan, a malicious spirit, a tempter?
+ Why did not God, who was so desirous of doing good to mankind, why did He
+ not annihilate, once for all, so many evil genii whose nature rendered
+ them enemies of our happiness? Or rather, why did God create evil spirits,
+ whose victories and terrible influences upon the human race He must have
+ foreseen? Finally, by what fatality, in all the religions of the world,
+ has the evil principle such a marked advantage over the good principle or
+ over Divinity?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0078" id="link2H_4_0078">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXV.&mdash;THE DEVIL, LIKE RELIGION, WAS INVENTED TO ENRICH THE PRIESTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are told a story of the simple-heartedness of an Italian monk, which
+ does him honor. This good man preaching one day felt obliged to announce
+ to his auditory that, thanks to Heaven, he had at last discovered a sure
+ means of rendering all men happy. "The devil," said he, "tempts men but to
+ have them as comrades of his misery in hell. Let us address ourselves,
+ then, to the Pope, who possesses the keys of paradise and of hell; let us
+ ask him to beseech God, at the head of the whole Church, to reconcile
+ Himself with the devil; to take him back into His favor; to re-establish
+ him in His first rank. This can not fail to put an end to his sinister
+ projects against mankind." The good monk did not see, perhaps, that the
+ devil is at least fully as useful as God to the ministers of religion.
+ These reap too many benefits from their differences to lend themselves
+ willingly to a reconciliation between the two enemies ties, upon whose
+ contests their existence and their revenues depend. If men would cease to
+ be tempted and to sin, the ministry of priests would become useless to
+ them. Manicheism is evidently the support of all religions; but
+ unfortunately the devil, being invented to remove all suspicion of malice
+ from Divinity, proves to us at every moment the powerlessness or the
+ awkwardness of his celestial Adversary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0079" id="link2H_4_0079">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXVI.&mdash;IF GOD COULD NOT RENDER HUMAN NATURE SINLESS, HE HAS NO RIGHT
+ TO PUNISH MAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Man's nature, it is said, must necessarily become corrupt. God could not
+ endow him with sinlessness, which is an inalienable portion of Divine
+ perfection. But if God could not render him sinless, why did He take the
+ trouble of creating man, whose nature was to become corrupt, and which,
+ consequently, had to offend God? On the other side, if God Himself was not
+ able to render human nature sinless, what right had He to punish men for
+ not being sinless? It is but by the right of might. But the right of the
+ strongest is violence; and violence is not suited to the most Just of
+ Beings. God would be supremely unjust if He punished men for not having a
+ portion of the Divine perfections, or for not being able to be Gods like
+ Himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could not God have at least endowed men with that sort of perfection of
+ which their nature is susceptible? If some men are good or render
+ themselves agreeable to their God, why did not this God bestow the same
+ favor or give the same dispositions to all beings of our kind? Why does
+ the number of wicked exceed so greatly the number of good people? Why, for
+ every friend, does God find ten thousand enemies in a world which depended
+ upon Him alone to people with honest men? If it is true that God intends
+ to form in heaven a court of saints, of chosen ones, or of men who have
+ lived in this world according to His views, would He not have had a court
+ more numerous, more brilliant, and more honorable to Him, if it were
+ composed of all the men to whom, in creating them, He could have granted
+ the degree of goodness necessary to obtain eternal happiness? Finally,
+ were it not easier not to take man from nothingness than to create him
+ full of defects, rebellious to his Creator, perpetually exposed to lose
+ himself by a fatal abuse of his liberty? Instead of creating men, a
+ perfect God ought to have created only docile and submissive angels. The
+ angels, it is said, are free; a few among them have sinned; but all of
+ them have not sinned; all have not abused their liberty by revolting
+ against their Master. Could not God have created only angels of the good
+ kind? If God could create angels who have not sinned, could He not create
+ men sinless, or those who would never abuse their liberty by doing evil.
+ If the chosen ones are incapable of sinning in heaven, could not God have
+ made sinless men upon the earth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0080" id="link2H_4_0080">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXVII.&mdash;IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT GOD'S CONDUCT MUST BE A MYSTERY TO
+ MAN, AND THAT HE HAS NO RIGHT TO EXAMINE AND JUDGE IT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are told that the enormous distance which separates God from men, makes
+ God's conduct necessarily a mystery for us, and that we have no right to
+ interrogate our Master. Is this statement satisfactory? But according to
+ you, when my eternal happiness is involved, have I not the right to
+ examine God's own conduct? It is but with the hope of happiness that men
+ submit to the empire of a God. A despot to whom men are subjected but
+ through fear, a master whom they can not interrogate, a totally
+ inaccessible sovereign, can not merit the homage of intelligent beings. If
+ God's conduct is a mystery to me, it is not made for me. Man can not
+ adore, admire, respect, or imitate a conduct of which everything is
+ impossible to conceive, or of which he can not form any but revolting
+ ideas; unless it is pretended that he should worship all the things of
+ which he is forced to be ignorant, and then all that he does not
+ understand becomes admirable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Priests! you teach us that the designs of God are impenetrable; that His
+ ways are not our ways; that His thoughts are not our thoughts; that it is
+ folly to complain of His administration, whose motives and secret ways are
+ entirely unknown to us; that there is temerity in accusing Him of unjust
+ judgments, because they are incomprehensible to us. But do you not see
+ that by speaking in this manner, you destroy with your own hands all your
+ profound systems which have no design but to explain the ways of Divinity
+ that you call impenetrable? These judgments, these ways, and these
+ designs, have you penetrated them? You dare not say so; and, although you
+ season incessantly, you do not understand them more than we do. If by
+ chance you know the plan of God, which you tell us to admire, while there
+ are many people who find it so little worthy of a just, good, intelligent,
+ and rational being; do not say that this plan is impenetrable. If you are
+ as ignorant as we, have some indulgence for those who ingenuously confess
+ that they comprehend nothing of it, or that they see nothing in it Divine.
+ Cease to persecute for opinions which you do not understand yourselves;
+ cease to slander each other for dreams and conjectures which are
+ altogether contradictory; speak to us of intelligible and truly useful
+ things; and no longer tell us of the impenetrable ways of a God, about
+ which you do nothing but stammer and contradict yourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In speaking to us incessantly of the immense depths of Divine wisdom, in
+ forbidding us to fathom these depths by telling us that it is insolence to
+ call God to the tribunal of our humble reason, in making it a crime to
+ judge our Master, the theologians only confess the embarrassment in which
+ they find themselves as soon as they have to render account of the conduct
+ of a God, which they tell us is marvelous, only because it is totally
+ impossible for them to understand it themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0081" id="link2H_4_0081">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXVIII.&mdash;IT IS ABSURD TO CALL HIM A GOD OF JUSTICE AND GOODNESS, WHO
+ INFLICTS EVIL INDISCRIMINATELY ON THE GOOD AND THE WICKED, UPON THE
+ INNOCENT AND THE GUILTY; IT IS IDLE TO DEMAND THAT THE UNFORTUNATE SHOULD
+ CONSOLE THEMSELVES FOR THEIR MISFORTUNES, IN THE VERY ARMS OF THE ONE WHO
+ ALONE IS THE AUTHOR OF THEM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Physical evil commonly passes as the punishment of sin. Calamities,
+ diseases, famines, wars, earthquakes, are the means which God employs to
+ chastise perverse men. Therefore, they have no difficulty in attributing
+ these evils to the severity of a just and good God. However, do we not see
+ these plagues fall indiscriminately upon the good and the wicked, upon the
+ impious and the pious, upon the innocent and the guilty? How can we be
+ made to admire, in this proceeding, the justice and the goodness of a
+ being, the idea of whom appears so consoling to the unfortunate? Doubtless
+ the brain of these unfortunate ones has been disturbed by their
+ misfortunes, since they forget that God is the arbiter of things, the sole
+ dispenser of the events of this world. In this case ought they not to
+ blame Him for the evils for which they would find consolation in His arms?
+ Unfortunate father! you console yourself in the bosom of Providence for
+ the loss of a cherished child or of a wife, who made your happiness! Alas!
+ do you not see that your God has killed them? Your God has rendered you
+ miserable; and you want Him to console you for the fearful blows He has
+ inflicted upon you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fantastic and supernatural notions of theology have succeeded so
+ thoroughly in overcoming the simplest, the clearest, the most natural
+ ideas of the human spirit, that the pious, incapable of accusing God of
+ malice, accustom themselves to look upon these sad afflictions as
+ indubitable proofs of celestial goodness. Are they in affliction, they are
+ told to believe that God loves them, that God visits them, that God wishes
+ to try them. Thus it is that religion changes evil into good! Some one has
+ said profanely, but with reason: "If the good God treats thus those whom
+ He loves, I beseech Him very earnestly not to think of me." Men must have
+ formed very sinister and very cruel ideas of their God whom they call so
+ good, in order to persuade themselves that the most frightful calamities
+ and the most painful afflictions are signs of His favor! Would a wicked
+ Genii or a Devil be more ingenious in tormenting his enemies, than
+ sometimes is this God of goodness, who is so often occupied with
+ inflicting His chastisements upon His dearest friends?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0082" id="link2H_4_0082">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXIX.&mdash;A GOD WHO PUNISHES THE FAULTS WHICH HE COULD HAVE PREVENTED,
+ IS A FOOL, WHO ADDS INJUSTICE TO FOOLISHNESS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What would we say or a father who, we are assured, watches without
+ relaxation over the welfare of his feeble and unforeseeing children, and
+ who, however, would leave them at liberty to go astray in the midst of
+ rocks, precipices, and waters; who would prevent them but rarely from
+ following their disordered appetites; who would permit them to handle,
+ without precaution, deadly arms, at the risk of wounding themselves
+ severely? What would we think of this same father, if, instead of blaming
+ himself for the harm which would have happened to his poor children, he
+ should punish them for their faults in the most cruel way? We would say,
+ with reason, that this father is a fool, who joins injustice to
+ foolishness. A God who punishes the faults which He could have prevented,
+ is a being who lacks wisdom, goodness, and equity. A God of foresight
+ would prevent evil, and in this way would be saved the trouble of
+ punishing it. A good God would not punish weaknesses which He knows to be
+ inherent in human nature. A just God, if He has made man, would not punish
+ him for not being strong enough to resist his desires. To punish weakness,
+ is the most unjust tyranny. Is it not calumniating a just God, to say that
+ He punishes men for their faults, even in the present life? How would He
+ punish beings whom He alone could correct, and who, as long as they had
+ not received grace, can not act otherwise than they do?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the principles of theologians themselves, man, in his actual
+ state of corruption, can do nothing but evil, for without Divine grace he
+ has not the strength to do good. Moreover, if man's nature, abandoned to
+ itself, of destitute of Divine help, inclines him necessarily to evil, or
+ renders him incapable of doing good, what becomes of his free will?
+ According to such principles, man can merit neither reward nor punishment;
+ in rewarding man for the good he does, God would but recompense Himself;
+ in punishing man for the evil he does, God punishes him for not having
+ been given the grace, without which it was impossible for him to do
+ better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0083" id="link2H_4_0083">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXX.&mdash;FREE WILL IS AN IDLE FANCY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Theologians tell and repeat to us that man is free, while all their
+ teachings conspire to destroy his liberty. Trying to justify Divinity,
+ they accuse him really of the blackest injustice. They suppose that,
+ without grace, man is compelled to do evil: and they maintain that God
+ will punish him for not having been given the grace to do good! With a
+ little reflection, we will be obliged to see that man in all things acts
+ by compulsion, and that his free will is a chimera, even according to the
+ theological system. Does it depend upon man whether or not he shall be
+ born of such or such parents? Does it depend upon man to accept or not to
+ accept the opinions of his parents and of his teachers? If I were born of
+ idolatrous or Mohammedan parents, would it have depended upon me to become
+ a Christian? However, grave Doctors of Divinity assure us that a just God
+ will damn without mercy all those to whom He has not given the grace to
+ know the religion of the Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man's birth does not depend upon his choice; he was not asked if he would
+ or would not come into the world; nature did not consult him upon the
+ country and the parents that she gave him; the ideas he acquired, his
+ opinions, his true or false notions are the necessary fruits of the
+ education which he has received, and of which he has not been the master;
+ his passions and his desires are the necessary results of the temperament
+ which nature has given him, and of the ideas with which he has been
+ inspired; during the whole course of his life, his wishes and his actions
+ are determined by his surroundings, his habits, his occupations, his
+ pleasures, his conversations, and by the thoughts which present themselves
+ involuntarily to him; in short, by a multitude of events and accidents
+ which are beyond his control. Incapable of foreseeing the future, he knows
+ neither what he will wish, nor what he will do in the time which must
+ immediately follow the present. Man passes his life, from the moment of
+ his birth to that of his death, without having been free one instant. Man,
+ you say, wishes, deliberates, chooses, determines; hence you conclude that
+ his actions are free. It is true that man intends, but he is not master of
+ his will or of his desires. He can desire and wish only what he judges
+ advantageous for himself; he can not love pain nor detest pleasure. Man,
+ it will be said, sometimes prefers pain to pleasure; but then, he prefers
+ a passing pain in the hope of procuring a greater and more durable
+ pleasure. In this case, the idea of a greater good determines him to
+ deprive himself of one less desirable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not the lover who gives to his mistress the features by which he is
+ enchanted; he is not then the master to love or not to love the object of
+ his tenderness; he is not the master of the imagination or the temperament
+ which dominates him; from which it follows, evidently, that man is not the
+ master of the wishes and desires which rise in his soul, independently of
+ him. But man, say you, can resist his desires; then he is free. Man
+ resists his desires when the motives which turn him from an object are
+ stronger than those which draw him toward it; but then, his resistance is
+ necessary. A man who fears dishonor and punishment more than he loves
+ money, resists necessarily the desire to take possession of another's
+ money. Are we not free when we deliberate?&mdash;but has one the power to
+ know or not to know, to be uncertain or to be assured? Deliberation is the
+ necessary effect of the uncertainty in which we find ourselves with
+ reference to the results of our actions. As soon as we believe ourselves
+ certain of these results, we necessarily decide; and then we act
+ necessarily according as we shall have judged right or wrong. Our
+ judgments, true or false, are not free; they are necessarily determined by
+ ideas which we have received, or which our mind has formed. Man is not
+ free in his choice; he is evidently compelled to choose what he judges the
+ most useful or the most agreeable for himself. When he suspends his
+ choice, he is not more free; he is forced to suspend it till he knows or
+ believes he knows the qualities of the objects presented to him, or until
+ he has weighed the consequence of his actions. Man, you will say, decides
+ every moment on actions which he knows will endanger him; man kills
+ himself sometimes, then he is free. I deny it! Has man the ability to
+ reason correctly or incorrectly? Do not his reason and his wisdom depend
+ either upon opinions that he has formed, or upon his mental constitution?
+ As neither the one nor the other depends upon his will, they can not in
+ any wise prove his liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I make the wager to do or not to do a thing, am I not free? Does it not
+ depend upon me to do or not to do it? No; I will answer you, the desire to
+ win the wager will necessarily determine you to do or not to do the thing
+ in question. "But if I consent to lose the wager?" Then the desire to
+ prove to me that you are free will have become to you a stronger motive
+ than the desire to win the wager; and this motive will necessarily have
+ determined you to do or not to do what was understood between us. But you
+ will say, "I feel myself free." It is an illusion which may be compared to
+ that of the fly in the fable, which, lighting on the shaft of a heavy
+ wagon, applauded itself as driver of the vehicle which carried it. Man who
+ believes himself free, is a fly who believes himself the master-motor in
+ the machine of the universe, while he himself, without his own volition,
+ is carried on by it. The feeling which makes us believe that we are free
+ to do or not to do a thing, is but a pure illusion. When we come to the
+ veritable principle of our actions, we will find that they are nothing but
+ the necessary results of our wills and of our desires, which are never
+ within our power. You believe yourselves free because you do as you
+ choose; but are you really free to will or not to will, to desire or not
+ to desire? Your wills and your desires, are they not necessarily excited
+ by objects or by qualities which do not depend upon you at all?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0084" id="link2H_4_0084">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXXI.&mdash;WE SHOULD NOT CONCLUDE FROM THIS THAT SOCIETY HAS NOT THE
+ RIGHT TO CHASTISE THE WICKED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If the actions of men are necessary, if men are not free, what right has
+ society to punish the wicked who infest it? Is it not very unjust to
+ chastise beings who could not act otherwise than they did? If the wicked
+ act from the impulse of their corrupt nature, society in punishing them
+ acts necessarily on its side from the desire to preserve itself. Certain
+ objects produce in us the feeling of pain; therefore our nature compels us
+ to hate them, and incites us to remove them. A tiger pressed by hunger,
+ attacks the man whom he wishes to devour; but the man is not the master of
+ his fear of the tiger, and seeks necessarily the means of exterminating
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0085" id="link2H_4_0085">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXXII.&mdash;REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENTS IN FAVOR OF FREE WILL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If everything is necessary, if errors, opinions, and ideas of men are
+ fated, how or why can we pretend to reform them? The errors of men are the
+ necessary results of their ignorance; their ignorance, their obstinacy,
+ their credulity, are the necessary results of their inexperience, of their
+ indifference, of their lack of reflection; the same as congestion of the
+ brain or lethargy are the natural effects of some diseases. Truth,
+ experience, reflection, reason, are the proper remedies to cure ignorance,
+ fanaticism, and follies; the same as bleeding is good to soothe congestion
+ of the brain. But you will say, why does not truth produce this effect
+ upon many of the sick heads? There are some diseases which resist all
+ remedies; it is impossible to cure obstinate patients who refuse to take
+ the remedies which are given them; the interest of some men and the folly
+ of others naturally oppose them to the admission of truth. A cause
+ produces its effect only when it is not interrupted in its action by other
+ causes which are stronger, or which weaken the action of the first cause
+ or render it useless. It is entirely impossible to have the best arguments
+ accepted by men who are strongly interested in error; who are prejudiced
+ in its favor; who refuse to reflect; but it must necessarily be that truth
+ undeceives the honest souls who seek it in good faith. Truth is a cause;
+ it produces necessarily its effect when its impulse is not interrupted by
+ causes which suspend its effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0086" id="link2H_4_0086">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXXIII.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To take away from man his free will, is, we are told, to make of him a
+ pure machine, an automaton without liberty; there would exist in him
+ neither merit nor virtue What is merit in man?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a certain manner of acting which renders him estimable in the eyes
+ of his fellow beings. What is virtue? It is the disposition that causes us
+ to do good to others. What can there be contemptible in automatic machines
+ capable of producing such desirable effects? Marcus Aurelius was a very
+ useful spring to the vast machine of the Roman Empire. By what right will
+ a machine despise another machine, whose springs would facilitate its own
+ play? Good people are springs which assist society in its tendency to
+ happiness; wicked men are badly-formed springs, which disturb the order,
+ the progress, and harmony of society. If for its own interests society
+ loves and rewards the good, she hates, despises, and removes the wicked,
+ as useless or dangerous motors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0087" id="link2H_4_0087">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXXIV.&mdash;GOD HIMSELF, IF THERE WAS A GOD, WOULD NOT BE FREE; HENCE
+ THE USELESSNESS OF ALL RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The world is a necessary agent; all the beings which compose it are united
+ to each other, and can not do otherwise than they do, so long as they are
+ moved by the same causes and possessed of the same qualities. If they lose
+ these qualities, they will act necessarily in a different way. God Himself
+ (admitting His existence a moment) can not be regarded as a free agent; if
+ there existed a God, His manner of acting would necessarily be determined
+ by the qualities inherent in His nature; nothing would be able to alter or
+ to oppose His wishes. This considered, neither our actions nor our prayers
+ nor our sacrifices could suspend or change His invariable progress and His
+ immutable designs, from which we are compelled to conclude that all
+ religion would be entirely useless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0088" id="link2H_4_0088">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXXV.&mdash;EVEN ACCORDING TO THEOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES, MAN IS NOT FREE ONE
+ INSTANT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If theologians were not constantly contradicting each other, they would
+ know, from their own hypotheses, that man can not be called free for an
+ instant. Is not man supposed to be in a continual dependence upon God? Is
+ one free, when one could not have existed or can not live without God, and
+ when one ceases to exist at the pleasure of His supreme will? If God
+ created man of nothing, if the preservation of man is a continual
+ creation, if God can not lose sight of His creature for an instant, if all
+ that happens to him is a result of the Divine will, if man is nothing of
+ himself, if all the events which he experiences are the effects of Divine
+ decrees, if he can not do any good without assistance from above, how can
+ it be pretended that man enjoys liberty during one moment of his life? If
+ God did not save him in the moment when he sins, how could man sin? If God
+ preserves him, God, therefore, forces him to live in order to sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0089" id="link2H_4_0089">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXXVI.&mdash;ALL EVIL, ALL DISORDER, ALL SIN, CAN BE ATTRIBUTED BUT TO
+ GOD; AND CONSEQUENTLY, HE HAS NO RIGHT TO PUNISH OR REWARD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Divinity is continually compared to a king, the majority of whose subjects
+ revolt against Him and it is pretended that He has the right to reward His
+ faithful subjects, and to punish those who revolt against Him. This
+ comparison is not just in any of its parts. God presides over a machine,
+ of which He has made all the springs; these springs act according to the
+ way in which God has formed them; it is the fault of His inaptitude if
+ these springs do not contribute to the harmony of the machine in which the
+ workman desired to place them. God is a creating King, who created all
+ kinds of subjects for Himself; who formed them according to His pleasure,
+ and whose wishes can never find any resistance. If God in His empire has
+ rebellious subjects, it is God who resolved to have rebellious subjects.
+ If the sins of men disturb the order of the world, it is God who desired
+ this order to be disturbed. Nobody dares to doubt Divine justice; however,
+ under the empire of a just God, we find nothing but injustice and
+ violence. Power decides the fate of nations. Equity seems to be banished
+ from the earth; a small number of men enjoy with impunity the repose, the
+ fortunes, the liberty, and the life of all the others. Everything is in
+ disorder in a world governed by a God of whom it is said that disorder
+ displeases Him exceedingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0090" id="link2H_4_0090">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXXVII.&mdash;MEN'S PRAYERS TO GOD PROVE SUFFICIENTLY THAT THEY ARE NOT
+ SATISFIED WITH THE DIVINE ECONOMY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although men incessantly admire the wisdom the goodness, the justice, the
+ beautiful order of Providence, they are, in fact, never contented with it.
+ The prayers which they continually offer to Heaven, prove to us that they
+ are not at all satisfied with God's administration. Praying to God, asking
+ a favor of Him, is to mistrust His vigilant care; to pray God to avert or
+ to suppress an evil, is to endeavor to put obstacles in the way of His
+ justice; to implore the assistance of God in our calamities, means to
+ appeal to the very author of these calamities in order to represent to Him
+ our welfare; that He ought to rectify in our favor His plan, which is not
+ beneficial to our interests. The optimist, or the one who thinks that
+ everything is good in the world, and who repeats to us incessantly that we
+ live in the best world possible, if he were consistent, ought never to
+ pray; still less should he expect another world where men will be happier.
+ Can there be a better world than the best possible of all worlds? Some of
+ the theologians have treated the optimists as impious for having claimed
+ that God could not have made a better world than the one in which we live;
+ according to these doctors it is limiting the Divine power and insulting
+ it. But do not theologians see that it is less offensive for God, to
+ pretend that He did His best in creating the world, than to say that He,
+ having the power to produce a better one, had the malice to make a very
+ bad one? If the optimist, by his system, does wrong to the Divine power,
+ the theologian, who treats him as impious, is himself a reprobate, who
+ wounds the Divine goodness under pretext of taking interest in God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0091" id="link2H_4_0091">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXXVIII.&mdash;THE REPARATION OF THE INIQUITIES AND THE MISERIES OF THIS
+ WORLD IN ANOTHER WORLD, IS AN IDLE CONJECTURE AND AN ABSURD SUPPOSITION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When we complain of the evils of which this world is the theater, we are
+ referred to another world; we are told that there God will repair all the
+ iniquities and the miseries which He permits for a time here below.
+ However, if leaving His eternal justice to sleep for a time, God could
+ consent to evil during the period of the existence of our globe, what
+ assurance have we that during the existence of another globe, Divine
+ justice will not likewise sleep during the misfortunes of its inhabitants?
+ They console us in our troubles by saying, that God is patient, and that
+ His justice, although often very slow, is not the less certain. But do you
+ not see, that patience can not be suited to a being just, immutable, and
+ omnipotent? Can God tolerate injustice for an instant? To temporize with
+ an evil that one knows of, evinces either uncertainty, weakness, or
+ collusion; to tolerate evil which one has the power to prevent, is to
+ consent that evil should be committed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0092" id="link2H_4_0092">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LXXXIX.&mdash;THEOLOGY JUSTIFIES THE EVIL AND INJUSTICE PERMITTED BY ITS
+ GOD, ONLY BY CONCEDING TO THIS GOD THE RIGHT OF THE STRONGEST, THAT IS TO
+ SAY, THE VIOLATION OF ALL RIGHTS, OR IN COMMANDING FROM MEN A STUPID
+ DEVOTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I hear a multitude of theologians tell me on all sides, that God is
+ infinitely just, but that His justice is not that of men! Of what kind, or
+ of what nature is this Divine justice then? What idea can I form of a
+ justice which so often resembles human injustice? Is it not confounding
+ all our ideas of justice and of injustice, to tell us that what is
+ equitable in God is iniquitous in His creatures? How can we take as a
+ model a being whose Divine perfections are precisely contrary to human
+ perfections? God, you say, is the sovereign arbiter of our destinies; His
+ supreme power, that nothing can limit, authorizes Him to do as He pleases
+ with His works; a worm, such as man, has not the right to murmur against
+ Him. This arrogant tone is literally borrowed from the language which the
+ ministers of tyrants hold, when they silence those who suffer by their
+ violences; it can not, then, be the language of the ministers of a God of
+ whose equity they boast. It can not impose upon a being who reasons.
+ Ministers of a just God! I tell you then, that the greatest power is not
+ able to confer even upon your God Himself the right to be unjust to the
+ vilest of His creatures. A despot is not a God. A God who arrogates to
+ Himself the right to do evil, is a tyrant; a tyrant is not a model for
+ men. He ought to be an execrable object in their eyes. Is it not strange
+ that, in order to justify Divinity, they made of Him the most unjust of
+ beings? As soon as we complain of His conduct, they think to silence us by
+ claiming that God is the Master; which signifies that God, being the
+ strongest, He is not subjected to ordinary rules. But the right of the
+ strongest is the violation of all rights; it can pass as a right but in
+ the eyes of a savage conqueror, who, in the intoxication of his fury,
+ imagines he has the right to do as he pleases with the unfortunate ones
+ whom he has conquered; this barbarous right can appear legitimate only to
+ slaves, who are blind enough to think that everything is allowed to
+ tyrants, who are too strong for them to resist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By a foolish simplicity, or rather by a plain contradiction of terms, do
+ we not see devotees exclaim, amidst the greatest calamities, that the good
+ Lord is the Master? Well, illogical reasoners, you believe in good faith
+ that the good Lord sends you the pestilence; that your good Lord gives
+ war; that the good Lord is the cause of famine; in a word, that the good
+ Lord, without ceasing to be good, has the will and the right to do you the
+ greatest evils you can endure! Cease to call your Lord good when He does
+ you harm; do not say that He is just; say that He is the strongest, and
+ that it is impossible for you to avert the blows which His caprice
+ inflicts upon you. God, you say, punishes us for our highest good; but
+ what real benefit can result to a nation in being exterminated by
+ contagion, murdered by wars, corrupted by the examples of perverse
+ masters, continually pressed by the iron scepter of merciless tyrants,
+ subjected to the scourge of a bad government, which often for centuries
+ causes nations to suffer its destructive effects? The eyes of faith must
+ be strange eyes, if we see by their means any advantage in the most
+ dreadful miseries and in the most durable evils, in the vices and follies
+ by which our kind is so cruelly afflicted!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0093" id="link2H_4_0093">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XC.&mdash;REDEMPTION, AND THE CONTINUAL EXTERMINATIONS ATTRIBUTED TO
+ JEHOVAH IN THE BIBLE, ARE SO MANY ABSURD AND RIDICULOUS INVENTIONS WHICH
+ PRESUPPOSE AN UNJUST AND BARBAROUS GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What strange ideas of the Divine justice must the Christians have who
+ believe that their God, with the view of reconciling Himself with mankind,
+ guilty without knowledge of the fault of their parents, sacrificed His own
+ innocent and sinless Son! What would we say of a king, whose subjects
+ having revolted against him, in order to appease himself could find no
+ other expedient than to put to death the heir to his crown, who had taken
+ no part in the general rebellion? It is, the Christian will say, through
+ kindness for His subjects, incapable of satisfying themselves of His
+ Divine justice, that God consented to the cruel death of His Son. But the
+ kindness of a father to strangers does not give him the right to be unjust
+ and cruel to his son. All the qualities that theology gives to its God
+ annul each other. The exercise of one of His perfections is always at the
+ expense of another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Has the Jew any more rational ideas than the Christian of Divine justice?
+ A king, by his pride, kindles the wrath of Heaven. Jehovah sends
+ pestilence upon His innocent people; seventy thousand subjects are
+ exterminated to expiate the fault of a monarch that the kindness of God
+ resolved to spare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0094" id="link2H_4_0094">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XCI.&mdash;HOW CAN WE DISCOVER A TENDER, GENEROUS, AND EQUITABLE FATHER IN
+ A BEING WHO HAS CREATED HIS CHILDREN BUT TO MAKE THEM UNHAPPY?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the injustice with which all religions are pleased to blacken
+ the Divinity, men can not consent to accuse Him of iniquity; they fear
+ that He, like the tyrants of this world, will be offended by the truth,
+ and redouble the weight of His malice and tyranny upon them. They listen,
+ then, to their priests, who tell them that their God is a tender Father;
+ that this God is an equitable Monarch, whose object in this world is to
+ assure Himself of the love, obedience, and respect of His subjects; who
+ gives them the liberty to act, in order to give them occasion to deserve
+ His favors and to acquire eternal happiness, which He does not owe them in
+ any way. In what way can we recognize the tenderness of a Father who
+ created the majority of His children but for the purpose of dragging out a
+ life of pain, anxiety, and bitterness upon this earth? Is there any more
+ fatal boon than this pretended liberty which, it is said, men can abuse,
+ and thereby expose themselves to the risk of eternal misery?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0095" id="link2H_4_0095">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XCII.&mdash;THE LIFE OF MORTALS, ALL WHICH TAKES PLACE HERE BELOW,
+ TESTIFIES AGAINST MAN'S LIBERTY AND AGAINST THE JUSTICE AND GOODNESS OF A
+ PRETENDED GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In calling mortals into life, what a cruel and dangerous game does the
+ Divinity force them to play! Thrust into the world without their wish,
+ provided with a temperament of which they are not the masters, animated by
+ passions and desires inherent in their nature, exposed to snares which
+ they have not the skill to avoid, led away by events which they could
+ neither foresee nor prevent, the unfortunate beings are obliged to follow
+ a career which conducts them to horrible tortures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Travelers assert that in some part of Asia reigns a sultan full of
+ phantasies, and very absolute in his will. By a strange mania this prince
+ spends his time sitting before a table, on which are placed six dice and a
+ dice-box. One end of the table is covered with a pile of gold, for the
+ purpose of exciting the cupidity of the courtiers and of the people by
+ whom the sultan is surrounded. He, knowing the weak point of his subjects,
+ speaks to them in this way: "Slaves! I wish you well; my aim is to enrich
+ you and render you all happy. Do you see these treasures? Well, they are
+ for you! try to win them; let each one in turn take this box and these
+ dice; whoever shall have the good luck to raffle six, will be master of
+ this treasure; but I warn you that he who has not the luck to throw the
+ required number, will be precipitated forever into an obscure cell, where
+ my justice exacts that he shall be burned by a slow fire." Upon this
+ threat of the monarch, they regarded each other in consternation; no one
+ willing to take a risk so dangerous. "What!" said the angry sultan, "no
+ one wants to play? Oh, this does not suit me! My glory demands that you
+ play. You will raffle then; I wish it; obey without replying!" It is well
+ to observe that the despot's dice are prepared in such a way, that upon a
+ hundred thousand throws there is but one that wins; thus the generous
+ monarch has the pleasure to see his prison well filled, and his treasures
+ seldom carried away. Mortals! this Sultan is your God; His treasures are
+ heaven; His cell is hell; and you hold the dice!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0096" id="link2H_4_0096">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XCIII.&mdash;IT IS NOT TRUE THAT WE OWE ANY GRATITUDE TO WHAT WE CALL
+ PROVIDENCE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are constantly told that we owe an infinite gratitude to Providence for
+ the countless blessings It is pleased to lavish upon us. They boast above
+ all that our existence is a blessing. But, alas! how many mortals are
+ really satisfied with their mode of existence? If life has its sweets, how
+ much of bitterness is mingled with it? Is not one bitter trouble
+ sufficient to blight all of a sudden the most peaceful and happy life? Is
+ there a great number of men who, if it depended upon them, would wish to
+ begin, at the same sacrifice, the painful career into which, without their
+ consent, destiny has thrown them? You say that existence itself is a great
+ blessing. But is not this existence continually troubled by griefs, fears,
+ and often cruel and undeserved maladies. This existence, menaced on so
+ many sides, can we not be deprived of it at any moment? Who is there,
+ after having lived for some time, who has not been deprived of a beloved
+ wife, a beloved child, a consoling friend, whose loss fills his mind
+ constantly? There are very few mortals who have not been compelled to
+ drink from the cup of bitterness; there are but few who have not often
+ wished to die. Finally, it did not depend upon us to exist or not to
+ exist. Would the bird be under such great obligations to the bird-catcher
+ for having caught it in his net and for having put it into his cage, in
+ order to eat it after being amused with it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0097" id="link2H_4_0097">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XCIV.&mdash;TO PRETEND THAT MAN IS THE BELOVED CHILD OF PROVIDENCE, GOD'S
+ FAVORITE, THE ONLY OBJECT OF HIS LABORS, THE KING OF NATURE, IS FOLLY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the infirmities, the troubles, the miseries to which man is
+ compelled to submit in this world; in spite of the danger which his
+ alarmed imagination creates in regard to another, he is still foolish
+ enough to believe himself to be God's favorite, the only aim of all His
+ works. He imagines that the entire universe was made for him; he calls
+ himself arrogantly the king of nature, and ranks himself far above other
+ animals. Poor mortal! upon what can you establish your high pretensions?
+ It is, you say, upon your soul, upon your reason, upon your sublime
+ faculties, which place you in a condition to exercise an absolute
+ authority over the beings which surround you. But weak sovereign of this
+ world, art thou sure one instant of the duration of thy reign? The least
+ atoms of matter which you despise, are they not sufficient to deprive you
+ of your throne and life? Finally, does not the king of animals terminate
+ always by becoming food for the worms?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You speak of your soul. But do you know what your soul is? Do you not see
+ that this soul is but the assemblage of your organs, from which life
+ results? Would you refuse a soul to other animals who live, who think, who
+ judge, who compare, who seek pleasure, and avoid pain even as you do, and
+ who often possess organs which are better than your own? You boast of your
+ intellectual faculties, but these faculties which render you so proud, do
+ they make you any happier than other creatures? Do you often make use of
+ this reason which you glory in, and which religion commands you not to
+ listen to? Those animals which you disdain because they are weaker or less
+ cunning than yourself, are they subject to troubles, to mental anxieties,
+ to a thousand frivolous passions, to a thousand imaginary needs, of which
+ your heart is continually the prey? Are they, like you, tormented by the
+ past, alarmed for the future?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Limited solely to the present, what you call their instinct, and what I
+ call their intelligence, is it not sufficient to preserve and to defend
+ them and to provide for their needs? This instinct, of which you speak
+ with disdain, does it not often serve them much better than your wonderful
+ faculties? Their peaceable ignorance, is it not more advantageous than
+ these extravagant meditations and these futile investigations which render
+ you miserable, and for which you are driven to murdering beings of your
+ own noble kind? Finally, these animals, have they, like mortals, a
+ troubled imagination which makes them fear not only death, but even
+ eternal torments? Augustus, having heard that Herod, king of Judea, had
+ murdered his sons, cried out: "It would be better to be Herod's pig than
+ his son!" We can say as much of men; this beloved child of Providence runs
+ much greater risks than all other animals. After having suffered a great
+ deal in this world, do we not believe ourselves in danger of suffering for
+ eternity in another?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0098" id="link2H_4_0098">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XCV.&mdash;COMPARISON BETWEEN MAN AND ANIMALS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What is the exact line of demarcation between man and the other animals
+ which he calls brutes? In what way does he essentially differ from the
+ beasts? It is, we are told, by his intelligence, by the faculties of his
+ mind, by his reason, that man is superior to all the other animals, which
+ in all they do, act but by physical impulsions, reason taking no part. But
+ the beasts, having more limited needs than men, do very well without these
+ intellectual faculties, which would be perfectly useless in their way of
+ living. Their instinct is sufficient for them, while all the faculties of
+ man are hardly sufficient to render his existence endurable, and to
+ satisfy the needs which his imagination, his prejudices, and his
+ institutions multiply to his torment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brute is not affected by the same objects as man; it has neither the
+ same needs, nor the same desires, nor the same whims; it early reaches
+ maturity, while nothing is more rare than to see the human being enjoying
+ all of his faculties, exercising them freely, and making a proper use of
+ them for his own happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0099" id="link2H_4_0099">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XCVI.&mdash;THERE ARE NO MORE DETESTABLE ANIMALS IN THIS WORLD THAN
+ TYRANTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are assured that the human soul is a simple substance; but if the soul
+ is such a simple substance, it ought to be the same in all the individuals
+ of the human race, who all ought to have the same intellectual faculties;
+ however, this is not the case; men differ as much in qualities of mind as
+ in the features of the face. There are in the human race, beings as
+ different from one another as man is from a horse or a dog. What
+ conformity or resemblance do we find between some men? What an infinite
+ distance between the genius of a Locke, of a Newton, and that of a
+ peasant, of a Hottentot, or of a Laplander!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man differs from other animals but by the difference of his organization,
+ which causes him to produce effects of which they are not capable. The
+ variety which we notice in the organs of individuals of the human race,
+ suffices to explain to us the difference which is often found between them
+ in regard to the intellectual faculties. More or less of delicacy in these
+ organs, of heat in the blood, of promptitude in the fluids, more or less
+ of suppleness or of rigidity in the fibers and the nerves, must
+ necessarily produce the infinite diversities which are noticeable in the
+ minds of men. It is by exercise, by habitude, by education, that the human
+ mind is developed and succeeds in rising above the beings which surround
+ it; man, without culture and without experience, is a being as devoid of
+ reason and of industry as the brute. A stupid individual is a man whose
+ organs are acted upon with difficulty, whose brain is hard to move, whose
+ blood circulates slowly; a man of mind is he whose organs are supple, who
+ feels very quickly, whose brain moves promptly; a learned man is one whose
+ organs and whose brain have been exercised a long while upon objects which
+ occupy him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man without culture, experience, or reason, is he not more despicable
+ and more abominable than the vilest insects, or the most ferocious beasts?
+ Is there a more detestable being in nature than a Tiberius, a Nero, a
+ Caligula? These destroyers of the human race, known by the name of
+ conquerors, have they better souls than those of bears, lions, and
+ panthers? Are there more detestable animals in this world than tyrants?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0100" id="link2H_4_0100">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XCVII.&mdash;REFUTATION OF MAN'S EXCELLENCE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Human extravagances soon dispel, in the eyes of reason, the superiority
+ which man arrogantly claims over other animals. Do we not see many animals
+ show more gentleness, more reflection and reason than the animal which
+ calls itself reasonable par excellence? Are there amongst men, who are so
+ often enslaved and oppressed, societies as well organized as those of
+ ants, bees, or beavers? Do we ever see ferocious beasts of the same kind
+ meet upon the plains to devour each other without profit? Do we see among
+ them religious wars? The cruelty of beasts against other species is caused
+ by hunger, the need of nourishment; the cruelty of man against man has no
+ other motive than the vanity of his masters and the folly of his
+ impertinent prejudices. Theorists who try to make us believe that
+ everything in the universe was made for man, are very much embarrassed
+ when we ask them in what way can so many mischievous animals which
+ continually infest our life here, contribute to the welfare of men. What
+ known advantage results for God's friend to be bitten by a viper, stung by
+ a gnat, devoured by vermin, torn into pieces by a tiger? Would not all
+ these animals reason as wisely as our theologians, if they should pretend
+ that man was made for them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0101" id="link2H_4_0101">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XCVIII.&mdash;AN ORIENTAL LEGEND.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At a short distance from Bagdad a dervis, celebrated for his holiness,
+ passed his days tranquilly in agreeable solitude. The surrounding
+ inhabitants, in order to have an interest in his prayers, eagerly brought
+ to him every day provisions and presents. The holy man thanked God
+ incessantly for the blessings Providence heaped upon him. "O Allah," said
+ he, "how ineffable is Thy tenderness toward Thy servants. What have I done
+ to deserve the benefactions which Thy liberality loads me with! Oh,
+ Monarch of the skies! oh, Father of nature! what praises could be worthy
+ to celebrate Thy munificence and Thy paternal cares! O Allah, how great
+ are Thy gifts to the children of men!" Filled with gratitude, our hermit
+ made a vow to undertake for the seventh time the pilgrimage to Mecca. The
+ war, which then existed between the Persians and the Turks, could not make
+ him defer the execution of his pious enterprise. Full of confidence in
+ God, he began his journey; under the inviolable safeguard of a respected
+ garb, he passed through without obstacle the enemies' detachments; far
+ from being molested, he receives at every step marks of veneration from
+ the soldiers of both sides. At last, overcome by fatigue, he finds himself
+ obliged to seek a shelter from the rays of the burning sun; he finds it
+ beneath a fresh group of palm-trees, whose roots were watered by a limpid
+ rivulet. In this solitary place, where the silence was broken only by the
+ murmuring of the waters and the singing of the birds, the man of God found
+ not only an enchanting retreat, but also a delicious repast; he had but to
+ extend the hand to gather dates and other agreeable fruits; the rivulet
+ can appease his thirst; very soon a green plot invites him to take sweet
+ repose. As he awakens he performs the holy cleansing; and in a transport
+ of ecstasy, he exclaimed: "O Allah! HOW GREAT IS THY GOODNESS TO THE
+ CHILDREN OF MEN!" Well rested, refreshed, full of life and gayety, our
+ holy man continues on his road; it conducts him for some time through a
+ delightful country, which offers to his sight but blooming shores and
+ trees filled with fruit. Softened by this spectacle, he worships
+ incessantly the rich and liberal hand of Providence, which is everywhere
+ seen occupied with the welfare of the human race. Going a little farther,
+ he comes across a few mountains, which were quite hard to ascend; but
+ having arrived at their summit, a hideous sight suddenly meets his eyes;
+ his soul is all consternation. He discovers a vast plain entirely
+ devastated by the sword and fire; he looks at it and finds it covered with
+ more than a hundred thousand corpses, deplorable remains of a bloody
+ battle which had taken place a few days previous. Eagles, vultures,
+ ravens, and wolves were devouring the dead bodies with which the earth was
+ covered. This sight plunges our pilgrim into a sad reverie. Heaven, by a
+ special favor, had made him understand the language of beasts. He heard a
+ wolf, gorged with human flesh, exclaim in his excessive joy: "O Allah! how
+ great is Thy kindness for the children of wolves! Thy foreseeing wisdom
+ takes care to send infatuation upon these detestable men who are so
+ dangerous to us. Through an effect of Thy Providence which watches over
+ Thy creatures, these, our destroyers, murder each other, and thus furnish
+ us with sumptuous repasts. O Allah! HOW GREAT IS THY GOODNESS TO THE
+ CHILDREN OF WOLVES!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0102" id="link2H_4_0102">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XCIX.&mdash;IT IS FOOLISH TO SEE IN THE UNIVERSE ONLY THE BENEFACTIONS OF
+ HEAVEN, AND TO BELIEVE THAT THIS UNIVERSE WAS MADE BUT FOR MAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ An exalted imagination sees in the universe but the benefactions of
+ Heaven; a calm mind finds good and evil in it. I exist, you will say; but
+ is this existence always a benefit? You will say, look at this sun, which
+ shines for you; this earth, which is covered with fruits and verdure;
+ these flowers, which bloom for our sight and smell; these trees, which
+ bend beneath the weight of fruits; these pure streams, which flow but to
+ quench your thirst; these seas, which embrace the universe to facilitate
+ your commerce; these animals, which a foreseeing nature produces for your
+ use! Yes, I see all these things, and I enjoy them when I can. But in some
+ climates this beautiful sun is most always obscured from me; in others,
+ its excessive heat torments me, produces storm, gives rise to dreadful
+ diseases, dries up the fields; the meadows have no grass, the trees are
+ fruitless, the harvests are scorched, the springs are dried up; I can
+ scarcely exist, and I sigh under the cruelty of a nature which you find so
+ benevolent. If these seas bring me spices, riches, and useless things, do
+ they not destroy a multitude of mortals who are dupes enough to go after
+ them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man's vanity persuades him that he is the sole center of the universe; he
+ creates for himself a world and a God; he thinks himself of sufficient
+ consequence to derange nature at his will, but he reasons as an atheist
+ when the question of other animals is involved. Does he not imagine that
+ the individuals different from his species are automatons unworthy of the
+ cares of universal Providence, and that the beasts can not be the objects
+ of its justice and kindness? Mortals consider fortunate or unfortunate
+ events, health or sickness, life and death, abundance or famine, as
+ rewards or punishments for the use or misuse of the liberty which they
+ arrogate to themselves. Do they reason on this principle when animals are
+ taken into consideration? No; although they see them under a just God
+ enjoy and suffer, be healthy and sick, live and die, like themselves, it
+ does not enter their mind to ask what crimes these beasts have committed
+ in order to cause the displeasure of the Arbiter of nature. Philosophers,
+ blinded by their theological prejudices, in order to disembarrass
+ themselves, have gone so far as to pretend that beasts have no feelings!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will men never renounce their foolish pretensions? Will they not recognize
+ that nature was not made for them? Will they not see that this nature has
+ placed on equal footing all the beings which she produced? Will they not
+ see that all organized beings are equally made to be born and to die, to
+ enjoy and to suffer? Finally, instead of priding themselves preposterously
+ on their mental faculties, are they not compelled to admit that they often
+ render them more unhappy than the beasts, in which we find neither
+ opinions, prejudices, vanities, nor the weaknesses which decide at every
+ moment the well-being of men?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0103" id="link2H_4_0103">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ C.&mdash;WHAT IS THE SOUL? WE KNOW NOTHING ABOUT IT. IF THIS PRETENDED
+ SOUL WAS OF ANOTHER ESSENCE FROM THAT OF THE BODY, THEIR UNION WOULD BE
+ IMPOSSIBLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The superiority which men arrogate to themselves over other animals, is
+ principally founded upon the opinion of possessing exclusively an immortal
+ soul. But as soon as we ask what this soul is, they begin to stammer. It
+ is an unknown substance; it is a secret force distinguished from their
+ bodies; it is a spirit of which they can form no idea. Ask them how this
+ spirit, which they suppose like their God, totally deprived of a physical
+ substance, could combine itself with their material bodies? They will tell
+ you that they know nothing about it; that it is a mystery to them; that
+ this combination is the effect of the Almighty power. These are the clear
+ ideas which men form of the hidden, or, rather, imaginary substance which
+ they consider the motor of all their actions! If the soul is a substance
+ essentially different from the body, and which can have no affinity with
+ it, their union would be, not a mystery, but a thing impossible. Besides,
+ this soul, being of an essence different from that of the body, ought to
+ act necessarily in a different way from it. However, we see that the
+ movements of the body are felt by this pretended soul, and that these two
+ substances, so different in essence, always act in harmony. You will tell
+ us that this harmony is a mystery; and I will tell you that I do not see
+ my soul, that I know and feel but my body; that it is my body which feels,
+ which reflects, which judges, which suffers, and which enjoys, and that
+ all of its faculties are the necessary results of its own mechanism or of
+ its organization.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0104" id="link2H_4_0104">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CI.&mdash;THE EXISTENCE OF A SOUL IS AN ABSURD SUPPOSITION, AND THE
+ EXISTENCE OF AN IMMORTAL SOUL IS A STILL MORE ABSURD SUPPOSITION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although it is impossible for men to have the least idea of the soul, or
+ of this pretended spirit which animates them, they persuade themselves,
+ however, that this unknown soul is exempt from death; everything proves to
+ them that they feel, think, acquire ideas, enjoy or suffer, but by the
+ means of the senses or of the material organs of the body. Even admitting
+ the existence of this soul, one can not refuse to recognize that it
+ depends wholly on the body, and suffers conjointly with it all the
+ vicissitudes which it experiences itself; and however it is imagined that
+ it has by its nature nothing analogous with it; it is pretended that it
+ can act and feel without the assistance of this body; that deprived of
+ this body and robbed of its senses, this soul will be able to live, to
+ enjoy, to suffer, be sensitive of enjoyment or of rigorous torments. Upon
+ such a tissue of conjectural absurdities the wonderful opinion of the
+ immortality of the soul is built.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I ask what ground we have for supposing that the soul is immortal: they
+ reply, it is because man by his nature desires to be immortal, or to live
+ forever. But I rejoin, if you desire anything very much, is it sufficient
+ to conclude that this desire will be fulfilled? By what strange logic do
+ they decide that a thing can not fail to happen because they ardently
+ desire it to happen? Man's childish desires of the imagination, are they
+ the measure of reality? Impious people, you say, deprived of the
+ flattering hopes of another life, desire to be annihilated. Well, have
+ they not just as much right to conclude by this desire that they will be
+ annihilated, as you to conclude that you will exist forever because you
+ desire it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0105" id="link2H_4_0105">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CII.&mdash;IT IS EVIDENT THAT THE WHOLE OF MAN DIES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Man dies entirely. Nothing is more evident to him who is not delirious.
+ The human body, after death, is but a mass, incapable of producing any
+ movements the union of which constitutes life. We no longer see
+ circulation, respiration, digestion, speech, or reflection. It is claimed
+ then that the soul has separated itself from the body. But to say that
+ this soul, which is unknown, is the principle of life, is saying nothing,
+ unless that an unknown force is the invisible principle of imperceptible
+ movements. Nothing is more natural and more simple than to believe that
+ the dead man lives no more, nothing more absurd than to believe that the
+ dead man is still living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We ridicule the simplicity of some nations whose fashion is to bury
+ provisions with the dead&mdash;under the idea that this food might be
+ useful and necessary to them in another life. Is it more ridiculous or
+ more absurd to believe that men will eat after death than to imagine that
+ they will think; that they will have agreeable or disagreeable ideas; that
+ they will enjoy; that they will suffer; that they will be conscious of
+ sorrow or joy when the organs which produce sensations or ideas are
+ dissolved and reduced to dust? To claim that the souls of men will be
+ happy or unhappy after the death of the body, is to pretend that man will
+ be able to see without eyes, to hear without ears, to taste without a
+ palate, to smell without a nose, and to feel without hands and without
+ skin. Nations who believe themselves very rational, adopt, nevertheless,
+ such ideas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0106" id="link2H_4_0106">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CIII.&mdash;INCONTESTABLE PROOFS AGAINST THE SPIRITUALITY OF THE SOUL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The dogma of the immortality of the soul assumes that the soul is a simple
+ substance, a spirit; but I will always ask, what is a spirit? It is, you
+ say, a substance deprived of expansion, incorruptible, and which has
+ nothing in common with matter. But if this is true, how came your soul
+ into existence? how did it grow? how did it strengthen? how weaken itself,
+ get out of order, and grow old with your body? In reply to all these
+ questions, you say that they are mysteries; but if they are mysteries, you
+ understand nothing about them. If you do not understand anything about
+ them, how can you positively affirm anything about them? In order to
+ believe or to affirm anything, it is necessary at least to know what that
+ consists of which we believe and which we affirm. To believe in the
+ existence of your immaterial soul, is to say that you are persuaded of the
+ existence of a thing of which it is impossible for you to form any true
+ idea; it is to believe in words without attaching any sense to them; to
+ affirm that the thing is as you claim, is the highest folly or assumption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0107" id="link2H_4_0107">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CIV.&mdash;THE ABSURDITY OF SUPERNATURAL CAUSES, WHICH THEOLOGIANS
+ CONSTANTLY CALL TO THEIR AID.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Are not theologians strange reasoners? As soon as they can not guess the
+ natural causes of things, they invent causes, which they call
+ supernatural; they imagine them spirits, occult causes, inexplicable
+ agents, or rather words much more obscure than the things which they
+ attempt to explain. Let us remain in nature when we desire to understand
+ its phenomena; let us ignore the causes which are too delicate to be
+ seized by our organs; and let us be assured that by seeking outside of
+ nature we can never find the solution of nature's problems. Even upon the
+ theological hypothesis&mdash;that is to say, supposing an Almighty motor
+ in matter&mdash;what right have theologians to refuse their God the power
+ to endow this matter with thought? Would it be more difficult for Him to
+ create combinations of matter from which results thought, than spirits
+ which think? At least, in supposing a substance endowed with thought, we
+ could form some idea of the object of our thoughts, or of what thinks in
+ us; while attributing thought to an immaterial being, it is impossible for
+ us to form the least idea of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0108" id="link2H_4_0108">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CV.&mdash;IT IS FALSE THAT MATERIALISM CAN BE DEBASING TO THE HUMAN RACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Materialism, it is objected, makes of man a mere machine, which is
+ considered very debasing to the human race. But will the human race be
+ more honored when it can be said that man acts by the secret impulsions of
+ a spirit, or a certain something which animates him without his knowing
+ how? It is easy to perceive that the superiority which is given to mind
+ over matter, or to the soul over the body, is based upon the ignorance of
+ the nature of this soul; while we are more familiarized with matter or the
+ body, which we imagine we know, and of which we believe we have understood
+ the springs; but the most simple movements of our bodies are, for every
+ thinking man, enigmas as difficult to divine as thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0109" id="link2H_4_0109">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CVI.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The esteem which so many people have for the spiritual substance, appears
+ to result from the impossibility they find in defining it in an
+ intelligible way. The contempt which our metaphysicians show for matter,
+ comes from the fact that "familiarity breeds contempt." When they tell us
+ that the soul is more excellent and noble than the body, they tell us
+ nothing, except that what they know nothing about must be more beautiful
+ than that of which they have some faint ideas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0110" id="link2H_4_0110">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CVII.&mdash;THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFE IS USEFUL BUT FOR THOSE WHO PROFIT
+ BY IT AT THE EXPENSE OF THE CREDULOUS PUBLIC.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are constantly told of the usefulness of the dogma of life hereafter.
+ It is pretended that even if it should be a fiction, it is advantageous,
+ because it imposes upon men and leads them to virtue. But is it true that
+ this dogma renders men wiser and more virtuous? The nations where this
+ fiction is established, are they remarkable for the morality of their
+ conduct? Is not the visible world always preferred to the invisible world?
+ If those who are charged to instruct and to govern men had themselves
+ enlightenment and virtue, they would govern them far better by realities
+ than by vain chimeras; but deceitful, ambitious, and corrupt, the
+ legislators found it everywhere easier to put the nations to sleep by
+ fables than to teach them truths; than to develop their reason; than to
+ excite them to virtue by sensible and real motives; than to govern them in
+ a reasonable way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Theologians, no doubt, have had reasons for making the soul immaterial.
+ They needed souls and chimeras to populate the imaginary regions which
+ they have discovered in the other life. Material souls would have been
+ subjected, like all bodies, to dissolution. Moreover, if men believe that
+ everything is to perish with the body, the geographers of the other world
+ would evidently lose the chance of guiding their souls to this unknown
+ abode. They would draw no profits from the hopes with which they feast
+ them, and from the terrors with which they take care to overwhelm them. If
+ the future is of no real utility to the human race, it is at least of the
+ greatest advantage to those who take upon themselves the responsibility of
+ conducting mankind thither.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0111" id="link2H_4_0111">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CVIII.&mdash;IT IS FALSE THAT THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFE CAN BE CONSOLING;
+ AND IF IT WERE, IT WOULD BE NO PROOF THAT THIS ASSERTION IS TRUE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ But, it will be said, is not the dogma of the immortality of the soul
+ consoling for beings who often find themselves very unhappy here below? If
+ this should be an illusion, is it not a sweet and agreeable one? Is it not
+ a benefit for man to believe that he can live again and enjoy, sometime,
+ the happiness which is refused to him on earth? Thus, poor mortals! you
+ make your wishes the measure of the truth! Because you desire to live
+ forever, and to be happier, you conclude from thence that you will live
+ forever, and that you will be more fortunate in an unknown world than in
+ the known world, in which you so often suffer! Consent, then, to leave
+ without regret this world, which causes more trouble than pleasure to the
+ majority of you. Resign yourselves to the order of destiny, which decrees
+ that you, like all other beings, should not endure forever. But what will
+ become of me? you ask! What you were several millions of years ago. You
+ were then, I do not know what; resign yourselves, then, to become again in
+ an instant, I do not know what; what you were then; return peaceably to
+ the universal home from which you came without your knowledge into your
+ material form, and pass by without murmuring, like all the beings which
+ surround you!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are repeatedly told that religious ideas offer infinite consolation to
+ the unfortunate; it is pretended that the idea of the immortality of the
+ soul and of a happier life has a tendency to lift up the heart of man and
+ to sustain him in the midst of the adversities with which he is assailed
+ in this life. Materialism, on the contrary, is, we are told, an afflicting
+ system, tending to degrade man, which ranks him among brutes; which
+ destroys his courage, whose only hope is complete annihilation, tending to
+ lead him to despair, and inducing him to commit suicide as soon as he
+ suffers in this world. The grand policy of theologians is to blow hot and
+ to blow cold, to afflict and to console, to frighten and to reassure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the fictions of theology, the regions of the other life are
+ happy and unhappy. Nothing more difficult than to render one worthy of the
+ abode of felicity; nothing easier than to obtain a place in the abode of
+ torments that Divinity prepares for the unfortunate victims of His eternal
+ fury. Those who find the idea of another life so flattering and so sweet,
+ have they then forgotten that this other life, according to them, is to be
+ accompanied by torments for the majority of mortals? Is not the idea of
+ total annihilation infinitely preferable to the idea of an eternal
+ existence accompanied with suffering and gnashing of teeth? The fear of
+ ceasing to exist, is it more afflicting than the thought of having not
+ always been? The fear of ceasing to be is but an evil for the imagination,
+ which alone brought forth the dogma of another life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You say, O Christian philosophers, that the idea of a happier life is
+ delightful; we agree; there is no one who would not desire a more
+ agreeable and a more durable existence than the one we enjoy here below.
+ But, if Paradise is tempting, you will admit, also, that hell is
+ frightful. It is very difficult to merit heaven, and very easy to gain
+ hell. Do you not say that one straight and narrow path leads to the happy
+ regions, and that a broad road leads to the regions of the unhappy? Do you
+ not constantly tell us that the number of the chosen ones is very small,
+ and that of the damned is very large? Do we not need, in order to be
+ saved, such grace as your God grants to but few? Well! I tell you that
+ these ideas are by no means consoling; I prefer to be annihilated at once
+ rather than to burn forever; I will tell you that the fate of beasts
+ appears to me more desirable than the fate of the damned; I will tell you
+ that the belief which delivers me from overwhelming fears in this world,
+ appears to me more desirable than the uncertainty in which I am left
+ through belief in a God who, master of His favors, gives them but to His
+ favorites, and who permits all the others to render themselves worthy of
+ eternal punishments. It can be but blind enthusiasm or folly that can
+ prefer a system which evidently encourages improbable conjectures,
+ accompanied by uncertainty and desolating fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0112" id="link2H_4_0112">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CIX.&mdash;ALL RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES ARE IMAGINARY. INNATE SENSE IS BUT THE
+ EFFECT OF A ROOTED HABIT. GOD IS AN IDLE FANCY, AND THE QUALITIES WHICH
+ ARE LAVISHED UPON HIM DESTROY EACH OTHER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All religious principles are a thing of imagination, in which experience
+ and reason have nothing to do. We find much difficulty in conquering them,
+ because imagination, when once occupied in creating chimeras which
+ astonish or excite it, is incapable of reasoning. He who combats religion
+ and its phantasies by the arms of reason, is like a man who uses a sword
+ to kill flies: as soon as the blow is struck, the flies and the fancies
+ return to the minds from which we thought to have banished them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as we refuse the proofs which theology pretends to give of the
+ existence of a God, they oppose to the arguments which destroy them, an
+ innate conviction, a profound persuasion, an invincible inclination
+ inherent in every man, which brings to him, in spite of himself, the idea
+ of an Almighty being which he can not altogether expel from his mind, and
+ which he is compelled to recognize in spite of the strongest reasons that
+ we can give him. But if we wish to analyze this innate conviction, upon
+ which so much weight is placed, we will find that it is but the effect of
+ a rooted habit, which, making them close their eyes against the most
+ demonstrative proofs, leads the majority of men, and often the most
+ enlightened ones, back to the prejudices of childhood. What can this
+ innate sense or this ill-founded persuasion prove against the evidence
+ which shows us that what implies contradiction can not exist?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told, very gravely, that it is not demonstrated that God does not
+ exist. However, nothing is better demonstrated, notwithstanding all that
+ men have told us so far, than that this God is an idle fancy, whose
+ existence is totally impossible, as nothing is more evident or more
+ clearly demonstrated than that a being can not combine qualities so
+ dissimilar, so contradictory, so irreconcilable as those which all the
+ religions of the earth ascribe to Divinity. The theologian's God, as well
+ as the God of the theist, is He not evidently a cause incompatible with
+ the effects attributed to Him? In whatever light we may look upon it, we
+ must either invent another God, or conclude that the one which, for so
+ many centuries, has been revealed to mortals, is at the same time very
+ good and very wicked, very powerful and very weak, immutable and
+ changeable, perfectly intelligent and perfectly destitute of reason, of
+ plan, and of means; the friend of order and permitting disorder; very just
+ and very unjust; very skillful and very awkward. Finally, are we not
+ obliged to admit that it is impossible to reconcile the discordant
+ attributes which are heaped upon a being of whom we can not say a single
+ word without falling into the most palpable contradictions? Let us attempt
+ to attribute but a single quality to Divinity, and what is said of it will
+ be contradicted immediately by the effects we assign to this cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0113" id="link2H_4_0113">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CX.&mdash;EVERY RELIGION IS BUT A SYSTEM IMAGINED FOR THE PURPOSE OF
+ RECONCILING CONTRADICTIONS BY THE AID OF MYSTERIES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Theology could very properly be defined as the science of contradictions.
+ Every religion is but a system imagined for the purpose of reconciling
+ irreconcilable ideas. By the aid of habitude and terror, we come to
+ persist in the greatest absurdities, even when they are the most clearly
+ exposed. All religions are easy to combat, but very difficult to
+ eradicate. Reason can do nothing against habit, which becomes, as is said,
+ a second nature. There are many persons otherwise sensible, who, even
+ after having examined the ruinous foundations of their belief, return to
+ it in spite of the most striking arguments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as we complain of not understanding religion, finding in it at
+ every step absurdities which are repulsive, seeing in it but
+ impossibilities, we are told that we are not made to conceive the truths
+ of the religion which is proposed to us; that wandering reason is but an
+ unfaithful guide, only capable of conducting us to perdition; and what is
+ more, we are assured that what is folly in the eyes of man, is wisdom in
+ the eyes of God, to whom nothing is impossible. Finally, in order to
+ decide by a single word the most insurmountable difficulties which
+ theology presents to us on all sides, they simply cry out: "Mysteries!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0114" id="link2H_4_0114">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXI.&mdash;ABSURDITY AND INUTILITY OF THE MYSTERIES FORGED IN THE SOLE
+ INTEREST OF THE PRIESTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What is a mystery? If I examine the thing closely, I discover very soon
+ that a mystery is nothing but a contradiction, a palpable absurdity, a
+ notorious impossibility, on which theologians wish to compel men to humbly
+ close the eyes; in a word, a mystery is whatever our spiritual guides can
+ not explain to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is advantageous for the ministers of religion that the people should
+ not comprehend what they are taught. It is impossible for us to examine
+ what we do not comprehend. Every time that we can not see clearly, we are
+ obliged to be guided. If religion was comprehensible, priests would not
+ have so many charges here below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No religion is without mysteries; mystery is its essence; a religion
+ destitute of mysteries would be a contradiction of terms. The God which
+ serves as a foundation to natural religion, to theism or to deism, is
+ Himself the greatest mystery to a mind wishing to dwell upon Him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0115" id="link2H_4_0115">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXII.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All the revealed religions which we see in the world are filled with
+ mysterious dogmas, unintelligible principles, of incredible miracles, of
+ astonishing tales which seem imagined but to confound reason. Every
+ religion announces a concealed God, whose essence is a mystery;
+ consequently, it is just as difficult to conceive of His conduct as of the
+ essence of this God Himself. Divinity has never spoken to us but in an
+ enigmatical and mysterious way in the various religions which have been
+ founded in the different regions of our globe. It has revealed itself
+ everywhere but to announce mysteries, that is to say, to warn mortals that
+ it designs that they should believe in contradictions, in impossibilities,
+ or in things of which they were incapable of forming any positive idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more mysteries a religion has, the more incredible objects it presents
+ to the mind, the better fitted it is to please the imagination of men, who
+ find in it a continual pasturage to feed upon. The more obscure a religion
+ is, the more it appears divine, that is to say, in conformity to the
+ nature of an invisible being, of whom we have no idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the peculiarity of ignorance to prefer the unknown, the concealed,
+ the fabulous, the wonderful, the incredible, even the terrible, to that
+ which is clear, simple, and true. Truth does not give to the imagination
+ such lively play as fiction, which each one may arrange as he pleases. The
+ vulgar ask nothing better than to listen to fables; priests and
+ legislators, by inventing religions and forging mysteries from them, have
+ served them to their taste. In this way they have attracted enthusiasts,
+ women, and the illiterate generally. Beings of this kind resign easily to
+ reasons which they are incapable of examining; the love of the simple and
+ the true is found but in the small number of those whose imagination is
+ regulated by study and by reflection. The inhabitants of a village are
+ never more pleased with their pastor than when he mixes a good deal of
+ Latin in his sermon. Ignorant men always imagine that he who speaks to
+ them of things which they do not understand, is a very wise and learned
+ man. This is the true principle of the credulity of nations, and of the
+ authority of those who pretend to guide them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0116" id="link2H_4_0116">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXIII.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To speak to men to announce to them mysteries, is to give and retain, it
+ is to speak not to be understood. He who talks but by enigmas, either
+ seeks to amuse himself by the embarrassment which he causes, or finds it
+ to his advantage not to explain himself too clearly. Every secret betrays
+ suspicion, weakness, and fear. Princes and their ministers make a mystery
+ of their projects for fear that their enemies in penetrating them would
+ cause them to fail. Can a good God amuse Himself by the embarrassment of
+ His creatures? A God who enjoys a power which nothing in the world can
+ resist, can He apprehend that His intentions could be thwarted? What
+ interest would He have in putting upon us enigmas and mysteries? We are
+ told that man, by the weakness of his nature, is not capable of
+ comprehending the Divine economy which can be to him but a tissue of
+ mysteries; that God can not unveil secrets to him which are beyond his
+ reach. In this case, I reply, that man is not made to trouble himself with
+ Divine economy, that this economy can not interest him in the least, that
+ he has no need of mysteries which he can not understand; finally, that a
+ mysterious religion is not made for him, any more than an eloquent
+ discourse is made for a flock of sheep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0117" id="link2H_4_0117">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXIV.&mdash;A UNIVERSAL GOD SHOULD HAVE REVEALED A UNIVERSAL RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Divinity has revealed itself in the different parts of our globe in a
+ manner of such little uniformity, that in matters of religion men look
+ upon each other with hatred and disdain. The partisans of the different
+ sects see each other very ridiculous and foolish. The most respected
+ mysteries in one religion are laughable for another. God, having revealed
+ Himself to men, ought at least to speak in the same language to all, and
+ relieve their weak minds of the embarrassment of seeking what can be the
+ religion which truly emanated from Him, or what is the most agreeable form
+ of worship in His eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A universal God ought to have revealed a universal religion. By what
+ fatality are so many different religions found on the earth? Which is the
+ true one amongst the great number of those of which each one pretends to
+ be the right one, to the exclusion of all the others? We have every reason
+ to believe that not one of them enjoys this advantage. The divisions and
+ the disputes about opinions are indubitable signs of the uncertainty and
+ of the obscurity of the principles which they profess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0118" id="link2H_4_0118">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXV.&mdash;THE PROOF THAT RELIGION IS NOT NECESSARY, IS THAT IT IS
+ UNINTELLIGIBLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If religion was necessary to all men, it ought to be intelligible to all
+ men. If this religion was the most important thing for them, the goodness
+ of God, it seems, ought to make it for them the clearest, the most
+ evident, and the best demonstrated of all things. Is it not astonishing to
+ see that this matter, so essential to the salvation of mortals, is
+ precisely the one which they understand the least, and about which, during
+ so many centuries, their doctors have disputed the most? Never have
+ priests, of even the same sect, come to an agreement among themselves
+ about the manner of understanding the wishes of a God who has truly
+ revealed Himself to them. The world which we inhabit can be compared to a
+ public place, in whose different parts several charlatans are placed, each
+ one straining himself to attract customers by depreciating the remedies
+ offered by his competitors. Each stand has its purchasers, who are
+ persuaded that their empiric alone possesses the good remedies;
+ notwithstanding the continual use which they make of them, they do not
+ perceive that they are no better, or that they are just as sick as those
+ who run after the charlatans of another stand. Devotion is a disease of
+ the imagination, contracted in infancy; the devotee is a hypochondriac,
+ who increases his disease by the use of remedies. The wise man takes none
+ of it; he follows a good regimen and leaves the rest to nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0119" id="link2H_4_0119">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXVI.&mdash;ALL RELIGIONS ARE RIDICULED BY THOSE OF OPPOSITE THOUGH
+ EQUALLY INSANE BELIEF.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Nothing appears more ridiculous in the eyes of a sensible man than for one
+ denomination to criticize another whose creed is equally foolish. A
+ Christian thinks that the Koran, the Divine revelation announced by
+ Mohammed, is but a tissue of impertinent dreams and impostures injurious
+ to Divinity. The Mohammedan, on his side, treats the Christian as an
+ idolater and a dog; he sees but absurdities in his religion; he imagines
+ he has the right to conquer his country and force him, sword in hand, to
+ accept the faith of his Divine prophet; he believes especially that
+ nothing is more impious or more unreasonable than to worship a man or to
+ believe in the Trinity. The Protestant Christian, who without scruple
+ worships a man, and who believes firmly in the inconceivable mystery of
+ the Trinity, ridicules the Catholic Christian because the latter believes
+ in the mystery of the transubstantiation. He treats him as a fool, as
+ ungodly and idolatrous, because he kneels to worship the bread in which he
+ believes he sees the God of the universe. All the Christian denominations
+ agree in considering as folly the incarnation of the God of the Indies,
+ Vishnu. They contend that the only true incarnation is that of Jesus, Son
+ of the God of the universe and of the wife of a carpenter. The theist, who
+ calls himself a votary of natural religion, is satisfied to acknowledge a
+ God of whom he has no conception; indulges himself in jesting upon other
+ mysteries taught by all the religions of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0120" id="link2H_4_0120">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXVII.&mdash;OPINION OF A CELEBRATED THEOLOGIAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Did not a famous theologian recognize the absurdity of admitting the
+ existence of a God and arresting His course? "To us," he said, "who
+ believe through faith in a true God, an individual substance, there ought
+ to be no trouble in believing everything else. This first mystery, which
+ is no small matter of itself, once admitted, our reason can not suffer
+ violence in admitting all the rest. As for myself, it is no more trouble
+ to accept a million of things that I do not understand, than to believe
+ the first one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there anything more contradictory, more impossible, or more mysterious,
+ than the creation of matter by an immaterial Being, who Himself immutable,
+ causes the continual changes that we see in the world? Is there anything
+ more incompatible with all the ideas of common sense than to believe that
+ a good, wise, equitable, and powerful Being presides over nature and
+ directs Himself the movements of a world which is filled with follies,
+ miseries, crimes, and disorders, which He could have foreseen, and by a
+ single word could have prevented or made to disappear? Finally, as soon as
+ we admit a Being so contradictory as the theological God, what right have
+ we to refuse to accept the most improbable fables, the most astonishing
+ miracles, the most profound mysteries?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0121" id="link2H_4_0121">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXVIII.&mdash;THE DEIST'S GOD IS NO LESS CONTRADICTORY, NO LESS FANCIFUL,
+ THAN THE THEOLOGIAN'S GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The theist exclaims, "Be careful not to worship the ferocious and strange
+ God of theology; mine is much wiser and better; He is the Father of men;
+ He is the mildest of Sovereigns; it is He who fills the universe with His
+ benefactions!" But I will tell him, do you not see that everything in this
+ world contradicts the good qualities which you attribute to your God? In
+ the numerous family of this mild Father I see but unfortunate ones. Under
+ the empire of this just Sovereign I see crime victorious and virtue in
+ distress. Among these benefactions, which you boast of, and which your
+ enthusiasm alone sees, I see a multitude of evils of all kinds, upon which
+ you obstinately close your eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compelled to acknowledge that your good God, in contradiction with
+ Himself, distributes with the same hand good and evil, you will find
+ yourself obliged, in order to justify Him, to send me, as the priests
+ would, to the other life. Invent, then, another God than the one of
+ theology, because your God is as contradictory as its God is. A good God
+ who does evil or who permits it to be done, a God full of equity and in an
+ empire where innocence is so often oppressed; a perfect God who produces
+ but imperfect and wretched works; such a God and His conduct, are they not
+ as great mysteries as that of the incarnation? You blush, you say, for
+ your fellow beings who are persuaded that the God of the universe could
+ change Himself into a man and die upon a cross in a corner of Asia. You
+ consider the ineffable mystery of the Trinity very absurd Nothing appears
+ more ridiculous to you than a God who changes Himself into bread and who
+ is eaten every day in a thousand different places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well! are all these mysteries any more shocking to reason than a God who
+ punishes and rewards men's actions? Man, according to your views, is he
+ free or not? In either case your God, if He has the shadow of justice, can
+ neither punish him nor reward him. If man is free, it is God who made him
+ free to act or not to act; it is God, then, who is the primitive cause of
+ all his actions; in punishing man for his faults, He would punish him for
+ having done that which He gave him the liberty to do. If man is not free
+ to act otherwise than he does, would not God be the most unjust of beings
+ to punish him for the faults which he could not help committing? Many
+ persons are struck with the detail of absurdities with which all religions
+ of the world are filled; but they have not the courage to seek for the
+ source whence these absurdities necessarily sprung. They do not see that a
+ God full of contradictions, of oddities, of incompatible qualities, either
+ inflaming or nursing the imagination of men, could create but a long line
+ of idle fancies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0122" id="link2H_4_0122">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXIX.&mdash;WE DO NOT PROVE AT ALL THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD BY SAYING THAT
+ IN ALL AGES EVERY NATION HAS ACKNOWLEDGED SOME KIND OF DIVINITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ They believe, to silence those who deny the existence of a God, by telling
+ them that all men, in all ages and in all centuries, have believed in some
+ kind of a God; that there is no people on the earth who have not believed
+ in an invisible and powerful being, whom they made the object of their
+ worship and of their veneration; finally, that there is no nation, no
+ matter how benighted we may suppose it to be, that is not persuaded of the
+ existence of some intelligence superior to human nature. But can the
+ belief of all men change an error into truth? A celebrated philosopher has
+ said with all reason: "Neither general tradition nor the unanimous consent
+ of all men could place any injunction upon truth." [Bayle.] Another wise
+ man said before him, that "an army of philosophers would not be sufficient
+ to change the nature of error and to make it truth." [Averroës]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a time when all men believed that the sun revolved around the
+ earth, while the latter remained motionless in the center of the whole
+ system of the universe; it is scarcely more than two hundred years since
+ this error was refuted. There was a time when nobody would believe in the
+ existence of antipodes, and when they persecuted those who had the courage
+ to sustain it; to-day no learned man dares to doubt it. All nations of the
+ world, except some men less credulous than others, still believe in
+ sorcerers, ghosts, apparitions, spirits; no sensible man imagines himself
+ obliged to adopt these follies; but the most sensible people feel obliged
+ to believe in a universal Spirit!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0123" id="link2H_4_0123">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXX.&mdash;ALL THE GODS ARE OF A BARBAROUS ORIGIN; ALL RELIGIONS ARE
+ ANTIQUE MONUMENTS OF IGNORANCE, SUPERSTITION, AND FEROCITY; AND MODERN
+ RELIGIONS ARE BUT ANCIENT FOLLIES REVIVED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All the Gods worshiped by men have a barbarous origin; they were visibly
+ imagined by stupid nations, or were presented by ambitious and cunning
+ legislators to simple and benighted people, who had neither the capacity
+ nor the courage to examine properly the object which, by means of terrors,
+ they were made to worship. In examining closely the God which we see
+ adored still in our days by the most civilized nations, we are compelled
+ to acknowledge that He has evidently barbarous features. To be barbarous
+ is to recognize no right but force; it is being cruel to excess; it is but
+ following one's own caprice; it is a lack of foresight, of prudence, and
+ reason. Nations, who believe yourselves civilized! do you not perceive
+ this frightful character of the God to whom you offer your incense? The
+ pictures which are drawn of Divinity, are they not visibly borrowed from
+ the implacable, jealous, vindictive, blood-thirsty, capricious,
+ inconsiderate humor of man, who has not yet cultivated his reason? Oh,
+ men! you worship but a great savage, whom you consider as a model to
+ follow, as an amiable master, as a perfect sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The religious opinions of men in every country are antique and durable
+ monuments of ignorance credulity, of the terrors and the ferocity of their
+ ancestors. Every barbarian is a child thirsting for the wonderful, which
+ he imbibes with pleasure, and who never reasons upon that which he finds
+ proper to excite his imagination; his ignorance of the ways of nature
+ makes him attribute to spirits, to enchantments, to magic, all that
+ appears to him extraordinary; in his eyes his priests are sorcerers, in
+ whom he supposes an Almighty power; before whom his confused reason
+ humiliates itself, whose oracles are for him infallible decrees, to
+ contradict which would be dangerous. In matters of religion the majority
+ of men have remained in their primitive barbarity. Modern religions are
+ but follies of old times rejuvenated or presented in some new form. If the
+ ancient barbarians have worshiped mountains, rivers, serpents, trees,
+ fetishes of every kind; if the wise Egyptians worshiped crocodiles, rats,
+ onions, do we not see nations who believe themselves wiser than they,
+ worship with reverence a bread, into which they imagine that the
+ enchantments of their priests cause the Divinity to descend? Is not the
+ God-bread the fetish of many Christian nations, as little rational in this
+ point as that of the most barbarous nations?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0124" id="link2H_4_0124">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXI.&mdash;ALL RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES BEAR THE SEAL OF STUPIDITY OR
+ BARBARITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In all times the ferocity, the stupidity, the folly of savage men were
+ shown in religious customs which were often cruel and extravagant. A
+ spirit of barbarity has come down to our days; it intrudes itself into the
+ religions which are followed by the most civilized nations. Do we not
+ still see human victims offered to Divinity? In order to appease the wrath
+ of a God whom we suppose as ferocious, as jealous, as vindictive, as a
+ savage, do not sanguinary laws cause the destruction of those who are
+ believed to have displeased Him by their way of thinking?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Modern nations, at the instigation of their priests, have even excelled
+ the atrocious folly of the most barbarous nations; at least do we not find
+ that it never entered into a savage's mind to torment for the sake of
+ opinions, to meddle in thought, to trouble men for the invisible actions
+ of their brains? When we see polished and wise nations, such as the
+ English, French, German, etc., notwithstanding all their enlightenment,
+ continue to kneel before the barbarous God of the Jews, that is to say, of
+ the most stupid, the most credulous, the most savage, the most unsocial
+ nation which ever was on the earth; when we see these enlightened nations
+ divide themselves into sects, tear one another, hate and despise each
+ other for opinions, equally ridiculous, upon the conduct and the
+ intentions of this irrational God; when we see intelligent persons occupy
+ themselves foolishly in meditating on the wishes of this capricious and
+ foolish God; we are tempted to exclaim, "Oh, men! you are still savages!
+ Oh, men! you are but children in the matter of religion!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0125" id="link2H_4_0125">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXII.&mdash;THE MORE ANCIENT AND GENERAL A RELIGIOUS OPINION IS, THE
+ GREATER THE REASON FOR SUSPECTING IT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Whoever has formed true ideas of the ignorance, credulity, negligence, and
+ sottishness of common people, will always regard their religious opinions
+ with the greater suspicion for their being generally established. The
+ majority of men examine nothing; they allow themselves to be blindly led
+ by custom and authority; their religious opinions are specially those
+ which they have the least courage and capacity to examine; as they do not
+ understand anything about them, they are compelled to be silent or put an
+ end to their reasoning. Ask the common man if he believes in God. He will
+ be surprised that you could doubt it. Then ask him what he understands by
+ the word God. You will confuse him; you will perceive at once that he is
+ incapable of forming any real idea of this word which he so often repeats;
+ he will tell you that God is God, and you will find that he knows neither
+ what he thinks of Him, nor the motives which he has for believing in Him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All nations speak of a God; but do they agree upon this God? No! Well,
+ difference of opinion does not serve as evidence, but is a sign of
+ uncertainty and obscurity. Does the same man always agree with himself in
+ his ideas of God? No! This idea varies with the vicissitudes of his life.
+ This is another sign of uncertainty. Men always agree with other men and
+ with themselves upon demonstrated truths, regardless of the position in
+ which they find themselves; except the insane, all agree that two and two
+ make four, that the sun shines, that the whole is greater than any one of
+ its parts, that Justice is a benefaction, that we must be benevolent to
+ deserve the love of men, that injustice and cruelty are incompatible with
+ goodness. Do they agree in the same way if they speak of God? All that
+ they think or say of Him is immediately contradicted by the effects which
+ they wish to attribute to Him. Tell several artists to paint a chimera,
+ each of them will form different ideas of it, and will paint it
+ differently; you will find no resemblance in the features each of them
+ will have given to a portrait whose model exists nowhere. In painting God,
+ do any of the theologians of the world represent Him otherwise than as a
+ great chimera, upon whose features they never agree, each one arranging it
+ according to his style, which has its origin but in his own brain? There
+ are no two individuals in the world who have or can have the same ideas of
+ their God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0126" id="link2H_4_0126">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXIII.&mdash;SKEPTICISM IN THE MATTER OF RELIGION, CAN BE THE EFFECT OF
+ BUT A SUPERFICIAL EXAMINATION OF THEOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps it would be more truthful to say, that all men are either skeptics
+ or atheists, than to pretend that they are firmly convinced of the
+ existence of a God. How can we be assured of the existence of a being whom
+ we never have been able to examine, of whom it is impossible to form any
+ permanent idea, whose different effects upon ourselves prevent us from
+ forming an invariable judgment, of whom no idea can be uniform in two
+ different brains? How can we claim to be completely persuaded of the
+ existence of a being to whom we are constantly obliged to attribute a
+ conduct opposed co the ideas which we had tried to form of it? Is it
+ possible firmly to believe what we can not conceive? In believing thus,
+ are we not adhering to the opinions of others without having one of our
+ own? The priests regulate the belief of the vulgar; but do not these
+ priests themselves acknowledge that God is incomprehensible to them? Let
+ us conclude, then, that the conviction of the existence of a God is not as
+ general as it is affirmed to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be a skeptic, is to lack the motives necessary to establish a judgment.
+ In view of the proofs which seem to establish, and of the arguments which
+ combat the existence of a God, some persons prefer to doubt and to suspend
+ their judgment; but at the bottom, this uncertainty is the result of an
+ insufficient examination. Is it, then, possible to doubt evidence?
+ Sensible people deride, and with reason, an absolute pyrrhonism, and even
+ consider it impossible. A man who could doubt his own existence, or that
+ of the sun, would appear very ridiculous, or would be suspected of
+ reasoning in bad faith. Is it less extravagant to have uncertainties about
+ the non-existence of an evidently impossible being? Is it more absurd to
+ doubt of one's own existence, than to hesitate upon the impossibility of a
+ being whose qualities destroy each other? Do we find more probabilities
+ for believing in a spiritual being than for believing in the existence of
+ a stick without two ends? Is the notion of an infinitely good and powerful
+ being who permits an infinity of evils, less absurd or less impossible
+ than that of a square triangle?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us conclude, then, that religious skepticism can be but the effect of
+ a superficial examination of theological principles, which are in a
+ perpetual contradiction of the clearest and best demonstrated principles!
+ To doubt is to deliberate upon the judgment which we should pass.
+ Skepticism is but a state of indecision which results from a superficial
+ examination of subjects. Is it possible to be skeptical in the matter of
+ religion when we design to return to its principles, and look closely into
+ the idea of the God who serves as its foundation? Doubt arises ordinarily
+ from laziness, weakness, indifference, or incapacity. To doubt, for many
+ people, is to dread the trouble of examining things to which one attaches
+ but little interest. Although religion is presented to men as the most
+ important thing for them in this world as well as in the other, skepticism
+ and doubt on this subject can be for the mind but a disagreeable state,
+ and offers but a comfortable cushion. No man who has not the courage to
+ contemplate without prejudice the God upon whom every religion is founded,
+ can know what religion to accept; he does not know what to believe and
+ what not to believe, to accept or to reject, what to hope or fear;
+ finally, he is incompetent to judge for himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indifference upon religion can not be confounded with skepticism; this
+ indifference itself is founded upon the assurance or upon the probability
+ which we find in believing that religion is not made to interest us. The
+ persuasion which we have that a thing which is presented to us as very
+ important, is not so, or is but indifferent, supposes a sufficient
+ examination of the thing, without which it would be impossible to have
+ this persuasion. Those who call themselves skeptics in regard to the
+ fundamental points of religion, are generally but idle and lazy men, who
+ are incapable of examining them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0127" id="link2H_4_0127">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXIV.&mdash;REVELATION REFUTED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In all parts of the world, we are assured that God revealed Himself. What
+ did He teach men? Does He prove to them evidently that He exists? Does He
+ tell them where He resides? Does He teach them what He is, or of what His
+ essence consists? Does He explain to them clearly His intentions and His
+ plan? What He says of this plan, does it agree with the effects which we
+ see? No! He informs us only that "He is the One that is," [I am that I am,
+ saith the Lord] that He is an invincible God, that His ways are ineffable,
+ that He becomes furious as soon as one has the temerity to penetrate His
+ decrees, or to consult reason in order to judge of Him or His works. Does
+ the revealed conduct of God correspond with the magnificent ideas which
+ are given to us of His wisdom, goodness, justice, of His omnipotence? Not
+ at all; in every revelation this conduct shows a partial, capricious
+ being, at least, good to His favorite people, an enemy to all others. If
+ He condescends to show Himself to some men, He takes care to keep all the
+ others in invincible ignorance of His divine intentions. Does not every
+ special revelation announce an unjust, partial, and malicious God?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Are the revealed wishes of a God capable of striking us by the sublime
+ reason or the wisdom which they contain? Do they tend to the happiness of
+ the people to whom Divinity has declared them? Examining the Divine
+ wishes, I find in them, in all countries, but whimsical ordinances,
+ ridiculous precepts, ceremonies of which we do not understand the aim,
+ puerile practices, principles of conduct unworthy of the Monarch of
+ Nature, offerings, sacrifices, expiations, useful, in fact, to the
+ ministers of God, but very onerous to the rest of mankind. I find also,
+ that they often have a tendency to render men unsocial, disdainful,
+ intolerant, quarrelsome, unjust, inhuman toward all those who have not
+ received either the same revelations as they, or the same ordinances, or
+ the same favors from Heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0128" id="link2H_4_0128">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXV.&mdash;WHERE, THEN, IS THE PROOF THAT GOD DID EVER SHOW HIMSELF TO
+ MEN OR SPEAK TO THEM?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Are the precepts of morality as announced by Divinity truly Divine, or
+ superior to those which every rational man could imagine? They are Divine
+ only because it is impossible for the human mind to see their utility.
+ Their virtue consists in a total renunciation of human nature, in a
+ voluntary oblivion of one's reason, in a holy hatred of self; finally,
+ these sublime precepts show us perfection in a conduct cruel to ourselves
+ and perfectly useless to others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How did God show Himself? Did He Himself promulgate His laws? Did He speak
+ to men with His own mouth? I am told that God did not show Himself to a
+ whole nation, but that He employed always the organism of a few favored
+ persons, who took the care to teach and to explain His intentions to the
+ unlearned. It was never permitted to the people to go to the sanctuary;
+ the ministers of the Gods always alone had the right to report to them
+ what transpired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0129" id="link2H_4_0129">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXVI.&mdash;NOTHING ESTABLISHES THE TRUTH OF MIRACLES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If, in the economy of all Divine revelations, I am unable to recognize
+ either the wisdom, the goodness, or the equity of a God; if I suspect
+ deceit, ambition, selfish designs in the great personages who have
+ interposed between Heaven and us, I am assured that God has confirmed, by
+ splendid miracles, the mission of those who have spoken for Him. But was
+ it not much easier to show Himself, and to explain for Himself? On the
+ other hand, if I have the curiosity to examine these miracles, I find that
+ they are tales void of probability, related by suspicious people, who had
+ the greatest interest in making others believe that they were sent from
+ the Most High.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What witnesses are referred to in order to make us believe incredible
+ miracles? They call as witnesses stupid people, who have ceased to exist
+ for thousands of years, and who, even if they could attest the miracles in
+ question, would be suspected of having been deceived by their own
+ imagination, and of permitting themselves to be seduced by the illusions
+ which skillful impostors performed before their eyes. But, you will say,
+ these miracles are recorded in books which through constant tradition have
+ been handed down to us. By whom were these books written? Who are the men
+ who have transmitted and perpetuated them? They are either the same people
+ who established these religions, or those who have become their adherents
+ and their assistants. Thus, in the matter of religion, the testimony of
+ interested parties is irrefragable and can not be contested!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0130" id="link2H_4_0130">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXVII.&mdash;IF GOD HAD SPOKEN, IT WOULD BE STRANGE THAT HE HAD SPOKEN
+ DIFFERENTLY TO ALL THE ADHERENTS OF THE DIFFERENT SECTS, WHO DAMN EACH
+ OTHER, WHO ACCUSE EACH OTHER, WITH REASON, OF SUPERSTITION AND IMPIETY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ God has spoken differently to each nation of the globe which we inhabit.
+ The Indian does not believe one word of what He said to the Chinaman; the
+ Mohammedan considers what He has told to the Christian as fables; the Jew
+ considers the Mohammedan and the Christian as sacrilegious corruptors of
+ the Holy Law, which his God has given to his fathers. The Christian, proud
+ of his more modern revelation, equally damns the Indian and the Chinaman,
+ the Mohammedan, and even the Jew, whose holy books he holds. Who is wrong
+ or right? Each one exclaims: "It is I!" Every one claims the same proofs;
+ each one speaks of his miracles, his saints, his prophets, his martyrs.
+ Sensible men answer, that they are all delirious; that God has not spoken,
+ if it is true that He is a Spirit who has neither mouth nor tongue; that
+ the God of the Universe could, without borrowing mortal organism, inspire
+ His creatures with what He desired them to learn, and that, as they are
+ all equally ignorant of what they ought to think about God, it is evident
+ that God did not want to instruct them. The adherents of the different
+ forms of worship which we see established in this world, accuse each other
+ of superstition and of ungodliness. The Christians abhor the superstition
+ of the heathen, of the Chinese, of the Mohammedans. The Roman Catholics
+ treat the Protestant Christians as impious; the latter incessantly declaim
+ against Roman superstition. They are all right. To be impious, is to have
+ unjust opinions about the God who is adored; to be superstitious, is to
+ have false ideas of Him. In accusing each other of superstition, the
+ different religionists resemble humpbacks who taunt each other with their
+ malformation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0131" id="link2H_4_0131">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXVIII.&mdash;OBSCURE AND SUSPICIOUS ORIGIN OF ORACLES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The oracles which the Deity has revealed to the nations through His
+ different mediums, are they clear? Alas! there are not two men who
+ understand them alike. Those who explain them to others do not agree among
+ themselves; in order to make them clear, they have recourse to
+ interpretations, to commentaries, to allegories, to parables, in which is
+ found a mystical sense very different from the literal one. Men are needed
+ everywhere to explain the wishes of God, who could not or would not
+ explain Himself clearly to those whom He desired to enlighten. God always
+ prefers to use as mediums men who can be suspected of having been deceived
+ themselves, or having reasons to deceive others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0132" id="link2H_4_0132">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXIX.&mdash;ABSURDITY OF PRETENDED MIRACLES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The founders of all religions have usually proved their mission by
+ miracles. But what is a miracle? It is an operation directly opposed to
+ the laws of nature. But, according to you, who has made these laws? It is
+ God. Thus your God, who, according to you, has foreseen everything,
+ counteracts the laws which His wisdom had imposed upon nature! These laws
+ were then defective, or at least in certain circumstances they were but in
+ accordance with the views of this same God, for you tell us that He
+ thought He ought to suspend or counteract them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An attempt is made to persuade us that men who have been favored by the
+ Most High have received from Him the power to perform miracles; but in
+ order to perform a miracle, it is necessary to have the faculty of
+ creating new causes capable of producing effects opposed to those which
+ ordinary causes can produce. Can we realize how God can give to men the
+ inconceivable power of creating causes out of nothing? Can it be believed
+ that an unchangeable God can communicate to man the power to change or
+ rectify His plan, a power which, according to His essence, an immutable
+ being can not have himself? Miracles, far from doing much honor to God,
+ far from proving the Divinity of religion, destroy evidently the idea
+ which is given to us of God, of His immutability, of His incommunicable
+ attributes, and even of His omnipotence. How can a theologian tell us that
+ a God who embraced at once the whole of His plan, who could make but
+ perfect laws, who can change nothing in them, should be obliged to employ
+ miracles to make His projects successful, or grant to His creatures the
+ faculty of performing prodigies, in order to execute His Divine will? Is
+ it probable that a God needs the support of men? An Omnipotent Being,
+ whose wishes are always gratified, a Being who holds in His hands the
+ hearts and the minds of His creatures, needs but to wish, in order to make
+ them believe all He desires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0133" id="link2H_4_0133">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXX.&mdash;REFUTATION OF PASCAL'S MANNER OF REASONING AS TO HOW WE SHOULD
+ JUDGE MIRACLES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What should we say of religions that based their Divinity upon miracles
+ which they themselves cause to appear suspicious? How can we place any
+ faith in the miracles related in the Holy Books of the Christians, where
+ God Himself boasts of hardening hearts, of blinding those whom He wishes
+ to ruin; where this God permits wicked spirits and magicians to perform as
+ wonderful miracles as those of His servants; where it is prophesied that
+ the Anti-Christ will have the power to perform miracles capable of
+ destroying the faith even of the elect? This granted, how can we know
+ whether God wants to instruct us or to lay a snare for us? How can we
+ distinguish whether the wonders which we see, proceed from God or the
+ Devil? Pascal, in order to disembarrass us, says very gravely, that we
+ must judge the doctrine by miracles, and the miracles by the doctrine;
+ that doctrine judges the miracles, and the miracles judge the doctrine. If
+ there exists a defective and ridiculous circle, it is no doubt in this
+ fine reasoning of one of the greatest defenders of the Christian religion.
+ Which of all the religions in the world does not claim to possess the most
+ admirable doctrine, and which does not bring to its aid a great number of
+ miracles?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is a miracle capable of destroying a demonstrated truth? Although a man
+ should have the secret of curing all diseases, of making the lame to walk,
+ of raising all the dead of a city, of floating in the air, of arresting
+ the course of the sun and of the moon, will he be able to convince me by
+ all this that two and two do not make four; that one makes three and that
+ three makes but one; that a God who fills the universe with His immensity,
+ could have transformed Himself into the body of a Jew; that the eternal
+ can perish like man; that an immutable, foreseeing, and sensible God could
+ have changed His opinion upon His religion, and reform His own work by a
+ new revelation?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0134" id="link2H_4_0134">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXXI.&mdash;EVEN ACCORDING TO THE PRINCIPLES OF THEOLOGY ITSELF, EVERY
+ NEW REVELATION SHOULD BE REFUTED AS FALSE AND IMPIOUS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ According to the principles of theology itself, whether natural or
+ revealed, every new revelation ought to be considered false; every change
+ in a religion which had emanated from the Deity ought to be refuted as
+ ungodly and blasphemous. Does not every reform suppose that God did not
+ know how at the start to give His religion the required solidity and
+ perfection? To say that God in giving a first law accommodated Himself to
+ the gross ideas of a people whom He wished to enlighten, is to pretend
+ that God neither could nor would make the people whom He enlightened at
+ that time, as reasonable as they ought to be to please Him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0135" id="link2H_4_0135">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Christianity is an impiety, if it is true that Judaism as a religion
+ really emanated from a Holy, Immutable, Almighty, grid Foreseeing God.
+ Christ's religion implies either defects in the law that God Himself gave
+ by Moses, or impotence or malice in this God who could not, or would not
+ make the Jews as they ought to be to please Him. All religions, whether
+ new, or ancient ones reformed, are evidently founded on the weakness, the
+ inconstancy, the imprudence, and the malice of the Deity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0136" id="link2H_4_0136">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXXII.&mdash;EVEN THE BLOOD OF THE MARTYRS, TESTIFIES AGAINST THE TRUTH
+ OF MIRACLES AND AGAINST THE DIVINE ORIGIN WHICH CHRISTIANITY CLAIMS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If history informs me that the first apostles, founders or reformers of
+ religions, performed great miracles, history teaches me also that these
+ reforming apostles and their adherents have been usually despised,
+ persecuted, and put to death as disturbers of the peace of nations. I am
+ then tempted to believe that they have not performed the miracles
+ attributed to them. Finally, these miracles should have procured to them a
+ great number of disciples among those who witnessed them, who ought to
+ have prevented the performers from being maltreated. My incredulity
+ increases if I am told that the performers of miracles have been cruelly
+ tormented or slain. How can we believe that missionaries, protected by a
+ God, invested with His Divine Power, and enjoying the gift of miracles,
+ could not perform the simple miracle of escaping from the cruelty of their
+ persecutors?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Persecutions themselves are considered as a convincing proof in favor of
+ the religion of those who have suffered them; but a religion which boasts
+ of having caused the death of many martyrs, and which informs us that its
+ founders have suffered for its extension unheard-of torments, can not be
+ the religion of a benevolent, equitable, and Almighty God. A good God
+ would not permit that men charged with revealing His will should be
+ misused. An omnipotent God desiring to found a religion, would have
+ employed simpler and less fatal means for His most faithful servants. To
+ say that God desired that His religion should be sealed by blood, is to
+ say that this God is weak, unjust, ungrateful, and sanguinary, and that He
+ sacrifices unworthily His missionaries to the interests of His ambition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0137" id="link2H_4_0137">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXXIII.&mdash;THE FANATICISM OF THE MARTYRS, THE INTERESTED ZEAL OF
+ MISSIONARIES, PROVE IN NOWISE THE TRUTH OF RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To die for a religion does not prove it true or Divine; this proves at
+ most that we suppose it to be so. An enthusiast in dying proves nothing
+ but that religious fanaticism is often stronger than the love of life. An
+ impostor can sometimes die with courage; he makes then, as is said, "a
+ virtue of necessity." We are often surprised and affected at the sight of
+ the generous courage and the disinterested zeal which have led
+ missionaries to preach their doctrine at the risk even of suffering the
+ most rigorous torments. We draw from this love, which is exhibited for the
+ salvation of men, deductions favorable to the religion which they have
+ proclaimed; but in truth this disinterestedness is only apparent. "Nothing
+ ventured, nothing gained!" A missionary seeks fortune by the aid of his
+ doctrine; he knows that if he has the good fortune to retail his
+ commodity, he will become the absolute master of those who accept him as
+ their guide; he is sure to become the object of their care, of their
+ respect, of their veneration; he has every reason to believe that he will
+ be abundantly provided for. These are the true motives which kindle the
+ zeal and the charity of so many preachers and missionaries who travel all
+ over the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To die for an opinion, proves no more the truth or the soundness of this
+ opinion than to die in a battle proves the right of the prince, for whose
+ benefit so many people are foolish enough to sacrifice themselves. The
+ courage of a martyr, animated by the idea of Paradise, is not any more
+ supernatural than the courage of a warrior, inspired with the idea of
+ glory or held to duty by the fear of disgrace. What difference do we find
+ between an Iroquois who sings while he is burned by a slow fire, and the
+ martyr St. Lawrence, who while upon the gridiron insults his tyrant?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preachers of a new doctrine succumb because they are not the
+ strongest; the apostles usually practice a perilous business, whose
+ consequences they can foresee; their courageous death does not prove any
+ more the truth of their principles or their own sincerity, than the
+ violent death of an ambitious man or a brigand proves that they had the
+ right to trouble society, or that they believed themselves authorized to
+ do it. A missionary's profession has been always flattering to his
+ ambition, and has enabled him to subsist at the expense of the common
+ people; these advantages have been sufficient to make him forget the
+ dangers which are connected with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0138" id="link2H_4_0138">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXXIV.&mdash;THEOLOGY MAKES OF ITS GOD AN ENEMY OF COMMON SENSE AND OF
+ ENLIGHTENMENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ You tell us, O theologians! that "what is folly in the eyes of men, is
+ wisdom before God, who is pleased to confound the wisdom of the wise." But
+ do you not pretend that human wisdom is a gift from Heaven? In telling us
+ that this wisdom displeases God, is but folly in His eyes, and that He
+ wishes to confound it, you proclaim that your God is but the friend of
+ unenlightened people, and that He makes to sensible people a fatal gift,
+ for which this perfidious Tyrant promises to punish them cruelly some day.
+ Is it not very strange that we can not be the friend of your God but by
+ declaring ourselves the enemy of reason and common sense?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0139" id="link2H_4_0139">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXXV.&mdash;FAITH IS IRRECONCILABLE WITH REASON, AND REASON IS PREFERABLE
+ TO FAITH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Faith, according to theologians, is consent without evidence. From this it
+ follows that religion exacts that we should firmly believe, without
+ evidence, in propositions which are often improbable or opposed to reason.
+ But to challenge reason as a judge of faith, is it not acknowledging that
+ reason can not agree with faith? As the ministers of religion have
+ determined to banish reason, they must have felt the impossibility of
+ reconciling reason with faith, which is visibly but a blind submission to
+ those priests whose authority, in many minds, appears to be of a greater
+ importance than evidence itself, and preferable to the testimony of the
+ senses. "Sacrifice your reason; give up experience; distrust the testimony
+ of your senses; submit without examination to all that is given to you as
+ coming from Heaven." This is the usual language of all the priests of the
+ world; they do not agree upon any point, except in the necessity of never
+ reasoning when they present principles to us which they claim as the most
+ important to our happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will not sacrifice my reason, because this reason alone enables me to
+ distinguish good from evil, the true from the false. If, as you pretend,
+ my reason comes from God, I will never believe that a God whom you call so
+ good, had ever given me reason but as a snare, in order to lead me to
+ perdition. Priests! in crying down reason, do you not see that you slander
+ your God, who, as you assure us, has given us this reason?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will not give up experience, because it is a much better guide than
+ imagination, or than the authority of the guides whom they wish to give
+ me. This experience teaches me that enthusiasm and interest can blind and
+ mislead them, and that the authority of experience ought to have more
+ weight upon my mind than the suspicious testimony of many men whom I know
+ to be capable of deceiving themselves, or very much interested in
+ deceiving others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will not distrust my senses. I do not ignore the fact that they can
+ sometimes lead me into error; but on the other hand, I know that they do
+ not deceive me always. I know very well that the eye shows the sun much
+ smaller than it really is; but experience, which is only the repeated
+ application of the senses, teaches me that objects continually diminish by
+ reason of their distance; it is by these means that I reach the conclusion
+ that the sun is much larger than the earth; it is thus that my senses
+ suffice to rectify the hasty judgments which they induced me to form. In
+ warning me to doubt the testimony of my senses, you destroy for me the
+ proofs of all religion. If men can be dupes of their imagination, if their
+ senses are deceivers, why would you have me believe in the miracles which
+ made an impression upon the deceiving senses of our ancestors? If my
+ senses are faithless guides, I learn that I should not have faith even in
+ the miracles which I might see performed under my own eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0140" id="link2H_4_0140">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXXVI.&mdash;HOW ABSURD AND RIDICULOUS IS THE SOPHISTRY OF THOSE WHO WISH
+ TO SUBSTITUTE FAITH FOR REASON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ You tell me continually that the "truths of religion are beyond reason."
+ Do you not admit, then, that these truths are not made for reasonable
+ beings? To pretend that reason can deceive us, is to say that truth can be
+ false, that usefulness can be injurious. Is reason anything else but the
+ knowledge of the useful and the true? Besides, as we have but our reason,
+ which is more or less exercised, and our senses, such as they are, to lead
+ us in this life, to claim that reason is an unsafe guide, and that our
+ senses are deceivers, is to tell us that our errors are necessary, that
+ our ignorance is invincible, and that, without extreme injustice, God can
+ not punish us for having followed the only guides which He desired to give
+ us. To pretend that we are obliged to believe in things which are beyond
+ our reason, is an assertion as ridiculous as to say that God would compel
+ us to fly without wings. To claim that there are objects on which reason
+ should not be consulted, is to say that in the most important affairs, we
+ must consult but imagination, or act by chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Doctors of Divinity tell us that we ought to sacrifice our reason to
+ God; but what motives can we have for sacrificing our reason to a being
+ who gives us but useless gifts, which He does not intend that we should
+ make use of? What confidence can we place in a God who, according to our
+ Doctors themselves, is wicked enough to harden hearts, to strike us with
+ blindness, to place snares in our way, to lead us into temptation?
+ Finally, how can we place confidence in the ministers of this God, who, in
+ order to guide us more conveniently, command us to close our eyes?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0141" id="link2H_4_0141">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXXVII.&mdash;HOW PRETEND THAT MAN OUGHT TO BELIEVE VERBAL TESTIMONY ON
+ WHAT IS CLAIMED TO BE THE MOST IMPORTANT THING FOR HIM?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Men persuade themselves that religion is the most serious affair in the
+ world for them, while it is the very thing which they least examine for
+ themselves. If the question arises in the purchase of land, of a house, of
+ the investment of money, of a transaction, or of some kind of an
+ agreement, you will see each one examine everything with care, take the
+ greatest precautions, weigh all the words of a document, to beware of any
+ surprise or imposition. It is not the same with religion; each one accepts
+ it at hazard, and believes it upon verbal testimony, without taking the
+ trouble to examine it. Two causes seem to concur in sustaining men in the
+ negligence and the thoughtlessness which they exhibit when the question
+ comes up of examining their religious opinions. The first one is, the
+ hopelessness of penetrating the obscurity by which every religion is
+ surrounded; even in its first principles, it has only a tendency to repel
+ indolent minds, who see in it but chaos, to penetrate which, they judge
+ impossible. The second is, that each one is afraid to incommode himself by
+ the severe precepts which everybody admires in the theory, and which few
+ persons take the trouble of practicing. Many people preserve their
+ religion like old family titles which they have never taken the trouble to
+ examine minutely, but which they place in their archives in case they need
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0142" id="link2H_4_0142">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXXVIII.&mdash;FAITH TAKES ROOT BUT IN WEAK, IGNORANT, OR INDOLENT MINDS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The disciples of Pythagoras had an implicit faith in their Master's
+ doctrine: "HE HAS SAID IT!" was for them the solution of all problems. The
+ majority of men act with as little reason. A curate, a priest, an ignorant
+ monk, will become in the matter of religion the master of one's thoughts.
+ Faith relieves the weakness of the human mind, for whom application is
+ commonly a very painful work; it is much easier to rely upon others than
+ to examine for one's self; examination being slow and difficult, it is
+ usually unpleasant to ignorant and stupid minds as well as to very ardent
+ ones; this is, no doubt, why faith finds so many partisans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The less enlightenment and reason men possess, the more zeal they exhibit
+ for their religion. In all the religious factions, women, aroused by their
+ directors, exhibit very great zeal in opinions of which it is evident they
+ have not the least idea. In theological quarrels people rush like a
+ ferocious beast upon all those against whom their priest wishes to excite
+ them. Profound ignorance, unlimited credulity, a very weak head, an
+ irritated imagination, these are the materials of which devotees, zealots,
+ fanatics, and saints are made. How can we make those people understand
+ reason who allow themselves to be guided without examining anything? The
+ devotees and common people are, in the hands of their guides, only
+ automatons which they move at their fancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0143" id="link2H_4_0143">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXXXIX.&mdash;TO TEACH THAT THERE EXISTS ONE TRUE RELIGION IS AN
+ ABSURDITY, AND A CAUSE OF MUCH TROUBLE AMONG THE NATIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Religion is a thing of custom and fashion; we must do as others do. But,
+ among the many religions in the world, which one ought we to choose? This
+ examination would be too long and too painful; we must then hold to the
+ faith of our fathers, to that of our country, or to that of the prince,
+ who, possessing power, must be the best. Chance alone decides the religion
+ of a man and of a people. The French would be to-day as good Mussulmen as
+ they are Christians, if their ancestors had not repulsed the efforts of
+ the Saracens. If we judge of the intentions of Providence by the events
+ and the revolutions of this world, we are compelled to believe that it is
+ quite indifferent about the different religions which exist on earth.
+ During thousands of years Paganism, Polytheism, and Idolatry have been the
+ religions of the world; we are assured today, that during this period the
+ most flourishing nations had not the least idea of the Deity, an idea
+ which is claimed, however, to be so important to all men. The Christians
+ pretend that, with the exception of the Jewish people, that is to say, a
+ handful of unfortunate beings, the whole human race lived in utter
+ ignorance of its duties toward God, and had but imperfect ideas of Divine
+ majesty. Christianity, offshoot of Judaism, which was very humble in its
+ obscure origin, became powerful and cruel under the Christian emperors,
+ who, driven by a holy zeal, spread it marvelously in their empire by sword
+ and fire, and founded it upon the ruins of overthrown Paganism. Mohammed
+ and his successors, aided by Providence, or by their victorious arms,
+ succeeded in a short time in expelling the Christian religion from a part
+ of Asia, Africa, and even of Europe itself; the Gospel was compelled to
+ surrender to the Koran. In all the factions or sects which during a great
+ number of centuries have lacerated the Christians, "THE REASON OF THE
+ STRONGEST WAS ALWAYS THE BEST;" the arms and the will of the princes alone
+ decided upon the most useful doctrine for the salvation of the nations.
+ Could we not conclude by this, either that the Deity takes but little
+ interest in the religion of men, or that He declares Himself always in
+ favor of opinions which best suit the Authorities of the earth, in order
+ that He can change His systems as soon as they take a notion to change?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A king of Macassar, tired of the idolatry of his fathers, took a notion
+ one day to leave it. The monarch's council deliberated for a long time to
+ know whether they should consult Christian or Mohammedan Doctors. In the
+ impossibility of finding out which was the better of the two religions, it
+ was resolved to send at the same time for the missionaries of both, and to
+ accept the doctrine of those who would have the advantage of arriving
+ first. They did not doubt that God, who disposes of events, would thus
+ Himself explain His will. Mohammed's missionaries having been more
+ diligent, the king with his people submitted to the law which he had
+ imposed upon himself; the missionaries of Christ were dismissed by default
+ of their God, who did not permit them to arrive early enough. God
+ evidently consents that chance should decide the religion of nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who govern, always decide the religion of the people. The true
+ religion is but the religion of the prince; the true God is the God whom
+ the prince wishes them to worship; the will of the priests who govern the
+ prince, always becomes the will of God. A jester once said, with reason,
+ that "the true faith is always the one which has on its side 'the prince
+ and the executioner.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emperors and executioners for a long time sustained the Gods of Rome
+ against the God of the Christians; the latter having won over to their
+ side the emperors, their soldiers and their executioners succeeded in
+ suppressing the worship of the Roman Gods. Mohammed's God succeeded in
+ expelling the Christian's God from a large part of the countries which He
+ formerly occupied. In the eastern part of Asia, there is a large country
+ which is very flourishing, very productive, thickly populated, and
+ governed by such wise laws, that the most savage conquerors adopted them
+ with respect. It is China! With the exception of Christianity, which was
+ banished as dangerous, they followed their own superstitious ideas; while
+ the mandarins or magistrates, undeceived long ago about the popular
+ religion, do not trouble themselves in regard to it, except to watch over
+ it, that the bonzes or priests do not use this religion to disturb the
+ peace of the State. However, we do not see that Providence withholds its
+ benefactions from a nation whose chiefs take so little interest in the
+ worship which is offered to it. The Chinese enjoy, on the contrary,
+ blessings and a peace worthy of being envied by many nations which
+ religion divides, ravages, and often destroys. We can not reasonably
+ expect to deprive a people of its follies; but we can hope to cure of
+ their follies those who govern the people; these will then prevent the
+ follies of the people from becoming dangerous. Superstition is never to be
+ feared except when it has the support of princes and soldiers; it is only
+ then that it becomes cruel and sanguinary. Every sovereign who assumes the
+ protection of a sect or of a religious faction, usually becomes the tyrant
+ of other sects, and makes himself the must cruel perturbator in his
+ kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0144" id="link2H_4_0144">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXL.&mdash;RELIGION IS NOT NECESSARY TO MORALITY AND TO VIRTUE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are constantly told, and a good many sensible persons come to believe
+ it, that religion is necessary to restrain men; that without it there
+ would be no check upon the people; that morality and virtue are intimately
+ connected with it: "The fear of the Lord is," we are told, "the beginning
+ of wisdom." The terrors of another life are salutary terrors, and
+ calculated to subdue men's passions. To disabuse us in regard to the
+ utility of religious notions, it is sufficient to open the eyes and to
+ consider what are the morals of the most religious people. We see haughty
+ tyrants, oppressive ministers, perfidious courtiers, countless
+ extortioners, unscrupulous magistrates, impostors, adulterers, libertines,
+ prostitutes, thieves, and rogues of all kinds, who have never doubted the
+ existence of a vindictive God, or the punishments of hell, or the joys of
+ Paradise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although very useless for the majority of men, the ministers of religion
+ have tried to make death appear terrible to the eyes of their votaries. If
+ the most devoted Christians could be consistent, they would pass their
+ whole lives in tears, and would finally die in the most terrible alarms.
+ What is more frightful than death to those unfortunate ones who are
+ constantly reminded that "it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of
+ a living God;" that they should "seek salvation with fear and trembling!"
+ However, we are assured that the Christian's death has great consolations,
+ of which the unbeliever is deprived. The good Christian, we are told, dies
+ with the firm hope of enjoying eternal happiness, which he has tried to
+ deserve. But this firm assurance, is it not a punishable presumption in
+ the eyes of a severe God? The greatest saints, are they not to be in doubt
+ whether they are worthy of the love or of the hatred of God Priests who
+ console us with the hope of the joys of Paradise, and close your eyes to
+ the torments of hell, have you then had the advantage of seeing your names
+ and ours inscribed in the book of life?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0145" id="link2H_4_0145">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXLI.&mdash;RELIGION IS THE WEAKEST RESTRAINT THAT CAN BE OPPOSED TO THE
+ PASSIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To oppose to the passions and present interests of men the obscure notions
+ about a metaphysical God whom no one can conceive of; the incredible
+ punishments of another life; the pleasures of Heaven, of which we can not
+ form an idea, is it not combating realities with chimeras? Men have always
+ but confused ideas of their God; they see Him only in the clouds; they
+ never think of Him when they wish to do wrong. Whenever ambition, fortune,
+ or pleasure entices them or leads them away, God, and His menaces, and His
+ promises weigh nothing in the balance. The things of this life have for
+ men a degree of certainty, which the most lively faith can never give to
+ the objects of another life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every religion, in its origin, was a restraint invented by legislators who
+ wished to subjugate the minds of the common people. Like nurses who
+ frighten children in order to put them to sleep, ambitious men use the
+ name of the gods to inspire fear in savages; terror seems well suited to
+ compel them to submit quietly to the yoke which is to be imposed upon
+ them. Are the ghost stories of childhood fit for mature age? Man in his
+ maturity no longer believes in them, or if he does, he is troubled but
+ little by it, and he keeps on his road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0146" id="link2H_4_0146">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXLII.&mdash;HONOR IS A MORE SALUTARY AND A STRONGER CHECK THAN RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is scarcely a man who does not fear more what he sees than what he
+ does not see; the judgments of men, of which he experiences the effects,
+ than the judgments of God, of whom he has but floating ideas. The desire
+ to please the world, the current of custom, the fear of being ridiculed,
+ and of "WHAT WILL THEY SAY?" have more power than all religious opinions.
+ A warrior with the fear of dishonor, does he not hazard his life in
+ battles every day, even at the risk of incurring eternal damnation?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most religious persons sometimes show more respect for a servant than
+ for God. A man that firmly believes that God sees everything, knows
+ everything, is everywhere, will, when he is alone, commit actions which he
+ never would do in the presence of the meanest of mortals. Those even who
+ claim to be the most firmly convinced of the existence of a God, act every
+ instant as if they did not believe anything about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0147" id="link2H_4_0147">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXLIII.&mdash;RELIGION IS CERTAINLY NOT A POWERFUL CHECK UPON THE PASSIONS
+ OF KINGS, WHO ARE ALMOST ALWAYS CRUEL AND FANTASTIC TYRANTS BY THE EXAMPLE
+ OF THIS SAME GOD, OF WHOM THEY CLAIM TO BE THE REPRESENTATIVES; THEY USE
+ RELIGION BUT TO BRUTALIZE THEIR SLAVES SO MUCH THE MORE, TO LULL THEM TO
+ SLEEP IN THEIR FETTERS, AND TO PREY UPON THEM WITH THE GREATER FACILITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Let us tolerate at least," we are told, "the idea of a God, which alone
+ can be a restraint upon the passions of kings." But, in good faith, can we
+ admire the marvelous effects which the fear of this God produces generally
+ upon the mind of the princes who claim to be His images? What idea can we
+ form of the original, if we judge it by its duplicates? Sovereigns, it is
+ true, call, themselves the representatives of God, His lieutenants upon
+ earth. But does the fear of a more powerful master than themselves make
+ them attend to the welfare of the peoples that Providence has confided to
+ their care? The idea of an invisible Judge, to whom alone they pretend to
+ be accountable for their actions, should inspire them with terror! But
+ does this terror render them more equitable, more humane, less avaricious
+ of the blood and the goods of their subjects, more moderate in their
+ pleasures, more attentive to their duties? Finally, does this God, by whom
+ we are assured that kings reign, prevent them from vexing in a thousand
+ ways the peoples of whom they ought to be the leaders, the protectors, and
+ fathers? Let us open our eyes, let us turn our regards upon all the earth,
+ and we shall see, almost everywhere, men governed by tyrants, who make use
+ of religion but to brutalize their slaves, whom they oppress by the weight
+ of their vices, or whom they sacrifice without mercy to their fatal
+ extravagances. Far from being a restraint to the passions of kings,
+ religion, by its very principles, gives them a loose rein. It transforms
+ them into Divinities, whose caprices the nations never dare to resist. At
+ the same time that it unchains princes and breaks for them the ties of the
+ social pact, it enchains the minds and the hands of their oppressed
+ subjects. Is it surprising, then, that the gods of the earth believe that
+ all is permitted to them, and consider their subjects as vile instruments
+ of their caprices or of their ambition?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Religion, in every country, has made of the Monarch of Nature a cruel,
+ fantastic, partial tyrant, whose caprice is the rule. The God-monarch is
+ but too well imitated by His representatives upon the earth. Everywhere
+ religion seems invented but to lull to sleep the people in fetters, in
+ order to furnish their masters the facility of devouring them, or to
+ render them miserable with impunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0148" id="link2H_4_0148">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXLIV.&mdash;ORIGIN OF THE MOST ABSURD, THE MOST RIDICULOUS, AND THE MOST
+ ODIOUS USURPATION, CALLED THE DIVINE RIGHT OF KINGS. WISE COUNSELS TO
+ KINGS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In order to guard themselves against the enterprises of a haughty Pontiff
+ who desired to reign over kings, and in order to protect their persons
+ from the attacks of the credulous people excited by their priests, several
+ princes of Europe pretended to have received their crowns and their rights
+ from God alone, and that they should account to Him only for their
+ actions. Civil power in its battles against spiritual power, having at
+ length gained the advantage, and the priests being compelled to yield,
+ recognized the Divine right of kings and preached it to the people,
+ reserving to themselves the right to change opinions and to preach
+ revolution, every time that the divine rights of kings did not agree with
+ the divine rights of the clergy. It was always at the expense of the
+ people that peace was restored between the kings and the priests, but the
+ latter maintained their pretensions notwithstanding all treaties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many tyrants and wicked princes, whose conscience reproaches them for
+ their negligence or their perversity, far from fearing their God, rather
+ like to bargain with this invisible Judge, who never refuses anything, or
+ with His priests, who are accommodating to the masters of the earth rather
+ than to their subjects. The people, when reduced to despair, consider the
+ divine rights of their chiefs as an abuse. When men become exasperated,
+ the divine rights of tyrants are compelled to yield to the natural rights
+ of their subjects; they have better market with the gods than with men.
+ Kings are responsible for their actions but to God, the priests but to
+ themselves; there is reason to believe that both of them have more faith
+ in the indulgence of Heaven than in that of earth. It is much easier to
+ escape the judgments of the gods, who can be appeased at little expense,
+ than the judgments of men whose patience is exhausted. If you take away
+ from the sovereigns the fear of an invisible power, what restraint will
+ you oppose to their misconduct? Let them learn how to govern, how to be
+ just, how to respect the rights of the people, to recognize the
+ benefactions of the nations from whom they obtain their grandeur and
+ power; let them learn to fear men, to submit to the laws of equity, that
+ no one can violate without danger; let these laws restrain equally the
+ powerful and the weak, the great and the small, the sovereign and the
+ subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fear of the Gods, religion, the terrors of another life&mdash;these
+ are the metaphysical and supernatural barriers which are opposed to the
+ furious passions of princes! Are these barriers sufficient? We leave it to
+ experience to solve the question! To oppose religion to the wickedness of
+ tyrants, is to wish that vague speculations should be more powerful than
+ inclinations which conspire to fortify them in it from day to day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0149" id="link2H_4_0149">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXLV.&mdash;RELIGION IS FATAL TO POLITICS; IT FORMS BUT LICENTIOUS AND
+ PERVERSE DESPOTS, AS WELL AS ABJECT AND UNHAPPY SUBJECTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are told constantly of the immense advantages which religion secures to
+ politics; but if we reflect a moment, we will see without trouble that
+ religious opinions blind and lead astray equally the rulers and the
+ people, and never enlighten them either in regard to their true duties or
+ their real interests. Religion but too often forms licentious, immoral
+ tyrants, obeyed by slaves who are obliged to conform to their views. From
+ lack of the knowledge of the true principles of administration, the aim
+ and the rights of social life, the real interests of men, and the duties
+ which unite them, the princes are become, in almost every land,
+ licentious, absolute, and perverse; and their subjects abject unhappy, and
+ wicked. It was to avoid the trouble of studying these important subjects,
+ that they felt themselves obliged to have recourse to chimeras, which so
+ far, instead of being a remedy, have but increased the evils of the human
+ race and withdrawn their attention from the most interesting things. Does
+ not the unjust and cruel manner in which so many nations are governed here
+ below, furnish the most visible proofs, not only of the non-effect
+ produced by the fear of another life, but of the non-existence of a
+ Providence interested in the fate of the human race? If there existed a
+ good God, would we not be forced to admit that He strangely neglects the
+ majority of men in this life? It would appear that this God created the
+ nations but to be toys for the passions and follies of His representatives
+ upon earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0150" id="link2H_4_0150">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXLVI.&mdash;CHRISTIANITY EXTENDED ITSELF BUT BY ENCOURAGING DESPOTISM, OF
+ WHICH IT, LIKE ALL RELIGION, IS THE STRONGEST SUPPORT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If we read history with some attention, we shall see that Christianity,
+ fawning at first, insinuated itself among the savage and free nations of
+ Europe but by showing their chiefs that its principles would favor
+ despotism and place absolute power in their hands. We see, consequently,
+ barbarous kings converting themselves with a miraculous promptitude; that
+ is to say, adopting without examination a system so favorable to their
+ ambition, and exerting themselves to have it adopted by their subjects. If
+ the ministers of this religion have since often moderated their servile
+ principles, it is because the theory has no influence upon the conduct of
+ the Lord's ministers, except when it suits their temporal interests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christianity boasts of having brought to men a happiness unknown to
+ preceding centuries. It is true that the Grecians have not known the
+ Divine right of tyrants or usurpers over their native country. Under the
+ reign of Paganism it never entered the brain of anybody that Heaven did
+ not want a nation to defend itself against a ferocious beast which
+ insolently ravaged it. The Christian religion, devised for the benefit of
+ tyrants, was established on the principle that the nations should renounce
+ the legitimate defense of themselves. Thus Christian nations are deprived
+ of the first law of nature, which decrees that man should resist evil and
+ disarm all who attempt to destroy him. If the ministers of the Church have
+ often permitted nations to revolt for Heaven's cause, they never allowed
+ them to revolt against real evils or known violences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is from Heaven that the chains have come to fetter the minds of
+ mortals. Why is the Mohammedan everywhere a slave? It is because his
+ Prophet subdued him in the name of the Deity, just as Moses before him
+ subjugated the Jews. In all parts of the world we see that priests were
+ the first law-givers and the first sovereigns of the savages whom they
+ governed. Religion seems to have been invented but to exalt princes above
+ their nations, and to deliver the people to their discretion. As soon as
+ the latter find themselves unhappy here below, they are silenced by
+ menacing them with God's wrath; their eyes are fixed on Heaven, in order
+ to prevent them from perceiving the real causes of their sufferings and
+ from applying the remedies which nature offers them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0152" id="link2H_4_0152">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXLVII.&mdash;THE ONLY AIM OF RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES IS TO PERPETUATE THE
+ TYRANNY OF KINGS AND TO SACRIFICE THE NATIONS TO THEM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By incessantly repeating to men that the earth is not their true country;
+ that the present life is but a passage; that they were not made to be
+ happy in this world; that their sovereigns hold their authority but from
+ God, and are responsible to Him alone for the misuse of it; that it is
+ never permitted to them to resist, the priesthood succeeded in
+ perpetuating the misconduct of the kings and the misfortunes of the
+ people; the interests of the nations have been cowardly sacrificed to
+ their chiefs. The more we consider the dogmas and the principles of
+ religion, the more we shall be convinced that their only aim is to give
+ advantage to tyrants and priests; not having the least regard for the good
+ of society. In order to mask the powerlessness of these deaf Gods,
+ religion has succeeded in making mortals believe that it is always
+ iniquity which excites the wrath of Heaven. The people blame themselves
+ for the disasters and the adversities which they endure continually. If
+ disturbed nature sometimes causes the people to feel its blows, their bad
+ governments are but too often the immediate and permanent causes from
+ which spring the continual calamities that they are obliged to endure. Is
+ it not the ambition of kings and of the great, their negligence, their
+ vices, their oppression, to which are generally due sterility, mendacity,
+ wars, contagions, bad morals, and all the multiplied scourges which
+ desolate the earth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In continually directing the eyes of men toward Heaven, making them
+ believe that all their evils are due to Divine wrath, in furnishing them
+ but inefficient and futile means of lessening their troubles, it would
+ appear that the only object of the priests is to prevent the nations from
+ dreaming of the true sources of their miseries, and to perpetuate them.
+ The ministers of religion act like those indigent mothers, who, in need of
+ bread, put their hungry children to sleep by songs, or who present them
+ toys to make them forget the want which torments them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blinded from childhood by error, held by the invincible ties of opinion,
+ crushed by panic terrors, stupefied at the bosom of ignorance, how could
+ the people understand the true causes of their troubles? They think to
+ remedy them by invoking the gods. Alas! do they not see that it is it the
+ name of these gods that they are ordered to present their throat to the
+ sword of their pitiless tyrants, in whom they would find the most visible
+ cause of the evils under which they groan, and for which they uselessly
+ implore the assistance of Heaven? Credulous people! in your adversities
+ redouble your prayers, your offerings, your sacrifices; besiege your
+ temples, strangle countless victims, fast in sackcloth and in ashes, drink
+ your own tears; finally, exhaust yourselves to enrich your gods: you will
+ do nothing but enrich their priests; the gods of Heaven will not be
+ propitious to you, except when the gods of the earth will recognize that
+ they are men like yourselves, and will give to your welfare the care which
+ is your due.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0153" id="link2H_4_0153">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXLVIII.&mdash;HOW FATAL IT IS TO PERSUADE KINGS THAT THEY HAVE ONLY GOD
+ TO FEAR IF THEY INJURE THE PEOPLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Negligent, ambitious, and perverse princes are the real causes of public
+ adversities, of useless and unjust wars continually depopulating the
+ earth, of greedy and despotic governments, destroying the benefactions of
+ nature for men. The rapacity of the courts discourages agriculture, blots
+ out industry, causes famine, contagion, misery; Heaven is neither cruel
+ nor favorable to the wishes of the people; it is their haughty chiefs, who
+ always have a heart of brass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a notion destructive to wholesome politics and to the morals of
+ princes, to persuade them that God alone is to be feared by them, when
+ they injure their subjects or when they neglect to render them happy.
+ Sovereigns! It is not the Gods, but your people whom you offend when you
+ do evil. It is to these people, and by retroaction, to yourselves, that
+ you do harm when you govern unjustly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is more common in history than to see religious tyrants; nothing
+ more rare than to find equitable, vigilant, enlightened princes. A monarch
+ can be pious, very strict in fulfilling servilely the duties of his
+ religion, very submissive to his priests, liberal in their behalf, and at
+ the same time destitute of all the virtues and talents necessary for
+ governing. Religion for the princes is but an instrument intended to keep
+ the people more firmly under the yoke. According to the beautiful
+ principles of religious morality, a tyrant who, during a long reign, will
+ have done nothing but oppress his subjects, rob them of the fruits of
+ their labor, sacrifice them without pity to his insatiable ambition; a
+ conqueror who will have usurped the provinces of others, who will have
+ slaughtered whole nations, who will have been all his life a real scourge
+ of the human race, imagines that his conscience can be tranquillized, if,
+ in order to expiate so many crimes, he will have wept at the feet of a
+ priest, who will have the cowardly complaisance to console and reassure a
+ brigand, whom the most frightful despair would punish too little for the
+ evil which he has done upon earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0154" id="link2H_4_0154">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXIX.&mdash;A RELIGIOUS KING IS A SCOURGE TO HIS KINGDOM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A sincerely religious sovereign is generally a very dangerous chief for a
+ State; credulity always indicates a narrow mind; devotion generally
+ absorbs the attention which the prince ought to give to the ruling of his
+ people. Docile to the suggestions of his priests, he constantly becomes
+ the toy of their caprices, the abettor of their quarrels, the instrument
+ and the accomplice of their follies, to which he attaches the greatest
+ importance. Among the most fatal gifts which religion has bestowed upon
+ the world, we must consider above all, these devoted and zealous monarchs,
+ who, with the idea of working for the salvation of their subjects, have
+ made it their sacred duty to torment, to persecute, to destroy those whose
+ conscience made them think otherwise than they do. A religious bigot at
+ the head of an empire, is one of the greatest scourges which Heaven in its
+ fury could have sent upon earth. One fanatical or deceitful priest who has
+ the ear of a credulous and powerful prince, suffices to put a State into
+ disorder and the universe into combustion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In almost all countries, priests and devout persons are charged with
+ forming the mind and the heart of the young princes destined to govern the
+ nations. What enlightenment can teachers of this stamp give? Filled
+ themselves with prejudices, they will hold up to their pupil superstition
+ as the most important and the most sacred thing, its chimerical duties as
+ the most holy obligations, intolerance, and the spirit of persecution, as
+ the true foundations of his future authority; they will try to make him a
+ chief of party, a turbulent fanatic, and a tyrant; they will suppress at
+ an early period his reason; they will premonish him against it; they will
+ prevent truth from reaching him; they will prejudice him against true
+ talents, and prepossess him in favor of despicable talents; finally they
+ will make of him an imbecile devotee, who will have no idea of justice or
+ of injustice, of true glory or of true greatness, and who will be devoid
+ of the intelligence and virtue necessary to the government of a great
+ kingdom. Here, in brief, is the plan of education for a child destined to
+ make, one day, the happiness or the misery of several millions of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0155" id="link2H_4_0155">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CL.&mdash;THE SHIELD OF RELIGION IS FOR TYRANNY, A WEAK RAMPART AGAINST
+ THE DESPAIR OF THE PEOPLE. A DESPOT IS A MADMAN, WHO INJURES HIMSELF AND
+ SLEEPS UPON THE EDGE OF A PRECIPICE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Priests in all times have shown themselves supporters of despotism, and
+ the enemies of public liberty. Their profession requires vile and
+ submissive slaves, who never have the audacity to reason. In an absolute
+ government, their great object is to secure control of the mind of a weak
+ and stupid prince, in order to make themselves masters of the people.
+ Instead of leading the people to salvation, priests have always led them
+ to servitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the sake of the supernatural titles which religion has forged for the
+ most wicked princes, the latter have generally united with the priests,
+ who, sure of governing by controlling the opinion of the sovereign
+ himself, have charge of tying the hands of the people and of keeping them
+ under their yoke. But it is vain that the tyrant, protected by the shield
+ of religion, flatters himself with being sheltered from all the blows of
+ fate. Opinion is a weak rampart against the despair of the people.
+ Besides, the priest is the friend of the tyrant only so long as he finds
+ his profit by the tyranny; he preaches sedition and demolishes the idol
+ which he has made, when he considers it no longer in conformity with the
+ interests of Heaven, which he speaks of as he pleases, and which never
+ speaks but in behalf of his interests. No doubt it will be said, that the
+ sovereigns, knowing all the advantages which religion procures for them,
+ are truly interested in upholding it with all their strength. If religious
+ opinions are useful to tyrants, it is evident that they are useless to
+ those who govern according to the laws of reason and of equity. Is there
+ any advantage in exercising tyranny? Does not tyranny deprive princes of
+ true power, the love of the people, in which is safety? Should not every
+ rational prince perceive that the despot is but an insane man who injures
+ himself? Will not every enlightened prince beware of his flatterers, whose
+ object is to put him to sleep at the edge of the precipice to which they
+ lead him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0156" id="link2H_4_0156">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLI.&mdash;RELIGION FAVORS THE ERRORS OF PRINCES, BY DELIVERING THEM FROM
+ FEAR AND REMORSE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If the sacerdotal flatteries succeed in perverting princes and changing
+ them into tyrants, the latter on their side necessarily corrupt the great
+ men and the people. Under an unjust master, without goodness, without
+ virtue, who knows no law but his caprice, a nation must become necessarily
+ depraved. Will this master wish to have honest, enlightened, and virtuous
+ men near him? No! he needs flatterers in those who approach him,
+ imitators, slaves, base and servile minds, who give themselves up to his
+ taste; his court will spread the contagion of vice to the inferior
+ classes. By degrees all will be necessarily corrupted, in a State whose
+ chief is corrupt himself. It was said a long time ago that the princes
+ seem ordained to do all they do themselves. Religion, far from being a
+ restraint upon the sovereigns, entitles them, without fear and without
+ remorse, to the errors which are as fatal to themselves as to the nations
+ which they govern. Men are never deceived with impunity. Tell a prince
+ that he is a God, and very soon he will believe that he owes nothing to
+ anybody. As long as he is feared, he will not care much for love; he will
+ recognize no rights, no relations with his subjects, nor obligations in
+ their behalf. Tell this prince that he is responsible for his actions to
+ God alone, and very soon he will act as if he was responsible to nobody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0157" id="link2H_4_0157">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLII.&mdash;WHAT IS AN ENLIGHTENED SOVEREIGN?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ An enlightened sovereign is he who understands his true interests; he
+ knows they are united to those of his nation; he knows that a prince can
+ be neither great, nor powerful, nor beloved, nor respected, so long as he
+ will command but miserable slaves; he knows that equity, benevolence, and
+ vigilance will give him more real rights over men than fabulous titles
+ which claim to come from Heaven. He will feel that religion is useful but
+ to the priests; that it is useless to society, which is often troubled by
+ it; that it must be limited to prevent it from doing injury; finally, he
+ will understand that, in order to reign with glory, he must make good
+ laws, possess virtues, and not base his power on impositions and chimeras.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0158" id="link2H_4_0158">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLIII.&mdash;THE DOMINANT PASSIONS AND CRIMES OF PRIESTCRAFT. WITH THE
+ ASSISTANCE OF ITS PRETENDED GOD AND OF RELIGION, IT ASSERTS ITS PASSIONS
+ AND COMMITS ITS CRIMES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The ministers of religion have taken great care to make of their God a
+ terrible, capricious, and changeable tyrant; it was necessary for them
+ that He should be thus in order that He might lend Himself to their
+ various interests. A God who would be just and good, without a mixture of
+ caprice and perversity; a God who would constantly have the qualities of
+ an honest man or of a compliant sovereign, would not suit His ministers.
+ It is necessary to the priests that we tremble before their God, in order
+ that we have recourse to them to obtain the means to be quieted. No man is
+ a hero to his valet de chambre. It is not surprising that a God clothed by
+ His priests in such a way as to cause others to fear Him, should rarely
+ impose upon those priests themselves, or exert but little influence upon
+ their conduct. Consequently we see them behave themselves in a uniform way
+ in every land; everywhere they devour nations, debase souls, discourage
+ industry, and sow discord under the pretext of the glory of their God.
+ Ambition and avarice were at all times the dominating passions of the
+ priesthood; everywhere the priest places himself above the sovereign and
+ the laws; everywhere we see him occupied but with the interests of his
+ pride, his cupidity, his despotic and vindictive mood; everywhere he
+ substitutes expiations, sacrifices, ceremonies, and mysterious practices;
+ in a word, inventions lucrative to himself for useful and social virtues.
+ The mind is confounded and reason interdicted with the view of ridiculous
+ practices and pitiable means which the ministers of the gods invented in
+ every country to purify souls and render Heaven favorable to nations.
+ Here, they practice circumcision upon a child to procure it Divine
+ benevolence; there, they pour water upon his head to wash away the crimes
+ which he could not yet have committed; in other places he is told to
+ plunge himself into a river whose waters have the power to wash away all
+ his impurities; in other places certain food is forbidden to him, whose
+ use would not fail to excite celestial indignation; in other countries
+ they order the sinful man to come periodically for the confession of his
+ faults to a priest, who is often a greater sinner than he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0159" id="link2H_4_0159">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLIV.&mdash;CHARLATANRY OF THE PRIESTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What would we say of a crowd of quacks, who every day would exhibit in a
+ public place, selling their remedies and recommending them as infallible,
+ while we should find them afflicted with the same infirmities which they
+ pretend to cure? Would we have much confidence in the recipes of these
+ charlatans, who would bawl out: "Take our remedies, their effects are
+ infallible&mdash;they cure everybody except us?" What would we think to
+ see these same charlatans pass their lives in complaining that their
+ remedies never produce any effect upon the patients who take them?
+ Finally, what idea would we form of the foolishness of the common man who,
+ in spite of this confession, would continue to pay very high for remedies
+ which will not be beneficial to him? The priests resemble alchemists, who
+ boldly assert that they have the secret of making gold, while they
+ scarcely have clothing enough to cover their nudity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ministers of religion incessantly declaim against the corruption of
+ the age, and complain loudly of the little success of their teachings, at
+ the same time they assure us that religion is the universal remedy, the
+ true panacea for all human evils. These priests are sick themselves;
+ however, men continue to frequent their stands and to have faith in their
+ Divine antidotes, which, according to their own confession, cure nobody!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0160" id="link2H_4_0160">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLV.&mdash;COUNTLESS CALAMITIES ARE PRODUCED BY RELIGION, WHICH HAS
+ TAINTED MORALITY AND DISTURBED ALL JUST IDEAS AND ALL SOUND DOCTRINES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Religion, especially among modern people, in taking possession of
+ morality, totally obscured its principles; it has rendered men unsocial
+ from a sense of duty; it has forced them to be inhuman toward all those
+ who did not think as they did. Theological disputes, equally
+ unintelligible for the parties already irritated against each other, have
+ unsettled empires, caused revolutions, ruined sovereigns, devastated the
+ whole of Europe; these despicable quarrels could not be extinguished even
+ in rivers of blood. After the extinction of Paganism the people
+ established a religious principle of going into a frenzy, every time that
+ an opinion was brought forth which their priests considered contrary to
+ the holy doctrine. The votaries of a religion which preaches externally
+ but charity, harmony, and peace, have shown themselves more ferocious than
+ cannibals or savages every time that their instructors have excited them
+ to the destruction of their brethren. There is no crime which men have not
+ committed in the idea of pleasing the Deity or of appeasing His wrath. The
+ idea of a terrible God who was represented as a despot, must necessarily
+ have rendered His subjects wicked. Fear makes but slaves, and slaves are
+ cowardly, low, cruel, and think they have a right to do anything when it
+ is the question of gaining the good-will or of escaping the punishments of
+ the master whom they fear. Liberty of thought can alone give to men
+ humanity and grandeur of soul. The notion of a tyrant God can create but
+ abject, angry, quarrelsome, intolerant slaves. Every religion which
+ supposes a God easily irritated, jealous, vindictive, punctilious about
+ His rights or His title, a God small enough to be offended at opinions
+ which we have of Him, a God unjust enough to exact uniform ideas in regard
+ to Him, such a religion becomes necessarily turbulent, unsocial,
+ sanguinary; the worshipers of such a God never believe they can, without
+ crime, dispense with hating and even destroying all those whom they
+ designate as adversaries of this God; they would believe themselves
+ traitors to the cause of their celestial Monarch, if they should live on
+ good terms with rebellious fellow-citizens. To love what God hates, would
+ it not be exposing one's self to His implacable hatred? Infamous
+ persecutors, and you, religious cannibals! will you never feel the folly
+ and injustice of your intolerant disposition? Do you not see that man is
+ no more the master of his religious opinions, of his credulity or
+ incredulity, than of the language which he learns in childhood, and which
+ he can not change? To tell men to think as you do, is it not asking a
+ foreigner to express his thoughts in your language? To punish a man for
+ his erroneous opinions, is it not punishing him for having been educated
+ differently from yourself? If I am incredulous, is it possible for me to
+ banish from my mind the reasons which have unsettled my faith? If God
+ allows men the freedom to damn themselves, is it your business? Are you
+ wiser and more prudent than this God whose rights you wish to avenge?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0161" id="link2H_4_0161">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLVI.&mdash;EVERY RELIGION IS INTOLERANT, AND CONSEQUENTLY DESTRUCTIVE OF
+ BENEFICENCE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is no religious person who, according to his temperament, does not
+ hate, despise, or pity the adherents of a sect different from his own. The
+ dominant religion (which is never but that of the sovereign and the
+ armies) always makes its superiority felt in a very cruel and injurious
+ manner toward the weaker sects. There does not exist yet upon earth a true
+ tolerance; everywhere a jealous God is worshiped, and each nation believes
+ itself His friend to the exclusion of all others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every nation boasts itself of worshiping the true God, the universal God,
+ the Sovereign of Nature; but when we come to examine this Monarch of the
+ world, we perceive that each organization, each sect, each religious
+ party, makes of this powerful God but an inferior sovereign, whose cares
+ and kindness extend themselves but over a small number of His subjects who
+ pretend to have the exclusive advantage of His favors, and that He does
+ not trouble Himself about the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The founders of religions, and the priests who maintain them, have
+ intended to separate the nations which they indoctrinated, from other
+ nations; they desired to separate their own flock by distinctive features;
+ they gave to their votaries Gods inimical to other Gods as well as the
+ forms of worship, dogmas, ceremonies, separately; they persuaded them
+ especially that the religions of others were ungodly and abominable. By
+ this infamous contrivance, these ambitious impostors took exclusive
+ possession of the minds of their votaries, rendered them unsocial, and
+ made them consider as outcasts all those who had not the same ideas and
+ form of worship as their own. This is the way religion succeeded in
+ closing the heart, and in banishing from it that affection which man ought
+ to have for his fellow-being. Sociability, tolerance, humanity, these
+ first virtues of all morality are totally in compatible with religious
+ prejudices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0162" id="link2H_4_0162">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLVII.&mdash;ABUSE OF A STATE RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Every national religion has a tendency to make man vain, unsocial, and
+ wicked; the first step toward humanity is to permit each one to follow
+ peacefully the worship and the opinions which suit him. But such a conduct
+ can not please the ministers of religion, who wish to have the right to
+ tyrannize over even the thoughts of men. Blind and bigoted princes, you
+ hate, you persecute, you devote heretics to torture, because you are
+ persuaded that these unfortunate ones displease God. But do you not claim
+ that your God is full of kindness? How can you hope to please Him by such
+ barbarous actions which He can not help disapproving of? Besides, who told
+ you that their opinions displease your God? Your priests told you! But who
+ guarantees that your priests are not deceived themselves or that they do
+ not wish to deceive you? It is these same priests! Princes! it is upon the
+ perilous word of your priests that you commit the most atrocious and the
+ most unheard-of crimes, with the idea of pleasing the Deity!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0163" id="link2H_4_0163">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLVIII.&mdash;RELIGION GIVES LICENSE TO THE FEROCITY OF THE PEOPLE BY
+ LEGITIMIZING IT, AND AUTHORIZES CRIME BY TEACHING THAT IT CAN BE USEFUL TO
+ THE DESIGNS OF GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Never," says Pascal, "do we do evil so thoroughly and so willingly as
+ when we do it through a false principle of conscience." Nothing is more
+ dangerous than a religion which licenses the ferocity of the people, and
+ justifies in their eyes the blackest crimes; it puts no limits to their
+ wickedness as soon as they believe it authorized by their God, whose
+ interests, as they are told, can justify all their actions. If there is a
+ question of religion, immediately the most civilized nations become true
+ savages, and believe everything is permitted to them. The more cruel they
+ are, the more agreeable they suppose themselves to be to their God, whose
+ cause they imagine can not be sustained by too much zeal. All religions of
+ the world have authorized countless crimes. The Jews, excited by the
+ promises of their God, arrogated to themselves the right of exterminating
+ whole nations; the Romans, whose faith was founded upon the oracles of
+ their Gods, became real brigands, and conquered and ravaged the world; the
+ Arabians, encouraged by their Divine preceptor, carried the sword and the
+ flame among Christians and idolaters. The Christians, under pretext of
+ spreading their holy religion, covered the two hemispheres a hundred times
+ with blood. In all events favorable to their own interests, which they
+ always call the cause of God, the priests show us the finger of God.
+ According to these principles, religious bigots have the luck of seeing
+ the finger of God in revolts, in revolutions, massacres, regicides,
+ prostitutions, infamies, and, if these things contribute to the advantage
+ of religion, we can say, then, that God uses all sorts of means to secure
+ His ends. Is there anything better calculated to annihilate every idea of
+ morality in the minds of men, than to make them understand that their God,
+ who is so powerful and so perfect, is often compelled to use crime to
+ accomplish His designs?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0164" id="link2H_4_0164">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLIX.&mdash;REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENT, THAT THE EVILS ATTRIBUTED TO
+ RELIGION ARE BUT THE SAD EFFECTS OF THE PASSIONS OF MEN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When we complain about the violence and evils which generally religion
+ causes upon earth, we are answered at once, that these excesses are not
+ due to religion, but that they are the sad effect of men's passions. I
+ would ask, however, what unchained these passions? It is evidently
+ religion; it is a zeal which renders inhuman, and which serves to cover
+ the greatest infamy. Do not these disorders prove that religion, instead
+ of restraining the passions of men, does but cover them with a cloak that
+ sanctifies them; and that nothing would be more beneficial than to tear
+ away this sacred cloak of which men make such a bad use? What horrors
+ would be banished from society, if the wicked were deprived of a pretext
+ so plausible for disturbing it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of cherishing peace among men, the priests stirred up hatred and
+ strife. They pleaded their conscience, and pretended to have received from
+ Heaven the right to be quarrelsome, turbulent, and rebellious. Do not the
+ ministers of God consider themselves to be wronged, do they not pretend
+ that His Divine Majesty is injured every time that the sovereigns have the
+ temerity to try to prevent them from doing injury? The priests resemble
+ that irritable woman, who cried out fire! murder! assassins! while her
+ husband was holding her hands to prevent her from beating him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0165" id="link2H_4_0165">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLX.&mdash;ALL MORALITY IS INCOMPATIBLE WITH RELIGIOUS OPINIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the bloody tragedies which religion has so often caused in
+ this world, we are constantly told that there can be no morality without
+ religion. If we judge theological opinions by their effects, we would be
+ right in assuming that all morality is perfectly incompatible with the
+ religious opinions of men. "Imitate God," is constantly repeated to us.
+ Ah! what morals would we have if we should imitate this God! Which God
+ should we imitate? Is it the deist's God? But even this God can not be a
+ model of goodness for us. If He is the author of all, He is equally the
+ author of the good and of the bad we see in this world; if He is the
+ author of order, He is also the author of disorder, which would not exist
+ without His permission; if He produces, He destroys; if He gives life, He
+ also causes death; if He grants abundance, riches, prosperity, and peace,
+ He permits or sends famines, poverty, calamities, and wars. How can you
+ accept as a model of permanent beneficence the God of theism or of natural
+ religion, whose favorable intentions are at every moment contradicted by
+ everything that transpires in the world? Morality needs a firmer basis
+ than the example of a God whose conduct varies, and whom we can not call
+ good but by obstinately closing the eyes to the evil which He causes, or
+ permits to be done in this world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall we imitate the good and great Jupiter of ancient Paganism? To
+ imitate such a God would be to take as a model a rebellious son, who
+ wrests his father's throne from him and then mutilates his body; it is
+ imitating a debauchee and adulterer, an incestuous, intemperate man, whose
+ conduct would cause any reasonable mortal to blush. What would have become
+ of men under the control of Paganism if they had imagined, according to
+ Plato, that virtue consisted in imitating the gods?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Must we imitate the God of the Jews? Will we find a model for our conduct
+ in Jehovah? He is truly a savage God, really created for an ignorant,
+ cruel, and immoral people; He is a God who is constantly enraged,
+ breathing only vengeance; who is without pity, who commands carnage and
+ robbery; in a word, He is a God whose conduct can not serve as a model to
+ an honest man, and who can be imitated but by a chief of brigands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall we imitate, then, the Jesus of the Christians? Can this God, who
+ died to appease the implacable fury of His Father, serve as an example
+ which men ought to follow? Alas! we will see in Him but a God, or rather a
+ fanatic, a misanthrope, who being plunged Himself into misery, and
+ preaching to the wretched, advises them to be poor, to combat and
+ extinguish nature, to hate pleasure, to seek sufferings, and to despise
+ themselves; He tells them to leave father, mother, all the ties of life,
+ in order to follow Him. What beautiful morality! you will say. It is
+ admirable, no doubt; it must be Divine, because it is impracticable for
+ men. But does not this sublime morality tend to render virtue despicable?
+ According to this boasted morality of the man-God of the Christians, His
+ disciples in this lower world are, like Tantalus, tormented with burning
+ thirst, which they are not permitted to quench. Do not such morals give us
+ a wonderful idea of nature's Author? If He has, as we are assured, created
+ everything for the use of His creatures, by what strange caprice does He
+ forbid the use of the good things which He has created for them? Is the
+ pleasure which man constantly desires but a snare that God has maliciously
+ laid in his path to entrap him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0166" id="link2H_4_0166">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXI.&mdash;THE MORALS OF THE GOSPEL ARE IMPRACTICABLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The votaries of Christ would like to make us regard as a miracle the
+ establishment of their religion, which is in every respect contrary to
+ nature, opposed to all the inclinations of the heart, an enemy to physical
+ pleasures. But the austerity of a doctrine has a tendency to render it
+ more wonderful to the ignorant. The same reason which makes us respect, as
+ Divine and supernatural, inconceivable mysteries, causes us to admire, as
+ Divine and supernatural, a morality impracticable and beyond the power of
+ man. To admire morals and to practice them, are two very different things.
+ All the Christians continually admire the morals of the Gospel, but it is
+ practiced but by a small number of saints; admired by people who
+ themselves avoid imitating their conduct, under the pretext that they are
+ lacking either the power or the grace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole universe is infected more or less with a religious morality
+ which is founded upon the opinion that to please the Deity it is necessary
+ to render one's self unhappy upon earth. We see in all parts of our globe
+ penitents, hermits, fakirs, fanatics, who seem to have studied profoundly
+ the means of tormenting themselves for the glory of a Being whose goodness
+ they all agree in celebrating. Religion, by its essence, is the enemy of
+ joy and of the welfare of men. "Blessed are those who suffer!" Woe to
+ those who have abundance and joy! These are the rare revelations which
+ Christianity teaches!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0167" id="link2H_4_0167">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXII.&mdash;A SOCIETY OF SAINTS WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In what consists the saint of all religions? It is a man who prays, fasts,
+ who torments himself, who avoids the world, who, like an owl, is pleased
+ but in solitude, who abstains from all pleasure, who seems frightened at
+ every object which turns him a moment from his fanatical meditations. Is
+ this virtue? Is a being of this stamp of any use to himself or to others?
+ Would not society be dissolved, and would not men retrograde into
+ barbarism, if each one should be fool enough to wish to be a saint?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is evident that the literal and rigorous practice of the Divine
+ morality of the Christians would lead nations to ruin. A Christian who
+ would attain perfection, ought to drive away from his mind all that can
+ alienate him from heaven&mdash;his true country. He sees upon earth but
+ temptations, snares, and opportunities to go astray; he must fear science
+ as injurious to faith; he must avoid industry, as it is a means of
+ obtaining riches, which are fatal to salvation; he must renounce
+ preferments and honors, as things capable of exciting his pride and
+ calling his attention away from his soul; in a word, the sublime morality
+ of Christ, if it were not impracticable, would sever all the ties of
+ society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A saint in the world is no more useful than a saint in the desert; the
+ saint has an unhappy, discontented, and often irritable, turbulent
+ disposition; his zeal often obliges him, conscientiously, to disturb
+ society by opinions or dreams which his vanity makes him accept as
+ inspirations from Heaven. The annals of all religions are filled with
+ accounts of anxious, intractable, seditious saints, who have distinguished
+ themselves by ravages that, for the greater glory of God, they have
+ scattered throughout the universe. If the saints who live in solitude are
+ useless, those who live in the world are very often dangerous. The vanity
+ of performing a role, the desire of distinguishing themselves in the eyes
+ of the stupid vulgar by a strange conduct, constitute usually the
+ distinctive characteristics of great saints; pride persuades them that
+ they are extraordinary men, far above human nature; beings who are more
+ perfect than others; chosen ones, which God looks upon with more
+ complaisance than the rest of mortals. Humility in a saint is, is a
+ general rule, but a pride more refined than that of common men. It must be
+ a very ridiculous vanity which can determine a man to continually war with
+ his own nature!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0168" id="link2H_4_0168">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXIII.&mdash;HUMAN NATURE IS NOT DEPRAVED; AND A MORALITY WHICH
+ CONTRADICTS THIS FACT IS NOT MADE FOR MAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A morality which contradicts the nature of man is not made for him. But
+ you will say that man's nature is depraved. In what consists this
+ pretended depravity? Is it because he has passions? But are not passions
+ the very essence of man? Must he not seek, desire, love that which is, or
+ that which he believes to be, essential to his happiness? Must he not fear
+ and avoid that which he judges injurious or fatal to him? Excite his
+ passions by useful objects; let him attach himself to these same objects,
+ divert him by sensible and known motives from that which can do him or
+ others harm, and you will make of him a reasonable and virtuous being. A
+ man without passions would be equally indifferent to vice and to virtue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holy doctors! you constantly tell us that man's nature is perverted; you
+ tell us that the way of all flesh is corrupt; you tell us that nature
+ gives us but inordinate inclinations. In this case you accuse your God,
+ who has not been able or willing to keep this nature in its original
+ perfection. If this nature became corrupted, why did not this God repair
+ it? The Christian assures me that human nature is repaired, that the death
+ of his God has reestablished it in its integrity. How comes it then, that
+ human nature, notwithstanding the death of a God, is still depraved? Is
+ it, then, a pure loss that your God died? What becomes of His omnipotence
+ and His victory over the Devil, if it is true that the Devil still holds
+ the empire which, according to you, he has always exercised in the world?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Death, according to Christian theology, is the penalty of sin. This
+ opinion agrees with that of some savage Negro nations, who imagine that
+ the death of a man is always the supernatural effect of the wrath of the
+ Gods. The Christians firmly believe that Christ has delivered them from
+ sin, while they see that, in their religion as in the others, man is
+ subject to death. To say that Jesus Christ has delivered us from sin, is
+ it not claiming that a judge has granted pardon to a guilty man, while we
+ see him sent to torture?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0169" id="link2H_4_0169">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXIV.&mdash;OF JESUS CHRIST, THE PRIEST'S GOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If, closing our eyes upon all that transpires in this world, we should
+ rely upon the votaries of the Christian religion, we would believe that
+ the coming of our Divine Saviour has produced the most wonderful
+ revolution and the most complete reform in the morals of nations. The
+ Messiah, according to Pascal, [See Thoughts of Pascal] ought of Himself
+ alone to produce a great, select, and holy people; conducting and
+ nourishing it, and introducing it into the place of repose and sanctity,
+ rendering it holy to God, making it the temple of God, saving it from the
+ wrath of God, delivering it from the servitude of sin, giving laws to this
+ people, engraving these laws upon their hearts, offering Himself to God
+ for them, crushing the head of the serpent, etc. This great man has
+ forgotten to show us the people upon whom His Divine Messiah has produced
+ the miraculous effects of which He speaks with so much emphasis; so far,
+ it seems, they do not exist upon the earth!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we examine ever so little the morals of the Christian nations, and
+ listen to the clamors of their priests, we will be obliged to conclude
+ that their God, Jesus Christ, preached without fruit, without success;
+ that His Almighty will still finds in men a resistance, over which this
+ God either can not or does not wish to triumph. The morality of this
+ Divine Doctor which His disciples admire so much, and practice so little,
+ is followed during a whole century but by half a dozen of obscure saints,
+ fanatical and ignorant monks, who alone will have the glory of shining in
+ the celestial court; all the remainder of mortals, although redeemed by
+ the blood of this God, will be the prey of eternal flames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0170" id="link2H_4_0170">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXV.&mdash;THE DOGMA OF THE REMISSION OF SINS HAS BEEN INVENTED IN THE
+ INTEREST OF THE PRIESTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When a man has a great desire to sin, he thinks very little about his God;
+ more than this, whatever crimes he may have committed, he always flatters
+ himself that this God will mitigate the severity of his punishments. No
+ mortal seriously believes that his conduct can damn him. Although he fears
+ a terrible God, who often makes him tremble, every time he is strongly
+ tempted he succumbs and sees but a God of mercy, the idea of whom quiets
+ him. Does he do evil? He hopes to have the time to correct himself, and
+ promises earnestly to repent some day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are in the religious pharmacy infallible receipts for calming the
+ conscience; the priests in every country possess sovereign secrets for
+ disarming the wrath of Heaven. However true it may be that the anger of
+ Deity is appeased by prayers, by offerings, by sacrifices, by penitential
+ tears, we have no right to say that religion holds in check the
+ irregularities of men; they will first sin, and afterward seek the means
+ to reconcile God. Every religion which expiates, and which promises the
+ remission of crimes, if it restrains any, it encourages the great number
+ to commit evil. Notwithstanding His immutability, God is, in all the
+ religions of this world, a veritable Proteus. His priests show Him now
+ armed with severity, and then full of clemency and gentleness; now cruel
+ and pitiless, and then easily reconciled by the repentance and the tears
+ of the sinners. Consequently, men face the Deity in the manner which
+ conforms the most to their present interests. An always wrathful God would
+ repel His worshipers, or cast them into despair. Men need a God who
+ becomes angry and who can be appeased; if His anger alarms a few timid
+ souls, His clemency reassures the determined wicked ones who intend to
+ have recourse sooner or later to the means of reconciling themselves with
+ Him; if the judgments of God frighten a few faint-hearted devotees who
+ already by temperament and by habitude are not inclined to evil, the
+ treasures of Divine mercy reassure the greatest criminals, who have reason
+ to hope that they will participate in them with the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0171" id="link2H_4_0171">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXVI.&mdash;THE FEAR OF GOD IS POWERLESS AGAINST HUMAN PASSIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The majority of men rarely think of God, or, at least, do not occupy
+ themselves much with Him. The idea of God has so little stability, it is
+ so afflicting, that it can not hold the imagination for a long time,
+ except in some sad and melancholy visionists who do not constitute the
+ majority of the inhabitants of this world. The common man has no
+ conception of it; his weak brain becomes perplexed the moment he attempts
+ to think of Him. The business man thinks of nothing but his affairs; the
+ courtier of his intrigues; worldly men, women, youth, of their pleasures;
+ dissipation soon dispels the wearisome notions of religion. The ambitious,
+ the avaricious, and the debauchee sedulously lay aside speculations too
+ feeble to counterbalance their diverse passions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whom does the idea of God overawe? A few weak men disappointed and
+ disgusted with this world; some persons whose passions are already
+ extinguished by age, by infirmities, or by reverses of fortune. Religion
+ is a restraint but for those whose temperament or circumstances have
+ already subjected them to reason. The fear of God does not prevent any
+ from committing sin but those who do not wish to sin very much, or who are
+ no longer in a condition to sin. To tell men that Divinity punishes crime
+ in this world, is to claim as a fact that which experience contradicts
+ constantly The most wicked men are usually the arbiters of the world, and
+ those whom fortune blesses with its favors. To convince us of the
+ judgments of God by sending us to the other life, is to make us accept
+ conjectures in order to destroy facts which we can not dispute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0172" id="link2H_4_0172">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXVII.&mdash;THE INVENTION OF HELL IS TOO ABSURD TO PREVENT EVIL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ No one dreams about another life when he is very much absorbed in objects
+ which he meets on earth. In the eyes of a passionate lover, the presence
+ of his mistress extinguishes the fires of hell, and her charms blot out
+ all the pleasures of Paradise. Woman! you leave, you say, your lover for
+ your God? It is that your lover is no longer the same in your estimation;
+ or your lover leaves you, and you must fill the void which is made in your
+ heart. Nothing is more common than to see ambitious, perverse, corrupt,
+ and immoral men who are religious, and who sometimes exhibit even zeal in
+ its behalf; if they do not practice religion, they promise themselves they
+ will practice it some day; they keep it in reserve as a remedy which,
+ sooner or later, will be necessary to quiet the conscience for the evil
+ which they intend yet to do. Besides, devotees and priests being a very
+ numerous, active, and powerful party, it is not astonishing to see
+ impostors and thieves seek for its support in order to gain their ends. We
+ will be told, no doubt, that many honest people are sincerely religious
+ without profit; but is uprightness of heart always accompanied with
+ intelligence? We are cited to a great number of learned men, men of
+ genius, who are very religious. This proves that men of genius can have
+ prejudices, can be pusillanimous, can have an imagination which seduces
+ them and prevents them from examining objects coolly. Pascal proves
+ nothing in favor of religion, except that a man of genius can possess a
+ grain of weakness, and is but a child when he is weak enough to listen to
+ prejudices. Pascal himself tells us "that the mind can be strong and
+ narrow, and just as extended as it is weak." He says more: "We can have
+ our senses all right, and not be equally able in all things; because there
+ are men who, being right in a certain sphere of things, lose themselves in
+ others."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0173" id="link2H_4_0173">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXVIII.&mdash;ABSURDITY OF THE MORALITY AND OF THE RELIGIOUS VIRTUES
+ ESTABLISHED SOLELY IN THE INTEREST OF THE PRIESTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What is virtue according to theology? It is, we are told, the conformity
+ of men's actions with the will of God. But who is God? He is a being whom
+ no one is able to conceive of, and whom, consequently, each one modifies
+ in his own way. What is the will of God? It is what men who have seen God,
+ or whom God has inspired, have told us. Who are those who have seen God?
+ They are either fanatics, or scoundrels, or ambitious men, whose word we
+ can not rely upon. To found morality upon a God that each man represents
+ differently, that each one composes by his own idea, whom everybody
+ arranges according to his own temperament and his own interest, is
+ evidently founding morality upon the caprice and upon the imagination of
+ men; it is basing it upon the whims of a sect, faction, or party, who,
+ excluding all others, claim to have the advantage of worshiping the true
+ God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To establish morality, or the duties of man, upon the Divine will, is
+ founding it upon the wishes, the reveries, or the interests of those who
+ make God talk without fear of contradiction. In every religion the priests
+ alone have the right to decide upon what pleases or displeases their God;
+ we may rest assured that they will decide upon what pleases or displeases
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dogmas, ceremonies, the morality and the virtues which all religions
+ of the world prescribe, are visibly calculated only to extend the power or
+ to increase the emoluments of the founders and of the ministers of these
+ religions; the dogmas are obscure, inconceivable, frightful, and, thereby,
+ very liable to cause the imagination to wander, and to render the common
+ man more docile to those who wish to domineer over him; the ceremonies and
+ practices procure fortune or consideration to the priests; the religious
+ morals and virtues consist in a submissive faith, which prevents
+ reasoning; in a devout humility, which assures to the priests the
+ submission of their slaves; in an ardent zeal, when the question of
+ religion is agitated; that is to say, when the interest of these priests
+ is considered, all religious virtues having evidently for their object the
+ advantage of the priests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0174" id="link2H_4_0174">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXIX.&mdash;WHAT DOES THAT CHRISTIAN CHARITY AMOUNT TO, SUCH AS
+ THEOLOGIANS TEACH AND PRACTICE?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When we reproach the theologians with the sterility of their religious
+ virtues, they praise, with emphasis, charity, that tender love of our
+ neighbor which Christianity makes an essential duty for its disciples.
+ But, alas! what becomes of this pretended charity as soon as we examine
+ the actions of the Lord's ministers? Ask if you must love your neighbor if
+ he is impious, heretical, and incredulous, that is to say, if he does not
+ think as they do? Ask them if you must tolerate opinions contrary to those
+ which they profess? Ask them if the Lord can show indulgence to those who
+ are in error? Immediately their charity disappears, and the dominating
+ clergy will tell you that the prince carries the sword but to sustain the
+ interests of the Most High; they will tell you that for love of the
+ neighbor, you must persecute, imprison, exile, or burn him. You will find
+ tolerance among a few priests who are persecuted themselves, but who put
+ aside Christian charity as soon as they have the power to persecute in
+ their turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Christian religion which was originally preached by beggars and by
+ very wretched men, strongly recommends alms-giving under the name of
+ charity; the faith of Mohammed equally makes it an indispensable duty.
+ Nothing, no doubt, is better suited to humanity than to assist the
+ unfortunate, to clothe the naked, to lend a charitable hand to whoever
+ needs it. But would it not be more humane and more charitable to foresee
+ the misery and to prevent the poor from increasing? If religion, instead
+ of deifying princes, had but taught them to respect the property of their
+ subjects, to be just, and to exercise but their legitimate rights, we
+ should not see such a great number of mendicants in their realms. A
+ greedy, unjust, tyrannical government multiplies misery; the rigor of
+ taxes produces discouragement, idleness, indigence, which, on their part,
+ produce robbery, murders, and all kinds of crime. If the sovereigns had
+ more humanity, charity, and justice, their States would not be peopled by
+ so many unfortunate ones whose misery becomes impossible to soothe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Christian and Mohammedan States are filled with vast and richly
+ endowed hospitals, in which we admire the pious charity of the kings and
+ of the sultans who erected them. Would it not have been more humane to
+ govern the people well, to procure them ease, to excite and to favor
+ industry and trade, to permit them to enjoy in safety the fruits of their
+ labors, than to oppress them under a despotic yoke, to impoverish them by
+ senseless wars, to reduce them to mendicity in order to gratify an
+ immoderate luxury, and afterward build sumptuous monuments which can
+ contain but a very small portion of those whom they have rendered
+ miserable? Religion, by its virtues, has but given a change to men;
+ instead of foreseeing evils, it applies but insufficient remedies. The
+ ministers of Heaven have always known how to benefit themselves by the
+ calamities of others; public misery became their element; they made
+ themselves the administrators of the goods of the poor, the distributors
+ of alms, the depositaries of charities; thereby they extended and
+ sustained at all times their power over the unfortunates who usually
+ compose the most numerous, the most anxious, the most seditious part of
+ society. Thus the greatest evils are made profitable to the ministers of
+ the Lord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Christian priests tell us that the goods which they possess are the
+ goods of the poor, and pretend by this title that their possessions are
+ sacred; consequently, the sovereigns and the people press themselves to
+ accumulate lands, revenues, treasures for them; under pretext of charity,
+ our spiritual guides have become very opulent, and enjoy, in the sight of
+ the impoverished nations, goods which were destined but for the miserable;
+ the latter, far from murmuring about it, applaud a deceitful generosity
+ which enriches the Church, but which very rarely alleviates the sufferings
+ of the poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the principles of Christianity, poverty itself is a virtue,
+ and it is this virtue which the sovereigns and the priests make their
+ slaves observe the most. According to these ideas, a great number of pious
+ Christians have renounced with good-will the perishable riches of the
+ earth; have distributed their patrimony to the poor, and have retired into
+ a desert to live a life of voluntary indigence. But very soon this
+ enthusiasm, this supernatural taste for misery, must surrender to nature.
+ The successors to these voluntary poor, sold to the religious people their
+ prayers and their powerful intercession with the Deity; they became rich
+ and powerful; thus, monks and hermits lived in idleness, and, under the
+ pretext of charity, devoured insultingly the substance of the poor.
+ Poverty of spirit was that of which religion made always the greatest use.
+ The fundamental virtue of all religion, that is to say, the most useful
+ one to its ministers, is faith. It consists in an unlimited credulity,
+ which causes men to believe, without examination, all that which the
+ interpreters of the Deity wish them to believe. With the aid of this
+ wonderful virtue, the priests became the arbiters of justice and of
+ injustice; of good and of evil; they found it easy to commit crimes when
+ crimes became necessary to their interests. Implicit faith has been the
+ source of the greatest outrages which have been committed upon the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0175" id="link2H_4_0175">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXX.&mdash;CONFESSION, THAT GOLDEN MINE FOR THE PRIESTS, HAS DESTROYED
+ THE TRUE PRINCIPLES OF MORALITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ He who first proclaimed to the nations that, when man had wronged man, he
+ must ask God's pardon, appease His wrath by presents, and offer Him
+ sacrifices, obviously subverted the true principles of morality. According
+ to these ideas, men imagine that they can obtain from the King of Heaven,
+ as well as from the kings of the earth, permission to be unjust and
+ wicked, or at least pardon for the evil which they might commit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morality is founded upon the relations, the needs, and the constant
+ interests of the inhabitants of the earth; the relations which subsist
+ between men and God are either entirely unknown or imaginary. The religion
+ associating God with men has visibly weakened or destroyed the ties which
+ unite men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mortals imagine that they can, with impunity, injure each other by making
+ a suitable reparation to the Almighty Being, who is supposed to have the
+ right to remit all the injuries done to His creatures. Is there anything
+ more liable to encourage wickedness and to embolden to crime, than to
+ persuade men that there exists an invisible being who has the right to
+ pardon injustice, rapine, perfidy, and all the outrages they can inflict
+ upon society? Encouraged by these fatal ideas, we see the most perverse
+ men abandon themselves to the greatest crimes, and expect to repair them
+ by imploring Divine mercy; their conscience rests in peace when a priest
+ assures them that Heaven is quieted by sincere repentance, which is very
+ useless to the world; this priest consoles them in the name of Deity, if
+ they consent in reparation of their faults to divide with His ministers
+ the fruits of their plunderings, of their frauds, and of their wickedness.
+ Morality united to religion, becomes necessarily subordinate to it. In the
+ mind of a religious person, God must be preferred to His creatures; "It is
+ better to obey Him than men!" The interests of the Celestial Monarch must
+ be above those of weak mortals. But the interests of Heaven are evidently
+ the interests of the ministers of Heaven; from which it follows evidently,
+ that in all religions, the priests, under pretext of Heaven's interest's,
+ or of God's glory, will be able to dispense with the duties of human
+ morals when they do not agree with the duties which God is entitled to
+ impose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, He who has the power to pardon crimes, has He not the right to
+ order them committed?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0176" id="link2H_4_0176">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXI.&mdash;THE SUPPOSITION OF THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD IS NOT NECESSARY TO
+ MORALITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are constantly told that without a God, there can be no moral
+ obligation; that it is necessary for men and for the sovereigns themselves
+ to have a lawgiver sufficiently powerful to compel them to be moral; moral
+ obligation implies a law; but this law arises from the eternal and
+ necessary relations of things among themselves, which have nothing in
+ common with the existence of a God. The rules which govern men's conduct
+ spring from their own nature, which they are supposed to know, and not
+ from the Divine nature, of which they have no conception; these rules
+ compel us to render ourselves estimable or contemptible, amiable or
+ hateful, worthy of reward or of punishments, happy or unhappy, according
+ to the extent to which we observe them. The law that compels man not to
+ harm himself, is inherent in the nature of a sensible being, who, no
+ matter how he came into this world, or what can be his fate in another, is
+ compelled by his very nature to seek his welfare and to shun evil, to love
+ pleasure and to fear pain. The law which compels a man not to harm others
+ and to do good, is inherent in the nature of sensible beings living in
+ society, who, by their nature, are compelled to despise those who do them
+ no good, and to detest those who oppose their happiness. Whether there
+ exists a God or not, whether this God has spoken or not, men's moral
+ duties will always be the same so long as they possess their own nature;
+ that is to say, so long as they are sensible beings. Do men need a God
+ whom they do not know, or an invisible lawgiver, or a mysterious religion,
+ or chimerical fears in order to comprehend that all excess tends
+ ultimately to destroy them, and that in order to preserve themselves they
+ must abstain from it; that in order to be loved by others, they must do
+ good; that doing evil is a sure means of incurring their hatred and
+ vengeance? "Before the law there was no sin." Nothing is more false than
+ this maxim. It is enough for a man to be what he is, to be a sensible
+ being in order to distinguish that which pleases or displeases him. It is
+ enough that a man knows that another man is a sensible being like himself,
+ in order for him to know what is useful or injurious to him. It is enough
+ that man needs his fellow-creature, in order that he should fear that he
+ might produce unfavorable impressions upon him. Thus a sentient and
+ thinking being needs but to feel and to think, in order to discover that
+ which is due to him and to others. I feel, and another feels, like myself;
+ this is the foundation of all morality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0177" id="link2H_4_0177">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXII.&mdash;RELIGION AND ITS SUPERNATURAL MORALITY ARE FATAL TO THE
+ PEOPLE, AND OPPOSED TO MAN'S NATURE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We can judge of the merit of a system of morals but by its conformity with
+ man's nature. According to this comparison, we have a right to reject it,
+ if we find it detrimental to the welfare of mankind. Whoever has seriously
+ meditated upon religion and its supernatural morality, whoever has weighed
+ its advantages and disadvantages, will become convinced that they are both
+ injurious to the interests of the human race, or directly opposed to man's
+ nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "People, to arms! Your God's cause is at stake! Heaven is outraged! Faith
+ is in danger! Down upon infidelity, blasphemy, and heresy!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the magical power of these valiant words, which the people never
+ understand, the priests in all ages were the leaders in the revolts of
+ nations, in dethroning kings, in kindling civil wars, and in imprisoning
+ men. When we chance to examine the important objects which have excited
+ the Celestial wrath and produced so many ravages upon the earth, it is
+ found that the foolish reveries and the strange conjectures of some
+ theologian who did not understand himself, or, the pretensions of the
+ clergy, have severed all ties of society and inundated the human race in
+ its own blood and tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0178" id="link2H_4_0178">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXIII.&mdash;HOW THE UNION OF RELIGION AND POLITICS IS FATAL TO THE
+ PEOPLE AND TO THE KINGS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The sovereigns of this world in associating the Deity in the government of
+ their realms, in pretending to be His lieutenants and His representatives
+ upon earth, in admitting that they hold their power from Him, must
+ necessarily accept His ministers as rivals or as masters. Is it, then,
+ astonishing that the priests have often made the kings feel the
+ superiority of the Celestial Monarch? Have they not more than once made
+ the temporal princes understand that the greatest physical power is
+ compelled to surrender to the spiritual power of opinion? Nothing is more
+ difficult than to serve two masters, especially when they do not agree
+ upon what they demand of their subjects. The union of religion with
+ politics has necessarily caused a double legislation in the States. The
+ law of God, interpreted by His priests, is often contrary to the law of
+ the sovereign or to the interest of the State. When the princes are firm,
+ and sure of the love of their subjects, God's law is sometimes obliged to
+ comply with the wise intentions of the temporal sovereign; but more often
+ the sovereign authority is obliged to retreat before the Divine authority,
+ that is to say, before the interests of the clergy. Nothing is more
+ dangerous for a prince, than to meddle with ecclesiastical affairs (to put
+ his hands into the holy-water pot), that is to say, to attempt the reform
+ of abuses consecrated by religion. God is never more angry than when the
+ Divine rights, the privileges, the possessions, and the immunities of His
+ priests are interfered with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Metaphysical speculations or the religious opinions of men, never
+ influence their conduct except when they believe them conformed to their
+ interests. Nothing proves this truth more forcibly than the conduct of a
+ great number of princes in regard to the spiritual power, which we see
+ them very often resist. Should not a sovereign who is persuaded of the
+ importance and the rights of religion, conscientiously feel himself
+ obliged to receive with respect the orders of his priests, and consider
+ them as commandments of the Deity? There was a time when the kings and the
+ people, more conformable, and convinced of the rights of the spiritual
+ power, became its slaves, surrendered to it on all occasions, and were but
+ docile instruments in its hands; this happy time is no more. By a strange
+ inconsistency, we sometimes see the most religious monarchs oppose the
+ enterprises of those whom they regard as God's ministers. A sovereign who
+ is filled with religion or respect for his God, ought to be constantly
+ prostrate before his priests, and regard them as his true sovereigns. Is
+ there a power upon the earth which has the right to measure itself with
+ that of the Most High?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0179" id="link2H_4_0179">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXIV.&mdash;CREEDS ARE BURDENSOME AND RUINOUS TO THE MAJORITY OF
+ NATIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Have the princes who believe themselves interested in propagating the
+ prejudices of their subjects, reflected well upon the effects which are
+ produced by privileged demagogues, who have the right to speak when they
+ choose, and excite in the name of Heaven the passions of many millions of
+ their subjects? What ravages would not these holy haranguers cause should
+ they conspire to disturb a State, as they have so often done?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is more onerous and more ruinous for the greatest part of the
+ nations than the worship of their Gods! Everywhere their ministers not
+ only rank as the first order in the State, but also enjoy the greater
+ portion of society's benefits, and have the right to levy continual taxes
+ upon their fellow-citizens. What real advantages do these organs of the
+ Most High procure for the people in exchange for the immense profits which
+ they draw from them? Do they give them in exchange for their wealth and
+ their courtesies anything but mysteries, hypotheses, ceremonies, subtle
+ questions, interminable quarrels, which very often their States must pay
+ for with their blood?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0180" id="link2H_4_0180">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXV.&mdash;RELIGION PARALYZES MORALITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Religion, which claims to be the firmest support of morality, evidently
+ deprives it of its true motor, to substitute imaginary motors,
+ inconceivable chimeras, which, being obviously contrary to common sense,
+ can not be firmly believed by any one. Everybody assures us that he
+ believes firmly in a God who rewards and punishes; everybody claims to be
+ persuaded of the existence of a hell and of a Paradise; however, do we see
+ that these ideas render men better or counterbalance in the minds of the
+ greatest number of them the slightest interest? Each one assures us that
+ he is afraid of God's judgments, although each one gives vent to his
+ passions when he believes himself sure of escaping the judgments of men.
+ The fear of invisible powers is rarely as great as the fear of visible
+ powers. Unknown or distant sufferings make less impression upon people
+ than the erected gallows, or the example of a hanged man. There is
+ scarcely any courtier who fears God's anger more than the displeasure of
+ his master. A pension, a title, a ribbon, are sufficient to make one
+ forget the torments of hell and the pleasures of the celestial court. A
+ woman's caresses expose him every day to the displeasure of the Most High.
+ A joke, a banter, a bon-mot, make more impression upon the man of the
+ world than all the grave notions of his religion. Are we not assured that
+ a true repentance is sufficient to appease Divinity? However, we do not
+ see that this true repentance is sincerely expressed; at least, we very
+ rarely see great thieves, even in the hour of death, restore the goods
+ which they know they have unjustly acquired. Men persuade themselves, no
+ doubt, that they will submit to the eternal fire, if they can not
+ guarantee themselves against it. But as settlements can be made with
+ Heaven by giving the Church a portion of their fortunes, there are very
+ few religious thieves who do not die perfectly quieted about the manner in
+ which they gained their riches in this world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0181" id="link2H_4_0181">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXVI.&mdash;FATAL CONSEQUENCES OF PIETY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Even by the confession of the most ardent defenders of religion and of its
+ usefulness, nothing is more rare than sincere conversions; to which we
+ might add, nothing is more useless to society. Men do not become disgusted
+ with the world until the world is disgusted with them; a woman gives
+ herself to God only when the world no longer wants her. Her vanity finds
+ in religious devotion a role which occupies her and consoles her for the
+ ruin of her charms. She passes her time in the most trifling practices,
+ parties, intrigues, invectives, and slander; zeal furnishes her the means
+ of distinguishing herself and becoming an object of consideration in the
+ religious circle. If the bigots have the talent to please God and His
+ priests, they rarely possess that of pleasing society or of rendering
+ themselves useful to it. Religion for a devotee is a veil which covers and
+ justifies all his passions, his pride, his bad humor, his anger, his
+ vengeance, his impatience, his bitterness. Religion arrogates to itself a
+ tyrannical superiority which banishes from commerce all gentleness,
+ gaiety, and joy; it gives the right to censure others; to capture and to
+ exterminate the infidels for the glory of God; it is very common to be
+ religious and to have none of the virtues or the qualities necessary to
+ social life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0182" id="link2H_4_0182">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXVII.&mdash;THE SUPPOSITION OF ANOTHER LIFE IS NEITHER CONSOLING TO MAN
+ NOR NECESSARY TO MORALITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are assured that the dogma of another life is of the greatest
+ importance to the peace of society; it is imagined that without it men
+ would have no motives for doing good. Why do we need terrors and fables to
+ teach any reasonable man how he ought to conduct himself upon earth? Does
+ not each one of us see that he has the greatest interest in deserving the
+ approbation, esteem, and kindness of the beings which surround him, and in
+ avoiding all that can cause the censure, the contempt, and the resentment
+ of society? No matter how short the duration of a festival, of a
+ conversation, or of a visit may be, does not each one of us wish to act a
+ befitting part in it, agreeable to himself and to others? If life is but a
+ passage, let us try to make it easy; it can not be so if we lack the
+ regards of those who travel with us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Religion, which is so sadly occupied with its gloomy reveries, represents
+ man to us as but a pilgrim upon earth; it concludes that in order to
+ travel with more safety, he should travel alone; renounce the pleasures
+ which he meets and deprive himself of the amusements which could console
+ him for the fatigues and the weariness of the road. A stoical and morose
+ philosophy sometimes gives us counsels as senseless as religion; but a
+ more rational philosophy inspires us to strew flowers on life's pathway;
+ to dispel melancholy and panic terrors; to link our interests with those
+ of our traveling companions; to divert ourselves by gaiety and honest
+ pleasures from the pains and the crosses to which we are so often exposed.
+ We are made to feel, that in order to travel pleasantly, we should abstain
+ from that which could become injurious to ourselves, and to avoid with
+ great care that which could make us odious to our associates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0183" id="link2H_4_0183">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXVIII.&mdash;AN ATHEIST HAS MORE MOTIVES FOR ACTING UPRIGHTLY, MORE
+ CONSCIENCE, THAN A RELIGIOUS PERSON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is asked what motives has an atheist for doing right. He can have the
+ motive of pleasing himself and his fellow-creatures; of living happily and
+ tranquilly; of making himself loved and respected by men, whose existence
+ and whose dispositions are better known than those of a being impossible
+ to understand. Can he who fears not the Gods, fear anything? He can fear
+ men, their contempt, their disrespect, and the punishments which the laws
+ inflict; finally, he can fear himself; he can be afraid of the remorse
+ that all those experience whose conscience reproaches them for having
+ deserved the hatred of their fellow-beings. Conscience is the inward
+ testimony which we render to ourselves for having acted in such a manner
+ as to deserve the esteem or the censure of those with whom we associate.
+ This conscience is based upon the knowledge which we have of men, and of
+ the sentiments which our actions must awaken in them. A religious person's
+ conscience persuades him that he has pleased or displeased his God, of
+ whom he has no idea, and whose obscure and doubtful intentions are
+ explained to him only by suspicious men, who know no more of the essence
+ of Divinity than he does, and who do not agree upon what can please or
+ displease God. In a word, the conscience of a credulous man is guided by
+ men whose own conscience is in error, or whose interest extinguishes
+ intelligence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can an atheist have conscience? What are his motives for abstaining from
+ secret vices and crimes of which other men are ignorant, and which are
+ beyond the reach of laws? He can be assured by constant experience that
+ there is no vice which, in the nature of things, does not bring its own
+ punishment. If he wishes to preserve himself, he will avoid all those
+ excesses which can be injurious to his health; he would not desire to live
+ and linger, thus becoming a burden to himself and others. In regard to
+ secret crimes, he would avoid them through fear of being ashamed of
+ himself, from whom he can not hide. If he has reason, he will know the
+ price of the esteem that an honest man should have for himself. He will
+ know, besides, that unexpected circumstances can unveil to the eyes of
+ others the conduct which he feels interested in concealing. The other
+ world gives no motive for doing well to him who finds no motive for it
+ here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0185" id="link2H_4_0185">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXIX.&mdash;AN ATHEISTICAL KING WOULD BE PREFERABLE TO ONE WHO IS
+ RELIGIOUS AND WICKED, AS WE OFTEN SEE THEM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The speculating atheist, the theist will tell us, may be an honest man,
+ but his writings will cause atheism in politics. Princes and ministers,
+ being no longer restrained by the fear of God, will give themselves up
+ without scruple to the most frightful excesses. But no matter what we can
+ suppose of the depravity of an atheist on a throne, can it ever be any
+ greater or more injurious than that of so many conquerors, tyrants,
+ persecutors, of ambitious and perverse courtiers, who, without being
+ atheists, but who, being very often religious, do not cease to make
+ humanity groan under the weight of their crimes? Can an atheistical king
+ inflict more evil on the world than a Louis XI., a Philip II., a
+ Richelieu, who have all allied religion with crime? Nothing is rarer than
+ atheistical princes, and nothing more common than very bad and very
+ religious tyrants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0186" id="link2H_4_0186">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXX.&mdash;THE MORALITY ACQUIRED BY PHILOSOPHY IS SUFFICIENT TO VIRTUE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Any man who reflects can not fail of knowing his duties, of discovering
+ the relations which subsist between men, of meditating upon his own
+ nature, of discerning his needs, his inclinations, and his desires, and of
+ perceiving what he owes to the beings necessary to his own happiness.
+ These reflections naturally lead to the knowledge of the morality which is
+ the most essential for society. Every man who loves to retire within
+ himself in order to study and seek for the principles of things, has no
+ very dangerous passions; his greatest passion will be to know the truth,
+ and his greatest ambition to show it to others. Philosophy is beneficial
+ in cultivating the heart and the mind. In regard to morals, has not he who
+ reflects and reasons the advantage over him who does not reason?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If ignorance is useful to priests and to the oppressors of humanity, it is
+ very fatal to society. Man, deprived of intelligence, does not enjoy the
+ use of his reason; man, deprived of reason and intelligence, is a savage,
+ who is liable at any moment to be led into crime. Morality, or the science
+ of moral duties, is acquired but by the study of man and his relations. He
+ who does not reflect for himself does not know true morals, and can not
+ walk the road of virtue. The less men reason, the more wicked they are.
+ The barbarians, the princes, the great, and the dregs of society, are
+ generally the most wicked because they are those who reason the least. The
+ religious man never reflects, and avoids reasoning; he fears examination;
+ he follows authority; and very often an erroneous conscience makes him
+ consider it a holy duty to commit evil. The incredulous man reasons,
+ consults experience, and prefers it to prejudice. If he has reasoned
+ justly, his conscience becomes clear; he finds more real motives for
+ right-doing than the religious man, who has no motives but his chimeras,
+ and who never listens to reason. Are not the motives of the incredulous
+ man strong enough to counterbalance his passions? Is he blind enough not
+ to recognize the interests which should restrain him? Well! he will be
+ vicious and wicked; but even then he will be no worse and no better than
+ many credulous men who, notwithstanding religion and its sublime precepts,
+ continue to lead a life which this very religion condemns. Is a credulous
+ murderer less to be feared than a murderer who does not believe anything?
+ Is a religious tyrant any less a tyrant than an irreligious one?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0187" id="link2H_4_0187">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXXI.&mdash;OPINIONS RARELY INFLUENCE CONDUCT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is nothing more rare in the world than consistent men. Their
+ opinions do not influence their conduct, except when they conform to their
+ temperament, their passions, and to their interests. Religious opinions,
+ according to daily experience, produce much more evil than good; they are
+ injurious, because they very often agree with the passions of tyrants,
+ fanatics, and priests; they produce no effect, because they have not the
+ power to balance the present interests of the majority of men. Religious
+ principles are always put aside when they are opposed to ardent desires;
+ without being incredulous, they act as if they believed nothing. We risk
+ being deceived when we judge the opinions of men by their conduct or their
+ conduct by their opinions. A very religious man, notwithstanding the
+ austere and cruel principles of a bloody religion, will sometimes be, by a
+ fortunate inconsistency, humane, tolerant, moderate; in this case the
+ principles of his religion do not agree with the mildness of his
+ disposition. A libertine, a debauchee, a hypocrite, an adulterer, or a
+ thief will often show us that he has the clearest ideas of morals. Why do
+ they not practice them? It is because neither their temperament, their
+ interests, nor their habits agree with their sublime theories. The rigid
+ principles of Christian morality, which so many attempt to pass off as
+ Divine, have but very little influence upon the conduct of those who
+ preach them to others. Do they not tell us every day to do what they
+ preach, and not what they practice?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The religious partisans generally designate the incredulous as libertines.
+ It may be that many incredulous people are immoral; this immorality is due
+ to their temperament, and not to their opinions. But what has their
+ conduct to do with these opinions? Can not an immoral man be a good
+ physician, a good architect, a good geometer, a good logician, a good
+ metaphysician? With an irreproachable conduct, one can be ignorant upon
+ many things, and reason very badly. When truth is presented, it matters
+ not from whom it comes. Let us not judge men by their opinions, or
+ opinions by men; let us judge men by their conduct; and their opinions by
+ their conformity with experience, reason, and their usefulness for
+ mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0188" id="link2H_4_0188">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXXII.&mdash;REASON LEADS MEN TO IRRELIGION AND TO ATHEISM, BECAUSE
+ RELIGION IS ABSURD, AND THE GOD OF THE PRIESTS IS A MALICIOUS AND
+ FEROCIOUS BEING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Every man who reasons soon becomes incredulous, because reasoning proves
+ to him that theology is but a tissue of falsehoods; that religion is
+ contrary to all principles of common sense; that it gives a false color to
+ all human knowledge. The rational man becomes incredulous, because he sees
+ that religion, far from rendering men happier, is the first cause of the
+ greatest disorders, and of the permanent calamities with which the human
+ race is afflicted. The man who seeks his well-being and his own
+ tranquillity, examines his religion and is undeceived, because he finds it
+ inconvenient and useless to pass his life in trembling at phantoms which
+ are made but to intimidate silly women or children. If, sometimes,
+ libertinage, which reasons but little, leads to irreligion, the man who is
+ regular in his morals can have very legitimate motives for examining his
+ religion, and for banishing it from his mind. Too weak to intimidate the
+ wicked, in whom vice has become deeply rooted, religious terrors afflict,
+ torment, and burden imaginative minds. If souls have courage and
+ elasticity, they shake off a yoke which they bear unwillingly. If weak or
+ timorous, they wear the yoke during their whole life, and they grow old,
+ trembling, or at least they live under burdensome uncertainty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The priests have made of God such a malicious, ferocious being, so ready
+ to be vexed, that there are few men in the world who do not wish at the
+ bottom of their hearts that this God did not exist. We can not live happy
+ if we are always in fear. You worship a terrible God, O religious people!
+ Alas! And yet you hate Him; you wish that He was not. Can we avoid wishing
+ the absence or the destruction of a master, the idea of whom can but
+ torment the mind? It is the dark colors in which the priests paint the
+ Deity which revolt men, moving them to hate and reject Him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0189" id="link2H_4_0189">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXXIII.&mdash;FEAR ALONE CREATES THEISTS AND BIGOTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If fear has created the Gods, fear still holds their empire in the mind of
+ mortals; they have been so early accustomed to tremble even at the name of
+ the Deity, that it has become for them a specter, a goblin, a were-wolf
+ which torments them, and whose idea deprives them even of the courage to
+ attempt to reassure themselves. They are afraid that this invisible
+ specter will strike them if they cease to be afraid. The religious people
+ fear their God too much to love Him sincerely; they serve Him as slaves,
+ who can not escape His power, and take the part of flattering their
+ Master; and who, by continually lying, persuade themselves that they love
+ Him. They make a virtue of necessity. The love of religious bigots for
+ their God, and of slaves for their despots, is but a servile and simulated
+ homage which they render by compulsion, in which the heart has no part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0190" id="link2H_4_0190">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXXIV.&mdash;CAN WE, OR SHOULD WE, LOVE OR NOT LOVE GOD?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Christian Doctors have made their God so little worthy of love, that
+ several among them have thought it their duty not to love Him; this is a
+ blasphemy which makes less sincere doctors tremble. Saint Thomas, having
+ asserted that we are under obligation to love God as soon as we can use
+ our reason, the Jesuit Sirmond replied to him that that was very soon; the
+ Jesuit Vasquez claims that it is sufficient to love God in the hour of
+ death; Hurtado says that we should love God at all times; Henriquez is
+ content with loving Him every five years; Sotus, every Sunday. "Upon what
+ shall we rely?" asks Father Sirmond, who adds: "that Suarez desires that
+ we should love God sometimes. But at what time? He allows you to judge of
+ it; he knows nothing about it himself; for he adds: 'What a learned doctor
+ does not know, who can know?'" The same Jesuit Sirmond continues, by
+ saying: "that God does not command us to love Him with human affection,
+ and does not promise us salvation but on condition of giving Him our
+ hearts; it is enough to obey Him and to love Him, by fulfilling His
+ commandments; that this is the only love which we owe Him, and He has not
+ commanded so much to love Him as not to hate Him." [See "Apology, Des
+ Lettres Provinciales," Tome II.] This doctrine appears heretical, ungodly,
+ and abominable to the Jansenists, who, by the revolting severity which
+ they attribute to their God, render Him still less lovable than their
+ adversaries, the Jesuits. The latter, in order to make converts, represent
+ God in such a light as to give confidence to the most perverse mortals.
+ Thus, nothing is less established among the Christians than the important
+ question, whether we can or should love or not love God. Among their
+ spiritual guides some pretend that we must love God with all the heart,
+ notwithstanding all His severity; others, like the Father Daniel, think
+ that an act of pure love of God is the most heroic act of Christian
+ virtue, and that human weakness can scarcely reach so high. The Jesuit
+ Pintereau goes still further; he says: "The deliverance from the grievous
+ yoke of Divine love is a privilege of the new alliance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0191" id="link2H_4_0191">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXXV.&mdash;THE VARIOUS AND CONTRADICTORY IDEAS WHICH EXIST EVERYWHERE
+ UPON GOD AND RELIGION, PROVE THAT THEY ARE BUT IDLE FANCIES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is always the character of man which decides upon the character of his
+ God; each one creates a God for himself, and in his own image. The
+ cheerful man who indulges in pleasures and dissipation, can not imagine
+ God to be an austere and rebukeful being; he requires a facile God with
+ whom he can make an agreement. The severe, sour, bilious man wants a God
+ like himself; one who inspires fear; and regards as perverse those that
+ accept only a God who is yielding and easily won over. Heresies, quarrels,
+ and schisms are necessary. Can men differently organized and modified by
+ diverse circumstances, agree in regard to an imaginary being which exists
+ but in their own brains? The cruel and interminable disputes continually
+ arising among the ministers of the Lord, have not a tendency to attract
+ the confidence of those who take an impartial view of them. How can we
+ help our incredulity, when we see principles about which those who teach
+ them to others, never agree? How can we avoid doubting the existence of a
+ God, the idea of whom varies in such a remarkable way in the mind of His
+ ministers? How can we avoid rejecting totally a God who is full of
+ contradictions? How can we rely upon priests whom we see continually
+ contending, accusing each other of being infidels and heretics, rending
+ and persecuting each other without mercy, about the way in which they
+ understand the pretended truths which they reveal to the world?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0192" id="link2H_4_0192">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXXVI.&mdash;THE EXISTENCE OF GOD, WHICH IS THE BASIS OF ALL RELIGION,
+ HAS NOT YET BEEN DEMONSTRATED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ However, so far, this important truth has not yet been demonstrated, not
+ only to the incredulous, but in a satisfactory way to theologians
+ themselves. In all times, we have seen profound thinkers who thought they
+ had new proofs of the truth most important to men. What have been the
+ fruits of their meditations and of their arguments? They left the thing at
+ the same point; they have demonstrated nothing; nearly always they have
+ excited the clamors of their colleagues, who accuse them of having badly
+ defended the best of causes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0193" id="link2H_4_0193">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXXVII.&mdash;PRIESTS, MORE THAN UNBELIEVERS, ACT FROM INTEREST.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The apologists of religion repeat to us every day that the passions alone
+ create unbelievers. "It is," they say, "pride, and a desire to distinguish
+ themselves, that make atheists; they seek also to efface the idea of God
+ from their minds, because they have reason to fear His rigorous
+ judgments." Whatever may be the motives which cause men to be irreligious,
+ the thing in question is whether they have found truth. No man acts
+ without motives; let us first examine the arguments&mdash;we shall examine
+ the motives afterward&mdash;and we shall find that they are more
+ legitimate, and more sensible, than those of many credulous devotees who
+ allow themselves to be guided by masters little worthy of men's
+ confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You say, O priests of the Lord! that the passions cause unbelievers; you
+ pretend that they renounce religion through interest, or because it
+ interferes with their irregular inclinations; you assert that they attack
+ your Gods because they fear their punishments. Ah! yourselves in defending
+ this religion and its chimeras, are you, then, really exempt from passions
+ and interests? Who receive the fees of this religion, on whose behalf the
+ priests are so zealous? It is the priests. To whom does religion procure
+ power, credit, honors, wealth? To the priests! In all countries, who make
+ war upon reason, science, truth, and philosophy and render them odious to
+ the sovereigns and to the people? Who profit by the ignorance of men and
+ their vain prejudices? The priests! You are, O priests, rewarded, honored,
+ and paid for deceiving mortals, and you punish those who undeceive them.
+ The follies of men procure you blessings, offerings, expiations; the most
+ useful truths bring to those who announce them, chains, sufferings,
+ stakes. Let the world judge between us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0194" id="link2H_4_0194">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXXVIII.&mdash;PRIDE, PRESUMPTION, AND CORRUPTION OF THE HEART ARE MORE
+ OFTEN FOUND AMONG PRIESTS THAN AMONG ATHEISTS AND UNBELIEVERS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Pride and vanity always were and always will be the inherent vices of the
+ priesthood. Is there anything that has a tendency to render men haughty
+ and vain more than the assumption of exercising Heavenly power, of
+ possessing a sacred character, of being the messengers of the Most High?
+ Are not these dispositions continually increased by the credulity of the
+ people, by the deference and the respect of the sovereigns, by the
+ immunities, the privileges, and the distinctions which the clergy enjoy?
+ The common man is, in every country, more devoted to his spiritual guides,
+ whom he considers as Divine men, than to his temporal superiors, whom he
+ considers as ordinary men. Village priests enjoy more honor than the lord
+ or the judge. A Christian priest believes himself far above a king or an
+ emperor. A Spanish grandee having spoken hastily to a monk, the latter
+ said to him, arrogantly, "Learn to respect a man who has every day your
+ God in his hands and your queen at his feet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Have the priests any right to accuse the unbelievers of pride? Do they
+ distinguish themselves by a rare modesty or profound humility? Is it not
+ evident that the desire to domineer over men is the essence of their
+ profession? If the Lord's ministers were truly modest, would we see them
+ so greedy of respect, so easily irritated by contradictions, so prompt and
+ so cruel in revenging themselves upon those whose opinions offend them?
+ Does not modest science impress us with the difficulty of unraveling
+ truth? What other passion than frenzied pride can render men so ferocious,
+ so vindictive, so devoid of toleration and gentleness? What is more
+ presumptuous than to arm nations and cause rivers of blood, in order to
+ establish or to defend futile conjectures?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You say, O Doctors of Divinity! that it is presumption alone which makes
+ atheists. Teach them, then, what your God is; instruct them about His
+ essence; speak of Him in an intelligible way; tell of Him reasonable
+ things, which are not contradictory or impossible! If you are not in the
+ condition to satisfy them; if, so far, none of you have been able to
+ demonstrate the existence of a God in a clear and convincing way; if,
+ according to your own confession, His essence is as much hidden from you
+ as from the rest of mortals, pardon those who can not admit that which
+ they can neither understand nor reconcile. Do not accuse of presumption
+ and vanity those who have the sincerity to confess their ignorance; accuse
+ not of folly those who find it impossible to believe in contradictions.
+ You should blush at the thought of exciting the hatred of the people and
+ the vengeance of the sovereigns against men who do not think as you do
+ upon a Being of whom you have no idea yourselves. Is there anything more
+ audacious and more extravagant than to reason about an object which it is
+ impossible to conceive of?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You tell us it is corruption of the heart which produces atheists; that
+ they shake off the yoke of the Deity because they fear His terrible
+ judgments. But why do you paint your God in such black colors? Why does
+ this powerful God permit that such corrupt hearts should exist? Why should
+ we not make efforts to break the yoke of a Tyrant who, being able to make
+ of the hearts of men what He pleases, allows them to become perverted and
+ hardened; blinds them; refuses them His grace, in order to have the
+ satisfaction of punishing them eternally for having been hardened,
+ blinded, and not having received the grace which He refused them? The
+ theologians and the priests must feel themselves very sure of Heaven's
+ grace and of a happy future, in order not to detest a Master so capricious
+ as the God whom they announce to us. A God who damns eternally must be the
+ most odious Being that the human mind could imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0195" id="link2H_4_0195">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CLXXXIX.&mdash;PREJUDICES ARE BUT FOR A TIME, AND NO POWER IS DURABLE
+ EXCEPT IT IS BASED UPON TRUTH, REASON, AND EQUITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ No man on earth is truly interested in sustaining error; sooner or later
+ it is compelled to surrender to truth. General interest tends to the
+ enlightenment of mortals; even the passions sometimes contribute to the
+ breaking of some of the chains of prejudice. Have not the passions of some
+ sovereigns destroyed, within the past two centuries in some countries of
+ Europe, the tyrannical power which a haughty Pontiff formerly exercised
+ over all the princes of his sect? Politics, becoming more enlightened, has
+ despoiled the clergy of an immense amount of property which credulity had
+ accumulated in their hands. Should not this memorable example make even
+ the priests realize that prejudices are but for a time, and that truth
+ alone is capable of assuring a substantial well-being?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Have not the ministers of the Lord seen that in pampering the sovereigns,
+ in forging Divine rights for them, and in delivering to them the people,
+ bound hand and foot, they were making tyrants of them? Have they not
+ reason to fear that these gigantic idols, whom they have raised to the
+ skies, will crush them also some day? Do not a thousand examples prove
+ that they ought to fear that these unchained lions, after having devoured
+ nations, will in turn devour them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will respect the priests when they become citizens. Let them make use,
+ if they can, of Heaven's authority to create fear in those princes who
+ incessantly desolate the earth; let them deprive them of the right of
+ being unjust; let them recognize that no subject of a State enjoys living
+ under tyranny; let them make the sovereigns feel that they themselves are
+ not interested in exercising a power which, rendering them odious, injures
+ their own safety, their own power, their own grandeur; finally, let the
+ priests and the undeceived kings recognize that no power is safe that is
+ not based upon truth, reason, and equity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0196" id="link2H_4_0196">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXC.&mdash;HOW MUCH POWER AND CONSIDERATION THE MINISTERS OF THE GODS
+ WOULD HAVE, IF THEY BECAME THE APOSTLES OF REASON AND THE DEFENDERS OF
+ LIBERTY!
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The ministers of the Gods, in warring against human reason, which they
+ ought to develop, act against their own interest. What would be their
+ power, their consideration, their empire over the wisest men; what would
+ be the gratitude of the people toward them if, instead of occupying
+ themselves with their vain quarrels, they had applied themselves to the
+ useful sciences; if they had sought the true principles of physics, of
+ government, and of morals. Who would dare reproach the opulence and credit
+ of a corporation which, consecrating its leisure and its authority to the
+ public good, should use the one for studying and meditating, and the other
+ for enlightening equally the minds of the sovereigns and the subjects?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Priests! lay aside your idle fancies, your unintelligible dogmas, your
+ despicable quarrels; banish to imaginary regions these phantoms, which
+ could be of use to you only in the infancy of nations; take the tone of
+ reason, instead of sounding the tocsin of persecution against your
+ adversaries; instead of entertaining the people with foolish disputes, of
+ preaching useless and fanatical virtues, preach to them humane and social
+ morality; preach to them virtues which are really useful to the world;
+ become the apostles of reason, the lights of the nations, the defenders of
+ liberty, reformers of abuses, the friends of truth, and we will bless you,
+ we will honor you, we will love you, and you will be sure of holding an
+ eternal empire over the hearts of your fellow-beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0197" id="link2H_4_0197">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXCI.&mdash;WHAT A HAPPY AND GREAT REVOLUTION WOULD TAKE PLACE IN THE
+ UNIVERSE, IF PHILOSOPHY WAS SUBSTITUTED FOR RELIGION!
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Philosophers, in all ages, have taken the part that seemed destined for
+ the ministers of religion. The hatred of the latter for philosophy was
+ never more than professional jealousy. All men accustomed to think,
+ instead of seeking to injure each other, should unite their efforts in
+ combating errors, in seeking truth, and especially in dispelling the
+ prejudices from which the sovereigns and subjects suffer alike, and whose
+ upholders themselves finish, sooner or later, by becoming the victims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the hands of an enlightened government the priests would become the
+ most useful of citizens. Could men with rich stipends from the State, and
+ relieved of the care of providing for their own subsistence, do anything
+ better than to instruct themselves in order to be able to instruct others?
+ Would not their minds be better satisfied in discovering truth than in
+ wandering in the labyrinths of darkness? Would it be any more difficult to
+ unravel the principles of man's morals, than the imaginary principles of
+ Divine and theological morals? Would ordinary men have as much trouble in
+ understanding the simple notions of their duties, as in charging their
+ memories with mysteries, unintelligible words, and obscure definitions
+ which are impossible for them to understand? How much time and trouble is
+ lost in trying to teach men things which are of no use to them. What
+ resources for the public benefit, for encouraging the progress of the
+ sciences and the advancement of knowledge, for the education of youth, are
+ presented to well-meaning sovereigns through so many monasteries, which,
+ in a great number of countries devour the people's substance without an
+ equivalent. But superstition, jealous of its exclusive empire, seems to
+ have formed but useless beings. What advantage could not be drawn from a
+ multitude of cenobites of both sexes whom we see in so many countries, and
+ who are so well paid to do nothing. Instead of occupying them with sterile
+ contemplations, with mechanical prayers, with monotonous practices;
+ instead of burdening them with fasts and austerities, let there be excited
+ among them a salutary emulation that would inspire them to seek the means
+ of serving usefully the world, which their fatal vows oblige them to
+ renounce. Instead of filling the youthful minds of their pupils with
+ fables, dogmas, and puerilities, why not invite or oblige the priests to
+ teach them true things, and so make of them citizens useful to their
+ country? The way in which men are brought up makes them useful but to the
+ clergy, who blind them, and to the tyrants, who plunder them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0198" id="link2H_4_0198">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXCII.&mdash;THE RETRACTION OF AN UNBELIEVER AT THE HOUR OF DEATH, PROVES
+ NOTHING AGAINST INCREDULITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The adherents of credulity often accuse the unbelievers of bad faith
+ because they sometimes waver in their principles, changing opinions during
+ sickness, and retracting them at the hour of death. When the body is
+ diseased, the faculty of reasoning is generally disturbed also. The infirm
+ and decrepit man, in approaching his end, sometimes perceives himself that
+ reason is leaving him, he feels that prejudice returns. There are diseases
+ which have a tendency to lessen courage, to make pusillanimous, and to
+ enfeeble the brain; there are others which, in destroying the body, do not
+ affect the reason. However, an unbeliever who retracts in sickness, is not
+ more rare or more extraordinary than a devotionist who permits himself,
+ while in health, to neglect the duties that his religion prescribes for
+ him in the most formal manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cleomenes, King of Sparta, having shown little respect for the Gods during
+ his reign, became superstitious in his last days; with the view of
+ interesting Heaven in his favor, he called around him a multitude of
+ sacrificing priests. One of his friends expressing his surprise, Cleomenes
+ said: "What are you astonished at? I am no longer what I was, and not
+ being the same, I can not think in the same way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ministers of religion in their daily conduct, often belie the rigorous
+ principles which they teach to others, so that the unbelievers in their
+ turn think they have a right to accuse them of bad faith. If some
+ unbelievers contradict, in sight of death or during sickness, the opinions
+ which they entertained in health, do not the priests in health belie
+ opinions of the religion which they hold? Do we see a great multitude of
+ humble, generous prelates devoid of ambition, enemies of pomp and
+ grandeur, the friends of poverty? In short, do we see the conduct of many
+ Christian priests corresponding with the austere morality of Christ, their
+ God and their model?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0199" id="link2H_4_0199">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXCIII.&mdash;IT IS NOT TRUE THAT ATHEISM SUNDERS ALL THE TIES OF SOCIETY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Atheism, we are told, breaks all social ties. Without belief in God, what
+ becomes of the sacredness of the oath? How can we bind an atheist who can
+ not seriously attest the Deity? But does the oath place us under stronger
+ obligations to the engagements which we make? Whoever dares to lie, will
+ he not dare to perjure himself? He who is base enough to violate his word,
+ or unjust enough to break his promises in contempt of the esteem of men,
+ will not be more faithful for having taken all the Gods as witnesses to
+ his oaths. Those who rank themselves above the judgments of men, will soon
+ put themselves above the judgments of God. Are not princes, of all
+ mortals, the most prompt in taking oaths, and the most prompt in violating
+ them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0200" id="link2H_4_0200">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXCIV.&mdash;REFUTATION OF THE ASSERTION THAT RELIGION IS NECESSARY FOR
+ THE MASSES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Religion, they tell us, is necessary for the masses; that though
+ enlightened persons may not need restraint upon their opinions, it is
+ necessary at least for the common people, in whom education has not
+ developed reason. Is it true, then, that religion is a restraint for the
+ people? Do we see that this religion prevents them from intemperance,
+ drunkenness, brutality, violence, frauds, and all kinds of excesses?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could a people who had no idea of the Deity, conduct itself in a more
+ detestable manner than many believing people in whom we see dissolute
+ habits, and the vices most unworthy of rational beings? Do we not see the
+ artisan or the man of the people go from his church and plunge headlong
+ into his usual excesses, persuading himself all the while that his
+ periodical homage to God gives him the right to follow without remorse his
+ vicious practices and habitual inclinations? If the people are gross and
+ ignorant, is not their stupidity due to the negligence of the princes who
+ do not attend to the public education, or who oppose the instruction of
+ their subjects? Finally, is not the irrationality of the people plainly
+ the work of the priests, who, instead of interesting them in a rational
+ morality, do nothing but entertain them with fables, phantoms, intrigues,
+ observances, idle fancies, and false virtues, upon which they claim that
+ everything depends?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Religion is, for the people, but a vain attendance upon ceremonies, to
+ which they cling from habit, which amuses their eyes, which enlivens
+ temporarily their sleepy minds, without influencing the conduct, and
+ without correcting their morals. By the confession even of the ministers
+ at the altars, nothing is more rare than the interior and spiritual
+ religion, which is alone capable of regulating the life of man, and of
+ triumphing over his inclinations. In good faith, among the most numerous
+ and the most devotional people, are there many capable of understanding
+ the principles of their religious system, and who find them of sufficient
+ strength to stifle their perverse inclinations?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many people will tell us that it is better to have some kind of a
+ restraint than none at all. They will pretend that if religion does not
+ control the great mass, it serves at least to restrain some individuals,
+ who, without it, would abandon themselves to crime without remorse. No
+ doubt it is necessary for men to have a restraint; but they do not need an
+ imaginary one; they need true and visible restraints; they need real
+ fears, which are much better to restrain them than panic terrors and idle
+ fancies. Religion frightens but a few pusillanimous minds, whose weakness
+ of character already renders them little to be dreaded by their
+ fellow-citizens. An equitable government, severe laws, a sound morality,
+ will apply equally to everybody; every one would be forced to believe in
+ it, and would feel the danger of not conforming to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0201" id="link2H_4_0201">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXCV.&mdash;EVERY RATIONAL SYSTEM IS NOT MADE FOR THE MULTITUDE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We may be asked if atheism can suit the multitude? I reply, that every
+ system which demands discussion is not for the multitude. What use is
+ there, then, in preaching atheism? It can at least make those who reason,
+ feel that nothing is more extravagant than to make ourselves uneasy, and
+ nothing more unjust than to cause anxiety to others on account of
+ conjectures, destitute of all foundation. As to the common man, who never
+ reasons, the arguments of an atheist are no better suited to him than a
+ philosopher's hypothesis, an astronomer's observations, a chemist's
+ experiments, a geometer's calculations, a physician's examinations, an
+ architect's designs, or a lawyer's pleadings, who all labor for the people
+ without their knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The metaphysical arguments of theology, and the religious disputes which
+ have occupied for so long many profound visionists, are they made any more
+ for the common man than the arguments of an atheist? More than this, the
+ principles of atheism, founded upon common sense, are they not more
+ intelligible than those of a theology which we see bristling with
+ insolvable difficulties, even for the most active minds? The people in
+ every country have a religion which they do not understand, which they do
+ not examine, and which they follow but by routine; their priests alone
+ occupy themselves with the theology which is too sublime for them. If, by
+ accident, the people should lose this unknown theology, they could console
+ them selves for the loss of a thing which is not only entirely useless,
+ but which produces among them very dangerous ebullitions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be very foolish to write for the common man or to attempt to cure
+ his prejudices all at once. We write but for those who read and reason;
+ the people read but little, and reason less. Sensible and peaceable people
+ enlighten themselves; their light spreads itself gradually, and in time
+ reaches the people. On the other hand, those who deceive men, do they not
+ often take the trouble themselves of undeceiving them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0202" id="link2H_4_0202">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXCVI.&mdash;FUTILITY AND DANGER OF THEOLOGY. WISE COUNSELS TO PRINCES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If theology is a branch of commerce useful to theologians, it has been
+ demonstrated to be superfluous and injurious to the rest of society. The
+ interests of men will succeed in opening their eyes sooner or later. The
+ sovereigns and the people will some day discover the indifference and the
+ contempt that a futile science deserves which serves but to trouble men
+ without making them better. They will feel the uselessness of many
+ expensive practices, which do not at all contribute to public welfare;
+ they will blush at many pitiful quarrels, which will cease to disturb the
+ tranquillity of the States as soon as they cease to attach any importance
+ to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Princes! instead of taking part in the senseless contentions of your
+ priests, instead of espousing foolishly their impertinent quarrels,
+ instead of striving to bring all your subjects to uniform opinions, occupy
+ yourselves with their happiness in this world, and do not trouble
+ yourselves about the fate which awaits them in another. Govern them
+ justly, give them good laws, respect their liberty and their property,
+ superintend their education, encourage them in their labors, reward their
+ talents and their virtues, repress their licentiousness, and do not
+ trouble yourselves upon what they think about objects useless to them and
+ to you. Then you will no longer need fictions to make yourselves obeyed;
+ you will become the only guides of your subjects; their ideas will be
+ uniform about the feelings of love and respect which will be your due.
+ Theological fables are useful but to tyrants, who do not understand the
+ art of ruling over reasonable beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0203" id="link2H_4_0203">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXCVII.&mdash;FATAL EFFECTS OF RELIGION UPON THE PEOPLE AND THE PRINCES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Does it require the efforts of genius to comprehend that what is beyond
+ man, is not made for men; that what is supernatural, is not made for
+ natural beings; that impenetrable mysteries are not made for limited
+ minds? If theologians are foolish enough to dispute about subjects which
+ they acknowledge to be unintelligible to themselves, should society take a
+ part in their foolish quarrels? Must human blood flow in order to give
+ value to the conjectures of a few obstinate visionists? If it is very
+ difficult to cure the theologians of their mania and the people of their
+ prejudices, it is at least very easy to prevent the extravagances of the
+ one and the folly of the other from producing pernicious effects. Let each
+ one be allowed to think as he chooses, but let him not be allowed to annoy
+ others for their mode of thinking. If the chiefs of nations were more just
+ and more sensible, theological opinions would not disturb the public
+ tranquillity any more than the disputes of philosophers, physicians,
+ grammarians, and of critics. It is the tyranny of princes which makes
+ theological quarrels have serious consequences. When kings shall cease to
+ meddle with theology, theological quarrels will no longer be a thing to
+ fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who boast so much upon the importance and usefulness of religion,
+ ought to show us its beneficial results, and the advantages that the
+ disputes and abstract speculations of theology can bring to porters, to
+ artisans, to farmers, to fishmongers, to women, and to so many depraved
+ servants, with whom the large cities are filled. People of this kind are
+ all religious, they have implicit faith; their priests believe for them;
+ they accept a faith unknown to their guides; they listen assiduously to
+ sermons; they assist regularly in ceremonies; they think it a great crime
+ to transgress the ordinances to which from childhood they have been taught
+ to conform. What good to morality results from all this? None whatever;
+ they have no idea of morality, and you see them indulge in all kinds of
+ rogueries, frauds, rapine, and excesses which the law does not punish. The
+ masses, in truth, have no idea of religion; what is called religion, is
+ but a blind attachment to unknown opinions and mysterious dealings. In
+ fact, to deprive the people of religion, is depriving them of nothing. If
+ we should succeed in destroying their prejudices, we would but diminish or
+ annihilate the dangerous confidence which they have in self-interested
+ guides, and teach them to beware of those who, under the pretext of
+ religion, very often lead them into fatal excesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0204" id="link2H_4_0204">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXCVIII.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Under pretext of instructing and enlightening men, religion really holds
+ them in ignorance, and deprives them even of the desire of understanding
+ the objects which interest them the most. There exists for the people no
+ other rule of conduct than that which their priests indicate to them.
+ Religion takes the place of everything; but being in darkness itself, it
+ has a greater tendency to misguide mortals, than to guide them in the way
+ of science and happiness. Philosophy, morality, legislation, and politics
+ are to them enigmas. Man, blinded by religious prejudices, finds it
+ impossible to understand his own nature, to cultivate his reason, to make
+ experiments; he fears truth as soon as it does not agree with his
+ opinions. Everything tends to render the people devout, but all is opposed
+ to their being humane, reasonable, and virtuous. Religion seems to have
+ for its object only to blunt the feeling and to dull the intelligence of
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war which always existed between the priests and the best minds of all
+ ages, comes from this, that the wise men perceived the fetters which
+ superstition wished to place upon the human mind, which it fain would keep
+ in eternal infancy, that it might be occupied with fables, burdened with
+ terrors, and frightened by phantoms which would prevent it from
+ progressing. Incapable of perfecting itself, theology opposed
+ insurmountable barriers to the progress of true knowledge; it seemed to be
+ occupied but with the care to keep the nations and their chiefs in the
+ most profound ignorance of their true interests, of their relations, of
+ their duties, of the real motives which can lead them to prosperity; it
+ does but obscure morality; renders its principles arbitrary, subjects it
+ to the caprices of the Gods, or of their ministers; it converts the art of
+ governing men into a mysterious tyranny which becomes the scourge of
+ nations; it changes the princes into unjust and licentious despots, and
+ the people into ignorant slaves, who corrupt themselves in order to obtain
+ the favor of their masters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0205" id="link2H_4_0205">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CXCIX.&mdash;HISTORY TEACHES US THAT ALL RELIGIONS WERE ESTABLISHED BY THE
+ AID OF IGNORANCE, AND BY MEN WHO HAD THU EFFRONTERY TO STYLE THEMSELVES
+ THE ENVOYS OF DIVINITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If we take the trouble to follow the history of the human mind, we will
+ discover that theology took care not to extend its limits. It began by
+ repeating fables, which it claimed to be sacred truths; it gave birth to
+ poesy, which filled the people's imagination with puerile fictions; it
+ entertained them but with its Gods and their incredible feats; in a word,
+ religion always treated men like children, whom they put to sleep with
+ tales that their ministers would like still to pass as incontestable
+ truths. If the ministers of the Gods sometimes made useful discoveries,
+ they always took care to hide them in enigmas and to envelope them in
+ shadows of mystery. The Pythagorases and the Platos, in order to acquire
+ some futile attainments, were obliged to crawl to the feet of the priests,
+ to become initiated into their mysteries, to submit to the tests which
+ they desired to impose upon them; it is at this cost that they were
+ permitted to draw from the fountain-head their exalted ideas, so seducing
+ still to all those who admire what is unintelligible. It was among
+ Egyptian, Indian, Chaldean priests; it was in the schools of these
+ dreamers, interested by profession in dethroning human reason, that
+ philosophy was obliged to borrow its first rudiments. Obscure or false in
+ its principles, mingled with fictions and fables, solely made to seduce
+ imagination, this philosophy progressed but waveringly, and instead of
+ enlightening the mind, it blinded it, and turned it away from useful
+ objects. The theological speculations and mystical reveries of the
+ ancients have, even in our days, the making of the law in a great part of
+ the philosophical world. Adopted by modern theology, we can scarcely
+ deviate from them without heresy; they entertain us with aerial beings,
+ with spirits, angels, demons, genii, and other phantoms, which are the
+ object of the meditations of our most profound thinkers, and which serve
+ as a basis to metaphysics, an abstract and futile science, upon which the
+ greatest geniuses have vainly exercised themselves for thousands of years.
+ Thus hypotheses, invented by a few visionists of Memphis and of Babylon,
+ continue to be the basis of a science revered for the obscurity which
+ makes it pass as marvelous and Divine. The first legislators of nations
+ were priests; the first mythologists and poets were priests; the first
+ philosophers were priests; the first physicians were priests. In their
+ hands science became a sacred thing, prohibited to the profane; they spoke
+ only by allegories, emblems, enigmas, and ambiguous oracles&mdash;means
+ well-suited to excite curiosity, to put to work the imagination, and
+ especially to inspire in the ignorant man a holy respect for those whom he
+ believed instructed by Heaven, capable of reading the destinies of earth,
+ and who boldly pretended to be the organs of Divinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0206" id="link2H_4_0206">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CC.&mdash;ALL RELIGIONS, ANCIENT AND MODERN, HAVE MUTUALLY BORROWED THEIR
+ ABSTRACT REVERIES AND THEIR RIDICULOUS PRACTICES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The religions of these ancient priests have disappeared, or, rather, they
+ have changed their form. Although our modern theologians regard the
+ ancient priests as impostors, they have taken care to gather up the
+ scattered fragments of their religious systems, the whole of which does
+ not exist any longer for us; we will find in our modern religions, not
+ only the metaphysical dogmas which theology has but dressed in another
+ form, but we still find remarkable remains of their superstitious
+ practices, of their theurgy, of their magic, of their enchantments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christians are still commanded to regard with respect the monuments of the
+ legislators, the priests, and the prophets of the Hebrew religion, which,
+ according to appearances, has borrowed from Egypt the fantastic notions
+ with which we see it filled. Thus the extravagances invented by frauds or
+ idolatrous visionists, are still regarded as sacred opinions by the
+ Christians!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we but look at history, we see striking resemblances in all religions.
+ Everywhere on earth we find religious ideas periodically afflicting and
+ rejoicing the people; everywhere we see rites, practices often abominable,
+ and formidable mysteries occupying the mind, and becoming objects of
+ meditation. We see the different superstitions borrowing from each other
+ their abstract reveries and their ceremonies. Religions are generally
+ unformed rhapsodies combined by new Doctors of Divinity, who, in composing
+ them, have used the materials of their predecessors, reserving the right
+ of adding or subtracting what suits or does not suit their present views.
+ The religion of Egypt served evidently as a basis for the religion of
+ Moses, who expunged from it the worship of idols. Moses was but an
+ Egyptian schismatic, Christianity is but a reformed Judaism. Mohammedanism
+ is composed of Judaism, of Christianity, and of the ancient religion of
+ Arabia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0207" id="link2H_4_0207">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CCI.&mdash;THEOLOGY HAS ALWAYS TURNED PHILOSOPHY FROM ITS TRUE COURSE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ From the most remote period theology alone regulated the march of
+ philosophy. What aid has it lent it? It changed it into an unintelligible
+ jargon, which only had a tendency to render the clearest truth uncertain;
+ it converted the art of reasoning into a science of words; it threw the
+ human mind into the aerial regions of metaphysics, where it unsuccessfully
+ occupied itself in sounding useless and dangerous abysses. For physical
+ and simple causes, this philosophy substituted supernatural causes, or,
+ rather, causes truly occult; it explained difficult phenomena by agents
+ more inconceivable than these phenomena; it filled discourse with words
+ void of sense, incapable of giving the reason of things, better suited to
+ obscure than to enlighten, and which seem invented but to discourage man,
+ to guard him against the powers of his own mind, to make him distrust the
+ principles of reason and evidence, and to surround the truth with an
+ insurmountable barrier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0208" id="link2H_4_0208">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CCII.&mdash;-THEOLOGY NEITHER EXPLAINS NOR ENLIGHTENS ANYTHING IN THE
+ WORLD OR IN NATURE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If we would believe the adherents of religion, nothing could be explicable
+ in the world without it; nature would be a continual enigma; it would be
+ impossible for man to comprehend himself. But, at the bottom, what does
+ this religion explain to us? The more we examine it, the more we find that
+ theological notions are fit but to perplex all our ideas; they change all
+ into mysteries; they explain to us difficult things by impossible things.
+ Is it, then, explaining things to attribute them to unknown agencies, to
+ invisible powers, to immaterial causes? Is it really enlightening the
+ human mind when, in its embarrassment, it is directed to the "depths of
+ the treasures of Divine Wisdom," upon which they tell us it is in vain for
+ us to turn our bold regards? Can the Divine Nature, which we know nothing
+ about, make us understand man's nature, which we find so difficult to
+ explain?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ask a Christian philosopher what is the origin of the world. He will
+ answer that God created the universe. What is God? We do not know anything
+ about it. What is it to create? We have no idea of it! What is the cause
+ of pestilences, famines, wars, sterility, inundations, earthquakes? It is
+ God's wrath. What remedies can prevent these calamities? Prayers,
+ sacrifices, processions, offerings, ceremonies, are, we are told, the true
+ means to disarm Celestial fury. But why is Heaven angry? Because men are
+ wicked. Why are men wicked? Because their nature is corrupt. What is the
+ cause of this corruption? It is, a theologian of enlightened Europe will
+ reply, because the first man was seduced by the first woman to eat of an
+ apple which his God had forbidden him to touch. Who induced this woman to
+ do such a folly? The Devil. Who created the Devil? God! Why did God create
+ this Devil destined to pervert the human race? We know nothing about it;
+ it is a mystery hidden in the bosom of the Deity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does the earth revolve around the sun? Two centuries ago a devout
+ philosopher would have replied that such a thought was blasphemy, because
+ such a system could not agree with the Holy Book, which every Christian
+ reveres as inspired by the Deity Himself. What is the opinion to-day about
+ it? Notwithstanding Divine Inspiration, the Christian philosophers finally
+ concluded to rely upon evidence rather than upon the testimony of their
+ inspired books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is the hidden principle of the actions and of the motions of the
+ human body? It is the soul. What is a soul? It is a spirit. What is a
+ spirit? It is a substance which has neither form, color, expansion, nor
+ parts. How can we conceive of such a substance? How can it move a body? We
+ know nothing about it. Have brutes souls? The Carthusian assures you that
+ they are machines. But do we not see them act, feel, and think in a manner
+ which resembles that of men? This is a pure illusion, you say. But why do
+ you deprive the brutes of souls, which, without understanding it, you
+ attribute to men? It is that the souls of the brutes would embarrass our
+ theologians, who, content with the power of frightening and damning the
+ immortal souls of men, do not take the same interest in damning those of
+ the brutes. Such are the puerile solutions which philosophy, always guided
+ by the leading-strings of theology, was obliged to bring forth to explain
+ the problems of the physical and moral world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0209" id="link2H_4_0209">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CCIII.&mdash;HOW THEOLOGY HAS FETTERED HUMAN MORALS AND RETARDED THE
+ PROGRESS OF ENLIGHTENMENT, OF REASON, AND OF TRUTH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ How many subterfuges and mental gymnastics all the ancient and modern
+ thinkers have employed, in order to avoid falling out with the ministers
+ of the Gods, who in all ages were the true tyrants of thought! How
+ Descartes, Malebranche, Leibnitz, and many others have been compelled to
+ invent hypotheses and evasions in order to reconcile their discoveries
+ with the reveries and the blunders which religion had rendered sacred!
+ With what prevarications have not the greatest philosophers guarded
+ themselves even at the risk of being absurd, inconsistent, and
+ unintelligible whenever their ideas did not correspond with the principles
+ of theology! Vigilant priests were always ready to extinguish systems
+ which could not be made to tally with their interests. Theology in every
+ age has been the bed of Procrustes upon which this brigand extended his
+ victims; he cut off the limbs when they were too long, or stretched them
+ by horses when they were shorter than the bed upon which he placed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What sensible man who has a love for science, and is interested in the
+ welfare of humanity, can reflect without sorrow and pain upon the loss of
+ so many profound, laborious, and subtle heads, who, for many centuries,
+ have foolishly exhausted themselves upon idle fancies that proved to be
+ injurious to our race? What light could have been thrown into the minds of
+ many famous thinkers, if, instead of occupying themselves with a useless
+ theology, and its impertinent disputes, they had turned their attention
+ upon intelligible and truly important objects. Half of the efforts that it
+ cost the genius that was able to forge their religious opinions, half of
+ the expense which their frivolous worship cost the nations, would have
+ sufficed to enlighten them perfectly upon morality, politics, philosophy,
+ medicine, agriculture, etc. Superstition nearly always absorbs the
+ attention, the admiration, and the treasures of the people; they have a
+ very expensive religion; but they have for their money, neither light,
+ virtue, nor happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0210" id="link2H_4_0210">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CCIV.&mdash;CONTINUATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Some ancient and modern philosophers have had the courage to accept
+ experience and reason as their guides, and to shake off the chains of
+ superstition. Lucippe, Democritus, Epicurus, Straton, and some other
+ Greeks, dared to tear away the thick veil of prejudice, and to deliver
+ philosophy from theological fetters. But their systems, too simple, too
+ sensible, and too stripped of wonders for the lovers of fancy, were
+ obliged to surrender to the fabulous conjectures of Plato, Socrates, and
+ Zeno. Among the moderns, Hobbes, Spinoza, Bayle, and others have followed
+ the path of Epicurus, but their doctrine found but few votaries in a world
+ still too much infatuated with fables to listen to reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all ages one could not, without imminent danger, lay aside the
+ prejudices which opinion had rendered sacred. No one was permitted to make
+ discoveries of any kind; all that the most enlightened men could do was to
+ speak and write with hidden meaning; and often, by a cowardly
+ complaisance, to shamefully ally falsehood with truth. A few of them had a
+ double doctrine&mdash;one public and the other secret. The key of this
+ last having been lost, their true sentiments often became unintelligible
+ and, consequently, useless to us. How could modern philosophers who, being
+ threatened with the most cruel persecution, were called upon to renounce
+ reason and to submit to faith&mdash;that is to say, to priestly authority&mdash;I
+ say, how could men thus fettered give free flight to their genius, perfect
+ reason, or hasten human progress? It was but in fear and trembling that
+ the greatest men obtained glimpses of truth; they rarely had the courage
+ to announce it; those who dared to do it have generally been punished for
+ their temerity. Thanks to religion, it was never permitted to think aloud
+ or to combat the prejudices of which man is everywhere the victim or the
+ dupe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0211" id="link2H_4_0211">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CCV.&mdash;WE COULD NOT REPEAT TOO OFTEN HOW EXTRAVAGANT AND FATAL
+ RELIGION IS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Every man who has the boldness to announce truths to the world, is sure to
+ receive the hatred of the priests; the latter loudly call upon the powers
+ that be, for assistance; they need the assistance of kings to sustain
+ their arguments and their Gods. These clamors show the weakness of their
+ cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are in embarrassment when they cry for help."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not permitted to err in the matter of religion; on every other
+ subject we can be deceived with impunity; we pity those who go astray, and
+ we have some liking for the persons who discover truths new to us. But as
+ soon as theology supposes itself concerned, be it in errors or
+ discoveries, a holy zeal is kindled; the sovereigns exterminate; the
+ people fly into frenzy; and the nations are all stirred up without knowing
+ why. Is there anything more afflicting than to see public and individual
+ welfare depend upon a futile science, which is void of principles, which
+ has no standing ground but imagination, and which presents to the mind but
+ words void of sense? What good is a religion which no one understands;
+ which continually torments those who trouble themselves about it; which is
+ incapable of rendering men better; and which often gives them the credit
+ of being unjust and wicked? Is there a more deplorable folly, and one that
+ ought more to be abated, than that which, far from doing any good to the
+ human race, does but blind it, cause transports, and render it miserable,
+ depriving it of truth, which alone can soften the rigor of fate?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0212" id="link2H_4_0212">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CCVI.&mdash;RELIGION IS PANDORA'S BOX, AND THIS FATAL BOX IS OPEN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Religion has in every age kept the human mind in darkness and held it in
+ ignorance of its true relations, of its real duties and its true
+ interests. It is but in removing its clouds and phantoms that we may find
+ the sources of truth, reason, morality, and the actual motives which
+ inspire virtue. This religion puts us on the wrong track for the causes of
+ our evils, and the natural remedies which we can apply. Far from curing
+ them, it can but multiply them and render them more durable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us, then, say, with the celebrated Lord Bolingbroke, in his posthumous
+ works: "Theology is the Box of Pandora; and if it is impossible to close
+ it, it is at least useful to give warning that this fatal box is open."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ I believe, my dear friends, that I have given you a sufficient
+ preventative against all these follies. Your reason will do more than my
+ discourses, and I sincerely wish that we had only to complain of being
+ deceived! But human blood has flowed since the time of Constantine for the
+ establishment of these horrible impositions. The Roman, the Greek, and the
+ Protestant churches by vain, ambitious, and hypocritical disputes have
+ ravaged Europe, Asia, and Africa. Add to these men, whom these quarrels
+ murdered, the multitudes of monks and of nuns, who became sterile by their
+ profession, and you will perceive that the Christian religion has
+ destroyed half of the human race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I conclude with the desire that we may return to Nature, whose declared
+ enemy the Christian religion is, and which necessarily instructs us to do
+ unto others as we would wish them to do unto us. Then the universe will be
+ composed of good citizens, just fathers, obedient children, tender
+ friends. Nature has given us this Religion, in giving us Reason. May
+ fanaticism pervert it no more! I die filled with these desires more than
+ with hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ETREPIGNY, March 15, 1732
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOHN MESLIER <a name="link2H_4_0213" id="link2H_4_0213">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ABSTRACT OF THE TESTAMENT OF JOHN MESLIER
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ By Voltaire;
+ </h3>
+ <h2>
+ OR, SENTIMENTS OF THE CURATE OF ETREPIGNY ADDRESSED TO HIS PARISHIONERS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0214" id="link2H_4_0214">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I.&mdash;OF RELIGIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As there is no one religious denomination which does not pretend to be
+ truly founded upon the authority of God, and entirely exempt from all the
+ errors and impositions which are found in the others, it is for those who
+ purpose to establish the truth of the faith of their sect, to show, by
+ clear and convincing proofs, that it is of Divine origin; as this is
+ lacking, we must conclude that it is but of human invention, and full of
+ errors and deceptions; for it is incredible that an Omnipotent and
+ Infinitely good God would have desired to give laws and ordinances to men,
+ and not have wished them to bear better authenticated marks of truth, than
+ those of the numerous impostors. Moreover, there is not one of our
+ Christ-worshipers, of whatever sect he may be, who can make us see, by
+ convincing proofs, that his religion is exclusively of Divine origin; and
+ for want of such proof they have been for many centuries contesting this
+ subject among themselves, even to persecuting each other by fire and sword
+ to maintain their opinions; there is, however, not one sect of them all
+ which could convince and persuade the others by such witnesses of truth;
+ this certainly would not be, if they had, on one side or the other,
+ convincing proofs of Divine origin. For, as no one of any religious sect,
+ enlightened and of good faith, pretends to hold and to favor error and
+ falsehood; and as, on the contrary, each, on his side, pretends to sustain
+ truth, the true means of banishing all errors, and of uniting all men in
+ peace in the same sentiments and in the same form of religion, would be to
+ produce convincing proofs and testimonies of the truth; and thus show that
+ such religion is of Divine origin, and not any of the others; then each
+ one would accept this truth; and no person would dare to question these
+ testimonies, or sustain the side of error and imposition, lest he should
+ be, at the same time, confounded by contrary proofs: but, as these proofs
+ are not found in any religion, it gives to impostors occasion to invent
+ and boldly sustain all kinds of falsehoods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are still other proofs, which will not be less evident, of the
+ falsity of human religions, and especially of the falsity of our own.
+ Every religion which relies upon mysteries as its foundation, and which
+ takes, as a rule of its doctrine and its morals, a principle of errors,
+ and which is at the same time a source of trouble and eternal divisions
+ among men, can not be a true religion, nor a Divine Institution. Now,
+ human religions, especially the Catholic, establish as the basis of their
+ doctrine and of their morals, a principle of errors; then, it follows that
+ these religions can not be true, or of Divine origin. I do not see that we
+ can deny the first proposition of this argument; it is too clear and too
+ evident to admit of a doubt. I pass to the proof of the second
+ proposition, which is, that the Christian religion takes for the rule of
+ its doctrine and its morals what they call faith, a blind trust, but yet
+ firm, and secured by some laws or revelations of some Deity. We must
+ necessarily suppose that it is thus, because it is this belief in some
+ Deity and in some Divine Revelations, which gives all the credit and all
+ the authority that it has in the world, and without which we could make no
+ use of what it prescribes. This is why there is no religion which does not
+ expressly recommend its votaries to be firm in their faith. ["Estate
+ fortes in fide!"] This is the reason that all Christians accept as a
+ maxim, that faith is the commencement and the basis of salvation, that it
+ is the root of all justice and of all sanctification, as it is expressed
+ at the Council of Trent.&mdash;Sess. 6, Ch. VIII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it is evident that a blind faith in all which is proposed in the name
+ and authority of God, is a principle of errors and falsehoods. As a proof,
+ we see that there is no impostor in the matter of religion, who does not
+ pretend to be clothed with the name and the authority of God, and who does
+ not claim to be especially inspired and sent by God. Not only is this
+ faith and blind belief which they accept as a basis of their doctrine, a
+ principle of errors, etc., but it is also a source of trouble and division
+ among men for the maintenance of their religion. There is no cruelty which
+ they do not practice upon each other under this specious pretext.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now then, it is not credible that an Almighty, All-Kind, and All-Wise God
+ desired to use such means or such a deceitful way to inform men of His
+ wishes; for this would be manifestly desiring to lead them into error and
+ to lay snares in their way, in order to make them accept the side of
+ falsehood. It is impossible to believe that a God who loved unity and
+ peace, the welfare and the happiness of men, would ever have established
+ as the basis of His religion, such a fatal source of trouble and of
+ eternal divisions among them. Such religions can not be true, neither
+ could they have been instituted by God. But I see that our
+ Christ-worshipers will not fail to have recourse to their pretended
+ motives for credulity, and that they will say, that although their faith
+ and belief may be blind in one sense, they are nevertheless supported by
+ such clear and convincing testimonies of truth, that it would be not only
+ imprudence, but temerity and folly not to surrender one's self. They
+ generally reduce these pretended motives to three or four leading
+ features. The first, they draw from the pretended holiness of their
+ religion, which condemns vice, and which recommends the practice of
+ virtue. Its doctrine is so pure, so simple, according to what they say,
+ that it is evident it could spring but from the sanctity of an infinitely
+ good and wise God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second motive for credulity, they draw from the innocence and the
+ holiness of life in those who embraced it with love, and defended it by
+ suffering death and the most cruel torments, rather than forsake it: it
+ not being credible that such great personages would allow themselves to be
+ deceived in their belief, that they would renounce all the advantages of
+ life, and expose themselves to such cruel torments and persecutions, in
+ order to maintain errors and impositions. Their third motive for
+ credulity, they draw from the oracles and prophecies which have so long
+ been rendered in their favor, and which they pretend have been
+ accomplished in a manner which permits no doubt. Finally, their fourth
+ motive for credulity, which is the most important of all, is drawn from
+ the grandeur and the multitude of the miracles performed, in all ages, and
+ in every place, in favor of their religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is easy to refute all these useless reasonings and to show the
+ falsity of all these evidences. For, firstly, the arguments which our
+ Christ-worshipers draw from their pretended motives for credulity can
+ serve to establish and confirm falsehood as well as truth; for we see that
+ there is no religion, no matter how false it may be, which does not
+ pretend to have a sound and true doctrine, and which, in its way, does not
+ condemn all vices and recommend the practice of all virtues; there is not
+ one which has not had firm and zealous defenders who have suffered
+ persecution in order to maintain their religion; and, finally, there is
+ none which does not pretend to have wonders and miracles that have been
+ performed in their favor. The Mohammedans, the Indians, the heathen, as
+ well as the Christians, claim miracles in their religions. If our
+ Christ-worshipers make use of their miracles and their prophecies, they
+ are found no less in the Pagan religions than in theirs. Thus the
+ advantage we might draw from all these motives for credulity, is found
+ about the same in all sorts of religions. This being established, as the
+ history and practice of all religions demonstrate, it evidently follows
+ that all these pretended motives for credulity, upon which our
+ Christ-worshipers place so much value, are found equally in all religions;
+ and, consequently, can not serve as reliable evidences of the truth of
+ their religion more than of the truth of any other. The result is clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly. In order to give an idea of the resemblance of the miracles of
+ Paganism to those of Christianity, could we not say, for example, that
+ there would be more reason to believe Philostratus in what he recites of
+ the life of Apollonius than to believe all the evangelists in what they
+ say of the miracles of Jesus Christ; because we know, at least that
+ Philostratus was a man of intelligence, eloquence, and fluency; that he
+ was the secretary of the Empress Julia, wife of the Emperor Severus, and
+ that he was requested by this empress to write the life and the wonderful
+ acts of Apollonius? It is evident that Apollonius rendered himself famous
+ by great and extraordinary deeds, since an empress was sufficiently
+ interested in them to desire a history of his life. This is what can not
+ be said of Jesus Christ, nor of those who have furnished us His biography,
+ for they were but ignorant men of the common people, poor workmen,
+ fishermen, who had not even the sense to relate consistently the facts
+ which they speak of, and which they mutually contradict very often. In
+ regard to the One whose life and actions they describe, if He had really
+ performed the miracles attributed to Him, He would have rendered Himself
+ notable by His beautiful acts; every one would have admired Him, and there
+ would be statues erected to Him as was done for the Gods; but instead of
+ that, He was regarded as a man of no consequence, as a fanatic, etc.
+ Josephus, the historian, after having spoken of the great miracles
+ performed in favor of his nation and his religion, immediately diminishes
+ their credibility and renders it suspicious by saying that he leaves to
+ each one the liberty of believing what he chooses; this evidently shows
+ that he had not much faith in them. It also gives occasion to the more
+ judicious to regard the histories which speak of this kind of things as
+ fabulous narrations. [See Montaigne, and the author of the "Apology for
+ Great Men."] All that can be said upon this subject shows us clearly that
+ pretended miracles can be invented to favor vice and falsehood as well as
+ justice and truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I prove it by the evidence of what even our Christ-worshipers call the
+ Word of God, and by the evidence of the One they adore; for their books,
+ which they claim contain the Word of God, and Christ Himself, whom they
+ adore as a God-made man, show us explicitly that there are not only false
+ prophets&mdash;that is to say, impostors&mdash;who claim to be sent by
+ God, and who speak in His name, but which show as explicitly that these
+ false prophets can perform such great and prodigious miracles as shall
+ deceive the very elect. [See Matthew, chapter xxiv., verses 5, 21-27.]
+ More than this, all these pretended performers of miracles wish us to put
+ faith only in them, and not in those who belong to an opposite party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one occasion one of these pretended prophets, named Sedecias, being
+ contradicted by another, named Michea, the former struck the latter and
+ said to him, pleasantly, "By what way did the Spirit of God pass from me
+ to you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how can these pretended miracles be the evidences of truth? for it is
+ clear that they were not performed. For it would be necessary to know:
+ Firstly, If those who are said to be the first authors of these narrations
+ truly are such. Secondly, If they were honest men, worthy of confidence,
+ wise and enlightened; and to know if they were not prejudiced in favor of
+ those of whom they speak so favorably. Thirdly, If they have examined all
+ the circumstances of the facts which they relate; if they know them well;
+ and if they make a faithful report of them. Fourthly, If the books or the
+ ancient histories which relate all these great miracles have not been
+ falsified and changed in course of time, as many others have been?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we consult Tacitus and many other celebrated historians, in regard to
+ Moses and his nation, we shall see that they are considered as a horde of
+ thieves and bandits. Magic and astrology were in those days the only
+ fashionable sciences; and as Moses was, it is said, instructed in the
+ wisdom of the Egyptians, it was not difficult for him to inspire
+ veneration and attachment for himself in the rustic and ignorant children
+ of Jacob, and to induce them to accept, in their misery, the discipline he
+ wished to give them. That is very different from what the Jews and our
+ Christ-worshipers wish to make us believe. By what certain rule can we
+ know that we should put faith in these rather than in the others? There is
+ no sound reason for it. There is as little of certainty and even of
+ probability in the miracles of the New Testament as in those of the Old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will serve no purpose to say that the histories which relate the facts
+ contained in the Gospels have been regarded as true and sacred; that they
+ have always been faithfully preserved without any alteration of the truths
+ which they contain; since this is perhaps the very reason why they should
+ be the more suspected, having been corrupted by those who drew profit from
+ them, or who feared that they were not sufficiently favorable to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Generally, authors who transcribe this kind of histories, take the right
+ to enlarge or to retrench all they please, in order to serve their own
+ interests. This is what even our Christ-worshipers can not deny; for,
+ without mentioning several other important personages who recognized the
+ additions, the retrenchments, and the falsifications which have been made
+ at different times in their Holy Scriptures, their saint Jerome, a famous
+ philosopher among them, formally said in several passages of his
+ "Prologues," that they had been corrupted and falsified; being, even in
+ his day, in the hands of all kinds of persons, who added and suppressed
+ whatever they pleased; so, "Thus there were," said he, "as many different
+ models as different copies of the Gospels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the books of the Old Testament, Esdras, a priest of the law,
+ testifies himself to having corrected and completed wholly the pretended
+ sacred books of his law, which had partly been lost and partly corrupted.
+ He divided them into twenty-two books, according to the number of the
+ Hebraic letters, and wrote several other books, whose doctrine was to be
+ revealed to the learned men alone. If these books have been partly lost
+ and partly corrupted, as Esdras and St. Jerome testify in so many
+ passages, there is then no certainty in regard to what they contain; and
+ as for Esdras saying he had corrected and compiled them by the inspiration
+ of God Himself there is no certainty of that, since there is no impostor
+ who would not make the same claim. All the books of the law of Moses and
+ of the prophets which could be found, were burned in the days of
+ Antiochus. The Talmud, considered by the Jews as a holy and sacred book,
+ and which contains all the Divine laws, with the sentences and notable
+ sayings of the Rabbins, of their interpretation of the Divine and of the
+ human laws, and a prodigious number of other secrets and mysteries in the
+ Hebraic language, is considered by the Christians as a book made up of
+ reveries, fables, impositions, and ungodliness. In the year 1559 they
+ burned in Rome, according to the command of the inquisitors of the faith,
+ twelve hundred of these Talmuds, which were found in a library in the city
+ of Cremona. The Pharisees, a famous sect among the Jews, accepted but the
+ five books of Moses, and rejected all the prophets. Among the Christians,
+ Marcion and his votaries rejected the books of Moses and the prophets, and
+ introduced other fashionable Scriptures. Carpocrates and his followers did
+ the same, and rejected the whole of the Old Testament, and contended that
+ Jesus Christ was but a man like all others. The Marcionites repudiated as
+ bad, the whole of the Old Testament, and rejected the greater part of the
+ four Gospels and the Epistles of St. Paul. The Ebionites accepted but the
+ Gospel of St. Matthew, rejecting the three others, and the Epistles of St.
+ Paul. The Marcionites published a Gospel under the name of St. Matthias,
+ in order to confirm their doctrine. The apostles introduced other
+ Scriptures in order to maintain their errors; and to carry out this, they
+ made use of certain Acts, which they attributed to St. Andrew and to St.
+ Thomas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Manicheans wrote a gospel of their own style, and rejected the
+ Scriptures of the prophets and the apostles. The Etzaites sold a certain
+ book which they claimed to have come from Heaven; they cut up the other
+ Scriptures according to their fancy. Origen himself, with all his great
+ mind, corrupted the Scriptures and forged changes in the allegories which
+ did not suit him, thus corrupting the sense of the prophets and apostles,
+ and even some of the principal points of doctrine. His books are now
+ mutilated and falsified; they are but fragments collected by others who
+ have appeared since. The Ellogians attributed to the heretic Corinthus the
+ Gospel and the Apocalypse of St. John; this is why they reject them. The
+ heretics of our last centuries reject as apocryphal several books which
+ the Roman Catholics consider as true and sacred&mdash;such as the books of
+ Tobias, Judith, Esther, Baruch, the Song of the Three Children in the
+ Furnace, the History of Susannah, and that of the Idol Bel, the Wisdom of
+ Solomon, Ecclesiasticus, the first and second book of Maccabees; to which
+ uncertain and doubtful books we could add several others that have been
+ attributed to the other apostles; as, for example, the Acts of St. Thomas,
+ his Circuits, his Gospel, and his Apocalypse; the Gospel of St.
+ Bartholomew, that of St. Matthias, of St. Jacques, of St. Peter and of the
+ Apostles, as also the Deeds of St. Peter, his book on Preaching, and that
+ of his Apocalypse; that of the Judgment, that of the Childhood of the
+ Saviour, and several others of the same kind, which are all rejected as
+ apocryphal by the Roman Catholics, even by the Pope Gelasee, and by the S.
+ S. F. F. of the Romish Communion. That which most confirms that there is
+ no foundation of truth in regard to the authority given to these books, is
+ that those who maintain their Divinity are compelled to acknowledge that
+ they have no certainty as a basis, if their faith did not assure them and
+ oblige them to believe it. Now, as faith is but a principle of error and
+ imposture, how can faith, that is to say, a blind belief, render the books
+ reliable which are themselves the foundation of this blind belief? What a
+ pity and what insanity! But let us see if these books have of themselves
+ any feature of truth; as, for example, of erudition, of wisdom, and of
+ holiness, or some other perfections which are suited only to a God; and if
+ the miracles which are cited agree with what we ought to think of the
+ grandeur, goodness, justice, and infinite wisdom of an Omnipotent God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no erudition, no sublime thought, nor any production which
+ surpasses the ordinary capacities of the human mind. On the contrary, we
+ shall see on one side fabulous tales similar to that of a woman formed of
+ a man's rib; of the pretended terrestrial Paradise; of a serpent which
+ spoke, which reasoned, and which was more cunning than man; of an ass
+ which spoke, and reprimanded its master for ill-treating it; of a
+ universal deluge, and of an ark where animals of all kinds were inclosed;
+ of the confusion of languages and of the division of the nations, without
+ speaking of numerous other useless narrations upon low and frivolous
+ subjects which important authors would scorn to relate. All these
+ narrations appear to be fables, as much as those invented about the
+ industry of Prometheus, the box of Pandora, the war of the Giants against
+ the Gods, and similar others which the poets have invented to amuse the
+ men of their time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand we will see a mixture of laws and ordinances, or
+ superstitious practices concerning sacrifices, the purifications of the
+ old law, the senseless distinctions in regard to animals, of which it
+ supposes some to be pure and others to be impure. These laws are no more
+ respectable than those of the most idolatrous nations. We shall see but
+ simple stories, true or false, of several kings, princes, or individuals,
+ who lived right or wrong, or who performed noble or mean actions, with
+ other low and frivolous things also related.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From all this, it is evident that no great genius was required, nor Divine
+ Revelations to produce these things. It would not be creditable to a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, we see in these books but the discourses, the conduct, and the
+ actions of those renowned prophets who proclaimed themselves especially
+ inspired by God. We will see their way of acting and speaking, their
+ dreams, their illusions, their reveries; and it will be easy to judge
+ whether they do not resemble visionaries and fanatics much more than wise
+ and enlightened persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are, however, in a few of these books, several good teachings and
+ beautiful maxims of morals, as in the Proverbs attributed to Solomon, in
+ the book of Wisdom and of Ecclesiastes; but this same Solomon, the wisest
+ of their writers, is also the most incredulous; he doubts even the
+ immortality of the soul, and concludes his works by saying that there is
+ nothing good but to enjoy in peace the fruits of one's labor, and to live
+ with those whom we love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How superior are the authors who are called profane, such as Xenophon,
+ Plato, Cicero, the Emperor Antoninus, the Emperor Julian, Virgil, etc., to
+ the books which we are told are inspired of God. I can truly say that the
+ fables of Aesop, for example, are certainly more ingenious and more
+ instructive than all these rough and poor parables which are related in
+ the Gospels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what shows us that this kind of books is not of Divine Inspiration,
+ is, that aside from the low order, coarseness of style, and the lack of
+ system in the narrations of the different facts, which are very badly
+ arranged, we do not see that the authors agree; they contradict each other
+ in several things; they had not even sufficient enlightenment or natural
+ talents to write a history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are some examples of the contradictions which are found among them.
+ The Evangelist Matthew claims that Jesus Christ descended from king David
+ by his son Solomon through Joseph, reputed to be His father; and Luke
+ claims that He is descended from the same David by his son Nathan through
+ Joseph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matthew says, in speaking of Jesus, that, it being reported in Jerusalem
+ that a new king of the Jews was born, and that the wise men had come to
+ adore Him, the king Herod, fearing that this pretended new king would rob
+ him of his crown some day, caused the murder of all the new-born children
+ under two years, in all the neighborhood of Bethlehem, where he had been
+ told that this new king was born; and that Joseph and the mother of Jesus,
+ having been warned in a dream by an angel, of this wicked intention, took
+ flight immediately to Egypt, where they stayed until the death of Herod,
+ which happened many years afterward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the contrary, Luke asserts that Joseph and the mother of Jesus lived
+ peaceably during six weeks in the place where their child Jesus was born;
+ that He was circumcised according to the law of the Jews, eight days after
+ His birth; and when the time prescribed by the law for the purification of
+ His mother had arrived, she and Joseph, her husband, carried Him to
+ Jerusalem in order to present Him to God in His temple, and to offer at
+ the same time a sacrifice which was ordained by God's law; after which
+ they returned to Galilee, into their town of Nazareth, where their child
+ Jesus grew every day in grace and in wisdom. Luke goes on to say that His
+ father and His mother went every year to Jerusalem on the solemn days of
+ their Easter feast, but makes no mention of their flight into Egypt, nor
+ of the cruelty of Herod toward the children of the province of Bethlehem.
+ In regard to the cruelty of Herod, as neither the historians of that time
+ speak of it, nor Josephus, the historian who wrote the life of this Herod,
+ and as the other Evangelists do not mention it, it is evident that the
+ journey of those wise men, guided by a star, this massacre of little
+ children, and this flight to Egypt, were but absurd falsehoods. For it is
+ not credible that Josephus, who blamed the vices of this king, could have
+ been silent on such a dark and detestable action, if what the Evangelist
+ said had been true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the duration of the public life of Jesus Christ, according to
+ what the first three Evangelists say, there could be scarcely more than
+ three months from the time of His baptism until His death, supposing He
+ was thirty years old when He was baptized by John, according to Luke, and
+ that He was born on the 25th of December. For, from this baptism, which
+ was in the year 15 of Tiberius Caesar, and in the year when Anne and
+ Caiaphas were high-priests, to the first Easter following, which was in
+ the month of March, there was but about three months; according to what
+ the first three Evangelists say, He was crucified on the eve of the first
+ Easter following His baptism, and the first time He went to Jerusalem with
+ His disciples; because all that they say of His baptism, of His travels,
+ of His miracles, of His preaching, of His death and passion, must have
+ taken place in the same year of His baptism, for the Evangelists speak of
+ no other year following, and it appears even by the narration of His acts
+ that He performed them consecutively immediately after His baptism, and in
+ a very short time, during which we see but an interval of six days before
+ his Transfiguration; during these six days we do not see that He did
+ anything. We see by this that He lived but about three months after His
+ baptism, from which, if we subtract the forty days and forty nights which
+ He passed in the desert immediately after His baptism, it would follow
+ that the length of His public life from His first preaching till His
+ death, would have lasted but about six weeks; and according to what John
+ says, it would have lasted at least three years and three months, because
+ it appears by the Gospel of this apostle, that, during the course of His
+ public life He might have been three or four times at Jerusalem at the
+ Easter feast which happened but once a year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now if it is true that He had been there three or four times after His
+ baptism, as John testifies, it is false that He lived but three months
+ after His baptism, and that He was crucified the first time He went to
+ Jerusalem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If it is said that these first three Evangelists really mean but one year,
+ but that they do not indicate distinctly the others which elapsed since
+ His baptism; or that John understood that there was but one Easter,
+ although he speaks of several, and that he only anticipated the time when
+ he repeatedly tells us that the Easter feast of the Jews was near at hand,
+ and that Jesus went to Jerusalem, and, consequently, that there is but an
+ apparent contradiction upon this subject between the Evangelists, I am
+ willing to accept this; but it is certain that this apparent contradiction
+ springs from the fact, that they do not explain themselves in all the
+ circumstances that are noted in the narration which they make. Be that as
+ it may, there will always be this inference made, that they were not
+ inspired by God when they wrote their biographies of Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is another contradiction in regard to the first thing which Jesus
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christ did immediately after His baptism; for the first three Evangelists
+ state, that He was transported immediately by the Spirit into the desert,
+ where He fasted forty days and forty nights, and where He was several
+ times tempted by the Devil; and, according to what John says, He departed
+ two days after His baptism to go into Galilee, where He performed His
+ first miracle by changing water into wine at the wedding of Cana, where He
+ found Himself three days after His arrival in Galilee, more than thirty
+ leagues from the place in which He had been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the place of His first retreat after His departure from the
+ desert, Matthew says that He returned to Galilee, and that leaving the
+ city of Nazareth, He went to live at Capernaum, a maritime city; and Luke
+ says, that He came at first to Nazareth, and afterward went to Capernaum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They contradict each other in regard to the time and manner in which the
+ apostles followed Him; for the first three say that Jesus, passing on the
+ shore of the Sea of Galilee, saw Simon and Andrew his brother, and that He
+ saw at a little distance James and his brother John with their father,
+ Zebedee. John, on the contrary, says that it was Andrew, brother of Simon
+ Peter, who first followed Jesus with another disciple of John the Baptist,
+ having seen Him pass before them, when they were with their Master on the
+ shores of the Jordan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the Lord's Supper, the first three Evangelists note that
+ Jesus Christ instituted the Sacrament of His body and His blood, in the
+ form of bread and wine, the same as our Roman Christ-worshipers say; and
+ John does not mention this mysterious sacrament. John says that after this
+ supper, Jesus washed His apostles' feet, and commanded them to do the same
+ thing to each other, and relates a long discourse which He delivered then.
+ But the other Evangelists do not speak of the washing of the feet, nor of
+ the long discourse He gave them then. On the contrary, they testify that
+ immediately after this supper, He went with His apostles upon the Mount of
+ Olives, where He gave up His Spirit to sadness, and was in anguish while
+ His apostles slept, at a short distance. They contradict each other upon
+ the day on which they say the Lord's Supper took place; because on one
+ side, they note that it took place Easter-eve, that is, the evening of the
+ first day of Azymes, or of the feast of unleavened bread; as it is noted
+ (1) in Exodus, (2) in Leviticus, and (3) in Numbers; and, on the other
+ hand, they say that He was crucified the day following the Lord's Supper,
+ about midday after the Jews had His trial during the whole night and
+ morning. Now, according to what they say, the day after this supper took
+ place, ought not to be Easter-eve. Therefore, if He died on the eve of
+ Easter, toward midday, it was not on the eve of this feast that this
+ supper took place. There is consequently a manifest error.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They contradict each other, also, in regard to the women who followed
+ Jesus from Galilee, for the first three Evangelists say that these women,
+ and those who knew Him, among whom were Mary Magdalene, and Mary, mother
+ of James and Joseph, and the mother of Zebedee's children, were looking on
+ at a distance when He was hanged and nailed upon the cross. John says, on
+ the contrary, that the mother of Jesus and His mother's sister, and Mary
+ Magdalene were standing near His cross with John, His apostle. The
+ contradiction is manifest, for, if these women and this disciple were near
+ Him, they were not at a distance, as the others say they were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They contradict each other upon the pretended apparitions which they
+ relate that Jesus made after His pretended resurrection; for Matthew
+ speaks of but two apparitions: the one when He appeared to Mary Magdalene
+ and to another woman, also named Mary, and when He appeared to His eleven
+ disciples who had returned to Galilee upon the mountain where He had
+ appointed to meet them. Mark speaks of three apparitions: The first, when
+ He appeared to Mary Magdalene; the second, when He appeared to His two
+ disciples, who went to Emmaus; and the third, when He appeared to His
+ eleven disciples, whom He reproaches for their incredulity. Luke speaks of
+ but two apparitions the same as Matthew; and John the Evangelist speaks of
+ four apparitions, and adds to Mark's three, the one which He made to seven
+ or eight of His disciples who were fishing upon the shores of the Tiberian
+ Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They contradict each other, also, in regard to the place of these
+ apparitions; for Matthew says that it was in Galilee, upon a mountain;
+ Mark says that it was when they were at table; Luke says that He brought
+ them out of Jerusalem as far as Bethany, where He left them by rising to
+ Heaven; and John says that it was in the city of Jerusalem, in a house of
+ which they had closed the doors, and another time upon the borders of the
+ Tiberian Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus is much contradiction in the report of these pretended apparitions.
+ They contradict each other in regard to His pretended ascension to heaven;
+ for Luke and Mark say positively that He went to heaven in presence of the
+ eleven apostles, but neither Matthew nor John mentions at all this
+ pretended ascension. More than this, Matthew testifies sufficiently that
+ He did not ascend to heaven; for he said positively that Jesus Christ
+ assured His apostles that He would be and remain always with them until
+ the end of the world. "Go ye," He said to them, in this pretended
+ apparition, "and teach all nations, and be assured that I am with you
+ always, even unto the end of the world." Luke contradicts himself upon the
+ subject; for in his Gospel he says that it was in Bethany where He
+ ascended to heaven in the presence of His apostles, and in his Acts of the
+ Apostles (supposing him to have been the author) he says that it was upon
+ the Mount of Olives. He contradicts himself again about this ascension;
+ for he notes in his Gospel that it was the very day of His resurrection,
+ or the first night following, that He ascended to heaven; and in the Acts
+ of the Apostles he says that it was forty days after His resurrection;
+ this certainly does not correspond. If all the apostles had really seen
+ their Master gloriously rise to heaven, how could it be possible that
+ Matthew and John, who would have seen it as well as the others, passed in
+ silence such a glorious mystery, and which was so advantageous to their
+ Master, considering that they relate many other circumstances of His life
+ and of His actions which are much less important than this one? How is it
+ that Matthew does not mention this ascension? And why does Christ not
+ explain clearly how He would live with them always, although He left them
+ visibly to ascend to heaven? It is not easy to comprehend by what secret
+ He could live with those whom He left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I pass in silence many other contradictions; what I have said is
+ sufficient to show that these books are not of Divine Inspiration, nor
+ even of human wisdom, and, consequently, do not deserve that we should put
+ any faith in them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0215" id="link2H_4_0215">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II.&mdash;OF MIRACLES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ But by what privilege do these four Gospels, and some other similar books,
+ pass for Holy and Divine more than several others, which bear no less the
+ title of Gospels, and which have been published under the name of some
+ other apostles? If it is said that the reputed Gospels are falsely
+ attributed to the apostles, we can say the same of the first ones; if we
+ suppose the first ones to be falsified and changed, we can think the same
+ of the others. Thus there is no positive proof to make us discern the one
+ from the other; in spite of the Church, which assumes to deride the
+ matter, it is not credible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the pretended miracles related in the Old Testament, they
+ could have been performed but to indicate on the part of God an unjust and
+ odious discrimination between nations and between individuals; purposely
+ injuring the one in order to especially favor the other. The vocation and
+ the choice which God made of the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in
+ order to make for Himself of their posterity a people which He would
+ sanctify and bless above all other peoples of the earth, is a proof of it.
+ But it will be said God is the absolute master of His favors and of His
+ benefits; He can grant them to whomsoever He pleases, without any one
+ having the right to complain or to accuse Him of injustice. This reason is
+ useless; for God, the Author of nature, the Father of all men, ought to
+ love them all alike as His own work, and, consequently, He ought to be
+ equally their protector and their benefactor; giving them life, He ought
+ to give all that is necessary for the well-being of His creatures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If all these pretended miracles of the Old and of the New Testament were
+ true, we could say that God would have had more care in providing for the
+ least good of men than for their greatest and principal good; that He
+ would have punished more severely trifling faults in certain persons than
+ He would have punished great crimes in others; and, finally, that He would
+ not have desired to show Himself as beneficent in the most pressing needs
+ as in the least. This is easy enough to show as much by the miracles which
+ it is pretended that He performed, as by those which He did not perform,
+ and which He would have performed rather than any other, if it is true
+ that He performed any at all. For example, it is claimed that God had the
+ kindness to send an angel to console and to assist a simple maid, while He
+ left, and still leaves every day, a countless number of innocents to
+ languish and starve to death; it is claimed that He miraculously preserved
+ during forty years the clothes and the shoes of a few people, while He
+ will not watch over the natural preservation of the vast quantities of
+ goods which are useful and necessary for the subsistence of great nations,
+ and that are lost every day by different accidents. It is claimed that He
+ sent to the first beings of the human race, Adam and Eve, a devil, or a
+ simple serpent, to seduce them, and by this means ruin all men. This is
+ not credible! It is claimed, that by a special providence, He prevented
+ the King of Gerais, a Pagan, from committing sin with a strange woman,
+ although there would be no results to follow; and yet He did not prevent
+ Adam and Eve from offending Him and falling into the sin of disobedience&mdash;a
+ sin which, according to our Christ-worshipers was to be fatal, and cause
+ the destruction of the human race. This is not credible!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us come to the pretended miracles of the New Testament. They consist,
+ as is pretended, in this: that Jesus Christ and His apostles cured,
+ through the Deity, all kinds of diseases and infirmities, giving sight to
+ the blind, hearing to the deaf, speech to the dumb, making the lame to
+ walk, curing the paralytics, driving the devils from those who were
+ possessed, and bringing the dead to life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We find several of these miracles in the Gospels, but we see a good many
+ more of them in the books that our Christ-worshipers have written of the
+ admirable lives of their saints; for in these lives we nearly everywhere
+ read that these pretended blessed ones cured diseases and infirmities,
+ expelled the devils wherever they encountered them, solely in the name of
+ Jesus or by the sign of the cross; that they controlled the elements; that
+ God favored them so much that He even preserved to them His Divine power
+ after their death, and that this Divine power could be communicated even
+ to the least of their clothing, even to their shadows, and even to the
+ infamous instruments of their death. It is said that the shoe of St.
+ Honorius raised a dead man on the sixth of January; that the staff of St.
+ Peter, that of St. James, and that of St. Bernard performed miracles. The
+ same is said of the cord of St. Francis, of the staff of St. John of God,
+ and of the girdle of St. Melanie. It is said that St. Gracilien was
+ divinely instructed as to what he ought to believe and to teach, and that
+ he, by the influence of his prayer, removed a mountain which prevented him
+ from building a church; that from the sepulchre of St. Andrew flowed
+ incessantly a liquor which cured all sorts of diseases; that the soul of
+ St. Benedict was seen ascending to Heaven clothed with a precious cloak
+ and surrounded by burning lamps; that St. Dominic said that God never
+ refused him anything he asked; that St. Francis commanded the swallows,
+ swans, and other birds to obey him, and that often the fishes, rabbits,
+ and the hares came and placed themselves on his hands and on his lap; that
+ St. Paul and St. Pantaleon, having been beheaded, there flowed milk
+ instead of blood; that the blessed Peter of Luxembourg, in the first two
+ years after his death (1388 and 1389), performed two thousand four hundred
+ miracles, among which forty-two dead were brought to life, not including
+ more than three thousand other miracles which he has performed since; that
+ the fifty philosophers whom St. Catherine converted, having all been
+ thrown into a great fire, their whole bodies were afterward found and not
+ a single hair was scorched; that the body of St. Catherine was carried off
+ by angels after her death, and buried by them upon Mount Sinai; that the
+ day of the canonization of St. Antoine de Padua, all the bells of the city
+ of Lisbon rang of themselves, without any one knowing how it was done;
+ that this saint being once near the sea-shore, and calling the fishes,
+ they came to him in a great multitude, and raised their heads out of the
+ water and listened to him attentively. We should never come to an end if
+ we had to report all this idle talk; there is no subject, however vain,
+ frivolous, and even ridiculous, on which the authors of these "LIVES OF
+ THE SAINTS" do not take pleasure in heaping miracles upon miracles, for
+ they are skillful in forging absurd falsehoods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is certainly not without reason that we consider these things as lies;
+ for it is easy to see that all these pretended miracles have been invented
+ but by imitating the fables of the Pagan poets. This is sufficiently
+ obvious by the resemblance which they bear one to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0216" id="link2H_4_0216">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III.&mdash;SIMILARITY BETWEEN ANCIENT AND MODERN MIRACLES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers claim that God endowed their saints with power to
+ perform the miracles related in their lives, some of the Pagans claim also
+ that the daughters of Anius, high-priest of Apollo, had really received
+ from the god Bacchus the power to change all they desired into wheat, into
+ wine, or into oil, etc.; that Jupiter gave to the nymphs who took care of
+ his education, a horn of the goat which nursed him in his infancy, with
+ this virtue, that it could give them an abundance of all they wished for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers assert that their saints had the power of raising
+ the dead, and that they had Divine revelations, the Pagans had said before
+ them that Athalide, son of Mercury, had obtained from his father the gift
+ of living, dying, and coming to life whenever he wished, and that he had
+ also the knowledge of all that transpired in this world as well as in the
+ other; and that Esculapius, son of Apollo, had raised the dead, and, among
+ others, he brought to life Hyppolites, son of Theseus, by Diana's request;
+ and that Hercules, also, raised from the dead Alceste, wife of Admetus,
+ King of Thessalia, to return her to her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers say that Christ was miraculously born of a
+ virgin, the Pagans had said before them that Remus and Romulus, the
+ founders of Rome, were miraculously born of a vestal virgin named Ilia, or
+ Silvia, or Rhea Silvia; they had already said that Mars, Argus, Vulcan,
+ and others were born of the goddess Juno without sexual union; and, also,
+ that Minerva, goddess of the sciences, sprang from Jupiter's brain, and
+ that she came out of it, all armed, by means of a blow which this god gave
+ to his own head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers claim that their saints made water gush from
+ rocks, the Pagans pretend also that Minerva made a fountain of oil spring
+ forth from a rock as a recompense for a temple which had been dedicated to
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers boast of having received images from Heaven
+ miraculously, as, for example, those of Notre-Dame de Loretto, and of
+ Liesse and several other gifts from Heaven, as the pretended Holy Vial of
+ Rheims, as the white Chasuble which St. Ildefonse received from the Virgin
+ Mary, and other similar things: the Pagans boasted before them of having
+ received a sacred shield as a mark of the preservation of their city of
+ Rome, and the Trojans boasted before them of having received miraculously
+ from Heaven their Palladium, or their Idol of Pallas, which came, they
+ said, to takes its place in the temple which they had erected in honor of
+ this Goddess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers pretend that Jesus Christ was seen by His
+ apostles ascending to Heaven, and that several of their pretended saints
+ were transported to Heaven by angels, the Roman Pagans had said before
+ them, that Romulus, their founder, was seen after his death; that
+ Ganymede, son of Troas, king of Troy, was transported to Heaven by Jupiter
+ to serve him as cup-bearer that the hair of Berenice, being consecrated to
+ the temple of Venus, was afterward carried to Heaven; they say the same
+ thing of Cassiope and Andromedes, and even of the ass of Silenus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers pretend that several of their saints' bodies were
+ miraculously saved from decomposition after death, and that they were
+ found by Divine Revelations, after having been lost for a long time, the
+ Pagans say the same of the holy of Orestes, which they pretend to have
+ found through an oracle, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers say that the seven sleeping brothers slept during
+ one hundred and seventy-seven years, while they were shut up in a cave,
+ the Pagans claim that Epimenides, the philosopher, slept during
+ fifty-seven years in a cave where he fell asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers claim that several of their saints continued to
+ speak after losing the head, or having the tongue cut out, the Pagans
+ claim that the head of Gambienus recited a long poem after separation from
+ his body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers glorify themselves that their temples and
+ churches are ornamented with several pictures and rich gifts which show
+ miraculous cures performed by the intercession of their saints, we also
+ see, or at least we formerly saw in the temple of Esculapius at Epidaurus,
+ many paintings of miraculous cures which he had performed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If our Christ-worshipers claim that several of their saints have been
+ miraculously preserved in the flames without having received any injury to
+ their bodies or their clothing, the Pagans claim that the Holy women of
+ the temple of Diana walked upon burning coals barefooted without burning
+ or hurting their feet, and that the priests of the Goddess Feronie and of
+ Hirpicus walked in the same way upon burning coals in the fires which were
+ made in honor of Apollo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the angels built a chapel for St. Clement at the bottom of the sea, the
+ little house of Baucis and of Philemon was miraculously changed into a
+ superb temple as a reward of their piety. If several of their saints, as
+ St. James and St. Maurice, appeared several times in their armies, mounted
+ and equipped in ancient style, and fought for them, Castor and Pollux
+ appeared several times in battles and fought for the Romans against their
+ enemies; if a ram was miraculously found to be offered as a sacrifice in
+ the place of Isaac, whom his father Abraham was about to sacrifice, the
+ Goddess Vesta also sent a heifer to be sacrificed in the place of Metella,
+ daughter of Metellus: the Goddess Diana sent a hind in the place of
+ Iphigenie when she was at the stake to be sacrificed to her, and by this
+ means Iphigenie was saved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If St. Joseph went into Egypt by the warning of an angel, Simonides, the
+ poet, avoided several great dangers by miraculous warnings which had been
+ given to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Moses forced a stream of water to flow from a rock by striking it with
+ his staff, the horse Pegasus did the same: by striking a rock with his
+ foot a fountain issued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If St. Vincent Ferrier brought to life a dead man hacked into pieces,
+ whose body was already half roasted and half broiled, Pelops, son of
+ Tantalus king of Phrygia, having been torn to pieces by his father to be
+ sacrificed to the Gods, they gathered all the pieces, joined them, and
+ brought them to life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If several crucifixes and other images have miraculously spoken and
+ answered, the Pagans say that their oracles have spoken and given answers
+ to those who consulted them, and that the head of Orpheus and that of
+ Policrates gave oracles after their death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If God revealed by a voice from Heaven that Jesus Christ was His Son, as
+ the Evangelists say, Vulcan showed by the apparition of a miraculous
+ flame, that Coceculus was really his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If God has miraculously nourished some of His saints, the Pagan poets
+ pretend that Triptolemus was miraculously nourished with Divine milk by
+ Ceres, who gave him also a chariot drawn by two dragons, and that Phineus,
+ son of Mars, being born after his mother's death, was nevertheless
+ miraculously nourished by her milk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If several saints miraculously tamed the ferocity of the most cruel
+ beasts, it is said that Orpheus attracted to him, by the sweetness of his
+ voice and by the harmony of his instruments, lions, bears, and tigers, and
+ softened the ferocity of their nature; that he attracted rocks and trees,
+ and that even the rivers stopped their course to listen to his song.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, to abbreviate, because we could report many others, if our
+ Christ-worshipers pretend that the walls of the city of Jericho fell by
+ the sound of their trumpets, the Pagans say that the walls of the city of
+ Thebes were built by the sound of the musical instruments of Amphion; the
+ stones, as the poets say, arranging themselves to the sweetness of his
+ harmony; this would be much more miraculous and more admirable than to see
+ the walls demolished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is certainly a great similarity between the Pagan miracles and our
+ own. As it would be great folly to give credence to these pretended
+ miracles of Paganism, it is not any the less so to have faith in those of
+ Christianity, because they all come from the same source of error. It was
+ for this that the Manicheans and the Arians, who existed at the
+ commencement of the Christian Era, derided these pretended miracles
+ performed by the invocation of saints, and blamed those who invoked them
+ after death and honored their relics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us return at present to the principal end which God proposed to
+ Himself, in sending His Son into the world to become man; it must have
+ been, as they say, to redeem the world from sin and to destroy entirely
+ the works of the pretended Devil, etc. This is what our Christ-worshipers
+ claim also, that Jesus Christ died for them according to His Father's
+ intention, which is plainly stated in all the pretended Holy Books. What!
+ an Almighty God, who was willing to become a mortal man for the love of
+ men, and to shed His blood to the last drop, to save them all, would yet
+ have limited His power to only curing a few diseases and physical
+ infirmities of a few individuals who were brought to Him; and would not
+ have employed His Divine goodness in curing the infirmities of the soul!
+ that is to say, in curing all men of their vices and their depravities,
+ which are worse than the diseases of their bodies! This is not credible.
+ What! such a good God would desire to preserve dead corpses from decay and
+ corruption; and would not keep from the contagion and corruption of vice
+ and sin the souls of a countless number of persons whom He sought to
+ redeem at the price of His blood, and to sanctify by His grace! What a
+ pitiful contradiction!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0217" id="link2H_4_0217">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV.&mdash;OF THE FALSITY OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Let us proceed to the pretended visions and Divine Revelations, upon which
+ our Christ-worshipers establish the truth and the certainty of their
+ religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to give a just idea of it, I believe it is best to say in
+ general, that they are such, that if any one should dare now to boast of
+ similar ones, or wish to make them valued, he would certainly be regarded
+ as a fool or a fanatic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is what the pretended Visions and Divine Revelations are:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God, as these pretended Holy Books claim, having appeared for the first
+ time to Abraham, said to him: "Get thee out of thy country, and from thy
+ kindred and from thy father's house, into a land that I will show thee."
+ Abraham, having gone there, God, says the Bible, appeared the second time
+ to him, and said, "Unto thy seed will I give this land," and there builded
+ he an altar unto the Lord, who appeared unto him. After the death of
+ Isaac, his son, Jacob going one day to Mesopotamia to look for a wife that
+ would suit him, having walked all the day, and being tired from the long
+ distance, desired to rest toward evening; lying upon the ground, with his
+ head resting upon a few stones, he fell asleep, and during his sleep he
+ saw a ladder set upon the earth, and the top of it reached to Heaven; and
+ beheld the angels of God ascending and descending on it. And behold, the
+ Lord stood above it, and said: "I am the Lord, God of Abraham thy father,
+ and the God of Isaac; the land whereon thou liest, to thee will I give it,
+ and to thy seed. And thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth, and thou
+ shalt spread abroad to the west and to the east, and to the north and to
+ the south and in thee and in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth
+ be blessed. And behold, I am with thee and will keep thee in all places
+ whither thou goest, and will bring thee again into this land: for I will
+ not leave thee until I have done that which I have spoken to thee of." And
+ Jacob awaked out of his sleep, and he said: "Surely the Lord is in this
+ place, and I knew it not." And he was afraid, and said: "How dreadful is
+ this place! this is none other than the house of God, and this is the gate
+ of Heaven." And Jacob rose up early in the morning, and took the stone
+ that he had put for his pillow, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil
+ on the top of it, and made at the same time a vow to God, that if he
+ should return safe and sound, he would give Him a tithe of all he might
+ possess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is yet another vision. Watching the flocks of his father-in-law,
+ Laban, who had promised him that all the speckled lambs produced by his
+ sheep should be his recompense, he dreamed one night that he saw all the
+ males leap upon the females, and all the lambs they brought forth were
+ speckled. In this beautiful dream, God appeared to him, and said: "Lift up
+ now thine eyes and see that the rams which leap upon the cattle are
+ ring-streaked, speckled, and grizzled; for I have seen all that Laban does
+ unto thee. Now arise, get thee out from this land, and return unto the
+ land of thy kindred." As he was returning with his whole family, and with
+ all he obtained from his father-in-law, he had, says the Bible, a wrestle
+ with an unknown man during the whole night, until the breaking of the day,
+ and as this man had not been able to subdue him, He asked him who he was.
+ Jacob told Him his name; and He said: "Thy name shall be called no more
+ Jacob, but Israel; for as a prince hast thou power with God and with men,
+ and hast prevailed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a specimen of the first of these pretended Visions and Divine
+ Revelations. We can judge of the others by these. Now, what appearance of
+ Divinity is there in dreams so gross and illusions so vain? As if some
+ foreigners, Germans, for instance, should come into our France, and, after
+ seeing all the beautiful provinces of our kingdom, should claim that God
+ had appeared to them in their country, that He had told them to go into
+ France, and that He would give to them and to their posterity all the
+ beautiful lands, domains, and provinces of this kingdom which extend from
+ the rivers Rhine and Rhone, even to the sea; that He would make an
+ everlasting alliance with them, that He would multiply their race, that He
+ would make their posterity as numerous as the stars of Heaven and as the
+ sands of the sea, etc., who would not laugh at such folly, and consider
+ these strangers as insane fools!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now there is no reason to think otherwise of all that has been said by
+ these pretended Holy Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in regard to
+ the Divine Revelations which they claim to have had. As to the institution
+ of bloody sacrifices, the Holy Scriptures attribute it to God. As it would
+ be too wearisome to go into the disgusting details of this kind of
+ sacrifices, I refer the reader to Exodus. [See chapters xxv., xxvii.,
+ xxyiii., and xxix.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Were not men insane and blind to believe they were honoring God by tearing
+ into pieces, butchering, and burning His own creatures, under the pretext
+ of offering them as sacrifices to Him? And even now, how is it that our
+ Christ-worshipers are so extravagant as to expect to please God the
+ Father, by offering up to Him the sacrifice of His Divine Son, in
+ remembrance of His being shamefully nailed to a cross upon which He died?
+ Certainly this can spring only from an obstinate blindness of mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the detail of the sacrifices of animals, it consists but in
+ colored clothing, blood, plucks, livers, birds' crops, kidneys, claws,
+ skins, in the dung, smoke, cakes, certain measures of oil and wine, the
+ whole being offered and infected by dirty ceremonies as filthy and
+ contemptible as the most extravagant performances of magic. What is most
+ horrible of all this is, that the law of this detestable Jewish people
+ commanded that even men should be offered up as sacrifices. The
+ barbarians, whoever they were, who introduced this horrible law, commanded
+ to put to death any man who had been consecrated to the God of the Jews,
+ whom they called Adonai: and it is according to this execrable precept
+ that Jephthah sacrificed his daughter, and that Saul wanted to sacrifice
+ his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here is yet another proof of the falsity of these revelations of which
+ we have spoken. It is the lack of the fulfillment of the great and
+ magnificent promises by which they were accompanied, for it is evident
+ that these promises never have been fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proof of this consists in three principal points:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Firstly. Their posterity was to be more numerous than all the other
+ nations of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly. The people who should spring from their race were to be the
+ happiest, the holiest, and the most victorious of all the people of the
+ earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thirdly. His covenant was to be everlasting, and they should possess
+ forever the country He should give them. Now it is plain that these
+ promises-never were fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Firstly. It is certain that the Jewish people, or the people of Israel&mdash;which
+ is the only one that can be regarded as having descended from the
+ Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the only ones to whom these
+ promises should have been fulfilled&mdash;have never been so numerous that
+ it could be compared with the other nations of the earth, much less with
+ the sands of the sea, etc., for we see that in the very time when it was
+ the most numerous and the most flourishing, it never occupied more than
+ the little sterile provinces of Palestine and its environs, which are
+ almost nothing in comparison with the vast extent of a multitude of
+ flourishing kingdoms which are on all sides of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly. They have never been fulfilled concerning the great blessings
+ with which they were to be favored; for, although they won a few small
+ victories over some poor nations whom they plundered, this did not prevent
+ them from being conquered and reduced to servitude; their kingdom
+ destroyed as well as their nation, by the Roman army; and even now the
+ remainder of this unfortunate nation is looked upon as the vilest and most
+ contemptible of all the earth, having no country, no dominion, no
+ superiority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, these promises have not been fulfilled in respect to this
+ everlasting covenant, which God ought to have fulfilled to them; because
+ we do not see now, and we have never seen, any evidence of this covenant;
+ and, on the contrary, they have been for many centuries excluded from the
+ possession of the small country they pretended God had promised that they
+ should enjoy forever. Thus, since these pretended promises were never
+ fulfilled, it is certain evidence of their falsity; which proves, plainly,
+ that these pretended Holy Books which contain them were not of Divine
+ inspiration. Therefore it is useless for our Christ-worshipers to pretend
+ to make use of them as infallible testimony to prove the truth of their
+ religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0218" id="link2H_4_0218">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0219" id="link2H_4_0219">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V.&mdash;(1) OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Our Christ-worshipers add to their reasons for credulity and to the proofs
+ of the truth of their testimony, the prophecies which are, as they
+ pretend, sure evidences of the truth of the revelations or inspirations of
+ God, there being no one but God who could predict future events so long
+ before they came to pass, as those which have been predicted by the
+ prophets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us see, then, who these pretended prophets are, and if we ought to
+ consider them as important as our Christ-worshipers pretend they are.
+ These men were but visionaries and fanatics, who acted and spoke according
+ to the impulsions of their ruling passions, and who imagined that it was
+ the Spirit of God by which they spoke and acted; or they were impostors
+ who feigned to be prophets, and who, in order to more easily deceive the
+ ignorant and simple-minded, boasted of acting and speaking by the Spirit
+ of God. I would like to know how an Ezekiel would be received who should
+ say that God made him eat for his breakfast a roll of parchment; commanded
+ him to be tied like an insane man, and lie three hundred and ninety days
+ upon his right side, and forty days upon his left, and commanded him to
+ eat man's dung upon his bread, and afterward, as an accommodation, cow's
+ dung? I ask how such a filthy statement would be received by the most
+ stupid people of our provinces?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What can be yet a greater proof of the falsity of these pretended
+ prophecies, than the violence with which these prophets reproach each
+ other for speaking falsely in the name of God, reproaches which they claim
+ to make in behalf of God. All of them say, "Beware of the false prophets!"
+ as the quacks say, "Beware of the counterfeit pills!" How could these
+ insane impostors tell the future? No prophecy in favor of their Jewish
+ nation was ever fulfilled. The number of prophecies which predict the
+ prosperity and the greatness of Jerusalem is almost innumerable; in
+ explanation of this, it will be said that it is very natural that a
+ subdued and captive people should comfort themselves in their real
+ afflictions by imaginary hopes&mdash;as a year after King James was
+ deposed, the Irish people of his party forged several prophecies in regard
+ to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if these promises made to the Jews had been really true, the Jewish
+ nation long ago would have been, and would still be, the most numerous,
+ the most powerful, the most blessed, and the most victorious of all
+ nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0220" id="link2H_4_0220">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI.&mdash;(2) THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Let us examine the pretended prophecies which are contained in the
+ Gospels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Firstly. An angel having appeared in a dream to a man named Joseph,
+ father, or at least so reputed, of Jesus, son of Mary, said unto him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Joseph, thou son of David fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for
+ that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost. And she shall bring
+ forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name JESUS; for He shall save His
+ people from their sins." This angel said also to Mary:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fear not, Mary, for thou hast found favor with God. And behold, thou
+ shalt conceive in thy womb and bring forth a Son, and shalt call His name
+ Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and
+ the Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of His father David. And He
+ shall reign over the house of Jacob forever; and of His kingdom there
+ shall be no end!" Jesus began to preach and to say:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Repent, for the kingdom of Heaven is at hand. Take no thought for your
+ life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink, nor yet for your body
+ what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the body than
+ raiment, for your Heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these
+ things. But seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and
+ all these things shall be added unto you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, let every man who has not lost common sense, examine if this Jesus
+ ever was a king, or if His disciples had abundance of all things. This
+ Jesus promised to deliver the world from sin. Is there any prophecy which
+ is more false? Is not our age a striking proof of it? It is said that
+ Jesus came to save His people. In what way did He save it? It is the
+ greatest number which rules any party. For example, one dozen or two of
+ Spaniards or Frenchmen do not constitute the French or Spanish people; and
+ if an army of a hundred and twenty thousand men were taken prisoners of
+ war by an army of enemies which was stronger, and if the chief of this
+ army should redeem only a few men, as ten or twelve soldiers or officers,
+ by paying their ransom, it could not be claimed that he had delivered or
+ redeemed his army. Then, who is this God who has been sacrificed, who died
+ to save the world, and leaves so many nations damned? What a pity! and
+ what horror!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jesus Christ says that we have but to ask and we shall receive, and to
+ seek and we shall find. He assures us that all we ask of God in His name
+ shall be granted, and that if we have faith as a grain of mustard-seed, we
+ could by one word remove mountains. If this promise is true, nothing
+ appears impossible to our Christ-worshipers who have faith in Jesus.
+ However, the contrary happens. If Mohammed had made the promises to his
+ votaries that Christ made to His, without success, what would not be said
+ about it. They would cry out, "Ah, the cheat! ah, the impostor!" These
+ Christ-worshipers are in the same condition: they have been blind, and
+ have not even yet recovered from their blindness; on the contrary, they
+ are so ingenious in deceiving themselves, that they pretend that these
+ promises have been fulfilled from the beginning of Christianity; that at
+ that time it was necessary to have miracles, in order to convince the
+ incredulous of the truth of religion; but that this religion being
+ sufficiently established, the miracles were no longer necessary. Where,
+ then, is their proof of all this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, He who made these promises did not limit them to a certain time,
+ or to certain places, or to certain persons; but He made them generally to
+ everybody. The faith of those who believe, says He, shall be followed by
+ these miracles; "They shall cast out devils in My name, they shall speak
+ in divers tongues, they shall handle serpents," etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the removal of mountains, He positively says that "whoever
+ shall say to a mountain: 'Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea;'
+ it shall be done;" provided that he does not doubt in his heart, but
+ believes all he commands will be done. Are not all these promises given in
+ a general way, without restriction as to time, place, or persons?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that all the sects which are founded in errors and imposture
+ will come to a shameful end. But if Jesus Christ intends to say that He
+ has established a society of followers who will not fall either into vice
+ or error, these words are absolutely false, as there is in Christendom no
+ sect, no society, and no church which is not full of errors and vices,
+ especially the Roman Church, although it claims to be the purest and the
+ holiest of all. It was born into error, or rather it was conceived and
+ formed in error; and even now it is full of delusions which are contrary
+ to the intentions, the sentiments, or the doctrine of its Founder, because
+ it has, contrary to His intention, abolished the laws of the Jews, which
+ He approved, and which He came Himself, as He said, to fulfill and not to
+ destroy. It has fallen into the errors and idolatry of Paganism, as is
+ seen by the idolatrous worship which is offered to its God of dough, to
+ its saints, to their images, and to their relics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I know well that our Christ-worshipers consider it a lack of intelligence
+ to accept literally the promises and prophecies as they are expressed;
+ they reject the literal and natural sense of the words, to give them a
+ mystical and spiritual sense which they call allegorical and figurative;
+ claiming, for example, that the people of Israel and Judea, to whom these
+ promises were made, were not understood as the Israelites after the body,
+ but the Israelites in spirit: that is to say, the Christians which are the
+ Israel of God, the true chosen people that by the promise made to this
+ enslaved people, to deliver it from captivity, it is understood to be not
+ the corporal deliverance of a single captive people, but the spiritual
+ deliverance of all men from the servitude of the Devil, which was to be
+ accomplished by their Divine Saviour; that by the abundance of riches, and
+ all the temporal blessings promised to this people, is meant the abundance
+ of spiritual graces; and finally, that by the city of Jerusalem, is meant
+ not the terrestrial Jerusalem, but the spiritual Jerusalem, which is the
+ Christian Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is easy to see that these spiritual and allegorical meanings having
+ only a strange, imaginary sense, being a subterfuge of the interpreters,
+ can not serve to show the truth or the falsehood of a proposition, or of
+ any promises whatever. It is ridiculous to forge such allegorical
+ meanings, since it is only by the relations of the natural and true sense
+ that we can judge of their truth or falsehood. A proposition, a promise,
+ for example, which is considered true in the proper and natural sense of
+ the terms in which it is expressed, will not become false in itself under
+ cover of a strange sense, one which does not belong to it. By the same
+ reasoning, that which is manifestly false in its proper and natural sense,
+ will not become true in itself, although we give it a strange sense, one
+ foreign to the true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We can say that the prophecies of the Old Testament adjusted to the New,
+ would be very absurd and puerile things. For example, Abraham had two
+ wives, of which the one, who was but a servant, represented the synagogue,
+ and the other one, his lawful wife, represented the Christian Church; and
+ that this Abraham had two sons, of which the one born of Hagar, the
+ servant, represented the Old Testament; and the other, born of Sarah, the
+ wife, represented the New Testament. Who would not laugh at such a
+ ridiculous doctrine?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not amusing that a piece of red cloth, exhibited by a prostitute as
+ a signal to spies, in the Old Testament is made to represent the blood of
+ Jesus Christ shed in the New? If&mdash;according to this manner of
+ interpreting allegorically all that is said, done, and practiced in the
+ ancient law of the Jews&mdash;we should interpret in the same allegorical
+ way all the discourses, the actions, and the adventures of the famous Don
+ Quixote de la Mancha, we would find the same sort of mysteries and
+ ridiculous figures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is nevertheless upon this absurd foundation that the whole Christian
+ religion rests. Thus it is that there is scarcely anything in this ancient
+ law that the Christ-worshiping doctors do not try to explain in a mystical
+ way to build up their system. The most false and the most ridiculous
+ prophecy ever made is that of Jesus, in Luke, where it is pretended that
+ there will be signs in the sun and in the moon, and that the Son of Man
+ will appear in a cloud to judge men; and this is predicted for the
+ generation living at that time. Has it come to pass? Did the Son of Man
+ appear in a cloud?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0221" id="link2H_4_0221">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII.&mdash;ERRORS OF DOCTRINE AND OF MORALITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Christian Apostolical Roman Religion teaches, and compels belief, that
+ there is but one God, and, at the same time, that there are three Divine
+ persons, each one being God. This is absurd; for if there are three who
+ are truly God, then there are three Gods. It is false, then, to say that
+ there is but one God; or if this is true, it is false to say that there
+ are really three who are God, for one and three can not be claimed to be
+ one and the same number. It is also said that the first of these pretended
+ Divine persons, called the Father, has brought forth the second person,
+ which is called the Son, and that these first two persons together have
+ produced the third, which is called the Holy Ghost, and, nevertheless,
+ these three pretended Divine persons do not depend the one upon the other,
+ and even that one is not older than the other. This, too, is manifestly
+ absurd; because one thing can not receive its existence from another thing
+ without some dependence on this other; and a thing must necessarily exist
+ in order to give birth to another. If, then, the Second and the Third
+ persons of Divinity have received their existence from the First person,
+ they must necessarily depend for their existence on this First person, who
+ gave them birth, or who begot them, and it is necessary also that the
+ First person of the Divinity, who gave birth to the two other persons,
+ should have existed before them; because that which does not exist can not
+ beget anything. Nevertheless, it is repugnant as well as absurd to claim
+ that anything could be begotten or born without having had a beginning.
+ Now, according to our Christ-worshipers, the Second and Third persons of
+ Divinity were begotten and born; then they had a beginning, and the First
+ person had none, not being begotten by another; it therefore follows
+ necessarily that one existed before the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Christ-worshipers, who feel these absurdities and can not avoid them
+ by any good reasoning, have no other resource than to say that we must
+ ignore human reason and humbly adore these sublime mysteries without
+ wishing to understand them; but that which they call faith is refuted when
+ they tell us that we must submit; it is telling us that we must blindly
+ believe that which we do not believe. Our Christ-worshipers condemn the
+ blindness of the ancient Pagans, who worshiped several Gods; they deride
+ the genealogy of those Gods, their birth, their marriages, and the
+ generating of their children; yet they do not observe that they themselves
+ say things which are much more ridiculous and absurd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Pagans believed that there were Goddesses as well as Gods, that
+ these Gods and Goddesses married and begat children, they thought of
+ nothing, then, but what is natural; for they did not believe yet that the
+ Gods were without body or feeling; they believed they were similar to men.
+ Why should there not be females as well as males? It is not more
+ reasonable to deny or to recognize the one than the other; and supposing
+ there were Gods and Goddesses, why should they not beget children in the
+ ordinary way? There would be certainly nothing ridiculous or absurd in
+ this doctrine, if it were true that their Gods existed. But in the
+ doctrine of our Christ-worshipers there is something absolutely ridiculous
+ and absurd; for besides claiming that one God forms Three, and that these
+ Three form but One, they pretend that this Triple and Unique God has
+ neither body, form, nor face; that the First person of this Triple and
+ Unique God, whom they call the Father, begot of Himself a Second person,
+ which they call the Son, and which is the same as His Father, being, like
+ Him, without body, form, or face. If this is true, why is it that the
+ First one is called Father rather than mother, or the Second called Son
+ rather than daughter? For if the First one is really father instead of
+ mother, and if the Second is son instead of daughter, there must be
+ something in both of these two persons which causes the one to be father
+ rather than mother, and the other to be son rather than daughter. Now who
+ can assert that they are males and not females? But how should they be
+ rather males than females, as they have neither body, form, nor face? That
+ is not an imaginable thing, and destroys itself. No matter, they claim
+ chat these two Persons, without body, form, or face, and, consequently,
+ without difference of sex, are nevertheless Father and Son, and that they
+ produced by their mutual love a third person, whom they called the Holy
+ Ghost, who has, like the other two, no body, no form, and no face. What
+ abominable nonsense!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As our Christ-worshipers limit the power of God the Father to begetting
+ but one Son, why do they not desire that this Second person, and the
+ Third, should have the same power to beget a Son like themselves? If this
+ power to beget a son is perfection in the First person, it is, then, a
+ perfection and a power which does not exist in the Second and in the Third
+ person. Thus these two Persons, lacking a perfection and a power which is
+ found in the First one, they are consequently not equal with Him. If, on
+ the contrary, they say that this power to beget a son is no perfection,
+ they should not attribute it, then, to the First person any more than to
+ the other two; for we should attribute perfections only to an absolutely
+ perfect being. Besides, they would not dare to say that the power to beget
+ a Divine person is not a perfection; and if they claim that this First
+ person could have begotten several sons and daughters, but that He desired
+ but this only Son, and that the two other persons did not desire to beget
+ any others, we could ask them, firstly, from whence they know this, for we
+ do not see in their pretended Holy Scriptures that any One of these Divine
+ personages reveals any such assertions; how, then, can our
+ Christ-worshipers know anything about it? They speak but according to
+ their ideas and to their hollow imaginations. Secondly, we could not avoid
+ saying, that if these pretended Divine personages had the power of
+ begetting several children, and did not wish to make use of it, the
+ consequence would be that this Divine power was ineffectual. It would be
+ entirely without effect in the Third person, who did not beget or produce
+ any, and would be almost without effect in the two others, because they
+ limited it. Then this power of begetting or producing an unlimited number
+ of children would remain idle and useless; it would be inconsistent to
+ suppose this of Divine Personages, One of whom had already produced a Son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Christ-worshipers blame and condemn the Pagans because they attribute
+ Divinity to mortal men, and worship them as Gods after their death; they
+ are right in doing this. But these Pagans did only what our
+ Christ-worshipers still do in attributing Divinity to their Christ; doing
+ which, they condemn themselves also, because they are in the same error as
+ these Pagans, in that they worship a man who was mortal, and so very
+ mortal that He died shamefully upon a cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be of no use for our Christ-worshipers to say that there was a
+ great difference between their Jesus Christ and the Pagan Gods, under the
+ pretense that their Christ was, as they claim, really God and man at the
+ same time, while the Divinity was incarnated in Him, by means of which,
+ the Divine nature found itself united personally, as they say, with human
+ nature; these two natures would have made of Jesus Christ a true God and a
+ true man; this is what never happened, they claim, in the Pagan Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is easy to show the weakness of this reply; for, on the one hand,
+ was it not as easy to the Pagans as to the Christians, to say that the
+ Divinity was incarnated in the men whom they worshiped as Gods? On the
+ other hand, if the Divinity wanted to incarnate and unite in the human
+ nature of their Jesus Christ, how did they know that this Divinity would
+ not wish to also incarnate and unite Himself personally to the human
+ nature of those great men and those admirable women, who, by their virtue,
+ by their good qualities, or by their noble actions, have excelled the
+ generality of people, and made themselves worshiped as Gods and Goddesses?
+ And if our Christ-worshipers do not wish to believe that Divinity ever
+ incarnated in these great personages, why do they wish to persuade us that
+ He was incarnated in their Jesus? Where is the proof? Their faith and
+ their belief; but as the Pagans rely on the same proof, we conclude both
+ to be equally in error.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what is more ridiculous in Christianity than in Paganism, is that the
+ Pagans have generally attributed Divinity but to great men, authors of
+ arts and sciences, and who excelled in virtues useful to their country.
+ But to whom do our God-Christ-worshipers attribute Divinity? To a nobody,
+ to a vile and contemptible man, who had neither talent, science, nor
+ ability; born of poor parents, and who, while He figured in the world,
+ passed but for a monomaniac and a seditious fool, who was disdained,
+ ridiculed, persecuted, whipped, and, finally, was hanged like most of
+ those who desired to act the same part, when they had neither the courage
+ nor skill. About that time there were several other impostors who claimed
+ to be the true promised Messiah; amongst others a certain Judas, a
+ Galilean, a Theodorus, a Barcon, and others who, under this vain pretext,
+ abused the people, and tried to excite them, in order to win them, but
+ they all perished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us pass now to His discourses and to some of His actions, which are
+ the most singular of this kind: "Repent," said He to the people, "for the
+ kingdom of Heaven is at hand; believe these good tidings." And He went all
+ over Galilee preaching this pretended approach of the kingdom of Heaven.
+ As no one has seen the arrival of this kingdom of Heaven, it is evident
+ that it was but imaginary. But let us see other predictions, the praise,
+ and the description of this beautiful kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behold what He said to the people:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The kingdom of Heaven is likened unto a man who sowed good seed in his
+ field. But while he slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat,
+ and went his way. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like unto treasure
+ hidden in a field, the which, when a man has found, he hideth again, and
+ for joy thereof goes and sells all that he has, and buys that field.
+ Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like unto a merchantman seeking goodly
+ pearls, who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all
+ he had, and bought it. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like unto a net
+ that was cast into the sea, and gathered of every kind; which, when it was
+ full, they drew to shore, and sat down and gathered the good into vessels,
+ but cast the bad away. It is like a grain of mustard-seed, which a man
+ took and sowed in his field which, indeed, is the least of all seeds, but
+ when it is grown it is the greatest among herbs, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is this a language worthy of a God? We will pass the same judgment upon
+ Him if we examine His actions more closely. Because, firstly, He is
+ represented as running all over a country preaching the approach of a
+ pretended kingdom; Secondly, as having been transported by the Devil upon
+ a high mountain, from which He believed He saw all the kingdoms of the
+ world; this could only happen to a visionist; for it is certain, there is
+ no mountain upon the earth from which He could see even one entire
+ kingdom, unless it was the little kingdom of Yvetot, which is in France;
+ thus it was only in imagination that He saw all these kingdoms, and was
+ transported upon this mountain, as well as upon the pinnacle of the
+ temple. Thirdly, when He cured the deaf-mute, spoken of in St. Mark, it is
+ said that He placed His fingers in the ears, spit, and touched his tongue,
+ then casting His eyes up to Heaven, He sighed deeply, and said unto him:
+ "Ephphatha!" Finally, let us read all that is related of Him, and we can
+ judge whether there is anything in the world more ridiculous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having considered some of the silly things attributed to God by our
+ Christ-worshipers, let us look a little further into their mysteries. They
+ worship one God in three persons, or three persons in one God, and they
+ attribute to themselves the power of forming Gods out of dough, and of
+ making as many as they want. For, according to their principles, they have
+ only to say four words over a certain quantity of wine or over these
+ little images of paste, to make as many Gods of them as they desire. What
+ folly! With all the pretended power of their Christ, they would not be
+ able to make the smallest fly, and yet they claim the ability to produce
+ millions of Gods. One must be struck by a strange blindness to maintain
+ such pitiable things, and that upon such vain foundation as the equivocal
+ words of a fanatic. Do not these blind theologians see that it means
+ opening a wide door to all sorts of idolatries, to adore these paste
+ images under the pretext that the priests have the power of consecrating
+ them and changing them into Gods?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can not the priests of the idols boast of having a similar ability?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do they not see, also, that the same reasoning which demonstrates the
+ vanity of the gods or idols of wood, of stone, etc., which the Pagans
+ worshiped, shows exactly the same vanity of the Gods and idols of paste or
+ of flour which our Christ-worshipers adore? By what right do they deride
+ the falseness of the Pagan Gods? Is it not because they are but the work
+ of human hands, mute and insensible images? And what kind of Gods are
+ those which we preserve in boxes for fear of the mice?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are these boasted resources of the Christ-worshipers? Their morality?
+ It is the same as in all religions, but their cruel dogmas produced and
+ taught persecution and trouble. Their miracles? But what people has not
+ its own, and what wise men do not disdain these fables? Their prophecies?
+ Have we not shown their falsity? Their morals? Are they not often
+ infamous? The establishment of their religion? but did not fanaticism
+ begin, and has not intrigue visibly sustained this edifice? The doctrine?
+ but is it not the height of absurdity?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ End Of The Abstract By Voltaire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0222" id="link2H_4_0222">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PUBLISHER'S PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By translating into both the English and German languages Le Bon Sens,
+ containing the Last Will and Testament of the French curate JEAN MESLIER,
+ Miss Anna Knoop has performed a most useful and meritorious task, and in
+ issuing a new edition of this work, it is but justice to her memory [Miss
+ Knoop died Jan. 11, 1889.] to state that her translation has received the
+ endorsement of our most competent critics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter dated Newburyport, Mass., Sep. 23, 1878, Mr. James Parton, the
+ celebrated author, commends Miss Knoop for "translating Meslier's book so
+ well," and says that:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This work of the honest pastor is the most curious and the most powerful
+ thing of the kind which the last century produced. . . . . Paine and
+ Voltaire had reserves, but Jean Meslier had none. He keeps nothing back;
+ and yet, after all, the wonder is not that there should have been one
+ priest who left that testimony at his death, but that all priests do not.
+ True, there is a great deal more to be said about religion, which I
+ believe to be an eternal necessity of human nature, but no man has uttered
+ the negative side of the matter with so much candor and completeness as
+ Jean Meslier."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The value of the testimony of a catholic priest, who in his last moments
+ recanted the errors of his faith and asked God's pardon for having taught
+ the catholic religion, was fully appreciated by Voltaire, who highly
+ commended this grand work of Meslier. He voluntarily made every effort to
+ increase its circulation, and even complained to D' Alembert "that there
+ were not as many copies in all Paris as he himself had dispersed
+ throughout the mountains of Switzerland." [See Letter 504, Voltaire to
+ D'Alembert] He earnestly entreats his associates to print and distribute
+ in Paris an edition of at least four or five thousand copies, and at the
+ suggestion of D'Alembert, made an abstract or abridgment of The Testament
+ "so small as to cost no more than five pence, and thus to be fitted for
+ the pocket and reading of every workman." [Letter 146, from D'Alembert.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Abbé Barruel claims in his Memoirs [See History of Jacobinism by the
+ Abbé Barruel, 4 vols. 8 VO, translated by the Hon. Robert Clifford, F. R.
+ S., and printed in London in 1798. The learned Abbé defines Jacobinism as
+ "the error of every man who, judging of all things by the standard of his
+ own reason, rejects in religious matters every authority that is not
+ derived from the light of nature. It is the error of every man who denies
+ the possibility of any mystery beyond the limits of his reason, of every
+ one who, discarding revelation in defence of the pretended rights of
+ Reason, Equality, and Liberty, seeks to subvert the whole fabric of the
+ Christian religion." B. 4.] to detect in the writings of Voltaire and of
+ the leading Encyclopedists, a conspiracy not only against the Altar but
+ also against the Throne. He severely denounces the "Last Will of Jean
+ Meslier,&mdash;that famous Curate of Etrepigni,&mdash;whose apostasy and
+ blasphemies made so strong an impression on the minds of the populace,"
+ and he styles the plan of D'Alembert for circulating a few thousand copies
+ of the Abstract of the Will, as a "base project against the doctrines of
+ the Gospel." [Ibid, page 145] He even asserts his belief that:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Jacobins will one day declare that all men are free, that all men are
+ equal; and as a consequence of this Equality and Liberty they will
+ conclude that every man must be left to the light of reason. That every
+ religion subjecting man's reason to mysteries, or to the authority of any
+ revelation speaking in God's name, is a religion of constraint and
+ slavery; that as such it should be annihilated in order to reestablish the
+ indefeasible rights of Equality and Liberty as to the belief or disbelief
+ of all that the reason of man approves or disapproves: and they will call
+ this Equality and Liberty the reign of Reason and the empire of
+ Philosophy." [History of Jacobinism, page 51.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The results which the Abbé Barruel so clearly foresaw have at length been
+ realized. The labors of the Jacobins have not been in vain, and the
+ Revolution they incited has restored France to the government of the
+ people!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With ardent hope for the future," says President Carnot in his centennial
+ address, May 5, 1889, "I greet in the palace of the monarchy the
+ representatives of a nation that is now in complete possession of herself,
+ that is mistress of her destinies, and that is in the full splendor and
+ strength of liberty. The first thoughts on this solemn meeting turn to our
+ fathers. The immortal generation of 1789, by dint of courage and many
+ sacrifices, secured for us benefits which we must bequeath to our sons as
+ a most precious inheritance. Never can our gratitude equal the grandeur of
+ the services rendered by our fathers to France and to the human race. . .
+ . The Revolution was based upon the rights of man. It created a new era in
+ history and founded modern society."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is literally true. The freethinkers of France have taught mankind the
+ doctrines of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity. They have taught the
+ dignity of human reason, and the sacredness of human rights. They have
+ broken the bondage of the altar, and severed the shackles of the throne;
+ and it is to be regretted that at the centennial celebration held in this
+ city on April 30th, 1889, the appointed orator [See the Centennial Address
+ of the Hon. Chauncey M. Depew.] did not realize the grandeur of the
+ occasion, and did not, like Carnot, pay a just tribute to our allies, the
+ reformers of Europe, as well as to the fathers of the republic. But the
+ people of America will remember what the politician has forgotten. They
+ will remember the names and deeds of their foreign benefactors as well as
+ of the American patriots of '76. When they recall the illustrious
+ Europeans who fought for our liberties they will remember the name of
+ Lafayette; when they think of the Declaration of Independence they will
+ not forget the name of Thomas Jefferson; and when they speak of "the times
+ that tried men's souls" they will recall with gratitude the name of Thomas
+ Paine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the ecclesiastical conclave at Rome claims the power of working
+ miracles in defiance of Nature's laws, yet with or without miracles, they
+ have never answered the simple arguments advanced by Jean Meslier;
+ although they claim to hold the keys of Paradise, and bind on earth the
+ souls that are to be bound in heaven, yet year by year their waning power
+ refutes their senseless boast; although they boldly assert the dogma of
+ popish infallibility, yet the loss of the temporal power once wielded by
+ Rome, and the death of each succeeding pontiff, attest both the Pope's
+ fallibility and the Pope's mortality. Indeed, the successor of St. Peter
+ is but human&mdash;the sacred college at Rome is but mortal; and faith and
+ dogma cannot forever resist the influence of light and knowledge. The
+ power of Catholicism is surely declining throughout Europe; and if it has
+ become aggressive in our American cities, is it not because the friends of
+ freedom have forgotten the well-known axiom that "eternal vigilance is the
+ price of liberty"?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PETER ECKLER.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ New York, May 21, 1889.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0223" id="link2H_4_0223">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFATORY NOTE BY THE TRANSLATOR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Some years ago a copy of John Meslier fell into my hands. I was struck
+ with the simple truthfulness of his arguments, and the thought never left
+ me of the happy change that would be produced all over the world when the
+ religious prejudices should be dispelled, and when all the different
+ nations and sects would unite and lend each other a friendly hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since I had the opportunity of hearing the speeches and lectures of
+ liberal men, it has seemed to me that the time has come for this work of
+ John Meslier to be appreciated, and I concluded to translate it into the
+ language of my adopted country, presuming that many would be happy to
+ study it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this faith I offer it now to the public, and I hope that the name of
+ John Meslier will be honored as one of the greatest benefactors of
+ humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ANNA KNOOP. <a name="link2H_PREF2" id="link2H_PREF2">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE OF THE EDITOR OF THE FRENCH EDITION OF 1830.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is said that truth is generally revealed by dying lips. When men full
+ of health and enjoying all the pleasures of life, exert themselves without
+ ceasing, to excite minds and to take advantage of their fanaticism by
+ wearing the mask of religion, it will not be without interest or
+ importance to know what other men, invested with the same ministry, have
+ taught under the impulse of a conscience quickened by the approach of the
+ final hour. Their confessions are more valuable because they carry with
+ them the spirit of contrition. It is then that the truth, which is no
+ longer obscured by narrow passions and sordid interests, presents itself
+ in all its brilliancy, and imposes upon him who has kept it hidden during
+ his life, the duty, and even the necessity, of unveiling it fully at his
+ death. It is then that human speech, losing in a measure its terrestrial
+ nature, becomes persuasive and convincing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know this fact of a celebrated preacher who in the beginning of the
+ Revolution stood in the same pulpit which we are pleased to call the
+ pulpit of truth, and with his hand upon his heart declared that till then
+ he had taught only falsehood. He did more; he implored his parishioners to
+ forgive him for the gross errors in which he had kept them, and
+ congratulated them upon having at last arrived at a period when it was
+ permitted to establish the empire of reason upon the ruins of prejudice.
+ Times have changed very much, it is true; however, so long as the press
+ shall be able to combat the fatal errors of religious fanaticism, and
+ perhaps even to some extent prevent its violence, it will be the duty of
+ every friend of humanity to reproduce continually the full retractions
+ which opposed the sincerity and conscience of the dying to the bad faith
+ and hypocritical avidity of the living. Guided by this intention, and
+ ashamed to see the human race, in a land just freed from the yoke of
+ prejudice, give birth to a disgraceful juggling which will terminate in
+ dominating authority, and associate itself with the persecutions of which
+ our incredulous or dissenting ancestors were the sad victims, we believe
+ it useful to reprint the last lessons of a priest&mdash;an honest man&mdash;bequeathed
+ to his fellow-citizens and to posterity. The service we render to
+ Philosophy will be so much the greater when we can consider as immutable,
+ perpetual, permanent, and ready to appear in the hour of need, the edition
+ which we are preparing of "COMMON SENSE, BY THE PRIEST JEAN MESLIER, AND
+ HIS DYING CONFESSION."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To do justice to these two works, to which we have added analytical notes,
+ which will greatly facilitate our researches, we will limit ourselves by
+ giving the imposing approbation of two philosophers of the eighteenth
+ century&mdash;Voltaire and d'Alembert. They certainly understood much
+ better the sublimity of evangelical morality, and spoke of it in a manner
+ more worthy of its author, than did those who deified it to profit by its
+ divinity, and who abused so cruelly the ignorance and barbarity of the
+ first centuries, to establish, in the interest of their fortunes and
+ power, so many base prejudices, so many puerile and superstitious
+ practices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is what Voltaire and d'Alembert thought of the curate Meslier and of
+ his work. Their letters are presented here in order to excite curiosity
+ and convince the judgment:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERNEY, February, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They have printed in Holland the Testament of Jean Meslier. I trembled
+ with horror in reading it. The testimony of a priest, who, in dying, asks
+ God's pardon for having taught Christianity, must be a great weight in the
+ balance of Liberals. I will send you a copy of this Testament of the
+ anti-Christ, because you desire to refute it. You have but to tell me by
+ what manner it will reach you. It is written with great simplicity, which
+ unfortunately resembles candor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERNEY, February 25, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meslier also has the wisdom of the serpent. He sets an example for you;
+ the good grain was hidden in the chaff of his book. A good Swiss has made
+ a faithful abstract and this abstract can do a great deal of good. What an
+ answer to the insolent fanatics who treat philosophers like libertines.
+ What an answer to you, wretches that you are, this testimony of a priest,
+ who asks God's pardon for having been a Christian!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ D'ALEMBERT'S ANSWER.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PARIS, March 31, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A misunderstanding has been the cause, my dear philosopher, that I
+ received but a few days since the work of Jean Meslier, which you had sent
+ almost a month ago. I waited till I received it to write to you. It seems
+ to me that we could inscribe upon the tombstone of this curate: "Here lies
+ a very honest priest, curate of a village in Champagne, who, in dying,
+ asks God's pardon for having been a Christian, and who has proved by this,
+ that ninety-nine sheep and one native of Champagne do not make a hundred
+ beasts." I suspect that the abstract of his work is written by a Swiss,
+ who understands French very well, though he affects to speak it badly.
+ This is neat, earnest, and concise, and I bless the author of the
+ abstract, whoever he may be. "It is of the Lord to cultivate the vine."
+ After all, my dear philosopher, a little longer, and I do not know whether
+ all these books will be necessary, and whether man will not have enough
+ sense to comprehend by himself that three do not make one, and that bread
+ is not God. The enemies of reason are playing a very foolish part at this
+ moment, and I believe that we can say as in the song:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To destroy all these people You should let them alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know what will become of the religion of Christ, but its
+ professors are in false garb. What Pascal, Nicole, and Arnaud could not
+ do, there is an appearance that three or four absurd and ignorant fanatics
+ will accomplish. The nation will give this vigorous blow within, while she
+ is doing so little outside, and we will put in the abbreviated
+ chronological pages of the year 1762: "This year France lost all its
+ colonies and expelled the Jesuits." I know nothing but powder, which with
+ so little apparent force, could produce such great results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DELICES, July 12, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears to me that the Testament of Jean Meslier has a great effect;
+ all those who read it are convinced; this man discusses and proves. He
+ speaks in the moment of death, at the moment when even liars tell the
+ truth fully. This is the strongest of all arguments. Jean Meslier is to
+ convert the world. Why is his gospel in so few hands? How lukewarm you are
+ at Paris! You hide your light under a bushel!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ D'ALEMBERT'S ANSWER.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PARIS, July 31, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You reproach us with lukewarmness, but I believe I have told you already
+ that the fear of the fagot is very cooling. You would like us to print the
+ Testament of Jean Meslier and distribute four or five thousand copies. The
+ infamous fanaticism, for infamous it is, would lose little or nothing, and
+ we should be treated as fools by those whom we would have converted. Man
+ is so little enlightened to-day only because we had the precaution or the
+ good fortune to enlighten him little by little. If the sun should appear
+ all of a sudden in a cave, the inhabitants would perceive only the harm it
+ would do their eyes. The excess of light would result only in blinding
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ D'ALEMBERT TO VOLTAIRE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PARIS, July 9, 1764.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apropos, they have lent me that work attributed to St. Evremont, and which
+ is said to be by Dumarsais, of which you spoke to me some time ago; it is
+ good, but the Testament of Meslier is still better!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERNEY, July 16, 1764.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Testament of Meslier ought to be in the pocket of all honest men; a
+ good priest, full of candor, who asks God's pardon for deceiving himself,
+ must enlighten those who deceive themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO THE COUNT D'ARGENTAL.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUX DELICES, February 6, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no little bird told me of the infernal book of that curate, Jean
+ Meslier; a very important work to the angels of darkness. An excellent
+ catechism for Beelzebub. Know that this book is very rare; it is a
+ treasure!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUX DEUCES, May 31, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is just that I should send you a copy of the second edition of Meslier.
+ In the first edition they forgot the preface, which is very strange. You
+ have wise friends who would not be sorry to have this book in their secret
+ cabinet. It is excellent to form youthful minds. The book, which was sold
+ in manuscript form for eight Louis-d'or, is illegible. This little
+ abstract is very edifying. Let us thank the good souls who give it
+ gratuitously, and let us pray God to extend His benedictions upon this
+ useful reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO D'AMILAVILLE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUX DEUCES, February 8, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My brother shall have a Meslier soon as I shall have received the order;
+ it would seem that my brother has not the facts. Fifteen to twenty years
+ ago the manuscript of this work sold for eight Louis-d'or; it was a very
+ large quarto. There are more than a hundred copies in Paris. Brother
+ Thiriot understands the facts. It is not known who made the abstract, but
+ it is taken wholly, word for word, from the original. There are still many
+ persons who have seen the curate Meslier. It would be very useful to make
+ a new edition of this little work in Paris; it can be done easily in three
+ or four days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERNEY, December 6, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I believe there will never be another impression of the little book of
+ Meslier. Think of the weight of the testimony of one dying, of a priest,
+ of a good man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERNEY, July 6, 1764.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three hundred Mesliers distributed in a province have caused many
+ conversions. Ah, if I was assisted!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERNEY, September 29, 1764.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are too few Mesliers and too many swindlers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUX DELICES, October 8, 1764.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Names injure the cause; they awaken prejudice. Only the name of Jean
+ Meslier can do good, because the repentance of a good priest in the hour
+ of death must make a great impression. This Meslier should be in the hands
+ of all the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO MADAM DE FLORIAN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUX DELICES, May 20, 1762.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My dear niece, it is very sad to be so far from you. Read and read again
+ Jean Meslier; he is a good curate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO THE MARQUIS D'ARGENCE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ March 2, 1763.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have found a Testament of Jean Meslier, which I send you. The simplicity
+ of this man, the purity of his manners, the pardon which he asks of God,
+ and the authenticity of his book, must produce a great effect. I will send
+ you as many copies as you want of the Testament of this good curate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO HELVETIUS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUX DEUCES, May 1, 1763.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They have sent me the two abstracts of Jean Meslier. It is true that it is
+ written in the style of a carriage-horse, but it is well suited to the
+ street. And what testimony! that of a priest who asks pardon in dying, for
+ having taught absurd and horrible things! What an answer to the platitudes
+ of fanatics who have the audacity to assert that philosophy is but the
+ fruit of libertinage!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Superstition In All Ages (1732), by Jean Meslier
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Superstition In All Ages (1732)
+ Common Sense
+
+Author: Jean Meslier
+
+Commentator: Voltaire
+
+Translator: Anna Knoop
+
+Release Date: January 25, 2006 [EBook #17607]
+[Last updated: July 2, 2011]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUPERSTITION IN ALL AGES (1732) ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Gary Klein
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SUPERSTITION IN ALL AGES
+
+By Jean Meslier
+
+1732
+
+
+A ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST, WHO, AFTER A PASTORAL SERVICE OF THIRTY YEARS
+AT ETREPIGNY IN CHAMPAGNE, FRANCE, WHOLLY ABJURED RELIGIOUS DOGMAS, AND
+LEFT AS HIS LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT TO HIS PARISHIONERS, AND TO THE
+WORLD, TO BE PUBLISHED AFTER HIS DEATH, THE FOLLOWING PAGES, ENTITLED:
+COMMON SENSE.
+
+
+Translated from the French original by Miss Anna Knoop
+
+
+1878
+
+
+
+
+LIFE OF JEAN MESLIER BY VOLTAIRE.
+
+Jean Meslier, born 1678, in the village of Mazerny, dependency of the
+duchy of Rethel, was the son of a serge weaver; brought up in the
+country, he nevertheless pursued his studies and succeeded to the
+priesthood. At the seminary, where he lived with much regularity, he
+devoted himself to the system of Descartes.
+
+Becoming curate of Etrepigny in Champagne and vicar of a little annexed
+parish named Bue, he was remarkable for the austerity of his habits.
+Devoted in all his duties, every year he gave what remained of his salary
+to the poor of his parishes; enthusiastic, and of rigid virtue, he was
+very temperate, as much in regard to his appetite as in relation to
+women.
+
+MM. Voiri and Delavaux, the one curate of Varq, the other curate of
+Boulzicourt, were his confessors, and the only ones with whom he
+associated.
+
+The curate Meslier was a rigid partisan of justice, and sometimes
+carried his zeal a little too far. The lord of his village, M. de
+Touilly, having ill-treated some peasants, he refused to pray for him in
+his service. M. de Mailly, Archbishop of Rheims, before whom the case
+was brought, condemned him. But the Sunday which followed this decision,
+the abbot Meslier stood in his pulpit and complained of the sentence of
+the cardinal. "This is," said he, "the general fate of the poor country
+priest; the archbishops, who are great lords, scorn them and do not
+listen to them. Therefore, let us pray for the lord of this place. We
+will pray for Antoine de Touilly, that he may be converted and granted
+the grace that he may not wrong the poor and despoil the orphans." His
+lordship, who was present at this mortifying supplication, brought new
+complaints before the same archbishop, who ordered the curate Meslier to
+come to Donchery, where he ill-treated him with abusive language.
+
+There have been scarcely any other events in his life, nor other
+benefice, than that of Etrepigny. He died in the odor of sanctity in the
+year 1733, fifty-five years old. It is believed that, disgusted with
+life, he expressly refused necessary food, because during his sickness
+he was not willing to take anything, not even a glass of wine.
+
+At his death he gave all he possessed, which was inconsiderable, to his
+parishioners, and desired to be buried in his garden.
+
+They were greatly surprised to find in his house three manuscripts, each
+containing three hundred and sixty-six pages, all written by his hand,
+signed and entitled by him, "My Testament." This work, which the author
+addressed to his parishioners and to M. Leroux, advocate and procurator
+for the parliament of Meziers, is a simple refutation of all the
+religious dogmas, without excepting one. The grand vicar of Rheims
+retained one of the three copies; another was sent to Monsieur
+Chauvelin, guardian of the State's seal; the third remained at the
+clerk's office of the justiciary of St. Minehould. The Count de Caylus
+had one of those three copies in his possession for some time, and soon
+afterward more than one hundred were at Paris, sold at ten Louis-d'or
+apiece. A dying priest accusing himself of having professed and taught
+the Christian religion, made a deeper impression upon the mind than the
+"Thoughts of Pascal."
+
+The curate Meslier had written upon a gray paper which enveloped the
+copy destined for his parishioners these remarkable words: "I have seen
+and recognized the errors, the abuses, the follies, and the wickedness
+of men. I have hated and despised them. I did not dare say it during my
+life, but I will say it at least in dying, and after my death; and it is
+that it may be known, that I write this present memorial in order that
+it may serve as a witness of truth to all those who may see and read it
+if they choose."
+
+At the beginning of this work is found this document (a kind of
+honorable amend, which in his letter to the Count of d'Argental of May
+31, 1762, Voltaire qualifies as a preface), addressed to his
+parishioners.
+
+"You know," said he, "my brethren, my disinterestedness; I do not
+sacrifice my belief to any vile interest. If I embraced a profession so
+directly opposed to my sentiments, it was not through cupidity. I obeyed
+my parents. I would have preferred to enlighten you sooner if I could
+have done it safely. You are witnesses to what I assert. I have not
+disgraced my ministry by exacting the requitals, which are a part of it.
+
+"I call heaven to witness that I also thoroughly despised those who
+laughed at the simplicity of the blind people, those who furnished
+piously considerable sums of money to buy prayers. How horrible this
+monopoly! I do not blame the disdain which those who grow rich by your
+sweat and your pains, show for their mysteries and their superstitions;
+but I detest their insatiable cupidity and the signal pleasure such
+fellows take in railing at the ignorance of those whom they carefully
+keep in this state of blindness. Let them content themselves with
+laughing at their own ease, but at least let them not multiply their
+errors by abusing the blind piety of those who, by their simplicity,
+procured them such an easy life. You render unto me, my brethren, the
+justice that is due me. The sympathy which I manifested for your
+troubles saves me from the least suspicion. How often have I performed
+gratuitously the functions of my ministry. How often also has my heart
+been grieved at not being able to assist you as often and as abundantly
+as I could have wished! Have I not always proved to you that I took more
+pleasure in giving than in receiving? I carefully avoided exhorting you
+to bigotry, and I spoke to you as rarely as possible of our unfortunate
+dogmas. It was necessary that I should acquit myself as a priest of my
+ministry, but how often have I not suffered within myself when I was
+forced to preach to you those pious lies which I despised in my heart.
+What a disdain I had for my ministry, and particularly for that
+superstitious Mass, and those ridiculous administrations of sacraments,
+especially if I was compelled to perform them with the solemnity which
+awakened all your piety and all your good faith. What remorse I had for
+exciting your credulity! A thousand times upon the point of bursting
+forth publicly, I was going to open your eyes, but a fear superior to my
+strength restrained me and forced me to silence until my death."
+
+The abbot Meslier had written two letters to the curates of his
+neighborhood to inform them of his Testament; he told them that he had
+consigned to the chancery of St. Minnehould a copy of his manuscript in
+366 leaves in octavo; but he feared it would be suppressed, according to
+the bad custom established to prevent the poor from being instructed and
+knowing the truth.
+
+The curate Meslier, the most singular phenomenon ever seen among all the
+meteors fatal to the Christian religion, worked his whole life secretly
+in order to attack the opinions he believed false. To compose his
+manuscript against God, against all religion, against the Bible and the
+Church, he had no other assistance than the Bible itself, Moreri
+Montaigne, and a few fathers.
+
+While the abbot Meslier naively acknowledged that he did not wish to be
+burned till after his death, Thomas Woolston, a doctor of Cambridge,
+published and sold publicly at London, in his own house, sixty thousand
+copies of his "Discourses" against the miracles of Jesus Christ.
+
+It was a very astonishing thing that two priests should at the same time
+write against the Christian religion. The curate Meslier has gone
+further yet than Woolston; he dares to treat the transport of our
+Saviour by the devil upon the mountain, the wedding of Cana, the bread
+and the fishes, as absurd fables, injurious to divinity, which were
+ignored during three hundred years by the whole Roman Empire, and
+finally passed from the lower class to the palace of the emperors, when
+policy obliged them to adopt the follies of the people in order the more
+easily to subjugate them. The denunciations of the English priest do not
+approach those of the Champagne priest. Woolston is sometimes indulgent,
+Meslier never. He was a man profoundly embittered by the crimes he
+witnessed, for which he holds the Christian religion responsible. There
+is no miracle which to him is not an object of contempt and horror; no
+prophecy that he does not compare to those of Nostredamus. He wrote thus
+against Jesus Christ when in the arms of death, at a time when the most
+dissimulating dare not lie, and when the most intrepid tremble. Struck
+with the difficulties which he found in Scripture, he inveighed against
+it more bitterly than the Acosta and all the Jews, more than the famous
+Porphyre, Celse, Iamblique, Julian, Libanius, and all the partisans of
+human reason.
+
+There were found among the books of the curate Meslier a printed
+manuscript of the Treatise of Fenelon, Archbishop of Cambray, upon the
+existence of God and His attributes, and the reflections of the Jesuit
+Tournemine upon Atheism, to which treatise he added marginal notes
+signed by his hand.
+
+
+DECREE
+
+of the NATIONAL CONVENTION upon the proposition to erect a statue to the
+curate Jean Meslier, the 27 Brumaire, in the year II. (November 17,
+1793). The National Convention sends to the Committee of Public
+Instruction the proposition made by one of its members to erect a statue
+to Jean Meslier, curate at Etrepigny, in Champagne, the first priest who
+had the courage and the honesty to abjure religious errors.
+
+PRESIDENT AND SECRETARIES.
+
+SIGNED--P. A. Laloy, President; Bazire, Charles Duval, Philippeaux,
+Frecine, and Merlin (de Thionville), Secretaries.
+
+Certified according to the original.
+
+MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTEE OF DECREES AND PROCESS-VERBAL.
+
+SIGNED--Batellier, Echasseriaux, Monnel, Becker, Vernetey, Perard, Vinet,
+Bouillerot, Auger, Cordier, Delecloy, and Cosnard.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE OF THE AUTHOR.
+
+When we wish to examine in a cool, calm way the opinions of men, we are
+very much surprised to find that in those which we consider the most
+essential, nothing is more rare than to find them using common sense;
+that is to say, the portion of judgment sufficient to know the most
+simple truths, to reject the most striking absurdities, and to be
+shocked by palpable contradictions. We have an example of this in
+Theology, a science revered in all times, in all countries, by the
+greatest number of mortals; an object considered the most important, the
+most useful, and the most indispensable to the happiness of society. If
+they would but take the trouble to sound the principles upon which this
+pretended science rests itself, they would be compelled to admit that
+the principles which were considered incontestable, are but hazardous
+suppositions, conceived in ignorance, propagated by enthusiasm or bad
+intention, adopted by timid credulity, preserved by habit, which never
+reasons, and revered solely because it is not comprehended. Some, says
+Montaigne, make the world believe that which they do not themselves
+believe; a greater number of others make themselves believe, not
+comprehending what it is to believe. In a word, whoever will consult
+common sense upon religious opinions, and will carry into this
+examination the attention given to objects of ordinary interest, will
+easily perceive that these opinions have no solid foundation; that all
+religion is but a castle in the air; that Theology is but ignorance of
+natural causes reduced to a system; that it is but a long tissue of
+chimeras and contradictions; that it presents to all the different
+nations of the earth only romances devoid of probability, of which the
+hero himself is made up of qualities impossible to reconcile, his name
+having the power to excite in all hearts respect and fear, is found to
+be but a vague word, which men continually utter, being able to attach
+to it only such ideas or qualities as are belied by the facts, or which
+evidently contradict each other. The notion of this imaginary being, or
+rather the word by which we designate him, would be of no consequence
+did it not cause ravages without number upon the earth. Born into the
+opinion that this phantom is for them a very interesting reality, men,
+instead of wisely concluding from its incomprehensibility that they are
+exempt from thinking of it, on the contrary, conclude that they can not
+occupy themselves enough about it, that they must meditate upon it
+without ceasing, reason without end, and never lose sight of it. The
+invincible ignorance in which they are kept in this respect, far from
+discouraging them, does but excite their curiosity; instead of putting
+them on guard against their imagination, this ignorance makes them
+positive, dogmatic, imperious, and causes them to quarrel with all those
+who oppose doubts to the reveries which their brains have brought forth.
+What perplexity, when we attempt to solve an unsolvable problem! Anxious
+meditations upon an object impossible to grasp, and which, however, is
+supposed to be very important to him, can but put a man into bad humor,
+and produce in his brain dangerous transports. When interest, vanity,
+and ambition are joined to such a morose disposition, society
+necessarily becomes troubled. This is why so many nations have often
+become the theaters of extravagances caused by nonsensical visionists,
+who, publishing their shallow speculations for the eternal truth, have
+kindled the enthusiasm of princes and of people, and have prepared them
+for opinions which they represented as essential to the glory of
+divinity and to the happiness of empires. We have seen, a thousand
+times, in all parts of our globe, infuriated fanatics slaughtering each
+other, lighting the funeral piles, committing without scruple, as a
+matter of duty, the greatest crimes. Why? To maintain or to propagate
+the impertinent conjectures of enthusiasts, or to sanction the knaveries
+of impostors on account of a being who exists only in their imagination,
+and who is known only by the ravages, the disputes, and the follies
+which he has caused upon the earth.
+
+Originally, savage nations, ferocious, perpetually at war, adored, under
+various names, some God conformed to their ideas; that is to say, cruel,
+carnivorous, selfish, greedy of blood. We find in all the religions of
+the earth a God of armies, a jealous God, an avenging God, an
+exterminating God, a God who enjoys carnage and whose worshipers make it
+a duty to serve him to his taste. Lambs, bulls, children, men, heretics,
+infidels, kings, whole nations, are sacrificed to him. The zealous
+servants of this barbarous God go so far as to believe that they are
+obliged to offer themselves as a sacrifice to him. Everywhere we see
+zealots who, after having sadly meditated upon their terrible God,
+imagine that, in order to please him, they must do themselves all the
+harm possible, and inflict upon themselves, in his honor, all imaginable
+torments. In a word, everywhere the baneful ideas of Divinity, far from
+consoling men for misfortunes incident to their existence, have filled
+the heart with trouble, and given birth to follies destructive to them.
+How could the human mind, filled with frightful phantoms and guided by
+men interested in perpetuating its ignorance and its fear, make
+progress? Man was compelled to vegetate in his primitive stupidity; he
+was preserved only by invisible powers, upon whom his fate was supposed
+to depend. Solely occupied with his alarms and his unintelligible
+reveries, he was always at the mercy of his priests, who reserved for
+themselves the right of thinking for him and of regulating his conduct.
+
+Thus man was, and always remained, a child without experience, a slave
+without courage, a loggerhead who feared to reason, and who could never
+escape from the labyrinth into which his ancestors had misled him; he
+felt compelled to groan under the yoke of his Gods, of whom he knew
+nothing except the fabulous accounts of their ministers. These, after
+having fettered him by the ties of opinion, have remained his masters or
+delivered him up defenseless to the absolute power of tyrants, no less
+terrible than the Gods, of whom they were the representatives upon the
+earth. Oppressed by the double yoke of spiritual and temporal power, it
+was impossible for the people to instruct themselves and to work for
+their own welfare. Thus, religion, politics, and morals became
+sanctuaries, into which the profane were not permitted to enter. Men had
+no other morality than that which their legislators and their priests
+claimed as descended from unknown empyrean regions. The human mind,
+perplexed by these theological opinions, misunderstood itself, doubted
+its own powers, mistrusted experience, feared truth, disdained its
+reason, and left it to blindly follow authority. Man was a pure machine
+in the hands of his tyrants and his priests, who alone had the right to
+regulate his movements. Always treated as a slave, he had at all times
+and in all places the vices and dispositions of a slave.
+
+These are the true sources of the corruption of habits, to which
+religion never opposes anything but ideal and ineffectual obstacles;
+ignorance and servitude have a tendency to make men wicked and unhappy.
+Science, reason, liberty, alone can reform them and render them more
+happy; but everything conspires to blind them and to confirm them in
+their blindness. The priests deceive them, tyrants corrupt them in order
+to subjugate them more easily. Tyranny has been, and will always be, the
+chief source of the depraved morals and habitual calamities of the
+people. These, almost always fascinated by their religious notions or by
+metaphysical fictions, instead of looking upon the natural and visible
+causes of their miseries, attribute their vices to the imperfections of
+their nature, and their misfortunes to the anger of their Gods; they
+offer to Heaven vows, sacrifices, and presents, in order to put an end
+to their misfortunes, which are really due only to the negligence, the
+ignorance, and to the perversity of their guides, to the folly of their
+institutions, to their foolish customs, to their false opinions, to
+their unreasonable laws, and especially to their want of enlightenment.
+Let the mind be filled early with true ideas; let man's reason be
+cultivated; let justice govern him; and there will be no need of
+opposing to his passions the powerless barrier of the fear of Gods. Men
+will be good when they are well taught, well governed, chastised or
+censured for the evil, and justly rewarded for the good which they have
+done to their fellow-citizens. It is idle to pretend to cure mortals of
+their vices if we do not begin by curing them of their prejudices. It is
+only by showing them the truth that they can know their best interests
+and the real motives which will lead them to happiness. Long enough have
+the instructors of the people fixed their eyes on heaven; let them at
+last bring them back to the earth. Tired of an incomprehensible
+theology, of ridiculous fables, of impenetrable mysteries, of puerile
+ceremonies, let the human mind occupy itself with natural things,
+intelligible objects, sensible truths, and useful knowledge. Let the
+vain chimeras which beset the people be dissipated, and very soon
+rational opinions will fill the minds of those who were believed fated
+to be always in error. To annihilate religious prejudices, it would be
+sufficient to show that what is inconceivable to man can not be of any
+use to him. Does it need, then, anything but simple common sense to
+perceive that a being most clearly irreconcilable with the notions of
+mankind, that a cause continually opposed to the effects attributed to
+him; that a being of whom not a word can be said without falling into
+contradictions; that a being who, far from explaining the mysteries of
+the universe, only renders them more inexplicable; that a being to whom
+for so many centuries men addressed themselves so vainly to obtain their
+happiness and deliverance from their sufferings; does it need, I say,
+more than simple common sense to understand that the idea of such a
+being is an idea without model, and that he is himself evidently not a
+reasonable being? Does it require more than common sense to feel that
+there is at least delirium and frenzy in hating and tormenting each
+other for unintelligible opinions of a being of this kind? Finally, does
+it not all prove that morality and virtue are totally incompatible with
+the idea of a God, whose ministers and interpreters have painted him in
+all countries as the most fantastic, the most unjust, and the most cruel
+of tyrants, whose pretended wishes are to serve as rules and laws for
+the inhabitants of the earth? To discover the true principles of
+morality, men have no need of theology, of revelation, or of Gods; they
+need but common sense; they have only to look within themselves, to
+reflect upon their own nature, to consult their obvious interests, to
+consider the object of society and of each of the members who compose
+it, and they will easily understand that virtue is an advantage, and
+that vice is an injury to beings of their species. Let us teach men to
+be just, benevolent, moderate, and sociable, not because their Gods
+exact it, but to please men; let us tell them to abstain from vice and
+from crime, not because they will be punished in another world, but
+because they will suffer in the present world. There are, says
+Montesquieu, means to prevent crime, they are sufferings; to change the
+manners, these are good examples. Truth is simple, error is complicated,
+uncertain in its gait, full of by-ways; the voice of nature is
+intelligible, that of falsehood is ambiguous, enigmatical, and
+mysterious; the road of truth is straight, that of imposture is oblique
+and dark; this truth, always necessary to man, is felt by all just
+minds; the lessons of reason are followed by all honest souls; men are
+unhappy only because they are ignorant; they are ignorant only because
+everything conspires to prevent them from being enlightened, and they
+are wicked only because their reason is not sufficiently developed.
+
+
+
+
+COMMON SENSE.
+
+Detexit quo dolose Vaticinandi furore sacerdotes mysteria, illis spe
+ignota, audactur publicant.--PETRON. SATYR.
+
+
+
+
+I.--APOLOGUE.
+
+There is a vast empire governed by a monarch, whose conduct does but
+confound the minds of his subjects. He desires to be known, loved,
+respected, and obeyed, but he never shows himself; everything tends to
+make uncertain the notions which we are able to form about him. The
+people subjected to his power have only such ideas of the character and
+the laws of their invisible sovereign as his ministers give them; these
+suit, however, because they themselves have no idea of their master, for
+his ways are impenetrable, and his views and his qualities are totally
+incomprehensible; moreover, his ministers disagree among themselves in
+regard to the orders which they pretend emanated from the sovereign
+whose organs they claim to be; they announce them diversely in each
+province of the empire; they discredit and treat each other as impostors
+and liars; the decrees and ordinances which they promulgate are obscure;
+they are enigmas, made not to be understood or divined by the subjects
+for whose instruction they were intended. The laws of the invisible
+monarch need interpreters, but those who explain them are always
+quarreling among themselves about the true way of understanding them;
+more than this, they do not agree among themselves; all which they
+relate of their hidden prince is but a tissue of contradictions,
+scarcely a single word that is not contradicted at once. He is called
+supremely good, nevertheless not a person but complains of his decrees.
+He is supposed to be infinitely wise, and in his administration
+everything seems contrary to reason and good sense. They boast of his
+justice, and the best of his subjects are generally the least favored.
+We are assured that he sees everything, yet his presence remedies
+nothing. It is said that he is the friend of order, and everything in
+his universe is in a state of confusion and disorder; all is created by
+him, yet events rarely happen according to his projects. He foresees
+everything, but his foresight prevents nothing. He is impatient if any
+offend him; at the same time he puts every one in the way of offending
+him. His knowledge is admired in the perfection of his works, but his
+works are full of imperfections, and of little permanence. He is
+continually occupied in creating and destroying, then repairing what he
+has done, never appearing to be satisfied with his work. In all his
+enterprises he seeks but his own glory, but he does not succeed in being
+glorified. He works but for the good of his subjects, and most of them
+lack the necessities of life. Those whom he seems to favor, are
+generally those who are the least satisfied with their fate; we see them
+all continually revolting against a master whose greatness they admire,
+whose wisdom they extol, whose goodness they worship, and whose justice
+they fear, revering orders which they never follow. This empire is the
+world; its monarch is God; His ministers are the priests; their subjects
+are men.
+
+
+
+
+II.--WHAT IS THEOLOGY?
+
+There is a science which has for its object only incomprehensible
+things. Unlike all others, it occupies itself but with things unseen.
+Hobbes calls it "the kingdom of darkness." In this land all obey laws
+opposed to those which men acknowledge in the world they inhabit. In
+this marvelous region light is but darkness, evidence becomes doubtful
+or false, the impossible becomes credible, reason is an unfaithful
+guide, and common sense changed into delirium. This science is named
+Theology, and this Theology is a continual insult to human reason.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+By frequent repetition of if, but, and perhaps, we succeed in forming an
+imperfect and broken system which perplexes men's minds to the extent of
+making them forget the clearest notions, and to render uncertain the
+most palpable truths. By the aid of this systematic nonsense, all nature
+has become an inexplicable enigma for man; the visible world has
+disappeared to give place to invisible regions; reason is obliged to
+give place to imagination, which can lead us only to the land of
+chimeras which she herself has invented.
+
+
+
+
+IV.--MAN BORN NEITHER RELIGIOUS NOR DEISTICAL.
+
+All religious principles are founded upon the idea of a God, but it is
+impossible for men to have true ideas of a being who does not act upon
+any one of their senses. All our ideas are but pictures of objects which
+strike us. What can the idea of God represent to us when it is evidently
+an idea without an object? Is not such an idea as impossible as an
+effect without a cause? An idea without a prototype, is it anything but
+a chimera? Some theologians, however, assure us that the idea of God is
+innate, or that men have this idea from the time of their birth. Every
+principle is a judgment; all judgment is the effect of experience;
+experience is not acquired but by the exercise of the senses: from which
+it follows that religious principles are drawn from nothing, and are not
+innate.
+
+
+
+
+V.--IT IS NOT NECESSARY TO BELIEVE IN A GOD, AND THE MOST REASONABLE
+THING IS NOT TO THINK OF HIM.
+
+No religious system can be founded otherwise than upon the nature of God
+and of men, and upon the relations they bear to each other. But, in
+order to judge of the reality of these relations, we must have some idea
+of the Divine nature. But everybody tells us that the essence of God is
+incomprehensible to man; at the same time they do not hesitate to assign
+attributes to this incomprehensible God, and assure us that man can not
+dispense with a knowledge of this God so impossible to conceive of. The
+most important thing for men is that which is the most impossible for
+them to comprehend. If God is incomprehensible to man, it would seem
+rational never to think of Him at all; but religion concludes that man
+is criminal if he ceases for a moment to revere Him.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--RELIGION IS FOUNDED UPON CREDULITY.
+
+We are told that Divine qualities are not of a nature to be grasped by
+limited minds. The natural consequence of this principle ought to be
+that the Divine qualities are not made to employ limited minds; but
+religion assures us that limited minds should never lose sight of this
+inconceivable being, whose qualities can not be grasped by them: from
+which we see that religion is the art of occupying limited minds with
+that which is impossible for them to comprehend.
+
+
+
+
+VII.--EVERY RELIGION IS AN ABSURDITY.
+
+Religion unites man with God or puts them in communication; but do you
+say that God is infinite? If God is infinite, no finite being can have
+communication or any relation with Him. Where there are no relations,
+there can be no union, no correspondence, no duties. If there are no
+duties between man and his God, there exists no religion for man. Thus
+by saying that God is infinite, you annihilate, from that moment, all
+religion for man, who is a finite being. The idea of infinity is for us
+in idea without model, without prototype, without object.
+
+
+
+
+VIII.--THE NOTION OF GOD IS IMPOSSIBLE.
+
+If God is an infinite being, there can be neither in the actual world or
+in another any proportion between man and his God; thus the idea of God
+will never enter the human mind. In the supposition of a life where men
+will be more enlightened than in this one, the infinity of God will
+always place such a distance between his idea and the limited mind of
+man, that he will not be able to conceive of God any more in a future
+life than in the present. Hence, it evidently follows that the idea of
+God will not be better suited to man in the other life than in the
+present. God is not made for man; it follows also that intelligences
+superior to man--such as angels, archangels, seraphims, and saints--can
+have no more complete notions of God than has man, who does not
+understand anything about Him here below.
+
+
+
+
+IX.--ORIGIN OF SUPERSTITION.
+
+How is it that we have succeeded in persuading reasonable beings that
+the thing most impossible to understand was the most essential for them.
+It is because they were greatly frightened; it is because when men are
+kept in fear they cease to reason; it is because they have been
+expressly enjoined to distrust their reason. When the brain is troubled,
+we believe everything and examine nothing.
+
+
+
+
+X.--ORIGIN OF ALL RELIGION.
+
+Ignorance and fear are the two pivots of all religion. The uncertainty
+attending man's relation to his God is precisely the motive which
+attaches him to his religion. Man is afraid when in darkness--physical or
+moral. His fear is habitual to him and becomes a necessity; he would
+believe that he lacked something if he had nothing to fear.
+
+
+
+
+XI.--IN THE NAME OF RELIGION CHARLATANS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE WEAKNESS
+OF MEN.
+
+He who from his childhood has had a habit of trembling every time he
+heard certain words, needs these words, and needs to tremble. In this
+way he is more disposed to listen to the one who encourages his fears
+than to the one who would dispel his fears. The superstitious man wants
+to be afraid; his imagination demands it. It seems that he fears nothing
+more than having no object to fear. Men are imaginary patients, whom
+interested charlatans take care to encourage in their weakness, in order
+to have a market for their remedies. Physicians who order a great number
+of remedies are more listened to than those who recommend a good
+regimen, and who leave nature to act.
+
+
+
+
+XII.--RELIGION ENTICES IGNORANCE BY THE AID OF THE MARVELOUS.
+
+If religion was clear, it would have fewer attractions for the ignorant.
+They need obscurity, mysteries, fables, miracles, incredible things,
+which keep their brains perpetually at work. Romances, idle stories,
+tales of ghosts and witches, have more charms for the vulgar than true
+narrations.
+
+
+
+
+XIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+In the matter of religion, men are but overgrown children. The more
+absurd a religion is, and the fuller of marvels, the more power it
+exerts; the devotee thinks himself obliged to place no limits to his
+credulity; the more inconceivable things are, the more divine they
+appear to him; the more incredible they are, the more merit he gives
+himself for believing them.
+
+
+
+
+XIV.--THERE WOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN ANY RELIGION IF THERE HAD NEVER BEEN
+ANY DARK AND BARBAROUS AGES.
+
+The origin of religious opinions dates, as a general thing, from the
+time when savage nations were yet in a state of infancy. It was to
+coarse, ignorant, and stupid men that the founders of religion addressed
+themselves in all ages, in order to present them with Gods, ceremonies,
+histories of fabulous Divinities, marvelous and terrible fables. These
+chimeras, adopted without examination by the fathers, have been
+transmitted with more or less changes to their polished children, who
+often do not reason more than their fathers.
+
+
+
+
+XV.--ALL RELIGION WAS BORN OF THE DESIRE TO DOMINATE.
+
+The first legislators of nations had for their object to dominate, The
+easiest means of succeeding was to frighten the people and to prevent
+them from reasoning; they led them by tortuous paths in order that they
+should not perceive the designs of their guides; they compelled them to
+look into the air, for fear they should look to their feet; they amused
+them upon the road by stories; in a word, they treated them in the way
+of nurses, who employ songs and menaces to put the children to sleep, or
+to force them to be quiet.
+
+
+
+
+XVI.--THAT WHICH SERVES AS A BASIS FOR ALL RELIGION IS VERY UNCERTAIN.
+
+The existence of a God is the basis of all religion. Few people seem to
+doubt this existence, but this fundamental principle is precisely the
+one which prevents every mind from reasoning. The first question of
+every catechism was, and will always be, the most difficult one to
+answer.
+
+
+
+
+XVII.--IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO BE CONVINCED OF THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
+
+Can one honestly say that he is convinced of the existence of a being
+whose nature is not known, who remains inaccessible to all our senses,
+and of whose qualities we are constantly assured that they are
+incomprehensible to us? In order to persuade me that a being exists, or
+can exist, he must begin by telling me what this being is; in order to
+make me believe the existence or the possibility of such a being, he
+must tell me things about him which are not contradictory, and which do
+not destroy one another; finally, in order to convince me fully of the
+existence of this being, he must tell me things about him which I can
+comprehend, and prove to me that it is impossible that the being to whom
+he attributes these qualities does not exist.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+A thing is impossible when it is composed of two ideas so antagonistic,
+that we can not think of them at the same time. Evidence can be relied
+on only when confirmed by the constant testimony of our senses, which
+alone give birth to ideas, and enable us to judge of their conformity or
+of their incompatibility. That which exists necessarily, is that of
+which the non-existence would imply contradiction. These principles,
+universally recognized, are at fault when the question of the existence
+of God is considered; what has been said of Him is either unintelligible
+or perfectly contradictory; and for this reason must appear impossible
+to every man of common sense.
+
+
+
+
+XIX.--THE EXISTENCE OF GOD IS NOT PROVED.
+
+All human intelligences are more or less enlightened and cultivated. By
+what fatality is it that the science of God has never been explained?
+The most civilized nations and the most profound thinkers are of the
+same opinion in regard to the matter as the most barbarous nations and
+the most ignorant and rustic people. As we examine the subject more
+closely, we will find that the science of divinity by means of reveries
+and subtleties has but obscured it more and more. Thus far, all religion
+has been founded on what is called in logic, a "begging of the
+question;" it supposes freely, and then proves, finally, by the
+suppositions it has made.
+
+
+
+
+XX.--TO SAY THAT GOD IS A SPIRIT, IS TO SPEAK WITHOUT SAYING ANYTHING AT
+ALL.
+
+By metaphysics, God is made a pure spirit, but has modern theology
+advanced one step further than the theology of the barbarians? They
+recognized a grand spirit as master of the world. The barbarians, like
+all ignorant men, attribute to spirits all the effects of which their
+inexperience prevents them from discovering the true causes. Ask a
+barbarian what causes your watch to move, he will answer, "a spirit!"
+Ask our philosophers what moves the universe, they will tell you "it is
+a spirit."
+
+
+
+
+XXI.--SPIRITUALITY IS A CHIMERA.
+
+The barbarian, when he speaks of a spirit, attaches at least some sense
+to this word; he understands by it an agent similar to the wind, to the
+agitated air, to the breath, which produces, invisibly, effects that we
+perceive. By subtilizing, the modern theologian becomes as little
+intelligible to himself as to others. Ask him what he means by a spirit?
+He will answer, that it is an unknown substance, which is perfectly
+simple, which has nothing tangible, nothing in common with matter. In
+good faith, is there any mortal who can form the least idea of such a
+substance? A spirit in the language of modern theology is then but an
+absence of ideas. The idea of spirituality is another idea without a
+model.
+
+
+
+
+XXII.--ALL WHICH EXISTS SPRINGS FROM THE BOSOM OF MATTER.
+
+Is it not more natural and more intelligible to deduce all which exists,
+from the bosom of matter, whose existence is demonstrated by all our
+senses, whose effects we feel at every moment, which we see act, move,
+communicate, motion, and constantly bring living beings into existence,
+than to attribute the formation of things to an unknown force, to a
+spiritual being, who can not draw from his ground that which he has not
+himself, and who, by the spiritual essence claimed for him, is incapable
+of making anything, and of putting anything in motion? Nothing is
+plainer than that they would have us believe that an intangible spirit
+can act upon matter.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII.--WHAT IS THE METAPHYSICAL GOD OF MODERN THEOLOGY?
+
+The material Jupiter of the ancients could move, build up, destroy, and
+propagate beings similar to himself; but the God of modern theology is a
+sterile being. According to his supposed nature he can neither occupy
+any place, nor move matter, nor produce a visible world, nor propagate
+either men or Gods. The metaphysical God is a workman without hands; he
+is able but to produce clouds, suspicions, reveries, follies, and
+quarrels.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV.--IT WOULD BE MORE RATIONAL TO WORSHIP THE SUN THAN A SPIRITUAL GOD.
+
+Since it was necessary for men to have a God, why did they not have the
+sun, the visible God, adored by so many nations? What being had more
+right to the homage of mortals than the star of the day, which gives
+light and heat; which invigorates all beings; whose presence reanimates
+and rejuvenates nature; whose absence seems to plunge her into sadness
+and languor? If some being bestowed upon men power, activity,
+benevolence, strength, it was no doubt the sun, which should be
+recognized as the father of nature, as the soul of the world, as
+Divinity. At least one could not without folly dispute his existence, or
+refuse to recognize his influence and his benefits.
+
+
+
+
+XXV.--A SPIRITUAL GOD IS INCAPABLE OF WILLING AND OF ACTING.
+
+The theologian tells us that God does not need hands or arms to act, and
+that He acts by His will alone. But what is this God who has a will? And
+what can be the subject of this divine will? Is it more ridiculous or
+more difficult to believe in fairies, in sylphs, in ghosts, in witches,
+in were-wolfs, than to believe in the magical or impossible action of
+the spirit upon the body? As soon as we admit of such a God, there are
+no longer fables or visions which can not be believed. The theologians
+treat men like children, who never cavil about the possibilities of the
+tales which they listen to.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI.--WHAT IS GOD?
+
+To unsettle the existence of a God, it is only necessary to ask a
+theologian to speak of Him; as soon as he utters one word about Him, the
+least reflection makes us discover at once that what he says is
+incompatible with the essence which he attributes to his God. Therefore,
+what is God? It is an abstract word, coined to designate the hidden
+forces of nature; or, it is a mathematical point, which has neither
+length, breadth, nor thickness. A philosopher [David Hume] has very
+ingeniously said in speaking of theologians, that they have found the
+solution to the famous problem of Archimedes; a point in the heavens
+from which they move the world.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII.--REMARKABLE CONTRADICTIONS OF THEOLOGY.
+
+Religion puts men on their knees before a being without extension, and
+who, notwithstanding, is infinite, and fills all space with his
+immensity; before an almighty being, who never executes that which he
+desires; before a being supremely good, and who causes but displeasure;
+before a being, the friend of order, and in whose government everything
+is in disorder. After all this, let us conjecture what this God of
+theology is.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII.--TO ADORE GOD IS TO ADORE A FICTION.
+
+In order to avoid all embarrassment, they tell us that it is not
+necessary to know what God is; that we must adore without knowing; that
+it is not permitted us to turn an eye of temerity upon His attributes.
+But if we must adore a God without knowing Him, should we not be assured
+that He exists? Moreover, how be assured that He exists without having
+examined whether it is possible that the diverse qualities claimed for
+Him, meet in Him? In truth, to adore God is to adore nothing but
+fictions of one's own brain, or rather, it is to adore nothing.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX.--THE INFINITY OF GOD AND THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF KNOWING THE DIVINE
+ESSENCE, OCCASIONS AND JUSTIFIES ATHEISM.
+
+Without doubt the more to perplex matters, theologians have chosen to
+say nothing about what their God is; they tell us what He is not. By
+negations and abstractions they imagine themselves composing a real and
+perfect being, while there can result from it but a being of human
+reason. A spirit has no body; an infinite being is a being which is not
+finite; a perfect being is a being which is not imperfect. Can any one
+form any real notions of such a multitude of deficiencies or absence of
+ideas? That which excludes all idea, can it be anything but nothingness?
+To pretend that the divine attributes are beyond the understanding of
+the human mind is to render God unfit for men. If we are assured that
+God is infinite, we admit that there can be nothing in common between
+Him and His creatures. To say that God is infinite, is to destroy Him
+for men, or at least render Him useless to them.
+
+God, we are told, created men intelligent, but He did not create them
+omniscient: that is to say, capable of knowing all things. We conclude
+that He was not able to endow him with intelligence sufficient to
+understand the divine essence. In this case it is demonstrated that God
+has neither the power nor the wish to be known by men. By what right
+could this God become angry with beings whose own essence makes it
+impossible to have any idea of the divine essence? God would evidently
+be the most unjust and the most unaccountable of tyrants if He should
+punish an atheist for not knowing that which his nature made it
+impossible for him to know.
+
+
+
+
+XXX.--IT IS NEITHER LESS NOR MORE CRIMINAL TO BELIEVE IN GOD THAN NOT TO
+BELIEVE IN HIM.
+
+For the generality of men nothing renders an argument more convincing
+than fear. In consequence of this fact, theologians tell us that the
+safest side must be taken; that nothing is more criminal than
+incredulity; that God will punish without mercy all those who have the
+temerity to doubt His existence; that His severity is just; since it is
+only madness or perversity which questions the existence of an angry
+monarch who revenges himself cruelly upon atheists. If we examine these
+menaces calmly, we shall find that they assume always the thing in
+question. They must commence by proving to our satisfaction the
+existence of a God, before telling us that it is safer to believe, and
+that it is horrible to doubt or to deny it. Then they must prove that it
+is possible for a just God to punish men cruelly for having been in a
+state of madness, which prevented them from believing in the existence
+of a being whom their enlightened reason could not comprehend. In a
+word, they must prove that a God that is said to be full of equity,
+could punish beyond measure the invincible and necessary ignorance of
+man, caused by his relation to the divine essence. Is not the
+theologians' manner of reasoning very singular? They create phantoms,
+they fill them with contradictions, and finally assure us that the
+safest way is not to doubt the existence of those phantoms, which they
+have themselves invented. By following out this method, there is no
+absurdity which it would not be safer to believe than not to believe.
+
+All children are atheists--they have no idea of God; are they, then,
+criminal on account of this ignorance? At what age do they begin to be
+obliged to believe in God? It is, you say, at the age of reason. At what
+time does this age begin? Besides, if the most profound theologians lose
+themselves in the divine essence, which they boast of not comprehending,
+what ideas can common people have?--women, mechanics, and, in short,
+those who compose the mass of the human race?
+
+
+
+
+XXXI.--THE BELIEF IN GOD IS NOTHING BUT A MECHANICAL HABITUDE OF
+CHILDHOOD.
+
+Men believe in God only upon the word of those who have no more idea of
+Him than they themselves. Our nurses are our first theologians; they
+talk to children of God as they talk to them of were-wolfs; they teach
+them from the most tender age to join the hands mechanically. Have the
+nurses clearer notions of God than the children, whom they compel to
+pray to Him?
+
+
+
+
+XXXII.--IT IS A PREJUDICE WHICH HAS BEEN HANDED FROM FATHER TO CHILDREN.
+
+Religion is handed down from fathers to children as the property of a
+family with the burdens. Very few people in the world would have a God
+if care had not been taken to give them one. Each one receives from his
+parents and his instructors the God which they themselves have received
+from theirs; only, according to his own temperament, each one arranges,
+modifies, and paints Him agreeably to his taste.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII.--ORIGIN OF PREJUDICES.
+
+The brain of man is, especially in infancy, like a soft wax, ready to
+receive all the impressions we wish to make on it; education furnishes
+nearly all his opinions, at a period when he is incapable of judging for
+himself. We believe that the ideas, true or false, which at a tender age
+were forced into our heads, were received from nature at our birth; and
+this persuasion is one of the greatest sources of our errors.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV.--HOW THEY TAKE ROOT AND SPREAD.
+
+Prejudice tends to confirm in us the opinions of those who are charged
+with our instruction. We believe them more skillful than we are; we
+suppose them thoroughly convinced themselves of the things they teach
+us. We have the greatest confidence in them. After the care they have
+taken of us when we were unable to assist ourselves, we judge them
+incapable of deceiving us. These are the motives which make us adopt a
+thousand errors without other foundation than the dangerous word of
+those who have educated us; even the being forbidden to reason upon what
+they tell us, does not diminish our confidence, but contributes often to
+increase our respect for their opinions.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV.--MEN WOULD NEVER HAVE BELIEVED IN THE PRINCIPLES OF MODERN THEOLOGY
+IF THEY HAD NOT BEEN TAUGHT AT AN AGE WHEN THEY WERE INCAPABLE OF
+REASONING.
+
+The instructors of the human race act very prudently in teaching men
+their religious principles before they are able to distinguish the true
+from the false, or the left hand from the right. It would be as
+difficult to tame the spirit of a man forty years old with the
+extravagant notions which are given us of Divinity, as to banish these
+notions from the head of a man who has imbibed them since his tenderest
+infancy.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI.--THE WONDERS OF NATURE DO NOT PROVE THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
+
+We are assured that the wonders of nature are sufficient to a belief in
+the existence of a God, and to convince us fully of this important
+truth. But how many persons are there in this world who have the
+leisure, the capacity, the necessary taste, to contemplate nature and to
+meditate upon its progress? The majority of men pay no attention to it.
+A peasant is not at all moved by the beauty of the sun, which he sees
+every day. The sailor is not surprised by the regular movements of the
+ocean; he will draw from them no theological inductions. The phenomena
+of nature do not prove the existence of a God, except to a few
+forewarned men, to whom has been shown in advance the finger of God in
+all the objects whose mechanism could embarrass them. The unprejudiced
+philosopher sees nothing in the wonders of nature but permanent and
+invariable law; nothing but the necessary effects of different
+combinations of diversified substance.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII.--THE WONDERS OF NATURE EXPLAIN THEMSELVES BY NATURAL CAUSES.
+
+Is there anything more surprising than the logic of so many profound
+doctors, who, instead of acknowledging the little light they have upon
+natural agencies, seek outside of nature--that is to say, in imaginary
+regions--an agent less understood than this nature, of which they can at
+least form some idea? To say that God is the author of the phenomena
+that we see, is it not attributing them to an occult cause? What is God?
+What is a spirit? They are causes of which we have no idea. Sages! study
+nature and her laws; and when you can from them unravel the action of
+natural causes, do not go in search of supernatural causes, which, very
+far from enlightening your ideas, will but entangle them more and more
+and make it impossible for you to understand yourselves.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII--CONTINUATION.
+
+Nature, you say, is totally inexplicable without a God; that is to say,
+in order to explain what you understand so little, you need a cause
+which you do not understand at all. You pretend to make clear that which
+is obscure, by magnifying its obscurity. You think you have untied a
+knot by multiplying knots. Enthusiastic philosophers, in order to prove
+to us the existence of a God, you copy complete treatises on botany; you
+enter into minute details of the parts of the human body; you ascend
+into the air to contemplate the revolutions of the stars; you return
+then to earth to admire the course of the waters; you fly into ecstasies
+over butterflies, insects, polyps, organized atoms, in which you think
+to find the greatness of your God; all these things will not prove the
+existence of this God; they will only prove that you have not the ideas
+which you should have of the immense variety of causes and effects that
+can produce the infinitely diversified combinations, of which the
+universe is the assemblage. This will prove that you ignore nature, that
+you have no idea of her resources when you judge her incapable of
+producing a multitude of forms and beings, of which your eyes, even by
+the aid of the microscope, see but the least part; finally, this will
+prove, that not being able to know the sensible and comprehensible
+agents, you find it easier to have recourse to a word, by which you
+designate an agent, of whom it will always be impossible for you to form
+any true idea.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX.--THE WORLD HAS NOT BEEN CREATED, AND MATTER MOVES BY ITSELF.
+
+They tell us gravely that there is no effect without a cause; they
+repeat to us very often that the world did not create itself. But the
+universe is a cause, not an effect; it is not a work, has not been made,
+because it was impossible that it should be made. The world has always
+been, its existence is necessary. It is the cause of itself. Nature,
+whose essence is visibly acting and producing, in order to fulfill her
+functions, as we see she does, needs no invisible motor far more unknown
+than herself. Matter moves by its own energy, by the necessary result of
+its heterogeneity; the diversity of its movements or of its ways of
+acting, constitute only the diversity of substances; we distinguish one
+being from another but by the diversity of the impressions or movements
+which they communicate to our organs.
+
+
+
+
+XL.--CONTINUATION.
+
+You see that everything in nature is in a state of activity, and you
+pretend that nature of itself is dead and without energy! You believe
+that all this, acting of itself, has need of a motor! Well! who is this
+motor? It is a spirit, that is to say, an absolutely incomprehensible
+and contradictory being. Conclude then, I say to you, that matter acts
+of itself, and cease to reason about your spiritual motor, which has
+nothing that is necessary to put it into motion. Return from your
+useless excursions; come down from an imaginary into a real world; take
+hold of second causes; leave to theologians their "First Cause," of
+which nature has no need in order to produce all the effects which you
+see.
+
+
+
+
+XLI.--OTHER PROOFS THAT MOTION IS IN THE ESSENCE OF MATTER, AND THAT IT
+IS NOT NECESSARY TO SUPPOSE A SPIRITUAL MOTOR.
+
+It is but by the diversity of impressions or of effects which substances
+or bodies make upon us, that we feel them, that we have perceptions and
+ideas of them, that we distinguish them one from another, that we assign
+to them peculiarities. Moreover, in order to perceive or to feel an
+object, this object must act upon our organs; this object can not act
+upon us without exciting some motion in us; it can not produce any
+motion in us if it is not itself in motion. As soon as I see an object,
+my eyes must be struck by it; I can not conceive of light and of vision
+without a motion in the luminous, extended, and colored body which
+communicates itself to my eye, or which acts upon my retina. As soon as
+I smell a body, my olfactory nerve must be irritated or put into motion
+by the parts exhaled from an odorous body. As soon as I hear a sound,
+the tympanum of my ear must be struck by the air put in motion by a
+sonorous body, which could not act if it was not moved of itself. From
+which it follows, evidently, that without motion I can neither feel,
+see, distinguish, compare, nor judge the body, nor even occupy my
+thought with any matter whatever. It is said in the schools, that the
+essence of a being is that from which flow all the properties of that
+being. Now then, it is evident that all the properties of bodies or of
+substances of which we have ideas, are due to the motion which alone
+informs us of their existence, and gives us the first conceptions of it.
+I can not be informed or assured of my own existence but by the motions
+which I experience within myself. I am compelled to conclude that motion
+is as essential to matter as its extension, and that it can not be
+conceived of without it. If one persists in caviling about the evidences
+which prove to us that motion is an essential property of matter, he
+must at least acknowledge that substances which seemed dead or deprived
+of all energy, take motion of themselves as soon as they are brought
+within the proper distance to act upon each other. Pyrophorus, when
+enclosed in a bottle or deprived of contact with the air, can not take
+fire by itself, but it burns as soon as exposed to the air. Flour and
+water cause fermentation as soon as they are mixed. Thus dead substances
+engender motion of themselves. Matter has then the power to move itself,
+and nature, in order to act, does not need a motor whose essence would
+hinder its activity.
+
+
+
+
+XLII.--THE EXISTENCE OF MAN DOES NOT PROVE THAT OF GOD.
+
+Whence comes man? What is his origin? Is he the result of the fortuitous
+meeting of atoms? Was the first man formed of the dust of the earth? I
+do not know! Man appears to me to be a production of nature like all
+others she embraces. I should be just as much embarrassed to tell you
+whence came the first stones, the first trees, the first elephants, the
+first ants, the first acorns, as to explain the origin of the human
+species. Recognize, we are told, the hand of God, of an infinitely
+intelligent and powerful workman, in a work so wonderful as the human
+machine. I would admit without question that the human machine appears
+to me surprising; but since man exists in nature, I do not believe it
+right to say that his formation is beyond the forces of nature. I will
+add, that I could conceive far less of the formation of the human
+machine, when to explain it to me they tell me that a pure spirit, who
+has neither eyes, nor feet, nor hands, nor head, nor lungs, nor mouth,
+nor breath, has made man by taking a little dust and blowing upon it.
+The savage inhabitants of Paraguay pretend to be descended from the
+moon, and appear to us as simpletons; the theologians of Europe pretend
+to be descended from a pure spirit. Is this pretension more sensible?
+
+Man is intelligent, hence it is concluded that he must be the work of an
+intelligent being, and not of a nature devoid of intelligence. Although
+nothing is more rare than to see man use this intelligence, of which he
+appears so proud, I will admit that he is intelligent, that his
+necessities develop in him this faculty, that the society of other men
+contributes especially to cultivate it. But in the human machine and in
+the intelligence with which it is endowed, I see nothing that shows in a
+precise manner the infinite intelligence of the workman who has the
+honor of making it. I see that this admirable machine is subject to
+derangement; that at that time this wonderful intelligence is
+disordered, and sometimes totally disappears; from this I conclude that
+human intelligence depends upon a certain disposition of the material
+organs of the body, and that, because man is an intelligent being, it is
+not well to conclude that God must be an intelligent being, any more
+than because man is material, we are compelled to conclude that God is
+material. The intelligence of man no more proves the intelligence of God
+than the malice of men proves the malice of this God, of whom they
+pretend that man is the work. In whatever way theology is taken, God
+will always be a cause contradicted by its effects, or of whom it is
+impossible to judge by His works. We shall always see evil,
+imperfections, and follies resulting from a cause claimed to be full of
+goodness, of perfections, and of wisdom.
+
+
+
+
+XLIII.--HOWEVER, NEITHER MAN NOR THE UNIVERSE IS THE EFFECT OF CHANCE.
+
+Then you will say that intelligent man and even the universe and all it
+encloses, are the effects of chance. No, I answer, the universe is not
+an effect; it is the cause of all effects; all the beings it embraces
+are the necessary effects of this cause which sometimes shows to us its
+manner of acting, out which often hides from us its way. Men may use the
+word "chance" to cover their ignorance of the true causes; nevertheless,
+although they may ignore them, these causes act, but by certain laws.
+There is no effect without a cause.
+
+Nature is a word which we make use of to designate the immense
+assemblage of beings, diverse substances, infinite combinations, and all
+the various motions which we see. All bodies, whether organized or not
+organized, are the necessary results of certain causes, made to produce
+necessarily the effects which we see. Nothing in nature can be made by
+chance; all follow fixed laws; these laws are but the necessary union of
+certain effects with their causes. An atom of matter does not meet
+another atom by accident or by hazard; this rencounter is due to
+permanent laws, which cause each being to act by necessity as it does,
+and can not act otherwise under the same circumstances. To speak about
+the accidental coming together of atoms, or to attribute any effects to
+chance, is to say nothing, if not to ignore the laws by which bodies
+act, meet, combine, or separate.
+
+Everything is made by chance for those who do not understand nature, the
+properties of beings, and the effects which must necessarily result from
+the concurrence of certain causes. It is not chance that has placed the
+sun in the center of our planetary system; it is by its very essence,
+the substance of which it is composed, that it occupies this place, and
+from thence diffuses itself to invigorate the beings who live in these
+planets.
+
+
+
+
+XLIV.--NEITHER DOES THE ORDER OF THE UNIVERSE PROVE THE EXISTENCE OF A
+GOD.
+
+The worshipers of a God find, especially in the order of the universe,
+an invincible proof of the existence of an intelligent and wise being
+who rules it. But this order is only a result of motions necessarily
+brought on by causes or by circumstances which are sometimes favorable
+and sometimes injurious to ourselves; we approve the former and find
+fault with the latter.
+
+Nature follows constantly the same progress; that is to say, the same
+causes produce the same effects, as long as their action is not
+interrupted by other causes which occasion the first ones to produce
+different effects. When the causes, whose effects we feel, are
+interrupted in their action by causes which, although unknown to us, are
+no less natural and necessary, we are stupefied, we cry out miracles:
+and we attribute them to a cause far less known than all those we see
+operating before us. The universe is always in order; there can be no
+disorder for it. Our organization alone is suffering if we complain
+about disorder. Bodies, causes, beings, which this world embraces, act
+necessarily in the manner in which we see them act, whether we approve
+or disapprove their action. Earthquakes, volcanoes, inundations,
+contagions, and famines are effects as necessary in the order of nature
+as the fall of heavy bodies, as the course of rivers, as the periodical
+movements of the seas, the blowing of the winds, the abundant rains, and
+the favorable effects for which we praise and thank Providence for its
+blessings.
+
+To be astonished that a certain order reigns in the world, is to be
+surprised to see the same causes constantly producing the same effects.
+To be shocked at seeing disorder, is to forget that the causes being
+changed or disturbed in their action, the effects can no longer be the
+same. To be astonished to see order in nature, is to be astonished that
+anything can exist; it is to be surprised at one's own existence. What
+is order for one being, is disorder for another. All wicked beings find
+that everything is in order when they can with impunity put everything
+into disorder; they find, on the contrary, that everything is in
+disorder when they are prevented from exercising their wickedness.
+
+
+
+
+XLV.--CONTINUATION.
+
+Supposing God to be the author and the motor of nature, there could be
+no disorder relating to Him; all causes which He would have made would
+necessarily act according to their properties the essences and the
+impulsions that He had endowed them with. If God should change the
+ordinary course of things, He would not be immutable. If the order of
+the universe--in which we believe we see the most convincing proof of His
+existence, of His intelligence, His power, and His goodness--should be
+inconsistent, His existence might be doubted; or He might be accused at
+least of inconstancy, of inability, of want of foresight, and of wisdom
+in the first arrangement of things; we would have a right to accuse Him
+of blundering in His choice of agents and instruments. Finally, if the
+order of nature proves the power and the intelligence, disorder ought to
+prove the weakness, inconstancy, and irrationality of Divinity. You say
+that God is everywhere; that He fills all space; that nothing was made
+without Him; that matter could not act without Him as its motor. But in
+this case you admit that your God is the author of disorder; that it is
+He who deranges nature; that He is the Father of confusion; that He is
+in man; and that He moves man at the moment when he sins. If God is
+everywhere, He is in me; He acts with me; He is deceived when I am
+deceived; He questions with me the existence of God; He offends God with
+me. Oh, theologians! you never understand yourselves when you speak of
+God.
+
+
+
+
+XLVI.--A PURE SPIRIT CAN NOT BE INTELLIGENT, AND TO ADORE A DIVINE
+INTELLIGENCE IS A CHIMERA.
+
+To be what we call intelligent, we must have ideas, thoughts, will; to
+have ideas, thoughts, and will, we must have organs; to have organs, we
+must have a body; to act upon bodies, we must have a body; to experience
+trouble, we must be capable of suffering; from which it evidently
+follows that a pure spirit can not be intelligent, and can not be
+affected by that which takes place in the universe.
+
+Divine intelligence, divine ideas, divine views, you say, have nothing
+in common with those of men. So much the better! But in this case, how
+can men judge of these views--whether good or evil--reason about these
+ideas, or admire this intelligence? It would be to judge, to admire, to
+adore that of which we can form no idea. To adore the profound views of
+divine wisdom, is it not to worship that of which it is impossible for
+us to judge? To admire these same views, is it not admiring without
+knowing wry? Admiration is always the daughter of ignorance. Men admire
+and worship only what they do not understand.
+
+
+
+
+XLVII.--ALL THE QUALITIES WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES TO ITS GOD ARE CONTRARY TO
+THE VERY ESSENCE WHICH IT SUPPOSES HIM TO HAVE.
+
+All these qualities which are given to God are not suited to a being
+who, by His own essence, is devoid of all similarity to human beings. It
+is true, they think to find this similarity by exaggerating the human
+qualities with which they have clothed Divinity; they thrust them upon
+the infinite, and from that moment cease to understand themselves. What
+is the result of this combination of man with God, or of this
+theanthropy? Its only result is a chimera, of which nothing can be
+affirmed without causing the phantom to vanish which they had taken so
+much trouble to conjure up.
+
+Dante, in his poem of Paradise, relates that the Divinity appeared to
+him under the figure of three circles, which formed an iris, whose
+bright colors arose from each other; but having wished to retain its
+brilliant light, the poet saw only his own face. In worshiping God, man
+adores himself.
+
+
+
+
+XLVIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+The slightest reflection suffices to prove to us that God can not have
+any of the human qualities, virtues, or perfections. Our virtues and our
+perfections are the results of our temperament modified. Has God a
+temperament like ours? Our good qualities are our habits relative to the
+beings in whose society we live. God, according to you, is a solitary
+being. God has no one like Him; He does not live in society; He has no
+need of any one; He enjoys a happiness which nothing can alter. Admit,
+then, upon your own principles, that God can not possess what we call
+virtues, and that man can not be virtuous in regard to Him.
+
+
+
+
+XLIX.--IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT THE HUMAN RACE IS THE OBJECT AND THE END
+OF CREATION.
+
+Man, charmed with his own merits, imagines that it is but his own kind
+that God proposed as the object and the end in the formation of the
+universe. Upon what is this so flattering opinion based? It is, we are
+told, upon this: that man is the only being endowed with an intelligence
+which enables him to know the Divine nature, and to render to it homage
+worthy of it. We are assured that God created the world for His own
+glory, and that the human race was included in His plan, in order that
+He might have somebody to admire and glorify Him in His works. But by
+these intentions has not God visibly missed His end?
+
+1. According to you, it would always be impossible for man to know his
+God, and he would be kept in the most invincible ignorance of the Divine
+essence.
+
+2. A being who has no equals, can not be susceptible of glory. Glory can
+result but from the comparison of his own excellence with that of
+others.
+
+3. If God by Himself is infinitely happy and is sufficient unto Himself,
+why does He need the homage of His feeble creatures?
+
+4. In spite of all His works, God is not glorified; on the contrary, all
+the religions of the world show Him to us as perpetually offended; their
+great object is to reconcile sinful, ungrateful, and rebellious man with
+his wrathful God.
+
+
+
+
+L.--GOD IS NOT MADE FOR MAN, NOR MAN FOR GOD.
+
+If God is infinite, He is created still less for man, than man is for
+the ants. Would the ants of a garden reason pertinently with reference
+to the gardener, if they should attempt to occupy themselves with his
+intentions, his desires, and his projects? Would they reason correctly
+if they pretended that the park of Versailles was made but for them, and
+that a fastidious monarch had had as his only object to lodge them
+superbly? But according to theology, man in his relation to God is far
+beneath what the lowest insect is to man. Thus by the acknowledgment of
+theology itself, theology, which does but occupy itself with the
+attributes and views of Divinity, is the most complete of follies.
+
+
+
+
+LI.--IT IS NOT TRUE THAT THE OBJECT OF THE FORMATION OF THE UNIVERSE WAS
+TO RENDER MEN HAPPY.
+
+It is pretended, that in forming the universe, God had no object but to
+render man happy. But, in a world created expressly for him and governed
+by an all-mighty God, is man after all very happy? Are his enjoyments
+durable? Are not his pleasures mingled with sufferings? Are there many
+people who are contented with their fate? Is not mankind the continual
+victim of physical and moral evils? This human machine, which is shown
+to us as the masterpiece of the Creator's industry, has it not a
+thousand ways of deranging itself? Would we admire the skill of a
+mechanic, who should show us a complicated machine, liable to be out of
+order at any moment, and which would after a while destroy itself?
+
+
+
+
+LII.--WHAT IS CALLED PROVIDENCE IS BUT A WORD VOID OF SENSE.
+
+We call Providence the generous care which Divinity shows in providing
+for our needs, and in watching over the happiness of its beloved
+creatures. But, as soon as we look around, we find that God provides for
+nothing. Providence neglects the greatest part of the inhabitants of
+this world. Against a very small number of men, who are supposed to be
+happy, what a multitude of miserable ones are groaning beneath
+oppression, and languishing in misery! Whole nations are compelled to
+starve in order to indulge the extravagances of a few morose tyrants,
+who are no happier than the slaves whom they oppress! At the same time
+that our philosophers energetically parade the bounties of Providence,
+and exhort us to place confidence in it, do we not see them cry out at
+unforeseen catastrophes, by which Providence plays with the vain
+projects of men; do we not see that it overthrows their designs, laughs
+at their efforts, and that its profound wisdom pleases itself in
+misleading mortals? But how can we place confidence in a malicious
+Providence which laughs at and sports with mankind? How can I admire the
+unknown course of a hidden wisdom whose manner of acting is inexplicable
+to me? Judge it by its effects! you will say; it is by these I do judge
+it, and I find that these effects are sometimes useful and sometimes
+injurious to me.
+
+We think to justify Providence by saying, that in this world there are
+more blessings than evil for each individual man. Let us suppose that
+the blessings which this Providence makes us enjoy are as one hundred,
+and that the evils are as ten per cent.; would it not always result that
+against these hundred degrees of goodness, Providence possesses a tenth
+degree of malignity?--which is incompatible with the perfection we
+suppose it to have.
+
+All the books are filled with the most flattering praises of Providence,
+whose attentive care is extolled; it would seem to us, as if in order to
+live happy here below, man would have no need of exerting himself.
+However, without labor, man could scarcely live a day. In order to live,
+I see him obliged to sweat, work, hunt, fish, toil without relaxation;
+without these secondary causes, the First Cause (at least in the
+majority of countries) could provide for none of his needs. If I examine
+all parts of this globe, I see the uncivilized as well as the civilized
+man in a perpetual struggle with Providence; he is compelled to ward off
+the blows which it sends in the form of hurricanes, tempests, frost,
+hail, inundations, sterility, and the divers accidents which so often
+render all their labors useless. In a word, I see the human race
+continually occupied in protecting itself from the wicked tricks of this
+Providence, which is said to be busy with the care of their happiness. A
+devotee admired Divine Providence for having wisely made rivers to flow
+through all the places where men had built large cities. Is not this
+man's way of reasoning as sensible as that of many learned men who do
+not cease from telling us of Final Causes, or who pretend to perceive
+clearly the benevolent views of God in the formation of things?
+
+
+
+
+LIII.--THIS PRETENDED PROVIDENCE IS LESS OCCUPIED IN CONSERVING THAN IN
+DISTURBING THE WORLD--MORE AN ENEMY THAN A FRIEND OF MAN.
+
+Do we see, then, that Divine Providence manifests itself in a sensible
+manner in the conservation of its admirable works, for which we honor
+it? If it is Divine Providence which governs the world, we find it as
+much occupied in destroying as in creating; in exterminating as in
+producing. Does it not at every instant cause thousands of those same
+men to perish, to whose preservation and well-being it is supposed to
+give its continual attention? Every moment it loses sight of its beloved
+creatures; sometimes it tears down their dwellings; sometimes it
+destroys their harvests, inundates their fields, devastates by a
+drought, arms all nature against man, sets man against man, and finishes
+by causing him to expire in pain. Is this what you call preserving a
+universe? If we attempted to consider without prejudice the equivocal
+conduct of Providence relative to mankind and to all sentient beings, we
+should find that very far from resembling a tender and careful mother,
+it rather resembles those unnatural mothers who, forgetting the
+unfortunate fruits of their illicit amours, abandon their children as
+soon as they are born; and who, pleased to have conceived them, expose
+them without mercy to the caprices of fate.
+
+The Hottentots--wiser in this particular than other nations, who treat
+them as barbarians--refuse, it is said, to adore God, because if He
+sometimes does good, He as often does harm. Is not this reasoning more
+just and more conformed to experience than that of so many men who
+persist in seeing in their God but kindness, wisdom, and foresight; and
+who refuse to see that the countless evils, of which the world is the
+theater, must come from the same Hand which they kiss with transport?
+
+
+
+
+LIV.--NO! THE WORLD IS NOT GOVERNED BY AN INTELLIGENT BEING.
+
+The logic of common sense teaches us that we should judge a cause but by
+its effects. A cause can not be reputed as constantly good, except when
+it constantly produces good, useful, and agreeable effects. A cause
+which produces good at one time, and evil at another, is a cause which
+is sometimes good and sometimes bad. But the logic of Theology destroys
+all this. According to it, the phenomena of nature, or the effects which
+we see in this world, prove to us the existence of an infinitely good
+Cause, and this Cause is God. Although this world is full of evils,
+although disorder reigns here very often, although men groan every
+moment under the fate which oppresses them, we ought to be convinced
+that these effects are due to a benevolent and immutable Cause; and many
+people believe it, or pretend to believe it!
+
+Everything which takes place in the world proves to us in the clearest
+way that it is not governed by an intelligent being. We can judge of the
+intelligence of a being but by the means which he employs to accomplish
+his proposed design. The aim of God, it is said, is the happiness of our
+race; however, the same necessity regulates the fate of all sentient
+beings--which are born to suffer much, to enjoy little, and to die. Man's
+cup is full of joy and of bitterness; everywhere good is side by side
+with evil; order is replaced by disorder; generation is followed by
+destruction. If you tell me that the designs of God are mysteries, and
+that His views are impossible to understand, I will answer, that in this
+case it is impossible for me to judge whether God is intelligent.
+
+
+
+
+LV.--GOD CAN NOT BE CALLED IMMUTABLE.
+
+You pretend that God is immutable! But what is it that occasions the
+continual instability in this world, which you claim as His empire? Is
+any state subject to more frequent and cruel revolutions than that of
+this unknown monarch? How can we attribute to an immutable God, powerful
+enough to give solidity to His works, the government of a world where
+everything is in a continual vicissitude? If I think to see a God
+unchanging in all the effects advantageous to my kind, what God can I
+discover in the continual misfortunes by which my kind is oppressed? You
+tell me that it is our sins that force Him to punish us. I will answer
+that God, according to yourselves, is not immutable, because the sins of
+men compel Him to change His conduct in regard to them. Can a being who
+is sometimes irritated, and sometimes appeased, be constantly the same?
+
+
+
+
+LVI.--EVIL AND GOOD ARE THE NECESSARY EFFECTS OF NATURAL CAUSES. WHAT IS
+A GOD WHO CAN CHANGE NOTHING?
+
+The universe is but what it can be; all sentient beings enjoy and suffer
+here: that is to say, they are moved sometimes in an agreeable, and at
+other times in a disagreeable way. These effects are necessary; they
+result from causes that act according to their inherent tendencies.,
+These effects necessarily please or displease me, according to my own
+nature. This same nature compels me to avoid, to remove, and to combat
+the one, and to seek, to desire, and to procure the other. In a world
+where everything is from necessity, a God who remedies nothing, and
+allows things to follow their own course, is He anything else but
+destiny or necessity personified? It is a deaf God who can effect no
+change on the general laws to which He is subjected Himself. What do I
+care for the infinite power of a being who can do but a very few things
+to please me? Where is the infinite kindness of a being who is
+indifferent to my happiness? What good to me is the favor of a being
+who, able to bestow upon me infinite good, does not even give me a
+finite one?
+
+
+
+
+LVII.--THE VANITY OF THEOLOGICAL CONSOLATIONS
+IN THE TROUBLES OF THIS LIFE. THE HOPE OF A HEAVEN, OF A FUTURE LIFE,
+IS BUT IMAGINARY.
+
+When we ask why, under a good God, so many are wretched, we are reminded
+that the present world is but a pass-way, designed to conduct man to a
+happier sphere; we are assured that our sojourn on the earth, where we
+live, is for trial; they silence us by saying that God would not impart
+to His creatures either the indifference to the sufferings of others, or
+the infinite happiness which He reserved for Himself alone. How can we
+be satisfied with these answers?
+
+1. The existence of another life has no other guaranty than the
+imagination of men, who, in supposing it, have but manifested their
+desire to live again, in order to enter upon a purer and more durable
+state of happiness than that which they enjoy at present.
+
+2. How can we conceive of a God who, knowing all things, must know to
+their depths the nature of His creatures, and yet must have so many
+proofs in order to assure Himself of their proclivities?
+
+3. According to the calculations of our chronologists, the earth which
+we inhabit has existed for six or seven thousand years; during this time
+the nations have, under different forms, experienced many vicissitudes
+and calamities; history shows us that the human race in all ages has
+been tormented and devastated by tyrants, conquerors, heroes; by wars,
+inundations, famines, epidemics, etc. Is this long catalogue of proofs
+of such a nature as to inspire us with great confidence in the hidden
+views of the Divinity? Do such constant evils give us an exalted idea of
+the future fate which His kindness is preparing for us?
+
+4. If God is as well-disposed as they assure us He is, could He not at
+least, without bestowing an infinite happiness upon men, communicate to
+them that degree of happiness of which finite beings are susceptible? In
+order to be happy, do we need an Infinite or Divine happiness?
+
+5. If God has not been able to render men happier than they are here
+below, what will become of the hope of a Paradise, where it is pretended
+that the elect or chosen few will rejoice forever in ineffable
+happiness? If God could not or would not remove evil from the earth (the
+only sojourning place we know of), what reason could we have to presume
+that He can or will remove it from another world, of which we know
+nothing? More than two thousand years ago, according to Lactance, the
+wise epicure said: "Either God wants to prevent evil, and can not, or He
+can and will not; or He neither can nor will, or He will and can. If He
+wants to, without the power, He is impotent; if He can, and will not, He
+is guilty of malice which we can not attribute to Him; if He neither can
+nor will, He is both impotent and wicked, and consequently can not be
+God; if He wishes to and can, whence then comes evil, or why does He not
+prevent it?" For more than two thousand years honest minds have waited
+for a rational solution of these difficulties; and our theologians teach
+us that they will not be revealed to us until the future life.
+
+
+
+
+LVIII.--ANOTHER IDLE FANCY.
+
+We are told of a pretended scale for human beings; it is supposed that
+God has divided His creatures into different classes, each one enjoying
+the degree of happiness of which he is susceptible. According to this
+romantic arrangement, all beings, from the oyster to the angel, enjoy
+the happiness which belongs to them. Experience contradicts this sublime
+revery. In the world where we are, we see all sentient beings living and
+suffering in the midst of dangers. Man can not step without wounding,
+tormenting, crushing a multitude of sentient beings which he finds in
+his path, while he himself, at every step, is exposed to a throng of
+evils seen or unseen, which may lead to his destruction. Is not the very
+thought of death sufficient to mar his greatest enjoyment? During the
+whole course of his life he is subject to sufferings; there is not a
+moment when he feels sure of preserving his existence, to which he is so
+strongly attached, and which he regards as the greatest gift of
+Divinity.
+
+
+
+
+LIX.--IN VAIN DOES THEOLOGY EXERT ITSELF TO ACQUIT GOD OF MAN'S DEFECTS.
+EITHER THIS GOD IS NOT FREE, OR HE IS MORE WICKED THAN GOOD.
+
+The world, it will be said, has all the perfection of which it was
+susceptible; by the very reason that the world was not the God who made
+it, it was necessary that it should have great qualities and great
+defects. But we will answer, that the world necessarily having great
+defects, it would have been better suited to the nature of a good God
+not to create a world which He could not render completely happy. If
+God, who was, according to you, supremely happy before the world was
+created, had continued to be supremely happy in the created world, why
+did He not remain in peace? Why must man suffer? Why must man exist What
+is his existence to God? Nothing or something. If his existence is not
+useful or necessary to God, why did He not leave him in nothingness? If
+man's existence is necessary to His glory, He then needed man, He lacked
+something before this man existed!
+
+We can forgive an unskillful workman for doing imperfect work, because
+he must work, well or ill, or starve; this workman is excusable; but
+your God is not. According to you, He is self-sufficient; in this case,
+why does He create men? He has, according to you, all that is necessary
+to render man happy; why, then, does He not do it? You must conclude
+that your God has more malice than goodness, or you must admit that God
+was compelled to do what He has done, without being able to do
+otherwise. However, you assure us that your God is free; you say also
+that He is immutable, although beginning in time and ceasing in time to
+exercise His power, like all the inconstant beings of this world. Oh,
+theologians! you have made vain efforts to acquit your God of all the
+defects of man; there is always visible in this God so perfect, "a tip
+of the [human] ear."
+
+
+
+
+LX.--WE CAN NOT BELIEVE IN A DIVINE PROVIDENCE, IN AN INFINITELY GOOD AND
+POWERFUL GOD.
+
+Is not God the master of His favors? Has He not the right to dispense
+His benefits? Can He not take them back again? His creature has no right
+to ask the reason of His conduct; He can dispose at will of the works of
+His hands. Absolute sovereign of mortals, He distributes happiness or
+unhappiness, according to His pleasure. These are the solutions which
+theologians give in order to console us for the evils which God inflicts
+upon us. We would tell them that a God who was infinitely good, would
+not be the master of His favors, but would be by His own nature obliged
+to distribute them among His creatures; we would tell them that a truly
+benevolent being would not believe he had the right to abstain from
+doing good; we would tell them that a truly generous being does not take
+back what he has given, and any man who does it, forfeits gratitude, and
+has no right to complain of ingratitude. How can the arbitrary and
+whimsical conduct which theologians ascribe to God, be reconciled with
+the religion which supposes a compact or mutual agreement between this
+God and men? If God owes nothing to His creatures, they, on their part,
+can not owe anything to their God. All religion is founded upon the
+happiness which men believe they have a right to expect from the
+Divinity, who is supposed to tell them: "Love, adore, obey me, and I
+will render you happy!" Men on their side say to Him: "Make us happy, be
+faithful to your promises, and we will love you, we will adore you, we
+will obey your laws!" In neglecting the happiness of His creatures, in
+distributing His favors and His graces according to His caprice, and
+taking back His gifts, does not God violate the contract which serves as
+a base for all religion?
+
+Cicero has said with reason that if God does not make Himself agreeable
+to man, He can not be his God. [Nisi Deus homini placuerit, Deus non
+erit.] Goodness constitutes Divinity; this Goodness can manifest itself
+to man only by the advantages he derives from it. As soon as he is
+unfortunate, this Goodness disappears and ceases to be Divinity. An
+infinite Goodness can be neither partial nor exclusive. If God is
+infinitely good, He owes happiness to all His creatures; one unfortunate
+being alone would be sufficient to annihilate an unlimited goodness.
+Under an infinitely good and powerful God, is it possible to conceive
+that a single man could suffer? An animal, a mite, which suffers,
+furnishes invincible arguments against Divine Providence and its
+infinite benefactions.
+
+
+
+
+LXI.--CONTINUATION.
+
+According to theologians, the afflictions and evils of this life are
+chastisements which culpable men receive from Divinity. But why are men
+culpable? If God is Almighty, does it cost Him any more to say, "Let
+everything remain in order!"--"let all my subjects be good, innocent,
+fortunate!"--than to say, "Let everything exist?" Was it more difficult
+for this God to do His work well than to do it so badly? Was it any
+farther from the nonexistence of beings to their wise and happy
+existence, than from their non-existence to their insensate and
+miserable existence? Religion speaks to us of a hell--that is, of a
+fearful place where, notwithstanding His goodness, God reserves eternal
+torments for the majority of men. Thus, after having rendered mortals
+very miserable in this world, religion teaches them that God can make
+them much more wretched in another. They meet our objections by saying,
+that otherwise the goodness of God would take the place of His justice.
+But goodness which takes the place of the most terrible cruelty, is not
+infinite kindness. Besides, a God who, after having been infinitely
+good, becomes infinitely wicked, can He be regarded as an immutable
+being? A God filled with implacable fury, is He a God in whom we can
+find a shadow of charity or goodness?
+
+
+
+
+LXII.--THEOLOGY MAKES OF ITS GOD A MONSTER OF NONSENSE, OF INJUSTICE, OF
+MALICE, AND ATROCITY--A BEING ABSOLUTELY HATEFUL.
+
+Divine justice, such as our theologians paint it, is, without doubt, a
+quality intended to make us love Divinity. According to the notions of
+modern theology, it appears evident that God has created the majority of
+men with the view only of punishing them eternally. Would it not have
+been more in conformity with kindness, with reason, with equity, to
+create but stones or plants, and not sentient beings, than to create men
+whose conduct in this world would cause them eternal chastisements in
+another? A God so perfidious and wicked as to create a single man and
+leave him exposed to the perils of damnation, can not be regarded as a
+perfect being, but as a monster of nonsense, injustice, malice, and
+atrocity. Far from forming a perfect God, the theologians have made the
+most imperfect of beings. According to theological ideas, God resembles
+a tyrant who, having deprived the majority of his slaves of their
+eyesight, would confine them in a cell where, in order to amuse himself
+he could observe incognito their conduct through a trap-door, in order
+to have occasion to cruelly punish all those who in walking should hurt
+each other; but who would reward splendidly the small number of those to
+whom the sight was spared, for having the skill to avoid an encounter
+with their comrades. Such are the ideas which the dogma of gratuitous
+predestination gives of Divinity!
+
+Although men repeat to us that their God is infinitely good, it is
+evident that in the bottom of their hearts they can believe nothing of
+it. How can we love anything we do not know? How can we love a being,
+the idea of whom is but liable to keep us in anxiety and trouble? How
+can we love a being of whom all that is told conspires to render him
+supremely hateful?
+
+
+
+
+LXIII.--ALL RELIGION INSPIRES BUT A COWARDLY AND INORDINATE FEAR OF THE
+DIVINITY.
+
+Many people make a subtle distinction between true religion and
+superstition; they tell us that the latter is but a cowardly and
+inordinate fear of Divinity, that the truly religious man has confidence
+in his God, and loves Him sincerely; while the superstitious man sees in
+Him but an enemy, has no confidence in Him, and represents Him as a
+suspicious and cruel tyrant, avaricious of His benefactions and prodigal
+of His chastisements. But does not all religion in reality give us these
+same ideas of God? While we are told that God is infinitely good, is it
+not constantly repeated to us that He is very easily offended, that He
+bestows His favors but upon a few, that He chastises with fury those to
+whom He has not been pleased to grant them?
+
+
+
+
+LXIV.--THERE IS IN REALITY NO DIFFERENCE BETWEEN RELIGION AND THE MOST
+SOMBRE AND SERVILE SUPERSTITION.
+
+If we take our ideas of God from the nature of the things where we find
+a mixture of good and evil, this God, according to the good and evil
+which we experience, does naturally appear to us capricious, inconstant,
+sometimes good, sometimes wicked, and in this way, instead of exciting
+our love, He must produce suspicion, fear, and uncertainty in our
+hearts. There is no real difference between natural religion and the
+most sombre and servile superstition. If the Theist sees God but on the
+beautiful side, the superstitious man looks upon Him from the most
+hideous side. The folly of the one is gay of the other is lugubrious;
+but both are equally delirious.
+
+
+
+
+LXV.--ACCORDING TO THE IDEAS WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES OF DIVINITY, TO LOVE
+GOD IS IMPOSSIBLE.
+
+If I take my ideas of God from theology, God shows Himself to me in such
+a light as to repel love. The devotees who tell us that they love their
+God sincerely, are either liars or fools who see their God but in
+profile; it is impossible to love a being, the thought of whom tends to
+excite terror, and whose judgments make us tremble. How can we face
+without fear, a God whom we suppose sufficiently barbarous to wish to
+damn us forever? Let them not speak to us of a filial or respectful fear
+mingled with love, which men should have for their God. A son can not
+love his father when he knows he is cruel enough to inflict exquisite
+torments upon him; in short, to punish him for the least faults. No man
+upon earth can have the least spark of love for a God who holds in
+reserve eternal, hard, and violent chastisements for ninety-nine
+hundredths of His children.
+
+
+
+
+LXVI.--BY THE INVENTION OF THE DOGMA OF THE ETERNAL TORMENTS OF HELL,
+THEOLOGIANS HAVE MADE OF THEIR GOD A DETESTABLE BEING, MORE WICKED THAN
+THE MOST WICKED OF MEN, A PERVERSE AND CRUEL TYRANT WITHOUT AIM.
+
+The inventors of the dogma of eternal torments in hell, have made of the
+God whom they call so good, the most detestable of beings. Cruelty in
+man is the last term of corruption. There is no sensitive soul but is
+moved and revolts at the recital alone of the torments which the
+greatest criminal endures; but cruelty merits the greater indignation
+when we consider it gratuitous or without motive. The most sanguinary
+tyrants, Caligula, Nero, Domitian, had at least some motive in
+tormenting their victims and insulting their sufferings; these motives
+were, either their own safety, the fury of revenge, the design to
+frighten by terrible examples, or perhaps the vanity to make parade of
+their power, and the desire to satisfy a barbarous curiosity. Can a God
+have any of these motives? In tormenting the victims of His wrath, He
+would punish beings who could not really endanger His immovable power,
+nor trouble His felicity, which nothing can change. On the other hand,
+the sufferings of the other life would be useless to the living, who can
+not witness them; these torments would be useless to the damned, because
+in hell is no more conversion, and the hour of mercy is passed; from
+which it follows, that God, in the exercise of His eternal vengeance,
+would have no other aim than to amuse Himself and insult the weakness of
+His creatures. I appeal to the whole human race! Is there in nature a
+man so cruel as to wish in cold blood to torment, I do not say his
+fellow-beings, but any sentient being whatever, without fee, without
+profit, without curiosity, without having anything to fear? Conclude,
+then, O theologians! that according to your own principles, your God is
+infinitely more wicked than the most wicked of men. You will tell me,
+perhaps, that infinite offenses deserve infinite chastisements, and I
+will tell you that we can not offend a God whose happiness is infinite.
+I will tell you further, that offenses of finite beings can not be
+infinite; that a God who does not want to be offended, can not consent
+to make His creatures' offenses last for eternity; I will tell you that
+a God infinitely good, can not be infinitely cruel, nor grant His
+creatures infinite existence solely for the pleasure of tormenting them
+forever.
+
+It could have been but the most cruel barbarity, the most notorious
+imposition, but the blindest ambition which could have created the dogma
+of eternal damnation. If there exists a God who could be offended or
+blasphemed, there would not be upon earth any greater blasphemers than
+those who dare to say that this God is perverse enough to take pleasure
+in dooming His feeble creatures to useless torments for all eternity.
+
+
+
+
+LXVII.--THEOLOGY IS BUT A SERIES OF PALPABLE CONTRADICTIONS.
+
+To pretend that God can be offended with the actions of men, is to
+annihilate all the ideas that are given to us of this being. To say that
+man can disturb the order of the universe, that he can grasp the
+lightning from God's hand, that he can upset His projects, is to claim
+that man is stronger than his God, that he is the arbiter of His will,
+that it depends on him to change His goodness into cruelty. Theology
+does nothing but destroy with one hand that which it builds with the
+other. If all religion is founded upon a God who becomes angry, and who
+is appeased, all religion is founded upon a palpable contradiction.
+
+All religions agree in exalting the wisdom and the infinite power of the
+Divinity; but as soon as they expose His conduct, we discover but
+imprudence, want of foresight, weakness, and folly. God, it is said,
+created the world for Himself; and so far He has not succeeded in making
+Himself properly respected! God has created men in order to have in His
+dominion subjects who would render Him homage; and we continually see
+men revolt against Him!
+
+
+
+
+LXVIII.--THE PRETENDED WORKS OF GOD DO NOT PROVE AT ALL WHAT WE CALL
+DIVINE PERFECTION.
+
+We are continually told of the Divine perfections; and as soon as we ask
+the proofs of them, we are shown the works in which we are assured that
+these perfections are written in ineffaceable characters. All these
+works, however, are imperfect and perishable; man, who is regarded as
+the masterpiece, as the most marvelous work of Divinity, is full of
+imperfections which render him disagreeable in the eyes of the Almighty
+workman who has formed him; this surprising work becomes often so
+revolting and so odious to its Author, that He feels Himself compelled
+to cast him into the fire. But if the choicest work of Divinity is
+imperfect, by what are we to judge of the Divine perfections? Can a work
+with which the author himself is so little satisfied, cause us to admire
+his skill? Physical man is subject to a thousand infirmities, to
+countless evils, to death; the moral man is full of defects; and yet
+they exhaust themselves by telling us that he is the most beautiful work
+of the most perfect of beings.
+
+
+
+
+LXIX.--THE PERFECTION OF GOD DOES NOT SHOW TO ANY MORE ADVANTAGE IN THE
+PRETENDED CREATION OF ANGELS AND PURE SPIRITS.
+
+It appears that God, in creating more perfect beings than men, did not
+succeed any better, or give stronger proofs of His perfection. Do we not
+see in many religions that angels and pure spirits revolted against
+their Master, and even attempted to expel Him from His throne? God
+intended the happiness of angels and of men, and He has never succeeded
+in rendering happy either angels or men; pride, malice, sins, the
+imperfections of His creatures, have always been opposed to the wishes
+of the perfect Creator.
+
+
+
+
+LXX.--THEOLOGY PREACHES THE OMNIPOTENCE OF ITS GOD, AND CONTINUALLY SHOWS
+HIM IMPOTENT.
+
+All religion is visibly founded upon the principle that "God proposes
+and man disposes." All the theologies of the world show us an unequal
+combat between Divinity on the one side, and His creatures on the other.
+God never relies on His honor; in spite of His almighty power, He could
+not succeed in making the works of His hands as He would like them to
+be. To complete the absurdity, there is a religion which pretends that
+God Himself died to redeem the human race; and, in spite of His death,
+men are not in the least as this God would desire them to be!
+
+
+
+
+LXXI.--ACCORDING TO ALL THE RELIGIOUS SYSTEMS OF THE EARTH, GOD WOULD BE
+THE MOST CAPRICIOUS AND THE MOST INSENSATE OF BEINGS.
+
+Nothing could be more extravagant than the role which in every country
+theology makes Divinity play. If the thing was real, we would be obliged
+to see in it the most capricious and the most insane of beings; one
+would be obliged to believe that God made the world to be the theater of
+dishonoring wars with His creatures; that He created angels, men,
+demons, wicked spirits, but as adversaries, against whom He could
+exercise His power. He gives them liberty to offend Him, makes them
+wicked enough to upset His projects, obstinate enough to never give up:
+all for the pleasure of getting angry, and being appeased, of
+reconciling Himself, and of repairing the confusion they have made. Had
+Divinity formed at once His creatures such as they ought to be in order
+to please Him, what trouble He might have spared Himself! or, at least,
+how much embarrassment He might have saved to His theologians! According
+to all the religious systems of the earth, God seems to be occupied but
+in doing Himself injury; He does it as those charlatans do who wound
+themselves, in order to have occasion to show the public the value of
+their ointments. We do not see, however, that so far Divinity has been
+able to radically cure itself of the evil which is caused by men.
+
+
+
+
+LXXII.--IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT EVIL DOES NOT COME FROM GOD.
+
+God is the author of all; still we are assured that evil does not come
+from God. Whence, then, does it come? From men? But who has made men? It
+is God: then that evil comes from God. If He had not made men as they
+are, moral evil or sin would not exist in the world. We must blame God,
+then, that man is so perverse. If man has the power to do wrong or to
+offend God, we must conclude that God wishes to be offended; that God,
+who has created man, resolved that evil should be done by him: without
+this, man would be an effect contrary to the cause from which he derives
+his being.
+
+
+
+
+LXXIII.--THE FORESIGHT ATTRIBUTED TO GOD, WOULD GIVE TO GUILTY MEN WHOM
+HE PUNISHES, THE RIGHT TO COMPLAIN OF HIS CRUELTY.
+
+The faculty of foresight, or the ability to know in advance all which is
+to happen in the world, is attributed to God. But this foresight can
+scarcely belong to His glory, nor spare Him the reproaches which men
+could legitimately heap upon Him. If God had the foresight of the
+future, did He not foresee the fall of His creatures whom He had
+destined to happiness? If He resolved in His decrees to allow this fall,
+there is no doubt that He desired it to take place: otherwise it would
+not have happened. If the Divine foresight of the sin of His creatures
+had been necessary or forced, it might be supposed that God was
+compelled by His justice to punish the guilty; but God, enjoying the
+faculty of foresight and the power to predestinate everything, would it
+not depend upon Himself not to impose upon men these cruel laws? Or, at
+least, could He not have dispensed with creating beings whom He might be
+compelled to punish and to render unhappy by a subsequent decree? What
+does it matter whether God destined men to happiness or to misery by a
+previous decree, the effect of His foresight, or by a subsequent decree,
+the effect of His justice. Does the arrangement of these decrees change
+the fate of the miserable? Would they not have the right to complain of
+a God who, having the power of leaving them in oblivion, brought them
+forth, although He foresaw very well that His justice would force Him
+sooner or later to punish them?
+
+
+
+
+LXXIV.--ABSURDITY OF THE THEOLOGICAL FABLES UPON ORIGINAL SIN AND UPON
+SATAN.
+
+Man, say you, issuing from the hands of God, was pure, innocent, and
+good; but his nature became corrupted in consequence of sin. If man
+could sin, when just leaving the hands of God, his nature was then not
+perfect! Why did God permit him to sin, and his nature to become
+corrupt? Why did God allow him to be seduced, knowing well that he would
+be too weak to resist the tempter? Why did God create a Satan, a
+malicious spirit, a tempter? Why did not God, who was so desirous of
+doing good to mankind, why did He not annihilate, once for all, so many
+evil genii whose nature rendered them enemies of our happiness? Or
+rather, why did God create evil spirits, whose victories and terrible
+influences upon the human race He must have foreseen? Finally, by what
+fatality, in all the religions of the world, has the evil principle such
+a marked advantage over the good principle or over Divinity?
+
+
+
+
+LXXV.--THE DEVIL, LIKE RELIGION, WAS INVENTED TO ENRICH THE PRIESTS.
+
+We are told a story of the simple-heartedness of an Italian monk, which
+does him honor. This good man preaching one day felt obliged to announce
+to his auditory that, thanks to Heaven, he had at last discovered a sure
+means of rendering all men happy. "The devil," said he, "tempts men but
+to have them as comrades of his misery in hell. Let us address
+ourselves, then, to the Pope, who possesses the keys of paradise and of
+hell; let us ask him to beseech God, at the head of the whole Church, to
+reconcile Himself with the devil; to take him back into His favor; to
+re-establish him in His first rank. This can not fail to put an end to
+his sinister projects against mankind." The good monk did not see,
+perhaps, that the devil is at least fully as useful as God to the
+ministers of religion. These reap too many benefits from their
+differences to lend themselves willingly to a reconciliation between the
+two enemies ties, upon whose contests their existence and their revenues
+depend. If men would cease to be tempted and to sin, the ministry of
+priests would become useless to them. Manicheism is evidently the
+support of all religions; but unfortunately the devil, being invented to
+remove all suspicion of malice from Divinity, proves to us at every
+moment the powerlessness or the awkwardness of his celestial Adversary.
+
+
+
+
+LXXVI.--IF GOD COULD NOT RENDER HUMAN NATURE SINLESS, HE HAS NO RIGHT TO
+PUNISH MAN.
+
+Man's nature, it is said, must necessarily become corrupt. God could not
+endow him with sinlessness, which is an inalienable portion of Divine
+perfection. But if God could not render him sinless, why did He take the
+trouble of creating man, whose nature was to become corrupt, and which,
+consequently, had to offend God? On the other side, if God Himself was
+not able to render human nature sinless, what right had He to punish men
+for not being sinless? It is but by the right of might. But the right of
+the strongest is violence; and violence is not suited to the most Just
+of Beings. God would be supremely unjust if He punished men for not
+having a portion of the Divine perfections, or for not being able to be
+Gods like Himself.
+
+Could not God have at least endowed men with that sort of perfection of
+which their nature is susceptible? If some men are good or render
+themselves agreeable to their God, why did not this God bestow the same
+favor or give the same dispositions to all beings of our kind? Why does
+the number of wicked exceed so greatly the number of good people? Why,
+for every friend, does God find ten thousand enemies in a world which
+depended upon Him alone to people with honest men? If it is true that
+God intends to form in heaven a court of saints, of chosen ones, or of
+men who have lived in this world according to His views, would He not
+have had a court more numerous, more brilliant, and more honorable to
+Him, if it were composed of all the men to whom, in creating them, He
+could have granted the degree of goodness necessary to obtain eternal
+happiness? Finally, were it not easier not to take man from nothingness
+than to create him full of defects, rebellious to his Creator,
+perpetually exposed to lose himself by a fatal abuse of his liberty?
+Instead of creating men, a perfect God ought to have created only docile
+and submissive angels. The angels, it is said, are free; a few among
+them have sinned; but all of them have not sinned; all have not abused
+their liberty by revolting against their Master. Could not God have
+created only angels of the good kind? If God could create angels who
+have not sinned, could He not create men sinless, or those who would
+never abuse their liberty by doing evil. If the chosen ones are
+incapable of sinning in heaven, could not God have made sinless men upon
+the earth?
+
+
+
+
+LXXVII.--IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT GOD'S CONDUCT MUST BE A MYSTERY TO MAN,
+AND THAT HE HAS NO RIGHT TO EXAMINE AND JUDGE IT.
+
+We are told that the enormous distance which separates God from men,
+makes God's conduct necessarily a mystery for us, and that we have no
+right to interrogate our Master. Is this statement satisfactory? But
+according to you, when my eternal happiness is involved, have I not the
+right to examine God's own conduct? It is but with the hope of happiness
+that men submit to the empire of a God. A despot to whom men are
+subjected but through fear, a master whom they can not interrogate, a
+totally inaccessible sovereign, can not merit the homage of intelligent
+beings. If God's conduct is a mystery to me, it is not made for me. Man
+can not adore, admire, respect, or imitate a conduct of which everything
+is impossible to conceive, or of which he can not form any but revolting
+ideas; unless it is pretended that he should worship all the things of
+which he is forced to be ignorant, and then all that he does not
+understand becomes admirable.
+
+Priests! you teach us that the designs of God are impenetrable; that His
+ways are not our ways; that His thoughts are not our thoughts; that it
+is folly to complain of His administration, whose motives and secret
+ways are entirely unknown to us; that there is temerity in accusing Him
+of unjust judgments, because they are incomprehensible to us. But do you
+not see that by speaking in this manner, you destroy with your own hands
+all your profound systems which have no design but to explain the ways
+of Divinity that you call impenetrable? These judgments, these ways, and
+these designs, have you penetrated them? You dare not say so; and,
+although you season incessantly, you do not understand them more than we
+do. If by chance you know the plan of God, which you tell us to admire,
+while there are many people who find it so little worthy of a just,
+good, intelligent, and rational being; do not say that this plan is
+impenetrable. If you are as ignorant as we, have some indulgence for
+those who ingenuously confess that they comprehend nothing of it, or
+that they see nothing in it Divine. Cease to persecute for opinions
+which you do not understand yourselves; cease to slander each other for
+dreams and conjectures which are altogether contradictory; speak to us
+of intelligible and truly useful things; and no longer tell us of the
+impenetrable ways of a God, about which you do nothing but stammer and
+contradict yourselves.
+
+In speaking to us incessantly of the immense depths of Divine wisdom, in
+forbidding us to fathom these depths by telling us that it is insolence
+to call God to the tribunal of our humble reason, in making it a crime
+to judge our Master, the theologians only confess the embarrassment in
+which they find themselves as soon as they have to render account of the
+conduct of a God, which they tell us is marvelous, only because it is
+totally impossible for them to understand it themselves.
+
+
+
+
+LXXVIII.--IT IS ABSURD TO CALL HIM A GOD OF JUSTICE AND GOODNESS, WHO
+INFLICTS EVIL INDISCRIMINATELY ON THE GOOD AND THE WICKED, UPON THE
+INNOCENT AND THE GUILTY; IT IS IDLE TO DEMAND THAT THE UNFORTUNATE
+SHOULD CONSOLE THEMSELVES FOR THEIR MISFORTUNES, IN THE VERY ARMS OF THE
+ONE WHO ALONE IS THE AUTHOR OF THEM.
+
+Physical evil commonly passes as the punishment of sin. Calamities,
+diseases, famines, wars, earthquakes, are the means which God employs to
+chastise perverse men. Therefore, they have no difficulty in attributing
+these evils to the severity of a just and good God. However, do we not
+see these plagues fall indiscriminately upon the good and the wicked,
+upon the impious and the pious, upon the innocent and the guilty? How
+can we be made to admire, in this proceeding, the justice and the
+goodness of a being, the idea of whom appears so consoling to the
+unfortunate? Doubtless the brain of these unfortunate ones has been
+disturbed by their misfortunes, since they forget that God is the
+arbiter of things, the sole dispenser of the events of this world. In
+this case ought they not to blame Him for the evils for which they would
+find consolation in His arms? Unfortunate father! you console yourself
+in the bosom of Providence for the loss of a cherished child or of a
+wife, who made your happiness! Alas! do you not see that your God has
+killed them? Your God has rendered you miserable; and you want Him to
+console you for the fearful blows He has inflicted upon you.
+
+The fantastic and supernatural notions of theology have succeeded so
+thoroughly in overcoming the simplest, the clearest, the most natural
+ideas of the human spirit, that the pious, incapable of accusing God of
+malice, accustom themselves to look upon these sad afflictions as
+indubitable proofs of celestial goodness. Are they in affliction, they
+are told to believe that God loves them, that God visits them, that God
+wishes to try them. Thus it is that religion changes evil into good!
+Some one has said profanely, but with reason: "If the good God treats
+thus those whom He loves, I beseech Him very earnestly not to think of
+me." Men must have formed very sinister and very cruel ideas of their
+God whom they call so good, in order to persuade themselves that the
+most frightful calamities and the most painful afflictions are signs of
+His favor! Would a wicked Genii or a Devil be more ingenious in
+tormenting his enemies, than sometimes is this God of goodness, who is
+so often occupied with inflicting His chastisements upon His dearest
+friends?
+
+
+
+
+LXXIX.--A GOD WHO PUNISHES THE FAULTS WHICH HE COULD HAVE PREVENTED, IS A
+FOOL, WHO ADDS INJUSTICE TO FOOLISHNESS.
+
+What would we say or a father who, we are assured, watches without
+relaxation over the welfare of his feeble and unforeseeing children, and
+who, however, would leave them at liberty to go astray in the midst of
+rocks, precipices, and waters; who would prevent them but rarely from
+following their disordered appetites; who would permit them to handle,
+without precaution, deadly arms, at the risk of wounding themselves
+severely? What would we think of this same father, if, instead of
+blaming himself for the harm which would have happened to his poor
+children, he should punish them for their faults in the most cruel way?
+We would say, with reason, that this father is a fool, who joins
+injustice to foolishness. A God who punishes the faults which He could
+have prevented, is a being who lacks wisdom, goodness, and equity. A God
+of foresight would prevent evil, and in this way would be saved the
+trouble of punishing it. A good God would not punish weaknesses which He
+knows to be inherent in human nature. A just God, if He has made man,
+would not punish him for not being strong enough to resist his desires.
+To punish weakness, is the most unjust tyranny. Is it not calumniating a
+just God, to say that He punishes men for their faults, even in the
+present life? How would He punish beings whom He alone could correct,
+and who, as long as they had not received grace, can not act otherwise
+than they do?
+
+According to the principles of theologians themselves, man, in his
+actual state of corruption, can do nothing but evil, for without Divine
+grace he has not the strength to do good. Moreover, if man's nature,
+abandoned to itself, of destitute of Divine help, inclines him
+necessarily to evil, or renders him incapable of doing good, what
+becomes of his free will? According to such principles, man can merit
+neither reward nor punishment; in rewarding man for the good he does,
+God would but recompense Himself; in punishing man for the evil he does,
+God punishes him for not having been given the grace, without which it
+was impossible for him to do better.
+
+
+
+
+LXXX.--FREE WILL IS AN IDLE FANCY.
+
+Theologians tell and repeat to us that man is free, while all their
+teachings conspire to destroy his liberty. Trying to justify Divinity,
+they accuse him really of the blackest injustice. They suppose that,
+without grace, man is compelled to do evil: and they maintain that God
+will punish him for not having been given the grace to do good! With a
+little reflection, we will be obliged to see that man in all things acts
+by compulsion, and that his free will is a chimera, even according to
+the theological system. Does it depend upon man whether or not he shall
+be born of such or such parents? Does it depend upon man to accept or
+not to accept the opinions of his parents and of his teachers? If I were
+born of idolatrous or Mohammedan parents, would it have depended upon me
+to become a Christian? However, grave Doctors of Divinity assure us that
+a just God will damn without mercy all those to whom He has not given
+the grace to know the religion of the Christians.
+
+Man's birth does not depend upon his choice; he was not asked if he
+would or would not come into the world; nature did not consult him upon
+the country and the parents that she gave him; the ideas he acquired,
+his opinions, his true or false notions are the necessary fruits of the
+education which he has received, and of which he has not been the
+master; his passions and his desires are the necessary results of the
+temperament which nature has given him, and of the ideas with which he
+has been inspired; during the whole course of his life, his wishes and
+his actions are determined by his surroundings, his habits, his
+occupations, his pleasures, his conversations, and by the thoughts which
+present themselves involuntarily to him; in short, by a multitude of
+events and accidents which are beyond his control. Incapable of
+foreseeing the future, he knows neither what he will wish, nor what he
+will do in the time which must immediately follow the present. Man
+passes his life, from the moment of his birth to that of his death,
+without having been free one instant. Man, you say, wishes, deliberates,
+chooses, determines; hence you conclude that his actions are free. It is
+true that man intends, but he is not master of his will or of his
+desires. He can desire and wish only what he judges advantageous for
+himself; he can not love pain nor detest pleasure. Man, it will be said,
+sometimes prefers pain to pleasure; but then, he prefers a passing pain
+in the hope of procuring a greater and more durable pleasure. In this
+case, the idea of a greater good determines him to deprive himself of
+one less desirable.
+
+It is not the lover who gives to his mistress the features by which he
+is enchanted; he is not then the master to love or not to love the
+object of his tenderness; he is not the master of the imagination or the
+temperament which dominates him; from which it follows, evidently, that
+man is not the master of the wishes and desires which rise in his soul,
+independently of him. But man, say you, can resist his desires; then he
+is free. Man resists his desires when the motives which turn him from an
+object are stronger than those which draw him toward it; but then, his
+resistance is necessary. A man who fears dishonor and punishment more
+than he loves money, resists necessarily the desire to take possession
+of another's money. Are we not free when we deliberate?--but has one the
+power to know or not to know, to be uncertain or to be assured?
+Deliberation is the necessary effect of the uncertainty in which we find
+ourselves with reference to the results of our actions. As soon as we
+believe ourselves certain of these results, we necessarily decide; and
+then we act necessarily according as we shall have judged right or
+wrong. Our judgments, true or false, are not free; they are necessarily
+determined by ideas which we have received, or which our mind has
+formed. Man is not free in his choice; he is evidently compelled to
+choose what he judges the most useful or the most agreeable for himself.
+When he suspends his choice, he is not more free; he is forced to
+suspend it till he knows or believes he knows the qualities of the
+objects presented to him, or until he has weighed the consequence of his
+actions. Man, you will say, decides every moment on actions which he
+knows will endanger him; man kills himself sometimes, then he is free. I
+deny it! Has man the ability to reason correctly or incorrectly? Do not
+his reason and his wisdom depend either upon opinions that he has
+formed, or upon his mental constitution? As neither the one nor the
+other depends upon his will, they can not in any wise prove his liberty.
+
+If I make the wager to do or not to do a thing, am I not free? Does it
+not depend upon me to do or not to do it? No; I will answer you, the
+desire to win the wager will necessarily determine you to do or not to
+do the thing in question. "But if I consent to lose the wager?" Then the
+desire to prove to me that you are free will have become to you a
+stronger motive than the desire to win the wager; and this motive will
+necessarily have determined you to do or not to do what was understood
+between us. But you will say, "I feel myself free." It is an illusion
+which may be compared to that of the fly in the fable, which, lighting
+on the shaft of a heavy wagon, applauded itself as driver of the vehicle
+which carried it. Man who believes himself free, is a fly who believes
+himself the master-motor in the machine of the universe, while he
+himself, without his own volition, is carried on by it. The feeling
+which makes us believe that we are free to do or not to do a thing, is
+but a pure illusion. When we come to the veritable principle of our
+actions, we will find that they are nothing but the necessary results of
+our wills and of our desires, which are never within our power. You
+believe yourselves free because you do as you choose; but are you really
+free to will or not to will, to desire or not to desire? Your wills and
+your desires, are they not necessarily excited by objects or by
+qualities which do not depend upon you at all?
+
+
+
+
+LXXXI.--WE SHOULD NOT CONCLUDE FROM THIS THAT SOCIETY HAS NOT THE RIGHT
+TO CHASTISE THE WICKED.
+
+If the actions of men are necessary, if men are not free, what right has
+society to punish the wicked who infest it? Is it not very unjust to
+chastise beings who could not act otherwise than they did? If the wicked
+act from the impulse of their corrupt nature, society in punishing them
+acts necessarily on its side from the desire to preserve itself. Certain
+objects produce in us the feeling of pain; therefore our nature compels
+us to hate them, and incites us to remove them. A tiger pressed by
+hunger, attacks the man whom he wishes to devour; but the man is not the
+master of his fear of the tiger, and seeks necessarily the means of
+exterminating it.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXII.--REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENTS IN FAVOR OF FREE WILL.
+
+If everything is necessary, if errors, opinions, and ideas of men are
+fated, how or why can we pretend to reform them? The errors of men are
+the necessary results of their ignorance; their ignorance, their
+obstinacy, their credulity, are the necessary results of their
+inexperience, of their indifference, of their lack of reflection; the
+same as congestion of the brain or lethargy are the natural effects of
+some diseases. Truth, experience, reflection, reason, are the proper
+remedies to cure ignorance, fanaticism, and follies; the same as
+bleeding is good to soothe congestion of the brain. But you will say,
+why does not truth produce this effect upon many of the sick heads?
+There are some diseases which resist all remedies; it is impossible to
+cure obstinate patients who refuse to take the remedies which are given
+them; the interest of some men and the folly of others naturally oppose
+them to the admission of truth. A cause produces its effect only when it
+is not interrupted in its action by other causes which are stronger, or
+which weaken the action of the first cause or render it useless. It is
+entirely impossible to have the best arguments accepted by men who are
+strongly interested in error; who are prejudiced in its favor; who
+refuse to reflect; but it must necessarily be that truth undeceives the
+honest souls who seek it in good faith. Truth is a cause; it produces
+necessarily its effect when its impulse is not interrupted by causes
+which suspend its effects.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+To take away from man his free will, is, we are told, to make of him a
+pure machine, an automaton without liberty; there would exist in him
+neither merit nor virtue What is merit in man?
+
+It is a certain manner of acting which renders him estimable in the eyes
+of his fellow beings. What is virtue? It is the disposition that causes
+us to do good to others. What can there be contemptible in automatic
+machines capable of producing such desirable effects? Marcus Aurelius
+was a very useful spring to the vast machine of the Roman Empire. By
+what right will a machine despise another machine, whose springs would
+facilitate its own play? Good people are springs which assist society in
+its tendency to happiness; wicked men are badly-formed springs, which
+disturb the order, the progress, and harmony of society. If for its own
+interests society loves and rewards the good, she hates, despises, and
+removes the wicked, as useless or dangerous motors.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXIV.--GOD HIMSELF, IF THERE WAS A GOD, WOULD NOT BE FREE; HENCE THE
+USELESSNESS OF ALL RELIGION.
+
+The world is a necessary agent; all the beings which compose it are
+united to each other, and can not do otherwise than they do, so long as
+they are moved by the same causes and possessed of the same qualities.
+If they lose these qualities, they will act necessarily in a different
+way. God Himself (admitting His existence a moment) can not be regarded
+as a free agent; if there existed a God, His manner of acting would
+necessarily be determined by the qualities inherent in His nature;
+nothing would be able to alter or to oppose His wishes. This considered,
+neither our actions nor our prayers nor our sacrifices could suspend or
+change His invariable progress and His immutable designs, from which we
+are compelled to conclude that all religion would be entirely useless.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXV.--EVEN ACCORDING TO THEOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES, MAN IS NOT FREE ONE
+INSTANT.
+
+If theologians were not constantly contradicting each other, they would
+know, from their own hypotheses, that man can not be called free for an
+instant. Is not man supposed to be in a continual dependence upon God?
+Is one free, when one could not have existed or can not live without
+God, and when one ceases to exist at the pleasure of His supreme will?
+If God created man of nothing, if the preservation of man is a continual
+creation, if God can not lose sight of His creature for an instant, if
+all that happens to him is a result of the Divine will, if man is
+nothing of himself, if all the events which he experiences are the
+effects of Divine decrees, if he can not do any good without assistance
+from above, how can it be pretended that man enjoys liberty during one
+moment of his life? If God did not save him in the moment when he sins,
+how could man sin? If God preserves him, God, therefore, forces him to
+live in order to sin.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXVI.--ALL EVIL, ALL DISORDER, ALL SIN, CAN BE ATTRIBUTED BUT TO GOD;
+AND CONSEQUENTLY, HE HAS NO RIGHT TO PUNISH OR REWARD.
+
+Divinity is continually compared to a king, the majority of whose
+subjects revolt against Him and it is pretended that He has the right to
+reward His faithful subjects, and to punish those who revolt against
+Him. This comparison is not just in any of its parts. God presides over
+a machine, of which He has made all the springs; these springs act
+according to the way in which God has formed them; it is the fault of
+His inaptitude if these springs do not contribute to the harmony of the
+machine in which the workman desired to place them. God is a creating
+King, who created all kinds of subjects for Himself; who formed them
+according to His pleasure, and whose wishes can never find any
+resistance. If God in His empire has rebellious subjects, it is God who
+resolved to have rebellious subjects. If the sins of men disturb the
+order of the world, it is God who desired this order to be disturbed.
+Nobody dares to doubt Divine justice; however, under the empire of a
+just God, we find nothing but injustice and violence. Power decides the
+fate of nations. Equity seems to be banished from the earth; a small
+number of men enjoy with impunity the repose, the fortunes, the liberty,
+and the life of all the others. Everything is in disorder in a world
+governed by a God of whom it is said that disorder displeases Him
+exceedingly.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXVII.--MEN'S PRAYERS TO GOD PROVE SUFFICIENTLY THAT THEY ARE NOT
+SATISFIED WITH THE DIVINE ECONOMY.
+
+Although men incessantly admire the wisdom the goodness, the justice,
+the beautiful order of Providence, they are, in fact, never contented
+with it. The prayers which they continually offer to Heaven, prove to us
+that they are not at all satisfied with God's administration. Praying to
+God, asking a favor of Him, is to mistrust His vigilant care; to pray
+God to avert or to suppress an evil, is to endeavor to put obstacles in
+the way of His justice; to implore the assistance of God in our
+calamities, means to appeal to the very author of these calamities in
+order to represent to Him our welfare; that He ought to rectify in our
+favor His plan, which is not beneficial to our interests. The optimist,
+or the one who thinks that everything is good in the world, and who
+repeats to us incessantly that we live in the best world possible, if he
+were consistent, ought never to pray; still less should he expect
+another world where men will be happier. Can there be a better world
+than the best possible of all worlds? Some of the theologians have
+treated the optimists as impious for having claimed that God could not
+have made a better world than the one in which we live; according to
+these doctors it is limiting the Divine power and insulting it. But do
+not theologians see that it is less offensive for God, to pretend that
+He did His best in creating the world, than to say that He, having the
+power to produce a better one, had the malice to make a very bad one? If
+the optimist, by his system, does wrong to the Divine power, the
+theologian, who treats him as impious, is himself a reprobate, who
+wounds the Divine goodness under pretext of taking interest in God.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXVIII.--THE REPARATION OF THE INIQUITIES AND THE MISERIES OF THIS
+WORLD IN ANOTHER WORLD, IS AN IDLE CONJECTURE AND AN ABSURD SUPPOSITION.
+
+When we complain of the evils of which this world is the theater, we are
+referred to another world; we are told that there God will repair all
+the iniquities and the miseries which He permits for a time here below.
+However, if leaving His eternal justice to sleep for a time, God could
+consent to evil during the period of the existence of our globe, what
+assurance have we that during the existence of another globe, Divine
+justice will not likewise sleep during the misfortunes of its
+inhabitants? They console us in our troubles by saying, that God is
+patient, and that His justice, although often very slow, is not the less
+certain. But do you not see, that patience can not be suited to a being
+just, immutable, and omnipotent? Can God tolerate injustice for an
+instant? To temporize with an evil that one knows of, evinces either
+uncertainty, weakness, or collusion; to tolerate evil which one has the
+power to prevent, is to consent that evil should be committed.
+
+
+
+
+LXXXIX.--THEOLOGY JUSTIFIES THE EVIL AND INJUSTICE PERMITTED BY ITS GOD,
+ONLY BY CONCEDING TO THIS GOD THE RIGHT OF THE STRONGEST, THAT IS TO
+SAY, THE VIOLATION OF ALL RIGHTS, OR IN COMMANDING FROM MEN A STUPID
+DEVOTION.
+
+I hear a multitude of theologians tell me on all sides, that God is
+infinitely just, but that His justice is not that of men! Of what kind,
+or of what nature is this Divine justice then? What idea can I form of a
+justice which so often resembles human injustice? Is it not confounding
+all our ideas of justice and of injustice, to tell us that what is
+equitable in God is iniquitous in His creatures? How can we take as a
+model a being whose Divine perfections are precisely contrary to human
+perfections? God, you say, is the sovereign arbiter of our destinies;
+His supreme power, that nothing can limit, authorizes Him to do as He
+pleases with His works; a worm, such as man, has not the right to murmur
+against Him. This arrogant tone is literally borrowed from the language
+which the ministers of tyrants hold, when they silence those who suffer
+by their violences; it can not, then, be the language of the ministers
+of a God of whose equity they boast. It can not impose upon a being who
+reasons. Ministers of a just God! I tell you then, that the greatest
+power is not able to confer even upon your God Himself the right to be
+unjust to the vilest of His creatures. A despot is not a God. A God who
+arrogates to Himself the right to do evil, is a tyrant; a tyrant is not
+a model for men. He ought to be an execrable object in their eyes. Is it
+not strange that, in order to justify Divinity, they made of Him the
+most unjust of beings? As soon as we complain of His conduct, they think
+to silence us by claiming that God is the Master; which signifies that
+God, being the strongest, He is not subjected to ordinary rules. But the
+right of the strongest is the violation of all rights; it can pass as a
+right but in the eyes of a savage conqueror, who, in the intoxication of
+his fury, imagines he has the right to do as he pleases with the
+unfortunate ones whom he has conquered; this barbarous right can appear
+legitimate only to slaves, who are blind enough to think that everything
+is allowed to tyrants, who are too strong for them to resist.
+
+By a foolish simplicity, or rather by a plain contradiction of terms, do
+we not see devotees exclaim, amidst the greatest calamities, that the
+good Lord is the Master? Well, illogical reasoners, you believe in good
+faith that the good Lord sends you the pestilence; that your good Lord
+gives war; that the good Lord is the cause of famine; in a word, that
+the good Lord, without ceasing to be good, has the will and the right to
+do you the greatest evils you can endure! Cease to call your Lord good
+when He does you harm; do not say that He is just; say that He is the
+strongest, and that it is impossible for you to avert the blows which
+His caprice inflicts upon you. God, you say, punishes us for our highest
+good; but what real benefit can result to a nation in being exterminated
+by contagion, murdered by wars, corrupted by the examples of perverse
+masters, continually pressed by the iron scepter of merciless tyrants,
+subjected to the scourge of a bad government, which often for centuries
+causes nations to suffer its destructive effects? The eyes of faith must
+be strange eyes, if we see by their means any advantage in the most
+dreadful miseries and in the most durable evils, in the vices and
+follies by which our kind is so cruelly afflicted!
+
+
+
+
+XC.--REDEMPTION, AND THE CONTINUAL EXTERMINATIONS ATTRIBUTED TO JEHOVAH
+IN THE BIBLE, ARE SO MANY ABSURD AND RIDICULOUS INVENTIONS WHICH
+PRESUPPOSE AN UNJUST AND BARBAROUS GOD.
+
+What strange ideas of the Divine justice must the Christians have who
+believe that their God, with the view of reconciling Himself with
+mankind, guilty without knowledge of the fault of their parents,
+sacrificed His own innocent and sinless Son! What would we say of a
+king, whose subjects having revolted against him, in order to appease
+himself could find no other expedient than to put to death the heir to
+his crown, who had taken no part in the general rebellion? It is, the
+Christian will say, through kindness for His subjects, incapable of
+satisfying themselves of His Divine justice, that God consented to the
+cruel death of His Son. But the kindness of a father to strangers does
+not give him the right to be unjust and cruel to his son. All the
+qualities that theology gives to its God annul each other. The exercise
+of one of His perfections is always at the expense of another.
+
+Has the Jew any more rational ideas than the Christian of Divine
+justice? A king, by his pride, kindles the wrath of Heaven. Jehovah
+sends pestilence upon His innocent people; seventy thousand subjects are
+exterminated to expiate the fault of a monarch that the kindness of God
+resolved to spare.
+
+
+
+
+XCI.--HOW CAN WE DISCOVER A TENDER, GENEROUS, AND EQUITABLE FATHER IN A
+BEING WHO HAS CREATED HIS CHILDREN BUT TO MAKE THEM UNHAPPY?
+
+In spite of the injustice with which all religions are pleased to
+blacken the Divinity, men can not consent to accuse Him of iniquity;
+they fear that He, like the tyrants of this world, will be offended by
+the truth, and redouble the weight of His malice and tyranny upon them.
+They listen, then, to their priests, who tell them that their God is a
+tender Father; that this God is an equitable Monarch, whose object in
+this world is to assure Himself of the love, obedience, and respect of
+His subjects; who gives them the liberty to act, in order to give them
+occasion to deserve His favors and to acquire eternal happiness, which
+He does not owe them in any way. In what way can we recognize the
+tenderness of a Father who created the majority of His children but for
+the purpose of dragging out a life of pain, anxiety, and bitterness upon
+this earth? Is there any more fatal boon than this pretended liberty
+which, it is said, men can abuse, and thereby expose themselves to the
+risk of eternal misery?
+
+
+
+
+XCII.--THE LIFE OF MORTALS, ALL WHICH TAKES PLACE HERE BELOW, TESTIFIES
+AGAINST MAN'S LIBERTY AND AGAINST THE JUSTICE AND GOODNESS OF A
+PRETENDED GOD.
+
+In calling mortals into life, what a cruel and dangerous game does the
+Divinity force them to play! Thrust into the world without their wish,
+provided with a temperament of which they are not the masters, animated
+by passions and desires inherent in their nature, exposed to snares
+which they have not the skill to avoid, led away by events which they
+could neither foresee nor prevent, the unfortunate beings are obliged to
+follow a career which conducts them to horrible tortures.
+
+Travelers assert that in some part of Asia reigns a sultan full of
+phantasies, and very absolute in his will. By a strange mania this
+prince spends his time sitting before a table, on which are placed six
+dice and a dice-box. One end of the table is covered with a pile of
+gold, for the purpose of exciting the cupidity of the courtiers and of
+the people by whom the sultan is surrounded. He, knowing the weak point
+of his subjects, speaks to them in this way: "Slaves! I wish you well;
+my aim is to enrich you and render you all happy. Do you see these
+treasures? Well, they are for you! try to win them; let each one in turn
+take this box and these dice; whoever shall have the good luck to raffle
+six, will be master of this treasure; but I warn you that he who has not
+the luck to throw the required number, will be precipitated forever into
+an obscure cell, where my justice exacts that he shall be burned by a
+slow fire." Upon this threat of the monarch, they regarded each other in
+consternation; no one willing to take a risk so dangerous. "What!" said
+the angry sultan, "no one wants to play? Oh, this does not suit me! My
+glory demands that you play. You will raffle then; I wish it; obey
+without replying!" It is well to observe that the despot's dice are
+prepared in such a way, that upon a hundred thousand throws there is but
+one that wins; thus the generous monarch has the pleasure to see his
+prison well filled, and his treasures seldom carried away. Mortals! this
+Sultan is your God; His treasures are heaven; His cell is hell; and you
+hold the dice!
+
+
+
+
+XCIII.--IT IS NOT TRUE THAT WE OWE ANY GRATITUDE TO WHAT WE CALL
+PROVIDENCE.
+
+We are constantly told that we owe an infinite gratitude to Providence
+for the countless blessings It is pleased to lavish upon us. They boast
+above all that our existence is a blessing. But, alas! how many mortals
+are really satisfied with their mode of existence? If life has its
+sweets, how much of bitterness is mingled with it? Is not one bitter
+trouble sufficient to blight all of a sudden the most peaceful and happy
+life? Is there a great number of men who, if it depended upon them,
+would wish to begin, at the same sacrifice, the painful career into
+which, without their consent, destiny has thrown them? You say that
+existence itself is a great blessing. But is not this existence
+continually troubled by griefs, fears, and often cruel and undeserved
+maladies. This existence, menaced on so many sides, can we not be
+deprived of it at any moment? Who is there, after having lived for some
+time, who has not been deprived of a beloved wife, a beloved child, a
+consoling friend, whose loss fills his mind constantly? There are very
+few mortals who have not been compelled to drink from the cup of
+bitterness; there are but few who have not often wished to die. Finally,
+it did not depend upon us to exist or not to exist. Would the bird be
+under such great obligations to the bird-catcher for having caught it in
+his net and for having put it into his cage, in order to eat it after
+being amused with it?
+
+
+
+
+XCIV.--TO PRETEND THAT MAN IS THE BELOVED CHILD OF PROVIDENCE, GOD'S
+FAVORITE, THE ONLY OBJECT OF HIS LABORS, THE KING OF NATURE, IS FOLLY.
+
+In spite of the infirmities, the troubles, the miseries to which man is
+compelled to submit in this world; in spite of the danger which his
+alarmed imagination creates in regard to another, he is still foolish
+enough to believe himself to be God's favorite, the only aim of all His
+works. He imagines that the entire universe was made for him; he calls
+himself arrogantly the king of nature, and ranks himself far above other
+animals. Poor mortal! upon what can you establish your high pretensions?
+It is, you say, upon your soul, upon your reason, upon your sublime
+faculties, which place you in a condition to exercise an absolute
+authority over the beings which surround you. But weak sovereign of this
+world, art thou sure one instant of the duration of thy reign? The least
+atoms of matter which you despise, are they not sufficient to deprive
+you of your throne and life? Finally, does not the king of animals
+terminate always by becoming food for the worms?
+
+You speak of your soul. But do you know what your soul is? Do you not
+see that this soul is but the assemblage of your organs, from which life
+results? Would you refuse a soul to other animals who live, who think,
+who judge, who compare, who seek pleasure, and avoid pain even as you
+do, and who often possess organs which are better than your own? You
+boast of your intellectual faculties, but these faculties which render
+you so proud, do they make you any happier than other creatures? Do you
+often make use of this reason which you glory in, and which religion
+commands you not to listen to? Those animals which you disdain because
+they are weaker or less cunning than yourself, are they subject to
+troubles, to mental anxieties, to a thousand frivolous passions, to a
+thousand imaginary needs, of which your heart is continually the prey?
+Are they, like you, tormented by the past, alarmed for the future?
+
+Limited solely to the present, what you call their instinct, and what I
+call their intelligence, is it not sufficient to preserve and to defend
+them and to provide for their needs? This instinct, of which you speak
+with disdain, does it not often serve them much better than your
+wonderful faculties? Their peaceable ignorance, is it not more
+advantageous than these extravagant meditations and these futile
+investigations which render you miserable, and for which you are driven
+to murdering beings of your own noble kind? Finally, these animals, have
+they, like mortals, a troubled imagination which makes them fear not
+only death, but even eternal torments? Augustus, having heard that
+Herod, king of Judea, had murdered his sons, cried out: "It would be
+better to be Herod's pig than his son!" We can say as much of men; this
+beloved child of Providence runs much greater risks than all other
+animals. After having suffered a great deal in this world, do we not
+believe ourselves in danger of suffering for eternity in another?
+
+
+
+
+XCV.--COMPARISON BETWEEN MAN AND ANIMALS.
+
+What is the exact line of demarcation between man and the other animals
+which he calls brutes? In what way does he essentially differ from the
+beasts? It is, we are told, by his intelligence, by the faculties of his
+mind, by his reason, that man is superior to all the other animals,
+which in all they do, act but by physical impulsions, reason taking no
+part. But the beasts, having more limited needs than men, do very well
+without these intellectual faculties, which would be perfectly useless
+in their way of living. Their instinct is sufficient for them, while all
+the faculties of man are hardly sufficient to render his existence
+endurable, and to satisfy the needs which his imagination, his
+prejudices, and his institutions multiply to his torment.
+
+The brute is not affected by the same objects as man; it has neither the
+same needs, nor the same desires, nor the same whims; it early reaches
+maturity, while nothing is more rare than to see the human being
+enjoying all of his faculties, exercising them freely, and making a
+proper use of them for his own happiness.
+
+
+
+
+XCVI.--THERE ARE NO MORE DETESTABLE ANIMALS IN THIS WORLD THAN TYRANTS.
+
+We are assured that the human soul is a simple substance; but if the
+soul is such a simple substance, it ought to be the same in all the
+individuals of the human race, who all ought to have the same
+intellectual faculties; however, this is not the case; men differ as
+much in qualities of mind as in the features of the face. There are in
+the human race, beings as different from one another as man is from a
+horse or a dog. What conformity or resemblance do we find between some
+men? What an infinite distance between the genius of a Locke, of a
+Newton, and that of a peasant, of a Hottentot, or of a Laplander!
+
+Man differs from other animals but by the difference of his
+organization, which causes him to produce effects of which they are not
+capable. The variety which we notice in the organs of individuals of the
+human race, suffices to explain to us the difference which is often
+found between them in regard to the intellectual faculties. More or less
+of delicacy in these organs, of heat in the blood, of promptitude in the
+fluids, more or less of suppleness or of rigidity in the fibers and the
+nerves, must necessarily produce the infinite diversities which are
+noticeable in the minds of men. It is by exercise, by habitude, by
+education, that the human mind is developed and succeeds in rising above
+the beings which surround it; man, without culture and without
+experience, is a being as devoid of reason and of industry as the brute.
+A stupid individual is a man whose organs are acted upon with
+difficulty, whose brain is hard to move, whose blood circulates slowly;
+a man of mind is he whose organs are supple, who feels very quickly,
+whose brain moves promptly; a learned man is one whose organs and whose
+brain have been exercised a long while upon objects which occupy him.
+
+The man without culture, experience, or reason, is he not more
+despicable and more abominable than the vilest insects, or the most
+ferocious beasts? Is there a more detestable being in nature than a
+Tiberius, a Nero, a Caligula? These destroyers of the human race, known
+by the name of conquerors, have they better souls than those of bears,
+lions, and panthers? Are there more detestable animals in this world
+than tyrants?
+
+
+
+
+XCVII.--REFUTATION OF MAN'S EXCELLENCE.
+
+Human extravagances soon dispel, in the eyes of reason, the superiority
+which man arrogantly claims over other animals. Do we not see many
+animals show more gentleness, more reflection and reason than the animal
+which calls itself reasonable par excellence? Are there amongst men, who
+are so often enslaved and oppressed, societies as well organized as
+those of ants, bees, or beavers? Do we ever see ferocious beasts of the
+same kind meet upon the plains to devour each other without profit? Do
+we see among them religious wars? The cruelty of beasts against other
+species is caused by hunger, the need of nourishment; the cruelty of man
+against man has no other motive than the vanity of his masters and the
+folly of his impertinent prejudices. Theorists who try to make us
+believe that everything in the universe was made for man, are very much
+embarrassed when we ask them in what way can so many mischievous animals
+which continually infest our life here, contribute to the welfare of
+men. What known advantage results for God's friend to be bitten by a
+viper, stung by a gnat, devoured by vermin, torn into pieces by a tiger?
+Would not all these animals reason as wisely as our theologians, if they
+should pretend that man was made for them?
+
+
+
+
+XCVIII.--AN ORIENTAL LEGEND.
+
+At a short distance from Bagdad a dervis, celebrated for his holiness,
+passed his days tranquilly in agreeable solitude. The surrounding
+inhabitants, in order to have an interest in his prayers, eagerly
+brought to him every day provisions and presents. The holy man thanked
+God incessantly for the blessings Providence heaped upon him. "O Allah,"
+said he, "how ineffable is Thy tenderness toward Thy servants. What have
+I done to deserve the benefactions which Thy liberality loads me with!
+Oh, Monarch of the skies! oh, Father of nature! what praises could be
+worthy to celebrate Thy munificence and Thy paternal cares! O Allah, how
+great are Thy gifts to the children of men!" Filled with gratitude, our
+hermit made a vow to undertake for the seventh time the pilgrimage to
+Mecca. The war, which then existed between the Persians and the Turks,
+could not make him defer the execution of his pious enterprise. Full of
+confidence in God, he began his journey; under the inviolable safeguard
+of a respected garb, he passed through without obstacle the enemies'
+detachments; far from being molested, he receives at every step marks of
+veneration from the soldiers of both sides. At last, overcome by
+fatigue, he finds himself obliged to seek a shelter from the rays of the
+burning sun; he finds it beneath a fresh group of palm-trees, whose
+roots were watered by a limpid rivulet. In this solitary place, where
+the silence was broken only by the murmuring of the waters and the
+singing of the birds, the man of God found not only an enchanting
+retreat, but also a delicious repast; he had but to extend the hand to
+gather dates and other agreeable fruits; the rivulet can appease his
+thirst; very soon a green plot invites him to take sweet repose. As he
+awakens he performs the holy cleansing; and in a transport of ecstasy,
+he exclaimed: "O Allah! HOW GREAT IS THY GOODNESS TO THE CHILDREN OF
+MEN!" Well rested, refreshed, full of life and gayety, our holy man
+continues on his road; it conducts him for some time through a
+delightful country, which offers to his sight but blooming shores and
+trees filled with fruit. Softened by this spectacle, he worships
+incessantly the rich and liberal hand of Providence, which is everywhere
+seen occupied with the welfare of the human race. Going a little
+farther, he comes across a few mountains, which were quite hard to
+ascend; but having arrived at their summit, a hideous sight suddenly
+meets his eyes; his soul is all consternation. He discovers a vast plain
+entirely devastated by the sword and fire; he looks at it and finds it
+covered with more than a hundred thousand corpses, deplorable remains of
+a bloody battle which had taken place a few days previous. Eagles,
+vultures, ravens, and wolves were devouring the dead bodies with which
+the earth was covered. This sight plunges our pilgrim into a sad
+reverie. Heaven, by a special favor, had made him understand the
+language of beasts. He heard a wolf, gorged with human flesh, exclaim in
+his excessive joy: "O Allah! how great is Thy kindness for the children
+of wolves! Thy foreseeing wisdom takes care to send infatuation upon
+these detestable men who are so dangerous to us. Through an effect of
+Thy Providence which watches over Thy creatures, these, our destroyers,
+murder each other, and thus furnish us with sumptuous repasts. O Allah!
+HOW GREAT IS THY GOODNESS TO THE CHILDREN OF WOLVES!"
+
+
+
+
+XCIX.--IT IS FOOLISH TO SEE IN THE UNIVERSE ONLY THE BENEFACTIONS OF
+HEAVEN, AND TO BELIEVE THAT THIS UNIVERSE WAS MADE BUT FOR MAN.
+
+An exalted imagination sees in the universe but the benefactions of
+Heaven; a calm mind finds good and evil in it. I exist, you will say;
+but is this existence always a benefit? You will say, look at this sun,
+which shines for you; this earth, which is covered with fruits and
+verdure; these flowers, which bloom for our sight and smell; these
+trees, which bend beneath the weight of fruits; these pure streams,
+which flow but to quench your thirst; these seas, which embrace the
+universe to facilitate your commerce; these animals, which a foreseeing
+nature produces for your use! Yes, I see all these things, and I enjoy
+them when I can. But in some climates this beautiful sun is most always
+obscured from me; in others, its excessive heat torments me, produces
+storm, gives rise to dreadful diseases, dries up the fields; the meadows
+have no grass, the trees are fruitless, the harvests are scorched, the
+springs are dried up; I can scarcely exist, and I sigh under the cruelty
+of a nature which you find so benevolent. If these seas bring me spices,
+riches, and useless things, do they not destroy a multitude of mortals
+who are dupes enough to go after them?
+
+Man's vanity persuades him that he is the sole center of the universe;
+he creates for himself a world and a God; he thinks himself of
+sufficient consequence to derange nature at his will, but he reasons as
+an atheist when the question of other animals is involved. Does he not
+imagine that the individuals different from his species are automatons
+unworthy of the cares of universal Providence, and that the beasts can
+not be the objects of its justice and kindness? Mortals consider
+fortunate or unfortunate events, health or sickness, life and death,
+abundance or famine, as rewards or punishments for the use or misuse of
+the liberty which they arrogate to themselves. Do they reason on this
+principle when animals are taken into consideration? No; although they
+see them under a just God enjoy and suffer, be healthy and sick, live
+and die, like themselves, it does not enter their mind to ask what
+crimes these beasts have committed in order to cause the displeasure of
+the Arbiter of nature. Philosophers, blinded by their theological
+prejudices, in order to disembarrass themselves, have gone so far as to
+pretend that beasts have no feelings!
+
+Will men never renounce their foolish pretensions? Will they not
+recognize that nature was not made for them? Will they not see that this
+nature has placed on equal footing all the beings which she produced?
+Will they not see that all organized beings are equally made to be born
+and to die, to enjoy and to suffer? Finally, instead of priding
+themselves preposterously on their mental faculties, are they not
+compelled to admit that they often render them more unhappy than the
+beasts, in which we find neither opinions, prejudices, vanities, nor the
+weaknesses which decide at every moment the well-being of men?
+
+
+
+
+C.--WHAT IS THE SOUL? WE KNOW NOTHING ABOUT IT. IF THIS PRETENDED SOUL
+WAS OF ANOTHER ESSENCE FROM THAT OF THE BODY, THEIR UNION WOULD BE
+IMPOSSIBLE.
+
+The superiority which men arrogate to themselves over other animals, is
+principally founded upon the opinion of possessing exclusively an
+immortal soul. But as soon as we ask what this soul is, they begin to
+stammer. It is an unknown substance; it is a secret force distinguished
+from their bodies; it is a spirit of which they can form no idea. Ask
+them how this spirit, which they suppose like their God, totally
+deprived of a physical substance, could combine itself with their
+material bodies? They will tell you that they know nothing about it;
+that it is a mystery to them; that this combination is the effect of the
+Almighty power. These are the clear ideas which men form of the hidden,
+or, rather, imaginary substance which they consider the motor of all
+their actions! If the soul is a substance essentially different from the
+body, and which can have no affinity with it, their union would be, not
+a mystery, but a thing impossible. Besides, this soul, being of an
+essence different from that of the body, ought to act necessarily in a
+different way from it. However, we see that the movements of the body
+are felt by this pretended soul, and that these two substances, so
+different in essence, always act in harmony. You will tell us that this
+harmony is a mystery; and I will tell you that I do not see my soul,
+that I know and feel but my body; that it is my body which feels, which
+reflects, which judges, which suffers, and which enjoys, and that all of
+its faculties are the necessary results of its own mechanism or of its
+organization.
+
+
+
+
+CI.--THE EXISTENCE OF A SOUL IS AN ABSURD SUPPOSITION, AND THE EXISTENCE
+OF AN IMMORTAL SOUL IS A STILL MORE ABSURD SUPPOSITION.
+
+Although it is impossible for men to have the least idea of the soul, or
+of this pretended spirit which animates them, they persuade themselves,
+however, that this unknown soul is exempt from death; everything proves
+to them that they feel, think, acquire ideas, enjoy or suffer, but by
+the means of the senses or of the material organs of the body. Even
+admitting the existence of this soul, one can not refuse to recognize
+that it depends wholly on the body, and suffers conjointly with it all
+the vicissitudes which it experiences itself; and however it is imagined
+that it has by its nature nothing analogous with it; it is pretended
+that it can act and feel without the assistance of this body; that
+deprived of this body and robbed of its senses, this soul will be able
+to live, to enjoy, to suffer, be sensitive of enjoyment or of rigorous
+torments. Upon such a tissue of conjectural absurdities the wonderful
+opinion of the immortality of the soul is built.
+
+If I ask what ground we have for supposing that the soul is immortal:
+they reply, it is because man by his nature desires to be immortal, or
+to live forever. But I rejoin, if you desire anything very much, is it
+sufficient to conclude that this desire will be fulfilled? By what
+strange logic do they decide that a thing can not fail to happen because
+they ardently desire it to happen? Man's childish desires of the
+imagination, are they the measure of reality? Impious people, you say,
+deprived of the flattering hopes of another life, desire to be
+annihilated. Well, have they not just as much right to conclude by this
+desire that they will be annihilated, as you to conclude that you will
+exist forever because you desire it?
+
+
+
+
+CII.--IT IS EVIDENT THAT THE WHOLE OF MAN DIES.
+
+Man dies entirely. Nothing is more evident to him who is not delirious.
+The human body, after death, is but a mass, incapable of producing any
+movements the union of which constitutes life. We no longer see
+circulation, respiration, digestion, speech, or reflection. It is
+claimed then that the soul has separated itself from the body. But to
+say that this soul, which is unknown, is the principle of life, is
+saying nothing, unless that an unknown force is the invisible principle
+of imperceptible movements. Nothing is more natural and more simple than
+to believe that the dead man lives no more, nothing more absurd than to
+believe that the dead man is still living.
+
+We ridicule the simplicity of some nations whose fashion is to bury
+provisions with the dead--under the idea that this food might be useful
+and necessary to them in another life. Is it more ridiculous or more
+absurd to believe that men will eat after death than to imagine that
+they will think; that they will have agreeable or disagreeable ideas;
+that they will enjoy; that they will suffer; that they will be conscious
+of sorrow or joy when the organs which produce sensations or ideas are
+dissolved and reduced to dust? To claim that the souls of men will be
+happy or unhappy after the death of the body, is to pretend that man
+will be able to see without eyes, to hear without ears, to taste without
+a palate, to smell without a nose, and to feel without hands and without
+skin. Nations who believe themselves very rational, adopt, nevertheless,
+such ideas.
+
+
+
+
+CIII.--INCONTESTABLE PROOFS AGAINST THE SPIRITUALITY OF THE SOUL.
+
+The dogma of the immortality of the soul assumes that the soul is a
+simple substance, a spirit; but I will always ask, what is a spirit? It
+is, you say, a substance deprived of expansion, incorruptible, and which
+has nothing in common with matter. But if this is true, how came your
+soul into existence? how did it grow? how did it strengthen? how weaken
+itself, get out of order, and grow old with your body? In reply to all
+these questions, you say that they are mysteries; but if they are
+mysteries, you understand nothing about them. If you do not understand
+anything about them, how can you positively affirm anything about them?
+In order to believe or to affirm anything, it is necessary at least to
+know what that consists of which we believe and which we affirm. To
+believe in the existence of your immaterial soul, is to say that you are
+persuaded of the existence of a thing of which it is impossible for you
+to form any true idea; it is to believe in words without attaching any
+sense to them; to affirm that the thing is as you claim, is the highest
+folly or assumption.
+
+
+
+
+CIV.--THE ABSURDITY OF SUPERNATURAL CAUSES, WHICH THEOLOGIANS CONSTANTLY
+
+
+
+CALL TO THEIR AID.
+
+Are not theologians strange reasoners? As soon as they can not guess the
+natural causes of things, they invent causes, which they call
+supernatural; they imagine them spirits, occult causes, inexplicable
+agents, or rather words much more obscure than the things which they
+attempt to explain. Let us remain in nature when we desire to understand
+its phenomena; let us ignore the causes which are too delicate to be
+seized by our organs; and let us be assured that by seeking outside of
+nature we can never find the solution of nature's problems. Even upon
+the theological hypothesis--that is to say, supposing an Almighty motor
+in matter--what right have theologians to refuse their God the power to
+endow this matter with thought? Would it be more difficult for Him to
+create combinations of matter from which results thought, than spirits
+which think? At least, in supposing a substance endowed with thought, we
+could form some idea of the object of our thoughts, or of what thinks in
+us; while attributing thought to an immaterial being, it is impossible
+for us to form the least idea of it.
+
+
+
+
+CV.--IT IS FALSE THAT MATERIALISM CAN BE DEBASING TO THE HUMAN RACE.
+
+Materialism, it is objected, makes of man a mere machine, which is
+considered very debasing to the human race. But will the human race be
+more honored when it can be said that man acts by the secret impulsions
+of a spirit, or a certain something which animates him without his
+knowing how? It is easy to perceive that the superiority which is given
+to mind over matter, or to the soul over the body, is based upon the
+ignorance of the nature of this soul; while we are more familiarized
+with matter or the body, which we imagine we know, and of which we
+believe we have understood the springs; but the most simple movements of
+our bodies are, for every thinking man, enigmas as difficult to divine
+as thought.
+
+
+
+
+CVI.--CONTINUATION.
+
+The esteem which so many people have for the spiritual substance,
+appears to result from the impossibility they find in defining it in an
+intelligible way. The contempt which our metaphysicians show for matter,
+comes from the fact that "familiarity breeds contempt." When they tell
+us that the soul is more excellent and noble than the body, they tell us
+nothing, except that what they know nothing about must be more beautiful
+than that of which they have some faint ideas.
+
+
+
+
+CVII.--THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFE IS USEFUL BUT FOR THOSE WHO PROFIT BY IT
+AT THE EXPENSE OF THE CREDULOUS PUBLIC.
+
+We are constantly told of the usefulness of the dogma of life hereafter.
+It is pretended that even if it should be a fiction, it is advantageous,
+because it imposes upon men and leads them to virtue. But is it true
+that this dogma renders men wiser and more virtuous? The nations where
+this fiction is established, are they remarkable for the morality of
+their conduct? Is not the visible world always preferred to the
+invisible world? If those who are charged to instruct and to govern men
+had themselves enlightenment and virtue, they would govern them far
+better by realities than by vain chimeras; but deceitful, ambitious, and
+corrupt, the legislators found it everywhere easier to put the nations
+to sleep by fables than to teach them truths; than to develop their
+reason; than to excite them to virtue by sensible and real motives; than
+to govern them in a reasonable way.
+
+Theologians, no doubt, have had reasons for making the soul immaterial.
+They needed souls and chimeras to populate the imaginary regions which
+they have discovered in the other life. Material souls would have been
+subjected, like all bodies, to dissolution. Moreover, if men believe
+that everything is to perish with the body, the geographers of the other
+world would evidently lose the chance of guiding their souls to this
+unknown abode. They would draw no profits from the hopes with which they
+feast them, and from the terrors with which they take care to overwhelm
+them. If the future is of no real utility to the human race, it is at
+least of the greatest advantage to those who take upon themselves the
+responsibility of conducting mankind thither.
+
+
+
+
+CVIII.--IT IS FALSE THAT THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFE CAN BE CONSOLING; AND
+IF IT WERE, IT WOULD BE NO PROOF THAT THIS ASSERTION IS TRUE.
+
+But, it will be said, is not the dogma of the immortality of the soul
+consoling for beings who often find themselves very unhappy here below?
+If this should be an illusion, is it not a sweet and agreeable one? Is
+it not a benefit for man to believe that he can live again and enjoy,
+sometime, the happiness which is refused to him on earth? Thus, poor
+mortals! you make your wishes the measure of the truth! Because you
+desire to live forever, and to be happier, you conclude from thence that
+you will live forever, and that you will be more fortunate in an unknown
+world than in the known world, in which you so often suffer! Consent,
+then, to leave without regret this world, which causes more trouble than
+pleasure to the majority of you. Resign yourselves to the order of
+destiny, which decrees that you, like all other beings, should not
+endure forever. But what will become of me? you ask! What you were
+several millions of years ago. You were then, I do not know what; resign
+yourselves, then, to become again in an instant, I do not know what;
+what you were then; return peaceably to the universal home from which
+you came without your knowledge into your material form, and pass by
+without murmuring, like all the beings which surround you!
+
+We are repeatedly told that religious ideas offer infinite consolation
+to the unfortunate; it is pretended that the idea of the immortality of
+the soul and of a happier life has a tendency to lift up the heart of
+man and to sustain him in the midst of the adversities with which he is
+assailed in this life. Materialism, on the contrary, is, we are told, an
+afflicting system, tending to degrade man, which ranks him among brutes;
+which destroys his courage, whose only hope is complete annihilation,
+tending to lead him to despair, and inducing him to commit suicide as
+soon as he suffers in this world. The grand policy of theologians is to
+blow hot and to blow cold, to afflict and to console, to frighten and to
+reassure.
+
+According to the fictions of theology, the regions of the other life are
+happy and unhappy. Nothing more difficult than to render one worthy of
+the abode of felicity; nothing easier than to obtain a place in the
+abode of torments that Divinity prepares for the unfortunate victims of
+His eternal fury. Those who find the idea of another life so flattering
+and so sweet, have they then forgotten that this other life, according
+to them, is to be accompanied by torments for the majority of mortals?
+Is not the idea of total annihilation infinitely preferable to the idea
+of an eternal existence accompanied with suffering and gnashing of
+teeth? The fear of ceasing to exist, is it more afflicting than the
+thought of having not always been? The fear of ceasing to be is but an
+evil for the imagination, which alone brought forth the dogma of another
+life.
+
+You say, O Christian philosophers, that the idea of a happier life is
+delightful; we agree; there is no one who would not desire a more
+agreeable and a more durable existence than the one we enjoy here below.
+But, if Paradise is tempting, you will admit, also, that hell is
+frightful. It is very difficult to merit heaven, and very easy to gain
+hell. Do you not say that one straight and narrow path leads to the
+happy regions, and that a broad road leads to the regions of the
+unhappy? Do you not constantly tell us that the number of the chosen
+ones is very small, and that of the damned is very large? Do we not
+need, in order to be saved, such grace as your God grants to but few?
+Well! I tell you that these ideas are by no means consoling; I prefer to
+be annihilated at once rather than to burn forever; I will tell you that
+the fate of beasts appears to me more desirable than the fate of the
+damned; I will tell you that the belief which delivers me from
+overwhelming fears in this world, appears to me more desirable than the
+uncertainty in which I am left through belief in a God who, master of
+His favors, gives them but to His favorites, and who permits all the
+others to render themselves worthy of eternal punishments. It can be but
+blind enthusiasm or folly that can prefer a system which evidently
+encourages improbable conjectures, accompanied by uncertainty and
+desolating fear.
+
+
+
+
+CIX.--ALL RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES ARE IMAGINARY. INNATE SENSE IS BUT THE
+EFFECT OF A ROOTED HABIT. GOD IS AN IDLE FANCY, AND THE QUALITIES WHICH
+ARE LAVISHED UPON HIM DESTROY EACH OTHER.
+
+All religious principles are a thing of imagination, in which experience
+and reason have nothing to do. We find much difficulty in conquering
+them, because imagination, when once occupied in creating chimeras which
+astonish or excite it, is incapable of reasoning. He who combats
+religion and its phantasies by the arms of reason, is like a man who
+uses a sword to kill flies: as soon as the blow is struck, the flies and
+the fancies return to the minds from which we thought to have banished
+them.
+
+As soon as we refuse the proofs which theology pretends to give of the
+existence of a God, they oppose to the arguments which destroy them, an
+innate conviction, a profound persuasion, an invincible inclination
+inherent in every man, which brings to him, in spite of himself, the
+idea of an Almighty being which he can not altogether expel from his
+mind, and which he is compelled to recognize in spite of the strongest
+reasons that we can give him. But if we wish to analyze this innate
+conviction, upon which so much weight is placed, we will find that it is
+but the effect of a rooted habit, which, making them close their eyes
+against the most demonstrative proofs, leads the majority of men, and
+often the most enlightened ones, back to the prejudices of childhood.
+What can this innate sense or this ill-founded persuasion prove against
+the evidence which shows us that what implies contradiction can not
+exist?
+
+We are told, very gravely, that it is not demonstrated that God does not
+exist. However, nothing is better demonstrated, notwithstanding all that
+men have told us so far, than that this God is an idle fancy, whose
+existence is totally impossible, as nothing is more evident or more
+clearly demonstrated than that a being can not combine qualities so
+dissimilar, so contradictory, so irreconcilable as those which all the
+religions of the earth ascribe to Divinity. The theologian's God, as
+well as the God of the theist, is He not evidently a cause incompatible
+with the effects attributed to Him? In whatever light we may look upon
+it, we must either invent another God, or conclude that the one which,
+for so many centuries, has been revealed to mortals, is at the same time
+very good and very wicked, very powerful and very weak, immutable and
+changeable, perfectly intelligent and perfectly destitute of reason, of
+plan, and of means; the friend of order and permitting disorder; very
+just and very unjust; very skillful and very awkward. Finally, are we
+not obliged to admit that it is impossible to reconcile the discordant
+attributes which are heaped upon a being of whom we can not say a single
+word without falling into the most palpable contradictions? Let us
+attempt to attribute but a single quality to Divinity, and what is said
+of it will be contradicted immediately by the effects we assign to this
+cause.
+
+
+
+
+CX.--EVERY RELIGION IS BUT A SYSTEM IMAGINED FOR THE PURPOSE OF
+RECONCILING CONTRADICTIONS BY THE AID OF MYSTERIES.
+
+Theology could very properly be defined as the science of
+contradictions. Every religion is but a system imagined for the purpose
+of reconciling irreconcilable ideas. By the aid of habitude and terror,
+we come to persist in the greatest absurdities, even when they are the
+most clearly exposed. All religions are easy to combat, but very
+difficult to eradicate. Reason can do nothing against habit, which
+becomes, as is said, a second nature. There are many persons otherwise
+sensible, who, even after having examined the ruinous foundations of
+their belief, return to it in spite of the most striking arguments.
+
+As soon as we complain of not understanding religion, finding in it at
+every step absurdities which are repulsive, seeing in it but
+impossibilities, we are told that we are not made to conceive the truths
+of the religion which is proposed to us; that wandering reason is but an
+unfaithful guide, only capable of conducting us to perdition; and what
+is more, we are assured that what is folly in the eyes of man, is wisdom
+in the eyes of God, to whom nothing is impossible. Finally, in order to
+decide by a single word the most insurmountable difficulties which
+theology presents to us on all sides, they simply cry out: "Mysteries!"
+
+
+
+
+CXI.--ABSURDITY AND INUTILITY OF THE MYSTERIES FORGED IN THE SOLE
+INTEREST OF THE PRIESTS.
+
+What is a mystery? If I examine the thing closely, I discover very soon
+that a mystery is nothing but a contradiction, a palpable absurdity, a
+notorious impossibility, on which theologians wish to compel men to
+humbly close the eyes; in a word, a mystery is whatever our spiritual
+guides can not explain to us.
+
+It is advantageous for the ministers of religion that the people should
+not comprehend what they are taught. It is impossible for us to examine
+what we do not comprehend. Every time that we can not see clearly, we
+are obliged to be guided. If religion was comprehensible, priests would
+not have so many charges here below.
+
+No religion is without mysteries; mystery is its essence; a religion
+destitute of mysteries would be a contradiction of terms. The God which
+serves as a foundation to natural religion, to theism or to deism, is
+Himself the greatest mystery to a mind wishing to dwell upon Him.
+
+
+
+
+CXII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+All the revealed religions which we see in the world are filled with
+mysterious dogmas, unintelligible principles, of incredible miracles, of
+astonishing tales which seem imagined but to confound reason. Every
+religion announces a concealed God, whose essence is a mystery;
+consequently, it is just as difficult to conceive of His conduct as of
+the essence of this God Himself. Divinity has never spoken to us but in
+an enigmatical and mysterious way in the various religions which have
+been founded in the different regions of our globe. It has revealed
+itself everywhere but to announce mysteries, that is to say, to warn
+mortals that it designs that they should believe in contradictions, in
+impossibilities, or in things of which they were incapable of forming
+any positive idea.
+
+The more mysteries a religion has, the more incredible objects it
+presents to the mind, the better fitted it is to please the imagination
+of men, who find in it a continual pasturage to feed upon. The more
+obscure a religion is, the more it appears divine, that is to say, in
+conformity to the nature of an invisible being, of whom we have no idea.
+
+It is the peculiarity of ignorance to prefer the unknown, the concealed,
+the fabulous, the wonderful, the incredible, even the terrible, to that
+which is clear, simple, and true. Truth does not give to the imagination
+such lively play as fiction, which each one may arrange as he pleases.
+The vulgar ask nothing better than to listen to fables; priests and
+legislators, by inventing religions and forging mysteries from them,
+have served them to their taste. In this way they have attracted
+enthusiasts, women, and the illiterate generally. Beings of this kind
+resign easily to reasons which they are incapable of examining; the love
+of the simple and the true is found but in the small number of those
+whose imagination is regulated by study and by reflection. The
+inhabitants of a village are never more pleased with their pastor than
+when he mixes a good deal of Latin in his sermon. Ignorant men always
+imagine that he who speaks to them of things which they do not
+understand, is a very wise and learned man. This is the true principle
+of the credulity of nations, and of the authority of those who pretend
+to guide them.
+
+
+
+
+CXIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+To speak to men to announce to them mysteries, is to give and retain, it
+is to speak not to be understood. He who talks but by enigmas, either
+seeks to amuse himself by the embarrassment which he causes, or finds it
+to his advantage not to explain himself too clearly. Every secret
+betrays suspicion, weakness, and fear. Princes and their ministers make
+a mystery of their projects for fear that their enemies in penetrating
+them would cause them to fail. Can a good God amuse Himself by the
+embarrassment of His creatures? A God who enjoys a power which nothing
+in the world can resist, can He apprehend that His intentions could be
+thwarted? What interest would He have in putting upon us enigmas and
+mysteries? We are told that man, by the weakness of his nature, is not
+capable of comprehending the Divine economy which can be to him but a
+tissue of mysteries; that God can not unveil secrets to him which are
+beyond his reach. In this case, I reply, that man is not made to trouble
+himself with Divine economy, that this economy can not interest him in
+the least, that he has no need of mysteries which he can not understand;
+finally, that a mysterious religion is not made for him, any more than
+an eloquent discourse is made for a flock of sheep.
+
+
+
+
+CXIV.--A UNIVERSAL GOD SHOULD HAVE REVEALED A UNIVERSAL RELIGION.
+
+Divinity has revealed itself in the different parts of our globe in a
+manner of such little uniformity, that in matters of religion men look
+upon each other with hatred and disdain. The partisans of the different
+sects see each other very ridiculous and foolish. The most respected
+mysteries in one religion are laughable for another. God, having
+revealed Himself to men, ought at least to speak in the same language to
+all, and relieve their weak minds of the embarrassment of seeking what
+can be the religion which truly emanated from Him, or what is the most
+agreeable form of worship in His eyes.
+
+A universal God ought to have revealed a universal religion. By what
+fatality are so many different religions found on the earth? Which is
+the true one amongst the great number of those of which each one
+pretends to be the right one, to the exclusion of all the others? We
+have every reason to believe that not one of them enjoys this advantage.
+The divisions and the disputes about opinions are indubitable signs of
+the uncertainty and of the obscurity of the principles which they
+profess.
+
+
+
+
+CXV.--THE PROOF THAT RELIGION IS NOT NECESSARY, IS THAT IT IS
+UNINTELLIGIBLE.
+
+If religion was necessary to all men, it ought to be intelligible to all
+men. If this religion was the most important thing for them, the
+goodness of God, it seems, ought to make it for them the clearest, the
+most evident, and the best demonstrated of all things. Is it not
+astonishing to see that this matter, so essential to the salvation of
+mortals, is precisely the one which they understand the least, and about
+which, during so many centuries, their doctors have disputed the most?
+Never have priests, of even the same sect, come to an agreement among
+themselves about the manner of understanding the wishes of a God who has
+truly revealed Himself to them. The world which we inhabit can be
+compared to a public place, in whose different parts several charlatans
+are placed, each one straining himself to attract customers by
+depreciating the remedies offered by his competitors. Each stand has its
+purchasers, who are persuaded that their empiric alone possesses the
+good remedies; notwithstanding the continual use which they make of
+them, they do not perceive that they are no better, or that they are
+just as sick as those who run after the charlatans of another stand.
+Devotion is a disease of the imagination, contracted in infancy; the
+devotee is a hypochondriac, who increases his disease by the use of
+remedies. The wise man takes none of it; he follows a good regimen and
+leaves the rest to nature.
+
+
+
+
+CXVI.--ALL RELIGIONS ARE RIDICULED BY THOSE OF OPPOSITE THOUGH EQUALLY
+INSANE BELIEF.
+
+Nothing appears more ridiculous in the eyes of a sensible man than for
+one denomination to criticize another whose creed is equally foolish. A
+Christian thinks that the Koran, the Divine revelation announced by
+Mohammed, is but a tissue of impertinent dreams and impostures injurious
+to Divinity. The Mohammedan, on his side, treats the Christian as an
+idolater and a dog; he sees but absurdities in his religion; he imagines
+he has the right to conquer his country and force him, sword in hand, to
+accept the faith of his Divine prophet; he believes especially that
+nothing is more impious or more unreasonable than to worship a man or to
+believe in the Trinity. The Protestant Christian, who without scruple
+worships a man, and who believes firmly in the inconceivable mystery of
+the Trinity, ridicules the Catholic Christian because the latter
+believes in the mystery of the transubstantiation. He treats him as a
+fool, as ungodly and idolatrous, because he kneels to worship the bread
+in which he believes he sees the God of the universe. All the Christian
+denominations agree in considering as folly the incarnation of the God
+of the Indies, Vishnu. They contend that the only true incarnation is
+that of Jesus, Son of the God of the universe and of the wife of a
+carpenter. The theist, who calls himself a votary of natural religion,
+is satisfied to acknowledge a God of whom he has no conception; indulges
+himself in jesting upon other mysteries taught by all the religions of
+the world.
+
+
+
+
+CXVII.--OPINION OF A CELEBRATED THEOLOGIAN.
+
+Did not a famous theologian recognize the absurdity of admitting the
+existence of a God and arresting His course? "To us," he said, "who
+believe through faith in a true God, an individual substance, there
+ought to be no trouble in believing everything else. This first mystery,
+which is no small matter of itself, once admitted, our reason can not
+suffer violence in admitting all the rest. As for myself, it is no more
+trouble to accept a million of things that I do not understand, than to
+believe the first one."
+
+Is there anything more contradictory, more impossible, or more
+mysterious, than the creation of matter by an immaterial Being, who
+Himself immutable, causes the continual changes that we see in the
+world? Is there anything more incompatible with all the ideas of common
+sense than to believe that a good, wise, equitable, and powerful Being
+presides over nature and directs Himself the movements of a world which
+is filled with follies, miseries, crimes, and disorders, which He could
+have foreseen, and by a single word could have prevented or made to
+disappear? Finally, as soon as we admit a Being so contradictory as the
+theological God, what right have we to refuse to accept the most
+improbable fables, the most astonishing miracles, the most profound
+mysteries?
+
+
+
+
+CXVIII.--THE DEIST'S GOD IS NO LESS CONTRADICTORY, NO LESS FANCIFUL, THAN
+THE THEOLOGIAN'S GOD.
+
+The theist exclaims, "Be careful not to worship the ferocious and
+strange God of theology; mine is much wiser and better; He is the Father
+of men; He is the mildest of Sovereigns; it is He who fills the universe
+with His benefactions!" But I will tell him, do you not see that
+everything in this world contradicts the good qualities which you
+attribute to your God? In the numerous family of this mild Father I see
+but unfortunate ones. Under the empire of this just Sovereign I see
+crime victorious and virtue in distress. Among these benefactions, which
+you boast of, and which your enthusiasm alone sees, I see a multitude of
+evils of all kinds, upon which you obstinately close your eyes.
+
+
+
+Compelled to acknowledge that your good God, in contradiction with
+Himself, distributes with the same hand good and evil, you will find
+yourself obliged, in order to justify Him, to send me, as the priests
+would, to the other life. Invent, then, another God than the one of
+theology, because your God is as contradictory as its God is. A good God
+who does evil or who permits it to be done, a God full of equity and in
+an empire where innocence is so often oppressed; a perfect God who
+produces but imperfect and wretched works; such a God and His conduct,
+are they not as great mysteries as that of the incarnation? You blush,
+you say, for your fellow beings who are persuaded that the God of the
+universe could change Himself into a man and die upon a cross in a
+corner of Asia. You consider the ineffable mystery of the Trinity very
+absurd Nothing appears more ridiculous to you than a God who changes
+Himself into bread and who is eaten every day in a thousand different
+places.
+
+Well! are all these mysteries any more shocking to reason than a God who
+punishes and rewards men's actions? Man, according to your views, is he
+free or not? In either case your God, if He has the shadow of justice,
+can neither punish him nor reward him. If man is free, it is God who
+made him free to act or not to act; it is God, then, who is the
+primitive cause of all his actions; in punishing man for his faults, He
+would punish him for having done that which He gave him the liberty to
+do. If man is not free to act otherwise than he does, would not God be
+the most unjust of beings to punish him for the faults which he could
+not help committing? Many persons are struck with the detail of
+absurdities with which all religions of the world are filled; but they
+have not the courage to seek for the source whence these absurdities
+necessarily sprung. They do not see that a God full of contradictions,
+of oddities, of incompatible qualities, either inflaming or nursing the
+imagination of men, could create but a long line of idle fancies.
+
+
+
+
+CXIX.--WE DO NOT PROVE AT ALL THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD BY SAYING THAT IN
+ALL AGES EVERY NATION HAS ACKNOWLEDGED SOME KIND OF DIVINITY.
+
+They believe, to silence those who deny the existence of a God, by
+telling them that all men, in all ages and in all centuries, have
+believed in some kind of a God; that there is no people on the earth who
+have not believed in an invisible and powerful being, whom they made the
+object of their worship and of their veneration; finally, that there is
+no nation, no matter how benighted we may suppose it to be, that is not
+persuaded of the existence of some intelligence superior to human
+nature. But can the belief of all men change an error into truth? A
+celebrated philosopher has said with all reason: "Neither general
+tradition nor the unanimous consent of all men could place any
+injunction upon truth." [Bayle.] Another wise man said before him, that
+"an army of philosophers would not be sufficient to change the nature of
+error and to make it truth." [Averroes]
+
+There was a time when all men believed that the sun revolved around the
+earth, while the latter remained motionless in the center of the whole
+system of the universe; it is scarcely more than two hundred years since
+this error was refuted. There was a time when nobody would believe in
+the existence of antipodes, and when they persecuted those who had the
+courage to sustain it; to-day no learned man dares to doubt it. All
+nations of the world, except some men less credulous than others, still
+believe in sorcerers, ghosts, apparitions, spirits; no sensible man
+imagines himself obliged to adopt these follies; but the most sensible
+people feel obliged to believe in a universal Spirit!
+
+
+
+
+CXX.--ALL THE GODS ARE OF A BARBAROUS ORIGIN; ALL RELIGIONS ARE ANTIQUE
+MONUMENTS OF IGNORANCE, SUPERSTITION, AND FEROCITY; AND MODERN RELIGIONS
+ARE BUT ANCIENT FOLLIES REVIVED.
+
+All the Gods worshiped by men have a barbarous origin; they were visibly
+imagined by stupid nations, or were presented by ambitious and cunning
+legislators to simple and benighted people, who had neither the capacity
+nor the courage to examine properly the object which, by means of
+terrors, they were made to worship. In examining closely the God which
+we see adored still in our days by the most civilized nations, we are
+compelled to acknowledge that He has evidently barbarous features. To be
+barbarous is to recognize no right but force; it is being cruel to
+excess; it is but following one's own caprice; it is a lack of
+foresight, of prudence, and reason. Nations, who believe yourselves
+civilized! do you not perceive this frightful character of the God to
+whom you offer your incense? The pictures which are drawn of Divinity,
+are they not visibly borrowed from the implacable, jealous, vindictive,
+blood-thirsty, capricious, inconsiderate humor of man, who has not yet
+cultivated his reason? Oh, men! you worship but a great savage, whom you
+consider as a model to follow, as an amiable master, as a perfect
+sovereign.
+
+The religious opinions of men in every country are antique and durable
+monuments of ignorance credulity, of the terrors and the ferocity of
+their ancestors. Every barbarian is a child thirsting for the wonderful,
+which he imbibes with pleasure, and who never reasons upon that which he
+finds proper to excite his imagination; his ignorance of the ways of
+nature makes him attribute to spirits, to enchantments, to magic, all
+that appears to him extraordinary; in his eyes his priests are
+sorcerers, in whom he supposes an Almighty power; before whom his
+confused reason humiliates itself, whose oracles are for him infallible
+decrees, to contradict which would be dangerous. In matters of religion
+the majority of men have remained in their primitive barbarity. Modern
+religions are but follies of old times rejuvenated or presented in some
+new form. If the ancient barbarians have worshiped mountains, rivers,
+serpents, trees, fetishes of every kind; if the wise Egyptians worshiped
+crocodiles, rats, onions, do we not see nations who believe themselves
+wiser than they, worship with reverence a bread, into which they imagine
+that the enchantments of their priests cause the Divinity to descend? Is
+not the God-bread the fetish of many Christian nations, as little
+rational in this point as that of the most barbarous nations?
+
+
+
+
+CXXI.--ALL RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES BEAR THE SEAL OF STUPIDITY OR BARBARITY.
+
+In all times the ferocity, the stupidity, the folly of savage men were
+shown in religious customs which were often cruel and extravagant. A
+spirit of barbarity has come down to our days; it intrudes itself into
+the religions which are followed by the most civilized nations. Do we
+not still see human victims offered to Divinity? In order to appease the
+wrath of a God whom we suppose as ferocious, as jealous, as vindictive,
+as a savage, do not sanguinary laws cause the destruction of those who
+are believed to have displeased Him by their way of thinking?
+
+Modern nations, at the instigation of their priests, have even excelled
+the atrocious folly of the most barbarous nations; at least do we not
+find that it never entered into a savage's mind to torment for the sake
+of opinions, to meddle in thought, to trouble men for the invisible
+actions of their brains? When we see polished and wise nations, such as
+the English, French, German, etc., notwithstanding all their
+enlightenment, continue to kneel before the barbarous God of the Jews,
+that is to say, of the most stupid, the most credulous, the most savage,
+the most unsocial nation which ever was on the earth; when we see these
+enlightened nations divide themselves into sects, tear one another, hate
+and despise each other for opinions, equally ridiculous, upon the
+conduct and the intentions of this irrational God; when we see
+intelligent persons occupy themselves foolishly in meditating on the
+wishes of this capricious and foolish God; we are tempted to exclaim,
+"Oh, men! you are still savages! Oh, men! you are but children in the
+matter of religion!"
+
+
+
+
+CXXII.--THE MORE ANCIENT AND GENERAL A RELIGIOUS OPINION IS, THE GREATER
+THE REASON FOR SUSPECTING IT.
+
+Whoever has formed true ideas of the ignorance, credulity, negligence,
+and sottishness of common people, will always regard their religious
+opinions with the greater suspicion for their being generally
+established. The majority of men examine nothing; they allow themselves
+to be blindly led by custom and authority; their religious opinions are
+specially those which they have the least courage and capacity to
+examine; as they do not understand anything about them, they are
+compelled to be silent or put an end to their reasoning. Ask the common
+man if he believes in God. He will be surprised that you could doubt it.
+Then ask him what he understands by the word God. You will confuse him;
+you will perceive at once that he is incapable of forming any real idea
+of this word which he so often repeats; he will tell you that God is
+God, and you will find that he knows neither what he thinks of Him, nor
+the motives which he has for believing in Him.
+
+All nations speak of a God; but do they agree upon this God? No! Well,
+difference of opinion does not serve as evidence, but is a sign of
+uncertainty and obscurity. Does the same man always agree with himself
+in his ideas of God? No! This idea varies with the vicissitudes of his
+life. This is another sign of uncertainty. Men always agree with other
+men and with themselves upon demonstrated truths, regardless of the
+position in which they find themselves; except the insane, all agree
+that two and two make four, that the sun shines, that the whole is
+greater than any one of its parts, that Justice is a benefaction, that
+we must be benevolent to deserve the love of men, that injustice and
+cruelty are incompatible with goodness. Do they agree in the same way if
+they speak of God? All that they think or say of Him is immediately
+contradicted by the effects which they wish to attribute to Him. Tell
+several artists to paint a chimera, each of them will form different
+ideas of it, and will paint it differently; you will find no resemblance
+in the features each of them will have given to a portrait whose model
+exists nowhere. In painting God, do any of the theologians of the world
+represent Him otherwise than as a great chimera, upon whose features
+they never agree, each one arranging it according to his style, which
+has its origin but in his own brain? There are no two individuals in the
+world who have or can have the same ideas of their God.
+
+
+
+
+CXXIII.--SKEPTICISM IN THE MATTER OF RELIGION, CAN BE THE EFFECT OF BUT A
+SUPERFICIAL EXAMINATION OF THEOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES.
+
+Perhaps it would be more truthful to say, that all men are either
+skeptics or atheists, than to pretend that they are firmly convinced of
+the existence of a God. How can we be assured of the existence of a
+being whom we never have been able to examine, of whom it is impossible
+to form any permanent idea, whose different effects upon ourselves
+prevent us from forming an invariable judgment, of whom no idea can be
+uniform in two different brains? How can we claim to be completely
+persuaded of the existence of a being to whom we are constantly obliged
+to attribute a conduct opposed co the ideas which we had tried to form
+of it? Is it possible firmly to believe what we can not conceive? In
+believing thus, are we not adhering to the opinions of others without
+having one of our own? The priests regulate the belief of the vulgar;
+but do not these priests themselves acknowledge that God is
+incomprehensible to them? Let us conclude, then, that the conviction of
+the existence of a God is not as general as it is affirmed to be.
+
+To be a skeptic, is to lack the motives necessary to establish a
+judgment. In view of the proofs which seem to establish, and of the
+arguments which combat the existence of a God, some persons prefer to
+doubt and to suspend their judgment; but at the bottom, this uncertainty
+is the result of an insufficient examination. Is it, then, possible to
+doubt evidence? Sensible people deride, and with reason, an absolute
+pyrrhonism, and even consider it impossible. A man who could doubt his
+own existence, or that of the sun, would appear very ridiculous, or
+would be suspected of reasoning in bad faith. Is it less extravagant to
+have uncertainties about the non-existence of an evidently impossible
+being? Is it more absurd to doubt of one's own existence, than to
+hesitate upon the impossibility of a being whose qualities destroy each
+other? Do we find more probabilities for believing in a spiritual being
+than for believing in the existence of a stick without two ends? Is the
+notion of an infinitely good and powerful being who permits an infinity
+of evils, less absurd or less impossible than that of a square triangle?
+
+
+
+Let us conclude, then, that religious skepticism can be but the effect
+of a superficial examination of theological principles, which are in a
+perpetual contradiction of the clearest and best demonstrated
+principles! To doubt is to deliberate upon the judgment which we should
+pass. Skepticism is but a state of indecision which results from a
+superficial examination of subjects. Is it possible to be skeptical in
+the matter of religion when we design to return to its principles, and
+look closely into the idea of the God who serves as its foundation?
+Doubt arises ordinarily from laziness, weakness, indifference, or
+incapacity. To doubt, for many people, is to dread the trouble of
+examining things to which one attaches but little interest. Although
+religion is presented to men as the most important thing for them in
+this world as well as in the other, skepticism and doubt on this subject
+can be for the mind but a disagreeable state, and offers but a
+comfortable cushion. No man who has not the courage to contemplate
+without prejudice the God upon whom every religion is founded, can know
+what religion to accept; he does not know what to believe and what not
+to believe, to accept or to reject, what to hope or fear; finally, he is
+incompetent to judge for himself.
+
+Indifference upon religion can not be confounded with skepticism; this
+indifference itself is founded upon the assurance or upon the
+probability which we find in believing that religion is not made to
+interest us. The persuasion which we have that a thing which is
+presented to us as very important, is not so, or is but indifferent,
+supposes a sufficient examination of the thing, without which it would
+be impossible to have this persuasion. Those who call themselves
+skeptics in regard to the fundamental points of religion, are generally
+but idle and lazy men, who are incapable of examining them.
+
+
+
+
+CXXIV.--REVELATION REFUTED.
+
+In all parts of the world, we are assured that God revealed Himself.
+What did He teach men? Does He prove to them evidently that He exists?
+Does He tell them where He resides? Does He teach them what He is, or of
+what His essence consists? Does He explain to them clearly His
+intentions and His plan? What He says of this plan, does it agree with
+the effects which we see? No! He informs us only that "He is the One
+that is," [I am that I am, saith the Lord] that He is an invincible God,
+that His ways are ineffable, that He becomes furious as soon as one has
+the temerity to penetrate His decrees, or to consult reason in order to
+judge of Him or His works. Does the revealed conduct of God correspond
+with the magnificent ideas which are given to us of His wisdom,
+goodness, justice, of His omnipotence? Not at all; in every revelation
+this conduct shows a partial, capricious being, at least, good to His
+favorite people, an enemy to all others. If He condescends to show
+Himself to some men, He takes care to keep all the others in invincible
+ignorance of His divine intentions. Does not every special revelation
+announce an unjust, partial, and malicious God?
+
+Are the revealed wishes of a God capable of striking us by the sublime
+reason or the wisdom which they contain? Do they tend to the happiness
+of the people to whom Divinity has declared them? Examining the Divine
+wishes, I find in them, in all countries, but whimsical ordinances,
+ridiculous precepts, ceremonies of which we do not understand the aim,
+puerile practices, principles of conduct unworthy of the Monarch of
+Nature, offerings, sacrifices, expiations, useful, in fact, to the
+ministers of God, but very onerous to the rest of mankind. I find also,
+that they often have a tendency to render men unsocial, disdainful,
+intolerant, quarrelsome, unjust, inhuman toward all those who have not
+received either the same revelations as they, or the same ordinances, or
+the same favors from Heaven.
+
+
+
+
+CXXV.--WHERE, THEN, IS THE PROOF THAT GOD DID EVER SHOW HIMSELF TO MEN OR
+SPEAK TO THEM?
+
+Are the precepts of morality as announced by Divinity truly Divine, or
+superior to those which every rational man could imagine? They are
+Divine only because it is impossible for the human mind to see their
+utility. Their virtue consists in a total renunciation of human nature,
+in a voluntary oblivion of one's reason, in a holy hatred of self;
+finally, these sublime precepts show us perfection in a conduct cruel to
+ourselves and perfectly useless to others.
+
+How did God show Himself? Did He Himself promulgate His laws? Did He
+speak to men with His own mouth? I am told that God did not show Himself
+to a whole nation, but that He employed always the organism of a few
+favored persons, who took the care to teach and to explain His
+intentions to the unlearned. It was never permitted to the people to go
+to the sanctuary; the ministers of the Gods always alone had the right
+to report to them what transpired.
+
+
+
+
+CXXVI.--NOTHING ESTABLISHES THE TRUTH OF MIRACLES.
+
+If, in the economy of all Divine revelations, I am unable to recognize
+either the wisdom, the goodness, or the equity of a God; if I suspect
+deceit, ambition, selfish designs in the great personages who have
+interposed between Heaven and us, I am assured that God has confirmed,
+by splendid miracles, the mission of those who have spoken for Him. But
+was it not much easier to show Himself, and to explain for Himself? On
+the other hand, if I have the curiosity to examine these miracles, I
+find that they are tales void of probability, related by suspicious
+people, who had the greatest interest in making others believe that they
+were sent from the Most High.
+
+What witnesses are referred to in order to make us believe incredible
+miracles? They call as witnesses stupid people, who have ceased to exist
+for thousands of years, and who, even if they could attest the miracles
+in question, would be suspected of having been deceived by their own
+imagination, and of permitting themselves to be seduced by the illusions
+which skillful impostors performed before their eyes. But, you will say,
+these miracles are recorded in books which through constant tradition
+have been handed down to us. By whom were these books written? Who are
+the men who have transmitted and perpetuated them? They are either the
+same people who established these religions, or those who have become
+their adherents and their assistants. Thus, in the matter of religion,
+the testimony of interested parties is irrefragable and can not be
+contested!
+
+
+
+
+CXXVII.--IF GOD HAD SPOKEN, IT WOULD BE STRANGE THAT HE HAD SPOKEN
+DIFFERENTLY TO ALL THE ADHERENTS OF THE DIFFERENT SECTS, WHO DAMN EACH
+OTHER, WHO ACCUSE EACH OTHER, WITH REASON, OF SUPERSTITION AND IMPIETY.
+
+God has spoken differently to each nation of the globe which we inhabit.
+The Indian does not believe one word of what He said to the Chinaman;
+the Mohammedan considers what He has told to the Christian as fables;
+the Jew considers the Mohammedan and the Christian as sacrilegious
+corruptors of the Holy Law, which his God has given to his fathers. The
+Christian, proud of his more modern revelation, equally damns the Indian
+and the Chinaman, the Mohammedan, and even the Jew, whose holy books he
+holds. Who is wrong or right? Each one exclaims: "It is I!" Every one
+claims the same proofs; each one speaks of his miracles, his saints, his
+prophets, his martyrs. Sensible men answer, that they are all delirious;
+that God has not spoken, if it is true that He is a Spirit who has
+neither mouth nor tongue; that the God of the Universe could, without
+borrowing mortal organism, inspire His creatures with what He desired
+them to learn, and that, as they are all equally ignorant of what they
+ought to think about God, it is evident that God did not want to
+instruct them. The adherents of the different forms of worship which we
+see established in this world, accuse each other of superstition and of
+ungodliness. The Christians abhor the superstition of the heathen, of
+the Chinese, of the Mohammedans. The Roman Catholics treat the
+Protestant Christians as impious; the latter incessantly declaim against
+Roman superstition. They are all right. To be impious, is to have unjust
+opinions about the God who is adored; to be superstitious, is to have
+false ideas of Him. In accusing each other of superstition, the
+different religionists resemble humpbacks who taunt each other with
+their malformation.
+
+
+
+
+CXXVIII.--OBSCURE AND SUSPICIOUS ORIGIN OF ORACLES.
+
+The oracles which the Deity has revealed to the nations through His
+different mediums, are they clear? Alas! there are not two men who
+understand them alike. Those who explain them to others do not agree
+among themselves; in order to make them clear, they have recourse to
+interpretations, to commentaries, to allegories, to parables, in which
+is found a mystical sense very different from the literal one. Men are
+needed everywhere to explain the wishes of God, who could not or would
+not explain Himself clearly to those whom He desired to enlighten. God
+always prefers to use as mediums men who can be suspected of having been
+deceived themselves, or having reasons to deceive others.
+
+
+
+
+CXXIX.--ABSURDITY OF PRETENDED MIRACLES.
+
+The founders of all religions have usually proved their mission by
+miracles. But what is a miracle? It is an operation directly opposed to
+the laws of nature. But, according to you, who has made these laws? It
+is God. Thus your God, who, according to you, has foreseen everything,
+counteracts the laws which His wisdom had imposed upon nature! These
+laws were then defective, or at least in certain circumstances they
+were but in accordance with the views of this same God, for you tell us
+that He thought He ought to suspend or counteract them.
+
+An attempt is made to persuade us that men who have been favored by the
+Most High have received from Him the power to perform miracles; but in
+order to perform a miracle, it is necessary to have the faculty of
+creating new causes capable of producing effects opposed to those which
+ordinary causes can produce. Can we realize how God can give to men the
+inconceivable power of creating causes out of nothing? Can it be
+believed that an unchangeable God can communicate to man the power to
+change or rectify His plan, a power which, according to His essence, an
+immutable being can not have himself? Miracles, far from doing much
+honor to God, far from proving the Divinity of religion, destroy
+evidently the idea which is given to us of God, of His immutability, of
+His incommunicable attributes, and even of His omnipotence. How can a
+theologian tell us that a God who embraced at once the whole of His
+plan, who could make but perfect laws, who can change nothing in them,
+should be obliged to employ miracles to make His projects successful, or
+grant to His creatures the faculty of performing prodigies, in order to
+execute His Divine will? Is it probable that a God needs the support of
+men? An Omnipotent Being, whose wishes are always gratified, a Being who
+holds in His hands the hearts and the minds of His creatures, needs but
+to wish, in order to make them believe all He desires.
+
+
+
+
+CXXX.--REFUTATION OF PASCAL'S MANNER OF REASONING AS TO HOW WE SHOULD
+JUDGE MIRACLES.
+
+What should we say of religions that based their Divinity upon miracles
+which they themselves cause to appear suspicious? How can we place any
+faith in the miracles related in the Holy Books of the Christians, where
+God Himself boasts of hardening hearts, of blinding those whom He wishes
+to ruin; where this God permits wicked spirits and magicians to perform
+as wonderful miracles as those of His servants; where it is prophesied
+that the Anti-Christ will have the power to perform miracles capable of
+destroying the faith even of the elect? This granted, how can we know
+whether God wants to instruct us or to lay a snare for us? How can we
+distinguish whether the wonders which we see, proceed from God or the
+Devil? Pascal, in order to disembarrass us, says very gravely, that we
+must judge the doctrine by miracles, and the miracles by the doctrine;
+that doctrine judges the miracles, and the miracles judge the doctrine.
+If there exists a defective and ridiculous circle, it is no doubt in
+this fine reasoning of one of the greatest defenders of the Christian
+religion. Which of all the religions in the world does not claim to
+possess the most admirable doctrine, and which does not bring to its aid
+a great number of miracles?
+
+Is a miracle capable of destroying a demonstrated truth? Although a man
+should have the secret of curing all diseases, of making the lame to
+walk, of raising all the dead of a city, of floating in the air, of
+arresting the course of the sun and of the moon, will he be able to
+convince me by all this that two and two do not make four; that one
+makes three and that three makes but one; that a God who fills the
+universe with His immensity, could have transformed Himself into the
+body of a Jew; that the eternal can perish like man; that an immutable,
+foreseeing, and sensible God could have changed His opinion upon His
+religion, and reform His own work by a new revelation?
+
+
+
+
+CXXXI.--EVEN ACCORDING TO THE PRINCIPLES OF THEOLOGY ITSELF, EVERY NEW
+REVELATION SHOULD BE REFUTED AS FALSE AND IMPIOUS.
+
+According to the principles of theology itself, whether natural or
+revealed, every new revelation ought to be considered false; every
+change in a religion which had emanated from the Deity ought to be
+refuted as ungodly and blasphemous. Does not every reform suppose that
+God did not know how at the start to give His religion the required
+solidity and perfection? To say that God in giving a first law
+accommodated Himself to the gross ideas of a people whom He wished to
+enlighten, is to pretend that God neither could nor would make the
+people whom He enlightened at that time, as reasonable as they ought to
+be to please Him.
+
+
+
+
+Christianity is an impiety, if it is true that Judaism as a religion
+really emanated from a Holy, Immutable, Almighty, grid Foreseeing God.
+
+
+
+Christ's religion implies either defects in the law that God Himself
+gave by Moses, or impotence or malice in this God who could not, or
+would not make the Jews as they ought to be to please Him. All
+religions, whether new, or ancient ones reformed, are evidently founded
+on the weakness, the inconstancy, the imprudence, and the malice of the
+Deity.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXII.--EVEN THE BLOOD OF THE MARTYRS, TESTIFIES AGAINST THE TRUTH OF
+MIRACLES AND AGAINST THE DIVINE ORIGIN WHICH CHRISTIANITY CLAIMS.
+
+If history informs me that the first apostles, founders or reformers of
+religions, performed great miracles, history teaches me also that these
+reforming apostles and their adherents have been usually despised,
+persecuted, and put to death as disturbers of the peace of nations. I am
+then tempted to believe that they have not performed the miracles
+attributed to them. Finally, these miracles should have procured to them
+a great number of disciples among those who witnessed them, who ought to
+have prevented the performers from being maltreated. My incredulity
+increases if I am told that the performers of miracles have been cruelly
+tormented or slain. How can we believe that missionaries, protected by a
+God, invested with His Divine Power, and enjoying the gift of miracles,
+could not perform the simple miracle of escaping from the cruelty of
+their persecutors?
+
+Persecutions themselves are considered as a convincing proof in favor of
+the religion of those who have suffered them; but a religion which
+boasts of having caused the death of many martyrs, and which informs us
+that its founders have suffered for its extension unheard-of torments,
+can not be the religion of a benevolent, equitable, and Almighty God. A
+good God would not permit that men charged with revealing His will
+should be misused. An omnipotent God desiring to found a religion, would
+have employed simpler and less fatal means for His most faithful
+servants. To say that God desired that His religion should be sealed by
+blood, is to say that this God is weak, unjust, ungrateful, and
+sanguinary, and that He sacrifices unworthily His missionaries to the
+interests of His ambition.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXIII.--THE FANATICISM OF THE MARTYRS, THE INTERESTED ZEAL OF
+MISSIONARIES, PROVE IN NOWISE THE TRUTH OF RELIGION.
+
+To die for a religion does not prove it true or Divine; this proves at
+most that we suppose it to be so. An enthusiast in dying proves nothing
+but that religious fanaticism is often stronger than the love of life.
+An impostor can sometimes die with courage; he makes then, as is said,
+"a virtue of necessity." We are often surprised and affected at the
+sight of the generous courage and the disinterested zeal which have led
+missionaries to preach their doctrine at the risk even of suffering the
+most rigorous torments. We draw from this love, which is exhibited for
+the salvation of men, deductions favorable to the religion which they
+have proclaimed; but in truth this disinterestedness is only apparent.
+"Nothing ventured, nothing gained!" A missionary seeks fortune by the
+aid of his doctrine; he knows that if he has the good fortune to retail
+his commodity, he will become the absolute master of those who accept
+him as their guide; he is sure to become the object of their care, of
+their respect, of their veneration; he has every reason to believe that
+he will be abundantly provided for. These are the true motives which
+kindle the zeal and the charity of so many preachers and missionaries
+who travel all over the world.
+
+To die for an opinion, proves no more the truth or the soundness of this
+opinion than to die in a battle proves the right of the prince, for
+whose benefit so many people are foolish enough to sacrifice themselves.
+The courage of a martyr, animated by the idea of Paradise, is not any
+more supernatural than the courage of a warrior, inspired with the idea
+of glory or held to duty by the fear of disgrace. What difference do we
+find between an Iroquois who sings while he is burned by a slow fire,
+and the martyr St. Lawrence, who while upon the gridiron insults his
+tyrant?
+
+The preachers of a new doctrine succumb because they are not the
+strongest; the apostles usually practice a perilous business, whose
+consequences they can foresee; their courageous death does not prove any
+more the truth of their principles or their own sincerity, than the
+violent death of an ambitious man or a brigand proves that they had the
+right to trouble society, or that they believed themselves authorized to
+do it. A missionary's profession has been always flattering to his
+ambition, and has enabled him to subsist at the expense of the common
+people; these advantages have been sufficient to make him forget the
+dangers which are connected with it.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXIV.--THEOLOGY MAKES OF ITS GOD AN ENEMY OF COMMON SENSE AND OF
+ENLIGHTENMENT.
+
+You tell us, O theologians! that "what is folly in the eyes of men, is
+wisdom before God, who is pleased to confound the wisdom of the wise."
+But do you not pretend that human wisdom is a gift from Heaven? In
+telling us that this wisdom displeases God, is but folly in His eyes,
+and that He wishes to confound it, you proclaim that your God is but the
+friend of unenlightened people, and that He makes to sensible people a
+fatal gift, for which this perfidious Tyrant promises to punish them
+cruelly some day. Is it not very strange that we can not be the friend
+of your God but by declaring ourselves the enemy of reason and common
+sense?
+
+
+
+
+CXXXV.--FAITH IS IRRECONCILABLE WITH REASON, AND REASON IS PREFERABLE TO
+FAITH.
+
+Faith, according to theologians, is consent without evidence. From this
+it follows that religion exacts that we should firmly believe, without
+evidence, in propositions which are often improbable or opposed to
+reason. But to challenge reason as a judge of faith, is it not
+acknowledging that reason can not agree with faith? As the ministers of
+religion have determined to banish reason, they must have felt the
+impossibility of reconciling reason with faith, which is visibly but a
+blind submission to those priests whose authority, in many minds,
+appears to be of a greater importance than evidence itself, and
+preferable to the testimony of the senses. "Sacrifice your reason; give
+up experience; distrust the testimony of your senses; submit without
+examination to all that is given to you as coming from Heaven." This is
+the usual language of all the priests of the world; they do not agree
+upon any point, except in the necessity of never reasoning when they
+present principles to us which they claim as the most important to our
+happiness.
+
+I will not sacrifice my reason, because this reason alone enables me to
+distinguish good from evil, the true from the false. If, as you pretend,
+my reason comes from God, I will never believe that a God whom you call
+so good, had ever given me reason but as a snare, in order to lead me to
+perdition. Priests! in crying down reason, do you not see that you
+slander your God, who, as you assure us, has given us this reason?
+
+I will not give up experience, because it is a much better guide than
+imagination, or than the authority of the guides whom they wish to give
+me. This experience teaches me that enthusiasm and interest can blind
+and mislead them, and that the authority of experience ought to have
+more weight upon my mind than the suspicious testimony of many men whom
+I know to be capable of deceiving themselves, or very much interested in
+deceiving others.
+
+I will not distrust my senses. I do not ignore the fact that they can
+sometimes lead me into error; but on the other hand, I know that they do
+not deceive me always. I know very well that the eye shows the sun much
+smaller than it really is; but experience, which is only the repeated
+application of the senses, teaches me that objects continually diminish
+by reason of their distance; it is by these means that I reach the
+conclusion that the sun is much larger than the earth; it is thus that
+my senses suffice to rectify the hasty judgments which they induced me
+to form. In warning me to doubt the testimony of my senses, you destroy
+for me the proofs of all religion. If men can be dupes of their
+imagination, if their senses are deceivers, why would you have me
+believe in the miracles which made an impression upon the deceiving
+senses of our ancestors? If my senses are faithless guides, I learn that
+I should not have faith even in the miracles which I might see performed
+under my own eyes.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXVI.--HOW ABSURD AND RIDICULOUS IS THE SOPHISTRY OF THOSE WHO WISH TO
+SUBSTITUTE FAITH FOR REASON.
+
+You tell me continually that the "truths of religion are beyond reason."
+Do you not admit, then, that these truths are not made for reasonable
+beings? To pretend that reason can deceive us, is to say that truth can
+be false, that usefulness can be injurious. Is reason anything else but
+the knowledge of the useful and the true? Besides, as we have but our
+reason, which is more or less exercised, and our senses, such as they
+are, to lead us in this life, to claim that reason is an unsafe guide,
+and that our senses are deceivers, is to tell us that our errors are
+necessary, that our ignorance is invincible, and that, without extreme
+injustice, God can not punish us for having followed the only guides
+which He desired to give us. To pretend that we are obliged to believe
+in things which are beyond our reason, is an assertion as ridiculous as
+to say that God would compel us to fly without wings. To claim that
+there are objects on which reason should not be consulted, is to say
+that in the most important affairs, we must consult but imagination, or
+act by chance.
+
+Our Doctors of Divinity tell us that we ought to sacrifice our reason to
+God; but what motives can we have for sacrificing our reason to a being
+who gives us but useless gifts, which He does not intend that we should
+make use of? What confidence can we place in a God who, according to our
+Doctors themselves, is wicked enough to harden hearts, to strike us with
+blindness, to place snares in our way, to lead us into temptation?
+Finally, how can we place confidence in the ministers of this God, who,
+in order to guide us more conveniently, command us to close our eyes?
+
+
+
+
+CXXXVII.--HOW PRETEND THAT MAN OUGHT TO BELIEVE VERBAL TESTIMONY ON WHAT
+IS CLAIMED TO BE THE MOST IMPORTANT THING FOR HIM?
+
+Men persuade themselves that religion is the most serious affair in the
+world for them, while it is the very thing which they least examine for
+themselves. If the question arises in the purchase of land, of a house,
+of the investment of money, of a transaction, or of some kind of an
+agreement, you will see each one examine everything with care, take the
+greatest precautions, weigh all the words of a document, to beware of
+any surprise or imposition. It is not the same with religion; each one
+accepts it at hazard, and believes it upon verbal testimony, without
+taking the trouble to examine it. Two causes seem to concur in
+sustaining men in the negligence and the thoughtlessness which they
+exhibit when the question comes up of examining their religious
+opinions. The first one is, the hopelessness of penetrating the
+obscurity by which every religion is surrounded; even in its first
+principles, it has only a tendency to repel indolent minds, who see in
+it but chaos, to penetrate which, they judge impossible. The second is,
+that each one is afraid to incommode himself by the severe precepts
+which everybody admires in the theory, and which few persons take the
+trouble of practicing. Many people preserve their religion like old
+family titles which they have never taken the trouble to examine
+minutely, but which they place in their archives in case they need them.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXVIII.--FAITH TAKES ROOT BUT IN WEAK, IGNORANT, OR INDOLENT MINDS.
+
+The disciples of Pythagoras had an implicit faith in their Master's
+doctrine: "HE HAS SAID IT!" was for them the solution of all problems.
+The majority of men act with as little reason. A curate, a priest, an
+ignorant monk, will become in the matter of religion the master of one's
+thoughts. Faith relieves the weakness of the human mind, for whom
+application is commonly a very painful work; it is much easier to rely
+upon others than to examine for one's self; examination being slow and
+difficult, it is usually unpleasant to ignorant and stupid minds as well
+as to very ardent ones; this is, no doubt, why faith finds so many
+partisans.
+
+The less enlightenment and reason men possess, the more zeal they
+exhibit for their religion. In all the religious factions, women,
+aroused by their directors, exhibit very great zeal in opinions of which
+it is evident they have not the least idea. In theological quarrels
+people rush like a ferocious beast upon all those against whom their
+priest wishes to excite them. Profound ignorance, unlimited credulity, a
+very weak head, an irritated imagination, these are the materials of
+which devotees, zealots, fanatics, and saints are made. How can we make
+those people understand reason who allow themselves to be guided without
+examining anything? The devotees and common people are, in the hands of
+their guides, only automatons which they move at their fancy.
+
+
+
+
+CXXXIX.--TO TEACH THAT THERE EXISTS ONE TRUE RELIGION IS AN ABSURDITY,
+AND A CAUSE OF MUCH TROUBLE AMONG THE NATIONS.
+
+Religion is a thing of custom and fashion; we must do as others do. But,
+among the many religions in the world, which one ought we to choose?
+This examination would be too long and too painful; we must then hold to
+the faith of our fathers, to that of our country, or to that of the
+prince, who, possessing power, must be the best. Chance alone decides
+the religion of a man and of a people. The French would be to-day as
+good Mussulmen as they are Christians, if their ancestors had not
+repulsed the efforts of the Saracens. If we judge of the intentions of
+Providence by the events and the revolutions of this world, we are
+compelled to believe that it is quite indifferent about the different
+religions which exist on earth. During thousands of years Paganism,
+Polytheism, and Idolatry have been the religions of the world; we are
+assured today, that during this period the most flourishing nations had
+not the least idea of the Deity, an idea which is claimed, however, to
+be so important to all men. The Christians pretend that, with the
+exception of the Jewish people, that is to say, a handful of unfortunate
+beings, the whole human race lived in utter ignorance of its duties
+toward God, and had but imperfect ideas of Divine majesty. Christianity,
+offshoot of Judaism, which was very humble in its obscure origin, became
+powerful and cruel under the Christian emperors, who, driven by a holy
+zeal, spread it marvelously in their empire by sword and fire, and
+founded it upon the ruins of overthrown Paganism. Mohammed and his
+successors, aided by Providence, or by their victorious arms, succeeded
+in a short time in expelling the Christian religion from a part of Asia,
+Africa, and even of Europe itself; the Gospel was compelled to surrender
+to the Koran. In all the factions or sects which during a great number
+of centuries have lacerated the Christians, "THE REASON OF THE STRONGEST
+WAS ALWAYS THE BEST;" the arms and the will of the princes alone decided
+upon the most useful doctrine for the salvation of the nations. Could we
+not conclude by this, either that the Deity takes but little interest in
+the religion of men, or that He declares Himself always in favor of
+opinions which best suit the Authorities of the earth, in order that He
+can change His systems as soon as they take a notion to change?
+
+A king of Macassar, tired of the idolatry of his fathers, took a notion
+one day to leave it. The monarch's council deliberated for a long time
+to know whether they should consult Christian or Mohammedan Doctors. In
+the impossibility of finding out which was the better of the two
+religions, it was resolved to send at the same time for the missionaries
+of both, and to accept the doctrine of those who would have the
+advantage of arriving first. They did not doubt that God, who disposes
+of events, would thus Himself explain His will. Mohammed's missionaries
+having been more diligent, the king with his people submitted to the law
+which he had imposed upon himself; the missionaries of Christ were
+dismissed by default of their God, who did not permit them to arrive
+early enough. God evidently consents that chance should decide the
+religion of nations.
+
+Those who govern, always decide the religion of the people. The true
+religion is but the religion of the prince; the true God is the God whom
+the prince wishes them to worship; the will of the priests who govern
+the prince, always becomes the will of God. A jester once said, with
+reason, that "the true faith is always the one which has on its side
+'the prince and the executioner.'"
+
+Emperors and executioners for a long time sustained the Gods of Rome
+against the God of the Christians; the latter having won over to their
+side the emperors, their soldiers and their executioners succeeded in
+suppressing the worship of the Roman Gods. Mohammed's God succeeded in
+expelling the Christian's God from a large part of the countries which
+He formerly occupied. In the eastern part of Asia, there is a large
+country which is very flourishing, very productive, thickly populated,
+and governed by such wise laws, that the most savage conquerors adopted
+them with respect. It is China! With the exception of Christianity,
+which was banished as dangerous, they followed their own superstitious
+ideas; while the mandarins or magistrates, undeceived long ago about the
+popular religion, do not trouble themselves in regard to it, except to
+watch over it, that the bonzes or priests do not use this religion to
+disturb the peace of the State. However, we do not see that Providence
+withholds its benefactions from a nation whose chiefs take so little
+interest in the worship which is offered to it. The Chinese enjoy, on
+the contrary, blessings and a peace worthy of being envied by many
+nations which religion divides, ravages, and often destroys. We can not
+reasonably expect to deprive a people of its follies; but we can hope to
+cure of their follies those who govern the people; these will then
+prevent the follies of the people from becoming dangerous. Superstition
+is never to be feared except when it has the support of princes and
+soldiers; it is only then that it becomes cruel and sanguinary. Every
+sovereign who assumes the protection of a sect or of a religious
+faction, usually becomes the tyrant of other sects, and makes himself
+the must cruel perturbator in his kingdom.
+
+
+
+
+CXL.--RELIGION IS NOT NECESSARY TO MORALITY AND TO VIRTUE.
+
+We are constantly told, and a good many sensible persons come to believe
+it, that religion is necessary to restrain men; that without it there
+would be no check upon the people; that morality and virtue are
+intimately connected with it: "The fear of the Lord is," we are told,
+"the beginning of wisdom." The terrors of another life are salutary
+terrors, and calculated to subdue men's passions. To disabuse us in
+regard to the utility of religious notions, it is sufficient to open the
+eyes and to consider what are the morals of the most religious people.
+We see haughty tyrants, oppressive ministers, perfidious courtiers,
+countless extortioners, unscrupulous magistrates, impostors, adulterers,
+libertines, prostitutes, thieves, and rogues of all kinds, who have
+never doubted the existence of a vindictive God, or the punishments of
+hell, or the joys of Paradise.
+
+Although very useless for the majority of men, the ministers of religion
+have tried to make death appear terrible to the eyes of their votaries.
+If the most devoted Christians could be consistent, they would pass
+their whole lives in tears, and would finally die in the most terrible
+alarms. What is more frightful than death to those unfortunate ones who
+are constantly reminded that "it is a fearful thing to fall into the
+hands of a living God;" that they should "seek salvation with fear and
+trembling!" However, we are assured that the Christian's death has great
+consolations, of which the unbeliever is deprived. The good Christian,
+we are told, dies with the firm hope of enjoying eternal happiness,
+which he has tried to deserve. But this firm assurance, is it not a
+punishable presumption in the eyes of a severe God? The greatest saints,
+are they not to be in doubt whether they are worthy of the love or of
+the hatred of God Priests who console us with the hope of the joys of
+Paradise, and close your eyes to the torments of hell, have you then had
+the advantage of seeing your names and ours inscribed in the book of
+life?
+
+
+
+
+CXLI.--RELIGION IS THE WEAKEST RESTRAINT THAT CAN BE OPPOSED TO THE
+PASSIONS.
+
+To oppose to the passions and present interests of men the obscure
+notions about a metaphysical God whom no one can conceive of; the
+incredible punishments of another life; the pleasures of Heaven, of
+which we can not form an idea, is it not combating realities with
+chimeras? Men have always but confused ideas of their God; they see Him
+only in the clouds; they never think of Him when they wish to do wrong.
+Whenever ambition, fortune, or pleasure entices them or leads them away,
+God, and His menaces, and His promises weigh nothing in the balance. The
+things of this life have for men a degree of certainty, which the most
+lively faith can never give to the objects of another life.
+
+Every religion, in its origin, was a restraint invented by legislators
+who wished to subjugate the minds of the common people. Like nurses who
+frighten children in order to put them to sleep, ambitious men use the
+name of the gods to inspire fear in savages; terror seems well suited to
+compel them to submit quietly to the yoke which is to be imposed upon
+them. Are the ghost stories of childhood fit for mature age? Man in his
+maturity no longer believes in them, or if he does, he is troubled but
+little by it, and he keeps on his road.
+
+
+
+
+CXLII.--HONOR IS A MORE SALUTARY AND A STRONGER CHECK THAN RELIGION.
+
+There is scarcely a man who does not fear more what he sees than what he
+does not see; the judgments of men, of which he experiences the effects,
+than the judgments of God, of whom he has but floating ideas. The desire
+to please the world, the current of custom, the fear of being ridiculed,
+and of "WHAT WILL THEY SAY?" have more power than all religious
+opinions. A warrior with the fear of dishonor, does he not hazard his
+life in battles every day, even at the risk of incurring eternal
+damnation?
+
+The most religious persons sometimes show more respect for a servant
+than for God. A man that firmly believes that God sees everything, knows
+everything, is everywhere, will, when he is alone, commit actions which
+he never would do in the presence of the meanest of mortals. Those even
+who claim to be the most firmly convinced of the existence of a God, act
+every instant as if they did not believe anything about it.
+
+
+
+
+CXLIII.--RELIGION IS CERTAINLY NOT A POWERFUL CHECK UPON THE PASSIONS OF
+KINGS, WHO ARE ALMOST ALWAYS CRUEL AND FANTASTIC TYRANTS BY THE EXAMPLE
+OF THIS SAME GOD, OF WHOM THEY CLAIM TO BE THE REPRESENTATIVES; THEY USE
+RELIGION BUT TO BRUTALIZE THEIR SLAVES SO MUCH THE MORE, TO LULL THEM TO
+SLEEP IN THEIR FETTERS, AND TO PREY UPON THEM WITH THE GREATER FACILITY.
+
+"Let us tolerate at least," we are told, "the idea of a God, which alone
+can be a restraint upon the passions of kings." But, in good faith, can
+we admire the marvelous effects which the fear of this God produces
+generally upon the mind of the princes who claim to be His images? What
+idea can we form of the original, if we judge it by its duplicates?
+Sovereigns, it is true, call, themselves the representatives of God, His
+lieutenants upon earth. But does the fear of a more powerful master than
+themselves make them attend to the welfare of the peoples that
+Providence has confided to their care? The idea of an invisible Judge,
+to whom alone they pretend to be accountable for their actions, should
+inspire them with terror! But does this terror render them more
+equitable, more humane, less avaricious of the blood and the goods of
+their subjects, more moderate in their pleasures, more attentive to
+their duties? Finally, does this God, by whom we are assured that kings
+reign, prevent them from vexing in a thousand ways the peoples of whom
+they ought to be the leaders, the protectors, and fathers? Let us open
+our eyes, let us turn our regards upon all the earth, and we shall see,
+almost everywhere, men governed by tyrants, who make use of religion but
+to brutalize their slaves, whom they oppress by the weight of their
+vices, or whom they sacrifice without mercy to their fatal
+extravagances. Far from being a restraint to the passions of kings,
+religion, by its very principles, gives them a loose rein. It transforms
+them into Divinities, whose caprices the nations never dare to resist.
+At the same time that it unchains princes and breaks for them the ties
+of the social pact, it enchains the minds and the hands of their
+oppressed subjects. Is it surprising, then, that the gods of the earth
+believe that all is permitted to them, and consider their subjects as
+vile instruments of their caprices or of their ambition?
+
+Religion, in every country, has made of the Monarch of Nature a cruel,
+fantastic, partial tyrant, whose caprice is the rule. The God-monarch is
+but too well imitated by His representatives upon the earth. Everywhere
+religion seems invented but to lull to sleep the people in fetters, in
+order to furnish their masters the facility of devouring them, or to
+render them miserable with impunity.
+
+
+
+
+CXLIV.--ORIGIN OF THE MOST ABSURD, THE MOST RIDICULOUS, AND THE MOST
+ODIOUS USURPATION, CALLED THE DIVINE RIGHT OF KINGS. WISE COUNSELS TO
+KINGS.
+
+In order to guard themselves against the enterprises of a haughty
+Pontiff who desired to reign over kings, and in order to protect their
+persons from the attacks of the credulous people excited by their
+priests, several princes of Europe pretended to have received their
+crowns and their rights from God alone, and that they should account to
+Him only for their actions. Civil power in its battles against spiritual
+power, having at length gained the advantage, and the priests being
+compelled to yield, recognized the Divine right of kings and preached it
+to the people, reserving to themselves the right to change opinions and
+to preach revolution, every time that the divine rights of kings did not
+agree with the divine rights of the clergy. It was always at the expense
+of the people that peace was restored between the kings and the priests,
+but the latter maintained their pretensions notwithstanding all
+treaties.
+
+Many tyrants and wicked princes, whose conscience reproaches them for
+their negligence or their perversity, far from fearing their God, rather
+like to bargain with this invisible Judge, who never refuses anything,
+or with His priests, who are accommodating to the masters of the earth
+rather than to their subjects. The people, when reduced to despair,
+consider the divine rights of their chiefs as an abuse. When men become
+exasperated, the divine rights of tyrants are compelled to yield to the
+natural rights of their subjects; they have better market with the gods
+than with men. Kings are responsible for their actions but to God, the
+priests but to themselves; there is reason to believe that both of them
+have more faith in the indulgence of Heaven than in that of earth. It is
+much easier to escape the judgments of the gods, who can be appeased at
+little expense, than the judgments of men whose patience is exhausted.
+If you take away from the sovereigns the fear of an invisible power,
+what restraint will you oppose to their misconduct? Let them learn how
+to govern, how to be just, how to respect the rights of the people, to
+recognize the benefactions of the nations from whom they obtain their
+grandeur and power; let them learn to fear men, to submit to the laws of
+equity, that no one can violate without danger; let these laws restrain
+equally the powerful and the weak, the great and the small, the
+sovereign and the subjects.
+
+The fear of the Gods, religion, the terrors of another life--these are
+the metaphysical and supernatural barriers which are opposed to the
+furious passions of princes! Are these barriers sufficient? We leave it
+to experience to solve the question! To oppose religion to the
+wickedness of tyrants, is to wish that vague speculations should be more
+powerful than inclinations which conspire to fortify them in it from day
+to day.
+
+
+
+
+CXLV.--RELIGION IS FATAL TO POLITICS; IT FORMS BUT LICENTIOUS AND
+PERVERSE DESPOTS, AS WELL AS ABJECT AND UNHAPPY SUBJECTS.
+
+We are told constantly of the immense advantages which religion secures
+to politics; but if we reflect a moment, we will see without trouble
+that religious opinions blind and lead astray equally the rulers and the
+people, and never enlighten them either in regard to their true duties
+or their real interests. Religion but too often forms licentious,
+immoral tyrants, obeyed by slaves who are obliged to conform to their
+views. From lack of the knowledge of the true principles of
+administration, the aim and the rights of social life, the real
+interests of men, and the duties which unite them, the princes are
+become, in almost every land, licentious, absolute, and perverse; and
+their subjects abject unhappy, and wicked. It was to avoid the trouble
+of studying these important subjects, that they felt themselves obliged
+to have recourse to chimeras, which so far, instead of being a remedy,
+have but increased the evils of the human race and withdrawn their
+attention from the most interesting things. Does not the unjust and
+cruel manner in which so many nations are governed here below, furnish
+the most visible proofs, not only of the non-effect produced by the fear
+of another life, but of the non-existence of a Providence interested in
+the fate of the human race? If there existed a good God, would we not be
+forced to admit that He strangely neglects the majority of men in this
+life? It would appear that this God created the nations but to be toys
+for the passions and follies of His representatives upon earth.
+
+
+
+
+CXLVI.--CHRISTIANITY EXTENDED ITSELF BUT BY ENCOURAGING DESPOTISM, OF
+WHICH IT, LIKE ALL RELIGION, IS THE STRONGEST SUPPORT.
+
+If we read history with some attention, we shall see that Christianity,
+fawning at first, insinuated itself among the savage and free nations of
+Europe but by showing their chiefs that its principles would favor
+despotism and place absolute power in their hands. We see, consequently,
+barbarous kings converting themselves with a miraculous promptitude;
+that is to say, adopting without examination a system so favorable to
+their ambition, and exerting themselves to have it adopted by their
+subjects. If the ministers of this religion have since often moderated
+their servile principles, it is because the theory has no influence upon
+the conduct of the Lord's ministers, except when it suits their temporal
+interests.
+
+
+
+
+Christianity boasts of having brought to men a happiness unknown to
+preceding centuries. It is true that the Grecians have not known the
+Divine right of tyrants or usurpers over their native country. Under the
+reign of Paganism it never entered the brain of anybody that Heaven did
+not want a nation to defend itself against a ferocious beast which
+insolently ravaged it. The Christian religion, devised for the benefit
+of tyrants, was established on the principle that the nations should
+renounce the legitimate defense of themselves. Thus Christian nations
+are deprived of the first law of nature, which decrees that man should
+resist evil and disarm all who attempt to destroy him. If the ministers
+of the Church have often permitted nations to revolt for Heaven's cause,
+they never allowed them to revolt against real evils or known violences.
+
+It is from Heaven that the chains have come to fetter the minds of
+mortals. Why is the Mohammedan everywhere a slave? It is because his
+Prophet subdued him in the name of the Deity, just as Moses before him
+subjugated the Jews. In all parts of the world we see that priests were
+the first law-givers and the first sovereigns of the savages whom they
+governed. Religion seems to have been invented but to exalt princes
+above their nations, and to deliver the people to their discretion. As
+soon as the latter find themselves unhappy here below, they are silenced
+by menacing them with God's wrath; their eyes are fixed on Heaven, in
+order to prevent them from perceiving the real causes of their
+sufferings and from applying the remedies which nature offers them.
+
+
+
+
+CXLVII.--THE ONLY AIM OF RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES IS TO PERPETUATE THE
+TYRANNY OF KINGS AND TO SACRIFICE THE NATIONS TO THEM.
+
+By incessantly repeating to men that the earth is not their true
+country; that the present life is but a passage; that they were not made
+to be happy in this world; that their sovereigns hold their authority
+but from God, and are responsible to Him alone for the misuse of it;
+that it is never permitted to them to resist, the priesthood succeeded
+in perpetuating the misconduct of the kings and the misfortunes of the
+people; the interests of the nations have been cowardly sacrificed to
+their chiefs. The more we consider the dogmas and the principles of
+religion, the more we shall be convinced that their only aim is to give
+advantage to tyrants and priests; not having the least regard for the
+good of society. In order to mask the powerlessness of these deaf Gods,
+religion has succeeded in making mortals believe that it is always
+iniquity which excites the wrath of Heaven. The people blame themselves
+for the disasters and the adversities which they endure continually. If
+disturbed nature sometimes causes the people to feel its blows, their
+bad governments are but too often the immediate and permanent causes
+from which spring the continual calamities that they are obliged to
+endure. Is it not the ambition of kings and of the great, their
+negligence, their vices, their oppression, to which are generally due
+sterility, mendacity, wars, contagions, bad morals, and all the
+multiplied scourges which desolate the earth?
+
+In continually directing the eyes of men toward Heaven, making them
+believe that all their evils are due to Divine wrath, in furnishing them
+but inefficient and futile means of lessening their troubles, it would
+appear that the only object of the priests is to prevent the nations
+from dreaming of the true sources of their miseries, and to perpetuate
+them. The ministers of religion act like those indigent mothers, who, in
+need of bread, put their hungry children to sleep by songs, or who
+present them toys to make them forget the want which torments them.
+
+Blinded from childhood by error, held by the invincible ties of opinion,
+crushed by panic terrors, stupefied at the bosom of ignorance, how could
+the people understand the true causes of their troubles? They think to
+remedy them by invoking the gods. Alas! do they not see that it is it
+the name of these gods that they are ordered to present their throat to
+the sword of their pitiless tyrants, in whom they would find the most
+visible cause of the evils under which they groan, and for which they
+uselessly implore the assistance of Heaven? Credulous people! in your
+adversities redouble your prayers, your offerings, your sacrifices;
+besiege your temples, strangle countless victims, fast in sackcloth and
+in ashes, drink your own tears; finally, exhaust yourselves to enrich
+your gods: you will do nothing but enrich their priests; the gods of
+Heaven will not be propitious to you, except when the gods of the earth
+will recognize that they are men like yourselves, and will give to your
+welfare the care which is your due.
+
+
+
+
+CXLVIII.--HOW FATAL IT IS TO PERSUADE KINGS THAT THEY HAVE ONLY GOD TO
+FEAR IF THEY INJURE THE PEOPLE.
+
+Negligent, ambitious, and perverse princes are the real causes of public
+adversities, of useless and unjust wars continually depopulating the
+earth, of greedy and despotic governments, destroying the benefactions
+of nature for men. The rapacity of the courts discourages agriculture,
+blots out industry, causes famine, contagion, misery; Heaven is neither
+cruel nor favorable to the wishes of the people; it is their haughty
+chiefs, who always have a heart of brass.
+
+It is a notion destructive to wholesome politics and to the morals of
+princes, to persuade them that God alone is to be feared by them, when
+they injure their subjects or when they neglect to render them happy.
+Sovereigns! It is not the Gods, but your people whom you offend when you
+do evil. It is to these people, and by retroaction, to yourselves, that
+you do harm when you govern unjustly.
+
+Nothing is more common in history than to see religious tyrants; nothing
+more rare than to find equitable, vigilant, enlightened princes. A
+monarch can be pious, very strict in fulfilling servilely the duties of
+his religion, very submissive to his priests, liberal in their behalf,
+and at the same time destitute of all the virtues and talents necessary
+for governing. Religion for the princes is but an instrument intended to
+keep the people more firmly under the yoke. According to the beautiful
+principles of religious morality, a tyrant who, during a long reign,
+will have done nothing but oppress his subjects, rob them of the fruits
+of their labor, sacrifice them without pity to his insatiable ambition;
+a conqueror who will have usurped the provinces of others, who will have
+slaughtered whole nations, who will have been all his life a real
+scourge of the human race, imagines that his conscience can be
+tranquillized, if, in order to expiate so many crimes, he will have wept
+at the feet of a priest, who will have the cowardly complaisance to
+console and reassure a brigand, whom the most frightful despair would
+punish too little for the evil which he has done upon earth.
+
+
+
+
+CLXIX.--A RELIGIOUS KING IS A SCOURGE TO HIS KINGDOM.
+
+A sincerely religious sovereign is generally a very dangerous chief for
+a State; credulity always indicates a narrow mind; devotion generally
+absorbs the attention which the prince ought to give to the ruling of
+his people. Docile to the suggestions of his priests, he constantly
+becomes the toy of their caprices, the abettor of their quarrels, the
+instrument and the accomplice of their follies, to which he attaches the
+greatest importance. Among the most fatal gifts which religion has
+bestowed upon the world, we must consider above all, these devoted and
+zealous monarchs, who, with the idea of working for the salvation of
+their subjects, have made it their sacred duty to torment, to persecute,
+to destroy those whose conscience made them think otherwise than they
+do. A religious bigot at the head of an empire, is one of the greatest
+scourges which Heaven in its fury could have sent upon earth. One
+fanatical or deceitful priest who has the ear of a credulous and
+powerful prince, suffices to put a State into disorder and the universe
+into combustion.
+
+In almost all countries, priests and devout persons are charged with
+forming the mind and the heart of the young princes destined to govern
+the nations. What enlightenment can teachers of this stamp give? Filled
+themselves with prejudices, they will hold up to their pupil
+superstition as the most important and the most sacred thing, its
+chimerical duties as the most holy obligations, intolerance, and the
+spirit of persecution, as the true foundations of his future authority;
+they will try to make him a chief of party, a turbulent fanatic, and a
+tyrant; they will suppress at an early period his reason; they will
+premonish him against it; they will prevent truth from reaching him;
+they will prejudice him against true talents, and prepossess him in
+favor of despicable talents; finally they will make of him an imbecile
+devotee, who will have no idea of justice or of injustice, of true glory
+or of true greatness, and who will be devoid of the intelligence and
+virtue necessary to the government of a great kingdom. Here, in brief,
+is the plan of education for a child destined to make, one day, the
+happiness or the misery of several millions of men.
+
+
+
+
+CL.--THE SHIELD OF RELIGION IS FOR TYRANNY, A WEAK RAMPART AGAINST THE
+DESPAIR OF THE PEOPLE. A DESPOT IS A MADMAN, WHO INJURES HIMSELF AND
+SLEEPS UPON THE EDGE OF A PRECIPICE.
+
+Priests in all times have shown themselves supporters of despotism, and
+the enemies of public liberty. Their profession requires vile and
+submissive slaves, who never have the audacity to reason. In an absolute
+government, their great object is to secure control of the mind of a
+weak and stupid prince, in order to make themselves masters of the
+people. Instead of leading the people to salvation, priests have always
+led them to servitude.
+
+For the sake of the supernatural titles which religion has forged for
+the most wicked princes, the latter have generally united with the
+priests, who, sure of governing by controlling the opinion of the
+sovereign himself, have charge of tying the hands of the people and of
+keeping them under their yoke. But it is vain that the tyrant, protected
+by the shield of religion, flatters himself with being sheltered from
+all the blows of fate. Opinion is a weak rampart against the despair of
+the people. Besides, the priest is the friend of the tyrant only so long
+as he finds his profit by the tyranny; he preaches sedition and
+demolishes the idol which he has made, when he considers it no longer in
+conformity with the interests of Heaven, which he speaks of as he
+pleases, and which never speaks but in behalf of his interests. No doubt
+it will be said, that the sovereigns, knowing all the advantages which
+religion procures for them, are truly interested in upholding it with
+all their strength. If religious opinions are useful to tyrants, it is
+evident that they are useless to those who govern according to the laws
+of reason and of equity. Is there any advantage in exercising tyranny?
+Does not tyranny deprive princes of true power, the love of the people,
+in which is safety? Should not every rational prince perceive that the
+despot is but an insane man who injures himself? Will not every
+enlightened prince beware of his flatterers, whose object is to put him
+to sleep at the edge of the precipice to which they lead him?
+
+
+
+
+CLI.--RELIGION FAVORS THE ERRORS OF PRINCES, BY DELIVERING THEM FROM FEAR
+AND REMORSE.
+
+If the sacerdotal flatteries succeed in perverting princes and changing
+them into tyrants, the latter on their side necessarily corrupt the
+great men and the people. Under an unjust master, without goodness,
+without virtue, who knows no law but his caprice, a nation must become
+necessarily depraved. Will this master wish to have honest, enlightened,
+and virtuous men near him? No! he needs flatterers in those who
+approach him, imitators, slaves, base and servile minds, who give
+themselves up to his taste; his court will spread the contagion of vice
+to the inferior classes. By degrees all will be necessarily corrupted,
+in a State whose chief is corrupt himself. It was said a long time ago
+that the princes seem ordained to do all they do themselves. Religion,
+far from being a restraint upon the sovereigns, entitles them, without
+fear and without remorse, to the errors which are as fatal to themselves
+as to the nations which they govern. Men are never deceived with
+impunity. Tell a prince that he is a God, and very soon he will believe
+that he owes nothing to anybody. As long as he is feared, he will not
+care much for love; he will recognize no rights, no relations with his
+subjects, nor obligations in their behalf. Tell this prince that he is
+responsible for his actions to God alone, and very soon he will act as
+if he was responsible to nobody.
+
+
+
+
+CLII.--WHAT IS AN ENLIGHTENED SOVEREIGN?
+
+An enlightened sovereign is he who understands his true interests; he
+knows they are united to those of his nation; he knows that a prince can
+be neither great, nor powerful, nor beloved, nor respected, so long as
+he will command but miserable slaves; he knows that equity, benevolence,
+and vigilance will give him more real rights over men than fabulous
+titles which claim to come from Heaven. He will feel that religion is
+useful but to the priests; that it is useless to society, which is often
+troubled by it; that it must be limited to prevent it from doing injury;
+finally, he will understand that, in order to reign with glory, he must
+make good laws, possess virtues, and not base his power on impositions
+and chimeras.
+
+
+
+
+CLIII.--THE DOMINANT PASSIONS AND CRIMES OF PRIESTCRAFT. WITH THE
+ASSISTANCE OF ITS PRETENDED GOD AND OF RELIGION, IT ASSERTS ITS PASSIONS
+AND COMMITS ITS CRIMES.
+
+The ministers of religion have taken great care to make of their God a
+terrible, capricious, and changeable tyrant; it was necessary for them
+that He should be thus in order that He might lend Himself to their
+various interests. A God who would be just and good, without a mixture
+of caprice and perversity; a God who would constantly have the qualities
+of an honest man or of a compliant sovereign, would not suit His
+ministers. It is necessary to the priests that we tremble before their
+God, in order that we have recourse to them to obtain the means to be
+quieted. No man is a hero to his valet de chambre. It is not surprising
+that a God clothed by His priests in such a way as to cause others to
+fear Him, should rarely impose upon those priests themselves, or exert
+but little influence upon their conduct. Consequently we see them behave
+themselves in a uniform way in every land; everywhere they devour
+nations, debase souls, discourage industry, and sow discord under the
+pretext of the glory of their God. Ambition and avarice were at all
+times the dominating passions of the priesthood; everywhere the priest
+places himself above the sovereign and the laws; everywhere we see him
+occupied but with the interests of his pride, his cupidity, his despotic
+and vindictive mood; everywhere he substitutes expiations, sacrifices,
+ceremonies, and mysterious practices; in a word, inventions lucrative to
+himself for useful and social virtues. The mind is confounded and reason
+interdicted with the view of ridiculous practices and pitiable means
+which the ministers of the gods invented in every country to purify
+souls and render Heaven favorable to nations. Here, they practice
+circumcision upon a child to procure it Divine benevolence; there, they
+pour water upon his head to wash away the crimes which he could not yet
+have committed; in other places he is told to plunge himself into a
+river whose waters have the power to wash away all his impurities; in
+other places certain food is forbidden to him, whose use would not fail
+to excite celestial indignation; in other countries they order the
+sinful man to come periodically for the confession of his faults to a
+priest, who is often a greater sinner than he.
+
+
+
+
+CLIV.--CHARLATANRY OF THE PRIESTS.
+
+What would we say of a crowd of quacks, who every day would exhibit in a
+public place, selling their remedies and recommending them as
+infallible, while we should find them afflicted with the same
+infirmities which they pretend to cure? Would we have much confidence in
+the recipes of these charlatans, who would bawl out: "Take our remedies,
+their effects are infallible--they cure everybody except us?" What would
+we think to see these same charlatans pass their lives in complaining
+that their remedies never produce any effect upon the patients who take
+them? Finally, what idea would we form of the foolishness of the common
+man who, in spite of this confession, would continue to pay very high
+for remedies which will not be beneficial to him? The priests resemble
+alchemists, who boldly assert that they have the secret of making gold,
+while they scarcely have clothing enough to cover their nudity.
+
+The ministers of religion incessantly declaim against the corruption of
+the age, and complain loudly of the little success of their teachings,
+at the same time they assure us that religion is the universal remedy,
+the true panacea for all human evils. These priests are sick themselves;
+however, men continue to frequent their stands and to have faith in
+their Divine antidotes, which, according to their own confession, cure
+nobody!
+
+
+
+
+CLV.--COUNTLESS CALAMITIES ARE PRODUCED BY RELIGION, WHICH HAS TAINTED
+MORALITY AND DISTURBED ALL JUST IDEAS AND ALL SOUND DOCTRINES.
+
+Religion, especially among modern people, in taking possession of
+morality, totally obscured its principles; it has rendered men unsocial
+from a sense of duty; it has forced them to be inhuman toward all those
+who did not think as they did. Theological disputes, equally
+unintelligible for the parties already irritated against each other,
+have unsettled empires, caused revolutions, ruined sovereigns,
+devastated the whole of Europe; these despicable quarrels could not be
+extinguished even in rivers of blood. After the extinction of Paganism
+the people established a religious principle of going into a frenzy,
+every time that an opinion was brought forth which their priests
+considered contrary to the holy doctrine. The votaries of a religion
+which preaches externally but charity, harmony, and peace, have shown
+themselves more ferocious than cannibals or savages every time that
+their instructors have excited them to the destruction of their
+brethren. There is no crime which men have not committed in the idea of
+pleasing the Deity or of appeasing His wrath. The idea of a terrible God
+who was represented as a despot, must necessarily have rendered His
+subjects wicked. Fear makes but slaves, and slaves are cowardly, low,
+cruel, and think they have a right to do anything when it is the
+question of gaining the good-will or of escaping the punishments of the
+master whom they fear. Liberty of thought can alone give to men humanity
+and grandeur of soul. The notion of a tyrant God can create but abject,
+angry, quarrelsome, intolerant slaves. Every religion which supposes a
+God easily irritated, jealous, vindictive, punctilious about His rights
+or His title, a God small enough to be offended at opinions which we
+have of Him, a God unjust enough to exact uniform ideas in regard to
+Him, such a religion becomes necessarily turbulent, unsocial,
+sanguinary; the worshipers of such a God never believe they can, without
+crime, dispense with hating and even destroying all those whom they
+designate as adversaries of this God; they would believe themselves
+traitors to the cause of their celestial Monarch, if they should live on
+good terms with rebellious fellow-citizens. To love what God hates,
+would it not be exposing one's self to His implacable hatred? Infamous
+persecutors, and you, religious cannibals! will you never feel the folly
+and injustice of your intolerant disposition? Do you not see that man is
+no more the master of his religious opinions, of his credulity or
+incredulity, than of the language which he learns in childhood, and
+which he can not change? To tell men to think as you do, is it not
+asking a foreigner to express his thoughts in your language? To punish a
+man for his erroneous opinions, is it not punishing him for having been
+educated differently from yourself? If I am incredulous, is it possible
+for me to banish from my mind the reasons which have unsettled my faith?
+If God allows men the freedom to damn themselves, is it your business?
+Are you wiser and more prudent than this God whose rights you wish to
+avenge?
+
+
+
+
+CLVI.--EVERY RELIGION IS INTOLERANT, AND CONSEQUENTLY DESTRUCTIVE OF
+BENEFICENCE.
+
+There is no religious person who, according to his temperament, does not
+hate, despise, or pity the adherents of a sect different from his own.
+The dominant religion (which is never but that of the sovereign and the
+armies) always makes its superiority felt in a very cruel and injurious
+manner toward the weaker sects. There does not exist yet upon earth a
+true tolerance; everywhere a jealous God is worshiped, and each nation
+believes itself His friend to the exclusion of all others.
+
+Every nation boasts itself of worshiping the true God, the universal
+God, the Sovereign of Nature; but when we come to examine this Monarch
+of the world, we perceive that each organization, each sect, each
+religious party, makes of this powerful God but an inferior sovereign,
+whose cares and kindness extend themselves but over a small number of
+His subjects who pretend to have the exclusive advantage of His favors,
+and that He does not trouble Himself about the others.
+
+The founders of religions, and the priests who maintain them, have
+intended to separate the nations which they indoctrinated, from other
+nations; they desired to separate their own flock by distinctive
+features; they gave to their votaries Gods inimical to other Gods as
+well as the forms of worship, dogmas, ceremonies, separately; they
+persuaded them especially that the religions of others were ungodly and
+abominable. By this infamous contrivance, these ambitious impostors took
+exclusive possession of the minds of their votaries, rendered them
+unsocial, and made them consider as outcasts all those who had not the
+same ideas and form of worship as their own. This is the way religion
+succeeded in closing the heart, and in banishing from it that affection
+which man ought to have for his fellow-being. Sociability, tolerance,
+humanity, these first virtues of all morality are totally in compatible
+with religious prejudices.
+
+
+
+
+CLVII.--ABUSE OF A STATE RELIGION.
+
+Every national religion has a tendency to make man vain, unsocial, and
+wicked; the first step toward humanity is to permit each one to follow
+peacefully the worship and the opinions which suit him. But such a
+conduct can not please the ministers of religion, who wish to have the
+right to tyrannize over even the thoughts of men. Blind and bigoted
+princes, you hate, you persecute, you devote heretics to torture,
+because you are persuaded that these unfortunate ones displease God. But
+do you not claim that your God is full of kindness? How can you hope to
+please Him by such barbarous actions which He can not help disapproving
+of? Besides, who told you that their opinions displease your God? Your
+priests told you! But who guarantees that your priests are not deceived
+themselves or that they do not wish to deceive you? It is these same
+priests! Princes! it is upon the perilous word of your priests that you
+commit the most atrocious and the most unheard-of crimes, with the idea
+of pleasing the Deity!
+
+
+
+
+CLVIII.--RELIGION GIVES LICENSE TO THE FEROCITY OF THE PEOPLE BY
+
+
+
+LEGITIMIZING IT, AND AUTHORIZES CRIME BY TEACHING THAT IT CAN BE USEFUL
+TO THE DESIGNS OF GOD.
+
+"Never," says Pascal, "do we do evil so thoroughly and so willingly as
+when we do it through a false principle of conscience." Nothing is more
+dangerous than a religion which licenses the ferocity of the people, and
+justifies in their eyes the blackest crimes; it puts no limits to their
+wickedness as soon as they believe it authorized by their God, whose
+interests, as they are told, can justify all their actions. If there is
+a question of religion, immediately the most civilized nations become
+true savages, and believe everything is permitted to them. The more
+cruel they are, the more agreeable they suppose themselves to be to
+their God, whose cause they imagine can not be sustained by too much
+zeal. All religions of the world have authorized countless crimes. The
+Jews, excited by the promises of their God, arrogated to themselves the
+right of exterminating whole nations; the Romans, whose faith was
+founded upon the oracles of their Gods, became real brigands, and
+conquered and ravaged the world; the Arabians, encouraged by their
+Divine preceptor, carried the sword and the flame among Christians and
+idolaters. The Christians, under pretext of spreading their holy
+religion, covered the two hemispheres a hundred times with blood. In all
+events favorable to their own interests, which they always call the
+cause of God, the priests show us the finger of God. According to these
+principles, religious bigots have the luck of seeing the finger of God
+in revolts, in revolutions, massacres, regicides, prostitutions,
+infamies, and, if these things contribute to the advantage of religion,
+we can say, then, that God uses all sorts of means to secure His ends.
+Is there anything better calculated to annihilate every idea of morality
+in the minds of men, than to make them understand that their God, who is
+so powerful and so perfect, is often compelled to use crime to
+accomplish His designs?
+
+
+
+
+CLIX.--REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENT, THAT THE EVILS ATTRIBUTED TO RELIGION
+ARE BUT THE SAD EFFECTS OF THE PASSIONS OF MEN.
+
+When we complain about the violence and evils which generally religion
+causes upon earth, we are answered at once, that these excesses are not
+due to religion, but that they are the sad effect of men's passions. I
+would ask, however, what unchained these passions? It is evidently
+religion; it is a zeal which renders inhuman, and which serves to cover
+the greatest infamy. Do not these disorders prove that religion, instead
+of restraining the passions of men, does but cover them with a cloak
+that sanctifies them; and that nothing would be more beneficial than to
+tear away this sacred cloak of which men make such a bad use? What
+horrors would be banished from society, if the wicked were deprived of a
+pretext so plausible for disturbing it!
+
+Instead of cherishing peace among men, the priests stirred up hatred and
+strife. They pleaded their conscience, and pretended to have received
+from Heaven the right to be quarrelsome, turbulent, and rebellious. Do
+not the ministers of God consider themselves to be wronged, do they not
+pretend that His Divine Majesty is injured every time that the
+sovereigns have the temerity to try to prevent them from doing injury?
+The priests resemble that irritable woman, who cried out fire! murder!
+assassins! while her husband was holding her hands to prevent her from
+beating him.
+
+
+
+
+CLX.--ALL MORALITY IS INCOMPATIBLE WITH RELIGIOUS OPINIONS.
+
+Notwithstanding the bloody tragedies which religion has so often caused
+in this world, we are constantly told that there can be no morality
+without religion. If we judge theological opinions by their effects, we
+would be right in assuming that all morality is perfectly incompatible
+with the religious opinions of men. "Imitate God," is constantly
+repeated to us. Ah! what morals would we have if we should imitate this
+God! Which God should we imitate? Is it the deist's God? But even this
+God can not be a model of goodness for us. If He is the author of all,
+He is equally the author of the good and of the bad we see in this
+world; if He is the author of order, He is also the author of disorder,
+which would not exist without His permission; if He produces, He
+destroys; if He gives life, He also causes death; if He grants
+abundance, riches, prosperity, and peace, He permits or sends famines,
+poverty, calamities, and wars. How can you accept as a model of
+permanent beneficence the God of theism or of natural religion, whose
+favorable intentions are at every moment contradicted by everything that
+transpires in the world? Morality needs a firmer basis than the example
+of a God whose conduct varies, and whom we can not call good but by
+obstinately closing the eyes to the evil which He causes, or permits to
+be done in this world.
+
+Shall we imitate the good and great Jupiter of ancient Paganism? To
+imitate such a God would be to take as a model a rebellious son, who
+wrests his father's throne from him and then mutilates his body; it is
+imitating a debauchee and adulterer, an incestuous, intemperate man,
+whose conduct would cause any reasonable mortal to blush. What would
+have become of men under the control of Paganism if they had imagined,
+according to Plato, that virtue consisted in imitating the gods?
+
+Must we imitate the God of the Jews? Will we find a model for our
+conduct in Jehovah? He is truly a savage God, really created for an
+ignorant, cruel, and immoral people; He is a God who is constantly
+enraged, breathing only vengeance; who is without pity, who commands
+carnage and robbery; in a word, He is a God whose conduct can not serve
+as a model to an honest man, and who can be imitated but by a chief of
+brigands.
+
+Shall we imitate, then, the Jesus of the Christians? Can this God, who
+died to appease the implacable fury of His Father, serve as an example
+which men ought to follow? Alas! we will see in Him but a God, or rather
+a fanatic, a misanthrope, who being plunged Himself into misery, and
+preaching to the wretched, advises them to be poor, to combat and
+extinguish nature, to hate pleasure, to seek sufferings, and to despise
+themselves; He tells them to leave father, mother, all the ties of life,
+in order to follow Him. What beautiful morality! you will say. It is
+admirable, no doubt; it must be Divine, because it is impracticable for
+men. But does not this sublime morality tend to render virtue
+despicable? According to this boasted morality of the man-God of the
+Christians, His disciples in this lower world are, like Tantalus,
+tormented with burning thirst, which they are not permitted to quench.
+Do not such morals give us a wonderful idea of nature's Author? If He
+has, as we are assured, created everything for the use of His creatures,
+by what strange caprice does He forbid the use of the good things which
+He has created for them? Is the pleasure which man constantly desires
+but a snare that God has maliciously laid in his path to entrap him?
+
+
+
+
+CLXI.--THE MORALS OF THE GOSPEL ARE IMPRACTICABLE.
+
+The votaries of Christ would like to make us regard as a miracle the
+establishment of their religion, which is in every respect contrary to
+nature, opposed to all the inclinations of the heart, an enemy to
+physical pleasures. But the austerity of a doctrine has a tendency to
+render it more wonderful to the ignorant. The same reason which makes us
+respect, as Divine and supernatural, inconceivable mysteries, causes us
+to admire, as Divine and supernatural, a morality impracticable and
+beyond the power of man. To admire morals and to practice them, are two
+very different things. All the Christians continually admire the morals
+of the Gospel, but it is practiced but by a small number of saints;
+admired by people who themselves avoid imitating their conduct, under
+the pretext that they are lacking either the power or the grace.
+
+The whole universe is infected more or less with a religious morality
+which is founded upon the opinion that to please the Deity it is
+necessary to render one's self unhappy upon earth. We see in all parts
+of our globe penitents, hermits, fakirs, fanatics, who seem to have
+studied profoundly the means of tormenting themselves for the glory of a
+Being whose goodness they all agree in celebrating. Religion, by its
+essence, is the enemy of joy and of the welfare of men. "Blessed are
+those who suffer!" Woe to those who have abundance and joy! These are
+the rare revelations which Christianity teaches!
+
+
+
+
+CLXII.--A SOCIETY OF SAINTS WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE.
+
+In what consists the saint of all religions? It is a man who prays,
+fasts, who torments himself, who avoids the world, who, like an owl, is
+pleased but in solitude, who abstains from all pleasure, who seems
+frightened at every object which turns him a moment from his fanatical
+meditations. Is this virtue? Is a being of this stamp of any use to
+himself or to others? Would not society be dissolved, and would not men
+retrograde into barbarism, if each one should be fool enough to wish to
+be a saint?
+
+It is evident that the literal and rigorous practice of the Divine
+morality of the Christians would lead nations to ruin. A Christian who
+would attain perfection, ought to drive away from his mind all that can
+alienate him from heaven--his true country. He sees upon earth but
+temptations, snares, and opportunities to go astray; he must fear
+science as injurious to faith; he must avoid industry, as it is a means
+of obtaining riches, which are fatal to salvation; he must renounce
+preferments and honors, as things capable of exciting his pride and
+calling his attention away from his soul; in a word, the sublime
+morality of Christ, if it were not impracticable, would sever all the
+ties of society.
+
+A saint in the world is no more useful than a saint in the desert; the
+saint has an unhappy, discontented, and often irritable, turbulent
+disposition; his zeal often obliges him, conscientiously, to disturb
+society by opinions or dreams which his vanity makes him accept as
+inspirations from Heaven. The annals of all religions are filled with
+accounts of anxious, intractable, seditious saints, who have
+distinguished themselves by ravages that, for the greater glory of God,
+they have scattered throughout the universe. If the saints who live in
+solitude are useless, those who live in the world are very often
+dangerous. The vanity of performing a role, the desire of distinguishing
+themselves in the eyes of the stupid vulgar by a strange conduct,
+constitute usually the distinctive characteristics of great saints;
+pride persuades them that they are extraordinary men, far above human
+nature; beings who are more perfect than others; chosen ones, which God
+looks upon with more complaisance than the rest of mortals. Humility in
+a saint is, is a general rule, but a pride more refined than that of
+common men. It must be a very ridiculous vanity which can determine a
+man to continually war with his own nature!
+
+
+
+
+CLXIII.--HUMAN NATURE IS NOT DEPRAVED; AND A MORALITY WHICH CONTRADICTS
+THIS FACT IS NOT MADE FOR MAN.
+
+A morality which contradicts the nature of man is not made for him. But
+you will say that man's nature is depraved. In what consists this
+pretended depravity? Is it because he has passions? But are not passions
+the very essence of man? Must he not seek, desire, love that which is,
+or that which he believes to be, essential to his happiness? Must he not
+fear and avoid that which he judges injurious or fatal to him? Excite
+his passions by useful objects; let him attach himself to these same
+objects, divert him by sensible and known motives from that which can do
+him or others harm, and you will make of him a reasonable and virtuous
+being. A man without passions would be equally indifferent to vice and
+to virtue.
+
+Holy doctors! you constantly tell us that man's nature is perverted; you
+tell us that the way of all flesh is corrupt; you tell us that nature
+gives us but inordinate inclinations. In this case you accuse your God,
+who has not been able or willing to keep this nature in its original
+perfection. If this nature became corrupted, why did not this God repair
+it? The Christian assures me that human nature is repaired, that the
+death of his God has reestablished it in its integrity. How comes it
+then, that human nature, notwithstanding the death of a God, is still
+depraved? Is it, then, a pure loss that your God died? What becomes of
+His omnipotence and His victory over the Devil, if it is true that the
+Devil still holds the empire which, according to you, he has always
+exercised in the world?
+
+Death, according to Christian theology, is the penalty of sin. This
+opinion agrees with that of some savage Negro nations, who imagine that
+the death of a man is always the supernatural effect of the wrath of the
+Gods. The Christians firmly believe that Christ has delivered them from
+sin, while they see that, in their religion as in the others, man is
+subject to death. To say that Jesus Christ has delivered us from sin, is
+it not claiming that a judge has granted pardon to a guilty man, while
+we see him sent to torture?
+
+
+
+
+CLXIV.--OF JESUS CHRIST, THE PRIEST'S GOD.
+
+If, closing our eyes upon all that transpires in this world, we should
+rely upon the votaries of the Christian religion, we would believe that
+the coming of our Divine Saviour has produced the most wonderful
+revolution and the most complete reform in the morals of nations. The
+Messiah, according to Pascal, [See Thoughts of Pascal] ought of Himself
+alone to produce a great, select, and holy people; conducting and
+nourishing it, and introducing it into the place of repose and sanctity,
+rendering it holy to God, making it the temple of God, saving it from
+the wrath of God, delivering it from the servitude of sin, giving laws
+to this people, engraving these laws upon their hearts, offering Himself
+to God for them, crushing the head of the serpent, etc. This great man
+has forgotten to show us the people upon whom His Divine Messiah has
+produced the miraculous effects of which He speaks with so much
+emphasis; so far, it seems, they do not exist upon the earth!
+
+If we examine ever so little the morals of the Christian nations, and
+listen to the clamors of their priests, we will be obliged to conclude
+that their God, Jesus Christ, preached without fruit, without success;
+that His Almighty will still finds in men a resistance, over which this
+God either can not or does not wish to triumph. The morality of this
+Divine Doctor which His disciples admire so much, and practice so
+little, is followed during a whole century but by half a dozen of
+obscure saints, fanatical and ignorant monks, who alone will have the
+glory of shining in the celestial court; all the remainder of mortals,
+although redeemed by the blood of this God, will be the prey of eternal
+flames.
+
+
+
+
+CLXV.--THE DOGMA OF THE REMISSION OF SINS HAS BEEN INVENTED IN THE
+INTEREST OF THE PRIESTS.
+
+When a man has a great desire to sin, he thinks very little about his
+God; more than this, whatever crimes he may have committed, he always
+flatters himself that this God will mitigate the severity of his
+punishments. No mortal seriously believes that his conduct can damn him.
+Although he fears a terrible God, who often makes him tremble, every
+time he is strongly tempted he succumbs and sees but a God of mercy, the
+idea of whom quiets him. Does he do evil? He hopes to have the time to
+correct himself, and promises earnestly to repent some day.
+
+There are in the religious pharmacy infallible receipts for calming the
+conscience; the priests in every country possess sovereign secrets for
+disarming the wrath of Heaven. However true it may be that the anger of
+Deity is appeased by prayers, by offerings, by sacrifices, by
+penitential tears, we have no right to say that religion holds in check
+the irregularities of men; they will first sin, and afterward seek the
+means to reconcile God. Every religion which expiates, and which
+promises the remission of crimes, if it restrains any, it encourages the
+great number to commit evil. Notwithstanding His immutability, God is,
+in all the religions of this world, a veritable Proteus. His priests
+show Him now armed with severity, and then full of clemency and
+gentleness; now cruel and pitiless, and then easily reconciled by the
+repentance and the tears of the sinners. Consequently, men face the
+Deity in the manner which conforms the most to their present interests.
+An always wrathful God would repel His worshipers, or cast them into
+despair. Men need a God who becomes angry and who can be appeased; if
+His anger alarms a few timid souls, His clemency reassures the
+determined wicked ones who intend to have recourse sooner or later to
+the means of reconciling themselves with Him; if the judgments of God
+frighten a few faint-hearted devotees who already by temperament and by
+habitude are not inclined to evil, the treasures of Divine mercy
+reassure the greatest criminals, who have reason to hope that they will
+participate in them with the others.
+
+
+
+
+CLXVI.--THE FEAR OF GOD IS POWERLESS AGAINST HUMAN PASSIONS.
+
+The majority of men rarely think of God, or, at least, do not occupy
+themselves much with Him. The idea of God has so little stability, it is
+so afflicting, that it can not hold the imagination for a long time,
+except in some sad and melancholy visionists who do not constitute the
+majority of the inhabitants of this world. The common man has no
+conception of it; his weak brain becomes perplexed the moment he
+attempts to think of Him. The business man thinks of nothing but his
+affairs; the courtier of his intrigues; worldly men, women, youth, of
+their pleasures; dissipation soon dispels the wearisome notions of
+religion. The ambitious, the avaricious, and the debauchee sedulously
+lay aside speculations too feeble to counterbalance their diverse
+passions.
+
+Whom does the idea of God overawe? A few weak men disappointed and
+disgusted with this world; some persons whose passions are already
+extinguished by age, by infirmities, or by reverses of fortune. Religion
+is a restraint but for those whose temperament or circumstances have
+already subjected them to reason. The fear of God does not prevent any
+from committing sin but those who do not wish to sin very much, or who
+are no longer in a condition to sin. To tell men that Divinity punishes
+crime in this world, is to claim as a fact that which experience
+contradicts constantly The most wicked men are usually the arbiters of
+the world, and those whom fortune blesses with its favors. To convince
+us of the judgments of God by sending us to the other life, is to make
+us accept conjectures in order to destroy facts which we can not
+dispute.
+
+
+
+
+CLXVII.--THE INVENTION OF HELL IS TOO ABSURD TO PREVENT EVIL.
+
+No one dreams about another life when he is very much absorbed in
+objects which he meets on earth. In the eyes of a passionate lover, the
+presence of his mistress extinguishes the fires of hell, and her charms
+blot out all the pleasures of Paradise. Woman! you leave, you say, your
+lover for your God? It is that your lover is no longer the same in your
+estimation; or your lover leaves you, and you must fill the void which
+is made in your heart. Nothing is more common than to see ambitious,
+perverse, corrupt, and immoral men who are religious, and who sometimes
+exhibit even zeal in its behalf; if they do not practice religion, they
+promise themselves they will practice it some day; they keep it in
+reserve as a remedy which, sooner or later, will be necessary to quiet
+the conscience for the evil which they intend yet to do. Besides,
+devotees and priests being a very numerous, active, and powerful party,
+it is not astonishing to see impostors and thieves seek for its support
+in order to gain their ends. We will be told, no doubt, that many honest
+people are sincerely religious without profit; but is uprightness of
+heart always accompanied with intelligence? We are cited to a great
+number of learned men, men of genius, who are very religious. This
+proves that men of genius can have prejudices, can be pusillanimous, can
+have an imagination which seduces them and prevents them from examining
+objects coolly. Pascal proves nothing in favor of religion, except that
+a man of genius can possess a grain of weakness, and is but a child when
+he is weak enough to listen to prejudices. Pascal himself tells us "that
+the mind can be strong and narrow, and just as extended as it is weak."
+He says more: "We can have our senses all right, and not be equally able
+in all things; because there are men who, being right in a certain
+sphere of things, lose themselves in others."
+
+
+
+
+CLXVIII.--ABSURDITY OF THE MORALITY AND OF THE RELIGIOUS VIRTUES
+ESTABLISHED SOLELY IN THE INTEREST OF THE PRIESTS.
+
+What is virtue according to theology? It is, we are told, the conformity
+of men's actions with the will of God. But who is God? He is a being
+whom no one is able to conceive of, and whom, consequently, each one
+modifies in his own way. What is the will of God? It is what men who
+have seen God, or whom God has inspired, have told us. Who are those who
+have seen God? They are either fanatics, or scoundrels, or ambitious
+men, whose word we can not rely upon. To found morality upon a God that
+each man represents differently, that each one composes by his own idea,
+whom everybody arranges according to his own temperament and his own
+interest, is evidently founding morality upon the caprice and upon the
+imagination of men; it is basing it upon the whims of a sect, faction,
+or party, who, excluding all others, claim to have the advantage of
+worshiping the true God.
+
+To establish morality, or the duties of man, upon the Divine will, is
+founding it upon the wishes, the reveries, or the interests of those who
+make God talk without fear of contradiction. In every religion the
+priests alone have the right to decide upon what pleases or displeases
+their God; we may rest assured that they will decide upon what pleases
+or displeases themselves.
+
+The dogmas, ceremonies, the morality and the virtues which all religions
+of the world prescribe, are visibly calculated only to extend the power
+or to increase the emoluments of the founders and of the ministers of
+these religions; the dogmas are obscure, inconceivable, frightful, and,
+thereby, very liable to cause the imagination to wander, and to render
+the common man more docile to those who wish to domineer over him; the
+ceremonies and practices procure fortune or consideration to the
+priests; the religious morals and virtues consist in a submissive faith,
+which prevents reasoning; in a devout humility, which assures to the
+priests the submission of their slaves; in an ardent zeal, when the
+question of religion is agitated; that is to say, when the interest of
+these priests is considered, all religious virtues having evidently for
+their object the advantage of the priests.
+
+
+
+
+CLXIX.--WHAT DOES THAT CHRISTIAN CHARITY AMOUNT TO, SUCH AS THEOLOGIANS
+TEACH AND PRACTICE?
+
+When we reproach the theologians with the sterility of their religious
+virtues, they praise, with emphasis, charity, that tender love of our
+neighbor which Christianity makes an essential duty for its disciples.
+But, alas! what becomes of this pretended charity as soon as we examine
+the actions of the Lord's ministers? Ask if you must love your neighbor
+if he is impious, heretical, and incredulous, that is to say, if he does
+not think as they do? Ask them if you must tolerate opinions contrary to
+those which they profess? Ask them if the Lord can show indulgence to
+those who are in error? Immediately their charity disappears, and the
+dominating clergy will tell you that the prince carries the sword but to
+sustain the interests of the Most High; they will tell you that for love
+of the neighbor, you must persecute, imprison, exile, or burn him. You
+will find tolerance among a few priests who are persecuted themselves,
+but who put aside Christian charity as soon as they have the power to
+persecute in their turn.
+
+The Christian religion which was originally preached by beggars and by
+very wretched men, strongly recommends alms-giving under the name of
+charity; the faith of Mohammed equally makes it an indispensable duty.
+Nothing, no doubt, is better suited to humanity than to assist the
+unfortunate, to clothe the naked, to lend a charitable hand to whoever
+needs it. But would it not be more humane and more charitable to foresee
+the misery and to prevent the poor from increasing? If religion, instead
+of deifying princes, had but taught them to respect the property of
+their subjects, to be just, and to exercise but their legitimate rights,
+we should not see such a great number of mendicants in their realms. A
+greedy, unjust, tyrannical government multiplies misery; the rigor of
+taxes produces discouragement, idleness, indigence, which, on their
+part, produce robbery, murders, and all kinds of crime. If the
+sovereigns had more humanity, charity, and justice, their States would
+not be peopled by so many unfortunate ones whose misery becomes
+impossible to soothe.
+
+The Christian and Mohammedan States are filled with vast and richly
+endowed hospitals, in which we admire the pious charity of the kings and
+of the sultans who erected them. Would it not have been more humane to
+govern the people well, to procure them ease, to excite and to favor
+industry and trade, to permit them to enjoy in safety the fruits of
+their labors, than to oppress them under a despotic yoke, to impoverish
+them by senseless wars, to reduce them to mendicity in order to gratify
+an immoderate luxury, and afterward build sumptuous monuments which can
+contain but a very small portion of those whom they have rendered
+miserable? Religion, by its virtues, has but given a change to men;
+instead of foreseeing evils, it applies but insufficient remedies. The
+ministers of Heaven have always known how to benefit themselves by the
+calamities of others; public misery became their element; they made
+themselves the administrators of the goods of the poor, the distributors
+of alms, the depositaries of charities; thereby they extended and
+sustained at all times their power over the unfortunates who usually
+compose the most numerous, the most anxious, the most seditious part of
+society. Thus the greatest evils are made profitable to the ministers
+of the Lord.
+
+The Christian priests tell us that the goods which they possess are the
+goods of the poor, and pretend by this title that their possessions are
+sacred; consequently, the sovereigns and the people press themselves to
+accumulate lands, revenues, treasures for them; under pretext of
+charity, our spiritual guides have become very opulent, and enjoy, in
+the sight of the impoverished nations, goods which were destined but for
+the miserable; the latter, far from murmuring about it, applaud a
+deceitful generosity which enriches the Church, but which very rarely
+alleviates the sufferings of the poor.
+
+According to the principles of Christianity, poverty itself is a virtue,
+and it is this virtue which the sovereigns and the priests make their
+slaves observe the most. According to these ideas, a great number of
+pious Christians have renounced with good-will the perishable riches of
+the earth; have distributed their patrimony to the poor, and have
+retired into a desert to live a life of voluntary indigence. But very
+soon this enthusiasm, this supernatural taste for misery, must surrender
+to nature. The successors to these voluntary poor, sold to the religious
+people their prayers and their powerful intercession with the Deity;
+they became rich and powerful; thus, monks and hermits lived in
+idleness, and, under the pretext of charity, devoured insultingly the
+substance of the poor. Poverty of spirit was that of which religion made
+always the greatest use. The fundamental virtue of all religion, that is
+to say, the most useful one to its ministers, is faith. It consists in
+an unlimited credulity, which causes men to believe, without
+examination, all that which the interpreters of the Deity wish them to
+believe. With the aid of this wonderful virtue, the priests became the
+arbiters of justice and of injustice; of good and of evil; they found it
+easy to commit crimes when crimes became necessary to their interests.
+Implicit faith has been the source of the greatest outrages which have
+been committed upon the earth.
+
+
+
+
+CLXX.--CONFESSION, THAT GOLDEN MINE FOR THE PRIESTS, HAS DESTROYED THE
+TRUE PRINCIPLES OF MORALITY.
+
+He who first proclaimed to the nations that, when man had wronged man,
+he must ask God's pardon, appease His wrath by presents, and offer Him
+sacrifices, obviously subverted the true principles of morality.
+According to these ideas, men imagine that they can obtain from the King
+of Heaven, as well as from the kings of the earth, permission to be
+unjust and wicked, or at least pardon for the evil which they might
+commit.
+
+Morality is founded upon the relations, the needs, and the constant
+interests of the inhabitants of the earth; the relations which subsist
+between men and God are either entirely unknown or imaginary. The
+religion associating God with men has visibly weakened or destroyed the
+ties which unite men.
+
+Mortals imagine that they can, with impunity, injure each other by
+making a suitable reparation to the Almighty Being, who is supposed to
+have the right to remit all the injuries done to His creatures. Is there
+anything more liable to encourage wickedness and to embolden to crime,
+than to persuade men that there exists an invisible being who has the
+right to pardon injustice, rapine, perfidy, and all the outrages they
+can inflict upon society? Encouraged by these fatal ideas, we see the
+most perverse men abandon themselves to the greatest crimes, and expect
+to repair them by imploring Divine mercy; their conscience rests in
+peace when a priest assures them that Heaven is quieted by sincere
+repentance, which is very useless to the world; this priest consoles
+them in the name of Deity, if they consent in reparation of their faults
+to divide with His ministers the fruits of their plunderings, of their
+frauds, and of their wickedness. Morality united to religion, becomes
+necessarily subordinate to it. In the mind of a religious person, God
+must be preferred to His creatures; "It is better to obey Him than men!"
+The interests of the Celestial Monarch must be above those of weak
+mortals. But the interests of Heaven are evidently the interests of the
+ministers of Heaven; from which it follows evidently, that in all
+religions, the priests, under pretext of Heaven's interest's, or of
+God's glory, will be able to dispense with the duties of human morals
+when they do not agree with the duties which God is entitled to impose.
+
+Besides, He who has the power to pardon crimes, has He not the right to
+order them committed?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXI.--THE SUPPOSITION OF THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD IS NOT NECESSARY TO
+MORALITY.
+
+We are constantly told that without a God, there can be no moral
+obligation; that it is necessary for men and for the sovereigns
+themselves to have a lawgiver sufficiently powerful to compel them to be
+moral; moral obligation implies a law; but this law arises from the
+eternal and necessary relations of things among themselves, which have
+nothing in common with the existence of a God. The rules which govern
+men's conduct spring from their own nature, which they are supposed to
+know, and not from the Divine nature, of which they have no conception;
+these rules compel us to render ourselves estimable or contemptible,
+amiable or hateful, worthy of reward or of punishments, happy or
+unhappy, according to the extent to which we observe them. The law that
+compels man not to harm himself, is inherent in the nature of a sensible
+being, who, no matter how he came into this world, or what can be his
+fate in another, is compelled by his very nature to seek his welfare and
+to shun evil, to love pleasure and to fear pain. The law which compels a
+man not to harm others and to do good, is inherent in the nature of
+sensible beings living in society, who, by their nature, are compelled
+to despise those who do them no good, and to detest those who oppose
+their happiness. Whether there exists a God or not, whether this God has
+spoken or not, men's moral duties will always be the same so long as
+they possess their own nature; that is to say, so long as they are
+sensible beings. Do men need a God whom they do not know, or an
+invisible lawgiver, or a mysterious religion, or chimerical fears in
+order to comprehend that all excess tends ultimately to destroy them,
+and that in order to preserve themselves they must abstain from it; that
+in order to be loved by others, they must do good; that doing evil is a
+sure means of incurring their hatred and vengeance? "Before the law
+there was no sin." Nothing is more false than this maxim. It is enough
+for a man to be what he is, to be a sensible being in order to
+distinguish that which pleases or displeases him. It is enough that a
+man knows that another man is a sensible being like himself, in order
+for him to know what is useful or injurious to him. It is enough that
+man needs his fellow-creature, in order that he should fear that he
+might produce unfavorable impressions upon him. Thus a sentient and
+thinking being needs but to feel and to think, in order to discover that
+which is due to him and to others. I feel, and another feels, like
+myself; this is the foundation of all morality.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXII.--RELIGION AND ITS SUPERNATURAL MORALITY ARE FATAL TO THE PEOPLE,
+AND OPPOSED TO MAN'S NATURE.
+
+We can judge of the merit of a system of morals but by its conformity
+with man's nature. According to this comparison, we have a right to
+reject it, if we find it detrimental to the welfare of mankind. Whoever
+has seriously meditated upon religion and its supernatural morality,
+whoever has weighed its advantages and disadvantages, will become
+convinced that they are both injurious to the interests of the human
+race, or directly opposed to man's nature.
+
+"People, to arms! Your God's cause is at stake! Heaven is outraged!
+Faith is in danger! Down upon infidelity, blasphemy, and heresy!"
+
+By the magical power of these valiant words, which the people never
+understand, the priests in all ages were the leaders in the revolts of
+nations, in dethroning kings, in kindling civil wars, and in imprisoning
+men. When we chance to examine the important objects which have excited
+the Celestial wrath and produced so many ravages upon the earth, it is
+found that the foolish reveries and the strange conjectures of some
+theologian who did not understand himself, or, the pretensions of the
+clergy, have severed all ties of society and inundated the human race in
+its own blood and tears.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXIII.--HOW THE UNION OF RELIGION AND POLITICS IS FATAL TO THE PEOPLE
+AND TO THE KINGS.
+
+The sovereigns of this world in associating the Deity in the government
+of their realms, in pretending to be His lieutenants and His
+representatives upon earth, in admitting that they hold their power from
+Him, must necessarily accept His ministers as rivals or as masters. Is
+it, then, astonishing that the priests have often made the kings feel
+the superiority of the Celestial Monarch? Have they not more than once
+made the temporal princes understand that the greatest physical power is
+compelled to surrender to the spiritual power of opinion? Nothing is
+more difficult than to serve two masters, especially when they do not
+agree upon what they demand of their subjects. The union of religion
+with politics has necessarily caused a double legislation in the States.
+The law of God, interpreted by His priests, is often contrary to the law
+of the sovereign or to the interest of the State. When the princes are
+firm, and sure of the love of their subjects, God's law is sometimes
+obliged to comply with the wise intentions of the temporal sovereign;
+but more often the sovereign authority is obliged to retreat before the
+Divine authority, that is to say, before the interests of the clergy.
+Nothing is more dangerous for a prince, than to meddle with
+ecclesiastical affairs (to put his hands into the holy-water pot), that
+is to say, to attempt the reform of abuses consecrated by religion. God
+is never more angry than when the Divine rights, the privileges, the
+possessions, and the immunities of His priests are interfered with.
+
+Metaphysical speculations or the religious opinions of men, never
+influence their conduct except when they believe them conformed to their
+interests. Nothing proves this truth more forcibly than the conduct of a
+great number of princes in regard to the spiritual power, which we see
+them very often resist. Should not a sovereign who is persuaded of the
+importance and the rights of religion, conscientiously feel himself
+obliged to receive with respect the orders of his priests, and consider
+them as commandments of the Deity? There was a time when the kings and
+the people, more conformable, and convinced of the rights of the
+spiritual power, became its slaves, surrendered to it on all occasions,
+and were but docile instruments in its hands; this happy time is no
+more. By a strange inconsistency, we sometimes see the most religious
+monarchs oppose the enterprises of those whom they regard as God's
+ministers. A sovereign who is filled with religion or respect for his
+God, ought to be constantly prostrate before his priests, and regard
+them as his true sovereigns. Is there a power upon the earth which has
+the right to measure itself with that of the Most High?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXIV.--CREEDS ARE BURDENSOME AND RUINOUS TO THE MAJORITY OF NATIONS.
+
+Have the princes who believe themselves interested in propagating the
+prejudices of their subjects, reflected well upon the effects which are
+produced by privileged demagogues, who have the right to speak when they
+choose, and excite in the name of Heaven the passions of many millions
+of their subjects? What ravages would not these holy haranguers cause
+should they conspire to disturb a State, as they have so often done?
+
+Nothing is more onerous and more ruinous for the greatest part of the
+nations than the worship of their Gods! Everywhere their ministers not
+only rank as the first order in the State, but also enjoy the greater
+portion of society's benefits, and have the right to levy continual
+taxes upon their fellow-citizens. What real advantages do these organs
+of the Most High procure for the people in exchange for the immense
+profits which they draw from them? Do they give them in exchange for
+their wealth and their courtesies anything but mysteries, hypotheses,
+ceremonies, subtle questions, interminable quarrels, which very often
+their States must pay for with their blood?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXV.--RELIGION PARALYZES MORALITY.
+
+Religion, which claims to be the firmest support of morality, evidently
+deprives it of its true motor, to substitute imaginary motors,
+inconceivable chimeras, which, being obviously contrary to common sense,
+can not be firmly believed by any one. Everybody assures us that he
+believes firmly in a God who rewards and punishes; everybody claims to
+be persuaded of the existence of a hell and of a Paradise; however, do
+we see that these ideas render men better or counterbalance in the minds
+of the greatest number of them the slightest interest? Each one assures
+us that he is afraid of God's judgments, although each one gives vent to
+his passions when he believes himself sure of escaping the judgments of
+men. The fear of invisible powers is rarely as great as the fear of
+visible powers. Unknown or distant sufferings make less impression upon
+people than the erected gallows, or the example of a hanged man. There
+is scarcely any courtier who fears God's anger more than the displeasure
+of his master. A pension, a title, a ribbon, are sufficient to make one
+forget the torments of hell and the pleasures of the celestial court. A
+woman's caresses expose him every day to the displeasure of the Most
+High. A joke, a banter, a bon-mot, make more impression upon the man of
+the world than all the grave notions of his religion. Are we not assured
+that a true repentance is sufficient to appease Divinity? However, we do
+not see that this true repentance is sincerely expressed; at least, we
+very rarely see great thieves, even in the hour of death, restore the
+goods which they know they have unjustly acquired. Men persuade
+themselves, no doubt, that they will submit to the eternal fire, if they
+can not guarantee themselves against it. But as settlements can be made
+with Heaven by giving the Church a portion of their fortunes, there are
+very few religious thieves who do not die perfectly quieted about the
+manner in which they gained their riches in this world.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXVI.--FATAL CONSEQUENCES OF PIETY.
+
+Even by the confession of the most ardent defenders of religion and of
+its usefulness, nothing is more rare than sincere conversions; to which
+we might add, nothing is more useless to society. Men do not become
+disgusted with the world until the world is disgusted with them; a woman
+gives herself to God only when the world no longer wants her. Her vanity
+finds in religious devotion a role which occupies her and consoles her
+for the ruin of her charms. She passes her time in the most trifling
+practices, parties, intrigues, invectives, and slander; zeal furnishes
+her the means of distinguishing herself and becoming an object of
+consideration in the religious circle. If the bigots have the talent to
+please God and His priests, they rarely possess that of pleasing society
+or of rendering themselves useful to it. Religion for a devotee is a
+veil which covers and justifies all his passions, his pride, his bad
+humor, his anger, his vengeance, his impatience, his bitterness.
+Religion arrogates to itself a tyrannical superiority which banishes
+from commerce all gentleness, gaiety, and joy; it gives the right to
+censure others; to capture and to exterminate the infidels for the glory
+of God; it is very common to be religious and to have none of the
+virtues or the qualities necessary to social life.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXVII.--THE SUPPOSITION OF ANOTHER LIFE IS NEITHER CONSOLING TO MAN NOR
+NECESSARY TO MORALITY.
+
+We are assured that the dogma of another life is of the greatest
+importance to the peace of society; it is imagined that without it men
+would have no motives for doing good. Why do we need terrors and fables
+to teach any reasonable man how he ought to conduct himself upon earth?
+Does not each one of us see that he has the greatest interest in
+deserving the approbation, esteem, and kindness of the beings which
+surround him, and in avoiding all that can cause the censure, the
+contempt, and the resentment of society? No matter how short the
+duration of a festival, of a conversation, or of a visit may be, does
+not each one of us wish to act a befitting part in it, agreeable to
+himself and to others? If life is but a passage, let us try to make it
+easy; it can not be so if we lack the regards of those who travel with
+us.
+
+Religion, which is so sadly occupied with its gloomy reveries,
+represents man to us as but a pilgrim upon earth; it concludes that in
+order to travel with more safety, he should travel alone; renounce the
+pleasures which he meets and deprive himself of the amusements which
+could console him for the fatigues and the weariness of the road. A
+stoical and morose philosophy sometimes gives us counsels as senseless
+as religion; but a more rational philosophy inspires us to strew flowers
+on life's pathway; to dispel melancholy and panic terrors; to link our
+interests with those of our traveling companions; to divert ourselves by
+gaiety and honest pleasures from the pains and the crosses to which we
+are so often exposed. We are made to feel, that in order to travel
+pleasantly, we should abstain from that which could become injurious to
+ourselves, and to avoid with great care that which could make us odious
+to our associates.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXVIII.--AN ATHEIST HAS MORE MOTIVES FOR ACTING UPRIGHTLY, MORE
+
+
+
+CONSCIENCE, THAN A RELIGIOUS PERSON.
+
+It is asked what motives has an atheist for doing right. He can have the
+motive of pleasing himself and his fellow-creatures; of living happily
+and tranquilly; of making himself loved and respected by men, whose
+existence and whose dispositions are better known than those of a being
+impossible to understand. Can he who fears not the Gods, fear anything?
+He can fear men, their contempt, their disrespect, and the punishments
+which the laws inflict; finally, he can fear himself; he can be afraid
+of the remorse that all those experience whose conscience reproaches
+them for having deserved the hatred of their fellow-beings. Conscience
+is the inward testimony which we render to ourselves for having acted in
+such a manner as to deserve the esteem or the censure of those with whom
+we associate. This conscience is based upon the knowledge which we have
+of men, and of the sentiments which our actions must awaken in them. A
+religious person's conscience persuades him that he has pleased or
+displeased his God, of whom he has no idea, and whose obscure and
+doubtful intentions are explained to him only by suspicious men, who
+know no more of the essence of Divinity than he does, and who do not
+agree upon what can please or displease God. In a word, the conscience
+of a credulous man is guided by men whose own conscience is in error, or
+whose interest extinguishes intelligence.
+
+
+
+
+Can an atheist have conscience? What are his motives for abstaining from
+secret vices and crimes of which other men are ignorant, and which are
+beyond the reach of laws? He can be assured by constant experience that
+there is no vice which, in the nature of things, does not bring its own
+punishment. If he wishes to preserve himself, he will avoid all those
+excesses which can be injurious to his health; he would not desire to
+live and linger, thus becoming a burden to himself and others. In regard
+to secret crimes, he would avoid them through fear of being ashamed of
+himself, from whom he can not hide. If he has reason, he will know the
+price of the esteem that an honest man should have for himself. He will
+know, besides, that unexpected circumstances can unveil to the eyes of
+others the conduct which he feels interested in concealing. The other
+world gives no motive for doing well to him who finds no motive for it
+here.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXIX.--AN ATHEISTICAL KING WOULD BE PREFERABLE TO ONE WHO IS RELIGIOUS
+AND WICKED, AS WE OFTEN SEE THEM.
+
+The speculating atheist, the theist will tell us, may be an honest man,
+but his writings will cause atheism in politics. Princes and ministers,
+being no longer restrained by the fear of God, will give themselves up
+without scruple to the most frightful excesses. But no matter what we
+can suppose of the depravity of an atheist on a throne, can it ever be
+any greater or more injurious than that of so many conquerors, tyrants,
+persecutors, of ambitious and perverse courtiers, who, without being
+atheists, but who, being very often religious, do not cease to make
+humanity groan under the weight of their crimes? Can an atheistical king
+inflict more evil on the world than a Louis XI., a Philip II., a
+Richelieu, who have all allied religion with crime? Nothing is rarer
+than atheistical princes, and nothing more common than very bad and very
+religious tyrants.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXX.--THE MORALITY ACQUIRED BY PHILOSOPHY IS SUFFICIENT TO VIRTUE.
+
+Any man who reflects can not fail of knowing his duties, of discovering
+the relations which subsist between men, of meditating upon his own
+nature, of discerning his needs, his inclinations, and his desires, and
+of perceiving what he owes to the beings necessary to his own happiness.
+These reflections naturally lead to the knowledge of the morality which
+is the most essential for society. Every man who loves to retire within
+himself in order to study and seek for the principles of things, has no
+very dangerous passions; his greatest passion will be to know the truth,
+and his greatest ambition to show it to others. Philosophy is beneficial
+in cultivating the heart and the mind. In regard to morals, has not he
+who reflects and reasons the advantage over him who does not reason?
+
+If ignorance is useful to priests and to the oppressors of humanity, it
+is very fatal to society. Man, deprived of intelligence, does not enjoy
+the use of his reason; man, deprived of reason and intelligence, is a
+savage, who is liable at any moment to be led into crime. Morality, or
+the science of moral duties, is acquired but by the study of man and his
+relations. He who does not reflect for himself does not know true
+morals, and can not walk the road of virtue. The less men reason, the
+more wicked they are. The barbarians, the princes, the great, and the
+dregs of society, are generally the most wicked because they are those
+who reason the least. The religious man never reflects, and avoids
+reasoning; he fears examination; he follows authority; and very often an
+erroneous conscience makes him consider it a holy duty to commit evil.
+The incredulous man reasons, consults experience, and prefers it to
+prejudice. If he has reasoned justly, his conscience becomes clear; he
+finds more real motives for right-doing than the religious man, who has
+no motives but his chimeras, and who never listens to reason. Are not
+the motives of the incredulous man strong enough to counterbalance his
+passions? Is he blind enough not to recognize the interests which should
+restrain him? Well! he will be vicious and wicked; but even then he will
+be no worse and no better than many credulous men who, notwithstanding
+religion and its sublime precepts, continue to lead a life which this
+very religion condemns. Is a credulous murderer less to be feared than a
+murderer who does not believe anything? Is a religious tyrant any less a
+tyrant than an irreligious one?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXI.--OPINIONS RARELY INFLUENCE CONDUCT.
+
+There is nothing more rare in the world than consistent men. Their
+opinions do not influence their conduct, except when they conform to
+their temperament, their passions, and to their interests. Religious
+opinions, according to daily experience, produce much more evil than
+good; they are injurious, because they very often agree with the
+passions of tyrants, fanatics, and priests; they produce no effect,
+because they have not the power to balance the present interests of the
+majority of men. Religious principles are always put aside when they are
+opposed to ardent desires; without being incredulous, they act as if
+they believed nothing. We risk being deceived when we judge the opinions
+of men by their conduct or their conduct by their opinions. A very
+religious man, notwithstanding the austere and cruel principles of a
+bloody religion, will sometimes be, by a fortunate inconsistency,
+humane, tolerant, moderate; in this case the principles of his religion
+do not agree with the mildness of his disposition. A libertine, a
+debauchee, a hypocrite, an adulterer, or a thief will often show us that
+he has the clearest ideas of morals. Why do they not practice them? It
+is because neither their temperament, their interests, nor their habits
+agree with their sublime theories. The rigid principles of Christian
+morality, which so many attempt to pass off as Divine, have but very
+little influence upon the conduct of those who preach them to others. Do
+they not tell us every day to do what they preach, and not what they
+practice?
+
+The religious partisans generally designate the incredulous as
+libertines. It may be that many incredulous people are immoral; this
+immorality is due to their temperament, and not to their opinions. But
+what has their conduct to do with these opinions? Can not an immoral man
+be a good physician, a good architect, a good geometer, a good logician,
+a good metaphysician? With an irreproachable conduct, one can be
+ignorant upon many things, and reason very badly. When truth is
+presented, it matters not from whom it comes. Let us not judge men by
+their opinions, or opinions by men; let us judge men by their conduct;
+and their opinions by their conformity with experience, reason, and
+their usefulness for mankind.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXII.---REASON LEADS MEN TO IRRELIGION AND TO ATHEISM, BECAUSE
+RELIGION IS ABSURD, AND THE GOD OF THE PRIESTS IS A MALICIOUS AND
+FEROCIOUS BEING.
+
+Every man who reasons soon becomes incredulous, because reasoning proves
+to him that theology is but a tissue of falsehoods; that religion is
+contrary to all principles of common sense; that it gives a false color
+to all human knowledge. The rational man becomes incredulous, because he
+sees that religion, far from rendering men happier, is the first cause
+of the greatest disorders, and of the permanent calamities with which
+the human race is afflicted. The man who seeks his well-being and his
+own tranquillity, examines his religion and is undeceived, because he
+finds it inconvenient and useless to pass his life in trembling at
+phantoms which are made but to intimidate silly women or children. If,
+sometimes, libertinage, which reasons but little, leads to irreligion,
+the man who is regular in his morals can have very legitimate motives
+for examining his religion, and for banishing it from his mind. Too weak
+to intimidate the wicked, in whom vice has become deeply rooted,
+religious terrors afflict, torment, and burden imaginative minds. If
+souls have courage and elasticity, they shake off a yoke which they bear
+unwillingly. If weak or timorous, they wear the yoke during their whole
+life, and they grow old, trembling, or at least they live under
+burdensome uncertainty.
+
+The priests have made of God such a malicious, ferocious being, so ready
+to be vexed, that there are few men in the world who do not wish at the
+bottom of their hearts that this God did not exist. We can not live
+happy if we are always in fear. You worship a terrible God, O religious
+people! Alas! And yet you hate Him; you wish that He was not. Can we
+avoid wishing the absence or the destruction of a master, the idea of
+whom can but torment the mind? It is the dark colors in which the
+priests paint the Deity which revolt men, moving them to hate and
+reject Him.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXIII.--FEAR ALONE CREATES THEISTS AND BIGOTS.
+
+If fear has created the Gods, fear still holds their empire in the mind
+of mortals; they have been so early accustomed to tremble even at the
+name of the Deity, that it has become for them a specter, a goblin, a
+were-wolf which torments them, and whose idea deprives them even of the
+courage to attempt to reassure themselves. They are afraid that this
+invisible specter will strike them if they cease to be afraid. The
+religious people fear their God too much to love Him sincerely; they
+serve Him as slaves, who can not escape His power, and take the part of
+flattering their Master; and who, by continually lying, persuade
+themselves that they love Him. They make a virtue of necessity. The love
+of religious bigots for their God, and of slaves for their despots, is
+but a servile and simulated homage which they render by compulsion, in
+which the heart has no part.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXIV.--CAN WE, OR SHOULD WE, LOVE OR NOT LOVE GOD?
+
+The Christian Doctors have made their God so little worthy of love, that
+several among them have thought it their duty not to love Him; this is a
+blasphemy which makes less sincere doctors tremble. Saint Thomas, having
+asserted that we are under obligation to love God as soon as we can use
+our reason, the Jesuit Sirmond replied to him that that was very soon;
+the Jesuit Vasquez claims that it is sufficient to love God in the hour
+of death; Hurtado says that we should love God at all times; Henriquez
+is content with loving Him every five years; Sotus, every Sunday. "Upon
+what shall we rely?" asks Father Sirmond, who adds: "that Suarez desires
+that we should love God sometimes. But at what time? He allows you to
+judge of it; he knows nothing about it himself; for he adds: 'What a
+learned doctor does not know, who can know?'" The same Jesuit Sirmond
+continues, by saying: "that God does not command us to love Him with
+human affection, and does not promise us salvation but on condition of
+giving Him our hearts; it is enough to obey Him and to love Him, by
+fulfilling His commandments; that this is the only love which we owe
+Him, and He has not commanded so much to love Him as not to hate Him."
+[See "Apology, Des Lettres Provinciales," Tome II.] This doctrine
+appears heretical, ungodly, and abominable to the Jansenists, who, by
+the revolting severity which they attribute to their God, render Him
+still less lovable than their adversaries, the Jesuits. The latter, in
+order to make converts, represent God in such a light as to give
+confidence to the most perverse mortals. Thus, nothing is less
+established among the Christians than the important question, whether we
+can or should love or not love God. Among their spiritual guides some
+pretend that we must love God with all the heart, notwithstanding all
+His severity; others, like the Father Daniel, think that an act of pure
+love of God is the most heroic act of Christian virtue, and that human
+weakness can scarcely reach so high. The Jesuit Pintereau goes still
+further; he says: "The deliverance from the grievous yoke of Divine love
+is a privilege of the new alliance."
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXV.--THE VARIOUS AND CONTRADICTORY IDEAS WHICH EXIST EVERYWHERE UPON
+GOD AND RELIGION, PROVE THAT THEY ARE BUT IDLE FANCIES.
+
+It is always the character of man which decides upon the character of
+his God; each one creates a God for himself, and in his own image. The
+cheerful man who indulges in pleasures and dissipation, can not imagine
+God to be an austere and rebukeful being; he requires a facile God with
+whom he can make an agreement. The severe, sour, bilious man wants a God
+like himself; one who inspires fear; and regards as perverse those that
+accept only a God who is yielding and easily won over. Heresies,
+quarrels, and schisms are necessary. Can men differently organized and
+modified by diverse circumstances, agree in regard to an imaginary being
+which exists but in their own brains? The cruel and interminable
+disputes continually arising among the ministers of the Lord, have not a
+tendency to attract the confidence of those who take an impartial view
+of them. How can we help our incredulity, when we see principles about
+which those who teach them to others, never agree? How can we avoid
+doubting the existence of a God, the idea of whom varies in such a
+remarkable way in the mind of His ministers? How can we avoid rejecting
+totally a God who is full of contradictions? How can we rely upon
+priests whom we see continually contending, accusing each other of being
+infidels and heretics, rending and persecuting each other without mercy,
+about the way in which they understand the pretended truths which they
+reveal to the world?
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXVI.--THE EXISTENCE OF GOD, WHICH IS THE BASIS OF ALL RELIGION, HAS
+NOT YET BEEN DEMONSTRATED.
+
+However, so far, this important truth has not yet been demonstrated, not
+only to the incredulous, but in a satisfactory way to theologians
+themselves. In all times, we have seen profound thinkers who thought
+they had new proofs of the truth most important to men. What have been
+the fruits of their meditations and of their arguments? They left the
+thing at the same point; they have demonstrated nothing; nearly always
+they have excited the clamors of their colleagues, who accuse them of
+having badly defended the best of causes.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXVII.--PRIESTS, MORE THAN UNBELIEVERS, ACT FROM INTEREST.
+
+The apologists of religion repeat to us every day that the passions
+alone create unbelievers. "It is," they say, "pride, and a desire to
+distinguish themselves, that make atheists; they seek also to efface the
+idea of God from their minds, because they have reason to fear His
+rigorous judgments." Whatever may be the motives which cause men to be
+irreligious, the thing in question is whether they have found truth. No
+man acts without motives; let us first examine the arguments--we shall
+examine the motives afterward--and we shall find that they are more
+legitimate, and more sensible, than those of many credulous devotees who
+allow themselves to be guided by masters little worthy of men's
+confidence.
+
+You say, O priests of the Lord! that the passions cause unbelievers; you
+pretend that they renounce religion through interest, or because it
+interferes with their irregular inclinations; you assert that they
+attack your Gods because they fear their punishments. Ah! yourselves in
+defending this religion and its chimeras, are you, then, really exempt
+from passions and interests? Who receive the fees of this religion, on
+whose behalf the priests are so zealous? It is the priests. To whom does
+religion procure power, credit, honors, wealth? To the priests! In all
+countries, who make war upon reason, science, truth, and philosophy and
+render them odious to the sovereigns and to the people? Who profit by
+the ignorance of men and their vain prejudices? The priests! You are, O
+priests, rewarded, honored, and paid for deceiving mortals, and you
+punish those who undeceive them. The follies of men procure you
+blessings, offerings, expiations; the most useful truths bring to those
+who announce them, chains, sufferings, stakes. Let the world judge
+between us.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXVIII.--PRIDE, PRESUMPTION, AND CORRUPTION OF THE HEART ARE MORE
+OFTEN FOUND AMONG PRIESTS THAN AMONG ATHEISTS AND UNBELIEVERS.
+
+Pride and vanity always were and always will be the inherent vices of
+the priesthood. Is there anything that has a tendency to render men
+haughty and vain more than the assumption of exercising Heavenly power,
+of possessing a sacred character, of being the messengers of the Most
+High? Are not these dispositions continually increased by the credulity
+of the people, by the deference and the respect of the sovereigns, by
+the immunities, the privileges, and the distinctions which the clergy
+enjoy? The common man is, in every country, more devoted to his
+spiritual guides, whom he considers as Divine men, than to his temporal
+superiors, whom he considers as ordinary men. Village priests enjoy more
+honor than the lord or the judge. A Christian priest believes himself
+far above a king or an emperor. A Spanish grandee having spoken hastily
+to a monk, the latter said to him, arrogantly, "Learn to respect a man
+who has every day your God in his hands and your queen at his feet."
+
+Have the priests any right to accuse the unbelievers of pride? Do they
+distinguish themselves by a rare modesty or profound humility? Is it not
+evident that the desire to domineer over men is the essence of their
+profession? If the Lord's ministers were truly modest, would we see them
+so greedy of respect, so easily irritated by contradictions, so prompt
+and so cruel in revenging themselves upon those whose opinions offend
+them? Does not modest science impress us with the difficulty of
+unraveling truth? What other passion than frenzied pride can render men
+so ferocious, so vindictive, so devoid of toleration and gentleness?
+What is more presumptuous than to arm nations and cause rivers of blood,
+in order to establish or to defend futile conjectures?
+
+You say, O Doctors of Divinity! that it is presumption alone which makes
+atheists. Teach them, then, what your God is; instruct them about His
+essence; speak of Him in an intelligible way; tell of Him reasonable
+things, which are not contradictory or impossible! If you are not in the
+condition to satisfy them; if, so far, none of you have been able to
+demonstrate the existence of a God in a clear and convincing way; if,
+according to your own confession, His essence is as much hidden from you
+as from the rest of mortals, pardon those who can not admit that which
+they can neither understand nor reconcile. Do not accuse of presumption
+and vanity those who have the sincerity to confess their ignorance;
+accuse not of folly those who find it impossible to believe in
+contradictions. You should blush at the thought of exciting the hatred
+of the people and the vengeance of the sovereigns against men who do not
+think as you do upon a Being of whom you have no idea yourselves. Is
+there anything more audacious and more extravagant than to reason about
+an object which it is impossible to conceive of?
+
+You tell us it is corruption of the heart which produces atheists; that
+they shake off the yoke of the Deity because they fear His terrible
+judgments. But why do you paint your God in such black colors? Why does
+this powerful God permit that such corrupt hearts should exist? Why
+should we not make efforts to break the yoke of a Tyrant who, being able
+to make of the hearts of men what He pleases, allows them to become
+perverted and hardened; blinds them; refuses them His grace, in order to
+have the satisfaction of punishing them eternally for having been
+hardened, blinded, and not having received the grace which He refused
+them? The theologians and the priests must feel themselves very sure of
+Heaven's grace and of a happy future, in order not to detest a Master so
+capricious as the God whom they announce to us. A God who damns
+eternally must be the most odious Being that the human mind could
+imagine.
+
+
+
+
+CLXXXIX.--PREJUDICES ARE BUT FOR A TIME, AND NO POWER IS DURABLE EXCEPT
+IT IS BASED UPON TRUTH, REASON, AND EQUITY.
+
+No man on earth is truly interested in sustaining error; sooner or later
+it is compelled to surrender to truth. General interest tends to the
+enlightenment of mortals; even the passions sometimes contribute to the
+breaking of some of the chains of prejudice. Have not the passions of
+some sovereigns destroyed, within the past two centuries in some
+countries of Europe, the tyrannical power which a haughty Pontiff
+formerly exercised over all the princes of his sect? Politics, becoming
+more enlightened, has despoiled the clergy of an immense amount of
+property which credulity had accumulated in their hands. Should not this
+memorable example make even the priests realize that prejudices are but
+for a time, and that truth alone is capable of assuring a substantial
+well-being?
+
+Have not the ministers of the Lord seen that in pampering the
+sovereigns, in forging Divine rights for them, and in delivering to them
+the people, bound hand and foot, they were making tyrants of them? Have
+they not reason to fear that these gigantic idols, whom they have raised
+to the skies, will crush them also some day? Do not a thousand examples
+prove that they ought to fear that these unchained lions, after having
+devoured nations, will in turn devour them?
+
+We will respect the priests when they become citizens. Let them make
+use, if they can, of Heaven's authority to create fear in those princes
+who incessantly desolate the earth; let them deprive them of the right
+of being unjust; let them recognize that no subject of a State enjoys
+living under tyranny; let them make the sovereigns feel that they
+themselves are not interested in exercising a power which, rendering
+them odious, injures their own safety, their own power, their own
+grandeur; finally, let the priests and the undeceived kings recognize
+that no power is safe that is not based upon truth, reason, and equity.
+
+
+
+
+CXC.--HOW MUCH POWER AND CONSIDERATION THE MINISTERS OF THE GODS WOULD
+HAVE, IF THEY BECAME THE APOSTLES OF REASON AND THE DEFENDERS OF
+LIBERTY!
+
+The ministers of the Gods, in warring against human reason, which they
+ought to develop, act against their own interest. What would be their
+power, their consideration, their empire over the wisest men; what would
+be the gratitude of the people toward them if, instead of occupying
+themselves with their vain quarrels, they had applied themselves to the
+useful sciences; if they had sought the true principles of physics, of
+government, and of morals. Who would dare reproach the opulence and
+credit of a corporation which, consecrating its leisure and its
+authority to the public good, should use the one for studying and
+meditating, and the other for enlightening equally the minds of the
+sovereigns and the subjects?
+
+Priests! lay aside your idle fancies, your unintelligible dogmas, your
+despicable quarrels; banish to imaginary regions these phantoms, which
+could be of use to you only in the infancy of nations; take the tone of
+reason, instead of sounding the tocsin of persecution against your
+adversaries; instead of entertaining the people with foolish disputes,
+of preaching useless and fanatical virtues, preach to them humane and
+social morality; preach to them virtues which are really useful to the
+world; become the apostles of reason, the lights of the nations, the
+defenders of liberty, reformers of abuses, the friends of truth, and we
+will bless you, we will honor you, we will love you, and you will be
+sure of holding an eternal empire over the hearts of your fellow-beings.
+
+
+
+
+CXCI.--WHAT A HAPPY AND GREAT REVOLUTION WOULD TAKE PLACE IN THE
+UNIVERSE, IF PHILOSOPHY WAS SUBSTITUTED FOR RELIGION!
+
+Philosophers, in all ages, have taken the part that seemed destined for
+the ministers of religion. The hatred of the latter for philosophy was
+never more than professional jealousy. All men accustomed to think,
+instead of seeking to injure each other, should unite their efforts in
+combating errors, in seeking truth, and especially in dispelling the
+prejudices from which the sovereigns and subjects suffer alike, and
+whose upholders themselves finish, sooner or later, by becoming the
+victims.
+
+In the hands of an enlightened government the priests would become the
+most useful of citizens. Could men with rich stipends from the State,
+and relieved of the care of providing for their own subsistence, do
+anything better than to instruct themselves in order to be able to
+instruct others? Would not their minds be better satisfied in
+discovering truth than in wandering in the labyrinths of darkness? Would
+it be any more difficult to unravel the principles of man's morals, than
+the imaginary principles of Divine and theological morals? Would
+ordinary men have as much trouble in understanding the simple notions of
+their duties, as in charging their memories with mysteries,
+unintelligible words, and obscure definitions which are impossible for
+them to understand? How much time and trouble is lost in trying to teach
+men things which are of no use to them. What resources for the public
+benefit, for encouraging the progress of the sciences and the
+advancement of knowledge, for the education of youth, are presented to
+well-meaning sovereigns through so many monasteries, which, in a great
+number of countries devour the people's substance without an equivalent.
+But superstition, jealous of its exclusive empire, seems to have formed
+but useless beings. What advantage could not be drawn from a multitude
+of cenobites of both sexes whom we see in so many countries, and who are
+so well paid to do nothing. Instead of occupying them with sterile
+contemplations, with mechanical prayers, with monotonous practices;
+instead of burdening them with fasts and austerities, let there be
+excited among them a salutary emulation that would inspire them to seek
+the means of serving usefully the world, which their fatal vows oblige
+them to renounce. Instead of filling the youthful minds of their pupils
+with fables, dogmas, and puerilities, why not invite or oblige the
+priests to teach them true things, and so make of them citizens useful
+to their country? The way in which men are brought up makes them useful
+but to the clergy, who blind them, and to the tyrants, who plunder them.
+
+
+
+
+CXCII.--THE RETRACTION OF AN UNBELIEVER AT THE HOUR OF DEATH, PROVES
+NOTHING AGAINST INCREDULITY.
+
+The adherents of credulity often accuse the unbelievers of bad faith
+because they sometimes waver in their principles, changing opinions
+during sickness, and retracting them at the hour of death. When the body
+is diseased, the faculty of reasoning is generally disturbed also. The
+infirm and decrepit man, in approaching his end, sometimes perceives
+himself that reason is leaving him, he feels that prejudice returns.
+There are diseases which have a tendency to lessen courage, to make
+pusillanimous, and to enfeeble the brain; there are others which, in
+destroying the body, do not affect the reason. However, an unbeliever
+who retracts in sickness, is not more rare or more extraordinary than a
+devotionist who permits himself, while in health, to neglect the duties
+that his religion prescribes for him in the most formal manner.
+
+Cleomenes, King of Sparta, having shown little respect for the Gods
+during his reign, became superstitious in his last days; with the view
+of interesting Heaven in his favor, he called around him a multitude of
+sacrificing priests. One of his friends expressing his surprise,
+Cleomenes said: "What are you astonished at? I am no longer what I was,
+and not being the same, I can not think in the same way."
+
+The ministers of religion in their daily conduct, often belie the
+rigorous principles which they teach to others, so that the unbelievers
+in their turn think they have a right to accuse them of bad faith. If
+some unbelievers contradict, in sight of death or during sickness, the
+opinions which they entertained in health, do not the priests in health
+belie opinions of the religion which they hold? Do we see a great
+multitude of humble, generous prelates devoid of ambition, enemies of
+pomp and grandeur, the friends of poverty? In short, do we see the
+conduct of many Christian priests corresponding with the austere
+morality of Christ, their God and their model?
+
+
+
+
+CXCIII.--IT IS NOT TRUE THAT ATHEISM SUNDERS ALL THE TIES OF SOCIETY.
+
+Atheism, we are told, breaks all social ties. Without belief in God,
+what becomes of the sacredness of the oath? How can we bind an atheist
+who can not seriously attest the Deity? But does the oath place us under
+stronger obligations to the engagements which we make? Whoever dares to
+lie, will he not dare to perjure himself? He who is base enough to
+violate his word, or unjust enough to break his promises in contempt of
+the esteem of men, will not be more faithful for having taken all the
+Gods as witnesses to his oaths. Those who rank themselves above the
+judgments of men, will soon put themselves above the judgments of God.
+Are not princes, of all mortals, the most prompt in taking oaths, and
+the most prompt in violating them?
+
+
+
+
+CXCIV.--REFUTATION OF THE ASSERTION THAT RELIGION IS NECESSARY FOR THE
+MASSES.
+
+Religion, they tell us, is necessary for the masses; that though
+enlightened persons may not need restraint upon their opinions, it is
+necessary at least for the common people, in whom education has not
+developed reason. Is it true, then, that religion is a restraint for the
+people? Do we see that this religion prevents them from intemperance,
+drunkenness, brutality, violence, frauds, and all kinds of excesses?
+
+Could a people who had no idea of the Deity, conduct itself in a more
+detestable manner than many believing people in whom we see dissolute
+habits, and the vices most unworthy of rational beings? Do we not see
+the artisan or the man of the people go from his church and plunge
+headlong into his usual excesses, persuading himself all the while that
+his periodical homage to God gives him the right to follow without
+remorse his vicious practices and habitual inclinations? If the people
+are gross and ignorant, is not their stupidity due to the negligence of
+the princes who do not attend to the public education, or who oppose the
+instruction of their subjects? Finally, is not the irrationality of the
+people plainly the work of the priests, who, instead of interesting them
+in a rational morality, do nothing but entertain them with fables,
+phantoms, intrigues, observances, idle fancies, and false virtues, upon
+which they claim that everything depends?
+
+Religion is, for the people, but a vain attendance upon ceremonies, to
+which they cling from habit, which amuses their eyes, which enlivens
+temporarily their sleepy minds, without influencing the conduct, and
+without correcting their morals. By the confession even of the ministers
+at the altars, nothing is more rare than the interior and spiritual
+religion, which is alone capable of regulating the life of man, and of
+triumphing over his inclinations. In good faith, among the most numerous
+and the most devotional people, are there many capable of understanding
+the principles of their religious system, and who find them of
+sufficient strength to stifle their perverse inclinations?
+
+Many people will tell us that it is better to have some kind of a
+restraint than none at all. They will pretend that if religion does not
+control the great mass, it serves at least to restrain some individuals,
+who, without it, would abandon themselves to crime without remorse. No
+doubt it is necessary for men to have a restraint; but they do not need
+an imaginary one; they need true and visible restraints; they need real
+fears, which are much better to restrain them than panic terrors and
+idle fancies. Religion frightens but a few pusillanimous minds, whose
+weakness of character already renders them little to be dreaded by their
+fellow-citizens. An equitable government, severe laws, a sound morality,
+will apply equally to everybody; every one would be forced to believe in
+it, and would feel the danger of not conforming to it.
+
+
+
+
+CXCV.--EVERY RATIONAL SYSTEM IS NOT MADE FOR THE MULTITUDE.
+
+We may be asked if atheism can suit the multitude? I reply, that every
+system which demands discussion is not for the multitude. What use is
+there, then, in preaching atheism? It can at least make those who
+reason, feel that nothing is more extravagant than to make ourselves
+uneasy, and nothing more unjust than to cause anxiety to others on
+account of conjectures, destitute of all foundation. As to the common
+man, who never reasons, the arguments of an atheist are no better suited
+to him than a philosopher's hypothesis, an astronomer's observations, a
+chemist's experiments, a geometer's calculations, a physician's
+examinations, an architect's designs, or a lawyer's pleadings, who all
+labor for the people without their knowledge.
+
+The metaphysical arguments of theology, and the religious disputes which
+have occupied for so long many profound visionists, are they made any
+more for the common man than the arguments of an atheist? More than
+this, the principles of atheism, founded upon common sense, are they not
+more intelligible than those of a theology which we see bristling with
+insolvable difficulties, even for the most active minds? The people in
+every country have a religion which they do not understand, which they
+do not examine, and which they follow but by routine; their priests
+alone occupy themselves with the theology which is too sublime for them.
+If, by accident, the people should lose this unknown theology, they
+could console them selves for the loss of a thing which is not only
+entirely useless, but which produces among them very dangerous
+ebullitions.
+
+It would be very foolish to write for the common man or to attempt to
+cure his prejudices all at once. We write but for those who read and
+reason; the people read but little, and reason less. Sensible and
+peaceable people enlighten themselves; their light spreads itself
+gradually, and in time reaches the people. On the other hand, those who
+deceive men, do they not often take the trouble themselves of
+undeceiving them?
+
+
+
+
+CXCVI.--FUTILITY AND DANGER OF THEOLOGY. WISE COUNSELS TO PRINCES.
+
+If theology is a branch of commerce useful to theologians, it has been
+demonstrated to be superfluous and injurious to the rest of society. The
+interests of men will succeed in opening their eyes sooner or later. The
+sovereigns and the people will some day discover the indifference and
+the contempt that a futile science deserves which serves but to trouble
+men without making them better. They will feel the uselessness of many
+expensive practices, which do not at all contribute to public welfare;
+they will blush at many pitiful quarrels, which will cease to disturb
+the tranquillity of the States as soon as they cease to attach any
+importance to them.
+
+Princes! instead of taking part in the senseless contentions of your
+priests, instead of espousing foolishly their impertinent quarrels,
+instead of striving to bring all your subjects to uniform opinions,
+occupy yourselves with their happiness in this world, and do not trouble
+yourselves about the fate which awaits them in another. Govern them
+justly, give them good laws, respect their liberty and their property,
+superintend their education, encourage them in their labors, reward
+their talents and their virtues, repress their licentiousness, and do
+not trouble yourselves upon what they think about objects useless to
+them and to you. Then you will no longer need fictions to make
+yourselves obeyed; you will become the only guides of your subjects;
+their ideas will be uniform about the feelings of love and respect which
+will be your due. Theological fables are useful but to tyrants, who do
+not understand the art of ruling over reasonable beings.
+
+
+
+
+CXCVII.--FATAL EFFECTS OF RELIGION UPON THE PEOPLE AND THE PRINCES.
+
+Does it require the efforts of genius to comprehend that what is beyond
+man, is not made for men; that what is supernatural, is not made for
+natural beings; that impenetrable mysteries are not made for limited
+minds? If theologians are foolish enough to dispute about subjects which
+they acknowledge to be unintelligible to themselves, should society take
+a part in their foolish quarrels? Must human blood flow in order to give
+value to the conjectures of a few obstinate visionists? If it is very
+difficult to cure the theologians of their mania and the people of their
+prejudices, it is at least very easy to prevent the extravagances of the
+one and the folly of the other from producing pernicious effects. Let
+each one be allowed to think as he chooses, but let him not be allowed
+to annoy others for their mode of thinking. If the chiefs of nations
+were more just and more sensible, theological opinions would not disturb
+the public tranquillity any more than the disputes of philosophers,
+physicians, grammarians, and of critics. It is the tyranny of princes
+which makes theological quarrels have serious consequences. When kings
+shall cease to meddle with theology, theological quarrels will no longer
+be a thing to fear.
+
+Those who boast so much upon the importance and usefulness of religion,
+ought to show us its beneficial results, and the advantages that the
+disputes and abstract speculations of theology can bring to porters, to
+artisans, to farmers, to fishmongers, to women, and to so many depraved
+servants, with whom the large cities are filled. People of this kind are
+all religious, they have implicit faith; their priests believe for them;
+they accept a faith unknown to their guides; they listen assiduously to
+sermons; they assist regularly in ceremonies; they think it a great
+crime to transgress the ordinances to which from childhood they have
+been taught to conform. What good to morality results from all this?
+None whatever; they have no idea of morality, and you see them indulge
+in all kinds of rogueries, frauds, rapine, and excesses which the law
+does not punish. The masses, in truth, have no idea of religion; what is
+called religion, is but a blind attachment to unknown opinions and
+mysterious dealings. In fact, to deprive the people of religion, is
+depriving them of nothing. If we should succeed in destroying their
+prejudices, we would but diminish or annihilate the dangerous confidence
+which they have in self-interested guides, and teach them to beware of
+those who, under the pretext of religion, very often lead them into
+fatal excesses.
+
+
+
+
+CXCVIII.--CONTINUATION.
+
+Under pretext of instructing and enlightening men, religion really holds
+them in ignorance, and deprives them even of the desire of understanding
+the objects which interest them the most. There exists for the people no
+other rule of conduct than that which their priests indicate to them.
+Religion takes the place of everything; but being in darkness itself, it
+has a greater tendency to misguide mortals, than to guide them in the
+way of science and happiness. Philosophy, morality, legislation, and
+politics are to them enigmas. Man, blinded by religious prejudices,
+finds it impossible to understand his own nature, to cultivate his
+reason, to make experiments; he fears truth as soon as it does not agree
+with his opinions. Everything tends to render the people devout, but all
+is opposed to their being humane, reasonable, and virtuous. Religion
+seems to have for its object only to blunt the feeling and to dull the
+intelligence of men.
+
+The war which always existed between the priests and the best minds of
+all ages, comes from this, that the wise men perceived the fetters which
+superstition wished to place upon the human mind, which it fain would
+keep in eternal infancy, that it might be occupied with fables, burdened
+with terrors, and frightened by phantoms which would prevent it from
+progressing. Incapable of perfecting itself, theology opposed
+insurmountable barriers to the progress of true knowledge; it seemed to
+be occupied but with the care to keep the nations and their chiefs in
+the most profound ignorance of their true interests, of their relations,
+of their duties, of the real motives which can lead them to prosperity;
+it does but obscure morality; renders its principles arbitrary, subjects
+it to the caprices of the Gods, or of their ministers; it converts the
+art of governing men into a mysterious tyranny which becomes the scourge
+of nations; it changes the princes into unjust and licentious despots,
+and the people into ignorant slaves, who corrupt themselves in order to
+obtain the favor of their masters.
+
+
+
+
+CXCIX.--HISTORY TEACHES US THAT ALL RELIGIONS WERE ESTABLISHED BY THE AID
+OF IGNORANCE, AND BY MEN WHO HAD THU EFFRONTERY TO STYLE THEMSELVES THE
+ENVOYS OF DIVINITY.
+
+If we take the trouble to follow the history of the human mind, we will
+discover that theology took care not to extend its limits. It began by
+repeating fables, which it claimed to be sacred truths; it gave birth to
+poesy, which filled the people's imagination with puerile fictions; it
+entertained them but with its Gods and their incredible feats; in a
+word, religion always treated men like children, whom they put to sleep
+with tales that their ministers would like still to pass as
+incontestable truths. If the ministers of the Gods sometimes made useful
+discoveries, they always took care to hide them in enigmas and to
+envelope them in shadows of mystery. The Pythagorases and the Platos, in
+order to acquire some futile attainments, were obliged to crawl to the
+feet of the priests, to become initiated into their mysteries, to submit
+to the tests which they desired to impose upon them; it is at this cost
+that they were permitted to draw from the fountain-head their exalted
+ideas, so seducing still to all those who admire what is unintelligible.
+It was among Egyptian, Indian, Chaldean priests; it was in the schools
+of these dreamers, interested by profession in dethroning human reason,
+that philosophy was obliged to borrow its first rudiments. Obscure or
+false in its principles, mingled with fictions and fables, solely made
+to seduce imagination, this philosophy progressed but waveringly, and
+instead of enlightening the mind, it blinded it, and turned it away from
+useful objects. The theological speculations and mystical reveries of
+the ancients have, even in our days, the making of the law in a great
+part of the philosophical world. Adopted by modern theology, we can
+scarcely deviate from them without heresy; they entertain us with aerial
+beings, with spirits, angels, demons, genii, and other phantoms, which
+are the object of the meditations of our most profound thinkers, and
+which serve as a basis to metaphysics, an abstract and futile science,
+upon which the greatest geniuses have vainly exercised themselves for
+thousands of years. Thus hypotheses, invented by a few visionists of
+Memphis and of Babylon, continue to be the basis of a science revered
+for the obscurity which makes it pass as marvelous and Divine. The first
+legislators of nations were priests; the first mythologists and poets
+were priests; the first philosophers were priests; the first physicians
+were priests. In their hands science became a sacred thing, prohibited
+to the profane; they spoke only by allegories, emblems, enigmas, and
+ambiguous oracles--means well-suited to excite curiosity, to put to work
+the imagination, and especially to inspire in the ignorant man a holy
+respect for those whom he believed instructed by Heaven, capable of
+reading the destinies of earth, and who boldly pretended to be the
+organs of Divinity.
+
+
+
+
+CC.--ALL RELIGIONS, ANCIENT AND MODERN, HAVE MUTUALLY BORROWED THEIR
+ABSTRACT REVERIES AND THEIR RIDICULOUS PRACTICES.
+
+The religions of these ancient priests have disappeared, or, rather,
+they have changed their form. Although our modern theologians regard the
+ancient priests as impostors, they have taken care to gather up the
+scattered fragments of their religious systems, the whole of which does
+not exist any longer for us; we will find in our modern religions, not
+only the metaphysical dogmas which theology has but dressed in another
+form, but we still find remarkable remains of their superstitious
+practices, of their theurgy, of their magic, of their enchantments.
+
+Christians are still commanded to regard with respect the monuments of
+the legislators, the priests, and the prophets of the Hebrew religion,
+which, according to appearances, has borrowed from Egypt the fantastic
+notions with which we see it filled. Thus the extravagances invented by
+frauds or idolatrous visionists, are still regarded as sacred opinions
+by the Christians!
+
+If we but look at history, we see striking resemblances in all
+religions. Everywhere on earth we find religious ideas periodically
+afflicting and rejoicing the people; everywhere we see rites, practices
+often abominable, and formidable mysteries occupying the mind, and
+becoming objects of meditation. We see the different superstitions
+borrowing from each other their abstract reveries and their ceremonies.
+Religions are generally unformed rhapsodies combined by new Doctors of
+Divinity, who, in composing them, have used the materials of their
+predecessors, reserving the right of adding or subtracting what suits or
+does not suit their present views. The religion of Egypt served
+evidently as a basis for the religion of Moses, who expunged from it the
+worship of idols. Moses was but an Egyptian schismatic, Christianity is
+but a reformed Judaism. Mohammedanism is composed of Judaism, of
+Christianity, and of the ancient religion of Arabia.
+
+
+
+
+CCI.--THEOLOGY HAS ALWAYS TURNED PHILOSOPHY FROM ITS TRUE COURSE.
+
+From the most remote period theology alone regulated the march of
+philosophy. What aid has it lent it? It changed it into an
+unintelligible jargon, which only had a tendency to render the clearest
+truth uncertain; it converted the art of reasoning into a science of
+words; it threw the human mind into the aerial regions of metaphysics,
+where it unsuccessfully occupied itself in sounding useless and
+dangerous abysses. For physical and simple causes, this philosophy
+substituted supernatural causes, or, rather, causes truly occult; it
+explained difficult phenomena by agents more inconceivable than these
+phenomena; it filled discourse with words void of sense, incapable of
+giving the reason of things, better suited to obscure than to enlighten,
+and which seem invented but to discourage man, to guard him against the
+powers of his own mind, to make him distrust the principles of reason
+and evidence, and to surround the truth with an insurmountable barrier.
+
+
+
+
+CCII.---THEOLOGY NEITHER EXPLAINS NOR ENLIGHTENS ANYTHING IN THE WORLD OR
+IN NATURE.
+
+If we would believe the adherents of religion, nothing could be
+explicable in the world without it; nature would be a continual enigma;
+it would be impossible for man to comprehend himself. But, at the
+bottom, what does this religion explain to us? The more we examine it,
+the more we find that theological notions are fit but to perplex all our
+ideas; they change all into mysteries; they explain to us difficult
+things by impossible things. Is it, then, explaining things to attribute
+them to unknown agencies, to invisible powers, to immaterial causes? Is
+it really enlightening the human mind when, in its embarrassment, it is
+directed to the "depths of the treasures of Divine Wisdom," upon which
+they tell us it is in vain for us to turn our bold regards? Can the
+Divine Nature, which we know nothing about, make us understand man's
+nature, which we find so difficult to explain?
+
+Ask a Christian philosopher what is the origin of the world. He will
+answer that God created the universe. What is God? We do not know
+anything about it. What is it to create? We have no idea of it! What is
+the cause of pestilences, famines, wars, sterility, inundations,
+earthquakes? It is God's wrath. What remedies can prevent these
+calamities? Prayers, sacrifices, processions, offerings, ceremonies,
+are, we are told, the true means to disarm Celestial fury. But why is
+Heaven angry? Because men are wicked. Why are men wicked? Because their
+nature is corrupt. What is the cause of this corruption? It is, a
+theologian of enlightened Europe will reply, because the first man was
+seduced by the first woman to eat of an apple which his God had
+forbidden him to touch. Who induced this woman to do such a folly? The
+Devil. Who created the Devil? God! Why did God create this Devil
+destined to pervert the human race? We know nothing about it; it is a
+mystery hidden in the bosom of the Deity.
+
+Does the earth revolve around the sun? Two centuries ago a devout
+philosopher would have replied that such a thought was blasphemy,
+because such a system could not agree with the Holy Book, which every
+Christian reveres as inspired by the Deity Himself. What is the opinion
+to-day about it? Notwithstanding Divine Inspiration, the Christian
+philosophers finally concluded to rely upon evidence rather than upon
+the testimony of their inspired books.
+
+What is the hidden principle of the actions and of the motions of the
+human body? It is the soul. What is a soul? It is a spirit. What is a
+spirit? It is a substance which has neither form, color, expansion, nor
+parts. How can we conceive of such a substance? How can it move a body?
+We know nothing about it. Have brutes souls? The Carthusian assures you
+that they are machines. But do we not see them act, feel, and think in a
+manner which resembles that of men? This is a pure illusion, you say.
+But why do you deprive the brutes of souls, which, without understanding
+it, you attribute to men? It is that the souls of the brutes would
+embarrass our theologians, who, content with the power of frightening
+and damning the immortal souls of men, do not take the same interest in
+damning those of the brutes. Such are the puerile solutions which
+philosophy, always guided by the leading-strings of theology, was
+obliged to bring forth to explain the problems of the physical and moral
+world.
+
+
+
+
+CCIII.--HOW THEOLOGY HAS FETTERED HUMAN MORALS AND RETARDED THE PROGRESS
+OF ENLIGHTENMENT, OF REASON, AND OF TRUTH.
+
+How many subterfuges and mental gymnastics all the ancient and modern
+thinkers have employed, in order to avoid falling out with the ministers
+of the Gods, who in all ages were the true tyrants of thought! How
+Descartes, Malebranche, Leibnitz, and many others have been compelled to
+invent hypotheses and evasions in order to reconcile their discoveries
+with the reveries and the blunders which religion had rendered sacred!
+With what prevarications have not the greatest philosophers guarded
+themselves even at the risk of being absurd, inconsistent, and
+unintelligible whenever their ideas did not correspond with the
+principles of theology! Vigilant priests were always ready to extinguish
+systems which could not be made to tally with their interests. Theology
+in every age has been the bed of Procrustes upon which this brigand
+extended his victims; he cut off the limbs when they were too long, or
+stretched them by horses when they were shorter than the bed upon which
+he placed them.
+
+What sensible man who has a love for science, and is interested in the
+welfare of humanity, can reflect without sorrow and pain upon the loss
+of so many profound, laborious, and subtle heads, who, for many
+centuries, have foolishly exhausted themselves upon idle fancies that
+proved to be injurious to our race? What light could have been thrown
+into the minds of many famous thinkers, if, instead of occupying
+themselves with a useless theology, and its impertinent disputes, they
+had turned their attention upon intelligible and truly important
+objects. Half of the efforts that it cost the genius that was able to
+forge their religious opinions, half of the expense which their
+frivolous worship cost the nations, would have sufficed to enlighten
+them perfectly upon morality, politics, philosophy, medicine,
+agriculture, etc. Superstition nearly always absorbs the attention, the
+admiration, and the treasures of the people; they have a very expensive
+religion; but they have for their money, neither light, virtue, nor
+happiness.
+
+
+
+
+CCIV.--CONTINUATION.
+
+Some ancient and modern philosophers have had the courage to accept
+experience and reason as their guides, and to shake off the chains of
+superstition. Lucippe, Democritus, Epicurus, Straton, and some other
+Greeks, dared to tear away the thick veil of prejudice, and to deliver
+philosophy from theological fetters. But their systems, too simple, too
+sensible, and too stripped of wonders for the lovers of fancy, were
+obliged to surrender to the fabulous conjectures of Plato, Socrates, and
+Zeno. Among the moderns, Hobbes, Spinoza, Bayle, and others have
+followed the path of Epicurus, but their doctrine found but few votaries
+in a world still too much infatuated with fables to listen to reason.
+
+In all ages one could not, without imminent danger, lay aside the
+prejudices which opinion had rendered sacred. No one was permitted to
+make discoveries of any kind; all that the most enlightened men could do
+was to speak and write with hidden meaning; and often, by a cowardly
+complaisance, to shamefully ally falsehood with truth. A few of them had
+a double doctrine--one public and the other secret. The key of this last
+having been lost, their true sentiments often became unintelligible and,
+consequently, useless to us. How could modern philosophers who, being
+threatened with the most cruel persecution, were called upon to renounce
+reason and to submit to faith--that is to say, to priestly authority--I
+say, how could men thus fettered give free flight to their genius,
+perfect reason, or hasten human progress? It was but in fear and
+trembling that the greatest men obtained glimpses of truth; they rarely
+had the courage to announce it; those who dared to do it have generally
+been punished for their temerity. Thanks to religion, it was never
+permitted to think aloud or to combat the prejudices of which man is
+everywhere the victim or the dupe.
+
+
+
+
+CCV.--WE COULD NOT REPEAT TOO OFTEN HOW EXTRAVAGANT AND FATAL RELIGION
+IS.
+
+Every man who has the boldness to announce truths to the world, is sure
+to receive the hatred of the priests; the latter loudly call upon the
+powers that be, for assistance; they need the assistance of kings to
+sustain their arguments and their Gods. These clamors show the weakness
+of their cause.
+
+"They are in embarrassment when they cry for help."
+
+It is not permitted to err in the matter of religion; on every other
+subject we can be deceived with impunity; we pity those who go astray,
+and we have some liking for the persons who discover truths new to us.
+But as soon as theology supposes itself concerned, be it in errors or
+discoveries, a holy zeal is kindled; the sovereigns exterminate; the
+people fly into frenzy; and the nations are all stirred up without
+knowing why. Is there anything more afflicting than to see public and
+individual welfare depend upon a futile science, which is void of
+principles, which has no standing ground but imagination, and which
+presents to the mind but words void of sense? What good is a religion
+which no one understands; which continually torments those who trouble
+themselves about it; which is incapable of rendering men better; and
+which often gives them the credit of being unjust and wicked? Is there a
+more deplorable folly, and one that ought more to be abated, than that
+which, far from doing any good to the human race, does but blind it,
+cause transports, and render it miserable, depriving it of truth, which
+alone can soften the rigor of fate?
+
+
+
+
+CCVI.--RELIGION IS PANDORA'S BOX, AND THIS FATAL BOX IS OPEN.
+
+Religion has in every age kept the human mind in darkness and held it in
+ignorance of its true relations, of its real duties and its true
+interests. It is but in removing its clouds and phantoms that we may
+find the sources of truth, reason, morality, and the actual motives
+which inspire virtue. This religion puts us on the wrong track for the
+causes of our evils, and the natural remedies which we can apply. Far
+from curing them, it can but multiply them and render them more durable.
+
+Let us, then, say, with the celebrated Lord Bolingbroke, in his
+posthumous works: "Theology is the Box of Pandora; and if it is
+impossible to close it, it is at least useful to give warning that this
+fatal box is open."
+
+*****
+
+I believe, my dear friends, that I have given you a sufficient
+preventative against all these follies. Your reason will do more than my
+discourses, and I sincerely wish that we had only to complain of being
+deceived! But human blood has flowed since the time of Constantine for
+the establishment of these horrible impositions. The Roman, the Greek,
+and the Protestant churches by vain, ambitious, and hypocritical
+disputes have ravaged Europe, Asia, and Africa. Add to these men, whom
+these quarrels murdered, the multitudes of monks and of nuns, who became
+sterile by their profession, and you will perceive that the Christian
+religion has destroyed half of the human race.
+
+I conclude with the desire that we may return to Nature, whose declared
+enemy the Christian religion is, and which necessarily instructs us to
+do unto others as we would wish them to do unto us. Then the universe
+will be composed of good citizens, just fathers, obedient children,
+tender friends. Nature has given us this Religion, in giving us Reason.
+May fanaticism pervert it no more! I die filled with these desires more
+than with hope.
+
+ETREPIGNY, March 15, 1732
+
+JOHN MESLIER
+
+
+
+
+
+ABSTRACT OF THE TESTAMENT OF JOHN MESLIER
+
+By Voltaire;
+
+OR, SENTIMENTS OF THE CURATE OF ETREPIGNY ADDRESSED TO HIS PARISHIONERS.
+
+
+
+
+I.--OF RELIGIONS.
+
+As there is no one religious denomination which does not pretend to be
+truly founded upon the authority of God, and entirely exempt from all
+the errors and impositions which are found in the others, it is for
+those who purpose to establish the truth of the faith of their sect, to
+show, by clear and convincing proofs, that it is of Divine origin; as
+this is lacking, we must conclude that it is but of human invention, and
+full of errors and deceptions; for it is incredible that an Omnipotent
+and Infinitely good God would have desired to give laws and ordinances
+to men, and not have wished them to bear better authenticated marks of
+truth, than those of the numerous impostors. Moreover, there is not one
+of our Christ-worshipers, of whatever sect he may be, who can make us
+see, by convincing proofs, that his religion is exclusively of Divine
+origin; and for want of such proof they have been for many centuries
+contesting this subject among themselves, even to persecuting each other
+by fire and sword to maintain their opinions; there is, however, not one
+sect of them all which could convince and persuade the others by such
+witnesses of truth; this certainly would not be, if they had, on one
+side or the other, convincing proofs of Divine origin. For, as no one of
+any religious sect, enlightened and of good faith, pretends to hold and
+to favor error and falsehood; and as, on the contrary, each, on his
+side, pretends to sustain truth, the true means of banishing all errors,
+and of uniting all men in peace in the same sentiments and in the same
+form of religion, would be to produce convincing proofs and testimonies
+of the truth; and thus show that such religion is of Divine origin, and
+not any of the others; then each one would accept this truth; and no
+person would dare to question these testimonies, or sustain the side of
+error and imposition, lest he should be, at the same time, confounded by
+contrary proofs: but, as these proofs are not found in any religion, it
+gives to impostors occasion to invent and boldly sustain all kinds of
+falsehoods.
+
+Here are still other proofs, which will not be less evident, of the
+falsity of human religions, and especially of the falsity of our own.
+Every religion which relies upon mysteries as its foundation, and which
+takes, as a rule of its doctrine and its morals, a principle of errors,
+and which is at the same time a source of trouble and eternal divisions
+among men, can not be a true religion, nor a Divine Institution. Now,
+human religions, especially the Catholic, establish as the basis of
+their doctrine and of their morals, a principle of errors; then, it
+follows that these religions can not be true, or of Divine origin. I do
+not see that we can deny the first proposition of this argument; it is
+too clear and too evident to admit of a doubt. I pass to the proof of
+the second proposition, which is, that the Christian religion takes for
+the rule of its doctrine and its morals what they call faith, a blind
+trust, but yet firm, and secured by some laws or revelations of some
+Deity. We must necessarily suppose that it is thus, because it is this
+belief in some Deity and in some Divine Revelations, which gives all the
+credit and all the authority that it has in the world, and without which
+we could make no use of what it prescribes. This is why there is no
+religion which does not expressly recommend its votaries to be firm in
+their faith. ["Estate fortes in fide!"] This is the reason that all
+Christians accept as a maxim, that faith is the commencement and the
+basis of salvation, that it is the root of all justice and of all
+sanctification, as it is expressed at the Council of Trent.--Sess. 6,
+Ch. VIII.
+
+Now it is evident that a blind faith in all which is proposed in the
+name and authority of God, is a principle of errors and falsehoods. As a
+proof, we see that there is no impostor in the matter of religion, who
+does not pretend to be clothed with the name and the authority of God,
+and who does not claim to be especially inspired and sent by God. Not
+only is this faith and blind belief which they accept as a basis of
+their doctrine, a principle of errors, etc., but it is also a source of
+trouble and division among men for the maintenance of their religion.
+There is no cruelty which they do not practice upon each other under
+this specious pretext.
+
+Now then, it is not credible that an Almighty, All-Kind, and All-Wise
+God desired to use such means or such a deceitful way to inform men of
+His wishes; for this would be manifestly desiring to lead them into
+error and to lay snares in their way, in order to make them accept the
+side of falsehood. It is impossible to believe that a God who loved
+unity and peace, the welfare and the happiness of men, would ever have
+established as the basis of His religion, such a fatal source of trouble
+and of eternal divisions among them. Such religions can not be true,
+neither could they have been instituted by God. But I see that our
+Christ-worshipers will not fail to have recourse to their pretended
+motives for credulity, and that they will say, that although their faith
+and belief may be blind in one sense, they are nevertheless supported by
+such clear and convincing testimonies of truth, that it would be not
+only imprudence, but temerity and folly not to surrender one's self.
+They generally reduce these pretended motives to three or four leading
+features. The first, they draw from the pretended holiness of their
+religion, which condemns vice, and which recommends the practice of
+virtue. Its doctrine is so pure, so simple, according to what they say,
+that it is evident it could spring but from the sanctity of an
+infinitely good and wise God.
+
+The second motive for credulity, they draw from the innocence and the
+holiness of life in those who embraced it with love, and defended it by
+suffering death and the most cruel torments, rather than forsake it: it
+not being credible that such great personages would allow themselves to
+be deceived in their belief, that they would renounce all the advantages
+of life, and expose themselves to such cruel torments and persecutions,
+in order to maintain errors and impositions. Their third motive for
+credulity, they draw from the oracles and prophecies which have so long
+been rendered in their favor, and which they pretend have been
+accomplished in a manner which permits no doubt. Finally, their fourth
+motive for credulity, which is the most important of all, is drawn from
+the grandeur and the multitude of the miracles performed, in all ages,
+and in every place, in favor of their religion.
+
+But it is easy to refute all these useless reasonings and to show the
+falsity of all these evidences. For, firstly, the arguments which our
+Christ-worshipers draw from their pretended motives for credulity can
+serve to establish and confirm falsehood as well as truth; for we see
+that there is no religion, no matter how false it may be, which does not
+pretend to have a sound and true doctrine, and which, in its way, does
+not condemn all vices and recommend the practice of all virtues; there
+is not one which has not had firm and zealous defenders who have
+suffered persecution in order to maintain their religion; and, finally,
+there is none which does not pretend to have wonders and miracles that
+have been performed in their favor. The Mohammedans, the Indians, the
+heathen, as well as the Christians, claim miracles in their religions.
+If our Christ-worshipers make use of their miracles and their
+prophecies, they are found no less in the Pagan religions than in
+theirs. Thus the advantage we might draw from all these motives for
+credulity, is found about the same in all sorts of religions. This being
+established, as the history and practice of all religions demonstrate,
+it evidently follows that all these pretended motives for credulity,
+upon which our Christ-worshipers place so much value, are found equally
+in all religions; and, consequently, can not serve as reliable evidences
+of the truth of their religion more than of the truth of any other. The
+result is clear.
+
+Secondly. In order to give an idea of the resemblance of the miracles of
+Paganism to those of Christianity, could we not say, for example, that
+there would be more reason to believe Philostratus in what he recites of
+the life of Apollonius than to believe all the evangelists in what they
+say of the miracles of Jesus Christ; because we know, at least that
+Philostratus was a man of intelligence, eloquence, and fluency; that he
+was the secretary of the Empress Julia, wife of the Emperor Severus, and
+that he was requested by this empress to write the life and the
+wonderful acts of Apollonius? It is evident that Apollonius rendered
+himself famous by great and extraordinary deeds, since an empress was
+sufficiently interested in them to desire a history of his life. This is
+what can not be said of Jesus Christ, nor of those who have furnished us
+His biography, for they were but ignorant men of the common people, poor
+workmen, fishermen, who had not even the sense to relate consistently
+the facts which they speak of, and which they mutually contradict very
+often. In regard to the One whose life and actions they describe, if He
+had really performed the miracles attributed to Him, He would have
+rendered Himself notable by His beautiful acts; every one would have
+admired Him, and there would be statues erected to Him as was done for
+the Gods; but instead of that, He was regarded as a man of no
+consequence, as a fanatic, etc. Josephus, the historian, after having
+spoken of the great miracles performed in favor of his nation and his
+religion, immediately diminishes their credibility and renders it
+suspicious by saying that he leaves to each one the liberty of believing
+what he chooses; this evidently shows that he had not much faith in
+them. It also gives occasion to the more judicious to regard the
+histories which speak of this kind of things as fabulous narrations.
+[See Montaigne, and the author of the "Apology for Great Men."] All that
+can be said upon this subject shows us clearly that pretended miracles
+can be invented to favor vice and falsehood as well as justice and
+truth.
+
+I prove it by the evidence of what even our Christ-worshipers call the
+Word of God, and by the evidence of the One they adore; for their books,
+which they claim contain the Word of God, and Christ Himself, whom they
+adore as a God-made man, show us explicitly that there are not only
+false prophets--that is to say, impostors--who claim to be sent by God,
+and who speak in His name, but which show as explicitly that these false
+prophets can perform such great and prodigious miracles as shall deceive
+the very elect. [See Matthew, chapter xxiv., verses 5, 21-27.] More than
+this, all these pretended performers of miracles wish us to put faith
+only in them, and not in those who belong to an opposite party.
+
+On one occasion one of these pretended prophets, named Sedecias, being
+contradicted by another, named Michea, the former struck the latter and
+said to him, pleasantly, "By what way did the Spirit of God pass from me
+to you?"
+
+But how can these pretended miracles be the evidences of truth? for it
+is clear that they were not performed. For it would be necessary to
+know: Firstly, If those who are said to be the first authors of these
+narrations truly are such. Secondly, If they were honest men, worthy of
+confidence, wise and enlightened; and to know if they were not
+prejudiced in favor of those of whom they speak so favorably. Thirdly,
+If they have examined all the circumstances of the facts which they
+relate; if they know them well; and if they make a faithful report of
+them. Fourthly, If the books or the ancient histories which relate all
+these great miracles have not been falsified and changed in course of
+time, as many others have been?
+
+If we consult Tacitus and many other celebrated historians, in regard to
+Moses and his nation, we shall see that they are considered as a horde
+of thieves and bandits. Magic and astrology were in those days the only
+fashionable sciences; and as Moses was, it is said, instructed in the
+wisdom of the Egyptians, it was not difficult for him to inspire
+veneration and attachment for himself in the rustic and ignorant
+children of Jacob, and to induce them to accept, in their misery, the
+discipline he wished to give them. That is very different from what the
+Jews and our Christ-worshipers wish to make us believe. By what certain
+rule can we know that we should put faith in these rather than in the
+others? There is no sound reason for it. There is as little of certainty
+and even of probability in the miracles of the New Testament as in those
+of the Old.
+
+It will serve no purpose to say that the histories which relate the
+facts contained in the Gospels have been regarded as true and sacred;
+that they have always been faithfully preserved without any alteration
+of the truths which they contain; since this is perhaps the very reason
+why they should be the more suspected, having been corrupted by those
+who drew profit from them, or who feared that they were not sufficiently
+favorable to them.
+
+Generally, authors who transcribe this kind of histories, take the right
+to enlarge or to retrench all they please, in order to serve their own
+interests. This is what even our Christ-worshipers can not deny; for,
+without mentioning several other important personages who recognized the
+additions, the retrenchments, and the falsifications which have been
+made at different times in their Holy Scriptures, their saint Jerome, a
+famous philosopher among them, formally said in several passages of his
+"Prologues," that they had been corrupted and falsified; being, even in
+his day, in the hands of all kinds of persons, who added and suppressed
+whatever they pleased; so, "Thus there were," said he, "as many
+different models as different copies of the Gospels."
+
+In regard to the books of the Old Testament, Esdras, a priest of the
+law, testifies himself to having corrected and completed wholly the
+pretended sacred books of his law, which had partly been lost and partly
+corrupted. He divided them into twenty-two books, according to the
+number of the Hebraic letters, and wrote several other books, whose
+doctrine was to be revealed to the learned men alone. If these books
+have been partly lost and partly corrupted, as Esdras and St. Jerome
+testify in so many passages, there is then no certainty in regard to
+what they contain; and as for Esdras saying he had corrected and
+compiled them by the inspiration of God Himself there is no certainty of
+that, since there is no impostor who would not make the same claim. All
+the books of the law of Moses and of the prophets which could be found,
+were burned in the days of Antiochus. The Talmud, considered by the Jews
+as a holy and sacred book, and which contains all the Divine laws, with
+the sentences and notable sayings of the Rabbins, of their
+interpretation of the Divine and of the human laws, and a prodigious
+number of other secrets and mysteries in the Hebraic language, is
+considered by the Christians as a book made up of reveries, fables,
+impositions, and ungodliness. In the year 1559 they burned in Rome,
+according to the command of the inquisitors of the faith, twelve hundred
+of these Talmuds, which were found in a library in the city of Cremona.
+The Pharisees, a famous sect among the Jews, accepted but the five books
+of Moses, and rejected all the prophets. Among the Christians, Marcion
+and his votaries rejected the books of Moses and the prophets, and
+introduced other fashionable Scriptures. Carpocrates and his followers
+did the same, and rejected the whole of the Old Testament, and contended
+that Jesus Christ was but a man like all others. The Marcionites
+repudiated as bad, the whole of the Old Testament, and rejected the
+greater part of the four Gospels and the Epistles of St. Paul. The
+Ebionites accepted but the Gospel of St. Matthew, rejecting the three
+others, and the Epistles of St. Paul. The Marcionites published a Gospel
+under the name of St. Matthias, in order to confirm their doctrine. The
+apostles introduced other Scriptures in order to maintain their errors;
+and to carry out this, they made use of certain Acts, which they
+attributed to St. Andrew and to St. Thomas.
+
+The Manicheans wrote a gospel of their own style, and rejected the
+Scriptures of the prophets and the apostles. The Etzaites sold a certain
+book which they claimed to have come from Heaven; they cut up the other
+Scriptures according to their fancy. Origen himself, with all his great
+mind, corrupted the Scriptures and forged changes in the allegories
+which did not suit him, thus corrupting the sense of the prophets and
+apostles, and even some of the principal points of doctrine. His books
+are now mutilated and falsified; they are but fragments collected by
+others who have appeared since. The Ellogians attributed to the heretic
+Corinthus the Gospel and the Apocalypse of St. John; this is why they
+reject them. The heretics of our last centuries reject as apocryphal
+several books which the Roman Catholics consider as true and sacred--such
+as the books of Tobias, Judith, Esther, Baruch, the Song of the Three
+Children in the Furnace, the History of Susannah, and that of the Idol
+Bel, the Wisdom of Solomon, Ecclesiasticus, the first and second book of
+Maccabees; to which uncertain and doubtful books we could add several
+others that have been attributed to the other apostles; as, for example,
+the Acts of St. Thomas, his Circuits, his Gospel, and his Apocalypse;
+the Gospel of St. Bartholomew, that of St. Matthias, of St. Jacques, of
+St. Peter and of the Apostles, as also the Deeds of St. Peter, his book
+on Preaching, and that of his Apocalypse; that of the Judgment, that of
+the Childhood of the Saviour, and several others of the same kind, which
+are all rejected as apocryphal by the Roman Catholics, even by the Pope
+Gelasee, and by the S. S. F. F. of the Romish Communion. That which most
+confirms that there is no foundation of truth in regard to the authority
+given to these books, is that those who maintain their Divinity are
+compelled to acknowledge that they have no certainty as a basis, if
+their faith did not assure them and oblige them to believe it. Now, as
+faith is but a principle of error and imposture, how can faith, that is
+to say, a blind belief, render the books reliable which are themselves
+the foundation of this blind belief? What a pity and what insanity! But
+let us see if these books have of themselves any feature of truth; as,
+for example, of erudition, of wisdom, and of holiness, or some other
+perfections which are suited only to a God; and if the miracles which
+are cited agree with what we ought to think of the grandeur, goodness,
+justice, and infinite wisdom of an Omnipotent God.
+
+There is no erudition, no sublime thought, nor any production which
+surpasses the ordinary capacities of the human mind. On the contrary, we
+shall see on one side fabulous tales similar to that of a woman formed
+of a man's rib; of the pretended terrestrial Paradise; of a serpent
+which spoke, which reasoned, and which was more cunning than man; of an
+ass which spoke, and reprimanded its master for ill-treating it; of a
+universal deluge, and of an ark where animals of all kinds were
+inclosed; of the confusion of languages and of the division of the
+nations, without speaking of numerous other useless narrations upon low
+and frivolous subjects which important authors would scorn to relate.
+All these narrations appear to be fables, as much as those invented
+about the industry of Prometheus, the box of Pandora, the war of the
+Giants against the Gods, and similar others which the poets have
+invented to amuse the men of their time.
+
+On the other hand we will see a mixture of laws and ordinances, or
+superstitious practices concerning sacrifices, the purifications of the
+old law, the senseless distinctions in regard to animals, of which it
+supposes some to be pure and others to be impure. These laws are no more
+respectable than those of the most idolatrous nations. We shall see but
+simple stories, true or false, of several kings, princes, or
+individuals, who lived right or wrong, or who performed noble or mean
+actions, with other low and frivolous things also related.
+
+From all this, it is evident that no great genius was required, nor
+Divine Revelations to produce these things. It would not be creditable
+to a God.
+
+Finally, we see in these books but the discourses, the conduct, and the
+actions of those renowned prophets who proclaimed themselves especially
+inspired by God. We will see their way of acting and speaking, their
+dreams, their illusions, their reveries; and it will be easy to judge
+whether they do not resemble visionaries and fanatics much more than
+wise and enlightened persons.
+
+There are, however, in a few of these books, several good teachings and
+beautiful maxims of morals, as in the Proverbs attributed to Solomon, in
+the book of Wisdom and of Ecclesiastes; but this same Solomon, the
+wisest of their writers, is also the most incredulous; he doubts even
+the immortality of the soul, and concludes his works by saying that
+there is nothing good but to enjoy in peace the fruits of one's labor,
+and to live with those whom we love.
+
+How superior are the authors who are called profane, such as Xenophon,
+Plato, Cicero, the Emperor Antoninus, the Emperor Julian, Virgil, etc.,
+to the books which we are told are inspired of God. I can truly say that
+the fables of Aesop, for example, are certainly more ingenious and more
+instructive than all these rough and poor parables which are related in
+the Gospels.
+
+But what shows us that this kind of books is not of Divine Inspiration,
+is, that aside from the low order, coarseness of style, and the lack of
+system in the narrations of the different facts, which are very badly
+arranged, we do not see that the authors agree; they contradict each
+other in several things; they had not even sufficient enlightenment or
+natural talents to write a history.
+
+Here are some examples of the contradictions which are found among them.
+The Evangelist Matthew claims that Jesus Christ descended from king
+David by his son Solomon through Joseph, reputed to be His father; and
+Luke claims that He is descended from the same David by his son Nathan
+through Joseph.
+
+Matthew says, in speaking of Jesus, that, it being reported in Jerusalem
+that a new king of the Jews was born, and that the wise men had come to
+adore Him, the king Herod, fearing that this pretended new king would
+rob him of his crown some day, caused the murder of all the new-born
+children under two years, in all the neighborhood of Bethlehem, where he
+had been told that this new king was born; and that Joseph and the
+mother of Jesus, having been warned in a dream by an angel, of this
+wicked intention, took flight immediately to Egypt, where they stayed
+until the death of Herod, which happened many years afterward.
+
+On the contrary, Luke asserts that Joseph and the mother of Jesus lived
+peaceably during six weeks in the place where their child Jesus was
+born; that He was circumcised according to the law of the Jews, eight
+days after His birth; and when the time prescribed by the law for the
+purification of His mother had arrived, she and Joseph, her husband,
+carried Him to Jerusalem in order to present Him to God in His temple,
+and to offer at the same time a sacrifice which was ordained by God's
+law; after which they returned to Galilee, into their town of Nazareth,
+where their child Jesus grew every day in grace and in wisdom. Luke goes
+on to say that His father and His mother went every year to Jerusalem on
+the solemn days of their Easter feast, but makes no mention of their
+flight into Egypt, nor of the cruelty of Herod toward the children of
+the province of Bethlehem. In regard to the cruelty of Herod, as neither
+the historians of that time speak of it, nor Josephus, the historian who
+wrote the life of this Herod, and as the other Evangelists do not
+mention it, it is evident that the journey of those wise men, guided by
+a star, this massacre of little children, and this flight to Egypt, were
+but absurd falsehoods. For it is not credible that Josephus, who blamed
+the vices of this king, could have been silent on such a dark and
+detestable action, if what the Evangelist said had been true.
+
+In regard to the duration of the public life of Jesus Christ, according
+to what the first three Evangelists say, there could be scarcely more
+than three months from the time of His baptism until His death,
+supposing He was thirty years old when He was baptized by John,
+according to Luke, and that He was born on the 25th of December. For,
+from this baptism, which was in the year 15 of Tiberius Caesar, and in
+the year when Anne and Caiaphas were high-priests, to the first Easter
+following, which was in the month of March, there was but about three
+months; according to what the first three Evangelists say, He was
+crucified on the eve of the first Easter following His baptism, and the
+first time He went to Jerusalem with His disciples; because all that
+they say of His baptism, of His travels, of His miracles, of His
+preaching, of His death and passion, must have taken place in the same
+year of His baptism, for the Evangelists speak of no other year
+following, and it appears even by the narration of His acts that He
+performed them consecutively immediately after His baptism, and in a
+very short time, during which we see but an interval of six days before
+his Transfiguration; during these six days we do not see that He did
+anything. We see by this that He lived but about three months after His
+baptism, from which, if we subtract the forty days and forty nights
+which He passed in the desert immediately after His baptism, it would
+follow that the length of His public life from His first preaching till
+His death, would have lasted but about six weeks; and according to what
+John says, it would have lasted at least three years and three months,
+because it appears by the Gospel of this apostle, that, during the
+course of His public life He might have been three or four times at
+Jerusalem at the Easter feast which happened but once a year.
+
+Now if it is true that He had been there three or four times after His
+baptism, as John testifies, it is false that He lived but three months
+after His baptism, and that He was crucified the first time He went to
+Jerusalem.
+
+If it is said that these first three Evangelists really mean but one
+year, but that they do not indicate distinctly the others which elapsed
+since His baptism; or that John understood that there was but one
+Easter, although he speaks of several, and that he only anticipated the
+time when he repeatedly tells us that the Easter feast of the Jews was
+near at hand, and that Jesus went to Jerusalem, and, consequently, that
+there is but an apparent contradiction upon this subject between the
+Evangelists, I am willing to accept this; but it is certain that this
+apparent contradiction springs from the fact, that they do not explain
+themselves in all the circumstances that are noted in the narration
+which they make. Be that as it may, there will always be this inference
+made, that they were not inspired by God when they wrote their
+biographies of Christ.
+
+Here is another contradiction in regard to the first thing which Jesus
+
+Christ did immediately after His baptism; for the first three
+Evangelists state, that He was transported immediately by the Spirit
+into the desert, where He fasted forty days and forty nights, and where
+He was several times tempted by the Devil; and, according to what John
+says, He departed two days after His baptism to go into Galilee, where
+He performed His first miracle by changing water into wine at the
+wedding of Cana, where He found Himself three days after His arrival in
+Galilee, more than thirty leagues from the place in which He had been.
+
+In regard to the place of His first retreat after His departure from the
+desert, Matthew says that He returned to Galilee, and that leaving the
+city of Nazareth, He went to live at Capernaum, a maritime city; and
+Luke says, that He came at first to Nazareth, and afterward went to
+Capernaum.
+
+They contradict each other in regard to the time and manner in which the
+apostles followed Him; for the first three say that Jesus, passing on
+the shore of the Sea of Galilee, saw Simon and Andrew his brother, and
+that He saw at a little distance James and his brother John with their
+father, Zebedee. John, on the contrary, says that it was Andrew, brother
+of Simon Peter, who first followed Jesus with another disciple of John
+the Baptist, having seen Him pass before them, when they were with their
+Master on the shores of the Jordan.
+
+In regard to the Lord's Supper, the first three Evangelists note that
+Jesus Christ instituted the Sacrament of His body and His blood, in the
+form of bread and wine, the same as our Roman Christ-worshipers say; and
+John does not mention this mysterious sacrament. John says that after
+this supper, Jesus washed His apostles' feet, and commanded them to do
+the same thing to each other, and relates a long discourse which He
+delivered then. But the other Evangelists do not speak of the washing of
+the feet, nor of the long discourse He gave them then. On the contrary,
+they testify that immediately after this supper, He went with His
+apostles upon the Mount of Olives, where He gave up His Spirit to
+sadness, and was in anguish while His apostles slept, at a short
+distance. They contradict each other upon the day on which they say the
+Lord's Supper took place; because on one side, they note that it took
+place Easter-eve, that is, the evening of the first day of Azymes, or of
+the feast of unleavened bread; as it is noted (1) in Exodus, (2) in
+Leviticus, and (3) in Numbers; and, on the other hand, they say that He
+was crucified the day following the Lord's Supper, about midday after
+the Jews had His trial during the whole night and morning. Now,
+according to what they say, the day after this supper took place, ought
+not to be Easter-eve. Therefore, if He died on the eve of Easter, toward
+midday, it was not on the eve of this feast that this supper took place.
+There is consequently a manifest error.
+
+They contradict each other, also, in regard to the women who followed
+Jesus from Galilee, for the first three Evangelists say that these
+women, and those who knew Him, among whom were Mary Magdalene, and Mary,
+mother of James and Joseph, and the mother of Zebedee's children, were
+looking on at a distance when He was hanged and nailed upon the cross.
+John says, on the contrary, that the mother of Jesus and His mother's
+sister, and Mary Magdalene were standing near His cross with John, His
+apostle. The contradiction is manifest, for, if these women and this
+disciple were near Him, they were not at a distance, as the others say
+they were.
+
+They contradict each other upon the pretended apparitions which they
+relate that Jesus made after His pretended resurrection; for Matthew
+speaks of but two apparitions: the one when He appeared to Mary
+Magdalene and to another woman, also named Mary, and when He appeared to
+His eleven disciples who had returned to Galilee upon the mountain where
+He had appointed to meet them. Mark speaks of three apparitions: The
+first, when He appeared to Mary Magdalene; the second, when He appeared
+to His two disciples, who went to Emmaus; and the third, when He
+appeared to His eleven disciples, whom He reproaches for their
+incredulity. Luke speaks of but two apparitions the same as Matthew; and
+John the Evangelist speaks of four apparitions, and adds to Mark's
+three, the one which He made to seven or eight of His disciples who were
+fishing upon the shores of the Tiberian Sea.
+
+They contradict each other, also, in regard to the place of these
+apparitions; for Matthew says that it was in Galilee, upon a mountain;
+Mark says that it was when they were at table; Luke says that He brought
+them out of Jerusalem as far as Bethany, where He left them by rising to
+Heaven; and John says that it was in the city of Jerusalem, in a house
+of which they had closed the doors, and another time upon the borders of
+the Tiberian Sea.
+
+Thus is much contradiction in the report of these pretended apparitions.
+They contradict each other in regard to His pretended ascension to
+heaven; for Luke and Mark say positively that He went to heaven in
+presence of the eleven apostles, but neither Matthew nor John mentions
+at all this pretended ascension. More than this, Matthew testifies
+sufficiently that He did not ascend to heaven; for he said positively
+that Jesus Christ assured His apostles that He would be and remain
+always with them until the end of the world. "Go ye," He said to them,
+in this pretended apparition, "and teach all nations, and be assured
+that I am with you always, even unto the end of the world." Luke
+contradicts himself upon the subject; for in his Gospel he says that it
+was in Bethany where He ascended to heaven in the presence of His
+apostles, and in his Acts of the Apostles (supposing him to have been
+the author) he says that it was upon the Mount of Olives. He contradicts
+himself again about this ascension; for he notes in his Gospel that it
+was the very day of His resurrection, or the first night following, that
+He ascended to heaven; and in the Acts of the Apostles he says that it
+was forty days after His resurrection; this certainly does not
+correspond. If all the apostles had really seen their Master gloriously
+rise to heaven, how could it be possible that Matthew and John, who
+would have seen it as well as the others, passed in silence such a
+glorious mystery, and which was so advantageous to their Master,
+considering that they relate many other circumstances of His life and of
+His actions which are much less important than this one? How is it that
+Matthew does not mention this ascension? And why does Christ not explain
+clearly how He would live with them always, although He left them
+visibly to ascend to heaven? It is not easy to comprehend by what secret
+He could live with those whom He left.
+
+I pass in silence many other contradictions; what I have said is
+sufficient to show that these books are not of Divine Inspiration, nor
+even of human wisdom, and, consequently, do not deserve that we should
+put any faith in them.
+
+
+
+
+II.--OF MIRACLES.
+
+But by what privilege do these four Gospels, and some other similar
+books, pass for Holy and Divine more than several others, which bear no
+less the title of Gospels, and which have been published under the name
+of some other apostles? If it is said that the reputed Gospels are
+falsely attributed to the apostles, we can say the same of the first
+ones; if we suppose the first ones to be falsified and changed, we can
+think the same of the others. Thus there is no positive proof to make us
+discern the one from the other; in spite of the Church, which assumes to
+deride the matter, it is not credible.
+
+In regard to the pretended miracles related in the Old Testament, they
+could have been performed but to indicate on the part of God an unjust
+and odious discrimination between nations and between individuals;
+purposely injuring the one in order to especially favor the other. The
+vocation and the choice which God made of the Patriarchs, Abraham,
+Isaac, and Jacob, in order to make for Himself of their posterity a
+people which He would sanctify and bless above all other peoples of the
+earth, is a proof of it. But it will be said God is the absolute master
+of His favors and of His benefits; He can grant them to whomsoever He
+pleases, without any one having the right to complain or to accuse Him
+of injustice. This reason is useless; for God, the Author of nature, the
+Father of all men, ought to love them all alike as His own work, and,
+consequently, He ought to be equally their protector and their
+benefactor; giving them life, He ought to give all that is necessary for
+the well-being of His creatures.
+
+If all these pretended miracles of the Old and of the New Testament were
+true, we could say that God would have had more care in providing for
+the least good of men than for their greatest and principal good; that
+He would have punished more severely trifling faults in certain persons
+than He would have punished great crimes in others; and, finally, that
+He would not have desired to show Himself as beneficent in the most
+pressing needs as in the least. This is easy enough to show as much by
+the miracles which it is pretended that He performed, as by those which
+He did not perform, and which He would have performed rather than any
+other, if it is true that He performed any at all. For example, it is
+claimed that God had the kindness to send an angel to console and to
+assist a simple maid, while He left, and still leaves every day, a
+countless number of innocents to languish and starve to death; it is
+claimed that He miraculously preserved during forty years the clothes
+and the shoes of a few people, while He will not watch over the natural
+preservation of the vast quantities of goods which are useful and
+necessary for the subsistence of great nations, and that are lost every
+day by different accidents. It is claimed that He sent to the first
+beings of the human race, Adam and Eve, a devil, or a simple serpent, to
+seduce them, and by this means ruin all men. This is not credible! It is
+claimed, that by a special providence, He prevented the King of Gerais,
+a Pagan, from committing sin with a strange woman, although there would
+be no results to follow; and yet He did not prevent Adam and Eve from
+offending Him and falling into the sin of disobedience--a sin which,
+according to our Christ-worshipers was to be fatal, and cause the
+destruction of the human race. This is not credible!
+
+Let us come to the pretended miracles of the New Testament. They
+consist, as is pretended, in this: that Jesus Christ and His apostles
+cured, through the Deity, all kinds of diseases and infirmities, giving
+sight to the blind, hearing to the deaf, speech to the dumb, making the
+lame to walk, curing the paralytics, driving the devils from those who
+were possessed, and bringing the dead to life.
+
+We find several of these miracles in the Gospels, but we see a good many
+more of them in the books that our Christ-worshipers have written of the
+admirable lives of their saints; for in these lives we nearly everywhere
+read that these pretended blessed ones cured diseases and infirmities,
+expelled the devils wherever they encountered them, solely in the name
+of Jesus or by the sign of the cross; that they controlled the elements;
+that God favored them so much that He even preserved to them His Divine
+power after their death, and that this Divine power could be
+communicated even to the least of their clothing, even to their shadows,
+and even to the infamous instruments of their death. It is said that the
+shoe of St. Honorius raised a dead man on the sixth of January; that the
+staff of St. Peter, that of St. James, and that of St. Bernard performed
+miracles. The same is said of the cord of St. Francis, of the staff of
+St. John of God, and of the girdle of St. Melanie. It is said that St.
+Gracilien was divinely instructed as to what he ought to believe and to
+teach, and that he, by the influence of his prayer, removed a mountain
+which prevented him from building a church; that from the sepulchre of
+St. Andrew flowed incessantly a liquor which cured all sorts of
+diseases; that the soul of St. Benedict was seen ascending to Heaven
+clothed with a precious cloak and surrounded by burning lamps; that St.
+Dominic said that God never refused him anything he asked; that St.
+Francis commanded the swallows, swans, and other birds to obey him, and
+that often the fishes, rabbits, and the hares came and placed themselves
+on his hands and on his lap; that St. Paul and St. Pantaleon, having
+been beheaded, there flowed milk instead of blood; that the blessed
+Peter of Luxembourg, in the first two years after his death (1388 and
+1389), performed two thousand four hundred miracles, among which
+forty-two dead were brought to life, not including more than three
+thousand other miracles which he has performed since; that the fifty
+philosophers whom St. Catherine converted, having all been thrown into a
+great fire, their whole bodies were afterward found and not a single
+hair was scorched; that the body of St. Catherine was carried off by
+angels after her death, and buried by them upon Mount Sinai; that the
+day of the canonization of St. Antoine de Padua, all the bells of the
+city of Lisbon rang of themselves, without any one knowing how it was
+done; that this saint being once near the sea-shore, and calling the
+fishes, they came to him in a great multitude, and raised their heads
+out of the water and listened to him attentively. We should never come
+to an end if we had to report all this idle talk; there is no subject,
+however vain, frivolous, and even ridiculous, on which the authors of
+these "LIVES OF THE SAINTS" do not take pleasure in heaping miracles
+upon miracles, for they are skillful in forging absurd falsehoods.
+
+It is certainly not without reason that we consider these things as
+lies; for it is easy to see that all these pretended miracles have been
+invented but by imitating the fables of the Pagan poets. This is
+sufficiently obvious by the resemblance which they bear one to another.
+
+
+
+
+III.--SIMILARITY BETWEEN ANCIENT AND MODERN MIRACLES.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers claim that God endowed their saints with power
+to perform the miracles related in their lives, some of the Pagans claim
+also that the daughters of Anius, high-priest of Apollo, had really
+received from the god Bacchus the power to change all they desired into
+wheat, into wine, or into oil, etc.; that Jupiter gave to the nymphs who
+took care of his education, a horn of the goat which nursed him in his
+infancy, with this virtue, that it could give them an abundance of all
+they wished for.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers assert that their saints had the power of
+raising the dead, and that they had Divine revelations, the Pagans had
+said before them that Athalide, son of Mercury, had obtained from his
+father the gift of living, dying, and coming to life whenever he wished,
+and that he had also the knowledge of all that transpired in this world
+as well as in the other; and that Esculapius, son of Apollo, had raised
+the dead, and, among others, he brought to life Hyppolites, son of
+Theseus, by Diana's request; and that Hercules, also, raised from the
+dead Alceste, wife of Admetus, King of Thessalia, to return her to her
+husband.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers say that Christ was miraculously born of a
+virgin, the Pagans had said before them that Remus and Romulus, the
+founders of Rome, were miraculously born of a vestal virgin named Ilia,
+or Silvia, or Rhea Silvia; they had already said that Mars, Argus,
+Vulcan, and others were born of the goddess Juno without sexual union;
+and, also, that Minerva, goddess of the sciences, sprang from Jupiter's
+brain, and that she came out of it, all armed, by means of a blow which
+this god gave to his own head.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers claim that their saints made water gush from
+rocks, the Pagans pretend also that Minerva made a fountain of oil
+spring forth from a rock as a recompense for a temple which had been
+dedicated to her.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers boast of having received images from Heaven
+miraculously, as, for example, those of Notre-Dame de Loretto, and of
+Liesse and several other gifts from Heaven, as the pretended Holy Vial
+of Rheims, as the white Chasuble which St. Ildefonse received from the
+Virgin Mary, and other similar things: the Pagans boasted before them of
+having received a sacred shield as a mark of the preservation of their
+city of Rome, and the Trojans boasted before them of having received
+miraculously from Heaven their Palladium, or their Idol of Pallas, which
+came, they said, to takes its place in the temple which they had erected
+in honor of this Goddess.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers pretend that Jesus Christ was seen by His
+apostles ascending to Heaven, and that several of their pretended saints
+were transported to Heaven by angels, the Roman Pagans had said before
+them, that Romulus, their founder, was seen after his death; that
+Ganymede, son of Troas, king of Troy, was transported to Heaven by
+Jupiter to serve him as cup-bearer that the hair of Berenice, being
+consecrated to the temple of Venus, was afterward carried to Heaven;
+they say the same thing of Cassiope and Andromedes, and even of the ass
+of Silenus.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers pretend that several of their saints' bodies
+were miraculously saved from decomposition after death, and that they
+were found by Divine Revelations, after having been lost for a long
+time, the Pagans say the same of the holy of Orestes, which they pretend
+to have found through an oracle, etc.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers say that the seven sleeping brothers slept
+during one hundred and seventy-seven years, while they were shut up in a
+cave, the Pagans claim that Epimenides, the philosopher, slept during
+fifty-seven years in a cave where he fell asleep.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers claim that several of their saints continued to
+speak after losing the head, or having the tongue cut out, the Pagans
+claim that the head of Gambienus recited a long poem after separation
+from his body.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers glorify themselves that their temples and
+churches are ornamented with several pictures and rich gifts which show
+miraculous cures performed by the intercession of their saints, we also
+see, or at least we formerly saw in the temple of Esculapius at
+Epidaurus, many paintings of miraculous cures which he had performed.
+
+If our Christ-worshipers claim that several of their saints have been
+miraculously preserved in the flames without having received any injury
+to their bodies or their clothing, the Pagans claim that the Holy women
+of the temple of Diana walked upon burning coals barefooted without
+burning or hurting their feet, and that the priests of the Goddess
+Feronie and of Hirpicus walked in the same way upon burning coals in the
+fires which were made in honor of Apollo.
+
+If the angels built a chapel for St. Clement at the bottom of the sea,
+the little house of Baucis and of Philemon was miraculously changed into
+a superb temple as a reward of their piety. If several of their saints,
+as St. James and St. Maurice, appeared several times in their armies,
+mounted and equipped in ancient style, and fought for them, Castor and
+Pollux appeared several times in battles and fought for the Romans
+against their enemies; if a ram was miraculously found to be offered as
+a sacrifice in the place of Isaac, whom his father Abraham was about to
+sacrifice, the Goddess Vesta also sent a heifer to be sacrificed in the
+place of Metella, daughter of Metellus: the Goddess Diana sent a hind in
+the place of Iphigenie when she was at the stake to be sacrificed to
+her, and by this means Iphigenie was saved.
+
+If St. Joseph went into Egypt by the warning of an angel, Simonides, the
+poet, avoided several great dangers by miraculous warnings which had
+been given to him.
+
+If Moses forced a stream of water to flow from a rock by striking it
+with his staff, the horse Pegasus did the same: by striking a rock with
+his foot a fountain issued.
+
+If St. Vincent Ferrier brought to life a dead man hacked into pieces,
+whose body was already half roasted and half broiled, Pelops, son of
+Tantalus king of Phrygia, having been torn to pieces by his father to be
+sacrificed to the Gods, they gathered all the pieces, joined them, and
+brought them to life.
+
+If several crucifixes and other images have miraculously spoken and
+answered, the Pagans say that their oracles have spoken and given
+answers to those who consulted them, and that the head of Orpheus and
+that of Policrates gave oracles after their death.
+
+If God revealed by a voice from Heaven that Jesus Christ was His Son, as
+the Evangelists say, Vulcan showed by the apparition of a miraculous
+flame, that Coceculus was really his son.
+
+If God has miraculously nourished some of His saints, the Pagan poets
+pretend that Triptolemus was miraculously nourished with Divine milk by
+Ceres, who gave him also a chariot drawn by two dragons, and that
+Phineus, son of Mars, being born after his mother's death, was
+nevertheless miraculously nourished by her milk.
+
+If several saints miraculously tamed the ferocity of the most cruel
+beasts, it is said that Orpheus attracted to him, by the sweetness of
+his voice and by the harmony of his instruments, lions, bears, and
+tigers, and softened the ferocity of their nature; that he attracted
+rocks and trees, and that even the rivers stopped their course to listen
+to his song.
+
+Finally, to abbreviate, because we could report many others, if our
+Christ-worshipers pretend that the walls of the city of Jericho fell by
+the sound of their trumpets, the Pagans say that the walls of the city
+of Thebes were built by the sound of the musical instruments of
+Amphion; the stones, as the poets say, arranging themselves to the
+sweetness of his harmony; this would be much more miraculous and more
+admirable than to see the walls demolished.
+
+There is certainly a great similarity between the Pagan miracles and our
+own. As it would be great folly to give credence to these pretended
+miracles of Paganism, it is not any the less so to have faith in those
+of Christianity, because they all come from the same source of error. It
+was for this that the Manicheans and the Arians, who existed at the
+commencement of the Christian Era, derided these pretended miracles
+performed by the invocation of saints, and blamed those who invoked them
+after death and honored their relics.
+
+Let us return at present to the principal end which God proposed to
+Himself, in sending His Son into the world to become man; it must have
+been, as they say, to redeem the world from sin and to destroy
+entirely the works of the pretended Devil, etc. This is what our
+Christ-worshipers claim also, that Jesus Christ died for them according
+to His Father's intention, which is plainly stated in all the pretended
+Holy Books. What! an Almighty God, who was willing to become a mortal
+man for the love of men, and to shed His blood to the last drop, to save
+them all, would yet have limited His power to only curing a few diseases
+and physical infirmities of a few individuals who were brought to Him;
+and would not have employed His Divine goodness in curing the
+infirmities of the soul! that is to say, in curing all men of their
+vices and their depravities, which are worse than the diseases of their
+bodies! This is not credible. What! such a good God would desire to
+preserve dead corpses from decay and corruption; and would not keep from
+the contagion and corruption of vice and sin the souls of a countless
+number of persons whom He sought to redeem at the price of His blood,
+and to sanctify by His grace! What a pitiful contradiction!
+
+
+
+
+IV.--OF THE FALSITY OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.
+
+Let us proceed to the pretended visions and Divine Revelations, upon
+which our Christ-worshipers establish the truth and the certainty of
+their religion.
+
+In order to give a just idea of it, I believe it is best to say in
+general, that they are such, that if any one should dare now to boast of
+similar ones, or wish to make them valued, he would certainly be
+regarded as a fool or a fanatic.
+
+Here is what the pretended Visions and Divine Revelations are:
+
+God, as these pretended Holy Books claim, having appeared for the first
+time to Abraham, said to him: "Get thee out of thy country, and from thy
+kindred and from thy father's house, into a land that I will show thee."
+Abraham, having gone there, God, says the Bible, appeared the second
+time to him, and said, "Unto thy seed will I give this land," and there
+builded he an altar unto the Lord, who appeared unto him. After the
+death of Isaac, his son, Jacob going one day to Mesopotamia to look for
+a wife that would suit him, having walked all the day, and being tired
+from the long distance, desired to rest toward evening; lying upon the
+ground, with his head resting upon a few stones, he fell asleep, and
+during his sleep he saw a ladder set upon the earth, and the top of it
+reached to Heaven; and beheld the angels of God ascending and descending
+on it. And behold, the Lord stood above it, and said: "I am the Lord,
+God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac; the land whereon thou
+liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy seed. And thy seed shall be as
+the dust of the earth, and thou shalt spread abroad to the west and to
+the east, and to the north and to the south and in thee and in thy seed
+shall all the nations of the earth be blessed. And behold, I am with
+thee and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest, and will bring
+thee again into this land: for I will not leave thee until I have done
+that which I have spoken to thee of." And Jacob awaked out of his sleep,
+and he said: "Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not." And
+he was afraid, and said: "How dreadful is this place! this is none other
+than the house of God, and this is the gate of Heaven." And Jacob rose
+up early in the morning, and took the stone that he had put for his
+pillow, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil on the top of it, and
+made at the same time a vow to God, that if he should return safe and
+sound, he would give Him a tithe of all he might possess.
+
+Here is yet another vision. Watching the flocks of his father-in-law,
+Laban, who had promised him that all the speckled lambs produced by his
+sheep should be his recompense, he dreamed one night that he saw all the
+males leap upon the females, and all the lambs they brought forth were
+speckled. In this beautiful dream, God appeared to him, and said: "Lift
+up now thine eyes and see that the rams which leap upon the cattle are
+ring-streaked, speckled, and grizzled; for I have seen all that Laban
+does unto thee. Now arise, get thee out from this land, and return unto
+the land of thy kindred." As he was returning with his whole family, and
+with all he obtained from his father-in-law, he had, says the Bible, a
+wrestle with an unknown man during the whole night, until the breaking
+of the day, and as this man had not been able to subdue him, He asked
+him who he was. Jacob told Him his name; and He said: "Thy name shall be
+called no more Jacob, but Israel; for as a prince hast thou power with
+God and with men, and hast prevailed."
+
+This is a specimen of the first of these pretended Visions and Divine
+Revelations. We can judge of the others by these. Now, what appearance
+of Divinity is there in dreams so gross and illusions so vain? As if
+some foreigners, Germans, for instance, should come into our France,
+and, after seeing all the beautiful provinces of our kingdom, should
+claim that God had appeared to them in their country, that He had told
+them to go into France, and that He would give to them and to their
+posterity all the beautiful lands, domains, and provinces of this
+kingdom which extend from the rivers Rhine and Rhone, even to the sea;
+that He would make an everlasting alliance with them, that He would
+multiply their race, that He would make their posterity as numerous as
+the stars of Heaven and as the sands of the sea, etc., who would not
+laugh at such folly, and consider these strangers as insane fools!
+
+Now there is no reason to think otherwise of all that has been said by
+these pretended Holy Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in regard to
+the Divine Revelations which they claim to have had. As to the
+institution of bloody sacrifices, the Holy Scriptures attribute it to
+God. As it would be too wearisome to go into the disgusting details of
+this kind of sacrifices, I refer the reader to Exodus. [See chapters
+xxv., xxvii., xxyiii., and xxix.]
+
+Were not men insane and blind to believe they were honoring God by
+tearing into pieces, butchering, and burning His own creatures, under
+the pretext of offering them as sacrifices to Him? And even now, how is
+it that our Christ-worshipers are so extravagant as to expect to please
+God the Father, by offering up to Him the sacrifice of His Divine Son,
+in remembrance of His being shamefully nailed to a cross upon which He
+died? Certainly this can spring only from an obstinate blindness of
+mind.
+
+In regard to the detail of the sacrifices of animals, it consists but in
+colored clothing, blood, plucks, livers, birds' crops, kidneys, claws,
+skins, in the dung, smoke, cakes, certain measures of oil and wine, the
+whole being offered and infected by dirty ceremonies as filthy and
+contemptible as the most extravagant performances of magic. What is most
+horrible of all this is, that the law of this detestable Jewish people
+commanded that even men should be offered up as sacrifices. The
+barbarians, whoever they were, who introduced this horrible law,
+commanded to put to death any man who had been consecrated to the God of
+the Jews, whom they called Adonai: and it is according to this execrable
+precept that Jephthah sacrificed his daughter, and that Saul wanted to
+sacrifice his son.
+
+But here is yet another proof of the falsity of these revelations of
+which we have spoken. It is the lack of the fulfillment of the great and
+magnificent promises by which they were accompanied, for it is evident
+that these promises never have been fulfilled.
+
+The proof of this consists in three principal points:
+
+Firstly. Their posterity was to be more numerous than all the other
+nations of the world.
+
+Secondly. The people who should spring from their race were to be the
+happiest, the holiest, and the most victorious of all the people of the
+earth.
+
+Thirdly. His covenant was to be everlasting, and they should possess
+forever the country He should give them. Now it is plain that these
+promises-never were fulfilled.
+
+Firstly. It is certain that the Jewish people, or the people of
+Israel--which is the only one that can be regarded as having descended
+from the Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the only ones to whom
+these promises should have been fulfilled--have never been so numerous
+that it could be compared with the other nations of the earth, much less
+with the sands of the sea, etc., for we see that in the very time when
+it was the most numerous and the most flourishing, it never occupied
+more than the little sterile provinces of Palestine and its environs,
+which are almost nothing in comparison with the vast extent of a
+multitude of flourishing kingdoms which are on all sides of the earth.
+
+Secondly. They have never been fulfilled concerning the great blessings
+with which they were to be favored; for, although they won a few small
+victories over some poor nations whom they plundered, this did not
+prevent them from being conquered and reduced to servitude; their
+kingdom destroyed as well as their nation, by the Roman army; and even
+now the remainder of this unfortunate nation is looked upon as the
+vilest and most contemptible of all the earth, having no country, no
+dominion, no superiority.
+
+Finally, these promises have not been fulfilled in respect to this
+everlasting covenant, which God ought to have fulfilled to them; because
+we do not see now, and we have never seen, any evidence of this
+covenant; and, on the contrary, they have been for many centuries
+excluded from the possession of the small country they pretended God had
+promised that they should enjoy forever. Thus, since these pretended
+promises were never fulfilled, it is certain evidence of their falsity;
+which proves, plainly, that these pretended Holy Books which contain
+them were not of Divine inspiration. Therefore it is useless for our
+Christ-worshipers to pretend to make use of them as infallible testimony
+to prove the truth of their religion.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.
+
+
+
+
+V.--(1) OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
+
+Our Christ-worshipers add to their reasons for credulity and to the
+proofs of the truth of their testimony, the prophecies which are, as
+they pretend, sure evidences of the truth of the revelations or
+inspirations of God, there being no one but God who could predict future
+events so long before they came to pass, as those which have been
+predicted by the prophets.
+
+Let us see, then, who these pretended prophets are, and if we ought to
+consider them as important as our Christ-worshipers pretend they are.
+These men were but visionaries and fanatics, who acted and spoke
+according to the impulsions of their ruling passions, and who imagined
+that it was the Spirit of God by which they spoke and acted; or they
+were impostors who feigned to be prophets, and who, in order to more
+easily deceive the ignorant and simple-minded, boasted of acting and
+speaking by the Spirit of God. I would like to know how an Ezekiel would
+be received who should say that God made him eat for his breakfast a
+roll of parchment; commanded him to be tied like an insane man, and lie
+three hundred and ninety days upon his right side, and forty days upon
+his left, and commanded him to eat man's dung upon his bread, and
+afterward, as an accommodation, cow's dung? I ask how such a filthy
+statement would be received by the most stupid people of our provinces?
+
+What can be yet a greater proof of the falsity of these pretended
+prophecies, than the violence with which these prophets reproach each
+other for speaking falsely in the name of God, reproaches which they
+claim to make in behalf of God. All of them say, "Beware of the false
+prophets!" as the quacks say, "Beware of the counterfeit pills!" How
+could these insane impostors tell the future? No prophecy in favor of
+their Jewish nation was ever fulfilled. The number of prophecies which
+predict the prosperity and the greatness of Jerusalem is almost
+innumerable; in explanation of this, it will be said that it is very
+natural that a subdued and captive people should comfort themselves in
+their real afflictions by imaginary hopes--as a year after King James was
+deposed, the Irish people of his party forged several prophecies in
+regard to him.
+
+But if these promises made to the Jews had been really true, the Jewish
+nation long ago would have been, and would still be, the most numerous,
+the most powerful, the most blessed, and the most victorious of all
+nations.
+
+
+
+
+VI.--(2) THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+
+Let us examine the pretended prophecies which are contained in the
+Gospels.
+
+Firstly. An angel having appeared in a dream to a man named Joseph,
+father, or at least so reputed, of Jesus, son of Mary, said unto him:
+
+"Joseph, thou son of David fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for
+that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost. And she shall bring
+forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name JESUS; for He shall save His
+people from their sins." This angel said also to Mary:
+
+"Fear not, Mary, for thou hast found favor with God. And behold, thou
+shalt conceive in thy womb and bring forth a Son, and shalt call His
+name Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the
+Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of His father
+David. And He shall reign over the house of Jacob forever; and of His
+kingdom there shall be no end!" Jesus began to preach and to say:
+
+"Repent, for the kingdom of Heaven is at hand. Take no thought for your
+life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink, nor yet for your body
+what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the body than
+raiment, for your Heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these
+things. But seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and
+all these things shall be added unto you."
+
+Now, let every man who has not lost common sense, examine if this Jesus
+ever was a king, or if His disciples had abundance of all things. This
+Jesus promised to deliver the world from sin. Is there any prophecy
+which is more false? Is not our age a striking proof of it? It is said
+that Jesus came to save His people. In what way did He save it? It is
+the greatest number which rules any party. For example, one dozen or two
+of Spaniards or Frenchmen do not constitute the French or Spanish
+people; and if an army of a hundred and twenty thousand men were taken
+prisoners of war by an army of enemies which was stronger, and if the
+chief of this army should redeem only a few men, as ten or twelve
+soldiers or officers, by paying their ransom, it could not be claimed
+that he had delivered or redeemed his army. Then, who is this God who
+has been sacrificed, who died to save the world, and leaves so many
+nations damned? What a pity! and what horror!
+
+Jesus Christ says that we have but to ask and we shall receive, and to
+seek and we shall find. He assures us that all we ask of God in His name
+shall be granted, and that if we have faith as a grain of mustard-seed,
+we could by one word remove mountains. If this promise is true, nothing
+appears impossible to our Christ-worshipers who have faith in Jesus.
+However, the contrary happens. If Mohammed had made the promises to his
+votaries that Christ made to His, without success, what would not be
+said about it. They would cry out, "Ah, the cheat! ah, the impostor!"
+These Christ-worshipers are in the same condition: they have been blind,
+and have not even yet recovered from their blindness; on the contrary,
+they are so ingenious in deceiving themselves, that they pretend that
+these promises have been fulfilled from the beginning of Christianity;
+that at that time it was necessary to have miracles, in order to
+convince the incredulous of the truth of religion; but that this
+religion being sufficiently established, the miracles were no longer
+necessary. Where, then, is their proof of all this?
+
+Besides, He who made these promises did not limit them to a certain
+time, or to certain places, or to certain persons; but He made them
+generally to everybody. The faith of those who believe, says He, shall
+be followed by these miracles; "They shall cast out devils in My name,
+they shall speak in divers tongues, they shall handle serpents," etc.
+
+In regard to the removal of mountains, He positively says that "whoever
+shall say to a mountain: 'Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the
+sea;' it shall be done;" provided that he does not doubt in his heart,
+but believes all he commands will be done. Are not all these promises
+given in a general way, without restriction as to time, place, or
+persons?
+
+It is said that all the sects which are founded in errors and imposture
+will come to a shameful end. But if Jesus Christ intends to say that He
+has established a society of followers who will not fall either into
+vice or error, these words are absolutely false, as there is in
+Christendom no sect, no society, and no church which is not full of
+errors and vices, especially the Roman Church, although it claims to be
+the purest and the holiest of all. It was born into error, or rather it
+was conceived and formed in error; and even now it is full of delusions
+which are contrary to the intentions, the sentiments, or the doctrine of
+its Founder, because it has, contrary to His intention, abolished the
+laws of the Jews, which He approved, and which He came Himself, as He
+said, to fulfill and not to destroy. It has fallen into the errors and
+idolatry of Paganism, as is seen by the idolatrous worship which is
+offered to its God of dough, to its saints, to their images, and to
+their relics.
+
+I know well that our Christ-worshipers consider it a lack of
+intelligence to accept literally the promises and prophecies as they are
+expressed; they reject the literal and natural sense of the words, to
+give them a mystical and spiritual sense which they call allegorical and
+figurative; claiming, for example, that the people of Israel and Judea,
+to whom these promises were made, were not understood as the Israelites
+after the body, but the Israelites in spirit: that is to say, the
+Christians which are the Israel of God, the true chosen people that by
+the promise made to this enslaved people, to deliver it from captivity,
+it is understood to be not the corporal deliverance of a single captive
+people, but the spiritual deliverance of all men from the servitude of
+the Devil, which was to be accomplished by their Divine Saviour; that by
+the abundance of riches, and all the temporal blessings promised to this
+people, is meant the abundance of spiritual graces; and finally, that by
+the city of Jerusalem, is meant not the terrestrial Jerusalem, but the
+spiritual Jerusalem, which is the Christian Church.
+
+But it is easy to see that these spiritual and allegorical meanings
+having only a strange, imaginary sense, being a subterfuge of the
+interpreters, can not serve to show the truth or the falsehood of a
+proposition, or of any promises whatever. It is ridiculous to forge such
+allegorical meanings, since it is only by the relations of the natural
+and true sense that we can judge of their truth or falsehood. A
+proposition, a promise, for example, which is considered true in the
+proper and natural sense of the terms in which it is expressed, will not
+become false in itself under cover of a strange sense, one which does
+not belong to it. By the same reasoning, that which is manifestly false
+in its proper and natural sense, will not become true in itself,
+although we give it a strange sense, one foreign to the true.
+
+We can say that the prophecies of the Old Testament adjusted to the New,
+would be very absurd and puerile things. For example, Abraham had two
+wives, of which the one, who was but a servant, represented the
+synagogue, and the other one, his lawful wife, represented the Christian
+Church; and that this Abraham had two sons, of which the one born of
+Hagar, the servant, represented the Old Testament; and the other, born
+of Sarah, the wife, represented the New Testament. Who would not laugh
+at such a ridiculous doctrine?
+
+Is it not amusing that a piece of red cloth, exhibited by a prostitute
+as a signal to spies, in the Old Testament is made to represent the
+blood of Jesus Christ shed in the New? If--according to this manner of
+interpreting allegorically all that is said, done, and practiced in the
+ancient law of the Jews--we should interpret in the same allegorical way
+all the discourses, the actions, and the adventures of the famous Don
+Quixote de la Mancha, we would find the same sort of mysteries and
+ridiculous figures.
+
+It is nevertheless upon this absurd foundation that the whole Christian
+religion rests. Thus it is that there is scarcely anything in this
+ancient law that the Christ-worshiping doctors do not try to explain in
+a mystical way to build up their system. The most false and the most
+ridiculous prophecy ever made is that of Jesus, in Luke, where it is
+pretended that there will be signs in the sun and in the moon, and that
+the Son of Man will appear in a cloud to judge men; and this is
+predicted for the generation living at that time. Has it come to pass?
+Did the Son of Man appear in a cloud?
+
+
+
+
+VII.--ERRORS OF DOCTRINE AND OF MORALITY.
+
+The Christian Apostolical Roman Religion teaches, and compels belief,
+that there is but one God, and, at the same time, that there are three
+Divine persons, each one being God. This is absurd; for if there are
+three who are truly God, then there are three Gods. It is false, then,
+to say that there is but one God; or if this is true, it is false to say
+that there are really three who are God, for one and three can not be
+claimed to be one and the same number. It is also said that the first of
+these pretended Divine persons, called the Father, has brought forth the
+second person, which is called the Son, and that these first two persons
+together have produced the third, which is called the Holy Ghost, and,
+nevertheless, these three pretended Divine persons do not depend the one
+upon the other, and even that one is not older than the other. This,
+too, is manifestly absurd; because one thing can not receive its
+existence from another thing without some dependence on this other; and
+a thing must necessarily exist in order to give birth to another. If,
+then, the Second and the Third persons of Divinity have received their
+existence from the First person, they must necessarily depend for their
+existence on this First person, who gave them birth, or who begot them,
+and it is necessary also that the First person of the Divinity, who gave
+birth to the two other persons, should have existed before them; because
+that which does not exist can not beget anything. Nevertheless, it is
+repugnant as well as absurd to claim that anything could be begotten
+or born without having had a beginning. Now, according to our
+Christ-worshipers, the Second and Third persons of Divinity were
+begotten and born; then they had a beginning, and the First person had
+none, not being begotten by another; it therefore follows necessarily
+that one existed before the other.
+
+Our Christ-worshipers, who feel these absurdities and can not avoid them
+by any good reasoning, have no other resource than to say that we must
+ignore human reason and humbly adore these sublime mysteries without
+wishing to understand them; but that which they call faith is refuted
+when they tell us that we must submit; it is telling us that we must
+blindly believe that which we do not believe. Our Christ-worshipers
+condemn the blindness of the ancient Pagans, who worshiped several
+Gods; they deride the genealogy of those Gods, their birth, their
+marriages, and the generating of their children; yet they do not observe
+that they themselves say things which are much more ridiculous and
+absurd.
+
+If the Pagans believed that there were Goddesses as well as Gods, that
+these Gods and Goddesses married and begat children, they thought of
+nothing, then, but what is natural; for they did not believe yet that
+the Gods were without body or feeling; they believed they were similar
+to men. Why should there not be females as well as males? It is not more
+reasonable to deny or to recognize the one than the other; and supposing
+there were Gods and Goddesses, why should they not beget children in the
+ordinary way? There would be certainly nothing ridiculous or absurd in
+this doctrine, if it were true that their Gods existed. But in the
+doctrine of our Christ-worshipers there is something absolutely
+ridiculous and absurd; for besides claiming that one God forms Three,
+and that these Three form but One, they pretend that this Triple and
+Unique God has neither body, form, nor face; that the First person of
+this Triple and Unique God, whom they call the Father, begot of Himself
+a Second person, which they call the Son, and which is the same as His
+Father, being, like Him, without body, form, or face. If this is true,
+why is it that the First one is called Father rather than mother, or the
+Second called Son rather than daughter? For if the First one is really
+father instead of mother, and if the Second is son instead of daughter,
+there must be something in both of these two persons which causes the
+one to be father rather than mother, and the other to be son rather than
+daughter. Now who can assert that they are males and not females? But
+how should they be rather males than females, as they have neither body,
+form, nor face? That is not an imaginable thing, and destroys itself. No
+matter, they claim chat these two Persons, without body, form, or face,
+and, consequently, without difference of sex, are nevertheless Father
+and Son, and that they produced by their mutual love a third person,
+whom they called the Holy Ghost, who has, like the other two, no body,
+no form, and no face. What abominable nonsense!
+
+As our Christ-worshipers limit the power of God the Father to begetting
+but one Son, why do they not desire that this Second person, and the
+Third, should have the same power to beget a Son like themselves? If
+this power to beget a son is perfection in the First person, it is,
+then, a perfection and a power which does not exist in the Second and in
+the Third person. Thus these two Persons, lacking a perfection and a
+power which is found in the First one, they are consequently not equal
+with Him. If, on the contrary, they say that this power to beget a son
+is no perfection, they should not attribute it, then, to the First
+person any more than to the other two; for we should attribute
+perfections only to an absolutely perfect being. Besides, they would not
+dare to say that the power to beget a Divine person is not a perfection;
+and if they claim that this First person could have begotten several
+sons and daughters, but that He desired but this only Son, and that the
+two other persons did not desire to beget any others, we could ask them,
+firstly, from whence they know this, for we do not see in their
+pretended Holy Scriptures that any One of these Divine personages
+reveals any such assertions; how, then, can our Christ-worshipers know
+anything about it? They speak but according to their ideas and to their
+hollow imaginations. Secondly, we could not avoid saying, that if these
+pretended Divine personages had the power of begetting several children,
+and did not wish to make use of it, the consequence would be that this
+Divine power was ineffectual. It would be entirely without effect in the
+Third person, who did not beget or produce any, and would be almost
+without effect in the two others, because they limited it. Then this
+power of begetting or producing an unlimited number of children would
+remain idle and useless; it would be inconsistent to suppose this of
+Divine Personages, One of whom had already produced a Son.
+
+Our Christ-worshipers blame and condemn the Pagans because they
+attribute Divinity to mortal men, and worship them as Gods after their
+death; they are right in doing this. But these Pagans did only what our
+Christ-worshipers still do in attributing Divinity to their Christ;
+doing which, they condemn themselves also, because they are in the same
+error as these Pagans, in that they worship a man who was mortal, and so
+very mortal that He died shamefully upon a cross.
+
+It would be of no use for our Christ-worshipers to say that there was a
+great difference between their Jesus Christ and the Pagan Gods, under
+the pretense that their Christ was, as they claim, really God and man at
+the same time, while the Divinity was incarnated in Him, by means of
+which, the Divine nature found itself united personally, as they say,
+with human nature; these two natures would have made of Jesus Christ a
+true God and a true man; this is what never happened, they claim, in the
+Pagan Gods.
+
+But it is easy to show the weakness of this reply; for, on the one hand,
+was it not as easy to the Pagans as to the Christians, to say that the
+Divinity was incarnated in the men whom they worshiped as Gods? On the
+other hand, if the Divinity wanted to incarnate and unite in the human
+nature of their Jesus Christ, how did they know that this Divinity would
+not wish to also incarnate and unite Himself personally to the human
+nature of those great men and those admirable women, who, by their
+virtue, by their good qualities, or by their noble actions, have
+excelled the generality of people, and made themselves worshiped as Gods
+and Goddesses? And if our Christ-worshipers do not wish to believe that
+Divinity ever incarnated in these great personages, why do they wish to
+persuade us that He was incarnated in their Jesus? Where is the proof?
+Their faith and their belief; but as the Pagans rely on the same proof,
+we conclude both to be equally in error.
+
+But what is more ridiculous in Christianity than in Paganism, is that
+the Pagans have generally attributed Divinity but to great men, authors
+of arts and sciences, and who excelled in virtues useful to their
+country. But to whom do our God-Christ-worshipers attribute Divinity? To
+a nobody, to a vile and contemptible man, who had neither talent,
+science, nor ability; born of poor parents, and who, while He figured in
+the world, passed but for a monomaniac and a seditious fool, who was
+disdained, ridiculed, persecuted, whipped, and, finally, was hanged like
+most of those who desired to act the same part, when they had neither
+the courage nor skill. About that time there were several other
+impostors who claimed to be the true promised Messiah; amongst others a
+certain Judas, a Galilean, a Theodorus, a Barcon, and others who, under
+this vain pretext, abused the people, and tried to excite them, in order
+to win them, but they all perished.
+
+Let us pass now to His discourses and to some of His actions, which are
+the most singular of this kind: "Repent," said He to the people, "for
+the kingdom of Heaven is at hand; believe these good tidings." And He
+went all over Galilee preaching this pretended approach of the kingdom
+of Heaven. As no one has seen the arrival of this kingdom of Heaven, it
+is evident that it was but imaginary. But let us see other predictions,
+the praise, and the description of this beautiful kingdom.
+
+Behold what He said to the people:
+
+The kingdom of Heaven is likened unto a man who sowed good seed in his
+field. But while he slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the
+wheat, and went his way. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like unto
+treasure hidden in a field, the which, when a man has found, he hideth
+again, and for joy thereof goes and sells all that he has, and buys that
+field. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like unto a merchantman seeking
+goodly pearls, who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and
+sold all he had, and bought it. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like
+unto a net that was cast into the sea, and gathered of every kind;
+which, when it was full, they drew to shore, and sat down and gathered
+the good into vessels, but cast the bad away. It is like a grain of
+mustard-seed, which a man took and sowed in his field which, indeed, is
+the least of all seeds, but when it is grown it is the greatest among
+herbs, etc.
+
+Is this a language worthy of a God? We will pass the same judgment upon
+Him if we examine His actions more closely. Because, firstly, He is
+represented as running all over a country preaching the approach of a
+pretended kingdom; Secondly, as having been transported by the Devil
+upon a high mountain, from which He believed He saw all the kingdoms of
+the world; this could only happen to a visionist; for it is certain,
+there is no mountain upon the earth from which He could see even one
+entire kingdom, unless it was the little kingdom of Yvetot, which is in
+France; thus it was only in imagination that He saw all these kingdoms,
+and was transported upon this mountain, as well as upon the pinnacle of
+the temple. Thirdly, when He cured the deaf-mute, spoken of in St. Mark,
+it is said that He placed His fingers in the ears, spit, and touched his
+tongue, then casting His eyes up to Heaven, He sighed deeply, and said
+unto him: "Ephphatha!" Finally, let us read all that is related of Him,
+and we can judge whether there is anything in the world more ridiculous.
+
+Having considered some of the silly things attributed to God by our
+Christ-worshipers, let us look a little further into their mysteries.
+They worship one God in three persons, or three persons in one God, and
+they attribute to themselves the power of forming Gods out of dough, and
+of making as many as they want. For, according to their principles, they
+have only to say four words over a certain quantity of wine or over
+these little images of paste, to make as many Gods of them as they
+desire. What folly! With all the pretended power of their Christ, they
+would not be able to make the smallest fly, and yet they claim the
+ability to produce millions of Gods. One must be struck by a strange
+blindness to maintain such pitiable things, and that upon such vain
+foundation as the equivocal words of a fanatic. Do not these blind
+theologians see that it means opening a wide door to all sorts of
+idolatries, to adore these paste images under the pretext that the
+priests have the power of consecrating them and changing them into Gods?
+
+Can not the priests of the idols boast of having a similar ability?
+
+Do they not see, also, that the same reasoning which demonstrates the
+vanity of the gods or idols of wood, of stone, etc., which the Pagans
+worshiped, shows exactly the same vanity of the Gods and idols of paste
+or of flour which our Christ-worshipers adore? By what right do they
+deride the falseness of the Pagan Gods? Is it not because they are but
+the work of human hands, mute and insensible images? And what kind of
+Gods are those which we preserve in boxes for fear of the mice?
+
+What are these boasted resources of the Christ-worshipers? Their
+morality? It is the same as in all religions, but their cruel dogmas
+produced and taught persecution and trouble. Their miracles? But what
+people has not its own, and what wise men do not disdain these fables?
+Their prophecies? Have we not shown their falsity? Their morals? Are
+they not often infamous? The establishment of their religion? but did
+not fanaticism begin, and has not intrigue visibly sustained this
+edifice? The doctrine? but is it not the height of absurdity?
+
+End Of The Abstract By Voltaire.
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHER'S PREFACE.
+
+By translating into both the English and German languages Le Bon Sens,
+containing the Last Will and Testament of the French curate JEAN
+MESLIER, Miss Anna Knoop has performed a most useful and meritorious
+task, and in issuing a new edition of this work, it is but justice to
+her memory [Miss Knoop died Jan. 11, 1889.] to state that her
+translation has received the endorsement of our most competent critics.
+
+In a letter dated Newburyport, Mass., Sep. 23, 1878, Mr. James Parton,
+the celebrated author, commends Miss Knoop for "translating Meslier's
+book so well," and says that:
+
+"This work of the honest pastor is the most curious and the most
+powerful thing of the kind which the last century produced. . . . .
+Paine and Voltaire had reserves, but Jean Meslier had none. He keeps
+nothing back; and yet, after all, the wonder is not that there should
+have been one priest who left that testimony at his death, but that all
+priests do not. True, there is a great deal more to be said about
+religion, which I believe to be an eternal necessity of human nature,
+but no man has uttered the negative side of the matter with so much
+candor and completeness as Jean Meslier."
+
+The value of the testimony of a catholic priest, who in his last moments
+recanted the errors of his faith and asked God's pardon for having
+taught the catholic religion, was fully appreciated by Voltaire, who
+highly commended this grand work of Meslier. He voluntarily made every
+effort to increase its circulation, and even complained to D' Alembert
+"that there were not as many copies in all Paris as he himself had
+dispersed throughout the mountains of Switzerland." [See Letter 504,
+Voltaire to D'Alembert] He earnestly entreats his associates to print
+and distribute in Paris an edition of at least four or five thousand
+copies, and at the suggestion of D'Alembert, made an abstract or
+abridgment of The Testament "so small as to cost no more than five
+pence, and thus to be fitted for the pocket and reading of every
+workman." [Letter 146, from D'Alembert.]
+
+The Abbe Barruel claims in his Memoirs [See History of Jacobinism by the
+Abbe Barruel, 4 vols. 8 VO, translated by the Hon. Robert Clifford, F.
+R. S., and printed in London in 1798. The learned Abbe defines
+Jacobinism as "the error of every man who, judging of all things by the
+standard of his own reason, rejects in religious matters every authority
+that is not derived from the light of nature. It is the error of every
+man who denies the possibility of any mystery beyond the limits of his
+reason, of every one who, discarding revelation in defence of the
+pretended rights of Reason, Equality, and Liberty, seeks to subvert the
+whole fabric of the Christian religion." B. 4.] to detect in the
+writings of Voltaire and of the leading Encyclopedists, a conspiracy not
+only against the Altar but also against the Throne. He severely
+denounces the "Last Will of Jean Meslier,--that famous Curate of
+Etrepigni,--whose apostasy and blasphemies made so strong an impression
+on the minds of the populace," and he styles the plan of D'Alembert for
+circulating a few thousand copies of the Abstract of the Will, as a "base
+project against the doctrines of the Gospel." [Ibid, page 145] He even
+asserts his belief that:
+
+"The Jacobins will one day declare that all men are free, that all men
+are equal; and as a consequence of this Equality and Liberty they will
+conclude that every man must be left to the light of reason. That every
+religion subjecting man's reason to mysteries, or to the authority of
+any revelation speaking in God's name, is a religion of constraint and
+slavery; that as such it should be annihilated in order to reestablish
+the indefeasible rights of Equality and Liberty as to the belief or
+disbelief of all that the reason of man approves or disapproves: and
+they will call this Equality and Liberty the reign of Reason and the
+empire of Philosophy." [History of Jacobinism, page 51.]
+
+The results which the Abbe Barruel so clearly foresaw have at length
+been realized. The labors of the Jacobins have not been in vain, and the
+Revolution they incited has restored France to the government of the
+people!
+
+"With ardent hope for the future," says President Carnot in his
+centennial address, May 5, 1889, "I greet in the palace of the monarchy
+the representatives of a nation that is now in complete possession of
+herself, that is mistress of her destinies, and that is in the full
+splendor and strength of liberty. The first thoughts on this solemn
+meeting turn to our fathers. The immortal generation of 1789, by dint
+of courage and many sacrifices, secured for us benefits which we must
+bequeath to our sons as a most precious inheritance. Never can our
+gratitude equal the grandeur of the services rendered by our fathers to
+France and to the human race. . . . The Revolution was based upon the
+rights of man. It created a new era in history and founded modern
+society."
+
+This is literally true. The freethinkers of France have taught mankind
+the doctrines of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity. They have taught the
+dignity of human reason, and the sacredness of human rights. They have
+broken the bondage of the altar, and severed the shackles of the throne;
+and it is to be regretted that at the centennial celebration held in
+this city on April 30th, 1889, the appointed orator [See the Centennial
+Address of the Hon. Chauncey M. Depew.] did not realize the grandeur of
+the occasion, and did not, like Carnot, pay a just tribute to our
+allies, the reformers of Europe, as well as to the fathers of the
+republic. But the people of America will remember what the politician
+has forgotten. They will remember the names and deeds of their foreign
+benefactors as well as of the American patriots of '76. When they recall
+the illustrious Europeans who fought for our liberties they will
+remember the name of Lafayette; when they think of the Declaration of
+Independence they will not forget the name of Thomas Jefferson; and when
+they speak of "the times that tried men's souls" they will recall with
+gratitude the name of Thomas Paine.
+
+Although the ecclesiastical conclave at Rome claims the power of working
+miracles in defiance of Nature's laws, yet with or without miracles,
+they have never answered the simple arguments advanced by Jean Meslier;
+although they claim to hold the keys of Paradise, and bind on earth the
+souls that are to be bound in heaven, yet year by year their waning
+power refutes their senseless boast; although they boldly assert the
+dogma of popish infallibility, yet the loss of the temporal power once
+wielded by Rome, and the death of each succeeding pontiff, attest both
+the Pope's fallibility and the Pope's mortality. Indeed, the successor
+of St. Peter is but human--the sacred college at Rome is but mortal; and
+faith and dogma cannot forever resist the influence of light and
+knowledge. The power of Catholicism is surely declining throughout
+Europe; and if it has become aggressive in our American cities, is it
+not because the friends of freedom have forgotten the well-known axiom
+that "eternal vigilance is the price of liberty"?
+
+PETER ECKLER.
+
+New York, May 21, 1889.
+
+
+
+
+PREFATORY NOTE BY THE TRANSLATOR
+
+Some years ago a copy of John Meslier fell into my hands. I was struck
+with the simple truthfulness of his arguments, and the thought never
+left me of the happy change that would be produced all over the world
+when the religious prejudices should be dispelled, and when all the
+different nations and sects would unite and lend each other a friendly
+hand.
+
+Since I had the opportunity of hearing the speeches and lectures of
+liberal men, it has seemed to me that the time has come for this work of
+John Meslier to be appreciated, and I concluded to translate it into the
+language of my adopted country, presuming that many would be happy to
+study it.
+
+In this faith I offer it now to the public, and I hope that the name of
+John Meslier will be honored as one of the greatest benefactors of
+humanity.
+
+ANNA KNOOP.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE OF THE EDITOR OF THE FRENCH EDITION OF 1830.
+
+It is said that truth is generally revealed by dying lips. When men full
+of health and enjoying all the pleasures of life, exert themselves
+without ceasing, to excite minds and to take advantage of their
+fanaticism by wearing the mask of religion, it will not be without
+interest or importance to know what other men, invested with the same
+ministry, have taught under the impulse of a conscience quickened by the
+approach of the final hour. Their confessions are more valuable because
+they carry with them the spirit of contrition. It is then that the
+truth, which is no longer obscured by narrow passions and sordid
+interests, presents itself in all its brilliancy, and imposes upon him
+who has kept it hidden during his life, the duty, and even the
+necessity, of unveiling it fully at his death. It is then that human
+speech, losing in a measure its terrestrial nature, becomes persuasive
+and convincing.
+
+We know this fact of a celebrated preacher who in the beginning of the
+Revolution stood in the same pulpit which we are pleased to call the
+pulpit of truth, and with his hand upon his heart declared that till
+then he had taught only falsehood. He did more; he implored his
+parishioners to forgive him for the gross errors in which he had kept
+them, and congratulated them upon having at last arrived at a period
+when it was permitted to establish the empire of reason upon the ruins
+of prejudice. Times have changed very much, it is true; however, so long
+as the press shall be able to combat the fatal errors of religious
+fanaticism, and perhaps even to some extent prevent its violence, it
+will be the duty of every friend of humanity to reproduce continually
+the full retractions which opposed the sincerity and conscience of the
+dying to the bad faith and hypocritical avidity of the living. Guided by
+this intention, and ashamed to see the human race, in a land just freed
+from the yoke of prejudice, give birth to a disgraceful juggling which
+will terminate in dominating authority, and associate itself with the
+persecutions of which our incredulous or dissenting ancestors were the
+sad victims, we believe it useful to reprint the last lessons of a
+priest--an honest man--bequeathed to his fellow-citizens and to posterity.
+The service we render to Philosophy will be so much the greater when we
+can consider as immutable, perpetual, permanent, and ready to appear in
+the hour of need, the edition which we are preparing of "COMMON SENSE,
+BY THE PRIEST JEAN MESLIER, AND HIS DYING CONFESSION."
+
+To do justice to these two works, to which we have added analytical
+notes, which will greatly facilitate our researches, we will limit
+ourselves by giving the imposing approbation of two philosophers of the
+eighteenth century--Voltaire and d'Alembert. They certainly understood
+much better the sublimity of evangelical morality, and spoke of it in a
+manner more worthy of its author, than did those who deified it to
+profit by its divinity, and who abused so cruelly the ignorance and
+barbarity of the first centuries, to establish, in the interest of their
+fortunes and power, so many base prejudices, so many puerile and
+superstitious practices.
+
+Here is what Voltaire and d'Alembert thought of the curate Meslier and
+of his work. Their letters are presented here in order to excite
+curiosity and convince the judgment:
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
+
+FERNEY, February, 1762.
+
+They have printed in Holland the Testament of Jean Meslier. I trembled
+with horror in reading it. The testimony of a priest, who, in dying,
+asks God's pardon for having taught Christianity, must be a great weight
+in the balance of Liberals. I will send you a copy of this Testament of
+the anti-Christ, because you desire to refute it. You have but to tell
+me by what manner it will reach you. It is written with great
+simplicity, which unfortunately resembles candor.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+FERNEY, February 25, 1762.
+
+Meslier also has the wisdom of the serpent. He sets an example for you;
+the good grain was hidden in the chaff of his book. A good Swiss has
+made a faithful abstract and this abstract can do a great deal of good.
+What an answer to the insolent fanatics who treat philosophers like
+libertines. What an answer to you, wretches that you are, this testimony
+of a priest, who asks God's pardon for having been a Christian!
+
+
+D'ALEMBERT'S ANSWER.
+
+PARIS, March 31, 1762.
+
+A misunderstanding has been the cause, my dear philosopher, that I
+received but a few days since the work of Jean Meslier, which you had
+sent almost a month ago. I waited till I received it to write to you. It
+seems to me that we could inscribe upon the tombstone of this curate:
+"Here lies a very honest priest, curate of a village in Champagne, who,
+in dying, asks God's pardon for having been a Christian, and who has
+proved by this, that ninety-nine sheep and one native of Champagne do
+not make a hundred beasts." I suspect that the abstract of his work is
+written by a Swiss, who understands French very well, though he affects
+to speak it badly. This is neat, earnest, and concise, and I bless the
+author of the abstract, whoever he may be. "It is of the Lord to
+cultivate the vine." After all, my dear philosopher, a little longer,
+and I do not know whether all these books will be necessary, and whether
+man will not have enough sense to comprehend by himself that three do
+not make one, and that bread is not God. The enemies of reason are
+playing a very foolish part at this moment, and I believe that we can
+say as in the song:
+
+"To destroy all these people
+You should let them alone."
+
+I do not know what will become of the religion of Christ, but its
+professors are in false garb. What Pascal, Nicole, and Arnaud could not
+do, there is an appearance that three or four absurd and ignorant
+fanatics will accomplish. The nation will give this vigorous blow
+within, while she is doing so little outside, and we will put in the
+abbreviated chronological pages of the year 1762: "This year France lost
+all its colonies and expelled the Jesuits." I know nothing but powder,
+which with so little apparent force, could produce such great results.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
+
+DELICES, July 12, 1762.
+
+It appears to me that the Testament of Jean Meslier has a great effect;
+all those who read it are convinced; this man discusses and proves. He
+speaks in the moment of death, at the moment when even liars tell the
+truth fully. This is the strongest of all arguments. Jean Meslier is to
+convert the world. Why is his gospel in so few hands? How lukewarm you
+are at Paris! You hide your light under a bushel!
+
+
+D'ALEMBERT'S ANSWER.
+
+PARIS, July 31, 1762.
+
+You reproach us with lukewarmness, but I believe I have told you already
+that the fear of the fagot is very cooling. You would like us to print
+the Testament of Jean Meslier and distribute four or five thousand
+copies. The infamous fanaticism, for infamous it is, would lose little
+or nothing, and we should be treated as fools by those whom we would
+have converted. Man is so little enlightened to-day only because we had
+the precaution or the good fortune to enlighten him little by little. If
+the sun should appear all of a sudden in a cave, the inhabitants would
+perceive only the harm it would do their eyes. The excess of light would
+result only in blinding them.
+
+
+D'ALEMBERT TO VOLTAIRE.
+
+PARIS, July 9, 1764.
+
+Apropos, they have lent me that work attributed to St. Evremont, and
+which is said to be by Dumarsais, of which you spoke to me some time
+ago; it is good, but the Testament of Meslier is still better!
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
+
+FERNEY, July 16, 1764.
+
+The Testament of Meslier ought to be in the pocket of all honest men; a
+good priest, full of candor, who asks God's pardon for deceiving
+himself, must enlighten those who deceive themselves.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE COUNT D'ARGENTAL.
+
+AUX DELICES, February 6, 1762.
+
+But no little bird told me of the infernal book of that curate, Jean
+Meslier; a very important work to the angels of darkness. An excellent
+catechism for Beelzebub. Know that this book is very rare; it is a
+treasure!
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+AUX DEUCES, May 31, 1762.
+
+It is just that I should send you a copy of the second edition of
+Meslier. In the first edition they forgot the preface, which is very
+strange. You have wise friends who would not be sorry to have this book
+in their secret cabinet. It is excellent to form youthful minds. The
+book, which was sold in manuscript form for eight Louis-d'or, is
+illegible. This little abstract is very edifying. Let us thank the good
+souls who give it gratuitously, and let us pray God to extend His
+benedictions upon this useful reading.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO D'AMILAVILLE.
+
+AUX DEUCES, February 8, 1762.
+
+My brother shall have a Meslier soon as I shall have received the order;
+it would seem that my brother has not the facts. Fifteen to twenty years
+ago the manuscript of this work sold for eight Louis-d'or; it was a very
+large quarto. There are more than a hundred copies in Paris. Brother
+Thiriot understands the facts. It is not known who made the abstract,
+but it is taken wholly, word for word, from the original. There are
+still many persons who have seen the curate Meslier. It would be very
+useful to make a new edition of this little work in Paris; it can be
+done easily in three or four days.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+FERNEY, December 6, 1762.
+
+But I believe there will never be another impression of the little book
+of Meslier. Think of the weight of the testimony of one dying, of a
+priest, of a good man.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+FERNEY, July 6, 1764.
+
+Three hundred Mesliers distributed in a province have caused many
+conversions. Ah, if I was assisted!
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+FERNEY, September 29, 1764.
+
+There are too few Mesliers and too many swindlers.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE SAME.
+
+AUX DELICES, October 8, 1764.
+
+Names injure the cause; they awaken prejudice. Only the name of Jean
+Meslier can do good, because the repentance of a good priest in the hour
+of death must make a great impression. This Meslier should be in the
+hands of all the world.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO MADAM DE FLORIAN.
+
+AUX DELICES, May 20, 1762.
+
+My dear niece, it is very sad to be so far from you. Read and read again
+Jean Meslier; he is a good curate.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO THE MARQUIS D'ARGENCE.
+
+March 2, 1763.
+
+I have found a Testament of Jean Meslier, which I send you. The
+simplicity of this man, the purity of his manners, the pardon which he
+asks of God, and the authenticity of his book, must produce a great
+effect. I will send you as many copies as you want of the Testament of
+this good curate.
+
+
+VOLTAIRE TO HELVETIUS.
+
+AUX DEUCES, May 1, 1763.
+
+They have sent me the two abstracts of Jean Meslier. It is true that it
+is written in the style of a carriage-horse, but it is well suited to
+the street. And what testimony! that of a priest who asks pardon in
+dying, for having taught absurd and horrible things! What an answer to
+the platitudes of fanatics who have the audacity to assert that
+philosophy is but the fruit of libertinage!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Superstition In All Ages (1732), by Jean Meslier
+
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