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+Project Gutenberg's The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors, by Kersey Graves
+
+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: The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors
+ Or, Christianity Before Christ
+
+Author: Kersey Graves
+
+Release Date: January 17, 2012 [EBook #38600]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIXTEEN SAVIORS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S SIXTEEN CRUCIFIED SAVIORS
+
+OR, CHRISTIANITY BEFORE CHRIST
+
+CONTAINING NEW, STARTLING, AND EXTRAORDINARY REVELATIONS IN RELIGIOUS
+HISTORY, WHICH DISCLOSE THE ORIENTAL ORIGIN OF ALL THE DOCTRINES,
+PRINCIPLES, PRECEPTS, AND MIRACLES OF THE CHRISTIAN NEW TESTAMENT, AND
+FURNISHING A KEY FOR UNLOCKING MANY OF ITS SACRED MYSTERIES, BESIDES
+COMPRISING THE HISTORY OF 16 HEATHEN CRUCIFIED GODS.
+
+By Kersey Graves
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+INVERSELY to the remoteness of time has been man's ascent toward the
+temple of knowledge. Truth has made its ingress into the human mind
+in the ratio by which man has attained the capacity to receive and
+appreciate it Hence, as we tread back the meandering pathway of human
+history, every step in the receding process brings us to a lower plane
+of intelligence and a state of mind more thoroughly encrusted with
+ignorance and superstition. It is, therefore, no source of surprise to
+learn, when we take a survey of the world two or three thousand years
+in the past, that every religious writer of that era committed errors on
+every subject which employed his pen, involving a scientific principle.
+Hence, the bible, or sacred book, to which he was a contributor, is
+now found to bear the marks of human imperfection. For the temple of
+knowledge was but partially reared, and its chambers but dimly lighted
+up. The intellectual brain was in a dark, feeble and dormant condition.
+Hence, the moral and religious feelings were drifted about without a
+pilot on the turbulent waves of superstition, and finally stranded on
+the shoals of bigotry. The Christian bible, like other bibles, having
+been written in an age when science was but budding into life, and
+philosophy had attained but a feeble growth, should be expected to teach
+many things incompatible with the principles of modern science.
+And accordingly it is found to contain, like other bibles, numerous
+statements so obviously at war with present established scientific
+truths that almost any school-boy, at the present day, can demonstrate
+their falsity. Let the unbiased reader examine and compare the oriental
+and Christian bibles together, and he will note the following facts,
+viz:--
+
+1. That the cardinal religious conceptions of all bibles are essentially
+the same--all running in parable grooves.
+
+2. That every chapter of every bible is but a transcript of the mental
+chart of the writer.
+
+3. That no bible, pagan or Christian, contains anything surpassing the
+natural, mental and moral capacity of the writer to originate. And hence
+no divine aid or inspiration was necessary for its production.
+
+4. That the moral and religious teachings of no bible reach a higher
+altitude than the intelligence and mental development of the age and
+country which produced it.
+
+5. That the Christian bible, in some respects, is superior to some of
+the other bibles, but only to the extent to which the age in which it
+was written was superior in intelligence and natural mental capacity to
+the era in which the older bibles were penned; and that this superiority
+consists not its more exalted religious conceptions, but only in the
+fact that, being of more modern origin, the progress of mind had worn
+away some of the legendary rubbish of the past. Being written in a later
+and more enlightened age, it is consequently a little less encrusted
+with mythological tradition and oriental imagery. Though not free from
+these elements, it possesses them in less degree. And by comparing
+Christ's history with those of the oriental Gods, it will be found:--
+
+1. That he taught no new doctrine or moral precept.
+
+2. That he inculcated the same religion and morality, which he
+elaborated, as other moral teachers, to great extremes.
+
+3. That Christ differs so little in his character, preaching, and
+practical life from some of the oriental Gods, that no person whose
+mind is not deplorably warped and biased by early training can call one
+divine while he considers the other human.
+
+4. That if Christ was a God, then all were Gods.
+
+The Author.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+The author desires to say that this work has been carefully reviewed
+and corrected, and some additions made, embracing two chapters from "the
+Bible of Bibles," and some explanatory notes, and is now able to place
+before the reader a greatly improved edition.
+
+The author also desires to say here, that the many flattering letters
+he has received from various parts of the country, from those who have
+supplied themselves with the work, excites in his mind the hope it will
+ultimately effect something towards achieving the important end sought
+to be attained by its publication--the banishment of that wide-spread
+delusion comprehended in the belief in an incarnate, virgin-born God,
+called Jesus Christ, and the infallibility of his teachings, with the
+numerous evils growing legitimately out of this belief--among the
+most important of which is, its cramping effect upon the mind of the
+possessor, which interdicts its growth, and thus constitutes a serious
+obstacle to the progress both of the individual and of society. And such
+has been the blinding effect of this delusion upon all who have fallen
+victims to its influence, that the numerous errors and evils of our
+popular system of religious faith, which constitutes its legitimate
+fruits, have passed from age to age, unnoticed by all except scientific
+and progressive minds, who are constantly bringing these errors and
+evils to light. This state of things has been a source of sorrow and
+regret to every philanthropist desiring the welfare of the race. And if
+this work shall achieve anything towards arresting this great evil, the
+author will feel that he is amply compensated for the years of toil and
+mental labor spent in its preparation.
+
+Note.--As the different works consulted have assigned different dates
+for the same event, the author has, in one or two cases, followed their
+example, accepting them as authority; as in the date of the birth and
+death of the Gods of Mexico. The reader will also notice that the name
+of the same God is found in different countries. Example--Adonis and
+Bacchus are found amongst the Gods of both Greece and Egypt.
+
+
+
+
+EXPLANATION
+
+"The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors." What an imposing title for a
+book! What startling developments of religious history it implies! Is
+it founded on fact or on fiction? If it has a basis of truth, where was
+such an extraordinary mine of sacred lore discovered? Where were such
+startling facts obtained as the title of the work suggests. These
+queries will doubtless arise as soliloquies in the minds of many readers
+on glancing at the title-page. And the author is disposed to gratify
+this natural and most probable, in some cases, excited curiosity by a
+brief explanation. In doing this, he deems it only necessary, to state
+that many of the most important facts collated in this work were derived
+from Sir Godfrey Higgins' Anacalypsis, a work as valuable as it is
+rare--a work comprising the result of twenty years' labor, devoted to
+the investigation of religious history. And although embodying many
+important historical facts which should have commanded for it a
+word-wide circulation, but a few copies of this invaluable treasury of
+religious knowledge have ever found their way into this country. One
+of these copies the author of this work obtained, at no inconsiderable
+expense, long enough to glean from its pages such facts as he presumed
+would be most interesting and instructive to the general reader, some
+of which will be found in nearly every chapter of this volume. With
+the facts and materials derived from this source, and two hundred other
+unimpeachable historical records, the present work might have been
+swelled to fourfold its present size without exhausting the author's
+ample store of materials and would have possessed such unwieldy
+dimensions but for a strict conformity to the most rigid rules of
+eclecticism and condensation. Encouraged by the extensive demand for his
+former work, "The Biography of Satan," which has passed through seven
+editions, the author cherishes the hope that the present work will
+meet with a circulation commensurate with the importance of the many
+invaluable facts which it contains. For he possesses the sad conviction
+that the many religious errors and evils which it is the object of
+this work to expose, operate very seriously to retard the moral and
+intellectual growth and prosperity of all Christian countries. They have
+the effect to injure mentally, morally and religiously the great body of
+Christian professors.
+
+Dr. Prince, of Long Island (now deceased), wrote to the author,
+respecting the thirty-fifth chapter of this work, entitled "The Logical
+View of the Incarnation," after he had seen it in the columns of a
+newspaper, "It is a masterly piece of logic, and will startle, if it
+does not revolutionize, the orthodox world. And the chapters comprising
+'The Philosophical View,' and 'The Physiological View,' were afterward
+pronounced specimens of profound and unanswerable logical reasoning." We
+thus call the reader's attention to these chapters in advance, in order
+to induce that thorough attention to their facts and arguments which
+will result in banishing from his mind the last vestiges of a belief (if
+he entertain any) in the doctrine of the divine incarnation.
+
+
+IMPORTANT FACTS CONSTITUTING THE BASIS OF THIS WORK.
+
+IGNORANCE of science and ignorance of history are the two great bulwarks
+of religious error. There is scarcely a tenet of religious faith now
+propagated to the world by the professed disciples of Christ but that,
+if subjected to a rigid test in the ordeal of modern science would be
+found to contain more or less error. Vast acquisitions have been made
+in the fields of science and history within the last half century, the
+moral lessons of which have done much to undermine and unsettle our
+popular system of religious faith, and to bring into disrepute or
+effectually change many of its long-cherished dogmas. The scientific and
+historical facts thus brought before the intelligent public, have served
+as keys for explaining many of the doctrines comprised in the popular
+creed. They have poured a flood of light upon our whole system of
+religion as now taught by its popular representatives, which have
+had the effect to reveal many of its errors to those who have had the
+temerity, or the curiosity, to investigate it upon these grounds. Many
+of the doctrines and miraculous events which have always been assigned a
+divine emanation by the disciples of the Christian faith, are, by these
+scientific and historical disclosures, shown to be explainable upon
+natural grounds, and to have exclusively a natural basis. Some of them
+are shown to be solvable by recently developed spiritual laws, while
+others are proven to be founded wholly in error. The intelligent
+community are now acquainted with many of these important facts, so that
+no man of science can be found in this enlightened age who can popularly
+be termed a Christian. No man can be found in any Christian country who
+has the established reputation of being a man of science, or who has
+made any proficiency in the whole curriculum of the sciences, whose
+creed, when examined by an orthodox committee, would not be pronounced
+unsound. It is true that many of the scientific class, not possessing
+the conviction that duty imposes the moral necessity of making living
+martyrs of themselves, have refrained from fully avowing or disclosing
+to the public their real convictions of the popular faith.
+
+The changes and improvements in religious ideas now observant in the
+most intelligent portion of the community, are due in part to the rapid
+progress of scientific discovery and the dissemination of scientific
+knowledge in Christian countries. The explorer in the field of religious
+history, however, comes in here for his meed of praise. New stores of
+historic facts and data may be reckoned among the recent acquisitions
+of the laborious archeologist; new fountains of religious history have
+recently been unsealed, which have had the effect to reveal many errors
+and false claims set up for the current religion of Christendom--a
+religion long regarded as settled and stereotyped. For many centuries
+subsequent to the establishment of the Christian religion, but little
+was known by its disciples of the character, claims and doctrines of
+the oriental systems of worship. These religions, in fact, were scarcely
+known to exist, because they had long been veiled in secrecy. They were
+found, in some cases, enshrined in religious books printed or written in
+a language so very ancient and obscure, as to bid defiance for
+centuries to the labors of the most indefatigable, profound and erudite
+archeological scholar to decipher it. That obstacle is now partially
+surmounted.
+
+The recent translation for the first time of the Hindoo Vedas into
+the English language (the oldest bible now extant or ever written) has
+revealed to the unwelcome gaze of the Christian reader the startling
+fact that "the heathen" had long been in possession of "holy books,"
+possessing essentially the same character, and teaching essentially the
+same doctrines as the Christian bible--there being, as Horace Greeley
+expressed it, "No doctrine of Christianity but what has been anticipated
+by the Vedas." (See Vol. II., Chap. i, of this work.)
+
+If, then, this heathen bible (compiled, according to the Christian
+missionary, Rev. D. G Allen, 1400 B. C.), contains all the doctrines of
+Christianity, then away goes over the dam all claim for the Christian
+bible as an original bible as an original revelation, or a work of
+divine inspiration.
+
+Bibles are thus shown to be of heathen and human origin, instead of
+heavenly and divine authorship, as claimed for them by their respective
+disciples--the Christian bible forming no exception to this statement.
+The latter, being essentially like other bibles, it must, of course,
+have had the same or a similar origin--a fact which, though it may be
+new and startling to millions, will be universally accepted as truth
+before the lapse of many generations, and a fact which confronts with
+open denial the claims of two hundred millions of Christian professors,
+who assert with unscrupulous boldness that every doctrine, principle and
+precept of their bible is of divine emanation.
+
+How utterly groundless and untenable is such a claim when arranged by
+the side of modern discoveries in religious history!
+
+Equally unsupportable is the declaration that "there is no other name
+given under heaven whereby men can be saved, than that of Jesus Christ
+and him crucified," when viewed in the light of the modern explorations
+of Sir Godfrey Higgins, which have disclosed the history of nearly a
+score of crucified Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, who, we have equal
+proof, died for the sins of mankind.
+
+Thus, the two prime articles of the Christian faith--Revelation and
+Crucifixion--are forever established as human and heathen conceptions.
+And the hope might be reasonably entertained that the important
+historical facts disclosed in this work will have the effect to open the
+eyes of the professors of the Christian religion to see their serious
+error in putting forth such exalted claims for their bible and their
+religion as that of being perfect products of infinite wisdom, did
+not the past history of all religious countries furnish sad proof that
+reason and logic, and even the most cogent and convincing facts of
+science and history often prove powerless when arrayed against a
+religious conviction, enstamped upon the mind for thousands of years in
+the past, and transmitted from parent to child until it has grown to a
+colossal stature, and become a part of the living tissues of the soul.
+
+No matter how glaringly absurd, how palpably erroneous, or how
+demonstrably false an opinion or doctrine is shown to be, they
+cannot see it, but will still continue to hug it to their bosoms as a
+divinely-revealed truth. No facts or evidence can prove an overmatch for
+the inherited convictions of a thousand generations. In this respect the
+Mahomedan, the Hindoo and the Christian all stand upon a level. It is
+about as easy to convince one as the other of their easily demonstrated
+errors.
+
+
+RELIGION OF NATURAL ORIGIN.
+
+Among the numerous errors traceable in the history of every religious
+sect, commemorated in the annals of the world, none possesses a
+more serious character, or has been attended with more deplorable
+consequences, than that of assigning a wrong origin to religion. Every
+bible, every sect, every creed, every catechism, and every orthodox
+sermon teaches that "religion is the gift of God," that "it is infused
+into the soul by the spirit and power of the Lord." Never was a greater
+mistake ever committed. Every student of anthropology, every person who
+has read any of the numerous modern works on mental science, and tested
+their easily-demonstrated facts, knows that religion is of _natural_ and
+not _supernatural_ origin; that it is a natural element of the
+_human mind_, and not a "_direct gift from God_;" that it grows as
+spontaneously out of the soul as flowers spring out of the ground. It is
+as natural as eating, sleeping or breathing. This conclusion is not the
+offspring of mere imagination. It is no hastily-concocted theory, but an
+oft-demonstrated and scientifically-established fact, which any person
+can test the truth of for himself.
+
+And this modern discovery will, at no distant day, revolutionize
+all systems of religious faith in existence, and either dissolve and
+dissipate them, or modify and establish them upon a more natural and
+enduring basis, expurgated of their dogmatic errors.
+
+Let us, then, labor to banish the wide-spread delusion believed and
+taught by a thousand systems of worship--Jew, Pagan and Christian--that
+"religion is of supernatural or divine origin," and the many ruinous
+errors; senseless dogmas and deplorable soul-crushing superstitions
+so thoroughly inwrought into the Christian system will vanish like fog
+before the morning sun, and be replaced by a religion which sensible,
+intelligent and scientific men and women can accept, and will delight to
+honor and practice.
+
+
+
+
+ADDRESS TO THE CLERGY.
+
+FRIENDS and brethren--teachers of the Christian faith: Will you believe
+us when we tell you the divine claims of your religion are
+gone--all swept away by the "logic of history," and nullified by the
+demonstrations of science?
+
+The recently opened fountains of historic law, many of whose potent
+facts will be found interspersed through the pages of this work, sweep
+away the last inch of ground on which can be predicated the least show
+for either the divine origin of the Christian religion, or the divinity
+of Jesus Christ.
+
+For these facts demonstrate beyond all cavil and criticism, and with
+a logical force which can leave not the vestige of a doubt upon any
+unbiased mind, that all its doctrines are an outgrowth from older
+heathen systems. Several systems of religion essentially the same in
+character and spirit as that religion now known as Christianity, and
+setting forth the same doctrines, principles and precepts, and several
+personages filling a chapter in history almost identical with that of
+Jesus Christ, it is now known to those who are up with the discoveries
+and intelligence of the age, were venerated in the East centuries before
+a religion called Christian, or a personage called Jesus Christ were
+known to history.
+
+Will you not, then, give it up that your religion is merely a human
+production, reconstructed from heathen materials--from oriental systems
+several thousand years older than yours--or will you continue, in spite
+of the unanimous and unalterable verdict of history, science, facts and
+logic, to proclaim to the world the now historically demonstrated
+error which you have so long preached, that God is the author of your
+religion, and Jesus Christ a Deity-begotten Messiah? Though you may have
+heretofore honestly believed these doctrines to be true, you can now no
+longer plead ignorance as an excuse for propagating such gigantic
+and serious errors, as they are now overwhelmingly demonstrated by a
+thousand facts of history to be untrue. You must abandon such exalted
+claims for your religion, or posterity will mark you as being "blind
+leaders of the blind." They will heap upon your honored names their
+unmitigated ridicule and condemnation. They will charge you as being
+either deplorably ignorant, or disloyal to the cause of truth. And shame
+and ignominy will be your portion.
+
+The following propositions (fatal to your claims for Christianity) are
+established beyond confutation by the historical facts cited in this
+work, viz:--
+
+1. There were many cases of the miraculous birth of Gods reported in
+history before the case of Jesus Christ.
+
+2 Also many other cases of Gods being born of virgin mothers.
+
+3. Many of these Gods, like Christ, were (reputedly) born on the 25th of
+December.
+
+4. Their advent into the world, like that of Jesus Christ, is in many
+cases claimed to have been foretold by "inspired prophets."
+
+5. Stars figured at the birth of several of them, as in the case of
+Christ.
+
+6. Also angels, shepherds, and magi, or "wise men."
+
+7. Many of them, like Christ, were claimed to be of royal or princely
+descent.
+
+8. Their lives, like his, were also threatened in infancy by the ruler
+of the country.
+
+9. Several of them, like him, gave early proof of divinity.
+
+10. And, like him, retired from the world and fasted.
+
+11. Also, like him, declared, "My kingdom is not of this world."
+
+12. Some of them preached a spiritual religion, too, like his.
+
+13. And were "anointed with oil," like him.
+
+14. Many of them, like him, were "crucified for the sins of the world."
+
+15. And after three days' interment "rose from the dead."
+
+16. And, finally, like him, are reported as ascending back to heaven.
+
+17. The same violent convulsions of nature at the crucifixion of several
+are reported.
+
+18. They were nearly all called "Saviors," "Son of God," "Messiah,"
+"Redeemer," "Lord," &c.
+
+19. Each one was the second member of the trinity of "Father, Son and
+Holy Ghost."
+
+20. The doctrines of "Original Sin," "Fall of Man," "The Atonement,"
+"The Trinity," "The Word," "Forgiveness," "An Angry God," "Future
+Endless Punishment," etc., etc. (see the author's "Biography of Satan,")
+were a part of the religion of each of these sin-atoning Gods, as
+found set forth in several oriental bibles and "holy books," similar in
+character and spirit to the Christian's bible, and written, like it,
+by "inspired and holy men" before the time of either Christ or Moses
+(before Moses, in some cases, at least). All these doctrines and
+declarations, and many others not here enumerated, the historical
+citations of this work abundantly prove, were taught in various
+oriental heathen nations centuries before the birth of Christ, or before
+Christianity, as a religion, was known in the world.
+
+Will you, then, after learning these facts, longer dare assert that
+Christianity is of divine emanation, or claim a special divine paternity
+for its author. Only the priest, who loves his _salary_ more than
+the cause of _truth_ (and I fear this class are numerous,) or who is
+deplorably ignorant of history, will have the effrontery or audacity to
+do so. For the historical facts herein set forth as clearly prove such
+assumptions to be false, as figures can demonstrate the truth of any
+mathematical problem. And no logic can overthrow, and no sophistry can
+set aside these facts.
+
+They will stand till the end of time in spite of your efforts either to
+evade, ignore, or invalidate them.
+
+We will here briefly state:--
+
+
+WHY ALL THE ANCIENT RELIGIONS WERE ALIKE.
+
+Two causes are obviously assignable for Christianity in all its
+essential features and phases, being so strikingly similar to the
+ancient pagan systems which preceded it, as also the close analogies of
+all the principal systems, whose doctrines and practical teachings have
+found a place on the pages of history.
+
+1. The primary and constituent elements and properties of human nature
+being essentially the same in all countries and all centuries, and the
+feeling called Religion being a spontaneous outgrowth of the devotional
+elements of the human mind, the coincidence would naturally produce
+similar feelings, similar thoughts, similar views and similar doctrines
+on the subject of religion in different countries, however widely
+separated. This accounts in part for the analogous features observable
+in all the primary systems of religious faith, which have flourished in
+the past ages.
+
+2. A more potent cause, however, for the proximate identity extending
+to such an elaborate detail, as is evinced by the foregoing schedule,
+is found in the historical incident which brought the disciples of the
+various systems of worship together, face to face, in the then grand
+religious emporium of the world--the royal and renowned city of
+Alexandria, the capital of Egypt Here, drawn together by various motives
+and influences, the devotee of India (the devout disciple of
+Buddhism), the ever-prayerful worshipper of "Mithra, the Mediator," the
+representatives of the crucified Quexalcoate of Mexico, the self-denying
+Essene, the superstitious Egyptian, the godly Chaldean, the imitative
+Judean founders of Christianity, and the disciples of other sin-atoning
+Gods, met and interchanged ideas, discussed their various dogmas,
+remolded their doctrines, and recast and rehabilitated their systems
+of religious faith by borrowing from each other, and from other systems
+there represented. In this way all became remarkably similar and alike
+in all their doctrines and details. And thus the mystery is solved,
+and the singular resemblance of all the ancient systems of religion
+satisfactorily accounted for. (For a fuller explanation of this matter,
+see Chapters XXX. and XXXI. of this work.)
+
+In conclusion, please note the following points:--
+
+1. The religious conceptions of the Old Testament are as easily traced
+to heathen sources as those of the New Testament. But we are compelled
+to exclude such an exposition from this work.
+
+2. The comparative exhibition of the doctrines and teachings of twenty
+bibles which proves them to be in their leading features essentially
+alike (originally designed for this volume), is found to be, when
+completed, of sufficient magnitude to constitute a volume of itself.
+
+3. Here I desire to impress upon the minds of my clerical brethren the
+important fact, that the gospel histories of Christ were written by men
+who had formerly been Jews (see Acts xxi. 20), and probably possessing
+the strong proclivity to imitate and borrow which their bible shows
+was characteristic of that nation; and being written many years after
+Christ's death, according to that standard Christian author, Dr.
+Lardner, it was impossible, under such circumstances, for them to
+separate (if they had desired to) the real facts and events of his life
+from the innumerable fictions and fables then afloat everywhere relative
+to the heathen Gods who had pre-enacted a similar history. Two reasons
+are thus furnished for their constructing a history of Christ almost
+identical with that of other Gods, as shown in chapters XXX., XXXI. and
+XXXII. of this work.
+
+4. The singular and senseless defense of your now tottering system
+we have known to be attempted by members of your order, by the
+self-complacent soliloquy "Christianity, whether divine or human, is
+good enough for me." But such a subterfuge betrays both a weak mind
+and a weak cause. The disciples of all the oriental systems cherished
+a similar feeling and a similar sentiment. And the deluded followers
+of Brigham Young exclaimed in like manner, "I want nothing better than
+Mormonism." "Snakes, lizards and frogs are good enough for me," a South
+Sea Islander once exclaimed to a missionary, when a reform diet was
+proposed. Such logic, if universally adopted, would keep the world
+eternally in barbarism. No progress can be made where such sentiments
+prevail. The truth is, no system of religion, whatever its ostensible
+marks of perfection, can long remain "good enough" for aspiring
+and progressive minds, unless occasionally improved, like other
+institutions. And then it should be borne in mind, that our controversy
+does not appertain so much to the character as to the origin of the
+Christian religion. Our many incontrovertible proofs, that it is
+of human and heathen origin, proves at the same time that it is an
+imperfect system, and as such, needing occasional improvement, like
+other institutions. And its assumed perfection and divine origin which
+have always guarded it from improvement, amply accounts for its present
+corrupt, immoral, declining and dying condition. And it will ere long
+die with paralysis, unless its assumption of divine perfection is soon
+exchanged for the principles of improvement and reconstruction. This
+policy alone can save it.
+
+5. We will here notice another feeble, futile and foolish expedient we
+have known resorted to by persons of your order to save your sinking
+cause when the evidence is presented with such cogency as to admit of no
+disproof, that all the important doctrines of Christianity were taught
+by older heathen systems before the era of Christ The plea is, that
+those systems were mere types, or ante-types, of the Christian religion.
+But this plea is of itself a borrowed subterfuge of heathenism, and is
+moreover devoid of evidence. The ancient Egyptians, also the Greeks,
+claimed that Brahminism was a type, or ante-type, of their religious
+systems. And Mahomedans now claim that both Judaism and Christianity
+were designed by God as foreshadowing types of religion of the Koran.
+And the disciples of more than a thousand systems of religion which have
+flourished in past ages, could have made such logic equally available in
+showing, in each case, that every system preceding theirs was designed
+by Infinite Wisdom as simply a typical or ante-typical forerunner of
+theirs. How ridiculous and senseless, therefore, is the argument thus
+shown to be when critically examined in the light of history! So much so
+as scarcely to merit a serious notice.
+
+6. Here permit us to say that we believe Christianity to be not only
+of human origin, but of natural origin also; I that is, a natural
+outgrowth, like other systems, of the religious elements of the human
+mind--a hypothesis which accounts most beautifully for the numerous
+human imperfections now visible in nearly every line of its teachings.
+
+Those imperfections correspond exactly to the imperfect minds which
+produced it.
+
+7. And we believe that the principle teacher of Christianity, "the man
+Christ Jesus," possessed a very exalted and superior mind for that age
+in the moral and religious departments, and in the intellectual to some
+extent also. But his superiority in these respects was not probably
+greater than that of Zera Colburn or Henry Salford in the mathematical
+department. And all probably derived their peculiar extraordinary traits
+of mind from the same causes--that of strong psychological influence
+impressed upon the mind of the mothers prior to their births. Had these
+ante-natal influences been as well understood then as now, we presume
+Christ would have escaped the fate of an exaltation to the Godhead.
+
+ [The author, stating the above, demonstrates that same
+ assumption of a _truth_ which he criticises in the
+ Christians, Mohamedens and other proponents of religions.
+ _Ed._]
+
+8. In conclusion, permit us to say that the numerous and overwhelming
+facts of this work render it utterly impossible that the exalted claims
+you put forth for your religion and its assumed author (that of a divine
+character) can be true. And posterity will so decide, whether you do or
+not.
+
+Cherishing for you naught but feelings of kindness and brotherly love,
+and desiring to promote the truth, we will answer any question, or
+discuss any proposition embraced in this work you may desire.
+
+Your brother,
+
+Kersey Graves.
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S SIXTEEN CRUCIFIED SAVIORS.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. RIVAL CLAIMS OF THE SAVIORS
+
+IT is claimed by the disciples of Jesus Christ, that he was of
+supernatural and divine origin; that he had a human being for a mother,
+and a God for his father; that, although he was woman-conceived, he
+was Deity-begotten, and molded in the human form, but comprehending in
+essence a full measure of the infinite Godhead; thus making him half
+human and half divine in his sublunary origin. It is claimed that he was
+full and perfect God, and perfect man; and while he was God, he was also
+the son of God, and as such was sent down by his father to save a fallen
+and guilty world; and that thus his mission pertained to the whole human
+race; and his inspired seers are made to declare that ultimately every
+nation, tongue, kindred, and people under heaven will acknowledge
+allegiance to his government, and concede his right to reign and rule
+the world; that "every knee must bow, and every tongue confess that
+Jesus is Lord, to the glory of God the Father."
+
+But we do not find that this prophecy has ever been or is likely to be
+fulfilled. We do not observe that this claim to the infinite deityship
+of Jesus Christ has been or is likely to be universally conceded. On
+the contrary, it is found that by a portion, and a large portion of the
+people of even those nations now called Christian, this claim has
+been steadily and unswervingly controverted, through the whole line of
+history, stretching through the nearly two thousand years which have
+elapsed since his advent to earth.
+
+Even some of those who are represented to have been personally
+acquainted with him--aye! some of his own brethren in the flesh,
+children in the same household, children of the same mother--had the
+temerity to question the tenableness of his claim to a divine emanation.
+And when we extend our researches to other countries, we find this
+claim, so far from being conceded, is denied and contested by whole
+nations upon other grounds. It is met and confronted by rival claims.
+
+Upon this ground hundreds of millions of the established believers
+in divine revelation--hundreds of millions of believers in the divine
+character and origin of religion--eject the pretentions set up for Jesus
+Christ. They admit both a God and a Savior, but do not accept Jesus of
+Nazareth as being either. They admit a Messiah, but not the Messiah;
+these nations contend that the title is misplaced which makes "the man
+Christ Jesus" the Savior of the world. They claim to have been honored
+with the birth of the true Savior among them, and defend this claim
+upon the ground of priority of date. They aver that the advent of their
+Messiahs were long prior to that of the Christians', and that this
+circumstance adjudicates for them a superiority of claim as to having
+had the true Messiah born upon their soil.
+
+It is argued that, as the story of the incarnation of the Christians'
+Savior is of more recent date than that of these oriental and ancient
+religions (as is conceded by Christians themselves), the origin of the
+former is thus indicated and foreshadowed as being an outgrowth from,
+if not a plagiarism upon the latter--a borrowed copy, of which the pagan
+stories furnish the original. Here, then, we observe a rivalship of
+claims, as to which of the remarkable personages who have figured in
+the world as Saviors, Messiahs, and Sons of God, in different ages and
+different countries, can be considered the true Savior and "sent of God"
+or whether all should be, or the claims of all rejected.
+
+For researches into oriental history reveal the remarkable fact that
+stories of incarnate Gods answering to and resembling the miraculous
+character of Jesus Christ have been prevalent in most if not all the
+principal religious heathen nations of antiquity; and the accounts and
+narrations of some of these deific incarnations bear such a striking
+resemblance to that of the Christian Savior--not only in their general
+features, but in some cases in the most minute details, from the legend
+of the immaculate conception to that of the crucifixion, and subsequent
+ascension into heaven--that one might almost be mistaken for the other.
+
+More than twenty claims of this kind--claims of beings invested with
+divine honor (deified)--have come forward and presented themselves at
+the bar of the world with their credentials, to contest the verdict of
+Christendom, in having proclaimed Jesus Christ, "the only son, and sent
+of God:" twenty Messiahs, Saviors, and Sons of God, according to history
+or tradition, have, in past times, descended from heaven, and taken upon
+themselves the form of men, clothing themselves with human flesh,
+and furnishing incontestable evidence of a divine origin, by various
+miracles, marvelous works, and superlative virtues; and finally these
+twenty Jesus Christs (accepting their character for the name) laid the
+foundation for the salvation of the world, and ascended back to heaven.
+
+1. Chrishna of Hindostan.
+
+2. Budha Sakia of India.
+
+3. Salivahana of Bermuda.
+
+4. Zulis, or Zhule, also Osiris and Orus, of Egypt.
+
+5. Odin of the Scandinavians.
+
+6. Crite of Chaldea.
+
+7. Zoroaster and Mithra of Persia.
+
+8. Baal and Taut, "the only Begotten of God," of Phenicia.
+
+9. Indra of Thibet.
+
+10. Bali of Afghanistan.
+
+11. Jao of Nepaul.
+
+12. Wittoba of the Bilingonese.
+
+13. Thammuz of Syria.
+
+14. Atys of Phrygia.
+
+15. Xamolxis of Thrace.
+
+16. Zoar of the Bonzes.
+
+17. Adad of Assyria.
+
+18. Deva Tat, and Sammonocadam of Siam.
+
+19. Alcides of Thebes.
+
+20. Mikado of the Sintoos.
+
+21. Beddru of Japan.
+
+22 Hesus or Eros, and Bremrillah, of the Druids.
+
+23. Thor, son of Odin, of the Gauls.
+
+24. Cadmus of Greece.
+
+25. Hil and Feta of the Mandaites.
+
+26. Gentaut and Quexalcote of Mexico.
+
+27. Universal Monarch of the Sibyls.
+
+28. Ischy of the Island of Formosa.
+
+29. Divine Teacher of Plato.
+
+30. Holy One of Xaca.
+
+31. Fohi and Tien of China.
+
+32. Adonis, son of the virgin Io of Greece.
+
+33. Ixion and Quirinus of Rome.
+
+34. Prometheus of Caucasus.
+
+35. Mohamud, or Mahomet, of Arabia.
+
+These have all received divine honors, have nearly all been worshiped
+as Gods, or sons of God; were mostly incarnated as Christs, Saviors,
+Messiahs, or Mediators; not a few of them were reputedly born of
+virgins; some of them filling a character almost identical with that
+ascribed by the Christian's bible to Jesus Christ; many of them,
+like him, are reported to have been crucified; and all of them, taken
+together, furnish a prototype and parallel for nearly every important
+incident and wonder-inciting miracle, doctrine and precept recorded
+in the New Testament, of the Christian's Savior. Surely, with so many
+Saviors the world cannot, or should not, be lost.
+
+We have now presented before us a two-fold ground for doubting and
+disputing the claims put forth by the Christian world in behalf of "Our
+Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." In the first place, allowing the question
+to be answered in the affirmative as to whether he was really a Savior,
+or supernatural being, or more than a mere man, a negative answer to
+which seems to have been sprung (as previously intimated) at the very
+hour of his birth, and that by his kindred, his own nearest relatives;
+as it is declared, "his own brethren did not believe on him"--a
+skepticism which has been growing deeper and broader from that day to
+this.
+
+And now, upon the heel of this question, we find another formidable
+query to be met and answered, viz.: Was he (Christ) the only Savior,
+seeing that a multitude of similar claims are now upon our council-board
+to be disposed of?
+
+We shall, however, leave the theologians of the various religious
+schools to adjust and settle this difficulty among themselves. We shall
+leave them to settle the question as best they can as to whether Jesus
+Christ was the only son and sent of God--"the only begotten of the
+Father," as John declares him to be (John i. 14)--in view of the fact
+that long prior to his time various personages, in different nations,
+were invested with the title "Son of God," and have left behind them
+similar proofs and credentials of the justness of their claims to such
+a title, if being essentially alike--as we shall prove and demonstrate
+them to be--can make their claims similar.
+
+We shall present an array of facts and historical proofs, drawn from
+numerous histories and the Holy Scriptures and bibles appertaining to
+these various Saviors, and which include a history of their lives
+and doctrines, that will go to show that in nearly all their leading
+features, and mostly even in their details, they are strikingly similar.
+
+A comparison, or parallel view, extended through their sacred histories,
+so as to include an exhibition presented in parallels of the teachings
+of their respective bibles, would make it clearly manifest that, with
+respect to nearly every important thought, deed, word, action, doctrine,
+principle, precept, tenet, ritual, ordinance or ceremony, and even
+the various important characters or personages, who figure in their
+religious dramas as Saviors, prophets, apostles, angels, devils, demons,
+exalted or fallen genii--in a word, nearly every miraculous or marvelous
+story, moral precept, or tenet of religious faith, noticed in either
+the Old or New Testament Scriptures of Christendom--from the Jewish
+cosmogony, or story of creation in Genesis, to the last legendary tale
+in St. John's "Arabian Nights" (alias the Apocalypse)--there is to be
+found an antitype for, or outline of, somewhere in the sacred records
+or bibles of the oriental heathen nations, making equal if not higher
+pretention to a divine emanation and divine inspiration, and admitted by
+all historians, even the most orthodox, to be of much more ancient date;
+for while Christians only claim, for the earthly advent of their Savior
+and the birth of their religion, a period less than nineteen hundred
+years in the past, on the contrary, most of the deific or divine
+incarnations of the heathen and their respective religions are, by the
+concurrent and united verdict of all history, assigned a date several
+hundred or several thousand years earlier, thus leaving the inference
+patent that so far as there has been any borrowing or transfer of
+materials from one system to another, Christianity has been the
+borrower.
+
+And as nearly the whole outline and constituent parts of the Christian
+system are found scattered through these older systems, the query is at
+once sprung as to whether Christianity did not derive its materials
+from these sources--that is, from heathenism, instead of from high
+heaven--as it claims.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. MESSIANIC PROPHECIES
+
+NEARLY all religious history is prophetic of the coming of Saviors,
+Messiahs, Redeemers, and virgin-born Gods. Most religious countries, and
+more than a score of religious systems, had a standing prophecy that a
+divine deliverer would descend from heaven and relieve them from their
+depressed state, and ameliorate their condition. And in most cases that
+prophecy was believed to have been fulfilled by the birth of a being,
+who, as he approached the goal of moral and intellectual manhood
+exhibited such remarkable proof of superiority of mind as to be readily
+accepted as the promised Messiah.
+
+We can only find room for a few citations and illustrations in proof
+of this statement. Many texts have been hunted out and marked in the
+Christian bible, by interested priests, as prophetic of the coming and
+mission of Christ. But a thorough, candid, and impartial investigation
+will convince any reader that _none of these texts_ have the remotest
+allusion to Christ, nor were they intended to have. On the contrary,
+most of them refer to events already past. The others are the
+mere ebullitions of pent-up feelings hopefully prayerful in their
+anticipation of better times, but very indefinite as to the period and
+the agencies or means in which, or by which, the desired reformation was
+to be brought about. A divine man was prayed for and hopefully expected.
+But no such being as Jesus Christ is anticipated, or alluded to, or
+dreamed of, by the prophecies. And it requires the most unwarrantable
+distortion to make one text refer to him.
+
+But this perversion has been wrought on many texts. We will cite one
+case in proof. In Isaiah's "famous prophecy" so-called, the phrase "Unto
+us a child is born" (Isa. ix. 6), the context clearly shows, refers to
+the prophet's own child, and the past tense, "is born," is an evidence
+the child was then born. And the title "Mighty God," found in the text,
+Dr. Beard shows should have been translated "the Mighty Hero," thus
+proving it has no reference to a God. And "the Everlasting Father"
+should have been rendered, according to this Christian writer, "the
+Father of the Everlasting Age." And other texts often quoted as
+prophecies by biased Christian writers, the doctor proves, are
+erroneously translated, and have no more reference to Christ than to
+Mahomet.
+
+It is true the Jews, in common with other nations, cherished strong
+anticipations of the arrival of a Mighty Deliverer amongst them; and
+this august personage some of them supposed would be a God, or a God-man
+(a demi-God). Hence, such prophetic utterances as "Behold, a king shall
+reign in righteousness" (Isa. xxxii. i), "And all nations shall flow
+unto Zion" (Isa. ii. 2).
+
+The Hindoo Budhists long previously indulged similar anticipations with
+respect to the triumph of their religion. Hence, their seers prophesied
+that at the end of the Cali Yug period, a divine child (Avatar, or
+Savior) would be born, who would understand the divine writings (the
+Holy Scriptures) and the sciences, without the labor of learning them.
+"He will supremely understand all things." "He will relieve the earth of
+sin, and cause justice and truth to reign everywhere. And will bring the
+whole earth into the acceptance of the Hindoo religion." And the Hindoo
+prophet Bala also predicted that a divine Savior would "become incarnate
+in the house of Yadu, and issue forth to mortal birth from the womb of
+Devaci (a Holy Virgin), and relieve the oppressed earth of its load of
+sin and sorrow." Much more similar language may be found in their holy
+bible, the Vedas. Colonel Wilford tells us the advent of their Savior
+Chrishna occurred in exact fulfillment of prophecy found in their sacred
+books.
+
+And the Chinese bible also contains a number of Messianic prophecies.
+In one of the five volumes a prophecy runs thus: "The Holy one, when he
+comes, will unite in himself all the virtues of heaven and earth. By his
+justice the world will be established in righteousness. He will labor
+and suffer much,.... and will finally offer up a sacrifice worthy of
+himself," i. e., worthy of a God. And a singular animal, called the
+Kilin (signifying the Lamb of God), was seen in the yard, with a stone
+in its mouth, on which was inscribed a prophecy of the event. And when
+the young God (Chang-ti) was born, in fulfillment of this prophecy,
+heavenly music, and angels and shepherds attended the scene. (See
+"History of China," by Martinus; also Halde's "History of China.")
+
+We will also give place to a Messianic prophecy of Persia. Mr. Faber,
+an English writer, in his "History of Idolatry," tells us that Zoroaster
+prophetically declared, that "A virgin should conceive and bear a son,
+and a star would appear blazing at midday to signalize the occurrence."
+"When you behold the star," said he to his followers, "follow it
+whithersoever it leads you. Adore the mysterious child, offering him
+gifts with profound humility. He is indeed the Almighty Word which
+created the heavens. He is indeed your Lord and everlasting Ring"
+(Faber, vol. ii. p. 92). Abulfaragius, in his "Historia Dynastarium,"
+and Maurice, in his "Indian Skeptics Refuted," both speak of this
+prophecy, fulfilled, according to Mr. Higgins, by the advent of the
+Persian and Chaldean God Josa. And Chalcidus (of the second century), in
+his "Comments on the Times of Plato," speaks of "a star which presaged
+neither disease nor death, but the descent of a God amongst men, and
+which is attested by Chaldean astronomers, who immediately hastened to
+adore the newborn deity, and present him gifts."
+
+We are compelled to omit, for the want of room, the notice of numerous
+Messianic prophecies found in the sacred writings of Egypt, Greece,
+Rome, Mexico, Arabia, and other countries, all of which tend to show
+that the same prophetic spirit pervaded all religious countries,
+reliable only to the extent it might have issued from an interior
+spiritual vision, or have been illuminated by departed spirits. And we
+find as much evidence that these pagan prophecies were inspired, and
+also fulfilled, as those found in Jew-Christian bible, thus reducing all
+to a common level. The possibility of the interior vision being expanded
+and illuminated by spiritual beings, so as to enable the possessor to
+forestall the occurrence of future events, we, however, by no means
+deny, since we have abundant proof of it in connection with the
+practical history of modern spiritualism. (See Chapter XXXIV., section
+2).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. PROPHECIES BY THE FIGURE OF A SERPENT
+
+The Seed of the Woman Bruising the Serpent's Head.
+
+"AND I will put emnity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed
+and her seed. It shall bruise thy head, and thou shall bruise his
+heel." (Gen. ill. 15.) This text is often cited by Christian writers and
+controversialists as prefiguring the mission of the Christian Savior,
+viz., the destruction of the serpent, alias the devil. St. John calls
+"the grand adversary of souls which deceiveth the whole world," "the
+dragon, the serpent, the devil, and Satan." (Rev. xii. 8.) The serpent,
+then, is the devil; that is, the dragon, the serpent, the devil and
+Satan are all one. The object of this chapter is to show the origin of
+the singular figure set forth in the first text quoted, and to prove
+that those Christian writers who assume it to be a revelation from
+heaven were profoundly ignorant of oriental history, as the same figure
+is found in several heathen systems of older date, as we will now cite
+the facts to prove.
+
+Some of the saviors or demigods of Egypt, India, Greece, Persia, Mexico
+and Etruria are represented as performing the same drama with the
+serpent or devil. "Osiris of Egypt (says Mr. Bryant) bruised the head
+of the serpent after it had bitten his heel." Descending to Greece, Mr.
+Faber relates that, "on the spheres Hercules is represented in the act
+of contending with the serpent, the head of which is placed under his
+foot; and this serpent guarded the tree with golden fruit in the midst
+of the garden Hesperides"--Eden. (Origin of Idolatry, vol. i. p. 443.)
+"And we may observe," says this author, "the same tradition in the
+Phoenician fable of Ophion or Ophiones." (Ibid.) In Genesis the serpent
+is the subject of two legends. But here it will be observed that they
+are both couched in one.
+
+Again, it is related by more than one oriental writer that Chrishna of
+India is represented on some very ancient sculptures and stone monuments
+with his heel on the head of a serpent. Mr. Maurice, in his Indian
+Antiquities, vol. ii., speaks of "Chrishna crushing the head of a
+serpent with his foot," and pronounces the striking similarity of this
+story with that found in the Christian bible as "very mysterious."
+Another author tells us "The image of Chrishna is sculptured in the
+ancient temples of India, sometimes wreathed in the folds of a serpent
+which is biting his foot, and sometimes treading victoriously on
+the head of a serpent." (Prog. Rel. Ideas, vol. i.) In the Mexican
+Antiquities, vol. vi., we are told, "A messenger from heaven announced
+to the first woman created (Suchiquecul), that she should bear a son who
+should bruise the serpent's head, and then presented her with a rose."
+Here is the origin of the Genesis legend, the rose being the fruit of
+the tree of "the knowledge of good and evil." "The ancient Persians,"
+says Volney, in his "Ruin of Empires," p. 169, "had the tradition of a
+virgin, from whom they predicted would be born, or would spring up, a
+shoot (a son) that would crush the serpent's head, and thus deliver the
+world from sin." And both the serpent and the virgin, he tells us,
+are represented imaginarily in the heavens, and pictured on their
+astronomical globes and spheres, as on those of the Romish Christian.
+(See Burritt's Geography of the Heavens.)
+
+In the ancient Etrurian story, instead of "the seed of the woman" (the
+virgin), it is the woman herself who is represented as standing with one
+foot on the head of a serpent, which has the twig of an apple tree in
+its mouth to which an apple is suspended (the forbidden fruit), while
+its tail is twisted around a celestial globe, thus reminding us of St.
+John's dragon hauling down one-third of the stars with his tail. (See
+Rev. xii. 4.) In the ancient celestial diagram of the Etrurian, the head
+of the virgin is surmounted with a crown of stars--doubtless the same
+legend from which St. John borrowed his metaphor of a "a woman with
+a crown of twelve stars on her head." (Rev. xiii.) "The _Regina
+Stellarum_" (Queen of the Stars), spoken of in some of the ancient
+systems appertains to the same fable. Also the tradition of Achilles
+of Greece being invulnerable in the heel, as related by Homer. The last
+clause of the first text quoted reads "_It_ shall bruise thy head"--a
+very curious prophetic reference to the savior of the world, if the text
+refers to him, to represent him as being of the neuter gender, for the
+neuter pronoun _it_ always refers to a thing without sex.
+
+In the further exposition of the serpent tradition, we are now brought
+to notice, and will trace to its origin, the story of the original
+transgression and fall of man--two cardinal doctrines of the Christian
+religion. Like every other tenet of the Christian faith, we find these
+doctrines taught in heathen systems much older than Christianity, and
+whose antiquity antedates even the birth of Moses. We will first notice
+the Persian tradition. "According to the doctrine of the Persians," says
+the Rev. J. C. Pitrat, "Meshia and Meshiane, the first man and first
+woman, were pure, and submitted to Ormuzd, their maker. But Ahriman (the
+evil one) saw them, and envied them their happiness. He approached them
+under the form of a serpent, presented fruits to them, and persuaded
+them that he was the maker of man, of animals, of plants, and of the
+beautiful universe in which they dwelt. They believed it. Since that
+time Ahriman was their master. Their natures became corrupt, and this
+corruption infested their whole posterity." This story is taken from the
+Vandidatsade of the Persians, pp. 305 and 428.
+
+The Indian or Hindoo story is furnished us by the Rev. Father Bouchat,
+in a letter to the bishops of Avranches, and runs thus: "Our Hindoos say
+the Gods tried by all means to obtain immortality. After many inquiries
+and trials, they conceived the idea that they would find it in the tree
+of life, which is the Chorcan (paradise). In fact they succeeded, and
+by eating once in a while of the fruits of that tree, they kept the
+precious treasure they so much valued. A famous snake, named Cheiden,
+saw that the tree of life had been found by the Gods of the second
+order. As probably he had been intrusted with guarding that tree,
+he became so angry because his vigilance had been deceived, that he
+immediately poured out an enormous quantity of poison, which spread over
+the whole earth." How much like this story is the story of St. John,
+"And the serpent cast out of his mouth water as a flood after the woman
+that he might cause her to be carried away of the flood!" (Rev. xii.
+15.)
+
+The idea of a snake or serpent inundating the earth from its mouth, as
+taught in both stories is so novel, and so far removed from the sphere
+of natural causes and possible events, that we are compelled to the
+conclusion that one is borrowed from the other, or both from a common
+original.
+
+And as facts cited in other chapters prove beyond dispute that the
+Hindoo system, containing this story, extends in antiquity far beyond
+the time of Moses, the question is thus settled as to which system
+borrowed the story from the other.
+
+Before closing the chapter, we wish to call the attention of the reader
+to the important fact that three out of four of the cardinal doctrines
+of the Christian faith are taught in the two heathen mythological
+stories of creation just presented, viz.:--
+
+1. Original sin.
+
+2. The fall of man caused by a serpent
+
+3. The consequent corruption and depravity of the human race.
+
+These doctrines, then, it must be admitted, are of heathen origin, and
+not, as Christians claim, "important truths revealed from heaven." For
+a historical exposition of the other cardinal doctrine of the Christian
+faith, viz., man's restoration by the atonement achieved through the
+crucifixion of a God, see Chapters xvi. and xxi.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. MIRACULOUS AND IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF THE GODS
+
+THE ancients very naturally concluded that an offspring of God (a son
+of God) should have a purer, higher and holier maternal origin than is
+incident to the lot of mortals, and this was to constitute one of the
+evidences of his emanation from the Deity--that is, of his supernatural
+or divine origin. He, as a matter of course, must not only have
+a different origin, but one in the highest degree superior and
+supernatural. He must not only be able to claim the highest _paternal_
+origin, but the highest _maternal_ also. And on the part of the mother,
+a sexual connection with the great Potentate of heaven would evince for
+her offspring the very acme of superiority with respect to his origin,
+moral perfection and authority. That the Savior was born of a woman
+could not possibly be made a matter of concealment. But his paternal
+parentage was not so obvious and apparent to general observation, being
+cognizant alone to the mother. This circumstance furnished the most
+propititious opportunity to concoct the story that "The Most High" had
+condescended and descended to become both a father and a grandfather to
+a human being, or a being apparently human at least.
+
+We say grandfather, because, if God (as the Christian bible itself
+frequently asserts, both directly and by implication) is father of the
+whole human family, then he was father to the maternal parent; so that
+her son, though deriving existence from him, would be his grandson as
+well as his son. Hence the corollary, _Jesus Christ was a grandson
+of God as well as a son of God_, and Jehovah both his father and
+grandfather.
+
+Again, to make the origin and character of the God and Savior stand
+higher for purity, and partake in the highest degree of the miraculous,
+the impression must go abroad that he was born of a woman _while she was
+yet a maiden_--i. e., before she was contaminated by illicit association
+with the masculine sex. Hence, nearly all the saviors were reputedly
+born of virgins. And the process of birth, too, was out of the line of
+natural causes, in order to invest the character of the savior with the
+_ne plus ultra_ of the miraculous.
+
+And hence it is related of Jesus Christ (in an Apocryphal Gospel), of
+Chrishna of India, and other saviors, that they were born through the
+mother's side.
+
+It is true our present canonical gospels are silent as to the manner
+of Christ's birth; but one of the Apocryphal gospels, which gives the
+matter in fuller detail, and whose authority in the earlier ages of the
+Christian church was not disputed, declares that the manner of his birth
+was as related above. And, besides, some of the early Christian fathers
+fully indorsed the story. The same is related in the pagan bibles of
+heathen Gods. The motives which originated the reports of the immaculate
+conception of the Saviors, it may be further remarked, were of a
+two-fold character:--
+
+1. To establish their spotless origin (as the word immaculate means
+spotless.)
+
+2. To make it appear that there was a Deific power and agency concerned
+in their conception.
+
+And we may observe here that it is not the Saviors alone who are
+reported to have been ushered into tangible existence without a human
+father, but it is declared of beings known and acknowledged to be men,
+as Plato, Pythagoras, Alexander, Augustus and a number of others. Of
+Plato an author remarks, "He was born of Paretonia, and begotten of
+Apollo, and not Ariston, his father." Both the manner, or process,
+and the source of the influence by which the Gods and Saviors were
+generated, seem to have been different in different countries, though
+the idea of "overshadowing with the Holy Ghost" seems to have been most
+current. Mr. Higgins says that "the Supreme First Cause was generally
+believe to overshadow, or in some other mysterious manner to impregnate,
+the mother of the God, or personage" (vol. i. 378). We are told that
+Pythais, the mother of Pythagoras, five hundred and fifty years B. C.,
+conceived by a spectre or ghost (of course the Holy Ghost) of the God
+Apollo, or God Sol.
+
+In Malcolm's "History of Persia" (vol. i. 494) the author tells us that
+"Zoroaster was born of an immaculate conception by a ray from the Divine
+Reason." The immaculate conception of Juno of Greece is thus described
+by the poet:--
+
+ "Juno touched the flower;
+ Its wondrous virtues such,
+ She touched it, and grew pregnant at the touch;
+ Then entered Thrace--the Propontic shore;
+ When mistress of her touch,
+ God Mars she bore."
+
+This case may certainly be set down as the _ne plus ultra_ of etiquette
+with respect to sexual commerce or purity of conception. The sweet odor
+of an expanded flower, we are here taught, is adequate to the conception
+and production of a God. Here we have "the immaculate conception" in the
+superlative degree, and while much more beautiful and grand it cannot be
+more senseless or unreasonable than the conception by a ghost. It proves
+at least that the doctrine of the immaculate conception is of very
+ancient date. And this fastidious maiden lady and immaculate virgin,
+Juno, not only conceived the God Mars by the touch of a flower, but she
+also (so the story reads) conceived Vulcan by being overshadowed by the
+wind--exactly a parallel case with that of the virgin Mary, as we find
+that ghost, in the original, means wind. Thus we observe that Vulcan,
+long before Jesus Christ, was "born of the Holy Ghost," i. e., both were
+conceived by the "Holy Wind." And the author of the "Perennial Calendar"
+speaks of the miraculous conception of Juno Jugulis, "the blessed virgin
+queen of heaven," and describes it as falling on the second of February,
+the very day which the early Christians celebrated with a festival, as
+being the date of the conception of the "ever Blessed Virgin Mary."
+
+Of the ancient Mexicans, it is said "they had the immaculate conception,
+the crucifixion, and the resurrection after three days." (Mex. Antiq.,
+vol. i.) And in an ancient work called "Codex Vaticanus," the immaculate
+conception is spoken of as a part of the history of Quexalcote, the
+Mexican Savior. "Suchiquecal," says the Mexican Antiquities, "was called
+the Queen of Heaven. She conceived a son without connection with a
+man"--a very obvious case of immaculate conception.
+
+Alvarez Semedo, in his "History of China," page 89, speaks of a sect in
+that country who worshiped a Savior known as Xaca, who was reputedly
+conceived of his mother, Maia, by a white elephant, which she saw in her
+sleep, and "for greater purity, she brought him forth from one of
+her sides." Colonel Tod, of England, tells us in his "History of the
+Rajahs," page 57, that Yu, the first Chinese monarch, was conceived by
+his mother being struck with a star while traveling.
+
+In the case of Christ, it will be recollected, the star did not appear
+till after his birth. But here the star is the author and agent of the
+conception.
+
+According to Ranking's "History of the Moguls," page 178, Tamerlane's
+mother (of Bermuda) professedly conceived by having had sexual
+intercourse with "the God of Day." The mother of Ghengis Khan, of
+Tartary, "being too modest to claim that she was the mother of the son
+of God, said only that he was the _son of the sun_." (History of Mogul,
+page 65.)
+
+Both Julis and Osiris of Egypt are spoken of by some authors as having
+been honored with a divine immaculate conception--the former being
+the son of the beautiful virgin Cronis Celestine, and "begotten by the
+Father of all Gods."
+
+Both Budha and Chrishna, of India, are reported as having been
+immaculately conceived. The mother of the latter (God) was (as the
+Hindoo Holy Book declares) overshadowed by the Supreme God, Brahma,
+while the spirit-author of the conception (that is, the Holy Ghost) was
+Naraan. The mother of Apollonius of Cappadocia, who was cotemporary
+with Jesus Christ (according to his history by Philostratus)--and his
+(Apollonius') disciple Damis testifies to the same effect gave birth
+to this God and rival Savior of Jesus Christ, by having been previously
+"overshadowed" by the supreme God Proteus. For the corporeal existence
+and earthly career of Augustus Caesar, the world has ostensibly to
+acknowledge itself indebted to the "overshadowing" influence and
+generating power of Jove, by whose divine influence he was immaculously
+conceived in the temple of Apollo, according to the statement of Nimrod,
+his biographer. The virgin mother Shing-Mon of China furnishes another
+case of immaculate conception. Possessing a sensibility too lofty and
+too refined to descend to the ordinary routine of the world, she gave
+birth to the God Yu from previous conception by a water lily. This
+case, with respect to the degree of procreative delicacy and refinement
+evinced, may be classed with that of Juno of Greece. Here it may be
+noted as a curious circumstance, that several of the virgin mothers
+of Gods and great men are specifically represented as going ten months
+between conception and delivery. The mothers of Hercules, Sakia,
+Guatama, Scipio, Arion, Solomon and Jesus Christ may be mentioned as
+samples of this character. This tradition probably grew out of the
+established belief in the ten sacred cycles which constitute the great
+prospective and portentous millennial epoch, as described in Chapter
+XXX. Arion, mentioned above, is represented as being both miraculously
+and immaculously conceived by the Gods in the citadel of Byrsa.
+
+In view of the foregoing facts, drawn from accredited histories,
+the reader will readily concede that the tradition of the miraculous
+conceptions of Gods (sons of God), Saviors and Messiahs was very
+prevalent in the world at a very ancient period of time, and long before
+the mother of Jesus was "overshadowed by the Most High." Indeed, says
+Mr. Higgins, "the belief in the immaculate conception extended to
+every nation in the world." And Grote, referring to Greece, makes the
+remarkable declaration, that "the furtive pregnancy of young women,
+often by a God, is one of the most frequently recurring incidents in
+the legendary narratives of the country." And we find that both the
+prevalency and great antiquity of the doctrine of the immaculate
+conception among the heathen is conceded by Christian writers themselves
+(of former ages) in their attempts to find arguments and commendatory
+precedents to justify their own belief in the doctrine. For proof of
+this, we need only cite the Christian writer Mr. Bailey, who remarks,
+"What I have said of St. Augustine is applicable also to Origen
+and Lactanius, who have endeavored to persuade us of the immaculate
+virginity of the mother of Jesus Christ by the example of similar events
+stored by the heathen." Here we have several Christian authorities cited
+by another writer, also a Christian, for placing the doctrine of the
+immaculate conception among the heathen legends in ages long anterior to
+Christ.
+
+With respect to the degree of credence to be attached to the story
+of the immaculate conception of the mother of Jesus, it need only be
+observed that there was no other person concerned in the transaction but
+herself who could possess positive, absolute knowledge of the parentage.
+And she, let it be noted, settles the matter forever, by virtually
+affirming that Joseph was his father in the declaration addressed to
+Jesus when she found him in the temple, "_I and thy father_ have sought
+thee sorrowing." (Luke ii. 48.) No one will dispute that the father here
+spoken of was Joseph, which amounts to a positive declaration by the
+mother, that Joseph was Jesus' father.
+
+
+IMMACULATE CONCEPTION AND MIRACULOUS BIRTH OF THE CHRISTIAN SAVIOR.
+
+The following considerations exhibit some of the numerous absurdities
+involved in the story of the miraculous birth of Jesus Christ.
+
+1. The evangelical narratives show that Christ himself did not claim to
+have a miraculous birth. He did not once allude to such an event; while
+if, as Christians claim, it is the principal evidence of his deityship,
+he certainly would have done so.
+
+2. His paternal genealogy, as made out by Matthew and Luke, completely
+disproves the story of his miraculous conception by a virgin. For they
+both trace his lineage through Joseph, which they could not do only on
+the assumption that Joseph was his father. This, of course, disproves
+his sireship by the Holy Ghost, ergo, the miraculous conception. It
+is the lineage and parentage of Joseph, and not Mary, that is given
+in tracing back his ancestry to the royal household--a fact which
+completely overthrows the story of his miraculous birth.
+
+3. And the fact that his _own disciple_ (Philip) declared him to be the
+_son of Joseph_, and that several texts show that it was the current
+impression, is still further confirmation of the conclusion.
+
+4. We find the story of the immaculate conception resting entirely upon
+the slender foundation comprised in the legends of an angel and a dream.
+We are told that Mary got it by an angel, and Joseph by a dream. And
+through these sources we have the whole groundwork and foundation of the
+story of the divinity of Jesus Christ.
+
+5. It should be noticed that we have neither Joseph's nor Mary's report
+of these things, but only Matthew and Luke's version of the affair.
+And we are not informed that either of them ever saw or conversed with
+Joseph or Mary on the subject. It is probable they got it from Dame
+Rumor, with her thousand tongues.
+
+6. If Christ were a miraculously born God, is it possible his mother
+would have reproved him for misconduct when she found him in the temple,
+as she must have known his character?
+
+7. If Mary was miraculously conceived, why was the important secret kept
+so long from Joseph? Why did she keep the "wool drawn over his eyes"
+till an angel had to be sent from heaven to let him into the secret?
+
+8. If she were a virtuously-minded woman, why did she thus attempt to
+deceive him?
+
+9. Why did not God inform Joseph by "inspiration" instead of employing
+the roundabout way of sending an angel to do it?
+
+10. We are told that "Mary was found with child of the Holy Ghost." But
+as we are not informed who found it out, or who made the discovery, or
+how it was made, is it not thus left in a very suspicious aspect?
+
+11. As the whole affair seems to have been based on dreams, and was
+carried on through dreams, and has no better foundation than dreams, why
+should we consider it entitled to any better credit than similar stories
+found in works on heathen mythology?
+
+12. And would it not prove that Christianity is rather a dreamy
+religion?
+
+13. Should not the astounding and incredible report of the birth of a
+God be based on a better foundation than that of dreams and angels and
+the legends of oriental mythology, to entitle it to the belief of an
+intelligent and scientific age?
+
+14. Or can any man of science entertain for a moment the superlative
+solecism of an Infinite God by any special act "overshadowing" a finite
+human female, especially as modern science teaches us that God is both
+male and female, and as much one as the other?
+
+15. As history teaches us the ancient orientalists believed that sexual
+commerce is sinful and contaminating to the child thus begotten and
+born, and hence had their incarnate Gods sent into the world through
+human virgins, can any unbiased mind resist the conviction that this is
+the source of the origin of the story of Christ's immaculate conception?
+
+16. And finally, if it were necessary for Christ to come into the world
+in such a way as to avoid the impure channel of human conception and
+parturition, why did he not descend directly from heaven in person? Why
+could he not "descend on the clouds" by his first advent, as the bible
+says he will do when he makes his second advent?
+
+17. Would not this course have furnished a hundred fold more convincing
+proof and demonstration of his divine power and divine attributes than
+the ridiculous story and inscrutable mystery of the divine conception,
+which is not susceptible of either investigation or proof?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. VIRGIN MOTHERS AND VIRGIN-BORN GODS
+
+THE report in authentic history of a case of a virtuous woman giving
+birth to a child with the usual form, and possessing the usual
+characteristics of a human being, and who should testify she had no male
+partner in the conception, might in an age of miracles and ignorance
+of natural law, be believed with implicit credulity. But in an age of
+intelligence, when the keys of science have unlocked the sacred shrines
+and hallowed vaults of sacerdotal mysteries, and modern researches of
+history have laid bare the fact that most ancient religious countries
+abound in reports of this character, a profound and general skepticism
+must be the result, and a total rejection of their truth by all men of
+science and historic intelligence.
+
+Many are the cases noted in history of young maidens claiming a
+paternity for their male offspring by a God.
+
+In Greece it became so common that the reigning king issued an edict,
+decreeing the death of all young women who should offer such an insult
+to deity as to lay to him the charge of begetting their children. The
+virgin Alcmene furnishes a case of a young woman claiming God as the
+father of her offspring, when she brought forth the divine Redeemer
+Alcides, 1280 years B. C. And Ceres, the virgin mother of Osiris,
+claimed that he was begotten by the "father of all Gods." Mr. Kenrick
+tells us the likeness of this virgin mother, with the divine child
+in her arms, may now be seen represented in sculpture on some of the
+ancient, ruined temples of that ruined empire. And Mr. Higgins makes
+the broad declaration that "the worship of this virgin mother, with her
+God-begotten child, prevailed everywhere." This author also quotes Mr.
+Riquord as saying, this son of God "was exhibited in effigy, lying in
+a manger, in the same manner the infant Jesus was afterward laid in the
+cave at Bethlehem." Mr. Higgins further testifies that the worship of
+this virgin God-mother (that is, the God and the mother) is of very
+ancient date and universal prevalence in all the eastern countries, as
+is proved by sculptured figures bearing the marks of great age.
+
+In corroboration of this statement we might cite many cases, if our
+space would permit, from the religious records of India, Egypt, Persia,
+Greece, Rome, Mexico, Thibet, etc. Maia, mother of Sakia and Yasoda of
+Chrishna; Celestine, mother of the crucified Zulis; Chimalman, mother of
+Quex-alcote; Semele, mother of the Egyptian Bacchus, and Minerva, mother
+of the Grecian Bacchus; Prudence, mother of Hercules; Alcmene, mother of
+Alcides; Shing-Mon, mother-of Yu, and Mayence, mother of Hesus, were
+all as confidently believed to be pure, holy and chaste virgins,
+while giving birth to these Gods, sons of God, Saviors and sin-atoning
+Mediators, as was Mary, mother of Jesus, and long before her time.
+
+Mr. Higgins remarks that the mother was still held to be a virgin, even
+after she had given birth to other children besides the deity-begotten
+bantling, which furnishes another striking parallel to the history of
+Mary, as she was still called a virgin after she had given birth to
+Jesus and his brothers James and John. And it is an incident worth
+noticing here, that, in the case of Mayence, virgin-mother of the
+God-sired Hesus of the Druids, the ancient traditions of the country,
+more than two thousand years old, represent her body as being enveloped
+in light, and a crown of twelve stars upon her head, corresponding
+exactly to the apocalyptic figure described by the mystagogue, St. John,
+in the twelfth chapter of his Revelation. She is also represented with
+her foot on the head of a serpent, according to Davie's "Universal
+Etymology." (Vide the case of the seed of the woman bruising the
+serpent's head, Gen. iii. 15.)
+
+Auguste Nichols tells us, in his "Philosophical Essays on Christianity,"
+that Io is called, in Eschylus, "the Chaste Virgin," and her son "the
+Son of God." (For other similar cases, see Guigne's History of the
+Huns.) Gonzales informs us he found on an ancient temple in India the
+Latin inscription _Patiuro virginis_, "the virgin about to bring forth."
+And similar inscriptions have been found on pagan temples in the country
+of the ancient Gauls. (For proof, see Riquord's Theology of the Ancient
+Gauls, Chapter X.) "He who hath ears to hear, let him hear," and
+treasure up these facts. According to Chinese history there were two
+beings--Tien and Chang-Ti--worshiped in that country as Gods more than
+twenty-five hundred years ago, born of virgins "who knew no man." The
+mother of the mighty and the almighty God Hercules, we are told, "knew
+only Jove."
+
+If history and tradition, then, are to be credited, God had many "well
+beloved sons," born of pious and holy virgins, besides Jesus Christ. And
+some of them are represented as being his "only begotten," and others his
+"first begotten," sons. And all these cases appear to be equally as well
+authenticated as the story of Jesus Christ. All stand upon a level, the
+same kind and the same amount of evidence being offered in each case.
+
+Here we will note it as a curious circumstance, that several of the
+above-named Saviors are represented as being black, Jesus Christ
+included with this number.
+
+There is as much evidence that the Christian Savior was a black man,
+or at least a dark man, as there is of his being the son of the Virgin
+Mary, or that he once lived and moved upon the earth. And that evidence
+is the testimony of his disciples, who had nearly as good an opportunity
+of knowing what his complexion was as the evangelists, who omit to say
+anything about it. In the pictures and portraits of Christ by the early
+Christians, he is uniformly represented as being black. And to make this
+the more certain, the red tinge is given to the lips; and the only text
+in the Christian bible quoted by orthodox Christians, as describing his
+complexion, represents it as being black. Solomon's declaration, "I am
+black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem" (Sol. i. 5), is often
+cited as referring to Christ. According to the bible itself, then, Jesus
+Christ was a black man.
+
+Let us suppose that, at some future time, he makes his second advent to
+the earth, as some Christians anticipate he will do, and that he comes
+in the character of a sable Messiah, how would he be received by our
+negro-hating Christians, of sensitive olfactory nerves? Would they
+worship a negro God? Let us imagine he enters one of our fashionable
+churches, with his "rough and ready" linsey-woolsey, seamless
+garment on, made of wild sea-grass, thus presenting a very forbidding
+appearance, and what would be the result? Would the sexton show him to
+a seat? Would he not rather point to the door, and exclaim, "Get out of
+here; no place here for niggers?" What a ludicrous series of ideas is
+thus suggested by the thought that Jesus Christ was a "darkey."
+
+And the tradition of divine Saviors being born of undefiled and
+undeflowered virgins has an astronomical chapter we must not omit
+to notice. The virgin, with her God-begotten child, was pictured
+imaginarily in the heavens from time immemorial. They are represented on
+the Hindoo zodiac, at least three thousand years old, and on the ancient
+Egyptian planispheres. And if you will examine "Burritt's Geography of
+the Heavens," you will find the infant God-son (the sun) is represented
+as being born into a new year on the 25th of December (the very date
+assigned for Christ's birth), and may be seen rising over the eastern
+horizon, out of Mary, Maria, or Mare (the Latin for _sea_), with the
+infant God in her arms, being heralded and preceded by a bright star,
+which rises immediately preceding the virgin and her child, thus
+suggesting the text, "We have seen his star in the east, and have come
+to worship him." (Matt. ii.8.) Such facts led the learned Alphonso to
+exclaim, "The adventures of Jesus Christ are all depicted among the
+stars."
+
+And such facts fasten the conviction on our mind that the stories of
+Gods cohabiting with young maids or virgins, and begetting other
+Gods, is of astrological origin--the story of Jesus Christ included. A
+critical research shows that astronomy and religion were interblended,
+interwoven, and confounded together at a very early period of time, so
+indissolubly, that it now becomes impossible to separate them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. STARS POINT OUT THE TIME AND THE SAVIORS' BIRTH-PLACE
+
+PROFUSION of evidence is furnished at every step along the devious
+pathway of sacred history, tending to show that all the systems of
+worship which have existed in the past have had a dip in "the halo
+of the heavenly orbs," and hence shine with a light derived from that
+source.
+
+We find the stars acting directly a conspicuous part at the births
+of several of the Saviors, besides figuring in some cases by marking
+important events in their subsequent history.
+
+Mr. Higgins remarks that "Among the ancients there seems to have been a
+very general idea that the arrival of Gods and great personages who
+were expected to come, would be announced by a star." And the cases of
+Abraham, Caesar, Pythagoras, Yu, Chrishna, and Christ, may be cited in
+proof of this declaration. A star figured either before or at the birth
+of each, according to their respective histories.
+
+And it is a historical fact that should be noted here that the practice
+of calculating nativities by the stars was in vogue in the era and
+country of Christ's birth, and had been for a long period previously in
+various countries. "We have seen his star in the east, and have come to
+worship him." (Matt. ii. i.) Now mark, here, it was not _the star_,
+nor _a star_, but "_his star_;" thus disclosing its unmistakable
+astrological features. Mr. Faber (in his "Origin of Idolatry," vol. ii.
+p. 77) reports Zoroaster (600 B. C.) as prophetically announcing to "the
+wise men" of that country that a Savior would be born, "attended by a
+star at noonday." For a fuller exposition of this case see Chapter II.
+
+In the history of the Hindoo Savior Chrishna, we are told that "as soon
+as Nared, who, having heard of his fame, had examined the stars, he
+declared him to be from God;" i. e., the Son of God' The Roman Calcidius
+speaks of "a wonderful star, presaging the descent of a God amongst
+men." (See Maurice's "Indian Skeptics Refuted," p. 62.) Quite suggestive
+of the star "apprising the wise men" of Christ's descent from above. And
+a star is said to have foretokened the birth of the Roman Julius Cæsar.
+The Chinese God Yu was not only heralded by a star, but conceived and
+brought to mortal birth by a star.
+
+In Numbers xxiv. 17, it is declared "There shall come a star out of
+Jacob," etc. This is a text often quoted by Christian writers as having
+a prophetic reference to the Christian Messiah. But the same text
+declares further, "It shall destroy the children of Seth," a prediction
+which no rational interpretation can make apply to Jesus Christ. And
+then we find this star of Jacob or Judah (the same) represented on
+astronomical maps as a prominent star in the constellation Virgo (the
+Virgin), fancifully termed by the Hebrew Ephraim.
+
+It was known in the Syrian, Arabian and Persian systems of astronomy as
+Messaeil (suggestive of Messiah), and was considered the ruling genius
+of the constellation.
+
+The "star of Jacob," then, was simply a figure borrowed from the ancient
+pagan systems of astronomy, in which they fancifully represent a virgin
+rising with an infant Messiah (Messaeil) in her arms. Messaeil is, when
+analyzed, Messaeh-el (Messiah-God), and is found in the constellation
+Virgo, which commences rising at midnight, on the 25th of December, with
+this "star in the east" in her arms--the star which piloted "the wise
+men." The whole thing, then, is evidently an astronomical legend.
+
+Albert the Great, in his "Book on the Universe," tells us, "The sign
+of the celestial virgin rises above the horizon, at the moment we find
+fixed for the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ." To which we will add the
+declaration of Sir William Drummond, who, in his "Odipus Judaicus," p.
+27, most significantly remarks, "The anointed of _El_ the male infant,
+who rises in the arms of Virgo, was called Jesus by the Hebrews,... and
+was hailed as the anointed king or Messiah"--still further proof of the
+astrological origin of the story.
+
+Dr. Hales, in his "Chronology," calls Christ "the star of our
+salvation, the true Apollo, the sun of righteousness"--all of which are
+astronomical terms.
+
+And here we may recur to the fact that some of the early inhabitants
+of the earth regarded a star as a thing of life, because it appeared
+to move, and acted as though controlled by a living spirit. And this
+fetchic idea we observe lurking amongst the borrowed orientalisms of the
+Jewish Old Testament. The representation of the morning stars joining
+in a chorus and singing together (see Job xxxviii. 9), is an instance of
+this kind of fetchic conception.
+
+And then we find a much stronger and more conclusive case in the New
+Testament, where Matthew represents a star as breaking loose from its
+orbit, and traveling some millions of miles, in order to stand over the
+young child Jesus, as he lay amongst the oxen and asses in a stable.
+(See Matt. ii. 7.) Wonderfully accommodating star indeed! How did its
+inhabitants feel while thus traveling with the velocity of lightning?
+This achievement would not only require life, but an active
+intelligence, on the part of the star, as it is represented as being an
+act of the planet itself.
+
+"All nations," says Mr. Higgins, "once believed that the planetary
+bodies or their inhabitants controlled the affairs of men, and even
+their births." Hence the cant phrases, "My stars," "He is ill-starred,"
+etc., in use then, and still in use at the present day. The good or ill
+luck of a person was attributed to the good or evil stars which it was
+believed ruled at the hour of his birth.
+
+We find a counterpart to the story of Matthew's traveling star in
+Virgil's writings, who declares (60 B. C.) that a star guided Æneas in
+a journey westward from Troy. In the days of Pliny (see his "Natural
+History," Book II.), the people of Rome fancied they saw a God in a star
+or comet in the form of a man. The Apocryphal book of Seth relates that
+a star descended from heaven and lighted on a mountain, in the midst of
+which a divine child was seen bearing a cross. Christ betrays the same
+ignorance of astronomy, when he speaks of "the stars falling from heaven
+to the earth." (See Matt. xxiv. 29.) For if there could be any falling
+in the case, the falling would be in the other direction, and the earth
+would fall to the stars, as larger bodies always attract smaller ones.
+
+As shown above, the stupendous orbs of night were represented by Jew,
+Pagan and Christian as breaking away from their orbits, and running
+hither and thither, like a fly on a ceiling, or a ball from a
+sky-rocket, being regarded as mere jack-a-lanterns, that could appear
+anywhere at any time creative fancy might dictate or require; while
+science teaches that the stars are stupendous orbs, some of them a
+thousand times larger than the planet on which we live, and that they
+could not depart one rod from their accustomed orbits without breaking
+up the whole planetary system, and destroying the universe.
+
+And then observe the absurdity in Matthew's story, which teaches that
+the wise men followed the star in the east, when they, coming from the
+east, were, as a matter of course, traveling westward, which would place
+the star to their backs. That must be a _sui generis_ pilot or guide
+which follows after, instead of going before. Omitting further citations
+from history, we will only observe further that the ancient Hindoos,
+Egyptians, Chaldeans, Syrians, Mexicans, etc., took great account of
+stars, and employed them on all important occasions, especially on long
+journeys and at the births of Gods and great personages--a circumstance
+which aids in explaining the star chapter in the gospel history of
+Christ.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. ANGELS, SHEPHERDS AND MAGI VISIT THE INFANT SAVIORS
+
+IN an age when Gods and men were on the most familiar terms, and when
+the character of one furnished a transcript for the other, and when
+each consented to act a reciprocal part towards elevating, honoring and
+glorifying the other, the birth of a God or Messiah was, as a matter
+of course, regarded as an event of sufficient importance to attract
+the attention of the great ones of the earth, and even the denizens of
+heaven also.
+
+And hence we find it related in the history of several of the
+God-begotten Saviors of antiquity, that as soon as they were born into
+the world they were visited by "wise men from a distance" (or Magi, as
+they were called by the Persians and Brahmins). And in some cases they
+were likewise waited upon and adored by the neighboring shepherds; and
+even celestial spirits are reported in some instances as leaving their
+star-gilt homes to wing their way to the humble mansion, the rude
+tenement, containing a new-born God, that they might honor and adore
+"the Savior of men, the Savior of the world."
+
+The sacred biographies of both Confucius and Christ furnish examples
+of the angel host forsaking their golden pavilions in the skies to pay
+their devoirs to a Deity-begotten bantling, sent down by the "Father of
+Mercies," to save a guilt-laden world. And in both cases the Magi are
+reported as assembling to present their offerings to the infant God.
+
+In the case of Confucius (born 598 B. C.), it is declared, "Five wise
+men from a distance came to the house, celestial music was heard in the
+skies, and angels attended the scene." (See the Five Volumes.) Now let
+us observe how strikingly similar to this ancient legend, in each of the
+several characteristics, is the Christian story. Matthew (ii. 1) speaks
+of "wise men from the east" journeying to Jerusalem to visit the infant
+Christ, soon after his birth, amongst the mules and oxen in a stable,
+though he omits to state the number of itinerant adorers who presented
+themselves on the occasion.
+
+The Persian story is more specific, as it gives the number of Magi who
+visited the young Savior of that country as five.
+
+Luke (ii. 13) speaks of "a multitude of the heavenly host praising God,"
+in gratulation of the birth of the Judean Savior. Now, when we bear in
+mind that one method of praising God, with the orientals, was by
+music, as we will at once observe that this is only another mode of
+proclaiming, as in the case of Confucius, that "celestial music was
+heard in the skies."
+
+And "angels attended the scene" of Confucius' birth. So, likewise, Luke
+(ii. 15) relates that the angels, after rejoicing with the shepherds on
+the occasion of the birth of Christ, "went away into heaven."
+
+How complete the parallel! and, but for the digression, and monopoly of
+space, we might trace it much further, and show that Confucius, like
+Christ, had twelve chosen disciples; that he was descended from a royal
+house of princes, as Christ from the royal house of David; that he,
+in like manner, retired for a long period from the noise and bustle of
+society into religious contemplative seclusion; that he inculcated the
+same Golden Rule of doing to others as we desire them to act toward us,
+and other moral maxims equal in importance to anything that can be found
+in the Christian Scriptures, etc.
+
+But to the line of history. Other Saviors at birth, we are told, were
+visited by both angels and shepherds, also "wise men," at least great
+men. Chrishna, the eighth avatar of India (1200 B. C.) (so it is related
+by the "inspired penman" of their pagan theocracy) was visited by
+angels, shepherds and prophets (avatars). "Immediately after his birth
+he was visited by a chorus of devatas (angels), and surrounded by
+shepherds, all of whom were impressed with the conviction of his future
+greatness." We are informed further that "gold, frankincense and myrrh"
+were presented to him as offerings.
+
+The well-known modern traveler, Mr. Ditson, who visited India but a
+few years since, uses the emphatic declaration, "In fact, as soon as
+Chrishna was born he was saluted by a chorus of devatas, or angels." In
+the evangelical narrative of the Christian Savior an angel is reported
+to have saluted his mother thus: "Hail, thou that art highly favored;
+the Lord is with thee; blessed art thou among women." (Luke, i. 28.) And
+in the next chapter the angel is reported as joining with "the heavenly
+host" in praising God. A similar report is found in the Hindoo bible
+(the Ramayana), appertaining to the mother of the eighth Savior, of whom
+it is declared "Brahma and Siva, with a host of attending spirits, came
+to her and sang, 'In thy delivery, O favored among women, all nations
+shall have cause to exult.'" And when the celestial infant (Chrishna)
+appeared (it is related in a subsequent chapter), "a chorus of heavenly
+spirits saluted him with hymns; the whole room was illuminated by
+his light, and the countenance of his father and mother shone with
+brightness and glory (by reflection), their understandings were opened
+so that they knew him to be the Preserver of the world, and they began
+to worship him." The last text here quoted brings to mind Luke xxiv.
+45, which declares, "Then he (Christ) opened their (his parents)
+understandings."
+
+The ninth avatar of India (Sakia) furnishes to some extent a similar
+parallel. According to the account of an exploration made in India, and
+published in the New York Correspondent of 1828, "There is on a silver
+plate in a cave in India an inscription stating that about the time of
+the advent of Budha Sakia (600 B. C.), a saint in the woods learned by
+inspiration that another avatar (Messiah or Savior) had appeared in the
+house of Rajah of Lailas. Learning which, he flew through the air to the
+place, and when he beheld the new-born Savior he declared him to be the
+great avatar (Savior or prophet), and that he was destined to establish
+a new religion"--the New Covenant Religion.
+
+We next draw on the history of Greece. It is authentically related
+of Pythagoras (600 B.), that his fame having reached Miletas and
+neighboring cities, men renowned for wisdom (wise men) came to visit
+him. (Progress of Religious Ideas, vol. i.) In the Anacalypsis we are
+told that "Magi came from the East to offer gifts at Socrates' birth,
+bringing gold, frankincense and myrrh," the same kind of offering as
+that presented to the two divine infants Chrishna and Christ, according
+to their respective "inspired" biographers. (See Matt. ii. 4, and the
+Ramayana).
+
+And the legend of Mithra, of Persia, might also be included in our
+category of comparison, if we had space for it. All the four Saviors
+last named (if Socrates may be called such) are reported as having been
+honored and enriched with aromatic offerings at their respective births.
+And we have the statement from Mr. Higgins, that the same assortment of
+spices (with the gold) constituted the materials offered as gifts to
+the sun, in Persia more than three thousand years ago; and likewise in
+Arabia near the same era. And it may be stated here, that an ancient
+historic account of Zoroaster of Persia (6,000 B. C., according to
+Pliny and Aristotle), speaks of his having also been visited by Magi, or
+"Magia," at the period of his earthly advent.
+
+And it is, perhaps, well to note in this place, that "Magi" is the term
+used in the Apocryphal Gospels, to designate the "wise men" who visited
+Christ at birth; and that Magi, Magic and Magician are but variations of
+the same word, at least derivations from the same root, all suggesting
+a wisdom correlated to the Gods. Osiris, an incarnate deity of Egypt, we
+may cite as another case of an infantile God receiving signal honors and
+eclat at birth, as he was visited while yet in the cradle by a host of
+admiring adorers. "People flocked from all parts of the world to behold
+the heaven-born infant." Such a world-wide fame must have had the effect
+to attract, with the numerous crowd who thronged to see and worship him,
+no small number of "wise men."
+
+At this stage of our historical exposition, we will suggest it as rather
+a singular circumstance that the divine Father, in his infinite wisdom,
+should have chosen to reveal the intelligence of the birth of his son
+Jesus Christ to a set of nomadic heathen idolaters hundreds of miles
+distant (though known as "wise men" because of their skill in astrology)
+before he made it known to his own "chosen people" (the Jews), who had
+ever regarded themselves as the recipients of his special favors. And
+perhaps it is still more singular that these pagan pedestrians should
+have been denominated "wise men," while men of God's own election,
+according to the Christian bible, were often stigmatized and denounced
+as "fools," a ".generation of vipers," etc. But it so happens that
+"human reason" finds many Incongruities in "Divine Revelations."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. THE TWENTY-FIFTH OF DECEMBER THE BIRTHDAY OF THE GODS.
+
+DIVESTED of all explanation, the announcement of the fact that the time
+of the birth of many of the incarnated Gods and Saviors of antiquity was
+fixed at the same period, and this period the twenty-fifth of December,
+celebrated all over Christendom as the birthday of Jesus Christ, would
+sound marvelously strange, especially when it is noticed that this
+period formerly dated the birth of a new year--the birth of King
+Sol. And when we find that the ancient pagans were in the habit of
+celebrating this venerated twenty-fifth of December as the birthday
+of their Gods in the same manner Christians now celebrate it as the
+birthday of Christ, we are driven to admit that something more than mere
+fortuitous accident must be adduced to account for the coincidence.
+
+According to Dr. Lightfoot, the temple of Jerusalem was employed in
+celebrating the birthday of a pagan God (Adonis) on the very night
+Christians assign for the birth of Christ. And Robert Taylor informs us
+that nearly all the nations of the East were once in the habit of rising
+at midnight to celebrate the birthday of their Gods, on the twenty-fifth
+of December. And to this statement Mr. Higgins adds that, "At the first
+moment after midnight of the twenty-fourth of December, the ancient
+nations celebrated the accouchement of the queen of heaven and celestial
+virgin, and the birth of the God Sol, the Infant Savior, and the God of
+Day."
+
+Bacchus of Egypt, Bacchus of Greece, Adonis of Greece, Chrishna of
+India, Chang-ti of China, Chris of Chaldea, Mithra of Persia, Sakia of
+India, Jao Wapaul (a crucified Savior of ancient Britain), were all
+born on the twenty-fifth of December, according to their respective
+histories. Chrishna is represented to have been born at midnight on the
+twenty-fifth of the month Savarana, which answers to our December, and
+millions of his disciples celebrated his birthday by decorating their
+houses with garlands and gilt paper, and the bestowment of presents to
+friends. The Rev. Mr. Barret tells us, "It was once common for the women
+in Rome to perambulate the streets on the twenty-fifth of December,
+singing in a loud voice, 'Unto us a child is born this day.'"
+
+The twenty-fifth of December, then, it will be observed, was marked as
+the birthday of the incarnated Gods, Saviors, and Sons of God, of many
+of the religious systems of antiquity, long prior to the birth of Christ
+And why his birth was fixed at that date is not hard to account for.
+According to the celebrated Christian writer Mr. Goodrich, the Christian
+world had no chronology and recorded no dates for several centuries
+after the commencement of the Christian era. (See History of all
+Nations, p. 23.) No event of their history was marked by dates for
+nearly four hundred years. Hence, the time of Christ's birth is
+altogether a matter of conjecture, as is also every other event noticed
+in the Christian bible. This is proved by the fact that the ablest
+Christian writers and chronologists differ to the extent of thirty-five
+hundred years in fixing the time of every event in the bible. A Mr.
+Kennedy presents us with three hundred different chronological systems,
+by different Christian writers, all founded on the bible, and proving
+that the date of its various events are inextricably involved in a
+labyrinth of doubt, darkness and uncertainty.
+
+Relative to the time of Christ's birth, the "Encyclopedia Britannica"
+says: "Christians count one hundred and thirty-three contrary opinions
+of different authors concerning the year the Messiah appeared on
+earth--many of them celebrated writers." (Art. Chron.) Mark the
+declaration--one hundred and thirty-three different opinions as to the
+year Christ was born in; one hundred and thirty-three different years
+fixed on by different Christian chronologists as the time of the birth
+of the most extraordinary and most noted being, as Christians would
+have us believe, that ever appeared on earth. Think of an omnipotent God
+descending from heaven, performing astounding miracles, and presenting
+other proofs of being a God, and yet not one of the three hundred
+writers of that era take any notice of him, or make any note of
+his birth or any event of his life. This circumstance is of itself
+sufficient to banish and dissipate all faith in his divinity.
+
+It is evident, from the facts just presented, that all systems of
+Christian chronology are founded on mere conjecture, and hence should
+be rejected as worthless. What event of Christ's life, then, can be
+accepted as certain, when no record was made of it till the time was
+forgotten, and none for at least half a century after the dawn of the
+Christian era, according to Dr. Lardner, when nearly all who witnessed
+it must have been dead?
+
+We think the most reasonable conclusion in the case is, that Christ,
+instead of performing those Munchausen prodigies attributed to him--such
+as casting out devils, raising the dead, controlling the elements of
+nature, etc.--led such an ordinary, obscure life--excelling only in
+healing the sick and other noble deeds of charity and philanthropy--that
+he attracted but little notice by the higher classes, or by anybody but
+those of a similar turn of mind, till he was deified by Constantine, in
+the year 325 A. D. Hence, the time of his birth was not recorded, and
+was forgotten. Consequently, the twenty-fifth of December was selected
+as his birthday, because it was the birthday of other Gods, and because
+it was regarded by the heathen, from time immemorial, as the birthday
+of Sol, the glorious luminary of heaven, it being the period he is born
+again into a new year, and "commences again his journey and his life;"
+and because, also, this epoch was, as Sharon Turner informs us, in his
+"History of the Anglo-Saxons," the commencement of a new year up to the
+tenth century.
+
+These events signalized the twenty-fifth of December, and made it a
+period of sufficient importance to lead the early Christians to suppose
+it must have been the birthday of their Messiah. Mosheim, however,
+confesses that the day or the year in which it happened "has not been
+fixed with certainty, notwithstanding the profound researches of the
+learned." So that it is still an open question as to when Christ was
+born. What day of the month, what year, or what century it took place
+in, is still unknown. This circumstance is, as before suggested,
+sufficient of itself to utterly prostrate all faith in the divine claims
+for Jesus Christ. What would be thought of a witness who should testify
+in court to the truth of an occurrence of which he did not know the
+year, or even the century, in which it took place, or who could come no
+nearer than one hundred and thirty-three years in fixing or guessing at
+the time. Would the court accept such testimony?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. TITLES OF THE SAVIORS
+
+THE various deific titles applied to Jesus Christ in the New Testament
+are regarded by some Christian writers as presumptive evidence of his
+divinity. But the argument proves too much for the case; as we find the
+proof in history that many other beings, whom Christians regard as
+men, were honored and addressed by the same titles, such as God, Lord,
+Savior, Redeemer, Mediator, Messiah, etc.
+
+The Hindoo Chrishna, more than two thousand years ago, was prayerfully
+worshiped as "God the Most High." His disciple Amarca once addressed
+him thus: "Thou art the Lord of all things, the God of the universe, the
+emblem of mercy, the bestower of salvation. Be propitious O most High
+God," etc. Here he is addressed both as Lord and God. He is also styled
+"God of Gods."
+
+Adonis of Greece was addressed as "God Supreme," and Osiris of Egypt as
+"the Lord of Life." In Phrygia, it was "Lord Atys," as Christians say,
+"Lord Jesus Christ" Narayan of Bermuda was styled the "Holy Living God."
+The title "Son of God" was so common in nearly all religious countries
+as to excite but little awe or attention.
+
+St. Basil says, "Every uncommonly good man was called 'the Son of God.'"
+The "Asiatic Researches" says, "the Tamulese adored a divine Son of
+God," and Thor of the Scandinavians was denominated "the first-born Son
+of God" and so was Chrishna of India, and other demigods.
+
+It requires, therefore, a wide stretch of faith to believe that
+Jesus Christ was in any peculiar sense "the Son of God," because so
+denominated, or "the only begotten Son of God," when so many others are
+reported in history bearing that title.
+
+The title Savior is found in the legends of every religious country. So
+also God, Redeemer, and Mediator. "When a Mogul or Thibetan is asked
+who is Chrishna," says the Christian missionary Hue, "the reply is,
+instantly, 'the Savior of men.'" Budha was known as "the Savior, Creator
+and Wisdom of God," and Mithra as both Mediator and Savior, also as "the
+Redeemer," and Chrishna as "the Divine Redeemer," also "the Redeemer
+of the World." The terms Mediator and Intercessor were also frequently
+applied to him by his disciples. And both he and Quexalcote were hailed
+as "the Messiah." In short, most ancient religious nations were honored
+with or expected a Messiah.
+
+Was Jesus Christ the "Lamb of God?" (John i. 9.) So was Chrishna styled
+"the Holy Lamb." The Mexicans, preferring a full-grown sheep, had their
+"Ram of God." The Celts had their "Heifer of God," and the Egyptians
+their "Bull of God." All these terms are ludicrous emblems of Deity,
+representing him as a quadruped, as the title "Lamb of God" does Jesus
+Christ, a term no less ludicrous than the titles of the pagan Gods as
+cited above.
+
+And was Christ "the True Light?" (John i. 9.) So was Chrishna likewise
+called "the True Light," also "the Giver of Light," "the Inward Light,"
+etc. Osiris was "the Redeemer of Light," and Pythagoras was both "Light
+and Truth." Apollonius was styled the "True Light of the World;" while
+Simon Magus was called "the Light of all Men."
+
+Several nations had also their Christs, though in many cases the word is
+differently spelled. Chrest, the Greek mode of spelling Christ, may
+be found on several of the ancient tombstones of that country. The
+Christian writer Elsley, in his "Annotations of the Gospels" (vol. i. p.
+25), spells the word Christ in this manner, Chrest The people of
+Loretto had a black Savior, called Chrest, or Christ. Lucian, in his
+"Philopatris," admits the ancient Gentiles had the name of Christ, which
+shows it was a heathen title. The Chaldeans had their Chris, the Hindoos
+their Chrishna, the Greeks their Chrest, and the Christians their
+Christ, all, doubtless, derived from the same original root.
+
+As for Jesus, it was a common name among the Jews long before the advent
+of Christ. Josephus refers to seven or eight persons by that name, as
+"Jesus, brother of Onias," "Jesus, son of Phabet," etc. Joshua in the
+Greek form, Jesus, was in still more common use.
+
+Again, was Jesus Christ "the Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the
+End?" so, likewise, Chrishna proclaimed, "I am the Beginning, the
+Middle, and the End." Osiris and Chrishna were both proclaimed "Judge of
+the Dead," as Jesus was "Judge of quick and dead." Isaiah represents the
+Father as proclaiming, "I am Jehovah; besides me there is no Savior."
+(Isa. xliii. 11.) With what consistency, then, can Christ be called
+"_the Savior_," if there is but _one Savior_, and that is the Father?
+
+And other divine titles besides those above named--in fact, all those
+applied to Christ--are found used also in reference to the older pagan
+gods, and hence prove nothing.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE TERMS MEDIATOR, INTERCESSOR, ETC.
+
+Several causes contributed to originate a belief in the offices
+imaginarily assigned to divine God-descended Mediators, Redeemers, and
+Intercessors.
+
+1. In the first place, the Great Supreme God was believed to be too far
+off and too aristocratic to be on familiar terms with his subjects,
+or at all times accessible to their prayers. Hence, was gotten up a
+"Mediator," or middle God, to stand midway between the Great Supreme and
+the people, and transmit messages one from the other, and thus serve
+as agent for both parties. Confirmatory of this statement is the
+declaration of Mamoides, in his "Guide to the Erring," that "the ancient
+Sabeans conceived the principal God, on account of his great distance,
+to be inaccessible; and hence, in imitation of the people in their
+conduct toward their king, who had to address him through a person
+appointed for the purpose, they imaginarily employed a middle divinity,
+who was called a Mediator, to present their claims to the Supreme God."
+Here the whole secret is out, the whole thing is explained, and we now
+understand why Christ is called a Mediator, Intercessor, "Advocate with
+the Father," etc.
+
+2. Again, the Supreme God was supposed to be frequently angry with the
+people, and threatening to punish if not to destroy them. "I will punish
+the multitude." (Jer. xlvi. 25.) "I will destroy the people." (Ex.
+xxiii. 27). Hence, this middle divinity, this second person of the
+trinity, stepped in to plead and intercede on their behalf, being, as we
+must presume, a better-natured and more merciful being than the
+Father. And thus interceding, he received the titles of Intercessor and
+"Advocate with the Father." (1 John, ii. 1.)
+
+3. The principal circumstance, however, which led to the conception of
+a divine Savior was the desire to find some way to continue in sin and
+wrong-doing and escape its natural and legitimate consequences; in other
+words, to evade the penalty. Hence, it came to be believed that people
+might run riot in sin, and plunge into the indulgence of their passions
+and their lusts, till the hour of death approached, when they would have
+nothing to do but to ask forgiveness, and cast the burden of their sins
+and sufferings on the merits of "a crucified Savior and Redeemer,"
+who "suffered once for all, that we might escape," and thus dodge the
+penalty for sin. It was, as Mr. Fleurbach expresses it, "A realized
+wish to be free from the laws of morality, and escape the natural
+consequences of wrong doing."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. THE SAVIORS OF ROYAL DESCENT, BUT HUMBLE BIRTH
+
+WE have the singular coincidence presented in the histories of several
+of the Saviors of their lineal descent through a line of kings or
+princes, and yet commencing their probationary life under the most
+humble and adverse circumstances--being born in stables, caves, and
+other inauspicious situations.
+
+The story of their royal blood was calculated to add dignity to their
+characters, while their humble birth in the midst of poverty, and
+unmarked by ostentation, would evince their humility, meekness,
+condescension, and absence of pride, and thus proclaim a lesson of
+humility and resignation to their disciples and followers.
+
+Here, seems to be plainly indicated the motives for assigning them to
+such a birth, and such a character.
+
+Christ's lineal descent, it will be remembered, is professedly traced
+(though in a very zig-zag, disjointed manner) from the royal house of
+David. And yet his royal blood did not save him from the most ignoble
+and ignominious birth, and obscure exordium of his earth life.
+
+A singular story, and yet a similar story, is told of the Indian Savior
+Chrishna, who was, according to the Rev. Mr. Allen (India, p. 379) of
+the royal house of Kousa, traced back through many generations. Yet,
+in order to teach the world a lesson of true humility, and administer a
+just reprehension to pride, he submitted to be born in a cave, amid the
+denizens of subterranean abodes. And here let it be noted, the best and
+most orthodox writers concede that while Christ is said to have born
+in a manger, that manger was in a cave. Mr. Fleetwood (a very popular
+Christian writer) testifies in this matter that "the Greek fathers
+generally agree that the place of Christ's birth was a cave." (Life of
+Christ, p. 568.) Then the coincidence in this respect between Christ and
+Chrishna may be set down as complete.
+
+We have no means of learning how many of the Saviors were of royal
+blood, as the genealogy of some of them is not given. But those whose
+lineal descent is furnished us are almost uniformly traced to or evinced
+as springing from royal parentage, and practical humility--so far as it
+can be taught by an unostentatious birth--is a lesson taught by nearly
+all. Budha Sakia of Hindostan is directly traced through a royal
+pedigree.
+
+Speaking on this point, one writer remarks: "Tradition affirms that his
+mother was betrothed to a rajah, and of course her son belonged to
+the same royal caste that Chrishna did during his existence on earth."
+(Prog. Rel. Ideas, vol, i. 84.)
+
+"The Great Prophet" of Arabia (Mahomet) not only commenced his earthly
+career in a humble situation, but resembled Christ in having "nowhere to
+lay his head." It is said of the Great Prophet, "A cloak spread on the
+ground served him for a bed, and a skin filled with date leaves was his
+pillow." The genealogy of the God Yu (of China) is traced through a line
+of princes to a very remote origin, while his whole life was a lesson of
+practical humility, and proclaimed at every step, "This is the way; walk
+ye in it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. CHRIST'S GENEALOGY
+
+IN order to exalt the dignity and character of the Christian Messiah
+still higher than a mere claim for a divine origin paternally would have
+the effect to do, two of his assumed to be inspired biographers have set
+up for him a claim to a royal lineage through the maternal line.
+
+Hence, they tell us that he descended from and through a line of kings
+embracing the house of David. But in presenting the names, and the
+number of generations, in their attempts to make out this royal
+distinction, this kingly exaltation of birth, they exhibit a most
+egregious bungle, and the most barefaced tissue of discrepancies. For
+they not only differ widely with each other in this matter, but differ
+with the Old Testament genealogy, and differ with those texts which give
+the maternal ancestry of Jesus.
+
+Indeed, though varying as wide as the poles from each other, they both
+miss Jesus and arrive at Joseph in tracing down the generations from
+Abraham (unless we assume they intended to represent Joseph as being his
+father).
+
+Luke, in his gospel, names and counts off forty-one generations from
+David to Joseph, though he had previously represented it as being
+forty-two; but Matthew says that "from Abraham to David are fourteen
+generations," but according to his own showing, and according to his own
+list of names, there are but thirteen. And then he tells us there are
+but fourteen generations from David to the carrying away into Babylon.
+BUt according to the Old Testament genealogy (see i Chron. iii.) there
+were eighteen.
+
+And then the names comprised in the two genealogies of Matthew and Luke
+are so widely different from that found in Chronicles, as to set all
+analogy and agreement at defiance.
+
+In fact, in their whole list of names, from David down to Joseph, they
+only come together twice. Their names are all different but two, that of
+Salathiel and Zorobabel, which names alone are found in both lists.
+
+Matthew tells us that the son of David, through whom Joseph descended,
+was Solomon, but Luke says it was Nathan. The next name in Matthew's
+list is that of Roboam, but the corresponding name in Luke's list is
+Mattatha. Matthew's next name is Abia, which Luke gives as Menan, while
+Chronicles differs from both, and gives it as Abijah. Matthew says Joram
+begat Ozias, but Chronicles virtually declares Joram had no such son,
+although he had a great-great-grandson Uzziah. But Luke says, in effect,
+there was no such person in the genealogical tree, or family line,
+as either Joram, Ozias or Uzziah. Matthew says again, "Josias begat
+Jechonias and his brethren, about the time they were carried away to
+Babylon." (Matt. i. ii.)
+
+But Chronicles declares that Jechonias was Jehoiakim's son, and not
+Josiah's, and that Josiah had no such son. And, besides, we learn, from
+2 Kings xiii., that Josiah was killed eleven years before the exile
+to Babylon, and could not well beget a son after he had been defunct a
+tenth of a century.
+
+Matthew, after naming twenty-four generations as filling out the line,
+and making it complete between David and Jacob, concludes by saying,
+"and Jacob begat Joseph, the husband of Mary."
+
+But Luke, antecedent to spinning out his list to fourteen generations
+more than Matthew, i. e., making it fourteen generations longer,
+declares that "Joseph was the son of Heli." So that Joseph either had
+two fathers, Jacob and Heli; or Matthew or Luke, or both, were most
+egregiously mistaken, with all their "inspiration."
+
+Again, Luke says that Salathiel was the son of Neri; but Chronicles
+says he was the son of Jechonias. And after Chronicles had registered
+Zorobabel as the son of Penniah, Matthew and Luke, assuming to become
+"wise above what was written," both declare that he was the son of
+Salathiel. They agree here in contradicting Chronicles, which is
+the only instance but one of their agreement in the whole list of
+progenitors from David to Joseph.
+
+With this exception they contradict each other all the way through, and
+in many instances that of Chronicles, too.
+
+This is a strange way, indeed, of proving Jesus Christ to have had two
+fathers!--to be both the son of God and son of David! And it is still
+stranger that they should trace his genealogy to Joseph, if they did
+not consider him Joseph's son. Otherwise, the genealogy of "Sinbad the
+Sailor," or "Harry Haulaway," would have been as apropos.
+
+Such are the beautiful harmony and agreement in the words of "divine
+inspiration" which Christians prate so much about.
+
+And all this appears to be the result of an attempt to elevate the man
+Christ Jesus to a level with the demigods of antiquity, nearly all
+of whom claimed to be of royal or princely descent. Such continual
+blundering, guessing, cross-firing, and clashing of names as is
+exhibited in the foregoing exposition, reminds us of the Hibernian's
+reply when asked for the number and names of his brothers:
+
+"Well, sir, I have fourteen brothers, and they are all named Bill but
+Bob--his name is Tom."
+
+Matthew and Luke's attempt to exalt and dignify the character of Christ
+by making out for him a pure, holy and royal lineage we find, upon a
+critical examination not only proved a very signal but a very singular
+and ludicrous failure, for all his female anchors who are brought to
+notice were persons of libidinous or licentious tendencies, according to
+their own biblical history.
+
+"It is remarkable," says Dr. Alexander Walker, (a Christian writer, in
+his work on Woman, p. 330), "that in the genealogy of Christ only four
+women are named: Thamar, who seduced the father of her late husband, and
+Rachel, a common prostitute, and Ruth, who, instead of marrying one
+of her cousins, went to bed with another of them, and Bathsheba, an
+adulteress, who espoused David, the murderer of her first husband."
+
+What a pedigree for an incarnate God--a being ostensibly of spotless
+origin! though his impure ancestral origin does not detract from the
+high moral character and distinguished moral life which marks the
+history of "the man Christ Jesus," many incidents of whose life show him
+to have been what is now known as a spiritual medium.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE WORLD'S SAVIORS SAVED FROM DESTRUCTION IN INFANCY
+
+OF course such an extraordinary circumstance as the birth of a God into
+the world must be marked with unusual incidents and great eclat. This
+was first exhibited by angels, shepherds, prophets, magi or "wise men,"
+flocking around their cradles. In the second place we observe an unusual
+display of divine power and providential care on the part of the great
+Father God, who was still left in heaven to save the young saviors
+through their infancy.
+
+It is certainly a remarkable circumstance that so many of the infant
+Saviors should have been threatened with the most imminent danger of
+destruction, and yet in every case miraculously preserved, and thus were
+the _Saviors saved_.
+
+A jealousy seems to have existed in several instances in the mind of
+the tyrant king or ruler of the country that the young Saviors and
+prospective spiritual rulers (who were mostly of royal descent) would
+ultimately acquire such favor with the people, by such a display of
+superior power and greatness of mind, as to endanger his retaining
+peaceable possession of the secular throne; to express it in brief, he
+feared the young God would prove a rival king, and hence took measures
+to destroy him.
+
+In the case of the Christian Savior we are told that an angel, or "the
+angel," warned Joseph (the assumed father) to take the young Savior and
+God and flee with him into Egypt, because "Herod the king sought to
+destroy the young child's life," and had, in order to effect this end,
+decreed the destruction of all the children under two years old. And
+Joseph heeded the divine warning, and fled as directed. An angel and a
+dream, then, it will be observed, were the instrumentalities used to
+save the young Judean Savior from massacre.
+
+And strange as it may seem, we find the same agencies had been
+previously employed to effect the rescue of other Saviors likewise and
+similarly threatened.
+
+In the case of Chrishna of India, in particular, the similitude is very
+striking in nearly every feature of the whole story.
+
+In the first place there is the angel warning. In the Christian story we
+are not specifically informed how the tyrant Herod first became apprised
+of the birth of the Judean Savior. The Hindoo story is fuller, and
+indicates that the angel was not only sufficiently thoughtful to warn
+the parents to flee from a danger which threatened to dispossess them of
+a divine child, and the world of a Savior, but was condescending enough
+to apprise the tyrant ruler (Cansa) of his danger likewise--as we are
+told he heard an angel voice announcing that a rival ruler was born in
+his kingdom.
+
+And hence, like Herod, he set about concocting measures to destroy him
+without a direct attack. Why either of them should have taken such a
+circuitous or roundabout way of killing an infant, when the life of the
+strongest man, and every man in their kingdoms, was at their instant
+disposal, "divine inspiration" does not inform us.
+
+But so it was. And we must not seek to "become wise above what is
+written" in their bibles. Herod's decree required the destruction of
+all infants under two years of age (see Matt. ii. 16)--first ordering,
+however, "Go, and search diligently for the young child." (Matt. ii. 8.)
+Cansa's decree ran thus: "Let active search be made for whatever young
+children there may be upon earth, and let every boy in whom there may be
+found signs of unusual greatness be slain without remorse."
+
+Now, let it be specially noticed that there is to this day in the
+cave temple at Elephanta, in India, the sculptured likeness of a
+king represented with a drawn sword, and surrounded with slaughtered
+infants--admitted by all writers to be much older than Christianity. Mr
+Forbes, in his "Oriental Memories," vol. iii. p. 447, says, "The figures
+of the slaughtered infants in the cave of Elephanta represent them as
+being all boys, who are surrounded by groups of figures of men and women
+in the act, apparently, of supplicating for those children." And Mr.
+Higgins testifies relative to the case, that Chrishna was carried away
+by night, and concealed in a region remote from his natal place, for
+fear of a tyrant whose destroyer it had been foretold he would become,
+who, for that reason, had ordered all the male children born at that
+time to be slain. Sculptures in Elephanta attest the story where the
+tyrant is represented as destroying the children. The date of this
+sculpture is of the most remote antiquity. "He who hath ears to hear,
+let him hear," and deduce the pregnant inference. Joseph and Mary fled
+with the young Judean God into Egypt; Chrishna's parents likewise fled
+with the young Hindoo Savior to Gokul.
+
+Now, let us observe for a moment the chain or category or resemblance.
+
+1. There was an angel warning in each case relative to the impending
+danger.
+
+2. The governor or ruler was hostile in each case to the mission of the
+young Savior.
+
+3. A bloody decree was issued in both cases, having for its object the
+destruction of these infant Messiahs.
+
+4. The hurried flight of the parents takes place in each case.
+
+5. And it may be remarked further, that the "Gospel of the Infancy of
+Jesus," once believed by the Christian world to be "inspired," and which
+for hundreds of years passed current as divine authority, relates that
+Christ and his parents sojourned for a time at a place called Matarea,
+or Mathura, as Sir William Jones spells it, who says it was the birth
+place of Chrishna.
+
+It is further related in the case of Chrishna, that as he and his
+parents approached the River Jumna in their flight, the waters "parted
+hither and thither," so that they passed over "dry shod," like Moses and
+the Israelites in crossing the Red Sea. And here let it be noted that
+the representation of this flight, which is said to have occurred at
+midnight, is like that of the massacre perpetuated and attested by
+imperishable monuments of stone bearing evidence of being now several
+thousand years old.
+
+Sir William Jones says:--
+
+"The Indian incarnate God Chrishna, the Hindoos believe, had a virgin
+mother of the royal race, who was sought to be destroyed in his infancy
+about nine hundred years before Christ. It appears that he passed his
+life in working miracles, and preaching, and was so humble as to wash
+his friends' feet; at length, dying, but rising from the dead, he
+ascended into heaven in the presence of a multitude." The Cingalese
+relate nearly the same things of their "Budha." And several authors of
+Egyptian history refer to a story perpetuated in the Egyptian legends
+concerning the God Osiris, who was threatened with destruction by the
+tyrant Amulius, to save whom his parents fled and concealed him in an
+arm of the River Nile, as Christ was concealed in the same country, and,
+for aught that appears to the contrary, in the same locality. The
+mother of another and older Savior of Egypt fled by a timely warning to
+Epidamis before the birth of the divine child, and was there delivered
+of "our Lord and Savior," Horus. And the earthly or adopted father
+of the Grecian Savior, and God, Alcides, had to flee with him and his
+mother to Galem for protection from threatening danger.
+
+In the ninth and tenth volumes of the "Asiatic Researches," we find the
+story of the "only begotten" or "first begotten son of God," Salvahana,
+of Cape Comorin, son of a virgin mother (as were all the other Saviors
+referred to), and a carpenter by the name of Taishnea. (It will be
+remembered that Joseph, "foster-father of Jesus," was a carpenter.) The
+story of this "Son of God" presents several features very similar to
+that relating to Jesus. Sir William Jones, Colonel Wilford, and the Rev.
+Mr. Maurice all confess to the antiquity of this story, as originating
+before the birth of Christ. Speaking of Zoroaster of Persia (another
+case), 600 B. C., an author remarks, "Tradition reports that his mother
+had alarming dreams of evil spirits seeking to destroy the child to whom
+she was about to give birth. But a good spirit came to rescue him, and
+consoled her by saying, 'Fear not; God Ormuzd will protect the infant,
+who has sent him as a prophet to the people and the world who are
+waiting for him."
+
+China, too, presents us with a case of the threatened destruction of
+a Savior in infancy, evidently recorded more than two thousand five
+hundred years ago. It is the case of the God Yu, who was concealed in a
+manner similar to that of Moses--a commemoration of the story of which
+is perpetuated by an image or picture of the virgin mother with a babe
+upon her knee--sometimes in her arms. Now, let it be noted that these
+virgin-born Gods, who, we are told, came "to save the world," could not
+save themselves, but had to be protected and saved by other Gods.
+
+Without pursuing the subject further in detail, we may mention by way
+of recapitulation, that Chrishna, Alcides, Zoraster, Salvahana, Yu, to
+which list we may add Bacchus, Romulus, Moses and Cyrus, according to
+their reputed history, were threatened with death and destruction, but
+were providentially and miraculously preserved. The case of Augustus
+is related by Suetonius, that of Romulus by Livy, and that of Cyrus by
+Herodotus. It will be recollected that Pharaoh, like Herod, in order
+to reach the infant Moses, ordered the massacre of all the male infants
+(Herod making no distinction of sex), in order that he might, by this
+singular and circuitous method, reach the object of his jealousy and
+malignity without passing a direct sentence of death upon him.
+
+The whole story of Herod's slaughter edict, with the familiar history
+of its execution, like nearly every other miraculous incident related
+in "The Holy Scriptures," which detail their histories, are traceable in
+the skies. Herod, we are told, literally means hero of the skin--a term
+applied also to Hercules, a personification of the sun--because the
+sun, on entering the constellation of the Zodiac in July, was supposed
+or assumed to invest himself with the skin of the lion, and this became
+"the hero of the skin," or a hero with a new skin. Now this solar Herod,
+passing through the astronomical twins and young infants of May, was
+said to destroy them, though the word destroy is in the Greek anairean,
+which any person, on turning to the Greek lexicon, will observe means
+also to take away, pass through, or withdraw from, so that Pharaoh more
+properly passed through the infants than destroyed them.
+
+The text, "In Rama there was a voice heard," "Rachel weeping for her
+children," etc., is quoted by a writer (Strauss) as referring to the
+children slaughtered by Pharaoh. Let two things be noticed here: 1. Rama
+is the Indian and Phoenician name for the zodiac. 2. Rachel had but two
+children to weep for--Joseph and Benjamin--just the number found in the
+fifth sign, or May sign, of the zodiac. And Venus, among the ancient
+Assyrians and Phoenicians, was in tears when the sun, in his annual cross
+through the heavens, passed through or over the astronomical Twins
+(Gemini), doubtless fearfully apprehending their destruction.
+
+The case of the massacre is an illustration and example of the manner in
+which all the miraculous stories related in the Christian Scriptures,
+as having been practically exemplified in the life of Jesus Christ, are
+traceable to older sources, frequently terminating among the stars.
+
+
+SECTION II.--INCREDIBILITY OF THE STORY OF THE MASSACRE OF THE HEBREW
+INFANTS.
+
+1. It is a cogent and potent fact, calculated to render the story of the
+murder of the Hebrew children by Herod wholly incredible, that not
+one writer of that age, or that nation, or any other nation, makes any
+mention of the circumstance.
+
+2. Even the Rabbinical writers who detail his wicked life so minutely,
+and who bring to his charge so many flagitious acts, fail to record
+any notice of this horrible and atrocious deed, which must have been
+published far and wide, and known to all the writers of that age and
+country, had it occurred.
+
+3. And still more logically ruinous to the credit of the story is
+the omission of Josephus to throw out one hint that such a wholesale
+slaughter ever took place in Judea. And yet he not only lived in that
+country, but was related to Herod's wife, and regarded him as his most
+implacable enemy, and professes to write out the whole history of his
+wicked life in the most minute detail, devoting thirty-seven chapters of
+his large work to this subject, and apparently enumerates every evil
+act of his life. And yet Josephus says not a word about his inhuman and
+infamous butchery of the babes which Matthew charges him with (about
+fourteen thousand in number)--a bloody deed, unmatched in the annals of
+tyranny. Such facts prove the story not only incredible, but impossible.
+Josephus could not and would not have omitted to notice this the most
+notorious and nefarious act of his life, had it occurred. It, therefore,
+could not have occurred. And it is almost equally incredible that
+Roman historians, who furnish us with a particular account of Herod's
+character, should pass over in silence such a villainous and bloody
+deed.
+
+4. And then some of our ablest and most reliable chronologists have
+shown that Herod was not living at the time this bloody decree should
+have been issued by him; that he died about three years prior to that
+period, and hence could have been guilty of no such villainy, and
+highhanded murder, and cruel infanticide.
+
+5. And even if living, he would have been an old man (not less than
+sixty-eight according to Josephus). Hence, he could not have calculated
+on surviving long enough for the son of a village carpenter, then a
+babe, to oust him from his throne.
+
+6. It is wholly incredible, also, that Herod should have adopted such a
+roundabout method of destroying the object of his fear and envy when he
+could have singled him out, and put him to death at once, and thus avoid
+the felonious act of breaking the hearts of thousands of parents, and
+his most loyal subjects, too.
+
+7. From the foregoing considerations, we endorse the sentiment of the
+Rev. Edward Evanson, that it is "an incredible, borrowed fiction."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. THE SAVIORS EXHIBIT EARLY PROOFS OF DIVINITY.
+
+OF course, all Gods must be heroes--physically or intellectually, or
+both. The more danger they encounter, and the earlier they manifest a
+precocious or preternatural smartness, the more like Gods.
+
+And hence we find several of the Saviors in very early childhood
+displaying great physical prowess in meeting and conquering danger,
+while others exhibit their superiority mentally by vanquishing their
+opponents in argument. Christ first began to exhibit proof of his divine
+character and greatness by meeting and silencing the doctors in the
+temple when only about twelve years of age.
+
+And similar proofs of divinity at or near this age is found in the
+history of some of the pagan Saviors.
+
+Of Christ it is declared, "There went out a fame of him through all the
+region round about." (Luke iv. 14.) And of the Grecian Esculapius it
+is likewise declared, "The voice of fame soon published the birth of a
+miraculous child," and "the people flocked from all quarters to behold
+him." Of Confucius of China it is declared, "His extensive knowledge
+and great wisdom soon made him known, and kings were governed by his
+counsels, and the people adored him wherever he went." And it is further
+declared of this "Divine Man," that he seemed to arrive at reason and
+the perfect use of his faculties almost from infancy. It is reported of
+the God Chang-ti, that when questioned on the subject of government and
+the duties of princes and rulers while yet a child, his answers were
+such as to astonish the whole empire by his knowledge and wisdom.
+
+It is related of a Grecian God that he demolished the serpents which
+attempted to bite or destroy him while in his cradle. "The proof of
+Osiris's divinity was a blaze of light shining around his cradle soon
+after he was born. Relative to Pythagoras of the same country, we have
+it upon the authority of a Christian writer, that he exhibited such a
+remarkable character, even in youth, as to attract the attention of all
+who saw and heard him speak." And the author further testifies of
+him that he "never was at any time overcome with anger, laughter, or
+perturbation of mind or precipitation of conduct." "His fame having
+reached Miletus and neighboring cities," it is said by another writer,
+"the people flocked to see and hear him, and he was reverenced by
+multitudes."
+
+Luke declares of Christ, that the people "were astonished at his
+understanding and answers." (Luke ii. 47.) And the "Gospel of the
+Infancy" tells us that his tutor Zacheas was astonished at his learning,
+which reminds us of the statement found in "The Divine Word" of the
+Hindoos (The Mahabarat), that the parents of the Savior Chrishna, in
+making arrangements to give him an education, sent him to a learned
+Brahmin as tutor, whom he instantly astonished with his vast learning,
+and under whose tuition he mastered the whole circle of sciences in a
+day and a night. "Men, seeing the wonders performed by this child, told
+Nanda (his adopted father) that this could not possibly be his son."
+
+It is told of Budha Sakia of India that, "as soon as he was born, a
+light shone around his cradle, when he stood up and proclaimed his
+mission, and that the River Ganges daring this time rose in a miraculous
+manner, which was stilled by his divine power, as Christ stilled the
+tempest on the sea." "He was born," says the New American Cyclopedia
+(vol. iv. p. 61), "amidst great miracles, and soon as born, most
+solemnly proclaims his mission."
+
+Of Narayan, "the Holy," it is declared that "mysterious words dropped
+from his lips on various occasions, giving hints of his divine nature
+and the purposes for which he had come down to the earth." (Prog. Rel.
+Ideas, vol. i. p. 128.) The divine power and mission of Yu of China was
+very early evinced by the display of great miracles.
+
+And here let us observe that some of the Old Testament or Jewish
+heroes--as Moses, Solomon and Samuel--are reported as exhibiting great
+superiority of mind in very early life; thus proving (it was thought)
+that if they were not Gods, they were at least from God--that is,
+endowed by him with divine power while yet mere children. Thus the
+histories of all Gods and divine personages run in parallel grooves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. THE SAVIORS; KINGDOMS NOT OF THIS WORLD
+
+Retirement and Forty Days' Fasting.
+
+CHRIST taught, "My kingdom is not of this world."
+
+And we find that most of the other Saviors virtually and practically
+taught the same doctrine.
+
+The first practical evincement of it was exhibited by retiring from the
+world; that is, they retired from the noise and commotion, from the
+busy scenes of life, into some sequestered spot excluded from human
+observation. Christ is reported to have withdrawn from society, and to
+have spent some forty days in the wilderness fasting and being tempted
+by Satan--a man of straw conjured up in order to furnish the hero God
+something to combat with, that he might thereby exhibit practical proof
+of his divine power and prowess. It was simply the two kings or rulers
+of two hostile kingdoms (heaven and hell) contending for the mastery.
+
+Lord Kingsborough tells us, "The ancient Mexicans had a forty days' fast
+in honor and memory of one of their demigods or Saviors, who was
+tempted forty days on a mountain. He is called 'the Morning Star'." Mr.
+Kingsborough (being a Christian) remarks, "These things are very curious
+and mysterious."
+
+It is said of "the Son of God" and Savior Chrishna that "he imparted
+his doctrines and precepts in the silent depths of the forest." Of the
+Egyptian God Osiris, we are informed in his sacred legends, that "he
+observed both fasting and penance," while Pythagoras of Greece spent
+several years in meditation and retirement in a cave, and was much given
+to fasting, and often inculcated the doctrine of "forsaking the world"
+and "the things thereof." He taught these things both by precept and
+example, even to "the forsaking of relations." Both Confucius and the
+Divine Savior Chang-ti of China, "in order to attain to a more perfect
+state of holiness," spent several years in retirement and "divine
+meditation," the former in a wilderness, the latter on a mountain, and
+fasted, and their disciples after them often fasted in a very devout
+manner. The Persian Zoroaster also spent several years in retirement and
+"contemplation on true holiness"--partly in a wilderness and partly on a
+"holy mountain," "holy mountains" being the favorite places of resort of
+most of the holy Saviors, holy Gods, and holy men of antiquity. One of
+the most ancient Saviors, Thammuz, is reported to have spent "twelve
+years in devout and contemplative retirement from the busy world."
+According to the Christian bible, Moses, Elijah, and Christ, each fasted
+forty days, and a Mexican Savior, too (Quexalcote), spent forty days in
+a similar manner, and other cases are so reported.
+
+We may institute the inquiry here, "How happens this coincidence?"
+
+The answer is indicated by "the Hierophant," which says, "Jesus in his
+baptism and forty days' fast imitated the passage of the sun through the
+constellation Aquarius, where John, Joannes, or Janus the baptizer had
+his domicile, and baptized the earth with his yearly rains." Having been
+baptized in Jordan, he fasted forty days in the wilderness, in imitation
+of the passage of the sun from the constellation Aquarius through the
+Fishes to the Lamb or Ram of March. During the forty days when the sun
+is among the Fishes (in the sign of the Fish) the faithful Catholics,
+Episcopalians and Mahommedans abstain from meat and live upon the fishes
+during the season of Lent, as did the Jews and pagans, and did also
+Jesus, "to fulfill all righteousness."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE SAVIORS WERE REAL PERSONAGES
+
+IT is unwarrantably assumed by Christian writers that the incarnated
+Gods and crucified Saviors of the pagan religions were all either mere
+fabulous characters, or ordinary human beings invested with divine
+titles, and divine attributes; while, on the other hand, the assumption
+is put forth with equal boldness that Jesus Christ was a real divine
+personage, "seen and believed on in the world, and finally crucified on
+Mount Calvary."
+
+But we do not find the facts in history to warrant any such assumptions
+or any such distinctions. They all stand in these respects upon the same
+ground and on equal footing.
+
+And their respective disciples point to the same kind of evidence to
+prove their real existence and their divine character, and to prove
+that they once walked and talked amongst men, as well as now sit on the
+eternal throne in heaven "at the right hand of the father." And we
+find even Christian writers admitting the once _bona fide_ or personal
+existence on earth of most of the pagan Saviors.
+
+As to the two chief incarnated Gods of India--Chrishna and Sakia--there
+is scarcely "a peg left to hang a doubt upon" as to the fact of their
+having descended to the earth, taken upon themselves the form of men,
+and having been worshiped as veritable Gods.
+
+Indeed, we believe but few of the missionaries who have visited that
+country question the statement and general belief prevalent there of
+their once personal reality. Col. Todd, in his "History of the Rajahs"
+(p. 44), says: "We must discard the idea that the Mahabaret, the
+history of Rama, of Chrishna, and the five Padua brothers are mere
+allegories; colossal figures, ancient temples, and caves inscribed
+with characters yet unknown, confirm the reality, and their race, their
+cities, and their coins yet exist." To argue further the personal reality
+of this crucified God would be a waste of words, as it is generally
+admitted, both by historical writers and missionaries.
+
+Mr. Higgins declares, "Chrishna lived at the conclusion of the brazen
+age, which is calculated to have been eleven hundred or twelve hundred
+years before Christ." Here is a very positive and specific declaration
+as to his tangible actuality. Col. Dow, Mr. Robinson, and others use
+similar language.
+
+Relative to Bacchus, of whose history many writers have spoken as being
+wholly fabulous or fictitious, Diodorus Siculus says (lib. iii. p. 137),
+"the Libyans claim Bacchus, and say that he was the son of Ammon, a
+king of Libya; that he built a temple to his father, Ammon." And that
+world-wide famous historian (Mr. Goodrich) is still more explicit, if
+possible, as to his material entity. After giving it directly as his
+opinion that there was such a being, he says, "He planted vine-yards and
+fig-trees, and erected many noble cities." He moreover tells us, "His
+skill in legislation and agriculture is much praised" (p. 499).
+
+With respect to Osiris of Egypt, another God-Savior, Mr. Hittle declares
+unqualifiedly that "Herodotus saw the tomb of Osiris, at Sais nearly
+five centuries before Christ" (vol. i. p. 246). Rather a strong evidence
+of his previous personality certainly, but not more so than that
+furnished by the _New York Journal of Commerce_ a few years since,
+relative to the Egyptian Apis or Thulis, whose theophany was annually
+celebrated, at the rising of the Nile, with great festivities and
+devotion, several thousand years ago. The Paris correspondent of
+that journal, after speaking of Mr. Auguste Marietta's travels, "a
+distinguished scientific gentleman who for four years past had been
+employed by the French Government in making Egyptian researches," having
+returned home, says, "The most important of Mr. Marietta's discoveries
+was the tomb of Apis (Thulis), a monument excavated entirely in
+lime-rock." "There are (he says in conclusion) epitaphs, forming a
+chronological record of each of the Apis buried in the common tomb. The
+sculpture is of the date of the Pyramids, and the statues are in
+the best state of preservation; the colors are perfectly bright The
+execution is admirable, and they convey an exact idea of the physical
+character of the primitive population."
+
+The New American Cyclopedia (art. Apis) in speaking of this Egyptian
+God, tells us his lifetime was twenty-five years; in harmony with one of
+the theologico-astronomical cycles of the Egyptians. The same work and
+volume (p. 132), in speaking of the real existence of Adonis of Greece,
+tells us, upon the authority of the poet Panyasis, that he was a
+veritable son of Theias, king of Syria.
+
+But of all the characters who figured in the mythological works or
+lawless rhapsodies of the ancients, and worshiped by them as crucified
+Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, none has, perhaps, been so indubitably, so
+positively, and so universally set down as mythological or fabulous as
+that of Prometheus of Caucasus.
+
+And yet Mr. Lempriere, D. D., tells us in his Classical Dictionary that
+he was the son of Japetus. Sir Isaac Newton says he was a descendant of
+the famous African Sesostris; while that erudite and masterly historian
+(Mr. Higgins) seems to have entertained no doubt of his personal esse;
+nor, indeed, of many, if any, of the pagan Saviors, as the following
+declaration will show. He says, "Finding men in India and other
+countries of the same name of the inferior Gods (as it is quite common
+to name men for them) has led some to conclude that those deified men
+never existed, but are merely mythological names of the sun. True, the
+first supreme God of every nation (not excepting the Jews) was the sun.
+But more modernly the names were transferred to men." Again, he says,
+"Inasmuch as some of them are found to have been real bona fide human
+beings, there is nothing unreasonable in concluding that all were" And
+if we take into consideration the true and indisputable fact that the
+priests had everything at their disposal, and the strongest motives for
+concealing and suppressing, not to say garbling and destroying evidence,
+it is not to be wondered at that the histories of some of these Gods
+should be somewhat obscure and ambiguous. Further on he declares, "In
+every case the Savior was incarnate, and in nearly every case the place
+in which he was actually born was exhibited to the people." And upon the
+authority of the Hierophant, we will add, the memories of many of them
+have been consecrated and perpetuated by tombs placed beside their
+temples, which is perhaps the most convincing species of evidence that
+could be offered.
+
+The evidence, then, is precisely of the same character as that offered
+in the case of Jesus Christ to prove that the pagan Saviors did really
+possess a substantial, earthly and bodily existence. Though it is true
+that it never has been universally conceded or believed by Christian
+themselves that Jesus Christ ever had a personal or corporeal existence
+on earth.
+
+Cotilenius, in a note on Ignatius, Epistle to the Trallians, written in
+the third century of the Christian era, declares that "it is as absurd
+to deny the doctrine which taught that Jesus Christ's body was a phantom
+as to deny that the sun shone at midday." His physical body of course
+was meant, for it appears he believed in his eternal existence as a
+spirit in heaven.
+
+And we find whole sects advocating similar views in the early ages of
+the Christian church. "One of the most primitive and learned sects,"
+says a writer, "were the Manicheans, who denied that Jesus Christ ever
+existed in flesh and blood, but believed him to be a God in spirit only;"
+others denied him to be a God, but believed him to have been a prophet,
+or inspired character, like the Unitarians of the present day. Some
+denied his crucifixion, others asserted it. It is more than probable
+that this was the cause of dispute between Paul and Barnabas, mentioned
+in the Acts of the Apostles, seeing that Paul had laid such peculiar
+emphasis on "Jesus Christ and him crucified."
+
+And this conclusion is corroborated by its being expressly stated in the
+Gospel of Barnabas that "Jesus Christ was not crucified, but was carried
+to heaven by four angels." "There was a long list," says the same
+writer, "from the earliest times, of sincere Christians who denied that
+Jesus Christ rose from the dead;" while, as we may remark here, there
+could not have been at that early date any grounds for denying these
+things, had he really figured in the world in the miraculous and
+extraordinary and public manner as that related in the Gospels.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. SIXTEEN SAVIORS CRUCIFIED
+
+"For I determined not to know anything among you, save Jesus Christ
+and him crucified." (i Cor. ii. 2.) There must have existed a very
+considerable amount of skepticism in the community as to the truth of
+the report of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in the country and era of
+its occurrence to make it necessary thus to erect it into an important
+dogma, and make it imperative to believe it There must have been a large
+margin for distrusting its truth.
+
+The determination not to know anything but the crucifixion of Jesus
+Christ was narrowing down his knowledge to rather a small compass.
+
+And such a resolution would necessarily preclude him from acquainting
+himself with the history of any other cases of crucifixion that might
+have occurred before that of his own favorite Messiah. "What! Was
+there ever a case of crucifixion beside that of Jesus Christ?" a good
+Christian brother or sister sometimes exclaims, when the world's sixteen
+crucified Saviors are spoken of.
+
+We meet the question with the reply, You seem to be a disciple of
+Paul, whose position would not allow him to know of any other cases of
+crucifixion but that of Jesus Christ. Hence, he may have considered it
+meritorious to perpetuate his ignorance on the subject And you, perhaps,
+are ignorant from the same cause.
+
+It is the nature of all religions based on fear and unchangeable dogmas,
+to deter and thus exclude its disciples from all knowledge adverse
+to their own creeds. And sometimes their own religious systems are
+magnified to such an exalted appreciation above all others as to lead
+them to destroy the evidence of the existence of the latter for fear of
+their ultimate rivalry.
+
+Mr. Taylor informs us that some of the early disciples of the Christian
+faith demolished accessible monuments representing and memorializing the
+crucifixion of the ancient oriental sin-atoning Gods, so that they are
+now unknown in the annals of Christian history. Hence, the surprise
+excited in the minds of Christian professors when other cases are
+mentioned.
+
+Such influences as referred to above have shut out from the minds of the
+disciples of several religious systems a knowledge of all crucified Gods
+but their own. Hence, the Hindoo rejoices in knowing only "Chrishna and
+him crucified." The Persian entwines around his heart the remembrance
+only of the atoning sufferings on the cross of Mithra the Mediator. The
+Mexican daily sends up his earnest, soul-breathing prayer for the return
+of the spirit of his crucified Savior--Quexalcote. While the Caucasian,
+with equal devotion, chants daily praises to his slain "Divine
+Intercessor" for voluntarily offering himself upon the cross for the
+sins of a fallen race. And the Christian disciple hugs to his bosom
+the bloody cross of the murdered Jesus, unhaunted by the suspicion that
+other Gods died for the sins of man long anterior to the advent of the
+immaculate Nazarene.
+
+We will now lay before the reader a brief account of the crucifixion of
+more than a dozen virgin-born Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, predicated
+upon facts which have escaped the hands of the Christian iconoclasts
+determined to know only Jesus Christ crucified. We will first notice the
+case of the Indian God--Chrishna.
+
+
+I.--CRUCIFIXION OF CHRISHNA OF INDIA, 1200 B. C.
+
+Among the sin-atoning Gods who condescended in ancient times to forsake
+the throne of heaven, and descend upon the plains of India, through
+human birth, to suffer and die for the sins and transgressions of the
+human race, the eighth Avatar, or Savior, may be considered the most
+important and the most exalted character, as he led the most conspicuous
+life, and commanded the most devout and the most universal homage. And
+while some of the other incarnate demigods were invested with only a
+limited measure of the infinite deityship, Chrishna, according to the
+teachings of their New Testament (the Ramazand), comprehended in himself
+"a full measure of the God-head bodily." The evidence of his having been
+crucified is as conclusive as any other sacrificial or sin-atoning God,
+whose name has been memorialized in history, or embalmed as a sacred
+idol in the memories of his devout worshipers.
+
+Mr. Moore, an English traveler and writer, in a large collection of
+drawings taken from Hindoo sculptures and monuments, which he has
+arranged together in a work entitled "The Hindoo Pantheon," has one
+representing, suspended on the cross, the Hindoo crucified God and Son
+of God, "our Lord and Savior" Chrishna, with holes pierced in his
+feet, evidently intended to represent the nail-holes made by the act of
+crucifixion. Mr. Higgins, who examined this work, which he found in the
+British Museum, makes a report of a number of the transcript drawings
+intended to represent the crucifixion of this oriental and mediatorial
+God, which we will here condense. In plate ninety-eight this Savior is
+represented with a hole in the top of one foot, just above the toes,
+where the nail was inserted in the act of crucifixion.
+
+In another drawing he is represented exactly in the form of a Romish
+Christian crucifix, but not fixed or fastened to a tree, though the legs
+and feet are arranged in the usual way, with nail-holes in the latter.
+There is a halo of glory over it, emanating from the heavens above,
+just as we have seen Jesus Christ represented in a work by a Christian
+writer, entitled "Quarles' Emblems," also in other Christian books. In
+several of the icons (drawings) there are marks of holes in both feet,
+and in others of holes in the hands only. In the first drawing which
+he consulted the marks are very faint, so as to be scarcely visible.
+In figures four and five of plate eleven the figures have nail-holes in
+both feet, while the hands are not represented. Figure six has on it the
+representation of a round hole in the side. To his collar or shirt hangs
+an emblem of a heart, represented in the same manner as those attached
+to the imaginary likenesses of Jesus Christ, which may now be found in
+some Christian countries Figure ninety-one has a hole in one foot and a
+nail through the other, and a round nail or pin mark in one hand only,
+while the other is ornamented with a dove and a serpent (both emblems of
+deity in the Christian's bible).
+
+Now, we raise the query here, and drive it into the innermost temple
+of the Christian's conscience, with the overwhelming force of the
+unconquerable logic of history--_What does all this mean?_
+
+And if they will only let conviction have its perfect work while
+answering this question unhampered by the inherited prejudices of
+a thousand years, they can henceforth rejoice in the discovery of a
+glorious historical truth, calculated to disenthrall their minds from
+the soul-cramping superstitions of crosses, crucifixions and bloody
+atonements on which they have been accustomed to hang the salvation of
+the world.
+
+If the credibility of the relation of these incidents going to prove
+an astonishing coincidence in the sacred histories of the Hindoo and
+Christian Saviors, and demonstrating the doctrine of the crucifixion
+as having been practically realized, and preached to the world long
+anterior to the offering of a God "once for all" on Mount Calvary;
+if its credibility rested on mere _ex parte_ testimony, mere pagan
+tradition, or even upon the best digested and most authentic annals of
+the past that have escaped the ravages of time, there might still be a
+forlorn hope for the stickler for the Christian faith now struggling
+in the agonies of a credal skepticism, that the whole thing has been
+plagiarized from the Christian Gospels. For paper and parchment history
+can be--and has been--mutilated. But the verity of this account rests
+upon no such a precarious basis. Its antiquity, reaching far beyond
+the Christian era, is corroborated and demonstrated by imperishable
+monuments, deep-chiseled indentures burrowed into the granite rock,
+which bid defiance to the fingers of time, and even the hands of the
+frenzied iconoclast, to destroy or deface, though impelled and spurred
+on to the effort by the long-cherished conviction burning in his soul,
+that the salvation of the human race depends upon believing that "there
+is no other name given under heaven whereby men can be saved" than his
+own crucified God, and that all others are but thieves, robbers and
+antichrists. Some of the disciples of the oriental systems cherished
+this conviction, and Christians and Mahommedans seem to have inherited
+it in magnified proportions.
+
+Hence, we are credibly informed that some of the earlier Christian
+saints, having determined, like Paul, "to know only Jesus Christ and him
+crucified," made repeated efforts to obliterate these sacred facts (so
+fatally damaging to their one-sided creeds) from the page of history.
+Mr. Higgins suggests that if we could have persons less under the
+influence of sectarian prejudice to visit, examine, and report on
+the sculptures and monuments of India, covered over as they are with
+antiquated and significant figures appertaining to and illustrating
+their religious history, we might accumulate still more light bearing
+upon the history of the crucifixion of the Savior and sin-atoning
+Chrishna. "Most of our reports," he declares, "are fragmentary, if not
+one-sided, having come through the hands of Christian missionaries,
+bishops and priests."
+
+He informs us that a report on the Hindoo religion, made out by a
+deputation from the British Parliament, sent to India for the purpose of
+examining their sacred books and monuments, being left in the hands of
+a Christian bishop at Calcutta, and with instructions to forward it
+to England, was found, on its arrival in London, to be so horribly
+mutilated and eviscerated as to be scarcely cognizable. The account of
+the crucifixion was gone---cancelled out. The inference is patent.
+
+And we have it upon the authority of this same reliable and truthful
+writer (Sir Godfrey Higgins) that the author of the Hindoo Pantheon (Mr.
+Moor), after having announced his intention to publish it to the world,
+was visited and labored with by some of his devout Christian neighbors
+zealous "for the faith once delivered to the saints," who endeavored to
+dissuade him from publishing such facts to the world as he represented
+his book to contain, for fear it would have the effect to unsettle
+the faith of some of the weak brethren (some of the weak-kneed church
+members) in the soul-saving religion of Jesus Christ, by raising
+doubts in their minds as to the originality of the gospel story of the
+crucifixion of Christ, or at least of his having been crucified as a God
+for a sin-offering. His crucifixion is a possible event. It may be
+thus far a true narrative, but the adjunct of the atonement, with its
+efficacy to obliterate the effects of sin, connected with the idea that
+an infinite, omnipotent and self-existent God was put to death, when a
+human form was slain upon the cross--never, no, never. It is a thought
+too monstrous to find lodgment in an enlightened human mind.
+
+Another case evincing the same spirit as that narrated above is found in
+the circumstance of a Christian missionary (a Mr. Maurice) publishing
+a historical account of this man-god or demigod of the Hindoos, and
+omitting any allusion to his crucifixion; this was entirely left out,
+apparently from design. His death, resurrection and ascension were
+spoken of, but the crucifixion skipped over. He could not have been
+ignorant of this chapter in his history as the writers preceding him,
+from whom he copied, had related it.
+
+Among this number may be mentioned the learned French writer
+Monsieur Guigniant, who, in his "Religion of the Ancients," speaks so
+specifically of the crucifixion of this God, as to name the circumstance
+of his being nailed to a tree. He also states, that before his exit he
+made some remarkable prophecies appertaining to the crimes and miseries
+of the world in the approaching future, reminding us of the wars and
+rumors of wars predicted by the Christian Messiah. Mr. Higgins names the
+same circumstance.
+
+We have it upon the authority of more than one writer on Hindoo or
+Indian antiquities that there is a rock temple at Mathura in the form
+of a cross, and facing the four cardinal points of the compass, which
+is admitted by all beholders as presenting the proof in bold relief of
+extreme age, and inside of this temple stands a statue of "the Savior
+of men," Chrishna of India, presenting the proof of being coeval in
+construction with the temple itself by the circumstance of its being
+cut out of the same rock and constituting a part of the temple. (Further
+citations of this character will be found under the head of Parallels,
+Chapter XXXII.)
+
+Thus we have the proof deeply and indelibly carved in the old,
+time-chiseled rocks of India--that their "Lord and Savior Chrishna"
+atoned for the sins of a grief-stricken world by "pouring out his blood
+as a propitiatory offering" while stretched upon the cross. No wonder,
+in view of such historic bulwarks, Col. Wiseman, for ten years a
+Christian missionary should have exclaimed, "Can we be surprised that
+the enemies of our holy religion should seize upon this legend (the
+crucifixion of Chrishna) as containing the original of our gospel
+history?"
+
+Christian reader, please ponder over the facts of this chapter, and let
+conviction have its perfect work.
+
+
+LIFE, CHARACTER, RELIGION, AND MIRACLES OF CHRISHNA.
+
+The history of Chrishna Zeus (or Jeseus, as some writers spell it) is
+contained principally in the Baghavat Gita, the episode portion of the
+Mahabaret bible. The book is believed to be divinely inspired, like all
+other bibles; and the Hindoos claim for it an antiquity of six thousand
+years. Like Christ, he was of humble origin, and like him had to
+encounter opposition and persecution.
+
+But he seems to have been more successful in the propagation of his
+doctrines; for it is declared, "he soon became surrounded by many
+earnest followers, and the people in vast multitudes followed him,
+crying aloud, 'This is indeed the Redeemer promised to our fathers.'"
+His pathway was thickly strewn with miracles, which consisted in healing
+the sick, curing lepers, restoring the dumb, deaf and the blind, raising
+the dead, aiding the weak, comforting the sorrow-stricken, relieving the
+oppressed, casting out devils, etc. He come not ostensibly to destroy
+the previous relgion, but to purify it of its impurities, and to preach
+a better doctrine. He came, as he declared, "to reject evil and restore
+the reign of good, and redeem man from the consequences of the fall,
+and deliver the oppressed earth from its load of sin and suffering." His
+disciples believed him to be God himself, and millions worshiped him as
+such in the time of Alexander the Great, 330 B. C.
+
+The hundreds of counterparts to the history of Christ, proving their
+histories to be almost identical, will be found enumerated in Chapter
+XXXII., such as--1. His miraculous birth by a virgin. 2. The mother and
+child being visited by shepherds, wise men and the angelic host, who
+joyously sang, "In thy delivery, O favored among women, all nations
+shall have cause to exult." 3. The edict of the tyrant ruler Cansa,
+ordering all the first born to be put to death. 4. The miraculous escape
+of the mother and child from his bloody decree by the parting of the
+waves of the River Jumna to permit them to pass through on dry ground.
+5. The early retirement of Chrishna to a desert. 6. His baptism or
+ablution in the River Ganges, corresponding to Christ's baptism in
+Jordan. 7. His transfiguration at Madura, where he assured his disciples
+that "present or absent, I will always be with you." 8. He had a
+favorite disciple (Arjoon), who was his bosom friend, as John was
+Christ's. 9. He was anointed with oil by women, like Christ. 10. A
+somewhat similar fish story is told of him--his disciples being enabled
+by him to catch large draughts of the finny prey in their nets. (For
+three hundred other similar parallels, see Chapter XXXII.)
+
+Like Christ, he taught much by parables and precepts. A notable sermon
+preached by him is also reported, which we have not space for here.
+
+On one occasion, having returned from a ministerial journey, as he
+entered Madura, the people came out in crowds to meet him, strewing the
+ground with the branches of cocoa-nut trees, and desiring to hear him.
+He addressed them in parables--the conclusion and moral of one of which,
+called the parable of the fishes, runs thus: "And thus it is, O people
+of Madura, that you ought to protect the weak and each other, and not
+retaliate upon an enemy the wrongs he may have done you." Here we see
+the peace doctrine preached in its purity. "And thus it was," says a
+writer, "that Chrishna spread among the people the holy doctrines of
+purest morality, and initiated his hearers into the exalted principles
+of charity, of self-denial, and self-respect at a time when the desert
+countries of the west were inhabited only by savage tribes;" and we
+will add, long before Christianity was thought of. Purity of life
+and spiritual insight, we are told, were distinguishing traits in the
+character of this oriental sin-atoning Savior, and that "he was often
+moved with compassion for the downtrodden and the suffering."
+
+A Budhist in Ceylon, who sent his son to a Christian school, once
+remarked to a missionary, "I respect Christianity as a help to Budhism."
+Thus is disclosed the fact that the motives of some of "the heathen"
+in sending to Christian schools is the promotion of their own religion,
+which they consider superior, and in many respects most of them are.
+(For proof, see Chapter on Bibles.)
+
+We have the remarkable admission of the _Christian Examiner_ that "the
+best precepts of the (Christian) bible are contained in the Hindoo
+Baghavat." Then it is not true that "Christ spake as man never spake."
+And if his "best precepts" were previously recorded in an old heathen
+bible, then they afford no proof of his divinity. This suicidal
+concession of the _Examiner_ pulls up the claims of orthodox
+Christianity by the roots.
+
+And many of the precepts uttered by Chrishna display a profound wisdom
+and depth of thought equal to any of those attributed to Jesus Christ.
+In proof of the statement, we will cite a few examples out of the
+hundreds in our possession:--
+
+1. Those who do not control their passions cannot act properly toward
+others.
+
+2. The evils we inflict upon others follow us as our shadows follow our
+bodies.
+
+3. Only the humble are beloved of God.
+
+4. Virtue sustains the soul as the muscles sustain the body.
+
+5. When the poor man knocks at your door, take him and administer to
+his wants, for the poor are the chosen of God. (Christ said, "God hath
+chosen the poor.")
+
+6. Let your hand be always open to the unfortunate.
+
+7. Look not upon a woman with unchaste desires.
+
+8. Avoid envy, covetousness, falsehood, imposture and slander, and
+sexual desires.
+
+9. Above all things, cultivate love for your neighbor.
+
+10. When you die you leave your worldly wealth behind you, but your
+virtues and vices follow you.
+
+11. Contemn riches and worldly honor.
+
+12. Seek the company of the wicked in order to reform them.
+
+13. Do good for its own sake, and expect not your reward for it on
+earth.
+
+14. The soul is immortal, but must be pure and free from all sin and
+stain before it can return to Him who gave it.
+
+15. The soul is inclined to good when it follows the inward light.
+
+16. The soul is responsible to God for its actions, who has established
+rewards and punishments.
+
+17. Cultivate that inward knowledge which teaches what is right and
+wrong.
+
+18. Never take delight in another's misfortunes.
+
+19. It is better to forgive an injury than to avenge it
+
+20. You can accomplish by kindness what you cannot by force.
+
+21. A noble spirit finds a cure for injustice by forgetting it.
+
+22. Pardon the offense of others, but not your own.
+
+23. What you blame in others do not practice yourself.
+
+24. By forgiving an enemy you make many friends.
+
+25. Do right from hatred of evil, and not from fear of punishment.
+
+26. A wise man corrects his own errors by observing those of others.
+
+27. He who rules his temper conquers his greatest enemy.
+
+28. The wise man governs his passions, but the fool obeys them.
+
+29. Be at war with men's vices, but at peace with their persons.
+
+30. There should be no disagreement between your lives and your
+doctrine.
+
+31. Spend every day as though it were the last.
+
+32. Lead not one life in public and another in private.
+
+33. Anger in trying to torture others punishes itself.
+
+34. A disgraceful death is honorable when you die in a good cause.
+
+35. By growing familiar with vices, we learn to tolerate them easily.
+
+36. We must master our evil propensities, or they will master us.
+
+37. He who has conquered his propensities rules over a kingdom.
+
+38. Protect, love and assist others, if you would serve God.
+
+39. From thought springs the will, and from the will action, true or
+false, just or unjust.
+
+40. As the sandal tree perfumes the axe which fells it, so the good man
+sheds fragrance on his enemies.
+
+41. Spend a portion of each day in pious devotion.
+
+42. To love the virtues of others is to brighten your own.
+
+43. He who gives to the needy loses nothing himself.
+
+44. A good, wise and benevolent man cannot be rich.
+
+45. Much riches is a curse to the possessor.
+
+46. The wounds of the soul are more important than those of the body.
+
+47. The virtuous man is like the banyan tree, which shelters and
+protects all around it.
+
+48. Money does not satisfy the love of gain, but only stimulates it.
+
+49. Your greatest enemy is in your own bosom.
+
+50. To flee when charged is to confess your guilt.
+
+51. The wounds of conscience leave a scar.
+
+Compare these fifty-one precepts of Chrishna with the forty-two precepts
+of Christ, and you must confess they suffer nothing by the comparison.
+If we had space we would like to quote also from the Vedas. We will
+merely cite a few examples relative to woman.
+
+1. He who is cursed by woman is cursed by God.
+
+2. God will punish him who laughs at woman's sufferings.
+
+3. When woman is honored, God is honored.
+
+4. The virtuous woman will have but one husband, and the right-minded
+man but one wife.
+
+5. It is the highest crime to take advantage of the weakness of woman.
+
+6. Woman should be loved, respected and protected by husbands, fathers
+and brothers, etc. (For more, see Chapter on Bibles.)
+
+Before we close this chapter we must anticipate and answer an objection.
+It will be said that the reported amours of Chrishna and his reencounter
+with Cansa constitute a criticism on his character. If so, we will point
+to Christ's fight or angry combat with the money-changers in the temple
+as an offset to it And then it should be remembered that Chrishna's
+disciples claim that these stories are mere fable, or allegorical, and
+are not found in the most approved or canonical writings.
+
+
+II.--CRUCIFIXION OF THE HINDOO SAKIA, 600 B. C.
+
+How many Gods who figured in Hindoo history suffered death upon the
+cross as atoning offerings for the sins of mankind is a point not
+clearly established by their sacred books. But the death of the God
+above named, known as Sakia, Budha Sakia, or Sakia Muni, is distinctly
+referred to by several writers, both oriental and Christian, though
+there appears to be in Budhist countries different accounts of the death
+of the famous and extensively worshiped sin-atoning Saviors.
+
+In some countries, the story runs, a God was crucified by an arrow being
+driven through his body, which fastened him to a tree; the tree,
+with the arrow thus projecting at right angles, formed the cross,
+emblematical of the atoning sacrifice.
+
+Sakia, an account states, was crucified by his enemies for the humble
+act of plucking a flower in a garden--doubtless seized on as a mere
+pretext, rather than as being considered a crime.
+
+One of the accusations brought against Christ, it will be remembered,
+was that of plucking the ripened ears of corn on the Sabbath. And it is
+a remarkable circumstance, that in the pictures of Christian countries
+representing the virgin Mary with the infant Jesus in her arms, either
+the child or the mother is frequently represented with a bunch of
+flowers in the hand.
+
+Here, let it be noted, the association of flowers with divinely born
+Saviors, in India, is indicated in the religious books of that country
+to have originated from the conception of the virgin parting with the
+flowers of her virginity by giving birth to a divine child, whereby she
+lost the immortality of her physical nature, it being transferred by
+that act to her Deity-begotten son. And from this circumstance, Sakia
+is represented as having been crucified for abstracting a flower from a
+garden. That his crucifixion was designed as a sin-atoning offering, is
+evident from the following declaration found in his sacred biography,
+viz.: "He in mercy left Paradise, and came down to earth because he was
+filled with compassion for the sins and miseries of mankind. He sought
+to lead them into better paths, and took their sufferings upon himself
+that he might expiate their crimes and mitigate the punishment they must
+otherwise inevitably undergo." (Prog. Rel. Ideas, vol. i. p. 86.)
+
+He believed and taught his followers that all sin is inevitably
+punished, either in this or the future life; and so great were his
+sympathy and tenderness, that he condescended to suffer that punishment
+himself, by an ignominious death upon the cross, after which he
+descended into Hades (Hell), to suffer for a time (three days) for the
+inmates of that dreadful and horrible prison, that he might show he
+sympathized with them. After his resurrection, and before his ascension
+to heaven, as well as during his earthly sojourn, he imparted to the
+world some beautiful, lofty, and soul-elevating precepts.
+
+"The object of his mission," says a writer, "was to instruct those who
+were straying from the right path, and expiate the sins of mortals by
+his own suffering, and procure for them a happy entrance into Paradise
+by obedience to his precepts and prayers to his name." (Ibid.) "His
+followers always speak of him as one with God from all eternity."
+(Ibid.) His most common title was "the Savior of the World." He was also
+called "the Benevolent One," "the Dispenser of Grace," "the Source of
+Life," "the Light of the World," "the True Light," etc.
+
+His mother was a very pure, refined, pious and devout woman; never
+indulged in any impure thoughts, words or actions. She was so much
+esteemed for her virtues and for being the mother of a God, that an
+escort of ladies attended her wherever she went. The trees bowed before
+her as she passed through the forest, and flowers sprang up wherever her
+foot pressed the ground. She was saluted as "the Holy Virgin, Queen of
+Heaven."
+
+It is said that when her divine child was born, he stood upright and
+proclaimed, "I will put an end to the sufferings and sorrows of the
+world." And immediately a light shone around about the young Messiah. He
+spent much time in retirement, and like Christ in another respect, was
+once tempted by a demon who offered him all the honors and wealth of the
+world. But he rebuked the devil, saying, "Be gone; hinder me not."
+
+He began, like Christ, to preach his gospel and heal the sick when about
+twenty-eight years of age. And it is declared, "the blind saw, the deaf
+heard, the dumb spoke, the lame danced and the crooked became straight."
+Hence, the people declared, "He is no mortal child, but an incarnation
+of the Deity." His religion was of a very superior character. He
+proclaimed, "My law is a law of grace for all." His religion knew no
+race, no sex, no caste, and no aristocratic priesthood.
+
+"It taught," says Max Muller, "the equality of all men, and the
+brotherhood of the human race." "All men, without regard to rank, birth
+or nation," says Dunckar, "form, according to Budha's view, one great
+suffering association in this earthly vale of tears; therefore,
+the commandments of love, forbearance, patience, compassion, pity,
+brotherliness of all men." Klaproth (a German professor of oriental
+languages) says this religion is calculated to ennoble the human race.
+"It is difficult to comprehend," says a French writer (M. Leboulay),
+"how men, not assisted by revelation, could have soared so high, and
+approached so near the truth."
+
+Dunckar says this oriental God "taught self-denial, chastity,
+temperance, the control of the passions, to bear injustice from others,
+to suffer death quietly, and without hate of your persecutor, to
+grieve not for one's own misfortunes, but for those of others." An
+investigation of their history will show that that they lived up to
+these moral injunctions. "Besides the five great commandments," says a
+Wesleyan missionary (Spense Hardy) in his Dahmma Padam, "every shade
+of vice, hypocrisy, anger, pride, suspicion, greediness, gossiping, and
+cruelty to animals is guarded against by special precepts. Among the
+virtues, recommended, we find not only reverence for parents, care for
+children, submission to authority, gratitude, moderation in all things,
+submission in time of trial, equanimity at all times, but virtues,
+unknown in some systems of morality, such as the duty of forgiving
+injuries, and not rewarding evil for evil." And we will add, both
+charity and love are specially recommended.
+
+We have it also upon the authority of Dunckar that "Budha proclaimed
+that salvation and redemption have come for all, even the lowest
+and most abject classes." For he broke down the iron caste of the
+Brahminical code which had so long ruled India, and aimed to place all
+mankind upon a level. His followers have been stigmatize! by Christian
+professors as "idolaters." But Sir John Bowling, in his "Kingdom and
+People of Siam," denies that they are idolaters--"because," says he, "no
+Budhist believes his image to be God, or anything more than an outward
+representation of Deity." Their deific images are looked upon with the
+same views and feelings as a Christian venerates the photograph of his
+deceased friend. Hence, if one is an idolater, the other is also. With
+respect to the charge of polytheism, Missionary Hue says, "that although
+their religion embraces many inferior deities, who fill the same
+offices that angels do under the Christian system, yet,"--adds M.
+Hue--"monotheism is the real character of Buddhism;" and confirms the
+statement by the testimony of a Thibetan.
+
+It should be noted here that although Budhism succeeded in converting
+about three hundred millions, or one-third of the inhabitants of the
+globe, it was never propagated by the sword, and never persecuted the
+disciples of other religions. Its conquests were made by a rational
+appeal to the human mind. Mr. Hodgson says, "It recognizes the infinite
+capacity of the human intellect." And St. Hilaire declares, "Love for
+all beings is its nucleus; and to love our enemies, and not prosecute,
+are the virtues of this people." Max Muller says, "Its moral code, taken
+by itself, is one of the most perfect the world has ever known."
+
+Its five commandments are:--
+
+1. Thou shalt not kill.
+
+2. Thou shalt not steal.
+
+3. Thou shalt not commit adultery or any impurity.
+
+4. Thou shall not lie.
+
+5. Thou shalt not intoxicate thyself.
+
+To establish the above cited doctrines and precepts, Budha sent forth
+his disciples into the world to preach his gospel to every creature. And
+if any convert had committed a sin in word, thought or deed, he was to
+confess and repent. One of the tracts which they distributed declares,
+"There is undoubtedly a life after this, in which the virtuous may
+expect the reward of their good deeds.... Judgment takes place
+immediately after death."
+
+Budha and his followers set an example to the world of enduring
+opposition and persecution with great patience and non-resistance. And
+some of them suffered martyrdom rather than abandon their principles,
+and gloried in thus sealing their doctrines with their lives.
+
+A story is told of a rich merchant by the name of Purna, forsaking all
+to follow his lord and master; and also of his encountering and talking
+with a woman of low caste at a well, which reminds us of similar
+incidents in the history of Christ. But his enemies, becoming jealous
+and fearful of his growing power, finally crucified him near the foot
+of the Nepaul mountains, about 600 B. C. But after his death, burial and
+resurrection, we are told he ascended back to heaven, where millions of
+his followers believed he had existed with Brahma from all eternity.
+
+[Note.--In the cases of crucifixion which follow, nothing like accuracy
+can be expected with respect to the dates of their occurrence, as all
+history covering the period beyond the modern era, or prior to the
+time of Alexander the Great (330 B. C.) is involved in a labyrinth of
+uncertainty with respect to dates. Hence, bible chronologists differ
+to the extent of three thousand years with respect to the time of every
+event recorded in the Old Testament. Compare the Hebrew and Septuagint
+versions of the bible: The former makes the world three thousand nine
+hundred and forty four, and the latter five thousand two hundred and
+seventy years old at the birth of Christ--a difference of thirteen
+hundred and twenty-six years. And other translations differ still more
+widely. All the cases of crucifixion which follow occurred before the
+time of Christ, but the exact time of many of them cannot be fixed with
+certainty. ]
+
+
+III.--THAMMUZ OF SYRIA CRUCIFIED, 1160 B. C.
+
+The history of this God is furnished us in fragments by several writers,
+portions of which will be found in other chapters of this work. The
+fullest history extant of this God-Savior is probably that of Ctesias
+(400 B. C.), author of "Persika." The poet has perpetuated his memory in
+rhyme.
+
+ "Trust, ye saints, your Lord restored,
+ Trust ye in your risen Lord;
+ For the pains which Thammuz endured
+ Our salvation have procured."
+
+Mr. Higgins informs us (Anac. vol. i. p. 246) that this God was
+crucified at the period above named, as a sin-atoning offering The
+stanza just quoted is predicated upon the following Greek text,
+translated by Godwin: "Trust ye in God, for out of his loins salvation
+has come unto us." Julius Firmicus speaks of this God "rising from the
+dead for the salvation of the world." The Christian writer Parkhurst
+alludes to this Savior as preceding the advent of Christ, and as filling
+to some extent the same chapter in sacred history.
+
+
+IV.--CRUCIFIXION OF WITTOBA OF THE TELINGONESS, 552 B. C.
+
+We have a very conclusive historical proof of the crucifixion of this
+heathen God. Mr. Higgins tells us, "He is represented in his history
+with nail-holes in his hands and the soles of his feet." Nails, hammers
+and pincers are constantly seen represented on his crucifixes, and are
+objects of adoration among his followers. And the iron crown of Lombardy
+has within it a nail of what is claimed as his true original cross,
+and is much admired and venerated on that account. The worship of
+this crucified God, according to our author, prevails chiefly in the
+Travancore and other southern countries in the region of Madura.
+
+
+V.--IAO OF NEPAUL CRUCIFIED, 622 B. C.
+
+With respect to the crucifixion of this ancient Savior, we have this
+very definite and specific testimony that "he was crucified on a tree
+in Nepaul." (See Georgius, p. 202.) The name of this incarnate God and
+oriental Savior occurs frequently in the holy bibles and sacred books of
+other countries. Some suppose that lao (often spelt Jao) is the root of
+the name of the Jewish God Jehovah.
+
+
+VI.--HESUS OF THE CELTIC DRUIDS CRUCIFIED, 834 B. C.
+
+Mr. Higgins informs us that the Celtic Druids represent their God Hesus
+as having been crucified with a lamb on one side and an elephant on the
+other, and that this occurred long before the Christian era. Also that a
+representation of it may now be seen upon "the fire-tower of Brechin."
+
+In this symbolical representation of the crucifixion, the elephant,
+being the largest animal known, was chosen to represent the magnitude
+of the sins of the world, while the lamb, from its proverbial innocent
+nature, was chosen to represent the innocency of the victim (the God
+offered as a propitiatory sacrifice). And thus we have "the Lamb of
+God taking away the sins of the world"--symbolical language used with
+respect to the offering of Jesus Christ. And here is indicated very
+clearly the origin of the figure. It is evidently borrowed from the
+Druids. We have the statement of the above writer that this legend was
+found amongst the Canutes of Gaul long before Jesus Christ was known to
+history. (See Anac. vol. ii. p. 130.)
+
+
+VII.--QUEXALCOTE OF MEXICO CRUCIFIED, 587 B. C.
+
+Historical authority, relative to the crucifixion of this Mexican God,
+and to his execution upon the cross as a propitiatory sacrifice for the
+sins of mankind, is explicit, unequivocal and ineffaceable. The evidence
+is tangible, and indelibly engraven upon steel and metal plates. One
+of these plates represents him as having been crucified on a mountain;
+another represents him as having been crucified in the heavens, as St.
+Justin tells us Christ was. According to another writer, he is sometimes
+represented as having been nailed to a cross, and by other accounts as
+hanging with a cross in his hand. The "Mexican Antiquities" (vol. vi.
+p. 166) says, "Quexalcote is represented in the paintings of 'Codex
+Borgianus' as nailed to the cross." Sometimes two thieves are
+represented as having been crucified with him.
+
+That the advent of this crucified Savior and Mexican God was long
+anterior to the era of Christ, is admitted by Christian writers, as we
+have shown elsewhere. In the work above named "Codex Borgianus," may
+be found the account, not only of his crucifixion, but of his death,
+burial, descent into hell, and resurrection on the third day. And
+another work, entitled "Codex Vaticanus," contains the story of his
+immaculate birth by a virgin mother by the name of Chimalman.
+
+Many other incidences are found related of him in his sacred biography,
+in which we find the most striking counterparts to the more modern
+gospel story of Jesus Christ, such as his forty days' temptation and
+fasting, his riding on an ass, his purification in the temple, his
+baptism and regeneration by water, his forgiving of sins, being anointed
+with oil, etc. "All these things, and many more, found related of this
+Mexican God in their sacred books," says Lord Kingsborough (a Christian
+writer), "are curious and mysterious." (See the books above cited.)
+
+
+VIII.--QUIRINUS OF ROME CRUCIFIED, 506 B. C.
+
+The crucifixion of this Roman Savior is briefly noticed by Mr. Higgins,
+and is remarkable for presenting (like other crucified Gods) several
+parallel features to that of the Judean Savior, not only in the
+circumstances related as attending his crucifixion, but also in a
+considerable portion of his antecedent life.
+
+He is represented, like Christ:--
+
+1. As having been conceived and brought forth by a virgin.
+
+2. His life was sought by the reigning king (Amulius),
+
+3. He was of royal blood, his mother being of kingly descent.
+
+4. He was "put to death by wicked hands"--i. e., crucified.
+
+5. At his mortal exit the whole earth is said to have been enveloped in
+darkness, as in the case of Christ, Chrishna, and Prometheus.
+
+6. And finally he is resurrected, and ascends back to heaven.
+
+
+IX.--(ÆSCHYLUS) PROMETHEUS CRUCIFIED, 547 B. C.
+
+In the account of the crucifixion of Prometheus of Caucasus, as
+furnished by Seneca, Hesiod, and other writers, it is stated that he was
+nailed to an upright beam of timber, to which were affixed extended arms
+of wood, and that this cross was situated near the Caspian Straits. The
+modern story of this crucified God, which represents him as having been
+bound to a rock for thirty years, while vultures preyed upon his vitals,
+Mr. Higgins pronounces an impious Christian fraud. "For," says this
+learned historical writer, "I have seen the account which declares
+he was nailed to a cross with hammer and nails." (Anac. vol. i. 327.)
+Confirmatory of this statement is the declaration of Mr. Southwell, that
+"he exposed himself to the wrath of God in his zeal to save mankind."
+
+The poet, in portraying his propitiatory offering, says
+
+ "Lo! streaming from the fatal tree
+ His all atoning blood,
+ Is this the Infinite?--
+ Yes, 'tis he,
+ Prometheus, and a God!
+
+ "Well might the sun in darkness hide,
+ And veil his glories in,
+ When God, the great Prometheus, died
+ For man the creature's sin."
+
+The "New American Cyclopedia" (vol. i. p. 157) contains the following
+significant declaration relative to this sin-atoning oriental Savior:
+"It is doubtful whether there is to be found in the whole range of Greek
+letters deeper pathos than that of the divine woe of the beneficent
+demigod Prometheus, crucified on his Scythian crags for his love to
+mortals." Here we have first-class authority for the crucifixion of this
+oriental God.
+
+In Lempriere's "Classical Dictionary," Higgins' "Anacalypsis," and other
+works, may be found the following particulars relative to the final exit
+of the God above named, viz.:--
+
+1. That the whole frame of nature became convulsed.
+
+2. The earth shook, the rocks were rent, the graves were opened, and in
+a storm, which seemed to threaten the dissolution of the universe, the
+solemn scene forever closed, and "Our Lord and Savior" Prometheus gave
+up the ghost.
+
+"The cause for which he suffered," says Mr. Southwell, "was his love for
+the human race." Mr. Taylor makes the statement in his Syntagma (p. 95),
+that the whole story of Prometheus' crucifixion, burial and resurrection
+was acted in pantomime in Athens five hundred years before Christ, which
+proves its great antiquity. Minutius Felix, one of the most popular
+Christian writers of the second century (in his "Octavius," sect. 29),
+thus addresses the people of Rome: "Your victorious trophies not only
+represent a simple cross, but a cross with a man on it," and this man
+St. Jerome calls a God.
+
+These coincidences furnish still further proof that the tradition of the
+crucifixion of Gods has been very long prevalent among the heathen.
+
+
+X.--CRUCIFIXION OF THULIS OF EGYPT, 1700 B. C.
+
+Thulis of Egypt, whence comes "Ultima Thule," died the death of the
+cross about thirty-five hundred years ago.
+
+Ultima Thule was the island which marked the ultimate bounds of the
+extensive empire of this legitimate descendant of the Gods.
+
+This Egyptian Savior appears also to have been known as Zulis, and with
+this name--Mr. Wilkison tells us--"his history is curiously illustrated
+in the sculptures, made seventeen hundred years B. C., of a small,
+retired chamber lying nearly over the western adytum of the temple-" We
+are told twenty-eight lotus plants near his grave indicate the number
+of years he lived on the earth. After suffering a violent death, he
+was buried, but rose again, ascended into heaven, and there became "the
+judge of the dead," or of souls in a future state. Wilkison says he came
+down from heaven to benefit mankind, and that he was said to be "full of
+grace and truth."
+
+
+XI.--CRUCIFIXION OF INDRA OF THIBET, 725 B. C.
+
+The account of the crucifixion of the God and Savior Indra may be found
+in Georgius, Thibetinum Alphabetum, p. 230. A brief notice of the case
+is all we have space for here. In the work just referred to may be found
+plates representing this Thibetan Savior as having been nailed to
+the cross. There are five wounds, representing the nailholes and the
+piercing of the side. The antiquity of the story is beyond dispute.
+
+Marvelous stories are told of the birth of the Divine Redeemer. His
+mother was a virgin of black complexion, and hence his complexion was
+of the ebony hue, as in the case of Christ and some other sin-atoning
+Saviors. He descended from heaven on a mission of benevolence, and
+ascended back to the heavenly mansion after his crucifixion. He led
+a life of strict celibacy, which, he taught, was essential to true
+holiness. He inculcated great tenderness toward all living beings. He
+could walk upon the water or upon the air; he could foretell future
+events with great accuracy. He practiced the most devout contemplation,
+severe discipline of the body and mind, and acquired the most complete
+subjection of his passions. He was worshiped as a God who had existed
+as a spirit from all eternity, and his followers were called "Heavenly
+Teachers."
+
+
+XII.--ALCESTOS OF EURIPIDES CRUCIFIED, 600 B. C.
+
+The "English Classical Journal" (vol. xxxvii.) furnishes us with the
+story of another crucified God, known as Alcestos--a female God or
+Goddess; and in this respect, it is a novelty in sacred history, being
+the first, if not the only example of a feminine God atoning for the
+sins of the world upon the cross. The doctrine of the trinity and
+atoning offering for sin was inculcated as a part of her religion.
+
+
+XIII.--ATYS OF PHRYGIA CRUCIFIED, 1170 B. C.
+
+Speaking of this crucified Messiah, the Anacalypsis informs us that
+several histories are given of him, but all concur in representing
+him as having been an atoning offering for sin. And the Latin phrase
+"suspensus lingo," found in his history, indicates the manner of his
+death. He was suspended on a tree, crucified, buried and rose again.
+
+
+XIV.--CRITE OF CHALDEA CRUCIFIED, 1200 B. C.
+
+The Chaldeans, as Mr. Higgins informs us, have noted in their sacred
+books the account of the crucifixion of a God with the above name. He
+was also known as "the Redeemer," and was styled "the Ever Blessed Son
+of God," "the Savior of the Race," "the Atoning Offering for an Angry
+God." And when he was offered up, both heaven and earth were shaken to
+their foundations.
+
+
+XV.--BALI OF ORISSA CRUCIFIED, 725 B. C.
+
+We learn by the oriental books, that in the district of country known
+as Orissa, in Asia, they have the story of a crucified God, known by
+several names, including the above, all of which, we are told, signify
+"Lord Second," having reference to him as the second person or second
+member of the trinity, as most of the crucified Gods occupied that
+position in the trial of deities constituting the trinity, as indicated
+by the language "Father, Son, and Holy Ghost," the Son, in all cases,
+being the atoning offering, "the crucified Redeemer," and the second
+person of the trinity. This God Bali was also called Baliu, and
+sometimes Bel. The Anacalypsis informs us (vol. i. 257) that monuments
+of this crucified God, bearing great age, may be found amid the ruins
+of the magnificent city of Mahabalipore, partially buried amongst the
+figures of the temple.
+
+
+XVI.--MITHRA OF PERSIA CRUCIFIED, 600 B. C.
+
+This Persian God, according to Mr. Higgins, was "slain upon the cross to
+make atonement for mankind, and to take away the sins of the world." He
+was reputedly born on the twenty-fifth day of December, and crucified on
+a tree. It is a remarkable circumstance that two Christian writers (Mr.
+Faber and Mr. Bryant) both speak of his "being slain," and yet both omit
+to speak of the manner in which he was put to death. And the same policy
+has been pursued with respect to other crucified Gods of the pagans, as
+we have shown elsewhere.
+
+Our list is full, or we might note other cases of crucifixion. Devatat
+of Siam, Ixion of Rome, Apollonius of Tyana in Cappadocia, are all
+reported in history as having "died the death of the cross."
+
+Ixion, 400 B. C., according to Nimrod, was crucified on a wheel, the
+rim representing the world, and the spokes constituting the cross. It is
+declared, "He bore the burden of the world" (that is, "the sins of
+the world") on his back while suspended on the cross. Hence, he was
+sometimes called "the crucified spirit of the world."
+
+With respect to Apollonius, it is a remarkable, if not a suspicious
+circumstance that should not be passed unnoticed, that several Christian
+writers, while they recount a long list of miracles and remarkable
+incidents in the life of this Cappadocian Savior, extending through his
+whole life, and forming a parallel to similar incidents of the Christian
+Savior, not a word is said about his crucifixion.
+
+And a similar policy has been pursued with respect to Mithra and other
+sin-atoning Gods, including Chrishna and Prometheus, as before noticed.
+
+This important chapter in their history has been omitted by Christian
+writers for fear the relation of it would damage the credibility of the
+crucifixion of Christ, or lessen its spiritual force. For, like
+Paul, they were "determined to know nothing but Jesus Christ and
+him crucified" (i Cor. ii. 2) i. e., to _know_ no other God had been
+crucified but _Jesus Christ_. They thus exalted the tradition of the
+crucifixion into the most important dogma of the Christian faith. Hence,
+their efforts to conceal from the public a knowledge of the fact that it
+is of pagan origin.
+
+By reference to Mackey's "Lexicon of Freemasonry" (p. 35) we learn that
+Freemasons secretly taught the doctrine of the crucifixion, atonement
+and resurrection long anterior to the Christian era, and that similar
+doctrines were taught in "all the ancient mysteries," thus proving that
+the conception of these tenets of faith existed at a very early period
+of time.
+
+And it may be noted here, that the doctrine of salvation by crucifixion
+had likewise, with most of the ancient forms of religious faith, an
+astronomical representation--i. e., a representation in astronomical
+symbols. According to the emblematical figures comprised in their astral
+worship, people were saved by the sun's crucifixion or crossification,
+realized by _crossing_ over the equinoctial line into the season of
+spring, and thereby gave out a saving heat and light to the world and
+stimulated the generative organs of animal and vegetable life. It was
+from this conception that the ancients were in the habit of carving or
+painting the organs of generation upon the walls of their holy temples.
+The blood of the grape, which was ripened by the heat of the sun, as he
+crossed over by resurrection into spring, (i. e., was crucified), was
+symbolically "the blood of the cross," or "the blood of the Lamb."
+
+If we should be met here with the statement, that the stories of the
+ancient crucifixions of Gods were mere myths or fables, unwarrantably
+saddled on to their histories as mere romance, and have no foundation in
+fact, we reply--there is as much ground for suspecting the same thing as
+being true of Jesus Christ.
+
+One of the most celebrated and most frequently quoted Christian writers
+of the ancient bishops (Irenæus) declares upon the authority of the
+martyr Polycarp, who claimed to have got it from St. John and all the
+elders of Asia, that Jesus Christ was not crucified, but lived to be
+about fifty years old.
+
+We find there has always been a margin for doubt amongst his own
+followers as to the fact of his crucifixion.
+
+Many of the early Christians and cotemporary Jews and Gentiles doubted
+it, and some openly disputed its ever having taken place. Others
+bestowed upon it a mere spiritual signification, and not a few
+considered it symbolical of a "holy life." One circumstance, calculated
+to lead to the entire discredit of the story of the crucifixion of
+Christ, is the relation, in connection with it, of a violent convulsion
+of nature, and the resurrection of the long-buried saints--events not
+supported by any authentic cotemporaneous history, sacred or profane.
+(See Chap. XVII., Aphanasia).
+
+And as these events must be set down as fabulous, they leave the mind
+in doubt with respect to the fact of the crucifixion itself, especially
+when the many absurdities involved in the doctrine of the crucifixion
+are brought to view, in connection with it, some of them so palpably
+erroneous that an unlettered savage could see and point them out.
+
+The Indian chief Red Jacket is reported to have replied to the Christian
+missionaries, when they urged upon his attention the benefits of
+Christ's death by crucifixion, "Brethren, if you white men murdered the
+son of the Great Spirit, we Indians have nothing to do with it, and it
+is none of our affair. If he had come among us, we would not have killed
+him. We would have treated him well. You must make amends for that crime
+yourselves."
+
+This view of the crucifixion suggested to the mind of an illiterate
+heathen we deem more sensible and rational than that of the orthodox
+Christians, which makes it a meritorious act and a moral necessity. For
+this would not only exonerate Judas from any criminality or guilt for
+the part he took in the affair, but would entitle him as well as Christ
+to the honorable title of a "Savior" for performing an act without which
+the crucifixion and consequent salvation of the world could not have
+been effected. If it was necessary for Christ to suffer death upon the
+cross as an atonement for sin, then the act of crucifixion was right,
+and a monument should be erected to the memory of Judas for bringing it
+about. We challenge Christian logic to find a flaw in this argument.
+
+And another important consideration arises here. If the inhabitants of
+this planet required the murderous death of a God as an atonement, we
+must presume that the eighty-five millions of inhabited worlds recently
+discovered by astronomers are, or have been, in equal need of a divine
+atonement. And this would require the crucifixion of eighty-five
+millions of Gods. Assuming one of these Gods to be crucified every
+minute, the whole would occupy a period of nearly twenty years. This
+would be killing off Gods at rather a rapid rate, and would make
+the work of the atonement and salvation a very murderous and bloody
+affair--a conception which brings to the mind a series of very revolting
+reflections.
+
+The conception of Gods coming down from heaven, and being born of
+virgins, and dying a violent death for the moral blunders of the people,
+originated in an age of the world when man was a savage, and dwelt
+exclusively upon the animal plane, and blood was the requisition for
+every offense. And it was an age when no world was known to exist but
+the one we inhabit. The stars were then supposed to be mere blazing
+tapers set in the azure vault to light this pygmy planet, or peep-holes
+for Gods to look out of heaven, to see and learn what is going on below.
+Such conceptions are in perfect keeping with the doctrine of the
+atoning crucifixion of Gods, which could never have originated or been
+entertained for a moment by an astronomer, with a knowledge of the
+existence of innumerable inhabited worlds. For as there is to the
+monotheistic Christian but one God, or Son of God, to be offered, he
+must be incarnated and crucified every day for a thousand years to make
+a sin-offering for each of these worlds--a conception too monstrous and
+preposterous to find a lodgment in a rational mind.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE BELIEF OF THE CRUCIFIXION OF GODS.
+
+It has always been presumed that death, and especially death by
+crucifixion, involved the highest state of suffering possible to be
+endured by mortals. Hence, the Gods must suffer in this way as an
+example of courage and fortitude, and to show themselves willing
+to undergo all the affliction and misery incident to the lot, and
+unavoidable to the lives, of their devoted worshipers. They must not
+only be equal, but superior to their subjects in this respect Hence,
+they would not merely die, but choose, or at least uncomplainingly
+submit to the most ignoble and ignominious mode of suffering death
+that could be devised, and that was crucifixion. This gave the highest
+finishing touch to the drama.
+
+And thus the legend of the crucifixion became the crowning chapter, the
+aggrandizing episode in the history of their lives. It was presumed that
+nothing less than a God could endure such excruciating tortures without
+complaining.
+
+Hence, when the victim was reported to have submitted with such
+fortitude that no murmur was heard to issue from his lips, this
+circumstance of itself was deemed sufficient evidence of his Godship.
+The story of the crucifixion, therefore, whether true or false, deified
+or helped deify many great men and exalt them to the rank of Gods.
+Though some of the disciples of Budhism, and some of the primitive
+professors of Christianity also (including, according to Christian
+history, Peter and his brother Andrew), voluntarily chose this mode
+of dying in imitation of their crucified Lord, without experiencing,
+however, the desired promotion to divine honors. They failed of an
+exaltation to the deityship, and hence are not now worshiped as Gods.
+
+Christian reader, what can you now make of the story of the crucifixion
+of Jesus Christ but a borrowed legend--at least the story of his being
+crucified _as a God!_
+
+Note.--The author desires it to be understood with respect to the cases
+of crucifixion here briefly narrated, that they are not vouched foras
+actual occurrences, of which there is much ground to doubt. It has
+neither been his aim or desire to prove them to be real historical
+events, nor to establish any certain number of cases. Indeed, he deems
+it unimportant to know, if it could be determined, whether they are fact
+or fiction, or whether one God was crucified, or many. The moral lesson
+designed to be taught by this chapter is, simply, that the belief in
+the crucifixion of Gods was prevalent in various oriental or heathen
+countries long prior to the reported crucifixion of Christ. If
+this point is established--which he feels certain no reader will
+dispute--then he is not concerned to know whether he has made out
+sixteen cases of crucifixion or not. Six will prove it as well as
+sixteen. In fact, one case is sufficient to establish the important
+proposition in view. The reader is, therefore, left to decide each case
+for himself, according as he may value the evidence presented. More
+authorities could have been adduced, and a more extended history
+presented of each God brought to notice. But this would have operated to
+exclude other matter, which the author considers of more importance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. THE APHANASIA, OR DARKNESS AT THE CRUCIFIXION.
+
+MATTHEW tells us (xxvii. 31) that when Christ was crucified, there was
+darkness all over the land for three hours, and "the earth did quake,
+and the rocks were rent, and many of the saints came out of their
+graves."
+
+Here we have a series of events spoken of so strange, so unusual and
+so extraordinary that, had they occurred, they must have attracted the
+attention of the whole world--especially the amazing scene of the sun's
+withdrawing his light and ceasing to shine, and thereby causing an
+almost total darkness near the middle of the day. And yet no writer
+of that age or country, or any other age or country, mentions the
+circumstance but Matthew. A phenomenon so terrible and so serious in its
+effects as literally to unhinge the planets and partially disorganize
+the universe must have excited the alarm and amazement of the whole
+world, and caused a serious disturbance in the affairs of nations. And
+yet strange, superlatively strange, not one of the numerous historians
+of that age makes the slightest allusion to such an astounding event.
+
+Even Seneca and the elder Pliny, who so particularly and minutely
+chronicle the events of those times, are as silent as the grave relative
+to this greatest event in the history of the world. Nor do Mark, Luke
+or John, who all furnish us with a history of the crucifixion, make the
+slightest hint at any of these wonder-exciting events, except Mark's
+incidental allusion to the darkness.
+
+Gibbon says, "It happened during the life of Seneca and the elder
+Pliny, who must have experienced its immediate effects, or received the
+earliest intelligence of the prodigy. Each of these philosophers, in a
+labored work, has recorded all the phenomena of Nature's earthquakes,
+meteors and eclipses, which his indefatigable curiosity could collect.
+Both the one and the other have omitted to mention the greatest
+phenomenon, to which the mortal eye has been witness since the creation
+of the world." (Gibbon, p. 451.)
+
+2. With reference to the "bodies" of the dead saints coming out of their
+tombs (for it is declared their "bodies arose," see Matt, xxvii. 52), many
+rather curious and puzzling questions might be started, which would at
+once disclose its utter absurdity.
+
+We might ask, for example
+
+1. Who were those "many saints" who came out of their graves, seeing
+there were as yet but few Christians to occupy graves, if they had been
+all dead, as the enumeration at Antioch made out only one hundred and
+twenty? (See Acts.) 2. How long had they lain in their graves?
+
+3. How long since their bodies had turned to dust, and been food for
+worms? 4. And would not those worms have to be hunted up and required to
+disgorge the contents of their stomachs in order to furnish the saints
+with the materials for their bodies again? 5. And were the shrouds or
+grave clothes of those saints also resurrected? or did they travel about
+in a state of nudity? 6. For what purpose were they re-animated? 7. And
+should not Matthew have furnished us, by way of proof, with the names
+of some of these ghostly visitors? 8. How long did they live the second
+time? 9. Did they die again, or did they ascend to heaven with their
+new-made bodies? 10. What business did they engage in? 11. Why have we
+not some account of what they said and did? 12. And what finally became
+of them?
+
+Until these questions are rationally answered, the story must be
+regarded as too incredible and too ludicrous to merit serious notice.
+
+3. Nearly all the phenomena represented as occurring at the crucifixion
+of Christ are reported to have been witnessed also at the final exit
+of Senerus, an ancient pagan demigod, who figured in history at a still
+more remote period of time. And similar incidents are related likewise
+in the legendary histories of several other heathen demigods and great
+men partially promoted to the honor of Gods. In the time-honored records
+of the oldest religion in the world, it is declared, "A cloud surrounded
+the moon; and the sun was darkened at noonday, and the sky rained fire
+and ashes during the crucifixion of the Indian God Chrishna." In the
+case of Osiris of Egypt, Mr. Southwell says, "As his birth had been
+attended by an eclipse of the sun, so his death was attended by a still
+greater darkness of the solar orb." At the critical juncture of the
+crucifixion of Prometheus, it is declared, "The whole frame of nature
+became convulsed, the earth shook, the rocks were rent, the graves
+opened, and in a storm which threatened the dissolution of the universe,
+the scene closed" (Higgins). According to Livy, the last hours of the
+mortal demise of Romulus were marked by a storm and by a solar eclipse.
+
+And similar stories are furnished us by several writers of Cæsar and
+Alexander the Great. With respect to the latter, Mr. Nimrod says, "Six
+hours of darkness formed his aphanasia, and his soul, like Polycarp's,
+was seen to fly away in the form of a dove." (Nimrod, vol. iii. p.
+458.) "It is remarkable," says a writer, "what a host of respectable
+authorities vouch for an acknowledged fable--the preternatural darkness
+which followed Cæsar's death." Gibbon alludes to this event when he
+speaks of "the singular defect of light which followed the murder of
+Caesar." He likewise says, "This season of darkness had already been
+celebrated by most of the poets and historians of that memorable age."
+(Gibbon, p. 452.) It is very remarkable that Pliny speaks of a darkness
+attending Cæsar's death, but omits to mention such a scene as attending
+the crucifixion of Christ. Virgil also seeks to exalt this royal
+personage by relating this prodigy. (See his Georgius, p. 465.) Another
+writer says, "Similar prodigies were supposed or said to accompany the
+great men of former days."
+
+Let the reader make a note of this fact--that the same story was told
+of the graves opening, and the dead rising at the final mortal exit of
+several heathen Gods and several great men long before it was penned as
+a chapter in the history of Christ.
+
+Shakespeare, in his Hamlet says:--
+
+ "In the most high and palmy days of Rome,
+ A little ere the mighty Julius fell--
+ The graves stood tenantless, and the sheeted dead
+ Did squeak and gibber in the Roman streets."
+
+These historical citations strongly press the conclusion that this
+portion of the history of Christ was borrowed from old pagan legends.
+
+4. Many cases are recorded in history of the light of the sun being
+obscured at midday so as to result in almost total darkness, when it was
+known not to be produced by an eclipse. And it is probable that these
+natural events furnish the basis in part for those wild legends we have
+brought to notice. Humboldt relates in his Cosmos, that, "in the year
+358, before the earthquake of Numidia, the darkness was very dense for
+two or three hours." Another obscuration of the sun took place in the
+year 360, which lasted five or six hours, and was so dense that the
+stars were visible at midday. Another circumstance of this kind was
+witnessed on the nineteenth of May, 1730, which lasted eight hours. And
+so great was the darkness, that candles and lamps had to be lighted at
+midday to dine by. Similar events are chronicled for the years 1094,
+1206, 1241, 1547, and 1730. And if any such solar obscurations occurred
+near the mortal exit of any of the Gods above named, of course they
+would be seized on as a part of their practical history wrought up into
+hyperbole, and interwoven in their narratives, to give eclat to the
+pageantry of their biographies--a fact which helps to solve the mystery.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE STORY OF THE APHANASIA AT THE CRUCIFIXION.
+
+There is but little ground to doubt but that the various stories of a
+similar character then current in different countries, as shown above,
+first suggested the thought to Christ's biographers of investing
+history with the incredible events reported as being connected with the
+crucifixion. The principal motive, however, seems to have grown out of a
+desire to fulfill a prophecy of the Jewish prophet Joel, as we may find
+many of the important miraculous events ingrafted into Christ's history
+were recorded by way of fulfilling some prophecy. "That the prophecy
+might be fulfilled" is the very language his evangelical biographers
+use.
+
+Joel's prediction runs thus: "And I will show wonders in the heavens,
+and in the earth, flood and fire, and pillars of smoke. The sun shall
+be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great
+and terrible day of the Lord come." (Joel ii. 30.) A little impartial
+investigation will satisfy any unprejudiced mind that this poetic
+rhapsody has not the most remote allusion to the closing events in the
+life of Christ, and was not intended to have.
+
+But his biographers, writing a long time after his death, supposing and
+assuming that this and various other texts, which they quote from the
+prophets, had reference to him, and had been fulfilled, incorporated it
+into his history as a part of his practical life. The conviction that
+the prophecy _must have been fulfilled_, without knowing that it had,
+added to similar stories of other Gods, with which Christ's history
+became confounded, misled them into the conclusion that they were
+warranted in assuming that the incredible events they name were really
+witnessed at the mortal termination of Christ's earthly career, when
+they did not know it, and could not have known it.
+
+This view of the case becomes very rational and very forcible when we
+observe various texts quoted from the prophets by the gospel writers,
+or, rather, most butcheringly misquoted, tortured or distorted into
+Messianic prophecies, when the context shows they have no reference to
+Christ whatever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. DESCENT OF THE SAVIORS INTO HELL.
+
+THE next most important event in the histories of the Saviors after
+their crucifixion, and the act of giving up the ghost, is that of their
+descent into the infernal regions. That Jesus Christ descended into hell
+after his crucifixion is not expressly taught in the Christian bible,
+but it is a matter of such obvious inference from several passages of
+scripture, the early Christians taught it as a scriptural doctrine. Mr.
+Sears, a Christian writer, tells us that "on the doctrine of Christ's
+underground mission the early Christians were united.... It was a point
+too well settled to admit of dispute." (See Foregleams of Immortality,
+p. 262).
+
+And besides this testimony, the "Apostles' Creed" teaches the doctrine
+explicitly, which was once as good authority throughout Christendom as
+the bible itself; indeed, it may be considered as constituting a part
+of the bible prior to the council of Nice (A. D. 325), being supposed
+to have been written by the apostles themselves. It declares that "Jesus
+Christ suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified (dead) and buried.
+He descended into hell; the third day he rose again from the dead," etc.
+This testimony is very explicit.
+
+And Peter is supposed to refer to the same event when he says, "being
+put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the spirit, by which also
+he went and preached unto the spirits in prison." (i Peter iii. 18.) The
+word prison, which occurs in this text, has undoubted reference to the
+Christian fabled hell. For no possible sense can be attached to the
+word prison in this connection without such a construction. Where have
+spirits ever been supposed to be imprisoned but in hell? And then we
+find a text in the Acts of the Apostles, which seems to remove all
+doubt in the case, and banishes at once all ground for dispute. It is
+explicitly stated that "his soul was not left in hell, neither did his
+flesh see corruption." (Adis ii. 31.) Why talk about his soul not
+being left in hell if it had never been there? Language could hardly be
+plainer. The most positive declaration that Christ did descend into hell
+could not make it more certainly a scriptural Christian doctrine.
+
+We, then, rest the case here, and proceed to enumerate other cases of
+Gods and Saviors descending into Pandemonium (the realms of Pluto)
+long before Jesus Christ walked on the water or on the earth. It is
+unquestionably stated in the Hindoo bible, written more than three
+thousand years ago, that the Savior Chrishna "went down to hell to
+preach to the inmates of that dark and dreary prison, with the view of
+reforming them, and getting them back to heaven, and was willing himself
+to suffer to abridge the period of their torment." And certainly, in the
+midst of the fire and smoke of brimstone, it could not have been hard
+to effect their conversion or repentance. One writer tells us that "so
+great was his (Chrishna's) tenderness, that he even descended into
+hell to teach souls in bondage." Now observe how much "teaching souls in
+bondage" sounds like "preaching to souls in prison," as Peter represents
+Christ as doing. And can any reader doubt that the meaning in the two
+cases is the same? And must we not confess that we are greatly indebted
+to the Hindoo bible for an explanation of the two occult and mysterious
+texts which I have quoted from the Christian bible, and which have
+puzzled so many learned critics to explain, or find a meaning for?
+
+We have another case of a God descending into hell in the person or
+spirit of the Savior Quexalcote of Mexico, (300 B. C.) The story will
+be found in the Codex Borgianus, wherein is related the account of
+his death, and burial after crucifixion, his descent into hell, and
+subsequent resurrection. Of Adonis of Greece it is declared, that
+"after his descent into hell, he rose again to life and immortality."
+Prometheus of Caucasus (600 B. C.) likewise is represented as "suffering
+and descending into hell, rising again from the dead, and ascending
+to heaven." Horus of Greece is described as "first reigning a thousand
+years, then dying, and being buried for three days, at the end of which
+time he triumphed over Typhon, the evil principle, and rose again to
+life evermore." And Osiris of Egypt also is represented as making a
+descent into hell, and after a period of three days rose again.
+
+Homer and Virgil speak of several cases of descent into Pluto's
+dominions. Hercules, Ulysses and Æneas are represented as performing the
+hellward journey on, as we infer, benevolent missions. Higgins remarks,
+"The Gods became incarnate, and descended into hell to teach humility
+and set an example of suffering."
+
+The story of their descent into hell was doubtless invented to
+find employment for them during their three days of hibernation or
+conservation in the tomb, that they might not appear to be really dead
+nor idle in the time, and as a still further proof of their matchless
+and unrivalled capacity and fortitude for suffering.
+
+And the story of the three days' entombment is likewise clearly
+traceable in appearance to the astronomical incident of the sun's lying
+apparently dead, and buried, and motionless for nearly three days at the
+period of the vernal epoch, from the twenty-first to the twenty-fifth
+of March. It was a matter of belief or fancy that the sun remained
+stationary for about three days, when he gradually rose again
+"into newness of life." And hence, this period or era was chosen to
+figuratively represent the three days' descent of the Gods into hell.
+We are told that the Persians have an ancient astronomical figure
+representing the descent of a God, divine, into hell, and returning at
+the time that Orsus, the goddess of spring, had conquered the God or
+genus of winter, after the manner St. John describes the Lamb of God
+(see Rev. xii) as conquering the dragon, which may be interpreted as
+the Scorpion or Dragon of the first month of winter (October) being
+conquered by the Lamb of March or spring.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. RESURRECTION OF THE SAVIORS
+
+WE find presented in the canonized histories of several of the demigod
+Saviors the following remarkable coincidences appertaining to their
+death:--
+
+1. Their resurrection from the dead.
+
+2. Their lying in the tomb just three days.
+
+3. The resurrection of several of them about the time of the vernal
+equinox. The twenty-fifth of March is the period assigned by the
+Christian world generally for the resurrection of Christ, though some
+Christian writers have assigned other dates for this event. They all
+agree, however, that Christ rose from the dead, and that this occurred
+three days after the entombment. Bishop Theophilus of Cesarea remarks,
+relative to this event, "Since the birth of Christ is celebrated on the
+twenty-fifth of December,.... so also should the resurrection of Jesus
+be celebrated on the twenty-fifth of March, on whatever day of the week
+it may fall, the Lord having risen again on that day." (Cent. ii. Call,
+p. 118.) "All the ancient Christians," says a writer, "were persuaded
+that Christ was crucified on the twenty-third of March, and rose
+from the dead on the twenty-fifth." And accordingly Constantine and
+cotemporary Christians celebrated the twenty-fifth of March with
+great eclat as the date of the resurrection. The twenty-third and
+twenty-fifth, including the twenty-fourth, would comprise a period of
+three days, the time of the entombment.
+
+Now mark, Quexalcote of Mexico, Chris of Chaldea, Quirinus of Rome,
+Prometheus of Caucasus, Osiris of Egypt, Atys of Phrygia, and "Mithra
+the Mediator" of Persia did, according to their respective histories,
+rise from the dead after three days' burial, and the time of their
+resurrection is in several cases fixed for the twenty-fifth of March.
+And there is an account more than three thousand years old of the Hindoo
+crucified Savior Chrishna, three days after his interment, forsaking
+"the silent bourn, whence (as we are told) no traveler ever returns,"
+and laying aside the moldy cerements of the dead, again walking forth
+to mortal life, to be again seen, recognized, admired, and adored by his
+pious, devout and awe-stricken followers, and thus present to the gaze
+of a hoping yet doubting world "the first fruits of the resurrection."
+
+At the annual celebration of the resurrection of the Persian Savior
+"Mithra the Mediator," more than three thousand years ago, the priests
+were in the habit of exclaiming in a solemn and loud voice, "Cheer up,
+holy mourners; your God has come again to life; his sorrows and his
+sufferings will save you." (See Pitrat, p. 105.) The twenty-fifth of
+March was with the ancient Persians the commencement of a new year,
+and on that day was celebrated "the feast of the Neurone," and by the
+ancient Romans "the festival of the Hilaria." And we find the ancients
+had both the crucifixion and resurrection of a God symbolically and
+astronomically represented among the plants. "Their foundation," says
+Clement of Alexandria, "was the fictitious death and resurrection of
+the sun, the soul of the world, the principle of life and motion."
+The inauguration of spring (the twenty-fifth of March), and the summer
+solstice (the twenty-fifth of June), were both important periods with
+the ancients.
+
+Hence, the latter period was fixed on as the birthday of John the
+Baptist (as marked in the almanacs), when the sun begins to decline
+southward--that is, decrease. How appropriately, therefore, John is made
+to say, "I shall decrease, but he shall increase." And the consecrated
+twenty-fifth of March is also the day marked in our calendars as the
+date of the conception and annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. And
+it was likewise the period of the conception of the ancient Roman Virgin
+Asteria, and of the ever-chaste and holy virgin Iris, as well as the
+time of the conjugal embrace of the solar and lunar potentates of
+the visible universe. May we not, then, very appropriately exclaim of
+religion and astronomy, "what God hath joined together, let no man put
+asunder."
+
+Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
+
+With respect to the physical resurrection of the Christian Savior, it
+may be observed that, aside from the physical impossibility of such an
+occurrence, the account, as reported to us by his four "inspired" Gospel
+biographers, are so palpably at variance with each other, so entirely
+contradictory in their reports, as to render their testimony as
+infallible writers utterly unworthy of credence, and impels us to
+the conclusion that the event is both physically and historically
+incredible. There is scarcely one incident or particular in which they
+all agree. They are at loggerheads,--
+
+1. With respect to the time of its discovery.
+
+2. The persons who made the discovery (for no witness claims to have
+seen it).
+
+3. With respect to what took place at the sepulchre.
+
+4. What Peter saw and did there.
+
+5. And as to what occurred afterward, having a relation to that event.
+
+1. Relative to the time the witness or witnesses visited the sepulchre
+and learned of the resurrection, Matthew (chap. xxviii.) tells us, "It
+was at the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn;" but according to
+Mark (xvi.), the "Sabbath was past, and the sun was rising;" while
+John (chap. xx) declares "it was yet dark." Now there is certainly some
+difference between the three periods, "the dawning of the day," "the
+rising of the sun," and "the darkness of night." If the writers were
+_divinely_ inspired, there would be a perfect agreement.
+
+2. With respect to the persons who first visited the sepulchre, Matthew
+states that it was Mary Magdalene and another Mary; but Luke says it
+was "Mary Magdalene and Joanna, and Mary the mother of James, and other
+women;" while, according to John (and he virtually reiterates it),
+Mary Magdalene went alone. It will be observed, then, that the first
+"inspired" and "infallible" witness testifies there were two women; the
+second that there were four; and the third witness declares there was
+but one. What beautiful harmony! No court in the civilized world would
+accept such discordant testimony!
+
+3. And in relation to what took place at the tomb, Matthew testifies
+that "the angel of the Lord" sat upon a stone at the door of the
+sepulchre, and told the women their Lord was risen. But Luke steps
+forward here, and avers that instead of an angel they found two men
+there, not outside, but inside, and not sitting, but standing. But Mark
+sets the testimony of both these "inspired" witnesses aside by affirming
+there was but one man there, and he was sitting. While Matthew says
+"they," St. John says "she" (speaking of the person or persons who left
+the sepulchre). According to Matthew the angel who rolled away the stone
+from the sepulchre sent a message to the disciples. But Mark affirms
+that it was not an "angel" outside, but a "young man" inside, who did
+this. And here the question naturally arises: Why was it necessary for
+a being who could say, "I have power to lay down my life and take it
+up again" (John), to have an angel to roll away the stone from the
+sepulchre. Certainly, if he possessed such omnipotent power, he needed
+no aid from any being to perform such an act.
+
+4. And relative to Peter's visit to the tomb, there is a total disparity
+in the testimony of the witnesses. According to Luke, he did not go into
+the sepulchre, but only stooped down and looked in. But Mark affirms he
+did go in, and that it was the disciple who went with him who stooped
+down.
+
+5. And with respect to the events which occurred immediately subsequent
+to the resurrection, there is no less discrepancy, no nearer agreement,
+in the testimony of the evangelical witnesses. Matthew says that when
+Christ's disciples first met him after the resurrection, they worshiped
+him, and held him by the feet. (Matt, xxviii. 9) Strange, indeed, and
+wholly incredible, if John is a reliable witness, for he affirms he did
+not allow even his best and dearest friend (Mary) to touch him. And then
+John combats this testimony of his by declaring he invited the skeptical
+Thomas, not only to touch him, but to thrust his hand into his side for
+tangible proof of his identity.
+
+6. And why, let us ask here, was not the skeptical Thomas damned for
+his doubting, when we, who live thousands of miles from the place,
+and nearly two thousand years from the time, are often told by the
+priesthood we must "believe or be damned?"
+
+7. And if Thomas was really convinced by this occurrence, or if it ever
+took place, why have we no account of his subsequent life? What good was
+effected by his convincement if he never said or did anything afterward?
+
+8. John tells us Mary first saw Christ, after his resurrection, at the
+tomb, but Matthew says it was on her way home she first saw him.
+
+9. We are told by Luke (xxiv. 36) that when Christ appeared to his
+disciples on a certain occasion, they were frightened, supposing it
+to be a spirit. But John (xx. 20) says they were glad. Which must we
+believe?
+
+10. According to Matthew, the disciples were all present on this
+occasion; but according to John, Thomas was not there.
+
+11. Here let it be noted that none of the narrators claim to have seen
+Christ rise from the tomb, nor to have got it from anybody who did see
+it The only proof in this case is their declaration, "It came to pass."
+
+12. And we are prompted to ask here, how "it came to pass" that the
+chief priests and pharisees cherished sufficient faith in Christ's
+resurrection to set a watch for it, as Matthew reports, when his own
+disciples were too faithless in such an event to be present, or to
+believe he had risen after the report reached their ears; for we are
+told some doubted. (See Matt, xxiii.)
+
+13. And how came Matthew to know the soldiers were bribed to say
+Christ's body was stolen away by his disciples, when the disclosures of
+such a secret would have been death under the Roman government.
+
+14. And their confession of being asleep, as related by Matthew, would
+have subjected them to the same fatal penalty by the civil rulers of
+Rome.
+
+15. And if the soldiers were all asleep, can we not suggest several ways
+the body may have disappeared without being restored to life?
+
+16. And here we would ask if Christ rose from the dead in order to
+convince the world of his divine power, why did not the event take
+place in public? Why was it seen only by a few credulous and interested
+disciples?
+
+17. And if such an astonishing and miraculous event did occur, why does
+not one of the numerous cotemporary writers of those times make any
+allusion to it? Neither Pliny, Tacitus, nor Josephus, who detail the
+events very minutely, not only of those times, but of that very country,
+says a word about such a wonder-exciting occurrence. This fact of itself
+entirely overthrows the credibility of the story.
+
+18. And the fact that several Christian sects, which flourished near
+those times, as the Corinthians and Carpocratians, etc., rejected the
+story in toto, furnishes another powerful argument for discrediting it.
+
+19. And then add to this fact that his own chosen followers were
+upbraided for their unbelief in the matter.
+
+20. And what was Christ doing during the forty days between his
+resurrection and ascension, that he should only be seen a few times,
+and but a few minutes at a time, and by but a few persons, and those
+interested?
+
+21. And we would ask, likewise,--What more can be proved by Christ's
+physical resurrection than that of the resurrection of Lazarus, the
+widow's son, and several cases related in the Old Testament, or the
+numerous cases reported in oriental history?
+
+22. And what analogy is there in the resurrection of the dead body of a
+perfect and self-existent God and that of vile man?
+
+23. And why should Christ be called "the first fruits of the
+resurrection," when so many cases are reported as occurring before his?
+
+24. And why do Christians build their hopes of immortality almost
+entirely upon Christ's alleged resurrection, in view of the numerous
+facts we have cited showing it to be a mere sandy foundation?
+
+25. Of course no person who believes in modern spiritualism will
+discredit the story of Christ being visually recognized after his death
+_as a spirit_--for they have ocular proof that many such cases have
+occurred within the last decade of years. But it is the story of his
+physical resurrection we are combating--the reanimation of his flesh
+and bones after having been subjected three days to the laws of
+decomposition. Neither science nor sense can indorse such a story.
+
+26. It was a very easy matter, and very natural to mistake Christ's
+spiritual body for his physical body; for such mistakes have been made a
+thousand times in the world's history.
+
+27. Is it not strange, in view of the countless defects in the story of
+Christ's physical resurrection as enumerated above, that the orthodox
+Christian world should rely upon it as the great sheet anchor of their
+faith, and as their chief and almost their only hope of immortal life?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. REAPPEARANCE AND ASCENSION OF THE SAVIORS.
+
+MANY cases are related by their respective sacred narratives of the
+ancient Saviors, and other beings possessing the form of man, and
+previously recognized as men, reappearing to their disciples and
+friends, after having been consigned to the tomb for three days, or a
+longer or shorter period of time, and of their final ascension to the
+house of many mansions.
+
+It is related of the Indian or Hindoo Savior Chrishna, that after having
+risen from the dead, he appeared again to his disciples. "He ascended
+to Voiacantha (heaven), to Brahma," the first person of the trinity (he
+himself being the second), and that as he ascended, "all men saw him,
+and exclaimed, 'Lo! Chrishna's soul ascends to his native skies.'"
+And it is further related that, "attended by celestial spirits,.... he
+pursued by his own light the journey between earth and heaven, to the
+bright paradise whence he had descended."
+
+Of the ninth incarnation of India, the Savior Sakia, it is declared,
+that he "ascended to the celestial regions", and his pious and devout
+disciples point the skeptic to indelible impressions and ineffaceable
+footprints on the rocks of a high mountain as an imperishable proof of
+the declaration that he took his last leave of earth and made his ascent
+from that point.
+
+It is related of the crucified Prometheus, likewise, that after having
+given up the ghost on the cross, "descended to hell", Christ's soul was
+"not left in hell," see Acts ii. 31), "he rose again from the dead, and ascended into heaven."
+
+And then it is declared of the Egyptian Savior Alcides, that "after
+having been seen a number of times, he ascended to a higher life," going
+up, like Elijah, in "a chariot of fire."
+
+The story of the crucifixion of Quexalcote of Mexico, followed by his
+burial, resurrection and ascension, is distinctly related in the "holy"
+and inspired "gospels" of that country, which Lord Kingsborough admitted
+to be more than two thousand years old.
+
+Of Laotsi of China, it is said that when "he had completed his mission
+of benevolence, he ascended bodily alive into the paradise above."
+(Prog, of Rel. Ideas, vol. 214.) And it is related of Fo of the same
+country, that having completed his glorious mission on earth, he
+"ascended back to paradise, where he had previously existed from all
+eternity."
+
+It is related also in the ancient legends, that the Savior or God
+Xamalxis of Thrace, having died, and descended beneath the earth, and
+remained there three years, made his appearance again in the fourth year
+after his death, as he had previously foretold, and eventually ascended
+to heaven about 600 B. C. Even some of the Hindoo saints are reported
+in their "holy" and time-honored books to have been seen ascending to
+heaven. "And impressions on the rocks are shown," says an author, "said
+to be of footprints they had left when they ascended."
+
+It is related both by the Grecian biographer Plutarch, in his life
+of Romulus, and by a Roman historian, that the great founder of Rome
+(Romulus) suddenly ascended in a tempest during a solar eclipse, about
+713 B. C. And Julius Proculis, a Roman senator of great fame and high
+reputation, declared, under solemn oath, that he saw him, and talked
+with him after his death.
+
+
+ASTRONOMICAL VERSION OF THE STORY.
+
+Before dismissing this chapter, we may state that, in common with most
+other religious conceptions, the doctrine of the ascension has in the
+ancient legends an astronomical representation.
+
+Having said that a planet was buried because it sunk below the horizon,
+when it returned to light and gained its state of eminence, they spoke
+of it as dead, risen again, and ascended into heaven. (Volney, p. 143.)
+What is the story of the ascension of Christ worth in view of these
+ancient pagan traditions of earlier origin?
+
+
+ASCENSION OF THE CHRISTIAN SAVIOR.
+
+1. The different scriptural accounts of the ascension of Christ are,
+like the different stories of the resurrection, quite contradictory,
+and, hence, entitled to as little credit. In Luke (xxiv.), he is
+represented as ascending on the evening of the third day after the
+crucifixion. But the writer of Acts (i. 3) says he did not ascend
+till forty days after his resurrection; while, according to his own
+declaration to the thief on the cross, "This day shalt thou be with me
+in paradise," he must have ascended on the same day of his crucifixion.
+Which statement must we accept as inspired, or what is proved by such
+contradictory testimony?
+
+2. Which must we believe, Paul's declaration that he was seen by above
+_five hundred of the brethren_ at once (1 Cor. xv. 6), or the statement
+of the author of the Acts (i. 15), that there were _but one hundred and
+twenty brethren in all after that period?_
+
+3. How would his ascension do anything toward proving his divinity,
+unless it also proves the divinity of Enoch and Elijah, who are reported
+to have ascended long prior to that era?
+
+4. As these stories of the ascension of Christ, according to Lardner,
+were written many years after his crucifixion. Is it not hence probable
+they grew out of similar stories relative to the heathen Gods long
+previously prevalent in oriental countries?
+
+5. As these gospel writers could not have been present to witness the
+ascension, as it must have occurred before their time of active life,
+does not this fact of itself seriously damage the credibility of the
+accounts, and more especially as neither Mark nor Luke, who are the only
+reporters of the occurrence, were not disciples of Christ at the time,
+while Matthew and John, who were, say nothing about it?--another fact
+which casts a shade on the credibility of the story.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. THE ATONEMENT--ITS ORIENTAL OR HEATHEN ORIGIN.
+
+THERE were various practices in vogue amongst the orientalists, which
+originated with the design of appeasing the anger, and propitiating
+the favor of a presumed to be irascible deity. Most of these practices
+consisted in some kind of sacrifice or destructive offering called the
+"atonement." But here let it be observed, that the doctrine of atonement
+for sin, by sacrifice, was unfolded by degrees, and that the crucifixion
+of a God was not the first practical exhibition of it. On the contrary,
+it appears to have commenced with the most valueless or cheapest species
+of property then known. And from this starting-point ascended gradually,
+so as finally to embody the most costly commodities; and did not stop
+here, but reached forward till it laid its murderous hands on human
+beings, and immolated them upon its bloody altars. And finally, to cap
+the climax, it assumed the effrontery to drag a God off the throne
+of heaven, to stanch its blood-thirsty spirit, as evinced by Paul's
+declaration, "Without the shedding of blood there can be no remission of
+sin." Rather a bloody doctrine, and one which our humanity rejects with
+instinctive horror.
+
+We will trace the doctrine of the atonement briefly through its
+successive stages of growth and development.
+
+The idea seems to have started very early in the practical history of
+the human race, that the sacrifice and consequent deprivation of earthly
+goods, or some terrestial enjoyment, would have the effect to mitigate
+the anger, propitiate the favor, and obtain the mercy of an imaginary
+and vengeful God. This idea obviously was suggested by observing that
+their earthly rulers always smiled, and became less rigorous in their
+laws, and milder in their treatment of their subjects, when they made
+them presents of some valuable or desirable commodity. They soon learned
+that such offerings had the effect to check their cruel and bloody mode
+of governing the people; so that when their houses were shaken down,
+or swallowed up by earthquakes, the trees riven by lightning, and
+prostrated by storms, and their cattle swept away by floods, supposing
+it to be the work of an angry God, the thought arose in their minds at
+once, that perhaps his wrath could be abated by the same expedient as
+that which had served in the case of their mundane lords--that of making
+presents of property. But as this property could not be carried up to
+the celestial throne, the expedient was adopted of burning it, so that
+the substance or quintessence of it would be conveyed up to the heavenly
+Potentate in the shape of steam and smoke, which would make for him, as
+the Jews express it, "a sweet-smelling savor." Abundant and conspicuous
+is the evidence in history to show that the custom of burnt-offerings
+and atonements for sin originated in this way.
+
+The first species of property made use of for burnt-offerings appears to
+have been the fruits of the earth--vegetables, fruits, roots, etc.,--the
+lowest kind of property in point of value. But the thought soon
+naturally sprang up in the mind of the devotee, that a more valuable
+offering would sooner and more effectually secure the divine favor.
+Hence, levies were made on living herds of cattle, sheep, goats and
+other domestic animals. This was the second step in the ascending scale
+toward Gods.
+
+And here we find the key to open and solve the mystery of Jehovah's
+preferring Abel's offering to Cain's. While the latter consisted in mere
+inanimate substances, the former embraced the firstlings of the flock--a
+higher and more valuable species of property, and quite sufficient
+to induce the selfish Jehovah to prefer Abel's offering to Cain's, or
+rather for the selfish Jews to cherish this conception. In all nations
+where offerings were made, the conclusion became established in the
+minds of the people that the amount of God's favor procured in this way
+must be proportionate to the value of the commodity or victim offered
+up--a conviction which ultimately led to the seizure of human beings for
+the atoning offerings, which brings us to the third stage of growth in
+the atonement doctrine. Children frequently constituted the victims in
+this case. The sacrifice of Jephthah's daughter, as related in Judges
+xi. 30, and other cases cited by bible writers, (Isaiah xxxii. 25), and
+modern Christian authors, prove that this practice was in vogue among
+"God's holy people."
+
+One step more (constituting the _fourth_ stage of development) brings us
+to the sacrifice of Gods. The climax is now reached; the conception can
+go no higher. The ancient Birmese taught that while common property in
+burnt-offerings would procure the temporary favor of the ruling God, the
+sacrifice of human beings would secure his good pleasure for a thousand
+years, and cancel out all the sins committed in that period. And when
+one of the three Gods on the throne of heaven was dragged down, or
+_voluntarily came down_ (as some of the sects taught), and was put to
+death on the cross as an atonement for sin, such was the value of the
+victim, such the magnitude of the offering, that it "atoned for _all_
+sin, past, present and future, for all the human race."
+
+The Hindoos, cherishing this conception, taught that the crucifixion of
+their sin-atoning Savior Chrishna (1200 B. C.) put an end to both animal
+and human sacrifices, and accordingly such offerings ceased in most
+Hindoo countries centuries ago. Thus far back in the mire and midnight
+of human ignorance, and amid the clouds of mental darkness, while man
+dwelt upon the animal plane, and was governed by his brutal feelings,
+and "blood for blood" was the requisition for human offenses, originated
+the bloody, savage and revolting doctrine of the atonement.
+
+Another mode of adjudicating the sins of the people in vogue in some
+countries anterior to the custom of shedding blood as an expiation, was
+that of packing them on the back, head, or horns of some animal by
+a formal hocus-pocus process, and then driving the animal into a
+wilderness, or some other place so remote that the brute could not find
+its way back amongst the people with its cargo of sins. The cloth or
+fabric used for inclosing the sins and iniquities of the people was
+usually of a red or scarlet color--of the semblance of blood. In fact,
+it was generally dipped in blood. This, being lashed to the animal,
+would of course be exposed to the weather and the drenching rains, would
+consequently, in the course of time, fade and become white. Hence, we
+have the key to Isaiah's declaration, "Though your sins be (red) as
+scarlet, they shall become (white) as wool." (See Isaiah, i. 18.) And
+thus the meaning of this obscure text is clearly explained by tracing
+its origin to its oriental source.
+
+And there are many other texts in the Christian bible which might be
+elucidated in a similar manner by using oriental tradition, or oriental
+sacred books, as a key to unlock and explain their meaning. We have
+stated above that some animal was made use of by different nations to
+convey the imaginary load of the people's sins out of the country.
+For this purpose the Jews had their "scapegoat," the Egyptians their
+"scape-ox," the Hindoos their "scape-horse," the Chaldeans their
+"scape-ram," the Britons their "scape-bull," the Mexicans their
+"scape-lamb" and "scape-mouse," the Tamalese their "scape-hen," and
+the Christians at a later period their _scape-God_. Jesus Christ may
+properly be termed the scape-God of orthodox Christians, as he stands in
+the same relation to his disciples, who believe in the atonement, as the
+goat did to the Jews, and performs the same end and office. The goat and
+the other sin-offering animals took away the sin of the nation in each
+case respectively. In like manner Jesus Christ takes away the sin of
+the world, being called "the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the
+world." (John i. 29.) And more than two thousand years ago the Mexicans
+sacrificed a lamb as an atonement, which they called "the Lamb
+of God"--the same title scripturally applied to Jesus Christ. The
+conception in each case is, then, the same--that of the atonement for
+sin by the sacrifice of an innocent victim.
+
+The above citations show that the present custom of orthodox
+Christendom, in packing their sins upon the back of a God, is just
+the same substantially as that of various heathen nations, who were
+anciently in the habit of packing them upon the backs of various dumb
+animals. If some of our Christian brethren should protest against our
+speaking of the church's idea of atonement as that of packing their sins
+upon the back of a God, we will here prove the appropriateness of the
+term upon the authority of the bible. Peter expressly declares Christ
+bore our sins upon his own body on a tree (see 1 Peter ii. 24), just
+as the Jews declared the _goat bore their_ sins on his body, and the
+ancient Brahmins taught that the bulls and the heifers bore theirs away,
+etc., which shows that the whole conception is of purely heathen
+origin. And hereafter, when they laugh at the Jewish superstition of
+a scape-goat, let them bear in mind that more sensible and intelligent
+people may laugh in turn at their superstitious doctrine of a scape-God.
+
+These superstitious customs were simply expedients of different nations
+to evade the punishment of their sins--an attempt to shift their
+retributive consequences on to other beings. The divine atonement more
+especially possessed this character. This system teaches that the son
+of God and Savior of the world was sent down and incarnated, in order to
+die for the people, and thus suffer by proxy the punishment meted out
+by divine wrath for the sins of the whole world. The blood of a God must
+atone for the sins of the whole human family, as rams, goats, bullocks
+and other animals had atoned for the sins of families and nations under
+older systems. Thus taught Brahminism, Budhism, Persianism, and other
+religious systems, before the dawn of Christianity. The nucleus of the
+atoning system is founded in the doctrine, "Without the shedding of
+blood there is no remission for sin" (Rom. v. 9)--a monstrous and
+morally revolting doctrine--a doctrine which teaches us that _somebodys_
+blood must be shed, somebody's veins and arteries depleted, for every
+trivial offense committed against the moral law. Somebody must pay the
+penalty in blood, somebody must be slaughtered for every little foible
+or peccadillo or moral blunder into which erring man may chance to
+stumble while upon the pilgrimage of life, while journeying through the
+wilderness of time, even if a God has to be dragged from his throne in
+heaven, and murdered to accomplish it. Nothing less will mitigate the
+divine wrath.
+
+Whose soul--possessing the slightest moral sensibility--does not
+inwardly and instinctively revolt at such a doctrine? We would not teach
+it to the world, for it is founded in butchery and bloodshed, and is
+an old pagan superstition, which originated far back in the midnight of
+mental darkness and heathen ignorance, when the whole human race were
+under the lawless sway of their brutal propensities, and when the
+ennobling attributes of love, mercy and forgiveness had as yet found
+no place, no abiding home, in the human bosom. The bloody soul of the
+savage first gave it birth. We hold the doctrine to be a a high-handed
+insult to the All-loving Father, who, we are told, is "long-suffering in
+mercy," and "plentiful in forgiveness," to charge _Him_ with sanctioning
+such a doctrine, much less with originating it.
+
+There is no "mercy or forgiveness" in putting an innocent being to death
+for any pretext whatever. And for the Father to consent to the brutal
+assassination of His own innocent Son upon the cross to gratify an
+implacable revenge toward his own children, the workmanship of his own
+hands, rather than forgive a moral weakness implanted in their natures
+by a voluntary act of his own, and for which consequently he alone ought
+to be responsible, would be nothing short of murder in the first degree.
+
+We cherish no such conception. We cannot for a moment harbor a
+blasphemous doctrine, which represents the Universal Father as being a
+bloody-minded and murderous being, instead of a being of infinite love,
+infinite wisdom, and infinite in all the moral virtues. Such a character
+would be a deep-dyed stigma upon any human being. And no person actuated
+by a strict sense of justice would accept salvation upon any such terms
+as that prescribed by the Christian atonement.
+
+It is manifestly too unjust, too devoid of moral principle, besides
+being a flagrant violation of the first principles of civil and criminal
+jurisprudence. It is a double wrong to punish the innocent for the
+guilty. It is the infliction of injustice on the one hand, and the
+omission of justice on the other. It inflicts the highest penalty of
+the law upon an innocent being, whom that law ought to shield from
+punishment, while it exculpates and liberates the guilty party, whose
+punishment the moral law demands. It robs society of a useful man on
+the one hand, and turns a moral pest upon community on the other,
+thus committing a twofold wrong, or act of injustice. No court in any
+civilized country would be allowed to act upon such a principle; and
+the judge who should indorse it, or favor a law, or principle, which
+punishes the innocent for the guilty, would be ruled off the bench at
+once.
+
+Here, however, we are sometimes met with the plea, that the offering
+of Jesus Christ was a voluntary act, that it was made with his own
+free will. But the plea don't do away with either the injustice or
+criminality of the act.
+
+No innocent person has a right to suffer for the guilty, and the
+courts have no right to accept the offer or admit the substitute. An
+illustration will show this. If Jefferson Davis had been convicted of
+the crime of treason, and sentenced to be hung, and Abraham Lincoln had
+come forward and offered to be stretched upon the gallows in his place,
+is there a court in the civilized world which would have accepted the
+substitute, and hung Lincoln, and liberated Davis? To ask the question
+is but to answer it. It is an insult to reason, law and justice to
+entertain the proposition.
+
+The doctrine of the atonement also involves the infinite absurdity of
+God punishing himself to appease his own wrath. For if "the fullness of
+the Godhead dwelt in Christ bodily" (as taught in Col. ii. 9), then
+his death was the death of God--that is, a divine suicide, prompted and
+committed by a feeling of anger and revenge, which terminated the life
+of the Infinite Ruler--a doctrine utterly devoid of reason, science
+or sense. We are sometimes told man owes a debt to his Maker, and the
+atonement pays that debt. To be sure! And to whom is the debt owing, and
+who pays it? Why, the debt is owing to God, and God (in the person of
+Jesus Christ) pays it--pays it to himself. We will illustrate. A man
+approaches his neighbor, and says, "Sir, I owe you a thousand dollars,
+but can never pay it." "Very well, it makes no difference," replies the
+claimant, "I will pay it myself;" and forthwith thrusts his hand into
+his right pocket and extracts the money, transfers it to the left pocket
+and exclaims--"There, the debt is paid!" A curious way of paying debts,
+and one utterly devoid of sense. And yet the orthodox world have adopted
+it for their God. We find, however, that they carefully avoid practicing
+this principle themselves in their dealings with each other. When they
+have a claim against a neighbor, we do not find them ever thrusting
+their hands into their own pockets to pay it off, but sue him, and
+compel him to pay--if he refuses to do it without compulsion--thus
+proving they do not consider it a correct principle of trade.
+
+But we find, upon further investigation, that the assumed debt is not
+paid--after all.
+
+When a debt is paid, it is canceled, and dismissed from memory, and
+nothing more said about it. But in this case the sinner is told he
+must still suffer the penalty for every sin he commits, notwithstanding
+Christ died to atone for and cancel that sin.
+
+Where, then, is the virtue of the atonement? Like other doctrines of
+the orthodox creed, it is at war with reason and common sense, and every
+principle of sound morality, and will be marked by coming ages as a
+relic of barbarism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. THE HOLY GHOST OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN
+
+OF all the weird, fanciful, and fabulous stories appertaining to the
+Gods and other spiritual entities of the olden times, whose capricious
+adventures we find so profusely narrated in oriental mythology--of
+all the strange, mythical and mystical feats, and ever-varying and
+ever-diverging changes in the shape, appearance, sex, and modes of
+manifestation which characterize the hobgoblins or ghostly beings which
+comprise the esoteric stock of the ancient mysteries, that appertaining
+to the third member of "the hypostatic union," the Holy Ghost, seems to
+stand pre-eminent. And I propose here to submit the facts to show that
+the Holy Ghost story of the Christian Gospels, like the more ancient
+pagan versions of the same story, is marked by the same wild, discordant
+and legendary characteristics which abound in all the accounts of gods
+and ghosts found recorded in the religious books of various nations.
+
+The following brief exposition of the history and exploits of this
+anomalous, nondescript, chameleon-like being will clearly evince that
+the same fanciful, metaphorical and fabulous changes in the size, shape,
+sex and appearance of this third limb of the triune God are found in the
+Christian Scriptures which are disclosed in the more ancient oriental
+traditions.
+
+We will first exhibit a classification of the names and characteristics
+of this imaginary being drawn from the gospels and epistles of the
+Christian bible, by which it will be observed that scarcely any two
+references to it agree in assigning it the same character or attributes.
+
+1. In John xiv. 26, the Holy Ghost is spoken of as a person or personal
+God.
+
+2. In Luke iii. 22, the Holy Ghost changes, and assumes the form of a
+dove.
+
+3. In Matt. xiii. 16, the Holy Ghost becomes a spirit
+
+4. In John i. 32, the Holy Ghost is presented as an inanimate, senseless
+object.
+
+5. In John v. 7, the Holy Ghost becomes a God--the third member of the
+Trinity.'
+
+6. In Acts ii. 1, the Holy Ghost is averred to be "a mighty, rushing
+wind."
+
+7. In Acts x. 38, the Holy Ghost, we infer, from its mode of
+application, is an ointment.
+
+8. In John xx. 22, the Holy Ghost is the breath, as we legitimately
+infer by its being breathed into the mouth of the recipient after the
+ancient oriental custom.
+
+9. In Adis ii. 3, we learn the Holy Ghost "sat upon each of them,"
+probably in the form of a bird, as at Jesus' baptism.
+
+10. In Adis ii. 1, the Holy Ghost appears as "cloven tongues of fire."
+
+11. In Luke ii. 26, the Holy Ghost is the author of a revelation or
+inspiration.
+
+12. In Adis viii. 17, the Holy Ghost is a magnetic aura imparted by the
+"laying on of hands."
+
+13. In Mark i. 8, the Holy Ghost is a medium or element for baptism.
+
+14. In Adis xxviii. 25, the Holy Ghost appears with vocal organs, and
+speaks.
+
+15. In Heb. vi. 4, the Holy Ghost is dealt out or imparted by measure.
+
+16. In Luke iii. 22, the Holy Ghost appears with a tangible body.
+
+17. In Luke i. 5, and many other texts, we are taught people are filled
+with the Holy Ghost.
+
+18. In Matt. xi. 15, the Holy Ghost falls upon the people as a
+ponderable substance.
+
+19. In Luke iv. 1, the Holy Ghost is a God within a God--"Jesus being
+full of the Holy Ghost."
+
+20. In Acts xxi. 11, the Holy Ghost is a being of the masculine or
+feminine gender--"Thus saith the Holy Ghost," etc.
+
+21. In John i. 32, the Holy Ghost is of the neuter gender--"It (the
+Holy Ghost) abode upon him."
+
+22. In Matt. i. 18, the Holy Ghost becomes a vicarious agent in the
+procreation of another God; that is, this third member of the Trinity
+aids the first member (the Father) in the creation or generation of the
+second member of the triad of bachelor Gods--the Word, or Savior, or Son
+of God.
+
+Such are the ever-shifting scenes presented in the Scripture panorama
+of the Holy Ghost. Surpassing the fabulous changes of some of the more
+ancient demigods, the Christian Holy Ghost undergoes (as is shown by
+the above-quoted texts) a perpetual metathesis or metamorphosis--being
+variously presented on different occasions as a personal and rational
+being, a dove, a spirit, an inanimate object, a God, the wind or a wind,
+an ointment, the breath or a breath, cloven tongue of fire, a bird, or
+some other flying recumbent animal, a revelator or divine messenger,
+a medium or element for baptism, an intelligent, speaking being, a
+lifeless, bodiless, sexless being, a measurable fluid substance, a being
+possessing a body, ponderable, unconscious substance, a God dwelling
+within a God, and, finally--though really first in order--the author
+or agent of the incarnation of the second God in the Trinity (Jesus
+Christ).
+
+That many of these fabulous conceptions were drawn from mythological
+sources will be made manifest by the following facts of history:--
+
+1. _The Holy Ghost in the shape of a bird, a dove or a pigeon._ This is
+proven to be a very ancient pagan tradition, as it is found incorporated
+in several of the oriental religious systems. In ancient India, whose
+prolific spiritual fancies constitute the primary parentage of nearly
+all the doctrines, dogmas and superstitions found incorporated in
+the Christian Scriptures, a dove was uniformly the emblem of the Holy
+Spirit, or Spirit of God. Confirmatory of this statement, we find the
+declaration in the Anacalypsis, that a "dove stood for or represented
+a third member of the Trinity, and was the regenerator or regeneratory
+power." This meets the Christian idea of "regeneration and renewing
+of the Holy Ghost." (Titus iii. 5.) A person being baptized under the
+Brahminical theocracy was said to be "regenerated and born again," or, as
+the above-quoted writer expresses it, "They were born into the spirit,
+or the spirit into them"--that is, the "dove into or upon them," (As vide
+the case of the Christian's "Holy Ghost descending in bodily shape like
+a dove," and alighting on Christ's head at baptism, as related in Luke
+iii. 22.) In ancient Rome a dove or pigeon was the emblem of the female
+procreative energy, and frequently a legendary spirit, the accompaniment
+of Venus. And hence, as a writer remarks, "It is very appropriately
+represented as descending at baptism in the character of the third
+member of the Trinity." The same writer tells us, "The dove fills the
+Grecian oracles with their spirit and power." We find the dove, also,
+in the romantic eclogues of ancient Syria. In the time-chiseled Syrian
+temple of Hierapolis, Semiramis is represented with a dove on her head,
+thus constituting the prototype of the dove on the head of the Christian
+Messiah at baptism. And a dove was in more than one of the ancient
+religious systems--"The Spirit of God (Holy Ghost) moving on the face of
+the waters" at creation, as implied in Gen. i. 2, though a pigeon, was
+often indiscriminately substituted. In Howe's "Ancient Mysteries" it is
+related that "in St. Paul's Cathedral, at the feast of Whitsuntide, the
+descent of the Holy Ghost was performed by a white pigeon being let fly
+out of a hole in the midst of the roof of the great aisle." The dove
+and the pigeon, being but slight variations of the same species of the
+feathered tribe, were used indiscriminately.
+
+2. As evinced above, the Holy Ghost was the third member of the Trinity
+in several of the oriental systems. Father, Son and Holy Ghost, or
+Father, Word and Holy Ghost (1 John v. 7), are familiar Christian
+terms to express the divine triad, which shows the Holy Ghost to be
+the acknowledged third member of the Christian Trinity. And, as already
+suggested, the same is true of the more ancient systems. "The Holy
+Spirit and the Evil Spirit were, each in their turn (says Mr. Higgins),
+third member of the Trinity." We might, if space would allow, draw
+largely upon the ancient defunct systems in proof of this statement. "In
+these triads (says Mr. Hillell) the third member, as might be supposed,
+was not of equal rank with the other two." And hence, in the Theban
+Trinity, Khonso was inferior to Arion and Mant. In the Hindoo triad,
+Siva was subordinate to Brahma and Vishnu. And a score of similar
+examples might be adduced from the fancy-constructed trinities of other
+and older oriental religious systems (but for the inflexible rule of
+brevity which forbids their presentation here), with all of which the
+more modern Holy Ghost conception of the Christian world is an exact
+correspondence, as this imaginary, fabulous being is less conspicuous
+than and has always stood third in rank with the Father and second
+to the Son, alias the Word, and is now seldom addressed in practical
+Christian devotion; and thus the analogy is complete. Mr. Maurice
+says, "This notion of a third person in the Deity (the Holy Ghost) was
+diffused among all the nations of the earth." (See Ind. Antiq. vol. iv.
+p. 75a) And Mr. Worseley, in his "Voyage" (vol. i. p. 259), avers this
+doctrine to be "of very great antiquity, and generally received by all
+the Gothic and Celtic nations."
+
+3. The Holy Ghost was the Holy Breath which, in the Hindoo traditions,
+moved on the face of the waters at creation, and imparted life and
+vitality into everything created. A similar conception is recognized in
+the Christian Scriptures. In Psalms xxxiii. 6, we read, "By the Word of
+the Lord were the heavens made, and all the host of them by the breath
+of his mouth." Here is the Brahminical conception, square out, of the
+act of creation by the Divine Breath, which is the Holy Ghost, the same,
+also, which was breathed into Adam, by which he became "a living soul."
+M. Dubois observes, "The Prana, or principle of life, of the Hindoos is
+the breath of life by which the Creator (Brahma) animates the clay, and
+man became a living soul." (Page 293.)
+
+4. Holy Ghost, Holy Breath and Holy Wind appear to have been synonymous
+and convertible terms for the living vocal emanations from the mouth of
+the Supreme God, as memorialized in several of the pagan traditions.
+The last term (Holy Wind) is suggested by "the mighty rushing wind from
+heaven" which filled the house, or church, on the day of Pentecost. (See
+Acts ii. 2.) Several of the old religious systems recognize "the
+Holy Wind" as a term for the Holy Ghost. The doxology (reported by a
+missionary) in the religious service of the Syrian worship runs thus:--
+
+ "Praise to the Holy Spiritual Wind, which is the Holy Ghost;
+ Praise to the three persons which are one true God."
+
+Some writers maintain that the Hebrew _Ruk Aliem._ translated "Spirit of
+God" (Gen. i. 2) in our version, should read, "Wind of the Gods." And
+we find that the word _pneuma_ of our Greek New Testament, is sometimes
+translated "Ghost" and sometimes "Wind," as best suited the fancy of the
+translators. In John iii. 5, we find the word Spirit, and in verse eight
+both Wind and Spirit are found; and in Luke i. 35, we observe the term
+Holy Ghost--all translated from the same word. Let it be specially
+noted that in the Greek Testament the word _pneuma_ is used in all these
+cases, thus proving that Spirit, Holy Ghost and Wind are used in the
+Christian Scriptures as synonymous terms; and proving, also, that an
+unwarranted license has been assumed by translators in rendering the
+same word three different ways. M. Auvaroff, in his "Essays on the
+Eleusinian Mysteries," speaks of "the torch being ignited at the command
+of Hermes of Egypt, the spiritual agent in the workshop of creation,"
+relative to which statement a writer remarks, "Hermes appears in
+this instance as a personification of Wind or Spirit, as in the
+bible (meaning the Christian bible), God, Wind and Spirit are often
+interchangeable terms, and the Word appears to be from the same windy
+source."
+
+5. _The Holy Ghost as "a tongue of fire, which sat upon each of
+them" (the apostles)_. (See Acts. ii. 3.) Even this conception is an
+orientalism. Mr. Higgins tells us that "Budha, an incarnate God of the
+Hindoos (three thousand years ago), is often seen with a glory or tongue
+of fire upon his head." And the tradition of the visible manifestation
+of the Holy Ghost by fire was prevalent among the ancient Budhists,
+Celts, Druids and Etrurians. In fact, as our author truly remarks, "The
+Holy Ghost, or Holy Spirit, when visible, was always in the form of fire
+(or a bird), and was always accompanied with wisdom and power." Hence,
+is disclosed the origin of the ancient custom amongst the Hindoos,
+Persians and Chaldeans, of making offerings to the solar fire, emblem of
+the Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit.
+
+6. _Inspiration by the Holy Ghost_ (Luke ii. 26.) "Holy men of God,"
+including some of the prophets, are claimed to have been inspired by the
+Holy Ghost (See 2 Peter i. 21; Acts xxviii. 25.) In like manner, as
+we are informed by Mr. Cleland in his "Specimens" (see Appendix), the
+ancient Celts were not only "moved by the Holy Ghost" in their divine
+decrees and prophetic utterances, but they claimed that their Salic laws
+(seventy-two in number) were inspired by the "Salo Ghost" (Holy Ghost),
+known also as "the Wisdom of the Spirit, or the Voice of the Spirit."
+This author several times alludes to the fact, and exhibits the proof,
+that the doctrine of the Holy Ghost was known to this ancient people.
+
+7. _The Holy Ghost imparted by "the laying on of hands_." This, too, is
+an ancient oriental custom. "And by the imposition of hands on the head
+of the candidate," says Mr. Cleland, speaking of the Celts, "the Holy
+Ghost, or Holy Spirit, was conveyed." And thus was the Holy Spirit,
+Ghost, Gas, Wind, Electrical Fire or Spirit of Authority imparted to the
+hierophant or gospel novitiate. "And their public assemblies," continues
+our author, "were always opened by an invocation to the Holy Ghost."
+
+8. _Baptism by or into the Holy Ghost accompanied with fire_. (Matt.
+iii. 11.) This rite, too, is traceable to a very ancient period, and was
+practiced by several of the old symbolical and mythological systems.
+The Tuscans, or Etrurians, baptized with fire, wind (ghost) and water.
+Baptism into the first member of the Trinity (the Father) was with fire;
+baptism into the second member of the Trinity (the Word) was with water;
+while baptism into the third member of the Trinity (the Holy Ghost,
+or Holy Spirit) consisted of the initiatory spiritual or symbolical
+application of gas, gust, ghost, wind, or spirit. It appears from
+"Herbert's Travels," that, in "ancient countries", the child was taken to
+the priest, who named him (christened him) before the sacred fire after
+which ceremony he was sprinkled with "holy water" from a vessel made of
+the sacred tree known as "The Holme."
+
+9. _The Holy Ghost imparted by breathing_. (See John xx. 22).
+"Sometimes," says Mr. Higgins, relative to this custom among the ancient
+heathen, "the priest blew his breath upon the child, which was then
+considered baptized by _air, spiritus sanctus,_ or ghost--i. e., baptism
+by the Holy Ghost." In case of baptism, a portion of the Holy Ghost
+was supposed to be transferred from the priest to the candidate. "The
+practice of breathing in or upon," says our author, "was quite common
+among the ancient heathen."
+
+10. _The Holy Ghost as the agent in divine conception, or the
+procreation of other Gods_. Jesus is said to have been conceived by
+the Holy Ghost (see Matt. i. 18), and we find similar claims instituted
+still more anciently for other incarnate demigods. In the Mexican
+Trinity, Y, Zona was the father, Bacal the Word, and Eckvah the Holy
+Ghost, by the last of whom Chimalman conceived and brought forth the
+enfleshed God Quexalcote. (See Mex. Ant., vol. vi. p. 1650.) In the
+Hindoo mythos, Sakia was conceived by the Holy Ghost Nara-an.
+
+Other cases might be cited, proving the same point.
+
+Thus, we observe that the various heterogeneous conceptions, discordant
+traditions, and contradictory superstitions appertaining to that
+anomalous nondescript being known as the Holy Ghost, are traceable to
+various oriental countries, and to a very remote antiquity.
+
+We will only occupy space with one or two more historical citations of a
+general nature, tending to prove the prevalence of this ghostly myth
+in other countries, not yet cited. "Tell me, O thou strong in fire!"
+ejaculated Sesostris of Egypt, to the oracle, as reported by Manetho,
+"who before me could subjugate all things, and who shall after me?" But
+the oracle rebuked him, saying, "First God, then the Word, and with them
+the Spirit." (See Nimrod, vol. i. p. 119.) "And Plutarch, in his 'Life
+of Numa,'" says our oft-quoted author, "shows that the incarnation of
+the Holy Spirit was known both to the ancient Romans and Egyptians."
+
+The doctrine is thus shown to have been nearly universal.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE HOLY GHOST SUPERSTITION.
+
+The origin of the tradition respecting this fabulous and mythical being
+is easily traced to the ancient Brahminical trifold conception of the
+Deity, in which stands, in Trinity order, first, the God of power or
+might--Brahma or Brahm (the Father); second, the God of creation--the
+Word--answering to John's creative Word (see John i. 3); and third, the
+God of generation and regeneration--the Holy Spirit or Holy Ghost. The
+last member of the triune conception of the Deity was considered, under
+the Brahminical theocracy, the _living, vital, active, life-imparting
+agent_ in both the first and second births of men and the gods.
+
+It will be borne in mind by the reader that the Holy Ghost is
+represented in the Christian Scripture as being the active generating
+agent of Christ's conception, he being, as Matthew declares, "conceived
+by the Holy Ghost." The Holy Ghost was also the regenerating agent at
+his baptism. Although the specific object of the descent of the Holy
+Ghost on that occasion is not stated by Luke, who relates it; although
+it is not stated for what purpose the Holy Spirit, after assuming the
+form of a bird, alighted and sat upon his head, yet the motive is fully
+disclosed in the older mythical religions, where we find the matter in
+fuller detail.
+
+Baptism itself is claimed by all its Christian votaries as regenerating
+or imparting a new spiritual life; and this new spiritual life was
+believed by several nations, as before stated, to make its appearance in
+the character and shape of a bird--sometimes a pigeon, sometimes a dove;
+and thus the origin of this tradition is most clearly and unmistakably
+exposed.
+
+As the foregoing historical exposition exhibits the Holy Ghost as
+performing several distinct and discordant offices, so we likewise find
+it possessing at least two distinct genders, the masculine and neuter,
+i. e., no gender--changing, ghost-like, from one to the other, as
+occasion seemed to require.
+
+From all these metamorphoses it is shown and demonstrated that the
+sexual and other changes of this "mysterious" being equal many of the
+demigods of mythology. The primary windy conception of the Holy Ghost
+is traceable to that early period of society when the rude and untutored
+denizens of the earth, in their profound ignorance of natural causes,
+were very easily and naturally led into the belief that wherever there
+was motion there was a God, or the active manifestation of a God,
+whether it was in the wind, breath, water, fire, or the sun.
+
+Hence, the Buddhists had their god _Vasus_ who manifested himself
+variously in the shape or character of fire, wind, storms, gas,
+ghosts, gusts, and the breath, thus constituting a very nearly-allied
+counterpart to the Christian Holy Ghost, which Mr. Parkhurst tells us
+originally meant "air in motion." This god was believed to have sprung
+from the supreme, primordial God, which the ancient Brahmins and
+Buddhists generally believed was constituted of a fine, spiritual
+substance,--aura, anima, wind, ether, igneous fluid, or electrical fire,
+i. e., fire from the sun, giving rise to "baptism by fire" and hence, the
+third God, or third member of the Trinity, subsequently arising out of
+this compound being, was also necessarily composed of or consisted of
+the same properties--all of which were believed to be correlated, if not
+identical.
+
+Such is a complete, though brief, historical elucidation of that
+mysterious, imaginary being so corporally intangible that Faustus, of
+the third century, declared respecting it, "The Holy Spirit, the third
+majesty, has the air for his residence." And it is a fabulous God whose
+scriptural biography is invested with so many ludicrous and abstruse
+incidents as to incite several hundred Christian writers to labor
+hard with a "godly zeal," by a reconstruction of "God's Word" and
+a rehabiliment of the ghostly texts, to effect some kind of a
+reconciliation of the story with reason and common sense--with what
+success the reader is left to judge.
+
+
+THE UNPARDONABLE SIN AGAINST THE HOLY GHOST.
+
+Before dismissing our ghostly narrative, it may effect something in the
+way of mitigating the anxious fears of some of our Christian brothers
+and sisters to explain the nature of "the sin against the Holy Ghost,"
+and assign the reason for its being unpardonable. The sin against the
+Holy Ghost consisted, according to the ancient Mexican traditions, in
+resisting its operations in the second birth--that is, the regeneration
+of the heart or soul by the Holy Ghost. And as the rectification of the
+heart or soul was a prominent idea with Christ, there is scarcely any
+ground to doubt but that this was the notion he cherished of the nature
+of the sin against the Holy Ghost. And it was considered unpardonable,
+simply because as the pardoning and cleansing process consisted in,
+or was at least always accompanied with baptism by water, in which
+operation the Holy Ghost was the agent in effecting a "new birth,"
+therefore, when the ministrations or operations of this indispensable
+agent were resisted or rejected, there was no channel, no means, no
+possible mode left for the sinner to find a renewed acceptance with God.
+When a person sinned against the Father or the Word (the Son), he could
+find a door of forgiveness through the baptizing processes spiritual
+or elementary, of the Holy Ghost. But an offense committed against this
+third limb of the Godhead had the effect to close and bar the door so
+that there could be "no forgiveness, either in this life or that which
+is to come." To sin against the Holy Ghost was to tear down the scaffold
+by which the door of heaven was to be reached.
+
+And thus it is explained the great "_mystery of godliness_," the
+"unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost," which, on account of the
+frightful penalty annexed to it, while it is impossible to learn what it
+consists in--it being undefined and undefinable--has caused thousands,
+and probably millions, of the disciples of the Christian faith the most
+agonizing hours of alarm and despair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. THE DIVINE "WORD" OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN.
+
+The Word as Creator, as Second Person of the Trinity, and its
+Pre-Existence.
+
+
+THE WORD OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN.
+
+"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
+was God." (John i. i.) The doctrine of the divine creative word (from
+the Greek Logos) appears to have been coeval in its origin with that of
+the Trinity, if not inseparably connected with it, as it constitutes the
+second member of the Trinity of "Father, Word, and Holy Ghost" in most
+of the ancient systems of religion. Works on heathen mythology show that
+it was anciently a very prevalent custom to personify ideas, thoughts
+and words into angels and Gods. Words were first personated, and
+transformed into men, then into angels, and finally into Gods.
+
+And here is foreshadowed the origin of John's personification of "the
+Word made flesh." It was simply the word of the supreme God as it
+escaped from his mouth, assuming the form and characteristics of a
+divine being like himself, and taking position as a secondary God and
+second member of the Trinity. This was the orient conception, and it
+appears to have been John's. He evidently had no thought of Christ
+experiencing human birth, at first, or being born of a woman, but
+believed, like some of the orientalists, that he came out of the mouth
+of the Father, and was thus "made flesh." (John i. 2.) Not a word of
+Christ being born is found in John's Gospel, till after his existence as
+the Word is spoken of. (See first note in back of book.)
+
+
+THE WORD AS CREATOR.
+
+John also represents the Word as having been the Creator. "All things
+were made by him." (John i. 3.) And Peter declares, "By the word of God
+the heavens were of old." (2 iii. 5.) Now, let it be observed here, as
+a notable circumstance, that the Chinese bible, much older than the
+Christian's New Testament, likewise declares, "God pronounced the
+primeval Word, and his own eternal and glorious abode sprang into
+existence." Mr. Guizot, in a note on Gibbon's work, says, "According to
+the Zend-Avesta (the Persian bible, more than three thousand years old),
+it is by the Word, more ancient than the world, that Ormuzd created the
+universe."
+
+In like manner the sacred writings of the ancient Thibetans speak of
+"the Word which produced the world"--an exact counterpart to John's
+declaration, "All things were made by him." And the ancient Greek writer
+Amelias, speaking of the God Mercury, says, "And this plainly was
+the Logos (the Word), by whom all things were made, he being himself
+eternal," as Heraclitus would say,.... He assumed to be with God, and
+to be God, and in him everything that was made, has its life and being,
+who, descending into body, and putting on flesh, took the appearance of
+a man, though still retaining the majesty of his nature. Here is
+"the Word made flesh" set forth in most explicit terms. The Psalmist
+exclaims, "By the Word of God were the heavens made, and all the host of
+them by the Breath of his mouth." (Ps. xxxiii. 6.) Here is disclosed not
+only the conception of the Word as Creator, but also the Word and the
+Breath as synonymous terms, both of which conceptions oriental history
+amply proves to be of heathen derivation.
+
+It was anciently believed that the Word and Breath of God were the same,
+and possessed a vitalizing power, which, as they issued from his mouth,
+might be transformed into another being known as a secondary God. Both
+the Jews and the Christians seem to have inherited this belief, as
+evinced by the foregoing quotations from their bible. The most ancient
+tradition taught that the Word emanated from the mouth of the principal
+God, and "became flesh," that is, took form, as the ancient Brahmins
+expressed it, for the special purpose of serving as agent in the work of
+creation, that is, to become the creator of the external universe. St.
+John evidently borrowed this idea. Read his first chapter.
+
+
+PRE-EXISTENCE OF THE WORD.
+
+The pre-existence or previous existence of the Word, antecedent to the
+date of its metamorphosis into the human form, we find taught in several
+of the ancient systems of religion, as well as the more modern Christian
+system. Several texts in the Christian New Testament set forth the
+doctrine quite explicitly. Christ, as the Divine Word, declared, "Before
+Abraham was I am," and that he had an existence with the Father before
+the foundation of the world, etc., which is a distinct avowal of the
+doctrine of pre-existence.
+
+But oriental history proves the doctrine is much older than
+Christianity.
+
+The Hindoo very anciently taught that "the Word had existed with God
+from all eternity, and when spoken it became a glorious form, the
+aggregate embodiment of all the divine ideas, and performed the work of
+creation." And of Chrishna, it is affirmed that "while upon the earth he
+existed also in heaven." (See Baghavat Gita.)
+
+In like manner it is declared of an Egyptian God, that "though he was
+born into the world, he existed with his father God before the world was
+made." And parallel to this is the statement of the Chinese bible, that
+"though the Holy Word (Chang-si) will be born upon the earth, yet he
+existed before anything was made." Even for Pythagoras it was claimed
+he existed in heaven before he was born upon the earth. Mr. Higgins,
+in summing up the matter, declares, "All the old religions believed
+the world was created by the Word, and that this Word existed before
+creation" (Ana., vol. ii. p. 77), which clearly indicates the source of
+St John's creative Word.
+
+
+THE DUAL OR TWO-FOLD NAME OF THE WORD.
+
+In most cases the living Divine Word was known by different names and
+titles, prior to the era of its assuming the mortal form, from that by
+which it was known after its fleshly investment.
+
+Among the ancient Persians, the name for the divine spiritual Word was
+Honover. After its human birth, it was called "Mithra the Mediator."
+The Hindoo oriental term for the primeval Word was Om, or Aum. After
+assuming its most important incarnate form, it was known as Chrishna.
+The Chinese Holy Interior Word was Om-i-to, and its principal
+incarnation was Chang-ti or Ti-en-ti. The Japanese also proclaimed
+their belief in a Divine Word before the Christian era, which, in their
+language, was Amina. They taught, like John, that it came forth from the
+mouth of the Supreme God (Brahm) to perform the work of creation, after
+which, it was known as Sakia. And that popular Christian writer, Mr.
+Milman, informs us that the Jewish founders of Christianity believed in
+an original Divine Word, which they call Memra. When it descended to the
+earth, and "became flesh, and dwelt amongst us" (John i. 4.) according
+to the evangelist John, it was known as Jesus Christ. Mr. Milman states
+also, that "the appellation to the Word is found in the Indian (Hindoo),
+Persian, the Platonic, and the Alexandrian systems." (Hist, of Chr.,
+Book I., Chap. 2.)
+
+Thus, the question is settled by Christian testimony--that the various
+conceptions of the Divine Word are of heathen origin.
+
+
+THE WORD AS A SECOND MEMBER OF THE TRINITY.
+
+"There are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and
+the Holy Ghost." (1 John v. 7.) Observe, the Word is the second person
+in the Trinity. And this was its post in the Brahman, Hindoo, Persian,
+and other systems. "All religions," says a writer, "which taught the
+existence of the Word as a great primeval spirit, represent him as
+secondary to the supreme." (P. R. 3, vol. ii. p. 336.) "The Hindoos
+reverenced it next to Brahm." Mr. Higgins cuts the matter short by
+declaring "The Logos, or Word, was the second person of the Trinity
+in all the ancient systems, as in the Christian system," which again
+indicates its heathen origin.
+
+
+THE WORD AS A BIBLICAL TITLE.
+
+"The Word," "the Holy Word," "the Divine Word," etc., are terms now
+frequently applied to the Christian bible, without any suspicion of
+their heathen origin. The Zend-Avesta, the Persian bible, was always
+called "The Living Word of God," for that is the meaning of the term
+Zend-Avesta, and the oldest bible in the world is the Vedas, and
+it means both Word and Wisdom. Om, the Egyptian's Holy Word, they
+frequently applied both to their incarnate Gods and to their sacred
+writings.
+
+The practice of calling bibles "The Word of God" originated from the
+belief that, when the incarnate Word left the earth and returned to
+heaven, he infused a portion of his living spirits into the divine
+writings which contained his history and his doctrines, and which he
+himself had prompted his disciples to write as his "Last Revelation to
+man." They then must contain a portion of him, i. e., a portion of the
+Holy Word--hence, both were called "The Holy Word."
+
+And this heathen custom Christians borrowed.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE WORD AS CREATOR.
+
+The motive which prompted a belief in the creative Word may be styled a
+theological necessity. It was believed that the principal God, like
+the rulers of earth, was too aristocratic to labor with his own hands.
+Hence, another God was originated to perform the work of creation, and
+called "The Word."
+
+The origin of the creative Word is still further indicated by
+Blackwood's Magazine.
+
+It says:--
+
+"Creation became impossible to a being already infinite, and was a
+derogation to a being already perfect. Some lower God, some Avatar, must
+be interposed (as an emanation from the mouth of the God supreme) to
+perform the subordinate task of creation. Hence, originated and came
+forth the Word as Creator."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. THE TRINITY VERY ANCIENTLY A CURRENT HEATHEN DOCTRINE
+
+"THERE are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and
+the Holy Ghost, and these three are one." (i John v. 7.) This text,
+which evidently discloses a belief in the existence of three separate
+and distinct beings in the Godhead, sets forth a doctrine which was
+anciently of almost universal prevalence. Nearly every nation, whether
+oriental or occidental, whose religious faith has been commemorated
+in history, discloses in its creed a belief in the trifold nature and
+triune division of the Deity. St. Jerome testifies unequivocally, "All
+the ancient nations believed in the Trinity."
+
+And a volume of facts and figures might be cited here, if we had space
+for them, in proof of this statement A text from one of the Hindoo
+bibles, (the Puranas) will evince the antiquity and prevalence of this
+belief in a nation of one hundred and fifty millions of people more than
+two thousand years ago. "O you three Lords!" ejaculated Attencion, "know
+that I recognize only one God. Inform me, therefore, which of you is the
+true divinity that I may address to him alone my vows and adorations."
+The three Gods, Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva, becoming manifest to him,
+replied, "Learn, O devotee, that there is no real distinction between
+us. What to you appears such is only by semblance. The single being
+appears under three forms by the acts of creation, preservation and
+destruction but he is one."
+
+Now, reader, note the remark here, that the ancient Christian fathers
+almost universally and unanimously proclaimed the doctrine of the
+Trinity as one of the leading tenets of the Christian faith, and as a
+doctrine derived directly by revelation from heaven. But here we find
+it most explicitly set forth by a disciple of a pagan religion more
+than three thousand years ago, as the Christian missionary D. O. Allen
+states, that the Hindoo bible, in which it was found was compiled
+fourteen hundred years before Christ, and written at a still earlier
+period. And we find the same doctrine very explicitly taught in the
+ancient Brahmin, Persian, Chaldean, Chinese, Mexican and Grecian systems
+--all much older than Christianity.
+
+No writer ever taught or avowed a belief in any tenet of religious faith
+more fully or plainly than Plato sets forth, the doctrine of the Trinity
+in his Phaedon, written four hundred years B. C. And his terms are found
+to be in most striking conformity to the Christian doctrine on this
+subject, as taught in the New Testament Plato's first term for the
+Trinity was in Greek--1. To Agathon, the supreme God or Father. 2. The
+Logos, which is the Greek term for the Word. And, 3. Psyche, which the
+Greek Lexicon defines to mean "soul, spirit or ghost"--of course, the
+Holy Ghost. Here we have the three terms of the Christian Trinity,
+Father, Word, and Holy Ghost, as plainly taught as language can express
+it, thus making Plato's exposition of the Trinity and definition of its
+terms, published four hundred years B. C., identical in meaning with
+those of St. John's, as found in his Gospel, and contained in the above
+quoted text. Where, then, is the foundation for the dogmatic claim
+on the part of the Christian professors for the divine origin of the
+Trinity doctrine?
+
+We will here cite the testimony of some Christian writers to prove
+that the Trinity is a pagan-derived doctrine. A _Christian bishop_,
+Mr. Powell, declares, "I not only confess but I _maintain_, such a
+similitude of Plato's and John's Trinity doctrines as bespeaks a common
+origin." (Thirteenth letter to Dr. Priestley.) What is that you say,
+bishop? "A common origin." Then you concede both are heaven-derived, or
+both heathen-derived. If the former, then revelation and heathenism are
+synonymous terms. If the latter, then Christianity stands on a level
+with heathen mythology. Which horn of the dilemma will you choose? St.
+Augustine confessed he found the beginning of John's Gospel in Plato's
+Phædon, which is a concession of the whole ground.
+
+Another writer, Chataubron, speaks of an ancient Greek inscription
+on the great obelisk at Rome, which reads--1. The Mighty God. 2. The
+Begotten of God as Christ is declared to be "the only begotten of the
+Father" (John i. 14). And, 3. "Apollo the Spirit"--the Holy Spirit or
+Holy Ghost--thus presenting in plain language the three terms of the
+Trinity. And Mr. Cudworth, in corroboration of this report, says, "The
+Greeks had a first God, and second God, and third God, and the second
+was begotten by the first. And yet for all that," continues Mr.
+Cudworth, "they considered all these one."
+
+In the Platonic or Grecian Trinity, the first person was considered the
+planner of the work of creation, the second person the creator, and
+the third person the ghost or spirit which moved upon the face of the
+waters, and infused life into the mighty deep at creation--the same
+Holy Ghost which descended from heaven to infuse life into the waters at
+Christ's baptism; thus, the resemblance is complete. Mr. Basnage quotes
+a Christian writer of the fifth century as declaring, "The Athenian sage
+Plato marvelously anticipated one of the most important and mysterious
+doctrines of the Christian religion"--meaning the Trinity--an important
+concession truly.
+
+The oldest and probably the original form of the Trinity is that found
+in the Brahmin and Hindoo systems--the terms of which are--i. Brahma,
+the Father or supreme God. 2. Vishnu, the incarnate Word and Creator. 3.
+Siva, the Spirit of God, i. e., the Holy Spirit or Ghost--each answering
+to corresponding terms of the Christian Trinity, and yet two thousand
+years older, according to Dr. Smith.
+
+We have not allowable space for other facts and citations (as this work
+is designed as a mere epitome), although we have but entered upon the
+threshold of the evidence tending to prove that the Christian Trinity
+was born of heathen parents, that it is an offspring of heathen
+mythology, like other doctrines of the Christian faith, claimed by its
+disciples as the gift of divine revelation.
+
+Here let it be noted as a curious chapter in sacred history that the
+numerous divine Trinities which have constituted a part of nearly every
+religious system ever propagated to the world were composed, in every
+case, of male Gods. No female has ever yet been admitted into the triad
+of Gods composing the orthodox Trinity. Every member of the Trinity in
+every case is a male, and an old bachelor--a doctrine most flagrantly at
+war with the principles of modern philosophy.
+
+For this science teaches us that the endowment of a being with either
+male or female organs, presupposes the existence of the other sex; and
+that either sex, without the other would be a ludicrous anomaly, and a
+ludicrous distortion of nature unparalleled in the history of science.
+As sexual organs create an imperious desire for the other sex, no male
+or female could long enjoy full happiness in the absence of the other
+party. What an unhappy, lonesome place, therefore, the orthodox heaven
+must have been, during the eternity of the past, with no society but old
+bachelors! The Trinity was constituted of males simply because woman has
+always been considered a mere cipher in society--a mere tool for man's
+convenience, an appendage to his wants. Hence, instead of having a place
+among the Gods she led the practical life of a servant and a menial,
+which accounts for her exclusion from the Trinity. But the time is
+coming when she will rule both heaven and earth with the omnipotent
+power of her love nature. Then we shall have no "war in heaven," and no
+fighting on earth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. ABSOLUTION, AND THE CONFESSION OF SINS, OF HEATHEN ORIGIN
+
+SOME Christian writers have labored to make it appear that this is
+exclusively a Christian doctrine, while others have labored as hard to
+get it out of their bible, or make the people believe that it is not
+therein taught.
+
+We shall show, upon scriptural and historical authority, that both are
+wrong.
+
+There can be no question as to this rite having existed outside of
+Christianity, or of its being much older than Christianity. History
+proves both. Nor can it be successfully denied that it is taught in the
+Christian Scriptures, both the confessing of sins and that of forgiving
+sins. The apostle James, with respect to the former, is quite explicit.
+He enjoins, emphatically, "Confess your faults one to another." (James
+v. 16.) The practice of forgiving sins is also enjoined. "Forgiving one
+another" is recommended both in Ephesians (iv. 32) and Colossians. (iii.
+13). "And whatsoever ye shall lose on earth shall be loosed in heaven"
+(Matthew xviii 18), is interpreted as conferring the power to forgive
+sins.
+
+And then we remark that the practices both of confessing and forgiving
+sins are very ancient pagan rites and customs. Speaking of their
+prevalence in ancient India, the author of the Anacalypsis remarks, "The
+person offering sacrifices made a verbal confession of his sins, and
+received absolution." Auricular confession was also practiced among
+the ancient Mithriacs, or Persians, and the Parsees proper of the
+same country. Mr. Volney tells us, "They observed all the Christian
+sacraments, even to the laying on of hands in the confirmation." (211.)
+And the Christian Tertullian also tells us that "The priests of Mithra
+promised absolution from sin on confession and baptism," while another
+author adds, that "on such occasions Mithra marked his followers (the
+servants of God) in their foreheads," and that "he celebrated the
+sacrifice of bread, which is the resurrection."
+
+In the collection of the Jewish laws called "The Mishna," we are
+told the Jews confessed their sins by placing their hands upon a calf
+belonging to the priest, and that this was called "the Confession of
+Calves." (See Mishna, tom. ii. p. 394.) Confessing sins was practiced in
+ancient Mexico; also under Numa of Rome, whose priests, we are informed,
+had to clear their consciences by confessing their sins before they
+could offer sacrifices. The practice of confessing and forgiving sins
+as recommended in the Christian bible, and practiced by some of
+the Christian sects, has been the source of much practical evil by
+furnishing a pretext and license, to some extent, for the commission
+of crime and sin. While sins can be so easily obliterated they will
+be committed--perpetrated without much remorse or restraint. "In China
+(says the Rev. Mr. Pitrat, 232), the invocation of Omito is sufficient
+to remit the punishment of the greatest crimes." The same author tells
+us, "The ancient initiation of the pagans had tribunals of penance,
+where the priests, under the name of _Roes_, heard from the mouth of the
+sinners themselves the avowal of their sins of which their souls were
+to be purified, and from the punishment of which they wished to be
+exempted." (Page 37.) The granting of absolution for sin or misconduct
+among the early primitive Christians was so common, St. Cyprian informs
+us, that "thousands of reprieves were granted daily," which served as an
+indirect license to crime. And thus the doctrine of divine forgiveness,
+as taught by pagans and Christians, has proved to be demoralizing in its
+effects upon society.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. ORIGIN OF BAPTISM BY WATER, FIRE, BLOOD AND THE HOLY GHOST
+
+BAPTISM, in some of its various forms, is a very ancient rite, and was
+extensively practiced in several oriental countries. It was administered
+in a great varieties of forms, and with the use of different elements.
+Water was the most common, but fire and air, wind, spirit ghost were
+also used; and both the living and the dead were made the subjects of
+its solemn and imposing ceremonies.
+
+We will notice each of these modes of baptism separate--appropriating a
+brief space to each.
+
+1. Baptism by Water.
+
+"Baptism by water," says Mr. Higgins, "is a very old rite, being
+practised by the followers of Zoroaster, by the Romans, the Egyptians,
+and other nations." It was also vogue among the ancient Hindoos at
+a still earlier day Their mode of administering it was to dip the
+candidate for immersion three times in the watery element, in the same
+manner as is now practiced by some of the Christian sects during the
+performance of which the hierophant would ejaculate the following prayer
+and ceremony: "O Lord this man is impure, like the mud of this stream!
+But as thou cleanse and deliver his soul from sin as the water cleanses
+his body." They believed that water possesses the virtue of purifying
+both soul and body--the latter from filth and the former from sin. The
+ancient Mexican, Persians, Hindoos and Jews were in the habit of
+baptizing their infants soon after they were born. And the water used
+for this purpose was called "the water of regeneration." Paul speaks of
+being "saved by the washing of regeneration." (See Titus iii. 5.) Those
+who touched these infants before they were baptized were deemed impure.
+And as this was unavoidable on the part of the mothers, they were
+required, as in the cases of the mothers of Chrishna and Christ, to
+present themselves on the eighth day after accouchement to the priest in
+the temple to be purified. The Romans chose the eighth day for girls and
+the ninth for boys. The child was usually named (christened) at the time
+it was baptized. And in India, the name, or God's name, or some other
+mark, was engraven or written on the forehead. This custom is several
+times recognized in the Christian bible, both in the old and in the New
+Testament. (See Ezek. ix 4; Rev. xiv. 9; xix. 20, etc.) John speaks of a
+mark being made on the forehead. (See Rev. xiii. 16.) Also of the name
+of God being written on the forehead. (Rev. iii. 12.)
+
+
+THE DOVE DESCENDING AT BAPTISM.
+
+At this stage of our inquiry it may be stated that several of the
+ancient religious orders had the legend of a dove or pigeon descending at
+baptism--a counterpart to the evangelical story of "the Spirit of God
+descending in bodily shape like a dove," and alighting on the head of
+Jesus Christ while being baptized by John in Jordan. (See Luke iii. 22.)
+It will be observed here that the spirit, or soul, of God descended not
+only in the manner, but in "bodily shape like a dove." This accords with
+the tradition anciently prevalent among the Hindoos, Mexicans, Greeks,
+Romans and Persians, or Babylonians, that all souls, or spirits,
+possessed, or were capable of assuming, the form of a dove. Hence, it is
+reported of Polycarp, Semiramis, Caesar and others, that at death their
+souls, or spirits, were seen to leave the body in "bodily shape like
+a dove" and ascend to heaven. "The Divine Love, or Eros," says Mr.
+Higgins, "was supposed by the oriental heathen to descend often in the
+form of a dove to bless the candidate for baptism." These traditions,
+doubtless, gave rise to the story of the dove descending at Christ's
+baptism--that is God in the shape of a dove, for that is clearly the
+meaning of the text. We are also informed by our author just quoted,
+that a dove stood for and represented, among the orientalists, the third
+person of the Trinity, as it does in the gospel story of Christ--he
+being the second member of the Christian Trinity of Father, Son and Holy
+Ghost. It was considered "the regenerator, or regenerating spirit," and
+persons being baptized were said to be "born again" into the spirit or
+the spirit into them; that is, the dove into or upon them.
+
+What a master-key is furnished by these oriental religions for solving
+the mysteries of the Christian bible! How much more lucid than Divine
+Revelation--so-called!
+
+We will quote again from Higgins: "Among all nations, from the
+very earliest period, water has been used as a species of religious
+sacrament. Because, as it dripped from the clouds, it was observed
+to have the power of reviving drooping nature and creating anew, or
+regenerating the whole vegetable kingdom in spring, it was hence chosen
+as an emblem of spiritual regeneration and a medium of baptism. Water
+was the element by means of which everything was born again through the
+agency of the Eros, Dove, or Divine Love." And, hence, the ceremony of
+dipping or plunging (or, as it is modernly termed, baptizing) came into
+vogue for the remission of sins and "the regeneration into a new and
+more holy life."
+
+Some streams were supposed to have more efficacy in these respects than
+others. Hence, nearly all religious nations had their "Holy Rivers,"
+"Holy Water," "Sacred Pools," etc. The Hindoos resorted to the "Holy
+Ganges," the Egyptians to the "Holy Nile," the Chaldeans and Persians
+to the "Holy Euphrates," the Greeks to their "Holy Lustral Water," the
+Italians to the river Po, and the Jews and Christians to their holy
+river Jordan. If Jordan was not called "holy," it was undoubtedly
+considered so, else why did Elisha order Naaman to wash seven times
+in that stream instead of Damascus, which was much nearer and more
+accessible? And why was Christ baptized in Jordan? "And all the land of
+Judea, and they of Jerusalem, were baptized in Jordan, confessing their
+sins." (Matt iii. vi.) Why, as several streams were handier to a large
+portion of the candidates, simply because Jordan was considered to be
+"more holy." And Christians had their sacred pool of Bethesda, as the
+Hindoos had their Sahar.
+
+The rite of baptism was at first generally practiced in caves--as were
+also other religious rites; and as these caves were often difficult of
+access, and their mouths, doors or gates narrow and difficult to enter,
+they fully exemplify Christ's declaration, "Straight is the gate and
+narrow is the way that leadeth unto life." (Matt. vii. 14.) And when
+he declared, "Except a man be born of water and of the spirit he cannot
+enter the kingdom of heaven" (John iii. 5) he was only seconding the
+exhortation of the priests to enter these subterranean vaults and be
+baptized after the oriental and Jewish custom. Thus originated baptism
+by water in the form of dipping, or immersion.
+
+
+BAPTISM BY SPRINKLING.
+
+Owing to the scarcity of water in some countries, and its entire absence
+in others, and the fatal effects sometimes resulting from the practice
+of baptizing infants and invalids by immersion, a new mode of baptism
+eventually sprung up, now known as "sprinkling," in which sometimes
+water and sometimes blood was used. Virgil, Ovid and Cicero all speak
+of its prevalence amongst the ancient Romans or Latins. We are informed
+that the ancient Jews practiced it upon their women while in a state of
+nudity, the ceremony being administered by three rabbis, or priests. But
+the custom finally gave way to one more consonant with decorum. Blood,
+being considered "the life thereof" of man, was deemed more efficacious
+than water, and hence was often used in lieu of that element. The Greeks
+kept a "holy vessel" for this purpose, known as the Facina. The Romans
+used a brush, which may now be seen engraven upon some of their ancient
+coins and sculptured on their ancient temples. The Hindoos and Persians
+used a branch of laurel or some other shrub for sprinkling the repentant
+candidate, whether water or blood was used.
+
+In some countries the rite was practiced as a talisman against evil
+spirits. The Mexicans never approached their altars without sprinkling
+them with blood drawn from their own bodies, as the Jews sprinkled the
+walls and door-posts of their temples with blood under the requisition
+of the Levitical code. This mode of fancied purification by sprinkling
+either with water or blood we find recognized, and apparently
+sanctioned, in the Christian bible, both in the Old and New Testaments.
+Ezekiel says, "I will sprinkle clean water on you." (Ezek. xxxvi. 25.)
+Peter uses the phrase, "The sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ."
+(1 Peter i. 2.) And Paul makes use of the expression, "The blood of
+sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of Abel" (Heb. xii.
+24), which we regard as an indirect sanction of the senseless heathen
+idea of effecting spiritual purification by drops of blood. (See
+Potter's Antiquities and Herbert's Travels.)
+
+
+BAPTISM BY FIRE.
+
+Baptism by fire was a form or mode of application which seems to have
+been introduced from the belief that it was productive of a higher
+degree of purification. There were several ways of using fire in the
+baptismal rite. In some cases the candidate for immortality ran through
+blazing streams of fire--a custom which was called "the baptism of
+fire." M. de Humboldt, in his "Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments
+of America," informs us it prevailed in India, Chaldea and Syria,
+and throughout eastern Asia. It appears to have been gotten up as
+a substitute for sun-worship, as this luminary was believed to be
+constituted of fire, though in reality there never was any such thing as
+sun or solar worship. Christian writers represent the ancient Persians
+as has having been addicted to solar worship. But Firdausi, Cudworth
+and other authors declare that neither they nor any other nation ever
+worshiped the sun, but merely an imaginary Deity supposed to reside in
+the sun. Heathen nations have been charged with many things of which
+they were not guilty; though it is true that in the spirit of Christ's
+exhortation, "Whosoever loseth his life for my sake shall find it,"
+some of the candidates for the fiery ordeal voluntarily sacrificed their
+lives in the operation, under the persuasion that it was necessary to
+purify the soul, and would enable them to ascend to higher posts or
+planes of enjoyment in the celestial world. And some of them were taught
+that sins not expurgated by fire, or some other efficaciously renovating
+process in this life, would be punished by fire in the life to come.
+Here we will mention that there is a seeming recognition of this ancient
+heathen rite in both departments of the Christian's bible. Isaiah says,
+"When thou walkest through fire thou shalt not be burned." (lxiii.
+2.) And the Baptist John recognizes three modes of baptism: "I indeed
+baptize you with water, but he that cometh after me shall baptize you
+with fire and the Holy Ghost." (Matt. iii. 11). And Paul teaches the
+necessity of being purified by fire. (See i Cor. iii. 15.) So it is both
+a heathen and a Christian idea.
+
+
+BAPTISM BY THE HOLY GHOST.
+
+This fanciful ceremony is both a Christian and a heathen rite, and is
+undoubtedly of heathen origin. The mode of applying it was to breathe
+into or upon the seeker for divine favors. This was done by the priest,
+who, it was believed, imparted the Spirit of God by the process. The
+custom, Mr. Herbert informs us, was anciently quite common in oriental
+countries, and was at a later date borrowed by Christ and his apostles
+and incorporated into the Christian ceremonies. We find that Christ not
+only sanctioned it but practised it, as it is declared when he met his
+disciples after his resurrection "he breathed on them, and saith unto
+them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost." (John xx. 22.)
+
+And the following language of Ezekiel is evidently a sanction of the
+same heathen custom: "Thus saith the Lord God, Come from the four winds,
+O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live." (xxxvii.
+9.) Let it be borne in mind here that breath, air, wind, spirit and
+ghost were used as synonymous terms, according to Mr. Parkhurst (see
+Chap. XXII.), and this breathing was supposed to impart spiritual life,
+being nothing less than the Spirit of God, the same as that breathed
+into Adam when "he became a living soul." (See Gen. ii. 7.) For a fuller
+exposition see Chapter XXII.
+
+
+BAPTISM OF OR FOR THE DEAD.
+
+It was customary among the Hindoos and other nations to postpone baptism
+till near the supposed terminus of life, in order that the ablution
+might extinguish all the sins and misdeeds of the subject's earthly
+probation. But it sometimes happened that men and women were killed, or
+died unexpectedly, before the rite was administered. And as it would
+not do for these unfortunate souls to be deprived of the benefit of this
+soul-saving ordinance, the custom was devised of baptizing the defunct
+body, or more commonly some living person in its stead. The method of
+executing the latter expedient, according to St. Chrysostom, was to
+place some living person under the bed or couch on which the corpse
+was reclining, when the defunct was asked if he would be baptized. The
+living man, responding for the dead, answered in the affirmative. The
+corpse was then taken and dipped in a vessel prepared for the purpose.
+This silly practice was in vogue among the early Christians, and Paul
+seems to regard it as an important custom. "Else what shall they do
+which are baptized for the dead, if the dead rise not at all." (i Cor.
+xv. 9.)
+
+The inference derivable from this text is, that Paul held that the labor
+of baptizing the dead would be lost in the event of the falsification of
+the doctrine of the resurrection, but otherwise it would be valid--which
+evinces his faith in the senseless and superstitious practice. It will
+be observed from the historical exposition of this chapter that all the
+various ancient heathen modes and rites of baptism have been practiced
+by Christians, and are sanctioned by their bible.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. THE SACRAMENT OR EUCHARIST OF HEATHEN ORIGIN
+
+AT the feast of the Passover, Christ is represented, while distributing
+bread to his disciples, to have said, "Take, eat; this is my body"
+(Matt. xxvi. 26); and while handing round the consecrated cup, he
+enjoined, "Drink ye all of it, for this is my blood of the new covenant,
+which is shed for many for the remission of sins" (xxvi. 27). Here is
+a very clear and explicit indorsement of what is generally termed "the
+Eucharist or Sacrament." And nothing can be more susceptible of proof
+than that this rite or ordinance is of pagan origin, and was practically
+recognized many centuries prior to the dawn of the Christian era.
+
+So we observe, by the text above quoted, the Christian Savior and
+Lawgiver copied, or reproduced, an old pagan rite as a part of his
+professedly new and spiritual system, one of the most ancient and
+widely-extended formulas of pagandom. And stranger still, the catechisms
+of the Christian church represent this ordinance as having originated in
+the design and motive to keep the ancient Christian world in remembrance
+of the death and sufferings and sacrifice of Christ, while we find it
+existing long prior to his time, both among Jews and pagans, this being
+virtually admitted in the bible itself, so far as respects the pagans,
+thus proving that it did not originate with Christ, and therefore is
+not of Christian origin. For in Gen. viv. 18, we read, "And Melchisedek,
+king of Salem, brought forth bread and wine, and he was the priest
+of the Most High God." Because the Melchisedek here spoken of is
+represented as being "a priest of the Most High God," and showed so much
+respect to Abraham, it is presumed and assumed, by Christian writers,
+that he was a Jewish priest and king; and Mr. Faber (vol. i. p. 72)
+calls him "an incarnation of the son of God." But there is no intimation
+throughout the Jewish Scriptures of the Jews ever having had a king or
+priest by that name. And besides, Eupolemus (vol. i. p. 39), tells
+us that the temple of Melchisedek was the temple of Jupiter, in which
+Pythagoras studied philosophy. Then, again, according to some writers,
+the name is synonymous with Moloch, the God of war among the Greeks.
+Strange, then, that Melchisedek should be claimed as a priest and king
+among the Jews. Be this as it may, the case proves that the ceremony of
+offering bread and wine existed long before the era of Jesus Christ.
+
+And then we have much more and much stronger proof of this fact than
+is here furnished. The Christian Mr. Faber virtually admits it, when he
+tells us, "The devil led the heathen to anticipate Christ with respect
+to several things, as the mysteries of the Eucharist, etc." "And this
+very solemnity (says St Justin) the evil spirit introduced into the
+mysteries of Mithra." (Reeves, Justin, p. 86.) Mr. Higgins observes, "It
+was instituted hundreds of years before the Lord's death took place."
+Amongst the ancient religious orders and nations who practiced this
+rite, we may name the Essenes, Persians, Pythagoreans, Gnostics,
+Brahmins and Mexicans. For proof of its existence and antiquity among
+the last-named nation, we refer the reader to the "Travels" (chap. ii.)
+of that Christian writer, Father Acosta. Mr. Marolles, in his Memoirs
+(p. 215) quotes Tibullus as saying, "The pagan appeased the divinity
+with holy bread." And Tibullus, in a panegyric on Marcella, wrote, "A
+little cake, a little morsel of bread, appeased the divinities."
+
+And here we discover the idea which originated the ceremony. It was
+started, like animal sacrifices, for the purpose of appeasing the wrath
+or propitiating the favor of the angry Gods. Tracing the conception
+still further in the rear of its progress, and apparently to its primary
+inception, Mr. Higgins observes, "The whole paschal supper (the Lord's
+supper with the Christians) was in fact a festival of joy to celebrate
+the passage of the sun across the equinox of spring."
+
+We find one pagan writer who had intelligence enough to ridicule this
+senseless ceremonial custom, called "the sacrament." Cicero, some
+forty years before Christ, shows up the doctrine of the sacrament, or
+substantiation, in its true light. He asks, "How can a man be so stupid
+as to imagine that which he eats to be a God?" A writer quoted above
+says, "Mass, or the sacrifice of bread and wine, was common to many
+ancient nations." (Anac. vol. ii. p. 62.) According to Alnetonae, the
+ancient Brahmins had a kind of Eucharist called "prajadam." And the same
+writer informs us that the ancient Peruvians, "after sacrificing a lamb,
+mingled his blood with flour, and distributed it among the people."
+Writers on Grecian mythology relate that Ceres, the goddess of corn,
+gave her flesh to eat, and that Bacchus, the God of wine, gave blood to
+drink. Nor is there any evidence that Christ and his followers made a
+better use, or different use, or a more spiritual application of the
+sacrament, or ceremonial offering of bread and wine, than the pagans
+did, though some have claimed this. It was a species of symbolism with
+both, notwithstanding Mr. Glover, a Christian writer, declares, that
+"in the sacrament of the altar are the natural body and blood of Christ,
+verily and indeed." (See Glover's Remarks on Bishop Marsh's Compendious
+Review.) It may be noted here that the Persians, Pythagoreans, Essenes
+and Gnostics used water instead of wine, and that this mode of practice
+was less objectionable than that of the Christians, who (as sad
+experience proves) have too often laid the foundation for the ruin of
+some poor unsuspecting devotee, by luring him to the fatal fascination
+of the intoxicating bowl, by holding the sacred and ceremonial wine to
+his lips, while administering the sacrament or the Lord's supper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. ANOINTING WITH OIL OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN
+
+THE custom and ceremony of anointing with oil by way of imparting some
+fancied spiritual power and religious qualification seems to have been
+extensively practiced by the Jews and primitive Christians, and still
+more anciently by various oriental nations. Mark (xiv. 4), reports Jesus
+Christ as speaking commendingly of the practice, by which it was evident
+he was in favor of the superstitious custom. The apostle James not only
+sanctions it, but recommends it in the most specific language. "Is any
+sick among you, let him call for the elders of the church, and let them
+pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord." (James
+v. 14.)
+
+The practice of greasing or smearing with oil, it may be noted here, was
+in vogue from other motives besides the one here indicated. We find
+the statement in the New American Cyclopedia (vol. i. p. 620), that
+anointing with perfumed oil was in common use among the Greeks and
+Romans as a mark of hospitality to guests. And modern travelers in
+the East still find it a custom for visitors to be sprinkled with
+rose-water, or their head, face and beard "anointed with olive oil."
+"Anointing," we are also told, "is an ancient and still prevalent custom
+throughout the East, by pouring aromatic oils on persons as a token of
+honor.... It was also employed in consecrating priests, prophets and
+kings, and the places and instruments appointed for worship." (Ibid.)
+Joshua anointed the ten stones he set up in Jordan, and Jacob the stone
+on which he slept at the time of his great vision.
+
+The early Christians were in the habit of anointing the altars, and even
+the walls, of the churches, in the same manner as the images, obelisks,
+statues, etc., had long been consecrated by the devotees of the oriental
+systems. Aaron, Saul, David, Solomon, and even Jesus Christ were
+anointed with oil in the same way. David Malcom, in his "Essay on the
+Antiquity of the Britons," p. 144, says, "The Mexican king was anointed
+with Holy Unction by the high priest while dancing before the Lord."
+Vide the case of David "dancing before the Lord with all his might." Dr.
+Lightfoot, in his "Harmony of the New Testament," speaks of the custom
+among the Jews of anointing the sick on the Sabbath day (see Works, vol.
+i, p. 333; also Toland, Sect. Naz. p. 54), as afterwards recommended by
+the apostle James, as shown above. This accords exactly with the method
+of treating the sick in ancient India and other heathen countries
+several thousand years ago. For proof consult Hyde, Bryant, Tertullian
+and other writers. The custom of anointing the sick, accompanied with
+prayer and other ceremonies, was quite fashionable in the East long
+before the birth of either Jesus or James. One writer testifies that
+"the practice of anointing with oil, so much in vogue among the Jews,
+and sanctioned by Christ and his followers, was held in high esteem in
+nearly all the Eastern religions."
+
+The foregoing historical facts furnish still further proof that
+Christianity is the offspring of heathenism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. HOW MEN, INCLUDING JESUS CHRIST, CAME TO BE WORSHIPED AS
+GODS
+
+
+JESUS CHRIST A DEMIGOD, ACCORDING TO CHRISTIAN WRITERS.
+
+IT is truly surprising to observe the damaging concessions of some of
+the early Christian writers, ruinous to the dogmas of their own faith
+with respect to the divinity of Jesus Christ, placing him, as they do,
+on an exact level with the heathen demigods, proving that the belief in
+his divinity originated in the same manner the belief in theirs did,
+by which it is clearly shown to be a pagan derived doctrine. Several
+Christian writers admit the belief in earth-born Gods (called Sons of
+Gods), and their coming into the world by human birth was prevalent
+among the heathen long prior to the time of Christ. Hear the proof.
+
+We will first quote St. Justin relative to the prevalence of the belief
+among the ancient Greeks and Romans. Addressing them, he says, "The
+title of Son of God (As applied to Jesus Christ) is very justifiable
+upon the account of his wisdom, considering you have your Mercury in
+your worship, under the title of Word or Messenger of God." (Reeves
+Apol. p. 76.) Here is the proof that the tradition of the Son of God
+coming into the world, and "the Word becoming flesh," was established
+amongst the ancient Greeks and Romans long prior to the era of
+Christianity, or the birth of Christ.
+
+And yet more than a hundred millions of Christian professors can now be
+found, who, in their historic ignorance, suppose St. John was the first
+writer who taught the doctrine of "the Word becoming flesh," and that
+Jesus Christ was "the first and only begotten Son of God" who ever made
+his appearance on earth. How true it is that "ignorance is the mother of
+devotion" to creeds.
+
+How "the man Christ Jesus" came to be worshiped as a God, is pretty
+clearly indicated by Bishop Horne, who shows that the doctrine of the
+incarnation was of universal prevalence long before Jesus Christ came
+into the flesh. He says, "That God should, in some extraordinary manner,
+visit and dwell with man, is an idea, which, as we read the writings of
+the ancient heathen, meets us in a thousand different forms." If,
+then, the tradition of God being born into the world was so universally
+established in heathen countries before the Christian era, as here
+shown, why should not, and why will not, our good Christian brethren
+dismiss their prejudices, and tear the scales from their eyes, so as
+to see that this universal belief would as naturally lead to the
+deification and worship of "the man Christ Jesus" as water flows down a
+descending plane?
+
+And, certainly a thousand times more reasonable is the assumption
+that his deification originated in this way, than that, with all his
+frailties and foibles, he was entitled to the appellation of a God--a
+conclusion strongly corroborated by the testimony of that able Christian
+writer, Mr. Norton, who tells us that "many of the first Christians
+being converts from Gentileism, their imaginations were familiar with
+the reputed incarnation of heathen deities." How natural it would be for
+such converts to worship "the man Christ Jesus" as a God on account of
+his superior manhood!
+
+Again, that ancient pillar of the Christian church, St. Justin, concedes
+that the ancient oriental heathen held all the cardinal doctrines of
+the Christian faith relating to the incarnation long prior to the
+introduction and establishment of Christianity. Hear him: Addressing the
+pagans, he says, "For by declaring the Logos the first begotten Son of
+God, our Master, Jesus Christ, to be born of a virgin without any human
+mixture, and to be crucified, and dead, and to have risen again into
+heaven, we say no more in this than what you say of those whom you style
+the sons of Jove." (Reeves, Apol. vol. i. p. 69.) Now, Christian reader,
+mark the several important admissions which are made here:--
+
+1. Here is traced to ancient heathen tradition the belief in an
+incarnate Son of God.
+
+2. The doctrine of a "first begotten Son of God."
+
+3. Of his being born of a virgin.
+
+4. Of his crucifixion.
+
+5. Of his resurrection.
+
+6. Of his final ascension into heaven.
+
+All these cardinal doctrines of Christianity are here shown to have been
+in existence, and to have been preached by pagan priests long anterior
+to the Christian era, thus entirely oversetting the common belief of
+Christendom that these doctrines were never known or preached in the
+world until heralded by the first disciples of the Christian religion.
+A fatal mistake, truly! This suicidal admission of St Justin (a standard
+Christian writer) thus entirely uptrips all pretensions to originality
+in the fundamental doctrines of the Christian faith, and shows it to be
+a mere travesty of the more ancient heathen systems.
+
+And we have still other testimony to corroborate this conclusion. The
+French writer Bazin says, "The most ancient histories are those of Gods
+becoming incarnate in order to govern mankind." Again he says, "The
+idea sprang up everywhere from confused ideas of God, which prevailed
+everywhere among mankind that Gods formerly descended upon earth. The
+fertile imagination of the people of various nations converted men into
+Gods."
+
+And to the same effect is the declaration of Mr. Higgins, that "there
+was incarnate Gods in all religions." Sadly beclouded and warped indeed
+must be that mind which cannot see that here is set in as plain view as
+the cloudless sun at noonday, the origin of the deification of "the man
+Christ Jesus." No unbiased mind can possibly stave off the conclusion
+that such a universal prevalence of the practice of God-making
+throughout the religious world would cause such a man as Jesus Christ
+to be worshiped as a God--especially when we look at the various motives
+which promoted men to Gods, which we will now present.
+
+
+MOTIVES TO INCARNATION, OR THE CAUSE OF MEN BEING WORSHIPED AS GODS.
+
+The causes which led to the conception of Gods and Sons of God becoming
+clothed in human flesh--the manner in which the absurd idea originated
+of an infinite being descending from heaven, assuming the form of a man,
+being born of a pure and spotless virgin, and finally being killed by
+his own children, the subjects of his own government, are palpably plain
+and easily understood' in the light of oriental history.
+
+And at the same time it is so shockingly absurd, that the rapid march
+of science and civilization will soon inaugurate the era when the man
+or woman who shall still be found clinging to these childish and
+superstitious conceptions--the offspring of ignorance, and the relics
+of barbarism, and a certain proof of undeveloped or unenlightened
+minds--will be looked upon as deplorably ignorant and superstitious. We
+will proceed to enumerate some of the causes which promoted men to the
+dignity of Gods.
+
+1. God must come down to suffer and sympathize with the people.
+
+The people of all ancient religious countries were so externally-minded,
+that they demanded a God whom they could know by virtue of his
+corporeity, really sympathized with their sorrows, their sufferings,
+their wrongs, and their oppressions, and, like Jesus Christ, "touched
+with a feeling of our infirmities" (Heb. iv. 15)--a God so far invested
+with human attributes, human frailties, and human sympathies, that
+he could shoulder their burdens and their infirmities, and take upon
+himself a portion of their sufferings. Hence it is said of Christ,
+"himself took our infirmities." (Matt. iii. 17.)
+
+The same conception runs through the pagan systems. One writer sets
+forth the matter thus: "The Creator occasionally assumed a mortal form
+to assist mankind in great emergencies" (as Jesus Christ was afterward
+reported as being the Creator. See Col. i. 16.) "And as repeated
+sojourners on earth in various capacities, they (the Saviors) became
+practically acquainted with all the sorrows and temptations of humanity,
+and could justly judge of its sins while they sympathized with its
+weaknesses and its sufferings. When they again returned to the higher
+regions (heaven), they remembered the lower forms they had dwelt
+amongst, and felt a lively interest in the world they had once
+inhabited. They could penetrate even the secret thoughts of mortals."
+
+The people then demanding a God of sympathy and suffering (as shown
+above), their credulous imaginations would not be long in finding one.
+Let a man rise up in society endowed with an extraordinary degree of
+spirituality and sympathy for human suffering; let him, like Chrishna,
+Pythagoras, Christ, and Mahomet, spend his time in visiting the hovels
+of the poor, or consoling their sorrows, laboring to mitigate their
+griefs, and in performing acts of charity, disinterested alms and deeds
+of benevolence, kindness and love, and so certain would he sooner or
+later command the homage of a God. For this was always the mode adopted,
+in an ignorant, undeveloped, and unenlightened age, for accounting
+not merely for moral greatness, but for every species of mental and
+physical superiority, as will be hereafter shown. We will proceed to
+notice the second cause of men being invested with divine attributes.
+
+2. The people must and would have an external God they could see, hear,
+and talk to.
+
+All the oriental nations, as well as Christian, taught that "God was
+a spirit," but no nation or class of people, not even the founders of
+Christianity, entertained a consistent view of the doctrine. Only a
+few learned philosophers saw the scientific impossibility of an
+infinite spirit being crowded into the human form. Hence they alone
+were contented to "worship God in spirit and in truth." Every religious
+nation went counter to the spirit of this injunction in worshiping for a
+God a being in the human form. Even the founders of Christianity, though
+making high claims to spirituality, were too gross, too sensuous in
+their conceptions, too externally-minded, and too idolatrous in their
+feelings and proclivities, to be content to "worship God in spirit."
+Hence their deification of the "man Christ Jesus" to answer the
+requisition of an external worship, by which they violated the command
+to "worship God as a spirit." That the practice of promoting men to the
+Godhead originated with minds on the external plane, and evinces a want
+of spiritual development, is clearly set forth by the author of "The
+Nineteenth Century" (a Christian writer) who tells us, "The idea of the
+primitive ages were wholly sensuous, and the masses did not believe in
+anything except that which they could touch, see, hear and taste." A
+true description, no doubt, of the ancient pagan worshipers of demigods.
+But we warn the Christian reader not to cast anchor here, for we have
+at our elbow abundance of Christian testimony from the pens of the very
+oracles of the church to prove that the same state of things, the
+same state of society, the same state of mind, the same proclivity for
+God-making, existed with the people among whom Christ was born, and
+that it was owing to this sensuous, idolatrous state of mind among his
+disciples that he received the homage and title of a God.
+
+Hence the famous Archbishop Tillotson says, "Another very common notion,
+and rife in the heathen world, and a great source of their idolatry, was
+their deification of great men fit to be worshiped as Gods."... "There
+was a great inclination in mankind to the worship of a visible Deity.
+So God was pleased to appear in our nature, that they who were fond of a
+visible Deity might have one, even a true and natural incarnation of God
+the Father, the express image of his person." Now, we enjoin the reader
+to mark this testimony well, and impress it indelibly upon his memory.
+According to this orthodox Christian bishop, Jesus Christ appeared on
+earth as a God in condescension to the wishes of a people too devoid of
+spirituality, and too strongly inclined to idolatry, to worship God as a
+spirit. For he admits the worship of a God-man or a man-God is a species
+of idolatry. This tells the whole story of the apotheosis of "the man
+Christ Jesus." We have no doubt but that here is suggested one of the
+true causes of his elevation to the Deityship. Again he says, "The world
+was mightily bent on addressing their requests and supplications, not to
+the Deity immediately, but by some Mediator between the Gods and men."
+(See Wadsworth's Eccles. Biog. p. 172.) Here, then, we have the most
+conclusive proof that the belief in mediators is of pagan origin. We
+will now hear from another archbishop on this subject. In his "Caution
+to the Times" (p, 71 ), Archbishop Whately says, "As the Infinite Being
+is an object too remote and incomprehensible for our minds to dwell
+upon, he has manifested himself in his Son, the man Jesus Christ"
+Precisely so 1 just the kind of reasoning employed to account for the
+worship of man-Gods among the heathen. This logic fits one case as well
+as the other.
+
+The Christian writer F. D. Maurice declares in like manner, "We accept
+the fact of the incarnation (of Jesus Christ), because we feel that it
+is impossible to know the absolute invisible God without an incarnation,
+as man needs to know him, and craves to know him." (Logical Essay, p.
+79.) Here is more pagan logic--the same reasoning they employed to prove
+the divinity of their Saviors and demigods. And the Rev. Dr. Thomas
+Arnold declares, "It (the incarnation of Christ) was very necessary,
+especially at a time when men were so accustomed to worship their
+highest Gods under the form of men" (Sermon on Christian Life, p. 61.)
+Let the reader attentively observe the explicit avowal here made, and
+mark well its pregnant inferences. He makes Jesus Christ come into the
+world in condescension to the idolatrous rivalry of the Jews to be up
+with the heathen nations in worshiping God in the form of man; that
+is, the founders of Christianity, having been Jews, disclosed the true
+Jewish character in running after and adopting the customs of heathen
+countries then so rife--that of hunting up a great man, and making him
+a God--which was only one case out of many of the Jews adopting some
+of the numerous forms of idolatry and other religious customs of their
+heathen neighbors. Their whole history, as set forth in the Bible,
+proves, as we have shown in another chapter, that they were strongly
+prone to such acts. It is not strange, therefore, that they should and
+did convert "the man Christ Jesus" into a God. We will now listen to
+another Christian writer, the notable and noteworthy Dr. T. Chambers.
+"Whatever the falsely or superstitiously fearful imagination conjures up
+because of God being at a distance, can only be dispelled by God being
+brought nigh to us.... The veil which hides the unseen God from the eyes
+of mortals must be somehow withdrawn." (Select Works, vol. iii. p. 161.)
+Most significant indeed is this species of reasoning. It is the same
+kind of logic which had led to the promotion of more than a score of
+great men to the Godhead among the ancient heathen. "The veil which
+hides the unseen God must be removed'" says Dr. Chambers; and so had
+reasoned in soliloquy a thousand pagans long before, when determined to
+worship men for Gods. It is simply saying, "We are too carnally-minded
+to worship God in spirit; we must and will have a God of flesh and
+blood--a God who can be recognized by the external senses;" he must
+"become flesh, and dwell amongst us." (See John i. 14.) Our author
+continues: "Now all this (removing the veil from the unseen God) has
+been done once, and done only once in the person of Jesus Christ."
+(Ibid.) Mistake, most fatal mistake, brother Chambers! It has been done
+more than a score of times in various heathen countries--a fact which
+proves you ignorant of oriental history.
+
+Now let the reader mark the foregoing citations from standard Christian
+authors, setting forth some of the reasons which led the founders of
+Christianity to adopt a visible man-God in their worship in the
+person of Jesus Christ, Language could hardly be used to prove more
+conclusively that the whole thing grew out of an idolatrous proclivity
+to man-worship,--that is, the gross, sensuous, carnally-minded
+propensity to worship an extetnal, visible God,--proving, with the
+corroborative evidence of many other facts, that they were not a whit
+above the heathen in spiritual development. The reason employed by the
+Thibetan for the worship of the Hindoo Chrishna as a God, tells the
+whole story of the worship and the deification of Jesus Christ "We could
+not always have God behind the clouds; so we had him come down where we
+could see him." This is the same kind of reasoning made use of by the
+Christian writer above quoted, all of which discloses a state of mind
+among both heathen and Christians that would not long rest satisfied
+without deifying somebody, in order to have a visible God to worship. And
+hence Christians deified "the man Christ Jesus" for this purpose.
+
+"The more externally minded (says Fleurbach), the greater was the
+determination to worship a personal God"--God in the form of man. And as
+the Jewish founders of Christianity (as every chapter of their history
+demonstrates) were dwelling on the external plane, it was not an act
+of direct innovation, therefore, for them to fall into the habit of
+worshiping the personal Jesus as a God. It involved no serious incursion
+on previous thoughts or habits. And warped and blinded, indeed, must be
+that mind which cannot here discover the true key to the apotheosis of
+Jesus--one of the real causes of his being stripped of his manhood, and
+advanced to the Godhead. It was as naturally to be expected from the
+then state of the religious world, and the state of the Jewish mind
+concerned in the founding of Christianity, as that an autumnal crop of
+fruit should succeed the bloom of spring.
+
+Let it be specially noted, that all the Christian writers above cited
+tell us, in effect, that God sent his Son Jesus Christ into the world
+to be worshiped as a God in condescension to the ignorance and
+superstitious tendencies, and we will add, idolatrous proclivities of
+the people. From this stand-point we challenge the world to show why
+God may not have sent the oriental Saviors into the world for the
+same reason--that is, in condescension to the prejudices of the devout
+worshipers under the heathen systems. Why, then, is there not as
+much probability that he did do so? Why would he not be as likely to
+accommodate their ignorance and prejudices in this way as those of the
+founders of the Christian system. This question we shall keep standing
+before the Christian world till it is answered, and we challenge them to
+meet it, and overthrow it if they can.
+
+3. Men deified on account of mental and moral superiority.
+
+The ancient nations, in their entire ignorance of the philosophy of the
+human mind, and the laws controlling its actions, always accounted for
+the appearance of great men amongst them by supposing them to be Gods.
+Every country occasionally produced a man, who, by virtue of natural
+superiority, rose so high in the scale of moral and intellectual
+greatness as to fill the ideal of the people with respect to the
+characteristics of a God. So low, so limited, so narrow, so greatly
+circumscribed were the conceptions of deity, of the undeveloped and
+intellectually dwarfed minds of all religious countries in that age,
+that a man had to rise but a few degrees above the common level of the
+populace to become a God. He could "easily fill the bill," and exhibit
+all the qualities they assigned to the highest God in the heavens.
+And this is as true of the Jewish mind as that of any other nation, a
+portion of whom adored Jesus as a God. Or if they lacked anything in
+natural inclination, they made it up by imitation, a propensity which
+they possessed in no small degree, that is, a proneness to imitate the
+customs of other nations.
+
+Mr. Higgins tells us that "men of brilliant intellects and high moral
+attainments, and great healers (of which Christ was one), were almost
+certain to be deified." In like manner Archbishop Tillotson says, "they
+deified famous and eminent persons by advancing them after their death
+to the dignity of an inferior kind of Gods fit to be worshiped by men
+on earth." Mark the expression, "after their death" We have shown in
+another chapter that Jesus Christ was not generally considered a God,
+even by his followers, till more than three hundred years after
+his death, when Constantine declared him to be "God of very God"--a
+circumstance of itself sufficient to establish the conclusion that
+he did not possess this character. A God would be adored as such by
+everybody while living, but a man's worshipers rise up after his death,
+as in the case of "the man Christ Jesus." Great mental endowments,
+or great moral attainments, would, in most countries, bring the most
+ignorant down on their knees to worship such a man as a God. But it
+re-quired years, and sometimes centuries, to get him fully established
+among the Gods. This is as true of Jesus Christ as the other
+human-descended deities. Whatever amount of homage Jesus might have
+received while living, any person who will institute a thorough,
+unbiased scrutiny in the case will discover that it was his great
+healing powers and superior mental qualities which finally deified him.
+His ignorant admirers knew no way of accounting for such extraordinary
+qualities but to suppose him to be the embodiment of infinite wisdom.
+Like the Chinaman who exclaimed, "See the God in that man," when an
+Englishman cured a young woman of partial blindness by anointing her eyes
+with kerosene. Such a deed would deify almost any man, in almost any
+country, before the dawn of letters and the recognition of the science
+of mind.
+
+The missionary Rev. D. O. Allen's method of accounting for the
+deification of the Hindoo God Chrishna is so suggestive, that we here
+present it. He tells us that "as the exploits ascribed to Chrishna
+exceed mere human power, the difficulty was removed by placing him among
+the incarnations of Vishnu." (India, Ancient and Modern, p. 26.) Exactly
+so! We are glad of such historic information. We hope the Christian
+reader will note the lesson it suggests. For certainly, every reader,
+who has not had his reason shipwrecked on the shoals of a blind and
+dogmatic theology, can see here a key to unlock the great mystery of
+the Christian incarnation--the divinity of Jesus Christ As some of the
+exploits of Chrishna were supposed to "exceed mere human power," we
+are told the difficulty was explained by imagining him to be a God. How
+powerful the suggestion! how conclusive the explanation, not only for
+the Godhood of this sin-atoning Savior, but for that of "our Lord and
+Savior Jesus Christ," and all the other Lords, and Gods, and Saviors of
+antiquity! A single hint will sometimes explain whole volumes of obscure
+history, as does this of the Rev. Christian Hindoo missionary D. O.
+Allen. And surely, most deplorably blinded by superstition must be the
+two hundred millions of Christ worshipers, the three hundred millions
+who worship Chrishna, the one hundred and twenty million adorers of
+Confucius, the fifty millions of suppliants of Mithra the Mediator, and
+the one hundred and fifty millions of followers of Mahomet, who cannot
+see here a satisfactory solution of the deityship of all these Gods, and
+all the other man-Gods of antiquity.
+
+The question is sometimes asked, How could two hundred millions of
+people come to believe that Jesus was a God merely because of his
+superiority as a man? We will answer by pointing to the history of the
+Hindoo Chrishna, and by asking the same question with respect to his
+Godhead. How could three hundred millions of people be brought to
+believe in his divinity, and worship him as a God, merely because he was
+a superior human being? One question is as easily answered as the other,
+and posterity will answer both questions alike. When we observe it
+taught as an important and easily learned lesson of history, and one
+based on a thousand facts, that no man could rise to intellectual
+greatness or moral distinction in the era in which Christ was born
+without being advanced to the dignity of a God, and worshiped as such,
+it is really a source of humility and sorrow to every unshackled lover
+of truth and humanity to reflect that there are so many millions of
+people whose mental vision is so beclouded by a dogmatic and inexorable
+theology that they cannot see the logical potency of these facts,--that
+they cannot be even moved by this great and overwhelming amount of
+evidence against the divinity dogma, and observe that it explodes it
+into a thousand fragments, but still cling to the delusion that "the
+man Christ Jesus," with all the human qualities and human frailties
+with which his own history (the Gospels) invest him, was nevertheless
+a God,--ay, the monstrous delusion that any being possessing a _finite
+form_ could be an _infinite being_--a most self-evident and shocking
+absurdity. And we challenge all Christendom to show, or approximate one
+inch toward showing, that there was sufficient difference between Christ
+and Chrishna to require us to accept one as a man and the other as a
+God. It cannot be done.
+
+We have shown, then, by the foregoing exposition, that one cause of the
+deification of men was simply an attempt to solve the problem of
+human greatness,--an attempt to account for the moral and intellectual
+superiority of men which enabled them to perform deeds and otherwise
+exhibit a character far above the capacity of the multitude to
+comprehend, and which they could find no other way to account for than
+to suppose them to be Gods, while the low and groveling conceptions
+which most religious nations, and especially the Jews, had formed of
+the character and essential attributes of the Infinite Deity (often
+investing him with the most ignoble human attributes, human passions,
+and human imperfections), made it perfectly easy to convert their great
+men by imagination into Gods. The Jews represented God not only as
+a coming down from heaven in propria persona, and walking, talking,
+wrestling, &c., as a man (on one occasion we are told he and Jacob
+scuffled all night), but he is often represented as acting the part of
+a wicked man, such as lying (see 2 Chron. v. 22), getting mad (see Deut.
+i. 37), swearing, sanctioning the highhanded and demoralizing crimes of
+stealing (see Ex. iii. 2), of robbery (see Ex. xii. 36), of murder (see
+Deut. xiii. 2) and even fornication (see Gen. xxxi. 1, and Num. xxxi)
+and thus they invested Diety with such mean, low, despicable attributes
+as to reduce his moral character to a level with the most immoral man in
+society. So that it was very easy, if not very natural, to elevate their
+great men (if it really required any elevation) to a level with their
+God.
+
+Men and Gods were in character and conception so nearly alike, that it
+was easy to bring them on a level, or to mistake one for the other. And
+hence it is we find an incarnated God, Savior, Son of God, Redeemer,
+&c., figuring in the early history of nearly every oriental religious
+nation whose name and history has descended to us. Indeed, the practice
+of deifying men, or mistaking men for Gods, was once so common, so
+nearly universal, that it must require a mind very ignorant of oriental
+history to adore Jesus Christ as having been the only character of this
+kind who figured in the religious world. It was, as before suggested,
+deemed the most rational way of accounting for the marked superiority
+among men, to suppose that some men had a divine birth, and were
+begotten by the great Infinite Deity himself, and descended to the earth
+through the purest human (virgin) channel.
+
+As Mr. Higgins remarks, "Every person who possessed a striking
+superiority of mind, either for talent or goodness, was supposed
+anciently to have a portion of the divine mind or essence incorporated
+or incarnated in him." The Jews had a number of men whose names imply a
+participation in the divine nature, among which we will cite Elijah and
+Elisha (El-i-jah and El-i-sha), El being the Hebrew name or term for
+God, while Jah is Jehovah (see Ps. lxviii. 4), and Sha means a Savior.
+Elijah, then, is an approximation to God--Jehovah, and Elisha is
+God--a Savior. The character of men and Gods were cast in molds so
+approximately similar, so nearly identical, as to make the transition,
+or change from one to the other, so slight and easy; either of men into
+Gods or Gods into men, that several nations went so far as to teach
+that a man might by his own natural exertions, his own voluntary powers,
+raise himself to a level with the Diety, and thereby become a God.
+
+Mr. Ritter in his "History of Ancient Philosophy" (Chap. II.), tells
+us that some of the Budhist sect held that "a man by freeing himself
+by holiness of conduct from the obstacles of nature, may deliver his
+fellows from the corruption of the times, and become a benefactor and
+redeemer of his race, and also even become a God"--a "Budha"--i. e., a
+Savior and Son of God. Singular enough that the Christian should
+object to this doctrine as being rather blasphemous, when his own bible
+abundantly and explicitly teaches the same doctrine in effect!
+
+We find the same thing substantially taught over and over again in the
+Christian Scriptures. "Be ye perfect even as your Father in heaven is
+perfect" (Matt. v. 18), requires a man to become morally perfect as God,
+which is all that the Budhist precept requires or contemplates, and no
+man can become perfect as God without becoming a God. But we are not
+left to mere inference in the matter, We have the doctrine several times
+expressed and unquestionably taught in the Christian bible of man's
+power and prerogative to become either a God or Son of God. "Said I not
+that ye are Gods?" (Ex. iv. 16). "Behold now, we are the sons of God."
+(i John i. 2.)
+
+Here is the Budhist doctrine as explicitly stated as it can be taught.
+It is, then, a Christian bible doctrine as well as a pagan doctrine,
+that man can become a God, and that God can be born of woman, and
+thereby invested with all the frail and imperfect attributes of man. It
+cannot be considered a matter of marvel, therefore, that so many of the
+good, the great, and the wise men of almost every country, including
+"the man Christ Jesus," should be honored and adored with the titles
+of Deity, and worshiped as God absolute, "Son of God," "Savior,"
+"Redeemer," "Intercessor" "Mediator," &c.
+
+4. God comes down and is incarnated to fight and conquer the devil. We
+will proceed to enumerate other causes and motives which conspired in
+various cases to invest some one or more of the great men of a nation
+with divine honors, and adore them as veritable Gods and Saviors "come
+down to us in the form of men." It was a tenant of faith with most of
+the ancient religions, that almost at the dawn of human existence a
+devil or evil principle found its way into the world, to the great
+discomfiture of man and the no small annoyance of the Supreme Creator
+himself, and that hence there must needs be a Savior, a Redeemer, an
+Intercessor to combat and if possible "destroy the devil and his works."
+
+For this purpose appeared the Savior Chrishna, in India, the Savior
+Osiris, in Egypt, the God or Mediator Mithra, in Persia, the Redeemer
+Quexalcote, in Mexico, the Savior Jesus Christ, in Judea, &c. In the
+initiatory chapter on the transgression and fall of man, some of the
+oriental bibles graphically describe the scene of "the war in heaven"--a
+counterpart to the story of St. John, as found in the twelfth chapter
+of Revelation, wherein Michael and the dragon are represented as the
+captains and commander-in-chief of their respective embattled hosts,
+and in which the former was crowned as victor in the contest, as he
+succeeded in vanquishing and "casting out the evil one." In the pagan
+military drama the scene of the war in heaven is transferred to the
+earth. A God, a Savior (a Son of God), comes down to put a stop to the
+machinations of the "Evil One," i. e., to "destroy the devil and his
+works" as we are told Christ came for that purpose. (1 John iii. 8 ) See
+the Author's "Biography of Satan."
+
+The Egyptian story runs thus: "Osiris appeared on earth to benefit
+mankind, and after he had performed the duties of his mission, and had
+fallen a sacrifice to Typhon (the devil, or evil principle), which,
+however, he eventually overcame ('overcame the wicked one,' 1 John ii.
+11), by rising from the dead, after being crucified, he became the
+judge of mankind in a future state." (See Kerrick's "Ancient Egypt",
+also Wilkinson's "Egypt.")
+
+The Budhist, or Hindoo, version of the story is on this wise: "The
+prince (of darkness), or evil spirit, Ravana, or Mahesa, got into a
+contest and a war with the divine hero Rama, in which the latter proved
+victorious, and put to flight the army of 'the wicked one,' but not till
+after considerable injury had been done to the human family, and the
+whole order of the universe subverted; to rectify which, and to achieve
+a final and complete triumph over Ravana (the devil) and his works,
+and thus save the human race from utter destruction, the gods besought
+Vishnu (the second person of the Trinity) to descend to the earth and
+take upon himself the form and flesh of man. And it was argued that as
+the mission appertained to man, the God Vishnu, when he descended to the
+earth in the capacity of a Savior, should become half man and half God,
+and that the most feasible way to accomplish this end was for him to be
+born of a woman."
+
+And that the glory and honor of his triumph over Ravana, the devil,
+would be greater if achieved in this capacity than if he were to come
+down from heaven and conquer Ravana wholly with his attributes as a God,
+or wholly in his divine character--i.e., as absolute God, uninvested
+with human nature. The suggestion was approved by Vishnu, who descended
+and took upon himself "the form of man" ("the form of a servant"--Phil.
+ii. 7). And that his metamorphosis or earth-born life might be
+the purer, it was decided that he should be born of a woman wholly
+uncontaminated with man--that is, a virgin. And thus, far back in the
+midnight of mythology and fable, originated the story of divine Saviors
+and Gods being born of virgins--a conception now found incorporated in
+the religious histories of various ancient nations.
+
+And now let us observe how substantially the Christian story of a Savior
+conforms to the above. Jesus, like the Saviors of India and Egypt, was
+believed to be a man-God--half man and half God, and reputedly he came
+into the world, like them, to "destroy the devil and his works," or
+the works of the devil--that is, to put an end to the evil or malignant
+principle introduced into the world by the serpent in the garden
+of Eden; as it is declared "the seed of the woman shall bruise the
+serpent's head" (Gen. iii. 15)--which is interpreted as referring to
+Christ. And like these and various other pagan Saviors Jesus is assigned
+the highest and most ennobling human origin--a birth from a virgin. And,
+as in the instances above named, Jesus had also several encounters with
+the devil; first in the wilderness, then on a mountain, and finally,
+like them, falls a sacrifice to his insidious, malignant power acting
+through the agency and mediumship of Judas Iscariot; for his betrayal
+is ascribed wholly to Satan, whom John called the serpent, entering into
+Judas and prompting the act. (See Rev. xii. 3). And thus Christ, like
+the other saviors, falls a victim to the serpentine or satanic power
+acting through the instrumentality of a Judas Iscariot; but finally,
+triumphed, like the Savior of Egypt (Osiris), by rising from the
+dead--"the first fruits of immortality." And thus the stories run
+parallel--the more modern Christian with the more ancient pagan.
+
+ (For a full exposition of the belief and traditions
+ respecting a devil and a hell in all ages and all countries,
+ see the Author's "Biography of Satan.")
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX. SACRED CYCLES EXPLAINING THE ADVENT OF THE GODS
+
+The Master-Key to the Divinity of Jesus Christ.
+
+Extraordinary Revelations in History and Science.
+
+RECENT explorations in the field of oriental sacred history have
+revealed to the antiquarian some curious and deeply interesting facts
+appertaining to traditions founded on, and growing out of, astronomical
+phenomena and changes in the visible heavens, which throw much light on,
+and go far toward elucidating and furnishing a satisfactory explanation
+of many of the "mysteries" of the Christian bible. The works which we
+have consulted, containing the reports and results of researches of this
+character, tend to elucidate and establish the following conclusions:--
+
+1. That anciently, in religious countries, time was divided into Cycles,
+Aetas, or Neros.
+
+2. That these measures of time grew out of, and represented periodical
+changes, or periodically occurring phenomena in the astronomical
+heavens.
+
+3. That some religious nations had three Cycular periods of different
+lengths, representing three orders and degrees of miraculous births.
+In India the length of the first or shorter Cycle was thirty days,
+the length of one moon or month. Every change of the moon marked an
+important event in their religious history. Each change was supposed to
+denote the birth of some angel or celestial being known as an Eon.
+The second Cycular period was of six hundred years' duration, and
+was founded on a text of the sacred book of India, known as the Surya
+Sidhanta, which declares "the equinoctial point moves eastward one
+degree in thirty times twenty years" (thirty times twenty being 600). At
+every occurrence of this equinoctial change hightened by an eclipse of
+the sun or moon, or some other wonder-exciting phenomenon, a God was
+supposed to be born. Such a marvelous and terror-inspiring event, in
+the apprehensions of the credulous and superstitious populace of an
+unscientific age, could not be designed for anything less than the birth
+of a God or Divine Savior. Their theology teaches that such was the
+wickedness of man, that a God had to descend from heaven, and suffer and
+die for the people, in some way, every six hundred years.
+
+And this period was announced by the God's causing a collision of the
+sun and moon, or some other terror-exciting phenomena in the heavens
+above or the earth beneath. When one of these six hundred Cycular
+periods was about to expire, and another commence, every remarkable
+phenomenon in the heavens was watched and interpreted as being connected
+with it. And some person born at that period, who exhibited any
+remarkable or extraordinary trait of character, was certain to be
+promoted to the Godhead, as being miraculously born and brought forth
+for the special occasion. He was the Avatar Savior or Messiah for that
+Cycle. There were two extraordinary events to be accounted for--one was
+the display of unusual and terror-exciting phenomena in the heavens, and
+the other the birth of extraordinary men on earth. And it was natural
+for an ignorant age to associate them together, and make one aid in
+accounting for the other. And as these celestial phenomena were only
+witnessed at intervals distant apart, the thought naturally arose, and
+the conclusion was easily established, that they came periodically, and
+for the special purpose of heralding the birth of a God.
+
+And as tradition reported that similar events were witnessed six hundred
+years before the conviction was fixed in the popular mind, this was the
+established period intervening between these great epochs. And thus
+the six hundred year Cycular tradition became established in India, and
+finally spread through all the Eastern countries. We find traces of it
+in Egypt, Syria, Persia, Chaldea, China, Italy, and Judea. And the proof
+that the deification of great men in some countries grew out of this
+Cycular tradition is found in the fact that many of them were born at
+the commencement of Cycles. The Hindoos are able to recount the names
+of ten sin-atoning Saviors who made their appearance on earth at these
+regular intervals of six hundred years. The name of the first Avatar
+Mediator and Savior who forsook the throne of heaven to come down and
+die for the people was Matsa. Tradition and the sacred books fix his
+birth at about six thousand years B. C. The names and advent of the
+other sin-atoning Saviors occur in the following order: 2. Vurahay, 3.
+Kurma, 4. Nursu, 5. Waman, 6. Pursuram, 7. Kama, 8. Chrishna, 9. Sakia,
+10. Salavahana. The last named Savior was cotemporary with Jesus Christ.
+The God and Savior Sakia was born six hundred years B. C. "Our Lord
+and Savior" and "Son of God," Chrisna, was immaculately conceived and
+miraculously born, according to Higgins, 1200 B. C.
+
+A circumstance strongly confirming the conclusion that Cycular periods
+had much to do with the promotion of men to the dignity of Gods is, that
+most of the deified personages reported in history were, according to
+the best authorities, born near the commencement of Cycles. Recurring
+back to the eighth Cycle, we observe the advent of that period of
+Chrishna, Zoroaster 2d, Bali, Thammuz, Atys, Osiris, and several others.
+At the commencement of the ninth Cycle appeared Sakia, Quexalcote,
+Zoroaster 2d, Xion, Qairious, Prometheus, Mithra and many others.
+
+The tenth Cycle brought in Jesus Christ, Salavhana, Apollonious, and
+others that might be named. Mahomet succeeded Jesus Christ just six
+hundred years (he was born in the year 600 A. D.), which inaugurated
+another Cycle. Many facts are recorded in history proving the prevalence
+and sacredness of the Cycle idea in different countries. The story
+in Egypt of the bird called the Phoenix, being hatched, according to
+tradition, just 600 years B. C., and living to be just six hundred years
+old, and having the power to renew itself every six hundred years, shows
+the prevalence of the Cycular tradition in that country.
+
+We have the statement upon the records of history that when the first
+six hundred years after the foundation of Rome were about to expire,
+the people became greatly excited with the apprehension that some
+extraordinary event, must attend the occasion. And but for the influence
+of the philosophers, some extraordinary man would have been hunted up
+and promoted to divine honor as being the God born for that Cycle. The
+writings of Plato, Plutarch, Ovid, Cicero, Virgil, and Aristotle, all
+evince a belief in Cycles, and the belief that ten Cycles, or Aetas,
+were the measure, for the duration of the world. According to M. Faber,
+a new-born Savior was always expected to make his appearance at the
+commencement of one of these Cycles. Hence the deification of those
+personages above named, and many others that might be named. It is a
+remarkable circumstance that the Jewish bible should speak of Noah as
+being six hundred years old at the commencement of the flood, when it
+was a tradition amongst the ancient Egyptians that the ushering in of
+the six hundreth year Cycle was to be attended with a flood.
+
+And the time antecedent to Noah after creation, was the measure of three
+Cycles, according to the chronology of the Samaritan bible, it being
+6004-600+600= 1800 years from Adam to Noah. It is an interesting fact
+that those enigmatical figures made use of by Daniel, as also some of
+those found in the Apocalypse, are susceptible of a Cycular explanation.
+These occult prophecies, as they are supposed to be, which have puzzled
+and bewildered many thousands of Christian minds and bible expounders
+in their attempt to evolve their signification, are susceptible of a
+Cycular explanation. They are of easy solution on a Cycular basis, or
+with the Cycular key.
+
+Take, for example, Daniel's famous prophecy (so called) of the seventy
+weeks, as found in the ninth chapter, announcing the advent of a Messiah
+at the end of that period. We find by a calculation based on Tyson's
+"Historical Atlas," and Haskell's "Chronology and Universal History,"
+that Daniel lived in the hundred and tenth year of the ninth Cycle, at
+which time the prefigure seems to have been used. Assuming this as a
+basis, and multiplying seventy weeks by seven, to convert it into years,
+as Christian essayists are accustomed to doing, and we have as the
+result 70x7=490, which being added to one hundred and ten, the year that
+gave birth to the prophesy, makes six hundred, which exactly completes
+the Cycle, and furnishes a simple and beautiful explanation of a
+mystical figure, on which many thousands of conjectures, speculations,
+and guesses have been founded, but on which they have failed to throw
+any light.
+
+The 70x70=490 years, were wanting to complete the Cycle; and when this
+rolled away, it brought a new Cycle, and with it a new sin-atoning
+Savior was always expected in some countries (the country in which
+Daniel lived being one of this number); a new Messiah (or sin-atoning
+Savior), and some great man born at that time, was fixed upon and
+deified as being that Messiah. Hence the Jews, in imitation of their
+neighbors, yielding to their strong proclivities to borrow from and copy
+after heathen nations, selected "the man Christ Jesus" as their Messiah
+and Savior. The mystical era of Daniel, signified by "a time, times, and
+the dividing of time" (Dan. vii. 25), or, as St. John has it, "a time,
+times, and a half time" (see Rev. xii. 14) is explainable by the same
+Cycular key.
+
+Some writers have conjectured that Daniel was a Chaldean priest. If so,
+he must have had a knowledge of their astronomical Cycle of two
+thousand one hundred and sixty years, which completed the period of the
+precession of the equinoxes. Explained by this Cycle, his "time, times,
+and dividing of time, or half time," or "a time, another time, and
+a half time," as some writers have rendered it, would be 2160 f
+2160-I-1080 5400; nine Cycles exactly, as 600X9= 5400. Add this to the
+Cycle in which he lived, and we have 5400+600=6000, the great Millennial
+Cycle, when not only a new Savior and Messiah was to be born, but a new
+world also. Both the long and short Cycle (and one was a measure of the
+other) were expected to expire at that time, according to a Chaldean
+tradition. And thus is beautifully explained another "deep, dark and
+unfathomable mystery," which thousands of devout minds have exhausted
+their ingenuity in trying to find a meaning for. Again, look at the
+frightful nightmare visions of Daniel and the author of the Apocalypse,
+in which they saw a monstrous beast with seven heads and ten horns,
+though Daniel mentions only the horns. The seven heads were, in all
+probability, the seven auspicious months of the year in which some of
+the nations revealed in the enjoyment of, and praised and celebrated
+their fruitful, bountiful blessings, the year being divided into two
+seasons, seven summer months and five winter months.
+
+Now, let it be noted, St. John lived near the tenth Cycle, which answers
+to the ten horns of the beast. Hence is most forcibly suggested that
+interpretation of the figure. Daniel's ten horns should have been
+translated eleven horns, as he lived in the ninth Cycle, though so near
+the tenth, that he probably constructed his figure on the tenth. And
+Daniel's prophetic declaration (so considered), found in the eighth
+chapter, that it would be two thousand three hundred days until the
+sanctuary should be closed, is explainable in the same manner. According
+to Mr. Irving, Mr. Frere, and other writers, there was a large fraction
+over the three hundred days, making it nearer four hundred, and hence
+might have been so rendered, which would make 20004-400=2400; the exact
+length of four Cycles, 600x4=2400. And their are other mystical
+figures, frightful visions, and occult metaphors found in the Apocalypse
+susceptible of a Cycular solution. The Cycle is the true key for
+unlocking many of the ancient mysteries of various religions. The
+Chinese have always reckoned by Cycles of sixty years, instead of by
+centuries. (See New Am. Encyclop. vol. v. p. 105.)
+
+We will now bestow a brief notice on the Millennial Cycle: the
+sacred period of 6000 years, composed of ten of the smaller Cycles,
+600x10=6000. Dr. Hales says, "A tradition of Millennial ages prevailed
+throughout the east, and finally reached the west." (Chron. vol. i. p.
+44.) We are told by astronomers that if the angle which the plane of the
+ecliptic forms with the plane of the Equator had decreased gradually, as
+it was once supposed to do, the two planes would coincide in about six
+thousand years--a period which comprises ten of the smaller Cycles,
+600X10 =6000. And it was very easy and very natural for an ignorant and
+superstitious age to conclude that such a prodigious, astounding, and
+awful event as that of two stupendous orbits or planes coming in contact
+with each other, should be attended with some direful and calamitous
+event, and with a tremendous display of divine power. Nothing less than
+an entire revolution, if not the total destruction of the world, could
+comport with the majesty and magnitude of such an event.
+
+And this great crisis was to bring down the Omnipotent Divine Judge from
+the throne of heaven; that is, the Almighty being who caused it was to
+come down, or send his Son to call the nations to judgment, and drown
+the world, or set it on fire. The first destruction according to the
+tradition of the Chaldeans, Persians, Assyrians, Mexicans, and some
+other nations, was to be by water, and the next by fire, when the
+oceans, seas, and lakes were to be converted into ashes. And Christ's
+apostles seemed to have cherished this tradition. Peter says, "whereby
+the world that was then, being overflowed by water, perished. But the
+heavens and the earth which are now, by the same word are kept in store,
+reserved unto fire against the day of judgment," (2 Peter iii. 6.) This
+was a pagan belief long prior to the era of Peter. Josephus says, "Adam
+predicted that the world would be twice destroyed, once by water,
+next by fire." A writer says, "A glorious, blissful future attends the
+destruction of the world by fire, and the reappearance of Vishnu (i. e.,
+eleventh incarnation of Vishnu) has been for several thousand years the
+hopeful anticipation of India." "The last coming of Vishnu in power and
+glory," says another writer, "to consummate the final overthrow of evil,
+sin, and death, is so firmly fixed in the minds of the devotees,
+that they have an annual festival in commemoration of their prophesy
+referring to it, at which they exclaim, in a loud voice, 'When will the
+Divine Helper come? when will the Deliverer appear?'"
+
+At the consummation of this event, "a comet will roll under the moon and
+set the world on fire;" so affirms their bible. And the Persian bible,
+the Zend-Avesta, in like manner predicts that "a star, with a tail in
+course of its revolution, will strike the earth and set it on fire."
+Seneca predicts that "the time will come when the world will be wrapped
+in flames, and the opposite powers in conflict will mutually destroy
+each other."
+
+Ovid prophesies poetically,--
+
+ "For thus the stern, unyielding Fates decree.
+ That earth, air, heaven, with the capacious sea,
+ All shall fall victims to devouring fire,
+ And in fierce flames the blazing orbs expire."
+ Lucian, in a like spirit, exclaims,--
+
+ "One vast, appointed flame, by Fate's decree,
+ Shall waste yon azure heavens, the earth and sea."
+
+The Egyptians marked their houses with red, to indicate that the world
+would be destroyed by fire. Orpheus, 1200 B. C., at the inauguration
+of the eighth Cycle, entertained fearful forebodings of the speedy
+destruction of the world by water or fire. Some nations held that
+the alternate destruction of the world by water and fire had already
+occurred, and would occur again. Theopompus informs us that some of the
+orientalists believed that "the God of light and the God of darkness
+reigned by turn every six thousand years" (commencing with an
+astronomical Cycle of course), and that during this period the other
+was held in subjection, which finally resulted in "a war in heaven;" a
+counterpart to St. John's story. (See Rev. chap. xii.)
+
+This accords with Volney's statement, that "it was recorded in the
+sacred books of the Persians and Chaldeans that the world, composed of
+a total revolution of twelve thousand periods, was divided into two
+partial revolutions of six thousand years each--one being the reign of
+good, and the other the reign of evil." (Ruins, p. 244.) This belief was
+disseminated through most of the nations. One of these revolutions was
+produced, some believed, by a concussion of worlds, which displaced the
+ocean and seas, and thus produced a general flood, which drowned every
+living thing on the earth. The next revolution will be caused by a
+collision of worlds, which will produce fire, and burn the earth to
+ashes.
+
+Now, let it be noted that all of these grand epochs were founded on
+Cycles, and accompanied by the tradition of a God being born upon the
+earth (conceived by a virgin maid), or descending in person; that is,
+men were promoted to the Godhead. And in this way Jesus Christ was
+deified. Volney explains the matter thus: "Now, according to the Jewish
+computation, six thousand years had nearly elapsed since the supposed
+creation of the world (according to their chronology). This coincidence
+produced considerable fermentation in the minds of the people. Nothing
+was thought of but the approaching termination. The great Mediator and
+Final Judge was expected, and his advent desired, that an end might be
+put to their calamities." (Ruins, p. 168).
+
+Mr. Higgins corroborates this statement, when he tells us that "about
+the time of the Cæsars, there seems to have been a general expectation
+that some Great One was to appear. And finally, when the Cycle had
+passed, the people, the Jew-Christians, began to look about to see who
+that Great One was. Some fixed on Herod, some on Julius Cæsar, and some
+on others. But finally public opinion settled on one Jesus of Nazareth,
+on account of his superiority in morals and intellect, while the Hindoos
+deified Salavahana, the Greeks Apollonious, &c." And thus science and
+history join hand in hand to explain most beautifully and conclusively
+the greatest mystery that ever brought two hundred millions of people
+daily upon their knees--the apotheosis, or deification of "the man
+Christ Jesus."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI. CHRISTIANITY DERIVED FROM HEATHEN AND ORIENTAL SYSTEMS
+
+MORE than twenty thousand sermons are preached in the Christian pulpits,
+on every recurring Sabbath, to convince the people that the religion and
+morality taught and practiced by Jesus Christ was of divine emanation,
+and was never before taught in the world,--that his system of
+morality was without a parallel, and his practical life without a
+precedent,--that the doctrine of self-denial, humility, unselfishness,
+benevolence, and charity,--also devout piety, kind treatment of enemies,
+and love for the human race, which he preached and practiced, had never
+before been exemplified in the life and teachings of any individual or
+nation. But a thorough acquaintance with the history and moral systems
+of some of the oriental nations, and the practical lives of piety and
+self-denial exemplified in their leading men long anterior to the birth
+of Christ, and long before the name of Christianity was anywhere
+known, must convince any unprejudiced mind that such a claim is
+without foundation. And to prove it, we will here institute a critical
+comparison between Christianity and some of the older systems with
+respect to the essential spirit of their teachings, and observe how
+utterly untenable and groundless is the dogmatic assumption which claims
+for the Christian religion either any originality or any superiority. Of
+course if their is nothing new or original, there is nothing superior.
+
+We will first arrange Christianity side by side with the ancient system
+known as Essenism--a religion whose origin has never been discovered,
+though it is known that the Essenes existed in the days of Jonathan
+Maccabeus, B. C. 150, and that they were of Jewish origin, and
+constituted one of the three Jewish sects (the other two being Pharisees
+and Sadducees). We have but fragments of their history as furnished by
+Philo, Josephus, Pliny, and their copyists, Eusebius, Dr. Ginsburg, and
+others, on whose authority we will proceed to show that Alexandrian and
+Judean Essenism was identically the same system in spirit and essence as
+its successor Judean Christianity; in other words, Judean Christianity
+teaches the same doctrines and moral precepts which had been previously
+inculcated by the disciples of the Essenian religion.
+
+
+A PARALLEL EXHIBITION OF THE PRECEPTS AND PRACTICAL LIVES OF CHRIST AND
+THE ESSENES.
+
+We will condense from Philo, Josephus, and other authors.
+
+1. Philo says, "It is our first duty to seek the kingdom of God and his
+righteousness so the Essenes believed and taught."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Seek first the kingdom of God, and his
+righteousness, and all else shall be added." (Matt. vi. 33; Luke xii. 31.)
+
+2. Philo says, "They abjured all amusements, all elegances, and all
+pleasures of the senses."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Forsake the world and the things thereof."
+
+3. The Essenes say, "Lay up nothing on earth, but fix your mind solely
+on heaven."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Lay not up treasures on earth," &c.
+
+4. "The Essenes, having laid aside all the anxieties of life," says
+Philo, "and leaving society, they make their residence in solitary wilds
+and in gardens."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "They wandered in deserts, and in mountains, and
+in dens, and in caves of the earth." (Heb. xi. 38.)
+
+5. Josephus says, "They neither buy nor sell among themselves, but give
+of what they have to him that wanteth."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "And parted them (their goods) to all men as every
+man had need." (Acts ii. 45.)
+
+6. Eusebius says, "Even as it is related in the Acts of the Apostles,
+all (the Esseues)... were wont to sell their possessions and their
+substance, and divide among all according as any one had need, so that
+there was not one among them in want."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Neither was their any among them that lacked, for
+as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold them, and brought the
+price of the things that were sold, &c." (Acts iv. 34.)
+
+7. Eusebius says, "For whoever, of Christ's disciples, were owners of
+estates or houses, sold them, and brought the price thereof, and laid
+them at the apostles' feet, and distribution was made as every one had
+need. So Philo relates things exactly similar of the Essenes."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ (The text above quoted.)
+
+8. "Philo tells us (says Eusebius) that the Essenes forsook father,
+mother, brothers and sisters, houses and lands, for their religion."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Whosoever forsaketh not father and mother, houses
+and lands, &c. cannot be my disciples."
+
+9. "Their being sometimes called _monks_ was owing to their abstraction
+from the world," says Eusebius.
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "They are not of the world, even as I am not of
+the world." (John xvii. 16.)
+
+10. "And the name Ascetics was applied to them on account of their rigid
+discipline, their prayers, fasting, self-mortification, &c., as they
+made themselves eunuchs."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "There be eunuchs which have made themselves
+eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake."
+
+11. "They maintained a perfect community of goods, and an equality of
+external rank." (Mich. vol. iv. p. 83.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Whosoever will be chief among you, let him be
+your servant." (Matt. xx. 27.)
+
+12. "The Essenes had all things in common, and appointed one of their
+number to manage the common bag." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "And had all things in common." (Acts ii. 44; see
+also Acts iv. 32.)
+
+13. "All ornamental dress they (Essenes) detested." (Mich. vol. iv. p.
+83.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Whose adorning let it not be that outward
+adorning of plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold, and putting on of
+apparel." (1 Peter iii. 3.)
+
+14. "They would call no man master." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Be not called Rabbi, for one is your Master."
+(Matt, xxiii. 8.)
+
+15. "They said the Creator made all mankind equal." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "God hath made of one blood all them that dwell
+upon the earth."
+
+16. "They renounced oaths, saying, He who cannot be believed without
+swearing is condemned already." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Swear not at all."
+
+17. "They would not eat anything which had blood in it, or meat which
+had been offered to idols. Their food was hyssop, and bread, and salt;
+and water their only drink." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "That ye abstain from meat offered to idols, and
+from blood." (Acts xv. 29.)
+
+18. "Take nothing with them, neither meat or drink, nor anything
+necessary for the wants of the body."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Take nothing for your journey; neither staves nor
+script; neither bread, neither money, neither have two coats apiece."
+
+19. "They expounded the literal sense of the Holy Scriptures by
+allegory."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Which things are an allegory." (Gal. iv. 24.)
+
+20. "They abjured the pleasures of the body, not desiring mortal
+offspring, and they renounced marriage, believing it to be detrimental
+to a holy life." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ It will be recollected that neither Jesus nor Paul
+ever married, and that they discouraged the marriage relation.
+Christ says, "They that shall be counted worthy of that world and the
+resurrection neither marry nor are given in marriage." And Paul says,
+"The unmarried careth for the things of the Lord." (i Cor. vii. 32.)
+
+21. "They strove to disengage their minds entirely from the world."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "If any man love the world, the love of the Father
+is not in him."
+
+22. "Devoting themselves to the Lord, they provide not for future
+subsistence."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Take no thought for the morrow, what ye shall eat
+and drink," &c.
+
+23. "Regarding the body as a prison, they were ashamed to give it
+sustenance." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Who shall change our _vile_ bodies?" (Phil. iii.
+21.)
+
+24. "They spent nearly all their time in silent meditation and inward
+prayer." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Men ought always to pray." (Luke xviii. 1.) "Pray
+without ceasing." (1 Thess. v. 17.)
+
+25. "Believing the poor were the Lord's favorites, they vowed perpetual
+chastity and poverty." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Blessed be ye poor." (Luke vi. 20.) "Hath not God
+chosen the poor?" (James ii. 5.)
+
+26. "They devoted themselves entirely to contemplation in divine
+things." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Mediate upon these (divine) things; give thyself
+wholly to them." (1 Tim. iv. 15.)
+
+27. "They fasted often, sometimes tasting food but once in three or even
+six days."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ Christ's disciples were "in fastings often." (2
+Cor. xi. 27; see also v. 34.)
+
+28. "They offered no sacrifices, believing that a serious and devout
+soul was most acceptable." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "There is no more offering for sin." (Heb. x. 18.)
+
+29. "They believed in and practiced baptizing the dead." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Else what shall they do which are baptized for
+the dead." (1 Cor. xv. 29.)
+
+30. "They gave a mystical sense to the Scriptures, disregarding the
+letter."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "The letter killeth, but the spirit maketh alive."
+(1 Cor. iii. 6.)
+
+31. "They taught by metaphors, symbols, and parables."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Without a parable spake he not unto them." (Matt.
+xiii. 34.)
+
+32. "They had many mysteries in their religion which they were sworn to
+keep secret."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "To you it is given to know the mysteries of
+the kingdom; to them it is not given." (Matt xiii. 11.) "Great is the
+mystery of godliness."
+
+33. "They had in their churches, bishops, elders, deacons, and priests."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Ordained elders in every church." (Acts xiv. 23.)
+For "deacons," see 1 Tim. iii. 1.
+
+34. "When assembled together they would often sing psalms."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Teaching and admonishing one another in psalms."
+(Col. iii. 16.)
+
+35. "They healed and cured the minds and bodies of those who joined
+them."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Healing all manner of sickness," &c. (Matt iv.
+23.)
+
+36. "They practiced certain ceremonial purifications by water."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "The accomplishment of the days of purification."
+(Acts xxi. 26.)
+
+37. "They assembled at the Sabbath festivals clothed in white garments."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Shall be clothed in white garments." (Rev. iii.
+4.)
+
+38. "They disbelieved in the resurrection of the external body."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "It is sown a natural body, it is raised a
+spiritual body." (1 Cor. xv. 44.)
+
+39. Pliny says, "They were the only sort of men who lived without money
+and without women."
+
+_Scripture parallel_\ "The love of money is the root of all evil." (1
+Tim. vi. 10.) Christ's disciples travelled without money and without
+scrip, and "eschew the lusts of the flesh."
+
+40. "They practiced the extremest charity to the poor." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Bestow all thy goods to feed the poor." (1 Cor.
+xiii. 3.)
+
+41. "They were skillful in interpreting dreams, and in foretelling
+future events."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Your sons and daughters shall prophesy, and your
+old men shall dream dreams." (Acts ii. 17.)
+
+42. "They believed in a paradise,... and in a place of never-ending
+lamentations."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Life everlasting." (Gal. viii. 8.) "Weeping,
+wailing, and gnashing of teeth." (Matt. xiii. 42.)
+
+43. "They affirmed," says Josephus, "that God foreordained all the
+events of human life."
+
+_Scripture parallel_' "Foreordained before the foundation of the world."
+(1 Peter.)
+
+44. "They believed in Mediators between God and the souls of men."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "One Mediator between God and men." (1 Tim. ii.
+5.)
+
+45. "They practiced the pantomimic representation of the death, burial,
+and resurrection of God"--Christ the Spirit.
+
+_Scripture parallel_. With respect to the death, burial, and
+resurrection of Christ, see 1 Cor. xv. 4.
+
+46. "They inculcated the forgiveness of injuries."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do." (Luke xxiii. 34.)
+
+47. "They totally disapproved of all war."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "If my kingdom were of this world, then would my
+servants fight." (John xviii. 36.)
+
+48. "They inculcated obedience to magistrates, and to the civil
+authorities."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Obey them which have the rule over you." (Heb.
+xiii. 17; xxvi. 65.)
+
+49. "They retired within themselves to receive interior revelations of
+divine truth." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Every one of you hath a revelation." (1 Cor. xiv.
+26.)
+
+50. "They were scrupulous in speaking the truth."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Speaking all things in truth." (2 Cor. vii. 14.)
+
+51. "They perform many wonderful miracles."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ Many texts teach us that Christ and his apostles
+did the same.
+
+52. "Essenism put all its members upon the same level, forbidding the
+exercise of authority of one over another." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. Christ did the same. For proof, see Matt. xx. 25;
+Mark ix. 35.
+
+53. "Essenism laid the greatest stress on being meek and lowly in
+spirit." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. See Matt. v. 5; ix. 28.
+
+54. "The Essenes commended the poor in spirit, those who hunger and
+thirst after righteousness, and the merciful, and the pure in heart."
+(Dr Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. For proof that Christ did the same, see Matt.
+
+55. "The Essenes commended the peacemakers." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Blessed are the peacemakers."
+
+56. "The Essenes declared their disciples must cast out evil spirits,
+and perform miraculous cures, as signs and proof of their faith." (Dr.
+Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. Christ's disciples were to cast out devils, heal
+the sick, and raise the dead, &c., as signs and proof of their faith.
+(Mark xvi. 17.)
+
+57. "They sacrificed the lusts of the flesh to gain spiritual
+happiness."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "You abstain from fleshly lusts." (1 Peter ii.
+11.)
+
+58. "The breaking of bread was a veritable ordinance among the Essenes."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "He (Jesus) took bread, and gave thanks, and brake
+it." (Luke xxii. 19.)
+
+59. "The Essenes enjoined the loving of enemies." (Philo.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. So did Christ say, "Love your enemies," &c.
+
+60. The Essenes enjoined, "Doing unto others as you would have them do
+unto you."
+
+_Scripture parallel_' The Confucian golden rule, as taught by Christ.
+
+This parallel might be extended much further, but we will proceed to
+present the reader with a general description of Essenism, as furnished
+us by Philo, Josephus, and some Christian writers. Philo, who was born
+in Alexandria 20 B. C., and lived to 60 A. D., and who was himself
+an Essenian Jew, in his account of them, says, "They do not lay up
+treasures of gold or silver,... but provide themselves only with the
+necessities of life." Paul afterwards, having caught the same spirit,
+advises the same course of life. "Having food and raiment, therewith be
+content." Contentment of mind they regarded as the greatest of riches.
+They make no instruments of war. They repudiate every inducement to
+covetousness. None are held as slaves, but all are free, and serve
+each other. They are instructed in piety and holiness, righteousness,
+economy, &c. They are guided by a threefold rule: love of God, love of
+virtue, and love of mankind. Of their love of God they give innumerable
+demonstrations, which is found in their constant and unalterable
+holiness throughout the whole of their lives, their avoidance of oaths
+and falsehoods, and their firm belief that God is the source of all
+good, but of nothing evil. "Of their love of virtue they give proof in
+their contempt for money, fame, and pleasures, their continence, easy
+satisfying of their wants, their simplicity, modesty," &c. Their love
+of man is proved by their benevolence and equality, and their having all
+things in common, which is beyond all deception. They reverence and take
+care of the aged, as children do their parents. (Condensed from Philo's
+treatise, "Every Virtuous Man is Free.")
+
+Josephus, 37 A. D., and who was also at one time a member of the
+Essenian Brotherhood, furnishes another fragmentary account of the
+Essenes in his "Jewish Wars," of which the following is the substance:--
+
+"They love each other more than others (that is, are "partial to the
+household of faith"); they despise riches, and have all things in
+common, so that there is neither abjectness of poverty nor distinction
+of riches among them; they change neither garments nor shoes till they
+are worn out or become unfit for use; they neither buy nor sell among
+themselves; their piety is extraordinary; they never speak about wordly
+matters before sunrise; they are girt about with a linen apron, and have
+a baptism of cold water; they eat but one kind of a food at a time, and
+commence with a prayer, and the priest must say grace before any one
+eats (that is, breaks and blesses as Christ did); they also return
+thanks after eating, and then put off their white garments; strangers
+were made welcome at their tables without money and without price; they
+give food to the hungry and the needy and show mercy to all; they curb
+their passions, restrain their anger, and claim to be ministers of
+peace; an oath they regard as worse than perjury; they excommunicate
+offenders ('Go tell it to the churches, says Christ); they condemn
+finery in dress; though condemning in most solemn terms oaths, members
+were admitted to the secret brotherhood by an oath ('See thou tell
+no man,' said Christ); they endured pain with heroic fortitude, and
+regarded an honorable death as better than long life; they read and
+study their Holy Scriptures from youth, often prophesy, and it was very
+seldom they failed in their predictions."
+
+Dr. Ginburg's testimony, abridged, is as follows:--
+
+"The Essenes had a high appreciations of the inspired law of God. The
+highest aim of their lives was to become fit temples of the Holy
+Ghost (see i Cor. vi. 19); also to perform miraculous cures, and to be
+spiritually qualified for forerunners of the Messiah. They taught the
+duty of mortifying the flesh and the lusts thereof, and to become
+meek and lowly in spirit; they answered by yea, yea, and nay, nay (see
+Matt.), scrupulously avoiding oaths; they avoided impure contact with
+the heathen and the world's people, and lived retired from the world,
+being in numbers about four thousand; they strove to be like the angels
+of heaven; there were no rich and poor, or masters and servants, amongst
+them; they lived peaceably with all men; a mysterious silence was
+observed while eating; a solemn oath was required on becoming a member
+of the secret order, which required three things:
+
+1. Love of God;
+
+2. Merciful justice to all men, and to avoid the wicked, and help the
+righteous;
+
+3. Purity of character, which implied love of truth, hatred of
+falsehood, and strict observance of 'the mysteries of godliness' to
+outsiders--that is, 'heathen and publicans;' they endured suffering for
+righteousness' sake, with rejoicings, and even _sought_ it; regarding
+the body as a prison for the soul, they desired the time to come to
+escape from it; they recognized eight different stages of spiritual
+growth and perfection: 1. Bodily purity; 2. Celibacy; 3. Spiritual
+purity; 4. The suppression of anger and malice, and the cultivation of a
+meek, lowly spirit; 5. The attainment of true holiness; 6. Becoming fit
+temples for the Holy Ghost; 7. The ability to perform miraculous cures,
+and raise the dead; 8. Becoming forerunners of the Messiah; and finally
+they took a solemn vow to exercise, piety toward God and justice toward
+all men, to hate the wicked, assist the good to keep clear of theft and
+unrighteous gains, to conceal none of their 'mysteries of godliness'
+from each other, or disclose them to others. 'Great is the mystery of
+godliness' ('See thou tell no man'); they were to walk humbly with God,
+shun bad society, forgive their enemies, sacrifice their passions, and
+crucify the lusts of the flesh; they disregarded bodily suffering,
+and even gloried in martyrdom, preaching and singing to God amid their
+sufferings; but in their domestic habits they were extremely filthy;
+they wore their clothes until they became ragged, filthy, and offensive,
+never changing them till they were wore out; their food consisted
+of bread and water, and wild roots and fruits of the palm tree; they
+enjoined their duty, not only of forgiving their enemies, but of seeking
+to benefit them, and of even blessing the destroyer who took life and
+property. Such was the religion, such the moral system, such the devout
+piety, and such the practical lives of the Essenian Jews, a religious
+sect which flourished in Alexandria and Judea several hundred
+years before the birth of Christ, and went out of history the hour
+Christianity came in.
+
+Now, as the foregoing exposition shows that Essenism and Christianity
+are most strikingly alike in all their essential features, that the
+former system contains nearly every important doctrine and precept of
+the Christian religion, the question occurs here as one of momentous
+import, how is this striking resemblance, this identity of character
+of the two religions, to be accounted for? Does it not go far toward
+proving that Christianity is an outgrowth, a legitimate offspring,
+of Judean Essenism? Indeed, are we not absolutely driven to such a
+conclusion? Let us briefly recite some of the important facts brought
+to light by the investigation of the character and history of these two
+religions, and see if those facts do not bring them together and weld
+them as one system--as one and the same religion.
+
+1. Both are alike, and Essenism is much the older system.
+
+2. Both religions are an outgrowth of Judaism.
+
+3. Both were known and taught in Judea and in Alexandria.
+
+4. Josephus living in Judea, and Philo in Alexandria, neither of them
+speaks of Christianity, or refers to any such religion by that name, and
+yet both describe a religion inculcating the same doctrines and moral
+precepts, which they call Essenism.
+
+Is not this very nearly conclusive proof that Essenism was only
+another name for Christianity--that it had not yet changed its name to
+Christianity? That famous standard author, Mr. Gibbon, was evidently of
+this opinion when he said, "Whether, indeed, the first of that sect (the
+Essenes) took the name of Christian when the appellation of Christian
+had as yet been nowhere announced, it is by no means necessary to
+discuss." (Book II. chap. xvi.) Here is evidence that Gibbon believed
+that the Essenes, after having borne that name for centuries, changed
+the appellation to Christian. And we find still stronger language than
+this in the writings of the same author expressive of this opinion. In
+a note to chapter xv. he says, "It is probable that the Therapeuts
+(Essenes) changed their name to Christians, as some writers affirm, and
+adopted some new articles of faith." Here the position is assumed that
+the Christian religion is an outgrowth of Essenism, that is, merely
+a continuation of that religion under a change of name, with a slight
+modification of its creed.
+
+5. And then we have the declaration of Christian writers, expressed in
+the most positive terms, that Essenism and Christianity were the
+same religion, the former name being used at an earlier period. Hear
+Eusebius, a standard ecclesiastical writer of the fourth century. He
+asserts positively, "Those ancient Therapeuts (Essenes) were Christians,
+and their ancient writings were our gospels." (Eccl. Hist. p. 63.) Hark!
+Hark! my good Christian reader, here is one of your own sworn witnessess
+testifying that the Essenes originated and established the Christian
+religion; i. e., the religion now known by that name. Will you then give
+it up? If not, we have other testimony of a similar character, rendering
+the proposition still stronger. Robert Taylor declares, "The learned
+Basnage has shown that the Essenes were really Christians centuries
+before Christ, and that they were actually in possession of those very
+writings which are now our Gospels and Epistles." (p. 81.) And then we
+have the declaration of the author of "Christ the Spirit" (p. no), that
+"the Christians were the later Essenes--that is, the Essenes of the time
+of Eusebius under a changed name, that name having been made at Antioch,
+where the disciples were first called Christian." The same writer
+suggests that "their sacred books are our sacred books." We will now
+hear Eusebius again: "It is highly probable that their (the Essenes')
+ancient commentaries, which Philo says the Essenes have, are the very
+Gospels and writings of the Apostles."
+
+Based upon this conclusion, he calls the Essenes "the first heralds of
+the gospel." "I find it, therefore, most probable," says Mr. Weilting,
+"that Jesus and John belonged literally to the society of the Essenes."
+And then the New American Encyclopedia furnishes us with the testimony
+of a very able English author of the last century (De Quincy), who
+concurs with all the writers cited above. "Mr. De Quincy (it says)
+identified the Essenes as being the early Christians; i. e., the early
+Christians were known as Essenes. Such testimony, coming from such a
+source, is entitled to much weight." (Vol. i. p. 157.) And to the same
+effect is the testimony of Bishop Marsh, who admits that our Gospels
+were drawn from those of the Essenes. (See his edition of Michaelis'
+translation of the New Testament.)
+
+Thus far historical _writers_. We will now lay before the reader some
+historical _facts_, fraught with unanswerable logical potency, and
+pointing to the same conclusion. It is a fact, and one of deep logical
+import, and tending to corroborate the conclusion of some of the writers
+cited above, who tell us the Christian Gospels were first composed by
+the Essenes; that the language in which those Gospels were originally
+written was Greek, the language in which the Alexandrian Essenes always
+wrote, while the evangelical writers, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
+being illiterate fishermen, could have had no knowledge of any but
+the Jewish, their own mother-tongue,--at least it is susceptible of
+satisfactory proof that they never wrote in any other language. Hence
+the conclusion is irresistible that they were not the original authors
+of the Gospels.
+
+The works of several authors are now lying at our elbow, who express
+the conviction unequivocally that the Gospels were copied, if not
+translated, from older writings. Mr. Le Clerc, one of the ablest writers
+of his time, maintained this position, and did it ably. Another writer,
+a Mr. Hatfield, was awarded a prize in 1793, by the theological faculty
+of Gottingen, for an essay, in which the position was ably argued that
+Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John were not the authors of the books which
+bear their names, but were mere copyists. Dr. Lessing and others concur
+with him in this conclusion. A circumstance confirming this verdict is
+found in the fact that the word _church_ occurs in our Gospels, which
+were written before such an institution was established by those who
+were then called Christians.
+
+"Go tell it to the church" (Matt, xviii. 17) was uttered before any
+steps had been taken by the then representatives of the Christian faith
+to organize such a body--an evidence this, that he alluded to the church
+of the Essenes, as there were no other churches in existence at the
+time; which leaves the inference patent and irresistible that he and
+his disciples were Essenes, perhaps then under the changed name of
+Christians. Centuries prior to that era the Essenes had not only
+churches, but their whole ecclesiastical nomenclature of bishops,
+deacons, elders, priests, disciples, scriptures, gospels, epistles,
+psalms, hymns, mystery, allegory, &c. If Christianity was re-established
+in the days of Christ and his apostles, they had nothing to originate,
+either with respect to doctrines, precepts, church polity, or
+ecclesiastical terms--all being established for them centuries before
+that era. With these facts in view, it seems impossible that the two
+religious orders--Essenes and Christians--could have been in existence
+at the same time as separate institutions. The former must have ended
+when the latter commenced.
+
+Josephus says, "the Essenes were scattered far and wide, and were in
+every city," being quite numerous in Judea in his time. But he makes no
+reference to any sect or religious order by the title of Christian--a
+strong inferential evidence, upon sound priori reasoning, that
+Christianity as yet was sailing under another name. Josephus must have
+known and named the fact, had there been a Christian sect or disciple
+there bearing that name. Impossible otherwise. We are then (upon the
+logical force of these and many other facts) driven to the conclusion
+that Christianity began when Essenism ended, and the change was only in
+name. I challenge the whole Christian world to find the historical proof
+that Christianity commenced one hour before the termination of Essenism,
+or of Essenism overlapping the Christian religion so far as to survive
+one day beyond or after its birth. I will confront them with the logic
+of dates, and defy them to find any proof except their own unauthorized,
+unauthenticated, and fictitious chronology, that a Christian was ever
+known in any country by that name prior to the time of Tacitus, 104
+A.D., who is the first of the three hundred writers of that era that
+makes any mention of Christianity, Christ, or a Christian. This was long
+after Josephus' time, which accounts most satisfactory for his omitting
+any allusion to Christ or Christianity. That religion had not yet
+dropped the name of Essenism and adopted that of Christianity.
+
+Now, hard indeed must distorted reason fight the ramparts of logic and
+history to resist the conviction, in view of the foregoing facts, that
+Christianity is simply an outcropping of Essenism, either direct or
+through Budhism. And even if it were possible to prove that the two
+religions never became welded together, yet it is not possible to
+disprove the striking identity of their doctrines, and the spirit of
+their precepts, and the practical lives of their disciples. And this
+identity, coupled with the fact that Essenism is the older system, is
+of itself most superlatively fatal to all pretension or claim to
+originality for the doctrines of the Christian faith.
+
+It is a matter of no importance whether Christianity was originally
+known by another name, so long as it can be shown that its doctrines
+had all been preached and proclaimed to the world centuries prior to
+the date assigned for its origin. And this is proved by the long list of
+paralellisms presented in the incipient pages of this chapter. And this
+proof explodes the pretensions of Christianity to an "original divine
+revelation," and brings it down to a level with pagan orientalism. And
+the fact that it sprang up in a country where its doctrine had long been
+taught by pagans and orientalists, must produce the conviction, deep and
+indelible, in all unbiased minds, that orientalism was the mother and
+heathenism the father of the Christian religion, even in the absence of
+any other proof. In fact, no other proof can be needed.
+
+And what are the arguments, it may be well here to inquire, with
+which orthodox Christians attempt to meet, combat, and vanquish the
+overwhelming mass of historical facts and historical testimonies we
+have presented in preceding pages, tending to prove and demonstrate the
+oriental origin of their religion and its identity with Essenism? Their
+whole argument is comprised in the naked postulate of the Rev. Mr.
+Paideaux, D. D., that "the Essenes did not believe in the resurrection
+of the physical body (but believed in a spiritual resurrection),
+and omit from their creed the Trinity and Incarnation doctrine, and
+therefore they could not have been the originators of the Christian
+religion;" but this argument is as easily demolished as a cobweb, as the
+following facts will prove:--
+
+1. We have but a fragment of the Essenian religion,--but one end of
+their creed,--mere scraps furnished us by Philo, Josephus, and Pliny. We
+have none of their sacred books apart from the Christian New Testament.
+
+2. They had secret books, as we have shown, in which doctrines were
+taught which they regarded as _too sacred to be thrown before the
+public_, as "pearls before swine." And no doctrines were regarded as
+more sacred or secret in that age than the doctrines of the Trinity and
+Incarnation. Christ's injunction, "See thou tell no man," was probably
+their motto, which prevented the publicity of a portion of their
+doctrines. And as their sacred books, containing their doctrines,
+perished with the extinction of the sect (except those now found in
+the Christian New Testament), a full knowledge of their doctrines,
+therefore, never reached the public mind. All religious sects had
+secret doctrines, designated as "Mysteries of Godliness," including
+the principal Jewish sects and the earliest Christian churches. It is,
+therefore, highly probable that if we were in possession of all their
+sacred books, we would be in possession of the proof that they believed
+and taught in their monasteries the doctrines above named. But we are
+not left to mere inference that the Essenes' creed did include the
+doctrines of the Trinity and the Divine Incarnation. We find skeletons
+of these doctrines scattered along the line of their history. Philo
+himself, an Essene teacher, most distinctly teaches the doctrine of "the
+Incarnation of the Divine Word or Logos." And "Son of God," "Mediator,"
+"Intercessor," and "Messiah," were familiar words with him. The idea
+often reappears in his writings, that the "Word could become flesh;"
+that the Son of God could appear as a personality, and return to the
+bosom of the Father. Moreover, one writer informs us that the Essenes
+celebrated the birth and death of a Divine Savior as a "Mystery of
+Godliness." And they claimed in their earlier history to be "forerunners
+of the Messiah"--a claim which would soon bring a Messiah before the
+world, that is, lead them to deify and worship some great man as "_The
+Messia_."
+
+As for the doctrine of the Trinity, we have the authority of Eusebius
+that they taught this doctrine too. So that it is not true that they
+did not recognize these two prime articles of the Christian faith, the
+Incarnation and Trinity doctrines. Some modern Christians assert that
+the Essenes not only omitted to teach these doctrines, but that, on the
+other hand, they taught other doctrines not taught in the Christian New
+Testament. This is not improbable. For the Christian religion has been
+characterized by frequent changes in its doctrines in every stage of its
+practical history, as was also the Jewish religion which preceded it,
+and from which it emanated. Judaism is a perpetual series of changes. It
+changed even the name of its God from Elohim to Jehovah. Its leader and
+founder Abram was changed to Abraham, and his grandson and successor
+from Jacob to Israel. And we have the works of many Christian writers
+in our possession who prove by their own bible that the Jews made many
+changes in their religious polity and religious doctrines. This is more
+especially observable when they came in contact with nations teaching
+a different religion. Their whole history shows they were prone to
+imitate, and borrow, and always did borrow on such occasions, and
+engraft the new doctrines thus obtained into their own creed, and thus
+effected important changes in their religion. We have the authority of
+Dr. Campbell for saying the Jews never believed and taught the doctrine
+of future punishment (and other doctrines that might be named) till
+after they were brought in contact with Persians in Babylon who had long
+taught these doctrines. (See Dissertation VI. ) And Dr. Enfield declares
+their theological opinions underwent thorough changes during this period
+of seventy years' captivity. Even their national title was changed at
+one period from Israelites to Jews. With all these changes of names,
+titles, and doctrines in view, it is not incredible that one of the
+Jewish sects should change its name from Essenes to Christians, and with
+this change modify some of the doctrines. And more especially as their
+title, according to Dr. Ginsburg, had been changed before from Chassidim
+to Essenes. And Philo at one period calls them Therapeuts, while
+Eusebius says the Therapeuts were Christians. Put this and that
+together, and the question is forever settled.
+
+Now, with all this overwhelming mass of historical evidence before us,
+"piled mountain high," tending to prove the truth of the proposition
+that Christianity is the offspring and outgrowth of ancient Judean
+Essenism, we feel certain that no sophistry, from interested charlatans
+or stereotyped creed worshipers, can stave off or obliterate the
+conviction in unprejudiced minds, that the proposition is most amply
+proven.
+
+We will now collate Christianity with another ancient religious system,
+which we are certain it will not be disputed, after the comparison
+is critically examined, contains the sum total of the doctrines and
+teachings of Christianity in all their details.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII. THREE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX STRIKING ANALOGIES BETWEEN
+CHRIST AND CHRISHNA
+
+
+I. THEIR MIRACULOUS HISTORY AND LEADING PRINCIPLES.
+
+1. The advent of each Savior was miraculously foretold by prophets.
+
+2. The fallen and degenerate condition of the human race is taught in
+the religion of each.
+
+3. A plan of restoration or salvation is provided for in each case.
+
+4. A divine Savior is considered necessary in both cases.
+
+5. The necessity of atoning for sin is taught in the religion of each.
+
+6. A God, or Son of God, is selected as the victim for the atoning
+sacrifice in each case.
+
+7. This God is sent down from heaven in each case in the form of a man.
+
+8. The God or Savior in each case is the second person of the Trinity.
+
+9. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was held to be really God incarnate.
+
+10. The mission of each Savior is the same.
+
+11. There is a resemblance in name-Chrishna and Christ.
+
+12. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was incarnated and born of a woman.
+
+13. The mother in each case was a holy virgin.
+
+14. The same peculiarities of a miraculous conception and birth are
+related of each.
+
+15. Each had an adopted earthly father.
+
+16. The father of Chrishna, as well as that of Christ, was a carpenter.
+
+17. God is claimed as the real father in both cases.
+
+18. A Spirit or Ghost was the author of the conception of each.
+
+19. There was rejoicing on earth when each Savior was born.
+
+20. There was also joy in heaven at the birth and advent of each.
+
+21. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was of royal descent.
+
+22. Their mothers were both reputedly pious women.
+
+23. The names of two mothers are somewhat similar--Mary and Maia.
+
+24. Each had a special female friend--Elizabeth in the one case, and the
+wife of Nanda in the other.
+
+25. Neither Savior was born in a house, but both in obscure situations.
+
+26. Both were born on the 25th of December.
+
+27. Both, at birth, were visited by wise men and shepards.
+
+28. The visitors conducted by a star in each case.
+
+29. The rite of purification observed by the mothers of each.
+
+30. An angel warning of impending danger in each case.
+
+31. The incumbent ruler was hostile in each case.
+
+32. A bloody decree in each case for the destruction of the infant
+Savior.
+
+33. A flight of the parents takes place in both cases.
+
+34. The parents of one sojourned at Muturea, the other at Mathura.
+
+35. Each Savior had a forerunner--John the Baptist in one case, Bali
+Rama in the other.
+
+36. Both were preternaturally smart in childhood.
+
+37. Each disputed with and vanquished learned opponents.
+
+38. Both became objects of search by their parents.
+
+39. And both occasioned anxiety, if not sorrow, to their parents.
+
+40. The mother of each had other children--that is children begotten by
+man as well as God.
+
+41. Both Saviors retired to, and spent considerable time in the
+wilderness.
+
+42. The religious rite of "fasting" was practiced by each Savior.
+
+43. Each delivered a noteworthy sermon, or series of moral lessons.
+
+44. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was called and considered God.
+
+45. Each was both God and the Son of God (so regarded).
+
+46. "Savior" was one of the divine titles of each.
+
+47. Each was designated "the Savior of man," "the Savior of the world,"
+&c.
+
+48. Both expressed a desire to "save all."
+
+49. Each sustained the character of a Messiah.
+
+50. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was a Redeemer.
+
+51. Each Savior was called "Shepard."
+
+52. Both were believed to be the Creator of the world.
+
+53. Each is sometimes spoken of, also, as only an agent in the creation.
+
+54. Both were the "Light and Life" of men.
+
+55. Each "brought life and immortality to light."
+
+56. Both are represented as "the seed of the woman bruising the
+serpent's head."
+
+57. Was Christ a "Dispenser of grace," so was the Hindoo Savior.
+
+58. One was "the lion of the tribe of Judah," the other "the lion of the
+tribe of Saki."
+
+59. Christ was "the Beginning of the End," Chrishna "the Beginning, the
+Middle, and the End."
+
+60. Both proclaimed, "I am the Resurrection."
+
+61. Each was "the way to the Father."
+
+62. Both represented emblematically "the Sun of Righteousness."
+
+63. Each is figuratively represented as being "all in all."
+
+64. Both speak of having existed prior to human birth.
+
+65. A dual existence--an existence in both heaven and earth at once--is
+claimed by or for both.
+
+66. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was "without sin."
+
+67. Both assumed the divine prerogative of forgiving sins.
+
+68. The mission of each was to deliver from sin.
+
+69. Both came to destroy the devil and his works.
+
+70. The doctrine of the "atonement" is practically realized in each
+case.
+
+71. Each made a voluntary offering for the sins of the world.
+
+72. Both were human as well as divine.
+
+73. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was worshiped as God absolute.
+
+74. Each was regarded as "the Lord from Heaven."
+
+75. Chrishna, as well as Christ, had applied to him all the attributes
+of God.
+
+76. Was Christ omniscient, so was Chrishna.
+
+77. Was one omnipotent, so was the other (so believed).
+
+78. And both are represented as being omnipresent.
+
+79. Each was believed to be divinely perfect.
+
+80. Was one "Lord of lords," so was the other.
+
+81. Each embodied the "power and wisdom of God."
+
+82. All power was committed unto each (so claimed).
+
+83. Chrishna performed many miracles as well as Christ.
+
+84. One of the first miracles of each was the cure of a leper.
+
+85. Each healed "all manner of diseases."
+
+86. The work of casting out devils constitutes a part of the mission of
+each.
+
+87. Each practically proved his power to raise the dead.
+
+88. A miracle appertaining to a tree is related of both.
+
+89. Both could read the thoughts of the people.
+
+90. The power to detect and eject evil spirits was claimed by both.
+
+91. Both had the keys or control of death.
+
+92. Each led an extraordinary life.
+
+93. Each had a character for supernatural greatness.
+
+94. Both possesed or claimed a oneness with the Father.
+
+95. A "oneness with his Lord and Master" is claimed, also, for the
+disciples of each.
+
+96. A strong reciprocal affection between Master and disciple in each
+case.
+
+97. Each offers to shoulder the burdens of his disciples.
+
+98. A portion of the life of each was spent in preaching.
+
+99. Both made converts by their miracles and preaching.
+
+100. A numerous retinue of believers springs up in each case.
+
+101. Both had commissioned apostles to proclaim their religion.
+
+102. Each was an innovator upon the antecedent religion.
+
+103. A beautiful reform in religion was inaugurated by each Savior.
+
+104. Each opposed the existing popular priesthood.
+
+105. Both abolished the law of lineal descent in the ancient priesthood.
+
+106. Each was an object of conspiracy by his enemies.
+
+107. Humility and external poverty distinguished the life of each.
+
+108. Each denounced riches and rich men, and loathed and detested
+wealth.
+
+109. Both had a character for meekness.
+
+110. Chastity or unmarried life was a distinguishing characteristic of
+each.
+
+111. Mercy was a noteworthy characteristic of each.
+
+112. Both were censured for associating with sinners.
+
+113. Each was a special friend to the poor.
+
+114. A poor widow woman receives marked attention by each.
+
+115. Each encounters a gentile woman at a well.
+
+116. Both submitted unresistingly to injuries and insults.
+
+117. General practical philanthropy and impartiality marks the life of
+each Savior.
+
+118. Each took more pleasure in repentant sinners than in virtuous
+saints.
+
+119. Both practically disclosed God's attempt to reconcile the world to
+himself.
+
+120. The closing incidents in the earth-life of each were strikingly
+similar.
+
+121. A memorable last supper marked the closing career of both.
+
+122. Both were put to death by "wicked hands."
+
+123. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was crucified.
+
+124. Darkness attended the crucifixion of each.
+
+125. Both were crucified between two thieves.
+
+126. Each is reported to have forgiven his enemies.
+
+127. The age of each at death corresponds (being between thirty and
+thirty-six years).
+
+128. Each, after giving up the ghost, descends into hell.
+
+129. The resurrection from the dead is a marked period in the history of
+each.
+
+130. Each ascends to heaven after his resurrection.
+
+131. Many people are reported to have witnessed the ascension in each
+case.
+
+132. Each is reported as having both descended and ascended.
+
+133. The head of each, while living on earth, was anointed with oil.
+
+
+II. DOCTRINES.
+
+134. There is a similarity in the doctrines of their respective
+religions.
+
+135. The same doctrines are propagated by the disciples of each.
+
+136. The doctrine of future rewards and punishments is a part of each
+system.
+
+137. Analogous views of heaven are found in each system.
+
+138. A third heaven is spoken of in each system.
+
+139. All sin must be punished according to the bible teachings of each.
+
+140. Each has a hell provided for the wicked.
+
+141. Both teach a hell of darkness and a hell of light.
+
+142. An immortal worm finds employment in the hell of each system ("the
+worm that dieth not.")
+
+143. The arch-demon of the under world uses brimstone for fuel in one
+case, and oil in the other.
+
+144. The motive for future punishment is in both cases the same.
+
+145. Each has a purgatory or sort of half-way house.
+
+146. Special divine judgments on nations are taught by each.
+
+147. A great and final day of judgment is taught by each.
+
+148. A general resurrection also is taught in each religion.
+
+149. That there is a "Judge of the dead" is a doctrine of each.
+
+150. Two witnesses are to report on human actions in the final assizes.
+
+151. We are furnished in each case with the dimension of heaven or "the
+holy city."
+
+152. Man is enjoined to strive against temptation to sin by each.
+
+153. And repentance for sin is a doctrine taught by the bible of each.
+
+154. Each has a prepared city for a paradise.
+
+155. The bibles of both teach that we have no continuing city here.
+
+156. Souls are carried to heaven by angels, as in the instance of
+Lazarus, in each case.
+
+157. A belief in angels or spirits is a tenant of each religion.
+
+158. The doctrine of fallen or evil angels is found in both system.
+
+159. Obsession by wicked or evil spirits is taught by each.
+
+160. Both teach that sickness or disease is caused by evil spirits.
+
+161. Each has a king-devil or arch-demon with a posse of subalterns or
+evil spirits.
+
+162. Both bibles record the story of a "hellaballoo" or war in heaven.
+
+163. Both teach that an evil man can neither do nor speak a good thing.
+
+164. Both teach that sin is a disadvantage in the present life as well
+as in the future.
+
+165. The doctrine of free will or free agency is taught by each.
+
+166. Predestination seems to be inferentially taught by each.
+
+167. In each case man is a prize in a lottery, with God and the devil
+for ticket-holders.
+
+168. Both make the devil (or devils) a scape-goat for sin.
+
+169. Both teach the devil or evil spirits as the primary cause of all
+evil.
+
+170. The destiny of both body and soul is pointed out by each.
+
+171. The true believers are known as "saints" under both systems.
+
+172. Saints with "white robes" are spoken of by each.
+
+173. Both specify "the Word of Logos" as God.
+
+174. Wisdom, too, is personified as God by the holy Scriptures of each.
+
+175. Both teach that God may be known by his works.
+
+176. The doctrine of one supreme God is taught in each bible.
+
+177. Light and truth are important words in the religious nomenclature
+of each.
+
+178. Both profess a high veneration for truth.
+
+179. "Where the treasure is, there is the heart also," is taught by
+each.
+
+180. "Seek and ye shall find" is a condition prescribed by each.
+
+181. Religious toleration is a virtue professed by both.
+
+182. All nations are professedly based on an equality by each.
+
+183. Both, however, enjoin partiality to "the household of faith."
+
+184. The doors of salvation are thrown open to high and low, rich and
+poor, by each.
+
+185. Each professes to have "the only true and saving faith."
+
+186. There is a mystery in the mission of each Savior.
+
+187. "Rama" is a well known word in the bible of each.
+
+188. "The understanding of the wise" is a phrase in each.
+
+189. Both speak figuratively of "the blind leading the blind."
+
+190. "A new heaven and a new earth" is spoken of by each.
+
+191. The doctrine of a Trinity in the Godhead is taught by each.
+
+192. Baptism by water is a tenant and ordinance of each.
+
+193. "Living water" is a metaphor found in each.
+
+194. Baptism by fire seems also to be recognized by each.
+
+195. Fasting is emphatically enjoined by each.
+
+196. Sacrifices are of secondary importance in each system, and are
+partially or wholly abandoned by each.
+
+197. The higher law is paramount to ceremonies in each religion.
+
+198. The bible of each religion literally condemns idolatry.
+
+199. Both also make concessions to idolatry.
+
+200. Polygamy is not literally encouraged nor openly condemned by
+either.
+
+201. The power to forgive sins is conferred on the disciples of each.
+
+202. The doctrine of blasphemy is recognized by each.
+
+203. Pantheism, or the reciprocal in-being of God in nature and nature
+in God, is taught by both.
+
+
+III. BIBLES AND HOLY SCRIPTURES.
+
+204. Each has a bible which is the idolized fountain of all religious
+teaching.
+
+205. Both have an Old Testament and a New Testament, virtually.
+
+206. The New Testament inaugurates a new and reform system of religion
+in each case.
+
+207. "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God" is the faith of the
+disciples of each.
+
+208. Each system claimed to have its inspired men to write its
+scriptures.
+
+209. Both hold a spiritual qualification necessary to understand their
+bibles.
+
+210. It is a sin to become "wise beyond what is written" in their
+respective bibles.
+
+211. Both recommend knowing the Scriptures in youth.
+
+212. Alteration of their respective bibles is divinely interdicted.
+
+213. The bible is an infallible rule of faith and practice in both
+cases.
+
+214. "All scripture is profitable for doctrine" is the faith of each.
+
+215. Both explain away the errors of their bibles.
+
+
+IV. SPIRITUALITY OF THE TWO RELIGIONS.
+
+216. The religion of Chrishna is pre-eminently spiritual no less than
+Christ's.
+
+217. Both teach that "to be carnally minded is death."
+
+218. External rites are practically dispensed with in each religion.
+
+219. The spiritual law written on the heart is recognized by each.
+
+220. "God is within you," Budhists teach as well as Christians.
+
+221. Both recognize an invisible spiritual Savior.
+
+222. "God dwells in the heart," say Hindoo as well as Christians.
+
+223 An inward recognition of the divine law is amply seen in both.
+
+224. Both confess allegiance to an inward monitor.
+
+225. The doctrine of inspiration and internal illumination is found in
+both.
+
+226. The indwelling Comforter is believed in by both.
+
+227. Both also teach that religion is an inward work.
+
+228. Both speak of being born again--i. e., the second birth.
+
+229. A spiritual body is also believed in by both.
+
+230. "Spiritual things are incomprehensible to the natural man" say
+each.
+
+231. God's spiritually sustaining power Budhists also acknowledge.
+
+232. Both give a spiritual interpretation to their bibles.
+
+233. Each has a new and more interior law superseding the old law.
+
+234. The spiritual cross--self-denial or asceticism--is a prominent
+feature of each religion.
+
+235. The duty of renouncing and abandoning the external world is
+solemnly enjoined by each.
+
+236. Budhists renounce the world more practically than Christians.
+
+237. Withdrawal or seclusion from society is recommended by each.
+
+238. Bodily suffering as a benefit to the soul is encouraged by each.
+
+239. Voluntary suffering for righteousness' sake is a virtue with each.
+
+240. The cross is a religious emblem in each system.
+
+241. Both glory in "the religion of the cross" as better than a religion
+without suffering.
+
+242. Hence both teach "the greater the cross the greater the crown."
+
+243. Earthly pleasures are regarded as evil by both.
+
+244. Contempt for the body as an enemy to the soul is visible in both.
+
+245. Retirement for religious contemplation is a duty with each.
+
+246. The forsaking of relations is also enjoined by each.
+
+247. Spiritual relationship is superior to external relationship with
+both.
+
+248. "To die is great gain" we are taught by each.
+
+249. A subjugation of the passions is a religious duty with each.
+
+250. The road to heaven is a narrow one with each.
+
+251. The same state of religious perfection is aspired to by the
+disciples of each.
+
+
+V. THE DOCTRINE OF FAITH OR BELIEF.
+
+252. Faith is an all-important element and doctrine with each.
+
+253. Heresy, or want of faith, is a sin of great magnitude with both.
+
+254. Faith in the Savior is a condition to salvation by both.
+
+255. Confessing the Savior is also required in both cases.
+
+256. "Believe or be damned" is the condition or profess to believe the
+terrible sine qua non to salvation by each.
+
+257. Skeptics or unbelievers are with both the chief of sinners.
+
+258. "Faith can remove mountains," either with a Bud-hist or a
+Christian.
+
+259. Both contrast faith with works.
+
+260. Faith without works is dead--so teach both Bud-hists and
+Christians.
+
+
+VI. THE DOCTRINE AND PRACTICE OF PRAYER.
+
+261. Prayer is an important rite in each religion.
+
+262. Private or secret prayer is recommended by both.
+
+263. Each has also a formula of prayer.
+
+264. "Pray without ceasing" is a Budhist as well as a Christian
+injunction.
+
+265. Praying to their respective Saviors in sickness and in health is a
+custom with both.
+
+266. The custom of praying for the dead is recognized in each system.
+
+
+VII. TREATMENT OF ENEMIES.
+
+267. It is a Hindoo as well as a Christian injunction to treat enemies
+kindly.
+
+268. Passive submission to injuries and abuse is enjoined by both.
+
+269. The holy Scriptures of both require us to pray for enemies, and
+feed them.
+
+270. And even love to enemies is a part of the spirit of each religion.
+
+
+VIII. THE MILLENNIUM.
+
+271. Hindoos, like Christians, prophesy of a great millennial era.
+
+272. There is a remarkable similarity in their notions with respect to
+it.
+
+273. Both anticipate a second advent or new Savior on the occasion.
+
+274. The destruction of the world also is to take place in both cases.
+
+275. And an entire renovation and a new order of things are to be
+established in each case.
+
+
+IX. MIRACLES.
+
+276. There is almost a constant display of miraculous power in each
+system.
+
+277. The disciples of both are professedly endowed with this power.
+
+278. Miraculous cures of the lame, the blind, and the sick are reported
+in both cases.
+
+279. Miracles of handling poisonous reptiles with impunity are reported
+by both.
+
+280. Swallowing deadly poison is enjoined by Christians and practiced by
+Hindoos.
+
+281. Many cases of the miraculous ejection of devils are reported by
+both.
+
+282. The miracle of thought-reading is displayed by both.
+
+283. The saints in both cases are reported as raising the dead.
+
+
+X. PRECEPTS.
+
+284. "The kingdom of heaven" was to be sought first of all things in
+each case.
+
+285. Love to God is a paramount obligation under each system.
+
+286. And the worship of God is an essential requisition in each
+religious polity.
+
+287. "Cease to do evil and learn to do well" is virtually enjoined by
+each.
+
+288. An inward knowledge of God is taught as essential by both systems.
+
+289. A reliance on works is discouraged by both.
+
+290. Purity of heart is inculcated by Hindoos as well as Christians.
+
+291. Speak and think evil of no man is a gospel injunction of each.
+
+292. A love of all beings is more prominently the spirit of Budhism than
+that of Christianity.
+
+293. The practice of strict godly virtue is enjoined by both.
+
+294. Moderation and temperance are recommended by both.
+
+295. Patience is a virtue in each religion.
+
+296. The duty of controlling our thoughts is taught by each.
+
+297. Charity has a high appreciation by each.
+
+298. Both make the poor objects of attention.
+
+299. The practice of hospitality is recommended by each.
+
+300. Humility is a duty and a virtue under both systems.
+
+301. Mirthfulness or light conversation is forbidden by each.
+
+302. Purity of life is a duty with Hindoos as well as Christians.
+
+303. Chasteness in conversation is inculcated by both.
+
+304. "Respect to persons" is a sin in the moral polity of both.
+
+305. Alms-giving is religiously enjoined by the holy Scriptures of both.
+
+306. Both teach that "it is better to give than to receive."
+
+307. Loyalty to rulers is a moral requisition of each system.
+
+308. Honor to father and mother is esteemed a great virtue by both.
+
+309. The correct training of children is with each a scriptural duty.
+
+310. "Look not upon a woman" is more than hinted by each.
+
+311. The reading of the holy Scriptures is enjoined by both.
+
+312. Lying or falsehood is with each a sin of great magnitude.
+
+313. Swearing is discountenanced by both religions.
+
+314. Theft or stealing is specially condemned by both.
+
+315. Both deprecate and condemn the practice of war.
+
+316. Both discountenance fighting.
+
+317. Neither of them professes to believe in slavery.
+
+318. Drunkenness and the use of wine are more specifically condemned by
+the Hindoo religion.
+
+319. Adultery and fornication are heinous sins in the eyes of both.
+
+320. Both condemn covetousness as a great sin.
+
+321. Budhists more practically condemn anger than Christians do.
+
+
+XI. MISCELLANEOUS ANALOGIES.
+
+322. Both have their apocryphal as well as their canonical Scriptures.
+
+323. Stories are found in the bible of each which would be rejected if
+found elsewhere.
+
+324. Both make their bible a finality in matters of faith.
+
+325. Both have had their councils and commentaries to reveal theis
+bibles over again.
+
+326. Numerous schisms, divisions, sects, and creeds have sprung up in
+each.
+
+327. Various religious reforms have sprung up under each.
+
+328. Conversion from one religious sect to another is common to both.
+
+329. Both religions have been troubled with numerous skeptics or
+infidels.
+
+330. Both have often resorted to new interpretations for their bibles to
+suit the times.
+
+331. The unconverted are stigmatized by each.
+
+332. "Knock and it shall be opened" is the invitation of each.
+
+333. Public confession of sins in class-meetings is known to each.
+
+334. Death-bed repentance often witnessed under both religious systems.
+
+335. A belief in haunted houses incident to the religious countries of
+both.
+
+336. A superior respect for woman claimed by each.
+
+337. An idolatrous veneration for religious ancestors by each.
+
+338. Each sustain a numerous horde of expensive priests.
+
+339. A divine call or illumination to preach claimed by each.
+
+340. Religious martyrdom the glory of each.
+
+341. Both have encountered "perils by sea and land" for their religion.
+
+342. He who loseth his life (for his religion) shall find it, say both.
+
+343. Both in ancient times suffered much persecution.
+
+344. The disciples of both have suffered death without flinching from
+the faith.
+
+345. Each sent numerous missionaries abroad to preach and convert.
+
+346. And, finally, each cherished the hope of converting the world to
+their religion.
+
+
+The author has in his possession historical quotations to prove the
+truth of each one of the above parallels. He has all the historical
+facts on which they were constructed found in and drawn from the
+sacred books of the Hindoo religion and the works of Christian writers
+descriptive of their religion. But they would swell the present volume
+to unwieldy dimensions, and far beyond its proper and prescribed limits,
+to present them here; they are therefore reserved for the second volume,
+and may be published in pamphlet form also.
+
+In proof of the correctness of the foregoing comparative analogies,
+we will now summon the testimony of various authors setting forth the
+historical character of the Hindoo God Chrishna, and the essential
+nature of his religion, so far as it approximates in its doctrines
+and moral teachings to the Christian religion. We will first hear from
+Colonel Wiseman, for ten years a Christian missionary in India.
+
+"There is one Indian (Hindoo) legend of considerable importance" says
+this writer... "This is the story of Chrishna, the Indian Apollo. In
+native legends he is represented as an Avatar, or incarnation of the
+Divinity. At his birth, choirs of Devitas (angels) sung hymns of praise,
+while shepherds surrounded his cradle. It was necessary to conceal his
+birth from the tyrant ruler, Cansa, to whom it had been foretold that
+the infant Savior should destroy him. The child escaped with his parents
+beyond the coast of Lamouna. For a time he lived in obscurity, and then
+commenced a public life distinguished for prowess and beneficence.
+He washed the feet of the Brahmins, and preached the most excellent
+doctrines; but at length the power of his enemies prevailed.... Before
+dying, he foretold the miseries which would take place in the Cali-yuga,
+or wicked age (Dark Age) of the world."
+
+"Chrishna (says another writer) taught his followers that they alone
+were the true believers of the saving faith; throwing down the barriers
+of caste, and elevating the dogmas of their faith above the sacerdotal
+class, he admitted every one who felt an inward desire to the ministry
+to the preaching of their religion. A system thus associating itself
+with the habits, feelings, and personal advantages of its disciples
+could not fail to make rapid progress." (Upham's History. Doctrines of
+Budhism.)
+
+"Budhism inculcates benevolence, tenderness, forgiveness of injuries,
+and love of enemies; and forbids sensuality, love of pleasure, and
+attachment to worldly objects." (Judson).
+
+"At the moment of his (Chrishna's) conception a God left heaven to enter
+the womb of his mother (a virgin). Immediately after his birth he was
+recognized as a divine personage, and it was predicted that he would
+surpass all previous divine incarnations in holiness. Every one adored
+him, saluting him as 'the God of Gods.' When twenty years of age he went
+into a desert, and lived there in the austerest retirement, poverty,
+simplicity, and virtue, spending his whole time in religious
+contemplation. He was tempted in various ways, but his self-denial
+resisted all the seductive approaches of sin. He declared, 'Religion
+is my essence.' He experienced a lively opposition from the priests
+attached to the ancient creeds (as Christ subsequently did). But he
+triumphed over all his enemies after holding a discussion with them (as
+Christ did with the doctors in the Temple). He revised the existing code
+of morals and the social law. He reduced the main principles of morality
+to four, viz: _mercy, aversion to cruelty, unbounded sympathy for all
+animated beings and the strictest adherence to the moral law._ He also
+gave a decalogue of commandments, viz.: 1. Not to kill. 2. Not to steal.
+3. To be chaste. 4. Not to testify falsely. 5. Not to lie. 6. Not to
+swear. 7. To avoid all impure words. 8. To be disinterested. 9. Not to
+take revenge. 10. And not to be superstitious. This code of morals
+was firmly established in the hearts of his followers." (Abridged from
+Hardy's Manual of Budhism.)
+
+"It was prophesied in olden times that a person would arise and redeem
+Hindostan from 'the yoke of bondage.' At midnight, when the birth of
+Chrishna was taking place, the clouds emitted low music, and poured
+down a rain of flowers. The celestial child was greeted with hymns by
+attending spirits.
+
+"The room was illuminated by his light, and the countenances of his
+father and mother emitted rays of glory, and they bowed in worship.'
+'The people believed he was a God.' They eagerly caught the words which
+fell from his lips, which taught his divine mission, and they called him
+the 'Holy One,' and finally the 'Living God.' He performed miraculous
+cures. At his birth a marvelous light illumined the earth. His followers
+baptised, and performed miraculous cures. And he, when a child,
+attracted attention by his miracles. While attending the herds with his
+foster-father a great serpent poisoned the river, which caused the death
+of cows and shepherd-boys when they drank of it, whom Chrishna restored
+to life by a look of divine power. His life was devoted to mercy and
+charity. He left paradise from pure compassion, to die for suffering
+sinners. He sought to lead men to better paths and lives of virtue
+and rectitude. He suffered to atone for the sins of the world; and the
+sinner, through faith in him, can be saved. Christ and Chrishna both
+taught the equality of man. Prayers addressed to Chrishna were after
+this fashion: 'O thou Supreme One! thy essence is inscrutable. Thou art
+all in all. The understanding of man cannot reach thy Almighty Power.
+I, who know nothing, fly to thee for protection. Show mercy unto me, and
+enable me to see and know thee.' Chrishna replies, 'Have faith in me.
+No one who worships me can perish. Address thyself to me as the
+only asylum. I will deliver thee from sin. I am animated with equal
+benevolence toward all beings. I know neither hatred nor partiality.
+Those who adore me devoutly are in me and I in them'"--"Christ within
+you the hope of glory." (Abridged from Mr. Tuttle.)
+
+"If we consider that Budhism proclaimed the equality of all men and
+women in the sight of God, that it denounced the impious pretensions
+of the most mischievous priesthood the world ever saw, and that it
+inculcated a pure system of practical morality, we must admit that
+the innovation was as advantageous as it was extensively spread and
+adopted." (Hue's Journey through China, chap. v.)
+
+"To Chrishna the Hindoos were indebted for a code of pure and practical
+morality, which inculcated charity and chastity, performance of good
+works, abstinence from evil, and general kindness to all living things."
+(Cunningham.)
+
+"Budhism never confounds right or wrong, and never excuses any sin"
+(Catharine Beecher.)
+
+"He (Chrishna) honored humanity by his virtues." (St Hilaire.)
+
+"It is probable that every incident in his (Chrisna's) life is founded
+in fact, which, if separated from surrounding fable, would afford
+a history that would scarce have any equal in the importance of the
+lessons it would teach." (Hardy's Manual of Budhism.)
+
+"He (Chrishna) undertakes and counsels a constant struggle against the
+body. In his eyes the body is the enemy of man's soul (as Paul thought
+when he spoke of 'our vile bodies.') He aims to subdue the body and the
+burning passions which consume it.... He requires humility, disregard of
+wordly wealth, patience and resignation in adversity, love to enemies,
+religious tolerance, horror at falsehood, avoidance of frivolous
+conversation, consideration and esteem for women, sanctity of the
+marriage relation, non-resistance to evil, confession of sins, and
+conversion." (St. Hilaire.)
+
+"Budhism has been called the Christianity of the East." (Abel Remuset.)
+
+"The doctrine and practical piety of their bible (the Baghavat Gita)
+bear a strong resemblance to those of the Holy Scriptures. It has
+scarcely a precept or principle that is not found in the (Christian)
+bible. And were the people to live up to its principles of peace
+and love, oppression and injury would be known no more within their
+borders... It has no mythology of obscene and ferocious deities, no
+sanguinary or impure observances, no self-inflicting tortures, no
+tyrannizing priesthood, no confounding of right and wrong by making
+certain iniquities laudable in worship. In its moral code, its
+description of the purity and peace of the first ages, and the
+shortening of man's life by sin, it seems to follow genuine traditions.
+In almost every respect it seems to be the best religion ever invented
+by man." (Rev. H. Malcom's Travels in Asia.)
+
+"If the morality of Budhism be examined, its exhortations to guard the
+will, to curb the thoughts, to exercise kindness towards others,
+to abstain from wrong to all, it propounds a very high standard of
+practice." (Upham's Doctrines and History of Budhism.)
+
+"It seeks the highest triumphants of humanity in the exercise of
+devotion, self-contemplation, and self-denial." (Theogony of the Hindoos,
+by Bjornsjerma.)
+
+"And the doctrines of Budhism are not alone in the beauty of their
+sentiments and the excellence of much of their morality. 'It is not
+permitted to you to return evil for evil' is one of the sentiments of
+Socrates." (Rev. H. S. Hardy's Eastern Monachism.)
+
+"Budhism insists on the necessity of taking the intellectual faculties
+for guides in philosophical researches." (Tiberghien.)
+
+"It sought to wean mankind from the pleasures and vanities of life
+by pointing to the transitoriness of all human enjoyment." (Smith's
+Mongolia.)
+
+"The principal characteristics of Budhism are the doctrines of mildness
+and the universal brotherhood of man." (Ibid.)
+
+"Life is a state of probation and misery, according to Budhism."
+(Upham, chap. vi.)
+
+"The Brahmins found fault with him (Chrishna) for receiving as
+disciples the outcasts of Hindoo society (as the Jews did Christ for
+fellowshipping publicans and sinners). But he (Chrishna) replied, 'My
+law is a law of mercy to all.'" (Hue's Voyages through China.)
+
+"Budhism attracted and furnished consolation for the poor and
+unfortunate." (Ibid.)
+
+"Budhism is a rationalistic and reform system as compared with
+Brahminism. Landresse expresses his high admiration of the heroism with
+which the Budhist missionaries before Christ crossed streams and seas
+which had arrested armies, and traversed deserts and mountains upon
+which no caravans dared to venture, and braved dangers and surmounted
+obstacles which had defied the omnipotence of the emperors." (A note on
+Landresse's _Foe Koui Ki._)
+
+"If we addressed a Mogul or Thibetan this question, Who is Chrishna?
+the reply was, instantly, 'The Savior of men.'" (Hue's Journey through
+China.)
+
+"Chrishna, the incarnate Deity of the Sanscrit romance continues to this
+hour the darling God of the women of India.... Chrishna was the person
+of Vishnu (God) himself in the human form." (Asiat. Researches, 260).
+
+"Respectable natives told me that some of the missionaries had told them
+that they were even now almost Christians" (owing to the two religions
+being so nearly alike). (Ibid).
+
+"All that converting the Hindoos to Christianity does for them is to
+change the object of their worship from Chrishna to Christ." (Robert
+Cheyne.)
+
+"Brahminism or Budhism in some of its forms is said to constitute the
+religion of considerably more than half the human race. It teaches the
+existence of one supreme eternal, and uncreated God, called Brahma, who
+created the world through Chrishna, the second member of the Trinity."
+Paul says, God created the world through Jesus Christ, the second member
+of the Christian Trinity. (Eph. iii. 9.) How striking the resemblance!
+"The doctrine of the incarnation, the descent of the Deity upon earth,
+and his manifestation in a human form for the redemption of mankind,
+seems to have existed in the shape of prophecy or fact in all ages of
+the world. Hindooism teaches nine of these incarnations. Furthermore, it
+teaches the doctrine of the Trinity, the fall and redemption of man,
+and a state of future rewards and punishments in a future life.... This
+religion in chief of Asia is traceable to remote ages. The doctrine of
+the Trinity is represented in the Elephantine cavern, and taught in
+the Mahabarat, which goes back for its origin nearly two thousand years
+before Christ." (New York Sunday Despatch, 1855.)
+
+"In the year 3600, Chrishna descended to the earth for the purpose of
+defeating the evil machinations of Chivan (the devil), as Christ 'came
+to destroy the devil and his works.' (See John iii. 8.) After a fierce
+combat with the devil, or serpent, he defeated him by bruising his
+head--he receiving, during the contest, a wound in the heel. ('It [the
+serpent] shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.'--Gen.
+iii. 15.) He died at last between two thieves.... He lead a pure and
+holy life, and was a meek, tender, and benevolent being, and enjoined
+charity, hospitality, and mercy, and forbade lying, prevarication,
+hypocrisy, and overreaching in dealing, and pilfering, and theft, and
+violence toward any being." (Lecture before the Free Press Association
+in 1827.)
+
+"The birthplace of the Hindoo hero (Chrishna) is called Mathura, which
+is easily changed, and by correct translation becomes Maturea, the place
+where Christ is said to have stopped, between Nazareth and Egypt... To
+show his humility he washed the feet of the Brahmins (as Christ is said
+to have washed the feet of the Jews--see John xiii. 14). One day a
+woman came to him and anointed his hair with oil, in return for which
+he healed her maladies. One of his first miracles was that of healing
+a leper, like Christ (See Mark i. 4). Finally, he was crucified, then
+descended to Hades. (It is said of Christ, 'his soul was not left in
+hell.'--Acts ii. 31.) He (Chrishna) rose from the dead and ascended to
+Voicontha (heaven.)" (Higgin's Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 239).
+
+Now, we ask, is it any wonder, in view of the foregoing historical
+exposition, that Eusebius should exclaim, "The religion of Jesus
+Christ is neither new nor strange?" (Eccl. Hist. ch. iv.) Truly did
+St. Augustine say, "This, in our day, is the Christian religion, not
+as having been unknown in former times, but as having recently received
+that name."
+
+Here, then, we pause to ask our good Christian reader, _Where is your
+original Christianity now?_ or what constitutes the revealed religion
+of Jesus Christ? or where is the evidence that any new religion was
+revealed by him or preached by him, seeing we have all his religion, as
+shown by the foregoing historical citations, included in an old heathen
+system more than a thousand years old when Jesus Christ was born?
+We find it all here in this old oriental system of Budhism--_every
+essential part, particle and principle_ of it. We find Christianity all
+here--its Alpha and Omega, its beginning and end. We find it here in
+all its details,--its root, essence, and entity,--all its "revealed
+doctrines," religious ideas, beautiful truths, senseless dogmas and
+oriental phantoms. Not, a doctrine, principle, or precept of the
+Christian system, but that is here proclaimed to the world ages before
+"the angels announced the birth of a divine babe in Bethlehem." Will
+you, then, persist in claiming that "truth, life, and immortality came
+by Jesus Christ," and that "Christ came to preach a new gospel to the
+world, and to set forth a new religion never before heard amongst men"
+(to use the language of Archbishop Tillotson), when the historical facts
+cited in this work demonstrate a hundred times over that such a position
+is palpably erroneous? Will you still persist, with all those undeniable
+facts staring you in the face (proving and reproving, with overwhelming
+demonstration, that the statement is untrue), in declaring that "the
+religion of Jesus Christ is the only true and soul-saving religion, and
+all other systems are mere straw, stubble, tradition, and superstition"
+(as asserted by a popular Christian writer), when no mathematician ever
+demonstrated a scientific problem more clearly than we have proved in
+these pages that all the principle systems of the past, by no means
+excepting Christianity, are essentially alike in every important
+particular--all of their cardinal doctrines being the same, differing
+only in unimportant details?
+
+Seeing, then, that all systems of religion have been found to be
+essentially alike in spirit and in practice, the all-important question
+arises here, What is the true cause assignable for this striking
+resemblance? How is it to be accounted for? Perhaps some of our good
+Christian readers, unacquainted with history, may cherish the thought
+that all the oriental systems brought to notice are but imitations of
+Christianity; that they were reconstructed out of materials obtained
+from that source; that Christianity is the parent, and they the
+off-spring. But, alas for their long-cherished idol, those who
+entertain such forlorn hopes are "sowing to the wind, and are doomed to
+disappointment." With the exception of Mahomedanism alone, Christianity
+is the youngest system in the whole catalogue. The historical facts to
+prove this statement are voluminous. But as it needs no proof to those
+who have read religious history, but little space will be occupied
+with citations for this purpose. With respect to the antiquity of the
+principal oriental system, we need only to quote the testimony of Sir
+William Jones, a devout Christian writer, who spent years in India,
+and whose testimony will be accepted by any person acquainted with his
+history. He makes the emphatic declaration, "That the name of Chrishna,
+and the general outline of his history, were long anterior to the birth
+of our Savior, and probably to the time of Homer (900 b. C.) we know
+very certainly." (Asiat. Res. vol. i. p. 254.) No guess-work about it.
+"_We know very certainly_."
+
+And being a scholar, a traveler, and a sojourner among the Hindoos, and
+well versed in their history, no person ever had a better opportunity
+to know than he. We will hear this renowned author further. "In the
+Sanscrit dictionary, compiled more than two thousand years ago, we have
+the whole history of the incarnate deity (Chrishna), born of a virgin,
+and miraculously escaping in his infancy from the reigning tyrant of
+his country (Cansa). He passed a life of the most extraordinary and
+incomprehensible devotion. His birth was concealed from the tyrant
+Cansa, to whom it had been predicted that one born at that time, and in
+that family, would destroy him;" i. e., destroy his power. (Asiat.
+Res. vol. i. p. 273.) This writer also states that the first Christian
+missionaries who entered India were astonished to find there a religion
+so near like their own, and could only account for it by supposing
+that the devil, foreseeing the advent of Christ, originated a system of
+religion in advance of his, and "just like it." Stated in other words,
+he got out the second edition of the gospel plan of salvation before the
+first edition was published or had an existence. Rather a smart trick
+this, thus to outwit God Almighty.
+
+With respect to the vast antiquity of the Hindoo oriental religion,
+which indicates it as being not only the source from which the materials
+of the Christian religion were drawn, but as being the parent of all the
+leading systems, with their three thousand subordinate branches which
+existed at a much earlier period than Christianity, we need only point
+to the deep chiseled sculptures and imperishable monuments enstamped
+on their time-honored temples, tombs, altars, vases, columns, pagodas,
+ruined towers, &c., which, with contemporary inscriptions, warrant us
+in antedating the religion of the Himmalehas far beyond the authentic
+records of any other religion that has floated down to us on the stream
+of time. The numerous images of their crucified Gods, Chrishna and Saki,
+emblazoned on their old rock temples in various parts of the country,
+some of which are constructed of clay porphyry, now the very hardest
+species of rock, with their attendant inscriptions in a language so very
+ancient as to be lost to the memory of man, vie with the Sanscrit in
+age, the oldest deciphered language in the world.
+
+All these and a hundred corroboratory historical facts fix on India as
+being the birthplace of the mother of all religions now existing, or
+that ever had an existence, while the great workshop in which they were
+subsequently remodeled was in Alexandria in Egypt, whose theological
+schools furnished the model for nearly every system now found noticed
+on the page of history--Christianity of course included. So much for
+the unrivaled antiquity of the Hindoo religion. Now, the more important
+query arises, What relationship does ancient heathen or Hindoo Budhism
+bear to Christianity? What is the evidence that the latter is an
+outgrowth of the former? As an answer to this question, the reader will
+please note the following facts of history:--
+
+1. Alexandria, the home of the world's great conqueror, was at one
+period of time the great focal center for religious speculation and
+propagandism, the great emporium for religious dogmas throughout the
+East, and a place of resort for the disciples of nearly every system of
+religious faith then existing.
+
+2. In this capital city, comprising about five hundred thousand
+inhabitants, were established a voluminous library, and vast theological
+schools, in which men of every religious order, and of every phase of
+faith, met and exchanged religious ideas, and borrowed new doctrines,
+with which they remodeled their former systems of faith, amounting in
+some cases to an entire change of their long-established creeds.
+
+3. In these theological schools the Jewish sect, which afterward became
+the founders of Christianity, were extensively represented; for, let it
+be noted, its first disciples and founders had all been Jews, probably
+of the Essene sect. "For a long time the Christians were but a Jewish
+sect," says M. Reuss' "History of Christian Theology." Alexander had,
+previous to this time (that is, about 330 b. c.), subjected the whole
+of Western Asia to his dominions, including, of course, "The Holy
+Land"--Judea.
+
+4. By this act a large portion of the Jewish nation were transferred
+from their own country to Alexandria. And this number was afterward
+vastly increased by Alexander's successor, Ptolemy Sotor, who carried off
+and settled in that credal city one hundred thousand more Jews.
+
+5. As the result, in part, of these repeated calamities, "the Lord's
+chosen people" were literally broken up. They lost their law, lost their
+leader and lawgiver, lost their language, lost the control of their
+country, the "_Promised Land"_ which (they verily believed) the Lord
+had deeded to them _in fee simple_, and ratified in the high court
+of heaven, and had declared they should hold and possess forever. And
+finally they partially lost their nationality, being literally dissolved
+and broken up; and were finally almost lost to history--the ten tribes
+disappearing entirely.
+
+6. The Jews had ever manifested a proneness for copying after the
+religious customs of their heathen neighbors, and engrafting their
+doctrines into their own creeds, as their bible history furnishes ample
+proof.
+
+7. In Alexandria a very superior opportunity was afforded for doing
+this, excelling in this respect any previous period of their history.
+
+8. The shattered condition of their own religion, with all its
+conventional creeds, customs, and ceremonies, now suspended and
+literally prostrated, as above shown, vastly augmented the temptation
+ever rife with them to make another change in their religion, and
+subject their creed to another installment of new doctrines, by which it
+became Christianity.
+
+9. The liberal character and tolerant spirit of the political and
+religious institutions of the kingdom of Alexandria, with its vast
+and attractive library of two hundred thousand volumes, established
+principally by Ptolemy Phila-delphus, with other attractive features
+already pointed out, furnished great facilities, as well as increased
+temptations to religious propagandists to absorb new theories, and make
+new creeds out of the vast medley of religious doctrines and speculative
+dogmas preached and propagated in that royal city by the disciples and
+representatives of nearly every religious system then in existence,
+brought together by the attractions above specified.
+
+10. Hence every consideration would lead us to conclude, taken in
+connection with the facts above stated, and the well-known borrowing
+proclivity and imitative propensity of the Jews, that they would not,
+and could not, withstand the overweening and overpowering temptation to
+make another radical change in their religion by a new draught on the
+boundless reservoir of speculative ideas, religious tenets, and specious
+theories then glowing in the popular schools of Alexandria.
+
+11. All the facts above enumerated would impel us to the conclusion that
+the Jews would--and every page of history touching the matter proves
+they did--make important changes in their religion by this contact with
+the oriental systems, as they had repeatedly done before. Some of this
+proof we will here present, to show how they originated Christianity.
+
+12. "The schools of Alexandria" says Mr. Enfield, a Christian writer,
+"by pretending to teach sublime doctrines concerning God and divine
+things, enticed men of different countries and religions, and among the
+rest the Jews, to study its mysteries, and incorporate them with their
+own.... The Jewish faith mixed with the Pythagorean, and afterward with
+the Egyptian oriental theology" (that is, they became Essenes in the
+Grecian school of Pythagoras, who taught the doctrines of that religious
+order, then Bud-hists in the Egyptian schools of Alexandria). And
+finally, with Christ as their leader, who taught the doctrines of
+both schools (they being essentially alike), they assumed the name of
+Christian in honor of him, and thus is Christianity from Essene Budhism.
+
+13. Beers in his "History of the Jews," sustains the above statement by
+the declaration that the Essenian Jews "fled to Egypt at the time of the
+Babylonian captivity, and there became acquainted with the Pythagorean
+philosophy, and ingrafted it upon the religion of Moses," which would
+make them Essenian Budhists--for Cunningham assures us that "the
+doctrine of Pythagoras were intensely Budhistic." (Philsa. Topus, chap.
+x.)
+
+14. We will condense a few more historical testimonies relative to the
+entire change of the Jewish faith, while in Alexandria, as well as on
+other occasions, to show how easy and natural it was for that portion of
+the Jews who afterward became the founders of Christianity to slide into
+and adopt Essenian Budhism, whose doctrines they took to constitute the
+Christian religion.
+
+15. Mr. Gibbon (chap. xxi.) declares that the theological opinions
+of the Jews underwent great changes by their contact with the various
+foreigners they found in Alexandria. Mr. Tytler likewise, in his
+"Universal History," assures us that the Jewish religion "became
+_totally changed by the intermixture of heathen doctrines_." Dr.
+Campbell also testifies that "their views came pretty much to coincide
+with those of the pagans." (See his Dissertation, vi.) And the author of
+"_The Expositor_ for 1854" complains that the pagan "theology stole upon
+them from every quarter, and mingled in all the views of the then known
+tribes, so that by the year 150 b. c., it had wrought visible changes in
+their notions and habits of thought." (P. 423.) Here we have the proof
+that the whole Jewish religion underwent a change in Alexandria.
+
+16. Now, most, certainly a nation or sect professing a religion so
+easily changed, and possessing a character so fickle, or so
+irrepressible as to yield on every slight occasion, and embrace every
+opportunity to imbibe new religious ideas and doctrines, would easily,
+if not naturally, slide into the adoption of the religious system then
+promulgated in Alexandria under the name of Budhism, and afterward
+remodeled or transformed, and called Christianity.
+
+17. The Jews of the Essenian order, as we have in part shown in a
+previous chapter, set forth in their creed all the leading doctrines now
+comprised in the Christian religion hundreds of years before the advent
+of Christ, not excepting the doctrine of the divine incarnation and its
+adjuncts, as these concomitants of the present popular faith, we will
+now prove, were not unknown to the Jewish theology, but constituted
+a part of the religion of some of the principal Jewish sects. That
+standard Christian author, Mr. Milman, in his "History of Christianity,"
+tells us that "the doctrine of the incarnation ('God manifest in the
+flesh') was the doctrine from the Ganges, and even the shores of the
+Yellow Sea to the Ilissus. It was the fundamental principle of
+the Indian Budhist religion and philosophy. It was the basis of
+Zoroasterism. It was pure Platonism. It was Platonic Judaism in the
+Alexandrian school." Here it is positively declared, by a popular
+Christian writer, whose work is a part of nearly every popular library
+in Christiandom as a standard authority, that the appearance of God
+amongst men in the human form, by human birth, was a doctrine of
+the Jewish religion in some of its branches, especially the Essenian
+branch--further proof that Christianity originated nothing, and gave
+utterance to no new doctrine or precepts, and performed no new miracles.
+Where, then, is the claim for its originality? On what ground is it
+predicated? Please answer us, good Christian brother.
+
+18. It is a question of no importance, if it could be settled, whether
+Christianity is a direct outgrowth from one of the new-fangled sects
+of Judaism, or whether it derived a portion of its doctrines from this
+source and the balance from ascetic Budhism. Yet we regard it as an
+incontrovertible proposition that it all grew out of Budhism originally,
+either directly or indirectly.
+
+19. Christ may have received his doctrines secondhanded, all or a
+portion from the Essenian Jews; for that sect held all the leading
+doctrines of Budhism (as we have shown in a previous chapter), which now
+goes under the name of the religion of Jesus Christ.
+
+20. Or we may indulge the not unreasonable hypothesis that the founders
+of Christianity, who republished the doctrines of Budhism and adopted
+them as their own, received them all direct from the disciples of that
+religious order; for "they were everywhere," as one writer (Mr. Taylor)
+declares, speaking of their extensive travels to propagate their
+doctrines through the world. And it was about that period, as Mr.
+Goodrich informs us, they sent out nine hundred missionaries, who made
+six millions of converts,--a small fraction of their present
+number (three hundred and eighty millions, as given by some of our
+geographies),--one third more than the entire census of Christendom, and
+six times the number of believers in the Christian religion, if we omit
+Greeks and Catholics. "It is." as a writer remarks, "the oldest and
+most widely spread religion in the world." And, whatever hypothesis may
+be adduced to account for the fact, Christianity is now all Budhism.
+
+21. It is impossible, with the historic darkness which at present
+environs and beclouds our pathway, to determine at what period or in
+what manner Christ became an Essene,--whether he was born of Essenian
+parents, or became a convert to the faith,--because the whole period of
+his life, with the exception of about three years, is a total blank in
+history. There is but one incident related of his movements by his
+bible biographers prior to his twenty-seventh year, leaving more than
+a quarter of a century of his probably active life unreported--a period
+that may have witnessed several important changes in his religion. We
+have not even his ancestry reported in his scriptural biography, in
+either parental line, unless we assume Joseph to have been his father.
+The parental lineage of his mother is entirely omitted Had we his
+line of ancestry, or could we trace him back to his national or family
+origin, we doubt not but we should there find a clue to the origin of
+his religion. We should find his ancestors were Essenian Jews.
+
+22. Nor can we fix the date when Essenian Budhism among the Jews
+received the name of Christianity for a similar reason. There is a
+link--a chain of events of four hundred years left out of the bible
+between Judaism and Christianity--thus lacking four hundred years of
+connecting the two religions together, or of showing how the latter
+grew out of the former. Malachi, the last book of the Old Testament,
+antedates the first events of Christian history four centuries, or
+twelve generations, thus leaving a wide and dark gap between them. And
+besides, we cannot find the name of Christ or Christianity mentioned in
+any of the contemporary histories of that era till one hundred and four
+years after the time fixed for Christ's birth by Christendom; Tacitus
+being the first writer who names either, and this was at that date.
+
+23. These facts disclose the whole secret with respect to the mystery
+and darkness thrown around the origin of the Christian religion--the
+how, the when, and the where of its origin. That chapter of Christian
+history is left out of the record. The bible account itself is
+but fragmentary, as it leaves nine tenths of Christ's history a
+blank,--twenty-seven years out of the thirty,--and omits all mention of
+his ancestors beyond his grandmother, and leaves even the time of his
+birth a blank. "The researches of the learned," says Mr. Mosheim (a
+standard Christian author), "though long and ably conducted, have been
+unable to fix the time of Christ's birth with certainty." (Eccl. Hist.
+p. 23.) Wonderful admission, truly, as it is an evidence that nothing
+else can be fixed "with certainty," with respect to the history of
+"the man Christ Jesus," only that his doctrines and precepts were all
+borrowed perhaps during the twenty-seven dark and mysteries years of his
+life, if not an Essene by birth.
+
+24. There is no escaping the conclusion that Christianity is a _borrowed
+system_--an outgrowth and remodeling of Budhism, with a change of name
+only. A thousand facts of history prove and proclaim it, and the verdict
+of posterity will be unanimous in affirming it.
+
+25. From the almost endless chain of analogies, exhibiting a striking
+resemblance even in their minute details of Christianity and Budhism,
+we are compelled to conclude that one furnished the materials for the
+other; that one is the offspring--the legitimate child--of the other.
+And as it is a settled historical fact that Budhism is much the older
+system, there is hence no difficulty in determining which is the parent
+and which is the child.
+
+26. In the Hindoo story of the creation of the human race, we find Adimo
+and Heva given as the names of the first man and woman answering to
+our Adam and Eve. And our Shem, Ham, and Japheth are traceable to their
+Sherma, Hama, and Jiapheta; the difference in the mode of spelling is
+probably owing to the difference in the languages. And under the new era
+we have Christ Jesus answering to their Chrishna Zeus, as some writers
+give the name of the eighth Avatar. And for Maia, a godmother, we have
+Mary. And other similar analogies might be pointed out besides the long
+string of strikingly similar events previously presented in the history
+of the two Saviors (Christ and Chrishna), amounting to hundreds.
+
+27. Such an almost countless list of similar and nearly identical
+incidents bids defiance, and absolutely sets at naught all attempts
+to account for it as a mere fortuitous accident. There is no
+other explanation possible but that Christianity is a re-vamp or
+re-establishment of Budhism.
+
+28. Here let it be noted that Christianity was not the only religion
+which was rehabilitated in the Alexandrian schools. On the contrary, all
+the popular oriental systems then in active being had long previously
+passed through the same representative theological schools and
+creed-making institutions of that royal and commercial city. All were
+remodeled in its theological workshops--a fact which accounts most
+conclusively for the same train of religions ideas and historical
+incidents being found in the later sacred books of each. And besides,
+Sir William Jones says, "The disciples of these various systems of
+religion had intercourse with each other long before the time of Christ,
+which would necessarily bring about a uniformity in the doctrines and
+general character of each system."
+
+29. The disciples of all the religious systems cited their initiatory
+miracles as a proof of being on familiar terms with God Almighty. They
+all (as is claimed) healed the sick; all restored the deaf, the dumb,
+and the blind; all cast out devils, and all raised the dead. (See
+chapter on Parallels.) In fact, all their miracles and legendary marvels
+run in parallel lines, because all were recast in the same creed-mold
+in Alexandria. A coincidence is thus beautifully explained, which would
+otherwise be hard to account for.
+
+30. Mr. Gibbon says, "It was in the school of Alexandria that the
+Christian theology appears to have assumed a regular and scientific
+form" (Decline, &c., chap. xv.); that is, the regular and scientific
+form of Budhism or Essenism.
+
+31. Pregnant with meaning is the text, "It was in the city of Antioch
+the disciples were first called Christians." (Acts xi. 36.) Here is
+conclusive proof that the disciples of the Christian faith were not
+always known by the same name, and were not at first called Christians.
+Then what were they called during the earlier years of their history?
+
+Here is a great and important query, and one involving a momentous
+problem. Couple the two facts together, that the disciples were first
+known as Christians at Antioch, and that the Essenian order of believers
+expired and went out of history about that period, and the question is
+at once and forever satisfactorily settled. It was not an infrequent act
+on making important changes in a religion, and adopting some new items
+of faith to change the title of the system, and give it a new name.
+
+After Alexander Campbell had made some modifications in his previous
+religious faith, and started a new church, his followers were popularly
+called Campbellites. Elias Hicks ingrafted some reform ideas into the
+Quaker faith, and instituted a new society of that order. Hence, and
+henceforth, his disciples were known as Hicksites. In like manner Jesus
+Christ having made some innovations in his inherited Jewish faith (which
+was of the Essene stamp) by ingrafting more of the Budhist doctrine into
+it, his followers were henceforth called Christians. How complete the
+analogy! Here let it be borne in mind, as powerfully confirmatory of
+this conclusion, that the first Christians were (as history affirms)
+"merely reformatory Jews." The twelve chosen were all Jews, probably of
+the Essene order. According to the Rev. Mr. Prideaux (Jewish History),
+the Jews of this order were first called Israelites, in common with the
+other tribes; then Chassidim; and thirdly Essenes. And finally, after
+the Essenian Jesus Christ, with some new radical ideas, proclaimed, "Ye
+have heard it hath been said by them of old time" thus and so, "but I
+say unto you" differently. The title was again changed, and they adopted
+or received the name of Christians--the Essenes going out of history
+at the very date Christians first appear in history. Put this and that
+together, and the chain is welded. Thus we can as easily trace the
+origin of Christianity as we can trace the origin of a root running
+beneath the soil in the direction of a certain tree. History, then,
+proclaims that to the honest, pious, deeply-devout, self-denying, yet
+ignorant, slothful, and filthy Budhistic Essenes must be awarded the
+honor or dishonor of giving birth to that system of religion now known
+as Christianity.
+
+
+CHRISHNA AS A GOD--ADDITIONAL FACTS.
+
+The following additional facts relative to the history, character, life,
+and teachings of Zeus Chrishna, or Jeseus Christna (as styled by one
+writer) are drawn mostly from the Vedas, Baghavat, Gita (Bible in
+India).
+
+1. _His Virgin Mother, her Character_.--The holy book declares, that
+"through her the designs of God were accomplished. She was pure and
+chaste; no animal food ever touched her lips; honey and milk were her
+sustenance; her time was spent in solitude, lost in the contemplation of
+God who showered upon her innumerable blessings; she looked upon death
+as the birth to a new and better life; when she traveled, a column of
+fire in the heavens went before her to guide her. One evening, as
+she was praying, she heard celestial music, and fell into a profound
+ecstasy, and being overshadowed by the spirit of God, she conceived the
+God Chrishna." (Baghavat, Gita).
+
+2. _Chrishna, his Life and Mission_.--This sin-atoning God was about
+sixteen when he commenced active life. Like Christ, he chose twelve
+disciples to aid him in propagating his doctrines. "He spent his time
+working miracles, resuscitating the dead, healing lepers, restoring
+the deaf and the blind, defending the weak against the strong, and the
+oppressed against the oppressor, and in proclaiming his divine mission
+to redeem man from original sin, and banish evil, and restore the reign
+of good." (Baghavat, Gita.) It is declared that he came to teach peace,
+charity, love to man, self-respect, the practice of good for its own
+sake, and faith in the inexhaustible goodness of the Creator; also to
+preach the immortality of the soul, and the doctrine of future rewards
+and punishments, and to vanquish the prince of darkness, Rakshas. It is
+further declared that "Brahma sent his son (Chrishna) upon the earth to
+die for the salvation of man." "His lofty precepts and the purity of his
+life spread his fame throughout all India, and finally won for him
+more than three millions of followers." "He inculcated the sublimest
+doctrines, and the purest morals, and the grand principles of charity
+and self-denial." "He forbade revenge, and commanded to return good
+for evil, and consoled the feeble and the unhappy." "He lived poor, and
+loved the poor." "He lived chaste, and enjoined chastity." "Problems the
+most lofty, and morals the most pure and sublime, and the future destiny
+of man, were themes which engaged his most profound attention."
+
+"Chrishna, we will venture to say (says the Bible in India) was the
+greatest of philosophers, not only of India, but of the entire world."
+"He was the grandest moral figure of ancient times." (Bible in India.)
+"Chrishna was a moralist and a philosopher." "We should admire his moral
+lessons, so sublime and so pure." "He was recognized as the 'Divine
+Word.'" "He received the title of Jeseus, which means pure Essense."
+Chrishna signifies the "Promised of God," the "Messiah." "When he
+preached, he often spoke from a mount. He also spoke in parables.
+'Parable plays a great part in the familiar instructions of this Hindoo
+Redeemer.'" He relates a very interesting parable of a fisherman who
+was much persecuted by his neighbors, but who in the time of a severe
+famine, when the people were suffering and dying for the want of food,
+being so noble as to return good for evil, he carried food to these same
+persecuting enemies, and thus saved them from starvation. "Therefore,"
+said he "do good to all, both the evil and the good, even your enemies."
+
+His addresses to the people were simple, but to his disciples they were
+elevated and philosophical. Such was the wisdom of his sermons and his
+parables, that the people crowded around him, eager to behold and hear
+him, "saying, This is indeed the Redeemer promised to our Fathers."
+Great multitudes followed him, exclaiming, "This is he who resuscitates
+the dead, and heals the lame, and the deaf, and the blind." On one
+occasion, as he entered Madura (as Christ once entered Jerusalem), "the
+people came out in flocks to meet him, and strewed branches in his way."
+On another occasion two women approached him, anointed him with oil,
+and worshiped him. When the people murmured at this waste, he replied,
+"Better is a little given with an humble heart than much given with
+ostentation." Such was his sense of decorum, that he admonished some
+girls he once observed playing in a state of nudity on the bank of a
+river after bathing. They repented, asked his forgiveness, and reformed.
+"The followers of Chrishna practiced all the virtues, and observed a
+complete abnegation of self (self-denial), and lived poor, hoping for a
+reward in the future life. They occupied all their time in the service
+of their Divine Master. Pure and majestic was their worship." Chrishna
+had a favorite disciple _Adjaurna_, who sustained to him the relation of
+John to Christ, while Angada acted the part of Judas by following him to
+the Ganges and betraying him.
+
+3. _His last Hours_.--"When Chrishna knew his hour had come, forbidding
+his disciples to follow him, he repaired to the bank of the River
+Ganges; and having performed three ablutions, he knelt down, and looking
+up to heaven, he prayed to Brahma." While nailed to the cross, the
+tree on which he was suspended became suddenly covered with great red
+flowers, which diffused their fragrance all around. And it is said
+he often appeared to his disciples after his death "in all his divine
+majesty."
+
+4. _The second Advent of Chrishna_.--"There is not a Hindoo or a Brahmin
+who does not look upon the second coming of Chrishna as an established
+article of faith." Their holy bibles (the Vedas and Gita) prophesy of
+him thus: "He shall come crowned with lights; he shall come, and the
+heavens and the earth shall be joyous; the stars shall pale before
+his splendor; the earth will be too small to contain him, for he is
+infinite, he is Almighty, he is Wisdom, he is Beauty, he is all and in
+all; and all men, all animated beings, beasts, birds, trees, and plants,
+will chant his praises; he will regenerate all bodies, and purify all
+souls." "He will be as sweet as honey and ambrosia, and as pure as
+the lamb without spot, or as the lips of a virgin. All hearts will be
+transported with joy. From the rising to the setting of the sun it will
+be a day of joy and exultation, when this God shall manifest his power
+and his glory, and reconcile the world unto himself." Such are a few of
+the prophetic utterances of his devout and prayerful disciples.
+
+"We find," says a writer, "in all the theogonies of different countries
+the hope of the advent of a God (either his first or his second
+coming)--a hope which sprang from a sense of their own imperfections and
+sufferings, which naturally induced them to look for a divine Redeemer."
+
+5. _Precepts of Chrishna_.--Numerous are the prescriptive admonitions
+found in the holy books which set forth the religion of "this heathen
+demigod" (so called by Christian professors). They appertain to all
+the duties of life, but are too numerous to be quoted here. Those
+appertaining to woman enjoin the most sacred regard for her rights,
+such as "woman should be protected with tenderness, and shielded with
+fostering solicitude." "There is no crime more odious than to persecute
+woman, or take advantage of her weakness." "Degrade woman and you
+degrade man." For other similar precepts, see Chapter XXXII. The
+injunctions to read their holy bible (the Vedas, &c.) are quite
+numerous, such as, "Let him study the holy Scriptures unceasingly"
+"Pray night and morning, and read the holy Scriptures in the attitude
+of devotion." And many of them read it through upon their knees. (See
+Chap. XLIV.) We have not space for a further exposition of this subject
+here; but it will be found more fully set forth in the pamphlet, "Christ
+and Chrishna Compared," which will, perhaps, become an Appendix to this
+work.
+
+It may be objected that there are precepts and stories to be found in
+the religion of this Hindoo God (Chrishna), which reflect but
+little credit or honor upon that religion. This is true. And similar
+reflections would materially damage the religion of Christianity also.
+The story of Christ beating and maltreating the money-changers in the
+temple, his cursing an innocent, unoffending, and unconscious fig tree,
+and his indulgence in profane swearing at his enemies,--"O ye fools
+and blind, ye generation of vipers, how can you escape the damnation
+of hell!"--does not reflect any credit upon his religion, viewed as
+a system. Defects, then, may be found in both systems. In viewing the
+analogies of the two religions, it should be noted that the Hindoos
+claim, with a forcible show of facts and logic, that the religion of
+Christianity grew out of theirs. It has not been long since a learned
+Hindoo maintained this position in a public debate with a missionary.
+If all these facts effect nothing in the way of inducing the Christian
+clergy to confess the falsity of their position in claiming their
+religion to be a direct emanation from God, it will be a sad commentary
+upon either their intelligence or their honesty.
+
+These historical facts, with those set forth in the preceding chapters,
+prove that the religion called Christianity, instead of being, as
+Christians claim, "the product of the Divine Mind," is the product
+of "heathen" minds; i. e., a spontaneous outgrowth of the moral and
+religious elements of the human mind. And therefore, for God to have
+revealed it over again to the founders of Christianity would have been
+superfluous, and a proof of his ignorance of history.
+
+Note.--The author deems it proper to state here, with respect to the
+comparison between Christ and Chrishna, that some of the doctrines which
+he has selected as constituting a part of the religion of the Hindoo
+Savior, are not found in the reported teachings of that deified
+moralist. But as they appear to breathe forth the same spirit, it is
+presumed he would have indorsed them, had they come under his notice. As
+Christians assume the liberty to arrange the doctrines of Paul and Peter
+under the head of Christianity because claimed to be in consonance with
+the religion of Christ, though not all taught by him, the author, in
+like manner, has assumed, that some doctrines taught by other systems
+and religious teachers of India accord with those taught by Chrishna,
+and hence has arranged them with his. The author's purpose is not to set
+forth the doctrines of any sect, any system, or any religious teacher,
+but to show that all the doctrines of Christianity are traceable to
+ancient India. But whether taught by this sect or that sect, it is
+foreign to our purpose to inquire; and hence, for convenience, he has
+arranged them all into one system, and designated them Chrishnianity
+(borrowing a new term). There can be no more impropriety, he presumes,
+in arranging the doctrines of the various conflicting sects of India
+into one system (including even Brahminism and Budhism), than to
+arrange, as Christians do, the doctrines taught by the antagnostic
+system of Catholicism and Protestantism, and their six hundred
+conflicting sects, under the head of Christianity. Hence, Christians, of
+course, will not fault the arrangement. The classification above alluded
+to comprises, in part, the religion of many of the Hindoo sects,
+but does not set forth all their doctrines, only those analogous to
+Christianity. Chrishna was a Vishnuite, and not a Brahmin, as some
+writers assume. He and Christ were both reformers, and departed from the
+ancient faith. Vishnuism appears to have finally centered in Budhism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII. APOLLONIUS, OSIRIS, MAGUS, ETC.--GODS
+
+
+MIRACULOUS ACHIEVEMENTS OF OTHER GODS AND DEMI-GODS OF ANTIQUITY.
+
+THE age in which Christ flourished, as before remarked, was
+pre-eminently an age of miracle. The practice of thaumaturgy, and the
+legends invested with the display of the miracle-working power, both
+preceding and subsequent to that era, rose to a great height. "All
+nations of that time," says a writer, "were mightily bent on working
+miracles." And the disciples who acted the part of biographers for the
+various crucified Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, throughout the East,
+seemed to vie with each other in setting off the lives and histories of
+their favorite objects of worship respectively, with marvelous exploits
+and the pageantry of the most astounding prodigies. And the miracles
+in each case were pretty much of the same character, thus indicating a
+common course for their origin,--all probably having been cast in the
+same mold--in the theological schools of the once famous, world-renowned
+city of Alexandria, the capital of Egypt. Having, in the preceding
+chapters, presented the miraculous achievements of the Hindoo Gods,
+Chrishna and Saki, we will here bring to notice those of other Gods.
+
+
+THE MIRACLES RECORDED OF ALCIDES, OSIRIS, AND OTHER GODS OF EGYPT.
+
+1. We have the miraculous birth by a virgin in the case of Alcides.
+
+2. Osiris, while a sucking infant in his cradle, killed two serpents
+which came to destroy him.
+
+3. Alcides performed many miraculous cures.
+
+4. According to Ovid he cured by a miracle the daughter of Archiades.
+
+5. Also the wife of Theogenes, after the doctors had given her up.
+
+6. And both these Gods converted water into wine.
+
+7. Both of them frequently cast out devils.
+
+8. Julius declares Alcides raised Tyndarus and Hippo-litus from the
+dead.
+
+9. When Zulis was crucified, the sun became dark and the moon refused to
+shine.
+
+10. Both he and Osiris were resurrected by a miracle.
+
+12. Both ascend to heaven in sight of many witnesses.
+
+12. And finally we are told that from Alexandria the whole empire became
+filled with the fame of these miracle-workers, who restored the blind to
+sight, cured the paralytic, caused the dumb to speak, the lame to walk,
+&c. All these miracles were as credibly related of these Gods as similar
+miracles of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+MIRACLES PERFORMED BY PYTHAGORAS AND OTHER GODS OF GREECE.
+
+1. Pythagoras was a spirit in heaven before he was born on earth.
+
+2. His birth was miraculously foretold.
+
+3. His mother conceived him by a specter (the Holy Ghost).
+
+4. His mother (Pytheas) was a holy virgin of great moral purity.
+
+5. Plato's mother, Paretonia (says Olympiodorus), conceived him by the
+God Apollo.
+
+6. Pythagoras in his youth astonishes the doctors by his wisdom.
+
+7. Was worshiped as the "Son of God," "Paraclete," "Child of Divinity,"
+&c.
+
+8. Coaid see events many ages in the future (says Richardson, his
+biographer).
+
+9. Could bring down the eagle from his lofty height by command.
+
+10. Could approach and subdue the wild, ferocious Daunian bear.
+
+11. Could, like Christ, appear at two places at once.
+
+12. Could walk on the water and travel on the air.
+
+13. Could discern and read the thoughts of his disciples.
+
+14. Could handle poisonous reptiles with impunity.
+
+15. Cured all manner of diseases.
+
+16. Restored sight to the blind.
+
+17. He "cast out devils."
+
+18. Jamblicus says he could allay storms on the sea.
+
+19. Raised several persons from the dead.
+
+20. And, finally, "a thousand other wonderful things are told of him,"
+says Jamblicus.
+
+With respect to his character, it is said that "for humility, and
+practical goodness, and the wisdom of his moral precepts, he stood
+without a rival." He discarded bloody sacrifices, discouraged wars,
+forbade the use of wine and other intoxicating drinks, enjoined the
+forgiveness of enemies and their kind treatment, and also respect to
+parents. He was a special friend to the poor, and taught that they
+were the favorites of God. "Blessed are ye poor." He practiced and
+recommended the silent worship of God. He retired from the world, and
+often fasted, and was a great enemy to riches (like Jesus Christ). He
+considered poverty a virtue, and despised the pomp of the world. He
+recommended (like Christ) the abandonment of parents, relations, and
+friends, houses and lands, &c., for religion's sake. His disciples, like
+those of Christ, had a common treasury and a general community of goods,
+to which all had free access, so that there was no poverty or suffering
+amongst them while the supply lasted. All shared alike. In fact, with
+respect to the spirit of his precepts, his moral lessons, and nearly his
+whole practical life, he bore a striking resemblance to Jesus Christ,
+and presented the same kind of evidence, and equally convincing
+evidence, of being a God. And as he was born into the world five hundred
+and fifty-four years before Christ, the latter probably obtained the
+materials of his moral system from that Grecian teacher, or in the same
+school of the Essenian Budhists, in which both Pythagoras and Christ
+appear to have taken lessons.
+
+
+MIRACLES OF THE ROMAN GODS QUIRINUS AND PROMETHEUS.
+
+1. Prometheus was honored with a miraculous birth.
+
+2. Quirinus was miraculously preserved in infancy, when threatened with
+destruction by the tyrant ruler Amulius.
+
+3. He performed the miracles, according to Seneca and Hesiod, of curing
+the sick, restoring the blind, raising the dead, and casting out devils.
+
+4. Both these Gods were crucified amid signs, and wonders, and miracles.
+
+5. All nature was convulsed, and the saints arose when they were
+crucified.
+
+6. The sun was also darkened, and refused to shine.
+
+7. Both descended to hell, and rose from it by divine power.
+
+8. And Prometheus was seen to ascend to heaven.
+
+We cite these lists of miraculous events as if real facts, not because
+we believe they were such, but as possessing the same degree of
+credibility as those related of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+MIRACLES AND RELIGION OF APOLLONIUS OF TYANA.
+
+1. Everything was subject to his miraculous power.
+
+2. He performed many miraculous cures.
+
+3. He restored sight to the blind.
+
+4. He cast out devils, which sometimes "cut up" like those of Christ
+
+5. He enabled the lame to walk.
+
+6. He re-animated the dead.
+
+7. He could read the thoughts of bystanders.
+
+8. Sometimes disappeared in a miraculous manner.
+
+9. Caused a tree to bloom, while Christ made another tree to wither
+away.
+
+10. The laws of nature obeyed him.
+
+11. Could speak in many languages he had never learned.
+
+12. Was at one time transfigured, like Christ
+
+13. His birth was miraculously foretold by an angel.
+
+14. Was born of a spotless virgin.
+
+15. There were demonstrations of joy and singing at his birth.
+
+16. Exhibited proofs in infancy of being a God.
+
+17. Manifested extraordinary wisdom in childhood.
+
+18. He was called "the Son of God."
+
+19. Also "the image of the Eternal Father manifested in the flesh."
+
+20. He was also styled "a prophet."
+
+21. Like Christ, he retired into mystic silence.
+
+22. His religion was one of exalted spirituality.
+
+23. He taught the doctrine of "the Inner Life."
+
+24. He possessed exalted views of purity and holiness.
+
+25. Like Christ, he was a religious ascetic.
+
+26. His religion, as in the case of Christ, forbade him to marry.
+
+27. He ate no animal food, and would wear no woolen garments.
+
+28. Gave his substance to the poor.
+
+29. Eschewed love for wine and women.
+
+30. Refrained from artificial ornaments and sumptuous living.
+
+31. He was a high-toned moral reformer.
+
+32. He condemned external sacrifices.
+
+33. Also condemned gladiatorial shows.
+
+34. He religiously opposed dancing and sexual pleasures.
+
+35. He recommended the pursuit of wisdom.
+
+36. Was of a serene temper, and never got angry.
+
+37. Was a true prophet, foresaw and foretold many future events.
+
+38. Foresaw a plague, and stopped it after it had commenced.
+
+39. Crowds were attracted by his great miracles and his wisdom.
+
+40. He disputed with and vanquished the wise men of Greece and Asia, as
+Christ did the learned doctors in the temple.
+
+41. When imprisoned by Domitian and loaded with chains, he disinthralled
+himself by divine power.
+
+42. He was followed by crowds when entering Alexandria, like Christ when
+entering Jerusalem.
+
+43. Was crucified amidst a display of divine power.
+
+44. He rose from the dead.
+
+45. Appeared to his disciples after his resurrection.
+
+46. Like Christ, he convinced a Tommy Didymus by getting him to feel the
+print of the nails in his hands and feet.
+
+47. Was seen by many witnesses after his resurrection, and was hailed by
+them as the "God Incarnate," "the Lord from Heaven."
+
+48. He finally ascended back to heaven, and now "sits at the right hand
+of the Father," pleading for a sinful world.
+
+49. When he entered the temple of Diana, "a voice from above was heard
+saying, 'Come to heaven."
+
+50. Accordingly he was seen no more on earth only as a spirit
+
+The reader will observe that the foregoing list of analogies, drawn from
+the history of Apollonius, as furnished us by his disciple Damos and his
+biographer Philostratus, are found also, in almost every particular, in
+the history of Jesus Christ. And the list might have been extended.
+It is declared, "A beauty shone in his countenance, and the words he
+uttered were divine," which reminds us of Christ's transfiguration. And
+his "staying a plague at Ephesus" revives the case of Christ stilling
+the tempest on the waters. Now, the question very naturally arises here,
+How came the histories of Apollonius and Christ to be so strikingly
+alike? Was one plagiarized from the other? As for the miraculous history
+of Apollonius being reconstructed from that of Jesus Christ, as some
+Christians have assumed, there is not the slightest foundation for such
+a conclusion, as the following facts will show, viz.:--
+
+1. The Cappadocian Savior (Apollonius) was born several years anterior
+to the advent of the Christian Savior, and appeared at an earlier date
+upon the stage of active life, and thus got the start of Christ in
+the promulgations of his doctrines and the exhibition of his miracles.
+Christ's active life, Christians concede and the bible proves, did not
+commence till about his twenty-eighth or thirtieth year, which was long
+after Apollonius had inaugurated his religion, and long after he had
+commenced the promulgation of his doctrines, and attested them by
+wonderful miracles, according to his biographer Philostratus.
+
+2. The New American Cyclopedia tells us, "Apollonius labored for the
+purity of Paganism, and to sustain its tottering edifice against the
+assaults of the Christians." So that, being placed in a hostile attitude
+toward the representatives of the Christian faith, it is not likely he
+would condescend to borrow their doctrines and the miraculous history of
+their incarnate God, to invest his own life with. He was probably one of
+the "anti-Christs" spoken of in the New Testament; but this circumstance
+reflects nothing dishonorable upon his character; for some of those
+distinguished personages denounced as "anti-Christ," by Christ's gospel
+biographers, were, according to impartial history, noble, honest, and
+righteous men. Their only offense consisted in robbing Christ of his
+divine laurels, by claiming similar titles, and claiming to perform the
+same kind of miracles; and there is as much proof that they did achieve
+these prodigies as that Christ did.
+
+3. The early Christian writers conceded that Apollonius and the other
+oriental Gods did perform the miracles which are ascribed to them
+by their respective disciples, but accounted for it by the childish
+expedient of obsession. Christ was assumed to perform miracles by
+divine power, they by the power of the devil--a childish and senseless
+distinction truly, and one which can have no logical force in this
+enlightened age.
+
+
+MIRACLES AND CLAIMS FOR SIMON MAGUS. B. C.
+
+1. It is declared, "he was in the beginning with God."
+
+2. That "he existed with God from all eternity."
+
+3. That "he took upon himself the form of a man."
+
+4. That "he was the Son of God," "the Word," &c.
+
+5. That "he was the second person in the godhead."
+
+6. That "he came down to destroy the devil and his works."
+
+7. That "he was the image of the Eternal Father."
+
+8. That "he was the first-born Son of God."
+
+9. That he could control the elements.
+
+10. That he could walk on the air as Christ did on the water.
+
+11. Could move anything by the command, "Be thou removed."
+
+12. That he could raise the dead.
+
+13. That he could transform himself into the image of any man.
+
+14. That he was "the Paraclete, or Comforter."
+
+15. That he came to "redeem the world from sin."
+
+16. Finally, he was the world's "Savior," "Redeemer," "the Only Begotten
+of the Father," and "through his name men are to be saved."
+
+The reader will call to mind that this Simon Magus is mentioned and
+condemned in the Acts of the Apostles, for offering to pay Peter for a
+bestowment of the gift of the Holy Ghost. And yet every philosopher
+in this age must concede that Magus' assumption in the case is more
+sensible and philosophical than that of Peter's. For the latter calls it
+"a gift from God," whereas every person now acquainted with the
+nature, principles, and science of animal magnetism, knows that such
+manifestation as that which Peter ascribes to God and the Holy Ghost, is
+a simple natural phenomenon; and that, consequently, it can be no more a
+violation of the rules of propriety to pay for the labor of making such
+developments than it is to pay a teacher for developing the mind of a
+child. It was certainly a greater act of courtesy to offer to pay for
+it than to demand it as a gratuitous favor. Hence we infer he excelled
+Peter in his demeanor as a gentleman, especially as he bore Peter's
+severe reprimand with patience, and apparently with a better spirit
+than that which dictated it. And we may remark here, also, that
+notwithstanding this Samaritan Jew is so unsparingly denounced by the
+godly Peter, and by the early Christian fathers also, yet we have the
+historical proof that he was an Honest, pious, and ardently devout man.
+His whole life was absorbed in the cause of religion, and his whole soul
+devoted to his religious duties and the worship of his God. Hence we
+think Peter's rebuke was uncalled for.
+
+Let the reader note the fact here that there are three circumstances
+amply sufficient to account for bibles and religious books being
+profusely supplied with the reports of groundless miracles.
+
+1. As everybody then believed in miracles (at least everybody who dared
+speak) there was nobody to investigate the reports of such occurrences,
+to learn whether they were true or false.
+
+2. The few who attempted to disprove the truth of those miraculous
+occurrences now found reported in sacred history, had their books
+burned, as in the case of Porphyry and Celsus, in the early history of
+Christianity, who called in question the truth of bible miracles.
+
+3. These marvelous facts were not usually recorded till long after the
+period in which they are said to have occurred, when the witnesses had
+left the stage of time, and every event exciting ay attention had grown
+to a monstrous prodigy. These circumstances, in an age of boundless
+credulity and scientific ignorance, which magnified every phenomenon,
+and looked upon every natural event as a direct display of divine power,
+accounts most fully and satisfactorily for the burdensome repetition of
+groundless miraculous stories found upon nearly every page of the sacred
+history of every religious nation, without driving us to the necessity
+of challenging the veracity of the writers who recorded them. They may
+all have been honest men.
+
+
+CONFUCIUS OF CHINA, BORN 551 B. C.
+
+This moral teacher, religious chieftain, and philosopher, though not
+subjected to the ignominious death of the cross, deserves a passing
+notice for the excellency of his morals and the acquisition of a
+world-wide fame. In the following particulars his history bears a strong
+analogy to that of Jesus Christ.
+
+1. He commenced as a religious teacher when about thirty years of age.
+
+2. The Golden Rule (see Chap. XXXIV.) was his favorite maxim.
+
+3. Most of his moral maxims were sound and of a high order. The New
+American Cyclopedia says (vol. v. p. 604), "His writings approach the
+Christian standard of morality;" and in some respects they excel.
+
+4. He traveled in different countries, preaching and teaching his
+doctrines.
+
+5. He made a host of converts, amounting now to one hundred and fifty
+millions.
+
+6. His religion and morals have been propagated by apostles and
+missionaries, some of whom are now traveling in this country, laboring
+to convert Christians to their superior religion and morals. "There was
+a time," says the work above quoted, "when European philosophers vied
+with each other in extolling Confucius as one of the sublimest teachers
+of truth among mankind."
+
+In the following respects his teachings were superior to those of
+Christ:--
+
+1. He taught that "the knowledge of one's self is the basis of all real
+advances in morals and manners." A lesson Christ neglected to teach.
+
+2. "The duties man owes to society and himself are minutely defined by
+Confucius," says the Cyclopedia. Another important work Christ partially
+omitted.
+
+He constructed several hundred beautiful and instructive moral maxims,
+which we have not space for here, and which amply prove that "the
+holiest truths were inculcated by pagan philosophers."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV. THE THREE PILLARS OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH--MIRACLES,
+PROPHECIES, AND PRECEPTS
+
+WHEN Christians are asked for the proof of the divinity of Jesus Christ,
+they point to his miracles and precepts, and the Messianic prophecies,
+said to have been fulfilled by his coming. And the same kind of evidence
+is adduced to prove the divine claims of their bible and its religion,
+including the Old Testament, which contains the prophecies. Their
+divine origin and supernatural character are claimed to be proved by the
+miracles, prophecies, and precepts found recorded in the Holy Book. All,
+then, stand or fall together--the divinity of Christ, and the divinity
+of the bible and its religion, all, rest on this threefold argument.
+All, it is claimed, are attested and proved by a threefold display of
+divine power, manifested,--
+
+1. By the performance of various acts, transcending human power and the
+laws of nature, called Miracles.
+
+2. By the discernment of events lying in the future which no human
+sagacity or prescience could have foreseen, unless aided by Omniscience;
+the display of such power being called Prophecy.
+
+3. By the enunciation of Moral Precepts beyond the mental capacity of
+human beings to originate.
+
+These three propositions cover the whole ground. They constitute the
+three grand pillars of the Christian faith, which, if shown to be
+untenable, must prostrate the whole superstructure to the ground. We
+will examine each separately, commencing with miracles.
+
+I. Miracles the first Pillar of the Christian Faith.
+
+We will not occupy space in discussing the various meanings assigned to
+the word miracle by different writers, but take the popular definition
+as given above, and proceed to inquire how much evidence can be deduced
+from the miracles represented as having been performed by Jesus Christ,
+toward proving his divinity and the truth of his religion. In the first
+place, it should be borne in mind that Christianity is not the only
+religion which appeals to miracles as a proof of its divine authorship.
+More than three hundred systems and sects are reported in history, most
+of which have, from time immemorial, gloried in being able to wield this
+knock-down argument as they claim it to be, in support of the truth and
+divine authenticity of their various systems of faith. We have briefly
+noticed some of the miraculous achievements reported in their sacred
+books, and ascribed to their Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, and compare
+them with similar ones related of Jesus Christ, commencing with Pagan
+Miracles.
+
+As the whole pathway of religious history is thickly be-studded with
+miracles wrought in all ages and countries, and every page of the
+oriental bibles and religious books is literally loaded down with the
+relation of these marvelous prodigies said to have been wrought by their
+Gods, Demigods, and crucified Saviors, it places a writer in a quandary
+to know where to begin to make a selection. We will express no opinion
+here as to whether these astounding feats were ever witnessed or not;
+but will merely state that they come to us as well authenticated as
+those reported in the Christian bible. There is as much evidence that
+Zoroaster, at the request of King Gustaph, caused a tree to spring up
+in a man's yard forthwith, of such magnificent proportions that no rope
+could be found large enough to reach around it, as that Jesus Christ
+caused a fig tree to wither away by merely cursing it. And we have
+the same kind of evidence that the Hindoo Messiah, Chrishna, of
+India, restored two boys to life who had been killed by the bites of
+serpents, as that Jesus Christ resurrected Lazarus and the widow's son
+of Nain; and as much proof that Bacchus turned water into wine, as that
+Jesus performed this act six hundred years after. And a hundred other
+similar comparisons might be drawn. The evidence of the truth of these
+performances in both cases, pagan and Christian, is simply the report
+of the writer. If there are any exceptions to be made in either case of
+better evidence, it will be found in favor of pagan religion; for its
+adherents are able in many cases to point to imperishable monuments of
+stone erected in commemoration of their miracles. And Mr. Goodrich tells
+us this is the highest species of evidence that can be offered to prove
+the truth of any ancient event. But as Christians, on the other hand,
+can find no such evidence to prove the performance of any miracles
+reported in their bible, it will be seen at once that the pagan miracles
+are the best authenticated. The famous historian Pausanias states upon
+current authority that Esculapius raised several persons from the
+dead, and names Hippolytus among the number, and then points to a
+stone monument erected as a proof of the occurrence--thus furnishing,
+according to Christian logic, the most conclusive proof of one of the
+most astounding miracles ever wrought. And yet no philosopher or man
+of science in this age can credit the literal truth of the story. But a
+spiritualist can easily conceive that he and others might have mistaken
+the risen spirits of those resurrected persons for their physical
+bodies, because they know that many mistakes of this kind have occurred
+in modern times.
+
+We might refer to many other cases of pagan miracles attested by
+monumental evidence if our space would permit--such as the names of many
+persons engraven upon the walls of the Temple of Serapis, miraculously
+carved by the God Esculapius. Strabo tells us the ancient temples are
+full of tablets describing miraculous cures performed by virgin-born
+Gods of those times, and names a case of two blind men being restored to
+sight by the son of God Alcides in the presence of a large multitude
+of people, "who acknowledged the miraculous power of the God with
+loud acclaim." Many spiritualists at the present day know by practical
+experience how these "miraculous cures" were performed. Without
+continuing the citation of cases, suffice it to say, the sin-atoning
+Gods of the orientals are reported as performing the same train of
+miracles assigned to Jesus Christ, such as performing astonishing cures,
+casting out devils, raising the dead, &c. Now, sadly warped indeed by
+education must be that mind which cannot see that if the account of
+such prodigies, reported in the history of Jesus Christ, can do anything
+towards proving him to have been a God, then the world must have been
+full of Gods long before his time. It is impossible to dodge or evade
+such a conclusion.
+
+Christians are in the habit of assuming that all the miraculous reports
+in the bible are unquestionably true, while those reported in pagan
+bibles are mere fables and fiction. But if they will reverse this
+proposition, it can be easier supported, because we have shown their
+miracles are better attested and authenticated. Their own bible admits
+that the heathen not only could and did perform miracles, but miraculous
+prodigies of the most astonishing character, equal to anything reported
+in their own religious history--such as transmuting water into blood,
+sticks into serpents, and stones into frogs. In a word, it is admitted
+they performed all the miraculous feats of Moses with the single
+exception of turning dust into lice. But certainly making lice was not
+a more difficult achievement than that of making frogs, and this is
+admitted they did do successfully.
+
+Hence it will be seen that the Egyptian pagans made as great a display
+of divine or miraculous power as "God's Holy People," according to the
+admission of the bible itself. And there is no intimation that the mode
+of performing the miracles was not the same in both cases, but a strong
+probability exists that it was, a conclusion confirmed by the bible
+report of the case which leads us to infer that they performed the
+miracles in the same way Moses did. For it is said, "The Egyptians did
+so with their enchantments"--that is, with the "enchanting rod" used
+on such occasions by the Egyptians, Assyrians, Babylonians, and other
+nations, including also the Jews. Now, as Moses always used the
+"enchanting rod" in performing miracles, called by him "the rod of God,
+the rod of divination," &c. (see Ex. iv. ), there is thus furnished the
+most satisfactory proof that he performed his miracles on this occasion,
+as well as all other occasions, by the same stratagem as the Egyptians
+and other nations did. And even if the mode adopted by the Egyptians had
+been different, it is still admitted they performed the miracles. In
+the name of reason and common sense, then, we ask if such facts as here
+presented with the case just referred to do not forever prostrate and
+annihilate all arguments based on miracles toward proving the divine
+character or divine origin of the religion of the bible, or towards
+proving
+
+Jesus Christ, or any other being reported to have performed miracles, as
+possessing divine attributes?
+
+
+CATHOLIC MIRACLES.
+
+Some of the most astonishing and best authenticated miracles ever
+performed by any religious sect we find reported in the history of the
+Roman Catholic church, looked upon and styled by the Protestants "the
+mother of Harlots and Abomination." And yet there is much stronger proof
+that the Catholic religion has the divine sanction, if miracles can
+furnish such proof. The editor of "The Official Memoirs" declares that
+during the Italian war in 1797, several pictures of the virgin Mary,
+situated in different parts of the country, were seen to open and shut
+their eyes for the space of six or seven months, and that no less than
+sixty thousand people actually saw this miracle performed, including
+many bishops, deacons, cardinals, and other officers of the church,
+whose names are given. And Forsyth's Italy (p. 344), written by a highly
+accredited author, tells us that a withered elm tree was suddenly
+restored to full life and vigor by coming in contact with the body of
+St. Zenobis, and that this miracle took place in the most public part
+of the town, in the presence of many thousands of people; that "it is
+recorded by contemporary historians, and inscribed upon a marble column
+now standing where the tree stood."
+
+Now, the question may be asked here, Would the people have allowed such
+an impudent trick to insult them as the erection of a monument for an
+event that never took place? If not, how is the matter to be explained?
+These are only specimens of a hundred more Catholic miracles of an
+astonishing character at our command. Several queries may be entertained
+in the solution of these stories. 1st, Were some phenomena really
+witnessed on which these stories were constructed, but which got
+magnified from a molehill to a mountain before they found their way
+into history? or, 2d, Were they manufactured as a pious fraud, which was
+rather a fashionable business with the early disciples of the Christian
+faith, according to Mr. Mosheim? Whatever answer may be given to these
+questions will explain the miracles of the Christian bible, excepting
+those which can be accounted for on natural principles.
+
+
+SATANIC MIRACLES.
+
+Among all the workers of miracles reported in the bible the devil seems
+to have been pre-eminent, and hence must come in for the better end of
+the argument toward proving him to have been a God. No miracle could
+excel the act of his "transforming himself into an angel of light," as
+stated in 2 Cor. xi. 14. It is not transcended by any other case, not
+even by Christ's transfiguration. And according to Paul he was endowed
+"with all power, and signs, and lying wonders." (Thess. ii. 9.) If,
+then, he possessed "all power," Christ, and no other God, could have
+possessed a miraculous power superior to his, for "all" comprehends the
+whole, beyond which nothing can reach. Where, then, is the evidence
+to come from to prove that Christ was a God, because he was
+a miracle-worker, or his religion divine, because attested by
+miracles--seeing the devil performed some of the most difficult miracles
+ever wrought? Should we not then change his title from that of a demon
+to a God, and place his religion amongst the divinely endowed systems?
+St. John represents the "Evil One" as having power to make "fire come
+down from heaven in the sight of men," and "to deceive those that dwell
+on the earth by means of those miracles which he hath power to do."
+(Rev. xiii.)
+
+Here the question arises, What can a miracle prove, what end can
+it serve, or what good can possibly arise from the display of the
+miracle-working power, when it is liable "to deceive those that
+dwell upon the earth?" Certainly, therefore, it proves nothing, and
+accomplishes nothing. And may not the apostles themselves have been
+deceived in ascribing some of the miracles they record to Jesus
+instead of the devil? Certainly we are drifted upon the quicksands of
+uncertainty by such a display of the miracle-working power, and are
+obnoxious to most fatal deception, which proves the total inutility and
+futility of such prodigies.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES NOT HIS OWN, BUT WROUGHT THROUGH HIM AND NOT BY HIM.
+
+How could Christ's miracles, assuming they were wrought, do anything
+toward proving his divinity, when he did not claim to be their author,
+but merely the agent or instrument in the hands of the Father, like the
+apostles, who are reported to have performed the same miracles? "The
+Father he doeth the work," is his own declaration. And the Apostles seem
+to have accepted his word, and his view of the matter. For proof listen
+to Peter: "Ye men of Israel, hear these words: Jesus of Nazareth, a man
+approved of God among you by miracles, and wonders, and signs, which
+God did by him in the midst of you, as ye yourselves do know." (Acts ii.
+22.) Let it be noted, then, the Christ's miracles were not performed by
+him as a God, but as "a man approved of God;" he was the mere medium or
+instrument in the case--a fact which banishes at once all grounds for
+controversy relative to his miracles serving the purpose of attesting
+his divinity, especially when it is conceded that men, magicians, and
+devils could achieve the same feats.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES DID NOT CONVINCE THE PEOPLE.
+
+As the miracles of Christ seem to have had little effect toward
+convincing the people of his claims to the godhead, it is evident they
+could have been but little superior to those performed by others, and
+therefore not designed, at least not calculated, to convince them that
+he was a God. The frequent instances in which he upbraids the people for
+their unbelief, and calls them fools, "slow of heart," &c., is a proof
+of this statement.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES NOT DESIGNED TO CONVINCE THE PEOPLE.
+
+A circumstance involving pretty strong proof that Christ's miraculous
+achievements were not considered as evidence of his divinity, is the
+fact that they were frequently performed in private, sometimes in the
+night, and often under the injunction of secrecy. "See thou tell no
+man," was the injunction, after the feat was performed, perhaps, in a
+private room. How can such facts be reconciled with the assumption that
+his miracles were designed to convince the people of his claims to the
+Divine Entity, as Christians frequently assert, when the people were not
+allowed to witness them, nor his disciples even to report them? Who
+can believe that he was a Divine Being, or Messiah, when he charged his
+disciples to "tell no man" that he was such a Being? Such incongruities
+verge to a contradiction. It is a logical contradiction to say that
+private miracles were designed to dissolve public skepticism. And yet
+many, if not most, of his reputed miraculous achievements were of this
+character. When he cured a blind man, he not only "led him out of the
+town" (Mark viii. 23), but forbid him, when his sight was restored,
+returning to the city, for fear he would publish it. When he resurrected
+Lazarus, he did not call the whole country around to witness it, but
+performed the act before a private party. The reanimation of Jairus's
+daughter was in the same concealed manner, in a private room, where
+nobody was admitted but his three confidential disciples (Peter, James,
+and John) and the parents, none of whom make any report of the case.
+How, therefore, the reporter (Mark) found it out, when he was not
+present, and none of the party were allowed to tell it to anybody, or
+why he should betray his trust by publishing it, if he was informed of
+it, is a "mystery of Godliness" not easily divined.
+
+When Christ cleansed the leper, he sent him to the priest, enjoining him
+to "say nothing to any man." The dumb, when restored to speech, was not
+allowed to exhibit any practical proof of the fact by using his tongue.
+His miraculous perambulation on the surface of the sea (walking on
+the water) was not only alone, but in the dark. His transfiguration,
+likewise, according to Dr. Barnes, took place in the night, his three
+favorite companions being the only witnesses, and they "heavy with
+sleep." And finally, the crowning miracle of all, the resurrection,
+is not only represented as taking place in the night, but without one
+substantial or terrestrial witness to report it. Verily such facts as
+these are not calculated to augment the faith jr work the conviction
+of a skeptic that these miracles were ever performed, seeing so few are
+reported as witnessing them, and even their testimony is not given. We
+have not the testimony of one person who claims to have been present and
+seen these wonders performed. Such facts are calculated to cast distrust
+upon the whole matter, especially when taken in connection with the
+fact that nine tenths of his life form a perfect blank in history. Is
+it possible, we ask, to reconcile such a fact with the belief of his
+divinity? Is it possible a God could lead a private life, or live
+twenty-seven years on earth, and do nothing worthy of note--a God known
+to nobody and noticed by nobody? Most transcendingly absurd is such a
+thought. Had Christ possessed the character that is claimed for him, not
+an hour of his life could have passed unaccompanied by some remarkable
+incident that would have been heralded abroad, and its record indelibly
+engraven upon the page of history; but instead of this, his acts were
+too commonplace to be noticed.
+
+
+ALL HISTORY IGNORES HIM.
+
+The fact that no history, sacred or profane,--that not one of the three
+hundred histories of that age,--makes the slightest allusion to Christ,
+or any of the miraculous incidents ingrafted into his life, certainly
+proves, with a cogency that no logic can overthrow, no sophistry can
+contradict, and no honest skepticism can resist, that there never was
+such a miraculously endowed being as his many orthodox disciples claim
+him to have been. The fact that Christ finds no place in the history of
+the era in which he lived,--that not one event of his life is recorded
+by anybody but his own interested and prejudiced biographers,--settles
+the conclusion, beyond cavil or criticism, that the godlike achievements
+ascribed to him are naught but fable or fiction. It not only proves
+he was not miraculously endowed, but proves he was not even naturally
+endowed to such an extraordinary degree as to make him an object of
+general attention. It would be a historical anomaly without a precedent,
+that Christ should have performed any of the extraordinary acts
+attributed to him in the Gospels, and no Roman or Grecian historian, and
+neither Philo nor Josephus, both writing in that age, and both living
+almost on the spot where they are said to have been witnessed, and both
+recording minutely all the religious events of that age and country,
+make the slightest mention of one of them, nor their reputed authors.
+Such a historical fact banishes the last shadow of faith in their
+reality.
+
+It is true a few lines are found in one of Josephus's large works
+alluding to Christ. But it is so manifestly a forgery, that we believe
+all modern critics of any note, even of the orthodox school, reject it
+as a base interpolation. Even Dr. Lardner, one of the ablest defenders
+of the Christian faith that ever wielded a pen in its support, and who
+has written ten large volumes to bolster it up, assigns nine cogent
+reasons (which we would insert here if we had space) for the conclusion
+that Josephus could not have penned those few lines found in his
+"Jewish Antiquities" referring to Christ. No Jew could possibly use such
+language. It would be a glaring absurdity to suppose a leading Jew
+could call Jesus "The Christ," when the whole Jewish nation have ever
+contested the claim with the sternest logic, and fought it to the bitter
+end. "It ought, therefore" (says Dr. Lardner, for the nine reasons which
+he assigns), "to be forever discarded from any place among the evidences
+of Christianity." (Life of Lardner by Dr. Kippis, p. 23.)
+
+As the passage is not found in any edition of Josephus prior to the era
+of Eusebius, the suspicion has fastened upon that Christian writer as
+being its author, who argued that falsehood might be used as a medicine
+for the benefit of the churches. (See his Eccles. Hist.) Origen, who
+lived before Eusebius, admitted Josephus makes no allusion to Christ. Of
+course the passage was not, then, in Josephus. One or two other similar
+passages have been found, in other authors of that era, which it is not
+necessary to notice here, as they are rejected by Christian writers. It
+must be conceded, therefore, that the numerous histories covering the
+epoch of the birth of Christ chronicle none of the astounding feats
+incorporated in his Gospel biographies as signalizing his earthly
+career, and make no mention of the reputed hero of these achievements,
+either by name or character. The conclusion is thus irresistibly forced
+upon us, not only that he was not a miracle-worker, but that he must
+have led rather an obscure life, entirely incompatible with his being
+a God or a Messiah, who came "to draw all men unto him." And it should
+also be noted here that none of Christ's famous biographers, Matthew,
+Mark, Luke, or John, are honored with a notice in history till one
+hundred and ninety years after the birth of Christ. And then the notice
+was by a Christian writer (Ireneus).
+
+"We look in vain," says a writer, "for any cotemporary notice of the
+Gospels, or Christ the subject of the Gospels, outside of the New
+Testament. So little was this 'king of the Jews' known, that the Romans
+were compelled to pay one of his apostles to turn traitor and act as
+guide before they could find him. It is impossible to observe this
+negative testimony of all history against Christ and his miracles, and
+not be struck with amazement, and seized with the conviction that he
+was not a God, and not a very extraordinary man." Who can believe that a
+God, from off the throne of heaven, could make his appearance on earth,
+and while performing the most astounding miracles ever recorded in
+any history, or that ever excited the credulity of any people, and be
+finally publicly crucified in the vicinity of a great city, and yet all
+the histories written in those times, both sacred and profane, pass over
+with entire silence the slightest notice of any of these extraordinary
+events. Impossible--most self-evidently impossible!! And when we find
+that this omission was so absolute that no record was made of the day or
+year of his birth by any person in the era in which he lived, and that
+they were finally forgotten, and hence that there are, as a writer
+informs us, no less then one hundred and thirty-three different opinions
+about the matter, the question assumes a still more serious aspect. From
+the logical potency of these facts we are driven to the conclusion that
+Christ received but little attention outside of the circle of his own
+credulous and interested followers, and consequently stands on a level
+with Chrishna of India, Mithra of Persia, Osiris of Egypt, and other
+demigods of antiquity, all whose miraculous legends were ingrafted in
+their histories long after their death. This leads us to consider
+
+
+HOW CHRIST'S INCREDIBLE LEGENDS GOT INTO HIS HISTORY.
+
+There is a remarkably easy and satisfactory way of accounting for
+all the marvelous feats and incredible stories found in the Gospel
+narratives of Jesus Christ, without assuming their reality or any
+intentional fraud or falsehood by the writers. When we learn that none
+of his evangelical biographies were penned (as Dr. Lardner affirms)
+till long after his death, we are no longer puzzled for a moment to
+understand exactly how many statements wholly incredible and morally
+impossible crept into his history, without challenging or calling
+in question the veracity or honesty of the writer. Perhaps the most
+powerful cord of moral conviction which holds the Christian professor to
+a belief in the divinity of Jesus Christ, is the difficulty of bringing
+himself to believe that the numerous miracles ascribed to him in the
+Gospels are merely the work of fiction, fabricated without a basis of
+truth, when they were evidently penned by men of the deepest piety and
+the strictest moral integrity. We ourselves were once environed
+with this difficulty. But it stands in our way no longer. We are
+disenthralled. We have solved the problem. We have found the true
+explanation. The key and clew to the whole secret is found in the simple
+fact, admitted by Christian writers and evidenced by the bible itself,
+that _no history of Christ's practical life was written out by a person
+claim-ing to have been an eyewitness_ of the events reported, nor until
+every incident and act of the noble-minded Nazarene had had ample
+time to become enormously magnified and distorted by rumor, fable, and
+fiction; so that it was impossible to discriminate or separate the real
+from the unreal, the true from the false, in his partly-forgotten life.
+It could not be done. A true history could not then be, nor have been
+written under such circumstances. It is manifestly impossible. The
+time for writing each Gospel is fixed by Dr. Lardner as follows, viz.:
+Matthew 62 A. D., Mark 64 A. D., Luke 63 or 64 A. D., and John 68 A. D.;
+thus allowing ample time for every noteworthy incident of his life to
+grow from molehills to mountains, and to swell into fiction, fable, and
+prodigy, a tendency to which was then very rife and very prevalent in
+all religious countries. Having made a note of this fact, let the
+reader treasure in memory, as another equally important fact, that the
+biography of no man of note who figured in that era, or who lived prior
+to the dawn of letters (if penned many years after his death, as was
+frequently the case), is free from a large percentage of extravagant
+detail, and simple incidents magnified into miracles. This was the
+uncurbed tendency of the age which ultimated into universal custom.
+
+The simplest incident in every man's life, who exhibited mind enough to
+attract attention, by rolling from year to year, and passing from mouth
+to mouth, invariably got to be finally swelled into such undue and
+enormous proportions, that it could only be accounted for by assuming
+the actor to have been a God. In this way many men of different
+countries, who had made a mark in the world, received divine honors
+and divine attributes, including such characters as Chrishna of India,
+Mithra of Persia, Quirinus of Rome, Eras of the Druids, Quexalcote of
+Mexico, Jesus Christ of Judea, and many others who might be mentioned.
+This circumstance deified them. The evidence of history to prove this
+declaration is abundant and irresistible.
+
+
+POSTHUMOUS HISTORIES ALONE DEIFIED MEN.
+
+To the two important facts above cited, viz., that Jesus Christ's
+evangelical histories were all written long after his death, and that
+unwritten histories of great men always become swollen and distorted
+with the lapse of time, let the reader add the equally significant
+fact that there is in all cases a vast difference in the biographies of
+famous men, penned during their actual lives, or immediately subsequent
+to their death, while every act and incident of their career was fresh
+and vigorous in the minds and memories of the cotemporaneous people,
+and before the ball of exaggerated rumor was set rolling, compared
+with those written at a later date, after molehills of fact had become
+mountains of fiction. The former are natural and reasonable, the latter
+unnatural and extravagant, and often fabulous. We will cite a few cases
+in proof. Let the reader compare the biographical sketches of Alexander
+the Great written near the epoch of his practical life, and those
+composed since the dawn of the Christian era, and he will find that the
+posthumous notices of him alone contain the story of the sun becoming
+obscured, and the earth developed in darkness, at the time of his mortal
+exit. It will be found, also, that Virgil's account of "the sheeted
+dead," rising from their graves at the time of Caesar's death, and which
+was written long after that famous hero left the stage of action, is
+omitted in all the cotemporary notices of that monarch, having crept in
+subsequently.
+
+In like manner, the various miracles recorded of Pythagoras by his
+biographer Jamblicus,--such as his walking on the air, stilling
+the tempest, raising the dead, &c.,--are not related of him by any
+cotemporaneous writers who lived in the era of his practical life. And
+let the reader compare, also, Damos' life of Apollonius with that of
+his later biography by Philostratus, as an illustration of the same
+historical fact. Mahomet and his biograhers might be included in the
+same category. It is a remarkable circumstance that neither Mahomet
+himself nor any of his immediate followers claim for him more than
+the humble title of prophet, or "God's holy prophet," while his later
+admirers and devout disciples have elevated him to the throne of heaven,
+and given him a seat among the Gods.
+
+And this historical analysis might be extended much farther if
+necessary. But cases enough have been cited to prove the principle and
+establish the proposition. And what is the lesson taught by these
+facts? A deeply-instructive and all-important one. From the foregoing
+historical illustrations we are impelled to the important conclusion,
+that the tissue of extravagant and incredible stories of demigod
+performances which run as a vein of fiction through the Gospel
+narrations of Jesus Christ, all grow out of long-continued rumor, in
+an age when the imagination was untamed and unbounded, and credulity
+uncurbed by a practical knowledge of the principles of science, and
+consequently the pen of the historian had lawless scope. All difficulty
+then vanishes, and the question is put forever at rest by assuming that
+if the Gospel histories of Jesus had been written by men who claimed to
+record only what they saw and heard themselves, we should have a more
+credible and instructive history of the great Judean reformer, freed
+from those Munchausen prodigies and that wild romance which mar the
+beauty and credibility of those now in popular use. This conclusion is
+not only natural, but irresistible, to a mind untrammeled by education
+and unbefogged by priestcraft. All that is wanting to convince us
+that miracles constitute no part of the real history of Christ, is a
+cotemporary instead of a posthumous biography--a history written in the
+age which knew him, and by an unprejudiced writer who witnessed all his
+movements. And we are perfectly willing to risk our reputation in this
+life, and our salvation in the next, by stating our conviction that this
+will be the unanimous verdict of posterity before fifty generations pass
+away.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES RECONSTRUCTED FROM FORMER MIRACLES.
+
+There are other circumstances than those noticed in the preceding
+chapter, which can aid us very materially in solving the problem
+of Christ's divinity; or, in other words, can aid us in tracing his
+miracles to their origin, and thus confirm the truth of the preceding
+proposition. Moses and the prophets were considered by the evangelists
+antetypes or archetypes of the coming Savior. Hence some of the more
+important incidents of their lives were hunted up and worked over again,
+to make them fit the life of Christ as the Messiah, reconstructed and
+applied to him as the second Moses, and a new prophet; for Moses is
+represented as saying, "A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up
+like unto me." Hence Moses comes in with the prophets as an antetype of
+Christ. The transfiguration of Christ is therefore constituted after
+the model of the transfiguration of Moses on Mount Sinai. And Christ is
+represented as raising the dead, not only because Elijah and Elisha had
+performed such miracles, but did it under circumstances which prove,
+as they suppose, he possessed superior power. For while they could only
+reanimate the body immediately after the breath had left it, Christ
+could raise a man after he had been dead four days (the case of
+Lazarus). Hence the New Prophet was superior to the old, and more like
+a God--the thing they desired to prove. Both Elijah and Christ are
+represented as raising a widows son,--Elijah being considered the
+special prototype of Christ, who, many believed, had re-appeared under
+the changed name of Elias. (See John v. 17.) And then we observe that
+while Elisha exhausted his skill in making three gallons of oil, Christ
+could make thirty gallons of wine--another proof of the superiority of
+the New Prophet. Then, again, the miracle of feeding one hundred
+men with twenty loaves is far excelled by the latter, who feeds five
+thousand men with five loaves. And both prophets, Elisha and Christ,
+encountered unfordable streams in their travels; the expedient of the
+former is to make a passage, but Christ performed the greater miracle
+of walking on the surface. And while Moses had to send the leper without
+the camp before he could heal him, Christ could heal him instantly with
+a single touch. The same slaughter of the infants is commanded by Herod,
+in order to destroy Christ, that Pharaoh had ordered to effect the
+destruction of Moses. And thus many of the miracles of Jesus can be
+accounted for as reconstructions of former miracles. It was simply a
+competition or rivalry between the New Messianic prophet and the old
+prophets. The New Prophet excels and comes off victorious in every case,
+and is thus considered to be a God. The object of the competition is to
+show that while the prophets, assisted by God, could perform marvelous
+deeds, Christ, being God himself, could perform greater. This was to be
+the proof of his being a God, that he could outvie the servants of God
+in every miraculous thing ascribed to them. This was one way adopted to
+prove his divinity.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES MANUFACTURED FROM PROPHECIES.
+
+Several of Christs miracles seem to have grown out of the Messianic
+prophecies; that is, were manufactured in order to fulfill the
+prophecies. There was, as we learn by the Gospels, an impression deep
+and wide-spread among the disciples of Christ, that the Old Testament
+was full of texts foretelling the advent of their Messiah, and
+foreshadowing his practical life. Under this conviction, a number of
+passages are quoted in the Gospels from the prophets as referring to
+Christ, but which, however, the context shows could not possibly have
+been written with any such thought or intention. Matthew has five
+miracles appertaining to Christ, built on prophecies, in his first two
+chapters. And they are represented as taking place "in order that the
+prophecy might be fulfilled," that is, Matthew, writing sixty-four years
+after Christ's advent, assumes those miracles had taken place because
+the prophecy required their performance, and hence recorded it as a fact
+without knowing it to be such. A great deal of that kind of license was
+assumed in that and subsequent ages, as the facts of history are ample
+to prove. It was done under the religious conviction that the cause of
+God and the church required it to be done, and that therefore it was
+justifiable.
+
+
+STRICT VERACITY NOT REQUIRED OR OBSERVED.
+
+It is by no means necessary to assume that the recorders of the New
+Testament miracles knew they had been performed, or that they would
+hesitate to record them as facts because they did not know them to be
+such. We are under no moral obligation to suppose they knew anything
+about it. People in that age were not so nice or so morally exact, as
+to require proof of a thing before they stated it, or never to state it
+unless they had the proof for its being true. We would be Very far
+from accusing the apostolic writers of malicious falsehood, or criminal
+misrepresentation. But we find that the disciples of all religions, in
+that age of the world, considered it not only allowable, but a religious
+duty, in the absence of knowledge, to supply omissions by guess-work
+or conjecture; that is, to use assumption in the place of proof, and to
+state that a thing was so when there was no proof of it whatever, and
+even when the proof was against it. All religious history is full of the
+exhibition of this kind of elasticity of conscience. Even a species of
+pious lying was considered justifiable in many cases. Paul furnishes
+evidence of this, when he says, "If the truth of God hath more abounded
+through my lie unto his glory, why am I judged a sinner?" (Rom. iii.
+16.) "No sin to lie for the glory of God," seems to be the teaching of
+this text. Although Paul does not clearly disclose for what purpose
+this policy was employed, yet it can easily be inferred. A part of
+the important business of the New Testament writers was to build a
+reputation for Christ and his inspired band of disciples for working
+miracles. A fame for achieving "signs and wonders" was the great set
+off of the age. There seems to have been an almost boundless competition
+amongst the disciples of the various religious orders, including Jews,
+Pagans, and Christians, as to who could, or whose God could outstrip all
+competitors in achieving astonishing prodigies that should set the laws
+of nature at defiance. And no devout disciple, who had good inventive
+powers, would allow any rival to outdo him. Nothing could authenticate
+the claim of the adopted Messiah to the throne or heaven, or a
+participation in the Divine Essence, like a miraculous display of divine
+power. Hence the history of all the Gods and demi-gods of the illiterate
+ages, including that of Christ, is loaded down with miraculous feats.
+There is the clearest proof that Christ's disciples were in this general
+rivalry--this universal miracle-working _mêlée_.
+
+Two things very necessary to be accomplished, in the estimation of the
+apostles, were, first, to show that Christ outdid the heathen Gods,
+and even the prophets, in the display of the wonder-exciting miraculous
+power, and thus proved his divinity; and second, that the prophecies had
+been fulfilled in his coming and his practical life. And there is reason
+to believe all the New Testament miracles are founded on and grew out of
+prophecy. For, although we do not find prophecies in the Old Testament
+for every miracle related of Christ, yet it is probable, if we had the
+Book of God, "the Book of Jehu," "the Like of Hezekiah," and other
+lost books mentioned in the Old Testament, we should find the supposed
+prophecy for every miracle of the New Testament. We should there find
+the key to every miracle. The true explanation of the matter seems to
+be, that the apostolic writers, looking through the Old Testament, and
+finding texts therein which they believed to be prophetic of the display
+of the miraculous power of Jesus, and passages which they religiously
+believed foreshadowed his coming and mission, or some important event
+in his history, they were impressed with the deepest conviction that God
+would not suffer any prophecy to go unfulfilled. But when they sat down
+to write the history of their Messiah, long after his death, they found
+they had not the evidence before them that the prophecies had been
+fulfilled. A third of a century had rolled away since his history had
+been practically before the people. The subject of their narrative had
+long since gone to "the house of many mansions," and left not a note, or
+scratch of a pen, of any act of his life behind him. And the current of
+time had washed away, or partially obliterated, nearly every event
+of his earthly career. The witnesses had nearly all left the stage of
+action, and their voices were forever hushed in the silent tomb. What
+was to be done in such an emergency? It was all-important to show that
+the prophecies had been fulfilled to the letter in his practical life.
+This quandary, however, did not beset them long. The difficulty was
+easily surmounted. Every religious country, including Judea, was full
+of miraculous legends and astonishing prodigies appertaining to the
+terrestrial movements of their Gods and demigods, some of which had
+floated down on the stream of tradition from time immemorial. And all
+had become blended, confounded, and mixed up together, until it was
+impossible to know whence they originated, where they belonged, or to
+what God they appertained. These miraculous stories were so numerous,
+and so varied in character, that there was no little difficulty in
+finding which seemed to be the fulfillment of any Messianic prophecy
+that had been or might be found in the Old Testament; and thus of the
+hundreds of miraculous stories afloat, one was picked out and assumed
+to be the fulfillment of the prophecy. With the countless number of such
+stories before them, which had been for half a century current in the
+community, they set themselves to work to select and reject, prune and
+remodel, honestly believing that this miracle was intended to fulfill
+this prophecy, and that miracle that prophecy, &c. And accordingly we
+now find it so stated in the New Testament. As, for example, a story had
+long been going the rounds that the parents of a young God had to flee
+with him out of the country, to save his life from being destroyed by
+its jealous ruler. This they supposed must of course refer to Jesus,
+because they had found a supposed prophecy of such an event in the
+Jewish bible, when a more thorough acquaintance with history would have
+taught them that the story did not refer to the ruler of Judea (Herod),
+but to Cansa, an ancient, jealous, despotic king, who ruled India at a
+much earlier period. And the story of the darkness at the crucifixion
+they incorporated as a part of the history of Jesus, because they had
+seen a text in Joel which they supposed presaged such an event, while,
+if they had been well versed in oriental history, they would have known
+that it had long been recorded as the last chapter in the earthly drama
+of the Hindoo God Chrishna. And so of the other miracles now found
+related as a part of the history of Jesus. A historical investigation of
+the matter would have shown the Gospel writers that they were a part of
+the written history of other and more ancient Gods, and had never
+formed a part of the practical life of Jesus, or been realized in his
+experience. This is a more charitable and honorable explanation of the
+matter than that found in the assumption of some other writers, that
+every miracle was constructed for the occasion--that it is a sheer
+fabrication; and yet there are some plausible grounds for this solution
+of the case.
+
+These critical writers tell us there was a religious persuasion deeply
+enstamped upon the minds of all religious countries, that God often
+justified a departure from the truth--the conscientious or veracious
+faculty being in that age but feebly developed. And the bible itself
+is full of evidence to establish the allegation. The prophets often
+disclose it, and the apostles were their strict imitators. Ezekiel
+represents God as saying, "If a prophet is deceived, I the Lord deceived
+that prophet." (Ezek. xiv. 9.) And Jeremiah asks God, "Wilt thou be to
+me as a liar?" (Jer. xv. 8.) While the writer of Kings represents God
+as putting a lying spirit into the mouth of his own prophets, (i Kings
+xxii. 23.) And most certainly if God himself might thus habitually
+depart from the truth, it was an ample warrant for his apostles, as well
+as the prophets, to adopt the same expedient. The case of Paul lying for
+the glory of God, which we have cited from Romans iii. 4, proves they
+were morally capable of doing this. Mosheim tells us that among the
+early Christians, "it was an almost universally adopted maxim, that it
+was an act of virtue to deceive and lie, when by so doing they could
+promote the interest of the church." (Mosh. vol. i. p. 198.) And Mr.
+Higgins informs us that "great numbers, of every age and of every
+religion, have been guilty of systematic frauds and falsehoods
+to support their religions, to an extent of which we can have no
+conception. They not only practiced it, but they reduced it to system.
+They avowed it, and they justified it by declaring it to be meritorious
+to lie in a good cause." (Ana. vol. i. p. 143.) The reader who can
+hesitate to credit these statements only betrays his ignorance of the
+moral weakness of human nature, and the imperfect growth in that era of
+the veracious faculty, which consequently had but a feeble voice in
+the councils of the mind. Even the most pious and devout professors
+of religion did not consider a rigid conformity to truth necessary, or
+morally obligatory, in their labors to promote the glory of God and the
+salvation of souls. And when direct falsehood was not resorted to, the
+writer still allowed himself to color, magnify, and invent largely; that
+is, to draw copiously upon the resources of his imagination, in the way
+of supplying omissions and defects, and filling out missing links in the
+chain of history. And hence it is that all ancient sacred history is so
+profusely inlaid with stories and statements manifestly fabricated
+for the occasion, without any historical support, and therefore wholly
+incredible. Let the Christian reader not, however, misapprehend us by
+supposing we wish to drive him to the extreme alternative of accepting
+this as the true explanation, or as indicating the real origin of the
+incredible stories and senseless miraculous feats interwoven into the
+Gospel life of Jesus. We only offer it as a plausible, but not as the
+probable explanation. The above citations from the Scriptures and other
+history prove most clearly that sacred writers were morally capable of
+fabricating or manufacturing history to supply assumed omissions. And
+this explanation is twofold more reasonable than to accept the miracles
+as real occurrences, for such a belief would be at war with common
+sense, and prostrate our reason beneath our feet. But there is no
+necessity of adopting lying hypotheses, while the borrowing theory
+is amply adequate to account for every Gospel miracle. There is not a
+miraculous story or incredible legend incorporated in the New Testament
+as a part of the history of Jesus, that was not afloat in some shape or
+form, on the wings of tradition in nearly every religious country,
+ages before his birth. The model for each and every miracle was already
+constructed, was already in the market, and already a part of the
+history or tradition of other and older Gods. And all that was wanted
+to make it appear as a part of the history of the Christian's deified
+Jesus, was to fill in names and dates. Yes, history with a hundred
+tongues proclaims it as the real explanation of the incredible and
+the impossible in the history of Jesus Christ. And the evidence is so
+voluminous and so overwhelming to disprove the common Christian dogma
+which makes the son of Joseph and Mary a miracle-working God (a portion
+of which we have presented under the several propositions of this
+chapter), that it really demolishes the last timber in the Christian
+fabric, and leaves it a heap of ruins. And we are certain that if we
+could divest the Christian reader's mind, for a few moments, of an
+inherited and fostered prejudice, he would see that our explanation
+is much more rational, more probable, more beautiful than the popular
+belief, which degrades the illustrious Judean reformer to a level with
+the heathen thaumaturgist, and gives him the same undignified reputation
+as a miracle-worker.
+
+But we are sometimes told we are under as much moral obligation to
+believe in the miracles reported of Jesus, as to believe in any other
+portion of his history; that we must accept his Gospel history as a
+whole, or reject it in toto. But this is manifestly a false assumption,
+and one easily exploded. No person who is acquainted with Grecian
+history doubts that Alexander the Great was born in Macedonia, and
+founded a city in Egypt bearing his own name. Yet not one of those
+readers will credit for a moment what one of his biographers relates
+of him, that he stopped the sun in its course, or that he had no human
+father. We all accept Pythagoras as a real entity, while we reject the
+story of his walking on the air. Are we morally bound to accept Romulus
+and Remus, founders of Rome, as mere fabulous beings, because their
+biographers relate the incredible story of their being suckled by a
+wolf? Many other illustrations might be given in proof of the falsity of
+the assumption that, because a portion of a man's biography is found
+to be incredible, the whole must be rejected as false, as unworthy of
+credence. This would be to annihilate history. For no biography of any
+person, and no history of any nation, can be accepted as plenarily pure,
+unmixed truth. There is always more or less chaff with the grain, and it
+is our privilege and our duty to separate them. And by so doing we not
+only confer a favor on the cause of truth, but add to the luster and
+honor of the name of the deceased reformer; and especially is this true
+of the renowned Judean philanthropist and reformer. Much more lovely
+and beautiful would his evangelical history stand before the world
+if stripped of the wild, the weird, and the miraculous. Much more
+interesting is he when viewed and venerated as a man than when
+worshipped as a God, guilty of the frequent violation of his own laws,
+by the display of the miracle-working power.
+
+And much more beautiful and much more rational is the doctrine which
+accepts every event that ever occurred as the legitimate and harmonious
+operation of the great machinery of nature, than as the smart trick,
+the lawless caprice or wild feat, of an arbitrary, wonder-exciting God,
+performed not to make the people better, more moral or more righteous
+(for miracles cannot do this), but merely to make them gape and stare,
+and shout, What a smart God we have got!
+
+And then the belief in miracles involves an utter repudiation of all
+law, all order, and all system, and introduces in their stead chaos,
+anarchy, and universal confusion. It is simply "the doctrine of
+chance." which all orthodox Christendom professes to deprecate and
+execrate as the quintessence of atheism. But they make a mistake;
+"chance" is more legitimately the fruit of miracle than of atheism; an
+assertion which we will here briefly prove.
+
+If the sun may be arrested in his course through the heavens, "the moon
+turned into blood," and "the stars fall from the heaven,"--sticks turned
+into serpents, water into blood, and dust into lice,--all of which
+orthodox Christians profess to believe were witnessed in the days of
+Moses and Christ, then everything is thrown upon the wheel of chance;
+everything is involved in uncertainty. If the course of nature could be
+arrested, or the natural qualities of objects changed by the prayer of
+a prophet, patriarch, or apostle, then the food set before us to eat may
+suddenly, in compliance with the prayers of some absent saint, become
+a deadly poison; the clothes we wear may be instantly transformed into
+virulent adders, which may inflict the fatal sting before we suspect it;
+some favorite servant of God (a Moses or an Elijah) might be this
+moment praying to God to stop the dews from falling, or the rain from
+descending for the next three months, or three years, as the latter is
+reported as doing (see James v. 17), so that we could not plant with any
+certainty that the seed would grow, or that we should be rewarded by
+a crop. Such would be the incertitude, such the "chance" against us
+in everything in which we might engage, if it were true that God ever
+intercepts the action of his laws by working a miracle, that we should
+eventually become discouraged by this chaos of "chance," the wheels of
+industry would stop, and the car of civilization go backward. If it were
+true, as taught by orthodox Christians, that "God in his providence," or
+"God in the dispensation of his providence," often "visits people with
+sickness," then it would be useless to study the laws of health with a
+view of complying with them. For we could not know in any case whether
+our sickness had been brought upon us by, an "overruling providence,"
+or by our own imprudence. Our inventives to study and comply with these
+laws, if there could be any, would consequently be very weak indeed,
+for we might comply with every physiological requisition, and yet
+there would be several "chances," against us that to-morrow we may be
+stretched upon a "sick bed and rolling pillow by the visitation of God."
+Thus the doctrine of miracles is shown to be pre-eminently the doctrine
+of "chance."
+
+The doctrine of miraculous agency makes God an imperfect being, by
+implying that his laws were defective in their original construction,
+that by mistake he left some emergency unprovided for, and now has to
+supply the omission by an afterclap exercise of power. Or if his laws
+were originally perfect, then the working of a miracle would disturb
+them, and make them imperfect; if originally imperfect, then God
+himself must have been imperfect, and hence no God at all. Think of a
+wonderworking God violating, suspending, or intercepting his own laws.
+Such a God would be a puerile, short-sighted being, that only ignorant
+and uncultivated minds could admire and adore.
+
+The age of miracles, however, is gone. The belief in divine prodigies
+has receded before the advancing genius of civilization. It has
+died away in the exact ratio of the progress of science and general
+intelligence. And a thorough acquaintance with nature's laws will banish
+the last vestige of such a belief. Hence it is that the most illiterate
+and ignorant nations and tribes have always been able to recount the
+longest list of miraculous prodigies achieved by a disorderly God, who
+seems to have taken pleasure in violating his own laws, or suspending
+them, for the most trivial purposes.
+
+Yes, the time is approaching when the belief in a "miraculous
+interposition" or "special providences" must pass away under the lights
+of science and civilization, and be numbered amongst the things which
+have been and can be no more, and men will cherish more noble and
+elevated ideas of the great Ruler of the universe, who is infinite
+in order, infinite in wisdom, ay, infinite in all his attributes and
+virtues, ever unchangeably the same.
+
+
+II. Prophecy, the second Pillar of the Christian Faith, proves as much
+for Heathenism and Spiritualism.
+
+Truthful prophecy, attested to be such by its fulfillment, is assumed to
+be one of the basic pillars and one of the main proofs of the truth of
+the Christian religion. But the following consideration will show that
+this assumption has no logical force, or real, tangible foundation.
+
+First. Every ancient system of religion had its prophets and seers, who
+professed to be able to foresee events of the future. And we find but
+little difference in the proofs each one has left to the world that they
+possessed this power, if we except the Greeks and Romans, some of whom
+evidently excelled all the Jewish prophets in their ability to take
+cognizance of events lying behind the curtain of time. Tacitus, the
+Latin historian, prophesied the downfall of the Roman empire and its
+attendant calamities more than five hundred years before its occurrence,
+which was fulfilled to the letter. And Solon, one of the seven wise men
+of Greece, foresaw and foretold a series of calamities which befell
+the Athenians two hundred years before they were realized. A still more
+remarkable example is furnished in the history of Marcus Tullius Cicero,
+who, writing of the future, with his mind fixed on the west, about 50 B.
+C., exclaimed, "There will arise after many ages (if we may credit the
+Sibylline oracles), a hero who will deliver his oppressed countrymen
+from bondage"--a prophecy most signally fulfilled in the life of
+General Washington. Many other examples of heathen prophecy and their
+fulfillment might be cited, if we had space for them.
+
+Second. The history of modern spiritualism furnishes many cases of
+future events being predicted long before they took place. In fact, many
+of the most important events of modern times which have occurred in this
+and other countries, were foreseen and foretold by spiritual seers known
+as "seeing mediums," when there was not the slightest probability that
+such events would ever occur. We will cite one or two cases, by way
+of proof and illustration. A few years ago John P. Coles, of New York,
+known as a spiritual medium, prophesied, when under spirit control,
+that Nicholas of Russia would shortly have difficulty with his secretary
+Menzicoff, and just three months from that time would die--a prediction
+that was fulfilled to the very letter and to the very hour. And yet
+there was not the slightest probability, externally indicated, at the
+time the prophecy was uttered, that either of these events would ever be
+realized. And this prophecy, let it be noted, was published in the New
+York Times at least two months before it was verified, thus proving that
+the prediction was not an "afterclap" affair, but preceded the event.
+Take another example. The serious calamity which befell the ill-fated
+steamer known as the Arctic, which was lost at sea a number of years
+ago, with all on board, was prophetically described in minute detail,
+by a spirit medium, several months before it occurred; and was seen and
+described by another medium, while taking place more than a thousand
+miles distant. The proof is at our command. And the late disastrous
+war was foreseen and described by Cora Tappan, of New York, and other
+mediums, and its principal events pointed out long before the war broke
+out--a fact which is now a matter of history. These are only a few cases
+out of hundreds that might be cited of a similar character, drawn from
+the practical history of modern spiritualism. If, then, prophecy can do
+anything toward the truth or divine emanation of the Christian religion,
+it must do the same for the heathen and spiritual systems. And thus
+proving too much, it proves nothing at all.
+
+Third. The Jewish prophecies not fulfilled. We have examined critically
+the various texts of the Christian bible called prophecies, and find
+that, if claimed as predictions of the future events beyond the powers
+of the natural mind to foresee, they have all failed. But few of them
+have been fulfilled in any sense, and those few required no divine
+prescience to foresee the result. Many events have transpired in every
+country, which the natural sagacity of the most observant minds in that
+country had anticipated as the result of natural causes, such as the
+ravages and downfall of cities and the overthrow of empires by the
+merciless hand of war. The Jewish prophet, fostering a spirit of envy
+and enmity towards Egypt, Babylon, and other superior kingdoms, because
+they had been overpowered by them and long held in subjection to
+their superior sway, were always prophesying evil things of these
+principalities. And though some of the evils which constituted the
+burden of prophecy might have been reasonably anticipated as natural
+occurrences, it is a signal fact they never transpired at all,--such
+as the total destruction of Babylon, Tyre, Damascus, and other cities
+belonging to those hostile kingdoms the Jews so much envied and
+execrated. Look, for proof, at the case of Damascus. The prophets
+Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, all poured out their fulminatory thunders
+upon this city. Isaiah declared it should be a "ruinous heap." (Isa.
+xvii. I.) And Jeremiah predicted its destruction by fire. (Jer. xlix.
+27.) And yet, notwithstanding these predictions of ruin, Damascus still
+stands as "one of the paradises of the earth," as one writer styles it,
+with a population, according to Burckhart, of not less than two hundred
+and fifty thousand, being one of the most magnificent and prosperous
+commercial cities on the globe. Instead of being blotted out of
+existence, as the Jewish prophets prayed and predicted, it has suffered
+less by ravages of war and the scythe of time than almost any other city
+of the east. It has stood nearly three thousand years without becoming
+a "ruinous heap," or being consumed by fire or destroyed by war. (Jer.
+xlix. 26.) And the prophecy against Tyre has most signally failed also.
+Ezekiel declared it should be destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar, and never be
+found again. (Ezek. xxvi.-xxix.) But two hundred and fifty years after
+Nebuchadnezzar's time Alexander found it a strong commercial city. And
+it still contains a population of five thousand or more. St. Jerome, of
+the fourth century, declared it to be then the finest city of Phoenicia,
+and was astonished that Ezekiel's prophecy had so utterly failed.
+
+And Isaiah's famous prediction against Babylon furnishes another proof
+of the utter failure of Jewish prophecy. He declared, after predicting
+its destruction, "It shall never be inhabited, neither shall it be dwelt
+in from generation to generation, neither shall the Arabian pitch tent
+there." (Isa. xiii. 20.) Of course he desired it should be so. But,
+unfortunately for his credit as a prophet, it never suffered such a
+calamity. On the contrary, according to Layard and Rawlinson, British
+commissioners who recently visited the place, it now presents "all the
+activity of a hive of bees" (to use Layard's language), and contains
+several thousand inhabitants, though its name is, since rebuilt, called
+Hillah. And thus the prophecy is falsified. "No," exclaims a good
+Christian brother, in forlorn hope, it may be fulfilled yet. But if he
+will examine the language of the prophecy, he will find he is entirely
+cut off from this "saving clause." The prophet says, "Her time is near
+to come, and her days shall not be prolonged." (Isa. xiii. 22.) Thus it
+is evident the prophecy was to be fulfilled in that age and generation.
+The failure, then, is absolute and indisputable. And these are but mere
+samples of the complete failure of every text called a prophecy, when
+applied to the prognostication of future events. Numerous texts can
+be found in the prophets auguring evil for Egypt, which have made
+no approximation toward fulfillment. Ezekiel prophesied "the fall of
+Egypt," "the desolation of Egypt," "the destruction of Egypt," &c.,
+not one of which calamities has ever been realized in her experience.
+Prophecies respecting the restoration of the lost tribes and the
+perpetuity of the Israelitish throne are complete failures; also all
+"the Messianic prophecies," so called. (See Chap. II.) With respect
+to the prophecy on Babylon, it may be further observed that while the
+prophet declares, "Neither shall the Arabian pitch tent there" (Isa.
+xiii. 22), Layard declares that is the very thing they did do while
+he was there. He says he saw a number of Arabian tents pitched on
+the ground; thus proving a failure of the prophecy all round in every
+particular. (See note page Fourth). The bible itself is a witness that
+truthful prophecy can do nothing toward authenticating a religion,
+or toward proving the prophet divinely inspired. The same damaging
+concession is made here as in the case of miracles, that a heathen and
+an unbeliever could and did succeed as well as the true disciples of the
+faith. The proof of this statement is found in the history of Balaam.
+His figurative representation of a star coming out of Jacob and
+a scepter out of Judah (see Numb. chap. xxiv.) is often quoted
+by Christian writers as presaging or prefiguring the coming of
+Christ,--thus making a heathen and an unbeliever the oracle of a
+Messianic prophecy, and a heathen, too, of sinful and ungodly habits.
+So that the Christian subterfuge is not available here, that "God might
+make a righteous man of any nation the vehicle of prophecy." For we have
+the express declaration of the bible itself that he was not a righteous
+man, but the very reverse. Peter tells us, "He loved the wages of
+unrighteousness," at the very time this prophecy so called was uttered
+( see 2 Peter ii. 13 ), which prostrates forever the Christian plea the
+"he might have possessed the true spirit of prophecy by virtue of being
+a righteous man," and drives us to the admission that an unconverted
+savage and ungodly heathen unbeliever could make a true prophecy. It not
+being necessary, then, to be a Jew, or a Christian, or a believer, or
+even a moral man, to foresee or foretell the far-off important events
+of the future, the argument falls forever to the ground that the
+fulfillment of the Jewish prophecies, if admitted to have been
+fulfilled, could do anything toward proving the truth or divine
+acceptance of the religion of the bible, or its superiority over any
+heathen or oriental religion then or subsequently known to history, as
+they all present the same evidence of being endowed with the true spirit
+of prophecy. All argument for Christianity based on the prophecies,
+or "the gift of prophecy," is, then, forever at an end, as it has been
+shown that the power to foretell future events is not restricted by
+the bible itself to any nation, to any religion, to any faith, to any
+belief, or to any moral or religious qualification. What, then, is
+prophecy worth, or what does it prove? Another case, and one similar to
+that of Balaam in its essential points, is found in the New Testament.
+Caiaphas, though not claiming to be any part of a believer, utters a
+prophecy in the interest of the Christian religion for which the bible
+itself gives him full credit as a prophet. Here, then, is another case
+of a heathen stealing the Christian's thunder, and another proof that
+the spirit of true prophecy has never been confined to any nation or
+any religion; and hence, according to the teachings of the bible
+itself, does nothing at all toward establishing the exalted claims of
+Christianity, or toward proving its superiority over other systems of
+religion.
+
+
+III. Moral Precepts the third Pillar of the Christian Faith.
+
+It is declared, in view of the many wise precepts which issued from the
+mouth of Jesus Christ, that "he spake as never man spake." (John vii.
+46.) If this were true, then Gods must have been very numerous prior to
+the Christian era. For there is not one of the moral maxims or preceptive
+commands which he gave utterance to that cannot be found literally or
+substantially in the older bibles of other nations, or the writings
+of the Greek philosophers, and the religious dissertations of heathen
+moralists, who gave out moral and religious lessons for the instruction
+of the world long prior to the birth of Christ. Even the Golden Rule,
+which Christian writers, ignorant or oriental history, have erroneously
+ascribed to Jesus Christ, and lauded him as being the author of, is
+found variously expressed in the writings of several heathen or oriental
+nations. We find it in the Chinese bible at least live hundred years
+older than ours, almost word for word as Jesus uttered it. We will here
+present it as expressed by different writers.
+
+1. Golden Rule by Confucius, 500 B. C.
+
+"Do unto another what you would have him do unto you, and do not to
+another what you would not have him do unto you. Thou needest this law
+alone. It is the foundation of all the rest."
+
+2. Golden Rule by Aristotle, 385 B. C.
+
+"We should conduct ourselves toward others as we would have them act
+toward us."
+
+3. Golden Rule by Pittacus, 650 B. C.
+
+"Do not to your neighbor what you would take ill from him."
+
+4. Golden Rule by Thales, 464 B. C.
+
+"Avoid doing what you would blame others for doing."
+
+5. Golden Rule by Isocrates, 338 B. C.
+
+"Act toward others as you desire them to act toward you."
+
+6. Golden Rule by Aristippus, 365 B. C.
+
+"Cherish reciprocal benevolence, which will make you as anxious for
+another's welfare as your own."
+
+7. Golden Rule by Sextus, a Pythagorean, 406 B. C.
+
+"What you wish your neighbors to be to you, such be also to them."
+
+8. Golden Rule by Hillel, 50 B. C.
+
+"Do not to others what you would not like others to do to you."
+
+Here is the Golden Rule proclaimed by seven heathen moralists and a
+Jew long before it was republished by the founder of Christianity;
+thus proving it to be of heathen origin, and proving that it does not
+transcend the natural capacity of the human brain to originate, and
+hence needs no God to reveal it. Indeed, it is one of the most natural
+sentiments of the human mind. "Would I like to be treated thus?" is
+the first thought which naturally arises in the mind of a person
+when maltreating a neighbor; thus showing that the Golden Rule is a
+spontaneous utterance of the moral feelings of the human mind.
+
+
+LOVE AND KIND TREATMENT OF ENEMIES.
+
+Love to enemies is considered to be another praiseworthy precept, which
+Christ has erroneously the credit of being the author of. We have heard
+the declaration made in the Christian pulpit, that Jesus Christ was the
+first moral teacher who inculcated love to enemies; a most transcendent
+error, as the following historical citations will show. Most of the
+religious books and religious teachers of the ancient oriental heathen
+breathe forth a spirit of love and kindness toward enemies.
+
+The following is from the old Persian bible, the Sadder:--
+
+1.
+
+ "Forgive thy foes, nor that alone;
+ Their evil deeds with good repay;
+ Fill those with joy who leave thee none,
+ And kiss the hand upraised to slay."
+
+The Christian bible would be searched in vain to find a moral sentiment
+or precept superior to this. Certainly it is the loftiest sentiment of
+kindness toward enemies that ever issued from human lips, or was ever
+penned by mortal man. And yet it is found in an old heathen bible. Think
+of "kissing the hand upraised to slay." Never was love, and kindness,
+and forbearance toward enemies more sublimely expressed than in the old
+Persian ballad.
+
+2. "Treat thine enemy as though a friend, and he will become thy
+friend," was expressed by Publius Syrus, a Roman slave, which is a wiser
+admonition than that of Christ, "Love thine enemy," as it is a moral
+impossibility.
+
+3. "All nature cries aloud, 'Shall man do less than heal the smiter, and
+the railer bless?'" (Hafiz, a Mahomedan.)
+
+4. "Bridle thine anger, and forgive thine enemy; give unto him who takes
+from thee." (Koran, Mahomedan bible. )
+
+5. "Let no man be offended with those who are angry at him, but reply
+gently to those who curse him." (Code of Menu.)
+
+6. "Let him endure injuries, and despise no one." (Ibid.)
+
+7. "Commit no hostile action for your own preservation." (Ibid.)
+
+8. "To be revenged on enemies, become more virtuous." (Diogenes.)
+
+9. "To strike a man, or vex him with words, is a sin." (Zend-Avesta,
+Persian bible.)
+
+10. "Even the intention to strike is a sin." (Ibid.)
+
+11. "Desire not the death of thine enemy." (Confucius.)
+
+12. "Acknowledge benefits, but never revenge injuries." (Ibid.)
+
+13. "We may dislike an enemy without desiring revenge." (Ibid.)
+
+14. "Pardon the offenses of others, but never your own." (Publius
+Syrus.)
+
+15. "The noble spirit cures injustice by forgiving it." (Ibid.)
+
+16. "It is much better to be injured than to kill a man." (Pythagoras.)
+
+17. "You can accomplish by kindness what you cannot by force." (Publius
+Syrus.)
+
+18. "Better overlook an injury than avenge it." (Publius Syrus.)
+
+19. "It is enough to think ill of an enemy without avenging it."
+(Publius Syrus.)
+
+20. "It is a kingly spirit to return good deeds for evil ones." (Ibid.)
+
+21.
+
+ "Learn for yon orient shell to love thy foe,
+ And store with pearls the hand that brings thee woe;
+ Flee, like yon rock, from base, vindictive pride,
+ Emblaze with gems the wrist that rends thy side."
+
+ (Hafiz.)
+
+22. "To revenge yourself on an enemy, make him your friend."
+(Pythagoras.)
+
+23. "It is not permitted to a man who has received an injury to revenge
+it by doing another." (Socrates, in his Crito.)
+
+24. "Seek him who turns thee out, and pardon him who injures thee."
+(Koran.)
+
+25. "Return not evil for evil." (Socrates.)
+
+26. "Endure all things if you would serve God." (Sextus.)
+
+27. "Desire to be able to benefit your enemies." (Ibid.)
+
+28. "Receive an injury rather than do one." (Publius Syrus.)
+
+29. "Be at war with men's vices, but at peace with their persons."
+(Ibid.)
+
+30. "Cultivate friendship for an enemy." (Pittacus.)
+
+31. "Be kind to your friends that they may continue so, and to your
+enemies that they may become so." (Ibid.)
+
+32. "Prevent injuries if possible; if not, do not revenge them." (Ibid.)
+
+33. "An enemy should not be hated, but cured." (Seneca.)
+
+34. "To act unkindly toward an enemy will increase his hate."
+(Antonius.)
+
+35. "Be to everybody kind and friendly." (Ibid.)
+
+36. "Speak evil of no one, not even your enemies." (Pittacus.)
+
+Thus it will be observed that love and kindness toward all mankind, both
+friends and enemies, is not confined to the teachings of Christ or
+to the Christian religion, as many have erroneously supposed, but
+is unquestionably a natural sentiment of the moral instinct or moral
+impulses of the human mind, and hence is no proof that their teacher is
+either a God or divinely inspired.
+
+And we have in our possession nearly eight hundred more precepts (see
+vol. ii.) from the pens or mouths of the ancient heathen, enjoining just
+and kind treatment of women, and setting forth nearly all the duties of
+life, and teaching the immortality of the soul, &c. And these precepts
+breathe the same lofty moral sentiment and moral feeling as those quoted
+above. How ignorant and how conceited must be the Christian professor
+who supposes all goodness is confined to Christianity, or that it even
+possesses any great superiority over other religious systems! And
+how completely the three foregoing parts of this chapter, "Miracles,"
+"Prophecies," and "Precepts," prostrate the divine claims of
+Christianity, and leave not an inch of ground for them to rest upon!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV. LOGICAL OR COMMON SENSE VIEW OF THE DOCTRINE OF DIVINE
+INCARNATION
+
+THE incarnation of an infinite God is a shocking absurdity, and an
+infinite impossibility. We ask in all solemn earnestness, and in the
+name of the intuitive monitions of an unshackled reason and an unbiased
+conscience, can any man in his sober senses, who has been in the habit
+of reflecting before he believes, entertain for a moment the monstrous
+absurdity that the Almighty and Infinite Maker of the universe was once
+reduced to a little wailing infant, lying in senseless and helpless
+weakness on the lap of its mother, unable to walk a step, or lisp a
+word, or do aught but cry with pain or for nourishment stored in the
+mother's breast? What! Almighty God fallen from his burnished, dazzling
+throne in the lofty heavens, and reduced to helpless, senseless
+babyhood! Omnipotence shorn of all power but to breathe, and cry, and
+smile! What! that Omniscient Being, who "leads one world by day, and
+ten thousand more by night," becoming suddenly transformed into a human
+bantling, which knows no higher enjoyment that that of being "pleased
+with a rattle, and tickled with a straw!" Who can believe it? Ay, who
+dare believe it, if he would escape the charge of blasphemy? Then say
+not that "the man Christ Jesus," though standing at the top of the
+ladder of moral manhood, and high above the common plane of humanity,
+was yet a God--"the Infinite Ruler of the infinite universe." Who can
+believe that that Being, whose existence stretches to an eternity beyond
+human conception, yea, whom "the heaven of heavens cannot contain," was
+ever cooped up in a human body, reduced so near to nothing in dimensions
+as to be susceptible (as was Jesus) of being weighed in scales, and
+measured with a yardstick?
+
+We ask again, Who, from the deepest depths of his inmost, enlightened
+consciousness, can believe such revolting, such atheistical doctrine
+as this? Or who will venture to descend still lower, and conceive of
+an Almighty, Omnipresent Being, who fills all space above, around, and
+beneath, "from infinity below to yon fixed star above," and millions
+upon millions of miles beyond it, sinking and dwindling to that mere
+mite, speck, or monad state and condition comprehended in the initiatory
+step of embryonic existence? And then think of the Almighty, Omnipotent
+Creator of the universe lying in a manger with four-footed beasts and
+creeping things, sleeping with oxen and asses in a stable. Next he
+is seen an urchin on the street playing with marbles and jack-knives,
+absorbed and forgetful of the world around him. Who can believe that
+awfully majestic Being, who is represented by his own inspired book as
+being so transcendently grand and awe-inspiring that "no man san see
+him and live" (Ex. xxxiii. 20), was not only daily seen by hundreds and
+thousands, but was on such familiar terms with men, that they regarded
+him as their companion, and equal, and even sometimes coolly reprimanded
+him for supposed misdemeanors and errors? Could they believe this to be
+Almighty God? Impossible! Impossible! And then who can believe that that
+infinite Being, whom we have been taught to regard as absolutely and
+eternally unchangeable, could become subject to hunger and thirst
+(as did Jesus)? Or who can believe that the eternally and unceasingly
+watchful Omnipotent Deity, whose eye, we are told, "never slumbers,"
+could sink into unconscious sleep, become "to dumb forgetfulness a
+prey," night after night, for thirty years, oblivious, and unconscious
+of the world around him? Think of a being of incomprehensible majesty,
+dignity, and power, able to "shake the heavens and the earth also,"
+being unable to protect himself from insult, and was therefore derided
+and "spit upon," and finally overcome by his enemies, as is related of
+Jesus. Can any man believe, who has not made shipwreck of his senses, or
+banished Reason from her courts, that God 'Almighty, who comprehends
+in himself the most absolute and boundless perfection of goodness and
+wisdom, was tempted by demons, devils, and crawling serpents? Who can
+believe that the Lord, who owns "the cattle upon a thousand hills"
+(Psalm 1. io), and the countless host of worlds besides, that wheel
+their course through infinite space, had not "where to lay his head"?
+Who can believe that that was the all-wise, omnipotent, and omnipresent
+God, possessing all power in heaven above and the earth beneath, who was
+betrayed by weak, finite mortals? What! the Almighty Creator betrayed by
+a puny being of his own creation into the hands of his disobedient and
+rebellious children? Why could he not, if possessing "power to lay
+down his life, and take it up again" (John x. 17), cause that all these
+children of his (as we must assume they were, if he was Almighty God,
+and hence the Father of all) should love him, instead of hating him?
+Can any man believe that Jesus was possessed with omnipotent power
+while standing to be whipped (scourged) by Pontius Pilate, or that
+he possessed a power above that of finite mortals while in the act of
+praying, with such extreme ardor that the sweat dropped from his face,
+that the cup of death might pass from his lips, or while calling for an
+angel to support him in the hour of his mortal dissolution? or that He,
+"by whom all things exist," could cease himself to exist, by dying upon
+the cross between malefactors? Think of this, reader! and think of the
+eternal Creator, the infinite Deity, the omnipotent Jehovah, the Maker
+of worlds as numberless as the sands upon the sea-shore for multitude,
+fainting, bleeding, dying, and pouring out his own blood to appease his
+own wrath; dying an ignominious death to satisfy an implacable revenge!
+Away with such insulting mockery, such blasphemous flummery! It can
+only find place in the dark chambers of an unenlightened mind.
+
+Well has Watts said of Locke's skepticism,--
+
+ "Reason could scarcely sustain to see,
+ Or bear the infant Deity:
+ A ransomed world, a bleeding God,
+ And heaven appeased by flowing blood,
+ Were themes too painful to be understood."
+
+Yes, and too painful to be believed, too, Mr. Watts! Here we have a
+"bleeding God," an "infant Deity," and a vengeful God, appeased by
+murder and streams of "flowing blood." Gracious heavens! Whose reason
+does not revolt at such a picture? Whose soul does not sicken at
+the thought, and who would not prefer, infinitely prefer, to sink
+to annihilation, if not to perdition itself, to being thus saved by
+navigating a river of blood?? Dr. South hits off some of the absurdities
+involved in the Christian doctrine of the incarnation so forcibly and so
+lucidly, that we cannot resist the temptation to subjoin---here a few
+extracts from his sermon on the subject' "But now," says this Christian
+clergyman, "was there ever any wonder comparable to this, to behold the
+Lord (Jesus Christ) thus clothed in flesh, the Creator of all things,
+humbled, not only to the company, but also to the cognation, of his
+creatures? It is as if one should imagine the whole world not only
+represented upon, but also contained in, one of our own artificial
+globes, or the body of the sun enveloped in a cloud as big as a man's
+hand, all of which would be looked upon as astonishing impossibilities,
+and yet is as short of the other as the finite is of the infinite,
+between which the disparity is immeasurable. It is, as it were, to
+cancel the essential distances of things, to remove the bounds of
+nature, to bring heaven and earth, and what is more, both ends of the
+contradiction, together. Men cannot persuade themselves that a Deity and
+infinity should lie within so narrow a compass as the dimensions of
+a human body; that omnipotence, omnipresence should ever be wrapped in
+swaddling clothes, and debased to the homely usages of a stable and a
+manger; that the glorious Artificer of the whole universe, who spread
+out the heaven like a curtain, and laid the foundations of the earth,
+could ever turn carpenter, and exercise an inglorious trade in a little
+cell. They cannot imagine that He who once created and at present
+governs the world, and shall hereafter judge the world, should be abased
+in all his concerns and relations, be scourged, spit upon, mocked and at
+last crucified. All which are passages which lie extremely close to the
+notions of conceptions which reason has made to itself of that high
+and impossible perfection that resided in the divine Creator." (Sermon,
+1665.) Dr. South, it will be observed, admits that the doctrine of
+the divine incarnation involves many palpable absurdities and
+contradictions, and lies directly across the path of reason. Fatal
+admission to the doctrine of the deityship of Christ, but true, as his
+own elucidation of the subject demonstrates. To the author, since he
+first subjected the question to a logical scrutiny, and looked at it
+with an unbiased mind, it presents difficulties insurmountable, and
+absurdities innumerable. He can imagine nothing more transcendently
+shocking, revolting, and dwarfing to the mind, both morally and
+intellectually, than the thought of believing that a being born of and
+suckled by a woman, and possessing the mere form and dimensions of
+a man, can be regarded as the great Almighty and Omnipotent God, the
+Creator of unnumbered worlds, millions of which are larger than this
+planet, on which Jesus was born.
+
+And then, reader, look for a moment at some of the many childish
+incongruities and logical difficulties this giant absurdity drags with
+it. It represents Almighty God as coming into the world through the
+hands of a midwife, as passing through the process of gestation and
+parturition. It insults our reason with the idea that the great,
+infinite Jehovah could be molded into the human form--a thought that is
+shocking to the moral sense, and withering, cramping, and dwarfing to
+the intellectual mind, imposing upon it a heavy drag-chain which checks
+its expansion, and forbids its onward progress. Christians tell us that
+the human and the divine were united in "the man Christ Jesus." But this
+is a monstrous absurdity, which no truly rational and unbiased mind can
+accept for an instant--that of hitching, splicing, tying, or dovetailing
+together finite man with the infinite Jehovah, that of amalgamating
+and commingling human foibles with divine perfection. Think of wedding
+mortal weakness to omnipotent power, local man with the omnipresent
+Deity! Think of compounding the creature and the Creator in one and the
+same being! Think of the omnipresent "I AM," whose illimitable existence
+stretches far away throughout the expansive arena of a boundless
+universe, occupying a dwelling within the narrow confines of the human
+temple! As well essay to crowd the universe into your pocket, or the
+Himalayas Mountains into a thimble. On the other hand, think of a small
+compound of flesh, blood, and bones, a few feet in dimensions, and
+weighing perhaps not more than one hundred and fifty pounds avoirdupois,
+containing that infinite, omnipresent Being, whom, we are told (we
+repeat the quotation), "the heaven of heavens cannot contain"! And more
+than all, kind reader, I ask you if you can accept for a moment, without
+the immolation of your common sense, and the trampling of your reason
+beneath you feet, the monstrous thought that that mighty and almighty
+Architect who who created the countless myriads upon myriads of
+ponderous worlds, which now roll in majestic order, and eternal rotation
+along the great cerulean causeway of heaven, that mighty Architect who,
+from time beyond human computation, has been rolling out orb after orb,
+world after world, if not myriads at a time, ten thousand times, ten
+thousand of which would dwindle our little pygmy, Lilliputian planet
+into insignificance, if compared with it in size.
+
+I ask, and drive home the query to your inward consciousness, and the
+inmost temples of your sacred reason:
+
+Can you believe, after a moment's reflection, that a Being who is too
+vast, infinitely too vast in power and ubiquity to be grasped by the
+human understanding, did become (as did the finite and humble Jesus)
+a helpless, senseless, unconscious, human infant; a suckling, crying,
+squalling babe, powerless of speech, and unable to walk? Ay, worse,
+more startling still, we are shocked with the thought that this mighty
+World-builder, this infinite, omnipotent Creator, was reduced so near to
+the verge of nonenity, so near to the last glimmering spark or speck
+of existence, and the world so near without a God, as to become an
+inanimate foetus--a monad in the matrix of a human virgin? Shocking the
+thought! Blasphemous the doctrine! Believe it who will; believe it who
+can! We cannot; we would not; we are infinitely beyond it. Such a belief
+may be deposited by educational tradition in the affections, but to
+enter the temple of Reason, it never did, it never can. She never
+unbarred her doors to admit such monstrous, such enormous incongruities.
+and all these logical absurdities, and a thousand more, grow
+legitimately out of the doctrine of the divine incarnation,--out of
+the postulate which would (following in the line of the pagan
+superstitutions) elevate the finite, humble, mortal Jesus to the throne
+of heaven, the exclusive prerogative of Almighty God. Come away, my
+Christian friends, from such disparaging, such dishonorable views of the
+Deity, such blasphemous caricatures of Almighty God. Come away from such
+morally darkening and such intellectually dwarfing superstitutions, the
+moldering relics of oriental mythology, the expiring embers of childish
+credulity and tradition, which originated far back in the dark cradle
+of human existence, in the infancy of an undeveloped age, ruled by
+ignorance, superstition, and priestcraft. Yet millions of people laying
+claim to sense and intelligence, even now profess to believe it. Talk
+not to me of infidelity or blasphemy for denying the divinity or
+Godhead of Jesus Christ. The blasphemy lies in the other direction. The
+infidelity is with the opposite party. It is with those who thus make
+the dignity and character of Deity the sport of childish I baubles, the
+game of priestly tawdryism. And be assured, dear friends, one and
+all, that coming generations will mark the man who now worships "the
+man Christ Jesus" as being "very God" as an idolater, if not a
+blasphemer--for worshipping a finite man for an infinite God, even
+though the motives for such worship may be as pure as the pearly stream
+that issues forth from the golden fount which rolls and sparkles beneath
+the throne of Almighty God.
+
+ Note. The words Creator, Maker, &c., are used from a
+ Christian standpoint Science knows no Creator.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI. PHILOSOPHICAL ABSURDITIES OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE DIVINE
+INCARNATION
+
+THERE is a philosophical principle underlying the doctrine of the Divine
+Incarnation, whose logical deductions completely overthrow the claim of
+Jesus of Nazareth to the Godhead, and which we regard as settling the
+question as conclusively as any demonstrated problem in mathematics.
+This argument is predicated upon the philosophical axiom, that two
+infinite beings of any description of conception, cannot exist, either
+in whole or in part, at the same time; and per consequence, it is
+impossible that the Father and Son should both be God in a divine sense,
+either conjointly or separately. The word infinite comprehends all; it
+covers the whole ground; it fills the immensity of the universe, and
+fills it to repletion! so that there is no room left for any other being
+to exist. And whoever and whatever does exist must constitute a part of
+this infinite whole.
+
+Now, the Christian world concedes ( for it is the teaching of their
+Scriptures), that the Father is God, always and truly, perfect,
+complete, and absolute; that there is nothing wanting in him to
+constitute him God in the most comprehensive and absolute sense of the
+term; that he is all we can conceive of as constituting God, "the one
+only true God" (John xvii. 3), and was such from all eternity, before
+Jesus Christ was born into the world; and Paul puts the keystone into
+the arch by proclaiming, "To us there is but one God, the Father." (
+1 Cor. viii. 6.) Hence we have here a logical proposition (despite the
+sophistry of Christendom) as impregnable as the rocks of Gibraltar, that
+the Father alone is or can be God, which effectually shuts out every
+other and all other beings in the universe from any participation in the
+Godhead with the Father. And thus this parity of reasoning demonstrates
+that the very moment you attempt to make Christ God, or any part of the
+Godhead, you attempt a philosophical impossibility. You cannot introduce
+another being as God in the infinite sense until the first-named
+infinite God is dethroned and put out of existence, and this, of course,
+is a self-evident impossibility. It it were not such, then we should
+have two Gods, both absolute and infinite. On the other hand, if that
+other being (who with the Christians is Jesus Christ, with the Hindoos
+Chrishna, with the Budhists Sakia, &c. ) is introduced as only a part of
+the infinite and perfect God, then it is evident to every mind with the
+least philosophical perception, that some change or alteration must
+take place in the latter before such a union can be effected. But such
+a change, or any alteration, in a perfect infinite being would at once
+reduce him to a changeable and finite being, and thus he would cease to
+be God. For it is a clear philosophical and mathematical axiom, that a
+perfect and infinite being cannot become more than infinite. And if
+he could and should become less than infinite, he would at once become
+finite, and thus lose all the attributes of the Godhead. To say or
+assume, then, that Christ was God in the absolute or divine sense, and
+the Father also God absolute, and yet that there is but one God, or that
+the two could in any manner be united, so as to constitute but one God,
+is not only a glaring solecism, but a positive contradiction in terms,
+and an utter violation of the first axiomatic principles of philosophy
+and mathematics. It also asserts the illogical hypothesis, that a part
+can be equal to the whole; it first assumes the Father to be absolutely
+God, then assumes the Son also to be absolutely God, and finally
+assumes each to be only a part, and has to unite them to make whole and
+culminates the theological farce. Such is Christian ratiocination.
+
+Again, it is conceded by Christians, that the Father is an omnipresent
+being; and we have shown that it is a mathematical impossibility for two
+omnipresent beings, or two beings possessing any infinite attributes, to
+exist at one and the same time. Hence the clear logical deducsequence,
+not God. Again, we have another philosophical maxim or axiom familiar
+to every schoolboy, that no two substances or beings can occupy the same
+place at the same time; the first must be removed before the second can
+by any possibility be introduced, in order thus to make room for the
+latter. But as omnipresent means existing everywhere, there can be no
+place to remove on omnipresent being to, or rather there can be no place
+or space he can be withdrawn from in order to make room for another
+being, without his ceasing to be omnipresent himself, and thereby
+ceasing to be God.
+
+It is thus shown to be a demonstrable truth that the omnipresence of
+the Father does and must exclude that of the Son, and thus exclude the
+possibility of his apatheosis or incarnated deityship. In other words,
+it is established as a scientific principle upon a philosophical and
+mathematical basis, that Jesus Christ was not and could not be "the
+great I AM," "the only true God."
+
+We will notice one other philosophical absurdity involved in the
+doctrine of the divine incarnation--one other solecism comprehended
+in the childish notion which invests the infinite God with finite
+attributes. It is a well-established and well-understood axiom in
+philosocomplete God; and thereby that the Son could not be
+omnipresent, and that "the less cannot be made to contain the
+greater." A pint bottle cannot be made to contain a quart of wine. For
+the same reason a finite body cannot contain an infinite spirit. Hence
+philosophy presses the conclusion that "the man Christ Jesus" could not
+have comprehended in himself "the Godhead bodily," inasmuch as it would
+have required the infinite God to be incorporated in a finite human
+body. We are therefore compelled to reject the doctrine of the incarnate
+divinity, the belief in the deityship of Jesus Christ, because (with
+many other reasons enumerated elsewhere) it involves a direct tilt
+against some of the plainest principles of science, and challenges, ay,
+virtually overthrows, some of the fundamental laws of both natural and
+moral philosophy. No philosopher, therefore, does, or can believe in
+the absolute divinity of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII. PHYSIOLOGICAL ABSURDITIES OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE DIVINE
+INCARNATION
+
+THERE is also a physiological principle (discovered by the author)
+comprised in the doctrine of the Divine Incarnation fatal in its
+practical and logical application to the divinity of Jesus Christ,
+and all the other incarnate or flesh-invested Gods of antiquity. It is
+evidently fraught with much logical force. It is based upon the law of
+mental and physical correspondence. As is the physical conformation, so
+is the mentality, is a law of analogy which pilots us to nearly all our
+practical knowledge of the natural world. A knowledge of either serves
+as an index to the other.
+
+When we observe an animal possessing that physical form and construction
+peculiar to its species, we expect to find it practically exhibiting
+the nature, character, disposition, and habits peculiar to that class of
+animals. If it possesses, for example, the conformation of a sheep, we
+infer at once that it has the disposition of a sheep, and we are never
+disappointed in this conclusion. And when we encounter an animal with
+the tiger form, we expect to see exhibited the tiger spirit. If it
+possesses the well-known physical conformation of the tiger, we are
+never deceived or misled when we assign it a predatory disposition. If
+it is a tiger form, it is sure to be a tiger in character and habits.
+And so of all the genera and species of animals that range upon the face
+of the globe. We may travel through the whole field of animated
+nature, and observe the infallible operation of this beautiful law
+of correspondence till we come, however, to the crowning work of God,
+called Man. Here we find this law, this beautiful chain of analogy,
+broken by the doctrine of the "divine incarnation." God becomes a man,
+at least is made to exhibit every external appearance of a man. All
+external distinction between God and man is thus obliterated. So that
+the very first being we meet in the street or on the highway possessing
+the form, size, and physical conformation of a man, and presenting every
+other external appearance of being a man, may nevertheless be a God. And
+no less is this objection practically exemplified, and not less is the
+infraction of this beautiful law of analogy observable in the case of
+Jesus Christ, than in the numerous other incarnate Gods and demigods of
+antiquity. Being in appearance a man, how was he to be, or how could he
+be, visually distinguished from a man? Or how could those men who
+were cotemporary with him, know, as they approached him, or as they
+approached each other, whether they were meeting a man or a God? Seeing
+that "he was found in fashion as a man" (Phil. ii. 8), either he might
+be mistaken for a man, or they for a God. They were constantly liable to
+be confounded. If, then, the infinite deityship was lodged in the person
+of Jesus Christ, it is evident that that important fundamental law of
+nature--"as is the form, so is the character"--was utterly annulled,
+prostrated, annihilated, and banished from the world by the act. So
+that all was, and is henceforth and forever, chaos, confusion, and
+uncertainty. For if the principle can be violated in one instance, it
+may be in another, and in thousands of cases, ad infinitum. If one case
+could be allowed to occur, the principle is established, and nature's
+universal chain of analogy is broken and destroyed; for to intercept the
+law is to "break the tenth and ten thousandth link alike."
+
+Hence it is evident that if a being resembling a man may be a God, an
+animal resembling a cow may be a horse, and yonder stick a poisonous
+adder; and fatal may be the consequences, in thousands of instances, in
+judging or inferring the nature and character of an animal by its form
+and size. A supposed innocent animal might be a deadly enemy, or
+vice versa. Can we then believe, or dare we believe, a doctrine
+so atheistical in its tendencies as that the Infinite Diety was
+incorporated in the person of the meek and lowly Jesus, when it would
+thus set at naught, violate, prostrate, and utterly cancel from the
+world one of God's own fundamental laws, and one of the essential
+principles of natural science, and banish forever the co-ordinate
+harmony of the universe, and thus inaugurate a state of universal
+disorder, incertitude, anarchy, and misrule into the otherwise
+beautifully law-governed, well-regulated domain of nature? Certainly,
+most certainly not! If the incarnation of the Deity, should or
+could take place, there should be something strikingly peculiar, ay,
+infinitely peculiar, in his figure, size, and general appearance, in
+order to make him susceptible of being distinguished from the human.
+Otherwise, men would be liable to be constantly mistaking and worshiping
+each other for the Great Almighty and Ubiquitous God, and thus
+constantly blundering into idolatry. And we actually find several cases
+reported in the Scriptures (mark the fact well) of men, ay, the
+saints themselves, being led into this error; being led to commit "the
+high-handed sin of idolatry" in consequence of their previous acceptance
+of the belief in a man-God--that is, a God of human size and type. St.
+John, in two instances, was in the act of worshipping a being possessing
+the human form, whom he mistook for the omnipotent and omnipresent God.
+(See Rev. xix. 10, and xxii. 4.) Having, perhaps, been taught that
+"the fullness of the Godhead dwelt bodily in Christ Jesus," he probably
+mistook the being he met for Him, and hence offered to worship him. If,
+then, Christ's own "inspired disciples" could thus be betrayed into "the
+sin of idolatry" by having abolished the infinite distinction between
+the divine and the human, we surely find here a very weighty argument
+against such a leveling and equalizing doctrine. And certainly nothing
+could be better calculated to promote "the sin of idolatry" than thus to
+obliterate the broad, the infinitely grand line of demarkation between
+the infinite God and his finite creature man. Indeed, may we not here
+find the very origin and the cause of the now general prevalence
+of idolatry in pagan countries? Is it not directly traceable to the
+demolition of the broad, high, and insurmountable wall of distinction
+which ought forever to stand between a God of infinite attributes, and a
+being caged up in the human form? Certainly, most certainly it is. Hence
+here I would ask, How can Christians, after subscribing to the doctrine,
+"that the fullness of the Godhead dwelt bodily in the man Christ Jesus"
+(as Paul very appropriately calls him), condemn the people of any age or
+nation for worshipping as God their fellow-beings--that is, beings with
+the human form? Certainly the man who could believe that the infinite
+God could be comprehended or incorporated in the person of Jesus, could
+easily be brought to believe that the Grand Lama of Thibet is a proper
+object of divine worship. He only lacks the substitution of names.
+Substitute the Grand Lama for that of Jesus Christ, and the thing is
+done. And idolatry thus becomes an easily established institution, and
+its abolition in any country an absolute moral impossibility.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII. A HISTORICAL VIEW OF THE DIVINITY OF JESUS CHRIST.
+
+A MOST fatal distrust is thrown upon the miraculous portions of the
+history of Jesus Christ, as found in his Gospel narratives, by the
+discovery of the fact (brought to light through recent archaeological
+researches), that the same marvelous feats, the same miraculous
+incidents, which were recorded in his life, were long previously
+ingrafted into the sacred biographies of Gods and demigods no less
+adored and worshipped as beings possessing divine attributes. We
+shall leave the reader to account for the long list of astonishing
+coincidences, as we proceed to recapitulate and abridge from previous
+chapters, the almost innumerable parallel incidents running through
+the legendary history of the many demigods and sin-atoning saviors of
+antiquity. The historical vouchers are given. We shall first direct
+attention to the long string of corresponding events recorded in the
+sacred histories of ancient Hindoo Gods, as compared with those of Jesus
+Christ at a much later period.
+
+As far back as 1200 B. C., sacred records were extant and traditions
+were current, in the East, which taught that the heathen Savior
+(Chrishna) was, 1st, Immaculately conceived and born of a spotless
+virgin, "who had never known man." 2d, That the author of, or agent in,
+the conception, was a spirit or ghost (of course a Holy Ghost). 3d,
+That he was threatened in early infancy with death by the ruling tyrant,
+Cansa. 4th, That his parents had, consequently, to flee with him to
+Gokul for safety. 5th, That all the young male children under two years
+of age were slain by an order issued by Cansa, similar to that of Herod
+in Judea. 6th, That angels and shepherds attended his birth. 7th, That
+his birth and advent occurred on the 25th of December. 8th, That it
+occurred in accordance with previous prophecy. 9th, That he was presented
+at birth with frankincense, myrrh, &c. 10th, That he was saluted and
+worshipped as "the Savior of men," according to the report of the late
+Christian Missionary Huelith, That he led a life of humility and
+practical moral usefulness. 12th, That he wrought various astounding
+miracles, such as healing the sick, restoring sight to the blind,
+casting out devils, raising the dead to life, &c. 13th, That he was
+finally put to death upon the cross (i. e., crucified) between two
+thieves. 14th. After which he descended to hell, rose from the dead,
+and ascended back to heaven "in the sight of all men," as his biblical
+history declares. For hundreds of other similar parallels, including his
+doctrines and precepts, see Chapter XXXII.
+
+Now, all these were matters of the firmest belief, more than three
+thousand years ago, in the minds of millions of the most devout
+worshippers that ever bowed the knee in humble prayer to the Father of
+Mercies. The reader can draw his own deduction.
+
+And then we have presented similar brief lists of parallels in Chapter
+XXIII., comprised in a comparative view of the miraculous lives of the
+Judean and Egyptian Saviors, Christ, Alcides, Osiris, Tulis, &c. In
+this analogous exhibition, it will be observed the Egyptian Gods are
+reported, as remotely as 900 B. C, as performing, besides several of
+the miraculous achievements enumerated above, other miracles equally
+indicative of divine power, such as converting water into wine,
+causing "rain to descend from heaven," &c. And on the occasion of the
+crucifixion of Tulis we are told "the sun became darkened and the moon
+refused to shine."
+
+We find, also, several well-authenticated instances of raising the dead
+to life, in works portraying the miraculous achievements of the Egyptian
+Gods, the relation being given in such specific detail in some cases
+that the names of the reanimated dead are furnished. Tyndarus and
+Hypolitus were instances of this kind, both (according to Julius) having
+been raised from the dead. Descending the line of history, until we
+arrive at the confines of Grecian theology, we find here the same train
+of marvelous events recorded in the histories of their virgin-born Gods,
+as we have shown in Chapter XXXIII., such as their healing the sick and
+the cripples, causing the blind to see, the lame to walk, the dead to be
+resuscitated to life, &c. And cases, as we have shown, are reported of
+their reading the thoughts of their disciples, as Jesus did those of
+the woman of Samaria. Apollonius declares he knew many Hindoo saints to
+perform this achievement with entire strangers.
+
+Likewise Apollonius of Tyana and Simon Magus, both cotemporary with
+Jesus Christ, we have arranged in the historic parallel (see Chapter
+XXXIII.), with their long train of miracles, constituting an exact
+counterpart with those related in the Gospel history of Christ, and
+including in Apollonius's case, besides those specified in the
+histories of the Gods above named, the miracle of transfiguration, the
+resurrection from the dead, his visible ascent to heaven, &c., while
+Simon Magus was very expert in casting out devils, raising the dead,
+allaying storms, walking on the sea, &c.
+
+But without recapitulating further, we will recite some new historic
+facts not embraced in any of the preceding chapters of this work,
+and tending to demonstrate still further the universal analogy of all
+religions, past and present, in their claims for a miraculous power
+for their Gods and incarnate Saviors. The "New York Correspondent,"
+published in 1828, furnishes us the following brief history of an
+ancient Chinese God, known as Beddou:--
+
+"All the Eastern writers agree in placing the birth of Beddou 1027 B.
+C. The doctrines of this Deity prevailed over Japan, China, and Ceylon.
+According to the sacred tenets of his religion, 'God is incessantly
+rendering himself incarnate,' but his greatest and most solemn
+incarnation was three thousand years ago, in the province of Cashmere,
+under the name of Fot, or Beddou. He was believed to have sprung from
+the right intercostal of a virgin of the royal blood, who, when she
+became a mother, did not the less continue to be a virgin; that the king
+of the country, uneasy at his birth, was desirous to put him to death,
+and hence caused all the males that were born at the same period to be
+put to death, and also that, being saved by shepherds, he lived in
+the desert to the age of thirty years, at which time he opened his
+commission, preaching the doctrines of truth, and casting out devils;
+that he performed a multitude of the most astonishing miracles, spent
+his life fasting, and in the severest mortifications, and at his death
+bequeathed to his disciples the volume in which the principles of his
+religion are contained."
+
+Here, it will be observed, are some very striking counterparts to
+the miraculous incidents found related in the Gospel history of Jesus
+Christ. And no less analogous is the no less well-authenticated story
+of Quexalcote of Mexico, which the Rev. Mr. Maurice concedes to be, and
+Lord Kingsborough and Niebuhr (in his history of Rome) prove to be much
+older than the Gospel account of Jesus Christ According to Maurice's
+"Ind. Ant.," Humboldt's "Researches in Mexico," Lord Kingsbor-ough's
+"Mexican Ant.," and other works, the incarnate God Quexalcote was born
+(about 300 B. C.) of a spotless virgin, by the name Chimalman, and led a
+life of the deepest humility and piety; retired to a wilderness, fasted
+forty days, was worshipped as a God, and was finally crucified between
+two thieves; after which he was buried and descended into hell, but
+rose again the third day. The following is a part of Lord Kingsborough's
+testimony in the case: "The temptation of Quexalcote, the fast of forty
+days ordained by the Mexican ritual, the cup with which he was presented
+to drink (on the cross), the reed which was his sign, the 'Morning
+Star,' which he is designated, the 'Teoteepall, or Divine Stone,'
+which was laid on his altar, and which was likewise an object of
+adoration,--all these circumstances, connected with many others relating
+to Quexalcote of Mexico, but which are here omitted, are very curious
+and mysterious." (Vol. vi. p. 237, Mexican Ant.)
+
+Again "Quexalcote is represented, in the painting of Codex Borgianus, as
+nailed to the cross." (See Mex. Ant. vol. vi. p. 166.) One plate in
+this work represents him as being crucified in the heavens, one as being
+crucified between two thieves. Sometimes he is represented as being
+nailed to the cross, and sometimes as hanging with the cross in his
+hands. The same work speaks of his burial, descent into hell, and
+his resurrection; while the account of his immaculate conception and
+miraculous birth are found in a work called "Codex Vaticanus."
+
+Other parallel incidents could be cited, if we had space for them,
+appertaining to the history of this Mexican God. And parallels might
+also be constructed upon the histories of other ancient Gods,--as that
+of Sakia of India, Salivahana of Bermuda, Hesus, or Eros, of the Celtic
+Druids, Mithra of Persia, Hil and Feta of the Mandaites, &c.
+
+But we will close with the testimony of a French philosopher (Bagin) on
+the subject of deific incarnations. This writer says, "The most ancient
+histories are those of Gods who became incarnate in order to govern
+mankind. All those fables are the same in spirit, and sprang up
+everywhere from confused ideas, which have universally prevailed among
+mankind,--that Gods formerly descended upon earth."
+
+Now, we ask the Christian reader,--and it will be the first query
+of every man whose religious faith has not made shipwreck of his
+reason,--"What does all this mean? How are you going to sustain the
+declaration that Jesus Christ was the only son and sent of God, in
+view of these historic facts? Where are the superior credentials of his
+claim? How will you prove his apparently legendary history (that is, the
+miraculous portion of his history) to be real, and the others false?"
+We boldly aver it cannot be done. Please answer these questions, or
+relinquish your doctrine of the divinity of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX. THE SCRIPTURAL VIEW OF CHRIST'S DIVINITY.
+
+THE monstrous scientific paradox (as coming ages will regard it)
+comprehended in the conception of an almighty, omnipresent, and infinite
+Being, "the Creator of innumerable worlds," ("by him [Christ] were all
+things made that were made," John i. 3-10), being born of a frail and
+finite woman, as taught by both the oriental and Christian religion, is
+so exceedingly shocking to every rational mind, which has not been sadly
+warped, perverted, and coerced into the belief by early psychological
+influence, that we would naturally presume that those who, on the
+assumption of the remotest possibility of its truth, should venture
+to put forth a doctrine so glaringly unreasonable and so obviously
+untenable, would of course vindicate it and establish it by the
+strongest arguments and by the most unassailable and most irrefragable
+proofs; and that in setting forth a doctrine so manifestly at war with
+every law and analogy of nature and every principle of science, no
+language should have been used, nor the slightest admission made,
+that could possibly lead to the slightest degree of suspicion that the
+original authors and propagators of this doctrine had either any doubt
+of the truth of the doctrine themselves, or were wanting in the most
+ample, the most abundant proof to sustain it. No language, no text,
+not a word, not a syllable should have been used making the most remote
+concession damaging to the validity of the doctrine, so that not "the
+shadow of a shade of doubt" could be left on any mind of its truth.
+Omnipotent indeed should be the logic, and irresistible the proof,
+in support of a thesis or a doctrine which so squarely confronts and
+contradicts all the observation, all the experience, the whole range
+of scientific knowledge, and the common sense of mankind. How startling
+then, to every devout and honest professor of the Christian faith ought
+to be the recent discovery of the fact, that the great majority of the
+texts having any bearing upon the doctrine of the divinity of Jesus
+Christ,--a large majority of the passages in the very book on which the
+doctrine is predicated, and which is acknowledged as the sole warranty
+for such a belief,--are actually at variance with the doctrine, and
+actually amount to its virtual denial and overthrow. For we find, upon
+a critical examination of the matter, that at least three-fourths of the
+texts, both in the Gospels and Epistles, which relate to the divinity
+of Christ, specifically or by implication either teach a different and
+a contrary doctrine, or make concessions entirely fatal to it, by
+investing him with finite human qualities utterly incompatible with the
+character and attributes of a divine or infinite Being. How strange,
+then, how superlatively strange, that millions should yet hold to such
+a strange "freak of nature," such a dark relic of oriental heathenism,
+such a monstrously foolish and childish superstition, as that which
+teaches the infinite Creator and "Upholder of the universe" could
+be reduced so near to nonentity, as was required to pass through the
+ordinary stages of human generation, human birth, and human parturition,
+--a puerile notion which reason, science, nature, philosophy, and common
+sense, proclaim to be supremely absurd and self-evidently impossible,
+and which even the Scriptures fail to sustain,--a logical, scriptural
+exposition, of which we will here present a brief summary:--
+
+1. The essential attributes of a self-existing God and Creator, and
+"Upholder of all things." are infinitude, omnipotence, omniscience,
+and omnipresence, and any being not possessing all these attributes to
+repletion, or possessing any quality or characteristic in the slightest
+degree incompatible with any one of these attributes, cannot be a God
+in a divine sense, but must of necessity be a frail, fallible, finite
+being.
+
+2. Jesus Christ disclaims, hundreds of times over, directly or
+impliedly, the inherent possession of any one of these divine
+attributes.
+
+3. His evangelical biographers have invested him with the entire
+category of human qualities and characteristics, each one of which
+is entirely unbefitting a God, and taken together are the only
+distinguishing characteristics by which we can know a man from a God.
+
+4. Furthermore, there issued from his own mouth various sayings and
+concessions most fatal to the conception of his being a God.
+
+5. His devout biographers have reported various actions and movements
+in his practical life which we are compelled to regard as absolutely
+irreconcilable with the infinite majesty, lofty character, and supreme
+attributes of an almighty Being.
+
+6. These human qualities were so obvious to all who saw him and all
+who became acquainted with him, that doubts sprang up among his own
+immediate followers, which ultimately matured into an open avowal of
+disbelief in his divinity in that early age.
+
+7. Upon the axiomatical principles of philosophy it is an utter and
+absolute impossibility to unite in repletion the divine and the human in
+the same being.
+
+8. And then Christ had a human birth.
+
+9. He was constituted in part, like human beings, of flesh and blood.
+
+10. He became, on certain occasions, "an hungered," like finite beings.
+
+11. He also became thirsty (John xix. 28), like perishable mortals.
+
+12. He often slept, like mortals, and thus became "to dumb forgetfulness
+a prey."
+
+13. He sometimes became weary, like human beings. (See John iv. 6.)
+
+14. He was occasionally tempted, like fallible mortals. (Matt. iv. 1.)
+
+15. His "soul became exceeding sorrowful," as a frail, finite being.
+(Matt. xxvi. 38.)
+
+16. He disclosed the weakness of human passion by weeping. (John xi.
+35.)
+
+17. He was originally an imperfect being, "made perfect through
+suffering." (Heb. ii. 10.)
+
+18. He "increased in wisdom and stature" (Luke ii. 52); therefore he
+must have possessed finite, changeable, mortal attributes.
+
+19. And he finally died and was buried, like all perishable mortals. He
+could not possibly, from these considerations, have been a God. It
+is utterly impracticable to associate with or comprehend, in a God of
+infinite powers and infinite attributes, all or any of these finite
+human qualities.
+
+20. Dark, intellectually dark, indeed, must be that mind, and sunk,
+sorrowfully sunk in superstition, that can worship a being as the great
+omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent "I AM," who possessed all those
+qualities which were constitutionally characteristic of the pious, the
+noble, the devout, the Godlike, yet finite and fallible Jesus, according
+to his own admissions and the representations of his own interested
+biographers.
+
+21. The only step which the disciples of the Christian faith have made
+toward disproving or setting aside these arguments, objections, and
+difficulties, is that of assigning the incarnate Jesus a double or
+twofold nature--the amalgamation of the human and divine; a postulate
+and a groundless assumption, which we have proved and demonstrated by
+thirteen arguments, which we believe to be unanswerable, is not only
+absurd, illogical, and impossible, but foolish and ludicrous in the
+highest degree. (See vol. ii.)
+
+22. This senseless hypothesis, and every other assumption and argument
+made use of by the professors of the Christian faith to vindicate their
+favorite dogma of the divinity of Jesus, we have shown to be equally
+applicable to the demigods of the ancient heathen, more than twenty
+of whom were invested with the same combination of human and divine
+qualities which the followers and worshippers of Jesus claim for him.
+
+23. Testimony of the Father against the divinity of the Son. The Father
+utterly precludes the Son from any participation in the divine essence,
+or any claim in the Godhead, by such declarations as the following: "I
+am Jehovah, and beside me there is no Savior." (Isaiah xliii. 11.) How,
+then, we would ask, can Jesus Christ be the Savior? "I, Jehovah, am thy
+Savior and thy Redeemer." Then Christ can be neither the Savior nor
+Redeemer. "There is no God else beside me, a just God and a Savior;
+there is none beside me." (Isaiah xiv. 21.) So the Father virtually
+declares, according to "the inspired prophet Isaiah," that the Son, in a
+divine sense, cannot be either God, Savior, or Redeemer. Again, "I am
+Jehovah, thy God, and thou shalt not acknowledge a God beside me."
+(Hosea xiii. 4.) Here Christ is not only by implication cut off from the
+Godhead, but positively prohibited from being worshipped as God. And
+thus the testimony of the Father disproves and sets aside the divinity
+of the Son.
+
+24. Testimony of the mother. When Mary found, after a long search,
+her son Jesus in the temple, disputing with the doctors, and chided or
+reproved him for staying from home without the consent of his parents,
+and declared, "thy father and I sought thee, sorrowing" (Luke ii. 48),
+she proclaimed a twofold denial of his divinity. In the first place it
+cannot be possible that she regarded her son Jesus as "that awful Being,
+before whom e'en the devout saints bow in trembling fear," when she used
+such language and evinced such a spirit as she did. "Why hast thou thus
+dealt with us?" (Luke ii. 48) is her chiding language. And then, when
+she speaks of Joseph as his father, "thy father and I," she issues a
+declaration against his divinity which ought to be regarded as settling
+the question forever. For who could know better than the mother, or
+rather, who could know but the mother, who the father of the child Jesus
+was? And as she acknowledges it was Joseph, she thus repudiates the
+story of the immaculate conception, which constitutes the whole basis
+for the claim of his divinity. Hence the testimony of the mother, also,
+disproves his title to the Godhead.
+
+25. Testimony or disclaimer of the Son. We will show by a specific
+citation of twenty-five texts that there is not one attribute
+comprehended in or peculiar to a divine and infinite Being, but that
+Christ rejects as applicable to himself--that he most conclusively
+disclaims every attribute of a divine Being, both by precept and
+practice, and often in the most explicit language.
+
+26. By declaring, "The Son can do nothing of himself" (John v. 19),
+he most emphatically disclaims the attribute of omnipotence. For an
+omnipotent Being can need no aid, and can accept of none.
+
+27. When he acknowledged and avowed his ignorance of the day of
+judgment, which must be presumed to be the most important event in the
+world's history, he disclaimed the attribute of omniscience. "Of that
+day and hour knoweth no man, neither the Son, but the Father only."
+(Matt. xxiv. 36.) Now, as an omniscient Being must possess all
+knowledge, his avowed ignorance in this case is a confession he was not
+omniscient, and hence not a God.
+
+28. And when he declares, "I am glad for your sakes I was not there" (at
+the grave of Lazarus), he most distinctly disavows being omnipresent,
+and thus denies to himself another essential attribute of an infinite
+God.
+
+29. And the emphatic declaration, "I live by the Father" (John vi. 57),
+is a direct disclaimer of the attributes of self-existence; as a being
+who lives by another cannot be self-existent, and, per consequence, not
+the infinite God.
+
+30 He disclaims possessing infinite goodness, another essential
+attribute of a supreme divine Being. "Why callest thou me good? there is
+none good but one, that is God." (Mark x. 18.)
+
+31. He disclaim divine honors, and directed them to the father. "I honor
+my Father." (John viii. 49.) "I receive not honor from men." (John v.
+41.)
+
+32. He recommended supreme worship to the Father, and not to himself.
+"The true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth."
+(John iv. 21.)
+
+33. He ascribed supreme dominion to the Father. "Thine is the kingdom,
+and the power, and the glory forever." (Matt. vi. 13.)
+
+34. It will be seen, from the foregoing text, that Christ also
+acknowledges that the kingdom is the Father's. A God without a kingdom
+would be a ludicrous state of things.
+
+35. He conceded supreme authority to the Father.
+
+"My doctrine is not mine, but his that sent me." (John vii. 16.)
+
+36. He considered the Father as the supreme protector and preserver of
+even his own disciples. "I pray that thou shouldst keep them from the
+evil." (John xvii. 15.) What, omnipotence not able to protect his own
+disciples?
+
+37. In fine, he humbly acknowledged that his power, his will, his
+ministry, his mission, his authority, his works, his knowledge, and his
+very life, were all from, and belonged to and were under the control of,
+the Father. "I can do nothing of myself;" "I came to do the will of him
+that sent me." "The Father that dwelleth within me, he doeth the work,"
+&c. "A God within a God," is an old pagan Otaheitan doctrine.
+
+38. He declared that even spiritual communion was the work of the
+Father. (See John vi. 45.)
+
+39. He acknowledged himself controlled by the Father. (See John v. 30.)
+
+40. He acknowledged his entire helplessness and dependence on the
+Father. "The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father
+do." (John v. 19.)
+
+41. He acknowledged that even his body was the work of his Father; in
+other words, that he was dependent on his Father for his physical life.
+(See Heb. xvi. 5.)
+
+42. And more than all, he not only called the Father "the only true God"
+(John xvii. 3), but calls him "my Father and my God." (John xx. 17.)
+Now, it would be superlative nonsense to consider a being himself a
+God, or the God, who could use such language as is here ascribed to the
+humble Jesus. This text, this language, is sufficient of itself to
+show that Christ could not have laid any claim to the Godhead on any
+occasion, unless we degrade him to the charge of the most palpable and
+shameful contradiction.
+
+43. He uniformly directed his disciples to pray, not to him, but the
+Father. (See Matt. vi. 6.)
+
+44. On one occasion, as we have cited the proof (in Matt. xi. 11), he
+even acknowledged John the Baptist to be greater than he; while it
+must be patent to every reader that no man could be greater than the
+almighty, supreme Potentate of heaven and earth, in any sense whatever.
+
+45. Testimony of the disciples. Another remarkable proof of the human
+sireship of Jesus is, that one of his own disciples--ay, one of the
+chosen twelve, selected by him as being endowed with a perfect knowledge
+of his character, mission, and origin--this witness, thus posted and
+thus authorized, proclaims, in unequivocal language, that Jesus was the
+son of Joseph. Hear the language of Philip addressed to Nathanael.
+"We have found him of whom Moses, in the law and the prophets, did
+write--Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph." (John i. 45.) No language
+could be more explicit, no declaration more positive, that Jesus was the
+son of Joseph. And no higher authority could be adduced to settle the
+question, coming as it does from "headquarters." And what will, or
+what can, the devout stickler for the divinely paternal origin of Jesus
+Christ do with such testimony? It is a clincher which no sophistry can
+set aside, no reasoning can grapple with, and no logic overthrow.
+
+46. His disciples, instead of representing him as being "the only true
+God," often speak of him in contradistinction to God.
+
+47. They never speak of him as the God Christ Jesus, but as "the man
+Christ Jesus." ( 1 Tim. ii. 5.) "Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved of
+God." (Acts ii. 23.) It would certainly be blasphemy to speak of the
+Supreme Being as "a man approved of God." Christian reader, reflect upon
+this text. "By that man whom he (die Father) hath ordained" (Acts xvii.
+3), by the assumption of the Godhead of Christ, we would be presented
+with the double or twofold solecism, 1st. Of God being "ordained" by
+another God; and 2d. That of his being blasphemously called a "man."
+
+48. Paul's declaration has been cited, that "unto us there is but one
+God--the Father." ( 1 Cor. iv. 8. ) Now, it is plain to common sense,
+that if there is but one God, and that God is comprehended in the
+Father, then Christ is entirely excluded from the Godhead.
+
+49. If John's declaration be true, that "no man hath seen God at any
+time" (John iv. 12), then the important question arises, How could
+Christ be God, as he was seen by thousands of men, and seen hundreds of
+times?
+
+50. God the Father is declared to be the "One," "the Holy One," "the
+only One," &c., more than one hundred times, as if purposely to exclude
+the participation of any other being in the Godhead.
+
+51. This one, this only God, is shown to be the Father alone in more
+than four thousand texts, thirteen hundred and twenty-six of which are
+found in the New Testament.
+
+52. More than fifty texts have been found which declare, either
+explicitly or by implication, that God the Father has no equal, which
+effectually denies or shuts out the divine equality of the Son. "To whom
+will ye liken me, or shall I be equal with, saith the holy One." (Isaiah
+xl. 25.)
+
+53. Christ in the New Testament is called "man," and "the Son of
+man," eighty-four times,--egregious and dishonorable misnomers, most
+certainly, to apply to a supreme and infinite Deity. On the other hand,
+he is called God but three times, and denominates himself "the Son of
+God" but once, and that rather obscurely.
+
+54. The Father is spoken of, in several instances, as standing in the
+relation of God to the Son, as "the God of our Lord Jesus Christ" (Acts
+iii. 2.) "Ye are Christ's, and Christ is Gods." (i Cor. xi. 3.) Now,
+the God of a God is a polytheistic, heathen conception; and 1 no
+meaning or interpretation, as we have shown, can be I forced upon such
+texts as these, that will not admit a plurality of Gods, if we admit
+the titles as applicable to Christ, or that his scriptural biographers
+intend to apply such a title in a superior or supreme sense.
+
+55. Many texts make Christ the mere tool, agent, image, servant, or
+representative of God, as Christ, "the image of God" (Heb. i. 3),
+Christ, the appointed of God (Heb. iii. 1), Christ, "the servant of God"
+(Matt. xii. | 18), &c. To consider a being thus spoken of as himself the
+supreme God, is, as we have demonstrated, the very climax of absurdity
+and nonsense. To believe "the servant of God" is God himself,--that is,
+the servant of himself,--and that God and his "image" are the same, is
+to descend within one step of buffoonery.
+
+56. And then it has been ascertained that there are more than three
+hundred texts which declare, either expressly or by implication,
+Christ's subordination to and dependence on the Father, as, "I can do
+nothing of myself;" "Not mine, but his that sent me;" "I came to do the
+will of him that sent me" (John iv. 34); "I seek the will of my Father,"
+&c.
+
+57. And more than one hundred and fifty texts make the Son inferior to
+the Father, as "the Son knoweth not, but the Father does" (Mark viii.
+32); "My Father is greater than I;" "The Son can do nothing of himself"
+(John v. 19), &c.
+
+58. There are many divine titles applied to the Father which are never
+used in reference to the Son, as "Jehovah," "The Most High," "God
+Almighty," "The Almighty," &c.
+
+On the other hand, those few divine epithets or titles which are used in
+application to Jesus Christ, as Lord, God, Savior, Redeemer,
+Intercessor, &c., it has been shown were all used prior to the birth of
+Christ, in application to beings known and acknowledged to be men, and
+some of them are found so applied in the bible itself; as, for example,
+Moses is called a God in two instances, as we have shown, and cited the
+proof (in Ex. iv. 16, vii. 1), while the title of Lord is applied to men
+at this day, even in Christian countries. And instances have been cited
+in the bible of the term Savior being applied to men, both in the
+singular and plural numbers. (See 2 Kings xiii. 5, and Neh. ix. 27.)
+Seeing, then, that the most important divine titles which the writers of
+the New Testament have applied to Jesus were previously used in
+application to men, known and admitted to be such, it is therefore at
+once evident that those titles do nothing toward proving him to be the
+Great Divine Being, as the modern Christian world assume him to be, even
+if we base the argument wholly on scriptural grounds. While, on the
+other hand, we have demonstrated it to be an absolute impossibility to
+apply with any propriety or any sense to a divine infinite omnipotent
+Being those finite human qualities which are so frequently used with
+reference to Jesus throughout the New Testament. And hence, even if we
+should suppose or concede that the writers of the New Testament did
+really believe him to be the great Infinite Spirit, or the almighty,
+omnipotent God,'we must conclude they were mistaken, from their own
+language, from their own description of him, as well as his own virtual
+denial and rejection of such a claim, when he applied to himself, as he
+did in nine cases out of ten, strictly finite human qualities and human
+titles (as we have shown), wholly incompatible with the character of an
+infinite divine Being. We say, from the foregoing considerations, if the
+primitive disciples of Jesus did really believe him to be the great
+Infinite, both their descriptions of him and his description or
+representation of himself, would amply and most conclusively prove that
+they were mistaken. At least we are compelled to admit that there is
+either an error in applying divine titles to Jesus, or often an error in
+describing his qualities and powers, by himself and his original
+followers, as there is no compatibility or agreement between the two.
+Divine titles to such a being as they represent him to be, would be an
+egregious misnomer. We say, then, that it must be clearly and
+conclusively evident to every unbiased mind, from evidence furnished by
+the bible itself, that if the divine titles applied to Jesus were
+intended to have a divine significance, then they are misapplied. Yet we
+would not here conclude an intentional misrepresentation in the case,
+but simply a mistake growing out of a misconception, and the very
+limited childish conception, of the nature, character, and attributes
+of the "great positive Mind," so universally prevalent in that
+semi-barbarous age, and the apparently total ignorance of the
+distinguishing characteristics which separate the divine and the human.
+We will illustrate: some children, on passing through a wild portion of
+the State of Maine recently, reported they encountered a bear; and to
+prove they could not be mistaken in the animal, they described it as
+being a tall, slight-built animal, with long slender legs, of yellowish
+auburn hue, a short, white, bushy tail, cloven feet, large branchy
+horns, &c. Now, it will be seen at once that, while their description of
+the animal is evidently in the main correct, they had simply mistaken a
+deer for a bear, and hence misnamed the animal.
+
+In like manner we must conclude, from the repeated instances in which
+Christ's biographers have ascribed to him all the foibles, frailties,
+and finite qualities and characteristics of a human being, that if they
+have in any instance called him a God in a divine sense, it is an
+egregious misnomer. Their description of him makes him a man, and but a
+man, whatever may have been their opinion with respect to the propriety
+of calling him a God. And if the two do not harmonize, the former must
+rule the judgment in all cases. The truth is, the Jewish founders of
+Christianity entertained such a low, narrow, contracted, and mean
+opinion of Deity and the infinite distinction and distance between the
+divine and the human, that their theology reduced him to a level with
+man; and hence they usually described him as a man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL. A METONYMIC VIEW OF THE DIVINITY OF JESUS CHRIST
+
+IF Jesus Christ were truly God, or if there existed such a co-equal
+and co-essential oneness between the Father and the Son that they
+constituted but one being or divine essence, then what is true of one
+is true of the other, and a change of names and titles from one to the
+other cannot alter the sense of the text. Let us, then, substitute the
+titles found applied to the Son in the New Testament, to the Father, and
+observe the effect:--
+
+"My Son is greater than I." (John vii. 28.)
+
+"God can do nothing of himself." (John v. 19.)
+
+"I must be about my Son's business." (Luke ii. 49.)
+
+"The kingdom of heaven is not mine to give, but the Son's." (Matt. xx.
+23.)
+
+"I am come in my Son's name, and ye receive me not" (John v. 43.)
+
+"God cried, Jesus, why hast thou forsaken me?" (Matt. xiii. 28.)
+
+"No man hath seen Jesus at any time." (1 John i. 5-)
+
+"Jesus created all things by his Son." (Eph. iii. 9.)
+
+"God sat down (in heaven) at the right hand of Jesus." (Luke xxii. 69.)
+
+"There is one Jesus, one mediator between Jesus and men." (Gal. iii.
+20.)
+
+"Jesus gave his only begotten Father." (1 John iv. 9)
+
+"God knows not the hour, but Jesus does." (Mark viii. 32.)
+
+"God is the servant of Jesus." (Mark xii. 18.)
+
+"God is ordained by Jesus." (Acts xvii. 31.)
+
+"The head of God is Christ." (Eph. i. 3.)
+
+"We have an advocate with Jesus, God the righteous." (1 John ii. 1.)
+
+"Jesus gave all power to God." (Matt, xxviii. 18.)
+
+"God abode all night in prayer to Jesus." (Luke vi. 12.)
+
+"God came down from heaven to do the will of Jesus." (John vi. 38.)
+
+"Jesus has made the Father his high priest." (Heb. x. 24.)
+
+"Last of all, the Son sent the Father." (Matt. xxi. 39.)
+
+"Jesus will save the world by that God whom he hath ordained."
+
+"Jesus is God of the Father." (John xx. 17.)
+
+"Jesus hath exalted God, and given him a more excellent name." (Phil.
+ii. 9.)
+
+"Jesus hath made God a little lower than the angels." (Heb. ii. 9.)
+
+"God can do nothing except what he seeth Jesus do." (John v. 19.)
+
+Now, the question arises, Is the above representation a true one? Most
+certainly it must be, if Jesus and the Father are but one almighty
+Being. A change of names and titles cannot alter the truth nor the
+sense.
+
+To say that Chief Justice Chase has gone south; Secretary Chase has gone
+south; Governor Chase has gone south; Ex-Senator Chase has gone south,
+or Salmon P. Chase has gone south, are affirmations equally true and
+equally sensible, because they all have reference to the same being; the
+case is to plain to need argument.
+
+The above reversal of names and titles of Jesus and the Father may sound
+very unpleasant and rather grating to Christ-adoring Christians, simply
+because it is the transposition of the tides of two very scripturally
+dissimilar beings, instead of being, as generally taught by orthodox
+Christians, "one in essence, one in mind, one in body or being, and one
+in name," as the Rev. Mr. Barnes affirms. Most self-evidently false
+is his statement, based solely on scriptural ground. If Jesus is "very
+God," and there is but one God, then the foregoing transposition cannot
+mar the sense nor altar the truth of one text quoted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI. THE PRECEPTS AND PRACTICAL LIFE OF JESUS CHRIST; HIS TWO
+HUNDRED ERRORS
+
+THE exaltation of men to the character and homage of divine beings
+has always had the effect to draw a vail over their errors and
+imperfections, so as to render them imperceptible to those who worship
+them as Gods. This is true of nearly all the deified men of antiquity,
+who were adored as incarnate divinities, among which may be included
+the Christian's man-God, Jesus Christ. The practice of the followers of
+these Gods has been, when an error was pointed out in their teachings,
+brought to light by the progress of science and general intelligence,
+to bestow upon the text some new and unwarranted meaning, entirely
+incompatible with its literal reading, or else to insist with a godly
+zeal on the correctness of the sentiment inculcated by the text, and
+thus essay to make error pass for truth. In this way millions of the
+disciples of' these Gods have been misled and blinded, and made to
+believe by their religious teachers and their religious education, that
+everything taught by their assumed-to-be divine exemplars is perfect
+truth, in perfect harmony with science, sense, and true morals. Indeed,
+the perversion of the mind and judgment by a religious education has
+been in many cases carried to such an extreme as to cause their devout
+and prejudiced followers either to entirely overlook and ignore their
+erroneous teachings, or to magnify them into God-given truths, and thus,
+as before stated, clothe error with the livery of truth. This state of
+things, it has long been noticed by unprejudiced minds, exists amongst
+the millions of professed believers in the divinity of Jesus Christ.
+Hence the errors, both in his moral lessons and his practical life, have
+passed from age to age unnoticed, because his pious and awe-stricken
+followers, having been taught that he was a divine teacher, have assumed
+that his teachings must all be true; and hence, too, have instituted no
+scrutiny to determine their truth or falsity. But we will now proceed to
+show that the progress of' science and general intelligence has brought
+to light many errors, not only in his teachings, but in his practical
+life also. In enumerating them, we will arrange them under the head
+
+
+MORAL AND RELIGIOUS ERRORS.
+
+1. The first moral precept in the teachings of Christ, which we will
+bring to notice, is one of a numerous class, which may very properly
+be arranged under the head of Moral Extremism. We find many of his
+admonitions of this character. Nearly everything that is said is
+oversaid, carried to extremes--thus constituting an overwrought,
+extravagant system of morality, impracticable in its requisitions; as,
+for example, "Take no thought for the morrow." (Matt, v.) If the spirit
+of this injunction were carried out in practical life, there would be
+no grain sown and no seed planted in spring, no reaping done in harvest,
+and no crop garnered in autumn; and the result would be universal
+starvation in less than twelve months. But, fortunately for society, the
+Christian world have laid this positive injunction upon the table under
+the rule of "indefinite postponement."
+
+2. Christ's assumed-to-be most important requisition is found in the
+injunction, "Seek ye first the Kingdom of God, and his righteousness,
+and all else shall be added unto you." (Matt. vi. 33.) His early
+followers understood by this injunction, and doubtless understood it
+correctly, that they were to spend their lives in religious devotion,
+and neglect the practical duties of life, leaving "Providence" to take
+care of their families--a course of life which reduced many of them to
+the point of starvation.
+
+3. The disciple of Christ is required, "when smitten on one cheek," to
+turn the other also that is, when one cheek is pommeled into a jelly by
+some vile miscreant or drunken wretch, turn the other, to be smashed up
+in like manner. This is an extravagant requisition, which none of his
+modern disciples even attempt to observe.
+
+4. "Resist not evil" (Matt. v. 34) breathes forth a kindred spirit. This
+injunction requires you to stand with your hands in your pocket while
+being maltreated so cruelly and unmercifully that the forfeiture of
+your life may be the consequence--at least Christ's early followers so
+understood it.
+
+5. The disciple of Christ is required, when his cloak is formally
+wrested from him, to give up his coat also. (See Matt, v.) And to carry
+out the principle, if the marauder demands it, he must next give up his
+boots, then his shirt, and thus strip himself of all his garments, and
+go naked. This looks like an invitation and bribe to robbery.
+
+6. "Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth." (Matt. vi. 19.) This
+is another positive command of Christ, which the modern Christian world,
+by common consent, have laid on the table under the rule of "indefinite
+postponement," under the conviction that the wants of their families and
+the exigencies of sickness and old age cannot be served if they should
+live up to such an injunction.
+
+7. "Sell all that thou hast,... and come and follow me," is another
+command which bespeaks more piety than wisdom, as all who have attempted
+to comply with it have reduced their families to beggary and want.
+
+8. "If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him."
+Then he must hate it, as there are but the two principles, and "from
+hate proceed envy, strife, evil surmisings, and persecution." Evidently
+the remedy in this case for "worldly-mindedness" is worse than the
+disease.
+
+9. "He that cometh to me, and hateth not father, mother, brother, and
+sister, &c., cannot be my disciple." (Luke xiv. 26). This breathes forth
+the same spirit as the last text quoted above. Many learned expositions
+have been penned by Christian writers to make it appear, that hate in
+this case does not mean hate. But certainly it would be a slander upon
+infinite wisdom to leave it to be inferred that he could not say or
+"inspire" his disciples to say exactly what he meant, and to say it so
+plainly as to leave no possibility of being misunderstood, or leave any
+ground for dispute about the meaning.
+
+10. "Rejoice and be exceeding glad" when persecuted. (Matt. v. 4.) Now,
+as a state of rejoicing is the highest condition of happiness that can
+be realized, such advice must naturally prompt the religious zealot
+to court persecution, in order to obtain complete happiness, and
+consequently to pursue a dare-devil life to provoke persecution.
+
+11. "Whosoever shall seek to save his life, shall lose it," &c. (Luke
+xvii. 33.) Here is displayed the spirit of martyrdom which has made
+millions reckless of life, and goaded on the frenzied bigot to seek the
+fiery fagot and the halter. We regard it as another display of religious
+fanaticism.
+
+12. "Ye shall be hated of all men for my name's sake." (Matt. x. 12.)
+How repulsive must have been their doctrines or their conduct! No
+sensible religion could excite the universal hatred of mankind. For it
+would contain something adapted to the moral, religious, or spiritual
+taste of some class or portion of society, and hence make it and its
+disciples loved instead of hated. And then how could they be "hated of
+all men," when not one man in a thousand ever heard of them? Here is
+more of the extravagance of religious enthusiasm.
+
+13. "Shake off the dust of your feet" against those who cannot see
+the truth or utility of your doctrines. (Matt. x. 14.) Here Christ
+encourages in his disciples a spirit of contempt for the opinions of
+others calculated to make them "hated." A proper regard for the rules of
+good-breeding would have forbidden such rudeness toward strangers for a
+mere honest difference of opinion.
+
+14. "Take nothing for your journey, neither staff, nor scrip, nor purse"
+(Mark vi. 8); that is "sponge on your friends, and force yourselves on
+your enemies," the latter class of which seem to have been much the most
+numerous. A preacher who should attempt to carry out this advice at the
+present day would be stopped at the first toll-gate, and compelled to
+return. Here is more violation of the rules of good-breeding, and the
+common courtesies of civilized life.
+
+15. "Go and teach all nations," &c. Why issue an injunction that could
+not possibly be carried out? It never has been, and never will be,
+executed, for three-fourths of the human race have never yet heard of
+Christianity. It was not, therefore, a mark of wisdom, or a superior
+mind, to issue such an injunction.
+
+16. "And he that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that
+believeth not shall be damned." What intolerance, bigotry, relentless
+cruelty, and ignorance of the science of mind are here displayed! No
+philosopher would give utterance to, or indorse such a sentiment.
+It assumes that belief is a creature of the will, and that a man
+can believe anything he chooses, which is wide of the truth. And the
+assumption has been followed by persecution, misery, and bloodshed.
+
+17. "All things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall
+receive." (Matt. xxi. 22.) Here is an entire negation of natural law in
+the necessity of physical labor as a means to procure the comforts of
+life. When anything is wanted in the shape of food or raiment, it is
+to be obtained, according to this text, by going down on your knees
+and asking God to bestow it. But no Christian ever realized "all things
+whatsoever asked for in prayer," thought "believing with all his heart"
+he should obtain it. The author knows, by his own practical experience,
+that this declaration is not true. This promise has been falsified
+thousands of times by thousands of praying Christians.
+
+18. "Be not called rabbi." "Call no man your father." (Matt, xxiii.)
+The Christian world assume that much of what Christ taught is mere idle
+nonsense, or the incoherent utterings of a religious fanatic; for
+they pay no more practical attention to it than the barking of a dog.
+And here is one command treated in this manner: "Call no man father."
+Where is the Christian who refuses to call his earthly sire a father?
+
+19. "Call no man master." (Matt, xxiii.) And yet mister, which is the
+same thing, is the most common title in Christendom.
+
+20. He who enunciates the two words, "'Thou fool.' shall be in danger of
+hell fire." (Matt, xxii.) Mercy! Who, then, can be saved? For there is
+probably not a live Christian in the world who has not called somebody a
+"fool," when he knew him to be such, and could not with truthfulness be
+called anything else. Here, then, is another command universally ignored
+and "indefinitely postponed."
+
+21. "Swear not at all, neither by heaven nor earth." (Matt, v.) And yet
+no Christian refuses to indulge in legal, if not profane, swearing which
+the text evidently forbids.
+
+22. "Men ought always to pray." (Luke xviii.) No time to be allowed for
+eating or sleeping. More religious fanaticism.
+
+23. "Whosoever will be chief among you let him be your servant" (Matt.
+xx. 27); that is, no Christian professor shall be a president, governor,
+major-general, deacon, or priest. Another command laid on the table.
+
+24. "Love your enemies." (Matt. v. 44.) Then what kind of feeling should
+we cultivate toward friends? And how much did he love his enemies when
+he called them "fools," "liars," "hypocrites," "generation of vipers,"
+&c.? And yet he is held up as "our" example in love, meekness,
+and forbearance. But no man ever did love an enemy. It is a moral
+impossibility, as much so as to love bitter or nauseating food.
+The advice of the Roman slave Syrus is indicative of more sense and
+wisdom--"Treat your enemy kindly, and thus make him a friend."
+
+25. We are required to forgive an enemy four hundred and ninety times;
+that is, "seventy times seven." (Matt, vii.) Another outburst of
+religious enthusiasm; another proof of an overheated imagination.
+
+26. "Be ye perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect." (Matt. v.
+48.) Here is more of the religious extravagance of a mind uncultured
+by science. For it is self-evident that human beings can make no
+approximation to divine perfection. The distance between human
+imperfection and a perfect God is, and ever must be, infinite.
+
+27. Christ commended those who "became eunuchs for the kingdom of
+heaven's sake" (Matt. xix. 12)--a custom requiring a murderous,
+self-butchering process; destructive of the energies of life and the
+vigor of manhood, and rendering the subject weak, effeminate, and
+mopish, and unfit for the business of life. It is a low species of
+piety, and discloses a lamentable lack of a scientific knowledge of the
+true functions of the sexual organs on the part of Jesus.
+
+28. Christ also encouraged his disciples to "pluck out the eye," and
+"cut off the hand," as a means of rendering it impossible to perpetrate
+evil with those members. And we would suggest, if such advice is
+consistent with sound reasoning, the head also should be cut off, as a
+means of more effectually carrying out the same principle. Such advice
+never came from the mouth of a philosopher. It is a part of Christ's
+system of extravagant piety.
+
+29. He also taught the senseless, oriental tradition of "the
+unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost"--a fabulous being who figured
+more anciently in the history of various countries. (See Chapter
+XXII.) No philosopher or man of science could harbor such childish
+misconceptions as are embodied in this tradition, which neither
+describes the being nor explains the nature of the sin.
+
+30. We find many proofs, in Christ's Gospel history, that he believed
+in the ancient heathen tradition which taught that disease is caused by
+demons and evil spirits. (See Luke vii. 21, and viii. 2.)
+
+31. Many cases are reported of his relieving the obsessed by casting out
+the diabolical intruders, in imitation of the oriental custom long in
+vogue in various countries, by which he evinced a profound ignorance of
+the natural causes of disease.
+
+32. Christ also taught the old pagan superstition that "God is a God of
+anger," while modern science teaches that it would be as impossible for
+a God of perfect and infinite attributes to experience the feeling of
+anger as to commit suicide; and recent discoveries in physiology prove
+that anger is a species of suicide, and that it is also a species of
+insanity. Hence an angry God would be an insane God--an omnipotent
+lunatic, "ruling the kingdom of heaven," which would make heaven a
+lunatic asylum, and rather a dangerous place to live.
+
+33. And Christ's injunction to "fear God" also implies that he is an
+angry being. (See Luke xxiii. 40.) But y past history proves that "the
+fear of God" has always been the great lever of priestcraft, and the
+most paltry and pitiful motive that ever moved the human mind. It has
+paralyzed the noblest intellects, crushed the elasticity of youth, and
+augmented the hesitating indecision of old age, and finally filled the
+world with cowardly, trembling slaves. No philosopher will either love
+or worship a God he fears. "The fear of the Lord" is a very ancient
+heathen superstition.
+
+34. The inducement Christ holds out for leading a virtuous life by
+the promise of "Well done, thou good and faithful servant," bespeaks a
+childish ignorance of the nature of the human mind and the true science
+of life. It ranks with the promise of the nurse of sugar-plums to the
+boy if he would keep his garments unsoiled. (For the remainder of the
+two hundred errors of Christ, see Vol. II.)
+
+There are many other errors found in the precepts and practical life
+of Jesus Christ (which we are compelled to omit an exposition of
+here), such as his losing his temper, and abusing the money-changers by
+overthrowing their counting-table, and expelling them from the temple
+with a whip of cords when engaged in a lawful' and laudable business;
+his getting mad at and cursing the fig tree; his dooming Capernaum
+to hell in a fit of anger; his being deceived by two of his disciples
+(Peter and Judas), which prompted him to call them devils; his implied
+approval of David, with his fourteen crimes and penitentiary deeds, and
+also Abraham, with his falsehoods, polygamy, and incest, and his implied
+sanction of the Old Testament, with all its errors and numerous crimes;
+his promise to his twelve apostles to "sit upon the twelve thrones of
+Israel" in heaven, thus evincing a very limited and childish conception
+of the enjoyments of the future life; his puerile idea of sin,
+consisting in a personal affront to a personal God; his omission to say
+anything about human freedom, the inalienable rights of man, &c.
+
+
+THE SCIENTIFIC ERRORS OF CHRIST.
+
+That Jesus Christ was neither a natural or moral philosopher is evident
+from the following facts:--
+
+1. He never made any use of the word "philosophy."
+
+2. Never gave utterance to the word "science."
+
+3. Never spoke of a natural law, or assigned a natural cause for
+anything. The fact that he never made use of these words now so current
+in all civilized countries, is evidence that he was totally ignorant of
+these important branches of knowledge, the cultivation of which is now
+known to be essential to the progress of civilization. And yet it
+is claimed his religion has been a great lever in the advancement of
+civilization. But this is a mistake--a solemn mistake, as elsewhere
+shown. (See Chap. XLV.)
+
+4. Everything to Christ was miracle; everything was produced and
+controlled by the arbitrary power of an angry or irascible God.
+He evidently had no idea of a ruling principle in nature or of the
+existence of natural law, as controlling any event he witnessed. Hence
+he set no bounds to anything, and recognized no limits to the possible.
+He believed God to be a supernatural personal being, who possessed
+unlimited power, and who ruled and controlled everything by his
+arbitrary will, without any law or any limitation to its exercises.
+Hence he told his disciples they would have anything they prayed for in
+faith; that by faith they could roll mountains into the sea, or bring
+to a halt the rolling billows of the mighty deep. He evidently believed
+that the forked lightning, the out-bursting earth-shaking thunder,
+and the roaring, heaving volcano were but pliant tools or obsequious
+servants to the man of faith. And he displays no less ignorance of the
+laws of mind than the laws of nature; thus proving him to have been
+neither a natural, moral, nor mental philosopher. He omitted to teach
+the great moral lessons learned by human experience, of which he was
+evidently totally ignorant.
+
+5. He never taught that the practice of virtue contains its own reward.
+
+6. That the question of right and wrong of any action is to be decided
+by its effect upon the individual, or upon society.
+
+7. That no life can be displeasing to God which is useful to man.
+
+8. And he omitted to teach the most important lesson that can engage
+the attention of man, viz.: that the great purpose of life is
+self-development.
+
+9. That no person can attain or approximate to real happiness without
+bestowing a special attention to the cultivation and exercise of all
+the mental and physical faculties, so far as to keep them in a healthy
+condition. None of the important lessons above named are hinted at in
+his teachings, which, if punctually observed, would do more to advance
+the happiness of the human race than all the sermons Christ or Chrishna
+ever preached, or ever taught.
+
+10. And then he taught many doctrines which are plainly contradicted by
+the established principle of modern science, such as,--
+
+11. Diseases being produced by demons, devils, or wicked spirits. (See
+Mark ix. 20.)
+
+Christ nowhere assigns a natural cause for disease, or a scientific
+explanation for its cure.
+
+12. His rebuking a fever discloses a similar lack of scientific
+knowledge. ( See Luke iv. 39.)
+
+13. His belief in a literal hell and a lake of fire and brimstone (see
+Matt, xviii. 8) is an ancient heathen superstition science knows nothing
+about, and has no use for.
+
+14. His belief in a personal devil also (see Matt. xvii. 88), which is
+another oriental tradition, furnishes more sad proof of an utter want of
+scientific knowledge, as science has no place for and no use for such a
+being.
+
+15. Christ taught the unphilosophical doctrine of repentance, as he
+declared he "came to call sinners to repentance" (Matt. ix. 13)--a
+mental process, which consists merely in a revival of early impressions,
+and often leads a person to condemn that which is right, as well as that
+which is wrong. (For proof, see Chapter XLIII.)
+
+16. The doctrine of "forgiveness," which Christ so often inculcated,
+is also at variance with the teachings of science, as it can do nothing
+toward changing the nature of the act forgiven, or toward cancelling its
+previous effects upon society. Science teaches that every crime has its
+penalty attached to it, which no act of forgiveness, by God or man, can
+arrest or set aside.
+
+17. But nothing evinces, perhaps, more clearly Christ's total lack of
+scientific knowledge than his holding a man responsible for his belief,
+and condemning for disbelief, as he does in numerous instances (see Mark
+xvi. 16), for a man could as easily control the circulation of the blood
+in his veins as control his belief. Science teaches that belief depends
+upon evidence, and without it, it is impossible to believe, and with
+it, it is impossible to disbelieve. How foolish and unphilosophical,
+therefore, to condemn for either belief or disbelief!
+
+18. The numerous cases in which Christ speaks of the heart as being
+the seat of consciousness, instead of the brain, evinces a remarkable
+ignorance of the science of mental philosophy. He speaks of an "upright
+heart," "a pure heart," &'c., when "an upright liver," "a pure liver,"
+would be as sensible, as the latter has as much to do with the character
+as the former.
+
+19. And the many cases in which he makes it meritorious to have a right
+"faith," and places it above reason, and assumes it to be a voluntary
+act, shows his utter ignorance of the nature of the human mind.
+
+20. And Christ evinced a remarkable ignorance of the cause of physical
+defects, when he told his hearers a certain man was born blind, in order
+that he might cure him. (Matt. vii. 22.)
+
+21. And Christ's declaration, that those who marry are not worthy of
+being saved (see Luke xx. 34), shows that he was very ignorant of the
+nature of the sexual functions of the human system.
+
+22. Nothing could more completely demonstrate a total ignorance of the
+grand science of astronomy than Christ's prediction of the stars falling
+to the earth. (See Luke xxi. 25.)
+
+23. And the conflagration of the world, "the gathering of the elect,"
+and the realization of a fancied millennium, which he several times
+predicted would take place in his time, "before this generation pass
+away" (Matt, xxiv. 34), proves a like ignorance, both of astronomy and
+philosophy.
+
+24. And his cursing of the fig tree for not bearing fruit in the winter
+season (see Matt. xxi. 20), not only proves his ignorance of the laws of
+nature, but evinces a bad temper.
+
+25. Christ indorses the truth of Noah's flood story (see Luke xvii. 27),
+which every person at the present day, versed in science and natural
+law, knows is mere fiction, and never took place.
+
+And numerous other errors, evincing the most profound ignorance of
+science and natural law, might be pointed out in Christ's teachings,
+if we had space for them. It has always been alleged by orthodox
+Christendom, that Christ's teaching and moral system are so faultless as
+to challenge criticism, and so perfect as to defy improvement. But this
+is a serious mistake. For most of his precepts and moral inculcations
+which are not directly at war with the principles of science, or do not
+involve a flagrant violation of the laws of nature, are, nevertheless,
+characterized by a lawless and extravagant mode of expression peculiar
+to semi-savage life, and which, as it renders it impossible to reduce
+them to practice, shows they could not have emanated from a philosopher,
+or man of science, or a man of evenly-balanced mind. They impose upon
+the world a system of morality, pushed to such extremes that its own
+professed admirers do not live it out, or even attempt to do so. They
+long ago abandoned it as an impracticable duty. We will prove this by
+enumerating most of its requisitions, and showing that they are daily
+violated and trampled under foot by all Christendom. Where can the
+Christian professor be found who, 1. "takes no thought for the morrow"
+or, 2. who "lays not up treasure on earth," or, at least, tries to do
+it; or, 3. who "gives up all his property to the poor;" or who, "when
+his cloak is wrested from him by a robber," gives up his coat also;
+or who calls no man master or mister (the most common title in
+Christendom); or who calls no man father (if he has a father); or who
+calls no man a fool (when he knows he is a fool); or who, when one cheek
+is pommeled into a jelly by some vile miscreant or drunken wretch,
+turns the other to be battered up in the same way; or who prays without
+ceasing; or who rejoices when persecuted; or who forgives an enemy four
+hundred and ninety times (70 times 7); or who manifests by his practical
+life that he loves his enemies (the way he loves him is to report him to
+the grand jury, or hand him over to the sheriff); or who forsakes
+houses and land, and everything, "for the kingdom of heaven's sake." No
+Christian professor lives up to these precepts, or any of them, or even
+tries to do so. To talk, therefore, of finding a practical Christian,
+while nearly the whole moral code of Christ is thus daily and habitually
+outraged and trampled under foot by all the churches and every one of
+the two hundred millions of Christian professors, is bitter irony and
+supreme solecism. We would go five hundred miles, or pay five hundred
+dollars, to see a Christian. If a man can be a Christian while openly
+and habitually violating every precept of Christ, then the word has no
+meaning. These precepts, the Christian world finding to be impossible
+to practice, have unanimously laid upon the table under the rule of
+"indefinite postponement." They are the product of a mind with an
+ardent temperament, and the religious faculties developed to excess, and
+unrestrained by scientific or intellectual culture. A similar vein
+of extravagant religious duty is found in the Essenian, Budhist, and
+Pythagorean systems. As Zera Colburn possessed the mathematical faculty
+to excess, and Jenny Lind the musical talent, Christ in like manner was
+all religion. And from the extreme ardor of his religious feeling, thus
+derived, sprang his extravagant notions of the duties of life. This
+peculiarity of his organization explains the whole mystery.
+
+
+CHRIST AS A MAN, AND CHRIST AS A SECTARIAN.
+
+To every observant and unbiased mind a strange contrast must be visible
+in the practical life of Jesus Christ when viewed in his twofold
+capacity of a man and a priest. While standing upon the broad plane of
+humanity, with his deep sympathetic nature directed toward the poor,
+the unfortunate, and the downtrodden, there often gushed forth from
+his impassioned bosom the most sublime expressions of pity, and the
+strongest outburst of commiseration for wrongs and sufferings, and
+his noble goodness and tender love yearned with a throbbing heart to
+relieve them. But the moment he put on the sacerdotal robe, and assumed
+the character of a priest, that moment, if any one crossed his path by
+refusing to yield to his requisitions of faith, or dissented from his
+religious creed, his whole nature was seemingly changed. It was no
+longer, "Blessed are ye," but "Cursed are ye," or "Woe unto you." Like
+the founders of other religious systems, he was ardent toward friends
+and bitter toward enemies, and extolled his own religion, while he
+denounced all others. His way was the only way, and all who did not walk
+threin, or conform thereto, were loaded with curses and imprecations,
+and all who could not accomplish the impossible mental achievement of
+believing everything he set forth or urged upon their credence, and
+that, too, without evidence, were to be eternally damned. All who
+climbed up any other way were thieves and robbers. All who professed
+faith in any other religion than his were on the road to hell. Like the
+oriental Gods, he taught that the world was to be saved through faith in
+him and his religion. All who did not honor him were to be dishonored
+by the Father. And "without faith (in him and his religion), it is
+impossible to please God." He declared that all who were not for him
+were against him; and all who were not on the same road are "heathens
+and publicans." His disciples were enjoined to shake off the dust from
+their feet as a manifestation of displeasure toward those who could not
+conscientiously subscribe to their creeds and dogmas. Thus we discover
+a strong vein of intolerance and sectarianism in the religion of the
+otherwise, and in other respects, the kind and loving Jesus. Though
+most benignantly kind and affectionate while moving and acting under the
+controlling impulses of his lofty manhood, yet when his ardent religious
+feelings were touched, he became chafed, irritated, and sometimes
+intolerant. He then could tolerate no such thing as liberty of
+conscience, or freedom of thought, or the right to differ with him in
+religious belief. His extremely ardent devotional nature, when roused
+into action in defense of a stereotyped faith, eclipsed his more noble,
+lofty, and lovely traits, and often dimmed his mental vision, thus
+presenting in the same individual a strange medley, and a strange
+contrast of the most opposite traits of character. That such a being
+should have been considered and worshipped as a God, and for the
+very reason that he possessed such strange, contradictory traits of
+character, and often let his religion run riot with his reason, will be
+looked upon by posterity as one of the strangest chapters in the history
+of the human race. But so it is. Extraordinary good qualities, though
+intermingled with many errors and human foibles, have deified many men.
+
+Note. One Christian writer alleges, in defense of the objectionable
+precepts of Jesus Christ, that "He taught some errors in condescension
+to the ignorance of the people." If this be true, that he taught both
+truth and falsehood, then the question arises, How can we know which is
+which? By what rule can we discriminate them, as he himself furnishes
+none? Or how are we to determine that he taught truth at all? And then
+this plea would account for and excuse all the errors found in the
+teachings of the oriental Gods. If it will apply in one case, it will in
+the other. And thus it proves too much.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII. CHRIST AS A SPIRITUAL MEDIUM
+
+THERE are many incidents related in the life of Christ, which, when
+critically examined, furnish abundant evidence that he was what is now
+known as a spiritual medium. He unquestionably represented, and often
+practically exhibited, several important phases of modern mediumship.
+
+1. The many instantaneous cures which he wrought, as reported in his
+Gospel narrative, performed in the same manner that "spirit doctors" now
+heal the sick, prove that he was an excellent "healing medium."
+
+2. His declaration to Nathanael, "When thou wast under the fig tree, I
+saw thee," and his recounting to the woman of Samaria the deeds of
+her past life (acts similar to which are now performed every day by
+spiritualists), are evidence that he was also a "clairvoyant medium."
+
+3. His walking on the water (if the story is true), as D. D. Home has
+frequently, within the past few years, walked or floated on the air
+in the presence of many witnesses (including men of science, royal
+personages, and members of parliament), entitles him to the appellation
+of a "physical medium."
+
+4. And the circumstance of his pointing his disciples to the mark of
+the spear in his side, and the print of the nails in his hands, while
+amongst them as a spirit, has led many spiritualists to conclude he was
+also a "medium for materialization." His spirit was made to present the
+peculiar marks which had been inflicted upon his physical body, cases
+parallel to which are now witnessed every day by modern spiritualists.
+Hundreds of cases have occurred of departed spirits presenting
+themselves to their friends with all the peculiar marks which their
+physical bodies had long worn while in the earth life. And the former
+physical wounds have often been exhibited by the spirit in the same
+manner Christ exhibited his. And thus spiritualism explains the
+phenomenon which otherwise would be entirely incredible.
+
+5. And there is yet another phase of mediumship which Christ often
+exhibited in his practical life. He claimed to have frequent intercourse
+with some invisible being, whom he called "the Father." But as modern
+science has settled the question of the personality of God in the
+negative, we are led to conclude that Christ, like many eminent persons
+since his time, mistook some finite spirit for the great infinite but
+impersonal Father spirit--though his attendant invisible companion
+was probably a spirit of a very high order. And the great beauty and
+grandeur of his life are exhibited by his frequent intercourse with and
+dependence upon this his "guardian spirit." He declared he did nothing
+of himself, so dependent was he upon his invisible guide. And the
+strongest proof that he had a spirit companion, which he often looked to
+for counsel and aid, and that this was the being he called the Father,
+is furnished by the fact, that when he prayed to the Father, his
+petition was answered by an angel spirit. (See Luke xxii. 44.) And there
+is no account and no evidence of any invisible or spiritual being ever
+presenting itself to him but an angel or spirit. That he should have
+supposed this spirit to be the great infinite Father God was very
+natural. Thousands since, and some before his time, committed a
+similar mistake. The author has known several persons who had long had
+intercourse with some invisible being they supposed to be God, who have
+recently, by the light afforded by modern spiritualism, become entirely
+convinced that they had simply mistaken a finite spirit for the great
+Infinite Spirit. And did Christ live in our day, he would probably be
+rescued from a similar error in the same way. In conclusion, we will
+remark that it was doubtless his frequent displays of several very
+remarkable phases of spiritual mediumship that contributed much to lead
+the people into the error of supposing him to be God. And this fact will
+yet be known.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII. CONVERSION, REPENTANCE, AND "GETTING RELIGION" OF HEATHEN
+ORIGIN
+
+
+THEIR NUMEROUS EVILS AND ABSURDITIES.
+
+OF all the follies ever enacted or exhibited under the sun, and of all
+the ignorance of history, science, and human nature ever displayed in
+the history of the human race, that which stands out in bold relief,
+as pre-eminent, is the fashionable custom of conversion, or "getting
+religion." When the evidence lies all around us as thick as the fallen
+leaves of autumn, clustering on the pages of history, and proclaimed
+by every principle of mental science, that what is called conversion
+is nothing but a mental and temperamental or nervous phenomenon--a
+psychological process--how can we rank those amongst intelligent people
+who still claim it to be "the power of God operating upon the soul of
+the sinner"? Ignorance is the only plea that can acquit them of the
+charge of imbecility. The number who daily fall victims to this priestly
+delusion in various parts of the country may be reckoned by thousands.
+We propose in this chapter to exhibit some of the evils and absurdities
+of this widespread delusion and religious mono-mania. To do so the more
+effectually, we will arrange the presentation of the subject under four
+separate heads. We will attempt to show,--
+
+1. Its historical errors.
+
+2. Its logical errors.
+
+3. Its philosophical or scientific errors.
+
+4. Its moral evils.
+
+1st. _Its Historical Errors_.--Can we conceive it possible that the
+thousands of priests who are now employed in "converting souls to
+God" are so ignorant of history as not to know that it is an old pagan
+custom? that it was prevalent in heathen countries long before a single
+soul was converted to Christianity, and is carried on to some extent
+now, both among pagans and Mahomedans? From such facts it would
+appear (viewing the matter from the Christian stand-point) that God
+is indifferent as to what kind of religion, or what sort of religious
+nonsense, people are converted to, or whether it is truth or error they
+embrace, or whether it is a true religion or a false one they imbibe,
+so he gets them converted. According to Mr. Higgins, the practice of
+converting people from one sect to another by the popular priesthood
+was prevalent under the ancient Persian system, and was carried on there
+quite extensively more than three thousand years ago; and the process
+was essentially the same as that now in vogue amongst modem Methodists,
+and the effect the same. At their large revival meetings the whole
+congregation would sometimes become so affected under the eloquent
+ministrations of the officiating priest, as to cry, and shout, and
+prostrate themselves upon the ground, which was afterward found to be
+drenched with their tears; and on these occasions they would confess
+their sins to each other, and to their priests; and yet those very sins
+they condemned were, perhaps, amongst the best acts of their lives,
+while their real crimes were overlooked and justified, instead of being
+condemned, thus showing that an honest, just, and sensible God could
+have had nothing to do with it. And we have reports of similar scenes
+witnessed more recently among the Mahomedans. Major Denham furnishes us
+an account of some "revival meetings" he attended a few years since in
+Arabia, carried on by one of the Mahomedan sects. On one occasion the
+effect of the discourse of the preacher upon the audience in the way of
+"converting souls to God" was so powerful, that he could only convince
+himself that he was not in a Methodist revival meeting by a knowledge
+of his geographical position. The preacher's name was Malem Chadily, and
+here is a specimen of some of his language. "Turn, turn, sinner, unto
+God; confess he is good, and that Mahomet is his prophet; wash, and
+become clean of your sins, and paradise is open before you: without
+this nothing can save you from eternal fire." During this earnest appeal
+(says the major), tears flowed plentifully, and everybody appeared to be
+affected. One of his hearers, becoming converted, shouted, "Your words
+pierce my soul," and fell upon the floor. Now let it be borne in mind,
+that Mahomet is stigmatized and condemned by the Christian churches as
+"a false prophet," and his religion denounced as "a system of fraud,"
+"a false religion," &c. Of course, then, Christians will not argue, nor
+admit, that conversion, and "getting religion," in this case, is the
+work of God. A just God would have nothing to do in converting people
+to "a false religion." What explanation shall we adopt for it then?
+To assume it to be the work of the devil (the dernier resort for all
+religious difficulties), and conversions among Christians the work of
+God, when both are so clearly and obviously alike, is to insult common
+sense. To assume that two things, exactly alike in character, can be
+exactly and diametrically unlike in origin, is a scientific paradox
+which no person of common intelligence can swallow, or accept for a
+moment. Both, then, we must admit, have the same origin. This train of
+argument leads us to speak of--
+
+2d. _The Logical Absurdities of the Doctrine of Conversion_.--There
+are several circumstances which point, unmistakably as the needle to the
+pole, to the mundane origin of the phenomenon of conversion.
+
+The character of many of the priestly conductors who "run the battery,"
+is sufficient of itself to preclude the hypothesis of any divine agency
+in the matter. The most powerful revivalist we ever knew, the priest who
+could convert an audience the quickest, and bring down sinners to the
+mourners' bench faster than any other clergyman we ever heard "dealing
+out damnation" to the people, was a broad-shouldered, muscular,
+stentorian-voiced circuit rider of the "Buckeye State," who, as was
+afterward learned, was guilty of perpetrating some of the blackest
+crimes that ever blotted the page of human history, at the very time of
+his most successful career in the way of "convicting souls of sin, and
+converting them to God." He was apprehended by the officers of the law
+in the midst of one of his most flourishing revivals, under the twofold
+charge, i. Of being the father of an illegitimate child, the young
+mother of which was a member of his church; 2. Of defrauding one of his
+neighbors in a trade, to the amount of nearly a thousand dollars--both
+of which charges he was convicted of. A similar case, but possessing
+some worse features, occurred a few years since in the county in which
+the author now resides. A preacher, who had had criminal connection with
+a young woman of his church, in order to conceal his guilt resorted to
+the damnable expedient of administering poison to his victim shortly
+before his illicit intercourse with her would have been made manifest
+by the birth of a child, thus committing a double murder. He was
+apprehended for the crime while carrying on "a most glorious revival,"
+as it was styled by some of the deluded congregation. Now to ascribe the
+irresistible power which these two preachers exerted over their audience
+(in the way of "converting them to God") to a divine source, as they
+claimed for it, would be to trifle with common sense, common decency,
+and all honorable conceptions of a God. These reverend scamps often
+instituted the high claim of being "called of God" to their ministerial
+labors. But if we concede the claim, we should have to conclude that God
+knew but little about them, for he certainly would not knowingly employ
+such moral outlaws upon such an important mission.
+
+Having thus briefly spoken of the character of some of the actors and
+agents in the work of conversion, we will now glance at the character of
+some of the religions and religious ideas, and moral course of conduct,
+to which the sinner is converted. It is evident that if an All-wise God
+had anything to do in the process of converting people to any system
+of religion, he would also convert them to correct moral habits. But in
+many cases, after conversion they are no nearer right in this respect,
+and in some cases further from it than before being thus sanctified.
+In some cases their religion becomes worse, their religious ideas less
+sensible, and their moral conduct more objectionable, by "the change of
+heart" in "getting religion." Mr. Spencer informs us that the Vewas, a
+sect or tribe of the Feegees, often cry for hours under conviction for
+sin. And what is that sin? Why, the neglect to offer sacrifices to their
+God. And those sacrifices consist in human beings, sometimes their own
+children. And their conviction, conversion, and repentance only make
+them more diligent in practicing this crime. It is evident, then, that
+their religion is at war with their humanity, and the former always
+triumphs in the contest. They are addicted to cannibalism, infanticide,
+and polygamy. But as the process of "getting religion" never makes
+anybody more intelligent, the "change of heart," with the Vewas, never
+changes their views, or opens their eyes to see the enormity of their
+crimes. In "getting religion" people get neither sense, knowledge, nor
+morality. They get neither a larger stock, nor an improved quality, of
+either. Their moral conduct is not often sensibly improved, materially
+or permanently.
+
+3d. _Scientific Errors, and Scientific Explanations of Conversion_.--The
+phenomena of conversion and "getting religion" are so easily explained
+in the light of science and philosophy, and that explanation is
+susceptible of so many proofs and demonstrations, that it seems
+remarkably strange that any persons claiming to be intelligent, and
+situated in the focal, scientific light of the nineteenth century,
+should still be hampered with the delusion that such phenomena are the
+direct display of the power of God. It requires but little investigation
+and reflection to convince any person that what is called conversion,
+and "repentance for sin," is nothing but the revival of early
+educational impressions resuscitated by the influence of mind on mind.
+No person has ever been known to get or embrace a religion he was not
+biased in favor of prior to the time of his conversion, unless we except
+a few weak-minded persons negative to any influence, and convertible
+to any religion the priest may urge upon their attention. A very strong
+proof of this statement is furnished by the history of the Christian
+missionary enterprise. The reports of travelers and sojourners in India
+show, that with two hundred years' labor, and two hundred missionaries
+in the field during a part of that period, the churches have not
+succeeded in converting one in ten thousand of the Hindoos to the
+Christian religion--unless we except those who, while children, were
+sent to Christian schools instituted by the missionaries for the special
+purpose of converting and warping the young mind, and welding it to the
+Christian faith before It should receive an unchangeable and unyielding
+bias in favor of another religion. So fruitless has been the effort
+to convert to Christianity those who were already established in the
+religion of the country, that, according to the estimate of Colonel Dow,
+each convert, on an average, has cost the missionary enterprise not
+less than ten thousand dollars. An intelligent Hindoo, while lecturing
+recently in London, made the remarkable statement, that conversions
+which are made to the Christian religion are not amongst the intelligent
+or learned classes, but are confined to the low, ignorant, and
+superstitious classes, "who have not sense or intelligence enough to
+perceive the difference between the _religion they are converted to,
+and that which they are converted from._" And the effort to convert the
+Mahomedans, Chinese, Persians, and the disciples of other religions has
+been attended with the same fruitless results--all seeming to warrant
+the conclusion that God can do but little toward converting any nation
+to Christianity which has always been biased in favor of another
+religion. The reason why people are so easily converted from one sect to
+another in Christian countries is owing to the fact that their religious
+convictions are unsettled. The members of the different Christian sects
+are all mixed up together in the various settlements throughout the
+country, and are brought in daily contact with each other in the busy
+scenes of life.
+
+Hence the children have the seeds of Methodism, Presbyterianism,
+Baptistism, Quakerism, and various other isms implanted in their minds
+in very early life. And which one of these will ultimately predominate
+depends upon what priest they fall victims to first. Having thus the
+germs of so many religious isms implanted in their minds, they are
+easily shifted about, and converted from one sect to another. And this
+shuttlecock process is called "getting religion," while, if they had
+lived in a country where only one form of religion exists, they would be
+as hard to convert as Mahomedans and Hindoos.
+
+_Repentance_.--Much importance is attached by the orthodox churches
+to the act of getting religion in the dying hour,--called "death-bed
+repentance,"--as if the person were better capable of discriminating
+between right and wrong when his brain is deranged with fever, and his
+whole system racked with disease and pain, than when in health. Such
+repentance can do nothing more than prove the honesty of the dying man
+or woman. For very often their doctrines, or religious belief, will be
+found no nearer right, and sometimes more erroneous after repentance
+than before, as repentance merely consists in the return to early
+impressions--the revival of former convictions, which may be either
+right or wrong, and are about as likely to be the latter as the former.
+No instance can be found of a person condemning a wrong act, or a wrong
+course of life, in his dying moments, unless he had previously believed
+it to be wrong, or if he had always believed it to be right. How much,
+then, does repentance do toward deciding what is right and what is
+wrong? Mahomedanism we know to be deeply fraught with error, but we
+never read nor heard of an instance of the many millions who had been
+educated to believe it is right, condemning it on their death-beds, or
+repenting for not having embraced Christianity, and led the life of
+a Christian, or for adoring Mahomet instead of Jesus Christ. On the
+contrary we have a well-authenticated instance of a Mahomedan (a Mr.
+Merton) who had embraced Christianity, and lived the life of a Christian
+for many years, renouncing it all, and returning to his primitive faith,
+when he was taken sick and became apprehensive he was going to die:
+his early religious impressions, returning involuntarily, wiped out
+his Christianity, and he died glorying in Mahomedanism. And we have an
+equally well authenticated case of an Indian of the Choctaw tribe, who
+had been taught to believe from early life that the white man was his
+natural enemy, and that it was his right and duty to kill him, repenting
+on his death-bed for having a short time previously neglected, when the
+opportunity presented, to despatch a "pale face" he met in his travels.
+Instead of killing him, he yielded for the moment to the impulse of his
+better feelings, and passed him by. But on reviewing his past life
+at the approach of death, he came to the conclusion he had sinned in
+omitting to kill this man, and he grieved and lamented sorely over
+this dereliction of apprehended duty. Here we have a case of repentance
+sanctioning murder. Must we, therefore, conclude that murder is morally
+right, or a righteous act? Certainly, according to orthodox logic.
+
+Their religious tracts assume that repentance is always for the right,
+and is _prima facie_ evidence of being right. If not, what does it
+prove, or what moral value is it? According to orthodox teaching, being
+"a murderer at heart," he was as consignable to perdition as if he had
+committed the act. There is no escaping the conclusion, therefore, that
+his repentance landed him in hell, or else proves murder to be right
+according to orthodox logic.
+
+We have known Quakers to leave their dying testimony against water
+baptism; and Baptists, with their last breath, declare it is right, and
+a sin to neglect it. Which is right? Who can tell? We have also known
+Quakers to condemn dancing in their dying hours, but Shakers never;
+because one had been taught that it is wrong, and the other that it
+is right. And which testimony must we accept? Mahomedans often, when
+approaching the confines of time, repent (sometimes in tears) for not
+having lived out more rigidly the injunctions of the Koran, but never
+regret not having been Christians. They often call upon Mohamet to aid
+them through the gates of death: but not one of the million who die
+every year ever calls upon Jesus Christ. What, then, does such a
+conflicting jargon of death-bed repentance prove? What good can grow
+out of it, or what moral value can possibly attach to it? It establishes
+simply two principles,--
+
+1st. That repentance grows out of education.
+
+2d. That it depends entirely upon previous convictions as to what it may
+sanction, and what it may condemn.
+
+No Christian ever repents in favor of Mahomedan-ism; and no Mahomedan
+ever lifts up his dying voice in favor of Christianity as being superior
+to his own religion; and no Hindoo has ever been known to indulge
+in death-bed lamentation for not having previously embraced either
+Christianity or Mahomedanism; because their earlier education never
+turned their minds in that direction. The mind has to be educated over
+again before it can embrace a new religion, or even condemn a wrong act,
+which, up to that period, it had always believed to be right.
+
+Hence it is evident repentance may lead a person to condemn what is
+right and sanction what is wrong. How profoundly ignorant of religious
+history and mental science must those persons therefore be who attach
+any importance to those diseased and often incoherent utterances, called
+"death-bed recantations," or who believe a thing the sooner because
+sanctioned by a dying man or woman, or that they do anything toward
+proving what is right or what is wrong with respect to either our belief
+or our moral conduct! And yet we find the orthodox churches printing
+every year, through their tract societies, stories of death-bed
+repentance in tract form, and scattering them over the country by the
+million. As they prove nothing but the honesty of the dying man or
+woman, they are not worth the paper on which they are printed.
+
+The phenomenon of repentance is simply the operation of a natural law,
+by which the last impressions made upon the mind are generally cancelled
+from the memory first, by the progress of fever and disease, thus
+leaving the earlier impressions to rule the judgment. The person is then
+virtually a child, controlled by his early youthful convictions, with
+which, if his late belief and conduct disagree, it causes a mental
+conflict, called repentance. Thus, instead of being the visitation
+of God, as Christians claim, repentance is shown to be the product of
+natural causes. The conclusion is thus established beyond disproof,
+that the mental processes called conversion, repentance, and "getting
+religion" are simply natural psychological operations, depending
+upon education, organization, and intelligence. They depend also upon
+intellect and scientific knowledge. For persons of large intellectual
+brains, or extensive scientific culture, never fall victims to these
+mental derangements. Hence those priests who claim God as their author
+are either deplorably and inexcusably ignorant, or lacking in moral
+honesty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV. THE MORAL LESSONS OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY.
+
+1. The most important lesson deducible from all the religious systems,
+commemorated in history, and noticed in this work, is, that all
+religious conceptions, whether in the shape of doctrine, precept,
+prophecy, prayer, religious devotion, or a belief in miracles, are a
+spontaneous outgrowth of the moral and religious elements of the human
+mind. And to assign them a higher origin is to ignore the developments
+of modern science, and insult the highest intelligence of the age.
+
+2. From the elevated scientific plane occupied by the most enlightened
+portion of the present age, there is no difficulty in finding a
+satisfactory solution for every event, every occurrence, and every
+performance recorded in any of the numerous bibles which have long been
+afloat in the world, and which have always constituted the sole basis
+for the claim to a divine origin of all the religious systems of the
+past; so that such a claim can be no longer vindicated by historically
+intelligent people.
+
+3. We have shown in this work that all the miraculous incidents related
+in the history of Jesus Christ as a proof of his divinity can find a
+more rational explanation than that which assigns them to divine agency.
+Some of them are now known to lie within the natural capacity of the
+human mind to achieve, others are explained by recently discovered
+natural laws. Another class are now well understood mental or nervous
+phenomena. Other stories, now regarded by the Christian world as
+referring to miraculous achievements, were probably designed by the
+writer as mere fable or metaphor. All the events in Christ's history, we
+have shown, are susceptible of a hundred fold more rational explanation
+than that which regards them as the feats of a God in violation of his
+own laws.
+
+4. We have also shown that the same marvelous incidents now found
+incorporated in the Gospel history of Jesus Christ were related long
+previously as a part of the sacred history of other Gods; such as
+being miraculously conceived and born of a virgin; born on the 25th of
+December; visited in infancy by angels and shepherds;' threatened by the
+ruler of the country; being of royal lineage; receiving the same divine
+titles; performing the same miracles, &c.
+
+In a word, we have shown that various heathen Gods and Demigods had,
+long before Christ's advent, filled the same chapter in history now
+reported of him in the Christian New Testament. All these stories of
+the heathen Gods prove as conclusively as any scientific problem can be
+demonstrated by figures, that the same stories related of Jesus Christ
+have no other foundation than that of heathen tradition. And will the
+Christian world, then, hereafter stultify their common sense by ignoring
+these facts of history so fatal to their claims? Past history points to
+an affirmative answer to this question, as we will illustrate.
+
+In the early history of this country, several reports were published
+of showers of blood being seen to fall in some of the sea-coast states,
+which were regarded as a divine judgment. But the use of the telescope
+revealed the fact that it was the ordure of butterflies, as those
+insects were seen at the time in vast swarms. But the devout Christian,
+whose faith in his religion has always been proof against the
+demonstrations of science, would give it up. He would not accept the
+butterfly explanation, but continued to teach his children that it came
+from God out of heaven as a manifestation of displeasure toward the
+sins of the people. And it now remains to be seen whether Christian
+professors at the present day will manifest a similar folly by standing
+out against the demonstrated truths and facts of this work.
+
+5. We here cite it as the last and most sorrowful lesson of history,
+that no facts, no proofs, no demonstrations of science can eradicate
+religious errors from the human mind, if instilled in early life, and
+never disturbed till the possessor arrives at mature age or middle life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV. CONCLUSION AND REVIEW.
+
+IN writing the concluding chapter of this work, the author deems it
+proper to re-state some points, and elaborate others, and anticipate
+some objections to some of the positions advanced. Each division of the
+subject will be marked by a separate figure, and treated in a brief and
+succinct manner, as follows:--
+
+1. Several persons, who examined this work before it went to press, have
+expressed the opinion that it must exert a powerful influence in the
+way of producing an entire revolution in the religion of orthodox
+Christendom sooner or later. But this must of course be the work of
+time, as moral revolutions are not the work of a day. When the human
+system has been long prostrated with chronic disease, no system
+of medication can restore it at once to health. The same principle
+governing the mind makes it morally impossible to eradicate its
+deeply-seated moral and religious errors in a day by even the
+presentation of the most powerful and convincing truths and
+demonstrations that can be brought to bear or operate upon the human
+judgment. The mind instinctively repels everything (no difference how
+true or how beautiful) that conflicts with its long-established opinions
+and convictions. The fires of truth usually require much time to burn
+their way through those incrustations of moral and religious error which
+often environ the human mind as the products of a false education. But
+when they once enter, the work of convincement is complete.
+
+2. It has been stated that the resemblance between Christianity and the
+more ancient heathen systems is complete and absolute throughout in all
+their essential doctrines, and principles, and precepts. And if it shall
+be found, on a critical reading of this work after it comes from the
+press, that there is one feature of Christianity which has not been
+traced to pagan origin, or that any points of resemblance have been
+omitted, they will be supplied in an appendix.
+
+3. It has been stated that a transfiguration is related of Chrishna of
+India (1200 B. C.) in the Hindoo bible (the Baghavat Gita), which is
+strikingly similar to that of Christ. We will here present the proof.
+"Abandoning the mortal form, he (Chrishna) appeared to his disciples in
+all the divine eclat of his Divine Majesty, his brow encircled with such
+a brilliant light that Adjouma and the other disciples, unable to bear
+it, fell with their faces in the dust, and prayed the Lord (Chrishna) to
+pardon their unworthiness. He replied, 'Have you not faith in me? Know
+ye not, that whether present or absent in body, I will be ever present
+with you to guard and protect you?'" (Gaghavat Gita.) How remarkable
+this to the story of Christ's transfiguration!
+
+4. Some readers, perhaps, will be surprised to observe that we have
+named so many crucified gods to whom some writers assign a different
+death. But we have followed, as we believe, the best authorities in
+doing so.
+
+5. In our work, "The Bibles of Bibles," we have shown that the score of
+bibles which have been extant in the world teach essentially the same
+doctrines, principles, and precepts. There are to be found in the old
+pagan bibles the same grand and beautiful truths mixed up with the same
+mind-enslaving errors and deleterious superstitions as those contained
+in the Christian bible. And the same exalted claim is set up by the
+disciples of each for their respective holy books--that of being a
+direct revelation from God, and inspired at the fountain of infinite
+wisdom. And all were exalted, adored, and idolized by their respective
+admirers, as containing a perfect embodiment of truth, without any
+admixture of error. The ancient Persians carried their bibles in their
+bosoms, and read them and prayed over them daily. The Hindoos often read
+their bible through on their bended knees, and sometimes committed it
+all to memory. The Baghavat has the following text: "The most important
+of all duties is to study the Holy Scriptures, which is the word of
+Brahma and Chrishna, revealed to the world." Some of the Mahomedans
+claim that immortal life can only be obtained by reading the Koran, and
+that the reading of it is essential to the progress and practice of good
+morals, and the advancement of civilization; and that it will ultimately
+reform and civilize the world. Both they and the Hindoos, like the
+Christian world, have numerous commentaries, explaining the obscure
+texts of their bibles, and aiming to reconcile their teachings with
+reason and science. And the disciples of all bibles had a mode of doing
+away with the immoral teachings, and concealing the worst features
+of their sacred books by bestowing on them a spiritual meaning, as
+Christians do theirs, thus dressing up error in the guise of truth. The
+Hindoo bible, the Mahomedan bible, and other holy books, consign those
+who disbelieve in their teachings to eternal damnation, denouncing them
+as infidels. In this respect, also, they are like the Christian's bible.
+
+6. "But then, after all (as some good pious Christian will probably
+exclaim after reading this work), the bible and Christianity are
+essential to the progress of good morals, and the advancement of the
+cause of civilization, and the civilized world would sink into a state
+of heathen darkness, demoralization, and savagism without them; for
+every enlightened nation owes its present moral and intellectual
+greatness to the Christian bible and the Christian religion, and
+would relapse into barbarism without them." This is a mistake, a most
+egregious mistake, my good brother Christian, as the following facts of
+history will show:--
+
+1. There are heathen nations now existing who never saw a bible, and
+others which flourished in the past, before our bible was written, who
+nevertheless attained to a higher state of morals, and a higher state
+of civilization in some respects, than any Christian nation known to
+history. A whole volume of facts might be adduced, if we had space for
+them, drawn from the ablest and most reliable authorities, to prove that
+India, Egypt, Greece, and other countries had reached a high state of
+civilization centuries before Christianity or any of its founders
+were even heat'd of, or made their appearance in the world. India was
+distinguished for her teaming, her laws, her legislation, her civil
+courts, her judicial tribunals, her astronomers, her poets, her
+philosophers, her writers, her moralists, her libraries, her men of
+literature, and her good morals before Moses was found in the bulrushes.
+
+Jacolliot says, "India gave civilization to the world." Egypt borrowed
+of India, the Greeks of the Egyptians, and the Jews and Christians are
+indebted to the Greeks for both their morals and their civilization.
+Dubois, a Christian missionary, in his "Memoirs of India,"
+testifies that "kindness, justice, humanity, good faith, compassion,
+disinterestedness, and in fact nearly all the moral virtues, were
+familiar to the ancient Brahmans and Hindoos, and they taught them both
+by precept and example." Can as much be said of any Christian nation?
+Certainly not. And the Rev. D. O. Allen says they were distinguished for
+all the arts and refinement of civilized life--thus placing them on the
+highest plane of civilization and moral elevation. And other nations
+might be referred to. Egypt had her vast temples of science, Chaldea her
+astronomical observatories, and Greece her distinguished academies of
+learning, her profound philosophers, and her high-toned moral writers
+and moral teachers, while the Jews, "God's holy people." were in a
+state of semibarbarism. So affirms the Rev. Albert Barnes.
+
+2. No advancement has often been made in morals or civilization in any
+country by the introduction of the Christian bible or the Christian
+religion. It is the arts and sciences which accompany or follow the
+bible which do the work. A proof of this statement is found in the
+fact, that no improvement takes place in the morals of the people by
+the introduction of the bible till the arts and sciences are also
+introduced amongst them. On the contrary, the morals of many
+deteriorate by reading the bible alone, because it sanctions as well as
+condemns every species of crime then known to society. (For proof see
+Chap. XXXIX. of this work.) That India has become corrupted and sunk in
+morals since the introduction of the Christian bible, is admitted by the
+Rev. D. O. Allen, for twenty-five years a missionary in that country.
+But science, especially moral science, imparts a different influence. It
+explains the nature of crimes, and teaches and demonstrates that a life
+of honesty and virtue can alone produce true and real happiness, while
+the bible augments the temptation to commit sin by teaching that "it
+is a sweet morsel to be rolled under the tongue," and that its punitive
+effects may be entirely escaped by an act of divine forgiveness. But
+science, either directly or by the enlightening of the mind, teaches and
+convinces the wrong-doer that there is no escape from the evil effects
+of a wrong or wicked act, and that sin is not a "sweet morsel," but
+ultimately a _bitter pill_. And thus it arrests the demoralizing effects
+of this pernicious doctrine of the Christian bible.
+
+3. It may startle some of the bible devotees to be told that their
+sacred book, instead of being a prompter to civilization and good
+morals, is really a hindrance to those ends; and that consequently
+nations without bibles advance faster in these respects than those
+who are well supplied with this book. But the facts of history seem
+to establish this as a fact. As a proof we will contrast the present
+condition of heathen Japan with that of Christian Abyssinia. Colonel
+Hall and Dr. Oliphant both testify that no drunkenness, no fighting,
+no quarreling, no thefts, no robberies, no rapes, no fornication, no
+domestic feuds or broils, and no fraudulent dealing take place in Japan.
+No locks or keys are used, for none are needed. There is no disposition
+to steal, or even to cheat, or overreach in dealing. But in Christian
+Abyssinia, on the other hand, according to Mr. Goodrich, where bibles
+and churches are numerous, and preaching and praying are heard every
+day, nearly all the crimes above enumerated are daily committed. The
+people go naked, eat raw flesh, cheat, lie, and murder, and practice
+polygamy. Such a thing as a legitimate child, he tells us, is not known.
+And thus it has been for fifteen hundred years, while in the daily
+practice of reading their bible. The arts and sciences have never been
+introduced amongst them. And this fact explains the cause of their
+continued moral degradation.
+
+4. According to Noah Webster, the cultivation of the arts and sciences
+is essential to the progress of civilization and good morals. But bible
+religion knows nothing about the arts and sciences. It don't even use
+the words. Paul uses the word science only once, and then to condemn it.
+But Jesus omits any allusion to science, philosophy, or natural law.
+So thoroughly convinced were the early disciples of the Christian faith
+that the teachings of their bible are inimical to the arts and sciences,
+that they destroyed works of art wherever they could find them, and
+opposed with a deadly aim every new discovery in the sciences.
+
+5. As bibles represent only the morals and state of society in the
+age in which they are written, and are not allowed to be altered or
+transcended, they thus hold their disciples back in all coming time, and
+compel them to teach and practice the morals of that semi-barbarous
+age as found taught in their bibles. And thus bibles prevent the moral
+growth of the people as effectually as the Chinese wooden shoes prevent
+the growth of the feet. For a fuller exposition of this matter, see The
+Bible of Bibles, Chap. XIV.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES
+
+
+NOTE OF EXPLANATION.
+
+In Chapter XXXI. we have traced Christianity to Essenism. This may need
+a fuller explanation than we have yet devoted to this point, though we
+have stated several times we consider them essentially one. The Essenes
+had their "Exoteric" and their "Esoteric" doctrines. The latter, which
+seems to have included the incarnation atonement, trinity, and all the
+other Budhist doctrines as set forth in Chapter XXXII. (and now included
+in the term Christianity), they never published to the world. Hence
+Chapter XXXI. sets forth only their Exoteric doctrines. But as Philo,
+Milman, Tytler, and other eminent authors show they held all the
+doctrines of Budhism, we assume they were a Budhist sect Hence, when we
+speak of Christianity growing out of Budhism, in Chapter XXXII., we
+mean Budhism under the name of Essenism. We believe Christianity is from
+Essenism and Budhism both, because they are essentially one; and that
+Christianity is merely a continuation of Budhism as taught by the
+Essenian sect of Budhists. Hence we have sometimes used the term
+Essenism, and sometimes the term Budhism, as being the fountain head of
+Christianity. We have stated Christ may have been an Essene either by
+birth or by conversion. But our conviction now is, that he was one by
+birth. And we now think it probable that that portion of the Jewish
+nation which became known as Essenes sprang up in the Budhist school of
+Pythagoras, in Alexandria, in the second or third century before Christ,
+and thus became Essenian Budhists; i. e., a sect of Jewish Budhists
+who called themselves Essenes. And consequently, neither Christ nor his
+disciples made any changes in the Essenian religion, when they changed
+its name to Christianity, except to ingraft a few unimportant tenets
+borrowed from the principal Budhist sect We are now convinced that
+Essenism was complete Budhism, that Christ was born of Essene parents,
+and that no important changes were made by dropping the term Essenism,
+and adopting the term Christianity in its place.
+
+
+NOTE TO PAGE 178.
+
+It may not be improper to explain more fully the reason for the opinion
+expressed on page 178, that the Gospel writer John did not believe that
+Christ first came into existence through human birth, but believed that
+he, like some of the oriental Gods, was "The Word" personified, without
+the process of birth; though he may, like the heathen orientalists,
+have cherished the tradition that the second God in the trinity (as he
+represents Christ to be), after having sprung into existence as "The
+Word" was subsequently subjected to human birth. Either so, or else
+his allusion to "the mother of Christ" was done in condescension to the
+general belief among the people, that he had a human mother. Be that as
+it may, he declares, '"His Word was made flesh" (John i. 14); nearly the
+same language used by the orientalists,--which with them did not imply
+human birth. And the declaration, "All things were made by him" (John i.
+3), is proof positive he believed in Christ's existence as the creator,
+before his human birth. Much of John's language is so strikingly similar
+to that employed by the disciples of some of the oriental religions, who
+believed that a second God emanated from the mouth of the Supreme, to
+perform the act of creation, that we cannot resist the conviction that
+this was John's belief; especially as many of them believed, like him,
+that this creative "Word" became afterward a subject of human birth.
+Thus, as we conceive, the proposition is established.
+
+
+NOTE TO PAGE 346.
+
+Our most reliable authorities testify that Babylon never was destroyed,
+but successfully resisted, for one hundred and fifty years after
+Isaiah's time, many of the most powerful sieges, and "the mightiest
+munitions of war," conducted by seven of the most skilful generals that
+ever wielded the sword--Cyrus, Darius, Alexander the Great, Antigonus,
+Demetrius, Poliorcetes, and Antiochus. She then gradually declined
+by the removal of her inhabitants to other and newer cities; thus
+falsifying the prediction of Jeremiah (li. 8), "Her end has come,"
+and of Isaiah (xiii. 22), "Her days shall not be prolonged," and that
+"desolation shall come upon her in a day," and her destruction shall
+be effected suddenly--all of which are falsified by the facts just
+presented. And even if Babylon had been destroyed, the present existence
+of Hillah, built in 1101 upon the same spot, with a population,
+according to Wellstead, of twenty-five thousand, is a signal overthrow
+of Jeremiah's prophecy, that it "shall become a wilderness, wherein no
+man dwelleth" (li. 43), and of Isaiah, also, that it should not be dwelt
+in from generation to generation. Jeremiah first predicted that her sea
+and springs should dry up (li. 38), and then declared the waves of the
+sea should come upon her (li. 42); and finally, that she should sink to
+rise no more (li. 64). And Isaiah's prediction of ruin and destruction
+included with Babylon, "the land of the Chaldeans" (l. 39), which was
+then, and is yet, a great commercial country, with an annual revenue at
+this time, according to Harvey Brydges, of a million pounds sterling.
+Here, then, is a long series of prophecies falsified. Our authority for
+saying that Hillah occupies the site of ancient Babylon is Malte-Brun's
+Geography (page 655), which declares, "Hillah is situated within the
+precincts of Babylon;" thus proving it is not "a wilderness, wherein no
+man dwelleth." Had we space, we should present an extended view of the
+prophecies.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors, by
+Kersey Graves
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+
+Project Gutenberg's The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors, by Kersey Graves
+
+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: The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors
+ Or, Christianity Before Christ
+
+Author: Kersey Graves
+
+Release Date: January 17, 2012 [EBook #38600]
+Last Updated: January 25, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIXTEEN SAVIORS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE WORLD'S SIXTEEN CRUCIFIED SAVIORS
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ OR, CHRISTIANITY BEFORE CHRIST
+ </h2>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ CONTAINING NEW, STARTLING, AND EXTRAORDINARY REVELATIONS IN RELIGIOUS
+ HISTORY, WHICH DISCLOSE THE ORIENTAL ORIGIN OF ALL THE DOCTRINES,
+ PRINCIPLES, PRECEPTS, AND MIRACLES OF THE CHRISTIAN NEW TESTAMENT, AND
+ FURNISHING A KEY FOR UNLOCKING MANY OF ITS SACRED MYSTERIES, BESIDES
+ COMPRISING THE HISTORY OF 16 HEATHEN CRUCIFIED GODS.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Kersey Graves
+ </h2>
+ <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_PREF"> PREFACE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF2"> PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> EXPLANATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> ADDRESS TO THE CLERGY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> <big><b>THE WORLD'S SIXTEEN CRUCIFIED SAVIORS.</b></big>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RIVAL
+ CLAIMS OF THE SAVIORS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MESSIANIC PROPHECIES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003">
+ CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;PROPHECIES BY THE FIGURE OF A SERPENT <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MIRACULOUS AND
+ IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF THE GODS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005">
+ CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;VIRGIN MOTHERS AND VIRGIN-BORN GODS <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;STARS POINT OUT THE
+ TIME AND THE SAVIORS' BIRTH-PLACE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007">
+ CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ANGELS, SHEPHERDS AND MAGI VISIT THE INFANT
+ SAVIORS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ TWENTY-FIFTH OF DECEMBER THE BIRTHDAY OF THE GODS <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;TITLES OF THE SAVIORS
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ SAVIORS OF ROYAL DESCENT, BUT HUMBLE BIRTH <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRIST'S GENEALOGY
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ WORLD'S SAVIORS SAVED FROM DESTRUCTION IN INFANCY <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE SAVIORS EXHIBIT
+ EARLY PROOFS OF DIVINITY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER
+ XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE SAVIORS; KINGDOMS NOT OF THIS WORLD <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE SAVIORS WERE
+ REAL PERSONAGES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;SIXTEEN
+ SAVIORS CRUCIFIED <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ APHANASIA, OR DARKNESS AT THE CRUCIFIXION <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;DESCENT OF THE
+ SAVIORS INTO HELL <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RESURRECTION
+ OF THE SAVIORS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REAPPEARANCE
+ AND ASCENSION OF THE SAVIORS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER
+ XXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE ATONEMENT&mdash;ITS ORIENTAL OR HEATHEN ORIGIN
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ HOLY GHOST OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0023">
+ CHAPTER XXIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE DIVINE "WORD" OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ TRINITY VERY ANCIENTLY A CURRENT HEATHEN DOCTRINE <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ABSOLUTION, AND THE
+ CONFESSION OF SINS, OF HEATHEN ORIGIN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0026">
+ CHAPTER XXVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ORIGIN OF BAPTISM BY WATER, FIRE, BLOOD
+ AND THE HOLY GHOST <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE SACRAMENT OR EUCHARIST OF HEATHEN ORIGIN <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ANOINTING WITH
+ OIL OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW MEN, INCLUDING JESUS CHRIST, CAME TO BE WORSHIPED AS
+ GODS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;SACRED
+ CYCLES EXPLAINING THE ADVENT OF THE GODS <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRISTIANITY DERIVED
+ FROM HEATHEN AND ORIENTAL SYSTEMS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0032">
+ CHAPTER XXXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THREE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX STRIKING
+ ANALOGIES BETWEEN CHRIST AND CHRISHNA <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0033">
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;APOLLONIUS, OSIRIS, MAGUS, ETC.&mdash;GODS
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXXIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ THREE PILLARS OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH&mdash;MIRACLES, PROPHECIES, AND
+ PRECEPTS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XXXV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LOGICAL
+ OR COMMON SENSE VIEW OF THE DOCTRINE OF DIVINE INCARNATION <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXXVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;PHILOSOPHICAL
+ ABSURDITIES OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE DIVINE INCARNATION <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXXVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;PHYSIOLOGICAL
+ ABSURDITIES OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE DIVINE INCARNATION <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0038"> CHAPTER XXXVIII.&nbsp; </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+ HISTORICAL VIEW OF THE DIVINITY OF JESUS CHRIST <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0039"> CHAPTER XXXIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE SCRIPTURAL VIEW
+ OF CHRIST'S DIVINITY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0040"> CHAPTER XL.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A METONYMIC VIEW OF THE DIVINITY OF JESUS CHRIST <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0041"> CHAPTER XLI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE PRECEPTS AND
+ PRACTICAL LIFE OF JESUS CHRIST; HIS TWO HUNDRED ERRORS <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0042"> CHAPTER XLII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRIST AS A
+ SPIRITUAL MEDIUM <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0043"> CHAPTER XLIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONVERSION,
+ REPENTANCE, AND "GETTING RELIGION" OF HEATHEN ORIGIN <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0044"> CHAPTER XLIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE MORAL LESSONS OF
+ RELIGIOUS HISTORY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0045"> CHAPTER XLV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONCLUSION
+ AND REVIEW <br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_NOTE"> NOTES </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ INVERSELY to the remoteness of time has been man's ascent toward the
+ temple of knowledge. Truth has made its ingress into the human mind in the
+ ratio by which man has attained the capacity to receive and appreciate it
+ Hence, as we tread back the meandering pathway of human history, every
+ step in the receding process brings us to a lower plane of intelligence
+ and a state of mind more thoroughly encrusted with ignorance and
+ superstition. It is, therefore, no source of surprise to learn, when we
+ take a survey of the world two or three thousand years in the past, that
+ every religious writer of that era committed errors on every subject which
+ employed his pen, involving a scientific principle. Hence, the bible, or
+ sacred book, to which he was a contributor, is now found to bear the marks
+ of human imperfection. For the temple of knowledge was but partially
+ reared, and its chambers but dimly lighted up. The intellectual brain was
+ in a dark, feeble and dormant condition. Hence, the moral and religious
+ feelings were drifted about without a pilot on the turbulent waves of
+ superstition, and finally stranded on the shoals of bigotry. The Christian
+ bible, like other bibles, having been written in an age when science was
+ but budding into life, and philosophy had attained but a feeble growth,
+ should be expected to teach many things incompatible with the principles
+ of modern science. And accordingly it is found to contain, like other
+ bibles, numerous statements so obviously at war with present established
+ scientific truths that almost any school-boy, at the present day, can
+ demonstrate their falsity. Let the unbiased reader examine and compare the
+ oriental and Christian bibles together, and he will note the following
+ facts, viz:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. That the cardinal religious conceptions of all bibles are essentially
+ the same&mdash;all running in parable grooves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. That every chapter of every bible is but a transcript of the mental
+ chart of the writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. That no bible, pagan or Christian, contains anything surpassing the
+ natural, mental and moral capacity of the writer to originate. And hence
+ no divine aid or inspiration was necessary for its production.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. That the moral and religious teachings of no bible reach a higher
+ altitude than the intelligence and mental development of the age and
+ country which produced it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. That the Christian bible, in some respects, is superior to some of the
+ other bibles, but only to the extent to which the age in which it was
+ written was superior in intelligence and natural mental capacity to the
+ era in which the older bibles were penned; and that this superiority
+ consists not its more exalted religious conceptions, but only in the fact
+ that, being of more modern origin, the progress of mind had worn away some
+ of the legendary rubbish of the past. Being written in a later and more
+ enlightened age, it is consequently a little less encrusted with
+ mythological tradition and oriental imagery. Though not free from these
+ elements, it possesses them in less degree. And by comparing Christ's
+ history with those of the oriental Gods, it will be found:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. That he taught no new doctrine or moral precept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. That he inculcated the same religion and morality, which he elaborated,
+ as other moral teachers, to great extremes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. That Christ differs so little in his character, preaching, and
+ practical life from some of the oriental Gods, that no person whose mind
+ is not deplorably warped and biased by early training can call one divine
+ while he considers the other human.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. That if Christ was a God, then all were Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Author.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF2" id="link2H_PREF2">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The author desires to say that this work has been carefully reviewed and
+ corrected, and some additions made, embracing two chapters from "the Bible
+ of Bibles," and some explanatory notes, and is now able to place before
+ the reader a greatly improved edition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The author also desires to say here, that the many flattering letters he
+ has received from various parts of the country, from those who have
+ supplied themselves with the work, excites in his mind the hope it will
+ ultimately effect something towards achieving the important end sought to
+ be attained by its publication&mdash;the banishment of that wide-spread
+ delusion comprehended in the belief in an incarnate, virgin-born God,
+ called Jesus Christ, and the infallibility of his teachings, with the
+ numerous evils growing legitimately out of this belief&mdash;among the
+ most important of which is, its cramping effect upon the mind of the
+ possessor, which interdicts its growth, and thus constitutes a serious
+ obstacle to the progress both of the individual and of society. And such
+ has been the blinding effect of this delusion upon all who have fallen
+ victims to its influence, that the numerous errors and evils of our
+ popular system of religious faith, which constitutes its legitimate
+ fruits, have passed from age to age, unnoticed by all except scientific
+ and progressive minds, who are constantly bringing these errors and evils
+ to light. This state of things has been a source of sorrow and regret to
+ every philanthropist desiring the welfare of the race. And if this work
+ shall achieve anything towards arresting this great evil, the author will
+ feel that he is amply compensated for the years of toil and mental labor
+ spent in its preparation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Note.&mdash;As the different works consulted have assigned different dates
+ for the same event, the author has, in one or two cases, followed their
+ example, accepting them as authority; as in the date of the birth and
+ death of the Gods of Mexico. The reader will also notice that the name of
+ the same God is found in different countries. Example&mdash;Adonis and
+ Bacchus are found amongst the Gods of both Greece and Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ EXPLANATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors." What an imposing title for a
+ book! What startling developments of religious history it implies! Is it
+ founded on fact or on fiction? If it has a basis of truth, where was such
+ an extraordinary mine of sacred lore discovered? Where were such startling
+ facts obtained as the title of the work suggests. These queries will
+ doubtless arise as soliloquies in the minds of many readers on glancing at
+ the title-page. And the author is disposed to gratify this natural and
+ most probable, in some cases, excited curiosity by a brief explanation. In
+ doing this, he deems it only necessary, to state that many of the most
+ important facts collated in this work were derived from Sir Godfrey
+ Higgins' Anacalypsis, a work as valuable as it is rare&mdash;a work
+ comprising the result of twenty years' labor, devoted to the investigation
+ of religious history. And although embodying many important historical
+ facts which should have commanded for it a word-wide circulation, but a
+ few copies of this invaluable treasury of religious knowledge have ever
+ found their way into this country. One of these copies the author of this
+ work obtained, at no inconsiderable expense, long enough to glean from its
+ pages such facts as he presumed would be most interesting and instructive
+ to the general reader, some of which will be found in nearly every chapter
+ of this volume. With the facts and materials derived from this source, and
+ two hundred other unimpeachable historical records, the present work might
+ have been swelled to fourfold its present size without exhausting the
+ author's ample store of materials and would have possessed such unwieldy
+ dimensions but for a strict conformity to the most rigid rules of
+ eclecticism and condensation. Encouraged by the extensive demand for his
+ former work, "The Biography of Satan," which has passed through seven
+ editions, the author cherishes the hope that the present work will meet
+ with a circulation commensurate with the importance of the many invaluable
+ facts which it contains. For he possesses the sad conviction that the many
+ religious errors and evils which it is the object of this work to expose,
+ operate very seriously to retard the moral and intellectual growth and
+ prosperity of all Christian countries. They have the effect to injure
+ mentally, morally and religiously the great body of Christian professors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Prince, of Long Island (now deceased), wrote to the author, respecting
+ the thirty-fifth chapter of this work, entitled "The Logical View of the
+ Incarnation," after he had seen it in the columns of a newspaper, "It is a
+ masterly piece of logic, and will startle, if it does not revolutionize,
+ the orthodox world. And the chapters comprising 'The Philosophical View,'
+ and 'The Physiological View,' were afterward pronounced specimens of
+ profound and unanswerable logical reasoning." We thus call the reader's
+ attention to these chapters in advance, in order to induce that thorough
+ attention to their facts and arguments which will result in banishing from
+ his mind the last vestiges of a belief (if he entertain any) in the
+ doctrine of the divine incarnation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IMPORTANT FACTS CONSTITUTING THE BASIS OF THIS WORK.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IGNORANCE of science and ignorance of history are the two great bulwarks
+ of religious error. There is scarcely a tenet of religious faith now
+ propagated to the world by the professed disciples of Christ but that, if
+ subjected to a rigid test in the ordeal of modern science would be found
+ to contain more or less error. Vast acquisitions have been made in the
+ fields of science and history within the last half century, the moral
+ lessons of which have done much to undermine and unsettle our popular
+ system of religious faith, and to bring into disrepute or effectually
+ change many of its long-cherished dogmas. The scientific and historical
+ facts thus brought before the intelligent public, have served as keys for
+ explaining many of the doctrines comprised in the popular creed. They have
+ poured a flood of light upon our whole system of religion as now taught by
+ its popular representatives, which have had the effect to reveal many of
+ its errors to those who have had the temerity, or the curiosity, to
+ investigate it upon these grounds. Many of the doctrines and miraculous
+ events which have always been assigned a divine emanation by the disciples
+ of the Christian faith, are, by these scientific and historical
+ disclosures, shown to be explainable upon natural grounds, and to have
+ exclusively a natural basis. Some of them are shown to be solvable by
+ recently developed spiritual laws, while others are proven to be founded
+ wholly in error. The intelligent community are now acquainted with many of
+ these important facts, so that no man of science can be found in this
+ enlightened age who can popularly be termed a Christian. No man can be
+ found in any Christian country who has the established reputation of being
+ a man of science, or who has made any proficiency in the whole curriculum
+ of the sciences, whose creed, when examined by an orthodox committee,
+ would not be pronounced unsound. It is true that many of the scientific
+ class, not possessing the conviction that duty imposes the moral necessity
+ of making living martyrs of themselves, have refrained from fully avowing
+ or disclosing to the public their real convictions of the popular faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The changes and improvements in religious ideas now observant in the most
+ intelligent portion of the community, are due in part to the rapid
+ progress of scientific discovery and the dissemination of scientific
+ knowledge in Christian countries. The explorer in the field of religious
+ history, however, comes in here for his meed of praise. New stores of
+ historic facts and data may be reckoned among the recent acquisitions of
+ the laborious archeologist; new fountains of religious history have
+ recently been unsealed, which have had the effect to reveal many errors
+ and false claims set up for the current religion of Christendom&mdash;a
+ religion long regarded as settled and stereotyped. For many centuries
+ subsequent to the establishment of the Christian religion, but little was
+ known by its disciples of the character, claims and doctrines of the
+ oriental systems of worship. These religions, in fact, were scarcely known
+ to exist, because they had long been veiled in secrecy. They were found,
+ in some cases, enshrined in religious books printed or written in a
+ language so very ancient and obscure, as to bid defiance for centuries to
+ the labors of the most indefatigable, profound and erudite archeological
+ scholar to decipher it. That obstacle is now partially surmounted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The recent translation for the first time of the Hindoo Vedas into the
+ English language (the oldest bible now extant or ever written) has
+ revealed to the unwelcome gaze of the Christian reader the startling fact
+ that "the heathen" had long been in possession of "holy books," possessing
+ essentially the same character, and teaching essentially the same
+ doctrines as the Christian bible&mdash;there being, as Horace Greeley
+ expressed it, "No doctrine of Christianity but what has been anticipated
+ by the Vedas." (See Vol. II., Chap. i, of this work.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, then, this heathen bible (compiled, according to the Christian
+ missionary, Rev. D. G Allen, 1400 B. C.), contains all the doctrines of
+ Christianity, then away goes over the dam all claim for the Christian
+ bible as an original bible as an original revelation, or a work of divine
+ inspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bibles are thus shown to be of heathen and human origin, instead of
+ heavenly and divine authorship, as claimed for them by their respective
+ disciples&mdash;the Christian bible forming no exception to this
+ statement. The latter, being essentially like other bibles, it must, of
+ course, have had the same or a similar origin&mdash;a fact which, though
+ it may be new and startling to millions, will be universally accepted as
+ truth before the lapse of many generations, and a fact which confronts
+ with open denial the claims of two hundred millions of Christian
+ professors, who assert with unscrupulous boldness that every doctrine,
+ principle and precept of their bible is of divine emanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How utterly groundless and untenable is such a claim when arranged by the
+ side of modern discoveries in religious history!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Equally unsupportable is the declaration that "there is no other name
+ given under heaven whereby men can be saved, than that of Jesus Christ and
+ him crucified," when viewed in the light of the modern explorations of Sir
+ Godfrey Higgins, which have disclosed the history of nearly a score of
+ crucified Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, who, we have equal proof, died for
+ the sins of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, the two prime articles of the Christian faith&mdash;Revelation and
+ Crucifixion&mdash;are forever established as human and heathen
+ conceptions. And the hope might be reasonably entertained that the
+ important historical facts disclosed in this work will have the effect to
+ open the eyes of the professors of the Christian religion to see their
+ serious error in putting forth such exalted claims for their bible and
+ their religion as that of being perfect products of infinite wisdom, did
+ not the past history of all religious countries furnish sad proof that
+ reason and logic, and even the most cogent and convincing facts of science
+ and history often prove powerless when arrayed against a religious
+ conviction, enstamped upon the mind for thousands of years in the past,
+ and transmitted from parent to child until it has grown to a colossal
+ stature, and become a part of the living tissues of the soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No matter how glaringly absurd, how palpably erroneous, or how
+ demonstrably false an opinion or doctrine is shown to be, they cannot see
+ it, but will still continue to hug it to their bosoms as a
+ divinely-revealed truth. No facts or evidence can prove an overmatch for
+ the inherited convictions of a thousand generations. In this respect the
+ Mahomedan, the Hindoo and the Christian all stand upon a level. It is
+ about as easy to convince one as the other of their easily demonstrated
+ errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RELIGION OF NATURAL ORIGIN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the numerous errors traceable in the history of every religious
+ sect, commemorated in the annals of the world, none possesses a more
+ serious character, or has been attended with more deplorable consequences,
+ than that of assigning a wrong origin to religion. Every bible, every
+ sect, every creed, every catechism, and every orthodox sermon teaches that
+ "religion is the gift of God," that "it is infused into the soul by the
+ spirit and power of the Lord." Never was a greater mistake ever committed.
+ Every student of anthropology, every person who has read any of the
+ numerous modern works on mental science, and tested their
+ easily-demonstrated facts, knows that religion is of <i>natural</i> and
+ not <i>supernatural</i> origin; that it is a natural element of the <i>human
+ mind</i>, and not a "<i>direct gift from God</i>;" that it grows as
+ spontaneously out of the soul as flowers spring out of the ground. It is
+ as natural as eating, sleeping or breathing. This conclusion is not the
+ offspring of mere imagination. It is no hastily-concocted theory, but an
+ oft-demonstrated and scientifically-established fact, which any person can
+ test the truth of for himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this modern discovery will, at no distant day, revolutionize all
+ systems of religious faith in existence, and either dissolve and dissipate
+ them, or modify and establish them upon a more natural and enduring basis,
+ expurgated of their dogmatic errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us, then, labor to banish the wide-spread delusion believed and taught
+ by a thousand systems of worship&mdash;Jew, Pagan and Christian&mdash;that
+ "religion is of supernatural or divine origin," and the many ruinous
+ errors; senseless dogmas and deplorable soul-crushing superstitions so
+ thoroughly inwrought into the Christian system will vanish like fog before
+ the morning sun, and be replaced by a religion which sensible, intelligent
+ and scientific men and women can accept, and will delight to honor and
+ practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ADDRESS TO THE CLERGY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ FRIENDS and brethren&mdash;teachers of the Christian faith: Will you
+ believe us when we tell you the divine claims of your religion are gone&mdash;all
+ swept away by the "logic of history," and nullified by the demonstrations
+ of science?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The recently opened fountains of historic law, many of whose potent facts
+ will be found interspersed through the pages of this work, sweep away the
+ last inch of ground on which can be predicated the least show for either
+ the divine origin of the Christian religion, or the divinity of Jesus
+ Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For these facts demonstrate beyond all cavil and criticism, and with a
+ logical force which can leave not the vestige of a doubt upon any unbiased
+ mind, that all its doctrines are an outgrowth from older heathen systems.
+ Several systems of religion essentially the same in character and spirit
+ as that religion now known as Christianity, and setting forth the same
+ doctrines, principles and precepts, and several personages filling a
+ chapter in history almost identical with that of Jesus Christ, it is now
+ known to those who are up with the discoveries and intelligence of the
+ age, were venerated in the East centuries before a religion called
+ Christian, or a personage called Jesus Christ were known to history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will you not, then, give it up that your religion is merely a human
+ production, reconstructed from heathen materials&mdash;from oriental
+ systems several thousand years older than yours&mdash;or will you
+ continue, in spite of the unanimous and unalterable verdict of history,
+ science, facts and logic, to proclaim to the world the now historically
+ demonstrated error which you have so long preached, that God is the author
+ of your religion, and Jesus Christ a Deity-begotten Messiah? Though you
+ may have heretofore honestly believed these doctrines to be true, you can
+ now no longer plead ignorance as an excuse for propagating such gigantic
+ and serious errors, as they are now overwhelmingly demonstrated by a
+ thousand facts of history to be untrue. You must abandon such exalted
+ claims for your religion, or posterity will mark you as being "blind
+ leaders of the blind." They will heap upon your honored names their
+ unmitigated ridicule and condemnation. They will charge you as being
+ either deplorably ignorant, or disloyal to the cause of truth. And shame
+ and ignominy will be your portion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following propositions (fatal to your claims for Christianity) are
+ established beyond confutation by the historical facts cited in this work,
+ viz:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. There were many cases of the miraculous birth of Gods reported in
+ history before the case of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2 Also many other cases of Gods being born of virgin mothers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Many of these Gods, like Christ, were (reputedly) born on the 25th of
+ December.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Their advent into the world, like that of Jesus Christ, is in many
+ cases claimed to have been foretold by "inspired prophets."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Stars figured at the birth of several of them, as in the case of
+ Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Also angels, shepherds, and magi, or "wise men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Many of them, like Christ, were claimed to be of royal or princely
+ descent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Their lives, like his, were also threatened in infancy by the ruler of
+ the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Several of them, like him, gave early proof of divinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. And, like him, retired from the world and fasted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Also, like him, declared, "My kingdom is not of this world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Some of them preached a spiritual religion, too, like his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. And were "anointed with oil," like him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Many of them, like him, were "crucified for the sins of the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. And after three days' interment "rose from the dead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. And, finally, like him, are reported as ascending back to heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. The same violent convulsions of nature at the crucifixion of several
+ are reported.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. They were nearly all called "Saviors," "Son of God," "Messiah,"
+ "Redeemer," "Lord," &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Each one was the second member of the trinity of "Father, Son and Holy
+ Ghost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. The doctrines of "Original Sin," "Fall of Man," "The Atonement," "The
+ Trinity," "The Word," "Forgiveness," "An Angry God," "Future Endless
+ Punishment," etc., etc. (see the author's "Biography of Satan,") were a
+ part of the religion of each of these sin-atoning Gods, as found set forth
+ in several oriental bibles and "holy books," similar in character and
+ spirit to the Christian's bible, and written, like it, by "inspired and
+ holy men" before the time of either Christ or Moses (before Moses, in some
+ cases, at least). All these doctrines and declarations, and many others
+ not here enumerated, the historical citations of this work abundantly
+ prove, were taught in various oriental heathen nations centuries before
+ the birth of Christ, or before Christianity, as a religion, was known in
+ the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will you, then, after learning these facts, longer dare assert that
+ Christianity is of divine emanation, or claim a special divine paternity
+ for its author. Only the priest, who loves his <i>salary</i> more than the
+ cause of <i>truth</i> (and I fear this class are numerous,) or who is
+ deplorably ignorant of history, will have the effrontery or audacity to do
+ so. For the historical facts herein set forth as clearly prove such
+ assumptions to be false, as figures can demonstrate the truth of any
+ mathematical problem. And no logic can overthrow, and no sophistry can set
+ aside these facts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They will stand till the end of time in spite of your efforts either to
+ evade, ignore, or invalidate them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will here briefly state:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WHY ALL THE ANCIENT RELIGIONS WERE ALIKE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two causes are obviously assignable for Christianity in all its essential
+ features and phases, being so strikingly similar to the ancient pagan
+ systems which preceded it, as also the close analogies of all the
+ principal systems, whose doctrines and practical teachings have found a
+ place on the pages of history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The primary and constituent elements and properties of human nature
+ being essentially the same in all countries and all centuries, and the
+ feeling called Religion being a spontaneous outgrowth of the devotional
+ elements of the human mind, the coincidence would naturally produce
+ similar feelings, similar thoughts, similar views and similar doctrines on
+ the subject of religion in different countries, however widely separated.
+ This accounts in part for the analogous features observable in all the
+ primary systems of religious faith, which have flourished in the past
+ ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. A more potent cause, however, for the proximate identity extending to
+ such an elaborate detail, as is evinced by the foregoing schedule, is
+ found in the historical incident which brought the disciples of the
+ various systems of worship together, face to face, in the then grand
+ religious emporium of the world&mdash;the royal and renowned city of
+ Alexandria, the capital of Egypt Here, drawn together by various motives
+ and influences, the devotee of India (the devout disciple of Buddhism),
+ the ever-prayerful worshipper of "Mithra, the Mediator," the
+ representatives of the crucified Quexalcoate of Mexico, the self-denying
+ Essene, the superstitious Egyptian, the godly Chaldean, the imitative
+ Judean founders of Christianity, and the disciples of other sin-atoning
+ Gods, met and interchanged ideas, discussed their various dogmas, remolded
+ their doctrines, and recast and rehabilitated their systems of religious
+ faith by borrowing from each other, and from other systems there
+ represented. In this way all became remarkably similar and alike in all
+ their doctrines and details. And thus the mystery is solved, and the
+ singular resemblance of all the ancient systems of religion satisfactorily
+ accounted for. (For a fuller explanation of this matter, see Chapters XXX.
+ and XXXI. of this work.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In conclusion, please note the following points:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The religious conceptions of the Old Testament are as easily traced to
+ heathen sources as those of the New Testament. But we are compelled to
+ exclude such an exposition from this work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The comparative exhibition of the doctrines and teachings of twenty
+ bibles which proves them to be in their leading features essentially alike
+ (originally designed for this volume), is found to be, when completed, of
+ sufficient magnitude to constitute a volume of itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Here I desire to impress upon the minds of my clerical brethren the
+ important fact, that the gospel histories of Christ were written by men
+ who had formerly been Jews (see Acts xxi. 20), and probably possessing the
+ strong proclivity to imitate and borrow which their bible shows was
+ characteristic of that nation; and being written many years after Christ's
+ death, according to that standard Christian author, Dr. Lardner, it was
+ impossible, under such circumstances, for them to separate (if they had
+ desired to) the real facts and events of his life from the innumerable
+ fictions and fables then afloat everywhere relative to the heathen Gods
+ who had pre-enacted a similar history. Two reasons are thus furnished for
+ their constructing a history of Christ almost identical with that of other
+ Gods, as shown in chapters XXX., XXXI. and XXXII. of this work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. The singular and senseless defense of your now tottering system we have
+ known to be attempted by members of your order, by the self-complacent
+ soliloquy "Christianity, whether divine or human, is good enough for me."
+ But such a subterfuge betrays both a weak mind and a weak cause. The
+ disciples of all the oriental systems cherished a similar feeling and a
+ similar sentiment. And the deluded followers of Brigham Young exclaimed in
+ like manner, "I want nothing better than Mormonism." "Snakes, lizards and
+ frogs are good enough for me," a South Sea Islander once exclaimed to a
+ missionary, when a reform diet was proposed. Such logic, if universally
+ adopted, would keep the world eternally in barbarism. No progress can be
+ made where such sentiments prevail. The truth is, no system of religion,
+ whatever its ostensible marks of perfection, can long remain "good enough"
+ for aspiring and progressive minds, unless occasionally improved, like
+ other institutions. And then it should be borne in mind, that our
+ controversy does not appertain so much to the character as to the origin
+ of the Christian religion. Our many incontrovertible proofs, that it is of
+ human and heathen origin, proves at the same time that it is an imperfect
+ system, and as such, needing occasional improvement, like other
+ institutions. And its assumed perfection and divine origin which have
+ always guarded it from improvement, amply accounts for its present
+ corrupt, immoral, declining and dying condition. And it will ere long die
+ with paralysis, unless its assumption of divine perfection is soon
+ exchanged for the principles of improvement and reconstruction. This
+ policy alone can save it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. We will here notice another feeble, futile and foolish expedient we
+ have known resorted to by persons of your order to save your sinking cause
+ when the evidence is presented with such cogency as to admit of no
+ disproof, that all the important doctrines of Christianity were taught by
+ older heathen systems before the era of Christ The plea is, that those
+ systems were mere types, or ante-types, of the Christian religion. But
+ this plea is of itself a borrowed subterfuge of heathenism, and is
+ moreover devoid of evidence. The ancient Egyptians, also the Greeks,
+ claimed that Brahminism was a type, or ante-type, of their religious
+ systems. And Mahomedans now claim that both Judaism and Christianity were
+ designed by God as foreshadowing types of religion of the Koran. And the
+ disciples of more than a thousand systems of religion which have
+ flourished in past ages, could have made such logic equally available in
+ showing, in each case, that every system preceding theirs was designed by
+ Infinite Wisdom as simply a typical or ante-typical forerunner of theirs.
+ How ridiculous and senseless, therefore, is the argument thus shown to be
+ when critically examined in the light of history! So much so as scarcely
+ to merit a serious notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Here permit us to say that we believe Christianity to be not only of
+ human origin, but of natural origin also; I that is, a natural outgrowth,
+ like other systems, of the religious elements of the human mind&mdash;a
+ hypothesis which accounts most beautifully for the numerous human
+ imperfections now visible in nearly every line of its teachings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those imperfections correspond exactly to the imperfect minds which
+ produced it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. And we believe that the principle teacher of Christianity, "the man
+ Christ Jesus," possessed a very exalted and superior mind for that age in
+ the moral and religious departments, and in the intellectual to some
+ extent also. But his superiority in these respects was not probably
+ greater than that of Zera Colburn or Henry Salford in the mathematical
+ department. And all probably derived their peculiar extraordinary traits
+ of mind from the same causes&mdash;that of strong psychological influence
+ impressed upon the mind of the mothers prior to their births. Had these
+ ante-natal influences been as well understood then as now, we presume
+ Christ would have escaped the fate of an exaltation to the Godhead.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [The author, stating the above, demonstrates that same
+ assumption of a <i>truth</i> which he criticises in the
+ Christians, Mohamedens and other proponents of religions.
+ <i>Ed.</i>]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 8. In conclusion, permit us to say that the numerous and overwhelming
+ facts of this work render it utterly impossible that the exalted claims
+ you put forth for your religion and its assumed author (that of a divine
+ character) can be true. And posterity will so decide, whether you do or
+ not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cherishing for you naught but feelings of kindness and brotherly love, and
+ desiring to promote the truth, we will answer any question, or discuss any
+ proposition embraced in this work you may desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your brother,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kersey Graves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE WORLD'S SIXTEEN CRUCIFIED SAVIORS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. RIVAL CLAIMS OF THE SAVIORS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT is claimed by the disciples of Jesus Christ, that he was of
+ supernatural and divine origin; that he had a human being for a mother,
+ and a God for his father; that, although he was woman-conceived, he was
+ Deity-begotten, and molded in the human form, but comprehending in essence
+ a full measure of the infinite Godhead; thus making him half human and
+ half divine in his sublunary origin. It is claimed that he was full and
+ perfect God, and perfect man; and while he was God, he was also the son of
+ God, and as such was sent down by his father to save a fallen and guilty
+ world; and that thus his mission pertained to the whole human race; and
+ his inspired seers are made to declare that ultimately every nation,
+ tongue, kindred, and people under heaven will acknowledge allegiance to
+ his government, and concede his right to reign and rule the world; that
+ "every knee must bow, and every tongue confess that Jesus is Lord, to the
+ glory of God the Father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we do not find that this prophecy has ever been or is likely to be
+ fulfilled. We do not observe that this claim to the infinite deityship of
+ Jesus Christ has been or is likely to be universally conceded. On the
+ contrary, it is found that by a portion, and a large portion of the people
+ of even those nations now called Christian, this claim has been steadily
+ and unswervingly controverted, through the whole line of history,
+ stretching through the nearly two thousand years which have elapsed since
+ his advent to earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even some of those who are represented to have been personally acquainted
+ with him&mdash;aye! some of his own brethren in the flesh, children in the
+ same household, children of the same mother&mdash;had the temerity to
+ question the tenableness of his claim to a divine emanation. And when we
+ extend our researches to other countries, we find this claim, so far from
+ being conceded, is denied and contested by whole nations upon other
+ grounds. It is met and confronted by rival claims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this ground hundreds of millions of the established believers in
+ divine revelation&mdash;hundreds of millions of believers in the divine
+ character and origin of religion&mdash;eject the pretentions set up for
+ Jesus Christ. They admit both a God and a Savior, but do not accept Jesus
+ of Nazareth as being either. They admit a Messiah, but not the Messiah;
+ these nations contend that the title is misplaced which makes "the man
+ Christ Jesus" the Savior of the world. They claim to have been honored
+ with the birth of the true Savior among them, and defend this claim upon
+ the ground of priority of date. They aver that the advent of their
+ Messiahs were long prior to that of the Christians', and that this
+ circumstance adjudicates for them a superiority of claim as to having had
+ the true Messiah born upon their soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is argued that, as the story of the incarnation of the Christians'
+ Savior is of more recent date than that of these oriental and ancient
+ religions (as is conceded by Christians themselves), the origin of the
+ former is thus indicated and foreshadowed as being an outgrowth from, if
+ not a plagiarism upon the latter&mdash;a borrowed copy, of which the pagan
+ stories furnish the original. Here, then, we observe a rivalship of
+ claims, as to which of the remarkable personages who have figured in the
+ world as Saviors, Messiahs, and Sons of God, in different ages and
+ different countries, can be considered the true Savior and "sent of God"
+ or whether all should be, or the claims of all rejected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For researches into oriental history reveal the remarkable fact that
+ stories of incarnate Gods answering to and resembling the miraculous
+ character of Jesus Christ have been prevalent in most if not all the
+ principal religious heathen nations of antiquity; and the accounts and
+ narrations of some of these deific incarnations bear such a striking
+ resemblance to that of the Christian Savior&mdash;not only in their
+ general features, but in some cases in the most minute details, from the
+ legend of the immaculate conception to that of the crucifixion, and
+ subsequent ascension into heaven&mdash;that one might almost be mistaken
+ for the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More than twenty claims of this kind&mdash;claims of beings invested with
+ divine honor (deified)&mdash;have come forward and presented themselves at
+ the bar of the world with their credentials, to contest the verdict of
+ Christendom, in having proclaimed Jesus Christ, "the only son, and sent of
+ God:" twenty Messiahs, Saviors, and Sons of God, according to history or
+ tradition, have, in past times, descended from heaven, and taken upon
+ themselves the form of men, clothing themselves with human flesh, and
+ furnishing incontestable evidence of a divine origin, by various miracles,
+ marvelous works, and superlative virtues; and finally these twenty Jesus
+ Christs (accepting their character for the name) laid the foundation for
+ the salvation of the world, and ascended back to heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Chrishna of Hindostan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Budha Sakia of India.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Salivahana of Bermuda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Zulis, or Zhule, also Osiris and Orus, of Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Odin of the Scandinavians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Crite of Chaldea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Zoroaster and Mithra of Persia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Baal and Taut, "the only Begotten of God," of Phenicia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Indra of Thibet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Bali of Afghanistan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Jao of Nepaul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Wittoba of the Bilingonese.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Thammuz of Syria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Atys of Phrygia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Xamolxis of Thrace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Zoar of the Bonzes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Adad of Assyria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. Deva Tat, and Sammonocadam of Siam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Alcides of Thebes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. Mikado of the Sintoos.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Beddru of Japan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22 Hesus or Eros, and Bremrillah, of the Druids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Thor, son of Odin, of the Gauls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. Cadmus of Greece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Hil and Feta of the Mandaites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. Gentaut and Quexalcote of Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Universal Monarch of the Sibyls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Ischy of the Island of Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Divine Teacher of Plato.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. Holy One of Xaca.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Fohi and Tien of China.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. Adonis, son of the virgin Io of Greece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. Ixion and Quirinus of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. Prometheus of Caucasus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35. Mohamud, or Mahomet, of Arabia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These have all received divine honors, have nearly all been worshiped as
+ Gods, or sons of God; were mostly incarnated as Christs, Saviors,
+ Messiahs, or Mediators; not a few of them were reputedly born of virgins;
+ some of them filling a character almost identical with that ascribed by
+ the Christian's bible to Jesus Christ; many of them, like him, are
+ reported to have been crucified; and all of them, taken together, furnish
+ a prototype and parallel for nearly every important incident and
+ wonder-inciting miracle, doctrine and precept recorded in the New
+ Testament, of the Christian's Savior. Surely, with so many Saviors the
+ world cannot, or should not, be lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have now presented before us a two-fold ground for doubting and
+ disputing the claims put forth by the Christian world in behalf of "Our
+ Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." In the first place, allowing the question
+ to be answered in the affirmative as to whether he was really a Savior, or
+ supernatural being, or more than a mere man, a negative answer to which
+ seems to have been sprung (as previously intimated) at the very hour of
+ his birth, and that by his kindred, his own nearest relatives; as it is
+ declared, "his own brethren did not believe on him"&mdash;a skepticism
+ which has been growing deeper and broader from that day to this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now, upon the heel of this question, we find another formidable query
+ to be met and answered, viz.: Was he (Christ) the only Savior, seeing that
+ a multitude of similar claims are now upon our council-board to be
+ disposed of?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We shall, however, leave the theologians of the various religious schools
+ to adjust and settle this difficulty among themselves. We shall leave them
+ to settle the question as best they can as to whether Jesus Christ was the
+ only son and sent of God&mdash;"the only begotten of the Father," as John
+ declares him to be (John i. 14)&mdash;in view of the fact that long prior
+ to his time various personages, in different nations, were invested with
+ the title "Son of God," and have left behind them similar proofs and
+ credentials of the justness of their claims to such a title, if being
+ essentially alike&mdash;as we shall prove and demonstrate them to be&mdash;can
+ make their claims similar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We shall present an array of facts and historical proofs, drawn from
+ numerous histories and the Holy Scriptures and bibles appertaining to
+ these various Saviors, and which include a history of their lives and
+ doctrines, that will go to show that in nearly all their leading features,
+ and mostly even in their details, they are strikingly similar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A comparison, or parallel view, extended through their sacred histories,
+ so as to include an exhibition presented in parallels of the teachings of
+ their respective bibles, would make it clearly manifest that, with respect
+ to nearly every important thought, deed, word, action, doctrine,
+ principle, precept, tenet, ritual, ordinance or ceremony, and even the
+ various important characters or personages, who figure in their religious
+ dramas as Saviors, prophets, apostles, angels, devils, demons, exalted or
+ fallen genii&mdash;in a word, nearly every miraculous or marvelous story,
+ moral precept, or tenet of religious faith, noticed in either the Old or
+ New Testament Scriptures of Christendom&mdash;from the Jewish cosmogony,
+ or story of creation in Genesis, to the last legendary tale in St. John's
+ "Arabian Nights" (alias the Apocalypse)&mdash;there is to be found an
+ antitype for, or outline of, somewhere in the sacred records or bibles of
+ the oriental heathen nations, making equal if not higher pretention to a
+ divine emanation and divine inspiration, and admitted by all historians,
+ even the most orthodox, to be of much more ancient date; for while
+ Christians only claim, for the earthly advent of their Savior and the
+ birth of their religion, a period less than nineteen hundred years in the
+ past, on the contrary, most of the deific or divine incarnations of the
+ heathen and their respective religions are, by the concurrent and united
+ verdict of all history, assigned a date several hundred or several
+ thousand years earlier, thus leaving the inference patent that so far as
+ there has been any borrowing or transfer of materials from one system to
+ another, Christianity has been the borrower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as nearly the whole outline and constituent parts of the Christian
+ system are found scattered through these older systems, the query is at
+ once sprung as to whether Christianity did not derive its materials from
+ these sources&mdash;that is, from heathenism, instead of from high heaven&mdash;as
+ it claims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. MESSIANIC PROPHECIES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ NEARLY all religious history is prophetic of the coming of Saviors,
+ Messiahs, Redeemers, and virgin-born Gods. Most religious countries, and
+ more than a score of religious systems, had a standing prophecy that a
+ divine deliverer would descend from heaven and relieve them from their
+ depressed state, and ameliorate their condition. And in most cases that
+ prophecy was believed to have been fulfilled by the birth of a being, who,
+ as he approached the goal of moral and intellectual manhood exhibited such
+ remarkable proof of superiority of mind as to be readily accepted as the
+ promised Messiah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We can only find room for a few citations and illustrations in proof of
+ this statement. Many texts have been hunted out and marked in the
+ Christian bible, by interested priests, as prophetic of the coming and
+ mission of Christ. But a thorough, candid, and impartial investigation
+ will convince any reader that <i>none of these texts</i> have the remotest
+ allusion to Christ, nor were they intended to have. On the contrary, most
+ of them refer to events already past. The others are the mere ebullitions
+ of pent-up feelings hopefully prayerful in their anticipation of better
+ times, but very indefinite as to the period and the agencies or means in
+ which, or by which, the desired reformation was to be brought about. A
+ divine man was prayed for and hopefully expected. But no such being as
+ Jesus Christ is anticipated, or alluded to, or dreamed of, by the
+ prophecies. And it requires the most unwarrantable distortion to make one
+ text refer to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this perversion has been wrought on many texts. We will cite one case
+ in proof. In Isaiah's "famous prophecy" so-called, the phrase "Unto us a
+ child is born" (Isa. ix. 6), the context clearly shows, refers to the
+ prophet's own child, and the past tense, "is born," is an evidence the
+ child was then born. And the title "Mighty God," found in the text, Dr.
+ Beard shows should have been translated "the Mighty Hero," thus proving it
+ has no reference to a God. And "the Everlasting Father" should have been
+ rendered, according to this Christian writer, "the Father of the
+ Everlasting Age." And other texts often quoted as prophecies by biased
+ Christian writers, the doctor proves, are erroneously translated, and have
+ no more reference to Christ than to Mahomet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true the Jews, in common with other nations, cherished strong
+ anticipations of the arrival of a Mighty Deliverer amongst them; and this
+ august personage some of them supposed would be a God, or a God-man (a
+ demi-God). Hence, such prophetic utterances as "Behold, a king shall reign
+ in righteousness" (Isa. xxxii. i), "And all nations shall flow unto Zion"
+ (Isa. ii. 2).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hindoo Budhists long previously indulged similar anticipations with
+ respect to the triumph of their religion. Hence, their seers prophesied
+ that at the end of the Cali Yug period, a divine child (Avatar, or Savior)
+ would be born, who would understand the divine writings (the Holy
+ Scriptures) and the sciences, without the labor of learning them. "He will
+ supremely understand all things." "He will relieve the earth of sin, and
+ cause justice and truth to reign everywhere. And will bring the whole
+ earth into the acceptance of the Hindoo religion." And the Hindoo prophet
+ Bala also predicted that a divine Savior would "become incarnate in the
+ house of Yadu, and issue forth to mortal birth from the womb of Devaci (a
+ Holy Virgin), and relieve the oppressed earth of its load of sin and
+ sorrow." Much more similar language may be found in their holy bible, the
+ Vedas. Colonel Wilford tells us the advent of their Savior Chrishna
+ occurred in exact fulfillment of prophecy found in their sacred books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the Chinese bible also contains a number of Messianic prophecies. In
+ one of the five volumes a prophecy runs thus: "The Holy one, when he
+ comes, will unite in himself all the virtues of heaven and earth. By his
+ justice the world will be established in righteousness. He will labor and
+ suffer much,.... and will finally offer up a sacrifice worthy of himself,"
+ i. e., worthy of a God. And a singular animal, called the Kilin
+ (signifying the Lamb of God), was seen in the yard, with a stone in its
+ mouth, on which was inscribed a prophecy of the event. And when the young
+ God (Chang-ti) was born, in fulfillment of this prophecy, heavenly music,
+ and angels and shepherds attended the scene. (See "History of China," by
+ Martinus; also Halde's "History of China.")
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will also give place to a Messianic prophecy of Persia. Mr. Faber, an
+ English writer, in his "History of Idolatry," tells us that Zoroaster
+ prophetically declared, that "A virgin should conceive and bear a son, and
+ a star would appear blazing at midday to signalize the occurrence." "When
+ you behold the star," said he to his followers, "follow it whithersoever
+ it leads you. Adore the mysterious child, offering him gifts with profound
+ humility. He is indeed the Almighty Word which created the heavens. He is
+ indeed your Lord and everlasting Ring" (Faber, vol. ii. p. 92).
+ Abulfaragius, in his "Historia Dynastarium," and Maurice, in his "Indian
+ Skeptics Refuted," both speak of this prophecy, fulfilled, according to
+ Mr. Higgins, by the advent of the Persian and Chaldean God Josa. And
+ Chalcidus (of the second century), in his "Comments on the Times of
+ Plato," speaks of "a star which presaged neither disease nor death, but
+ the descent of a God amongst men, and which is attested by Chaldean
+ astronomers, who immediately hastened to adore the newborn deity, and
+ present him gifts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are compelled to omit, for the want of room, the notice of numerous
+ Messianic prophecies found in the sacred writings of Egypt, Greece, Rome,
+ Mexico, Arabia, and other countries, all of which tend to show that the
+ same prophetic spirit pervaded all religious countries, reliable only to
+ the extent it might have issued from an interior spiritual vision, or have
+ been illuminated by departed spirits. And we find as much evidence that
+ these pagan prophecies were inspired, and also fulfilled, as those found
+ in Jew-Christian bible, thus reducing all to a common level. The
+ possibility of the interior vision being expanded and illuminated by
+ spiritual beings, so as to enable the possessor to forestall the
+ occurrence of future events, we, however, by no means deny, since we have
+ abundant proof of it in connection with the practical history of modern
+ spiritualism. (See Chapter XXXIV., section 2).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. PROPHECIES BY THE FIGURE OF A SERPENT
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ The Seed of the Woman Bruising the Serpent's Head.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "AND I will put emnity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed
+ and her seed. It shall bruise thy head, and thou shall bruise his heel."
+ (Gen. ill. 15.) This text is often cited by Christian writers and
+ controversialists as prefiguring the mission of the Christian Savior,
+ viz., the destruction of the serpent, alias the devil. St. John calls "the
+ grand adversary of souls which deceiveth the whole world," "the dragon,
+ the serpent, the devil, and Satan." (Rev. xii. 8.) The serpent, then, is
+ the devil; that is, the dragon, the serpent, the devil and Satan are all
+ one. The object of this chapter is to show the origin of the singular
+ figure set forth in the first text quoted, and to prove that those
+ Christian writers who assume it to be a revelation from heaven were
+ profoundly ignorant of oriental history, as the same figure is found in
+ several heathen systems of older date, as we will now cite the facts to
+ prove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the saviors or demigods of Egypt, India, Greece, Persia, Mexico
+ and Etruria are represented as performing the same drama with the serpent
+ or devil. "Osiris of Egypt (says Mr. Bryant) bruised the head of the
+ serpent after it had bitten his heel." Descending to Greece, Mr. Faber
+ relates that, "on the spheres Hercules is represented in the act of
+ contending with the serpent, the head of which is placed under his foot;
+ and this serpent guarded the tree with golden fruit in the midst of the
+ garden Hesperides"&mdash;Eden. (Origin of Idolatry, vol. i. p. 443.) "And
+ we may observe," says this author, "the same tradition in the Phoenician
+ fable of Ophion or Ophiones." (Ibid.) In Genesis the serpent is the
+ subject of two legends. But here it will be observed that they are both
+ couched in one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, it is related by more than one oriental writer that Chrishna of
+ India is represented on some very ancient sculptures and stone monuments
+ with his heel on the head of a serpent. Mr. Maurice, in his Indian
+ Antiquities, vol. ii., speaks of "Chrishna crushing the head of a serpent
+ with his foot," and pronounces the striking similarity of this story with
+ that found in the Christian bible as "very mysterious." Another author
+ tells us "The image of Chrishna is sculptured in the ancient temples of
+ India, sometimes wreathed in the folds of a serpent which is biting his
+ foot, and sometimes treading victoriously on the head of a serpent."
+ (Prog. Rel. Ideas, vol. i.) In the Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi., we are
+ told, "A messenger from heaven announced to the first woman created
+ (Suchiquecul), that she should bear a son who should bruise the serpent's
+ head, and then presented her with a rose." Here is the origin of the
+ Genesis legend, the rose being the fruit of the tree of "the knowledge of
+ good and evil." "The ancient Persians," says Volney, in his "Ruin of
+ Empires," p. 169, "had the tradition of a virgin, from whom they predicted
+ would be born, or would spring up, a shoot (a son) that would crush the
+ serpent's head, and thus deliver the world from sin." And both the serpent
+ and the virgin, he tells us, are represented imaginarily in the heavens,
+ and pictured on their astronomical globes and spheres, as on those of the
+ Romish Christian. (See Burritt's Geography of the Heavens.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the ancient Etrurian story, instead of "the seed of the woman" (the
+ virgin), it is the woman herself who is represented as standing with one
+ foot on the head of a serpent, which has the twig of an apple tree in its
+ mouth to which an apple is suspended (the forbidden fruit), while its tail
+ is twisted around a celestial globe, thus reminding us of St. John's
+ dragon hauling down one-third of the stars with his tail. (See Rev. xii.
+ 4.) In the ancient celestial diagram of the Etrurian, the head of the
+ virgin is surmounted with a crown of stars&mdash;doubtless the same legend
+ from which St. John borrowed his metaphor of a "a woman with a crown of
+ twelve stars on her head." (Rev. xiii.) "The <i>Regina Stellarum</i>"
+ (Queen of the Stars), spoken of in some of the ancient systems appertains
+ to the same fable. Also the tradition of Achilles of Greece being
+ invulnerable in the heel, as related by Homer. The last clause of the
+ first text quoted reads "<i>It</i> shall bruise thy head"&mdash;a very
+ curious prophetic reference to the savior of the world, if the text refers
+ to him, to represent him as being of the neuter gender, for the neuter
+ pronoun <i>it</i> always refers to a thing without sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the further exposition of the serpent tradition, we are now brought to
+ notice, and will trace to its origin, the story of the original
+ transgression and fall of man&mdash;two cardinal doctrines of the
+ Christian religion. Like every other tenet of the Christian faith, we find
+ these doctrines taught in heathen systems much older than Christianity,
+ and whose antiquity antedates even the birth of Moses. We will first
+ notice the Persian tradition. "According to the doctrine of the Persians,"
+ says the Rev. J. C. Pitrat, "Meshia and Meshiane, the first man and first
+ woman, were pure, and submitted to Ormuzd, their maker. But Ahriman (the
+ evil one) saw them, and envied them their happiness. He approached them
+ under the form of a serpent, presented fruits to them, and persuaded them
+ that he was the maker of man, of animals, of plants, and of the beautiful
+ universe in which they dwelt. They believed it. Since that time Ahriman
+ was their master. Their natures became corrupt, and this corruption
+ infested their whole posterity." This story is taken from the Vandidatsade
+ of the Persians, pp. 305 and 428.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indian or Hindoo story is furnished us by the Rev. Father Bouchat, in
+ a letter to the bishops of Avranches, and runs thus: "Our Hindoos say the
+ Gods tried by all means to obtain immortality. After many inquiries and
+ trials, they conceived the idea that they would find it in the tree of
+ life, which is the Chorcan (paradise). In fact they succeeded, and by
+ eating once in a while of the fruits of that tree, they kept the precious
+ treasure they so much valued. A famous snake, named Cheiden, saw that the
+ tree of life had been found by the Gods of the second order. As probably
+ he had been intrusted with guarding that tree, he became so angry because
+ his vigilance had been deceived, that he immediately poured out an
+ enormous quantity of poison, which spread over the whole earth." How much
+ like this story is the story of St. John, "And the serpent cast out of his
+ mouth water as a flood after the woman that he might cause her to be
+ carried away of the flood!" (Rev. xii. 15.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idea of a snake or serpent inundating the earth from its mouth, as
+ taught in both stories is so novel, and so far removed from the sphere of
+ natural causes and possible events, that we are compelled to the
+ conclusion that one is borrowed from the other, or both from a common
+ original.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as facts cited in other chapters prove beyond dispute that the Hindoo
+ system, containing this story, extends in antiquity far beyond the time of
+ Moses, the question is thus settled as to which system borrowed the story
+ from the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before closing the chapter, we wish to call the attention of the reader to
+ the important fact that three out of four of the cardinal doctrines of the
+ Christian faith are taught in the two heathen mythological stories of
+ creation just presented, viz.:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Original sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The fall of man caused by a serpent
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The consequent corruption and depravity of the human race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These doctrines, then, it must be admitted, are of heathen origin, and
+ not, as Christians claim, "important truths revealed from heaven." For a
+ historical exposition of the other cardinal doctrine of the Christian
+ faith, viz., man's restoration by the atonement achieved through the
+ crucifixion of a God, see Chapters xvi. and xxi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. MIRACULOUS AND IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF THE GODS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE ancients very naturally concluded that an offspring of God (a son of
+ God) should have a purer, higher and holier maternal origin than is
+ incident to the lot of mortals, and this was to constitute one of the
+ evidences of his emanation from the Deity&mdash;that is, of his
+ supernatural or divine origin. He, as a matter of course, must not only
+ have a different origin, but one in the highest degree superior and
+ supernatural. He must not only be able to claim the highest <i>paternal</i>
+ origin, but the highest <i>maternal</i> also. And on the part of the
+ mother, a sexual connection with the great Potentate of heaven would
+ evince for her offspring the very acme of superiority with respect to his
+ origin, moral perfection and authority. That the Savior was born of a
+ woman could not possibly be made a matter of concealment. But his paternal
+ parentage was not so obvious and apparent to general observation, being
+ cognizant alone to the mother. This circumstance furnished the most
+ propititious opportunity to concoct the story that "The Most High" had
+ condescended and descended to become both a father and a grandfather to a
+ human being, or a being apparently human at least.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We say grandfather, because, if God (as the Christian bible itself
+ frequently asserts, both directly and by implication) is father of the
+ whole human family, then he was father to the maternal parent; so that her
+ son, though deriving existence from him, would be his grandson as well as
+ his son. Hence the corollary, <i>Jesus Christ was a grandson of God as
+ well as a son of God</i>, and Jehovah both his father and grandfather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, to make the origin and character of the God and Savior stand higher
+ for purity, and partake in the highest degree of the miraculous, the
+ impression must go abroad that he was born of a woman <i>while she was yet
+ a maiden</i>&mdash;i. e., before she was contaminated by illicit
+ association with the masculine sex. Hence, nearly all the saviors were
+ reputedly born of virgins. And the process of birth, too, was out of the
+ line of natural causes, in order to invest the character of the savior
+ with the <i>ne plus ultra</i> of the miraculous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And hence it is related of Jesus Christ (in an Apocryphal Gospel), of
+ Chrishna of India, and other saviors, that they were born through the
+ mother's side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true our present canonical gospels are silent as to the manner of
+ Christ's birth; but one of the Apocryphal gospels, which gives the matter
+ in fuller detail, and whose authority in the earlier ages of the Christian
+ church was not disputed, declares that the manner of his birth was as
+ related above. And, besides, some of the early Christian fathers fully
+ indorsed the story. The same is related in the pagan bibles of heathen
+ Gods. The motives which originated the reports of the immaculate
+ conception of the Saviors, it may be further remarked, were of a two-fold
+ character:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. To establish their spotless origin (as the word immaculate means
+ spotless.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. To make it appear that there was a Deific power and agency concerned in
+ their conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And we may observe here that it is not the Saviors alone who are reported
+ to have been ushered into tangible existence without a human father, but
+ it is declared of beings known and acknowledged to be men, as Plato,
+ Pythagoras, Alexander, Augustus and a number of others. Of Plato an author
+ remarks, "He was born of Paretonia, and begotten of Apollo, and not
+ Ariston, his father." Both the manner, or process, and the source of the
+ influence by which the Gods and Saviors were generated, seem to have been
+ different in different countries, though the idea of "overshadowing with
+ the Holy Ghost" seems to have been most current. Mr. Higgins says that
+ "the Supreme First Cause was generally believe to overshadow, or in some
+ other mysterious manner to impregnate, the mother of the God, or
+ personage" (vol. i. 378). We are told that Pythais, the mother of
+ Pythagoras, five hundred and fifty years B. C., conceived by a spectre or
+ ghost (of course the Holy Ghost) of the God Apollo, or God Sol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Malcolm's "History of Persia" (vol. i. 494) the author tells us that
+ "Zoroaster was born of an immaculate conception by a ray from the Divine
+ Reason." The immaculate conception of Juno of Greece is thus described by
+ the poet:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Juno touched the flower;
+ Its wondrous virtues such,
+ She touched it, and grew pregnant at the touch;
+ Then entered Thrace&mdash;the Propontic shore;
+ When mistress of her touch,
+ God Mars she bore."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This case may certainly be set down as the <i>ne plus ultra</i> of
+ etiquette with respect to sexual commerce or purity of conception. The
+ sweet odor of an expanded flower, we are here taught, is adequate to the
+ conception and production of a God. Here we have "the immaculate
+ conception" in the superlative degree, and while much more beautiful and
+ grand it cannot be more senseless or unreasonable than the conception by a
+ ghost. It proves at least that the doctrine of the immaculate conception
+ is of very ancient date. And this fastidious maiden lady and immaculate
+ virgin, Juno, not only conceived the God Mars by the touch of a flower,
+ but she also (so the story reads) conceived Vulcan by being overshadowed
+ by the wind&mdash;exactly a parallel case with that of the virgin Mary, as
+ we find that ghost, in the original, means wind. Thus we observe that
+ Vulcan, long before Jesus Christ, was "born of the Holy Ghost," i. e.,
+ both were conceived by the "Holy Wind." And the author of the "Perennial
+ Calendar" speaks of the miraculous conception of Juno Jugulis, "the
+ blessed virgin queen of heaven," and describes it as falling on the second
+ of February, the very day which the early Christians celebrated with a
+ festival, as being the date of the conception of the "ever Blessed Virgin
+ Mary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the ancient Mexicans, it is said "they had the immaculate conception,
+ the crucifixion, and the resurrection after three days." (Mex. Antiq.,
+ vol. i.) And in an ancient work called "Codex Vaticanus," the immaculate
+ conception is spoken of as a part of the history of Quexalcote, the
+ Mexican Savior. "Suchiquecal," says the Mexican Antiquities, "was called
+ the Queen of Heaven. She conceived a son without connection with a man"&mdash;a
+ very obvious case of immaculate conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alvarez Semedo, in his "History of China," page 89, speaks of a sect in
+ that country who worshiped a Savior known as Xaca, who was reputedly
+ conceived of his mother, Maia, by a white elephant, which she saw in her
+ sleep, and "for greater purity, she brought him forth from one of her
+ sides." Colonel Tod, of England, tells us in his "History of the Rajahs,"
+ page 57, that Yu, the first Chinese monarch, was conceived by his mother
+ being struck with a star while traveling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case of Christ, it will be recollected, the star did not appear
+ till after his birth. But here the star is the author and agent of the
+ conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Ranking's "History of the Moguls," page 178, Tamerlane's
+ mother (of Bermuda) professedly conceived by having had sexual intercourse
+ with "the God of Day." The mother of Ghengis Khan, of Tartary, "being too
+ modest to claim that she was the mother of the son of God, said only that
+ he was the <i>son of the sun</i>." (History of Mogul, page 65.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both Julis and Osiris of Egypt are spoken of by some authors as having
+ been honored with a divine immaculate conception&mdash;the former being
+ the son of the beautiful virgin Cronis Celestine, and "begotten by the
+ Father of all Gods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both Budha and Chrishna, of India, are reported as having been
+ immaculately conceived. The mother of the latter (God) was (as the Hindoo
+ Holy Book declares) overshadowed by the Supreme God, Brahma, while the
+ spirit-author of the conception (that is, the Holy Ghost) was Naraan. The
+ mother of Apollonius of Cappadocia, who was cotemporary with Jesus Christ
+ (according to his history by Philostratus)&mdash;and his (Apollonius')
+ disciple Damis testifies to the same effect gave birth to this God and
+ rival Savior of Jesus Christ, by having been previously "overshadowed" by
+ the supreme God Proteus. For the corporeal existence and earthly career of
+ Augustus Caesar, the world has ostensibly to acknowledge itself indebted
+ to the "overshadowing" influence and generating power of Jove, by whose
+ divine influence he was immaculously conceived in the temple of Apollo,
+ according to the statement of Nimrod, his biographer. The virgin mother
+ Shing-Mon of China furnishes another case of immaculate conception.
+ Possessing a sensibility too lofty and too refined to descend to the
+ ordinary routine of the world, she gave birth to the God Yu from previous
+ conception by a water lily. This case, with respect to the degree of
+ procreative delicacy and refinement evinced, may be classed with that of
+ Juno of Greece. Here it may be noted as a curious circumstance, that
+ several of the virgin mothers of Gods and great men are specifically
+ represented as going ten months between conception and delivery. The
+ mothers of Hercules, Sakia, Guatama, Scipio, Arion, Solomon and Jesus
+ Christ may be mentioned as samples of this character. This tradition
+ probably grew out of the established belief in the ten sacred cycles which
+ constitute the great prospective and portentous millennial epoch, as
+ described in Chapter XXX. Arion, mentioned above, is represented as being
+ both miraculously and immaculously conceived by the Gods in the citadel of
+ Byrsa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In view of the foregoing facts, drawn from accredited histories, the
+ reader will readily concede that the tradition of the miraculous
+ conceptions of Gods (sons of God), Saviors and Messiahs was very prevalent
+ in the world at a very ancient period of time, and long before the mother
+ of Jesus was "overshadowed by the Most High." Indeed, says Mr. Higgins,
+ "the belief in the immaculate conception extended to every nation in the
+ world." And Grote, referring to Greece, makes the remarkable declaration,
+ that "the furtive pregnancy of young women, often by a God, is one of the
+ most frequently recurring incidents in the legendary narratives of the
+ country." And we find that both the prevalency and great antiquity of the
+ doctrine of the immaculate conception among the heathen is conceded by
+ Christian writers themselves (of former ages) in their attempts to find
+ arguments and commendatory precedents to justify their own belief in the
+ doctrine. For proof of this, we need only cite the Christian writer Mr.
+ Bailey, who remarks, "What I have said of St. Augustine is applicable also
+ to Origen and Lactanius, who have endeavored to persuade us of the
+ immaculate virginity of the mother of Jesus Christ by the example of
+ similar events stored by the heathen." Here we have several Christian
+ authorities cited by another writer, also a Christian, for placing the
+ doctrine of the immaculate conception among the heathen legends in ages
+ long anterior to Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the degree of credence to be attached to the story of the
+ immaculate conception of the mother of Jesus, it need only be observed
+ that there was no other person concerned in the transaction but herself
+ who could possess positive, absolute knowledge of the parentage. And she,
+ let it be noted, settles the matter forever, by virtually affirming that
+ Joseph was his father in the declaration addressed to Jesus when she found
+ him in the temple, "<i>I and thy father</i> have sought thee sorrowing."
+ (Luke ii. 48.) No one will dispute that the father here spoken of was
+ Joseph, which amounts to a positive declaration by the mother, that Joseph
+ was Jesus' father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IMMACULATE CONCEPTION AND MIRACULOUS BIRTH OF THE CHRISTIAN SAVIOR.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following considerations exhibit some of the numerous absurdities
+ involved in the story of the miraculous birth of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The evangelical narratives show that Christ himself did not claim to
+ have a miraculous birth. He did not once allude to such an event; while
+ if, as Christians claim, it is the principal evidence of his deityship, he
+ certainly would have done so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. His paternal genealogy, as made out by Matthew and Luke, completely
+ disproves the story of his miraculous conception by a virgin. For they
+ both trace his lineage through Joseph, which they could not do only on the
+ assumption that Joseph was his father. This, of course, disproves his
+ sireship by the Holy Ghost, ergo, the miraculous conception. It is the
+ lineage and parentage of Joseph, and not Mary, that is given in tracing
+ back his ancestry to the royal household&mdash;a fact which completely
+ overthrows the story of his miraculous birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. And the fact that his <i>own disciple</i> (Philip) declared him to be
+ the <i>son of Joseph</i>, and that several texts show that it was the
+ current impression, is still further confirmation of the conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. We find the story of the immaculate conception resting entirely upon
+ the slender foundation comprised in the legends of an angel and a dream.
+ We are told that Mary got it by an angel, and Joseph by a dream. And
+ through these sources we have the whole groundwork and foundation of the
+ story of the divinity of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. It should be noticed that we have neither Joseph's nor Mary's report of
+ these things, but only Matthew and Luke's version of the affair. And we
+ are not informed that either of them ever saw or conversed with Joseph or
+ Mary on the subject. It is probable they got it from Dame Rumor, with her
+ thousand tongues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. If Christ were a miraculously born God, is it possible his mother would
+ have reproved him for misconduct when she found him in the temple, as she
+ must have known his character?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. If Mary was miraculously conceived, why was the important secret kept
+ so long from Joseph? Why did she keep the "wool drawn over his eyes" till
+ an angel had to be sent from heaven to let him into the secret?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. If she were a virtuously-minded woman, why did she thus attempt to
+ deceive him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Why did not God inform Joseph by "inspiration" instead of employing the
+ roundabout way of sending an angel to do it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. We are told that "Mary was found with child of the Holy Ghost." But as
+ we are not informed who found it out, or who made the discovery, or how it
+ was made, is it not thus left in a very suspicious aspect?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. As the whole affair seems to have been based on dreams, and was
+ carried on through dreams, and has no better foundation than dreams, why
+ should we consider it entitled to any better credit than similar stories
+ found in works on heathen mythology?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. And would it not prove that Christianity is rather a dreamy religion?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Should not the astounding and incredible report of the birth of a God
+ be based on a better foundation than that of dreams and angels and the
+ legends of oriental mythology, to entitle it to the belief of an
+ intelligent and scientific age?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Or can any man of science entertain for a moment the superlative
+ solecism of an Infinite God by any special act "overshadowing" a finite
+ human female, especially as modern science teaches us that God is both
+ male and female, and as much one as the other?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. As history teaches us the ancient orientalists believed that sexual
+ commerce is sinful and contaminating to the child thus begotten and born,
+ and hence had their incarnate Gods sent into the world through human
+ virgins, can any unbiased mind resist the conviction that this is the
+ source of the origin of the story of Christ's immaculate conception?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. And finally, if it were necessary for Christ to come into the world in
+ such a way as to avoid the impure channel of human conception and
+ parturition, why did he not descend directly from heaven in person? Why
+ could he not "descend on the clouds" by his first advent, as the bible
+ says he will do when he makes his second advent?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Would not this course have furnished a hundred fold more convincing
+ proof and demonstration of his divine power and divine attributes than the
+ ridiculous story and inscrutable mystery of the divine conception, which
+ is not susceptible of either investigation or proof?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. VIRGIN MOTHERS AND VIRGIN-BORN GODS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE report in authentic history of a case of a virtuous woman giving birth
+ to a child with the usual form, and possessing the usual characteristics
+ of a human being, and who should testify she had no male partner in the
+ conception, might in an age of miracles and ignorance of natural law, be
+ believed with implicit credulity. But in an age of intelligence, when the
+ keys of science have unlocked the sacred shrines and hallowed vaults of
+ sacerdotal mysteries, and modern researches of history have laid bare the
+ fact that most ancient religious countries abound in reports of this
+ character, a profound and general skepticism must be the result, and a
+ total rejection of their truth by all men of science and historic
+ intelligence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many are the cases noted in history of young maidens claiming a paternity
+ for their male offspring by a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Greece it became so common that the reigning king issued an edict,
+ decreeing the death of all young women who should offer such an insult to
+ deity as to lay to him the charge of begetting their children. The virgin
+ Alcmene furnishes a case of a young woman claiming God as the father of
+ her offspring, when she brought forth the divine Redeemer Alcides, 1280
+ years B. C. And Ceres, the virgin mother of Osiris, claimed that he was
+ begotten by the "father of all Gods." Mr. Kenrick tells us the likeness of
+ this virgin mother, with the divine child in her arms, may now be seen
+ represented in sculpture on some of the ancient, ruined temples of that
+ ruined empire. And Mr. Higgins makes the broad declaration that "the
+ worship of this virgin mother, with her God-begotten child, prevailed
+ everywhere." This author also quotes Mr. Riquord as saying, this son of
+ God "was exhibited in effigy, lying in a manger, in the same manner the
+ infant Jesus was afterward laid in the cave at Bethlehem." Mr. Higgins
+ further testifies that the worship of this virgin God-mother (that is, the
+ God and the mother) is of very ancient date and universal prevalence in
+ all the eastern countries, as is proved by sculptured figures bearing the
+ marks of great age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In corroboration of this statement we might cite many cases, if our space
+ would permit, from the religious records of India, Egypt, Persia, Greece,
+ Rome, Mexico, Thibet, etc. Maia, mother of Sakia and Yasoda of Chrishna;
+ Celestine, mother of the crucified Zulis; Chimalman, mother of
+ Quex-alcote; Semele, mother of the Egyptian Bacchus, and Minerva, mother
+ of the Grecian Bacchus; Prudence, mother of Hercules; Alcmene, mother of
+ Alcides; Shing-Mon, mother-of Yu, and Mayence, mother of Hesus, were all
+ as confidently believed to be pure, holy and chaste virgins, while giving
+ birth to these Gods, sons of God, Saviors and sin-atoning Mediators, as
+ was Mary, mother of Jesus, and long before her time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Higgins remarks that the mother was still held to be a virgin, even
+ after she had given birth to other children besides the deity-begotten
+ bantling, which furnishes another striking parallel to the history of
+ Mary, as she was still called a virgin after she had given birth to Jesus
+ and his brothers James and John. And it is an incident worth noticing
+ here, that, in the case of Mayence, virgin-mother of the God-sired Hesus
+ of the Druids, the ancient traditions of the country, more than two
+ thousand years old, represent her body as being enveloped in light, and a
+ crown of twelve stars upon her head, corresponding exactly to the
+ apocalyptic figure described by the mystagogue, St. John, in the twelfth
+ chapter of his Revelation. She is also represented with her foot on the
+ head of a serpent, according to Davie's "Universal Etymology." (Vide the
+ case of the seed of the woman bruising the serpent's head, Gen. iii. 15.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Auguste Nichols tells us, in his "Philosophical Essays on Christianity,"
+ that Io is called, in Eschylus, "the Chaste Virgin," and her son "the Son
+ of God." (For other similar cases, see Guigne's History of the Huns.)
+ Gonzales informs us he found on an ancient temple in India the Latin
+ inscription <i>Patiuro virginis</i>, "the virgin about to bring forth."
+ And similar inscriptions have been found on pagan temples in the country
+ of the ancient Gauls. (For proof, see Riquord's Theology of the Ancient
+ Gauls, Chapter X.) "He who hath ears to hear, let him hear," and treasure
+ up these facts. According to Chinese history there were two beings&mdash;Tien
+ and Chang-Ti&mdash;worshiped in that country as Gods more than twenty-five
+ hundred years ago, born of virgins "who knew no man." The mother of the
+ mighty and the almighty God Hercules, we are told, "knew only Jove."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If history and tradition, then, are to be credited, God had many "well
+ beloved sons," born of pious and holy virgins, besides Jesus Christ. And
+ some of them are represented as being his "only begotten," and others his
+ "first begotten," sons. And all these cases appear to be equally as well
+ authenticated as the story of Jesus Christ. All stand upon a level, the
+ same kind and the same amount of evidence being offered in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here we will note it as a curious circumstance, that several of the
+ above-named Saviors are represented as being black, Jesus Christ included
+ with this number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is as much evidence that the Christian Savior was a black man, or at
+ least a dark man, as there is of his being the son of the Virgin Mary, or
+ that he once lived and moved upon the earth. And that evidence is the
+ testimony of his disciples, who had nearly as good an opportunity of
+ knowing what his complexion was as the evangelists, who omit to say
+ anything about it. In the pictures and portraits of Christ by the early
+ Christians, he is uniformly represented as being black. And to make this
+ the more certain, the red tinge is given to the lips; and the only text in
+ the Christian bible quoted by orthodox Christians, as describing his
+ complexion, represents it as being black. Solomon's declaration, "I am
+ black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem" (Sol. i. 5), is often
+ cited as referring to Christ. According to the bible itself, then, Jesus
+ Christ was a black man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us suppose that, at some future time, he makes his second advent to
+ the earth, as some Christians anticipate he will do, and that he comes in
+ the character of a sable Messiah, how would he be received by our
+ negro-hating Christians, of sensitive olfactory nerves? Would they worship
+ a negro God? Let us imagine he enters one of our fashionable churches,
+ with his "rough and ready" linsey-woolsey, seamless garment on, made of
+ wild sea-grass, thus presenting a very forbidding appearance, and what
+ would be the result? Would the sexton show him to a seat? Would he not
+ rather point to the door, and exclaim, "Get out of here; no place here for
+ niggers?" What a ludicrous series of ideas is thus suggested by the
+ thought that Jesus Christ was a "darkey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the tradition of divine Saviors being born of undefiled and
+ undeflowered virgins has an astronomical chapter we must not omit to
+ notice. The virgin, with her God-begotten child, was pictured imaginarily
+ in the heavens from time immemorial. They are represented on the Hindoo
+ zodiac, at least three thousand years old, and on the ancient Egyptian
+ planispheres. And if you will examine "Burritt's Geography of the
+ Heavens," you will find the infant God-son (the sun) is represented as
+ being born into a new year on the 25th of December (the very date assigned
+ for Christ's birth), and may be seen rising over the eastern horizon, out
+ of Mary, Maria, or Mare (the Latin for <i>sea</i>), with the infant God in
+ her arms, being heralded and preceded by a bright star, which rises
+ immediately preceding the virgin and her child, thus suggesting the text,
+ "We have seen his star in the east, and have come to worship him." (Matt.
+ ii.8.) Such facts led the learned Alphonso to exclaim, "The adventures of
+ Jesus Christ are all depicted among the stars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And such facts fasten the conviction on our mind that the stories of Gods
+ cohabiting with young maids or virgins, and begetting other Gods, is of
+ astrological origin&mdash;the story of Jesus Christ included. A critical
+ research shows that astronomy and religion were interblended, interwoven,
+ and confounded together at a very early period of time, so indissolubly,
+ that it now becomes impossible to separate them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. STARS POINT OUT THE TIME AND THE SAVIORS' BIRTH-PLACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ PROFUSION of evidence is furnished at every step along the devious pathway
+ of sacred history, tending to show that all the systems of worship which
+ have existed in the past have had a dip in "the halo of the heavenly
+ orbs," and hence shine with a light derived from that source.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We find the stars acting directly a conspicuous part at the births of
+ several of the Saviors, besides figuring in some cases by marking
+ important events in their subsequent history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Higgins remarks that "Among the ancients there seems to have been a
+ very general idea that the arrival of Gods and great personages who were
+ expected to come, would be announced by a star." And the cases of Abraham,
+ Caesar, Pythagoras, Yu, Chrishna, and Christ, may be cited in proof of
+ this declaration. A star figured either before or at the birth of each,
+ according to their respective histories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it is a historical fact that should be noted here that the practice of
+ calculating nativities by the stars was in vogue in the era and country of
+ Christ's birth, and had been for a long period previously in various
+ countries. "We have seen his star in the east, and have come to worship
+ him." (Matt. ii. i.) Now mark, here, it was not <i>the star</i>, nor <i>a
+ star</i>, but "<i>his star</i>;" thus disclosing its unmistakable
+ astrological features. Mr. Faber (in his "Origin of Idolatry," vol. ii. p.
+ 77) reports Zoroaster (600 B. C.) as prophetically announcing to "the wise
+ men" of that country that a Savior would be born, "attended by a star at
+ noonday." For a fuller exposition of this case see Chapter II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the history of the Hindoo Savior Chrishna, we are told that "as soon as
+ Nared, who, having heard of his fame, had examined the stars, he declared
+ him to be from God;" i. e., the Son of God' The Roman Calcidius speaks of
+ "a wonderful star, presaging the descent of a God amongst men." (See
+ Maurice's "Indian Skeptics Refuted," p. 62.) Quite suggestive of the star
+ "apprising the wise men" of Christ's descent from above. And a star is
+ said to have foretokened the birth of the Roman Julius Cæsar. The Chinese
+ God Yu was not only heralded by a star, but conceived and brought to
+ mortal birth by a star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Numbers xxiv. 17, it is declared "There shall come a star out of
+ Jacob," etc. This is a text often quoted by Christian writers as having a
+ prophetic reference to the Christian Messiah. But the same text declares
+ further, "It shall destroy the children of Seth," a prediction which no
+ rational interpretation can make apply to Jesus Christ. And then we find
+ this star of Jacob or Judah (the same) represented on astronomical maps as
+ a prominent star in the constellation Virgo (the Virgin), fancifully
+ termed by the Hebrew Ephraim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was known in the Syrian, Arabian and Persian systems of astronomy as
+ Messaeil (suggestive of Messiah), and was considered the ruling genius of
+ the constellation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "star of Jacob," then, was simply a figure borrowed from the ancient
+ pagan systems of astronomy, in which they fancifully represent a virgin
+ rising with an infant Messiah (Messaeil) in her arms. Messaeil is, when
+ analyzed, Messaeh-el (Messiah-God), and is found in the constellation
+ Virgo, which commences rising at midnight, on the 25th of December, with
+ this "star in the east" in her arms&mdash;the star which piloted "the wise
+ men." The whole thing, then, is evidently an astronomical legend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Albert the Great, in his "Book on the Universe," tells us, "The sign of
+ the celestial virgin rises above the horizon, at the moment we find fixed
+ for the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ." To which we will add the
+ declaration of Sir William Drummond, who, in his "Odipus Judaicus," p. 27,
+ most significantly remarks, "The anointed of <i>El</i> the male infant,
+ who rises in the arms of Virgo, was called Jesus by the Hebrews,... and
+ was hailed as the anointed king or Messiah"&mdash;still further proof of
+ the astrological origin of the story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Hales, in his "Chronology," calls Christ "the star of our salvation,
+ the true Apollo, the sun of righteousness"&mdash;all of which are
+ astronomical terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here we may recur to the fact that some of the early inhabitants of
+ the earth regarded a star as a thing of life, because it appeared to move,
+ and acted as though controlled by a living spirit. And this fetchic idea
+ we observe lurking amongst the borrowed orientalisms of the Jewish Old
+ Testament. The representation of the morning stars joining in a chorus and
+ singing together (see Job xxxviii. 9), is an instance of this kind of
+ fetchic conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then we find a much stronger and more conclusive case in the New
+ Testament, where Matthew represents a star as breaking loose from its
+ orbit, and traveling some millions of miles, in order to stand over the
+ young child Jesus, as he lay amongst the oxen and asses in a stable. (See
+ Matt. ii. 7.) Wonderfully accommodating star indeed! How did its
+ inhabitants feel while thus traveling with the velocity of lightning? This
+ achievement would not only require life, but an active intelligence, on
+ the part of the star, as it is represented as being an act of the planet
+ itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All nations," says Mr. Higgins, "once believed that the planetary bodies
+ or their inhabitants controlled the affairs of men, and even their
+ births." Hence the cant phrases, "My stars," "He is ill-starred," etc., in
+ use then, and still in use at the present day. The good or ill luck of a
+ person was attributed to the good or evil stars which it was believed
+ ruled at the hour of his birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We find a counterpart to the story of Matthew's traveling star in Virgil's
+ writings, who declares (60 B. C.) that a star guided Æneas in a journey
+ westward from Troy. In the days of Pliny (see his "Natural History," Book
+ II.), the people of Rome fancied they saw a God in a star or comet in the
+ form of a man. The Apocryphal book of Seth relates that a star descended
+ from heaven and lighted on a mountain, in the midst of which a divine
+ child was seen bearing a cross. Christ betrays the same ignorance of
+ astronomy, when he speaks of "the stars falling from heaven to the earth."
+ (See Matt. xxiv. 29.) For if there could be any falling in the case, the
+ falling would be in the other direction, and the earth would fall to the
+ stars, as larger bodies always attract smaller ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As shown above, the stupendous orbs of night were represented by Jew,
+ Pagan and Christian as breaking away from their orbits, and running hither
+ and thither, like a fly on a ceiling, or a ball from a sky-rocket, being
+ regarded as mere jack-a-lanterns, that could appear anywhere at any time
+ creative fancy might dictate or require; while science teaches that the
+ stars are stupendous orbs, some of them a thousand times larger than the
+ planet on which we live, and that they could not depart one rod from their
+ accustomed orbits without breaking up the whole planetary system, and
+ destroying the universe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then observe the absurdity in Matthew's story, which teaches that the
+ wise men followed the star in the east, when they, coming from the east,
+ were, as a matter of course, traveling westward, which would place the
+ star to their backs. That must be a <i>sui generis</i> pilot or guide
+ which follows after, instead of going before. Omitting further citations
+ from history, we will only observe further that the ancient Hindoos,
+ Egyptians, Chaldeans, Syrians, Mexicans, etc., took great account of
+ stars, and employed them on all important occasions, especially on long
+ journeys and at the births of Gods and great personages&mdash;a
+ circumstance which aids in explaining the star chapter in the gospel
+ history of Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. ANGELS, SHEPHERDS AND MAGI VISIT THE INFANT SAVIORS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IN an age when Gods and men were on the most familiar terms, and when the
+ character of one furnished a transcript for the other, and when each
+ consented to act a reciprocal part towards elevating, honoring and
+ glorifying the other, the birth of a God or Messiah was, as a matter of
+ course, regarded as an event of sufficient importance to attract the
+ attention of the great ones of the earth, and even the denizens of heaven
+ also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And hence we find it related in the history of several of the God-begotten
+ Saviors of antiquity, that as soon as they were born into the world they
+ were visited by "wise men from a distance" (or Magi, as they were called
+ by the Persians and Brahmins). And in some cases they were likewise waited
+ upon and adored by the neighboring shepherds; and even celestial spirits
+ are reported in some instances as leaving their star-gilt homes to wing
+ their way to the humble mansion, the rude tenement, containing a new-born
+ God, that they might honor and adore "the Savior of men, the Savior of the
+ world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sacred biographies of both Confucius and Christ furnish examples of
+ the angel host forsaking their golden pavilions in the skies to pay their
+ devoirs to a Deity-begotten bantling, sent down by the "Father of
+ Mercies," to save a guilt-laden world. And in both cases the Magi are
+ reported as assembling to present their offerings to the infant God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case of Confucius (born 598 B. C.), it is declared, "Five wise men
+ from a distance came to the house, celestial music was heard in the skies,
+ and angels attended the scene." (See the Five Volumes.) Now let us observe
+ how strikingly similar to this ancient legend, in each of the several
+ characteristics, is the Christian story. Matthew (ii. 1) speaks of "wise
+ men from the east" journeying to Jerusalem to visit the infant Christ,
+ soon after his birth, amongst the mules and oxen in a stable, though he
+ omits to state the number of itinerant adorers who presented themselves on
+ the occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Persian story is more specific, as it gives the number of Magi who
+ visited the young Savior of that country as five.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luke (ii. 13) speaks of "a multitude of the heavenly host praising God,"
+ in gratulation of the birth of the Judean Savior. Now, when we bear in
+ mind that one method of praising God, with the orientals, was by music, as
+ we will at once observe that this is only another mode of proclaiming, as
+ in the case of Confucius, that "celestial music was heard in the skies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And "angels attended the scene" of Confucius' birth. So, likewise, Luke
+ (ii. 15) relates that the angels, after rejoicing with the shepherds on
+ the occasion of the birth of Christ, "went away into heaven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How complete the parallel! and, but for the digression, and monopoly of
+ space, we might trace it much further, and show that Confucius, like
+ Christ, had twelve chosen disciples; that he was descended from a royal
+ house of princes, as Christ from the royal house of David; that he, in
+ like manner, retired for a long period from the noise and bustle of
+ society into religious contemplative seclusion; that he inculcated the
+ same Golden Rule of doing to others as we desire them to act toward us,
+ and other moral maxims equal in importance to anything that can be found
+ in the Christian Scriptures, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to the line of history. Other Saviors at birth, we are told, were
+ visited by both angels and shepherds, also "wise men," at least great men.
+ Chrishna, the eighth avatar of India (1200 B. C.) (so it is related by the
+ "inspired penman" of their pagan theocracy) was visited by angels,
+ shepherds and prophets (avatars). "Immediately after his birth he was
+ visited by a chorus of devatas (angels), and surrounded by shepherds, all
+ of whom were impressed with the conviction of his future greatness." We
+ are informed further that "gold, frankincense and myrrh" were presented to
+ him as offerings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The well-known modern traveler, Mr. Ditson, who visited India but a few
+ years since, uses the emphatic declaration, "In fact, as soon as Chrishna
+ was born he was saluted by a chorus of devatas, or angels." In the
+ evangelical narrative of the Christian Savior an angel is reported to have
+ saluted his mother thus: "Hail, thou that art highly favored; the Lord is
+ with thee; blessed art thou among women." (Luke, i. 28.) And in the next
+ chapter the angel is reported as joining with "the heavenly host" in
+ praising God. A similar report is found in the Hindoo bible (the
+ Ramayana), appertaining to the mother of the eighth Savior, of whom it is
+ declared "Brahma and Siva, with a host of attending spirits, came to her
+ and sang, 'In thy delivery, O favored among women, all nations shall have
+ cause to exult.'" And when the celestial infant (Chrishna) appeared (it is
+ related in a subsequent chapter), "a chorus of heavenly spirits saluted
+ him with hymns; the whole room was illuminated by his light, and the
+ countenance of his father and mother shone with brightness and glory (by
+ reflection), their understandings were opened so that they knew him to be
+ the Preserver of the world, and they began to worship him." The last text
+ here quoted brings to mind Luke xxiv. 45, which declares, "Then he
+ (Christ) opened their (his parents) understandings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ninth avatar of India (Sakia) furnishes to some extent a similar
+ parallel. According to the account of an exploration made in India, and
+ published in the New York Correspondent of 1828, "There is on a silver
+ plate in a cave in India an inscription stating that about the time of the
+ advent of Budha Sakia (600 B. C.), a saint in the woods learned by
+ inspiration that another avatar (Messiah or Savior) had appeared in the
+ house of Rajah of Lailas. Learning which, he flew through the air to the
+ place, and when he beheld the new-born Savior he declared him to be the
+ great avatar (Savior or prophet), and that he was destined to establish a
+ new religion"&mdash;the New Covenant Religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We next draw on the history of Greece. It is authentically related of
+ Pythagoras (600 B.), that his fame having reached Miletas and neighboring
+ cities, men renowned for wisdom (wise men) came to visit him. (Progress of
+ Religious Ideas, vol. i.) In the Anacalypsis we are told that "Magi came
+ from the East to offer gifts at Socrates' birth, bringing gold,
+ frankincense and myrrh," the same kind of offering as that presented to
+ the two divine infants Chrishna and Christ, according to their respective
+ "inspired" biographers. (See Matt. ii. 4, and the Ramayana).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the legend of Mithra, of Persia, might also be included in our
+ category of comparison, if we had space for it. All the four Saviors last
+ named (if Socrates may be called such) are reported as having been honored
+ and enriched with aromatic offerings at their respective births. And we
+ have the statement from Mr. Higgins, that the same assortment of spices
+ (with the gold) constituted the materials offered as gifts to the sun, in
+ Persia more than three thousand years ago; and likewise in Arabia near the
+ same era. And it may be stated here, that an ancient historic account of
+ Zoroaster of Persia (6,000 B. C., according to Pliny and Aristotle),
+ speaks of his having also been visited by Magi, or "Magia," at the period
+ of his earthly advent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it is, perhaps, well to note in this place, that "Magi" is the term
+ used in the Apocryphal Gospels, to designate the "wise men" who visited
+ Christ at birth; and that Magi, Magic and Magician are but variations of
+ the same word, at least derivations from the same root, all suggesting a
+ wisdom correlated to the Gods. Osiris, an incarnate deity of Egypt, we may
+ cite as another case of an infantile God receiving signal honors and eclat
+ at birth, as he was visited while yet in the cradle by a host of admiring
+ adorers. "People flocked from all parts of the world to behold the
+ heaven-born infant." Such a world-wide fame must have had the effect to
+ attract, with the numerous crowd who thronged to see and worship him, no
+ small number of "wise men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this stage of our historical exposition, we will suggest it as rather a
+ singular circumstance that the divine Father, in his infinite wisdom,
+ should have chosen to reveal the intelligence of the birth of his son
+ Jesus Christ to a set of nomadic heathen idolaters hundreds of miles
+ distant (though known as "wise men" because of their skill in astrology)
+ before he made it known to his own "chosen people" (the Jews), who had
+ ever regarded themselves as the recipients of his special favors. And
+ perhaps it is still more singular that these pagan pedestrians should have
+ been denominated "wise men," while men of God's own election, according to
+ the Christian bible, were often stigmatized and denounced as "fools," a
+ ".generation of vipers," etc. But it so happens that "human reason" finds
+ many Incongruities in "Divine Revelations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. THE TWENTY-FIFTH OF DECEMBER THE BIRTHDAY OF THE GODS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ DIVESTED of all explanation, the announcement of the fact that the time of
+ the birth of many of the incarnated Gods and Saviors of antiquity was
+ fixed at the same period, and this period the twenty-fifth of December,
+ celebrated all over Christendom as the birthday of Jesus Christ, would
+ sound marvelously strange, especially when it is noticed that this period
+ formerly dated the birth of a new year&mdash;the birth of King Sol. And
+ when we find that the ancient pagans were in the habit of celebrating this
+ venerated twenty-fifth of December as the birthday of their Gods in the
+ same manner Christians now celebrate it as the birthday of Christ, we are
+ driven to admit that something more than mere fortuitous accident must be
+ adduced to account for the coincidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Dr. Lightfoot, the temple of Jerusalem was employed in
+ celebrating the birthday of a pagan God (Adonis) on the very night
+ Christians assign for the birth of Christ. And Robert Taylor informs us
+ that nearly all the nations of the East were once in the habit of rising
+ at midnight to celebrate the birthday of their Gods, on the twenty-fifth
+ of December. And to this statement Mr. Higgins adds that, "At the first
+ moment after midnight of the twenty-fourth of December, the ancient
+ nations celebrated the accouchement of the queen of heaven and celestial
+ virgin, and the birth of the God Sol, the Infant Savior, and the God of
+ Day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bacchus of Egypt, Bacchus of Greece, Adonis of Greece, Chrishna of India,
+ Chang-ti of China, Chris of Chaldea, Mithra of Persia, Sakia of India, Jao
+ Wapaul (a crucified Savior of ancient Britain), were all born on the
+ twenty-fifth of December, according to their respective histories.
+ Chrishna is represented to have been born at midnight on the twenty-fifth
+ of the month Savarana, which answers to our December, and millions of his
+ disciples celebrated his birthday by decorating their houses with garlands
+ and gilt paper, and the bestowment of presents to friends. The Rev. Mr.
+ Barret tells us, "It was once common for the women in Rome to perambulate
+ the streets on the twenty-fifth of December, singing in a loud voice,
+ 'Unto us a child is born this day.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twenty-fifth of December, then, it will be observed, was marked as the
+ birthday of the incarnated Gods, Saviors, and Sons of God, of many of the
+ religious systems of antiquity, long prior to the birth of Christ And why
+ his birth was fixed at that date is not hard to account for. According to
+ the celebrated Christian writer Mr. Goodrich, the Christian world had no
+ chronology and recorded no dates for several centuries after the
+ commencement of the Christian era. (See History of all Nations, p. 23.) No
+ event of their history was marked by dates for nearly four hundred years.
+ Hence, the time of Christ's birth is altogether a matter of conjecture, as
+ is also every other event noticed in the Christian bible. This is proved
+ by the fact that the ablest Christian writers and chronologists differ to
+ the extent of thirty-five hundred years in fixing the time of every event
+ in the bible. A Mr. Kennedy presents us with three hundred different
+ chronological systems, by different Christian writers, all founded on the
+ bible, and proving that the date of its various events are inextricably
+ involved in a labyrinth of doubt, darkness and uncertainty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Relative to the time of Christ's birth, the "Encyclopedia Britannica"
+ says: "Christians count one hundred and thirty-three contrary opinions of
+ different authors concerning the year the Messiah appeared on earth&mdash;many
+ of them celebrated writers." (Art. Chron.) Mark the declaration&mdash;one
+ hundred and thirty-three different opinions as to the year Christ was born
+ in; one hundred and thirty-three different years fixed on by different
+ Christian chronologists as the time of the birth of the most extraordinary
+ and most noted being, as Christians would have us believe, that ever
+ appeared on earth. Think of an omnipotent God descending from heaven,
+ performing astounding miracles, and presenting other proofs of being a
+ God, and yet not one of the three hundred writers of that era take any
+ notice of him, or make any note of his birth or any event of his life.
+ This circumstance is of itself sufficient to banish and dissipate all
+ faith in his divinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is evident, from the facts just presented, that all systems of
+ Christian chronology are founded on mere conjecture, and hence should be
+ rejected as worthless. What event of Christ's life, then, can be accepted
+ as certain, when no record was made of it till the time was forgotten, and
+ none for at least half a century after the dawn of the Christian era,
+ according to Dr. Lardner, when nearly all who witnessed it must have been
+ dead?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We think the most reasonable conclusion in the case is, that Christ,
+ instead of performing those Munchausen prodigies attributed to him&mdash;such
+ as casting out devils, raising the dead, controlling the elements of
+ nature, etc.&mdash;led such an ordinary, obscure life&mdash;excelling only
+ in healing the sick and other noble deeds of charity and philanthropy&mdash;that
+ he attracted but little notice by the higher classes, or by anybody but
+ those of a similar turn of mind, till he was deified by Constantine, in
+ the year 325 A. D. Hence, the time of his birth was not recorded, and was
+ forgotten. Consequently, the twenty-fifth of December was selected as his
+ birthday, because it was the birthday of other Gods, and because it was
+ regarded by the heathen, from time immemorial, as the birthday of Sol, the
+ glorious luminary of heaven, it being the period he is born again into a
+ new year, and "commences again his journey and his life;" and because,
+ also, this epoch was, as Sharon Turner informs us, in his "History of the
+ Anglo-Saxons," the commencement of a new year up to the tenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These events signalized the twenty-fifth of December, and made it a period
+ of sufficient importance to lead the early Christians to suppose it must
+ have been the birthday of their Messiah. Mosheim, however, confesses that
+ the day or the year in which it happened "has not been fixed with
+ certainty, notwithstanding the profound researches of the learned." So
+ that it is still an open question as to when Christ was born. What day of
+ the month, what year, or what century it took place in, is still unknown.
+ This circumstance is, as before suggested, sufficient of itself to utterly
+ prostrate all faith in the divine claims for Jesus Christ. What would be
+ thought of a witness who should testify in court to the truth of an
+ occurrence of which he did not know the year, or even the century, in
+ which it took place, or who could come no nearer than one hundred and
+ thirty-three years in fixing or guessing at the time. Would the court
+ accept such testimony?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. TITLES OF THE SAVIORS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE various deific titles applied to Jesus Christ in the New Testament are
+ regarded by some Christian writers as presumptive evidence of his
+ divinity. But the argument proves too much for the case; as we find the
+ proof in history that many other beings, whom Christians regard as men,
+ were honored and addressed by the same titles, such as God, Lord, Savior,
+ Redeemer, Mediator, Messiah, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hindoo Chrishna, more than two thousand years ago, was prayerfully
+ worshiped as "God the Most High." His disciple Amarca once addressed him
+ thus: "Thou art the Lord of all things, the God of the universe, the
+ emblem of mercy, the bestower of salvation. Be propitious O most High
+ God," etc. Here he is addressed both as Lord and God. He is also styled
+ "God of Gods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adonis of Greece was addressed as "God Supreme," and Osiris of Egypt as
+ "the Lord of Life." In Phrygia, it was "Lord Atys," as Christians say,
+ "Lord Jesus Christ" Narayan of Bermuda was styled the "Holy Living God."
+ The title "Son of God" was so common in nearly all religious countries as
+ to excite but little awe or attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. Basil says, "Every uncommonly good man was called 'the Son of God.'"
+ The "Asiatic Researches" says, "the Tamulese adored a divine Son of God,"
+ and Thor of the Scandinavians was denominated "the first-born Son of God"
+ and so was Chrishna of India, and other demigods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It requires, therefore, a wide stretch of faith to believe that Jesus
+ Christ was in any peculiar sense "the Son of God," because so denominated,
+ or "the only begotten Son of God," when so many others are reported in
+ history bearing that title.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The title Savior is found in the legends of every religious country. So
+ also God, Redeemer, and Mediator. "When a Mogul or Thibetan is asked who
+ is Chrishna," says the Christian missionary Hue, "the reply is, instantly,
+ 'the Savior of men.'" Budha was known as "the Savior, Creator and Wisdom
+ of God," and Mithra as both Mediator and Savior, also as "the Redeemer,"
+ and Chrishna as "the Divine Redeemer," also "the Redeemer of the World."
+ The terms Mediator and Intercessor were also frequently applied to him by
+ his disciples. And both he and Quexalcote were hailed as "the Messiah." In
+ short, most ancient religious nations were honored with or expected a
+ Messiah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was Jesus Christ the "Lamb of God?" (John i. 9.) So was Chrishna styled
+ "the Holy Lamb." The Mexicans, preferring a full-grown sheep, had their
+ "Ram of God." The Celts had their "Heifer of God," and the Egyptians their
+ "Bull of God." All these terms are ludicrous emblems of Deity,
+ representing him as a quadruped, as the title "Lamb of God" does Jesus
+ Christ, a term no less ludicrous than the titles of the pagan Gods as
+ cited above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And was Christ "the True Light?" (John i. 9.) So was Chrishna likewise
+ called "the True Light," also "the Giver of Light," "the Inward Light,"
+ etc. Osiris was "the Redeemer of Light," and Pythagoras was both "Light
+ and Truth." Apollonius was styled the "True Light of the World;" while
+ Simon Magus was called "the Light of all Men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several nations had also their Christs, though in many cases the word is
+ differently spelled. Chrest, the Greek mode of spelling Christ, may be
+ found on several of the ancient tombstones of that country. The Christian
+ writer Elsley, in his "Annotations of the Gospels" (vol. i. p. 25), spells
+ the word Christ in this manner, Chrest The people of Loretto had a black
+ Savior, called Chrest, or Christ. Lucian, in his "Philopatris," admits the
+ ancient Gentiles had the name of Christ, which shows it was a heathen
+ title. The Chaldeans had their Chris, the Hindoos their Chrishna, the
+ Greeks their Chrest, and the Christians their Christ, all, doubtless,
+ derived from the same original root.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Jesus, it was a common name among the Jews long before the advent
+ of Christ. Josephus refers to seven or eight persons by that name, as
+ "Jesus, brother of Onias," "Jesus, son of Phabet," etc. Joshua in the
+ Greek form, Jesus, was in still more common use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, was Jesus Christ "the Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the End?"
+ so, likewise, Chrishna proclaimed, "I am the Beginning, the Middle, and
+ the End." Osiris and Chrishna were both proclaimed "Judge of the Dead," as
+ Jesus was "Judge of quick and dead." Isaiah represents the Father as
+ proclaiming, "I am Jehovah; besides me there is no Savior." (Isa. xliii.
+ 11.) With what consistency, then, can Christ be called "<i>the Savior</i>,"
+ if there is but <i>one Savior</i>, and that is the Father?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And other divine titles besides those above named&mdash;in fact, all those
+ applied to Christ&mdash;are found used also in reference to the older
+ pagan gods, and hence prove nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ORIGIN OF THE TERMS MEDIATOR, INTERCESSOR, ETC.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several causes contributed to originate a belief in the offices
+ imaginarily assigned to divine God-descended Mediators, Redeemers, and
+ Intercessors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. In the first place, the Great Supreme God was believed to be too far
+ off and too aristocratic to be on familiar terms with his subjects, or at
+ all times accessible to their prayers. Hence, was gotten up a "Mediator,"
+ or middle God, to stand midway between the Great Supreme and the people,
+ and transmit messages one from the other, and thus serve as agent for both
+ parties. Confirmatory of this statement is the declaration of Mamoides, in
+ his "Guide to the Erring," that "the ancient Sabeans conceived the
+ principal God, on account of his great distance, to be inaccessible; and
+ hence, in imitation of the people in their conduct toward their king, who
+ had to address him through a person appointed for the purpose, they
+ imaginarily employed a middle divinity, who was called a Mediator, to
+ present their claims to the Supreme God." Here the whole secret is out,
+ the whole thing is explained, and we now understand why Christ is called a
+ Mediator, Intercessor, "Advocate with the Father," etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Again, the Supreme God was supposed to be frequently angry with the
+ people, and threatening to punish if not to destroy them. "I will punish
+ the multitude." (Jer. xlvi. 25.) "I will destroy the people." (Ex. xxiii.
+ 27). Hence, this middle divinity, this second person of the trinity,
+ stepped in to plead and intercede on their behalf, being, as we must
+ presume, a better-natured and more merciful being than the Father. And
+ thus interceding, he received the titles of Intercessor and "Advocate with
+ the Father." (1 John, ii. 1.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The principal circumstance, however, which led to the conception of a
+ divine Savior was the desire to find some way to continue in sin and
+ wrong-doing and escape its natural and legitimate consequences; in other
+ words, to evade the penalty. Hence, it came to be believed that people
+ might run riot in sin, and plunge into the indulgence of their passions
+ and their lusts, till the hour of death approached, when they would have
+ nothing to do but to ask forgiveness, and cast the burden of their sins
+ and sufferings on the merits of "a crucified Savior and Redeemer," who
+ "suffered once for all, that we might escape," and thus dodge the penalty
+ for sin. It was, as Mr. Fleurbach expresses it, "A realized wish to be
+ free from the laws of morality, and escape the natural consequences of
+ wrong doing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. THE SAVIORS OF ROYAL DESCENT, BUT HUMBLE BIRTH
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WE have the singular coincidence presented in the histories of several of
+ the Saviors of their lineal descent through a line of kings or princes,
+ and yet commencing their probationary life under the most humble and
+ adverse circumstances&mdash;being born in stables, caves, and other
+ inauspicious situations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of their royal blood was calculated to add dignity to their
+ characters, while their humble birth in the midst of poverty, and unmarked
+ by ostentation, would evince their humility, meekness, condescension, and
+ absence of pride, and thus proclaim a lesson of humility and resignation
+ to their disciples and followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, seems to be plainly indicated the motives for assigning them to such
+ a birth, and such a character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christ's lineal descent, it will be remembered, is professedly traced
+ (though in a very zig-zag, disjointed manner) from the royal house of
+ David. And yet his royal blood did not save him from the most ignoble and
+ ignominious birth, and obscure exordium of his earth life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A singular story, and yet a similar story, is told of the Indian Savior
+ Chrishna, who was, according to the Rev. Mr. Allen (India, p. 379) of the
+ royal house of Kousa, traced back through many generations. Yet, in order
+ to teach the world a lesson of true humility, and administer a just
+ reprehension to pride, he submitted to be born in a cave, amid the
+ denizens of subterranean abodes. And here let it be noted, the best and
+ most orthodox writers concede that while Christ is said to have born in a
+ manger, that manger was in a cave. Mr. Fleetwood (a very popular Christian
+ writer) testifies in this matter that "the Greek fathers generally agree
+ that the place of Christ's birth was a cave." (Life of Christ, p. 568.)
+ Then the coincidence in this respect between Christ and Chrishna may be
+ set down as complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have no means of learning how many of the Saviors were of royal blood,
+ as the genealogy of some of them is not given. But those whose lineal
+ descent is furnished us are almost uniformly traced to or evinced as
+ springing from royal parentage, and practical humility&mdash;so far as it
+ can be taught by an unostentatious birth&mdash;is a lesson taught by
+ nearly all. Budha Sakia of Hindostan is directly traced through a royal
+ pedigree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Speaking on this point, one writer remarks: "Tradition affirms that his
+ mother was betrothed to a rajah, and of course her son belonged to the
+ same royal caste that Chrishna did during his existence on earth." (Prog.
+ Rel. Ideas, vol, i. 84.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Great Prophet" of Arabia (Mahomet) not only commenced his earthly
+ career in a humble situation, but resembled Christ in having "nowhere to
+ lay his head." It is said of the Great Prophet, "A cloak spread on the
+ ground served him for a bed, and a skin filled with date leaves was his
+ pillow." The genealogy of the God Yu (of China) is traced through a line
+ of princes to a very remote origin, while his whole life was a lesson of
+ practical humility, and proclaimed at every step, "This is the way; walk
+ ye in it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. CHRIST'S GENEALOGY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IN order to exalt the dignity and character of the Christian Messiah still
+ higher than a mere claim for a divine origin paternally would have the
+ effect to do, two of his assumed to be inspired biographers have set up
+ for him a claim to a royal lineage through the maternal line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence, they tell us that he descended from and through a line of kings
+ embracing the house of David. But in presenting the names, and the number
+ of generations, in their attempts to make out this royal distinction, this
+ kingly exaltation of birth, they exhibit a most egregious bungle, and the
+ most barefaced tissue of discrepancies. For they not only differ widely
+ with each other in this matter, but differ with the Old Testament
+ genealogy, and differ with those texts which give the maternal ancestry of
+ Jesus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, though varying as wide as the poles from each other, they both
+ miss Jesus and arrive at Joseph in tracing down the generations from
+ Abraham (unless we assume they intended to represent Joseph as being his
+ father).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luke, in his gospel, names and counts off forty-one generations from David
+ to Joseph, though he had previously represented it as being forty-two; but
+ Matthew says that "from Abraham to David are fourteen generations," but
+ according to his own showing, and according to his own list of names,
+ there are but thirteen. And then he tells us there are but fourteen
+ generations from David to the carrying away into Babylon. BUt according to
+ the Old Testament genealogy (see i Chron. iii.) there were eighteen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then the names comprised in the two genealogies of Matthew and Luke
+ are so widely different from that found in Chronicles, as to set all
+ analogy and agreement at defiance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, in their whole list of names, from David down to Joseph, they
+ only come together twice. Their names are all different but two, that of
+ Salathiel and Zorobabel, which names alone are found in both lists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matthew tells us that the son of David, through whom Joseph descended, was
+ Solomon, but Luke says it was Nathan. The next name in Matthew's list is
+ that of Roboam, but the corresponding name in Luke's list is Mattatha.
+ Matthew's next name is Abia, which Luke gives as Menan, while Chronicles
+ differs from both, and gives it as Abijah. Matthew says Joram begat Ozias,
+ but Chronicles virtually declares Joram had no such son, although he had a
+ great-great-grandson Uzziah. But Luke says, in effect, there was no such
+ person in the genealogical tree, or family line, as either Joram, Ozias or
+ Uzziah. Matthew says again, "Josias begat Jechonias and his brethren,
+ about the time they were carried away to Babylon." (Matt. i. ii.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Chronicles declares that Jechonias was Jehoiakim's son, and not
+ Josiah's, and that Josiah had no such son. And, besides, we learn, from 2
+ Kings xiii., that Josiah was killed eleven years before the exile to
+ Babylon, and could not well beget a son after he had been defunct a tenth
+ of a century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matthew, after naming twenty-four generations as filling out the line, and
+ making it complete between David and Jacob, concludes by saying, "and
+ Jacob begat Joseph, the husband of Mary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Luke, antecedent to spinning out his list to fourteen generations more
+ than Matthew, i. e., making it fourteen generations longer, declares that
+ "Joseph was the son of Heli." So that Joseph either had two fathers, Jacob
+ and Heli; or Matthew or Luke, or both, were most egregiously mistaken,
+ with all their "inspiration."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, Luke says that Salathiel was the son of Neri; but Chronicles says
+ he was the son of Jechonias. And after Chronicles had registered Zorobabel
+ as the son of Penniah, Matthew and Luke, assuming to become "wise above
+ what was written," both declare that he was the son of Salathiel. They
+ agree here in contradicting Chronicles, which is the only instance but one
+ of their agreement in the whole list of progenitors from David to Joseph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this exception they contradict each other all the way through, and in
+ many instances that of Chronicles, too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a strange way, indeed, of proving Jesus Christ to have had two
+ fathers!&mdash;to be both the son of God and son of David! And it is still
+ stranger that they should trace his genealogy to Joseph, if they did not
+ consider him Joseph's son. Otherwise, the genealogy of "Sinbad the
+ Sailor," or "Harry Haulaway," would have been as apropos.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such are the beautiful harmony and agreement in the words of "divine
+ inspiration" which Christians prate so much about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all this appears to be the result of an attempt to elevate the man
+ Christ Jesus to a level with the demigods of antiquity, nearly all of whom
+ claimed to be of royal or princely descent. Such continual blundering,
+ guessing, cross-firing, and clashing of names as is exhibited in the
+ foregoing exposition, reminds us of the Hibernian's reply when asked for
+ the number and names of his brothers:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, sir, I have fourteen brothers, and they are all named Bill but Bob&mdash;his
+ name is Tom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matthew and Luke's attempt to exalt and dignify the character of Christ by
+ making out for him a pure, holy and royal lineage we find, upon a critical
+ examination not only proved a very signal but a very singular and
+ ludicrous failure, for all his female anchors who are brought to notice
+ were persons of libidinous or licentious tendencies, according to their
+ own biblical history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is remarkable," says Dr. Alexander Walker, (a Christian writer, in his
+ work on Woman, p. 330), "that in the genealogy of Christ only four women
+ are named: Thamar, who seduced the father of her late husband, and Rachel,
+ a common prostitute, and Ruth, who, instead of marrying one of her
+ cousins, went to bed with another of them, and Bathsheba, an adulteress,
+ who espoused David, the murderer of her first husband."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a pedigree for an incarnate God&mdash;a being ostensibly of spotless
+ origin! though his impure ancestral origin does not detract from the high
+ moral character and distinguished moral life which marks the history of
+ "the man Christ Jesus," many incidents of whose life show him to have been
+ what is now known as a spiritual medium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. THE WORLD'S SAVIORS SAVED FROM DESTRUCTION IN INFANCY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ OF course such an extraordinary circumstance as the birth of a God into
+ the world must be marked with unusual incidents and great eclat. This was
+ first exhibited by angels, shepherds, prophets, magi or "wise men,"
+ flocking around their cradles. In the second place we observe an unusual
+ display of divine power and providential care on the part of the great
+ Father God, who was still left in heaven to save the young saviors through
+ their infancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is certainly a remarkable circumstance that so many of the infant
+ Saviors should have been threatened with the most imminent danger of
+ destruction, and yet in every case miraculously preserved, and thus were
+ the <i>Saviors saved</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A jealousy seems to have existed in several instances in the mind of the
+ tyrant king or ruler of the country that the young Saviors and prospective
+ spiritual rulers (who were mostly of royal descent) would ultimately
+ acquire such favor with the people, by such a display of superior power
+ and greatness of mind, as to endanger his retaining peaceable possession
+ of the secular throne; to express it in brief, he feared the young God
+ would prove a rival king, and hence took measures to destroy him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case of the Christian Savior we are told that an angel, or "the
+ angel," warned Joseph (the assumed father) to take the young Savior and
+ God and flee with him into Egypt, because "Herod the king sought to
+ destroy the young child's life," and had, in order to effect this end,
+ decreed the destruction of all the children under two years old. And
+ Joseph heeded the divine warning, and fled as directed. An angel and a
+ dream, then, it will be observed, were the instrumentalities used to save
+ the young Judean Savior from massacre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And strange as it may seem, we find the same agencies had been previously
+ employed to effect the rescue of other Saviors likewise and similarly
+ threatened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case of Chrishna of India, in particular, the similitude is very
+ striking in nearly every feature of the whole story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first place there is the angel warning. In the Christian story we
+ are not specifically informed how the tyrant Herod first became apprised
+ of the birth of the Judean Savior. The Hindoo story is fuller, and
+ indicates that the angel was not only sufficiently thoughtful to warn the
+ parents to flee from a danger which threatened to dispossess them of a
+ divine child, and the world of a Savior, but was condescending enough to
+ apprise the tyrant ruler (Cansa) of his danger likewise&mdash;as we are
+ told he heard an angel voice announcing that a rival ruler was born in his
+ kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And hence, like Herod, he set about concocting measures to destroy him
+ without a direct attack. Why either of them should have taken such a
+ circuitous or roundabout way of killing an infant, when the life of the
+ strongest man, and every man in their kingdoms, was at their instant
+ disposal, "divine inspiration" does not inform us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But so it was. And we must not seek to "become wise above what is written"
+ in their bibles. Herod's decree required the destruction of all infants
+ under two years of age (see Matt. ii. 16)&mdash;first ordering, however,
+ "Go, and search diligently for the young child." (Matt. ii. 8.) Cansa's
+ decree ran thus: "Let active search be made for whatever young children
+ there may be upon earth, and let every boy in whom there may be found
+ signs of unusual greatness be slain without remorse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, let it be specially noticed that there is to this day in the cave
+ temple at Elephanta, in India, the sculptured likeness of a king
+ represented with a drawn sword, and surrounded with slaughtered infants&mdash;admitted
+ by all writers to be much older than Christianity. Mr Forbes, in his
+ "Oriental Memories," vol. iii. p. 447, says, "The figures of the
+ slaughtered infants in the cave of Elephanta represent them as being all
+ boys, who are surrounded by groups of figures of men and women in the act,
+ apparently, of supplicating for those children." And Mr. Higgins testifies
+ relative to the case, that Chrishna was carried away by night, and
+ concealed in a region remote from his natal place, for fear of a tyrant
+ whose destroyer it had been foretold he would become, who, for that
+ reason, had ordered all the male children born at that time to be slain.
+ Sculptures in Elephanta attest the story where the tyrant is represented
+ as destroying the children. The date of this sculpture is of the most
+ remote antiquity. "He who hath ears to hear, let him hear," and deduce the
+ pregnant inference. Joseph and Mary fled with the young Judean God into
+ Egypt; Chrishna's parents likewise fled with the young Hindoo Savior to
+ Gokul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, let us observe for a moment the chain or category or resemblance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. There was an angel warning in each case relative to the impending
+ danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The governor or ruler was hostile in each case to the mission of the
+ young Savior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. A bloody decree was issued in both cases, having for its object the
+ destruction of these infant Messiahs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. The hurried flight of the parents takes place in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. And it may be remarked further, that the "Gospel of the Infancy of
+ Jesus," once believed by the Christian world to be "inspired," and which
+ for hundreds of years passed current as divine authority, relates that
+ Christ and his parents sojourned for a time at a place called Matarea, or
+ Mathura, as Sir William Jones spells it, who says it was the birth place
+ of Chrishna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is further related in the case of Chrishna, that as he and his parents
+ approached the River Jumna in their flight, the waters "parted hither and
+ thither," so that they passed over "dry shod," like Moses and the
+ Israelites in crossing the Red Sea. And here let it be noted that the
+ representation of this flight, which is said to have occurred at midnight,
+ is like that of the massacre perpetuated and attested by imperishable
+ monuments of stone bearing evidence of being now several thousand years
+ old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir William Jones says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Indian incarnate God Chrishna, the Hindoos believe, had a virgin
+ mother of the royal race, who was sought to be destroyed in his infancy
+ about nine hundred years before Christ. It appears that he passed his life
+ in working miracles, and preaching, and was so humble as to wash his
+ friends' feet; at length, dying, but rising from the dead, he ascended
+ into heaven in the presence of a multitude." The Cingalese relate nearly
+ the same things of their "Budha." And several authors of Egyptian history
+ refer to a story perpetuated in the Egyptian legends concerning the God
+ Osiris, who was threatened with destruction by the tyrant Amulius, to save
+ whom his parents fled and concealed him in an arm of the River Nile, as
+ Christ was concealed in the same country, and, for aught that appears to
+ the contrary, in the same locality. The mother of another and older Savior
+ of Egypt fled by a timely warning to Epidamis before the birth of the
+ divine child, and was there delivered of "our Lord and Savior," Horus. And
+ the earthly or adopted father of the Grecian Savior, and God, Alcides, had
+ to flee with him and his mother to Galem for protection from threatening
+ danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the ninth and tenth volumes of the "Asiatic Researches," we find the
+ story of the "only begotten" or "first begotten son of God," Salvahana, of
+ Cape Comorin, son of a virgin mother (as were all the other Saviors
+ referred to), and a carpenter by the name of Taishnea. (It will be
+ remembered that Joseph, "foster-father of Jesus," was a carpenter.) The
+ story of this "Son of God" presents several features very similar to that
+ relating to Jesus. Sir William Jones, Colonel Wilford, and the Rev. Mr.
+ Maurice all confess to the antiquity of this story, as originating before
+ the birth of Christ. Speaking of Zoroaster of Persia (another case), 600
+ B. C., an author remarks, "Tradition reports that his mother had alarming
+ dreams of evil spirits seeking to destroy the child to whom she was about
+ to give birth. But a good spirit came to rescue him, and consoled her by
+ saying, 'Fear not; God Ormuzd will protect the infant, who has sent him as
+ a prophet to the people and the world who are waiting for him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ China, too, presents us with a case of the threatened destruction of a
+ Savior in infancy, evidently recorded more than two thousand five hundred
+ years ago. It is the case of the God Yu, who was concealed in a manner
+ similar to that of Moses&mdash;a commemoration of the story of which is
+ perpetuated by an image or picture of the virgin mother with a babe upon
+ her knee&mdash;sometimes in her arms. Now, let it be noted that these
+ virgin-born Gods, who, we are told, came "to save the world," could not
+ save themselves, but had to be protected and saved by other Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without pursuing the subject further in detail, we may mention by way of
+ recapitulation, that Chrishna, Alcides, Zoraster, Salvahana, Yu, to which
+ list we may add Bacchus, Romulus, Moses and Cyrus, according to their
+ reputed history, were threatened with death and destruction, but were
+ providentially and miraculously preserved. The case of Augustus is related
+ by Suetonius, that of Romulus by Livy, and that of Cyrus by Herodotus. It
+ will be recollected that Pharaoh, like Herod, in order to reach the infant
+ Moses, ordered the massacre of all the male infants (Herod making no
+ distinction of sex), in order that he might, by this singular and
+ circuitous method, reach the object of his jealousy and malignity without
+ passing a direct sentence of death upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole story of Herod's slaughter edict, with the familiar history of
+ its execution, like nearly every other miraculous incident related in "The
+ Holy Scriptures," which detail their histories, are traceable in the
+ skies. Herod, we are told, literally means hero of the skin&mdash;a term
+ applied also to Hercules, a personification of the sun&mdash;because the
+ sun, on entering the constellation of the Zodiac in July, was supposed or
+ assumed to invest himself with the skin of the lion, and this became "the
+ hero of the skin," or a hero with a new skin. Now this solar Herod,
+ passing through the astronomical twins and young infants of May, was said
+ to destroy them, though the word destroy is in the Greek anairean, which
+ any person, on turning to the Greek lexicon, will observe means also to
+ take away, pass through, or withdraw from, so that Pharaoh more properly
+ passed through the infants than destroyed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The text, "In Rama there was a voice heard," "Rachel weeping for her
+ children," etc., is quoted by a writer (Strauss) as referring to the
+ children slaughtered by Pharaoh. Let two things be noticed here: 1. Rama
+ is the Indian and Phoenician name for the zodiac. 2. Rachel had but two
+ children to weep for&mdash;Joseph and Benjamin&mdash;just the number found
+ in the fifth sign, or May sign, of the zodiac. And Venus, among the
+ ancient Assyrians and Phoenicians, was in tears when the sun, in his
+ annual cross through the heavens, passed through or over the astronomical
+ Twins (Gemini), doubtless fearfully apprehending their destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case of the massacre is an illustration and example of the manner in
+ which all the miraculous stories related in the Christian Scriptures, as
+ having been practically exemplified in the life of Jesus Christ, are
+ traceable to older sources, frequently terminating among the stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_SECT" id="link2H_SECT">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SECTION II.&mdash;INCREDIBILITY OF THE STORY OF THE MASSACRE OF THE HEBREW
+ INFANTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1. It is a cogent and potent fact, calculated to render the story of the
+ murder of the Hebrew children by Herod wholly incredible, that not one
+ writer of that age, or that nation, or any other nation, makes any mention
+ of the circumstance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Even the Rabbinical writers who detail his wicked life so minutely, and
+ who bring to his charge so many flagitious acts, fail to record any notice
+ of this horrible and atrocious deed, which must have been published far
+ and wide, and known to all the writers of that age and country, had it
+ occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. And still more logically ruinous to the credit of the story is the
+ omission of Josephus to throw out one hint that such a wholesale slaughter
+ ever took place in Judea. And yet he not only lived in that country, but
+ was related to Herod's wife, and regarded him as his most implacable
+ enemy, and professes to write out the whole history of his wicked life in
+ the most minute detail, devoting thirty-seven chapters of his large work
+ to this subject, and apparently enumerates every evil act of his life. And
+ yet Josephus says not a word about his inhuman and infamous butchery of
+ the babes which Matthew charges him with (about fourteen thousand in
+ number)&mdash;a bloody deed, unmatched in the annals of tyranny. Such
+ facts prove the story not only incredible, but impossible. Josephus could
+ not and would not have omitted to notice this the most notorious and
+ nefarious act of his life, had it occurred. It, therefore, could not have
+ occurred. And it is almost equally incredible that Roman historians, who
+ furnish us with a particular account of Herod's character, should pass
+ over in silence such a villainous and bloody deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. And then some of our ablest and most reliable chronologists have shown
+ that Herod was not living at the time this bloody decree should have been
+ issued by him; that he died about three years prior to that period, and
+ hence could have been guilty of no such villainy, and highhanded murder,
+ and cruel infanticide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. And even if living, he would have been an old man (not less than
+ sixty-eight according to Josephus). Hence, he could not have calculated on
+ surviving long enough for the son of a village carpenter, then a babe, to
+ oust him from his throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. It is wholly incredible, also, that Herod should have adopted such a
+ roundabout method of destroying the object of his fear and envy when he
+ could have singled him out, and put him to death at once, and thus avoid
+ the felonious act of breaking the hearts of thousands of parents, and his
+ most loyal subjects, too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. From the foregoing considerations, we endorse the sentiment of the Rev.
+ Edward Evanson, that it is "an incredible, borrowed fiction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. THE SAVIORS EXHIBIT EARLY PROOFS OF DIVINITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ OF course, all Gods must be heroes&mdash;physically or intellectually, or
+ both. The more danger they encounter, and the earlier they manifest a
+ precocious or preternatural smartness, the more like Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And hence we find several of the Saviors in very early childhood
+ displaying great physical prowess in meeting and conquering danger, while
+ others exhibit their superiority mentally by vanquishing their opponents
+ in argument. Christ first began to exhibit proof of his divine character
+ and greatness by meeting and silencing the doctors in the temple when only
+ about twelve years of age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And similar proofs of divinity at or near this age is found in the history
+ of some of the pagan Saviors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Christ it is declared, "There went out a fame of him through all the
+ region round about." (Luke iv. 14.) And of the Grecian Esculapius it is
+ likewise declared, "The voice of fame soon published the birth of a
+ miraculous child," and "the people flocked from all quarters to behold
+ him." Of Confucius of China it is declared, "His extensive knowledge and
+ great wisdom soon made him known, and kings were governed by his counsels,
+ and the people adored him wherever he went." And it is further declared of
+ this "Divine Man," that he seemed to arrive at reason and the perfect use
+ of his faculties almost from infancy. It is reported of the God Chang-ti,
+ that when questioned on the subject of government and the duties of
+ princes and rulers while yet a child, his answers were such as to astonish
+ the whole empire by his knowledge and wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is related of a Grecian God that he demolished the serpents which
+ attempted to bite or destroy him while in his cradle. "The proof of
+ Osiris's divinity was a blaze of light shining around his cradle soon
+ after he was born. Relative to Pythagoras of the same country, we have it
+ upon the authority of a Christian writer, that he exhibited such a
+ remarkable character, even in youth, as to attract the attention of all
+ who saw and heard him speak." And the author further testifies of him that
+ he "never was at any time overcome with anger, laughter, or perturbation
+ of mind or precipitation of conduct." "His fame having reached Miletus and
+ neighboring cities," it is said by another writer, "the people flocked to
+ see and hear him, and he was reverenced by multitudes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luke declares of Christ, that the people "were astonished at his
+ understanding and answers." (Luke ii. 47.) And the "Gospel of the Infancy"
+ tells us that his tutor Zacheas was astonished at his learning, which
+ reminds us of the statement found in "The Divine Word" of the Hindoos (The
+ Mahabarat), that the parents of the Savior Chrishna, in making
+ arrangements to give him an education, sent him to a learned Brahmin as
+ tutor, whom he instantly astonished with his vast learning, and under
+ whose tuition he mastered the whole circle of sciences in a day and a
+ night. "Men, seeing the wonders performed by this child, told Nanda (his
+ adopted father) that this could not possibly be his son."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is told of Budha Sakia of India that, "as soon as he was born, a light
+ shone around his cradle, when he stood up and proclaimed his mission, and
+ that the River Ganges daring this time rose in a miraculous manner, which
+ was stilled by his divine power, as Christ stilled the tempest on the
+ sea." "He was born," says the New American Cyclopedia (vol. iv. p. 61),
+ "amidst great miracles, and soon as born, most solemnly proclaims his
+ mission."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Narayan, "the Holy," it is declared that "mysterious words dropped from
+ his lips on various occasions, giving hints of his divine nature and the
+ purposes for which he had come down to the earth." (Prog. Rel. Ideas, vol.
+ i. p. 128.) The divine power and mission of Yu of China was very early
+ evinced by the display of great miracles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here let us observe that some of the Old Testament or Jewish heroes&mdash;as
+ Moses, Solomon and Samuel&mdash;are reported as exhibiting great
+ superiority of mind in very early life; thus proving (it was thought) that
+ if they were not Gods, they were at least from God&mdash;that is, endowed
+ by him with divine power while yet mere children. Thus the histories of
+ all Gods and divine personages run in parallel grooves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. THE SAVIORS; KINGDOMS NOT OF THIS WORLD
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Retirement and Forty Days' Fasting.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ CHRIST taught, "My kingdom is not of this world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And we find that most of the other Saviors virtually and practically
+ taught the same doctrine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first practical evincement of it was exhibited by retiring from the
+ world; that is, they retired from the noise and commotion, from the busy
+ scenes of life, into some sequestered spot excluded from human
+ observation. Christ is reported to have withdrawn from society, and to
+ have spent some forty days in the wilderness fasting and being tempted by
+ Satan&mdash;a man of straw conjured up in order to furnish the hero God
+ something to combat with, that he might thereby exhibit practical proof of
+ his divine power and prowess. It was simply the two kings or rulers of two
+ hostile kingdoms (heaven and hell) contending for the mastery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Kingsborough tells us, "The ancient Mexicans had a forty days' fast
+ in honor and memory of one of their demigods or Saviors, who was tempted
+ forty days on a mountain. He is called 'the Morning Star'." Mr.
+ Kingsborough (being a Christian) remarks, "These things are very curious
+ and mysterious."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said of "the Son of God" and Savior Chrishna that "he imparted his
+ doctrines and precepts in the silent depths of the forest." Of the
+ Egyptian God Osiris, we are informed in his sacred legends, that "he
+ observed both fasting and penance," while Pythagoras of Greece spent
+ several years in meditation and retirement in a cave, and was much given
+ to fasting, and often inculcated the doctrine of "forsaking the world" and
+ "the things thereof." He taught these things both by precept and example,
+ even to "the forsaking of relations." Both Confucius and the Divine Savior
+ Chang-ti of China, "in order to attain to a more perfect state of
+ holiness," spent several years in retirement and "divine meditation," the
+ former in a wilderness, the latter on a mountain, and fasted, and their
+ disciples after them often fasted in a very devout manner. The Persian
+ Zoroaster also spent several years in retirement and "contemplation on
+ true holiness"&mdash;partly in a wilderness and partly on a "holy
+ mountain," "holy mountains" being the favorite places of resort of most of
+ the holy Saviors, holy Gods, and holy men of antiquity. One of the most
+ ancient Saviors, Thammuz, is reported to have spent "twelve years in
+ devout and contemplative retirement from the busy world." According to the
+ Christian bible, Moses, Elijah, and Christ, each fasted forty days, and a
+ Mexican Savior, too (Quexalcote), spent forty days in a similar manner,
+ and other cases are so reported.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may institute the inquiry here, "How happens this coincidence?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The answer is indicated by "the Hierophant," which says, "Jesus in his
+ baptism and forty days' fast imitated the passage of the sun through the
+ constellation Aquarius, where John, Joannes, or Janus the baptizer had his
+ domicile, and baptized the earth with his yearly rains." Having been
+ baptized in Jordan, he fasted forty days in the wilderness, in imitation
+ of the passage of the sun from the constellation Aquarius through the
+ Fishes to the Lamb or Ram of March. During the forty days when the sun is
+ among the Fishes (in the sign of the Fish) the faithful Catholics,
+ Episcopalians and Mahommedans abstain from meat and live upon the fishes
+ during the season of Lent, as did the Jews and pagans, and did also Jesus,
+ "to fulfill all righteousness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. THE SAVIORS WERE REAL PERSONAGES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT is unwarrantably assumed by Christian writers that the incarnated Gods
+ and crucified Saviors of the pagan religions were all either mere fabulous
+ characters, or ordinary human beings invested with divine titles, and
+ divine attributes; while, on the other hand, the assumption is put forth
+ with equal boldness that Jesus Christ was a real divine personage, "seen
+ and believed on in the world, and finally crucified on Mount Calvary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we do not find the facts in history to warrant any such assumptions or
+ any such distinctions. They all stand in these respects upon the same
+ ground and on equal footing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And their respective disciples point to the same kind of evidence to prove
+ their real existence and their divine character, and to prove that they
+ once walked and talked amongst men, as well as now sit on the eternal
+ throne in heaven "at the right hand of the father." And we find even
+ Christian writers admitting the once <i>bona fide</i> or personal
+ existence on earth of most of the pagan Saviors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the two chief incarnated Gods of India&mdash;Chrishna and Sakia&mdash;there
+ is scarcely "a peg left to hang a doubt upon" as to the fact of their
+ having descended to the earth, taken upon themselves the form of men, and
+ having been worshiped as veritable Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, we believe but few of the missionaries who have visited that
+ country question the statement and general belief prevalent there of their
+ once personal reality. Col. Todd, in his "History of the Rajahs" (p. 44),
+ says: "We must discard the idea that the Mahabaret, the history of Rama,
+ of Chrishna, and the five Padua brothers are mere allegories; colossal
+ figures, ancient temples, and caves inscribed with characters yet unknown,
+ confirm the reality, and their race, their cities, and their coins yet
+ exist." To argue further the personal reality of this crucified God would
+ be a waste of words, as it is generally admitted, both by historical
+ writers and missionaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Higgins declares, "Chrishna lived at the conclusion of the brazen age,
+ which is calculated to have been eleven hundred or twelve hundred years
+ before Christ." Here is a very positive and specific declaration as to his
+ tangible actuality. Col. Dow, Mr. Robinson, and others use similar
+ language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Relative to Bacchus, of whose history many writers have spoken as being
+ wholly fabulous or fictitious, Diodorus Siculus says (lib. iii. p. 137),
+ "the Libyans claim Bacchus, and say that he was the son of Ammon, a king
+ of Libya; that he built a temple to his father, Ammon." And that
+ world-wide famous historian (Mr. Goodrich) is still more explicit, if
+ possible, as to his material entity. After giving it directly as his
+ opinion that there was such a being, he says, "He planted vine-yards and
+ fig-trees, and erected many noble cities." He moreover tells us, "His
+ skill in legislation and agriculture is much praised" (p. 499).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to Osiris of Egypt, another God-Savior, Mr. Hittle declares
+ unqualifiedly that "Herodotus saw the tomb of Osiris, at Sais nearly five
+ centuries before Christ" (vol. i. p. 246). Rather a strong evidence of his
+ previous personality certainly, but not more so than that furnished by the
+ <i>New York Journal of Commerce</i> a few years since, relative to the
+ Egyptian Apis or Thulis, whose theophany was annually celebrated, at the
+ rising of the Nile, with great festivities and devotion, several thousand
+ years ago. The Paris correspondent of that journal, after speaking of Mr.
+ Auguste Marietta's travels, "a distinguished scientific gentleman who for
+ four years past had been employed by the French Government in making
+ Egyptian researches," having returned home, says, "The most important of
+ Mr. Marietta's discoveries was the tomb of Apis (Thulis), a monument
+ excavated entirely in lime-rock." "There are (he says in conclusion)
+ epitaphs, forming a chronological record of each of the Apis buried in the
+ common tomb. The sculpture is of the date of the Pyramids, and the statues
+ are in the best state of preservation; the colors are perfectly bright The
+ execution is admirable, and they convey an exact idea of the physical
+ character of the primitive population."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The New American Cyclopedia (art. Apis) in speaking of this Egyptian God,
+ tells us his lifetime was twenty-five years; in harmony with one of the
+ theologico-astronomical cycles of the Egyptians. The same work and volume
+ (p. 132), in speaking of the real existence of Adonis of Greece, tells us,
+ upon the authority of the poet Panyasis, that he was a veritable son of
+ Theias, king of Syria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But of all the characters who figured in the mythological works or lawless
+ rhapsodies of the ancients, and worshiped by them as crucified Gods and
+ sin-atoning Saviors, none has, perhaps, been so indubitably, so
+ positively, and so universally set down as mythological or fabulous as
+ that of Prometheus of Caucasus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet Mr. Lempriere, D. D., tells us in his Classical Dictionary that he
+ was the son of Japetus. Sir Isaac Newton says he was a descendant of the
+ famous African Sesostris; while that erudite and masterly historian (Mr.
+ Higgins) seems to have entertained no doubt of his personal esse; nor,
+ indeed, of many, if any, of the pagan Saviors, as the following
+ declaration will show. He says, "Finding men in India and other countries
+ of the same name of the inferior Gods (as it is quite common to name men
+ for them) has led some to conclude that those deified men never existed,
+ but are merely mythological names of the sun. True, the first supreme God
+ of every nation (not excepting the Jews) was the sun. But more modernly
+ the names were transferred to men." Again, he says, "Inasmuch as some of
+ them are found to have been real bona fide human beings, there is nothing
+ unreasonable in concluding that all were" And if we take into
+ consideration the true and indisputable fact that the priests had
+ everything at their disposal, and the strongest motives for concealing and
+ suppressing, not to say garbling and destroying evidence, it is not to be
+ wondered at that the histories of some of these Gods should be somewhat
+ obscure and ambiguous. Further on he declares, "In every case the Savior
+ was incarnate, and in nearly every case the place in which he was actually
+ born was exhibited to the people." And upon the authority of the
+ Hierophant, we will add, the memories of many of them have been
+ consecrated and perpetuated by tombs placed beside their temples, which is
+ perhaps the most convincing species of evidence that could be offered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evidence, then, is precisely of the same character as that offered in
+ the case of Jesus Christ to prove that the pagan Saviors did really
+ possess a substantial, earthly and bodily existence. Though it is true
+ that it never has been universally conceded or believed by Christian
+ themselves that Jesus Christ ever had a personal or corporeal existence on
+ earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cotilenius, in a note on Ignatius, Epistle to the Trallians, written in
+ the third century of the Christian era, declares that "it is as absurd to
+ deny the doctrine which taught that Jesus Christ's body was a phantom as
+ to deny that the sun shone at midday." His physical body of course was
+ meant, for it appears he believed in his eternal existence as a spirit in
+ heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And we find whole sects advocating similar views in the early ages of the
+ Christian church. "One of the most primitive and learned sects," says a
+ writer, "were the Manicheans, who denied that Jesus Christ ever existed in
+ flesh and blood, but believed him to be a God in spirit only;" others
+ denied him to be a God, but believed him to have been a prophet, or
+ inspired character, like the Unitarians of the present day. Some denied
+ his crucifixion, others asserted it. It is more than probable that this
+ was the cause of dispute between Paul and Barnabas, mentioned in the Acts
+ of the Apostles, seeing that Paul had laid such peculiar emphasis on
+ "Jesus Christ and him crucified."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this conclusion is corroborated by its being expressly stated in the
+ Gospel of Barnabas that "Jesus Christ was not crucified, but was carried
+ to heaven by four angels." "There was a long list," says the same writer,
+ "from the earliest times, of sincere Christians who denied that Jesus
+ Christ rose from the dead;" while, as we may remark here, there could not
+ have been at that early date any grounds for denying these things, had he
+ really figured in the world in the miraculous and extraordinary and public
+ manner as that related in the Gospels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. SIXTEEN SAVIORS CRUCIFIED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "For I determined not to know anything among you, save Jesus Christ and
+ him crucified." (i Cor. ii. 2.) There must have existed a very
+ considerable amount of skepticism in the community as to the truth of the
+ report of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in the country and era of its
+ occurrence to make it necessary thus to erect it into an important dogma,
+ and make it imperative to believe it There must have been a large margin
+ for distrusting its truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The determination not to know anything but the crucifixion of Jesus Christ
+ was narrowing down his knowledge to rather a small compass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And such a resolution would necessarily preclude him from acquainting
+ himself with the history of any other cases of crucifixion that might have
+ occurred before that of his own favorite Messiah. "What! Was there ever a
+ case of crucifixion beside that of Jesus Christ?" a good Christian brother
+ or sister sometimes exclaims, when the world's sixteen crucified Saviors
+ are spoken of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We meet the question with the reply, You seem to be a disciple of Paul,
+ whose position would not allow him to know of any other cases of
+ crucifixion but that of Jesus Christ. Hence, he may have considered it
+ meritorious to perpetuate his ignorance on the subject And you, perhaps,
+ are ignorant from the same cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the nature of all religions based on fear and unchangeable dogmas,
+ to deter and thus exclude its disciples from all knowledge adverse to
+ their own creeds. And sometimes their own religious systems are magnified
+ to such an exalted appreciation above all others as to lead them to
+ destroy the evidence of the existence of the latter for fear of their
+ ultimate rivalry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Taylor informs us that some of the early disciples of the Christian
+ faith demolished accessible monuments representing and memorializing the
+ crucifixion of the ancient oriental sin-atoning Gods, so that they are now
+ unknown in the annals of Christian history. Hence, the surprise excited in
+ the minds of Christian professors when other cases are mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such influences as referred to above have shut out from the minds of the
+ disciples of several religious systems a knowledge of all crucified Gods
+ but their own. Hence, the Hindoo rejoices in knowing only "Chrishna and
+ him crucified." The Persian entwines around his heart the remembrance only
+ of the atoning sufferings on the cross of Mithra the Mediator. The Mexican
+ daily sends up his earnest, soul-breathing prayer for the return of the
+ spirit of his crucified Savior&mdash;Quexalcote. While the Caucasian, with
+ equal devotion, chants daily praises to his slain "Divine Intercessor" for
+ voluntarily offering himself upon the cross for the sins of a fallen race.
+ And the Christian disciple hugs to his bosom the bloody cross of the
+ murdered Jesus, unhaunted by the suspicion that other Gods died for the
+ sins of man long anterior to the advent of the immaculate Nazarene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will now lay before the reader a brief account of the crucifixion of
+ more than a dozen virgin-born Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, predicated
+ upon facts which have escaped the hands of the Christian iconoclasts
+ determined to know only Jesus Christ crucified. We will first notice the
+ case of the Indian God&mdash;Chrishna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I.&mdash;CRUCIFIXION OF CHRISHNA OF INDIA, 1200 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the sin-atoning Gods who condescended in ancient times to forsake
+ the throne of heaven, and descend upon the plains of India, through human
+ birth, to suffer and die for the sins and transgressions of the human
+ race, the eighth Avatar, or Savior, may be considered the most important
+ and the most exalted character, as he led the most conspicuous life, and
+ commanded the most devout and the most universal homage. And while some of
+ the other incarnate demigods were invested with only a limited measure of
+ the infinite deityship, Chrishna, according to the teachings of their New
+ Testament (the Ramazand), comprehended in himself "a full measure of the
+ God-head bodily." The evidence of his having been crucified is as
+ conclusive as any other sacrificial or sin-atoning God, whose name has
+ been memorialized in history, or embalmed as a sacred idol in the memories
+ of his devout worshipers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Moore, an English traveler and writer, in a large collection of
+ drawings taken from Hindoo sculptures and monuments, which he has arranged
+ together in a work entitled "The Hindoo Pantheon," has one representing,
+ suspended on the cross, the Hindoo crucified God and Son of God, "our Lord
+ and Savior" Chrishna, with holes pierced in his feet, evidently intended
+ to represent the nail-holes made by the act of crucifixion. Mr. Higgins,
+ who examined this work, which he found in the British Museum, makes a
+ report of a number of the transcript drawings intended to represent the
+ crucifixion of this oriental and mediatorial God, which we will here
+ condense. In plate ninety-eight this Savior is represented with a hole in
+ the top of one foot, just above the toes, where the nail was inserted in
+ the act of crucifixion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another drawing he is represented exactly in the form of a Romish
+ Christian crucifix, but not fixed or fastened to a tree, though the legs
+ and feet are arranged in the usual way, with nail-holes in the latter.
+ There is a halo of glory over it, emanating from the heavens above, just
+ as we have seen Jesus Christ represented in a work by a Christian writer,
+ entitled "Quarles' Emblems," also in other Christian books. In several of
+ the icons (drawings) there are marks of holes in both feet, and in others
+ of holes in the hands only. In the first drawing which he consulted the
+ marks are very faint, so as to be scarcely visible. In figures four and
+ five of plate eleven the figures have nail-holes in both feet, while the
+ hands are not represented. Figure six has on it the representation of a
+ round hole in the side. To his collar or shirt hangs an emblem of a heart,
+ represented in the same manner as those attached to the imaginary
+ likenesses of Jesus Christ, which may now be found in some Christian
+ countries Figure ninety-one has a hole in one foot and a nail through the
+ other, and a round nail or pin mark in one hand only, while the other is
+ ornamented with a dove and a serpent (both emblems of deity in the
+ Christian's bible).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, we raise the query here, and drive it into the innermost temple of
+ the Christian's conscience, with the overwhelming force of the
+ unconquerable logic of history&mdash;<i>What does all this mean?</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And if they will only let conviction have its perfect work while answering
+ this question unhampered by the inherited prejudices of a thousand years,
+ they can henceforth rejoice in the discovery of a glorious historical
+ truth, calculated to disenthrall their minds from the soul-cramping
+ superstitions of crosses, crucifixions and bloody atonements on which they
+ have been accustomed to hang the salvation of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the credibility of the relation of these incidents going to prove an
+ astonishing coincidence in the sacred histories of the Hindoo and
+ Christian Saviors, and demonstrating the doctrine of the crucifixion as
+ having been practically realized, and preached to the world long anterior
+ to the offering of a God "once for all" on Mount Calvary; if its
+ credibility rested on mere <i>ex parte</i> testimony, mere pagan
+ tradition, or even upon the best digested and most authentic annals of the
+ past that have escaped the ravages of time, there might still be a forlorn
+ hope for the stickler for the Christian faith now struggling in the
+ agonies of a credal skepticism, that the whole thing has been plagiarized
+ from the Christian Gospels. For paper and parchment history can be&mdash;and
+ has been&mdash;mutilated. But the verity of this account rests upon no
+ such a precarious basis. Its antiquity, reaching far beyond the Christian
+ era, is corroborated and demonstrated by imperishable monuments,
+ deep-chiseled indentures burrowed into the granite rock, which bid
+ defiance to the fingers of time, and even the hands of the frenzied
+ iconoclast, to destroy or deface, though impelled and spurred on to the
+ effort by the long-cherished conviction burning in his soul, that the
+ salvation of the human race depends upon believing that "there is no other
+ name given under heaven whereby men can be saved" than his own crucified
+ God, and that all others are but thieves, robbers and antichrists. Some of
+ the disciples of the oriental systems cherished this conviction, and
+ Christians and Mahommedans seem to have inherited it in magnified
+ proportions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence, we are credibly informed that some of the earlier Christian saints,
+ having determined, like Paul, "to know only Jesus Christ and him
+ crucified," made repeated efforts to obliterate these sacred facts (so
+ fatally damaging to their one-sided creeds) from the page of history. Mr.
+ Higgins suggests that if we could have persons less under the influence of
+ sectarian prejudice to visit, examine, and report on the sculptures and
+ monuments of India, covered over as they are with antiquated and
+ significant figures appertaining to and illustrating their religious
+ history, we might accumulate still more light bearing upon the history of
+ the crucifixion of the Savior and sin-atoning Chrishna. "Most of our
+ reports," he declares, "are fragmentary, if not one-sided, having come
+ through the hands of Christian missionaries, bishops and priests."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He informs us that a report on the Hindoo religion, made out by a
+ deputation from the British Parliament, sent to India for the purpose of
+ examining their sacred books and monuments, being left in the hands of a
+ Christian bishop at Calcutta, and with instructions to forward it to
+ England, was found, on its arrival in London, to be so horribly mutilated
+ and eviscerated as to be scarcely cognizable. The account of the
+ crucifixion was gone&mdash;-cancelled out. The inference is patent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And we have it upon the authority of this same reliable and truthful
+ writer (Sir Godfrey Higgins) that the author of the Hindoo Pantheon (Mr.
+ Moor), after having announced his intention to publish it to the world,
+ was visited and labored with by some of his devout Christian neighbors
+ zealous "for the faith once delivered to the saints," who endeavored to
+ dissuade him from publishing such facts to the world as he represented his
+ book to contain, for fear it would have the effect to unsettle the faith
+ of some of the weak brethren (some of the weak-kneed church members) in
+ the soul-saving religion of Jesus Christ, by raising doubts in their minds
+ as to the originality of the gospel story of the crucifixion of Christ, or
+ at least of his having been crucified as a God for a sin-offering. His
+ crucifixion is a possible event. It may be thus far a true narrative, but
+ the adjunct of the atonement, with its efficacy to obliterate the effects
+ of sin, connected with the idea that an infinite, omnipotent and
+ self-existent God was put to death, when a human form was slain upon the
+ cross&mdash;never, no, never. It is a thought too monstrous to find
+ lodgment in an enlightened human mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another case evincing the same spirit as that narrated above is found in
+ the circumstance of a Christian missionary (a Mr. Maurice) publishing a
+ historical account of this man-god or demigod of the Hindoos, and omitting
+ any allusion to his crucifixion; this was entirely left out, apparently
+ from design. His death, resurrection and ascension were spoken of, but the
+ crucifixion skipped over. He could not have been ignorant of this chapter
+ in his history as the writers preceding him, from whom he copied, had
+ related it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among this number may be mentioned the learned French writer Monsieur
+ Guigniant, who, in his "Religion of the Ancients," speaks so specifically
+ of the crucifixion of this God, as to name the circumstance of his being
+ nailed to a tree. He also states, that before his exit he made some
+ remarkable prophecies appertaining to the crimes and miseries of the world
+ in the approaching future, reminding us of the wars and rumors of wars
+ predicted by the Christian Messiah. Mr. Higgins names the same
+ circumstance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have it upon the authority of more than one writer on Hindoo or Indian
+ antiquities that there is a rock temple at Mathura in the form of a cross,
+ and facing the four cardinal points of the compass, which is admitted by
+ all beholders as presenting the proof in bold relief of extreme age, and
+ inside of this temple stands a statue of "the Savior of men," Chrishna of
+ India, presenting the proof of being coeval in construction with the
+ temple itself by the circumstance of its being cut out of the same rock
+ and constituting a part of the temple. (Further citations of this
+ character will be found under the head of Parallels, Chapter XXXII.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus we have the proof deeply and indelibly carved in the old,
+ time-chiseled rocks of India&mdash;that their "Lord and Savior Chrishna"
+ atoned for the sins of a grief-stricken world by "pouring out his blood as
+ a propitiatory offering" while stretched upon the cross. No wonder, in
+ view of such historic bulwarks, Col. Wiseman, for ten years a Christian
+ missionary should have exclaimed, "Can we be surprised that the enemies of
+ our holy religion should seize upon this legend (the crucifixion of
+ Chrishna) as containing the original of our gospel history?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian reader, please ponder over the facts of this chapter, and let
+ conviction have its perfect work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LIFE, CHARACTER, RELIGION, AND MIRACLES OF CHRISHNA.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of Chrishna Zeus (or Jeseus, as some writers spell it) is
+ contained principally in the Baghavat Gita, the episode portion of the
+ Mahabaret bible. The book is believed to be divinely inspired, like all
+ other bibles; and the Hindoos claim for it an antiquity of six thousand
+ years. Like Christ, he was of humble origin, and like him had to encounter
+ opposition and persecution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he seems to have been more successful in the propagation of his
+ doctrines; for it is declared, "he soon became surrounded by many earnest
+ followers, and the people in vast multitudes followed him, crying aloud,
+ 'This is indeed the Redeemer promised to our fathers.'" His pathway was
+ thickly strewn with miracles, which consisted in healing the sick, curing
+ lepers, restoring the dumb, deaf and the blind, raising the dead, aiding
+ the weak, comforting the sorrow-stricken, relieving the oppressed, casting
+ out devils, etc. He come not ostensibly to destroy the previous relgion,
+ but to purify it of its impurities, and to preach a better doctrine. He
+ came, as he declared, "to reject evil and restore the reign of good, and
+ redeem man from the consequences of the fall, and deliver the oppressed
+ earth from its load of sin and suffering." His disciples believed him to
+ be God himself, and millions worshiped him as such in the time of
+ Alexander the Great, 330 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hundreds of counterparts to the history of Christ, proving their
+ histories to be almost identical, will be found enumerated in Chapter
+ XXXII., such as&mdash;1. His miraculous birth by a virgin. 2. The mother
+ and child being visited by shepherds, wise men and the angelic host, who
+ joyously sang, "In thy delivery, O favored among women, all nations shall
+ have cause to exult." 3. The edict of the tyrant ruler Cansa, ordering all
+ the first born to be put to death. 4. The miraculous escape of the mother
+ and child from his bloody decree by the parting of the waves of the River
+ Jumna to permit them to pass through on dry ground. 5. The early
+ retirement of Chrishna to a desert. 6. His baptism or ablution in the
+ River Ganges, corresponding to Christ's baptism in Jordan. 7. His
+ transfiguration at Madura, where he assured his disciples that "present or
+ absent, I will always be with you." 8. He had a favorite disciple
+ (Arjoon), who was his bosom friend, as John was Christ's. 9. He was
+ anointed with oil by women, like Christ. 10. A somewhat similar fish story
+ is told of him&mdash;his disciples being enabled by him to catch large
+ draughts of the finny prey in their nets. (For three hundred other similar
+ parallels, see Chapter XXXII.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like Christ, he taught much by parables and precepts. A notable sermon
+ preached by him is also reported, which we have not space for here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one occasion, having returned from a ministerial journey, as he entered
+ Madura, the people came out in crowds to meet him, strewing the ground
+ with the branches of cocoa-nut trees, and desiring to hear him. He
+ addressed them in parables&mdash;the conclusion and moral of one of which,
+ called the parable of the fishes, runs thus: "And thus it is, O people of
+ Madura, that you ought to protect the weak and each other, and not
+ retaliate upon an enemy the wrongs he may have done you." Here we see the
+ peace doctrine preached in its purity. "And thus it was," says a writer,
+ "that Chrishna spread among the people the holy doctrines of purest
+ morality, and initiated his hearers into the exalted principles of
+ charity, of self-denial, and self-respect at a time when the desert
+ countries of the west were inhabited only by savage tribes;" and we will
+ add, long before Christianity was thought of. Purity of life and spiritual
+ insight, we are told, were distinguishing traits in the character of this
+ oriental sin-atoning Savior, and that "he was often moved with compassion
+ for the downtrodden and the suffering."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Budhist in Ceylon, who sent his son to a Christian school, once remarked
+ to a missionary, "I respect Christianity as a help to Budhism." Thus is
+ disclosed the fact that the motives of some of "the heathen" in sending to
+ Christian schools is the promotion of their own religion, which they
+ consider superior, and in many respects most of them are. (For proof, see
+ Chapter on Bibles.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have the remarkable admission of the <i>Christian Examiner</i> that
+ "the best precepts of the (Christian) bible are contained in the Hindoo
+ Baghavat." Then it is not true that "Christ spake as man never spake." And
+ if his "best precepts" were previously recorded in an old heathen bible,
+ then they afford no proof of his divinity. This suicidal concession of the
+ <i>Examiner</i> pulls up the claims of orthodox Christianity by the roots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And many of the precepts uttered by Chrishna display a profound wisdom and
+ depth of thought equal to any of those attributed to Jesus Christ. In
+ proof of the statement, we will cite a few examples out of the hundreds in
+ our possession:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Those who do not control their passions cannot act properly toward
+ others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The evils we inflict upon others follow us as our shadows follow our
+ bodies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Only the humble are beloved of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Virtue sustains the soul as the muscles sustain the body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. When the poor man knocks at your door, take him and administer to his
+ wants, for the poor are the chosen of God. (Christ said, "God hath chosen
+ the poor.")
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Let your hand be always open to the unfortunate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Look not upon a woman with unchaste desires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Avoid envy, covetousness, falsehood, imposture and slander, and sexual
+ desires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Above all things, cultivate love for your neighbor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. When you die you leave your worldly wealth behind you, but your
+ virtues and vices follow you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Contemn riches and worldly honor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Seek the company of the wicked in order to reform them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Do good for its own sake, and expect not your reward for it on earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. The soul is immortal, but must be pure and free from all sin and stain
+ before it can return to Him who gave it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. The soul is inclined to good when it follows the inward light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. The soul is responsible to God for its actions, who has established
+ rewards and punishments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Cultivate that inward knowledge which teaches what is right and wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. Never take delight in another's misfortunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. It is better to forgive an injury than to avenge it
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. You can accomplish by kindness what you cannot by force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. A noble spirit finds a cure for injustice by forgetting it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Pardon the offense of others, but not your own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. What you blame in others do not practice yourself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. By forgiving an enemy you make many friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Do right from hatred of evil, and not from fear of punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. A wise man corrects his own errors by observing those of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. He who rules his temper conquers his greatest enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. The wise man governs his passions, but the fool obeys them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Be at war with men's vices, but at peace with their persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. There should be no disagreement between your lives and your doctrine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Spend every day as though it were the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. Lead not one life in public and another in private.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. Anger in trying to torture others punishes itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. A disgraceful death is honorable when you die in a good cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35. By growing familiar with vices, we learn to tolerate them easily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36. We must master our evil propensities, or they will master us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37. He who has conquered his propensities rules over a kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38. Protect, love and assist others, if you would serve God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39. From thought springs the will, and from the will action, true or
+ false, just or unjust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40. As the sandal tree perfumes the axe which fells it, so the good man
+ sheds fragrance on his enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41. Spend a portion of each day in pious devotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42. To love the virtues of others is to brighten your own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43. He who gives to the needy loses nothing himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44. A good, wise and benevolent man cannot be rich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45. Much riches is a curse to the possessor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 46. The wounds of the soul are more important than those of the body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 47. The virtuous man is like the banyan tree, which shelters and protects
+ all around it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 48. Money does not satisfy the love of gain, but only stimulates it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 49. Your greatest enemy is in your own bosom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 50. To flee when charged is to confess your guilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 51. The wounds of conscience leave a scar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compare these fifty-one precepts of Chrishna with the forty-two precepts
+ of Christ, and you must confess they suffer nothing by the comparison. If
+ we had space we would like to quote also from the Vedas. We will merely
+ cite a few examples relative to woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. He who is cursed by woman is cursed by God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. God will punish him who laughs at woman's sufferings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. When woman is honored, God is honored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. The virtuous woman will have but one husband, and the right-minded man
+ but one wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. It is the highest crime to take advantage of the weakness of woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Woman should be loved, respected and protected by husbands, fathers and
+ brothers, etc. (For more, see Chapter on Bibles.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before we close this chapter we must anticipate and answer an objection.
+ It will be said that the reported amours of Chrishna and his reencounter
+ with Cansa constitute a criticism on his character. If so, we will point
+ to Christ's fight or angry combat with the money-changers in the temple as
+ an offset to it And then it should be remembered that Chrishna's disciples
+ claim that these stories are mere fable, or allegorical, and are not found
+ in the most approved or canonical writings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II.&mdash;CRUCIFIXION OF THE HINDOO SAKIA, 600 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How many Gods who figured in Hindoo history suffered death upon the cross
+ as atoning offerings for the sins of mankind is a point not clearly
+ established by their sacred books. But the death of the God above named,
+ known as Sakia, Budha Sakia, or Sakia Muni, is distinctly referred to by
+ several writers, both oriental and Christian, though there appears to be
+ in Budhist countries different accounts of the death of the famous and
+ extensively worshiped sin-atoning Saviors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some countries, the story runs, a God was crucified by an arrow being
+ driven through his body, which fastened him to a tree; the tree, with the
+ arrow thus projecting at right angles, formed the cross, emblematical of
+ the atoning sacrifice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sakia, an account states, was crucified by his enemies for the humble act
+ of plucking a flower in a garden&mdash;doubtless seized on as a mere
+ pretext, rather than as being considered a crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the accusations brought against Christ, it will be remembered, was
+ that of plucking the ripened ears of corn on the Sabbath. And it is a
+ remarkable circumstance, that in the pictures of Christian countries
+ representing the virgin Mary with the infant Jesus in her arms, either the
+ child or the mother is frequently represented with a bunch of flowers in
+ the hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, let it be noted, the association of flowers with divinely born
+ Saviors, in India, is indicated in the religious books of that country to
+ have originated from the conception of the virgin parting with the flowers
+ of her virginity by giving birth to a divine child, whereby she lost the
+ immortality of her physical nature, it being transferred by that act to
+ her Deity-begotten son. And from this circumstance, Sakia is represented
+ as having been crucified for abstracting a flower from a garden. That his
+ crucifixion was designed as a sin-atoning offering, is evident from the
+ following declaration found in his sacred biography, viz.: "He in mercy
+ left Paradise, and came down to earth because he was filled with
+ compassion for the sins and miseries of mankind. He sought to lead them
+ into better paths, and took their sufferings upon himself that he might
+ expiate their crimes and mitigate the punishment they must otherwise
+ inevitably undergo." (Prog. Rel. Ideas, vol. i. p. 86.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He believed and taught his followers that all sin is inevitably punished,
+ either in this or the future life; and so great were his sympathy and
+ tenderness, that he condescended to suffer that punishment himself, by an
+ ignominious death upon the cross, after which he descended into Hades
+ (Hell), to suffer for a time (three days) for the inmates of that dreadful
+ and horrible prison, that he might show he sympathized with them. After
+ his resurrection, and before his ascension to heaven, as well as during
+ his earthly sojourn, he imparted to the world some beautiful, lofty, and
+ soul-elevating precepts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The object of his mission," says a writer, "was to instruct those who
+ were straying from the right path, and expiate the sins of mortals by his
+ own suffering, and procure for them a happy entrance into Paradise by
+ obedience to his precepts and prayers to his name." (Ibid.) "His followers
+ always speak of him as one with God from all eternity." (Ibid.) His most
+ common title was "the Savior of the World." He was also called "the
+ Benevolent One," "the Dispenser of Grace," "the Source of Life," "the
+ Light of the World," "the True Light," etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His mother was a very pure, refined, pious and devout woman; never
+ indulged in any impure thoughts, words or actions. She was so much
+ esteemed for her virtues and for being the mother of a God, that an escort
+ of ladies attended her wherever she went. The trees bowed before her as
+ she passed through the forest, and flowers sprang up wherever her foot
+ pressed the ground. She was saluted as "the Holy Virgin, Queen of Heaven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that when her divine child was born, he stood upright and
+ proclaimed, "I will put an end to the sufferings and sorrows of the
+ world." And immediately a light shone around about the young Messiah. He
+ spent much time in retirement, and like Christ in another respect, was
+ once tempted by a demon who offered him all the honors and wealth of the
+ world. But he rebuked the devil, saying, "Be gone; hinder me not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He began, like Christ, to preach his gospel and heal the sick when about
+ twenty-eight years of age. And it is declared, "the blind saw, the deaf
+ heard, the dumb spoke, the lame danced and the crooked became straight."
+ Hence, the people declared, "He is no mortal child, but an incarnation of
+ the Deity." His religion was of a very superior character. He proclaimed,
+ "My law is a law of grace for all." His religion knew no race, no sex, no
+ caste, and no aristocratic priesthood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It taught," says Max Muller, "the equality of all men, and the
+ brotherhood of the human race." "All men, without regard to rank, birth or
+ nation," says Dunckar, "form, according to Budha's view, one great
+ suffering association in this earthly vale of tears; therefore, the
+ commandments of love, forbearance, patience, compassion, pity,
+ brotherliness of all men." Klaproth (a German professor of oriental
+ languages) says this religion is calculated to ennoble the human race. "It
+ is difficult to comprehend," says a French writer (M. Leboulay), "how men,
+ not assisted by revelation, could have soared so high, and approached so
+ near the truth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dunckar says this oriental God "taught self-denial, chastity, temperance,
+ the control of the passions, to bear injustice from others, to suffer
+ death quietly, and without hate of your persecutor, to grieve not for
+ one's own misfortunes, but for those of others." An investigation of their
+ history will show that that they lived up to these moral injunctions.
+ "Besides the five great commandments," says a Wesleyan missionary (Spense
+ Hardy) in his Dahmma Padam, "every shade of vice, hypocrisy, anger, pride,
+ suspicion, greediness, gossiping, and cruelty to animals is guarded
+ against by special precepts. Among the virtues, recommended, we find not
+ only reverence for parents, care for children, submission to authority,
+ gratitude, moderation in all things, submission in time of trial,
+ equanimity at all times, but virtues, unknown in some systems of morality,
+ such as the duty of forgiving injuries, and not rewarding evil for evil."
+ And we will add, both charity and love are specially recommended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have it also upon the authority of Dunckar that "Budha proclaimed that
+ salvation and redemption have come for all, even the lowest and most
+ abject classes." For he broke down the iron caste of the Brahminical code
+ which had so long ruled India, and aimed to place all mankind upon a
+ level. His followers have been stigmatize! by Christian professors as
+ "idolaters." But Sir John Bowling, in his "Kingdom and People of Siam,"
+ denies that they are idolaters&mdash;"because," says he, "no Budhist
+ believes his image to be God, or anything more than an outward
+ representation of Deity." Their deific images are looked upon with the
+ same views and feelings as a Christian venerates the photograph of his
+ deceased friend. Hence, if one is an idolater, the other is also. With
+ respect to the charge of polytheism, Missionary Hue says, "that although
+ their religion embraces many inferior deities, who fill the same offices
+ that angels do under the Christian system, yet,"&mdash;adds M. Hue&mdash;"monotheism
+ is the real character of Buddhism;" and confirms the statement by the
+ testimony of a Thibetan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It should be noted here that although Budhism succeeded in converting
+ about three hundred millions, or one-third of the inhabitants of the
+ globe, it was never propagated by the sword, and never persecuted the
+ disciples of other religions. Its conquests were made by a rational appeal
+ to the human mind. Mr. Hodgson says, "It recognizes the infinite capacity
+ of the human intellect." And St. Hilaire declares, "Love for all beings is
+ its nucleus; and to love our enemies, and not prosecute, are the virtues
+ of this people." Max Muller says, "Its moral code, taken by itself, is one
+ of the most perfect the world has ever known."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its five commandments are:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Thou shalt not kill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Thou shalt not steal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Thou shalt not commit adultery or any impurity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Thou shall not lie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Thou shalt not intoxicate thyself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To establish the above cited doctrines and precepts, Budha sent forth his
+ disciples into the world to preach his gospel to every creature. And if
+ any convert had committed a sin in word, thought or deed, he was to
+ confess and repent. One of the tracts which they distributed declares,
+ "There is undoubtedly a life after this, in which the virtuous may expect
+ the reward of their good deeds.... Judgment takes place immediately after
+ death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Budha and his followers set an example to the world of enduring opposition
+ and persecution with great patience and non-resistance. And some of them
+ suffered martyrdom rather than abandon their principles, and gloried in
+ thus sealing their doctrines with their lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A story is told of a rich merchant by the name of Purna, forsaking all to
+ follow his lord and master; and also of his encountering and talking with
+ a woman of low caste at a well, which reminds us of similar incidents in
+ the history of Christ. But his enemies, becoming jealous and fearful of
+ his growing power, finally crucified him near the foot of the Nepaul
+ mountains, about 600 B. C. But after his death, burial and resurrection,
+ we are told he ascended back to heaven, where millions of his followers
+ believed he had existed with Brahma from all eternity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Note.&mdash;In the cases of crucifixion which follow, nothing like
+ accuracy can be expected with respect to the dates of their occurrence, as
+ all history covering the period beyond the modern era, or prior to the
+ time of Alexander the Great (330 B. C.) is involved in a labyrinth of
+ uncertainty with respect to dates. Hence, bible chronologists differ to
+ the extent of three thousand years with respect to the time of every event
+ recorded in the Old Testament. Compare the Hebrew and Septuagint versions
+ of the bible: The former makes the world three thousand nine hundred and
+ forty four, and the latter five thousand two hundred and seventy years old
+ at the birth of Christ&mdash;a difference of thirteen hundred and
+ twenty-six years. And other translations differ still more widely. All the
+ cases of crucifixion which follow occurred before the time of Christ, but
+ the exact time of many of them cannot be fixed with certainty. ]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III.&mdash;THAMMUZ OF SYRIA CRUCIFIED, 1160 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of this God is furnished us in fragments by several writers,
+ portions of which will be found in other chapters of this work. The
+ fullest history extant of this God-Savior is probably that of Ctesias (400
+ B. C.), author of "Persika." The poet has perpetuated his memory in rhyme.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Trust, ye saints, your Lord restored,
+ Trust ye in your risen Lord;
+ For the pains which Thammuz endured
+ Our salvation have procured."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Higgins informs us (Anac. vol. i. p. 246) that this God was crucified
+ at the period above named, as a sin-atoning offering The stanza just
+ quoted is predicated upon the following Greek text, translated by Godwin:
+ "Trust ye in God, for out of his loins salvation has come unto us." Julius
+ Firmicus speaks of this God "rising from the dead for the salvation of the
+ world." The Christian writer Parkhurst alludes to this Savior as preceding
+ the advent of Christ, and as filling to some extent the same chapter in
+ sacred history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV.&mdash;CRUCIFIXION OF WITTOBA OF THE TELINGONESS, 552 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have a very conclusive historical proof of the crucifixion of this
+ heathen God. Mr. Higgins tells us, "He is represented in his history with
+ nail-holes in his hands and the soles of his feet." Nails, hammers and
+ pincers are constantly seen represented on his crucifixes, and are objects
+ of adoration among his followers. And the iron crown of Lombardy has
+ within it a nail of what is claimed as his true original cross, and is
+ much admired and venerated on that account. The worship of this crucified
+ God, according to our author, prevails chiefly in the Travancore and other
+ southern countries in the region of Madura.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V.&mdash;IAO OF NEPAUL CRUCIFIED, 622 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the crucifixion of this ancient Savior, we have this very
+ definite and specific testimony that "he was crucified on a tree in
+ Nepaul." (See Georgius, p. 202.) The name of this incarnate God and
+ oriental Savior occurs frequently in the holy bibles and sacred books of
+ other countries. Some suppose that lao (often spelt Jao) is the root of
+ the name of the Jewish God Jehovah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI.&mdash;HESUS OF THE CELTIC DRUIDS CRUCIFIED, 834 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Higgins informs us that the Celtic Druids represent their God Hesus as
+ having been crucified with a lamb on one side and an elephant on the
+ other, and that this occurred long before the Christian era. Also that a
+ representation of it may now be seen upon "the fire-tower of Brechin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this symbolical representation of the crucifixion, the elephant, being
+ the largest animal known, was chosen to represent the magnitude of the
+ sins of the world, while the lamb, from its proverbial innocent nature,
+ was chosen to represent the innocency of the victim (the God offered as a
+ propitiatory sacrifice). And thus we have "the Lamb of God taking away the
+ sins of the world"&mdash;symbolical language used with respect to the
+ offering of Jesus Christ. And here is indicated very clearly the origin of
+ the figure. It is evidently borrowed from the Druids. We have the
+ statement of the above writer that this legend was found amongst the
+ Canutes of Gaul long before Jesus Christ was known to history. (See Anac.
+ vol. ii. p. 130.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII.&mdash;QUEXALCOTE OF MEXICO CRUCIFIED, 587 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Historical authority, relative to the crucifixion of this Mexican God, and
+ to his execution upon the cross as a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins
+ of mankind, is explicit, unequivocal and ineffaceable. The evidence is
+ tangible, and indelibly engraven upon steel and metal plates. One of these
+ plates represents him as having been crucified on a mountain; another
+ represents him as having been crucified in the heavens, as St. Justin
+ tells us Christ was. According to another writer, he is sometimes
+ represented as having been nailed to a cross, and by other accounts as
+ hanging with a cross in his hand. The "Mexican Antiquities" (vol. vi. p.
+ 166) says, "Quexalcote is represented in the paintings of 'Codex
+ Borgianus' as nailed to the cross." Sometimes two thieves are represented
+ as having been crucified with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the advent of this crucified Savior and Mexican God was long anterior
+ to the era of Christ, is admitted by Christian writers, as we have shown
+ elsewhere. In the work above named "Codex Borgianus," may be found the
+ account, not only of his crucifixion, but of his death, burial, descent
+ into hell, and resurrection on the third day. And another work, entitled
+ "Codex Vaticanus," contains the story of his immaculate birth by a virgin
+ mother by the name of Chimalman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many other incidences are found related of him in his sacred biography, in
+ which we find the most striking counterparts to the more modern gospel
+ story of Jesus Christ, such as his forty days' temptation and fasting, his
+ riding on an ass, his purification in the temple, his baptism and
+ regeneration by water, his forgiving of sins, being anointed with oil,
+ etc. "All these things, and many more, found related of this Mexican God
+ in their sacred books," says Lord Kingsborough (a Christian writer), "are
+ curious and mysterious." (See the books above cited.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII.&mdash;QUIRINUS OF ROME CRUCIFIED, 506 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crucifixion of this Roman Savior is briefly noticed by Mr. Higgins,
+ and is remarkable for presenting (like other crucified Gods) several
+ parallel features to that of the Judean Savior, not only in the
+ circumstances related as attending his crucifixion, but also in a
+ considerable portion of his antecedent life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is represented, like Christ:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. As having been conceived and brought forth by a virgin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. His life was sought by the reigning king (Amulius),
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. He was of royal blood, his mother being of kingly descent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. He was "put to death by wicked hands"&mdash;i. e., crucified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. At his mortal exit the whole earth is said to have been enveloped in
+ darkness, as in the case of Christ, Chrishna, and Prometheus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. And finally he is resurrected, and ascends back to heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX.&mdash;(ÆSCHYLUS) PROMETHEUS CRUCIFIED, 547 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the account of the crucifixion of Prometheus of Caucasus, as furnished
+ by Seneca, Hesiod, and other writers, it is stated that he was nailed to
+ an upright beam of timber, to which were affixed extended arms of wood,
+ and that this cross was situated near the Caspian Straits. The modern
+ story of this crucified God, which represents him as having been bound to
+ a rock for thirty years, while vultures preyed upon his vitals, Mr.
+ Higgins pronounces an impious Christian fraud. "For," says this learned
+ historical writer, "I have seen the account which declares he was nailed
+ to a cross with hammer and nails." (Anac. vol. i. 327.) Confirmatory of
+ this statement is the declaration of Mr. Southwell, that "he exposed
+ himself to the wrath of God in his zeal to save mankind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poet, in portraying his propitiatory offering, says
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Lo! streaming from the fatal tree
+ His all atoning blood,
+ Is this the Infinite?&mdash;
+ Yes, 'tis he,
+ Prometheus, and a God!
+
+ "Well might the sun in darkness hide,
+ And veil his glories in,
+ When God, the great Prometheus, died
+ For man the creature's sin."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The "New American Cyclopedia" (vol. i. p. 157) contains the following
+ significant declaration relative to this sin-atoning oriental Savior: "It
+ is doubtful whether there is to be found in the whole range of Greek
+ letters deeper pathos than that of the divine woe of the beneficent
+ demigod Prometheus, crucified on his Scythian crags for his love to
+ mortals." Here we have first-class authority for the crucifixion of this
+ oriental God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Lempriere's "Classical Dictionary," Higgins' "Anacalypsis," and other
+ works, may be found the following particulars relative to the final exit
+ of the God above named, viz.:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. That the whole frame of nature became convulsed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The earth shook, the rocks were rent, the graves were opened, and in a
+ storm, which seemed to threaten the dissolution of the universe, the
+ solemn scene forever closed, and "Our Lord and Savior" Prometheus gave up
+ the ghost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The cause for which he suffered," says Mr. Southwell, "was his love for
+ the human race." Mr. Taylor makes the statement in his Syntagma (p. 95),
+ that the whole story of Prometheus' crucifixion, burial and resurrection
+ was acted in pantomime in Athens five hundred years before Christ, which
+ proves its great antiquity. Minutius Felix, one of the most popular
+ Christian writers of the second century (in his "Octavius," sect. 29),
+ thus addresses the people of Rome: "Your victorious trophies not only
+ represent a simple cross, but a cross with a man on it," and this man St.
+ Jerome calls a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These coincidences furnish still further proof that the tradition of the
+ crucifixion of Gods has been very long prevalent among the heathen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X.&mdash;CRUCIFIXION OF THULIS OF EGYPT, 1700 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thulis of Egypt, whence comes "Ultima Thule," died the death of the cross
+ about thirty-five hundred years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ultima Thule was the island which marked the ultimate bounds of the
+ extensive empire of this legitimate descendant of the Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Egyptian Savior appears also to have been known as Zulis, and with
+ this name&mdash;Mr. Wilkison tells us&mdash;"his history is curiously
+ illustrated in the sculptures, made seventeen hundred years B. C., of a
+ small, retired chamber lying nearly over the western adytum of the
+ temple-" We are told twenty-eight lotus plants near his grave indicate the
+ number of years he lived on the earth. After suffering a violent death, he
+ was buried, but rose again, ascended into heaven, and there became "the
+ judge of the dead," or of souls in a future state. Wilkison says he came
+ down from heaven to benefit mankind, and that he was said to be "full of
+ grace and truth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI.&mdash;CRUCIFIXION OF INDRA OF THIBET, 725 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The account of the crucifixion of the God and Savior Indra may be found in
+ Georgius, Thibetinum Alphabetum, p. 230. A brief notice of the case is all
+ we have space for here. In the work just referred to may be found plates
+ representing this Thibetan Savior as having been nailed to the cross.
+ There are five wounds, representing the nailholes and the piercing of the
+ side. The antiquity of the story is beyond dispute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marvelous stories are told of the birth of the Divine Redeemer. His mother
+ was a virgin of black complexion, and hence his complexion was of the
+ ebony hue, as in the case of Christ and some other sin-atoning Saviors. He
+ descended from heaven on a mission of benevolence, and ascended back to
+ the heavenly mansion after his crucifixion. He led a life of strict
+ celibacy, which, he taught, was essential to true holiness. He inculcated
+ great tenderness toward all living beings. He could walk upon the water or
+ upon the air; he could foretell future events with great accuracy. He
+ practiced the most devout contemplation, severe discipline of the body and
+ mind, and acquired the most complete subjection of his passions. He was
+ worshiped as a God who had existed as a spirit from all eternity, and his
+ followers were called "Heavenly Teachers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII.&mdash;ALCESTOS OF EURIPIDES CRUCIFIED, 600 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "English Classical Journal" (vol. xxxvii.) furnishes us with the story
+ of another crucified God, known as Alcestos&mdash;a female God or Goddess;
+ and in this respect, it is a novelty in sacred history, being the first,
+ if not the only example of a feminine God atoning for the sins of the
+ world upon the cross. The doctrine of the trinity and atoning offering for
+ sin was inculcated as a part of her religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIII.&mdash;ATYS OF PHRYGIA CRUCIFIED, 1170 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Speaking of this crucified Messiah, the Anacalypsis informs us that
+ several histories are given of him, but all concur in representing him as
+ having been an atoning offering for sin. And the Latin phrase "suspensus
+ lingo," found in his history, indicates the manner of his death. He was
+ suspended on a tree, crucified, buried and rose again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIV.&mdash;CRITE OF CHALDEA CRUCIFIED, 1200 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chaldeans, as Mr. Higgins informs us, have noted in their sacred books
+ the account of the crucifixion of a God with the above name. He was also
+ known as "the Redeemer," and was styled "the Ever Blessed Son of God,"
+ "the Savior of the Race," "the Atoning Offering for an Angry God." And
+ when he was offered up, both heaven and earth were shaken to their
+ foundations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XV.&mdash;BALI OF ORISSA CRUCIFIED, 725 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We learn by the oriental books, that in the district of country known as
+ Orissa, in Asia, they have the story of a crucified God, known by several
+ names, including the above, all of which, we are told, signify "Lord
+ Second," having reference to him as the second person or second member of
+ the trinity, as most of the crucified Gods occupied that position in the
+ trial of deities constituting the trinity, as indicated by the language
+ "Father, Son, and Holy Ghost," the Son, in all cases, being the atoning
+ offering, "the crucified Redeemer," and the second person of the trinity.
+ This God Bali was also called Baliu, and sometimes Bel. The Anacalypsis
+ informs us (vol. i. 257) that monuments of this crucified God, bearing
+ great age, may be found amid the ruins of the magnificent city of
+ Mahabalipore, partially buried amongst the figures of the temple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVI.&mdash;MITHRA OF PERSIA CRUCIFIED, 600 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Persian God, according to Mr. Higgins, was "slain upon the cross to
+ make atonement for mankind, and to take away the sins of the world." He
+ was reputedly born on the twenty-fifth day of December, and crucified on a
+ tree. It is a remarkable circumstance that two Christian writers (Mr.
+ Faber and Mr. Bryant) both speak of his "being slain," and yet both omit
+ to speak of the manner in which he was put to death. And the same policy
+ has been pursued with respect to other crucified Gods of the pagans, as we
+ have shown elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our list is full, or we might note other cases of crucifixion. Devatat of
+ Siam, Ixion of Rome, Apollonius of Tyana in Cappadocia, are all reported
+ in history as having "died the death of the cross."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ixion, 400 B. C., according to Nimrod, was crucified on a wheel, the rim
+ representing the world, and the spokes constituting the cross. It is
+ declared, "He bore the burden of the world" (that is, "the sins of the
+ world") on his back while suspended on the cross. Hence, he was sometimes
+ called "the crucified spirit of the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to Apollonius, it is a remarkable, if not a suspicious
+ circumstance that should not be passed unnoticed, that several Christian
+ writers, while they recount a long list of miracles and remarkable
+ incidents in the life of this Cappadocian Savior, extending through his
+ whole life, and forming a parallel to similar incidents of the Christian
+ Savior, not a word is said about his crucifixion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And a similar policy has been pursued with respect to Mithra and other
+ sin-atoning Gods, including Chrishna and Prometheus, as before noticed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This important chapter in their history has been omitted by Christian
+ writers for fear the relation of it would damage the credibility of the
+ crucifixion of Christ, or lessen its spiritual force. For, like Paul, they
+ were "determined to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified" (i
+ Cor. ii. 2) i. e., to <i>know</i> no other God had been crucified but <i>Jesus
+ Christ</i>. They thus exalted the tradition of the crucifixion into the
+ most important dogma of the Christian faith. Hence, their efforts to
+ conceal from the public a knowledge of the fact that it is of pagan
+ origin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By reference to Mackey's "Lexicon of Freemasonry" (p. 35) we learn that
+ Freemasons secretly taught the doctrine of the crucifixion, atonement and
+ resurrection long anterior to the Christian era, and that similar
+ doctrines were taught in "all the ancient mysteries," thus proving that
+ the conception of these tenets of faith existed at a very early period of
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it may be noted here, that the doctrine of salvation by crucifixion
+ had likewise, with most of the ancient forms of religious faith, an
+ astronomical representation&mdash;i. e., a representation in astronomical
+ symbols. According to the emblematical figures comprised in their astral
+ worship, people were saved by the sun's crucifixion or crossification,
+ realized by <i>crossing</i> over the equinoctial line into the season of
+ spring, and thereby gave out a saving heat and light to the world and
+ stimulated the generative organs of animal and vegetable life. It was from
+ this conception that the ancients were in the habit of carving or painting
+ the organs of generation upon the walls of their holy temples. The blood
+ of the grape, which was ripened by the heat of the sun, as he crossed over
+ by resurrection into spring, (i. e., was crucified), was symbolically "the
+ blood of the cross," or "the blood of the Lamb."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we should be met here with the statement, that the stories of the
+ ancient crucifixions of Gods were mere myths or fables, unwarrantably
+ saddled on to their histories as mere romance, and have no foundation in
+ fact, we reply&mdash;there is as much ground for suspecting the same thing
+ as being true of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most celebrated and most frequently quoted Christian writers of
+ the ancient bishops (Irenæus) declares upon the authority of the martyr
+ Polycarp, who claimed to have got it from St. John and all the elders of
+ Asia, that Jesus Christ was not crucified, but lived to be about fifty
+ years old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We find there has always been a margin for doubt amongst his own followers
+ as to the fact of his crucifixion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the early Christians and cotemporary Jews and Gentiles doubted it,
+ and some openly disputed its ever having taken place. Others bestowed upon
+ it a mere spiritual signification, and not a few considered it symbolical
+ of a "holy life." One circumstance, calculated to lead to the entire
+ discredit of the story of the crucifixion of Christ, is the relation, in
+ connection with it, of a violent convulsion of nature, and the
+ resurrection of the long-buried saints&mdash;events not supported by any
+ authentic cotemporaneous history, sacred or profane. (See Chap. XVII.,
+ Aphanasia).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as these events must be set down as fabulous, they leave the mind in
+ doubt with respect to the fact of the crucifixion itself, especially when
+ the many absurdities involved in the doctrine of the crucifixion are
+ brought to view, in connection with it, some of them so palpably erroneous
+ that an unlettered savage could see and point them out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indian chief Red Jacket is reported to have replied to the Christian
+ missionaries, when they urged upon his attention the benefits of Christ's
+ death by crucifixion, "Brethren, if you white men murdered the son of the
+ Great Spirit, we Indians have nothing to do with it, and it is none of our
+ affair. If he had come among us, we would not have killed him. We would
+ have treated him well. You must make amends for that crime yourselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This view of the crucifixion suggested to the mind of an illiterate
+ heathen we deem more sensible and rational than that of the orthodox
+ Christians, which makes it a meritorious act and a moral necessity. For
+ this would not only exonerate Judas from any criminality or guilt for the
+ part he took in the affair, but would entitle him as well as Christ to the
+ honorable title of a "Savior" for performing an act without which the
+ crucifixion and consequent salvation of the world could not have been
+ effected. If it was necessary for Christ to suffer death upon the cross as
+ an atonement for sin, then the act of crucifixion was right, and a
+ monument should be erected to the memory of Judas for bringing it about.
+ We challenge Christian logic to find a flaw in this argument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And another important consideration arises here. If the inhabitants of
+ this planet required the murderous death of a God as an atonement, we must
+ presume that the eighty-five millions of inhabited worlds recently
+ discovered by astronomers are, or have been, in equal need of a divine
+ atonement. And this would require the crucifixion of eighty-five millions
+ of Gods. Assuming one of these Gods to be crucified every minute, the
+ whole would occupy a period of nearly twenty years. This would be killing
+ off Gods at rather a rapid rate, and would make the work of the atonement
+ and salvation a very murderous and bloody affair&mdash;a conception which
+ brings to the mind a series of very revolting reflections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conception of Gods coming down from heaven, and being born of virgins,
+ and dying a violent death for the moral blunders of the people, originated
+ in an age of the world when man was a savage, and dwelt exclusively upon
+ the animal plane, and blood was the requisition for every offense. And it
+ was an age when no world was known to exist but the one we inhabit. The
+ stars were then supposed to be mere blazing tapers set in the azure vault
+ to light this pygmy planet, or peep-holes for Gods to look out of heaven,
+ to see and learn what is going on below. Such conceptions are in perfect
+ keeping with the doctrine of the atoning crucifixion of Gods, which could
+ never have originated or been entertained for a moment by an astronomer,
+ with a knowledge of the existence of innumerable inhabited worlds. For as
+ there is to the monotheistic Christian but one God, or Son of God, to be
+ offered, he must be incarnated and crucified every day for a thousand
+ years to make a sin-offering for each of these worlds&mdash;a conception
+ too monstrous and preposterous to find a lodgment in a rational mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ORIGIN OF THE BELIEF OF THE CRUCIFIXION OF GODS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has always been presumed that death, and especially death by
+ crucifixion, involved the highest state of suffering possible to be
+ endured by mortals. Hence, the Gods must suffer in this way as an example
+ of courage and fortitude, and to show themselves willing to undergo all
+ the affliction and misery incident to the lot, and unavoidable to the
+ lives, of their devoted worshipers. They must not only be equal, but
+ superior to their subjects in this respect Hence, they would not merely
+ die, but choose, or at least uncomplainingly submit to the most ignoble
+ and ignominious mode of suffering death that could be devised, and that
+ was crucifixion. This gave the highest finishing touch to the drama.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus the legend of the crucifixion became the crowning chapter, the
+ aggrandizing episode in the history of their lives. It was presumed that
+ nothing less than a God could endure such excruciating tortures without
+ complaining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence, when the victim was reported to have submitted with such fortitude
+ that no murmur was heard to issue from his lips, this circumstance of
+ itself was deemed sufficient evidence of his Godship. The story of the
+ crucifixion, therefore, whether true or false, deified or helped deify
+ many great men and exalt them to the rank of Gods. Though some of the
+ disciples of Budhism, and some of the primitive professors of Christianity
+ also (including, according to Christian history, Peter and his brother
+ Andrew), voluntarily chose this mode of dying in imitation of their
+ crucified Lord, without experiencing, however, the desired promotion to
+ divine honors. They failed of an exaltation to the deityship, and hence
+ are not now worshiped as Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian reader, what can you now make of the story of the crucifixion of
+ Jesus Christ but a borrowed legend&mdash;at least the story of his being
+ crucified <i>as a God!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Note.&mdash;The author desires it to be understood with respect to the
+ cases of crucifixion here briefly narrated, that they are not vouched
+ foras actual occurrences, of which there is much ground to doubt. It has
+ neither been his aim or desire to prove them to be real historical events,
+ nor to establish any certain number of cases. Indeed, he deems it
+ unimportant to know, if it could be determined, whether they are fact or
+ fiction, or whether one God was crucified, or many. The moral lesson
+ designed to be taught by this chapter is, simply, that the belief in the
+ crucifixion of Gods was prevalent in various oriental or heathen countries
+ long prior to the reported crucifixion of Christ. If this point is
+ established&mdash;which he feels certain no reader will dispute&mdash;then
+ he is not concerned to know whether he has made out sixteen cases of
+ crucifixion or not. Six will prove it as well as sixteen. In fact, one
+ case is sufficient to establish the important proposition in view. The
+ reader is, therefore, left to decide each case for himself, according as
+ he may value the evidence presented. More authorities could have been
+ adduced, and a more extended history presented of each God brought to
+ notice. But this would have operated to exclude other matter, which the
+ author considers of more importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. THE APHANASIA, OR DARKNESS AT THE CRUCIFIXION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MATTHEW tells us (xxvii. 31) that when Christ was crucified, there was
+ darkness all over the land for three hours, and "the earth did quake, and
+ the rocks were rent, and many of the saints came out of their graves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here we have a series of events spoken of so strange, so unusual and so
+ extraordinary that, had they occurred, they must have attracted the
+ attention of the whole world&mdash;especially the amazing scene of the
+ sun's withdrawing his light and ceasing to shine, and thereby causing an
+ almost total darkness near the middle of the day. And yet no writer of
+ that age or country, or any other age or country, mentions the
+ circumstance but Matthew. A phenomenon so terrible and so serious in its
+ effects as literally to unhinge the planets and partially disorganize the
+ universe must have excited the alarm and amazement of the whole world, and
+ caused a serious disturbance in the affairs of nations. And yet strange,
+ superlatively strange, not one of the numerous historians of that age
+ makes the slightest allusion to such an astounding event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even Seneca and the elder Pliny, who so particularly and minutely
+ chronicle the events of those times, are as silent as the grave relative
+ to this greatest event in the history of the world. Nor do Mark, Luke or
+ John, who all furnish us with a history of the crucifixion, make the
+ slightest hint at any of these wonder-exciting events, except Mark's
+ incidental allusion to the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gibbon says, "It happened during the life of Seneca and the elder Pliny,
+ who must have experienced its immediate effects, or received the earliest
+ intelligence of the prodigy. Each of these philosophers, in a labored
+ work, has recorded all the phenomena of Nature's earthquakes, meteors and
+ eclipses, which his indefatigable curiosity could collect. Both the one
+ and the other have omitted to mention the greatest phenomenon, to which
+ the mortal eye has been witness since the creation of the world." (Gibbon,
+ p. 451.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. With reference to the "bodies" of the dead saints coming out of their
+ tombs (for it is declared their "bodies arose," see Matt, xxvii. 52), many
+ rather curious and puzzling questions might be started, which would at
+ once disclose its utter absurdity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We might ask, for example
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Who were those "many saints" who came out of their graves, seeing there
+ were as yet but few Christians to occupy graves, if they had been all
+ dead, as the enumeration at Antioch made out only one hundred and twenty?
+ (See Acts.) 2. How long had they lain in their graves?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. How long since their bodies had turned to dust, and been food for
+ worms? 4. And would not those worms have to be hunted up and required to
+ disgorge the contents of their stomachs in order to furnish the saints
+ with the materials for their bodies again? 5. And were the shrouds or
+ grave clothes of those saints also resurrected? or did they travel about
+ in a state of nudity? 6. For what purpose were they re-animated? 7. And
+ should not Matthew have furnished us, by way of proof, with the names of
+ some of these ghostly visitors? 8. How long did they live the second time?
+ 9. Did they die again, or did they ascend to heaven with their new-made
+ bodies? 10. What business did they engage in? 11. Why have we not some
+ account of what they said and did? 12. And what finally became of them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until these questions are rationally answered, the story must be regarded
+ as too incredible and too ludicrous to merit serious notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Nearly all the phenomena represented as occurring at the crucifixion of
+ Christ are reported to have been witnessed also at the final exit of
+ Senerus, an ancient pagan demigod, who figured in history at a still more
+ remote period of time. And similar incidents are related likewise in the
+ legendary histories of several other heathen demigods and great men
+ partially promoted to the honor of Gods. In the time-honored records of
+ the oldest religion in the world, it is declared, "A cloud surrounded the
+ moon; and the sun was darkened at noonday, and the sky rained fire and
+ ashes during the crucifixion of the Indian God Chrishna." In the case of
+ Osiris of Egypt, Mr. Southwell says, "As his birth had been attended by an
+ eclipse of the sun, so his death was attended by a still greater darkness
+ of the solar orb." At the critical juncture of the crucifixion of
+ Prometheus, it is declared, "The whole frame of nature became convulsed,
+ the earth shook, the rocks were rent, the graves opened, and in a storm
+ which threatened the dissolution of the universe, the scene closed"
+ (Higgins). According to Livy, the last hours of the mortal demise of
+ Romulus were marked by a storm and by a solar eclipse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And similar stories are furnished us by several writers of Cæsar and
+ Alexander the Great. With respect to the latter, Mr. Nimrod says, "Six
+ hours of darkness formed his aphanasia, and his soul, like Polycarp's, was
+ seen to fly away in the form of a dove." (Nimrod, vol. iii. p. 458.) "It
+ is remarkable," says a writer, "what a host of respectable authorities
+ vouch for an acknowledged fable&mdash;the preternatural darkness which
+ followed Cæsar's death." Gibbon alludes to this event when he speaks of
+ "the singular defect of light which followed the murder of Caesar." He
+ likewise says, "This season of darkness had already been celebrated by
+ most of the poets and historians of that memorable age." (Gibbon, p. 452.)
+ It is very remarkable that Pliny speaks of a darkness attending Cæsar's
+ death, but omits to mention such a scene as attending the crucifixion of
+ Christ. Virgil also seeks to exalt this royal personage by relating this
+ prodigy. (See his Georgius, p. 465.) Another writer says, "Similar
+ prodigies were supposed or said to accompany the great men of former
+ days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let the reader make a note of this fact&mdash;that the same story was told
+ of the graves opening, and the dead rising at the final mortal exit of
+ several heathen Gods and several great men long before it was penned as a
+ chapter in the history of Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shakespeare, in his Hamlet says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "In the most high and palmy days of Rome,
+ A little ere the mighty Julius fell&mdash;
+ The graves stood tenantless, and the sheeted dead
+ Did squeak and gibber in the Roman streets."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These historical citations strongly press the conclusion that this portion
+ of the history of Christ was borrowed from old pagan legends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Many cases are recorded in history of the light of the sun being
+ obscured at midday so as to result in almost total darkness, when it was
+ known not to be produced by an eclipse. And it is probable that these
+ natural events furnish the basis in part for those wild legends we have
+ brought to notice. Humboldt relates in his Cosmos, that, "in the year 358,
+ before the earthquake of Numidia, the darkness was very dense for two or
+ three hours." Another obscuration of the sun took place in the year 360,
+ which lasted five or six hours, and was so dense that the stars were
+ visible at midday. Another circumstance of this kind was witnessed on the
+ nineteenth of May, 1730, which lasted eight hours. And so great was the
+ darkness, that candles and lamps had to be lighted at midday to dine by.
+ Similar events are chronicled for the years 1094, 1206, 1241, 1547, and
+ 1730. And if any such solar obscurations occurred near the mortal exit of
+ any of the Gods above named, of course they would be seized on as a part
+ of their practical history wrought up into hyperbole, and interwoven in
+ their narratives, to give eclat to the pageantry of their biographies&mdash;a
+ fact which helps to solve the mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ORIGIN OF THE STORY OF THE APHANASIA AT THE CRUCIFIXION.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is but little ground to doubt but that the various stories of a
+ similar character then current in different countries, as shown above,
+ first suggested the thought to Christ's biographers of investing history
+ with the incredible events reported as being connected with the
+ crucifixion. The principal motive, however, seems to have grown out of a
+ desire to fulfill a prophecy of the Jewish prophet Joel, as we may find
+ many of the important miraculous events ingrafted into Christ's history
+ were recorded by way of fulfilling some prophecy. "That the prophecy might
+ be fulfilled" is the very language his evangelical biographers use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joel's prediction runs thus: "And I will show wonders in the heavens, and
+ in the earth, flood and fire, and pillars of smoke. The sun shall be
+ turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and
+ terrible day of the Lord come." (Joel ii. 30.) A little impartial
+ investigation will satisfy any unprejudiced mind that this poetic rhapsody
+ has not the most remote allusion to the closing events in the life of
+ Christ, and was not intended to have.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his biographers, writing a long time after his death, supposing and
+ assuming that this and various other texts, which they quote from the
+ prophets, had reference to him, and had been fulfilled, incorporated it
+ into his history as a part of his practical life. The conviction that the
+ prophecy <i>must have been fulfilled</i>, without knowing that it had,
+ added to similar stories of other Gods, with which Christ's history became
+ confounded, misled them into the conclusion that they were warranted in
+ assuming that the incredible events they name were really witnessed at the
+ mortal termination of Christ's earthly career, when they did not know it,
+ and could not have known it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This view of the case becomes very rational and very forcible when we
+ observe various texts quoted from the prophets by the gospel writers, or,
+ rather, most butcheringly misquoted, tortured or distorted into Messianic
+ prophecies, when the context shows they have no reference to Christ
+ whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. DESCENT OF THE SAVIORS INTO HELL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE next most important event in the histories of the Saviors after their
+ crucifixion, and the act of giving up the ghost, is that of their descent
+ into the infernal regions. That Jesus Christ descended into hell after his
+ crucifixion is not expressly taught in the Christian bible, but it is a
+ matter of such obvious inference from several passages of scripture, the
+ early Christians taught it as a scriptural doctrine. Mr. Sears, a
+ Christian writer, tells us that "on the doctrine of Christ's underground
+ mission the early Christians were united.... It was a point too well
+ settled to admit of dispute." (See Foregleams of Immortality, p. 262).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And besides this testimony, the "Apostles' Creed" teaches the doctrine
+ explicitly, which was once as good authority throughout Christendom as the
+ bible itself; indeed, it may be considered as constituting a part of the
+ bible prior to the council of Nice (A. D. 325), being supposed to have
+ been written by the apostles themselves. It declares that "Jesus Christ
+ suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified (dead) and buried. He
+ descended into hell; the third day he rose again from the dead," etc. This
+ testimony is very explicit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Peter is supposed to refer to the same event when he says, "being put
+ to death in the flesh, but quickened by the spirit, by which also he went
+ and preached unto the spirits in prison." (i Peter iii. 18.) The word
+ prison, which occurs in this text, has undoubted reference to the
+ Christian fabled hell. For no possible sense can be attached to the word
+ prison in this connection without such a construction. Where have spirits
+ ever been supposed to be imprisoned but in hell? And then we find a text
+ in the Acts of the Apostles, which seems to remove all doubt in the case,
+ and banishes at once all ground for dispute. It is explicitly stated that
+ "his soul was not left in hell, neither did his flesh see corruption."
+ (Adis ii. 31.) Why talk about his soul not being left in hell if it had
+ never been there? Language could hardly be plainer. The most positive
+ declaration that Christ did descend into hell could not make it more
+ certainly a scriptural Christian doctrine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We, then, rest the case here, and proceed to enumerate other cases of Gods
+ and Saviors descending into Pandemonium (the realms of Pluto) long before
+ Jesus Christ walked on the water or on the earth. It is unquestionably
+ stated in the Hindoo bible, written more than three thousand years ago,
+ that the Savior Chrishna "went down to hell to preach to the inmates of
+ that dark and dreary prison, with the view of reforming them, and getting
+ them back to heaven, and was willing himself to suffer to abridge the
+ period of their torment." And certainly, in the midst of the fire and
+ smoke of brimstone, it could not have been hard to effect their conversion
+ or repentance. One writer tells us that "so great was his (Chrishna's)
+ tenderness, that he even descended into hell to teach souls in bondage."
+ Now observe how much "teaching souls in bondage" sounds like "preaching to
+ souls in prison," as Peter represents Christ as doing. And can any reader
+ doubt that the meaning in the two cases is the same? And must we not
+ confess that we are greatly indebted to the Hindoo bible for an
+ explanation of the two occult and mysterious texts which I have quoted
+ from the Christian bible, and which have puzzled so many learned critics
+ to explain, or find a meaning for?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have another case of a God descending into hell in the person or spirit
+ of the Savior Quexalcote of Mexico, (300 B. C.) The story will be found in
+ the Codex Borgianus, wherein is related the account of his death, and
+ burial after crucifixion, his descent into hell, and subsequent
+ resurrection. Of Adonis of Greece it is declared, that "after his descent
+ into hell, he rose again to life and immortality." Prometheus of Caucasus
+ (600 B. C.) likewise is represented as "suffering and descending into
+ hell, rising again from the dead, and ascending to heaven." Horus of
+ Greece is described as "first reigning a thousand years, then dying, and
+ being buried for three days, at the end of which time he triumphed over
+ Typhon, the evil principle, and rose again to life evermore." And Osiris
+ of Egypt also is represented as making a descent into hell, and after a
+ period of three days rose again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Homer and Virgil speak of several cases of descent into Pluto's dominions.
+ Hercules, Ulysses and Æneas are represented as performing the hellward
+ journey on, as we infer, benevolent missions. Higgins remarks, "The Gods
+ became incarnate, and descended into hell to teach humility and set an
+ example of suffering."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of their descent into hell was doubtless invented to find
+ employment for them during their three days of hibernation or conservation
+ in the tomb, that they might not appear to be really dead nor idle in the
+ time, and as a still further proof of their matchless and unrivalled
+ capacity and fortitude for suffering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the story of the three days' entombment is likewise clearly traceable
+ in appearance to the astronomical incident of the sun's lying apparently
+ dead, and buried, and motionless for nearly three days at the period of
+ the vernal epoch, from the twenty-first to the twenty-fifth of March. It
+ was a matter of belief or fancy that the sun remained stationary for about
+ three days, when he gradually rose again "into newness of life." And
+ hence, this period or era was chosen to figuratively represent the three
+ days' descent of the Gods into hell. We are told that the Persians have an
+ ancient astronomical figure representing the descent of a God, divine,
+ into hell, and returning at the time that Orsus, the goddess of spring,
+ had conquered the God or genus of winter, after the manner St. John
+ describes the Lamb of God (see Rev. xii) as conquering the dragon, which
+ may be interpreted as the Scorpion or Dragon of the first month of winter
+ (October) being conquered by the Lamb of March or spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. RESURRECTION OF THE SAVIORS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WE find presented in the canonized histories of several of the demigod
+ Saviors the following remarkable coincidences appertaining to their death:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Their resurrection from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Their lying in the tomb just three days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The resurrection of several of them about the time of the vernal
+ equinox. The twenty-fifth of March is the period assigned by the Christian
+ world generally for the resurrection of Christ, though some Christian
+ writers have assigned other dates for this event. They all agree, however,
+ that Christ rose from the dead, and that this occurred three days after
+ the entombment. Bishop Theophilus of Cesarea remarks, relative to this
+ event, "Since the birth of Christ is celebrated on the twenty-fifth of
+ December,.... so also should the resurrection of Jesus be celebrated on
+ the twenty-fifth of March, on whatever day of the week it may fall, the
+ Lord having risen again on that day." (Cent. ii. Call, p. 118.) "All the
+ ancient Christians," says a writer, "were persuaded that Christ was
+ crucified on the twenty-third of March, and rose from the dead on the
+ twenty-fifth." And accordingly Constantine and cotemporary Christians
+ celebrated the twenty-fifth of March with great eclat as the date of the
+ resurrection. The twenty-third and twenty-fifth, including the
+ twenty-fourth, would comprise a period of three days, the time of the
+ entombment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now mark, Quexalcote of Mexico, Chris of Chaldea, Quirinus of Rome,
+ Prometheus of Caucasus, Osiris of Egypt, Atys of Phrygia, and "Mithra the
+ Mediator" of Persia did, according to their respective histories, rise
+ from the dead after three days' burial, and the time of their resurrection
+ is in several cases fixed for the twenty-fifth of March. And there is an
+ account more than three thousand years old of the Hindoo crucified Savior
+ Chrishna, three days after his interment, forsaking "the silent bourn,
+ whence (as we are told) no traveler ever returns," and laying aside the
+ moldy cerements of the dead, again walking forth to mortal life, to be
+ again seen, recognized, admired, and adored by his pious, devout and
+ awe-stricken followers, and thus present to the gaze of a hoping yet
+ doubting world "the first fruits of the resurrection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the annual celebration of the resurrection of the Persian Savior
+ "Mithra the Mediator," more than three thousand years ago, the priests
+ were in the habit of exclaiming in a solemn and loud voice, "Cheer up,
+ holy mourners; your God has come again to life; his sorrows and his
+ sufferings will save you." (See Pitrat, p. 105.) The twenty-fifth of March
+ was with the ancient Persians the commencement of a new year, and on that
+ day was celebrated "the feast of the Neurone," and by the ancient Romans
+ "the festival of the Hilaria." And we find the ancients had both the
+ crucifixion and resurrection of a God symbolically and astronomically
+ represented among the plants. "Their foundation," says Clement of
+ Alexandria, "was the fictitious death and resurrection of the sun, the
+ soul of the world, the principle of life and motion." The inauguration of
+ spring (the twenty-fifth of March), and the summer solstice (the
+ twenty-fifth of June), were both important periods with the ancients.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence, the latter period was fixed on as the birthday of John the Baptist
+ (as marked in the almanacs), when the sun begins to decline southward&mdash;that
+ is, decrease. How appropriately, therefore, John is made to say, "I shall
+ decrease, but he shall increase." And the consecrated twenty-fifth of
+ March is also the day marked in our calendars as the date of the
+ conception and annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. And it was
+ likewise the period of the conception of the ancient Roman Virgin Asteria,
+ and of the ever-chaste and holy virgin Iris, as well as the time of the
+ conjugal embrace of the solar and lunar potentates of the visible
+ universe. May we not, then, very appropriately exclaim of religion and
+ astronomy, "what God hath joined together, let no man put asunder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the physical resurrection of the Christian Savior, it may
+ be observed that, aside from the physical impossibility of such an
+ occurrence, the account, as reported to us by his four "inspired" Gospel
+ biographers, are so palpably at variance with each other, so entirely
+ contradictory in their reports, as to render their testimony as infallible
+ writers utterly unworthy of credence, and impels us to the conclusion that
+ the event is both physically and historically incredible. There is
+ scarcely one incident or particular in which they all agree. They are at
+ loggerheads,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. With respect to the time of its discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The persons who made the discovery (for no witness claims to have seen
+ it).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. With respect to what took place at the sepulchre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. What Peter saw and did there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. And as to what occurred afterward, having a relation to that event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Relative to the time the witness or witnesses visited the sepulchre and
+ learned of the resurrection, Matthew (chap. xxviii.) tells us, "It was at
+ the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn;" but according to Mark
+ (xvi.), the "Sabbath was past, and the sun was rising;" while John (chap.
+ xx) declares "it was yet dark." Now there is certainly some difference
+ between the three periods, "the dawning of the day," "the rising of the
+ sun," and "the darkness of night." If the writers were <i>divinely</i>
+ inspired, there would be a perfect agreement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. With respect to the persons who first visited the sepulchre, Matthew
+ states that it was Mary Magdalene and another Mary; but Luke says it was
+ "Mary Magdalene and Joanna, and Mary the mother of James, and other
+ women;" while, according to John (and he virtually reiterates it), Mary
+ Magdalene went alone. It will be observed, then, that the first "inspired"
+ and "infallible" witness testifies there were two women; the second that
+ there were four; and the third witness declares there was but one. What
+ beautiful harmony! No court in the civilized world would accept such
+ discordant testimony!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. And in relation to what took place at the tomb, Matthew testifies that
+ "the angel of the Lord" sat upon a stone at the door of the sepulchre, and
+ told the women their Lord was risen. But Luke steps forward here, and
+ avers that instead of an angel they found two men there, not outside, but
+ inside, and not sitting, but standing. But Mark sets the testimony of both
+ these "inspired" witnesses aside by affirming there was but one man there,
+ and he was sitting. While Matthew says "they," St. John says "she"
+ (speaking of the person or persons who left the sepulchre). According to
+ Matthew the angel who rolled away the stone from the sepulchre sent a
+ message to the disciples. But Mark affirms that it was not an "angel"
+ outside, but a "young man" inside, who did this. And here the question
+ naturally arises: Why was it necessary for a being who could say, "I have
+ power to lay down my life and take it up again" (John), to have an angel
+ to roll away the stone from the sepulchre. Certainly, if he possessed such
+ omnipotent power, he needed no aid from any being to perform such an act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. And relative to Peter's visit to the tomb, there is a total disparity
+ in the testimony of the witnesses. According to Luke, he did not go into
+ the sepulchre, but only stooped down and looked in. But Mark affirms he
+ did go in, and that it was the disciple who went with him who stooped
+ down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. And with respect to the events which occurred immediately subsequent to
+ the resurrection, there is no less discrepancy, no nearer agreement, in
+ the testimony of the evangelical witnesses. Matthew says that when
+ Christ's disciples first met him after the resurrection, they worshiped
+ him, and held him by the feet. (Matt, xxviii. 9) Strange, indeed, and
+ wholly incredible, if John is a reliable witness, for he affirms he did
+ not allow even his best and dearest friend (Mary) to touch him. And then
+ John combats this testimony of his by declaring he invited the skeptical
+ Thomas, not only to touch him, but to thrust his hand into his side for
+ tangible proof of his identity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. And why, let us ask here, was not the skeptical Thomas damned for his
+ doubting, when we, who live thousands of miles from the place, and nearly
+ two thousand years from the time, are often told by the priesthood we must
+ "believe or be damned?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. And if Thomas was really convinced by this occurrence, or if it ever
+ took place, why have we no account of his subsequent life? What good was
+ effected by his convincement if he never said or did anything afterward?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. John tells us Mary first saw Christ, after his resurrection, at the
+ tomb, but Matthew says it was on her way home she first saw him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. We are told by Luke (xxiv. 36) that when Christ appeared to his
+ disciples on a certain occasion, they were frightened, supposing it to be
+ a spirit. But John (xx. 20) says they were glad. Which must we believe?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. According to Matthew, the disciples were all present on this occasion;
+ but according to John, Thomas was not there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Here let it be noted that none of the narrators claim to have seen
+ Christ rise from the tomb, nor to have got it from anybody who did see it
+ The only proof in this case is their declaration, "It came to pass."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. And we are prompted to ask here, how "it came to pass" that the chief
+ priests and pharisees cherished sufficient faith in Christ's resurrection
+ to set a watch for it, as Matthew reports, when his own disciples were too
+ faithless in such an event to be present, or to believe he had risen after
+ the report reached their ears; for we are told some doubted. (See Matt,
+ xxiii.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. And how came Matthew to know the soldiers were bribed to say Christ's
+ body was stolen away by his disciples, when the disclosures of such a
+ secret would have been death under the Roman government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. And their confession of being asleep, as related by Matthew, would
+ have subjected them to the same fatal penalty by the civil rulers of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. And if the soldiers were all asleep, can we not suggest several ways
+ the body may have disappeared without being restored to life?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. And here we would ask if Christ rose from the dead in order to
+ convince the world of his divine power, why did not the event take place
+ in public? Why was it seen only by a few credulous and interested
+ disciples?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. And if such an astonishing and miraculous event did occur, why does
+ not one of the numerous cotemporary writers of those times make any
+ allusion to it? Neither Pliny, Tacitus, nor Josephus, who detail the
+ events very minutely, not only of those times, but of that very country,
+ says a word about such a wonder-exciting occurrence. This fact of itself
+ entirely overthrows the credibility of the story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. And the fact that several Christian sects, which flourished near those
+ times, as the Corinthians and Carpocratians, etc., rejected the story in
+ toto, furnishes another powerful argument for discrediting it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. And then add to this fact that his own chosen followers were upbraided
+ for their unbelief in the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. And what was Christ doing during the forty days between his
+ resurrection and ascension, that he should only be seen a few times, and
+ but a few minutes at a time, and by but a few persons, and those
+ interested?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. And we would ask, likewise,&mdash;What more can be proved by Christ's
+ physical resurrection than that of the resurrection of Lazarus, the
+ widow's son, and several cases related in the Old Testament, or the
+ numerous cases reported in oriental history?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. And what analogy is there in the resurrection of the dead body of a
+ perfect and self-existent God and that of vile man?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. And why should Christ be called "the first fruits of the
+ resurrection," when so many cases are reported as occurring before his?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. And why do Christians build their hopes of immortality almost entirely
+ upon Christ's alleged resurrection, in view of the numerous facts we have
+ cited showing it to be a mere sandy foundation?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Of course no person who believes in modern spiritualism will discredit
+ the story of Christ being visually recognized after his death <i>as a
+ spirit</i>&mdash;for they have ocular proof that many such cases have
+ occurred within the last decade of years. But it is the story of his
+ physical resurrection we are combating&mdash;the reanimation of his flesh
+ and bones after having been subjected three days to the laws of
+ decomposition. Neither science nor sense can indorse such a story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. It was a very easy matter, and very natural to mistake Christ's
+ spiritual body for his physical body; for such mistakes have been made a
+ thousand times in the world's history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Is it not strange, in view of the countless defects in the story of
+ Christ's physical resurrection as enumerated above, that the orthodox
+ Christian world should rely upon it as the great sheet anchor of their
+ faith, and as their chief and almost their only hope of immortal life?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. REAPPEARANCE AND ASCENSION OF THE SAVIORS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MANY cases are related by their respective sacred narratives of the
+ ancient Saviors, and other beings possessing the form of man, and
+ previously recognized as men, reappearing to their disciples and friends,
+ after having been consigned to the tomb for three days, or a longer or
+ shorter period of time, and of their final ascension to the house of many
+ mansions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is related of the Indian or Hindoo Savior Chrishna, that after having
+ risen from the dead, he appeared again to his disciples. "He ascended to
+ Voiacantha (heaven), to Brahma," the first person of the trinity (he
+ himself being the second), and that as he ascended, "all men saw him, and
+ exclaimed, 'Lo! Chrishna's soul ascends to his native skies.'" And it is
+ further related that, "attended by celestial spirits,.... he pursued by
+ his own light the journey between earth and heaven, to the bright paradise
+ whence he had descended."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the ninth incarnation of India, the Savior Sakia, it is declared, that
+ he "ascended to the celestial regions", and his pious and devout disciples
+ point the skeptic to indelible impressions and ineffaceable footprints on
+ the rocks of a high mountain as an imperishable proof of the declaration
+ that he took his last leave of earth and made his ascent from that point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is related of the crucified Prometheus, likewise, that after having
+ given up the ghost on the cross, "descended to hell", Christ's soul was
+ "not left in hell," see Acts ii. 31), "he rose again from the dead, and
+ ascended into heaven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then it is declared of the Egyptian Savior Alcides, that "after having
+ been seen a number of times, he ascended to a higher life," going up, like
+ Elijah, in "a chariot of fire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of the crucifixion of Quexalcote of Mexico, followed by his
+ burial, resurrection and ascension, is distinctly related in the "holy"
+ and inspired "gospels" of that country, which Lord Kingsborough admitted
+ to be more than two thousand years old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Laotsi of China, it is said that when "he had completed his mission of
+ benevolence, he ascended bodily alive into the paradise above." (Prog, of
+ Rel. Ideas, vol. 214.) And it is related of Fo of the same country, that
+ having completed his glorious mission on earth, he "ascended back to
+ paradise, where he had previously existed from all eternity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is related also in the ancient legends, that the Savior or God Xamalxis
+ of Thrace, having died, and descended beneath the earth, and remained
+ there three years, made his appearance again in the fourth year after his
+ death, as he had previously foretold, and eventually ascended to heaven
+ about 600 B. C. Even some of the Hindoo saints are reported in their
+ "holy" and time-honored books to have been seen ascending to heaven. "And
+ impressions on the rocks are shown," says an author, "said to be of
+ footprints they had left when they ascended."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is related both by the Grecian biographer Plutarch, in his life of
+ Romulus, and by a Roman historian, that the great founder of Rome
+ (Romulus) suddenly ascended in a tempest during a solar eclipse, about 713
+ B. C. And Julius Proculis, a Roman senator of great fame and high
+ reputation, declared, under solemn oath, that he saw him, and talked with
+ him after his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ASTRONOMICAL VERSION OF THE STORY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before dismissing this chapter, we may state that, in common with most
+ other religious conceptions, the doctrine of the ascension has in the
+ ancient legends an astronomical representation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having said that a planet was buried because it sunk below the horizon,
+ when it returned to light and gained its state of eminence, they spoke of
+ it as dead, risen again, and ascended into heaven. (Volney, p. 143.) What
+ is the story of the ascension of Christ worth in view of these ancient
+ pagan traditions of earlier origin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ASCENSION OF THE CHRISTIAN SAVIOR.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The different scriptural accounts of the ascension of Christ are, like
+ the different stories of the resurrection, quite contradictory, and,
+ hence, entitled to as little credit. In Luke (xxiv.), he is represented as
+ ascending on the evening of the third day after the crucifixion. But the
+ writer of Acts (i. 3) says he did not ascend till forty days after his
+ resurrection; while, according to his own declaration to the thief on the
+ cross, "This day shalt thou be with me in paradise," he must have ascended
+ on the same day of his crucifixion. Which statement must we accept as
+ inspired, or what is proved by such contradictory testimony?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Which must we believe, Paul's declaration that he was seen by above <i>five
+ hundred of the brethren</i> at once (1 Cor. xv. 6), or the statement of
+ the author of the Acts (i. 15), that there were <i>but one hundred and
+ twenty brethren in all after that period?</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. How would his ascension do anything toward proving his divinity, unless
+ it also proves the divinity of Enoch and Elijah, who are reported to have
+ ascended long prior to that era?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. As these stories of the ascension of Christ, according to Lardner, were
+ written many years after his crucifixion. Is it not hence probable they
+ grew out of similar stories relative to the heathen Gods long previously
+ prevalent in oriental countries?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. As these gospel writers could not have been present to witness the
+ ascension, as it must have occurred before their time of active life, does
+ not this fact of itself seriously damage the credibility of the accounts,
+ and more especially as neither Mark nor Luke, who are the only reporters
+ of the occurrence, were not disciples of Christ at the time, while Matthew
+ and John, who were, say nothing about it?&mdash;another fact which casts a
+ shade on the credibility of the story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. THE ATONEMENT&mdash;ITS ORIENTAL OR HEATHEN ORIGIN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE were various practices in vogue amongst the orientalists, which
+ originated with the design of appeasing the anger, and propitiating the
+ favor of a presumed to be irascible deity. Most of these practices
+ consisted in some kind of sacrifice or destructive offering called the
+ "atonement." But here let it be observed, that the doctrine of atonement
+ for sin, by sacrifice, was unfolded by degrees, and that the crucifixion
+ of a God was not the first practical exhibition of it. On the contrary, it
+ appears to have commenced with the most valueless or cheapest species of
+ property then known. And from this starting-point ascended gradually, so
+ as finally to embody the most costly commodities; and did not stop here,
+ but reached forward till it laid its murderous hands on human beings, and
+ immolated them upon its bloody altars. And finally, to cap the climax, it
+ assumed the effrontery to drag a God off the throne of heaven, to stanch
+ its blood-thirsty spirit, as evinced by Paul's declaration, "Without the
+ shedding of blood there can be no remission of sin." Rather a bloody
+ doctrine, and one which our humanity rejects with instinctive horror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will trace the doctrine of the atonement briefly through its successive
+ stages of growth and development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idea seems to have started very early in the practical history of the
+ human race, that the sacrifice and consequent deprivation of earthly
+ goods, or some terrestial enjoyment, would have the effect to mitigate the
+ anger, propitiate the favor, and obtain the mercy of an imaginary and
+ vengeful God. This idea obviously was suggested by observing that their
+ earthly rulers always smiled, and became less rigorous in their laws, and
+ milder in their treatment of their subjects, when they made them presents
+ of some valuable or desirable commodity. They soon learned that such
+ offerings had the effect to check their cruel and bloody mode of governing
+ the people; so that when their houses were shaken down, or swallowed up by
+ earthquakes, the trees riven by lightning, and prostrated by storms, and
+ their cattle swept away by floods, supposing it to be the work of an angry
+ God, the thought arose in their minds at once, that perhaps his wrath
+ could be abated by the same expedient as that which had served in the case
+ of their mundane lords&mdash;that of making presents of property. But as
+ this property could not be carried up to the celestial throne, the
+ expedient was adopted of burning it, so that the substance or quintessence
+ of it would be conveyed up to the heavenly Potentate in the shape of steam
+ and smoke, which would make for him, as the Jews express it, "a
+ sweet-smelling savor." Abundant and conspicuous is the evidence in history
+ to show that the custom of burnt-offerings and atonements for sin
+ originated in this way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first species of property made use of for burnt-offerings appears to
+ have been the fruits of the earth&mdash;vegetables, fruits, roots, etc.,&mdash;the
+ lowest kind of property in point of value. But the thought soon naturally
+ sprang up in the mind of the devotee, that a more valuable offering would
+ sooner and more effectually secure the divine favor. Hence, levies were
+ made on living herds of cattle, sheep, goats and other domestic animals.
+ This was the second step in the ascending scale toward Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here we find the key to open and solve the mystery of Jehovah's
+ preferring Abel's offering to Cain's. While the latter consisted in mere
+ inanimate substances, the former embraced the firstlings of the flock&mdash;a
+ higher and more valuable species of property, and quite sufficient to
+ induce the selfish Jehovah to prefer Abel's offering to Cain's, or rather
+ for the selfish Jews to cherish this conception. In all nations where
+ offerings were made, the conclusion became established in the minds of the
+ people that the amount of God's favor procured in this way must be
+ proportionate to the value of the commodity or victim offered up&mdash;a
+ conviction which ultimately led to the seizure of human beings for the
+ atoning offerings, which brings us to the third stage of growth in the
+ atonement doctrine. Children frequently constituted the victims in this
+ case. The sacrifice of Jephthah's daughter, as related in Judges xi. 30,
+ and other cases cited by bible writers, (Isaiah xxxii. 25), and modern
+ Christian authors, prove that this practice was in vogue among "God's holy
+ people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One step more (constituting the <i>fourth</i> stage of development) brings
+ us to the sacrifice of Gods. The climax is now reached; the conception can
+ go no higher. The ancient Birmese taught that while common property in
+ burnt-offerings would procure the temporary favor of the ruling God, the
+ sacrifice of human beings would secure his good pleasure for a thousand
+ years, and cancel out all the sins committed in that period. And when one
+ of the three Gods on the throne of heaven was dragged down, or <i>voluntarily
+ came down</i> (as some of the sects taught), and was put to death on the
+ cross as an atonement for sin, such was the value of the victim, such the
+ magnitude of the offering, that it "atoned for <i>all</i> sin, past,
+ present and future, for all the human race."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hindoos, cherishing this conception, taught that the crucifixion of
+ their sin-atoning Savior Chrishna (1200 B. C.) put an end to both animal
+ and human sacrifices, and accordingly such offerings ceased in most Hindoo
+ countries centuries ago. Thus far back in the mire and midnight of human
+ ignorance, and amid the clouds of mental darkness, while man dwelt upon
+ the animal plane, and was governed by his brutal feelings, and "blood for
+ blood" was the requisition for human offenses, originated the bloody,
+ savage and revolting doctrine of the atonement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another mode of adjudicating the sins of the people in vogue in some
+ countries anterior to the custom of shedding blood as an expiation, was
+ that of packing them on the back, head, or horns of some animal by a
+ formal hocus-pocus process, and then driving the animal into a wilderness,
+ or some other place so remote that the brute could not find its way back
+ amongst the people with its cargo of sins. The cloth or fabric used for
+ inclosing the sins and iniquities of the people was usually of a red or
+ scarlet color&mdash;of the semblance of blood. In fact, it was generally
+ dipped in blood. This, being lashed to the animal, would of course be
+ exposed to the weather and the drenching rains, would consequently, in the
+ course of time, fade and become white. Hence, we have the key to Isaiah's
+ declaration, "Though your sins be (red) as scarlet, they shall become
+ (white) as wool." (See Isaiah, i. 18.) And thus the meaning of this
+ obscure text is clearly explained by tracing its origin to its oriental
+ source.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there are many other texts in the Christian bible which might be
+ elucidated in a similar manner by using oriental tradition, or oriental
+ sacred books, as a key to unlock and explain their meaning. We have stated
+ above that some animal was made use of by different nations to convey the
+ imaginary load of the people's sins out of the country. For this purpose
+ the Jews had their "scapegoat," the Egyptians their "scape-ox," the
+ Hindoos their "scape-horse," the Chaldeans their "scape-ram," the Britons
+ their "scape-bull," the Mexicans their "scape-lamb" and "scape-mouse," the
+ Tamalese their "scape-hen," and the Christians at a later period their <i>scape-God</i>.
+ Jesus Christ may properly be termed the scape-God of orthodox Christians,
+ as he stands in the same relation to his disciples, who believe in the
+ atonement, as the goat did to the Jews, and performs the same end and
+ office. The goat and the other sin-offering animals took away the sin of
+ the nation in each case respectively. In like manner Jesus Christ takes
+ away the sin of the world, being called "the Lamb of God that taketh away
+ the sin of the world." (John i. 29.) And more than two thousand years ago
+ the Mexicans sacrificed a lamb as an atonement, which they called "the
+ Lamb of God"&mdash;the same title scripturally applied to Jesus Christ.
+ The conception in each case is, then, the same&mdash;that of the atonement
+ for sin by the sacrifice of an innocent victim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above citations show that the present custom of orthodox Christendom,
+ in packing their sins upon the back of a God, is just the same
+ substantially as that of various heathen nations, who were anciently in
+ the habit of packing them upon the backs of various dumb animals. If some
+ of our Christian brethren should protest against our speaking of the
+ church's idea of atonement as that of packing their sins upon the back of
+ a God, we will here prove the appropriateness of the term upon the
+ authority of the bible. Peter expressly declares Christ bore our sins upon
+ his own body on a tree (see 1 Peter ii. 24), just as the Jews declared the
+ <i>goat bore their</i> sins on his body, and the ancient Brahmins taught
+ that the bulls and the heifers bore theirs away, etc., which shows that
+ the whole conception is of purely heathen origin. And hereafter, when they
+ laugh at the Jewish superstition of a scape-goat, let them bear in mind
+ that more sensible and intelligent people may laugh in turn at their
+ superstitious doctrine of a scape-God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These superstitious customs were simply expedients of different nations to
+ evade the punishment of their sins&mdash;an attempt to shift their
+ retributive consequences on to other beings. The divine atonement more
+ especially possessed this character. This system teaches that the son of
+ God and Savior of the world was sent down and incarnated, in order to die
+ for the people, and thus suffer by proxy the punishment meted out by
+ divine wrath for the sins of the whole world. The blood of a God must
+ atone for the sins of the whole human family, as rams, goats, bullocks and
+ other animals had atoned for the sins of families and nations under older
+ systems. Thus taught Brahminism, Budhism, Persianism, and other religious
+ systems, before the dawn of Christianity. The nucleus of the atoning
+ system is founded in the doctrine, "Without the shedding of blood there is
+ no remission for sin" (Rom. v. 9)&mdash;a monstrous and morally revolting
+ doctrine&mdash;a doctrine which teaches us that <i>somebodys</i> blood
+ must be shed, somebody's veins and arteries depleted, for every trivial
+ offense committed against the moral law. Somebody must pay the penalty in
+ blood, somebody must be slaughtered for every little foible or peccadillo
+ or moral blunder into which erring man may chance to stumble while upon
+ the pilgrimage of life, while journeying through the wilderness of time,
+ even if a God has to be dragged from his throne in heaven, and murdered to
+ accomplish it. Nothing less will mitigate the divine wrath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whose soul&mdash;possessing the slightest moral sensibility&mdash;does not
+ inwardly and instinctively revolt at such a doctrine? We would not teach
+ it to the world, for it is founded in butchery and bloodshed, and is an
+ old pagan superstition, which originated far back in the midnight of
+ mental darkness and heathen ignorance, when the whole human race were
+ under the lawless sway of their brutal propensities, and when the
+ ennobling attributes of love, mercy and forgiveness had as yet found no
+ place, no abiding home, in the human bosom. The bloody soul of the savage
+ first gave it birth. We hold the doctrine to be a a high-handed insult to
+ the All-loving Father, who, we are told, is "long-suffering in mercy," and
+ "plentiful in forgiveness," to charge <i>Him</i> with sanctioning such a
+ doctrine, much less with originating it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no "mercy or forgiveness" in putting an innocent being to death
+ for any pretext whatever. And for the Father to consent to the brutal
+ assassination of His own innocent Son upon the cross to gratify an
+ implacable revenge toward his own children, the workmanship of his own
+ hands, rather than forgive a moral weakness implanted in their natures by
+ a voluntary act of his own, and for which consequently he alone ought to
+ be responsible, would be nothing short of murder in the first degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cherish no such conception. We cannot for a moment harbor a blasphemous
+ doctrine, which represents the Universal Father as being a bloody-minded
+ and murderous being, instead of a being of infinite love, infinite wisdom,
+ and infinite in all the moral virtues. Such a character would be a
+ deep-dyed stigma upon any human being. And no person actuated by a strict
+ sense of justice would accept salvation upon any such terms as that
+ prescribed by the Christian atonement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is manifestly too unjust, too devoid of moral principle, besides being
+ a flagrant violation of the first principles of civil and criminal
+ jurisprudence. It is a double wrong to punish the innocent for the guilty.
+ It is the infliction of injustice on the one hand, and the omission of
+ justice on the other. It inflicts the highest penalty of the law upon an
+ innocent being, whom that law ought to shield from punishment, while it
+ exculpates and liberates the guilty party, whose punishment the moral law
+ demands. It robs society of a useful man on the one hand, and turns a
+ moral pest upon community on the other, thus committing a twofold wrong,
+ or act of injustice. No court in any civilized country would be allowed to
+ act upon such a principle; and the judge who should indorse it, or favor a
+ law, or principle, which punishes the innocent for the guilty, would be
+ ruled off the bench at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, however, we are sometimes met with the plea, that the offering of
+ Jesus Christ was a voluntary act, that it was made with his own free will.
+ But the plea don't do away with either the injustice or criminality of the
+ act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No innocent person has a right to suffer for the guilty, and the courts
+ have no right to accept the offer or admit the substitute. An illustration
+ will show this. If Jefferson Davis had been convicted of the crime of
+ treason, and sentenced to be hung, and Abraham Lincoln had come forward
+ and offered to be stretched upon the gallows in his place, is there a
+ court in the civilized world which would have accepted the substitute, and
+ hung Lincoln, and liberated Davis? To ask the question is but to answer
+ it. It is an insult to reason, law and justice to entertain the
+ proposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctrine of the atonement also involves the infinite absurdity of God
+ punishing himself to appease his own wrath. For if "the fullness of the
+ Godhead dwelt in Christ bodily" (as taught in Col. ii. 9), then his death
+ was the death of God&mdash;that is, a divine suicide, prompted and
+ committed by a feeling of anger and revenge, which terminated the life of
+ the Infinite Ruler&mdash;a doctrine utterly devoid of reason, science or
+ sense. We are sometimes told man owes a debt to his Maker, and the
+ atonement pays that debt. To be sure! And to whom is the debt owing, and
+ who pays it? Why, the debt is owing to God, and God (in the person of
+ Jesus Christ) pays it&mdash;pays it to himself. We will illustrate. A man
+ approaches his neighbor, and says, "Sir, I owe you a thousand dollars, but
+ can never pay it." "Very well, it makes no difference," replies the
+ claimant, "I will pay it myself;" and forthwith thrusts his hand into his
+ right pocket and extracts the money, transfers it to the left pocket and
+ exclaims&mdash;"There, the debt is paid!" A curious way of paying debts,
+ and one utterly devoid of sense. And yet the orthodox world have adopted
+ it for their God. We find, however, that they carefully avoid practicing
+ this principle themselves in their dealings with each other. When they
+ have a claim against a neighbor, we do not find them ever thrusting their
+ hands into their own pockets to pay it off, but sue him, and compel him to
+ pay&mdash;if he refuses to do it without compulsion&mdash;thus proving
+ they do not consider it a correct principle of trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we find, upon further investigation, that the assumed debt is not paid&mdash;after
+ all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a debt is paid, it is canceled, and dismissed from memory, and
+ nothing more said about it. But in this case the sinner is told he must
+ still suffer the penalty for every sin he commits, notwithstanding Christ
+ died to atone for and cancel that sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where, then, is the virtue of the atonement? Like other doctrines of the
+ orthodox creed, it is at war with reason and common sense, and every
+ principle of sound morality, and will be marked by coming ages as a relic
+ of barbarism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII. THE HOLY GHOST OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ OF all the weird, fanciful, and fabulous stories appertaining to the Gods
+ and other spiritual entities of the olden times, whose capricious
+ adventures we find so profusely narrated in oriental mythology&mdash;of
+ all the strange, mythical and mystical feats, and ever-varying and
+ ever-diverging changes in the shape, appearance, sex, and modes of
+ manifestation which characterize the hobgoblins or ghostly beings which
+ comprise the esoteric stock of the ancient mysteries, that appertaining to
+ the third member of "the hypostatic union," the Holy Ghost, seems to stand
+ pre-eminent. And I propose here to submit the facts to show that the Holy
+ Ghost story of the Christian Gospels, like the more ancient pagan versions
+ of the same story, is marked by the same wild, discordant and legendary
+ characteristics which abound in all the accounts of gods and ghosts found
+ recorded in the religious books of various nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following brief exposition of the history and exploits of this
+ anomalous, nondescript, chameleon-like being will clearly evince that the
+ same fanciful, metaphorical and fabulous changes in the size, shape, sex
+ and appearance of this third limb of the triune God are found in the
+ Christian Scriptures which are disclosed in the more ancient oriental
+ traditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will first exhibit a classification of the names and characteristics of
+ this imaginary being drawn from the gospels and epistles of the Christian
+ bible, by which it will be observed that scarcely any two references to it
+ agree in assigning it the same character or attributes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. In John xiv. 26, the Holy Ghost is spoken of as a person or personal
+ God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. In Luke iii. 22, the Holy Ghost changes, and assumes the form of a
+ dove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. In Matt. xiii. 16, the Holy Ghost becomes a spirit
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. In John i. 32, the Holy Ghost is presented as an inanimate, senseless
+ object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. In John v. 7, the Holy Ghost becomes a God&mdash;the third member of
+ the Trinity.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. In Acts ii. 1, the Holy Ghost is averred to be "a mighty, rushing
+ wind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. In Acts x. 38, the Holy Ghost, we infer, from its mode of application,
+ is an ointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. In John xx. 22, the Holy Ghost is the breath, as we legitimately infer
+ by its being breathed into the mouth of the recipient after the ancient
+ oriental custom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. In Adis ii. 3, we learn the Holy Ghost "sat upon each of them,"
+ probably in the form of a bird, as at Jesus' baptism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. In Adis ii. 1, the Holy Ghost appears as "cloven tongues of fire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. In Luke ii. 26, the Holy Ghost is the author of a revelation or
+ inspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. In Adis viii. 17, the Holy Ghost is a magnetic aura imparted by the
+ "laying on of hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. In Mark i. 8, the Holy Ghost is a medium or element for baptism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. In Adis xxviii. 25, the Holy Ghost appears with vocal organs, and
+ speaks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. In Heb. vi. 4, the Holy Ghost is dealt out or imparted by measure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. In Luke iii. 22, the Holy Ghost appears with a tangible body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. In Luke i. 5, and many other texts, we are taught people are filled
+ with the Holy Ghost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. In Matt. xi. 15, the Holy Ghost falls upon the people as a ponderable
+ substance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. In Luke iv. 1, the Holy Ghost is a God within a God&mdash;"Jesus being
+ full of the Holy Ghost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. In Acts xxi. 11, the Holy Ghost is a being of the masculine or
+ feminine gender&mdash;"Thus saith the Holy Ghost," etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. In John i. 32, the Holy Ghost is of the neuter gender&mdash;"It (the
+ Holy Ghost) abode upon him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. In Matt. i. 18, the Holy Ghost becomes a vicarious agent in the
+ procreation of another God; that is, this third member of the Trinity aids
+ the first member (the Father) in the creation or generation of the second
+ member of the triad of bachelor Gods&mdash;the Word, or Savior, or Son of
+ God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such are the ever-shifting scenes presented in the Scripture panorama of
+ the Holy Ghost. Surpassing the fabulous changes of some of the more
+ ancient demigods, the Christian Holy Ghost undergoes (as is shown by the
+ above-quoted texts) a perpetual metathesis or metamorphosis&mdash;being
+ variously presented on different occasions as a personal and rational
+ being, a dove, a spirit, an inanimate object, a God, the wind or a wind,
+ an ointment, the breath or a breath, cloven tongue of fire, a bird, or
+ some other flying recumbent animal, a revelator or divine messenger, a
+ medium or element for baptism, an intelligent, speaking being, a lifeless,
+ bodiless, sexless being, a measurable fluid substance, a being possessing
+ a body, ponderable, unconscious substance, a God dwelling within a God,
+ and, finally&mdash;though really first in order&mdash;the author or agent
+ of the incarnation of the second God in the Trinity (Jesus Christ).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That many of these fabulous conceptions were drawn from mythological
+ sources will be made manifest by the following facts of history:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. <i>The Holy Ghost in the shape of a bird, a dove or a pigeon.</i> This
+ is proven to be a very ancient pagan tradition, as it is found
+ incorporated in several of the oriental religious systems. In ancient
+ India, whose prolific spiritual fancies constitute the primary parentage
+ of nearly all the doctrines, dogmas and superstitions found incorporated
+ in the Christian Scriptures, a dove was uniformly the emblem of the Holy
+ Spirit, or Spirit of God. Confirmatory of this statement, we find the
+ declaration in the Anacalypsis, that a "dove stood for or represented a
+ third member of the Trinity, and was the regenerator or regeneratory
+ power." This meets the Christian idea of "regeneration and renewing of the
+ Holy Ghost." (Titus iii. 5.) A person being baptized under the Brahminical
+ theocracy was said to be "regenerated and born again," or, as the
+ above-quoted writer expresses it, "They were born into the spirit, or the
+ spirit into them"&mdash;that is, the "dove into or upon them," (As vide
+ the case of the Christian's "Holy Ghost descending in bodily shape like a
+ dove," and alighting on Christ's head at baptism, as related in Luke iii.
+ 22.) In ancient Rome a dove or pigeon was the emblem of the female
+ procreative energy, and frequently a legendary spirit, the accompaniment
+ of Venus. And hence, as a writer remarks, "It is very appropriately
+ represented as descending at baptism in the character of the third member
+ of the Trinity." The same writer tells us, "The dove fills the Grecian
+ oracles with their spirit and power." We find the dove, also, in the
+ romantic eclogues of ancient Syria. In the time-chiseled Syrian temple of
+ Hierapolis, Semiramis is represented with a dove on her head, thus
+ constituting the prototype of the dove on the head of the Christian
+ Messiah at baptism. And a dove was in more than one of the ancient
+ religious systems&mdash;"The Spirit of God (Holy Ghost) moving on the face
+ of the waters" at creation, as implied in Gen. i. 2, though a pigeon, was
+ often indiscriminately substituted. In Howe's "Ancient Mysteries" it is
+ related that "in St. Paul's Cathedral, at the feast of Whitsuntide, the
+ descent of the Holy Ghost was performed by a white pigeon being let fly
+ out of a hole in the midst of the roof of the great aisle." The dove and
+ the pigeon, being but slight variations of the same species of the
+ feathered tribe, were used indiscriminately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. As evinced above, the Holy Ghost was the third member of the Trinity in
+ several of the oriental systems. Father, Son and Holy Ghost, or Father,
+ Word and Holy Ghost (1 John v. 7), are familiar Christian terms to express
+ the divine triad, which shows the Holy Ghost to be the acknowledged third
+ member of the Christian Trinity. And, as already suggested, the same is
+ true of the more ancient systems. "The Holy Spirit and the Evil Spirit
+ were, each in their turn (says Mr. Higgins), third member of the Trinity."
+ We might, if space would allow, draw largely upon the ancient defunct
+ systems in proof of this statement. "In these triads (says Mr. Hillell)
+ the third member, as might be supposed, was not of equal rank with the
+ other two." And hence, in the Theban Trinity, Khonso was inferior to Arion
+ and Mant. In the Hindoo triad, Siva was subordinate to Brahma and Vishnu.
+ And a score of similar examples might be adduced from the
+ fancy-constructed trinities of other and older oriental religious systems
+ (but for the inflexible rule of brevity which forbids their presentation
+ here), with all of which the more modern Holy Ghost conception of the
+ Christian world is an exact correspondence, as this imaginary, fabulous
+ being is less conspicuous than and has always stood third in rank with the
+ Father and second to the Son, alias the Word, and is now seldom addressed
+ in practical Christian devotion; and thus the analogy is complete. Mr.
+ Maurice says, "This notion of a third person in the Deity (the Holy Ghost)
+ was diffused among all the nations of the earth." (See Ind. Antiq. vol.
+ iv. p. 75a) And Mr. Worseley, in his "Voyage" (vol. i. p. 259), avers this
+ doctrine to be "of very great antiquity, and generally received by all the
+ Gothic and Celtic nations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The Holy Ghost was the Holy Breath which, in the Hindoo traditions,
+ moved on the face of the waters at creation, and imparted life and
+ vitality into everything created. A similar conception is recognized in
+ the Christian Scriptures. In Psalms xxxiii. 6, we read, "By the Word of
+ the Lord were the heavens made, and all the host of them by the breath of
+ his mouth." Here is the Brahminical conception, square out, of the act of
+ creation by the Divine Breath, which is the Holy Ghost, the same, also,
+ which was breathed into Adam, by which he became "a living soul." M.
+ Dubois observes, "The Prana, or principle of life, of the Hindoos is the
+ breath of life by which the Creator (Brahma) animates the clay, and man
+ became a living soul." (Page 293.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Holy Ghost, Holy Breath and Holy Wind appear to have been synonymous
+ and convertible terms for the living vocal emanations from the mouth of
+ the Supreme God, as memorialized in several of the pagan traditions. The
+ last term (Holy Wind) is suggested by "the mighty rushing wind from
+ heaven" which filled the house, or church, on the day of Pentecost. (See
+ Acts ii. 2.) Several of the old religious systems recognize "the Holy
+ Wind" as a term for the Holy Ghost. The doxology (reported by a
+ missionary) in the religious service of the Syrian worship runs thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Praise to the Holy Spiritual Wind, which is the Holy Ghost;
+ Praise to the three persons which are one true God."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Some writers maintain that the Hebrew <i>Ruk Aliem.</i> translated "Spirit
+ of God" (Gen. i. 2) in our version, should read, "Wind of the Gods." And
+ we find that the word <i>pneuma</i> of our Greek New Testament, is
+ sometimes translated "Ghost" and sometimes "Wind," as best suited the
+ fancy of the translators. In John iii. 5, we find the word Spirit, and in
+ verse eight both Wind and Spirit are found; and in Luke i. 35, we observe
+ the term Holy Ghost&mdash;all translated from the same word. Let it be
+ specially noted that in the Greek Testament the word <i>pneuma</i> is used
+ in all these cases, thus proving that Spirit, Holy Ghost and Wind are used
+ in the Christian Scriptures as synonymous terms; and proving, also, that
+ an unwarranted license has been assumed by translators in rendering the
+ same word three different ways. M. Auvaroff, in his "Essays on the
+ Eleusinian Mysteries," speaks of "the torch being ignited at the command
+ of Hermes of Egypt, the spiritual agent in the workshop of creation,"
+ relative to which statement a writer remarks, "Hermes appears in this
+ instance as a personification of Wind or Spirit, as in the bible (meaning
+ the Christian bible), God, Wind and Spirit are often interchangeable
+ terms, and the Word appears to be from the same windy source."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. <i>The Holy Ghost as "a tongue of fire, which sat upon each of them"
+ (the apostles)</i>. (See Acts. ii. 3.) Even this conception is an
+ orientalism. Mr. Higgins tells us that "Budha, an incarnate God of the
+ Hindoos (three thousand years ago), is often seen with a glory or tongue
+ of fire upon his head." And the tradition of the visible manifestation of
+ the Holy Ghost by fire was prevalent among the ancient Budhists, Celts,
+ Druids and Etrurians. In fact, as our author truly remarks, "The Holy
+ Ghost, or Holy Spirit, when visible, was always in the form of fire (or a
+ bird), and was always accompanied with wisdom and power." Hence, is
+ disclosed the origin of the ancient custom amongst the Hindoos, Persians
+ and Chaldeans, of making offerings to the solar fire, emblem of the Holy
+ Ghost or Holy Spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. <i>Inspiration by the Holy Ghost</i> (Luke ii. 26.) "Holy men of God,"
+ including some of the prophets, are claimed to have been inspired by the
+ Holy Ghost (See 2 Peter i. 21; Acts xxviii. 25.) In like manner, as we are
+ informed by Mr. Cleland in his "Specimens" (see Appendix), the ancient
+ Celts were not only "moved by the Holy Ghost" in their divine decrees and
+ prophetic utterances, but they claimed that their Salic laws (seventy-two
+ in number) were inspired by the "Salo Ghost" (Holy Ghost), known also as
+ "the Wisdom of the Spirit, or the Voice of the Spirit." This author
+ several times alludes to the fact, and exhibits the proof, that the
+ doctrine of the Holy Ghost was known to this ancient people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. <i>The Holy Ghost imparted by "the laying on of hands</i>." This, too,
+ is an ancient oriental custom. "And by the imposition of hands on the head
+ of the candidate," says Mr. Cleland, speaking of the Celts, "the Holy
+ Ghost, or Holy Spirit, was conveyed." And thus was the Holy Spirit, Ghost,
+ Gas, Wind, Electrical Fire or Spirit of Authority imparted to the
+ hierophant or gospel novitiate. "And their public assemblies," continues
+ our author, "were always opened by an invocation to the Holy Ghost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. <i>Baptism by or into the Holy Ghost accompanied with fire</i>. (Matt.
+ iii. 11.) This rite, too, is traceable to a very ancient period, and was
+ practiced by several of the old symbolical and mythological systems. The
+ Tuscans, or Etrurians, baptized with fire, wind (ghost) and water. Baptism
+ into the first member of the Trinity (the Father) was with fire; baptism
+ into the second member of the Trinity (the Word) was with water; while
+ baptism into the third member of the Trinity (the Holy Ghost, or Holy
+ Spirit) consisted of the initiatory spiritual or symbolical application of
+ gas, gust, ghost, wind, or spirit. It appears from "Herbert's Travels,"
+ that, in "ancient countries", the child was taken to the priest, who named
+ him (christened him) before the sacred fire after which ceremony he was
+ sprinkled with "holy water" from a vessel made of the sacred tree known as
+ "The Holme."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. <i>The Holy Ghost imparted by breathing</i>. (See John xx. 22).
+ "Sometimes," says Mr. Higgins, relative to this custom among the ancient
+ heathen, "the priest blew his breath upon the child, which was then
+ considered baptized by <i>air, spiritus sanctus,</i> or ghost&mdash;i. e.,
+ baptism by the Holy Ghost." In case of baptism, a portion of the Holy
+ Ghost was supposed to be transferred from the priest to the candidate.
+ "The practice of breathing in or upon," says our author, "was quite common
+ among the ancient heathen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. <i>The Holy Ghost as the agent in divine conception, or the
+ procreation of other Gods</i>. Jesus is said to have been conceived by the
+ Holy Ghost (see Matt. i. 18), and we find similar claims instituted still
+ more anciently for other incarnate demigods. In the Mexican Trinity, Y,
+ Zona was the father, Bacal the Word, and Eckvah the Holy Ghost, by the
+ last of whom Chimalman conceived and brought forth the enfleshed God
+ Quexalcote. (See Mex. Ant., vol. vi. p. 1650.) In the Hindoo mythos, Sakia
+ was conceived by the Holy Ghost Nara-an.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other cases might be cited, proving the same point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, we observe that the various heterogeneous conceptions, discordant
+ traditions, and contradictory superstitions appertaining to that anomalous
+ nondescript being known as the Holy Ghost, are traceable to various
+ oriental countries, and to a very remote antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will only occupy space with one or two more historical citations of a
+ general nature, tending to prove the prevalence of this ghostly myth in
+ other countries, not yet cited. "Tell me, O thou strong in fire!"
+ ejaculated Sesostris of Egypt, to the oracle, as reported by Manetho, "who
+ before me could subjugate all things, and who shall after me?" But the
+ oracle rebuked him, saying, "First God, then the Word, and with them the
+ Spirit." (See Nimrod, vol. i. p. 119.) "And Plutarch, in his 'Life of
+ Numa,'" says our oft-quoted author, "shows that the incarnation of the
+ Holy Spirit was known both to the ancient Romans and Egyptians."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctrine is thus shown to have been nearly universal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ORIGIN OF THE HOLY GHOST SUPERSTITION.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The origin of the tradition respecting this fabulous and mythical being is
+ easily traced to the ancient Brahminical trifold conception of the Deity,
+ in which stands, in Trinity order, first, the God of power or might&mdash;Brahma
+ or Brahm (the Father); second, the God of creation&mdash;the Word&mdash;answering
+ to John's creative Word (see John i. 3); and third, the God of generation
+ and regeneration&mdash;the Holy Spirit or Holy Ghost. The last member of
+ the triune conception of the Deity was considered, under the Brahminical
+ theocracy, the <i>living, vital, active, life-imparting agent</i> in both
+ the first and second births of men and the gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be borne in mind by the reader that the Holy Ghost is represented
+ in the Christian Scripture as being the active generating agent of
+ Christ's conception, he being, as Matthew declares, "conceived by the Holy
+ Ghost." The Holy Ghost was also the regenerating agent at his baptism.
+ Although the specific object of the descent of the Holy Ghost on that
+ occasion is not stated by Luke, who relates it; although it is not stated
+ for what purpose the Holy Spirit, after assuming the form of a bird,
+ alighted and sat upon his head, yet the motive is fully disclosed in the
+ older mythical religions, where we find the matter in fuller detail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baptism itself is claimed by all its Christian votaries as regenerating or
+ imparting a new spiritual life; and this new spiritual life was believed
+ by several nations, as before stated, to make its appearance in the
+ character and shape of a bird&mdash;sometimes a pigeon, sometimes a dove;
+ and thus the origin of this tradition is most clearly and unmistakably
+ exposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the foregoing historical exposition exhibits the Holy Ghost as
+ performing several distinct and discordant offices, so we likewise find it
+ possessing at least two distinct genders, the masculine and neuter, i. e.,
+ no gender&mdash;changing, ghost-like, from one to the other, as occasion
+ seemed to require.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From all these metamorphoses it is shown and demonstrated that the sexual
+ and other changes of this "mysterious" being equal many of the demigods of
+ mythology. The primary windy conception of the Holy Ghost is traceable to
+ that early period of society when the rude and untutored denizens of the
+ earth, in their profound ignorance of natural causes, were very easily and
+ naturally led into the belief that wherever there was motion there was a
+ God, or the active manifestation of a God, whether it was in the wind,
+ breath, water, fire, or the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence, the Buddhists had their god <i>Vasus</i> who manifested himself
+ variously in the shape or character of fire, wind, storms, gas, ghosts,
+ gusts, and the breath, thus constituting a very nearly-allied counterpart
+ to the Christian Holy Ghost, which Mr. Parkhurst tells us originally meant
+ "air in motion." This god was believed to have sprung from the supreme,
+ primordial God, which the ancient Brahmins and Buddhists generally
+ believed was constituted of a fine, spiritual substance,&mdash;aura,
+ anima, wind, ether, igneous fluid, or electrical fire, i. e., fire from
+ the sun, giving rise to "baptism by fire" and hence, the third God, or
+ third member of the Trinity, subsequently arising out of this compound
+ being, was also necessarily composed of or consisted of the same
+ properties&mdash;all of which were believed to be correlated, if not
+ identical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is a complete, though brief, historical elucidation of that
+ mysterious, imaginary being so corporally intangible that Faustus, of the
+ third century, declared respecting it, "The Holy Spirit, the third
+ majesty, has the air for his residence." And it is a fabulous God whose
+ scriptural biography is invested with so many ludicrous and abstruse
+ incidents as to incite several hundred Christian writers to labor hard
+ with a "godly zeal," by a reconstruction of "God's Word" and a
+ rehabiliment of the ghostly texts, to effect some kind of a reconciliation
+ of the story with reason and common sense&mdash;with what success the
+ reader is left to judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE UNPARDONABLE SIN AGAINST THE HOLY GHOST.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before dismissing our ghostly narrative, it may effect something in the
+ way of mitigating the anxious fears of some of our Christian brothers and
+ sisters to explain the nature of "the sin against the Holy Ghost," and
+ assign the reason for its being unpardonable. The sin against the Holy
+ Ghost consisted, according to the ancient Mexican traditions, in resisting
+ its operations in the second birth&mdash;that is, the regeneration of the
+ heart or soul by the Holy Ghost. And as the rectification of the heart or
+ soul was a prominent idea with Christ, there is scarcely any ground to
+ doubt but that this was the notion he cherished of the nature of the sin
+ against the Holy Ghost. And it was considered unpardonable, simply because
+ as the pardoning and cleansing process consisted in, or was at least
+ always accompanied with baptism by water, in which operation the Holy
+ Ghost was the agent in effecting a "new birth," therefore, when the
+ ministrations or operations of this indispensable agent were resisted or
+ rejected, there was no channel, no means, no possible mode left for the
+ sinner to find a renewed acceptance with God. When a person sinned against
+ the Father or the Word (the Son), he could find a door of forgiveness
+ through the baptizing processes spiritual or elementary, of the Holy
+ Ghost. But an offense committed against this third limb of the Godhead had
+ the effect to close and bar the door so that there could be "no
+ forgiveness, either in this life or that which is to come." To sin against
+ the Holy Ghost was to tear down the scaffold by which the door of heaven
+ was to be reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus it is explained the great "<i>mystery of godliness</i>," the
+ "unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost," which, on account of the
+ frightful penalty annexed to it, while it is impossible to learn what it
+ consists in&mdash;it being undefined and undefinable&mdash;has caused
+ thousands, and probably millions, of the disciples of the Christian faith
+ the most agonizing hours of alarm and despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII. THE DIVINE "WORD" OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ The Word as Creator, as Second Person of the Trinity, and its
+ Pre-Existence.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE WORD OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
+ was God." (John i. i.) The doctrine of the divine creative word (from the
+ Greek Logos) appears to have been coeval in its origin with that of the
+ Trinity, if not inseparably connected with it, as it constitutes the
+ second member of the Trinity of "Father, Word, and Holy Ghost" in most of
+ the ancient systems of religion. Works on heathen mythology show that it
+ was anciently a very prevalent custom to personify ideas, thoughts and
+ words into angels and Gods. Words were first personated, and transformed
+ into men, then into angels, and finally into Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here is foreshadowed the origin of John's personification of "the Word
+ made flesh." It was simply the word of the supreme God as it escaped from
+ his mouth, assuming the form and characteristics of a divine being like
+ himself, and taking position as a secondary God and second member of the
+ Trinity. This was the orient conception, and it appears to have been
+ John's. He evidently had no thought of Christ experiencing human birth, at
+ first, or being born of a woman, but believed, like some of the
+ orientalists, that he came out of the mouth of the Father, and was thus
+ "made flesh." (John i. 2.) Not a word of Christ being born is found in
+ John's Gospel, till after his existence as the Word is spoken of. (See
+ first note in back of book.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE WORD AS CREATOR.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John also represents the Word as having been the Creator. "All things were
+ made by him." (John i. 3.) And Peter declares, "By the word of God the
+ heavens were of old." (2 iii. 5.) Now, let it be observed here, as a
+ notable circumstance, that the Chinese bible, much older than the
+ Christian's New Testament, likewise declares, "God pronounced the primeval
+ Word, and his own eternal and glorious abode sprang into existence." Mr.
+ Guizot, in a note on Gibbon's work, says, "According to the Zend-Avesta
+ (the Persian bible, more than three thousand years old), it is by the
+ Word, more ancient than the world, that Ormuzd created the universe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In like manner the sacred writings of the ancient Thibetans speak of "the
+ Word which produced the world"&mdash;an exact counterpart to John's
+ declaration, "All things were made by him." And the ancient Greek writer
+ Amelias, speaking of the God Mercury, says, "And this plainly was the
+ Logos (the Word), by whom all things were made, he being himself eternal,"
+ as Heraclitus would say,.... He assumed to be with God, and to be God, and
+ in him everything that was made, has its life and being, who, descending
+ into body, and putting on flesh, took the appearance of a man, though
+ still retaining the majesty of his nature. Here is "the Word made flesh"
+ set forth in most explicit terms. The Psalmist exclaims, "By the Word of
+ God were the heavens made, and all the host of them by the Breath of his
+ mouth." (Ps. xxxiii. 6.) Here is disclosed not only the conception of the
+ Word as Creator, but also the Word and the Breath as synonymous terms,
+ both of which conceptions oriental history amply proves to be of heathen
+ derivation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was anciently believed that the Word and Breath of God were the same,
+ and possessed a vitalizing power, which, as they issued from his mouth,
+ might be transformed into another being known as a secondary God. Both the
+ Jews and the Christians seem to have inherited this belief, as evinced by
+ the foregoing quotations from their bible. The most ancient tradition
+ taught that the Word emanated from the mouth of the principal God, and
+ "became flesh," that is, took form, as the ancient Brahmins expressed it,
+ for the special purpose of serving as agent in the work of creation, that
+ is, to become the creator of the external universe. St. John evidently
+ borrowed this idea. Read his first chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PRE-EXISTENCE OF THE WORD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pre-existence or previous existence of the Word, antecedent to the
+ date of its metamorphosis into the human form, we find taught in several
+ of the ancient systems of religion, as well as the more modern Christian
+ system. Several texts in the Christian New Testament set forth the
+ doctrine quite explicitly. Christ, as the Divine Word, declared, "Before
+ Abraham was I am," and that he had an existence with the Father before the
+ foundation of the world, etc., which is a distinct avowal of the doctrine
+ of pre-existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But oriental history proves the doctrine is much older than Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hindoo very anciently taught that "the Word had existed with God from
+ all eternity, and when spoken it became a glorious form, the aggregate
+ embodiment of all the divine ideas, and performed the work of creation."
+ And of Chrishna, it is affirmed that "while upon the earth he existed also
+ in heaven." (See Baghavat Gita.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In like manner it is declared of an Egyptian God, that "though he was born
+ into the world, he existed with his father God before the world was made."
+ And parallel to this is the statement of the Chinese bible, that "though
+ the Holy Word (Chang-si) will be born upon the earth, yet he existed
+ before anything was made." Even for Pythagoras it was claimed he existed
+ in heaven before he was born upon the earth. Mr. Higgins, in summing up
+ the matter, declares, "All the old religions believed the world was
+ created by the Word, and that this Word existed before creation" (Ana.,
+ vol. ii. p. 77), which clearly indicates the source of St John's creative
+ Word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE DUAL OR TWO-FOLD NAME OF THE WORD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In most cases the living Divine Word was known by different names and
+ titles, prior to the era of its assuming the mortal form, from that by
+ which it was known after its fleshly investment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the ancient Persians, the name for the divine spiritual Word was
+ Honover. After its human birth, it was called "Mithra the Mediator." The
+ Hindoo oriental term for the primeval Word was Om, or Aum. After assuming
+ its most important incarnate form, it was known as Chrishna. The Chinese
+ Holy Interior Word was Om-i-to, and its principal incarnation was Chang-ti
+ or Ti-en-ti. The Japanese also proclaimed their belief in a Divine Word
+ before the Christian era, which, in their language, was Amina. They
+ taught, like John, that it came forth from the mouth of the Supreme God
+ (Brahm) to perform the work of creation, after which, it was known as
+ Sakia. And that popular Christian writer, Mr. Milman, informs us that the
+ Jewish founders of Christianity believed in an original Divine Word, which
+ they call Memra. When it descended to the earth, and "became flesh, and
+ dwelt amongst us" (John i. 4.) according to the evangelist John, it was
+ known as Jesus Christ. Mr. Milman states also, that "the appellation to
+ the Word is found in the Indian (Hindoo), Persian, the Platonic, and the
+ Alexandrian systems." (Hist, of Chr., Book I., Chap. 2.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, the question is settled by Christian testimony&mdash;that the
+ various conceptions of the Divine Word are of heathen origin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE WORD AS A SECOND MEMBER OF THE TRINITY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the
+ Holy Ghost." (1 John v. 7.) Observe, the Word is the second person in the
+ Trinity. And this was its post in the Brahman, Hindoo, Persian, and other
+ systems. "All religions," says a writer, "which taught the existence of
+ the Word as a great primeval spirit, represent him as secondary to the
+ supreme." (P. R. 3, vol. ii. p. 336.) "The Hindoos reverenced it next to
+ Brahm." Mr. Higgins cuts the matter short by declaring "The Logos, or
+ Word, was the second person of the Trinity in all the ancient systems, as
+ in the Christian system," which again indicates its heathen origin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE WORD AS A BIBLICAL TITLE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Word," "the Holy Word," "the Divine Word," etc., are terms now
+ frequently applied to the Christian bible, without any suspicion of their
+ heathen origin. The Zend-Avesta, the Persian bible, was always called "The
+ Living Word of God," for that is the meaning of the term Zend-Avesta, and
+ the oldest bible in the world is the Vedas, and it means both Word and
+ Wisdom. Om, the Egyptian's Holy Word, they frequently applied both to
+ their incarnate Gods and to their sacred writings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The practice of calling bibles "The Word of God" originated from the
+ belief that, when the incarnate Word left the earth and returned to
+ heaven, he infused a portion of his living spirits into the divine
+ writings which contained his history and his doctrines, and which he
+ himself had prompted his disciples to write as his "Last Revelation to
+ man." They then must contain a portion of him, i. e., a portion of the
+ Holy Word&mdash;hence, both were called "The Holy Word."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this heathen custom Christians borrowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ORIGIN OF THE WORD AS CREATOR.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The motive which prompted a belief in the creative Word may be styled a
+ theological necessity. It was believed that the principal God, like the
+ rulers of earth, was too aristocratic to labor with his own hands. Hence,
+ another God was originated to perform the work of creation, and called
+ "The Word."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The origin of the creative Word is still further indicated by Blackwood's
+ Magazine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Creation became impossible to a being already infinite, and was a
+ derogation to a being already perfect. Some lower God, some Avatar, must
+ be interposed (as an emanation from the mouth of the God supreme) to
+ perform the subordinate task of creation. Hence, originated and came forth
+ the Word as Creator."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV. THE TRINITY VERY ANCIENTLY A CURRENT HEATHEN DOCTRINE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "THERE are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the
+ Holy Ghost, and these three are one." (i John v. 7.) This text, which
+ evidently discloses a belief in the existence of three separate and
+ distinct beings in the Godhead, sets forth a doctrine which was anciently
+ of almost universal prevalence. Nearly every nation, whether oriental or
+ occidental, whose religious faith has been commemorated in history,
+ discloses in its creed a belief in the trifold nature and triune division
+ of the Deity. St. Jerome testifies unequivocally, "All the ancient nations
+ believed in the Trinity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And a volume of facts and figures might be cited here, if we had space for
+ them, in proof of this statement A text from one of the Hindoo bibles,
+ (the Puranas) will evince the antiquity and prevalence of this belief in a
+ nation of one hundred and fifty millions of people more than two thousand
+ years ago. "O you three Lords!" ejaculated Attencion, "know that I
+ recognize only one God. Inform me, therefore, which of you is the true
+ divinity that I may address to him alone my vows and adorations." The
+ three Gods, Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva, becoming manifest to him, replied,
+ "Learn, O devotee, that there is no real distinction between us. What to
+ you appears such is only by semblance. The single being appears under
+ three forms by the acts of creation, preservation and destruction but he
+ is one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, reader, note the remark here, that the ancient Christian fathers
+ almost universally and unanimously proclaimed the doctrine of the Trinity
+ as one of the leading tenets of the Christian faith, and as a doctrine
+ derived directly by revelation from heaven. But here we find it most
+ explicitly set forth by a disciple of a pagan religion more than three
+ thousand years ago, as the Christian missionary D. O. Allen states, that
+ the Hindoo bible, in which it was found was compiled fourteen hundred
+ years before Christ, and written at a still earlier period. And we find
+ the same doctrine very explicitly taught in the ancient Brahmin, Persian,
+ Chaldean, Chinese, Mexican and Grecian systems &mdash;all much older than
+ Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No writer ever taught or avowed a belief in any tenet of religious faith
+ more fully or plainly than Plato sets forth, the doctrine of the Trinity
+ in his Phaedon, written four hundred years B. C. And his terms are found
+ to be in most striking conformity to the Christian doctrine on this
+ subject, as taught in the New Testament Plato's first term for the Trinity
+ was in Greek&mdash;1. To Agathon, the supreme God or Father. 2. The Logos,
+ which is the Greek term for the Word. And, 3. Psyche, which the Greek
+ Lexicon defines to mean "soul, spirit or ghost"&mdash;of course, the Holy
+ Ghost. Here we have the three terms of the Christian Trinity, Father,
+ Word, and Holy Ghost, as plainly taught as language can express it, thus
+ making Plato's exposition of the Trinity and definition of its terms,
+ published four hundred years B. C., identical in meaning with those of St.
+ John's, as found in his Gospel, and contained in the above quoted text.
+ Where, then, is the foundation for the dogmatic claim on the part of the
+ Christian professors for the divine origin of the Trinity doctrine?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will here cite the testimony of some Christian writers to prove that
+ the Trinity is a pagan-derived doctrine. A <i>Christian bishop</i>, Mr.
+ Powell, declares, "I not only confess but I <i>maintain</i>, such a
+ similitude of Plato's and John's Trinity doctrines as bespeaks a common
+ origin." (Thirteenth letter to Dr. Priestley.) What is that you say,
+ bishop? "A common origin." Then you concede both are heaven-derived, or
+ both heathen-derived. If the former, then revelation and heathenism are
+ synonymous terms. If the latter, then Christianity stands on a level with
+ heathen mythology. Which horn of the dilemma will you choose? St.
+ Augustine confessed he found the beginning of John's Gospel in Plato's
+ Phædon, which is a concession of the whole ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another writer, Chataubron, speaks of an ancient Greek inscription on the
+ great obelisk at Rome, which reads&mdash;1. The Mighty God. 2. The
+ Begotten of God as Christ is declared to be "the only begotten of the
+ Father" (John i. 14). And, 3. "Apollo the Spirit"&mdash;the Holy Spirit or
+ Holy Ghost&mdash;thus presenting in plain language the three terms of the
+ Trinity. And Mr. Cudworth, in corroboration of this report, says, "The
+ Greeks had a first God, and second God, and third God, and the second was
+ begotten by the first. And yet for all that," continues Mr. Cudworth,
+ "they considered all these one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Platonic or Grecian Trinity, the first person was considered the
+ planner of the work of creation, the second person the creator, and the
+ third person the ghost or spirit which moved upon the face of the waters,
+ and infused life into the mighty deep at creation&mdash;the same Holy
+ Ghost which descended from heaven to infuse life into the waters at
+ Christ's baptism; thus, the resemblance is complete. Mr. Basnage quotes a
+ Christian writer of the fifth century as declaring, "The Athenian sage
+ Plato marvelously anticipated one of the most important and mysterious
+ doctrines of the Christian religion"&mdash;meaning the Trinity&mdash;an
+ important concession truly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The oldest and probably the original form of the Trinity is that found in
+ the Brahmin and Hindoo systems&mdash;the terms of which are&mdash;i.
+ Brahma, the Father or supreme God. 2. Vishnu, the incarnate Word and
+ Creator. 3. Siva, the Spirit of God, i. e., the Holy Spirit or Ghost&mdash;each
+ answering to corresponding terms of the Christian Trinity, and yet two
+ thousand years older, according to Dr. Smith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have not allowable space for other facts and citations (as this work is
+ designed as a mere epitome), although we have but entered upon the
+ threshold of the evidence tending to prove that the Christian Trinity was
+ born of heathen parents, that it is an offspring of heathen mythology,
+ like other doctrines of the Christian faith, claimed by its disciples as
+ the gift of divine revelation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here let it be noted as a curious chapter in sacred history that the
+ numerous divine Trinities which have constituted a part of nearly every
+ religious system ever propagated to the world were composed, in every
+ case, of male Gods. No female has ever yet been admitted into the triad of
+ Gods composing the orthodox Trinity. Every member of the Trinity in every
+ case is a male, and an old bachelor&mdash;a doctrine most flagrantly at
+ war with the principles of modern philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this science teaches us that the endowment of a being with either male
+ or female organs, presupposes the existence of the other sex; and that
+ either sex, without the other would be a ludicrous anomaly, and a
+ ludicrous distortion of nature unparalleled in the history of science. As
+ sexual organs create an imperious desire for the other sex, no male or
+ female could long enjoy full happiness in the absence of the other party.
+ What an unhappy, lonesome place, therefore, the orthodox heaven must have
+ been, during the eternity of the past, with no society but old bachelors!
+ The Trinity was constituted of males simply because woman has always been
+ considered a mere cipher in society&mdash;a mere tool for man's
+ convenience, an appendage to his wants. Hence, instead of having a place
+ among the Gods she led the practical life of a servant and a menial, which
+ accounts for her exclusion from the Trinity. But the time is coming when
+ she will rule both heaven and earth with the omnipotent power of her love
+ nature. Then we shall have no "war in heaven," and no fighting on earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV. ABSOLUTION, AND THE CONFESSION OF SINS, OF HEATHEN ORIGIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SOME Christian writers have labored to make it appear that this is
+ exclusively a Christian doctrine, while others have labored as hard to get
+ it out of their bible, or make the people believe that it is not therein
+ taught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We shall show, upon scriptural and historical authority, that both are
+ wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There can be no question as to this rite having existed outside of
+ Christianity, or of its being much older than Christianity. History proves
+ both. Nor can it be successfully denied that it is taught in the Christian
+ Scriptures, both the confessing of sins and that of forgiving sins. The
+ apostle James, with respect to the former, is quite explicit. He enjoins,
+ emphatically, "Confess your faults one to another." (James v. 16.) The
+ practice of forgiving sins is also enjoined. "Forgiving one another" is
+ recommended both in Ephesians (iv. 32) and Colossians. (iii. 13). "And
+ whatsoever ye shall lose on earth shall be loosed in heaven" (Matthew
+ xviii 18), is interpreted as conferring the power to forgive sins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then we remark that the practices both of confessing and forgiving
+ sins are very ancient pagan rites and customs. Speaking of their
+ prevalence in ancient India, the author of the Anacalypsis remarks, "The
+ person offering sacrifices made a verbal confession of his sins, and
+ received absolution." Auricular confession was also practiced among the
+ ancient Mithriacs, or Persians, and the Parsees proper of the same
+ country. Mr. Volney tells us, "They observed all the Christian sacraments,
+ even to the laying on of hands in the confirmation." (211.) And the
+ Christian Tertullian also tells us that "The priests of Mithra promised
+ absolution from sin on confession and baptism," while another author adds,
+ that "on such occasions Mithra marked his followers (the servants of God)
+ in their foreheads," and that "he celebrated the sacrifice of bread, which
+ is the resurrection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the collection of the Jewish laws called "The Mishna," we are told the
+ Jews confessed their sins by placing their hands upon a calf belonging to
+ the priest, and that this was called "the Confession of Calves." (See
+ Mishna, tom. ii. p. 394.) Confessing sins was practiced in ancient Mexico;
+ also under Numa of Rome, whose priests, we are informed, had to clear
+ their consciences by confessing their sins before they could offer
+ sacrifices. The practice of confessing and forgiving sins as recommended
+ in the Christian bible, and practiced by some of the Christian sects, has
+ been the source of much practical evil by furnishing a pretext and
+ license, to some extent, for the commission of crime and sin. While sins
+ can be so easily obliterated they will be committed&mdash;perpetrated
+ without much remorse or restraint. "In China (says the Rev. Mr. Pitrat,
+ 232), the invocation of Omito is sufficient to remit the punishment of the
+ greatest crimes." The same author tells us, "The ancient initiation of the
+ pagans had tribunals of penance, where the priests, under the name of <i>Roes</i>,
+ heard from the mouth of the sinners themselves the avowal of their sins of
+ which their souls were to be purified, and from the punishment of which
+ they wished to be exempted." (Page 37.) The granting of absolution for sin
+ or misconduct among the early primitive Christians was so common, St.
+ Cyprian informs us, that "thousands of reprieves were granted daily,"
+ which served as an indirect license to crime. And thus the doctrine of
+ divine forgiveness, as taught by pagans and Christians, has proved to be
+ demoralizing in its effects upon society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI. ORIGIN OF BAPTISM BY WATER, FIRE, BLOOD AND THE HOLY GHOST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BAPTISM, in some of its various forms, is a very ancient rite, and was
+ extensively practiced in several oriental countries. It was administered
+ in a great varieties of forms, and with the use of different elements.
+ Water was the most common, but fire and air, wind, spirit ghost were also
+ used; and both the living and the dead were made the subjects of its
+ solemn and imposing ceremonies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will notice each of these modes of baptism separate&mdash;appropriating
+ a brief space to each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Baptism by Water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Baptism by water," says Mr. Higgins, "is a very old rite, being practised
+ by the followers of Zoroaster, by the Romans, the Egyptians, and other
+ nations." It was also vogue among the ancient Hindoos at a still earlier
+ day Their mode of administering it was to dip the candidate for immersion
+ three times in the watery element, in the same manner as is now practiced
+ by some of the Christian sects during the performance of which the
+ hierophant would ejaculate the following prayer and ceremony: "O Lord this
+ man is impure, like the mud of this stream! But as thou cleanse and
+ deliver his soul from sin as the water cleanses his body." They believed
+ that water possesses the virtue of purifying both soul and body&mdash;the
+ latter from filth and the former from sin. The ancient Mexican, Persians,
+ Hindoos and Jews were in the habit of baptizing their infants soon after
+ they were born. And the water used for this purpose was called "the water
+ of regeneration." Paul speaks of being "saved by the washing of
+ regeneration." (See Titus iii. 5.) Those who touched these infants before
+ they were baptized were deemed impure. And as this was unavoidable on the
+ part of the mothers, they were required, as in the cases of the mothers of
+ Chrishna and Christ, to present themselves on the eighth day after
+ accouchement to the priest in the temple to be purified. The Romans chose
+ the eighth day for girls and the ninth for boys. The child was usually
+ named (christened) at the time it was baptized. And in India, the name, or
+ God's name, or some other mark, was engraven or written on the forehead.
+ This custom is several times recognized in the Christian bible, both in
+ the old and in the New Testament. (See Ezek. ix 4; Rev. xiv. 9; xix. 20,
+ etc.) John speaks of a mark being made on the forehead. (See Rev. xiii.
+ 16.) Also of the name of God being written on the forehead. (Rev. iii.
+ 12.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE DOVE DESCENDING AT BAPTISM.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this stage of our inquiry it may be stated that several of the ancient
+ religious orders had the legend of a dove or pigeon descending at baptism&mdash;a
+ counterpart to the evangelical story of "the Spirit of God descending in
+ bodily shape like a dove," and alighting on the head of Jesus Christ while
+ being baptized by John in Jordan. (See Luke iii. 22.) It will be observed
+ here that the spirit, or soul, of God descended not only in the manner,
+ but in "bodily shape like a dove." This accords with the tradition
+ anciently prevalent among the Hindoos, Mexicans, Greeks, Romans and
+ Persians, or Babylonians, that all souls, or spirits, possessed, or were
+ capable of assuming, the form of a dove. Hence, it is reported of
+ Polycarp, Semiramis, Caesar and others, that at death their souls, or
+ spirits, were seen to leave the body in "bodily shape like a dove" and
+ ascend to heaven. "The Divine Love, or Eros," says Mr. Higgins, "was
+ supposed by the oriental heathen to descend often in the form of a dove to
+ bless the candidate for baptism." These traditions, doubtless, gave rise
+ to the story of the dove descending at Christ's baptism&mdash;that is God
+ in the shape of a dove, for that is clearly the meaning of the text. We
+ are also informed by our author just quoted, that a dove stood for and
+ represented, among the orientalists, the third person of the Trinity, as
+ it does in the gospel story of Christ&mdash;he being the second member of
+ the Christian Trinity of Father, Son and Holy Ghost. It was considered
+ "the regenerator, or regenerating spirit," and persons being baptized were
+ said to be "born again" into the spirit or the spirit into them; that is,
+ the dove into or upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a master-key is furnished by these oriental religions for solving the
+ mysteries of the Christian bible! How much more lucid than Divine
+ Revelation&mdash;so-called!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will quote again from Higgins: "Among all nations, from the very
+ earliest period, water has been used as a species of religious sacrament.
+ Because, as it dripped from the clouds, it was observed to have the power
+ of reviving drooping nature and creating anew, or regenerating the whole
+ vegetable kingdom in spring, it was hence chosen as an emblem of spiritual
+ regeneration and a medium of baptism. Water was the element by means of
+ which everything was born again through the agency of the Eros, Dove, or
+ Divine Love." And, hence, the ceremony of dipping or plunging (or, as it
+ is modernly termed, baptizing) came into vogue for the remission of sins
+ and "the regeneration into a new and more holy life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some streams were supposed to have more efficacy in these respects than
+ others. Hence, nearly all religious nations had their "Holy Rivers," "Holy
+ Water," "Sacred Pools," etc. The Hindoos resorted to the "Holy Ganges,"
+ the Egyptians to the "Holy Nile," the Chaldeans and Persians to the "Holy
+ Euphrates," the Greeks to their "Holy Lustral Water," the Italians to the
+ river Po, and the Jews and Christians to their holy river Jordan. If
+ Jordan was not called "holy," it was undoubtedly considered so, else why
+ did Elisha order Naaman to wash seven times in that stream instead of
+ Damascus, which was much nearer and more accessible? And why was Christ
+ baptized in Jordan? "And all the land of Judea, and they of Jerusalem,
+ were baptized in Jordan, confessing their sins." (Matt iii. vi.) Why, as
+ several streams were handier to a large portion of the candidates, simply
+ because Jordan was considered to be "more holy." And Christians had their
+ sacred pool of Bethesda, as the Hindoos had their Sahar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rite of baptism was at first generally practiced in caves&mdash;as
+ were also other religious rites; and as these caves were often difficult
+ of access, and their mouths, doors or gates narrow and difficult to enter,
+ they fully exemplify Christ's declaration, "Straight is the gate and
+ narrow is the way that leadeth unto life." (Matt. vii. 14.) And when he
+ declared, "Except a man be born of water and of the spirit he cannot enter
+ the kingdom of heaven" (John iii. 5) he was only seconding the exhortation
+ of the priests to enter these subterranean vaults and be baptized after
+ the oriental and Jewish custom. Thus originated baptism by water in the
+ form of dipping, or immersion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BAPTISM BY SPRINKLING.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owing to the scarcity of water in some countries, and its entire absence
+ in others, and the fatal effects sometimes resulting from the practice of
+ baptizing infants and invalids by immersion, a new mode of baptism
+ eventually sprung up, now known as "sprinkling," in which sometimes water
+ and sometimes blood was used. Virgil, Ovid and Cicero all speak of its
+ prevalence amongst the ancient Romans or Latins. We are informed that the
+ ancient Jews practiced it upon their women while in a state of nudity, the
+ ceremony being administered by three rabbis, or priests. But the custom
+ finally gave way to one more consonant with decorum. Blood, being
+ considered "the life thereof" of man, was deemed more efficacious than
+ water, and hence was often used in lieu of that element. The Greeks kept a
+ "holy vessel" for this purpose, known as the Facina. The Romans used a
+ brush, which may now be seen engraven upon some of their ancient coins and
+ sculptured on their ancient temples. The Hindoos and Persians used a
+ branch of laurel or some other shrub for sprinkling the repentant
+ candidate, whether water or blood was used.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some countries the rite was practiced as a talisman against evil
+ spirits. The Mexicans never approached their altars without sprinkling
+ them with blood drawn from their own bodies, as the Jews sprinkled the
+ walls and door-posts of their temples with blood under the requisition of
+ the Levitical code. This mode of fancied purification by sprinkling either
+ with water or blood we find recognized, and apparently sanctioned, in the
+ Christian bible, both in the Old and New Testaments. Ezekiel says, "I will
+ sprinkle clean water on you." (Ezek. xxxvi. 25.) Peter uses the phrase,
+ "The sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ." (1 Peter i. 2.) And Paul
+ makes use of the expression, "The blood of sprinkling, that speaketh
+ better things than that of Abel" (Heb. xii. 24), which we regard as an
+ indirect sanction of the senseless heathen idea of effecting spiritual
+ purification by drops of blood. (See Potter's Antiquities and Herbert's
+ Travels.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BAPTISM BY FIRE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baptism by fire was a form or mode of application which seems to have been
+ introduced from the belief that it was productive of a higher degree of
+ purification. There were several ways of using fire in the baptismal rite.
+ In some cases the candidate for immortality ran through blazing streams of
+ fire&mdash;a custom which was called "the baptism of fire." M. de
+ Humboldt, in his "Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments of America,"
+ informs us it prevailed in India, Chaldea and Syria, and throughout
+ eastern Asia. It appears to have been gotten up as a substitute for
+ sun-worship, as this luminary was believed to be constituted of fire,
+ though in reality there never was any such thing as sun or solar worship.
+ Christian writers represent the ancient Persians as has having been
+ addicted to solar worship. But Firdausi, Cudworth and other authors
+ declare that neither they nor any other nation ever worshiped the sun, but
+ merely an imaginary Deity supposed to reside in the sun. Heathen nations
+ have been charged with many things of which they were not guilty; though
+ it is true that in the spirit of Christ's exhortation, "Whosoever loseth
+ his life for my sake shall find it," some of the candidates for the fiery
+ ordeal voluntarily sacrificed their lives in the operation, under the
+ persuasion that it was necessary to purify the soul, and would enable them
+ to ascend to higher posts or planes of enjoyment in the celestial world.
+ And some of them were taught that sins not expurgated by fire, or some
+ other efficaciously renovating process in this life, would be punished by
+ fire in the life to come. Here we will mention that there is a seeming
+ recognition of this ancient heathen rite in both departments of the
+ Christian's bible. Isaiah says, "When thou walkest through fire thou shalt
+ not be burned." (lxiii. 2.) And the Baptist John recognizes three modes of
+ baptism: "I indeed baptize you with water, but he that cometh after me
+ shall baptize you with fire and the Holy Ghost." (Matt. iii. 11). And Paul
+ teaches the necessity of being purified by fire. (See i Cor. iii. 15.) So
+ it is both a heathen and a Christian idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BAPTISM BY THE HOLY GHOST.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This fanciful ceremony is both a Christian and a heathen rite, and is
+ undoubtedly of heathen origin. The mode of applying it was to breathe into
+ or upon the seeker for divine favors. This was done by the priest, who, it
+ was believed, imparted the Spirit of God by the process. The custom, Mr.
+ Herbert informs us, was anciently quite common in oriental countries, and
+ was at a later date borrowed by Christ and his apostles and incorporated
+ into the Christian ceremonies. We find that Christ not only sanctioned it
+ but practised it, as it is declared when he met his disciples after his
+ resurrection "he breathed on them, and saith unto them, Receive ye the
+ Holy Ghost." (John xx. 22.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the following language of Ezekiel is evidently a sanction of the same
+ heathen custom: "Thus saith the Lord God, Come from the four winds, O
+ breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live." (xxxvii. 9.)
+ Let it be borne in mind here that breath, air, wind, spirit and ghost were
+ used as synonymous terms, according to Mr. Parkhurst (see Chap. XXII.),
+ and this breathing was supposed to impart spiritual life, being nothing
+ less than the Spirit of God, the same as that breathed into Adam when "he
+ became a living soul." (See Gen. ii. 7.) For a fuller exposition see
+ Chapter XXII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BAPTISM OF OR FOR THE DEAD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was customary among the Hindoos and other nations to postpone baptism
+ till near the supposed terminus of life, in order that the ablution might
+ extinguish all the sins and misdeeds of the subject's earthly probation.
+ But it sometimes happened that men and women were killed, or died
+ unexpectedly, before the rite was administered. And as it would not do for
+ these unfortunate souls to be deprived of the benefit of this soul-saving
+ ordinance, the custom was devised of baptizing the defunct body, or more
+ commonly some living person in its stead. The method of executing the
+ latter expedient, according to St. Chrysostom, was to place some living
+ person under the bed or couch on which the corpse was reclining, when the
+ defunct was asked if he would be baptized. The living man, responding for
+ the dead, answered in the affirmative. The corpse was then taken and
+ dipped in a vessel prepared for the purpose. This silly practice was in
+ vogue among the early Christians, and Paul seems to regard it as an
+ important custom. "Else what shall they do which are baptized for the
+ dead, if the dead rise not at all." (i Cor. xv. 9.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inference derivable from this text is, that Paul held that the labor
+ of baptizing the dead would be lost in the event of the falsification of
+ the doctrine of the resurrection, but otherwise it would be valid&mdash;which
+ evinces his faith in the senseless and superstitious practice. It will be
+ observed from the historical exposition of this chapter that all the
+ various ancient heathen modes and rites of baptism have been practiced by
+ Christians, and are sanctioned by their bible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII. THE SACRAMENT OR EUCHARIST OF HEATHEN ORIGIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AT the feast of the Passover, Christ is represented, while distributing
+ bread to his disciples, to have said, "Take, eat; this is my body" (Matt.
+ xxvi. 26); and while handing round the consecrated cup, he enjoined,
+ "Drink ye all of it, for this is my blood of the new covenant, which is
+ shed for many for the remission of sins" (xxvi. 27). Here is a very clear
+ and explicit indorsement of what is generally termed "the Eucharist or
+ Sacrament." And nothing can be more susceptible of proof than that this
+ rite or ordinance is of pagan origin, and was practically recognized many
+ centuries prior to the dawn of the Christian era.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we observe, by the text above quoted, the Christian Savior and Lawgiver
+ copied, or reproduced, an old pagan rite as a part of his professedly new
+ and spiritual system, one of the most ancient and widely-extended formulas
+ of pagandom. And stranger still, the catechisms of the Christian church
+ represent this ordinance as having originated in the design and motive to
+ keep the ancient Christian world in remembrance of the death and
+ sufferings and sacrifice of Christ, while we find it existing long prior
+ to his time, both among Jews and pagans, this being virtually admitted in
+ the bible itself, so far as respects the pagans, thus proving that it did
+ not originate with Christ, and therefore is not of Christian origin. For
+ in Gen. viv. 18, we read, "And Melchisedek, king of Salem, brought forth
+ bread and wine, and he was the priest of the Most High God." Because the
+ Melchisedek here spoken of is represented as being "a priest of the Most
+ High God," and showed so much respect to Abraham, it is presumed and
+ assumed, by Christian writers, that he was a Jewish priest and king; and
+ Mr. Faber (vol. i. p. 72) calls him "an incarnation of the son of God."
+ But there is no intimation throughout the Jewish Scriptures of the Jews
+ ever having had a king or priest by that name. And besides, Eupolemus
+ (vol. i. p. 39), tells us that the temple of Melchisedek was the temple of
+ Jupiter, in which Pythagoras studied philosophy. Then, again, according to
+ some writers, the name is synonymous with Moloch, the God of war among the
+ Greeks. Strange, then, that Melchisedek should be claimed as a priest and
+ king among the Jews. Be this as it may, the case proves that the ceremony
+ of offering bread and wine existed long before the era of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then we have much more and much stronger proof of this fact than is
+ here furnished. The Christian Mr. Faber virtually admits it, when he tells
+ us, "The devil led the heathen to anticipate Christ with respect to
+ several things, as the mysteries of the Eucharist, etc." "And this very
+ solemnity (says St Justin) the evil spirit introduced into the mysteries
+ of Mithra." (Reeves, Justin, p. 86.) Mr. Higgins observes, "It was
+ instituted hundreds of years before the Lord's death took place." Amongst
+ the ancient religious orders and nations who practiced this rite, we may
+ name the Essenes, Persians, Pythagoreans, Gnostics, Brahmins and Mexicans.
+ For proof of its existence and antiquity among the last-named nation, we
+ refer the reader to the "Travels" (chap. ii.) of that Christian writer,
+ Father Acosta. Mr. Marolles, in his Memoirs (p. 215) quotes Tibullus as
+ saying, "The pagan appeased the divinity with holy bread." And Tibullus,
+ in a panegyric on Marcella, wrote, "A little cake, a little morsel of
+ bread, appeased the divinities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here we discover the idea which originated the ceremony. It was
+ started, like animal sacrifices, for the purpose of appeasing the wrath or
+ propitiating the favor of the angry Gods. Tracing the conception still
+ further in the rear of its progress, and apparently to its primary
+ inception, Mr. Higgins observes, "The whole paschal supper (the Lord's
+ supper with the Christians) was in fact a festival of joy to celebrate the
+ passage of the sun across the equinox of spring."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We find one pagan writer who had intelligence enough to ridicule this
+ senseless ceremonial custom, called "the sacrament." Cicero, some forty
+ years before Christ, shows up the doctrine of the sacrament, or
+ substantiation, in its true light. He asks, "How can a man be so stupid as
+ to imagine that which he eats to be a God?" A writer quoted above says,
+ "Mass, or the sacrifice of bread and wine, was common to many ancient
+ nations." (Anac. vol. ii. p. 62.) According to Alnetonae, the ancient
+ Brahmins had a kind of Eucharist called "prajadam." And the same writer
+ informs us that the ancient Peruvians, "after sacrificing a lamb, mingled
+ his blood with flour, and distributed it among the people." Writers on
+ Grecian mythology relate that Ceres, the goddess of corn, gave her flesh
+ to eat, and that Bacchus, the God of wine, gave blood to drink. Nor is
+ there any evidence that Christ and his followers made a better use, or
+ different use, or a more spiritual application of the sacrament, or
+ ceremonial offering of bread and wine, than the pagans did, though some
+ have claimed this. It was a species of symbolism with both,
+ notwithstanding Mr. Glover, a Christian writer, declares, that "in the
+ sacrament of the altar are the natural body and blood of Christ, verily
+ and indeed." (See Glover's Remarks on Bishop Marsh's Compendious Review.)
+ It may be noted here that the Persians, Pythagoreans, Essenes and Gnostics
+ used water instead of wine, and that this mode of practice was less
+ objectionable than that of the Christians, who (as sad experience proves)
+ have too often laid the foundation for the ruin of some poor unsuspecting
+ devotee, by luring him to the fatal fascination of the intoxicating bowl,
+ by holding the sacred and ceremonial wine to his lips, while administering
+ the sacrament or the Lord's supper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. ANOINTING WITH OIL OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE custom and ceremony of anointing with oil by way of imparting some
+ fancied spiritual power and religious qualification seems to have been
+ extensively practiced by the Jews and primitive Christians, and still more
+ anciently by various oriental nations. Mark (xiv. 4), reports Jesus Christ
+ as speaking commendingly of the practice, by which it was evident he was
+ in favor of the superstitious custom. The apostle James not only sanctions
+ it, but recommends it in the most specific language. "Is any sick among
+ you, let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over
+ him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord." (James v. 14.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The practice of greasing or smearing with oil, it may be noted here, was
+ in vogue from other motives besides the one here indicated. We find the
+ statement in the New American Cyclopedia (vol. i. p. 620), that anointing
+ with perfumed oil was in common use among the Greeks and Romans as a mark
+ of hospitality to guests. And modern travelers in the East still find it a
+ custom for visitors to be sprinkled with rose-water, or their head, face
+ and beard "anointed with olive oil." "Anointing," we are also told, "is an
+ ancient and still prevalent custom throughout the East, by pouring
+ aromatic oils on persons as a token of honor.... It was also employed in
+ consecrating priests, prophets and kings, and the places and instruments
+ appointed for worship." (Ibid.) Joshua anointed the ten stones he set up
+ in Jordan, and Jacob the stone on which he slept at the time of his great
+ vision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The early Christians were in the habit of anointing the altars, and even
+ the walls, of the churches, in the same manner as the images, obelisks,
+ statues, etc., had long been consecrated by the devotees of the oriental
+ systems. Aaron, Saul, David, Solomon, and even Jesus Christ were anointed
+ with oil in the same way. David Malcom, in his "Essay on the Antiquity of
+ the Britons," p. 144, says, "The Mexican king was anointed with Holy
+ Unction by the high priest while dancing before the Lord." Vide the case
+ of David "dancing before the Lord with all his might." Dr. Lightfoot, in
+ his "Harmony of the New Testament," speaks of the custom among the Jews of
+ anointing the sick on the Sabbath day (see Works, vol. i, p. 333; also
+ Toland, Sect. Naz. p. 54), as afterwards recommended by the apostle James,
+ as shown above. This accords exactly with the method of treating the sick
+ in ancient India and other heathen countries several thousand years ago.
+ For proof consult Hyde, Bryant, Tertullian and other writers. The custom
+ of anointing the sick, accompanied with prayer and other ceremonies, was
+ quite fashionable in the East long before the birth of either Jesus or
+ James. One writer testifies that "the practice of anointing with oil, so
+ much in vogue among the Jews, and sanctioned by Christ and his followers,
+ was held in high esteem in nearly all the Eastern religions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foregoing historical facts furnish still further proof that
+ Christianity is the offspring of heathenism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIX. HOW MEN, INCLUDING JESUS CHRIST, CAME TO BE WORSHIPED AS
+ GODS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ JESUS CHRIST A DEMIGOD, ACCORDING TO CHRISTIAN WRITERS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IT is truly surprising to observe the damaging concessions of some of the
+ early Christian writers, ruinous to the dogmas of their own faith with
+ respect to the divinity of Jesus Christ, placing him, as they do, on an
+ exact level with the heathen demigods, proving that the belief in his
+ divinity originated in the same manner the belief in theirs did, by which
+ it is clearly shown to be a pagan derived doctrine. Several Christian
+ writers admit the belief in earth-born Gods (called Sons of Gods), and
+ their coming into the world by human birth was prevalent among the heathen
+ long prior to the time of Christ. Hear the proof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will first quote St. Justin relative to the prevalence of the belief
+ among the ancient Greeks and Romans. Addressing them, he says, "The title
+ of Son of God (As applied to Jesus Christ) is very justifiable upon the
+ account of his wisdom, considering you have your Mercury in your worship,
+ under the title of Word or Messenger of God." (Reeves Apol. p. 76.) Here
+ is the proof that the tradition of the Son of God coming into the world,
+ and "the Word becoming flesh," was established amongst the ancient Greeks
+ and Romans long prior to the era of Christianity, or the birth of Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet more than a hundred millions of Christian professors can now be
+ found, who, in their historic ignorance, suppose St. John was the first
+ writer who taught the doctrine of "the Word becoming flesh," and that
+ Jesus Christ was "the first and only begotten Son of God" who ever made
+ his appearance on earth. How true it is that "ignorance is the mother of
+ devotion" to creeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How "the man Christ Jesus" came to be worshiped as a God, is pretty
+ clearly indicated by Bishop Horne, who shows that the doctrine of the
+ incarnation was of universal prevalence long before Jesus Christ came into
+ the flesh. He says, "That God should, in some extraordinary manner, visit
+ and dwell with man, is an idea, which, as we read the writings of the
+ ancient heathen, meets us in a thousand different forms." If, then, the
+ tradition of God being born into the world was so universally established
+ in heathen countries before the Christian era, as here shown, why should
+ not, and why will not, our good Christian brethren dismiss their
+ prejudices, and tear the scales from their eyes, so as to see that this
+ universal belief would as naturally lead to the deification and worship of
+ "the man Christ Jesus" as water flows down a descending plane?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, certainly a thousand times more reasonable is the assumption that his
+ deification originated in this way, than that, with all his frailties and
+ foibles, he was entitled to the appellation of a God&mdash;a conclusion
+ strongly corroborated by the testimony of that able Christian writer, Mr.
+ Norton, who tells us that "many of the first Christians being converts
+ from Gentileism, their imaginations were familiar with the reputed
+ incarnation of heathen deities." How natural it would be for such converts
+ to worship "the man Christ Jesus" as a God on account of his superior
+ manhood!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, that ancient pillar of the Christian church, St. Justin, concedes
+ that the ancient oriental heathen held all the cardinal doctrines of the
+ Christian faith relating to the incarnation long prior to the introduction
+ and establishment of Christianity. Hear him: Addressing the pagans, he
+ says, "For by declaring the Logos the first begotten Son of God, our
+ Master, Jesus Christ, to be born of a virgin without any human mixture,
+ and to be crucified, and dead, and to have risen again into heaven, we say
+ no more in this than what you say of those whom you style the sons of
+ Jove." (Reeves, Apol. vol. i. p. 69.) Now, Christian reader, mark the
+ several important admissions which are made here:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Here is traced to ancient heathen tradition the belief in an incarnate
+ Son of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The doctrine of a "first begotten Son of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Of his being born of a virgin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Of his crucifixion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Of his resurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Of his final ascension into heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these cardinal doctrines of Christianity are here shown to have been
+ in existence, and to have been preached by pagan priests long anterior to
+ the Christian era, thus entirely oversetting the common belief of
+ Christendom that these doctrines were never known or preached in the world
+ until heralded by the first disciples of the Christian religion. A fatal
+ mistake, truly! This suicidal admission of St Justin (a standard Christian
+ writer) thus entirely uptrips all pretensions to originality in the
+ fundamental doctrines of the Christian faith, and shows it to be a mere
+ travesty of the more ancient heathen systems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And we have still other testimony to corroborate this conclusion. The
+ French writer Bazin says, "The most ancient histories are those of Gods
+ becoming incarnate in order to govern mankind." Again he says, "The idea
+ sprang up everywhere from confused ideas of God, which prevailed
+ everywhere among mankind that Gods formerly descended upon earth. The
+ fertile imagination of the people of various nations converted men into
+ Gods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to the same effect is the declaration of Mr. Higgins, that "there was
+ incarnate Gods in all religions." Sadly beclouded and warped indeed must
+ be that mind which cannot see that here is set in as plain view as the
+ cloudless sun at noonday, the origin of the deification of "the man Christ
+ Jesus." No unbiased mind can possibly stave off the conclusion that such a
+ universal prevalence of the practice of God-making throughout the
+ religious world would cause such a man as Jesus Christ to be worshiped as
+ a God&mdash;especially when we look at the various motives which promoted
+ men to Gods, which we will now present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MOTIVES TO INCARNATION, OR THE CAUSE OF MEN BEING WORSHIPED AS GODS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The causes which led to the conception of Gods and Sons of God becoming
+ clothed in human flesh&mdash;the manner in which the absurd idea
+ originated of an infinite being descending from heaven, assuming the form
+ of a man, being born of a pure and spotless virgin, and finally being
+ killed by his own children, the subjects of his own government, are
+ palpably plain and easily understood' in the light of oriental history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And at the same time it is so shockingly absurd, that the rapid march of
+ science and civilization will soon inaugurate the era when the man or
+ woman who shall still be found clinging to these childish and
+ superstitious conceptions&mdash;the offspring of ignorance, and the relics
+ of barbarism, and a certain proof of undeveloped or unenlightened minds&mdash;will
+ be looked upon as deplorably ignorant and superstitious. We will proceed
+ to enumerate some of the causes which promoted men to the dignity of Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. God must come down to suffer and sympathize with the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of all ancient religious countries were so externally-minded,
+ that they demanded a God whom they could know by virtue of his corporeity,
+ really sympathized with their sorrows, their sufferings, their wrongs, and
+ their oppressions, and, like Jesus Christ, "touched with a feeling of our
+ infirmities" (Heb. iv. 15)&mdash;a God so far invested with human
+ attributes, human frailties, and human sympathies, that he could shoulder
+ their burdens and their infirmities, and take upon himself a portion of
+ their sufferings. Hence it is said of Christ, "himself took our
+ infirmities." (Matt. iii. 17.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same conception runs through the pagan systems. One writer sets forth
+ the matter thus: "The Creator occasionally assumed a mortal form to assist
+ mankind in great emergencies" (as Jesus Christ was afterward reported as
+ being the Creator. See Col. i. 16.) "And as repeated sojourners on earth
+ in various capacities, they (the Saviors) became practically acquainted
+ with all the sorrows and temptations of humanity, and could justly judge
+ of its sins while they sympathized with its weaknesses and its sufferings.
+ When they again returned to the higher regions (heaven), they remembered
+ the lower forms they had dwelt amongst, and felt a lively interest in the
+ world they had once inhabited. They could penetrate even the secret
+ thoughts of mortals."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people then demanding a God of sympathy and suffering (as shown
+ above), their credulous imaginations would not be long in finding one. Let
+ a man rise up in society endowed with an extraordinary degree of
+ spirituality and sympathy for human suffering; let him, like Chrishna,
+ Pythagoras, Christ, and Mahomet, spend his time in visiting the hovels of
+ the poor, or consoling their sorrows, laboring to mitigate their griefs,
+ and in performing acts of charity, disinterested alms and deeds of
+ benevolence, kindness and love, and so certain would he sooner or later
+ command the homage of a God. For this was always the mode adopted, in an
+ ignorant, undeveloped, and unenlightened age, for accounting not merely
+ for moral greatness, but for every species of mental and physical
+ superiority, as will be hereafter shown. We will proceed to notice the
+ second cause of men being invested with divine attributes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The people must and would have an external God they could see, hear,
+ and talk to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the oriental nations, as well as Christian, taught that "God was a
+ spirit," but no nation or class of people, not even the founders of
+ Christianity, entertained a consistent view of the doctrine. Only a few
+ learned philosophers saw the scientific impossibility of an infinite
+ spirit being crowded into the human form. Hence they alone were contented
+ to "worship God in spirit and in truth." Every religious nation went
+ counter to the spirit of this injunction in worshiping for a God a being
+ in the human form. Even the founders of Christianity, though making high
+ claims to spirituality, were too gross, too sensuous in their conceptions,
+ too externally-minded, and too idolatrous in their feelings and
+ proclivities, to be content to "worship God in spirit." Hence their
+ deification of the "man Christ Jesus" to answer the requisition of an
+ external worship, by which they violated the command to "worship God as a
+ spirit." That the practice of promoting men to the Godhead originated with
+ minds on the external plane, and evinces a want of spiritual development,
+ is clearly set forth by the author of "The Nineteenth Century" (a
+ Christian writer) who tells us, "The idea of the primitive ages were
+ wholly sensuous, and the masses did not believe in anything except that
+ which they could touch, see, hear and taste." A true description, no
+ doubt, of the ancient pagan worshipers of demigods. But we warn the
+ Christian reader not to cast anchor here, for we have at our elbow
+ abundance of Christian testimony from the pens of the very oracles of the
+ church to prove that the same state of things, the same state of society,
+ the same state of mind, the same proclivity for God-making, existed with
+ the people among whom Christ was born, and that it was owing to this
+ sensuous, idolatrous state of mind among his disciples that he received
+ the homage and title of a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence the famous Archbishop Tillotson says, "Another very common notion,
+ and rife in the heathen world, and a great source of their idolatry, was
+ their deification of great men fit to be worshiped as Gods."... "There was
+ a great inclination in mankind to the worship of a visible Deity. So God
+ was pleased to appear in our nature, that they who were fond of a visible
+ Deity might have one, even a true and natural incarnation of God the
+ Father, the express image of his person." Now, we enjoin the reader to
+ mark this testimony well, and impress it indelibly upon his memory.
+ According to this orthodox Christian bishop, Jesus Christ appeared on
+ earth as a God in condescension to the wishes of a people too devoid of
+ spirituality, and too strongly inclined to idolatry, to worship God as a
+ spirit. For he admits the worship of a God-man or a man-God is a species
+ of idolatry. This tells the whole story of the apotheosis of "the man
+ Christ Jesus." We have no doubt but that here is suggested one of the true
+ causes of his elevation to the Deityship. Again he says, "The world was
+ mightily bent on addressing their requests and supplications, not to the
+ Deity immediately, but by some Mediator between the Gods and men." (See
+ Wadsworth's Eccles. Biog. p. 172.) Here, then, we have the most conclusive
+ proof that the belief in mediators is of pagan origin. We will now hear
+ from another archbishop on this subject. In his "Caution to the Times" (p,
+ 71 ), Archbishop Whately says, "As the Infinite Being is an object too
+ remote and incomprehensible for our minds to dwell upon, he has manifested
+ himself in his Son, the man Jesus Christ" Precisely so 1 just the kind of
+ reasoning employed to account for the worship of man-Gods among the
+ heathen. This logic fits one case as well as the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Christian writer F. D. Maurice declares in like manner, "We accept the
+ fact of the incarnation (of Jesus Christ), because we feel that it is
+ impossible to know the absolute invisible God without an incarnation, as
+ man needs to know him, and craves to know him." (Logical Essay, p. 79.)
+ Here is more pagan logic&mdash;the same reasoning they employed to prove
+ the divinity of their Saviors and demigods. And the Rev. Dr. Thomas Arnold
+ declares, "It (the incarnation of Christ) was very necessary, especially
+ at a time when men were so accustomed to worship their highest Gods under
+ the form of men" (Sermon on Christian Life, p. 61.) Let the reader
+ attentively observe the explicit avowal here made, and mark well its
+ pregnant inferences. He makes Jesus Christ come into the world in
+ condescension to the idolatrous rivalry of the Jews to be up with the
+ heathen nations in worshiping God in the form of man; that is, the
+ founders of Christianity, having been Jews, disclosed the true Jewish
+ character in running after and adopting the customs of heathen countries
+ then so rife&mdash;that of hunting up a great man, and making him a God&mdash;which
+ was only one case out of many of the Jews adopting some of the numerous
+ forms of idolatry and other religious customs of their heathen neighbors.
+ Their whole history, as set forth in the Bible, proves, as we have shown
+ in another chapter, that they were strongly prone to such acts. It is not
+ strange, therefore, that they should and did convert "the man Christ
+ Jesus" into a God. We will now listen to another Christian writer, the
+ notable and noteworthy Dr. T. Chambers. "Whatever the falsely or
+ superstitiously fearful imagination conjures up because of God being at a
+ distance, can only be dispelled by God being brought nigh to us.... The
+ veil which hides the unseen God from the eyes of mortals must be somehow
+ withdrawn." (Select Works, vol. iii. p. 161.) Most significant indeed is
+ this species of reasoning. It is the same kind of logic which had led to
+ the promotion of more than a score of great men to the Godhead among the
+ ancient heathen. "The veil which hides the unseen God must be removed'"
+ says Dr. Chambers; and so had reasoned in soliloquy a thousand pagans long
+ before, when determined to worship men for Gods. It is simply saying, "We
+ are too carnally-minded to worship God in spirit; we must and will have a
+ God of flesh and blood&mdash;a God who can be recognized by the external
+ senses;" he must "become flesh, and dwell amongst us." (See John i. 14.)
+ Our author continues: "Now all this (removing the veil from the unseen
+ God) has been done once, and done only once in the person of Jesus
+ Christ." (Ibid.) Mistake, most fatal mistake, brother Chambers! It has
+ been done more than a score of times in various heathen countries&mdash;a
+ fact which proves you ignorant of oriental history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now let the reader mark the foregoing citations from standard Christian
+ authors, setting forth some of the reasons which led the founders of
+ Christianity to adopt a visible man-God in their worship in the person of
+ Jesus Christ, Language could hardly be used to prove more conclusively
+ that the whole thing grew out of an idolatrous proclivity to man-worship,&mdash;that
+ is, the gross, sensuous, carnally-minded propensity to worship an
+ extetnal, visible God,&mdash;proving, with the corroborative evidence of
+ many other facts, that they were not a whit above the heathen in spiritual
+ development. The reason employed by the Thibetan for the worship of the
+ Hindoo Chrishna as a God, tells the whole story of the worship and the
+ deification of Jesus Christ "We could not always have God behind the
+ clouds; so we had him come down where we could see him." This is the same
+ kind of reasoning made use of by the Christian writer above quoted, all of
+ which discloses a state of mind among both heathen and Christians that
+ would not long rest satisfied without deifying somebody, in order to have
+ a visible God to worship. And hence Christians deified "the man Christ
+ Jesus" for this purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The more externally minded (says Fleurbach), the greater was the
+ determination to worship a personal God"&mdash;God in the form of man. And
+ as the Jewish founders of Christianity (as every chapter of their history
+ demonstrates) were dwelling on the external plane, it was not an act of
+ direct innovation, therefore, for them to fall into the habit of
+ worshiping the personal Jesus as a God. It involved no serious incursion
+ on previous thoughts or habits. And warped and blinded, indeed, must be
+ that mind which cannot here discover the true key to the apotheosis of
+ Jesus&mdash;one of the real causes of his being stripped of his manhood,
+ and advanced to the Godhead. It was as naturally to be expected from the
+ then state of the religious world, and the state of the Jewish mind
+ concerned in the founding of Christianity, as that an autumnal crop of
+ fruit should succeed the bloom of spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let it be specially noted, that all the Christian writers above cited tell
+ us, in effect, that God sent his Son Jesus Christ into the world to be
+ worshiped as a God in condescension to the ignorance and superstitious
+ tendencies, and we will add, idolatrous proclivities of the people. From
+ this stand-point we challenge the world to show why God may not have sent
+ the oriental Saviors into the world for the same reason&mdash;that is, in
+ condescension to the prejudices of the devout worshipers under the heathen
+ systems. Why, then, is there not as much probability that he did do so?
+ Why would he not be as likely to accommodate their ignorance and
+ prejudices in this way as those of the founders of the Christian system.
+ This question we shall keep standing before the Christian world till it is
+ answered, and we challenge them to meet it, and overthrow it if they can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Men deified on account of mental and moral superiority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient nations, in their entire ignorance of the philosophy of the
+ human mind, and the laws controlling its actions, always accounted for the
+ appearance of great men amongst them by supposing them to be Gods. Every
+ country occasionally produced a man, who, by virtue of natural
+ superiority, rose so high in the scale of moral and intellectual greatness
+ as to fill the ideal of the people with respect to the characteristics of
+ a God. So low, so limited, so narrow, so greatly circumscribed were the
+ conceptions of deity, of the undeveloped and intellectually dwarfed minds
+ of all religious countries in that age, that a man had to rise but a few
+ degrees above the common level of the populace to become a God. He could
+ "easily fill the bill," and exhibit all the qualities they assigned to the
+ highest God in the heavens. And this is as true of the Jewish mind as that
+ of any other nation, a portion of whom adored Jesus as a God. Or if they
+ lacked anything in natural inclination, they made it up by imitation, a
+ propensity which they possessed in no small degree, that is, a proneness
+ to imitate the customs of other nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Higgins tells us that "men of brilliant intellects and high moral
+ attainments, and great healers (of which Christ was one), were almost
+ certain to be deified." In like manner Archbishop Tillotson says, "they
+ deified famous and eminent persons by advancing them after their death to
+ the dignity of an inferior kind of Gods fit to be worshiped by men on
+ earth." Mark the expression, "after their death" We have shown in another
+ chapter that Jesus Christ was not generally considered a God, even by his
+ followers, till more than three hundred years after his death, when
+ Constantine declared him to be "God of very God"&mdash;a circumstance of
+ itself sufficient to establish the conclusion that he did not possess this
+ character. A God would be adored as such by everybody while living, but a
+ man's worshipers rise up after his death, as in the case of "the man
+ Christ Jesus." Great mental endowments, or great moral attainments, would,
+ in most countries, bring the most ignorant down on their knees to worship
+ such a man as a God. But it re-quired years, and sometimes centuries, to
+ get him fully established among the Gods. This is as true of Jesus Christ
+ as the other human-descended deities. Whatever amount of homage Jesus
+ might have received while living, any person who will institute a
+ thorough, unbiased scrutiny in the case will discover that it was his
+ great healing powers and superior mental qualities which finally deified
+ him. His ignorant admirers knew no way of accounting for such
+ extraordinary qualities but to suppose him to be the embodiment of
+ infinite wisdom. Like the Chinaman who exclaimed, "See the God in that
+ man," when an Englishman cured a young woman of partial blindness by
+ anointing her eyes with kerosene. Such a deed would deify almost any man,
+ in almost any country, before the dawn of letters and the recognition of
+ the science of mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The missionary Rev. D. O. Allen's method of accounting for the deification
+ of the Hindoo God Chrishna is so suggestive, that we here present it. He
+ tells us that "as the exploits ascribed to Chrishna exceed mere human
+ power, the difficulty was removed by placing him among the incarnations of
+ Vishnu." (India, Ancient and Modern, p. 26.) Exactly so! We are glad of
+ such historic information. We hope the Christian reader will note the
+ lesson it suggests. For certainly, every reader, who has not had his
+ reason shipwrecked on the shoals of a blind and dogmatic theology, can see
+ here a key to unlock the great mystery of the Christian incarnation&mdash;the
+ divinity of Jesus Christ As some of the exploits of Chrishna were supposed
+ to "exceed mere human power," we are told the difficulty was explained by
+ imagining him to be a God. How powerful the suggestion! how conclusive the
+ explanation, not only for the Godhood of this sin-atoning Savior, but for
+ that of "our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ," and all the other Lords, and
+ Gods, and Saviors of antiquity! A single hint will sometimes explain whole
+ volumes of obscure history, as does this of the Rev. Christian Hindoo
+ missionary D. O. Allen. And surely, most deplorably blinded by
+ superstition must be the two hundred millions of Christ worshipers, the
+ three hundred millions who worship Chrishna, the one hundred and twenty
+ million adorers of Confucius, the fifty millions of suppliants of Mithra
+ the Mediator, and the one hundred and fifty millions of followers of
+ Mahomet, who cannot see here a satisfactory solution of the deityship of
+ all these Gods, and all the other man-Gods of antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question is sometimes asked, How could two hundred millions of people
+ come to believe that Jesus was a God merely because of his superiority as
+ a man? We will answer by pointing to the history of the Hindoo Chrishna,
+ and by asking the same question with respect to his Godhead. How could
+ three hundred millions of people be brought to believe in his divinity,
+ and worship him as a God, merely because he was a superior human being?
+ One question is as easily answered as the other, and posterity will answer
+ both questions alike. When we observe it taught as an important and easily
+ learned lesson of history, and one based on a thousand facts, that no man
+ could rise to intellectual greatness or moral distinction in the era in
+ which Christ was born without being advanced to the dignity of a God, and
+ worshiped as such, it is really a source of humility and sorrow to every
+ unshackled lover of truth and humanity to reflect that there are so many
+ millions of people whose mental vision is so beclouded by a dogmatic and
+ inexorable theology that they cannot see the logical potency of these
+ facts,&mdash;that they cannot be even moved by this great and overwhelming
+ amount of evidence against the divinity dogma, and observe that it
+ explodes it into a thousand fragments, but still cling to the delusion
+ that "the man Christ Jesus," with all the human qualities and human
+ frailties with which his own history (the Gospels) invest him, was
+ nevertheless a God,&mdash;ay, the monstrous delusion that any being
+ possessing a <i>finite form</i> could be an <i>infinite being</i>&mdash;a
+ most self-evident and shocking absurdity. And we challenge all Christendom
+ to show, or approximate one inch toward showing, that there was sufficient
+ difference between Christ and Chrishna to require us to accept one as a
+ man and the other as a God. It cannot be done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have shown, then, by the foregoing exposition, that one cause of the
+ deification of men was simply an attempt to solve the problem of human
+ greatness,&mdash;an attempt to account for the moral and intellectual
+ superiority of men which enabled them to perform deeds and otherwise
+ exhibit a character far above the capacity of the multitude to comprehend,
+ and which they could find no other way to account for than to suppose them
+ to be Gods, while the low and groveling conceptions which most religious
+ nations, and especially the Jews, had formed of the character and
+ essential attributes of the Infinite Deity (often investing him with the
+ most ignoble human attributes, human passions, and human imperfections),
+ made it perfectly easy to convert their great men by imagination into
+ Gods. The Jews represented God not only as a coming down from heaven in
+ propria persona, and walking, talking, wrestling, &amp;c., as a man (on
+ one occasion we are told he and Jacob scuffled all night), but he is often
+ represented as acting the part of a wicked man, such as lying (see 2
+ Chron. v. 22), getting mad (see Deut. i. 37), swearing, sanctioning the
+ highhanded and demoralizing crimes of stealing (see Ex. iii. 2), of
+ robbery (see Ex. xii. 36), of murder (see Deut. xiii. 2) and even
+ fornication (see Gen. xxxi. 1, and Num. xxxi) and thus they invested Diety
+ with such mean, low, despicable attributes as to reduce his moral
+ character to a level with the most immoral man in society. So that it was
+ very easy, if not very natural, to elevate their great men (if it really
+ required any elevation) to a level with their God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men and Gods were in character and conception so nearly alike, that it was
+ easy to bring them on a level, or to mistake one for the other. And hence
+ it is we find an incarnated God, Savior, Son of God, Redeemer, &amp;c.,
+ figuring in the early history of nearly every oriental religious nation
+ whose name and history has descended to us. Indeed, the practice of
+ deifying men, or mistaking men for Gods, was once so common, so nearly
+ universal, that it must require a mind very ignorant of oriental history
+ to adore Jesus Christ as having been the only character of this kind who
+ figured in the religious world. It was, as before suggested, deemed the
+ most rational way of accounting for the marked superiority among men, to
+ suppose that some men had a divine birth, and were begotten by the great
+ Infinite Deity himself, and descended to the earth through the purest
+ human (virgin) channel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Mr. Higgins remarks, "Every person who possessed a striking superiority
+ of mind, either for talent or goodness, was supposed anciently to have a
+ portion of the divine mind or essence incorporated or incarnated in him."
+ The Jews had a number of men whose names imply a participation in the
+ divine nature, among which we will cite Elijah and Elisha (El-i-jah and
+ El-i-sha), El being the Hebrew name or term for God, while Jah is Jehovah
+ (see Ps. lxviii. 4), and Sha means a Savior. Elijah, then, is an
+ approximation to God&mdash;Jehovah, and Elisha is God&mdash;a Savior. The
+ character of men and Gods were cast in molds so approximately similar, so
+ nearly identical, as to make the transition, or change from one to the
+ other, so slight and easy; either of men into Gods or Gods into men, that
+ several nations went so far as to teach that a man might by his own
+ natural exertions, his own voluntary powers, raise himself to a level with
+ the Diety, and thereby become a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Ritter in his "History of Ancient Philosophy" (Chap. II.), tells us
+ that some of the Budhist sect held that "a man by freeing himself by
+ holiness of conduct from the obstacles of nature, may deliver his fellows
+ from the corruption of the times, and become a benefactor and redeemer of
+ his race, and also even become a God"&mdash;a "Budha"&mdash;i. e., a
+ Savior and Son of God. Singular enough that the Christian should object to
+ this doctrine as being rather blasphemous, when his own bible abundantly
+ and explicitly teaches the same doctrine in effect!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We find the same thing substantially taught over and over again in the
+ Christian Scriptures. "Be ye perfect even as your Father in heaven is
+ perfect" (Matt. v. 18), requires a man to become morally perfect as God,
+ which is all that the Budhist precept requires or contemplates, and no man
+ can become perfect as God without becoming a God. But we are not left to
+ mere inference in the matter, We have the doctrine several times expressed
+ and unquestionably taught in the Christian bible of man's power and
+ prerogative to become either a God or Son of God. "Said I not that ye are
+ Gods?" (Ex. iv. 16). "Behold now, we are the sons of God." (i John i. 2.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is the Budhist doctrine as explicitly stated as it can be taught. It
+ is, then, a Christian bible doctrine as well as a pagan doctrine, that man
+ can become a God, and that God can be born of woman, and thereby invested
+ with all the frail and imperfect attributes of man. It cannot be
+ considered a matter of marvel, therefore, that so many of the good, the
+ great, and the wise men of almost every country, including "the man Christ
+ Jesus," should be honored and adored with the titles of Deity, and
+ worshiped as God absolute, "Son of God," "Savior," "Redeemer,"
+ "Intercessor" "Mediator," &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. God comes down and is incarnated to fight and conquer the devil. We
+ will proceed to enumerate other causes and motives which conspired in
+ various cases to invest some one or more of the great men of a nation with
+ divine honors, and adore them as veritable Gods and Saviors "come down to
+ us in the form of men." It was a tenant of faith with most of the ancient
+ religions, that almost at the dawn of human existence a devil or evil
+ principle found its way into the world, to the great discomfiture of man
+ and the no small annoyance of the Supreme Creator himself, and that hence
+ there must needs be a Savior, a Redeemer, an Intercessor to combat and if
+ possible "destroy the devil and his works."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this purpose appeared the Savior Chrishna, in India, the Savior
+ Osiris, in Egypt, the God or Mediator Mithra, in Persia, the Redeemer
+ Quexalcote, in Mexico, the Savior Jesus Christ, in Judea, &amp;c. In the
+ initiatory chapter on the transgression and fall of man, some of the
+ oriental bibles graphically describe the scene of "the war in heaven"&mdash;a
+ counterpart to the story of St. John, as found in the twelfth chapter of
+ Revelation, wherein Michael and the dragon are represented as the captains
+ and commander-in-chief of their respective embattled hosts, and in which
+ the former was crowned as victor in the contest, as he succeeded in
+ vanquishing and "casting out the evil one." In the pagan military drama
+ the scene of the war in heaven is transferred to the earth. A God, a
+ Savior (a Son of God), comes down to put a stop to the machinations of the
+ "Evil One," i. e., to "destroy the devil and his works" as we are told
+ Christ came for that purpose. (1 John iii. 8 ) See the Author's "Biography
+ of Satan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Egyptian story runs thus: "Osiris appeared on earth to benefit
+ mankind, and after he had performed the duties of his mission, and had
+ fallen a sacrifice to Typhon (the devil, or evil principle), which,
+ however, he eventually overcame ('overcame the wicked one,' 1 John ii.
+ 11), by rising from the dead, after being crucified, he became the judge
+ of mankind in a future state." (See Kerrick's "Ancient Egypt", also
+ Wilkinson's "Egypt.")
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Budhist, or Hindoo, version of the story is on this wise: "The prince
+ (of darkness), or evil spirit, Ravana, or Mahesa, got into a contest and a
+ war with the divine hero Rama, in which the latter proved victorious, and
+ put to flight the army of 'the wicked one,' but not till after
+ considerable injury had been done to the human family, and the whole order
+ of the universe subverted; to rectify which, and to achieve a final and
+ complete triumph over Ravana (the devil) and his works, and thus save the
+ human race from utter destruction, the gods besought Vishnu (the second
+ person of the Trinity) to descend to the earth and take upon himself the
+ form and flesh of man. And it was argued that as the mission appertained
+ to man, the God Vishnu, when he descended to the earth in the capacity of
+ a Savior, should become half man and half God, and that the most feasible
+ way to accomplish this end was for him to be born of a woman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that the glory and honor of his triumph over Ravana, the devil, would
+ be greater if achieved in this capacity than if he were to come down from
+ heaven and conquer Ravana wholly with his attributes as a God, or wholly
+ in his divine character&mdash;i.e., as absolute God, uninvested with human
+ nature. The suggestion was approved by Vishnu, who descended and took upon
+ himself "the form of man" ("the form of a servant"&mdash;Phil. ii. 7). And
+ that his metamorphosis or earth-born life might be the purer, it was
+ decided that he should be born of a woman wholly uncontaminated with man&mdash;that
+ is, a virgin. And thus, far back in the midnight of mythology and fable,
+ originated the story of divine Saviors and Gods being born of virgins&mdash;a
+ conception now found incorporated in the religious histories of various
+ ancient nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now let us observe how substantially the Christian story of a Savior
+ conforms to the above. Jesus, like the Saviors of India and Egypt, was
+ believed to be a man-God&mdash;half man and half God, and reputedly he
+ came into the world, like them, to "destroy the devil and his works," or
+ the works of the devil&mdash;that is, to put an end to the evil or
+ malignant principle introduced into the world by the serpent in the garden
+ of Eden; as it is declared "the seed of the woman shall bruise the
+ serpent's head" (Gen. iii. 15)&mdash;which is interpreted as referring to
+ Christ. And like these and various other pagan Saviors Jesus is assigned
+ the highest and most ennobling human origin&mdash;a birth from a virgin.
+ And, as in the instances above named, Jesus had also several encounters
+ with the devil; first in the wilderness, then on a mountain, and finally,
+ like them, falls a sacrifice to his insidious, malignant power acting
+ through the agency and mediumship of Judas Iscariot; for his betrayal is
+ ascribed wholly to Satan, whom John called the serpent, entering into
+ Judas and prompting the act. (See Rev. xii. 3). And thus Christ, like the
+ other saviors, falls a victim to the serpentine or satanic power acting
+ through the instrumentality of a Judas Iscariot; but finally, triumphed,
+ like the Savior of Egypt (Osiris), by rising from the dead&mdash;"the
+ first fruits of immortality." And thus the stories run parallel&mdash;the
+ more modern Christian with the more ancient pagan.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (For a full exposition of the belief and traditions
+ respecting a devil and a hell in all ages and all countries,
+ see the Author's "Biography of Satan.")
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXX. SACRED CYCLES EXPLAINING THE ADVENT OF THE GODS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ The Master-Key to the Divinity of Jesus Christ.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Extraordinary Revelations in History and Science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RECENT explorations in the field of oriental sacred history have revealed
+ to the antiquarian some curious and deeply interesting facts appertaining
+ to traditions founded on, and growing out of, astronomical phenomena and
+ changes in the visible heavens, which throw much light on, and go far
+ toward elucidating and furnishing a satisfactory explanation of many of
+ the "mysteries" of the Christian bible. The works which we have consulted,
+ containing the reports and results of researches of this character, tend
+ to elucidate and establish the following conclusions:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. That anciently, in religious countries, time was divided into Cycles,
+ Aetas, or Neros.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. That these measures of time grew out of, and represented periodical
+ changes, or periodically occurring phenomena in the astronomical heavens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. That some religious nations had three Cycular periods of different
+ lengths, representing three orders and degrees of miraculous births. In
+ India the length of the first or shorter Cycle was thirty days, the length
+ of one moon or month. Every change of the moon marked an important event
+ in their religious history. Each change was supposed to denote the birth
+ of some angel or celestial being known as an Eon. The second Cycular
+ period was of six hundred years' duration, and was founded on a text of
+ the sacred book of India, known as the Surya Sidhanta, which declares "the
+ equinoctial point moves eastward one degree in thirty times twenty years"
+ (thirty times twenty being 600). At every occurrence of this equinoctial
+ change hightened by an eclipse of the sun or moon, or some other
+ wonder-exciting phenomenon, a God was supposed to be born. Such a
+ marvelous and terror-inspiring event, in the apprehensions of the
+ credulous and superstitious populace of an unscientific age, could not be
+ designed for anything less than the birth of a God or Divine Savior. Their
+ theology teaches that such was the wickedness of man, that a God had to
+ descend from heaven, and suffer and die for the people, in some way, every
+ six hundred years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this period was announced by the God's causing a collision of the sun
+ and moon, or some other terror-exciting phenomena in the heavens above or
+ the earth beneath. When one of these six hundred Cycular periods was about
+ to expire, and another commence, every remarkable phenomenon in the
+ heavens was watched and interpreted as being connected with it. And some
+ person born at that period, who exhibited any remarkable or extraordinary
+ trait of character, was certain to be promoted to the Godhead, as being
+ miraculously born and brought forth for the special occasion. He was the
+ Avatar Savior or Messiah for that Cycle. There were two extraordinary
+ events to be accounted for&mdash;one was the display of unusual and
+ terror-exciting phenomena in the heavens, and the other the birth of
+ extraordinary men on earth. And it was natural for an ignorant age to
+ associate them together, and make one aid in accounting for the other. And
+ as these celestial phenomena were only witnessed at intervals distant
+ apart, the thought naturally arose, and the conclusion was easily
+ established, that they came periodically, and for the special purpose of
+ heralding the birth of a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as tradition reported that similar events were witnessed six hundred
+ years before the conviction was fixed in the popular mind, this was the
+ established period intervening between these great epochs. And thus the
+ six hundred year Cycular tradition became established in India, and
+ finally spread through all the Eastern countries. We find traces of it in
+ Egypt, Syria, Persia, Chaldea, China, Italy, and Judea. And the proof that
+ the deification of great men in some countries grew out of this Cycular
+ tradition is found in the fact that many of them were born at the
+ commencement of Cycles. The Hindoos are able to recount the names of ten
+ sin-atoning Saviors who made their appearance on earth at these regular
+ intervals of six hundred years. The name of the first Avatar Mediator and
+ Savior who forsook the throne of heaven to come down and die for the
+ people was Matsa. Tradition and the sacred books fix his birth at about
+ six thousand years B. C. The names and advent of the other sin-atoning
+ Saviors occur in the following order: 2. Vurahay, 3. Kurma, 4. Nursu, 5.
+ Waman, 6. Pursuram, 7. Kama, 8. Chrishna, 9. Sakia, 10. Salavahana. The
+ last named Savior was cotemporary with Jesus Christ. The God and Savior
+ Sakia was born six hundred years B. C. "Our Lord and Savior" and "Son of
+ God," Chrisna, was immaculately conceived and miraculously born, according
+ to Higgins, 1200 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A circumstance strongly confirming the conclusion that Cycular periods had
+ much to do with the promotion of men to the dignity of Gods is, that most
+ of the deified personages reported in history were, according to the best
+ authorities, born near the commencement of Cycles. Recurring back to the
+ eighth Cycle, we observe the advent of that period of Chrishna, Zoroaster
+ 2d, Bali, Thammuz, Atys, Osiris, and several others. At the commencement
+ of the ninth Cycle appeared Sakia, Quexalcote, Zoroaster 2d, Xion,
+ Qairious, Prometheus, Mithra and many others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tenth Cycle brought in Jesus Christ, Salavhana, Apollonious, and
+ others that might be named. Mahomet succeeded Jesus Christ just six
+ hundred years (he was born in the year 600 A. D.), which inaugurated
+ another Cycle. Many facts are recorded in history proving the prevalence
+ and sacredness of the Cycle idea in different countries. The story in
+ Egypt of the bird called the Phoenix, being hatched, according to
+ tradition, just 600 years B. C., and living to be just six hundred years
+ old, and having the power to renew itself every six hundred years, shows
+ the prevalence of the Cycular tradition in that country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have the statement upon the records of history that when the first six
+ hundred years after the foundation of Rome were about to expire, the
+ people became greatly excited with the apprehension that some
+ extraordinary event, must attend the occasion. And but for the influence
+ of the philosophers, some extraordinary man would have been hunted up and
+ promoted to divine honor as being the God born for that Cycle. The
+ writings of Plato, Plutarch, Ovid, Cicero, Virgil, and Aristotle, all
+ evince a belief in Cycles, and the belief that ten Cycles, or Aetas, were
+ the measure, for the duration of the world. According to M. Faber, a
+ new-born Savior was always expected to make his appearance at the
+ commencement of one of these Cycles. Hence the deification of those
+ personages above named, and many others that might be named. It is a
+ remarkable circumstance that the Jewish bible should speak of Noah as
+ being six hundred years old at the commencement of the flood, when it was
+ a tradition amongst the ancient Egyptians that the ushering in of the six
+ hundreth year Cycle was to be attended with a flood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the time antecedent to Noah after creation, was the measure of three
+ Cycles, according to the chronology of the Samaritan bible, it being
+ 6004-600+600= 1800 years from Adam to Noah. It is an interesting fact that
+ those enigmatical figures made use of by Daniel, as also some of those
+ found in the Apocalypse, are susceptible of a Cycular explanation. These
+ occult prophecies, as they are supposed to be, which have puzzled and
+ bewildered many thousands of Christian minds and bible expounders in their
+ attempt to evolve their signification, are susceptible of a Cycular
+ explanation. They are of easy solution on a Cycular basis, or with the
+ Cycular key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take, for example, Daniel's famous prophecy (so called) of the seventy
+ weeks, as found in the ninth chapter, announcing the advent of a Messiah
+ at the end of that period. We find by a calculation based on Tyson's
+ "Historical Atlas," and Haskell's "Chronology and Universal History," that
+ Daniel lived in the hundred and tenth year of the ninth Cycle, at which
+ time the prefigure seems to have been used. Assuming this as a basis, and
+ multiplying seventy weeks by seven, to convert it into years, as Christian
+ essayists are accustomed to doing, and we have as the result 70x7=490,
+ which being added to one hundred and ten, the year that gave birth to the
+ prophesy, makes six hundred, which exactly completes the Cycle, and
+ furnishes a simple and beautiful explanation of a mystical figure, on
+ which many thousands of conjectures, speculations, and guesses have been
+ founded, but on which they have failed to throw any light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 70x70=490 years, were wanting to complete the Cycle; and when this
+ rolled away, it brought a new Cycle, and with it a new sin-atoning Savior
+ was always expected in some countries (the country in which Daniel lived
+ being one of this number); a new Messiah (or sin-atoning Savior), and some
+ great man born at that time, was fixed upon and deified as being that
+ Messiah. Hence the Jews, in imitation of their neighbors, yielding to
+ their strong proclivities to borrow from and copy after heathen nations,
+ selected "the man Christ Jesus" as their Messiah and Savior. The mystical
+ era of Daniel, signified by "a time, times, and the dividing of time"
+ (Dan. vii. 25), or, as St. John has it, "a time, times, and a half time"
+ (see Rev. xii. 14) is explainable by the same Cycular key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some writers have conjectured that Daniel was a Chaldean priest. If so, he
+ must have had a knowledge of their astronomical Cycle of two thousand one
+ hundred and sixty years, which completed the period of the precession of
+ the equinoxes. Explained by this Cycle, his "time, times, and dividing of
+ time, or half time," or "a time, another time, and a half time," as some
+ writers have rendered it, would be 2160 f 2160-I-1080 5400; nine Cycles
+ exactly, as 600X9= 5400. Add this to the Cycle in which he lived, and we
+ have 5400+600=6000, the great Millennial Cycle, when not only a new Savior
+ and Messiah was to be born, but a new world also. Both the long and short
+ Cycle (and one was a measure of the other) were expected to expire at that
+ time, according to a Chaldean tradition. And thus is beautifully explained
+ another "deep, dark and unfathomable mystery," which thousands of devout
+ minds have exhausted their ingenuity in trying to find a meaning for.
+ Again, look at the frightful nightmare visions of Daniel and the author of
+ the Apocalypse, in which they saw a monstrous beast with seven heads and
+ ten horns, though Daniel mentions only the horns. The seven heads were, in
+ all probability, the seven auspicious months of the year in which some of
+ the nations revealed in the enjoyment of, and praised and celebrated their
+ fruitful, bountiful blessings, the year being divided into two seasons,
+ seven summer months and five winter months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, let it be noted, St. John lived near the tenth Cycle, which answers
+ to the ten horns of the beast. Hence is most forcibly suggested that
+ interpretation of the figure. Daniel's ten horns should have been
+ translated eleven horns, as he lived in the ninth Cycle, though so near
+ the tenth, that he probably constructed his figure on the tenth. And
+ Daniel's prophetic declaration (so considered), found in the eighth
+ chapter, that it would be two thousand three hundred days until the
+ sanctuary should be closed, is explainable in the same manner. According
+ to Mr. Irving, Mr. Frere, and other writers, there was a large fraction
+ over the three hundred days, making it nearer four hundred, and hence
+ might have been so rendered, which would make 20004-400=2400; the exact
+ length of four Cycles, 600x4=2400. And their are other mystical figures,
+ frightful visions, and occult metaphors found in the Apocalypse
+ susceptible of a Cycular solution. The Cycle is the true key for unlocking
+ many of the ancient mysteries of various religions. The Chinese have
+ always reckoned by Cycles of sixty years, instead of by centuries. (See
+ New Am. Encyclop. vol. v. p. 105.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will now bestow a brief notice on the Millennial Cycle: the sacred
+ period of 6000 years, composed of ten of the smaller Cycles, 600x10=6000.
+ Dr. Hales says, "A tradition of Millennial ages prevailed throughout the
+ east, and finally reached the west." (Chron. vol. i. p. 44.) We are told
+ by astronomers that if the angle which the plane of the ecliptic forms
+ with the plane of the Equator had decreased gradually, as it was once
+ supposed to do, the two planes would coincide in about six thousand years&mdash;a
+ period which comprises ten of the smaller Cycles, 600X10 =6000. And it was
+ very easy and very natural for an ignorant and superstitious age to
+ conclude that such a prodigious, astounding, and awful event as that of
+ two stupendous orbits or planes coming in contact with each other, should
+ be attended with some direful and calamitous event, and with a tremendous
+ display of divine power. Nothing less than an entire revolution, if not
+ the total destruction of the world, could comport with the majesty and
+ magnitude of such an event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this great crisis was to bring down the Omnipotent Divine Judge from
+ the throne of heaven; that is, the Almighty being who caused it was to
+ come down, or send his Son to call the nations to judgment, and drown the
+ world, or set it on fire. The first destruction according to the tradition
+ of the Chaldeans, Persians, Assyrians, Mexicans, and some other nations,
+ was to be by water, and the next by fire, when the oceans, seas, and lakes
+ were to be converted into ashes. And Christ's apostles seemed to have
+ cherished this tradition. Peter says, "whereby the world that was then,
+ being overflowed by water, perished. But the heavens and the earth which
+ are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire against
+ the day of judgment," (2 Peter iii. 6.) This was a pagan belief long prior
+ to the era of Peter. Josephus says, "Adam predicted that the world would
+ be twice destroyed, once by water, next by fire." A writer says, "A
+ glorious, blissful future attends the destruction of the world by fire,
+ and the reappearance of Vishnu (i. e., eleventh incarnation of Vishnu) has
+ been for several thousand years the hopeful anticipation of India." "The
+ last coming of Vishnu in power and glory," says another writer, "to
+ consummate the final overthrow of evil, sin, and death, is so firmly fixed
+ in the minds of the devotees, that they have an annual festival in
+ commemoration of their prophesy referring to it, at which they exclaim, in
+ a loud voice, 'When will the Divine Helper come? when will the Deliverer
+ appear?'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the consummation of this event, "a comet will roll under the moon and
+ set the world on fire;" so affirms their bible. And the Persian bible, the
+ Zend-Avesta, in like manner predicts that "a star, with a tail in course
+ of its revolution, will strike the earth and set it on fire." Seneca
+ predicts that "the time will come when the world will be wrapped in
+ flames, and the opposite powers in conflict will mutually destroy each
+ other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ovid prophesies poetically,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "For thus the stern, unyielding Fates decree.
+ That earth, air, heaven, with the capacious sea,
+ All shall fall victims to devouring fire,
+ And in fierce flames the blazing orbs expire."
+ Lucian, in a like spirit, exclaims,&mdash;
+
+ "One vast, appointed flame, by Fate's decree,
+ Shall waste yon azure heavens, the earth and sea."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Egyptians marked their houses with red, to indicate that the world
+ would be destroyed by fire. Orpheus, 1200 B. C., at the inauguration of
+ the eighth Cycle, entertained fearful forebodings of the speedy
+ destruction of the world by water or fire. Some nations held that the
+ alternate destruction of the world by water and fire had already occurred,
+ and would occur again. Theopompus informs us that some of the orientalists
+ believed that "the God of light and the God of darkness reigned by turn
+ every six thousand years" (commencing with an astronomical Cycle of
+ course), and that during this period the other was held in subjection,
+ which finally resulted in "a war in heaven;" a counterpart to St. John's
+ story. (See Rev. chap. xii.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This accords with Volney's statement, that "it was recorded in the sacred
+ books of the Persians and Chaldeans that the world, composed of a total
+ revolution of twelve thousand periods, was divided into two partial
+ revolutions of six thousand years each&mdash;one being the reign of good,
+ and the other the reign of evil." (Ruins, p. 244.) This belief was
+ disseminated through most of the nations. One of these revolutions was
+ produced, some believed, by a concussion of worlds, which displaced the
+ ocean and seas, and thus produced a general flood, which drowned every
+ living thing on the earth. The next revolution will be caused by a
+ collision of worlds, which will produce fire, and burn the earth to ashes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, let it be noted that all of these grand epochs were founded on
+ Cycles, and accompanied by the tradition of a God being born upon the
+ earth (conceived by a virgin maid), or descending in person; that is, men
+ were promoted to the Godhead. And in this way Jesus Christ was deified.
+ Volney explains the matter thus: "Now, according to the Jewish
+ computation, six thousand years had nearly elapsed since the supposed
+ creation of the world (according to their chronology). This coincidence
+ produced considerable fermentation in the minds of the people. Nothing was
+ thought of but the approaching termination. The great Mediator and Final
+ Judge was expected, and his advent desired, that an end might be put to
+ their calamities." (Ruins, p. 168).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Higgins corroborates this statement, when he tells us that "about the
+ time of the Cæsars, there seems to have been a general expectation that
+ some Great One was to appear. And finally, when the Cycle had passed, the
+ people, the Jew-Christians, began to look about to see who that Great One
+ was. Some fixed on Herod, some on Julius Cæsar, and some on others. But
+ finally public opinion settled on one Jesus of Nazareth, on account of his
+ superiority in morals and intellect, while the Hindoos deified Salavahana,
+ the Greeks Apollonious, &amp;c." And thus science and history join hand in
+ hand to explain most beautifully and conclusively the greatest mystery
+ that ever brought two hundred millions of people daily upon their knees&mdash;the
+ apotheosis, or deification of "the man Christ Jesus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXI. CHRISTIANITY DERIVED FROM HEATHEN AND ORIENTAL SYSTEMS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MORE than twenty thousand sermons are preached in the Christian pulpits,
+ on every recurring Sabbath, to convince the people that the religion and
+ morality taught and practiced by Jesus Christ was of divine emanation, and
+ was never before taught in the world,&mdash;that his system of morality
+ was without a parallel, and his practical life without a precedent,&mdash;that
+ the doctrine of self-denial, humility, unselfishness, benevolence, and
+ charity,&mdash;also devout piety, kind treatment of enemies, and love for
+ the human race, which he preached and practiced, had never before been
+ exemplified in the life and teachings of any individual or nation. But a
+ thorough acquaintance with the history and moral systems of some of the
+ oriental nations, and the practical lives of piety and self-denial
+ exemplified in their leading men long anterior to the birth of Christ, and
+ long before the name of Christianity was anywhere known, must convince any
+ unprejudiced mind that such a claim is without foundation. And to prove
+ it, we will here institute a critical comparison between Christianity and
+ some of the older systems with respect to the essential spirit of their
+ teachings, and observe how utterly untenable and groundless is the
+ dogmatic assumption which claims for the Christian religion either any
+ originality or any superiority. Of course if their is nothing new or
+ original, there is nothing superior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will first arrange Christianity side by side with the ancient system
+ known as Essenism&mdash;a religion whose origin has never been discovered,
+ though it is known that the Essenes existed in the days of Jonathan
+ Maccabeus, B. C. 150, and that they were of Jewish origin, and constituted
+ one of the three Jewish sects (the other two being Pharisees and
+ Sadducees). We have but fragments of their history as furnished by Philo,
+ Josephus, Pliny, and their copyists, Eusebius, Dr. Ginsburg, and others,
+ on whose authority we will proceed to show that Alexandrian and Judean
+ Essenism was identically the same system in spirit and essence as its
+ successor Judean Christianity; in other words, Judean Christianity teaches
+ the same doctrines and moral precepts which had been previously inculcated
+ by the disciples of the Essenian religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A PARALLEL EXHIBITION OF THE PRECEPTS AND PRACTICAL LIVES OF CHRIST AND
+ THE ESSENES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will condense from Philo, Josephus, and other authors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Philo says, "It is our first duty to seek the kingdom of God and his
+ righteousness so the Essenes believed and taught."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Seek first the kingdom of God, and his
+ righteousness, and all else shall be added." (Matt. vi. 33; Luke xii. 31.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Philo says, "They abjured all amusements, all elegances, and all
+ pleasures of the senses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Forsake the world and the things thereof."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The Essenes say, "Lay up nothing on earth, but fix your mind solely on
+ heaven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Lay not up treasures on earth," &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. "The Essenes, having laid aside all the anxieties of life," says Philo,
+ "and leaving society, they make their residence in solitary wilds and in
+ gardens."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "They wandered in deserts, and in mountains,
+ and in dens, and in caves of the earth." (Heb. xi. 38.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Josephus says, "They neither buy nor sell among themselves, but give of
+ what they have to him that wanteth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "And parted them (their goods) to all men as
+ every man had need." (Acts ii. 45.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Eusebius says, "Even as it is related in the Acts of the Apostles, all
+ (the Esseues)... were wont to sell their possessions and their substance,
+ and divide among all according as any one had need, so that there was not
+ one among them in want."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "Neither was their any among them that lacked,
+ for as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold them, and brought
+ the price of the things that were sold, &amp;c." (Acts iv. 34.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Eusebius says, "For whoever, of Christ's disciples, were owners of
+ estates or houses, sold them, and brought the price thereof, and laid them
+ at the apostles' feet, and distribution was made as every one had need. So
+ Philo relates things exactly similar of the Essenes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> (The text above quoted.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. "Philo tells us (says Eusebius) that the Essenes forsook father,
+ mother, brothers and sisters, houses and lands, for their religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Whosoever forsaketh not father and mother,
+ houses and lands, &amp;c. cannot be my disciples."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. "Their being sometimes called <i>monks</i> was owing to their
+ abstraction from the world," says Eusebius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "They are not of the world, even as I am not of
+ the world." (John xvii. 16.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. "And the name Ascetics was applied to them on account of their rigid
+ discipline, their prayers, fasting, self-mortification, &amp;c., as they
+ made themselves eunuchs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "There be eunuchs which have made themselves
+ eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. "They maintained a perfect community of goods, and an equality of
+ external rank." (Mich. vol. iv. p. 83.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Whosoever will be chief among you, let him be
+ your servant." (Matt. xx. 27.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. "The Essenes had all things in common, and appointed one of their
+ number to manage the common bag." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> "And had all things in common." (Acts ii. 44;
+ see also Acts iv. 32.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. "All ornamental dress they (Essenes) detested." (Mich. vol. iv. p.
+ 83.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "Whose adorning let it not be that outward
+ adorning of plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold, and putting on of
+ apparel." (1 Peter iii. 3.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. "They would call no man master." (Mich.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Be not called Rabbi, for one is your Master."
+ (Matt, xxiii. 8.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. "They said the Creator made all mankind equal." (Mich.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "God hath made of one blood all them that dwell
+ upon the earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. "They renounced oaths, saying, He who cannot be believed without
+ swearing is condemned already." (Mich.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Swear not at all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. "They would not eat anything which had blood in it, or meat which had
+ been offered to idols. Their food was hyssop, and bread, and salt; and
+ water their only drink." (Mich.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "That ye abstain from meat offered to idols,
+ and from blood." (Acts xv. 29.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. "Take nothing with them, neither meat or drink, nor anything necessary
+ for the wants of the body."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Take nothing for your journey; neither staves
+ nor script; neither bread, neither money, neither have two coats apiece."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. "They expounded the literal sense of the Holy Scriptures by allegory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Which things are an allegory." (Gal. iv. 24.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. "They abjured the pleasures of the body, not desiring mortal
+ offspring, and they renounced marriage, believing it to be detrimental to
+ a holy life." (Mich.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> It will be recollected that neither Jesus nor
+ Paul ever married, and that they discouraged the marriage relation. Christ
+ says, "They that shall be counted worthy of that world and the
+ resurrection neither marry nor are given in marriage." And Paul says, "The
+ unmarried careth for the things of the Lord." (i Cor. vii. 32.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. "They strove to disengage their minds entirely from the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "If any man love the world, the love of the
+ Father is not in him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. "Devoting themselves to the Lord, they provide not for future
+ subsistence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Take no thought for the morrow, what ye shall
+ eat and drink," &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. "Regarding the body as a prison, they were ashamed to give it
+ sustenance." (c. ii. 71.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Who shall change our <i>vile</i> bodies?"
+ (Phil. iii. 21.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. "They spent nearly all their time in silent meditation and inward
+ prayer." (c. ii. 71.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Men ought always to pray." (Luke xviii. 1.)
+ "Pray without ceasing." (1 Thess. v. 17.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. "Believing the poor were the Lord's favorites, they vowed perpetual
+ chastity and poverty." (c. ii. 71.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "Blessed be ye poor." (Luke vi. 20.) "Hath not
+ God chosen the poor?" (James ii. 5.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. "They devoted themselves entirely to contemplation in divine things."
+ (c. ii. 71.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "Mediate upon these (divine) things; give
+ thyself wholly to them." (1 Tim. iv. 15.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. "They fasted often, sometimes tasting food but once in three or even
+ six days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> Christ's disciples were "in fastings often." (2
+ Cor. xi. 27; see also v. 34.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. "They offered no sacrifices, believing that a serious and devout soul
+ was most acceptable." (c. ii. 71.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "There is no more offering for sin." (Heb. x.
+ 18.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. "They believed in and practiced baptizing the dead." (c. ii. 71.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Else what shall they do which are baptized for
+ the dead." (1 Cor. xv. 29.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. "They gave a mystical sense to the Scriptures, disregarding the
+ letter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "The letter killeth, but the spirit maketh
+ alive." (1 Cor. iii. 6.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. "They taught by metaphors, symbols, and parables."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Without a parable spake he not unto them."
+ (Matt. xiii. 34.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. "They had many mysteries in their religion which they were sworn to
+ keep secret."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "To you it is given to know the mysteries of
+ the kingdom; to them it is not given." (Matt xiii. 11.) "Great is the
+ mystery of godliness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. "They had in their churches, bishops, elders, deacons, and priests."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Ordained elders in every church." (Acts xiv.
+ 23.) For "deacons," see 1 Tim. iii. 1.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. "When assembled together they would often sing psalms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel.</i> "Teaching and admonishing one another in
+ psalms." (Col. iii. 16.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35. "They healed and cured the minds and bodies of those who joined them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> "Healing all manner of sickness," &amp;c. (Matt
+ iv. 23.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36. "They practiced certain ceremonial purifications by water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "The accomplishment of the days of
+ purification." (Acts xxi. 26.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37. "They assembled at the Sabbath festivals clothed in white garments."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> "Shall be clothed in white garments." (Rev. iii.
+ 4.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38. "They disbelieved in the resurrection of the external body."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> "It is sown a natural body, it is raised a
+ spiritual body." (1 Cor. xv. 44.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39. Pliny says, "They were the only sort of men who lived without money
+ and without women."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>\ "The love of money is the root of all evil." (1
+ Tim. vi. 10.) Christ's disciples travelled without money and without
+ scrip, and "eschew the lusts of the flesh."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40. "They practiced the extremest charity to the poor." (c. ii. 71.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> "Bestow all thy goods to feed the poor." (1 Cor.
+ xiii. 3.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41. "They were skillful in interpreting dreams, and in foretelling future
+ events."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> "Your sons and daughters shall prophesy, and
+ your old men shall dream dreams." (Acts ii. 17.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42. "They believed in a paradise,... and in a place of never-ending
+ lamentations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> "Life everlasting." (Gal. viii. 8.) "Weeping,
+ wailing, and gnashing of teeth." (Matt. xiii. 42.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43. "They affirmed," says Josephus, "that God foreordained all the events
+ of human life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>' "Foreordained before the foundation of the
+ world." (1 Peter.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44. "They believed in Mediators between God and the souls of men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "One Mediator between God and men." (1 Tim. ii.
+ 5.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45. "They practiced the pantomimic representation of the death, burial,
+ and resurrection of God"&mdash;Christ the Spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. With respect to the death, burial, and
+ resurrection of Christ, see 1 Cor. xv. 4.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 46. "They inculcated the forgiveness of injuries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "Father, forgive them; for they know not what
+ they do." (Luke xxiii. 34.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 47. "They totally disapproved of all war."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> "If my kingdom were of this world, then would my
+ servants fight." (John xviii. 36.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 48. "They inculcated obedience to magistrates, and to the civil
+ authorities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "Obey them which have the rule over you." (Heb.
+ xiii. 17; xxvi. 65.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 49. "They retired within themselves to receive interior revelations of
+ divine truth." (c. ii. 71.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "Every one of you hath a revelation." (1 Cor.
+ xiv. 26.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 50. "They were scrupulous in speaking the truth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> "Speaking all things in truth." (2 Cor. vii.
+ 14.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 51. "They perform many wonderful miracles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i> Many texts teach us that Christ and his apostles
+ did the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 52. "Essenism put all its members upon the same level, forbidding the
+ exercise of authority of one over another." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. Christ did the same. For proof, see Matt. xx.
+ 25; Mark ix. 35.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 53. "Essenism laid the greatest stress on being meek and lowly in spirit."
+ (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. See Matt. v. 5; ix. 28.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 54. "The Essenes commended the poor in spirit, those who hunger and thirst
+ after righteousness, and the merciful, and the pure in heart." (Dr
+ Ginsburg.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. For proof that Christ did the same, see Matt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 55. "The Essenes commended the peacemakers." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "Blessed are the peacemakers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 56. "The Essenes declared their disciples must cast out evil spirits, and
+ perform miraculous cures, as signs and proof of their faith." (Dr.
+ Ginsburg.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. Christ's disciples were to cast out devils,
+ heal the sick, and raise the dead, &amp;c., as signs and proof of their
+ faith. (Mark xvi. 17.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 57. "They sacrificed the lusts of the flesh to gain spiritual happiness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "You abstain from fleshly lusts." (1 Peter ii.
+ 11.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 58. "The breaking of bread was a veritable ordinance among the Essenes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. "He (Jesus) took bread, and gave thanks, and
+ brake it." (Luke xxii. 19.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 59. "The Essenes enjoined the loving of enemies." (Philo.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>. So did Christ say, "Love your enemies," &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 60. The Essenes enjoined, "Doing unto others as you would have them do
+ unto you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Scripture parallel</i>' The Confucian golden rule, as taught by Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This parallel might be extended much further, but we will proceed to
+ present the reader with a general description of Essenism, as furnished us
+ by Philo, Josephus, and some Christian writers. Philo, who was born in
+ Alexandria 20 B. C., and lived to 60 A. D., and who was himself an
+ Essenian Jew, in his account of them, says, "They do not lay up treasures
+ of gold or silver,... but provide themselves only with the necessities of
+ life." Paul afterwards, having caught the same spirit, advises the same
+ course of life. "Having food and raiment, therewith be content."
+ Contentment of mind they regarded as the greatest of riches. They make no
+ instruments of war. They repudiate every inducement to covetousness. None
+ are held as slaves, but all are free, and serve each other. They are
+ instructed in piety and holiness, righteousness, economy, &amp;c. They are
+ guided by a threefold rule: love of God, love of virtue, and love of
+ mankind. Of their love of God they give innumerable demonstrations, which
+ is found in their constant and unalterable holiness throughout the whole
+ of their lives, their avoidance of oaths and falsehoods, and their firm
+ belief that God is the source of all good, but of nothing evil. "Of their
+ love of virtue they give proof in their contempt for money, fame, and
+ pleasures, their continence, easy satisfying of their wants, their
+ simplicity, modesty," &amp;c. Their love of man is proved by their
+ benevolence and equality, and their having all things in common, which is
+ beyond all deception. They reverence and take care of the aged, as
+ children do their parents. (Condensed from Philo's treatise, "Every
+ Virtuous Man is Free.")
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Josephus, 37 A. D., and who was also at one time a member of the Essenian
+ Brotherhood, furnishes another fragmentary account of the Essenes in his
+ "Jewish Wars," of which the following is the substance:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They love each other more than others (that is, are "partial to the
+ household of faith"); they despise riches, and have all things in common,
+ so that there is neither abjectness of poverty nor distinction of riches
+ among them; they change neither garments nor shoes till they are worn out
+ or become unfit for use; they neither buy nor sell among themselves; their
+ piety is extraordinary; they never speak about wordly matters before
+ sunrise; they are girt about with a linen apron, and have a baptism of
+ cold water; they eat but one kind of a food at a time, and commence with a
+ prayer, and the priest must say grace before any one eats (that is, breaks
+ and blesses as Christ did); they also return thanks after eating, and then
+ put off their white garments; strangers were made welcome at their tables
+ without money and without price; they give food to the hungry and the
+ needy and show mercy to all; they curb their passions, restrain their
+ anger, and claim to be ministers of peace; an oath they regard as worse
+ than perjury; they excommunicate offenders ('Go tell it to the churches,
+ says Christ); they condemn finery in dress; though condemning in most
+ solemn terms oaths, members were admitted to the secret brotherhood by an
+ oath ('See thou tell no man,' said Christ); they endured pain with heroic
+ fortitude, and regarded an honorable death as better than long life; they
+ read and study their Holy Scriptures from youth, often prophesy, and it
+ was very seldom they failed in their predictions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Ginburg's testimony, abridged, is as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Essenes had a high appreciations of the inspired law of God. The
+ highest aim of their lives was to become fit temples of the Holy Ghost
+ (see i Cor. vi. 19); also to perform miraculous cures, and to be
+ spiritually qualified for forerunners of the Messiah. They taught the duty
+ of mortifying the flesh and the lusts thereof, and to become meek and
+ lowly in spirit; they answered by yea, yea, and nay, nay (see Matt.),
+ scrupulously avoiding oaths; they avoided impure contact with the heathen
+ and the world's people, and lived retired from the world, being in numbers
+ about four thousand; they strove to be like the angels of heaven; there
+ were no rich and poor, or masters and servants, amongst them; they lived
+ peaceably with all men; a mysterious silence was observed while eating; a
+ solemn oath was required on becoming a member of the secret order, which
+ required three things:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Love of God;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Merciful justice to all men, and to avoid the wicked, and help the
+ righteous;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Purity of character, which implied love of truth, hatred of falsehood,
+ and strict observance of 'the mysteries of godliness' to outsiders&mdash;that
+ is, 'heathen and publicans;' they endured suffering for righteousness'
+ sake, with rejoicings, and even <i>sought</i> it; regarding the body as a
+ prison for the soul, they desired the time to come to escape from it; they
+ recognized eight different stages of spiritual growth and perfection: 1.
+ Bodily purity; 2. Celibacy; 3. Spiritual purity; 4. The suppression of
+ anger and malice, and the cultivation of a meek, lowly spirit; 5. The
+ attainment of true holiness; 6. Becoming fit temples for the Holy Ghost;
+ 7. The ability to perform miraculous cures, and raise the dead; 8.
+ Becoming forerunners of the Messiah; and finally they took a solemn vow to
+ exercise, piety toward God and justice toward all men, to hate the wicked,
+ assist the good to keep clear of theft and unrighteous gains, to conceal
+ none of their 'mysteries of godliness' from each other, or disclose them
+ to others. 'Great is the mystery of godliness' ('See thou tell no man');
+ they were to walk humbly with God, shun bad society, forgive their
+ enemies, sacrifice their passions, and crucify the lusts of the flesh;
+ they disregarded bodily suffering, and even gloried in martyrdom,
+ preaching and singing to God amid their sufferings; but in their domestic
+ habits they were extremely filthy; they wore their clothes until they
+ became ragged, filthy, and offensive, never changing them till they were
+ wore out; their food consisted of bread and water, and wild roots and
+ fruits of the palm tree; they enjoined their duty, not only of forgiving
+ their enemies, but of seeking to benefit them, and of even blessing the
+ destroyer who took life and property. Such was the religion, such the
+ moral system, such the devout piety, and such the practical lives of the
+ Essenian Jews, a religious sect which flourished in Alexandria and Judea
+ several hundred years before the birth of Christ, and went out of history
+ the hour Christianity came in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as the foregoing exposition shows that Essenism and Christianity are
+ most strikingly alike in all their essential features, that the former
+ system contains nearly every important doctrine and precept of the
+ Christian religion, the question occurs here as one of momentous import,
+ how is this striking resemblance, this identity of character of the two
+ religions, to be accounted for? Does it not go far toward proving that
+ Christianity is an outgrowth, a legitimate offspring, of Judean Essenism?
+ Indeed, are we not absolutely driven to such a conclusion? Let us briefly
+ recite some of the important facts brought to light by the investigation
+ of the character and history of these two religions, and see if those
+ facts do not bring them together and weld them as one system&mdash;as one
+ and the same religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Both are alike, and Essenism is much the older system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Both religions are an outgrowth of Judaism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Both were known and taught in Judea and in Alexandria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Josephus living in Judea, and Philo in Alexandria, neither of them
+ speaks of Christianity, or refers to any such religion by that name, and
+ yet both describe a religion inculcating the same doctrines and moral
+ precepts, which they call Essenism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is not this very nearly conclusive proof that Essenism was only another
+ name for Christianity&mdash;that it had not yet changed its name to
+ Christianity? That famous standard author, Mr. Gibbon, was evidently of
+ this opinion when he said, "Whether, indeed, the first of that sect (the
+ Essenes) took the name of Christian when the appellation of Christian had
+ as yet been nowhere announced, it is by no means necessary to discuss."
+ (Book II. chap. xvi.) Here is evidence that Gibbon believed that the
+ Essenes, after having borne that name for centuries, changed the
+ appellation to Christian. And we find still stronger language than this in
+ the writings of the same author expressive of this opinion. In a note to
+ chapter xv. he says, "It is probable that the Therapeuts (Essenes) changed
+ their name to Christians, as some writers affirm, and adopted some new
+ articles of faith." Here the position is assumed that the Christian
+ religion is an outgrowth of Essenism, that is, merely a continuation of
+ that religion under a change of name, with a slight modification of its
+ creed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. And then we have the declaration of Christian writers, expressed in the
+ most positive terms, that Essenism and Christianity were the same
+ religion, the former name being used at an earlier period. Hear Eusebius,
+ a standard ecclesiastical writer of the fourth century. He asserts
+ positively, "Those ancient Therapeuts (Essenes) were Christians, and their
+ ancient writings were our gospels." (Eccl. Hist. p. 63.) Hark! Hark! my
+ good Christian reader, here is one of your own sworn witnessess testifying
+ that the Essenes originated and established the Christian religion; i. e.,
+ the religion now known by that name. Will you then give it up? If not, we
+ have other testimony of a similar character, rendering the proposition
+ still stronger. Robert Taylor declares, "The learned Basnage has shown
+ that the Essenes were really Christians centuries before Christ, and that
+ they were actually in possession of those very writings which are now our
+ Gospels and Epistles." (p. 81.) And then we have the declaration of the
+ author of "Christ the Spirit" (p. no), that "the Christians were the later
+ Essenes&mdash;that is, the Essenes of the time of Eusebius under a changed
+ name, that name having been made at Antioch, where the disciples were
+ first called Christian." The same writer suggests that "their sacred books
+ are our sacred books." We will now hear Eusebius again: "It is highly
+ probable that their (the Essenes') ancient commentaries, which Philo says
+ the Essenes have, are the very Gospels and writings of the Apostles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Based upon this conclusion, he calls the Essenes "the first heralds of the
+ gospel." "I find it, therefore, most probable," says Mr. Weilting, "that
+ Jesus and John belonged literally to the society of the Essenes." And then
+ the New American Encyclopedia furnishes us with the testimony of a very
+ able English author of the last century (De Quincy), who concurs with all
+ the writers cited above. "Mr. De Quincy (it says) identified the Essenes
+ as being the early Christians; i. e., the early Christians were known as
+ Essenes. Such testimony, coming from such a source, is entitled to much
+ weight." (Vol. i. p. 157.) And to the same effect is the testimony of
+ Bishop Marsh, who admits that our Gospels were drawn from those of the
+ Essenes. (See his edition of Michaelis' translation of the New Testament.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far historical <i>writers</i>. We will now lay before the reader some
+ historical <i>facts</i>, fraught with unanswerable logical potency, and
+ pointing to the same conclusion. It is a fact, and one of deep logical
+ import, and tending to corroborate the conclusion of some of the writers
+ cited above, who tell us the Christian Gospels were first composed by the
+ Essenes; that the language in which those Gospels were originally written
+ was Greek, the language in which the Alexandrian Essenes always wrote,
+ while the evangelical writers, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, being
+ illiterate fishermen, could have had no knowledge of any but the Jewish,
+ their own mother-tongue,&mdash;at least it is susceptible of satisfactory
+ proof that they never wrote in any other language. Hence the conclusion is
+ irresistible that they were not the original authors of the Gospels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The works of several authors are now lying at our elbow, who express the
+ conviction unequivocally that the Gospels were copied, if not translated,
+ from older writings. Mr. Le Clerc, one of the ablest writers of his time,
+ maintained this position, and did it ably. Another writer, a Mr. Hatfield,
+ was awarded a prize in 1793, by the theological faculty of Gottingen, for
+ an essay, in which the position was ably argued that Matthew, Mark, Luke,
+ and John were not the authors of the books which bear their names, but
+ were mere copyists. Dr. Lessing and others concur with him in this
+ conclusion. A circumstance confirming this verdict is found in the fact
+ that the word <i>church</i> occurs in our Gospels, which were written
+ before such an institution was established by those who were then called
+ Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Go tell it to the church" (Matt, xviii. 17) was uttered before any steps
+ had been taken by the then representatives of the Christian faith to
+ organize such a body&mdash;an evidence this, that he alluded to the church
+ of the Essenes, as there were no other churches in existence at the time;
+ which leaves the inference patent and irresistible that he and his
+ disciples were Essenes, perhaps then under the changed name of Christians.
+ Centuries prior to that era the Essenes had not only churches, but their
+ whole ecclesiastical nomenclature of bishops, deacons, elders, priests,
+ disciples, scriptures, gospels, epistles, psalms, hymns, mystery,
+ allegory, &amp;c. If Christianity was re-established in the days of Christ
+ and his apostles, they had nothing to originate, either with respect to
+ doctrines, precepts, church polity, or ecclesiastical terms&mdash;all
+ being established for them centuries before that era. With these facts in
+ view, it seems impossible that the two religious orders&mdash;Essenes and
+ Christians&mdash;could have been in existence at the same time as separate
+ institutions. The former must have ended when the latter commenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Josephus says, "the Essenes were scattered far and wide, and were in every
+ city," being quite numerous in Judea in his time. But he makes no
+ reference to any sect or religious order by the title of Christian&mdash;a
+ strong inferential evidence, upon sound priori reasoning, that
+ Christianity as yet was sailing under another name. Josephus must have
+ known and named the fact, had there been a Christian sect or disciple
+ there bearing that name. Impossible otherwise. We are then (upon the
+ logical force of these and many other facts) driven to the conclusion that
+ Christianity began when Essenism ended, and the change was only in name. I
+ challenge the whole Christian world to find the historical proof that
+ Christianity commenced one hour before the termination of Essenism, or of
+ Essenism overlapping the Christian religion so far as to survive one day
+ beyond or after its birth. I will confront them with the logic of dates,
+ and defy them to find any proof except their own unauthorized,
+ unauthenticated, and fictitious chronology, that a Christian was ever
+ known in any country by that name prior to the time of Tacitus, 104 A.D.,
+ who is the first of the three hundred writers of that era that makes any
+ mention of Christianity, Christ, or a Christian. This was long after
+ Josephus' time, which accounts most satisfactory for his omitting any
+ allusion to Christ or Christianity. That religion had not yet dropped the
+ name of Essenism and adopted that of Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, hard indeed must distorted reason fight the ramparts of logic and
+ history to resist the conviction, in view of the foregoing facts, that
+ Christianity is simply an outcropping of Essenism, either direct or
+ through Budhism. And even if it were possible to prove that the two
+ religions never became welded together, yet it is not possible to disprove
+ the striking identity of their doctrines, and the spirit of their
+ precepts, and the practical lives of their disciples. And this identity,
+ coupled with the fact that Essenism is the older system, is of itself most
+ superlatively fatal to all pretension or claim to originality for the
+ doctrines of the Christian faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a matter of no importance whether Christianity was originally known
+ by another name, so long as it can be shown that its doctrines had all
+ been preached and proclaimed to the world centuries prior to the date
+ assigned for its origin. And this is proved by the long list of
+ paralellisms presented in the incipient pages of this chapter. And this
+ proof explodes the pretensions of Christianity to an "original divine
+ revelation," and brings it down to a level with pagan orientalism. And the
+ fact that it sprang up in a country where its doctrine had long been
+ taught by pagans and orientalists, must produce the conviction, deep and
+ indelible, in all unbiased minds, that orientalism was the mother and
+ heathenism the father of the Christian religion, even in the absence of
+ any other proof. In fact, no other proof can be needed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what are the arguments, it may be well here to inquire, with which
+ orthodox Christians attempt to meet, combat, and vanquish the overwhelming
+ mass of historical facts and historical testimonies we have presented in
+ preceding pages, tending to prove and demonstrate the oriental origin of
+ their religion and its identity with Essenism? Their whole argument is
+ comprised in the naked postulate of the Rev. Mr. Paideaux, D. D., that
+ "the Essenes did not believe in the resurrection of the physical body (but
+ believed in a spiritual resurrection), and omit from their creed the
+ Trinity and Incarnation doctrine, and therefore they could not have been
+ the originators of the Christian religion;" but this argument is as easily
+ demolished as a cobweb, as the following facts will prove:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. We have but a fragment of the Essenian religion,&mdash;but one end of
+ their creed,&mdash;mere scraps furnished us by Philo, Josephus, and Pliny.
+ We have none of their sacred books apart from the Christian New Testament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. They had secret books, as we have shown, in which doctrines were taught
+ which they regarded as <i>too sacred to be thrown before the public</i>,
+ as "pearls before swine." And no doctrines were regarded as more sacred or
+ secret in that age than the doctrines of the Trinity and Incarnation.
+ Christ's injunction, "See thou tell no man," was probably their motto,
+ which prevented the publicity of a portion of their doctrines. And as
+ their sacred books, containing their doctrines, perished with the
+ extinction of the sect (except those now found in the Christian New
+ Testament), a full knowledge of their doctrines, therefore, never reached
+ the public mind. All religious sects had secret doctrines, designated as
+ "Mysteries of Godliness," including the principal Jewish sects and the
+ earliest Christian churches. It is, therefore, highly probable that if we
+ were in possession of all their sacred books, we would be in possession of
+ the proof that they believed and taught in their monasteries the doctrines
+ above named. But we are not left to mere inference that the Essenes' creed
+ did include the doctrines of the Trinity and the Divine Incarnation. We
+ find skeletons of these doctrines scattered along the line of their
+ history. Philo himself, an Essene teacher, most distinctly teaches the
+ doctrine of "the Incarnation of the Divine Word or Logos." And "Son of
+ God," "Mediator," "Intercessor," and "Messiah," were familiar words with
+ him. The idea often reappears in his writings, that the "Word could become
+ flesh;" that the Son of God could appear as a personality, and return to
+ the bosom of the Father. Moreover, one writer informs us that the Essenes
+ celebrated the birth and death of a Divine Savior as a "Mystery of
+ Godliness." And they claimed in their earlier history to be "forerunners
+ of the Messiah"&mdash;a claim which would soon bring a Messiah before the
+ world, that is, lead them to deify and worship some great man as "<i>The
+ Messia</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the doctrine of the Trinity, we have the authority of Eusebius that
+ they taught this doctrine too. So that it is not true that they did not
+ recognize these two prime articles of the Christian faith, the Incarnation
+ and Trinity doctrines. Some modern Christians assert that the Essenes not
+ only omitted to teach these doctrines, but that, on the other hand, they
+ taught other doctrines not taught in the Christian New Testament. This is
+ not improbable. For the Christian religion has been characterized by
+ frequent changes in its doctrines in every stage of its practical history,
+ as was also the Jewish religion which preceded it, and from which it
+ emanated. Judaism is a perpetual series of changes. It changed even the
+ name of its God from Elohim to Jehovah. Its leader and founder Abram was
+ changed to Abraham, and his grandson and successor from Jacob to Israel.
+ And we have the works of many Christian writers in our possession who
+ prove by their own bible that the Jews made many changes in their
+ religious polity and religious doctrines. This is more especially
+ observable when they came in contact with nations teaching a different
+ religion. Their whole history shows they were prone to imitate, and
+ borrow, and always did borrow on such occasions, and engraft the new
+ doctrines thus obtained into their own creed, and thus effected important
+ changes in their religion. We have the authority of Dr. Campbell for
+ saying the Jews never believed and taught the doctrine of future
+ punishment (and other doctrines that might be named) till after they were
+ brought in contact with Persians in Babylon who had long taught these
+ doctrines. (See Dissertation VI. ) And Dr. Enfield declares their
+ theological opinions underwent thorough changes during this period of
+ seventy years' captivity. Even their national title was changed at one
+ period from Israelites to Jews. With all these changes of names, titles,
+ and doctrines in view, it is not incredible that one of the Jewish sects
+ should change its name from Essenes to Christians, and with this change
+ modify some of the doctrines. And more especially as their title,
+ according to Dr. Ginsburg, had been changed before from Chassidim to
+ Essenes. And Philo at one period calls them Therapeuts, while Eusebius
+ says the Therapeuts were Christians. Put this and that together, and the
+ question is forever settled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, with all this overwhelming mass of historical evidence before us,
+ "piled mountain high," tending to prove the truth of the proposition that
+ Christianity is the offspring and outgrowth of ancient Judean Essenism, we
+ feel certain that no sophistry, from interested charlatans or stereotyped
+ creed worshipers, can stave off or obliterate the conviction in
+ unprejudiced minds, that the proposition is most amply proven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will now collate Christianity with another ancient religious system,
+ which we are certain it will not be disputed, after the comparison is
+ critically examined, contains the sum total of the doctrines and teachings
+ of Christianity in all their details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXII. THREE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX STRIKING ANALOGIES BETWEEN
+ CHRIST AND CHRISHNA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I. THEIR MIRACULOUS HISTORY AND LEADING PRINCIPLES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The advent of each Savior was miraculously foretold by prophets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The fallen and degenerate condition of the human race is taught in the
+ religion of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. A plan of restoration or salvation is provided for in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. A divine Savior is considered necessary in both cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. The necessity of atoning for sin is taught in the religion of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. A God, or Son of God, is selected as the victim for the atoning
+ sacrifice in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. This God is sent down from heaven in each case in the form of a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. The God or Savior in each case is the second person of the Trinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was held to be really God incarnate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. The mission of each Savior is the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. There is a resemblance in name-Chrishna and Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was incarnated and born of a woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. The mother in each case was a holy virgin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. The same peculiarities of a miraculous conception and birth are
+ related of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Each had an adopted earthly father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. The father of Chrishna, as well as that of Christ, was a carpenter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. God is claimed as the real father in both cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. A Spirit or Ghost was the author of the conception of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. There was rejoicing on earth when each Savior was born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. There was also joy in heaven at the birth and advent of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was of royal descent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Their mothers were both reputedly pious women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. The names of two mothers are somewhat similar&mdash;Mary and Maia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. Each had a special female friend&mdash;Elizabeth in the one case, and
+ the wife of Nanda in the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Neither Savior was born in a house, but both in obscure situations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. Both were born on the 25th of December.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Both, at birth, were visited by wise men and shepards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. The visitors conducted by a star in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. The rite of purification observed by the mothers of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. An angel warning of impending danger in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. The incumbent ruler was hostile in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. A bloody decree in each case for the destruction of the infant Savior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. A flight of the parents takes place in both cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. The parents of one sojourned at Muturea, the other at Mathura.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35. Each Savior had a forerunner&mdash;John the Baptist in one case, Bali
+ Rama in the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36. Both were preternaturally smart in childhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37. Each disputed with and vanquished learned opponents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38. Both became objects of search by their parents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39. And both occasioned anxiety, if not sorrow, to their parents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40. The mother of each had other children&mdash;that is children begotten
+ by man as well as God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41. Both Saviors retired to, and spent considerable time in the
+ wilderness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42. The religious rite of "fasting" was practiced by each Savior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43. Each delivered a noteworthy sermon, or series of moral lessons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was called and considered God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45. Each was both God and the Son of God (so regarded).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 46. "Savior" was one of the divine titles of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 47. Each was designated "the Savior of man," "the Savior of the world,"
+ &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 48. Both expressed a desire to "save all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 49. Each sustained the character of a Messiah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 50. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was a Redeemer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 51. Each Savior was called "Shepard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 52. Both were believed to be the Creator of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 53. Each is sometimes spoken of, also, as only an agent in the creation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 54. Both were the "Light and Life" of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 55. Each "brought life and immortality to light."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 56. Both are represented as "the seed of the woman bruising the serpent's
+ head."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 57. Was Christ a "Dispenser of grace," so was the Hindoo Savior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 58. One was "the lion of the tribe of Judah," the other "the lion of the
+ tribe of Saki."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 59. Christ was "the Beginning of the End," Chrishna "the Beginning, the
+ Middle, and the End."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 60. Both proclaimed, "I am the Resurrection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 61. Each was "the way to the Father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 62. Both represented emblematically "the Sun of Righteousness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 63. Each is figuratively represented as being "all in all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 64. Both speak of having existed prior to human birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 65. A dual existence&mdash;an existence in both heaven and earth at once&mdash;is
+ claimed by or for both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 66. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was "without sin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 67. Both assumed the divine prerogative of forgiving sins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 68. The mission of each was to deliver from sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 69. Both came to destroy the devil and his works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 70. The doctrine of the "atonement" is practically realized in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 71. Each made a voluntary offering for the sins of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 72. Both were human as well as divine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 73. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was worshiped as God absolute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 74. Each was regarded as "the Lord from Heaven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 75. Chrishna, as well as Christ, had applied to him all the attributes of
+ God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 76. Was Christ omniscient, so was Chrishna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 77. Was one omnipotent, so was the other (so believed).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 78. And both are represented as being omnipresent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 79. Each was believed to be divinely perfect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 80. Was one "Lord of lords," so was the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 81. Each embodied the "power and wisdom of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 82. All power was committed unto each (so claimed).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 83. Chrishna performed many miracles as well as Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 84. One of the first miracles of each was the cure of a leper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 85. Each healed "all manner of diseases."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 86. The work of casting out devils constitutes a part of the mission of
+ each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 87. Each practically proved his power to raise the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 88. A miracle appertaining to a tree is related of both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 89. Both could read the thoughts of the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 90. The power to detect and eject evil spirits was claimed by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 91. Both had the keys or control of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 92. Each led an extraordinary life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 93. Each had a character for supernatural greatness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 94. Both possesed or claimed a oneness with the Father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 95. A "oneness with his Lord and Master" is claimed, also, for the
+ disciples of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 96. A strong reciprocal affection between Master and disciple in each
+ case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 97. Each offers to shoulder the burdens of his disciples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 98. A portion of the life of each was spent in preaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 99. Both made converts by their miracles and preaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 100. A numerous retinue of believers springs up in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 101. Both had commissioned apostles to proclaim their religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 102. Each was an innovator upon the antecedent religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 103. A beautiful reform in religion was inaugurated by each Savior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 104. Each opposed the existing popular priesthood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 105. Both abolished the law of lineal descent in the ancient priesthood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 106. Each was an object of conspiracy by his enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 107. Humility and external poverty distinguished the life of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 108. Each denounced riches and rich men, and loathed and detested wealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 109. Both had a character for meekness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 110. Chastity or unmarried life was a distinguishing characteristic of
+ each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 111. Mercy was a noteworthy characteristic of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 112. Both were censured for associating with sinners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 113. Each was a special friend to the poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 114. A poor widow woman receives marked attention by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 115. Each encounters a gentile woman at a well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 116. Both submitted unresistingly to injuries and insults.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 117. General practical philanthropy and impartiality marks the life of
+ each Savior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 118. Each took more pleasure in repentant sinners than in virtuous saints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 119. Both practically disclosed God's attempt to reconcile the world to
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 120. The closing incidents in the earth-life of each were strikingly
+ similar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 121. A memorable last supper marked the closing career of both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 122. Both were put to death by "wicked hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 123. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was crucified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 124. Darkness attended the crucifixion of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 125. Both were crucified between two thieves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 126. Each is reported to have forgiven his enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 127. The age of each at death corresponds (being between thirty and
+ thirty-six years).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 128. Each, after giving up the ghost, descends into hell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 129. The resurrection from the dead is a marked period in the history of
+ each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 130. Each ascends to heaven after his resurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 131. Many people are reported to have witnessed the ascension in each
+ case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 132. Each is reported as having both descended and ascended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 133. The head of each, while living on earth, was anointed with oil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. DOCTRINES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 134. There is a similarity in the doctrines of their respective religions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 135. The same doctrines are propagated by the disciples of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 136. The doctrine of future rewards and punishments is a part of each
+ system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 137. Analogous views of heaven are found in each system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 138. A third heaven is spoken of in each system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 139. All sin must be punished according to the bible teachings of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 140. Each has a hell provided for the wicked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 141. Both teach a hell of darkness and a hell of light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 142. An immortal worm finds employment in the hell of each system ("the
+ worm that dieth not.")
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 143. The arch-demon of the under world uses brimstone for fuel in one
+ case, and oil in the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 144. The motive for future punishment is in both cases the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 145. Each has a purgatory or sort of half-way house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 146. Special divine judgments on nations are taught by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 147. A great and final day of judgment is taught by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 148. A general resurrection also is taught in each religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 149. That there is a "Judge of the dead" is a doctrine of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 150. Two witnesses are to report on human actions in the final assizes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 151. We are furnished in each case with the dimension of heaven or "the
+ holy city."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 152. Man is enjoined to strive against temptation to sin by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 153. And repentance for sin is a doctrine taught by the bible of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 154. Each has a prepared city for a paradise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 155. The bibles of both teach that we have no continuing city here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 156. Souls are carried to heaven by angels, as in the instance of Lazarus,
+ in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 157. A belief in angels or spirits is a tenant of each religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 158. The doctrine of fallen or evil angels is found in both system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 159. Obsession by wicked or evil spirits is taught by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 160. Both teach that sickness or disease is caused by evil spirits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 161. Each has a king-devil or arch-demon with a posse of subalterns or
+ evil spirits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 162. Both bibles record the story of a "hellaballoo" or war in heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 163. Both teach that an evil man can neither do nor speak a good thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 164. Both teach that sin is a disadvantage in the present life as well as
+ in the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 165. The doctrine of free will or free agency is taught by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 166. Predestination seems to be inferentially taught by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 167. In each case man is a prize in a lottery, with God and the devil for
+ ticket-holders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 168. Both make the devil (or devils) a scape-goat for sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 169. Both teach the devil or evil spirits as the primary cause of all
+ evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 170. The destiny of both body and soul is pointed out by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 171. The true believers are known as "saints" under both systems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 172. Saints with "white robes" are spoken of by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 173. Both specify "the Word of Logos" as God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 174. Wisdom, too, is personified as God by the holy Scriptures of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 175. Both teach that God may be known by his works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 176. The doctrine of one supreme God is taught in each bible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 177. Light and truth are important words in the religious nomenclature of
+ each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 178. Both profess a high veneration for truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 179. "Where the treasure is, there is the heart also," is taught by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 180. "Seek and ye shall find" is a condition prescribed by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 181. Religious toleration is a virtue professed by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 182. All nations are professedly based on an equality by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 183. Both, however, enjoin partiality to "the household of faith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 184. The doors of salvation are thrown open to high and low, rich and
+ poor, by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 185. Each professes to have "the only true and saving faith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 186. There is a mystery in the mission of each Savior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 187. "Rama" is a well known word in the bible of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 188. "The understanding of the wise" is a phrase in each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 189. Both speak figuratively of "the blind leading the blind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 190. "A new heaven and a new earth" is spoken of by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 191. The doctrine of a Trinity in the Godhead is taught by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 192. Baptism by water is a tenant and ordinance of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 193. "Living water" is a metaphor found in each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 194. Baptism by fire seems also to be recognized by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 195. Fasting is emphatically enjoined by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 196. Sacrifices are of secondary importance in each system, and are
+ partially or wholly abandoned by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 197. The higher law is paramount to ceremonies in each religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 198. The bible of each religion literally condemns idolatry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 199. Both also make concessions to idolatry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 200. Polygamy is not literally encouraged nor openly condemned by either.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 201. The power to forgive sins is conferred on the disciples of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 202. The doctrine of blasphemy is recognized by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 203. Pantheism, or the reciprocal in-being of God in nature and nature in
+ God, is taught by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. BIBLES AND HOLY SCRIPTURES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 204. Each has a bible which is the idolized fountain of all religious
+ teaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 205. Both have an Old Testament and a New Testament, virtually.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 206. The New Testament inaugurates a new and reform system of religion in
+ each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 207. "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God" is the faith of the
+ disciples of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 208. Each system claimed to have its inspired men to write its scriptures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 209. Both hold a spiritual qualification necessary to understand their
+ bibles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 210. It is a sin to become "wise beyond what is written" in their
+ respective bibles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 211. Both recommend knowing the Scriptures in youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 212. Alteration of their respective bibles is divinely interdicted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 213. The bible is an infallible rule of faith and practice in both cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 214. "All scripture is profitable for doctrine" is the faith of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 215. Both explain away the errors of their bibles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. SPIRITUALITY OF THE TWO RELIGIONS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 216. The religion of Chrishna is pre-eminently spiritual no less than
+ Christ's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 217. Both teach that "to be carnally minded is death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 218. External rites are practically dispensed with in each religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 219. The spiritual law written on the heart is recognized by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 220. "God is within you," Budhists teach as well as Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 221. Both recognize an invisible spiritual Savior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 222. "God dwells in the heart," say Hindoo as well as Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 223 An inward recognition of the divine law is amply seen in both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 224. Both confess allegiance to an inward monitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 225. The doctrine of inspiration and internal illumination is found in
+ both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 226. The indwelling Comforter is believed in by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 227. Both also teach that religion is an inward work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 228. Both speak of being born again&mdash;i. e., the second birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 229. A spiritual body is also believed in by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 230. "Spiritual things are incomprehensible to the natural man" say each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 231. God's spiritually sustaining power Budhists also acknowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 232. Both give a spiritual interpretation to their bibles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 233. Each has a new and more interior law superseding the old law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 234. The spiritual cross&mdash;self-denial or asceticism&mdash;is a
+ prominent feature of each religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 235. The duty of renouncing and abandoning the external world is solemnly
+ enjoined by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 236. Budhists renounce the world more practically than Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 237. Withdrawal or seclusion from society is recommended by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 238. Bodily suffering as a benefit to the soul is encouraged by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 239. Voluntary suffering for righteousness' sake is a virtue with each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 240. The cross is a religious emblem in each system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 241. Both glory in "the religion of the cross" as better than a religion
+ without suffering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 242. Hence both teach "the greater the cross the greater the crown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 243. Earthly pleasures are regarded as evil by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 244. Contempt for the body as an enemy to the soul is visible in both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 245. Retirement for religious contemplation is a duty with each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 246. The forsaking of relations is also enjoined by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 247. Spiritual relationship is superior to external relationship with
+ both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 248. "To die is great gain" we are taught by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 249. A subjugation of the passions is a religious duty with each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 250. The road to heaven is a narrow one with each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 251. The same state of religious perfection is aspired to by the disciples
+ of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. THE DOCTRINE OF FAITH OR BELIEF.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 252. Faith is an all-important element and doctrine with each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 253. Heresy, or want of faith, is a sin of great magnitude with both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 254. Faith in the Savior is a condition to salvation by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 255. Confessing the Savior is also required in both cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 256. "Believe or be damned" is the condition or profess to believe the
+ terrible sine qua non to salvation by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 257. Skeptics or unbelievers are with both the chief of sinners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 258. "Faith can remove mountains," either with a Bud-hist or a Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 259. Both contrast faith with works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 260. Faith without works is dead&mdash;so teach both Bud-hists and
+ Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. THE DOCTRINE AND PRACTICE OF PRAYER.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 261. Prayer is an important rite in each religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 262. Private or secret prayer is recommended by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 263. Each has also a formula of prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 264. "Pray without ceasing" is a Budhist as well as a Christian
+ injunction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 265. Praying to their respective Saviors in sickness and in health is a
+ custom with both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 266. The custom of praying for the dead is recognized in each system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. TREATMENT OF ENEMIES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 267. It is a Hindoo as well as a Christian injunction to treat enemies
+ kindly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 268. Passive submission to injuries and abuse is enjoined by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 269. The holy Scriptures of both require us to pray for enemies, and feed
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 270. And even love to enemies is a part of the spirit of each religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. THE MILLENNIUM.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 271. Hindoos, like Christians, prophesy of a great millennial era.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 272. There is a remarkable similarity in their notions with respect to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 273. Both anticipate a second advent or new Savior on the occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 274. The destruction of the world also is to take place in both cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 275. And an entire renovation and a new order of things are to be
+ established in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX. MIRACLES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 276. There is almost a constant display of miraculous power in each
+ system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 277. The disciples of both are professedly endowed with this power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 278. Miraculous cures of the lame, the blind, and the sick are reported in
+ both cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 279. Miracles of handling poisonous reptiles with impunity are reported by
+ both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 280. Swallowing deadly poison is enjoined by Christians and practiced by
+ Hindoos.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 281. Many cases of the miraculous ejection of devils are reported by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 282. The miracle of thought-reading is displayed by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 283. The saints in both cases are reported as raising the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X. PRECEPTS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 284. "The kingdom of heaven" was to be sought first of all things in each
+ case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 285. Love to God is a paramount obligation under each system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 286. And the worship of God is an essential requisition in each religious
+ polity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 287. "Cease to do evil and learn to do well" is virtually enjoined by
+ each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 288. An inward knowledge of God is taught as essential by both systems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 289. A reliance on works is discouraged by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 290. Purity of heart is inculcated by Hindoos as well as Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 291. Speak and think evil of no man is a gospel injunction of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 292. A love of all beings is more prominently the spirit of Budhism than
+ that of Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 293. The practice of strict godly virtue is enjoined by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 294. Moderation and temperance are recommended by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 295. Patience is a virtue in each religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 296. The duty of controlling our thoughts is taught by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 297. Charity has a high appreciation by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 298. Both make the poor objects of attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 299. The practice of hospitality is recommended by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 300. Humility is a duty and a virtue under both systems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 301. Mirthfulness or light conversation is forbidden by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 302. Purity of life is a duty with Hindoos as well as Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 303. Chasteness in conversation is inculcated by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 304. "Respect to persons" is a sin in the moral polity of both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 305. Alms-giving is religiously enjoined by the holy Scriptures of both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 306. Both teach that "it is better to give than to receive."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 307. Loyalty to rulers is a moral requisition of each system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 308. Honor to father and mother is esteemed a great virtue by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 309. The correct training of children is with each a scriptural duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 310. "Look not upon a woman" is more than hinted by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 311. The reading of the holy Scriptures is enjoined by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 312. Lying or falsehood is with each a sin of great magnitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 313. Swearing is discountenanced by both religions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 314. Theft or stealing is specially condemned by both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 315. Both deprecate and condemn the practice of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 316. Both discountenance fighting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 317. Neither of them professes to believe in slavery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 318. Drunkenness and the use of wine are more specifically condemned by
+ the Hindoo religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 319. Adultery and fornication are heinous sins in the eyes of both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 320. Both condemn covetousness as a great sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 321. Budhists more practically condemn anger than Christians do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. MISCELLANEOUS ANALOGIES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 322. Both have their apocryphal as well as their canonical Scriptures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 323. Stories are found in the bible of each which would be rejected if
+ found elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 324. Both make their bible a finality in matters of faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 325. Both have had their councils and commentaries to reveal theis bibles
+ over again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 326. Numerous schisms, divisions, sects, and creeds have sprung up in
+ each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 327. Various religious reforms have sprung up under each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 328. Conversion from one religious sect to another is common to both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 329. Both religions have been troubled with numerous skeptics or infidels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 330. Both have often resorted to new interpretations for their bibles to
+ suit the times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 331. The unconverted are stigmatized by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 332. "Knock and it shall be opened" is the invitation of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 333. Public confession of sins in class-meetings is known to each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 334. Death-bed repentance often witnessed under both religious systems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 335. A belief in haunted houses incident to the religious countries of
+ both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 336. A superior respect for woman claimed by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 337. An idolatrous veneration for religious ancestors by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 338. Each sustain a numerous horde of expensive priests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 339. A divine call or illumination to preach claimed by each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 340. Religious martyrdom the glory of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 341. Both have encountered "perils by sea and land" for their religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 342. He who loseth his life (for his religion) shall find it, say both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 343. Both in ancient times suffered much persecution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 344. The disciples of both have suffered death without flinching from the
+ faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 345. Each sent numerous missionaries abroad to preach and convert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 346. And, finally, each cherished the hope of converting the world to
+ their religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The author has in his possession historical quotations to prove the truth
+ of each one of the above parallels. He has all the historical facts on
+ which they were constructed found in and drawn from the sacred books of
+ the Hindoo religion and the works of Christian writers descriptive of
+ their religion. But they would swell the present volume to unwieldy
+ dimensions, and far beyond its proper and prescribed limits, to present
+ them here; they are therefore reserved for the second volume, and may be
+ published in pamphlet form also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In proof of the correctness of the foregoing comparative analogies, we
+ will now summon the testimony of various authors setting forth the
+ historical character of the Hindoo God Chrishna, and the essential nature
+ of his religion, so far as it approximates in its doctrines and moral
+ teachings to the Christian religion. We will first hear from Colonel
+ Wiseman, for ten years a Christian missionary in India.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is one Indian (Hindoo) legend of considerable importance" says this
+ writer... "This is the story of Chrishna, the Indian Apollo. In native
+ legends he is represented as an Avatar, or incarnation of the Divinity. At
+ his birth, choirs of Devitas (angels) sung hymns of praise, while
+ shepherds surrounded his cradle. It was necessary to conceal his birth
+ from the tyrant ruler, Cansa, to whom it had been foretold that the infant
+ Savior should destroy him. The child escaped with his parents beyond the
+ coast of Lamouna. For a time he lived in obscurity, and then commenced a
+ public life distinguished for prowess and beneficence. He washed the feet
+ of the Brahmins, and preached the most excellent doctrines; but at length
+ the power of his enemies prevailed.... Before dying, he foretold the
+ miseries which would take place in the Cali-yuga, or wicked age (Dark Age)
+ of the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chrishna (says another writer) taught his followers that they alone were
+ the true believers of the saving faith; throwing down the barriers of
+ caste, and elevating the dogmas of their faith above the sacerdotal class,
+ he admitted every one who felt an inward desire to the ministry to the
+ preaching of their religion. A system thus associating itself with the
+ habits, feelings, and personal advantages of its disciples could not fail
+ to make rapid progress." (Upham's History. Doctrines of Budhism.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Budhism inculcates benevolence, tenderness, forgiveness of injuries, and
+ love of enemies; and forbids sensuality, love of pleasure, and attachment
+ to worldly objects." (Judson).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the moment of his (Chrishna's) conception a God left heaven to enter
+ the womb of his mother (a virgin). Immediately after his birth he was
+ recognized as a divine personage, and it was predicted that he would
+ surpass all previous divine incarnations in holiness. Every one adored
+ him, saluting him as 'the God of Gods.' When twenty years of age he went
+ into a desert, and lived there in the austerest retirement, poverty,
+ simplicity, and virtue, spending his whole time in religious
+ contemplation. He was tempted in various ways, but his self-denial
+ resisted all the seductive approaches of sin. He declared, 'Religion is my
+ essence.' He experienced a lively opposition from the priests attached to
+ the ancient creeds (as Christ subsequently did). But he triumphed over all
+ his enemies after holding a discussion with them (as Christ did with the
+ doctors in the Temple). He revised the existing code of morals and the
+ social law. He reduced the main principles of morality to four, viz: <i>mercy,
+ aversion to cruelty, unbounded sympathy for all animated beings and the
+ strictest adherence to the moral law.</i> He also gave a decalogue of
+ commandments, viz.: 1. Not to kill. 2. Not to steal. 3. To be chaste. 4.
+ Not to testify falsely. 5. Not to lie. 6. Not to swear. 7. To avoid all
+ impure words. 8. To be disinterested. 9. Not to take revenge. 10. And not
+ to be superstitious. This code of morals was firmly established in the
+ hearts of his followers." (Abridged from Hardy's Manual of Budhism.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was prophesied in olden times that a person would arise and redeem
+ Hindostan from 'the yoke of bondage.' At midnight, when the birth of
+ Chrishna was taking place, the clouds emitted low music, and poured down a
+ rain of flowers. The celestial child was greeted with hymns by attending
+ spirits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The room was illuminated by his light, and the countenances of his father
+ and mother emitted rays of glory, and they bowed in worship.' 'The people
+ believed he was a God.' They eagerly caught the words which fell from his
+ lips, which taught his divine mission, and they called him the 'Holy One,'
+ and finally the 'Living God.' He performed miraculous cures. At his birth
+ a marvelous light illumined the earth. His followers baptised, and
+ performed miraculous cures. And he, when a child, attracted attention by
+ his miracles. While attending the herds with his foster-father a great
+ serpent poisoned the river, which caused the death of cows and
+ shepherd-boys when they drank of it, whom Chrishna restored to life by a
+ look of divine power. His life was devoted to mercy and charity. He left
+ paradise from pure compassion, to die for suffering sinners. He sought to
+ lead men to better paths and lives of virtue and rectitude. He suffered to
+ atone for the sins of the world; and the sinner, through faith in him, can
+ be saved. Christ and Chrishna both taught the equality of man. Prayers
+ addressed to Chrishna were after this fashion: 'O thou Supreme One! thy
+ essence is inscrutable. Thou art all in all. The understanding of man
+ cannot reach thy Almighty Power. I, who know nothing, fly to thee for
+ protection. Show mercy unto me, and enable me to see and know thee.'
+ Chrishna replies, 'Have faith in me. No one who worships me can perish.
+ Address thyself to me as the only asylum. I will deliver thee from sin. I
+ am animated with equal benevolence toward all beings. I know neither
+ hatred nor partiality. Those who adore me devoutly are in me and I in
+ them'"&mdash;"Christ within you the hope of glory." (Abridged from Mr.
+ Tuttle.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If we consider that Budhism proclaimed the equality of all men and women
+ in the sight of God, that it denounced the impious pretensions of the most
+ mischievous priesthood the world ever saw, and that it inculcated a pure
+ system of practical morality, we must admit that the innovation was as
+ advantageous as it was extensively spread and adopted." (Hue's Journey
+ through China, chap. v.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To Chrishna the Hindoos were indebted for a code of pure and practical
+ morality, which inculcated charity and chastity, performance of good
+ works, abstinence from evil, and general kindness to all living things."
+ (Cunningham.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Budhism never confounds right or wrong, and never excuses any sin"
+ (Catharine Beecher.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He (Chrishna) honored humanity by his virtues." (St Hilaire.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is probable that every incident in his (Chrisna's) life is founded in
+ fact, which, if separated from surrounding fable, would afford a history
+ that would scarce have any equal in the importance of the lessons it would
+ teach." (Hardy's Manual of Budhism.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He (Chrishna) undertakes and counsels a constant struggle against the
+ body. In his eyes the body is the enemy of man's soul (as Paul thought
+ when he spoke of 'our vile bodies.') He aims to subdue the body and the
+ burning passions which consume it.... He requires humility, disregard of
+ wordly wealth, patience and resignation in adversity, love to enemies,
+ religious tolerance, horror at falsehood, avoidance of frivolous
+ conversation, consideration and esteem for women, sanctity of the marriage
+ relation, non-resistance to evil, confession of sins, and conversion."
+ (St. Hilaire.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Budhism has been called the Christianity of the East." (Abel Remuset.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The doctrine and practical piety of their bible (the Baghavat Gita) bear
+ a strong resemblance to those of the Holy Scriptures. It has scarcely a
+ precept or principle that is not found in the (Christian) bible. And were
+ the people to live up to its principles of peace and love, oppression and
+ injury would be known no more within their borders... It has no mythology
+ of obscene and ferocious deities, no sanguinary or impure observances, no
+ self-inflicting tortures, no tyrannizing priesthood, no confounding of
+ right and wrong by making certain iniquities laudable in worship. In its
+ moral code, its description of the purity and peace of the first ages, and
+ the shortening of man's life by sin, it seems to follow genuine
+ traditions. In almost every respect it seems to be the best religion ever
+ invented by man." (Rev. H. Malcom's Travels in Asia.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If the morality of Budhism be examined, its exhortations to guard the
+ will, to curb the thoughts, to exercise kindness towards others, to
+ abstain from wrong to all, it propounds a very high standard of practice."
+ (Upham's Doctrines and History of Budhism.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seeks the highest triumphants of humanity in the exercise of devotion,
+ self-contemplation, and self-denial." (Theogony of the Hindoos, by
+ Bjornsjerma.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the doctrines of Budhism are not alone in the beauty of their
+ sentiments and the excellence of much of their morality. 'It is not
+ permitted to you to return evil for evil' is one of the sentiments of
+ Socrates." (Rev. H. S. Hardy's Eastern Monachism.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Budhism insists on the necessity of taking the intellectual faculties for
+ guides in philosophical researches." (Tiberghien.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It sought to wean mankind from the pleasures and vanities of life by
+ pointing to the transitoriness of all human enjoyment." (Smith's
+ Mongolia.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The principal characteristics of Budhism are the doctrines of mildness
+ and the universal brotherhood of man." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Life is a state of probation and misery, according to Budhism." (Upham,
+ chap. vi.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Brahmins found fault with him (Chrishna) for receiving as disciples
+ the outcasts of Hindoo society (as the Jews did Christ for fellowshipping
+ publicans and sinners). But he (Chrishna) replied, 'My law is a law of
+ mercy to all.'" (Hue's Voyages through China.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Budhism attracted and furnished consolation for the poor and
+ unfortunate." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Budhism is a rationalistic and reform system as compared with Brahminism.
+ Landresse expresses his high admiration of the heroism with which the
+ Budhist missionaries before Christ crossed streams and seas which had
+ arrested armies, and traversed deserts and mountains upon which no
+ caravans dared to venture, and braved dangers and surmounted obstacles
+ which had defied the omnipotence of the emperors." (A note on Landresse's
+ <i>Foe Koui Ki.</i>)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If we addressed a Mogul or Thibetan this question, Who is Chrishna? the
+ reply was, instantly, 'The Savior of men.'" (Hue's Journey through China.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chrishna, the incarnate Deity of the Sanscrit romance continues to this
+ hour the darling God of the women of India.... Chrishna was the person of
+ Vishnu (God) himself in the human form." (Asiat. Researches, 260).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Respectable natives told me that some of the missionaries had told them
+ that they were even now almost Christians" (owing to the two religions
+ being so nearly alike). (Ibid).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All that converting the Hindoos to Christianity does for them is to
+ change the object of their worship from Chrishna to Christ." (Robert
+ Cheyne.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Brahminism or Budhism in some of its forms is said to constitute the
+ religion of considerably more than half the human race. It teaches the
+ existence of one supreme eternal, and uncreated God, called Brahma, who
+ created the world through Chrishna, the second member of the Trinity."
+ Paul says, God created the world through Jesus Christ, the second member
+ of the Christian Trinity. (Eph. iii. 9.) How striking the resemblance!
+ "The doctrine of the incarnation, the descent of the Deity upon earth, and
+ his manifestation in a human form for the redemption of mankind, seems to
+ have existed in the shape of prophecy or fact in all ages of the world.
+ Hindooism teaches nine of these incarnations. Furthermore, it teaches the
+ doctrine of the Trinity, the fall and redemption of man, and a state of
+ future rewards and punishments in a future life.... This religion in chief
+ of Asia is traceable to remote ages. The doctrine of the Trinity is
+ represented in the Elephantine cavern, and taught in the Mahabarat, which
+ goes back for its origin nearly two thousand years before Christ." (New
+ York Sunday Despatch, 1855.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the year 3600, Chrishna descended to the earth for the purpose of
+ defeating the evil machinations of Chivan (the devil), as Christ 'came to
+ destroy the devil and his works.' (See John iii. 8.) After a fierce combat
+ with the devil, or serpent, he defeated him by bruising his head&mdash;he
+ receiving, during the contest, a wound in the heel. ('It [the serpent]
+ shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.'&mdash;Gen. iii.
+ 15.) He died at last between two thieves.... He lead a pure and holy life,
+ and was a meek, tender, and benevolent being, and enjoined charity,
+ hospitality, and mercy, and forbade lying, prevarication, hypocrisy, and
+ overreaching in dealing, and pilfering, and theft, and violence toward any
+ being." (Lecture before the Free Press Association in 1827.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The birthplace of the Hindoo hero (Chrishna) is called Mathura, which is
+ easily changed, and by correct translation becomes Maturea, the place
+ where Christ is said to have stopped, between Nazareth and Egypt... To
+ show his humility he washed the feet of the Brahmins (as Christ is said to
+ have washed the feet of the Jews&mdash;see John xiii. 14). One day a woman
+ came to him and anointed his hair with oil, in return for which he healed
+ her maladies. One of his first miracles was that of healing a leper, like
+ Christ (See Mark i. 4). Finally, he was crucified, then descended to
+ Hades. (It is said of Christ, 'his soul was not left in hell.'&mdash;Acts
+ ii. 31.) He (Chrishna) rose from the dead and ascended to Voicontha
+ (heaven.)" (Higgin's Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 239).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, we ask, is it any wonder, in view of the foregoing historical
+ exposition, that Eusebius should exclaim, "The religion of Jesus Christ is
+ neither new nor strange?" (Eccl. Hist. ch. iv.) Truly did St. Augustine
+ say, "This, in our day, is the Christian religion, not as having been
+ unknown in former times, but as having recently received that name."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, then, we pause to ask our good Christian reader, <i>Where is your
+ original Christianity now?</i> or what constitutes the revealed religion
+ of Jesus Christ? or where is the evidence that any new religion was
+ revealed by him or preached by him, seeing we have all his religion, as
+ shown by the foregoing historical citations, included in an old heathen
+ system more than a thousand years old when Jesus Christ was born? We find
+ it all here in this old oriental system of Budhism&mdash;<i>every
+ essential part, particle and principle</i> of it. We find Christianity all
+ here&mdash;its Alpha and Omega, its beginning and end. We find it here in
+ all its details,&mdash;its root, essence, and entity,&mdash;all its
+ "revealed doctrines," religious ideas, beautiful truths, senseless dogmas
+ and oriental phantoms. Not, a doctrine, principle, or precept of the
+ Christian system, but that is here proclaimed to the world ages before
+ "the angels announced the birth of a divine babe in Bethlehem." Will you,
+ then, persist in claiming that "truth, life, and immortality came by Jesus
+ Christ," and that "Christ came to preach a new gospel to the world, and to
+ set forth a new religion never before heard amongst men" (to use the
+ language of Archbishop Tillotson), when the historical facts cited in this
+ work demonstrate a hundred times over that such a position is palpably
+ erroneous? Will you still persist, with all those undeniable facts staring
+ you in the face (proving and reproving, with overwhelming demonstration,
+ that the statement is untrue), in declaring that "the religion of Jesus
+ Christ is the only true and soul-saving religion, and all other systems
+ are mere straw, stubble, tradition, and superstition" (as asserted by a
+ popular Christian writer), when no mathematician ever demonstrated a
+ scientific problem more clearly than we have proved in these pages that
+ all the principle systems of the past, by no means excepting Christianity,
+ are essentially alike in every important particular&mdash;all of their
+ cardinal doctrines being the same, differing only in unimportant details?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing, then, that all systems of religion have been found to be
+ essentially alike in spirit and in practice, the all-important question
+ arises here, What is the true cause assignable for this striking
+ resemblance? How is it to be accounted for? Perhaps some of our good
+ Christian readers, unacquainted with history, may cherish the thought that
+ all the oriental systems brought to notice are but imitations of
+ Christianity; that they were reconstructed out of materials obtained from
+ that source; that Christianity is the parent, and they the off-spring.
+ But, alas for their long-cherished idol, those who entertain such forlorn
+ hopes are "sowing to the wind, and are doomed to disappointment." With the
+ exception of Mahomedanism alone, Christianity is the youngest system in
+ the whole catalogue. The historical facts to prove this statement are
+ voluminous. But as it needs no proof to those who have read religious
+ history, but little space will be occupied with citations for this
+ purpose. With respect to the antiquity of the principal oriental system,
+ we need only to quote the testimony of Sir William Jones, a devout
+ Christian writer, who spent years in India, and whose testimony will be
+ accepted by any person acquainted with his history. He makes the emphatic
+ declaration, "That the name of Chrishna, and the general outline of his
+ history, were long anterior to the birth of our Savior, and probably to
+ the time of Homer (900 b. C.) we know very certainly." (Asiat. Res. vol.
+ i. p. 254.) No guess-work about it. "<i>We know very certainly</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And being a scholar, a traveler, and a sojourner among the Hindoos, and
+ well versed in their history, no person ever had a better opportunity to
+ know than he. We will hear this renowned author further. "In the Sanscrit
+ dictionary, compiled more than two thousand years ago, we have the whole
+ history of the incarnate deity (Chrishna), born of a virgin, and
+ miraculously escaping in his infancy from the reigning tyrant of his
+ country (Cansa). He passed a life of the most extraordinary and
+ incomprehensible devotion. His birth was concealed from the tyrant Cansa,
+ to whom it had been predicted that one born at that time, and in that
+ family, would destroy him;" i. e., destroy his power. (Asiat. Res. vol. i.
+ p. 273.) This writer also states that the first Christian missionaries who
+ entered India were astonished to find there a religion so near like their
+ own, and could only account for it by supposing that the devil, foreseeing
+ the advent of Christ, originated a system of religion in advance of his,
+ and "just like it." Stated in other words, he got out the second edition
+ of the gospel plan of salvation before the first edition was published or
+ had an existence. Rather a smart trick this, thus to outwit God Almighty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the vast antiquity of the Hindoo oriental religion, which
+ indicates it as being not only the source from which the materials of the
+ Christian religion were drawn, but as being the parent of all the leading
+ systems, with their three thousand subordinate branches which existed at a
+ much earlier period than Christianity, we need only point to the deep
+ chiseled sculptures and imperishable monuments enstamped on their
+ time-honored temples, tombs, altars, vases, columns, pagodas, ruined
+ towers, &amp;c., which, with contemporary inscriptions, warrant us in
+ antedating the religion of the Himmalehas far beyond the authentic records
+ of any other religion that has floated down to us on the stream of time.
+ The numerous images of their crucified Gods, Chrishna and Saki, emblazoned
+ on their old rock temples in various parts of the country, some of which
+ are constructed of clay porphyry, now the very hardest species of rock,
+ with their attendant inscriptions in a language so very ancient as to be
+ lost to the memory of man, vie with the Sanscrit in age, the oldest
+ deciphered language in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these and a hundred corroboratory historical facts fix on India as
+ being the birthplace of the mother of all religions now existing, or that
+ ever had an existence, while the great workshop in which they were
+ subsequently remodeled was in Alexandria in Egypt, whose theological
+ schools furnished the model for nearly every system now found noticed on
+ the page of history&mdash;Christianity of course included. So much for the
+ unrivaled antiquity of the Hindoo religion. Now, the more important query
+ arises, What relationship does ancient heathen or Hindoo Budhism bear to
+ Christianity? What is the evidence that the latter is an outgrowth of the
+ former? As an answer to this question, the reader will please note the
+ following facts of history:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Alexandria, the home of the world's great conqueror, was at one period
+ of time the great focal center for religious speculation and propagandism,
+ the great emporium for religious dogmas throughout the East, and a place
+ of resort for the disciples of nearly every system of religious faith then
+ existing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. In this capital city, comprising about five hundred thousand
+ inhabitants, were established a voluminous library, and vast theological
+ schools, in which men of every religious order, and of every phase of
+ faith, met and exchanged religious ideas, and borrowed new doctrines, with
+ which they remodeled their former systems of faith, amounting in some
+ cases to an entire change of their long-established creeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. In these theological schools the Jewish sect, which afterward became
+ the founders of Christianity, were extensively represented; for, let it be
+ noted, its first disciples and founders had all been Jews, probably of the
+ Essene sect. "For a long time the Christians were but a Jewish sect," says
+ M. Reuss' "History of Christian Theology." Alexander had, previous to this
+ time (that is, about 330 b. c.), subjected the whole of Western Asia to
+ his dominions, including, of course, "The Holy Land"&mdash;Judea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. By this act a large portion of the Jewish nation were transferred from
+ their own country to Alexandria. And this number was afterward vastly
+ increased by Alexander's successor, Ptolemy Sotor, who carried off and
+ settled in that credal city one hundred thousand more Jews.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. As the result, in part, of these repeated calamities, "the Lord's
+ chosen people" were literally broken up. They lost their law, lost their
+ leader and lawgiver, lost their language, lost the control of their
+ country, the "<i>Promised Land"</i> which (they verily believed) the Lord
+ had deeded to them <i>in fee simple</i>, and ratified in the high court of
+ heaven, and had declared they should hold and possess forever. And finally
+ they partially lost their nationality, being literally dissolved and
+ broken up; and were finally almost lost to history&mdash;the ten tribes
+ disappearing entirely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. The Jews had ever manifested a proneness for copying after the
+ religious customs of their heathen neighbors, and engrafting their
+ doctrines into their own creeds, as their bible history furnishes ample
+ proof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. In Alexandria a very superior opportunity was afforded for doing this,
+ excelling in this respect any previous period of their history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. The shattered condition of their own religion, with all its
+ conventional creeds, customs, and ceremonies, now suspended and literally
+ prostrated, as above shown, vastly augmented the temptation ever rife with
+ them to make another change in their religion, and subject their creed to
+ another installment of new doctrines, by which it became Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. The liberal character and tolerant spirit of the political and
+ religious institutions of the kingdom of Alexandria, with its vast and
+ attractive library of two hundred thousand volumes, established
+ principally by Ptolemy Phila-delphus, with other attractive features
+ already pointed out, furnished great facilities, as well as increased
+ temptations to religious propagandists to absorb new theories, and make
+ new creeds out of the vast medley of religious doctrines and speculative
+ dogmas preached and propagated in that royal city by the disciples and
+ representatives of nearly every religious system then in existence,
+ brought together by the attractions above specified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Hence every consideration would lead us to conclude, taken in
+ connection with the facts above stated, and the well-known borrowing
+ proclivity and imitative propensity of the Jews, that they would not, and
+ could not, withstand the overweening and overpowering temptation to make
+ another radical change in their religion by a new draught on the boundless
+ reservoir of speculative ideas, religious tenets, and specious theories
+ then glowing in the popular schools of Alexandria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. All the facts above enumerated would impel us to the conclusion that
+ the Jews would&mdash;and every page of history touching the matter proves
+ they did&mdash;make important changes in their religion by this contact
+ with the oriental systems, as they had repeatedly done before. Some of
+ this proof we will here present, to show how they originated Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. "The schools of Alexandria" says Mr. Enfield, a Christian writer, "by
+ pretending to teach sublime doctrines concerning God and divine things,
+ enticed men of different countries and religions, and among the rest the
+ Jews, to study its mysteries, and incorporate them with their own.... The
+ Jewish faith mixed with the Pythagorean, and afterward with the Egyptian
+ oriental theology" (that is, they became Essenes in the Grecian school of
+ Pythagoras, who taught the doctrines of that religious order, then
+ Bud-hists in the Egyptian schools of Alexandria). And finally, with Christ
+ as their leader, who taught the doctrines of both schools (they being
+ essentially alike), they assumed the name of Christian in honor of him,
+ and thus is Christianity from Essene Budhism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Beers in his "History of the Jews," sustains the above statement by
+ the declaration that the Essenian Jews "fled to Egypt at the time of the
+ Babylonian captivity, and there became acquainted with the Pythagorean
+ philosophy, and ingrafted it upon the religion of Moses," which would make
+ them Essenian Budhists&mdash;for Cunningham assures us that "the doctrine
+ of Pythagoras were intensely Budhistic." (Philsa. Topus, chap. x.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. We will condense a few more historical testimonies relative to the
+ entire change of the Jewish faith, while in Alexandria, as well as on
+ other occasions, to show how easy and natural it was for that portion of
+ the Jews who afterward became the founders of Christianity to slide into
+ and adopt Essenian Budhism, whose doctrines they took to constitute the
+ Christian religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Mr. Gibbon (chap. xxi.) declares that the theological opinions of the
+ Jews underwent great changes by their contact with the various foreigners
+ they found in Alexandria. Mr. Tytler likewise, in his "Universal History,"
+ assures us that the Jewish religion "became <i>totally changed by the
+ intermixture of heathen doctrines</i>." Dr. Campbell also testifies that
+ "their views came pretty much to coincide with those of the pagans." (See
+ his Dissertation, vi.) And the author of "<i>The Expositor</i> for 1854"
+ complains that the pagan "theology stole upon them from every quarter, and
+ mingled in all the views of the then known tribes, so that by the year 150
+ b. c., it had wrought visible changes in their notions and habits of
+ thought." (P. 423.) Here we have the proof that the whole Jewish religion
+ underwent a change in Alexandria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Now, most, certainly a nation or sect professing a religion so easily
+ changed, and possessing a character so fickle, or so irrepressible as to
+ yield on every slight occasion, and embrace every opportunity to imbibe
+ new religious ideas and doctrines, would easily, if not naturally, slide
+ into the adoption of the religious system then promulgated in Alexandria
+ under the name of Budhism, and afterward remodeled or transformed, and
+ called Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. The Jews of the Essenian order, as we have in part shown in a previous
+ chapter, set forth in their creed all the leading doctrines now comprised
+ in the Christian religion hundreds of years before the advent of Christ,
+ not excepting the doctrine of the divine incarnation and its adjuncts, as
+ these concomitants of the present popular faith, we will now prove, were
+ not unknown to the Jewish theology, but constituted a part of the religion
+ of some of the principal Jewish sects. That standard Christian author, Mr.
+ Milman, in his "History of Christianity," tells us that "the doctrine of
+ the incarnation ('God manifest in the flesh') was the doctrine from the
+ Ganges, and even the shores of the Yellow Sea to the Ilissus. It was the
+ fundamental principle of the Indian Budhist religion and philosophy. It
+ was the basis of Zoroasterism. It was pure Platonism. It was Platonic
+ Judaism in the Alexandrian school." Here it is positively declared, by a
+ popular Christian writer, whose work is a part of nearly every popular
+ library in Christiandom as a standard authority, that the appearance of
+ God amongst men in the human form, by human birth, was a doctrine of the
+ Jewish religion in some of its branches, especially the Essenian branch&mdash;further
+ proof that Christianity originated nothing, and gave utterance to no new
+ doctrine or precepts, and performed no new miracles. Where, then, is the
+ claim for its originality? On what ground is it predicated? Please answer
+ us, good Christian brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. It is a question of no importance, if it could be settled, whether
+ Christianity is a direct outgrowth from one of the new-fangled sects of
+ Judaism, or whether it derived a portion of its doctrines from this source
+ and the balance from ascetic Budhism. Yet we regard it as an
+ incontrovertible proposition that it all grew out of Budhism originally,
+ either directly or indirectly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Christ may have received his doctrines secondhanded, all or a portion
+ from the Essenian Jews; for that sect held all the leading doctrines of
+ Budhism (as we have shown in a previous chapter), which now goes under the
+ name of the religion of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. Or we may indulge the not unreasonable hypothesis that the founders of
+ Christianity, who republished the doctrines of Budhism and adopted them as
+ their own, received them all direct from the disciples of that religious
+ order; for "they were everywhere," as one writer (Mr. Taylor) declares,
+ speaking of their extensive travels to propagate their doctrines through
+ the world. And it was about that period, as Mr. Goodrich informs us, they
+ sent out nine hundred missionaries, who made six millions of converts,&mdash;a
+ small fraction of their present number (three hundred and eighty millions,
+ as given by some of our geographies),&mdash;one third more than the entire
+ census of Christendom, and six times the number of believers in the
+ Christian religion, if we omit Greeks and Catholics. "It is." as a writer
+ remarks, "the oldest and most widely spread religion in the world." And,
+ whatever hypothesis may be adduced to account for the fact, Christianity
+ is now all Budhism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. It is impossible, with the historic darkness which at present environs
+ and beclouds our pathway, to determine at what period or in what manner
+ Christ became an Essene,&mdash;whether he was born of Essenian parents, or
+ became a convert to the faith,&mdash;because the whole period of his life,
+ with the exception of about three years, is a total blank in history.
+ There is but one incident related of his movements by his bible
+ biographers prior to his twenty-seventh year, leaving more than a quarter
+ of a century of his probably active life unreported&mdash;a period that
+ may have witnessed several important changes in his religion. We have not
+ even his ancestry reported in his scriptural biography, in either parental
+ line, unless we assume Joseph to have been his father. The parental
+ lineage of his mother is entirely omitted Had we his line of ancestry, or
+ could we trace him back to his national or family origin, we doubt not but
+ we should there find a clue to the origin of his religion. We should find
+ his ancestors were Essenian Jews.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Nor can we fix the date when Essenian Budhism among the Jews received
+ the name of Christianity for a similar reason. There is a link&mdash;a
+ chain of events of four hundred years left out of the bible between
+ Judaism and Christianity&mdash;thus lacking four hundred years of
+ connecting the two religions together, or of showing how the latter grew
+ out of the former. Malachi, the last book of the Old Testament, antedates
+ the first events of Christian history four centuries, or twelve
+ generations, thus leaving a wide and dark gap between them. And besides,
+ we cannot find the name of Christ or Christianity mentioned in any of the
+ contemporary histories of that era till one hundred and four years after
+ the time fixed for Christ's birth by Christendom; Tacitus being the first
+ writer who names either, and this was at that date.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. These facts disclose the whole secret with respect to the mystery and
+ darkness thrown around the origin of the Christian religion&mdash;the how,
+ the when, and the where of its origin. That chapter of Christian history
+ is left out of the record. The bible account itself is but fragmentary, as
+ it leaves nine tenths of Christ's history a blank,&mdash;twenty-seven
+ years out of the thirty,&mdash;and omits all mention of his ancestors
+ beyond his grandmother, and leaves even the time of his birth a blank.
+ "The researches of the learned," says Mr. Mosheim (a standard Christian
+ author), "though long and ably conducted, have been unable to fix the time
+ of Christ's birth with certainty." (Eccl. Hist. p. 23.) Wonderful
+ admission, truly, as it is an evidence that nothing else can be fixed
+ "with certainty," with respect to the history of "the man Christ Jesus,"
+ only that his doctrines and precepts were all borrowed perhaps during the
+ twenty-seven dark and mysteries years of his life, if not an Essene by
+ birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. There is no escaping the conclusion that Christianity is a <i>borrowed
+ system</i>&mdash;an outgrowth and remodeling of Budhism, with a change of
+ name only. A thousand facts of history prove and proclaim it, and the
+ verdict of posterity will be unanimous in affirming it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. From the almost endless chain of analogies, exhibiting a striking
+ resemblance even in their minute details of Christianity and Budhism, we
+ are compelled to conclude that one furnished the materials for the other;
+ that one is the offspring&mdash;the legitimate child&mdash;of the other.
+ And as it is a settled historical fact that Budhism is much the older
+ system, there is hence no difficulty in determining which is the parent
+ and which is the child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. In the Hindoo story of the creation of the human race, we find Adimo
+ and Heva given as the names of the first man and woman answering to our
+ Adam and Eve. And our Shem, Ham, and Japheth are traceable to their
+ Sherma, Hama, and Jiapheta; the difference in the mode of spelling is
+ probably owing to the difference in the languages. And under the new era
+ we have Christ Jesus answering to their Chrishna Zeus, as some writers
+ give the name of the eighth Avatar. And for Maia, a godmother, we have
+ Mary. And other similar analogies might be pointed out besides the long
+ string of strikingly similar events previously presented in the history of
+ the two Saviors (Christ and Chrishna), amounting to hundreds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Such an almost countless list of similar and nearly identical
+ incidents bids defiance, and absolutely sets at naught all attempts to
+ account for it as a mere fortuitous accident. There is no other
+ explanation possible but that Christianity is a re-vamp or
+ re-establishment of Budhism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Here let it be noted that Christianity was not the only religion which
+ was rehabilitated in the Alexandrian schools. On the contrary, all the
+ popular oriental systems then in active being had long previously passed
+ through the same representative theological schools and creed-making
+ institutions of that royal and commercial city. All were remodeled in its
+ theological workshops&mdash;a fact which accounts most conclusively for
+ the same train of religions ideas and historical incidents being found in
+ the later sacred books of each. And besides, Sir William Jones says, "The
+ disciples of these various systems of religion had intercourse with each
+ other long before the time of Christ, which would necessarily bring about
+ a uniformity in the doctrines and general character of each system."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. The disciples of all the religious systems cited their initiatory
+ miracles as a proof of being on familiar terms with God Almighty. They all
+ (as is claimed) healed the sick; all restored the deaf, the dumb, and the
+ blind; all cast out devils, and all raised the dead. (See chapter on
+ Parallels.) In fact, all their miracles and legendary marvels run in
+ parallel lines, because all were recast in the same creed-mold in
+ Alexandria. A coincidence is thus beautifully explained, which would
+ otherwise be hard to account for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. Mr. Gibbon says, "It was in the school of Alexandria that the
+ Christian theology appears to have assumed a regular and scientific form"
+ (Decline, &amp;c., chap. xv.); that is, the regular and scientific form of
+ Budhism or Essenism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Pregnant with meaning is the text, "It was in the city of Antioch the
+ disciples were first called Christians." (Acts xi. 36.) Here is conclusive
+ proof that the disciples of the Christian faith were not always known by
+ the same name, and were not at first called Christians. Then what were
+ they called during the earlier years of their history?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is a great and important query, and one involving a momentous
+ problem. Couple the two facts together, that the disciples were first
+ known as Christians at Antioch, and that the Essenian order of believers
+ expired and went out of history about that period, and the question is at
+ once and forever satisfactorily settled. It was not an infrequent act on
+ making important changes in a religion, and adopting some new items of
+ faith to change the title of the system, and give it a new name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Alexander Campbell had made some modifications in his previous
+ religious faith, and started a new church, his followers were popularly
+ called Campbellites. Elias Hicks ingrafted some reform ideas into the
+ Quaker faith, and instituted a new society of that order. Hence, and
+ henceforth, his disciples were known as Hicksites. In like manner Jesus
+ Christ having made some innovations in his inherited Jewish faith (which
+ was of the Essene stamp) by ingrafting more of the Budhist doctrine into
+ it, his followers were henceforth called Christians. How complete the
+ analogy! Here let it be borne in mind, as powerfully confirmatory of this
+ conclusion, that the first Christians were (as history affirms) "merely
+ reformatory Jews." The twelve chosen were all Jews, probably of the Essene
+ order. According to the Rev. Mr. Prideaux (Jewish History), the Jews of
+ this order were first called Israelites, in common with the other tribes;
+ then Chassidim; and thirdly Essenes. And finally, after the Essenian Jesus
+ Christ, with some new radical ideas, proclaimed, "Ye have heard it hath
+ been said by them of old time" thus and so, "but I say unto you"
+ differently. The title was again changed, and they adopted or received the
+ name of Christians&mdash;the Essenes going out of history at the very date
+ Christians first appear in history. Put this and that together, and the
+ chain is welded. Thus we can as easily trace the origin of Christianity as
+ we can trace the origin of a root running beneath the soil in the
+ direction of a certain tree. History, then, proclaims that to the honest,
+ pious, deeply-devout, self-denying, yet ignorant, slothful, and filthy
+ Budhistic Essenes must be awarded the honor or dishonor of giving birth to
+ that system of religion now known as Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHRISHNA AS A GOD&mdash;ADDITIONAL FACTS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following additional facts relative to the history, character, life,
+ and teachings of Zeus Chrishna, or Jeseus Christna (as styled by one
+ writer) are drawn mostly from the Vedas, Baghavat, Gita (Bible in India).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. <i>His Virgin Mother, her Character</i>.&mdash;The holy book declares,
+ that "through her the designs of God were accomplished. She was pure and
+ chaste; no animal food ever touched her lips; honey and milk were her
+ sustenance; her time was spent in solitude, lost in the contemplation of
+ God who showered upon her innumerable blessings; she looked upon death as
+ the birth to a new and better life; when she traveled, a column of fire in
+ the heavens went before her to guide her. One evening, as she was praying,
+ she heard celestial music, and fell into a profound ecstasy, and being
+ overshadowed by the spirit of God, she conceived the God Chrishna."
+ (Baghavat, Gita).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. <i>Chrishna, his Life and Mission</i>.&mdash;This sin-atoning God was
+ about sixteen when he commenced active life. Like Christ, he chose twelve
+ disciples to aid him in propagating his doctrines. "He spent his time
+ working miracles, resuscitating the dead, healing lepers, restoring the
+ deaf and the blind, defending the weak against the strong, and the
+ oppressed against the oppressor, and in proclaiming his divine mission to
+ redeem man from original sin, and banish evil, and restore the reign of
+ good." (Baghavat, Gita.) It is declared that he came to teach peace,
+ charity, love to man, self-respect, the practice of good for its own sake,
+ and faith in the inexhaustible goodness of the Creator; also to preach the
+ immortality of the soul, and the doctrine of future rewards and
+ punishments, and to vanquish the prince of darkness, Rakshas. It is
+ further declared that "Brahma sent his son (Chrishna) upon the earth to
+ die for the salvation of man." "His lofty precepts and the purity of his
+ life spread his fame throughout all India, and finally won for him more
+ than three millions of followers." "He inculcated the sublimest doctrines,
+ and the purest morals, and the grand principles of charity and
+ self-denial." "He forbade revenge, and commanded to return good for evil,
+ and consoled the feeble and the unhappy." "He lived poor, and loved the
+ poor." "He lived chaste, and enjoined chastity." "Problems the most lofty,
+ and morals the most pure and sublime, and the future destiny of man, were
+ themes which engaged his most profound attention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chrishna, we will venture to say (says the Bible in India) was the
+ greatest of philosophers, not only of India, but of the entire world." "He
+ was the grandest moral figure of ancient times." (Bible in India.)
+ "Chrishna was a moralist and a philosopher." "We should admire his moral
+ lessons, so sublime and so pure." "He was recognized as the 'Divine
+ Word.'" "He received the title of Jeseus, which means pure Essense."
+ Chrishna signifies the "Promised of God," the "Messiah." "When he
+ preached, he often spoke from a mount. He also spoke in parables. 'Parable
+ plays a great part in the familiar instructions of this Hindoo Redeemer.'"
+ He relates a very interesting parable of a fisherman who was much
+ persecuted by his neighbors, but who in the time of a severe famine, when
+ the people were suffering and dying for the want of food, being so noble
+ as to return good for evil, he carried food to these same persecuting
+ enemies, and thus saved them from starvation. "Therefore," said he "do
+ good to all, both the evil and the good, even your enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His addresses to the people were simple, but to his disciples they were
+ elevated and philosophical. Such was the wisdom of his sermons and his
+ parables, that the people crowded around him, eager to behold and hear
+ him, "saying, This is indeed the Redeemer promised to our Fathers." Great
+ multitudes followed him, exclaiming, "This is he who resuscitates the
+ dead, and heals the lame, and the deaf, and the blind." On one occasion,
+ as he entered Madura (as Christ once entered Jerusalem), "the people came
+ out in flocks to meet him, and strewed branches in his way." On another
+ occasion two women approached him, anointed him with oil, and worshiped
+ him. When the people murmured at this waste, he replied, "Better is a
+ little given with an humble heart than much given with ostentation." Such
+ was his sense of decorum, that he admonished some girls he once observed
+ playing in a state of nudity on the bank of a river after bathing. They
+ repented, asked his forgiveness, and reformed. "The followers of Chrishna
+ practiced all the virtues, and observed a complete abnegation of self
+ (self-denial), and lived poor, hoping for a reward in the future life.
+ They occupied all their time in the service of their Divine Master. Pure
+ and majestic was their worship." Chrishna had a favorite disciple <i>Adjaurna</i>,
+ who sustained to him the relation of John to Christ, while Angada acted
+ the part of Judas by following him to the Ganges and betraying him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. <i>His last Hours</i>.&mdash;"When Chrishna knew his hour had come,
+ forbidding his disciples to follow him, he repaired to the bank of the
+ River Ganges; and having performed three ablutions, he knelt down, and
+ looking up to heaven, he prayed to Brahma." While nailed to the cross, the
+ tree on which he was suspended became suddenly covered with great red
+ flowers, which diffused their fragrance all around. And it is said he
+ often appeared to his disciples after his death "in all his divine
+ majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. <i>The second Advent of Chrishna</i>.&mdash;"There is not a Hindoo or a
+ Brahmin who does not look upon the second coming of Chrishna as an
+ established article of faith." Their holy bibles (the Vedas and Gita)
+ prophesy of him thus: "He shall come crowned with lights; he shall come,
+ and the heavens and the earth shall be joyous; the stars shall pale before
+ his splendor; the earth will be too small to contain him, for he is
+ infinite, he is Almighty, he is Wisdom, he is Beauty, he is all and in
+ all; and all men, all animated beings, beasts, birds, trees, and plants,
+ will chant his praises; he will regenerate all bodies, and purify all
+ souls." "He will be as sweet as honey and ambrosia, and as pure as the
+ lamb without spot, or as the lips of a virgin. All hearts will be
+ transported with joy. From the rising to the setting of the sun it will be
+ a day of joy and exultation, when this God shall manifest his power and
+ his glory, and reconcile the world unto himself." Such are a few of the
+ prophetic utterances of his devout and prayerful disciples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We find," says a writer, "in all the theogonies of different countries
+ the hope of the advent of a God (either his first or his second coming)&mdash;a
+ hope which sprang from a sense of their own imperfections and sufferings,
+ which naturally induced them to look for a divine Redeemer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. <i>Precepts of Chrishna</i>.&mdash;Numerous are the prescriptive
+ admonitions found in the holy books which set forth the religion of "this
+ heathen demigod" (so called by Christian professors). They appertain to
+ all the duties of life, but are too numerous to be quoted here. Those
+ appertaining to woman enjoin the most sacred regard for her rights, such
+ as "woman should be protected with tenderness, and shielded with fostering
+ solicitude." "There is no crime more odious than to persecute woman, or
+ take advantage of her weakness." "Degrade woman and you degrade man." For
+ other similar precepts, see Chapter XXXII. The injunctions to read their
+ holy bible (the Vedas, &amp;c.) are quite numerous, such as, "Let him
+ study the holy Scriptures unceasingly" "Pray night and morning, and read
+ the holy Scriptures in the attitude of devotion." And many of them read it
+ through upon their knees. (See Chap. XLIV.) We have not space for a
+ further exposition of this subject here; but it will be found more fully
+ set forth in the pamphlet, "Christ and Chrishna Compared," which will,
+ perhaps, become an Appendix to this work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be objected that there are precepts and stories to be found in the
+ religion of this Hindoo God (Chrishna), which reflect but little credit or
+ honor upon that religion. This is true. And similar reflections would
+ materially damage the religion of Christianity also. The story of Christ
+ beating and maltreating the money-changers in the temple, his cursing an
+ innocent, unoffending, and unconscious fig tree, and his indulgence in
+ profane swearing at his enemies,&mdash;"O ye fools and blind, ye
+ generation of vipers, how can you escape the damnation of hell!"&mdash;does
+ not reflect any credit upon his religion, viewed as a system. Defects,
+ then, may be found in both systems. In viewing the analogies of the two
+ religions, it should be noted that the Hindoos claim, with a forcible show
+ of facts and logic, that the religion of Christianity grew out of theirs.
+ It has not been long since a learned Hindoo maintained this position in a
+ public debate with a missionary. If all these facts effect nothing in the
+ way of inducing the Christian clergy to confess the falsity of their
+ position in claiming their religion to be a direct emanation from God, it
+ will be a sad commentary upon either their intelligence or their honesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These historical facts, with those set forth in the preceding chapters,
+ prove that the religion called Christianity, instead of being, as
+ Christians claim, "the product of the Divine Mind," is the product of
+ "heathen" minds; i. e., a spontaneous outgrowth of the moral and religious
+ elements of the human mind. And therefore, for God to have revealed it
+ over again to the founders of Christianity would have been superfluous,
+ and a proof of his ignorance of history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Note.&mdash;The author deems it proper to state here, with respect to the
+ comparison between Christ and Chrishna, that some of the doctrines which
+ he has selected as constituting a part of the religion of the Hindoo
+ Savior, are not found in the reported teachings of that deified moralist.
+ But as they appear to breathe forth the same spirit, it is presumed he
+ would have indorsed them, had they come under his notice. As Christians
+ assume the liberty to arrange the doctrines of Paul and Peter under the
+ head of Christianity because claimed to be in consonance with the religion
+ of Christ, though not all taught by him, the author, in like manner, has
+ assumed, that some doctrines taught by other systems and religious
+ teachers of India accord with those taught by Chrishna, and hence has
+ arranged them with his. The author's purpose is not to set forth the
+ doctrines of any sect, any system, or any religious teacher, but to show
+ that all the doctrines of Christianity are traceable to ancient India. But
+ whether taught by this sect or that sect, it is foreign to our purpose to
+ inquire; and hence, for convenience, he has arranged them all into one
+ system, and designated them Chrishnianity (borrowing a new term). There
+ can be no more impropriety, he presumes, in arranging the doctrines of the
+ various conflicting sects of India into one system (including even
+ Brahminism and Budhism), than to arrange, as Christians do, the doctrines
+ taught by the antagnostic system of Catholicism and Protestantism, and
+ their six hundred conflicting sects, under the head of Christianity.
+ Hence, Christians, of course, will not fault the arrangement. The
+ classification above alluded to comprises, in part, the religion of many
+ of the Hindoo sects, but does not set forth all their doctrines, only
+ those analogous to Christianity. Chrishna was a Vishnuite, and not a
+ Brahmin, as some writers assume. He and Christ were both reformers, and
+ departed from the ancient faith. Vishnuism appears to have finally
+ centered in Budhism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. APOLLONIUS, OSIRIS, MAGUS, ETC.&mdash;GODS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MIRACULOUS ACHIEVEMENTS OF OTHER GODS AND DEMI-GODS OF ANTIQUITY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE age in which Christ flourished, as before remarked, was pre-eminently
+ an age of miracle. The practice of thaumaturgy, and the legends invested
+ with the display of the miracle-working power, both preceding and
+ subsequent to that era, rose to a great height. "All nations of that
+ time," says a writer, "were mightily bent on working miracles." And the
+ disciples who acted the part of biographers for the various crucified Gods
+ and sin-atoning Saviors, throughout the East, seemed to vie with each
+ other in setting off the lives and histories of their favorite objects of
+ worship respectively, with marvelous exploits and the pageantry of the
+ most astounding prodigies. And the miracles in each case were pretty much
+ of the same character, thus indicating a common course for their origin,&mdash;all
+ probably having been cast in the same mold&mdash;in the theological
+ schools of the once famous, world-renowned city of Alexandria, the capital
+ of Egypt. Having, in the preceding chapters, presented the miraculous
+ achievements of the Hindoo Gods, Chrishna and Saki, we will here bring to
+ notice those of other Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE MIRACLES RECORDED OF ALCIDES, OSIRIS, AND OTHER GODS OF EGYPT.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. We have the miraculous birth by a virgin in the case of Alcides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Osiris, while a sucking infant in his cradle, killed two serpents which
+ came to destroy him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Alcides performed many miraculous cures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. According to Ovid he cured by a miracle the daughter of Archiades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Also the wife of Theogenes, after the doctors had given her up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. And both these Gods converted water into wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Both of them frequently cast out devils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Julius declares Alcides raised Tyndarus and Hippo-litus from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. When Zulis was crucified, the sun became dark and the moon refused to
+ shine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Both he and Osiris were resurrected by a miracle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Both ascend to heaven in sight of many witnesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. And finally we are told that from Alexandria the whole empire became
+ filled with the fame of these miracle-workers, who restored the blind to
+ sight, cured the paralytic, caused the dumb to speak, the lame to walk,
+ &amp;c. All these miracles were as credibly related of these Gods as
+ similar miracles of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MIRACLES PERFORMED BY PYTHAGORAS AND OTHER GODS OF GREECE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Pythagoras was a spirit in heaven before he was born on earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. His birth was miraculously foretold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. His mother conceived him by a specter (the Holy Ghost).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. His mother (Pytheas) was a holy virgin of great moral purity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Plato's mother, Paretonia (says Olympiodorus), conceived him by the God
+ Apollo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Pythagoras in his youth astonishes the doctors by his wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Was worshiped as the "Son of God," "Paraclete," "Child of Divinity,"
+ &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Coaid see events many ages in the future (says Richardson, his
+ biographer).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Could bring down the eagle from his lofty height by command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. Could approach and subdue the wild, ferocious Daunian bear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Could, like Christ, appear at two places at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Could walk on the water and travel on the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. Could discern and read the thoughts of his disciples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Could handle poisonous reptiles with impunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Cured all manner of diseases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Restored sight to the blind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. He "cast out devils."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. Jamblicus says he could allay storms on the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Raised several persons from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. And, finally, "a thousand other wonderful things are told of him,"
+ says Jamblicus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to his character, it is said that "for humility, and
+ practical goodness, and the wisdom of his moral precepts, he stood without
+ a rival." He discarded bloody sacrifices, discouraged wars, forbade the
+ use of wine and other intoxicating drinks, enjoined the forgiveness of
+ enemies and their kind treatment, and also respect to parents. He was a
+ special friend to the poor, and taught that they were the favorites of
+ God. "Blessed are ye poor." He practiced and recommended the silent
+ worship of God. He retired from the world, and often fasted, and was a
+ great enemy to riches (like Jesus Christ). He considered poverty a virtue,
+ and despised the pomp of the world. He recommended (like Christ) the
+ abandonment of parents, relations, and friends, houses and lands, &amp;c.,
+ for religion's sake. His disciples, like those of Christ, had a common
+ treasury and a general community of goods, to which all had free access,
+ so that there was no poverty or suffering amongst them while the supply
+ lasted. All shared alike. In fact, with respect to the spirit of his
+ precepts, his moral lessons, and nearly his whole practical life, he bore
+ a striking resemblance to Jesus Christ, and presented the same kind of
+ evidence, and equally convincing evidence, of being a God. And as he was
+ born into the world five hundred and fifty-four years before Christ, the
+ latter probably obtained the materials of his moral system from that
+ Grecian teacher, or in the same school of the Essenian Budhists, in which
+ both Pythagoras and Christ appear to have taken lessons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MIRACLES OF THE ROMAN GODS QUIRINUS AND PROMETHEUS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Prometheus was honored with a miraculous birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Quirinus was miraculously preserved in infancy, when threatened with
+ destruction by the tyrant ruler Amulius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. He performed the miracles, according to Seneca and Hesiod, of curing
+ the sick, restoring the blind, raising the dead, and casting out devils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Both these Gods were crucified amid signs, and wonders, and miracles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. All nature was convulsed, and the saints arose when they were
+ crucified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. The sun was also darkened, and refused to shine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Both descended to hell, and rose from it by divine power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. And Prometheus was seen to ascend to heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cite these lists of miraculous events as if real facts, not because we
+ believe they were such, but as possessing the same degree of credibility
+ as those related of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MIRACLES AND RELIGION OF APOLLONIUS OF TYANA.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Everything was subject to his miraculous power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. He performed many miraculous cures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. He restored sight to the blind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. He cast out devils, which sometimes "cut up" like those of Christ
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. He enabled the lame to walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. He re-animated the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. He could read the thoughts of bystanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Sometimes disappeared in a miraculous manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. Caused a tree to bloom, while Christ made another tree to wither away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. The laws of nature obeyed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Could speak in many languages he had never learned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. Was at one time transfigured, like Christ
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. His birth was miraculously foretold by an angel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. Was born of a spotless virgin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. There were demonstrations of joy and singing at his birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Exhibited proofs in infancy of being a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. Manifested extraordinary wisdom in childhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. He was called "the Son of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. Also "the image of the Eternal Father manifested in the flesh."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. He was also styled "a prophet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. Like Christ, he retired into mystic silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. His religion was one of exalted spirituality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. He taught the doctrine of "the Inner Life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. He possessed exalted views of purity and holiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Like Christ, he was a religious ascetic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. His religion, as in the case of Christ, forbade him to marry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. He ate no animal food, and would wear no woolen garments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Gave his substance to the poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. Eschewed love for wine and women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. Refrained from artificial ornaments and sumptuous living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. He was a high-toned moral reformer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. He condemned external sacrifices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. Also condemned gladiatorial shows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. He religiously opposed dancing and sexual pleasures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35. He recommended the pursuit of wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36. Was of a serene temper, and never got angry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37. Was a true prophet, foresaw and foretold many future events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38. Foresaw a plague, and stopped it after it had commenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39. Crowds were attracted by his great miracles and his wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40. He disputed with and vanquished the wise men of Greece and Asia, as
+ Christ did the learned doctors in the temple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41. When imprisoned by Domitian and loaded with chains, he disinthralled
+ himself by divine power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42. He was followed by crowds when entering Alexandria, like Christ when
+ entering Jerusalem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43. Was crucified amidst a display of divine power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44. He rose from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45. Appeared to his disciples after his resurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 46. Like Christ, he convinced a Tommy Didymus by getting him to feel the
+ print of the nails in his hands and feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 47. Was seen by many witnesses after his resurrection, and was hailed by
+ them as the "God Incarnate," "the Lord from Heaven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 48. He finally ascended back to heaven, and now "sits at the right hand of
+ the Father," pleading for a sinful world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 49. When he entered the temple of Diana, "a voice from above was heard
+ saying, 'Come to heaven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 50. Accordingly he was seen no more on earth only as a spirit
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will observe that the foregoing list of analogies, drawn from
+ the history of Apollonius, as furnished us by his disciple Damos and his
+ biographer Philostratus, are found also, in almost every particular, in
+ the history of Jesus Christ. And the list might have been extended. It is
+ declared, "A beauty shone in his countenance, and the words he uttered
+ were divine," which reminds us of Christ's transfiguration. And his
+ "staying a plague at Ephesus" revives the case of Christ stilling the
+ tempest on the waters. Now, the question very naturally arises here, How
+ came the histories of Apollonius and Christ to be so strikingly alike? Was
+ one plagiarized from the other? As for the miraculous history of
+ Apollonius being reconstructed from that of Jesus Christ, as some
+ Christians have assumed, there is not the slightest foundation for such a
+ conclusion, as the following facts will show, viz.:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The Cappadocian Savior (Apollonius) was born several years anterior to
+ the advent of the Christian Savior, and appeared at an earlier date upon
+ the stage of active life, and thus got the start of Christ in the
+ promulgations of his doctrines and the exhibition of his miracles.
+ Christ's active life, Christians concede and the bible proves, did not
+ commence till about his twenty-eighth or thirtieth year, which was long
+ after Apollonius had inaugurated his religion, and long after he had
+ commenced the promulgation of his doctrines, and attested them by
+ wonderful miracles, according to his biographer Philostratus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The New American Cyclopedia tells us, "Apollonius labored for the
+ purity of Paganism, and to sustain its tottering edifice against the
+ assaults of the Christians." So that, being placed in a hostile attitude
+ toward the representatives of the Christian faith, it is not likely he
+ would condescend to borrow their doctrines and the miraculous history of
+ their incarnate God, to invest his own life with. He was probably one of
+ the "anti-Christs" spoken of in the New Testament; but this circumstance
+ reflects nothing dishonorable upon his character; for some of those
+ distinguished personages denounced as "anti-Christ," by Christ's gospel
+ biographers, were, according to impartial history, noble, honest, and
+ righteous men. Their only offense consisted in robbing Christ of his
+ divine laurels, by claiming similar titles, and claiming to perform the
+ same kind of miracles; and there is as much proof that they did achieve
+ these prodigies as that Christ did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The early Christian writers conceded that Apollonius and the other
+ oriental Gods did perform the miracles which are ascribed to them by their
+ respective disciples, but accounted for it by the childish expedient of
+ obsession. Christ was assumed to perform miracles by divine power, they by
+ the power of the devil&mdash;a childish and senseless distinction truly,
+ and one which can have no logical force in this enlightened age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MIRACLES AND CLAIMS FOR SIMON MAGUS. B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. It is declared, "he was in the beginning with God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. That "he existed with God from all eternity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. That "he took upon himself the form of a man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. That "he was the Son of God," "the Word," &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. That "he was the second person in the godhead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. That "he came down to destroy the devil and his works."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. That "he was the image of the Eternal Father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. That "he was the first-born Son of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. That he could control the elements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. That he could walk on the air as Christ did on the water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Could move anything by the command, "Be thou removed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. That he could raise the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. That he could transform himself into the image of any man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. That he was "the Paraclete, or Comforter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. That he came to "redeem the world from sin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. Finally, he was the world's "Savior," "Redeemer," "the Only Begotten
+ of the Father," and "through his name men are to be saved."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will call to mind that this Simon Magus is mentioned and
+ condemned in the Acts of the Apostles, for offering to pay Peter for a
+ bestowment of the gift of the Holy Ghost. And yet every philosopher in
+ this age must concede that Magus' assumption in the case is more sensible
+ and philosophical than that of Peter's. For the latter calls it "a gift
+ from God," whereas every person now acquainted with the nature,
+ principles, and science of animal magnetism, knows that such manifestation
+ as that which Peter ascribes to God and the Holy Ghost, is a simple
+ natural phenomenon; and that, consequently, it can be no more a violation
+ of the rules of propriety to pay for the labor of making such developments
+ than it is to pay a teacher for developing the mind of a child. It was
+ certainly a greater act of courtesy to offer to pay for it than to demand
+ it as a gratuitous favor. Hence we infer he excelled Peter in his demeanor
+ as a gentleman, especially as he bore Peter's severe reprimand with
+ patience, and apparently with a better spirit than that which dictated it.
+ And we may remark here, also, that notwithstanding this Samaritan Jew is
+ so unsparingly denounced by the godly Peter, and by the early Christian
+ fathers also, yet we have the historical proof that he was an Honest,
+ pious, and ardently devout man. His whole life was absorbed in the cause
+ of religion, and his whole soul devoted to his religious duties and the
+ worship of his God. Hence we think Peter's rebuke was uncalled for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let the reader note the fact here that there are three circumstances amply
+ sufficient to account for bibles and religious books being profusely
+ supplied with the reports of groundless miracles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. As everybody then believed in miracles (at least everybody who dared
+ speak) there was nobody to investigate the reports of such occurrences, to
+ learn whether they were true or false.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The few who attempted to disprove the truth of those miraculous
+ occurrences now found reported in sacred history, had their books burned,
+ as in the case of Porphyry and Celsus, in the early history of
+ Christianity, who called in question the truth of bible miracles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. These marvelous facts were not usually recorded till long after the
+ period in which they are said to have occurred, when the witnesses had
+ left the stage of time, and every event exciting ay attention had grown to
+ a monstrous prodigy. These circumstances, in an age of boundless credulity
+ and scientific ignorance, which magnified every phenomenon, and looked
+ upon every natural event as a direct display of divine power, accounts
+ most fully and satisfactorily for the burdensome repetition of groundless
+ miraculous stories found upon nearly every page of the sacred history of
+ every religious nation, without driving us to the necessity of challenging
+ the veracity of the writers who recorded them. They may all have been
+ honest men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CONFUCIUS OF CHINA, BORN 551 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This moral teacher, religious chieftain, and philosopher, though not
+ subjected to the ignominious death of the cross, deserves a passing notice
+ for the excellency of his morals and the acquisition of a world-wide fame.
+ In the following particulars his history bears a strong analogy to that of
+ Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. He commenced as a religious teacher when about thirty years of age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The Golden Rule (see Chap. XXXIV.) was his favorite maxim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Most of his moral maxims were sound and of a high order. The New
+ American Cyclopedia says (vol. v. p. 604), "His writings approach the
+ Christian standard of morality;" and in some respects they excel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. He traveled in different countries, preaching and teaching his
+ doctrines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. He made a host of converts, amounting now to one hundred and fifty
+ millions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. His religion and morals have been propagated by apostles and
+ missionaries, some of whom are now traveling in this country, laboring to
+ convert Christians to their superior religion and morals. "There was a
+ time," says the work above quoted, "when European philosophers vied with
+ each other in extolling Confucius as one of the sublimest teachers of
+ truth among mankind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following respects his teachings were superior to those of Christ:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. He taught that "the knowledge of one's self is the basis of all real
+ advances in morals and manners." A lesson Christ neglected to teach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. "The duties man owes to society and himself are minutely defined by
+ Confucius," says the Cyclopedia. Another important work Christ partially
+ omitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He constructed several hundred beautiful and instructive moral maxims,
+ which we have not space for here, and which amply prove that "the holiest
+ truths were inculcated by pagan philosophers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0034" id="link2HCH0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIV. THE THREE PILLARS OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH&mdash;MIRACLES,
+ PROPHECIES, AND PRECEPTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WHEN Christians are asked for the proof of the divinity of Jesus Christ,
+ they point to his miracles and precepts, and the Messianic prophecies,
+ said to have been fulfilled by his coming. And the same kind of evidence
+ is adduced to prove the divine claims of their bible and its religion,
+ including the Old Testament, which contains the prophecies. Their divine
+ origin and supernatural character are claimed to be proved by the
+ miracles, prophecies, and precepts found recorded in the Holy Book. All,
+ then, stand or fall together&mdash;the divinity of Christ, and the
+ divinity of the bible and its religion, all, rest on this threefold
+ argument. All, it is claimed, are attested and proved by a threefold
+ display of divine power, manifested,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. By the performance of various acts, transcending human power and the
+ laws of nature, called Miracles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. By the discernment of events lying in the future which no human
+ sagacity or prescience could have foreseen, unless aided by Omniscience;
+ the display of such power being called Prophecy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. By the enunciation of Moral Precepts beyond the mental capacity of
+ human beings to originate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These three propositions cover the whole ground. They constitute the three
+ grand pillars of the Christian faith, which, if shown to be untenable,
+ must prostrate the whole superstructure to the ground. We will examine
+ each separately, commencing with miracles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I. Miracles the first Pillar of the Christian Faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will not occupy space in discussing the various meanings assigned to
+ the word miracle by different writers, but take the popular definition as
+ given above, and proceed to inquire how much evidence can be deduced from
+ the miracles represented as having been performed by Jesus Christ, toward
+ proving his divinity and the truth of his religion. In the first place, it
+ should be borne in mind that Christianity is not the only religion which
+ appeals to miracles as a proof of its divine authorship. More than three
+ hundred systems and sects are reported in history, most of which have,
+ from time immemorial, gloried in being able to wield this knock-down
+ argument as they claim it to be, in support of the truth and divine
+ authenticity of their various systems of faith. We have briefly noticed
+ some of the miraculous achievements reported in their sacred books, and
+ ascribed to their Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, and compare them with
+ similar ones related of Jesus Christ, commencing with Pagan Miracles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the whole pathway of religious history is thickly be-studded with
+ miracles wrought in all ages and countries, and every page of the oriental
+ bibles and religious books is literally loaded down with the relation of
+ these marvelous prodigies said to have been wrought by their Gods,
+ Demigods, and crucified Saviors, it places a writer in a quandary to know
+ where to begin to make a selection. We will express no opinion here as to
+ whether these astounding feats were ever witnessed or not; but will merely
+ state that they come to us as well authenticated as those reported in the
+ Christian bible. There is as much evidence that Zoroaster, at the request
+ of King Gustaph, caused a tree to spring up in a man's yard forthwith, of
+ such magnificent proportions that no rope could be found large enough to
+ reach around it, as that Jesus Christ caused a fig tree to wither away by
+ merely cursing it. And we have the same kind of evidence that the Hindoo
+ Messiah, Chrishna, of India, restored two boys to life who had been killed
+ by the bites of serpents, as that Jesus Christ resurrected Lazarus and the
+ widow's son of Nain; and as much proof that Bacchus turned water into
+ wine, as that Jesus performed this act six hundred years after. And a
+ hundred other similar comparisons might be drawn. The evidence of the
+ truth of these performances in both cases, pagan and Christian, is simply
+ the report of the writer. If there are any exceptions to be made in either
+ case of better evidence, it will be found in favor of pagan religion; for
+ its adherents are able in many cases to point to imperishable monuments of
+ stone erected in commemoration of their miracles. And Mr. Goodrich tells
+ us this is the highest species of evidence that can be offered to prove
+ the truth of any ancient event. But as Christians, on the other hand, can
+ find no such evidence to prove the performance of any miracles reported in
+ their bible, it will be seen at once that the pagan miracles are the best
+ authenticated. The famous historian Pausanias states upon current
+ authority that Esculapius raised several persons from the dead, and names
+ Hippolytus among the number, and then points to a stone monument erected
+ as a proof of the occurrence&mdash;thus furnishing, according to Christian
+ logic, the most conclusive proof of one of the most astounding miracles
+ ever wrought. And yet no philosopher or man of science in this age can
+ credit the literal truth of the story. But a spiritualist can easily
+ conceive that he and others might have mistaken the risen spirits of those
+ resurrected persons for their physical bodies, because they know that many
+ mistakes of this kind have occurred in modern times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We might refer to many other cases of pagan miracles attested by
+ monumental evidence if our space would permit&mdash;such as the names of
+ many persons engraven upon the walls of the Temple of Serapis,
+ miraculously carved by the God Esculapius. Strabo tells us the ancient
+ temples are full of tablets describing miraculous cures performed by
+ virgin-born Gods of those times, and names a case of two blind men being
+ restored to sight by the son of God Alcides in the presence of a large
+ multitude of people, "who acknowledged the miraculous power of the God
+ with loud acclaim." Many spiritualists at the present day know by
+ practical experience how these "miraculous cures" were performed. Without
+ continuing the citation of cases, suffice it to say, the sin-atoning Gods
+ of the orientals are reported as performing the same train of miracles
+ assigned to Jesus Christ, such as performing astonishing cures, casting
+ out devils, raising the dead, &amp;c. Now, sadly warped indeed by
+ education must be that mind which cannot see that if the account of such
+ prodigies, reported in the history of Jesus Christ, can do anything
+ towards proving him to have been a God, then the world must have been full
+ of Gods long before his time. It is impossible to dodge or evade such a
+ conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christians are in the habit of assuming that all the miraculous reports in
+ the bible are unquestionably true, while those reported in pagan bibles
+ are mere fables and fiction. But if they will reverse this proposition, it
+ can be easier supported, because we have shown their miracles are better
+ attested and authenticated. Their own bible admits that the heathen not
+ only could and did perform miracles, but miraculous prodigies of the most
+ astonishing character, equal to anything reported in their own religious
+ history&mdash;such as transmuting water into blood, sticks into serpents,
+ and stones into frogs. In a word, it is admitted they performed all the
+ miraculous feats of Moses with the single exception of turning dust into
+ lice. But certainly making lice was not a more difficult achievement than
+ that of making frogs, and this is admitted they did do successfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence it will be seen that the Egyptian pagans made as great a display of
+ divine or miraculous power as "God's Holy People," according to the
+ admission of the bible itself. And there is no intimation that the mode of
+ performing the miracles was not the same in both cases, but a strong
+ probability exists that it was, a conclusion confirmed by the bible report
+ of the case which leads us to infer that they performed the miracles in
+ the same way Moses did. For it is said, "The Egyptians did so with their
+ enchantments"&mdash;that is, with the "enchanting rod" used on such
+ occasions by the Egyptians, Assyrians, Babylonians, and other nations,
+ including also the Jews. Now, as Moses always used the "enchanting rod" in
+ performing miracles, called by him "the rod of God, the rod of
+ divination," &amp;c. (see Ex. iv. ), there is thus furnished the most
+ satisfactory proof that he performed his miracles on this occasion, as
+ well as all other occasions, by the same stratagem as the Egyptians and
+ other nations did. And even if the mode adopted by the Egyptians had been
+ different, it is still admitted they performed the miracles. In the name
+ of reason and common sense, then, we ask if such facts as here presented
+ with the case just referred to do not forever prostrate and annihilate all
+ arguments based on miracles toward proving the divine character or divine
+ origin of the religion of the bible, or towards proving
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jesus Christ, or any other being reported to have performed miracles, as
+ possessing divine attributes?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CATHOLIC MIRACLES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the most astonishing and best authenticated miracles ever
+ performed by any religious sect we find reported in the history of the
+ Roman Catholic church, looked upon and styled by the Protestants "the
+ mother of Harlots and Abomination." And yet there is much stronger proof
+ that the Catholic religion has the divine sanction, if miracles can
+ furnish such proof. The editor of "The Official Memoirs" declares that
+ during the Italian war in 1797, several pictures of the virgin Mary,
+ situated in different parts of the country, were seen to open and shut
+ their eyes for the space of six or seven months, and that no less than
+ sixty thousand people actually saw this miracle performed, including many
+ bishops, deacons, cardinals, and other officers of the church, whose names
+ are given. And Forsyth's Italy (p. 344), written by a highly accredited
+ author, tells us that a withered elm tree was suddenly restored to full
+ life and vigor by coming in contact with the body of St. Zenobis, and that
+ this miracle took place in the most public part of the town, in the
+ presence of many thousands of people; that "it is recorded by contemporary
+ historians, and inscribed upon a marble column now standing where the tree
+ stood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, the question may be asked here, Would the people have allowed such an
+ impudent trick to insult them as the erection of a monument for an event
+ that never took place? If not, how is the matter to be explained? These
+ are only specimens of a hundred more Catholic miracles of an astonishing
+ character at our command. Several queries may be entertained in the
+ solution of these stories. 1st, Were some phenomena really witnessed on
+ which these stories were constructed, but which got magnified from a
+ molehill to a mountain before they found their way into history? or, 2d,
+ Were they manufactured as a pious fraud, which was rather a fashionable
+ business with the early disciples of the Christian faith, according to Mr.
+ Mosheim? Whatever answer may be given to these questions will explain the
+ miracles of the Christian bible, excepting those which can be accounted
+ for on natural principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SATANIC MIRACLES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among all the workers of miracles reported in the bible the devil seems to
+ have been pre-eminent, and hence must come in for the better end of the
+ argument toward proving him to have been a God. No miracle could excel the
+ act of his "transforming himself into an angel of light," as stated in 2
+ Cor. xi. 14. It is not transcended by any other case, not even by Christ's
+ transfiguration. And according to Paul he was endowed "with all power, and
+ signs, and lying wonders." (Thess. ii. 9.) If, then, he possessed "all
+ power," Christ, and no other God, could have possessed a miraculous power
+ superior to his, for "all" comprehends the whole, beyond which nothing can
+ reach. Where, then, is the evidence to come from to prove that Christ was
+ a God, because he was a miracle-worker, or his religion divine, because
+ attested by miracles&mdash;seeing the devil performed some of the most
+ difficult miracles ever wrought? Should we not then change his title from
+ that of a demon to a God, and place his religion amongst the divinely
+ endowed systems? St. John represents the "Evil One" as having power to
+ make "fire come down from heaven in the sight of men," and "to deceive
+ those that dwell on the earth by means of those miracles which he hath
+ power to do." (Rev. xiii.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the question arises, What can a miracle prove, what end can it serve,
+ or what good can possibly arise from the display of the miracle-working
+ power, when it is liable "to deceive those that dwell upon the earth?"
+ Certainly, therefore, it proves nothing, and accomplishes nothing. And may
+ not the apostles themselves have been deceived in ascribing some of the
+ miracles they record to Jesus instead of the devil? Certainly we are
+ drifted upon the quicksands of uncertainty by such a display of the
+ miracle-working power, and are obnoxious to most fatal deception, which
+ proves the total inutility and futility of such prodigies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHRIST'S MIRACLES NOT HIS OWN, BUT WROUGHT THROUGH HIM AND NOT BY HIM.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How could Christ's miracles, assuming they were wrought, do anything
+ toward proving his divinity, when he did not claim to be their author, but
+ merely the agent or instrument in the hands of the Father, like the
+ apostles, who are reported to have performed the same miracles? "The
+ Father he doeth the work," is his own declaration. And the Apostles seem
+ to have accepted his word, and his view of the matter. For proof listen to
+ Peter: "Ye men of Israel, hear these words: Jesus of Nazareth, a man
+ approved of God among you by miracles, and wonders, and signs, which God
+ did by him in the midst of you, as ye yourselves do know." (Acts ii. 22.)
+ Let it be noted, then, the Christ's miracles were not performed by him as
+ a God, but as "a man approved of God;" he was the mere medium or
+ instrument in the case&mdash;a fact which banishes at once all grounds for
+ controversy relative to his miracles serving the purpose of attesting his
+ divinity, especially when it is conceded that men, magicians, and devils
+ could achieve the same feats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHRIST'S MIRACLES DID NOT CONVINCE THE PEOPLE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the miracles of Christ seem to have had little effect toward convincing
+ the people of his claims to the godhead, it is evident they could have
+ been but little superior to those performed by others, and therefore not
+ designed, at least not calculated, to convince them that he was a God. The
+ frequent instances in which he upbraids the people for their unbelief, and
+ calls them fools, "slow of heart," &amp;c., is a proof of this statement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHRIST'S MIRACLES NOT DESIGNED TO CONVINCE THE PEOPLE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A circumstance involving pretty strong proof that Christ's miraculous
+ achievements were not considered as evidence of his divinity, is the fact
+ that they were frequently performed in private, sometimes in the night,
+ and often under the injunction of secrecy. "See thou tell no man," was the
+ injunction, after the feat was performed, perhaps, in a private room. How
+ can such facts be reconciled with the assumption that his miracles were
+ designed to convince the people of his claims to the Divine Entity, as
+ Christians frequently assert, when the people were not allowed to witness
+ them, nor his disciples even to report them? Who can believe that he was a
+ Divine Being, or Messiah, when he charged his disciples to "tell no man"
+ that he was such a Being? Such incongruities verge to a contradiction. It
+ is a logical contradiction to say that private miracles were designed to
+ dissolve public skepticism. And yet many, if not most, of his reputed
+ miraculous achievements were of this character. When he cured a blind man,
+ he not only "led him out of the town" (Mark viii. 23), but forbid him,
+ when his sight was restored, returning to the city, for fear he would
+ publish it. When he resurrected Lazarus, he did not call the whole country
+ around to witness it, but performed the act before a private party. The
+ reanimation of Jairus's daughter was in the same concealed manner, in a
+ private room, where nobody was admitted but his three confidential
+ disciples (Peter, James, and John) and the parents, none of whom make any
+ report of the case. How, therefore, the reporter (Mark) found it out, when
+ he was not present, and none of the party were allowed to tell it to
+ anybody, or why he should betray his trust by publishing it, if he was
+ informed of it, is a "mystery of Godliness" not easily divined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Christ cleansed the leper, he sent him to the priest, enjoining him
+ to "say nothing to any man." The dumb, when restored to speech, was not
+ allowed to exhibit any practical proof of the fact by using his tongue.
+ His miraculous perambulation on the surface of the sea (walking on the
+ water) was not only alone, but in the dark. His transfiguration, likewise,
+ according to Dr. Barnes, took place in the night, his three favorite
+ companions being the only witnesses, and they "heavy with sleep." And
+ finally, the crowning miracle of all, the resurrection, is not only
+ represented as taking place in the night, but without one substantial or
+ terrestrial witness to report it. Verily such facts as these are not
+ calculated to augment the faith jr work the conviction of a skeptic that
+ these miracles were ever performed, seeing so few are reported as
+ witnessing them, and even their testimony is not given. We have not the
+ testimony of one person who claims to have been present and seen these
+ wonders performed. Such facts are calculated to cast distrust upon the
+ whole matter, especially when taken in connection with the fact that nine
+ tenths of his life form a perfect blank in history. Is it possible, we
+ ask, to reconcile such a fact with the belief of his divinity? Is it
+ possible a God could lead a private life, or live twenty-seven years on
+ earth, and do nothing worthy of note&mdash;a God known to nobody and
+ noticed by nobody? Most transcendingly absurd is such a thought. Had
+ Christ possessed the character that is claimed for him, not an hour of his
+ life could have passed unaccompanied by some remarkable incident that
+ would have been heralded abroad, and its record indelibly engraven upon
+ the page of history; but instead of this, his acts were too commonplace to
+ be noticed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALL HISTORY IGNORES HIM.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that no history, sacred or profane,&mdash;that not one of the
+ three hundred histories of that age,&mdash;makes the slightest allusion to
+ Christ, or any of the miraculous incidents ingrafted into his life,
+ certainly proves, with a cogency that no logic can overthrow, no sophistry
+ can contradict, and no honest skepticism can resist, that there never was
+ such a miraculously endowed being as his many orthodox disciples claim him
+ to have been. The fact that Christ finds no place in the history of the
+ era in which he lived,&mdash;that not one event of his life is recorded by
+ anybody but his own interested and prejudiced biographers,&mdash;settles
+ the conclusion, beyond cavil or criticism, that the godlike achievements
+ ascribed to him are naught but fable or fiction. It not only proves he was
+ not miraculously endowed, but proves he was not even naturally endowed to
+ such an extraordinary degree as to make him an object of general
+ attention. It would be a historical anomaly without a precedent, that
+ Christ should have performed any of the extraordinary acts attributed to
+ him in the Gospels, and no Roman or Grecian historian, and neither Philo
+ nor Josephus, both writing in that age, and both living almost on the spot
+ where they are said to have been witnessed, and both recording minutely
+ all the religious events of that age and country, make the slightest
+ mention of one of them, nor their reputed authors. Such a historical fact
+ banishes the last shadow of faith in their reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true a few lines are found in one of Josephus's large works alluding
+ to Christ. But it is so manifestly a forgery, that we believe all modern
+ critics of any note, even of the orthodox school, reject it as a base
+ interpolation. Even Dr. Lardner, one of the ablest defenders of the
+ Christian faith that ever wielded a pen in its support, and who has
+ written ten large volumes to bolster it up, assigns nine cogent reasons
+ (which we would insert here if we had space) for the conclusion that
+ Josephus could not have penned those few lines found in his "Jewish
+ Antiquities" referring to Christ. No Jew could possibly use such language.
+ It would be a glaring absurdity to suppose a leading Jew could call Jesus
+ "The Christ," when the whole Jewish nation have ever contested the claim
+ with the sternest logic, and fought it to the bitter end. "It ought,
+ therefore" (says Dr. Lardner, for the nine reasons which he assigns), "to
+ be forever discarded from any place among the evidences of Christianity."
+ (Life of Lardner by Dr. Kippis, p. 23.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the passage is not found in any edition of Josephus prior to the era of
+ Eusebius, the suspicion has fastened upon that Christian writer as being
+ its author, who argued that falsehood might be used as a medicine for the
+ benefit of the churches. (See his Eccles. Hist.) Origen, who lived before
+ Eusebius, admitted Josephus makes no allusion to Christ. Of course the
+ passage was not, then, in Josephus. One or two other similar passages have
+ been found, in other authors of that era, which it is not necessary to
+ notice here, as they are rejected by Christian writers. It must be
+ conceded, therefore, that the numerous histories covering the epoch of the
+ birth of Christ chronicle none of the astounding feats incorporated in his
+ Gospel biographies as signalizing his earthly career, and make no mention
+ of the reputed hero of these achievements, either by name or character.
+ The conclusion is thus irresistibly forced upon us, not only that he was
+ not a miracle-worker, but that he must have led rather an obscure life,
+ entirely incompatible with his being a God or a Messiah, who came "to draw
+ all men unto him." And it should also be noted here that none of Christ's
+ famous biographers, Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John, are honored with a
+ notice in history till one hundred and ninety years after the birth of
+ Christ. And then the notice was by a Christian writer (Ireneus).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We look in vain," says a writer, "for any cotemporary notice of the
+ Gospels, or Christ the subject of the Gospels, outside of the New
+ Testament. So little was this 'king of the Jews' known, that the Romans
+ were compelled to pay one of his apostles to turn traitor and act as guide
+ before they could find him. It is impossible to observe this negative
+ testimony of all history against Christ and his miracles, and not be
+ struck with amazement, and seized with the conviction that he was not a
+ God, and not a very extraordinary man." Who can believe that a God, from
+ off the throne of heaven, could make his appearance on earth, and while
+ performing the most astounding miracles ever recorded in any history, or
+ that ever excited the credulity of any people, and be finally publicly
+ crucified in the vicinity of a great city, and yet all the histories
+ written in those times, both sacred and profane, pass over with entire
+ silence the slightest notice of any of these extraordinary events.
+ Impossible&mdash;most self-evidently impossible!! And when we find that
+ this omission was so absolute that no record was made of the day or year
+ of his birth by any person in the era in which he lived, and that they
+ were finally forgotten, and hence that there are, as a writer informs us,
+ no less then one hundred and thirty-three different opinions about the
+ matter, the question assumes a still more serious aspect. From the logical
+ potency of these facts we are driven to the conclusion that Christ
+ received but little attention outside of the circle of his own credulous
+ and interested followers, and consequently stands on a level with Chrishna
+ of India, Mithra of Persia, Osiris of Egypt, and other demigods of
+ antiquity, all whose miraculous legends were ingrafted in their histories
+ long after their death. This leads us to consider
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOW CHRIST'S INCREDIBLE LEGENDS GOT INTO HIS HISTORY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a remarkably easy and satisfactory way of accounting for all the
+ marvelous feats and incredible stories found in the Gospel narratives of
+ Jesus Christ, without assuming their reality or any intentional fraud or
+ falsehood by the writers. When we learn that none of his evangelical
+ biographies were penned (as Dr. Lardner affirms) till long after his
+ death, we are no longer puzzled for a moment to understand exactly how
+ many statements wholly incredible and morally impossible crept into his
+ history, without challenging or calling in question the veracity or
+ honesty of the writer. Perhaps the most powerful cord of moral conviction
+ which holds the Christian professor to a belief in the divinity of Jesus
+ Christ, is the difficulty of bringing himself to believe that the numerous
+ miracles ascribed to him in the Gospels are merely the work of fiction,
+ fabricated without a basis of truth, when they were evidently penned by
+ men of the deepest piety and the strictest moral integrity. We ourselves
+ were once environed with this difficulty. But it stands in our way no
+ longer. We are disenthralled. We have solved the problem. We have found
+ the true explanation. The key and clew to the whole secret is found in the
+ simple fact, admitted by Christian writers and evidenced by the bible
+ itself, that <i>no history of Christ's practical life was written out by a
+ person claim-ing to have been an eyewitness</i> of the events reported,
+ nor until every incident and act of the noble-minded Nazarene had had
+ ample time to become enormously magnified and distorted by rumor, fable,
+ and fiction; so that it was impossible to discriminate or separate the
+ real from the unreal, the true from the false, in his partly-forgotten
+ life. It could not be done. A true history could not then be, nor have
+ been written under such circumstances. It is manifestly impossible. The
+ time for writing each Gospel is fixed by Dr. Lardner as follows, viz.:
+ Matthew 62 A. D., Mark 64 A. D., Luke 63 or 64 A. D., and John 68 A. D.;
+ thus allowing ample time for every noteworthy incident of his life to grow
+ from molehills to mountains, and to swell into fiction, fable, and
+ prodigy, a tendency to which was then very rife and very prevalent in all
+ religious countries. Having made a note of this fact, let the reader
+ treasure in memory, as another equally important fact, that the biography
+ of no man of note who figured in that era, or who lived prior to the dawn
+ of letters (if penned many years after his death, as was frequently the
+ case), is free from a large percentage of extravagant detail, and simple
+ incidents magnified into miracles. This was the uncurbed tendency of the
+ age which ultimated into universal custom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The simplest incident in every man's life, who exhibited mind enough to
+ attract attention, by rolling from year to year, and passing from mouth to
+ mouth, invariably got to be finally swelled into such undue and enormous
+ proportions, that it could only be accounted for by assuming the actor to
+ have been a God. In this way many men of different countries, who had made
+ a mark in the world, received divine honors and divine attributes,
+ including such characters as Chrishna of India, Mithra of Persia, Quirinus
+ of Rome, Eras of the Druids, Quexalcote of Mexico, Jesus Christ of Judea,
+ and many others who might be mentioned. This circumstance deified them.
+ The evidence of history to prove this declaration is abundant and
+ irresistible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ POSTHUMOUS HISTORIES ALONE DEIFIED MEN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the two important facts above cited, viz., that Jesus Christ's
+ evangelical histories were all written long after his death, and that
+ unwritten histories of great men always become swollen and distorted with
+ the lapse of time, let the reader add the equally significant fact that
+ there is in all cases a vast difference in the biographies of famous men,
+ penned during their actual lives, or immediately subsequent to their
+ death, while every act and incident of their career was fresh and vigorous
+ in the minds and memories of the cotemporaneous people, and before the
+ ball of exaggerated rumor was set rolling, compared with those written at
+ a later date, after molehills of fact had become mountains of fiction. The
+ former are natural and reasonable, the latter unnatural and extravagant,
+ and often fabulous. We will cite a few cases in proof. Let the reader
+ compare the biographical sketches of Alexander the Great written near the
+ epoch of his practical life, and those composed since the dawn of the
+ Christian era, and he will find that the posthumous notices of him alone
+ contain the story of the sun becoming obscured, and the earth developed in
+ darkness, at the time of his mortal exit. It will be found, also, that
+ Virgil's account of "the sheeted dead," rising from their graves at the
+ time of Caesar's death, and which was written long after that famous hero
+ left the stage of action, is omitted in all the cotemporary notices of
+ that monarch, having crept in subsequently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In like manner, the various miracles recorded of Pythagoras by his
+ biographer Jamblicus,&mdash;such as his walking on the air, stilling the
+ tempest, raising the dead, &amp;c.,&mdash;are not related of him by any
+ cotemporaneous writers who lived in the era of his practical life. And let
+ the reader compare, also, Damos' life of Apollonius with that of his later
+ biography by Philostratus, as an illustration of the same historical fact.
+ Mahomet and his biograhers might be included in the same category. It is a
+ remarkable circumstance that neither Mahomet himself nor any of his
+ immediate followers claim for him more than the humble title of prophet,
+ or "God's holy prophet," while his later admirers and devout disciples
+ have elevated him to the throne of heaven, and given him a seat among the
+ Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this historical analysis might be extended much farther if necessary.
+ But cases enough have been cited to prove the principle and establish the
+ proposition. And what is the lesson taught by these facts? A
+ deeply-instructive and all-important one. From the foregoing historical
+ illustrations we are impelled to the important conclusion, that the tissue
+ of extravagant and incredible stories of demigod performances which run as
+ a vein of fiction through the Gospel narrations of Jesus Christ, all grow
+ out of long-continued rumor, in an age when the imagination was untamed
+ and unbounded, and credulity uncurbed by a practical knowledge of the
+ principles of science, and consequently the pen of the historian had
+ lawless scope. All difficulty then vanishes, and the question is put
+ forever at rest by assuming that if the Gospel histories of Jesus had been
+ written by men who claimed to record only what they saw and heard
+ themselves, we should have a more credible and instructive history of the
+ great Judean reformer, freed from those Munchausen prodigies and that wild
+ romance which mar the beauty and credibility of those now in popular use.
+ This conclusion is not only natural, but irresistible, to a mind
+ untrammeled by education and unbefogged by priestcraft. All that is
+ wanting to convince us that miracles constitute no part of the real
+ history of Christ, is a cotemporary instead of a posthumous biography&mdash;a
+ history written in the age which knew him, and by an unprejudiced writer
+ who witnessed all his movements. And we are perfectly willing to risk our
+ reputation in this life, and our salvation in the next, by stating our
+ conviction that this will be the unanimous verdict of posterity before
+ fifty generations pass away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHRIST'S MIRACLES RECONSTRUCTED FROM FORMER MIRACLES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are other circumstances than those noticed in the preceding chapter,
+ which can aid us very materially in solving the problem of Christ's
+ divinity; or, in other words, can aid us in tracing his miracles to their
+ origin, and thus confirm the truth of the preceding proposition. Moses and
+ the prophets were considered by the evangelists antetypes or archetypes of
+ the coming Savior. Hence some of the more important incidents of their
+ lives were hunted up and worked over again, to make them fit the life of
+ Christ as the Messiah, reconstructed and applied to him as the second
+ Moses, and a new prophet; for Moses is represented as saying, "A prophet
+ shall the Lord your God raise up like unto me." Hence Moses comes in with
+ the prophets as an antetype of Christ. The transfiguration of Christ is
+ therefore constituted after the model of the transfiguration of Moses on
+ Mount Sinai. And Christ is represented as raising the dead, not only
+ because Elijah and Elisha had performed such miracles, but did it under
+ circumstances which prove, as they suppose, he possessed superior power.
+ For while they could only reanimate the body immediately after the breath
+ had left it, Christ could raise a man after he had been dead four days
+ (the case of Lazarus). Hence the New Prophet was superior to the old, and
+ more like a God&mdash;the thing they desired to prove. Both Elijah and
+ Christ are represented as raising a widows son,&mdash;Elijah being
+ considered the special prototype of Christ, who, many believed, had
+ re-appeared under the changed name of Elias. (See John v. 17.) And then we
+ observe that while Elisha exhausted his skill in making three gallons of
+ oil, Christ could make thirty gallons of wine&mdash;another proof of the
+ superiority of the New Prophet. Then, again, the miracle of feeding one
+ hundred men with twenty loaves is far excelled by the latter, who feeds
+ five thousand men with five loaves. And both prophets, Elisha and Christ,
+ encountered unfordable streams in their travels; the expedient of the
+ former is to make a passage, but Christ performed the greater miracle of
+ walking on the surface. And while Moses had to send the leper without the
+ camp before he could heal him, Christ could heal him instantly with a
+ single touch. The same slaughter of the infants is commanded by Herod, in
+ order to destroy Christ, that Pharaoh had ordered to effect the
+ destruction of Moses. And thus many of the miracles of Jesus can be
+ accounted for as reconstructions of former miracles. It was simply a
+ competition or rivalry between the New Messianic prophet and the old
+ prophets. The New Prophet excels and comes off victorious in every case,
+ and is thus considered to be a God. The object of the competition is to
+ show that while the prophets, assisted by God, could perform marvelous
+ deeds, Christ, being God himself, could perform greater. This was to be
+ the proof of his being a God, that he could outvie the servants of God in
+ every miraculous thing ascribed to them. This was one way adopted to prove
+ his divinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHRIST'S MIRACLES MANUFACTURED FROM PROPHECIES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several of Christs miracles seem to have grown out of the Messianic
+ prophecies; that is, were manufactured in order to fulfill the prophecies.
+ There was, as we learn by the Gospels, an impression deep and wide-spread
+ among the disciples of Christ, that the Old Testament was full of texts
+ foretelling the advent of their Messiah, and foreshadowing his practical
+ life. Under this conviction, a number of passages are quoted in the
+ Gospels from the prophets as referring to Christ, but which, however, the
+ context shows could not possibly have been written with any such thought
+ or intention. Matthew has five miracles appertaining to Christ, built on
+ prophecies, in his first two chapters. And they are represented as taking
+ place "in order that the prophecy might be fulfilled," that is, Matthew,
+ writing sixty-four years after Christ's advent, assumes those miracles had
+ taken place because the prophecy required their performance, and hence
+ recorded it as a fact without knowing it to be such. A great deal of that
+ kind of license was assumed in that and subsequent ages, as the facts of
+ history are ample to prove. It was done under the religious conviction
+ that the cause of God and the church required it to be done, and that
+ therefore it was justifiable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STRICT VERACITY NOT REQUIRED OR OBSERVED.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is by no means necessary to assume that the recorders of the New
+ Testament miracles knew they had been performed, or that they would
+ hesitate to record them as facts because they did not know them to be
+ such. We are under no moral obligation to suppose they knew anything about
+ it. People in that age were not so nice or so morally exact, as to require
+ proof of a thing before they stated it, or never to state it unless they
+ had the proof for its being true. We would be Very far from accusing the
+ apostolic writers of malicious falsehood, or criminal misrepresentation.
+ But we find that the disciples of all religions, in that age of the world,
+ considered it not only allowable, but a religious duty, in the absence of
+ knowledge, to supply omissions by guess-work or conjecture; that is, to
+ use assumption in the place of proof, and to state that a thing was so
+ when there was no proof of it whatever, and even when the proof was
+ against it. All religious history is full of the exhibition of this kind
+ of elasticity of conscience. Even a species of pious lying was considered
+ justifiable in many cases. Paul furnishes evidence of this, when he says,
+ "If the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto his glory, why
+ am I judged a sinner?" (Rom. iii. 16.) "No sin to lie for the glory of
+ God," seems to be the teaching of this text. Although Paul does not
+ clearly disclose for what purpose this policy was employed, yet it can
+ easily be inferred. A part of the important business of the New Testament
+ writers was to build a reputation for Christ and his inspired band of
+ disciples for working miracles. A fame for achieving "signs and wonders"
+ was the great set off of the age. There seems to have been an almost
+ boundless competition amongst the disciples of the various religious
+ orders, including Jews, Pagans, and Christians, as to who could, or whose
+ God could outstrip all competitors in achieving astonishing prodigies that
+ should set the laws of nature at defiance. And no devout disciple, who had
+ good inventive powers, would allow any rival to outdo him. Nothing could
+ authenticate the claim of the adopted Messiah to the throne or heaven, or
+ a participation in the Divine Essence, like a miraculous display of divine
+ power. Hence the history of all the Gods and demi-gods of the illiterate
+ ages, including that of Christ, is loaded down with miraculous feats.
+ There is the clearest proof that Christ's disciples were in this general
+ rivalry&mdash;this universal miracle-working <i>mêlée</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two things very necessary to be accomplished, in the estimation of the
+ apostles, were, first, to show that Christ outdid the heathen Gods, and
+ even the prophets, in the display of the wonder-exciting miraculous power,
+ and thus proved his divinity; and second, that the prophecies had been
+ fulfilled in his coming and his practical life. And there is reason to
+ believe all the New Testament miracles are founded on and grew out of
+ prophecy. For, although we do not find prophecies in the Old Testament for
+ every miracle related of Christ, yet it is probable, if we had the Book of
+ God, "the Book of Jehu," "the Like of Hezekiah," and other lost books
+ mentioned in the Old Testament, we should find the supposed prophecy for
+ every miracle of the New Testament. We should there find the key to every
+ miracle. The true explanation of the matter seems to be, that the
+ apostolic writers, looking through the Old Testament, and finding texts
+ therein which they believed to be prophetic of the display of the
+ miraculous power of Jesus, and passages which they religiously believed
+ foreshadowed his coming and mission, or some important event in his
+ history, they were impressed with the deepest conviction that God would
+ not suffer any prophecy to go unfulfilled. But when they sat down to write
+ the history of their Messiah, long after his death, they found they had
+ not the evidence before them that the prophecies had been fulfilled. A
+ third of a century had rolled away since his history had been practically
+ before the people. The subject of their narrative had long since gone to
+ "the house of many mansions," and left not a note, or scratch of a pen, of
+ any act of his life behind him. And the current of time had washed away,
+ or partially obliterated, nearly every event of his earthly career. The
+ witnesses had nearly all left the stage of action, and their voices were
+ forever hushed in the silent tomb. What was to be done in such an
+ emergency? It was all-important to show that the prophecies had been
+ fulfilled to the letter in his practical life. This quandary, however, did
+ not beset them long. The difficulty was easily surmounted. Every religious
+ country, including Judea, was full of miraculous legends and astonishing
+ prodigies appertaining to the terrestrial movements of their Gods and
+ demigods, some of which had floated down on the stream of tradition from
+ time immemorial. And all had become blended, confounded, and mixed up
+ together, until it was impossible to know whence they originated, where
+ they belonged, or to what God they appertained. These miraculous stories
+ were so numerous, and so varied in character, that there was no little
+ difficulty in finding which seemed to be the fulfillment of any Messianic
+ prophecy that had been or might be found in the Old Testament; and thus of
+ the hundreds of miraculous stories afloat, one was picked out and assumed
+ to be the fulfillment of the prophecy. With the countless number of such
+ stories before them, which had been for half a century current in the
+ community, they set themselves to work to select and reject, prune and
+ remodel, honestly believing that this miracle was intended to fulfill this
+ prophecy, and that miracle that prophecy, &amp;c. And accordingly we now
+ find it so stated in the New Testament. As, for example, a story had long
+ been going the rounds that the parents of a young God had to flee with him
+ out of the country, to save his life from being destroyed by its jealous
+ ruler. This they supposed must of course refer to Jesus, because they had
+ found a supposed prophecy of such an event in the Jewish bible, when a
+ more thorough acquaintance with history would have taught them that the
+ story did not refer to the ruler of Judea (Herod), but to Cansa, an
+ ancient, jealous, despotic king, who ruled India at a much earlier period.
+ And the story of the darkness at the crucifixion they incorporated as a
+ part of the history of Jesus, because they had seen a text in Joel which
+ they supposed presaged such an event, while, if they had been well versed
+ in oriental history, they would have known that it had long been recorded
+ as the last chapter in the earthly drama of the Hindoo God Chrishna. And
+ so of the other miracles now found related as a part of the history of
+ Jesus. A historical investigation of the matter would have shown the
+ Gospel writers that they were a part of the written history of other and
+ more ancient Gods, and had never formed a part of the practical life of
+ Jesus, or been realized in his experience. This is a more charitable and
+ honorable explanation of the matter than that found in the assumption of
+ some other writers, that every miracle was constructed for the occasion&mdash;that
+ it is a sheer fabrication; and yet there are some plausible grounds for
+ this solution of the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These critical writers tell us there was a religious persuasion deeply
+ enstamped upon the minds of all religious countries, that God often
+ justified a departure from the truth&mdash;the conscientious or veracious
+ faculty being in that age but feebly developed. And the bible itself is
+ full of evidence to establish the allegation. The prophets often disclose
+ it, and the apostles were their strict imitators. Ezekiel represents God
+ as saying, "If a prophet is deceived, I the Lord deceived that prophet."
+ (Ezek. xiv. 9.) And Jeremiah asks God, "Wilt thou be to me as a liar?"
+ (Jer. xv. 8.) While the writer of Kings represents God as putting a lying
+ spirit into the mouth of his own prophets, (i Kings xxii. 23.) And most
+ certainly if God himself might thus habitually depart from the truth, it
+ was an ample warrant for his apostles, as well as the prophets, to adopt
+ the same expedient. The case of Paul lying for the glory of God, which we
+ have cited from Romans iii. 4, proves they were morally capable of doing
+ this. Mosheim tells us that among the early Christians, "it was an almost
+ universally adopted maxim, that it was an act of virtue to deceive and
+ lie, when by so doing they could promote the interest of the church."
+ (Mosh. vol. i. p. 198.) And Mr. Higgins informs us that "great numbers, of
+ every age and of every religion, have been guilty of systematic frauds and
+ falsehoods to support their religions, to an extent of which we can have
+ no conception. They not only practiced it, but they reduced it to system.
+ They avowed it, and they justified it by declaring it to be meritorious to
+ lie in a good cause." (Ana. vol. i. p. 143.) The reader who can hesitate
+ to credit these statements only betrays his ignorance of the moral
+ weakness of human nature, and the imperfect growth in that era of the
+ veracious faculty, which consequently had but a feeble voice in the
+ councils of the mind. Even the most pious and devout professors of
+ religion did not consider a rigid conformity to truth necessary, or
+ morally obligatory, in their labors to promote the glory of God and the
+ salvation of souls. And when direct falsehood was not resorted to, the
+ writer still allowed himself to color, magnify, and invent largely; that
+ is, to draw copiously upon the resources of his imagination, in the way of
+ supplying omissions and defects, and filling out missing links in the
+ chain of history. And hence it is that all ancient sacred history is so
+ profusely inlaid with stories and statements manifestly fabricated for the
+ occasion, without any historical support, and therefore wholly incredible.
+ Let the Christian reader not, however, misapprehend us by supposing we
+ wish to drive him to the extreme alternative of accepting this as the true
+ explanation, or as indicating the real origin of the incredible stories
+ and senseless miraculous feats interwoven into the Gospel life of Jesus.
+ We only offer it as a plausible, but not as the probable explanation. The
+ above citations from the Scriptures and other history prove most clearly
+ that sacred writers were morally capable of fabricating or manufacturing
+ history to supply assumed omissions. And this explanation is twofold more
+ reasonable than to accept the miracles as real occurrences, for such a
+ belief would be at war with common sense, and prostrate our reason beneath
+ our feet. But there is no necessity of adopting lying hypotheses, while
+ the borrowing theory is amply adequate to account for every Gospel
+ miracle. There is not a miraculous story or incredible legend incorporated
+ in the New Testament as a part of the history of Jesus, that was not
+ afloat in some shape or form, on the wings of tradition in nearly every
+ religious country, ages before his birth. The model for each and every
+ miracle was already constructed, was already in the market, and already a
+ part of the history or tradition of other and older Gods. And all that was
+ wanted to make it appear as a part of the history of the Christian's
+ deified Jesus, was to fill in names and dates. Yes, history with a hundred
+ tongues proclaims it as the real explanation of the incredible and the
+ impossible in the history of Jesus Christ. And the evidence is so
+ voluminous and so overwhelming to disprove the common Christian dogma
+ which makes the son of Joseph and Mary a miracle-working God (a portion of
+ which we have presented under the several propositions of this chapter),
+ that it really demolishes the last timber in the Christian fabric, and
+ leaves it a heap of ruins. And we are certain that if we could divest the
+ Christian reader's mind, for a few moments, of an inherited and fostered
+ prejudice, he would see that our explanation is much more rational, more
+ probable, more beautiful than the popular belief, which degrades the
+ illustrious Judean reformer to a level with the heathen thaumaturgist, and
+ gives him the same undignified reputation as a miracle-worker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we are sometimes told we are under as much moral obligation to believe
+ in the miracles reported of Jesus, as to believe in any other portion of
+ his history; that we must accept his Gospel history as a whole, or reject
+ it in toto. But this is manifestly a false assumption, and one easily
+ exploded. No person who is acquainted with Grecian history doubts that
+ Alexander the Great was born in Macedonia, and founded a city in Egypt
+ bearing his own name. Yet not one of those readers will credit for a
+ moment what one of his biographers relates of him, that he stopped the sun
+ in its course, or that he had no human father. We all accept Pythagoras as
+ a real entity, while we reject the story of his walking on the air. Are we
+ morally bound to accept Romulus and Remus, founders of Rome, as mere
+ fabulous beings, because their biographers relate the incredible story of
+ their being suckled by a wolf? Many other illustrations might be given in
+ proof of the falsity of the assumption that, because a portion of a man's
+ biography is found to be incredible, the whole must be rejected as false,
+ as unworthy of credence. This would be to annihilate history. For no
+ biography of any person, and no history of any nation, can be accepted as
+ plenarily pure, unmixed truth. There is always more or less chaff with the
+ grain, and it is our privilege and our duty to separate them. And by so
+ doing we not only confer a favor on the cause of truth, but add to the
+ luster and honor of the name of the deceased reformer; and especially is
+ this true of the renowned Judean philanthropist and reformer. Much more
+ lovely and beautiful would his evangelical history stand before the world
+ if stripped of the wild, the weird, and the miraculous. Much more
+ interesting is he when viewed and venerated as a man than when worshipped
+ as a God, guilty of the frequent violation of his own laws, by the display
+ of the miracle-working power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And much more beautiful and much more rational is the doctrine which
+ accepts every event that ever occurred as the legitimate and harmonious
+ operation of the great machinery of nature, than as the smart trick, the
+ lawless caprice or wild feat, of an arbitrary, wonder-exciting God,
+ performed not to make the people better, more moral or more righteous (for
+ miracles cannot do this), but merely to make them gape and stare, and
+ shout, What a smart God we have got!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then the belief in miracles involves an utter repudiation of all law,
+ all order, and all system, and introduces in their stead chaos, anarchy,
+ and universal confusion. It is simply "the doctrine of chance." which all
+ orthodox Christendom professes to deprecate and execrate as the
+ quintessence of atheism. But they make a mistake; "chance" is more
+ legitimately the fruit of miracle than of atheism; an assertion which we
+ will here briefly prove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the sun may be arrested in his course through the heavens, "the moon
+ turned into blood," and "the stars fall from the heaven,"&mdash;sticks
+ turned into serpents, water into blood, and dust into lice,&mdash;all of
+ which orthodox Christians profess to believe were witnessed in the days of
+ Moses and Christ, then everything is thrown upon the wheel of chance;
+ everything is involved in uncertainty. If the course of nature could be
+ arrested, or the natural qualities of objects changed by the prayer of a
+ prophet, patriarch, or apostle, then the food set before us to eat may
+ suddenly, in compliance with the prayers of some absent saint, become a
+ deadly poison; the clothes we wear may be instantly transformed into
+ virulent adders, which may inflict the fatal sting before we suspect it;
+ some favorite servant of God (a Moses or an Elijah) might be this moment
+ praying to God to stop the dews from falling, or the rain from descending
+ for the next three months, or three years, as the latter is reported as
+ doing (see James v. 17), so that we could not plant with any certainty
+ that the seed would grow, or that we should be rewarded by a crop. Such
+ would be the incertitude, such the "chance" against us in everything in
+ which we might engage, if it were true that God ever intercepts the action
+ of his laws by working a miracle, that we should eventually become
+ discouraged by this chaos of "chance," the wheels of industry would stop,
+ and the car of civilization go backward. If it were true, as taught by
+ orthodox Christians, that "God in his providence," or "God in the
+ dispensation of his providence," often "visits people with sickness," then
+ it would be useless to study the laws of health with a view of complying
+ with them. For we could not know in any case whether our sickness had been
+ brought upon us by, an "overruling providence," or by our own imprudence.
+ Our inventives to study and comply with these laws, if there could be any,
+ would consequently be very weak indeed, for we might comply with every
+ physiological requisition, and yet there would be several "chances,"
+ against us that to-morrow we may be stretched upon a "sick bed and rolling
+ pillow by the visitation of God." Thus the doctrine of miracles is shown
+ to be pre-eminently the doctrine of "chance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctrine of miraculous agency makes God an imperfect being, by
+ implying that his laws were defective in their original construction, that
+ by mistake he left some emergency unprovided for, and now has to supply
+ the omission by an afterclap exercise of power. Or if his laws were
+ originally perfect, then the working of a miracle would disturb them, and
+ make them imperfect; if originally imperfect, then God himself must have
+ been imperfect, and hence no God at all. Think of a wonderworking God
+ violating, suspending, or intercepting his own laws. Such a God would be a
+ puerile, short-sighted being, that only ignorant and uncultivated minds
+ could admire and adore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The age of miracles, however, is gone. The belief in divine prodigies has
+ receded before the advancing genius of civilization. It has died away in
+ the exact ratio of the progress of science and general intelligence. And a
+ thorough acquaintance with nature's laws will banish the last vestige of
+ such a belief. Hence it is that the most illiterate and ignorant nations
+ and tribes have always been able to recount the longest list of miraculous
+ prodigies achieved by a disorderly God, who seems to have taken pleasure
+ in violating his own laws, or suspending them, for the most trivial
+ purposes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, the time is approaching when the belief in a "miraculous
+ interposition" or "special providences" must pass away under the lights of
+ science and civilization, and be numbered amongst the things which have
+ been and can be no more, and men will cherish more noble and elevated
+ ideas of the great Ruler of the universe, who is infinite in order,
+ infinite in wisdom, ay, infinite in all his attributes and virtues, ever
+ unchangeably the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. Prophecy, the second Pillar of the Christian Faith, proves as much for
+ Heathenism and Spiritualism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Truthful prophecy, attested to be such by its fulfillment, is assumed to
+ be one of the basic pillars and one of the main proofs of the truth of the
+ Christian religion. But the following consideration will show that this
+ assumption has no logical force, or real, tangible foundation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First. Every ancient system of religion had its prophets and seers, who
+ professed to be able to foresee events of the future. And we find but
+ little difference in the proofs each one has left to the world that they
+ possessed this power, if we except the Greeks and Romans, some of whom
+ evidently excelled all the Jewish prophets in their ability to take
+ cognizance of events lying behind the curtain of time. Tacitus, the Latin
+ historian, prophesied the downfall of the Roman empire and its attendant
+ calamities more than five hundred years before its occurrence, which was
+ fulfilled to the letter. And Solon, one of the seven wise men of Greece,
+ foresaw and foretold a series of calamities which befell the Athenians two
+ hundred years before they were realized. A still more remarkable example
+ is furnished in the history of Marcus Tullius Cicero, who, writing of the
+ future, with his mind fixed on the west, about 50 B. C., exclaimed, "There
+ will arise after many ages (if we may credit the Sibylline oracles), a
+ hero who will deliver his oppressed countrymen from bondage"&mdash;a
+ prophecy most signally fulfilled in the life of General Washington. Many
+ other examples of heathen prophecy and their fulfillment might be cited,
+ if we had space for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Second. The history of modern spiritualism furnishes many cases of future
+ events being predicted long before they took place. In fact, many of the
+ most important events of modern times which have occurred in this and
+ other countries, were foreseen and foretold by spiritual seers known as
+ "seeing mediums," when there was not the slightest probability that such
+ events would ever occur. We will cite one or two cases, by way of proof
+ and illustration. A few years ago John P. Coles, of New York, known as a
+ spiritual medium, prophesied, when under spirit control, that Nicholas of
+ Russia would shortly have difficulty with his secretary Menzicoff, and
+ just three months from that time would die&mdash;a prediction that was
+ fulfilled to the very letter and to the very hour. And yet there was not
+ the slightest probability, externally indicated, at the time the prophecy
+ was uttered, that either of these events would ever be realized. And this
+ prophecy, let it be noted, was published in the New York Times at least
+ two months before it was verified, thus proving that the prediction was
+ not an "afterclap" affair, but preceded the event. Take another example.
+ The serious calamity which befell the ill-fated steamer known as the
+ Arctic, which was lost at sea a number of years ago, with all on board,
+ was prophetically described in minute detail, by a spirit medium, several
+ months before it occurred; and was seen and described by another medium,
+ while taking place more than a thousand miles distant. The proof is at our
+ command. And the late disastrous war was foreseen and described by Cora
+ Tappan, of New York, and other mediums, and its principal events pointed
+ out long before the war broke out&mdash;a fact which is now a matter of
+ history. These are only a few cases out of hundreds that might be cited of
+ a similar character, drawn from the practical history of modern
+ spiritualism. If, then, prophecy can do anything toward the truth or
+ divine emanation of the Christian religion, it must do the same for the
+ heathen and spiritual systems. And thus proving too much, it proves
+ nothing at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Third. The Jewish prophecies not fulfilled. We have examined critically
+ the various texts of the Christian bible called prophecies, and find that,
+ if claimed as predictions of the future events beyond the powers of the
+ natural mind to foresee, they have all failed. But few of them have been
+ fulfilled in any sense, and those few required no divine prescience to
+ foresee the result. Many events have transpired in every country, which
+ the natural sagacity of the most observant minds in that country had
+ anticipated as the result of natural causes, such as the ravages and
+ downfall of cities and the overthrow of empires by the merciless hand of
+ war. The Jewish prophet, fostering a spirit of envy and enmity towards
+ Egypt, Babylon, and other superior kingdoms, because they had been
+ overpowered by them and long held in subjection to their superior sway,
+ were always prophesying evil things of these principalities. And though
+ some of the evils which constituted the burden of prophecy might have been
+ reasonably anticipated as natural occurrences, it is a signal fact they
+ never transpired at all,&mdash;such as the total destruction of Babylon,
+ Tyre, Damascus, and other cities belonging to those hostile kingdoms the
+ Jews so much envied and execrated. Look, for proof, at the case of
+ Damascus. The prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, all poured out their
+ fulminatory thunders upon this city. Isaiah declared it should be a
+ "ruinous heap." (Isa. xvii. I.) And Jeremiah predicted its destruction by
+ fire. (Jer. xlix. 27.) And yet, notwithstanding these predictions of ruin,
+ Damascus still stands as "one of the paradises of the earth," as one
+ writer styles it, with a population, according to Burckhart, of not less
+ than two hundred and fifty thousand, being one of the most magnificent and
+ prosperous commercial cities on the globe. Instead of being blotted out of
+ existence, as the Jewish prophets prayed and predicted, it has suffered
+ less by ravages of war and the scythe of time than almost any other city
+ of the east. It has stood nearly three thousand years without becoming a
+ "ruinous heap," or being consumed by fire or destroyed by war. (Jer. xlix.
+ 26.) And the prophecy against Tyre has most signally failed also. Ezekiel
+ declared it should be destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar, and never be found
+ again. (Ezek. xxvi.-xxix.) But two hundred and fifty years after
+ Nebuchadnezzar's time Alexander found it a strong commercial city. And it
+ still contains a population of five thousand or more. St. Jerome, of the
+ fourth century, declared it to be then the finest city of Phoenicia, and
+ was astonished that Ezekiel's prophecy had so utterly failed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Isaiah's famous prediction against Babylon furnishes another proof of
+ the utter failure of Jewish prophecy. He declared, after predicting its
+ destruction, "It shall never be inhabited, neither shall it be dwelt in
+ from generation to generation, neither shall the Arabian pitch tent
+ there." (Isa. xiii. 20.) Of course he desired it should be so. But,
+ unfortunately for his credit as a prophet, it never suffered such a
+ calamity. On the contrary, according to Layard and Rawlinson, British
+ commissioners who recently visited the place, it now presents "all the
+ activity of a hive of bees" (to use Layard's language), and contains
+ several thousand inhabitants, though its name is, since rebuilt, called
+ Hillah. And thus the prophecy is falsified. "No," exclaims a good
+ Christian brother, in forlorn hope, it may be fulfilled yet. But if he
+ will examine the language of the prophecy, he will find he is entirely cut
+ off from this "saving clause." The prophet says, "Her time is near to
+ come, and her days shall not be prolonged." (Isa. xiii. 22.) Thus it is
+ evident the prophecy was to be fulfilled in that age and generation. The
+ failure, then, is absolute and indisputable. And these are but mere
+ samples of the complete failure of every text called a prophecy, when
+ applied to the prognostication of future events. Numerous texts can be
+ found in the prophets auguring evil for Egypt, which have made no
+ approximation toward fulfillment. Ezekiel prophesied "the fall of Egypt,"
+ "the desolation of Egypt," "the destruction of Egypt," &amp;c., not one of
+ which calamities has ever been realized in her experience. Prophecies
+ respecting the restoration of the lost tribes and the perpetuity of the
+ Israelitish throne are complete failures; also all "the Messianic
+ prophecies," so called. (See Chap. II.) With respect to the prophecy on
+ Babylon, it may be further observed that while the prophet declares,
+ "Neither shall the Arabian pitch tent there" (Isa. xiii. 22), Layard
+ declares that is the very thing they did do while he was there. He says he
+ saw a number of Arabian tents pitched on the ground; thus proving a
+ failure of the prophecy all round in every particular. (See note page
+ Fourth). The bible itself is a witness that truthful prophecy can do
+ nothing toward authenticating a religion, or toward proving the prophet
+ divinely inspired. The same damaging concession is made here as in the
+ case of miracles, that a heathen and an unbeliever could and did succeed
+ as well as the true disciples of the faith. The proof of this statement is
+ found in the history of Balaam. His figurative representation of a star
+ coming out of Jacob and a scepter out of Judah (see Numb. chap. xxiv.) is
+ often quoted by Christian writers as presaging or prefiguring the coming
+ of Christ,&mdash;thus making a heathen and an unbeliever the oracle of a
+ Messianic prophecy, and a heathen, too, of sinful and ungodly habits. So
+ that the Christian subterfuge is not available here, that "God might make
+ a righteous man of any nation the vehicle of prophecy." For we have the
+ express declaration of the bible itself that he was not a righteous man,
+ but the very reverse. Peter tells us, "He loved the wages of
+ unrighteousness," at the very time this prophecy so called was uttered (
+ see 2 Peter ii. 13 ), which prostrates forever the Christian plea the "he
+ might have possessed the true spirit of prophecy by virtue of being a
+ righteous man," and drives us to the admission that an unconverted savage
+ and ungodly heathen unbeliever could make a true prophecy. It not being
+ necessary, then, to be a Jew, or a Christian, or a believer, or even a
+ moral man, to foresee or foretell the far-off important events of the
+ future, the argument falls forever to the ground that the fulfillment of
+ the Jewish prophecies, if admitted to have been fulfilled, could do
+ anything toward proving the truth or divine acceptance of the religion of
+ the bible, or its superiority over any heathen or oriental religion then
+ or subsequently known to history, as they all present the same evidence of
+ being endowed with the true spirit of prophecy. All argument for
+ Christianity based on the prophecies, or "the gift of prophecy," is, then,
+ forever at an end, as it has been shown that the power to foretell future
+ events is not restricted by the bible itself to any nation, to any
+ religion, to any faith, to any belief, or to any moral or religious
+ qualification. What, then, is prophecy worth, or what does it prove?
+ Another case, and one similar to that of Balaam in its essential points,
+ is found in the New Testament. Caiaphas, though not claiming to be any
+ part of a believer, utters a prophecy in the interest of the Christian
+ religion for which the bible itself gives him full credit as a prophet.
+ Here, then, is another case of a heathen stealing the Christian's thunder,
+ and another proof that the spirit of true prophecy has never been confined
+ to any nation or any religion; and hence, according to the teachings of
+ the bible itself, does nothing at all toward establishing the exalted
+ claims of Christianity, or toward proving its superiority over other
+ systems of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. Moral Precepts the third Pillar of the Christian Faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is declared, in view of the many wise precepts which issued from the
+ mouth of Jesus Christ, that "he spake as never man spake." (John vii. 46.)
+ If this were true, then Gods must have been very numerous prior to the
+ Christian era. For there is not one of the moral maxims or preceptive
+ commands which he gave utterance to that cannot be found literally or
+ substantially in the older bibles of other nations, or the writings of the
+ Greek philosophers, and the religious dissertations of heathen moralists,
+ who gave out moral and religious lessons for the instruction of the world
+ long prior to the birth of Christ. Even the Golden Rule, which Christian
+ writers, ignorant or oriental history, have erroneously ascribed to Jesus
+ Christ, and lauded him as being the author of, is found variously
+ expressed in the writings of several heathen or oriental nations. We find
+ it in the Chinese bible at least live hundred years older than ours,
+ almost word for word as Jesus uttered it. We will here present it as
+ expressed by different writers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Golden Rule by Confucius, 500 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do unto another what you would have him do unto you, and do not to
+ another what you would not have him do unto you. Thou needest this law
+ alone. It is the foundation of all the rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Golden Rule by Aristotle, 385 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We should conduct ourselves toward others as we would have them act
+ toward us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Golden Rule by Pittacus, 650 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not to your neighbor what you would take ill from him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Golden Rule by Thales, 464 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Avoid doing what you would blame others for doing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Golden Rule by Isocrates, 338 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Act toward others as you desire them to act toward you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Golden Rule by Aristippus, 365 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cherish reciprocal benevolence, which will make you as anxious for
+ another's welfare as your own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Golden Rule by Sextus, a Pythagorean, 406 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What you wish your neighbors to be to you, such be also to them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. Golden Rule by Hillel, 50 B. C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not to others what you would not like others to do to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is the Golden Rule proclaimed by seven heathen moralists and a Jew
+ long before it was republished by the founder of Christianity; thus
+ proving it to be of heathen origin, and proving that it does not transcend
+ the natural capacity of the human brain to originate, and hence needs no
+ God to reveal it. Indeed, it is one of the most natural sentiments of the
+ human mind. "Would I like to be treated thus?" is the first thought which
+ naturally arises in the mind of a person when maltreating a neighbor; thus
+ showing that the Golden Rule is a spontaneous utterance of the moral
+ feelings of the human mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOVE AND KIND TREATMENT OF ENEMIES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Love to enemies is considered to be another praiseworthy precept, which
+ Christ has erroneously the credit of being the author of. We have heard
+ the declaration made in the Christian pulpit, that Jesus Christ was the
+ first moral teacher who inculcated love to enemies; a most transcendent
+ error, as the following historical citations will show. Most of the
+ religious books and religious teachers of the ancient oriental heathen
+ breathe forth a spirit of love and kindness toward enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following is from the old Persian bible, the Sadder:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Forgive thy foes, nor that alone;
+ Their evil deeds with good repay;
+ Fill those with joy who leave thee none,
+ And kiss the hand upraised to slay."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Christian bible would be searched in vain to find a moral sentiment or
+ precept superior to this. Certainly it is the loftiest sentiment of
+ kindness toward enemies that ever issued from human lips, or was ever
+ penned by mortal man. And yet it is found in an old heathen bible. Think
+ of "kissing the hand upraised to slay." Never was love, and kindness, and
+ forbearance toward enemies more sublimely expressed than in the old
+ Persian ballad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. "Treat thine enemy as though a friend, and he will become thy friend,"
+ was expressed by Publius Syrus, a Roman slave, which is a wiser admonition
+ than that of Christ, "Love thine enemy," as it is a moral impossibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. "All nature cries aloud, 'Shall man do less than heal the smiter, and
+ the railer bless?'" (Hafiz, a Mahomedan.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. "Bridle thine anger, and forgive thine enemy; give unto him who takes
+ from thee." (Koran, Mahomedan bible. )
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. "Let no man be offended with those who are angry at him, but reply
+ gently to those who curse him." (Code of Menu.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. "Let him endure injuries, and despise no one." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. "Commit no hostile action for your own preservation." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. "To be revenged on enemies, become more virtuous." (Diogenes.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. "To strike a man, or vex him with words, is a sin." (Zend-Avesta,
+ Persian bible.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. "Even the intention to strike is a sin." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. "Desire not the death of thine enemy." (Confucius.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. "Acknowledge benefits, but never revenge injuries." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. "We may dislike an enemy without desiring revenge." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. "Pardon the offenses of others, but never your own." (Publius Syrus.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. "The noble spirit cures injustice by forgiving it." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. "It is much better to be injured than to kill a man." (Pythagoras.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. "You can accomplish by kindness what you cannot by force." (Publius
+ Syrus.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. "Better overlook an injury than avenge it." (Publius Syrus.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. "It is enough to think ill of an enemy without avenging it." (Publius
+ Syrus.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. "It is a kingly spirit to return good deeds for evil ones." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Learn for yon orient shell to love thy foe,
+ And store with pearls the hand that brings thee woe;
+ Flee, like yon rock, from base, vindictive pride,
+ Emblaze with gems the wrist that rends thy side."
+
+ (Hafiz.)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 22. "To revenge yourself on an enemy, make him your friend." (Pythagoras.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. "It is not permitted to a man who has received an injury to revenge it
+ by doing another." (Socrates, in his Crito.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. "Seek him who turns thee out, and pardon him who injures thee."
+ (Koran.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. "Return not evil for evil." (Socrates.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. "Endure all things if you would serve God." (Sextus.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. "Desire to be able to benefit your enemies." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. "Receive an injury rather than do one." (Publius Syrus.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. "Be at war with men's vices, but at peace with their persons." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. "Cultivate friendship for an enemy." (Pittacus.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. "Be kind to your friends that they may continue so, and to your
+ enemies that they may become so." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. "Prevent injuries if possible; if not, do not revenge them." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. "An enemy should not be hated, but cured." (Seneca.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. "To act unkindly toward an enemy will increase his hate." (Antonius.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35. "Be to everybody kind and friendly." (Ibid.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36. "Speak evil of no one, not even your enemies." (Pittacus.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it will be observed that love and kindness toward all mankind, both
+ friends and enemies, is not confined to the teachings of Christ or to the
+ Christian religion, as many have erroneously supposed, but is
+ unquestionably a natural sentiment of the moral instinct or moral impulses
+ of the human mind, and hence is no proof that their teacher is either a
+ God or divinely inspired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And we have in our possession nearly eight hundred more precepts (see vol.
+ ii.) from the pens or mouths of the ancient heathen, enjoining just and
+ kind treatment of women, and setting forth nearly all the duties of life,
+ and teaching the immortality of the soul, &amp;c. And these precepts
+ breathe the same lofty moral sentiment and moral feeling as those quoted
+ above. How ignorant and how conceited must be the Christian professor who
+ supposes all goodness is confined to Christianity, or that it even
+ possesses any great superiority over other religious systems! And how
+ completely the three foregoing parts of this chapter, "Miracles,"
+ "Prophecies," and "Precepts," prostrate the divine claims of Christianity,
+ and leave not an inch of ground for them to rest upon!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXV. LOGICAL OR COMMON SENSE VIEW OF THE DOCTRINE OF DIVINE
+ INCARNATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE incarnation of an infinite God is a shocking absurdity, and an
+ infinite impossibility. We ask in all solemn earnestness, and in the name
+ of the intuitive monitions of an unshackled reason and an unbiased
+ conscience, can any man in his sober senses, who has been in the habit of
+ reflecting before he believes, entertain for a moment the monstrous
+ absurdity that the Almighty and Infinite Maker of the universe was once
+ reduced to a little wailing infant, lying in senseless and helpless
+ weakness on the lap of its mother, unable to walk a step, or lisp a word,
+ or do aught but cry with pain or for nourishment stored in the mother's
+ breast? What! Almighty God fallen from his burnished, dazzling throne in
+ the lofty heavens, and reduced to helpless, senseless babyhood!
+ Omnipotence shorn of all power but to breathe, and cry, and smile! What!
+ that Omniscient Being, who "leads one world by day, and ten thousand more
+ by night," becoming suddenly transformed into a human bantling, which
+ knows no higher enjoyment that that of being "pleased with a rattle, and
+ tickled with a straw!" Who can believe it? Ay, who dare believe it, if he
+ would escape the charge of blasphemy? Then say not that "the man Christ
+ Jesus," though standing at the top of the ladder of moral manhood, and
+ high above the common plane of humanity, was yet a God&mdash;"the Infinite
+ Ruler of the infinite universe." Who can believe that that Being, whose
+ existence stretches to an eternity beyond human conception, yea, whom "the
+ heaven of heavens cannot contain," was ever cooped up in a human body,
+ reduced so near to nothing in dimensions as to be susceptible (as was
+ Jesus) of being weighed in scales, and measured with a yardstick?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We ask again, Who, from the deepest depths of his inmost, enlightened
+ consciousness, can believe such revolting, such atheistical doctrine as
+ this? Or who will venture to descend still lower, and conceive of an
+ Almighty, Omnipresent Being, who fills all space above, around, and
+ beneath, "from infinity below to yon fixed star above," and millions upon
+ millions of miles beyond it, sinking and dwindling to that mere mite,
+ speck, or monad state and condition comprehended in the initiatory step of
+ embryonic existence? And then think of the Almighty, Omnipotent Creator of
+ the universe lying in a manger with four-footed beasts and creeping
+ things, sleeping with oxen and asses in a stable. Next he is seen an
+ urchin on the street playing with marbles and jack-knives, absorbed and
+ forgetful of the world around him. Who can believe that awfully majestic
+ Being, who is represented by his own inspired book as being so
+ transcendently grand and awe-inspiring that "no man san see him and live"
+ (Ex. xxxiii. 20), was not only daily seen by hundreds and thousands, but
+ was on such familiar terms with men, that they regarded him as their
+ companion, and equal, and even sometimes coolly reprimanded him for
+ supposed misdemeanors and errors? Could they believe this to be Almighty
+ God? Impossible! Impossible! And then who can believe that that infinite
+ Being, whom we have been taught to regard as absolutely and eternally
+ unchangeable, could become subject to hunger and thirst (as did Jesus)? Or
+ who can believe that the eternally and unceasingly watchful Omnipotent
+ Deity, whose eye, we are told, "never slumbers," could sink into
+ unconscious sleep, become "to dumb forgetfulness a prey," night after
+ night, for thirty years, oblivious, and unconscious of the world around
+ him? Think of a being of incomprehensible majesty, dignity, and power,
+ able to "shake the heavens and the earth also," being unable to protect
+ himself from insult, and was therefore derided and "spit upon," and
+ finally overcome by his enemies, as is related of Jesus. Can any man
+ believe, who has not made shipwreck of his senses, or banished Reason from
+ her courts, that God 'Almighty, who comprehends in himself the most
+ absolute and boundless perfection of goodness and wisdom, was tempted by
+ demons, devils, and crawling serpents? Who can believe that the Lord, who
+ owns "the cattle upon a thousand hills" (Psalm 1. io), and the countless
+ host of worlds besides, that wheel their course through infinite space,
+ had not "where to lay his head"? Who can believe that that was the
+ all-wise, omnipotent, and omnipresent God, possessing all power in heaven
+ above and the earth beneath, who was betrayed by weak, finite mortals?
+ What! the Almighty Creator betrayed by a puny being of his own creation
+ into the hands of his disobedient and rebellious children? Why could he
+ not, if possessing "power to lay down his life, and take it up again"
+ (John x. 17), cause that all these children of his (as we must assume they
+ were, if he was Almighty God, and hence the Father of all) should love
+ him, instead of hating him? Can any man believe that Jesus was possessed
+ with omnipotent power while standing to be whipped (scourged) by Pontius
+ Pilate, or that he possessed a power above that of finite mortals while in
+ the act of praying, with such extreme ardor that the sweat dropped from
+ his face, that the cup of death might pass from his lips, or while calling
+ for an angel to support him in the hour of his mortal dissolution? or that
+ He, "by whom all things exist," could cease himself to exist, by dying
+ upon the cross between malefactors? Think of this, reader! and think of
+ the eternal Creator, the infinite Deity, the omnipotent Jehovah, the Maker
+ of worlds as numberless as the sands upon the sea-shore for multitude,
+ fainting, bleeding, dying, and pouring out his own blood to appease his
+ own wrath; dying an ignominious death to satisfy an implacable revenge!
+ Away with such insulting mockery, such blasphemous flummery! It can only
+ find place in the dark chambers of an unenlightened mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well has Watts said of Locke's skepticism,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Reason could scarcely sustain to see,
+ Or bear the infant Deity:
+ A ransomed world, a bleeding God,
+ And heaven appeased by flowing blood,
+ Were themes too painful to be understood."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Yes, and too painful to be believed, too, Mr. Watts! Here we have a
+ "bleeding God," an "infant Deity," and a vengeful God, appeased by murder
+ and streams of "flowing blood." Gracious heavens! Whose reason does not
+ revolt at such a picture? Whose soul does not sicken at the thought, and
+ who would not prefer, infinitely prefer, to sink to annihilation, if not
+ to perdition itself, to being thus saved by navigating a river of blood??
+ Dr. South hits off some of the absurdities involved in the Christian
+ doctrine of the incarnation so forcibly and so lucidly, that we cannot
+ resist the temptation to subjoin&mdash;-here a few extracts from his
+ sermon on the subject' "But now," says this Christian clergyman, "was
+ there ever any wonder comparable to this, to behold the Lord (Jesus
+ Christ) thus clothed in flesh, the Creator of all things, humbled, not
+ only to the company, but also to the cognation, of his creatures? It is as
+ if one should imagine the whole world not only represented upon, but also
+ contained in, one of our own artificial globes, or the body of the sun
+ enveloped in a cloud as big as a man's hand, all of which would be looked
+ upon as astonishing impossibilities, and yet is as short of the other as
+ the finite is of the infinite, between which the disparity is
+ immeasurable. It is, as it were, to cancel the essential distances of
+ things, to remove the bounds of nature, to bring heaven and earth, and
+ what is more, both ends of the contradiction, together. Men cannot
+ persuade themselves that a Deity and infinity should lie within so narrow
+ a compass as the dimensions of a human body; that omnipotence,
+ omnipresence should ever be wrapped in swaddling clothes, and debased to
+ the homely usages of a stable and a manger; that the glorious Artificer of
+ the whole universe, who spread out the heaven like a curtain, and laid the
+ foundations of the earth, could ever turn carpenter, and exercise an
+ inglorious trade in a little cell. They cannot imagine that He who once
+ created and at present governs the world, and shall hereafter judge the
+ world, should be abased in all his concerns and relations, be scourged,
+ spit upon, mocked and at last crucified. All which are passages which lie
+ extremely close to the notions of conceptions which reason has made to
+ itself of that high and impossible perfection that resided in the divine
+ Creator." (Sermon, 1665.) Dr. South, it will be observed, admits that the
+ doctrine of the divine incarnation involves many palpable absurdities and
+ contradictions, and lies directly across the path of reason. Fatal
+ admission to the doctrine of the deityship of Christ, but true, as his own
+ elucidation of the subject demonstrates. To the author, since he first
+ subjected the question to a logical scrutiny, and looked at it with an
+ unbiased mind, it presents difficulties insurmountable, and absurdities
+ innumerable. He can imagine nothing more transcendently shocking,
+ revolting, and dwarfing to the mind, both morally and intellectually, than
+ the thought of believing that a being born of and suckled by a woman, and
+ possessing the mere form and dimensions of a man, can be regarded as the
+ great Almighty and Omnipotent God, the Creator of unnumbered worlds,
+ millions of which are larger than this planet, on which Jesus was born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, reader, look for a moment at some of the many childish
+ incongruities and logical difficulties this giant absurdity drags with it.
+ It represents Almighty God as coming into the world through the hands of a
+ midwife, as passing through the process of gestation and parturition. It
+ insults our reason with the idea that the great, infinite Jehovah could be
+ molded into the human form&mdash;a thought that is shocking to the moral
+ sense, and withering, cramping, and dwarfing to the intellectual mind,
+ imposing upon it a heavy drag-chain which checks its expansion, and
+ forbids its onward progress. Christians tell us that the human and the
+ divine were united in "the man Christ Jesus." But this is a monstrous
+ absurdity, which no truly rational and unbiased mind can accept for an
+ instant&mdash;that of hitching, splicing, tying, or dovetailing together
+ finite man with the infinite Jehovah, that of amalgamating and commingling
+ human foibles with divine perfection. Think of wedding mortal weakness to
+ omnipotent power, local man with the omnipresent Deity! Think of
+ compounding the creature and the Creator in one and the same being! Think
+ of the omnipresent "I AM," whose illimitable existence stretches far away
+ throughout the expansive arena of a boundless universe, occupying a
+ dwelling within the narrow confines of the human temple! As well essay to
+ crowd the universe into your pocket, or the Himalayas Mountains into a
+ thimble. On the other hand, think of a small compound of flesh, blood, and
+ bones, a few feet in dimensions, and weighing perhaps not more than one
+ hundred and fifty pounds avoirdupois, containing that infinite,
+ omnipresent Being, whom, we are told (we repeat the quotation), "the
+ heaven of heavens cannot contain"! And more than all, kind reader, I ask
+ you if you can accept for a moment, without the immolation of your common
+ sense, and the trampling of your reason beneath you feet, the monstrous
+ thought that that mighty and almighty Architect who who created the
+ countless myriads upon myriads of ponderous worlds, which now roll in
+ majestic order, and eternal rotation along the great cerulean causeway of
+ heaven, that mighty Architect who, from time beyond human computation, has
+ been rolling out orb after orb, world after world, if not myriads at a
+ time, ten thousand times, ten thousand of which would dwindle our little
+ pygmy, Lilliputian planet into insignificance, if compared with it in
+ size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I ask, and drive home the query to your inward consciousness, and the
+ inmost temples of your sacred reason:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can you believe, after a moment's reflection, that a Being who is too
+ vast, infinitely too vast in power and ubiquity to be grasped by the human
+ understanding, did become (as did the finite and humble Jesus) a helpless,
+ senseless, unconscious, human infant; a suckling, crying, squalling babe,
+ powerless of speech, and unable to walk? Ay, worse, more startling still,
+ we are shocked with the thought that this mighty World-builder, this
+ infinite, omnipotent Creator, was reduced so near to the verge of
+ nonenity, so near to the last glimmering spark or speck of existence, and
+ the world so near without a God, as to become an inanimate foetus&mdash;a
+ monad in the matrix of a human virgin? Shocking the thought! Blasphemous
+ the doctrine! Believe it who will; believe it who can! We cannot; we would
+ not; we are infinitely beyond it. Such a belief may be deposited by
+ educational tradition in the affections, but to enter the temple of
+ Reason, it never did, it never can. She never unbarred her doors to admit
+ such monstrous, such enormous incongruities. and all these logical
+ absurdities, and a thousand more, grow legitimately out of the doctrine of
+ the divine incarnation,&mdash;out of the postulate which would (following
+ in the line of the pagan superstitutions) elevate the finite, humble,
+ mortal Jesus to the throne of heaven, the exclusive prerogative of
+ Almighty God. Come away, my Christian friends, from such disparaging, such
+ dishonorable views of the Deity, such blasphemous caricatures of Almighty
+ God. Come away from such morally darkening and such intellectually
+ dwarfing superstitutions, the moldering relics of oriental mythology, the
+ expiring embers of childish credulity and tradition, which originated far
+ back in the dark cradle of human existence, in the infancy of an
+ undeveloped age, ruled by ignorance, superstition, and priestcraft. Yet
+ millions of people laying claim to sense and intelligence, even now
+ profess to believe it. Talk not to me of infidelity or blasphemy for
+ denying the divinity or Godhead of Jesus Christ. The blasphemy lies in the
+ other direction. The infidelity is with the opposite party. It is with
+ those who thus make the dignity and character of Deity the sport of
+ childish I baubles, the game of priestly tawdryism. And be assured, dear
+ friends, one and all, that coming generations will mark the man who now
+ worships "the man Christ Jesus" as being "very God" as an idolater, if not
+ a blasphemer&mdash;for worshipping a finite man for an infinite God, even
+ though the motives for such worship may be as pure as the pearly stream
+ that issues forth from the golden fount which rolls and sparkles beneath
+ the throne of Almighty God.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Note. The words Creator, Maker, &amp;c., are used from a
+ Christian standpoint Science knows no Creator.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVI. PHILOSOPHICAL ABSURDITIES OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE DIVINE
+ INCARNATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE is a philosophical principle underlying the doctrine of the Divine
+ Incarnation, whose logical deductions completely overthrow the claim of
+ Jesus of Nazareth to the Godhead, and which we regard as settling the
+ question as conclusively as any demonstrated problem in mathematics. This
+ argument is predicated upon the philosophical axiom, that two infinite
+ beings of any description of conception, cannot exist, either in whole or
+ in part, at the same time; and per consequence, it is impossible that the
+ Father and Son should both be God in a divine sense, either conjointly or
+ separately. The word infinite comprehends all; it covers the whole ground;
+ it fills the immensity of the universe, and fills it to repletion! so that
+ there is no room left for any other being to exist. And whoever and
+ whatever does exist must constitute a part of this infinite whole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, the Christian world concedes ( for it is the teaching of their
+ Scriptures), that the Father is God, always and truly, perfect, complete,
+ and absolute; that there is nothing wanting in him to constitute him God
+ in the most comprehensive and absolute sense of the term; that he is all
+ we can conceive of as constituting God, "the one only true God" (John
+ xvii. 3), and was such from all eternity, before Jesus Christ was born
+ into the world; and Paul puts the keystone into the arch by proclaiming,
+ "To us there is but one God, the Father." ( 1 Cor. viii. 6.) Hence we have
+ here a logical proposition (despite the sophistry of Christendom) as
+ impregnable as the rocks of Gibraltar, that the Father alone is or can be
+ God, which effectually shuts out every other and all other beings in the
+ universe from any participation in the Godhead with the Father. And thus
+ this parity of reasoning demonstrates that the very moment you attempt to
+ make Christ God, or any part of the Godhead, you attempt a philosophical
+ impossibility. You cannot introduce another being as God in the infinite
+ sense until the first-named infinite God is dethroned and put out of
+ existence, and this, of course, is a self-evident impossibility. It it
+ were not such, then we should have two Gods, both absolute and infinite.
+ On the other hand, if that other being (who with the Christians is Jesus
+ Christ, with the Hindoos Chrishna, with the Budhists Sakia, &amp;c. ) is
+ introduced as only a part of the infinite and perfect God, then it is
+ evident to every mind with the least philosophical perception, that some
+ change or alteration must take place in the latter before such a union can
+ be effected. But such a change, or any alteration, in a perfect infinite
+ being would at once reduce him to a changeable and finite being, and thus
+ he would cease to be God. For it is a clear philosophical and mathematical
+ axiom, that a perfect and infinite being cannot become more than infinite.
+ And if he could and should become less than infinite, he would at once
+ become finite, and thus lose all the attributes of the Godhead. To say or
+ assume, then, that Christ was God in the absolute or divine sense, and the
+ Father also God absolute, and yet that there is but one God, or that the
+ two could in any manner be united, so as to constitute but one God, is not
+ only a glaring solecism, but a positive contradiction in terms, and an
+ utter violation of the first axiomatic principles of philosophy and
+ mathematics. It also asserts the illogical hypothesis, that a part can be
+ equal to the whole; it first assumes the Father to be absolutely God, then
+ assumes the Son also to be absolutely God, and finally assumes each to be
+ only a part, and has to unite them to make whole and culminates the
+ theological farce. Such is Christian ratiocination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, it is conceded by Christians, that the Father is an omnipresent
+ being; and we have shown that it is a mathematical impossibility for two
+ omnipresent beings, or two beings possessing any infinite attributes, to
+ exist at one and the same time. Hence the clear logical deducsequence, not
+ God. Again, we have another philosophical maxim or axiom familiar to every
+ schoolboy, that no two substances or beings can occupy the same place at
+ the same time; the first must be removed before the second can by any
+ possibility be introduced, in order thus to make room for the latter. But
+ as omnipresent means existing everywhere, there can be no place to remove
+ on omnipresent being to, or rather there can be no place or space he can
+ be withdrawn from in order to make room for another being, without his
+ ceasing to be omnipresent himself, and thereby ceasing to be God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is thus shown to be a demonstrable truth that the omnipresence of the
+ Father does and must exclude that of the Son, and thus exclude the
+ possibility of his apatheosis or incarnated deityship. In other words, it
+ is established as a scientific principle upon a philosophical and
+ mathematical basis, that Jesus Christ was not and could not be "the great
+ I AM," "the only true God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will notice one other philosophical absurdity involved in the doctrine
+ of the divine incarnation&mdash;one other solecism comprehended in the
+ childish notion which invests the infinite God with finite attributes. It
+ is a well-established and well-understood axiom in philosocomplete God;
+ and thereby that the Son could not be omnipresent, and that "the less
+ cannot be made to contain the greater." A pint bottle cannot be made to
+ contain a quart of wine. For the same reason a finite body cannot contain
+ an infinite spirit. Hence philosophy presses the conclusion that "the man
+ Christ Jesus" could not have comprehended in himself "the Godhead bodily,"
+ inasmuch as it would have required the infinite God to be incorporated in
+ a finite human body. We are therefore compelled to reject the doctrine of
+ the incarnate divinity, the belief in the deityship of Jesus Christ,
+ because (with many other reasons enumerated elsewhere) it involves a
+ direct tilt against some of the plainest principles of science, and
+ challenges, ay, virtually overthrows, some of the fundamental laws of both
+ natural and moral philosophy. No philosopher, therefore, does, or can
+ believe in the absolute divinity of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVII. PHYSIOLOGICAL ABSURDITIES OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE DIVINE
+ INCARNATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE is also a physiological principle (discovered by the author)
+ comprised in the doctrine of the Divine Incarnation fatal in its practical
+ and logical application to the divinity of Jesus Christ, and all the other
+ incarnate or flesh-invested Gods of antiquity. It is evidently fraught
+ with much logical force. It is based upon the law of mental and physical
+ correspondence. As is the physical conformation, so is the mentality, is a
+ law of analogy which pilots us to nearly all our practical knowledge of
+ the natural world. A knowledge of either serves as an index to the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we observe an animal possessing that physical form and construction
+ peculiar to its species, we expect to find it practically exhibiting the
+ nature, character, disposition, and habits peculiar to that class of
+ animals. If it possesses, for example, the conformation of a sheep, we
+ infer at once that it has the disposition of a sheep, and we are never
+ disappointed in this conclusion. And when we encounter an animal with the
+ tiger form, we expect to see exhibited the tiger spirit. If it possesses
+ the well-known physical conformation of the tiger, we are never deceived
+ or misled when we assign it a predatory disposition. If it is a tiger
+ form, it is sure to be a tiger in character and habits. And so of all the
+ genera and species of animals that range upon the face of the globe. We
+ may travel through the whole field of animated nature, and observe the
+ infallible operation of this beautiful law of correspondence till we come,
+ however, to the crowning work of God, called Man. Here we find this law,
+ this beautiful chain of analogy, broken by the doctrine of the "divine
+ incarnation." God becomes a man, at least is made to exhibit every
+ external appearance of a man. All external distinction between God and man
+ is thus obliterated. So that the very first being we meet in the street or
+ on the highway possessing the form, size, and physical conformation of a
+ man, and presenting every other external appearance of being a man, may
+ nevertheless be a God. And no less is this objection practically
+ exemplified, and not less is the infraction of this beautiful law of
+ analogy observable in the case of Jesus Christ, than in the numerous other
+ incarnate Gods and demigods of antiquity. Being in appearance a man, how
+ was he to be, or how could he be, visually distinguished from a man? Or
+ how could those men who were cotemporary with him, know, as they
+ approached him, or as they approached each other, whether they were
+ meeting a man or a God? Seeing that "he was found in fashion as a man"
+ (Phil. ii. 8), either he might be mistaken for a man, or they for a God.
+ They were constantly liable to be confounded. If, then, the infinite
+ deityship was lodged in the person of Jesus Christ, it is evident that
+ that important fundamental law of nature&mdash;"as is the form, so is the
+ character"&mdash;was utterly annulled, prostrated, annihilated, and
+ banished from the world by the act. So that all was, and is henceforth and
+ forever, chaos, confusion, and uncertainty. For if the principle can be
+ violated in one instance, it may be in another, and in thousands of cases,
+ ad infinitum. If one case could be allowed to occur, the principle is
+ established, and nature's universal chain of analogy is broken and
+ destroyed; for to intercept the law is to "break the tenth and ten
+ thousandth link alike."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence it is evident that if a being resembling a man may be a God, an
+ animal resembling a cow may be a horse, and yonder stick a poisonous
+ adder; and fatal may be the consequences, in thousands of instances, in
+ judging or inferring the nature and character of an animal by its form and
+ size. A supposed innocent animal might be a deadly enemy, or vice versa.
+ Can we then believe, or dare we believe, a doctrine so atheistical in its
+ tendencies as that the Infinite Diety was incorporated in the person of
+ the meek and lowly Jesus, when it would thus set at naught, violate,
+ prostrate, and utterly cancel from the world one of God's own fundamental
+ laws, and one of the essential principles of natural science, and banish
+ forever the co-ordinate harmony of the universe, and thus inaugurate a
+ state of universal disorder, incertitude, anarchy, and misrule into the
+ otherwise beautifully law-governed, well-regulated domain of nature?
+ Certainly, most certainly not! If the incarnation of the Deity, should or
+ could take place, there should be something strikingly peculiar, ay,
+ infinitely peculiar, in his figure, size, and general appearance, in order
+ to make him susceptible of being distinguished from the human. Otherwise,
+ men would be liable to be constantly mistaking and worshiping each other
+ for the Great Almighty and Ubiquitous God, and thus constantly blundering
+ into idolatry. And we actually find several cases reported in the
+ Scriptures (mark the fact well) of men, ay, the saints themselves, being
+ led into this error; being led to commit "the high-handed sin of idolatry"
+ in consequence of their previous acceptance of the belief in a man-God&mdash;that
+ is, a God of human size and type. St. John, in two instances, was in the
+ act of worshipping a being possessing the human form, whom he mistook for
+ the omnipotent and omnipresent God. (See Rev. xix. 10, and xxii. 4.)
+ Having, perhaps, been taught that "the fullness of the Godhead dwelt
+ bodily in Christ Jesus," he probably mistook the being he met for Him, and
+ hence offered to worship him. If, then, Christ's own "inspired disciples"
+ could thus be betrayed into "the sin of idolatry" by having abolished the
+ infinite distinction between the divine and the human, we surely find here
+ a very weighty argument against such a leveling and equalizing doctrine.
+ And certainly nothing could be better calculated to promote "the sin of
+ idolatry" than thus to obliterate the broad, the infinitely grand line of
+ demarkation between the infinite God and his finite creature man. Indeed,
+ may we not here find the very origin and the cause of the now general
+ prevalence of idolatry in pagan countries? Is it not directly traceable to
+ the demolition of the broad, high, and insurmountable wall of distinction
+ which ought forever to stand between a God of infinite attributes, and a
+ being caged up in the human form? Certainly, most certainly it is. Hence
+ here I would ask, How can Christians, after subscribing to the doctrine,
+ "that the fullness of the Godhead dwelt bodily in the man Christ Jesus"
+ (as Paul very appropriately calls him), condemn the people of any age or
+ nation for worshipping as God their fellow-beings&mdash;that is, beings
+ with the human form? Certainly the man who could believe that the infinite
+ God could be comprehended or incorporated in the person of Jesus, could
+ easily be brought to believe that the Grand Lama of Thibet is a proper
+ object of divine worship. He only lacks the substitution of names.
+ Substitute the Grand Lama for that of Jesus Christ, and the thing is done.
+ And idolatry thus becomes an easily established institution, and its
+ abolition in any country an absolute moral impossibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0038" id="link2HCH0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII. A HISTORICAL VIEW OF THE DIVINITY OF JESUS CHRIST.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A MOST fatal distrust is thrown upon the miraculous portions of the
+ history of Jesus Christ, as found in his Gospel narratives, by the
+ discovery of the fact (brought to light through recent archaeological
+ researches), that the same marvelous feats, the same miraculous incidents,
+ which were recorded in his life, were long previously ingrafted into the
+ sacred biographies of Gods and demigods no less adored and worshipped as
+ beings possessing divine attributes. We shall leave the reader to account
+ for the long list of astonishing coincidences, as we proceed to
+ recapitulate and abridge from previous chapters, the almost innumerable
+ parallel incidents running through the legendary history of the many
+ demigods and sin-atoning saviors of antiquity. The historical vouchers are
+ given. We shall first direct attention to the long string of corresponding
+ events recorded in the sacred histories of ancient Hindoo Gods, as
+ compared with those of Jesus Christ at a much later period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As far back as 1200 B. C., sacred records were extant and traditions were
+ current, in the East, which taught that the heathen Savior (Chrishna) was,
+ 1st, Immaculately conceived and born of a spotless virgin, "who had never
+ known man." 2d, That the author of, or agent in, the conception, was a
+ spirit or ghost (of course a Holy Ghost). 3d, That he was threatened in
+ early infancy with death by the ruling tyrant, Cansa. 4th, That his
+ parents had, consequently, to flee with him to Gokul for safety. 5th, That
+ all the young male children under two years of age were slain by an order
+ issued by Cansa, similar to that of Herod in Judea. 6th, That angels and
+ shepherds attended his birth. 7th, That his birth and advent occurred on
+ the 25th of December. 8th, That it occurred in accordance with previous
+ prophecy. 9th, That he was presented at birth with frankincense, myrrh,
+ &amp;c. 10th, That he was saluted and worshipped as "the Savior of men,"
+ according to the report of the late Christian Missionary Huelith, That he
+ led a life of humility and practical moral usefulness. 12th, That he
+ wrought various astounding miracles, such as healing the sick, restoring
+ sight to the blind, casting out devils, raising the dead to life, &amp;c.
+ 13th, That he was finally put to death upon the cross (i. e., crucified)
+ between two thieves. 14th. After which he descended to hell, rose from the
+ dead, and ascended back to heaven "in the sight of all men," as his
+ biblical history declares. For hundreds of other similar parallels,
+ including his doctrines and precepts, see Chapter XXXII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, all these were matters of the firmest belief, more than three
+ thousand years ago, in the minds of millions of the most devout
+ worshippers that ever bowed the knee in humble prayer to the Father of
+ Mercies. The reader can draw his own deduction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then we have presented similar brief lists of parallels in Chapter
+ XXIII., comprised in a comparative view of the miraculous lives of the
+ Judean and Egyptian Saviors, Christ, Alcides, Osiris, Tulis, &amp;c. In
+ this analogous exhibition, it will be observed the Egyptian Gods are
+ reported, as remotely as 900 B. C, as performing, besides several of the
+ miraculous achievements enumerated above, other miracles equally
+ indicative of divine power, such as converting water into wine, causing
+ "rain to descend from heaven," &amp;c. And on the occasion of the
+ crucifixion of Tulis we are told "the sun became darkened and the moon
+ refused to shine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We find, also, several well-authenticated instances of raising the dead to
+ life, in works portraying the miraculous achievements of the Egyptian
+ Gods, the relation being given in such specific detail in some cases that
+ the names of the reanimated dead are furnished. Tyndarus and Hypolitus
+ were instances of this kind, both (according to Julius) having been raised
+ from the dead. Descending the line of history, until we arrive at the
+ confines of Grecian theology, we find here the same train of marvelous
+ events recorded in the histories of their virgin-born Gods, as we have
+ shown in Chapter XXXIII., such as their healing the sick and the cripples,
+ causing the blind to see, the lame to walk, the dead to be resuscitated to
+ life, &amp;c. And cases, as we have shown, are reported of their reading
+ the thoughts of their disciples, as Jesus did those of the woman of
+ Samaria. Apollonius declares he knew many Hindoo saints to perform this
+ achievement with entire strangers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Likewise Apollonius of Tyana and Simon Magus, both cotemporary with Jesus
+ Christ, we have arranged in the historic parallel (see Chapter XXXIII.),
+ with their long train of miracles, constituting an exact counterpart with
+ those related in the Gospel history of Christ, and including in
+ Apollonius's case, besides those specified in the histories of the Gods
+ above named, the miracle of transfiguration, the resurrection from the
+ dead, his visible ascent to heaven, &amp;c., while Simon Magus was very
+ expert in casting out devils, raising the dead, allaying storms, walking
+ on the sea, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But without recapitulating further, we will recite some new historic facts
+ not embraced in any of the preceding chapters of this work, and tending to
+ demonstrate still further the universal analogy of all religions, past and
+ present, in their claims for a miraculous power for their Gods and
+ incarnate Saviors. The "New York Correspondent," published in 1828,
+ furnishes us the following brief history of an ancient Chinese God, known
+ as Beddou:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All the Eastern writers agree in placing the birth of Beddou 1027 B. C.
+ The doctrines of this Deity prevailed over Japan, China, and Ceylon.
+ According to the sacred tenets of his religion, 'God is incessantly
+ rendering himself incarnate,' but his greatest and most solemn incarnation
+ was three thousand years ago, in the province of Cashmere, under the name
+ of Fot, or Beddou. He was believed to have sprung from the right
+ intercostal of a virgin of the royal blood, who, when she became a mother,
+ did not the less continue to be a virgin; that the king of the country,
+ uneasy at his birth, was desirous to put him to death, and hence caused
+ all the males that were born at the same period to be put to death, and
+ also that, being saved by shepherds, he lived in the desert to the age of
+ thirty years, at which time he opened his commission, preaching the
+ doctrines of truth, and casting out devils; that he performed a multitude
+ of the most astonishing miracles, spent his life fasting, and in the
+ severest mortifications, and at his death bequeathed to his disciples the
+ volume in which the principles of his religion are contained."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, it will be observed, are some very striking counterparts to the
+ miraculous incidents found related in the Gospel history of Jesus Christ.
+ And no less analogous is the no less well-authenticated story of
+ Quexalcote of Mexico, which the Rev. Mr. Maurice concedes to be, and Lord
+ Kingsborough and Niebuhr (in his history of Rome) prove to be much older
+ than the Gospel account of Jesus Christ According to Maurice's "Ind.
+ Ant.," Humboldt's "Researches in Mexico," Lord Kingsbor-ough's "Mexican
+ Ant.," and other works, the incarnate God Quexalcote was born (about 300
+ B. C.) of a spotless virgin, by the name Chimalman, and led a life of the
+ deepest humility and piety; retired to a wilderness, fasted forty days,
+ was worshipped as a God, and was finally crucified between two thieves;
+ after which he was buried and descended into hell, but rose again the
+ third day. The following is a part of Lord Kingsborough's testimony in the
+ case: "The temptation of Quexalcote, the fast of forty days ordained by
+ the Mexican ritual, the cup with which he was presented to drink (on the
+ cross), the reed which was his sign, the 'Morning Star,' which he is
+ designated, the 'Teoteepall, or Divine Stone,' which was laid on his
+ altar, and which was likewise an object of adoration,&mdash;all these
+ circumstances, connected with many others relating to Quexalcote of
+ Mexico, but which are here omitted, are very curious and mysterious."
+ (Vol. vi. p. 237, Mexican Ant.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again "Quexalcote is represented, in the painting of Codex Borgianus, as
+ nailed to the cross." (See Mex. Ant. vol. vi. p. 166.) One plate in this
+ work represents him as being crucified in the heavens, one as being
+ crucified between two thieves. Sometimes he is represented as being nailed
+ to the cross, and sometimes as hanging with the cross in his hands. The
+ same work speaks of his burial, descent into hell, and his resurrection;
+ while the account of his immaculate conception and miraculous birth are
+ found in a work called "Codex Vaticanus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other parallel incidents could be cited, if we had space for them,
+ appertaining to the history of this Mexican God. And parallels might also
+ be constructed upon the histories of other ancient Gods,&mdash;as that of
+ Sakia of India, Salivahana of Bermuda, Hesus, or Eros, of the Celtic
+ Druids, Mithra of Persia, Hil and Feta of the Mandaites, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we will close with the testimony of a French philosopher (Bagin) on
+ the subject of deific incarnations. This writer says, "The most ancient
+ histories are those of Gods who became incarnate in order to govern
+ mankind. All those fables are the same in spirit, and sprang up everywhere
+ from confused ideas, which have universally prevailed among mankind,&mdash;that
+ Gods formerly descended upon earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, we ask the Christian reader,&mdash;and it will be the first query of
+ every man whose religious faith has not made shipwreck of his reason,&mdash;"What
+ does all this mean? How are you going to sustain the declaration that
+ Jesus Christ was the only son and sent of God, in view of these historic
+ facts? Where are the superior credentials of his claim? How will you prove
+ his apparently legendary history (that is, the miraculous portion of his
+ history) to be real, and the others false?" We boldly aver it cannot be
+ done. Please answer these questions, or relinquish your doctrine of the
+ divinity of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIX. THE SCRIPTURAL VIEW OF CHRIST'S DIVINITY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE monstrous scientific paradox (as coming ages will regard it)
+ comprehended in the conception of an almighty, omnipresent, and infinite
+ Being, "the Creator of innumerable worlds," ("by him [Christ] were all
+ things made that were made," John i. 3-10), being born of a frail and
+ finite woman, as taught by both the oriental and Christian religion, is so
+ exceedingly shocking to every rational mind, which has not been sadly
+ warped, perverted, and coerced into the belief by early psychological
+ influence, that we would naturally presume that those who, on the
+ assumption of the remotest possibility of its truth, should venture to put
+ forth a doctrine so glaringly unreasonable and so obviously untenable,
+ would of course vindicate it and establish it by the strongest arguments
+ and by the most unassailable and most irrefragable proofs; and that in
+ setting forth a doctrine so manifestly at war with every law and analogy
+ of nature and every principle of science, no language should have been
+ used, nor the slightest admission made, that could possibly lead to the
+ slightest degree of suspicion that the original authors and propagators of
+ this doctrine had either any doubt of the truth of the doctrine
+ themselves, or were wanting in the most ample, the most abundant proof to
+ sustain it. No language, no text, not a word, not a syllable should have
+ been used making the most remote concession damaging to the validity of
+ the doctrine, so that not "the shadow of a shade of doubt" could be left
+ on any mind of its truth. Omnipotent indeed should be the logic, and
+ irresistible the proof, in support of a thesis or a doctrine which so
+ squarely confronts and contradicts all the observation, all the
+ experience, the whole range of scientific knowledge, and the common sense
+ of mankind. How startling then, to every devout and honest professor of
+ the Christian faith ought to be the recent discovery of the fact, that the
+ great majority of the texts having any bearing upon the doctrine of the
+ divinity of Jesus Christ,&mdash;a large majority of the passages in the
+ very book on which the doctrine is predicated, and which is acknowledged
+ as the sole warranty for such a belief,&mdash;are actually at variance
+ with the doctrine, and actually amount to its virtual denial and
+ overthrow. For we find, upon a critical examination of the matter, that at
+ least three-fourths of the texts, both in the Gospels and Epistles, which
+ relate to the divinity of Christ, specifically or by implication either
+ teach a different and a contrary doctrine, or make concessions entirely
+ fatal to it, by investing him with finite human qualities utterly
+ incompatible with the character and attributes of a divine or infinite
+ Being. How strange, then, how superlatively strange, that millions should
+ yet hold to such a strange "freak of nature," such a dark relic of
+ oriental heathenism, such a monstrously foolish and childish superstition,
+ as that which teaches the infinite Creator and "Upholder of the universe"
+ could be reduced so near to nonentity, as was required to pass through the
+ ordinary stages of human generation, human birth, and human parturition,
+ &mdash;a puerile notion which reason, science, nature, philosophy, and
+ common sense, proclaim to be supremely absurd and self-evidently
+ impossible, and which even the Scriptures fail to sustain,&mdash;a
+ logical, scriptural exposition, of which we will here present a brief
+ summary:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The essential attributes of a self-existing God and Creator, and
+ "Upholder of all things." are infinitude, omnipotence, omniscience, and
+ omnipresence, and any being not possessing all these attributes to
+ repletion, or possessing any quality or characteristic in the slightest
+ degree incompatible with any one of these attributes, cannot be a God in a
+ divine sense, but must of necessity be a frail, fallible, finite being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Jesus Christ disclaims, hundreds of times over, directly or impliedly,
+ the inherent possession of any one of these divine attributes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. His evangelical biographers have invested him with the entire category
+ of human qualities and characteristics, each one of which is entirely
+ unbefitting a God, and taken together are the only distinguishing
+ characteristics by which we can know a man from a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Furthermore, there issued from his own mouth various sayings and
+ concessions most fatal to the conception of his being a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. His devout biographers have reported various actions and movements in
+ his practical life which we are compelled to regard as absolutely
+ irreconcilable with the infinite majesty, lofty character, and supreme
+ attributes of an almighty Being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. These human qualities were so obvious to all who saw him and all who
+ became acquainted with him, that doubts sprang up among his own immediate
+ followers, which ultimately matured into an open avowal of disbelief in
+ his divinity in that early age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. Upon the axiomatical principles of philosophy it is an utter and
+ absolute impossibility to unite in repletion the divine and the human in
+ the same being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. And then Christ had a human birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. He was constituted in part, like human beings, of flesh and blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. He became, on certain occasions, "an hungered," like finite beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. He also became thirsty (John xix. 28), like perishable mortals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. He often slept, like mortals, and thus became "to dumb forgetfulness a
+ prey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. He sometimes became weary, like human beings. (See John iv. 6.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. He was occasionally tempted, like fallible mortals. (Matt. iv. 1.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. His "soul became exceeding sorrowful," as a frail, finite being.
+ (Matt. xxvi. 38.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. He disclosed the weakness of human passion by weeping. (John xi. 35.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. He was originally an imperfect being, "made perfect through
+ suffering." (Heb. ii. 10.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. He "increased in wisdom and stature" (Luke ii. 52); therefore he must
+ have possessed finite, changeable, mortal attributes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. And he finally died and was buried, like all perishable mortals. He
+ could not possibly, from these considerations, have been a God. It is
+ utterly impracticable to associate with or comprehend, in a God of
+ infinite powers and infinite attributes, all or any of these finite human
+ qualities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. Dark, intellectually dark, indeed, must be that mind, and sunk,
+ sorrowfully sunk in superstition, that can worship a being as the great
+ omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent "I AM," who possessed all those
+ qualities which were constitutionally characteristic of the pious, the
+ noble, the devout, the Godlike, yet finite and fallible Jesus, according
+ to his own admissions and the representations of his own interested
+ biographers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. The only step which the disciples of the Christian faith have made
+ toward disproving or setting aside these arguments, objections, and
+ difficulties, is that of assigning the incarnate Jesus a double or twofold
+ nature&mdash;the amalgamation of the human and divine; a postulate and a
+ groundless assumption, which we have proved and demonstrated by thirteen
+ arguments, which we believe to be unanswerable, is not only absurd,
+ illogical, and impossible, but foolish and ludicrous in the highest
+ degree. (See vol. ii.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. This senseless hypothesis, and every other assumption and argument
+ made use of by the professors of the Christian faith to vindicate their
+ favorite dogma of the divinity of Jesus, we have shown to be equally
+ applicable to the demigods of the ancient heathen, more than twenty of
+ whom were invested with the same combination of human and divine qualities
+ which the followers and worshippers of Jesus claim for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. Testimony of the Father against the divinity of the Son. The Father
+ utterly precludes the Son from any participation in the divine essence, or
+ any claim in the Godhead, by such declarations as the following: "I am
+ Jehovah, and beside me there is no Savior." (Isaiah xliii. 11.) How, then,
+ we would ask, can Jesus Christ be the Savior? "I, Jehovah, am thy Savior
+ and thy Redeemer." Then Christ can be neither the Savior nor Redeemer.
+ "There is no God else beside me, a just God and a Savior; there is none
+ beside me." (Isaiah xiv. 21.) So the Father virtually declares, according
+ to "the inspired prophet Isaiah," that the Son, in a divine sense, cannot
+ be either God, Savior, or Redeemer. Again, "I am Jehovah, thy God, and
+ thou shalt not acknowledge a God beside me." (Hosea xiii. 4.) Here Christ
+ is not only by implication cut off from the Godhead, but positively
+ prohibited from being worshipped as God. And thus the testimony of the
+ Father disproves and sets aside the divinity of the Son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. Testimony of the mother. When Mary found, after a long search, her son
+ Jesus in the temple, disputing with the doctors, and chided or reproved
+ him for staying from home without the consent of his parents, and
+ declared, "thy father and I sought thee, sorrowing" (Luke ii. 48), she
+ proclaimed a twofold denial of his divinity. In the first place it cannot
+ be possible that she regarded her son Jesus as "that awful Being, before
+ whom e'en the devout saints bow in trembling fear," when she used such
+ language and evinced such a spirit as she did. "Why hast thou thus dealt
+ with us?" (Luke ii. 48) is her chiding language. And then, when she speaks
+ of Joseph as his father, "thy father and I," she issues a declaration
+ against his divinity which ought to be regarded as settling the question
+ forever. For who could know better than the mother, or rather, who could
+ know but the mother, who the father of the child Jesus was? And as she
+ acknowledges it was Joseph, she thus repudiates the story of the
+ immaculate conception, which constitutes the whole basis for the claim of
+ his divinity. Hence the testimony of the mother, also, disproves his title
+ to the Godhead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Testimony or disclaimer of the Son. We will show by a specific
+ citation of twenty-five texts that there is not one attribute comprehended
+ in or peculiar to a divine and infinite Being, but that Christ rejects as
+ applicable to himself&mdash;that he most conclusively disclaims every
+ attribute of a divine Being, both by precept and practice, and often in
+ the most explicit language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. By declaring, "The Son can do nothing of himself" (John v. 19), he
+ most emphatically disclaims the attribute of omnipotence. For an
+ omnipotent Being can need no aid, and can accept of none.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. When he acknowledged and avowed his ignorance of the day of judgment,
+ which must be presumed to be the most important event in the world's
+ history, he disclaimed the attribute of omniscience. "Of that day and hour
+ knoweth no man, neither the Son, but the Father only." (Matt. xxiv. 36.)
+ Now, as an omniscient Being must possess all knowledge, his avowed
+ ignorance in this case is a confession he was not omniscient, and hence
+ not a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. And when he declares, "I am glad for your sakes I was not there" (at
+ the grave of Lazarus), he most distinctly disavows being omnipresent, and
+ thus denies to himself another essential attribute of an infinite God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. And the emphatic declaration, "I live by the Father" (John vi. 57), is
+ a direct disclaimer of the attributes of self-existence; as a being who
+ lives by another cannot be self-existent, and, per consequence, not the
+ infinite God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30 He disclaims possessing infinite goodness, another essential attribute
+ of a supreme divine Being. "Why callest thou me good? there is none good
+ but one, that is God." (Mark x. 18.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. He disclaim divine honors, and directed them to the father. "I honor
+ my Father." (John viii. 49.) "I receive not honor from men." (John v. 41.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. He recommended supreme worship to the Father, and not to himself. "The
+ true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth." (John
+ iv. 21.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. He ascribed supreme dominion to the Father. "Thine is the kingdom, and
+ the power, and the glory forever." (Matt. vi. 13.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. It will be seen, from the foregoing text, that Christ also
+ acknowledges that the kingdom is the Father's. A God without a kingdom
+ would be a ludicrous state of things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 35. He conceded supreme authority to the Father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My doctrine is not mine, but his that sent me." (John vii. 16.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 36. He considered the Father as the supreme protector and preserver of
+ even his own disciples. "I pray that thou shouldst keep them from the
+ evil." (John xvii. 15.) What, omnipotence not able to protect his own
+ disciples?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 37. In fine, he humbly acknowledged that his power, his will, his
+ ministry, his mission, his authority, his works, his knowledge, and his
+ very life, were all from, and belonged to and were under the control of,
+ the Father. "I can do nothing of myself;" "I came to do the will of him
+ that sent me." "The Father that dwelleth within me, he doeth the work,"
+ &amp;c. "A God within a God," is an old pagan Otaheitan doctrine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 38. He declared that even spiritual communion was the work of the Father.
+ (See John vi. 45.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 39. He acknowledged himself controlled by the Father. (See John v. 30.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 40. He acknowledged his entire helplessness and dependence on the Father.
+ "The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do."
+ (John v. 19.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 41. He acknowledged that even his body was the work of his Father; in
+ other words, that he was dependent on his Father for his physical life.
+ (See Heb. xvi. 5.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42. And more than all, he not only called the Father "the only true God"
+ (John xvii. 3), but calls him "my Father and my God." (John xx. 17.) Now,
+ it would be superlative nonsense to consider a being himself a God, or the
+ God, who could use such language as is here ascribed to the humble Jesus.
+ This text, this language, is sufficient of itself to show that Christ
+ could not have laid any claim to the Godhead on any occasion, unless we
+ degrade him to the charge of the most palpable and shameful contradiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 43. He uniformly directed his disciples to pray, not to him, but the
+ Father. (See Matt. vi. 6.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44. On one occasion, as we have cited the proof (in Matt. xi. 11), he even
+ acknowledged John the Baptist to be greater than he; while it must be
+ patent to every reader that no man could be greater than the almighty,
+ supreme Potentate of heaven and earth, in any sense whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 45. Testimony of the disciples. Another remarkable proof of the human
+ sireship of Jesus is, that one of his own disciples&mdash;ay, one of the
+ chosen twelve, selected by him as being endowed with a perfect knowledge
+ of his character, mission, and origin&mdash;this witness, thus posted and
+ thus authorized, proclaims, in unequivocal language, that Jesus was the
+ son of Joseph. Hear the language of Philip addressed to Nathanael. "We
+ have found him of whom Moses, in the law and the prophets, did write&mdash;Jesus
+ of Nazareth, the son of Joseph." (John i. 45.) No language could be more
+ explicit, no declaration more positive, that Jesus was the son of Joseph.
+ And no higher authority could be adduced to settle the question, coming as
+ it does from "headquarters." And what will, or what can, the devout
+ stickler for the divinely paternal origin of Jesus Christ do with such
+ testimony? It is a clincher which no sophistry can set aside, no reasoning
+ can grapple with, and no logic overthrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 46. His disciples, instead of representing him as being "the only true
+ God," often speak of him in contradistinction to God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 47. They never speak of him as the God Christ Jesus, but as "the man
+ Christ Jesus." ( 1 Tim. ii. 5.) "Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved of
+ God." (Acts ii. 23.) It would certainly be blasphemy to speak of the
+ Supreme Being as "a man approved of God." Christian reader, reflect upon
+ this text. "By that man whom he (die Father) hath ordained" (Acts xvii.
+ 3), by the assumption of the Godhead of Christ, we would be presented with
+ the double or twofold solecism, 1st. Of God being "ordained" by another
+ God; and 2d. That of his being blasphemously called a "man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 48. Paul's declaration has been cited, that "unto us there is but one God&mdash;the
+ Father." ( 1 Cor. iv. 8. ) Now, it is plain to common sense, that if there
+ is but one God, and that God is comprehended in the Father, then Christ is
+ entirely excluded from the Godhead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 49. If John's declaration be true, that "no man hath seen God at any time"
+ (John iv. 12), then the important question arises, How could Christ be
+ God, as he was seen by thousands of men, and seen hundreds of times?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 50. God the Father is declared to be the "One," "the Holy One," "the only
+ One," &amp;c., more than one hundred times, as if purposely to exclude the
+ participation of any other being in the Godhead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 51. This one, this only God, is shown to be the Father alone in more than
+ four thousand texts, thirteen hundred and twenty-six of which are found in
+ the New Testament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 52. More than fifty texts have been found which declare, either explicitly
+ or by implication, that God the Father has no equal, which effectually
+ denies or shuts out the divine equality of the Son. "To whom will ye liken
+ me, or shall I be equal with, saith the holy One." (Isaiah xl. 25.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 53. Christ in the New Testament is called "man," and "the Son of man,"
+ eighty-four times,&mdash;egregious and dishonorable misnomers, most
+ certainly, to apply to a supreme and infinite Deity. On the other hand, he
+ is called God but three times, and denominates himself "the Son of God"
+ but once, and that rather obscurely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 54. The Father is spoken of, in several instances, as standing in the
+ relation of God to the Son, as "the God of our Lord Jesus Christ" (Acts
+ iii. 2.) "Ye are Christ's, and Christ is Gods." (i Cor. xi. 3.) Now, the
+ God of a God is a polytheistic, heathen conception; and 1 no meaning or
+ interpretation, as we have shown, can be I forced upon such texts as
+ these, that will not admit a plurality of Gods, if we admit the titles as
+ applicable to Christ, or that his scriptural biographers intend to apply
+ such a title in a superior or supreme sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 55. Many texts make Christ the mere tool, agent, image, servant, or
+ representative of God, as Christ, "the image of God" (Heb. i. 3), Christ,
+ the appointed of God (Heb. iii. 1), Christ, "the servant of God" (Matt.
+ xii. | 18), &amp;c. To consider a being thus spoken of as himself the
+ supreme God, is, as we have demonstrated, the very climax of absurdity and
+ nonsense. To believe "the servant of God" is God himself,&mdash;that is,
+ the servant of himself,&mdash;and that God and his "image" are the same,
+ is to descend within one step of buffoonery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 56. And then it has been ascertained that there are more than three
+ hundred texts which declare, either expressly or by implication, Christ's
+ subordination to and dependence on the Father, as, "I can do nothing of
+ myself;" "Not mine, but his that sent me;" "I came to do the will of him
+ that sent me" (John iv. 34); "I seek the will of my Father," &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 57. And more than one hundred and fifty texts make the Son inferior to the
+ Father, as "the Son knoweth not, but the Father does" (Mark viii. 32); "My
+ Father is greater than I;" "The Son can do nothing of himself" (John v.
+ 19), &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 58. There are many divine titles applied to the Father which are never
+ used in reference to the Son, as "Jehovah," "The Most High," "God
+ Almighty," "The Almighty," &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, those few divine epithets or titles which are used in
+ application to Jesus Christ, as Lord, God, Savior, Redeemer, Intercessor,
+ &amp;c., it has been shown were all used prior to the birth of Christ, in
+ application to beings known and acknowledged to be men, and some of them
+ are found so applied in the bible itself; as, for example, Moses is called
+ a God in two instances, as we have shown, and cited the proof (in Ex. iv.
+ 16, vii. 1), while the title of Lord is applied to men at this day, even
+ in Christian countries. And instances have been cited in the bible of the
+ term Savior being applied to men, both in the singular and plural numbers.
+ (See 2 Kings xiii. 5, and Neh. ix. 27.) Seeing, then, that the most
+ important divine titles which the writers of the New Testament have
+ applied to Jesus were previously used in application to men, known and
+ admitted to be such, it is therefore at once evident that those titles do
+ nothing toward proving him to be the Great Divine Being, as the modern
+ Christian world assume him to be, even if we base the argument wholly on
+ scriptural grounds. While, on the other hand, we have demonstrated it to
+ be an absolute impossibility to apply with any propriety or any sense to a
+ divine infinite omnipotent Being those finite human qualities which are so
+ frequently used with reference to Jesus throughout the New Testament. And
+ hence, even if we should suppose or concede that the writers of the New
+ Testament did really believe him to be the great Infinite Spirit, or the
+ almighty, omnipotent God,'we must conclude they were mistaken, from their
+ own language, from their own description of him, as well as his own
+ virtual denial and rejection of such a claim, when he applied to himself,
+ as he did in nine cases out of ten, strictly finite human qualities and
+ human titles (as we have shown), wholly incompatible with the character of
+ an infinite divine Being. We say, from the foregoing considerations, if
+ the primitive disciples of Jesus did really believe him to be the great
+ Infinite, both their descriptions of him and his description or
+ representation of himself, would amply and most conclusively prove that
+ they were mistaken. At least we are compelled to admit that there is
+ either an error in applying divine titles to Jesus, or often an error in
+ describing his qualities and powers, by himself and his original
+ followers, as there is no compatibility or agreement between the two.
+ Divine titles to such a being as they represent him to be, would be an
+ egregious misnomer. We say, then, that it must be clearly and conclusively
+ evident to every unbiased mind, from evidence furnished by the bible
+ itself, that if the divine titles applied to Jesus were intended to have a
+ divine significance, then they are misapplied. Yet we would not here
+ conclude an intentional misrepresentation in the case, but simply a
+ mistake growing out of a misconception, and the very limited childish
+ conception, of the nature, character, and attributes of the "great
+ positive Mind," so universally prevalent in that semi-barbarous age, and
+ the apparently total ignorance of the distinguishing characteristics which
+ separate the divine and the human. We will illustrate: some children, on
+ passing through a wild portion of the State of Maine recently, reported
+ they encountered a bear; and to prove they could not be mistaken in the
+ animal, they described it as being a tall, slight-built animal, with long
+ slender legs, of yellowish auburn hue, a short, white, bushy tail, cloven
+ feet, large branchy horns, &amp;c. Now, it will be seen at once that,
+ while their description of the animal is evidently in the main correct,
+ they had simply mistaken a deer for a bear, and hence misnamed the animal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In like manner we must conclude, from the repeated instances in which
+ Christ's biographers have ascribed to him all the foibles, frailties, and
+ finite qualities and characteristics of a human being, that if they have
+ in any instance called him a God in a divine sense, it is an egregious
+ misnomer. Their description of him makes him a man, and but a man,
+ whatever may have been their opinion with respect to the propriety of
+ calling him a God. And if the two do not harmonize, the former must rule
+ the judgment in all cases. The truth is, the Jewish founders of
+ Christianity entertained such a low, narrow, contracted, and mean opinion
+ of Deity and the infinite distinction and distance between the divine and
+ the human, that their theology reduced him to a level with man; and hence
+ they usually described him as a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0040" id="link2HCH0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XL. A METONYMIC VIEW OF THE DIVINITY OF JESUS CHRIST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IF Jesus Christ were truly God, or if there existed such a co-equal and
+ co-essential oneness between the Father and the Son that they constituted
+ but one being or divine essence, then what is true of one is true of the
+ other, and a change of names and titles from one to the other cannot alter
+ the sense of the text. Let us, then, substitute the titles found applied
+ to the Son in the New Testament, to the Father, and observe the effect:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Son is greater than I." (John vii. 28.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God can do nothing of himself." (John v. 19.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must be about my Son's business." (Luke ii. 49.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The kingdom of heaven is not mine to give, but the Son's." (Matt. xx.
+ 23.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am come in my Son's name, and ye receive me not" (John v. 43.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God cried, Jesus, why hast thou forsaken me?" (Matt. xiii. 28.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No man hath seen Jesus at any time." (1 John i. 5-)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jesus created all things by his Son." (Eph. iii. 9.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God sat down (in heaven) at the right hand of Jesus." (Luke xxii. 69.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is one Jesus, one mediator between Jesus and men." (Gal. iii. 20.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jesus gave his only begotten Father." (1 John iv. 9)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God knows not the hour, but Jesus does." (Mark viii. 32.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God is the servant of Jesus." (Mark xii. 18.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God is ordained by Jesus." (Acts xvii. 31.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The head of God is Christ." (Eph. i. 3.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have an advocate with Jesus, God the righteous." (1 John ii. 1.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jesus gave all power to God." (Matt, xxviii. 18.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God abode all night in prayer to Jesus." (Luke vi. 12.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God came down from heaven to do the will of Jesus." (John vi. 38.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jesus has made the Father his high priest." (Heb. x. 24.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Last of all, the Son sent the Father." (Matt. xxi. 39.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jesus will save the world by that God whom he hath ordained."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jesus is God of the Father." (John xx. 17.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jesus hath exalted God, and given him a more excellent name." (Phil. ii.
+ 9.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jesus hath made God a little lower than the angels." (Heb. ii. 9.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God can do nothing except what he seeth Jesus do." (John v. 19.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, the question arises, Is the above representation a true one? Most
+ certainly it must be, if Jesus and the Father are but one almighty Being.
+ A change of names and titles cannot alter the truth nor the sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To say that Chief Justice Chase has gone south; Secretary Chase has gone
+ south; Governor Chase has gone south; Ex-Senator Chase has gone south, or
+ Salmon P. Chase has gone south, are affirmations equally true and equally
+ sensible, because they all have reference to the same being; the case is
+ to plain to need argument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above reversal of names and titles of Jesus and the Father may sound
+ very unpleasant and rather grating to Christ-adoring Christians, simply
+ because it is the transposition of the tides of two very scripturally
+ dissimilar beings, instead of being, as generally taught by orthodox
+ Christians, "one in essence, one in mind, one in body or being, and one in
+ name," as the Rev. Mr. Barnes affirms. Most self-evidently false is his
+ statement, based solely on scriptural ground. If Jesus is "very God," and
+ there is but one God, then the foregoing transposition cannot mar the
+ sense nor altar the truth of one text quoted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0041" id="link2HCH0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLI. THE PRECEPTS AND PRACTICAL LIFE OF JESUS CHRIST; HIS TWO
+ HUNDRED ERRORS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE exaltation of men to the character and homage of divine beings has
+ always had the effect to draw a vail over their errors and imperfections,
+ so as to render them imperceptible to those who worship them as Gods. This
+ is true of nearly all the deified men of antiquity, who were adored as
+ incarnate divinities, among which may be included the Christian's man-God,
+ Jesus Christ. The practice of the followers of these Gods has been, when
+ an error was pointed out in their teachings, brought to light by the
+ progress of science and general intelligence, to bestow upon the text some
+ new and unwarranted meaning, entirely incompatible with its literal
+ reading, or else to insist with a godly zeal on the correctness of the
+ sentiment inculcated by the text, and thus essay to make error pass for
+ truth. In this way millions of the disciples of' these Gods have been
+ misled and blinded, and made to believe by their religious teachers and
+ their religious education, that everything taught by their assumed-to-be
+ divine exemplars is perfect truth, in perfect harmony with science, sense,
+ and true morals. Indeed, the perversion of the mind and judgment by a
+ religious education has been in many cases carried to such an extreme as
+ to cause their devout and prejudiced followers either to entirely overlook
+ and ignore their erroneous teachings, or to magnify them into God-given
+ truths, and thus, as before stated, clothe error with the livery of truth.
+ This state of things, it has long been noticed by unprejudiced minds,
+ exists amongst the millions of professed believers in the divinity of
+ Jesus Christ. Hence the errors, both in his moral lessons and his
+ practical life, have passed from age to age unnoticed, because his pious
+ and awe-stricken followers, having been taught that he was a divine
+ teacher, have assumed that his teachings must all be true; and hence, too,
+ have instituted no scrutiny to determine their truth or falsity. But we
+ will now proceed to show that the progress of' science and general
+ intelligence has brought to light many errors, not only in his teachings,
+ but in his practical life also. In enumerating them, we will arrange them
+ under the head
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MORAL AND RELIGIOUS ERRORS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The first moral precept in the teachings of Christ, which we will bring
+ to notice, is one of a numerous class, which may very properly be arranged
+ under the head of Moral Extremism. We find many of his admonitions of this
+ character. Nearly everything that is said is oversaid, carried to extremes&mdash;thus
+ constituting an overwrought, extravagant system of morality, impracticable
+ in its requisitions; as, for example, "Take no thought for the morrow."
+ (Matt, v.) If the spirit of this injunction were carried out in practical
+ life, there would be no grain sown and no seed planted in spring, no
+ reaping done in harvest, and no crop garnered in autumn; and the result
+ would be universal starvation in less than twelve months. But, fortunately
+ for society, the Christian world have laid this positive injunction upon
+ the table under the rule of "indefinite postponement."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Christ's assumed-to-be most important requisition is found in the
+ injunction, "Seek ye first the Kingdom of God, and his righteousness, and
+ all else shall be added unto you." (Matt. vi. 33.) His early followers
+ understood by this injunction, and doubtless understood it correctly, that
+ they were to spend their lives in religious devotion, and neglect the
+ practical duties of life, leaving "Providence" to take care of their
+ families&mdash;a course of life which reduced many of them to the point of
+ starvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The disciple of Christ is required, "when smitten on one cheek," to
+ turn the other also that is, when one cheek is pommeled into a jelly by
+ some vile miscreant or drunken wretch, turn the other, to be smashed up in
+ like manner. This is an extravagant requisition, which none of his modern
+ disciples even attempt to observe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. "Resist not evil" (Matt. v. 34) breathes forth a kindred spirit. This
+ injunction requires you to stand with your hands in your pocket while
+ being maltreated so cruelly and unmercifully that the forfeiture of your
+ life may be the consequence&mdash;at least Christ's early followers so
+ understood it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. The disciple of Christ is required, when his cloak is formally wrested
+ from him, to give up his coat also. (See Matt, v.) And to carry out the
+ principle, if the marauder demands it, he must next give up his boots,
+ then his shirt, and thus strip himself of all his garments, and go naked.
+ This looks like an invitation and bribe to robbery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. "Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth." (Matt. vi. 19.) This is
+ another positive command of Christ, which the modern Christian world, by
+ common consent, have laid on the table under the rule of "indefinite
+ postponement," under the conviction that the wants of their families and
+ the exigencies of sickness and old age cannot be served if they should
+ live up to such an injunction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. "Sell all that thou hast,... and come and follow me," is another
+ command which bespeaks more piety than wisdom, as all who have attempted
+ to comply with it have reduced their families to beggary and want.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. "If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him." Then
+ he must hate it, as there are but the two principles, and "from hate
+ proceed envy, strife, evil surmisings, and persecution." Evidently the
+ remedy in this case for "worldly-mindedness" is worse than the disease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. "He that cometh to me, and hateth not father, mother, brother, and
+ sister, &amp;c., cannot be my disciple." (Luke xiv. 26). This breathes
+ forth the same spirit as the last text quoted above. Many learned
+ expositions have been penned by Christian writers to make it appear, that
+ hate in this case does not mean hate. But certainly it would be a slander
+ upon infinite wisdom to leave it to be inferred that he could not say or
+ "inspire" his disciples to say exactly what he meant, and to say it so
+ plainly as to leave no possibility of being misunderstood, or leave any
+ ground for dispute about the meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. "Rejoice and be exceeding glad" when persecuted. (Matt. v. 4.) Now, as
+ a state of rejoicing is the highest condition of happiness that can be
+ realized, such advice must naturally prompt the religious zealot to court
+ persecution, in order to obtain complete happiness, and consequently to
+ pursue a dare-devil life to provoke persecution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. "Whosoever shall seek to save his life, shall lose it," &amp;c. (Luke
+ xvii. 33.) Here is displayed the spirit of martyrdom which has made
+ millions reckless of life, and goaded on the frenzied bigot to seek the
+ fiery fagot and the halter. We regard it as another display of religious
+ fanaticism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. "Ye shall be hated of all men for my name's sake." (Matt. x. 12.) How
+ repulsive must have been their doctrines or their conduct! No sensible
+ religion could excite the universal hatred of mankind. For it would
+ contain something adapted to the moral, religious, or spiritual taste of
+ some class or portion of society, and hence make it and its disciples
+ loved instead of hated. And then how could they be "hated of all men,"
+ when not one man in a thousand ever heard of them? Here is more of the
+ extravagance of religious enthusiasm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. "Shake off the dust of your feet" against those who cannot see the
+ truth or utility of your doctrines. (Matt. x. 14.) Here Christ encourages
+ in his disciples a spirit of contempt for the opinions of others
+ calculated to make them "hated." A proper regard for the rules of
+ good-breeding would have forbidden such rudeness toward strangers for a
+ mere honest difference of opinion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. "Take nothing for your journey, neither staff, nor scrip, nor purse"
+ (Mark vi. 8); that is "sponge on your friends, and force yourselves on
+ your enemies," the latter class of which seem to have been much the most
+ numerous. A preacher who should attempt to carry out this advice at the
+ present day would be stopped at the first toll-gate, and compelled to
+ return. Here is more violation of the rules of good-breeding, and the
+ common courtesies of civilized life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. "Go and teach all nations," &amp;c. Why issue an injunction that could
+ not possibly be carried out? It never has been, and never will be,
+ executed, for three-fourths of the human race have never yet heard of
+ Christianity. It was not, therefore, a mark of wisdom, or a superior mind,
+ to issue such an injunction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. "And he that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that
+ believeth not shall be damned." What intolerance, bigotry, relentless
+ cruelty, and ignorance of the science of mind are here displayed! No
+ philosopher would give utterance to, or indorse such a sentiment. It
+ assumes that belief is a creature of the will, and that a man can believe
+ anything he chooses, which is wide of the truth. And the assumption has
+ been followed by persecution, misery, and bloodshed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. "All things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall
+ receive." (Matt. xxi. 22.) Here is an entire negation of natural law in
+ the necessity of physical labor as a means to procure the comforts of
+ life. When anything is wanted in the shape of food or raiment, it is to be
+ obtained, according to this text, by going down on your knees and asking
+ God to bestow it. But no Christian ever realized "all things whatsoever
+ asked for in prayer," thought "believing with all his heart" he should
+ obtain it. The author knows, by his own practical experience, that this
+ declaration is not true. This promise has been falsified thousands of
+ times by thousands of praying Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. "Be not called rabbi." "Call no man your father." (Matt, xxiii.) The
+ Christian world assume that much of what Christ taught is mere idle
+ nonsense, or the incoherent utterings of a religious fanatic; for they pay
+ no more practical attention to it than the barking of a dog. And here is
+ one command treated in this manner: "Call no man father." Where is the
+ Christian who refuses to call his earthly sire a father?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. "Call no man master." (Matt, xxiii.) And yet mister, which is the same
+ thing, is the most common title in Christendom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. He who enunciates the two words, "'Thou fool.' shall be in danger of
+ hell fire." (Matt, xxii.) Mercy! Who, then, can be saved? For there is
+ probably not a live Christian in the world who has not called somebody a
+ "fool," when he knew him to be such, and could not with truthfulness be
+ called anything else. Here, then, is another command universally ignored
+ and "indefinitely postponed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. "Swear not at all, neither by heaven nor earth." (Matt, v.) And yet no
+ Christian refuses to indulge in legal, if not profane, swearing which the
+ text evidently forbids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. "Men ought always to pray." (Luke xviii.) No time to be allowed for
+ eating or sleeping. More religious fanaticism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. "Whosoever will be chief among you let him be your servant" (Matt. xx.
+ 27); that is, no Christian professor shall be a president, governor,
+ major-general, deacon, or priest. Another command laid on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. "Love your enemies." (Matt. v. 44.) Then what kind of feeling should
+ we cultivate toward friends? And how much did he love his enemies when he
+ called them "fools," "liars," "hypocrites," "generation of vipers," &amp;c.?
+ And yet he is held up as "our" example in love, meekness, and forbearance.
+ But no man ever did love an enemy. It is a moral impossibility, as much so
+ as to love bitter or nauseating food. The advice of the Roman slave Syrus
+ is indicative of more sense and wisdom&mdash;"Treat your enemy kindly, and
+ thus make him a friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. We are required to forgive an enemy four hundred and ninety times;
+ that is, "seventy times seven." (Matt, vii.) Another outburst of religious
+ enthusiasm; another proof of an overheated imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 26. "Be ye perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect." (Matt. v.
+ 48.) Here is more of the religious extravagance of a mind uncultured by
+ science. For it is self-evident that human beings can make no
+ approximation to divine perfection. The distance between human
+ imperfection and a perfect God is, and ever must be, infinite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 27. Christ commended those who "became eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's
+ sake" (Matt. xix. 12)&mdash;a custom requiring a murderous,
+ self-butchering process; destructive of the energies of life and the vigor
+ of manhood, and rendering the subject weak, effeminate, and mopish, and
+ unfit for the business of life. It is a low species of piety, and
+ discloses a lamentable lack of a scientific knowledge of the true
+ functions of the sexual organs on the part of Jesus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 28. Christ also encouraged his disciples to "pluck out the eye," and "cut
+ off the hand," as a means of rendering it impossible to perpetrate evil
+ with those members. And we would suggest, if such advice is consistent
+ with sound reasoning, the head also should be cut off, as a means of more
+ effectually carrying out the same principle. Such advice never came from
+ the mouth of a philosopher. It is a part of Christ's system of extravagant
+ piety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 29. He also taught the senseless, oriental tradition of "the unpardonable
+ sin against the Holy Ghost"&mdash;a fabulous being who figured more
+ anciently in the history of various countries. (See Chapter XXII.) No
+ philosopher or man of science could harbor such childish misconceptions as
+ are embodied in this tradition, which neither describes the being nor
+ explains the nature of the sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 30. We find many proofs, in Christ's Gospel history, that he believed in
+ the ancient heathen tradition which taught that disease is caused by
+ demons and evil spirits. (See Luke vii. 21, and viii. 2.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Many cases are reported of his relieving the obsessed by casting out
+ the diabolical intruders, in imitation of the oriental custom long in
+ vogue in various countries, by which he evinced a profound ignorance of
+ the natural causes of disease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 32. Christ also taught the old pagan superstition that "God is a God of
+ anger," while modern science teaches that it would be as impossible for a
+ God of perfect and infinite attributes to experience the feeling of anger
+ as to commit suicide; and recent discoveries in physiology prove that
+ anger is a species of suicide, and that it is also a species of insanity.
+ Hence an angry God would be an insane God&mdash;an omnipotent lunatic,
+ "ruling the kingdom of heaven," which would make heaven a lunatic asylum,
+ and rather a dangerous place to live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 33. And Christ's injunction to "fear God" also implies that he is an angry
+ being. (See Luke xxiii. 40.) But y past history proves that "the fear of
+ God" has always been the great lever of priestcraft, and the most paltry
+ and pitiful motive that ever moved the human mind. It has paralyzed the
+ noblest intellects, crushed the elasticity of youth, and augmented the
+ hesitating indecision of old age, and finally filled the world with
+ cowardly, trembling slaves. No philosopher will either love or worship a
+ God he fears. "The fear of the Lord" is a very ancient heathen
+ superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 34. The inducement Christ holds out for leading a virtuous life by the
+ promise of "Well done, thou good and faithful servant," bespeaks a
+ childish ignorance of the nature of the human mind and the true science of
+ life. It ranks with the promise of the nurse of sugar-plums to the boy if
+ he would keep his garments unsoiled. (For the remainder of the two hundred
+ errors of Christ, see Vol. II.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are many other errors found in the precepts and practical life of
+ Jesus Christ (which we are compelled to omit an exposition of here), such
+ as his losing his temper, and abusing the money-changers by overthrowing
+ their counting-table, and expelling them from the temple with a whip of
+ cords when engaged in a lawful' and laudable business; his getting mad at
+ and cursing the fig tree; his dooming Capernaum to hell in a fit of anger;
+ his being deceived by two of his disciples (Peter and Judas), which
+ prompted him to call them devils; his implied approval of David, with his
+ fourteen crimes and penitentiary deeds, and also Abraham, with his
+ falsehoods, polygamy, and incest, and his implied sanction of the Old
+ Testament, with all its errors and numerous crimes; his promise to his
+ twelve apostles to "sit upon the twelve thrones of Israel" in heaven, thus
+ evincing a very limited and childish conception of the enjoyments of the
+ future life; his puerile idea of sin, consisting in a personal affront to
+ a personal God; his omission to say anything about human freedom, the
+ inalienable rights of man, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE SCIENTIFIC ERRORS OF CHRIST.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Jesus Christ was neither a natural or moral philosopher is evident
+ from the following facts:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. He never made any use of the word "philosophy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Never gave utterance to the word "science."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Never spoke of a natural law, or assigned a natural cause for anything.
+ The fact that he never made use of these words now so current in all
+ civilized countries, is evidence that he was totally ignorant of these
+ important branches of knowledge, the cultivation of which is now known to
+ be essential to the progress of civilization. And yet it is claimed his
+ religion has been a great lever in the advancement of civilization. But
+ this is a mistake&mdash;a solemn mistake, as elsewhere shown. (See Chap.
+ XLV.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Everything to Christ was miracle; everything was produced and
+ controlled by the arbitrary power of an angry or irascible God. He
+ evidently had no idea of a ruling principle in nature or of the existence
+ of natural law, as controlling any event he witnessed. Hence he set no
+ bounds to anything, and recognized no limits to the possible. He believed
+ God to be a supernatural personal being, who possessed unlimited power,
+ and who ruled and controlled everything by his arbitrary will, without any
+ law or any limitation to its exercises. Hence he told his disciples they
+ would have anything they prayed for in faith; that by faith they could
+ roll mountains into the sea, or bring to a halt the rolling billows of the
+ mighty deep. He evidently believed that the forked lightning, the
+ out-bursting earth-shaking thunder, and the roaring, heaving volcano were
+ but pliant tools or obsequious servants to the man of faith. And he
+ displays no less ignorance of the laws of mind than the laws of nature;
+ thus proving him to have been neither a natural, moral, nor mental
+ philosopher. He omitted to teach the great moral lessons learned by human
+ experience, of which he was evidently totally ignorant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. He never taught that the practice of virtue contains its own reward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. That the question of right and wrong of any action is to be decided by
+ its effect upon the individual, or upon society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. That no life can be displeasing to God which is useful to man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 8. And he omitted to teach the most important lesson that can engage the
+ attention of man, viz.: that the great purpose of life is
+ self-development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. That no person can attain or approximate to real happiness without
+ bestowing a special attention to the cultivation and exercise of all the
+ mental and physical faculties, so far as to keep them in a healthy
+ condition. None of the important lessons above named are hinted at in his
+ teachings, which, if punctually observed, would do more to advance the
+ happiness of the human race than all the sermons Christ or Chrishna ever
+ preached, or ever taught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 10. And then he taught many doctrines which are plainly contradicted by
+ the established principle of modern science, such as,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. Diseases being produced by demons, devils, or wicked spirits. (See
+ Mark ix. 20.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christ nowhere assigns a natural cause for disease, or a scientific
+ explanation for its cure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. His rebuking a fever discloses a similar lack of scientific knowledge.
+ ( See Luke iv. 39.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. His belief in a literal hell and a lake of fire and brimstone (see
+ Matt, xviii. 8) is an ancient heathen superstition science knows nothing
+ about, and has no use for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. His belief in a personal devil also (see Matt. xvii. 88), which is
+ another oriental tradition, furnishes more sad proof of an utter want of
+ scientific knowledge, as science has no place for and no use for such a
+ being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. Christ taught the unphilosophical doctrine of repentance, as he
+ declared he "came to call sinners to repentance" (Matt. ix. 13)&mdash;a
+ mental process, which consists merely in a revival of early impressions,
+ and often leads a person to condemn that which is right, as well as that
+ which is wrong. (For proof, see Chapter XLIII.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. The doctrine of "forgiveness," which Christ so often inculcated, is
+ also at variance with the teachings of science, as it can do nothing
+ toward changing the nature of the act forgiven, or toward cancelling its
+ previous effects upon society. Science teaches that every crime has its
+ penalty attached to it, which no act of forgiveness, by God or man, can
+ arrest or set aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. But nothing evinces, perhaps, more clearly Christ's total lack of
+ scientific knowledge than his holding a man responsible for his belief,
+ and condemning for disbelief, as he does in numerous instances (see Mark
+ xvi. 16), for a man could as easily control the circulation of the blood
+ in his veins as control his belief. Science teaches that belief depends
+ upon evidence, and without it, it is impossible to believe, and with it,
+ it is impossible to disbelieve. How foolish and unphilosophical,
+ therefore, to condemn for either belief or disbelief!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. The numerous cases in which Christ speaks of the heart as being the
+ seat of consciousness, instead of the brain, evinces a remarkable
+ ignorance of the science of mental philosophy. He speaks of an "upright
+ heart," "a pure heart," &amp;'c., when "an upright liver," "a pure liver,"
+ would be as sensible, as the latter has as much to do with the character
+ as the former.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 19. And the many cases in which he makes it meritorious to have a right
+ "faith," and places it above reason, and assumes it to be a voluntary act,
+ shows his utter ignorance of the nature of the human mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 20. And Christ evinced a remarkable ignorance of the cause of physical
+ defects, when he told his hearers a certain man was born blind, in order
+ that he might cure him. (Matt. vii. 22.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 21. And Christ's declaration, that those who marry are not worthy of being
+ saved (see Luke xx. 34), shows that he was very ignorant of the nature of
+ the sexual functions of the human system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 22. Nothing could more completely demonstrate a total ignorance of the
+ grand science of astronomy than Christ's prediction of the stars falling
+ to the earth. (See Luke xxi. 25.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 23. And the conflagration of the world, "the gathering of the elect," and
+ the realization of a fancied millennium, which he several times predicted
+ would take place in his time, "before this generation pass away" (Matt,
+ xxiv. 34), proves a like ignorance, both of astronomy and philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 24. And his cursing of the fig tree for not bearing fruit in the winter
+ season (see Matt. xxi. 20), not only proves his ignorance of the laws of
+ nature, but evinces a bad temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 25. Christ indorses the truth of Noah's flood story (see Luke xvii. 27),
+ which every person at the present day, versed in science and natural law,
+ knows is mere fiction, and never took place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And numerous other errors, evincing the most profound ignorance of science
+ and natural law, might be pointed out in Christ's teachings, if we had
+ space for them. It has always been alleged by orthodox Christendom, that
+ Christ's teaching and moral system are so faultless as to challenge
+ criticism, and so perfect as to defy improvement. But this is a serious
+ mistake. For most of his precepts and moral inculcations which are not
+ directly at war with the principles of science, or do not involve a
+ flagrant violation of the laws of nature, are, nevertheless, characterized
+ by a lawless and extravagant mode of expression peculiar to semi-savage
+ life, and which, as it renders it impossible to reduce them to practice,
+ shows they could not have emanated from a philosopher, or man of science,
+ or a man of evenly-balanced mind. They impose upon the world a system of
+ morality, pushed to such extremes that its own professed admirers do not
+ live it out, or even attempt to do so. They long ago abandoned it as an
+ impracticable duty. We will prove this by enumerating most of its
+ requisitions, and showing that they are daily violated and trampled under
+ foot by all Christendom. Where can the Christian professor be found who,
+ 1. "takes no thought for the morrow" or, 2. who "lays not up treasure on
+ earth," or, at least, tries to do it; or, 3. who "gives up all his
+ property to the poor;" or who, "when his cloak is wrested from him by a
+ robber," gives up his coat also; or who calls no man master or mister (the
+ most common title in Christendom); or who calls no man father (if he has a
+ father); or who calls no man a fool (when he knows he is a fool); or who,
+ when one cheek is pommeled into a jelly by some vile miscreant or drunken
+ wretch, turns the other to be battered up in the same way; or who prays
+ without ceasing; or who rejoices when persecuted; or who forgives an enemy
+ four hundred and ninety times (70 times 7); or who manifests by his
+ practical life that he loves his enemies (the way he loves him is to
+ report him to the grand jury, or hand him over to the sheriff); or who
+ forsakes houses and land, and everything, "for the kingdom of heaven's
+ sake." No Christian professor lives up to these precepts, or any of them,
+ or even tries to do so. To talk, therefore, of finding a practical
+ Christian, while nearly the whole moral code of Christ is thus daily and
+ habitually outraged and trampled under foot by all the churches and every
+ one of the two hundred millions of Christian professors, is bitter irony
+ and supreme solecism. We would go five hundred miles, or pay five hundred
+ dollars, to see a Christian. If a man can be a Christian while openly and
+ habitually violating every precept of Christ, then the word has no
+ meaning. These precepts, the Christian world finding to be impossible to
+ practice, have unanimously laid upon the table under the rule of
+ "indefinite postponement." They are the product of a mind with an ardent
+ temperament, and the religious faculties developed to excess, and
+ unrestrained by scientific or intellectual culture. A similar vein of
+ extravagant religious duty is found in the Essenian, Budhist, and
+ Pythagorean systems. As Zera Colburn possessed the mathematical faculty to
+ excess, and Jenny Lind the musical talent, Christ in like manner was all
+ religion. And from the extreme ardor of his religious feeling, thus
+ derived, sprang his extravagant notions of the duties of life. This
+ peculiarity of his organization explains the whole mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHRIST AS A MAN, AND CHRIST AS A SECTARIAN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To every observant and unbiased mind a strange contrast must be visible in
+ the practical life of Jesus Christ when viewed in his twofold capacity of
+ a man and a priest. While standing upon the broad plane of humanity, with
+ his deep sympathetic nature directed toward the poor, the unfortunate, and
+ the downtrodden, there often gushed forth from his impassioned bosom the
+ most sublime expressions of pity, and the strongest outburst of
+ commiseration for wrongs and sufferings, and his noble goodness and tender
+ love yearned with a throbbing heart to relieve them. But the moment he put
+ on the sacerdotal robe, and assumed the character of a priest, that
+ moment, if any one crossed his path by refusing to yield to his
+ requisitions of faith, or dissented from his religious creed, his whole
+ nature was seemingly changed. It was no longer, "Blessed are ye," but
+ "Cursed are ye," or "Woe unto you." Like the founders of other religious
+ systems, he was ardent toward friends and bitter toward enemies, and
+ extolled his own religion, while he denounced all others. His way was the
+ only way, and all who did not walk threin, or conform thereto, were loaded
+ with curses and imprecations, and all who could not accomplish the
+ impossible mental achievement of believing everything he set forth or
+ urged upon their credence, and that, too, without evidence, were to be
+ eternally damned. All who climbed up any other way were thieves and
+ robbers. All who professed faith in any other religion than his were on
+ the road to hell. Like the oriental Gods, he taught that the world was to
+ be saved through faith in him and his religion. All who did not honor him
+ were to be dishonored by the Father. And "without faith (in him and his
+ religion), it is impossible to please God." He declared that all who were
+ not for him were against him; and all who were not on the same road are
+ "heathens and publicans." His disciples were enjoined to shake off the
+ dust from their feet as a manifestation of displeasure toward those who
+ could not conscientiously subscribe to their creeds and dogmas. Thus we
+ discover a strong vein of intolerance and sectarianism in the religion of
+ the otherwise, and in other respects, the kind and loving Jesus. Though
+ most benignantly kind and affectionate while moving and acting under the
+ controlling impulses of his lofty manhood, yet when his ardent religious
+ feelings were touched, he became chafed, irritated, and sometimes
+ intolerant. He then could tolerate no such thing as liberty of conscience,
+ or freedom of thought, or the right to differ with him in religious
+ belief. His extremely ardent devotional nature, when roused into action in
+ defense of a stereotyped faith, eclipsed his more noble, lofty, and lovely
+ traits, and often dimmed his mental vision, thus presenting in the same
+ individual a strange medley, and a strange contrast of the most opposite
+ traits of character. That such a being should have been considered and
+ worshipped as a God, and for the very reason that he possessed such
+ strange, contradictory traits of character, and often let his religion run
+ riot with his reason, will be looked upon by posterity as one of the
+ strangest chapters in the history of the human race. But so it is.
+ Extraordinary good qualities, though intermingled with many errors and
+ human foibles, have deified many men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Note. One Christian writer alleges, in defense of the objectionable
+ precepts of Jesus Christ, that "He taught some errors in condescension to
+ the ignorance of the people." If this be true, that he taught both truth
+ and falsehood, then the question arises, How can we know which is which?
+ By what rule can we discriminate them, as he himself furnishes none? Or
+ how are we to determine that he taught truth at all? And then this plea
+ would account for and excuse all the errors found in the teachings of the
+ oriental Gods. If it will apply in one case, it will in the other. And
+ thus it proves too much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0042" id="link2HCH0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLII. CHRIST AS A SPIRITUAL MEDIUM
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE are many incidents related in the life of Christ, which, when
+ critically examined, furnish abundant evidence that he was what is now
+ known as a spiritual medium. He unquestionably represented, and often
+ practically exhibited, several important phases of modern mediumship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The many instantaneous cures which he wrought, as reported in his
+ Gospel narrative, performed in the same manner that "spirit doctors" now
+ heal the sick, prove that he was an excellent "healing medium."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. His declaration to Nathanael, "When thou wast under the fig tree, I saw
+ thee," and his recounting to the woman of Samaria the deeds of her past
+ life (acts similar to which are now performed every day by spiritualists),
+ are evidence that he was also a "clairvoyant medium."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. His walking on the water (if the story is true), as D. D. Home has
+ frequently, within the past few years, walked or floated on the air in the
+ presence of many witnesses (including men of science, royal personages,
+ and members of parliament), entitles him to the appellation of a "physical
+ medium."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. And the circumstance of his pointing his disciples to the mark of the
+ spear in his side, and the print of the nails in his hands, while amongst
+ them as a spirit, has led many spiritualists to conclude he was also a
+ "medium for materialization." His spirit was made to present the peculiar
+ marks which had been inflicted upon his physical body, cases parallel to
+ which are now witnessed every day by modern spiritualists. Hundreds of
+ cases have occurred of departed spirits presenting themselves to their
+ friends with all the peculiar marks which their physical bodies had long
+ worn while in the earth life. And the former physical wounds have often
+ been exhibited by the spirit in the same manner Christ exhibited his. And
+ thus spiritualism explains the phenomenon which otherwise would be
+ entirely incredible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. And there is yet another phase of mediumship which Christ often
+ exhibited in his practical life. He claimed to have frequent intercourse
+ with some invisible being, whom he called "the Father." But as modern
+ science has settled the question of the personality of God in the
+ negative, we are led to conclude that Christ, like many eminent persons
+ since his time, mistook some finite spirit for the great infinite but
+ impersonal Father spirit&mdash;though his attendant invisible companion
+ was probably a spirit of a very high order. And the great beauty and
+ grandeur of his life are exhibited by his frequent intercourse with and
+ dependence upon this his "guardian spirit." He declared he did nothing of
+ himself, so dependent was he upon his invisible guide. And the strongest
+ proof that he had a spirit companion, which he often looked to for counsel
+ and aid, and that this was the being he called the Father, is furnished by
+ the fact, that when he prayed to the Father, his petition was answered by
+ an angel spirit. (See Luke xxii. 44.) And there is no account and no
+ evidence of any invisible or spiritual being ever presenting itself to him
+ but an angel or spirit. That he should have supposed this spirit to be the
+ great infinite Father God was very natural. Thousands since, and some
+ before his time, committed a similar mistake. The author has known several
+ persons who had long had intercourse with some invisible being they
+ supposed to be God, who have recently, by the light afforded by modern
+ spiritualism, become entirely convinced that they had simply mistaken a
+ finite spirit for the great Infinite Spirit. And did Christ live in our
+ day, he would probably be rescued from a similar error in the same way. In
+ conclusion, we will remark that it was doubtless his frequent displays of
+ several very remarkable phases of spiritual mediumship that contributed
+ much to lead the people into the error of supposing him to be God. And
+ this fact will yet be known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0043" id="link2HCH0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLIII. CONVERSION, REPENTANCE, AND "GETTING RELIGION" OF HEATHEN
+ ORIGIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THEIR NUMEROUS EVILS AND ABSURDITIES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OF all the follies ever enacted or exhibited under the sun, and of all the
+ ignorance of history, science, and human nature ever displayed in the
+ history of the human race, that which stands out in bold relief, as
+ pre-eminent, is the fashionable custom of conversion, or "getting
+ religion." When the evidence lies all around us as thick as the fallen
+ leaves of autumn, clustering on the pages of history, and proclaimed by
+ every principle of mental science, that what is called conversion is
+ nothing but a mental and temperamental or nervous phenomenon&mdash;a
+ psychological process&mdash;how can we rank those amongst intelligent
+ people who still claim it to be "the power of God operating upon the soul
+ of the sinner"? Ignorance is the only plea that can acquit them of the
+ charge of imbecility. The number who daily fall victims to this priestly
+ delusion in various parts of the country may be reckoned by thousands. We
+ propose in this chapter to exhibit some of the evils and absurdities of
+ this widespread delusion and religious mono-mania. To do so the more
+ effectually, we will arrange the presentation of the subject under four
+ separate heads. We will attempt to show,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Its historical errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Its logical errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Its philosophical or scientific errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Its moral evils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1st. <i>Its Historical Errors</i>.&mdash;Can we conceive it possible that
+ the thousands of priests who are now employed in "converting souls to God"
+ are so ignorant of history as not to know that it is an old pagan custom?
+ that it was prevalent in heathen countries long before a single soul was
+ converted to Christianity, and is carried on to some extent now, both
+ among pagans and Mahomedans? From such facts it would appear (viewing the
+ matter from the Christian stand-point) that God is indifferent as to what
+ kind of religion, or what sort of religious nonsense, people are converted
+ to, or whether it is truth or error they embrace, or whether it is a true
+ religion or a false one they imbibe, so he gets them converted. According
+ to Mr. Higgins, the practice of converting people from one sect to another
+ by the popular priesthood was prevalent under the ancient Persian system,
+ and was carried on there quite extensively more than three thousand years
+ ago; and the process was essentially the same as that now in vogue amongst
+ modem Methodists, and the effect the same. At their large revival meetings
+ the whole congregation would sometimes become so affected under the
+ eloquent ministrations of the officiating priest, as to cry, and shout,
+ and prostrate themselves upon the ground, which was afterward found to be
+ drenched with their tears; and on these occasions they would confess their
+ sins to each other, and to their priests; and yet those very sins they
+ condemned were, perhaps, amongst the best acts of their lives, while their
+ real crimes were overlooked and justified, instead of being condemned,
+ thus showing that an honest, just, and sensible God could have had nothing
+ to do with it. And we have reports of similar scenes witnessed more
+ recently among the Mahomedans. Major Denham furnishes us an account of
+ some "revival meetings" he attended a few years since in Arabia, carried
+ on by one of the Mahomedan sects. On one occasion the effect of the
+ discourse of the preacher upon the audience in the way of "converting
+ souls to God" was so powerful, that he could only convince himself that he
+ was not in a Methodist revival meeting by a knowledge of his geographical
+ position. The preacher's name was Malem Chadily, and here is a specimen of
+ some of his language. "Turn, turn, sinner, unto God; confess he is good,
+ and that Mahomet is his prophet; wash, and become clean of your sins, and
+ paradise is open before you: without this nothing can save you from
+ eternal fire." During this earnest appeal (says the major), tears flowed
+ plentifully, and everybody appeared to be affected. One of his hearers,
+ becoming converted, shouted, "Your words pierce my soul," and fell upon
+ the floor. Now let it be borne in mind, that Mahomet is stigmatized and
+ condemned by the Christian churches as "a false prophet," and his religion
+ denounced as "a system of fraud," "a false religion," &amp;c. Of course,
+ then, Christians will not argue, nor admit, that conversion, and "getting
+ religion," in this case, is the work of God. A just God would have nothing
+ to do in converting people to "a false religion." What explanation shall
+ we adopt for it then? To assume it to be the work of the devil (the
+ dernier resort for all religious difficulties), and conversions among
+ Christians the work of God, when both are so clearly and obviously alike,
+ is to insult common sense. To assume that two things, exactly alike in
+ character, can be exactly and diametrically unlike in origin, is a
+ scientific paradox which no person of common intelligence can swallow, or
+ accept for a moment. Both, then, we must admit, have the same origin. This
+ train of argument leads us to speak of&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2d. <i>The Logical Absurdities of the Doctrine of Conversion</i>.&mdash;There
+ are several circumstances which point, unmistakably as the needle to the
+ pole, to the mundane origin of the phenomenon of conversion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The character of many of the priestly conductors who "run the battery," is
+ sufficient of itself to preclude the hypothesis of any divine agency in
+ the matter. The most powerful revivalist we ever knew, the priest who
+ could convert an audience the quickest, and bring down sinners to the
+ mourners' bench faster than any other clergyman we ever heard "dealing out
+ damnation" to the people, was a broad-shouldered, muscular,
+ stentorian-voiced circuit rider of the "Buckeye State," who, as was
+ afterward learned, was guilty of perpetrating some of the blackest crimes
+ that ever blotted the page of human history, at the very time of his most
+ successful career in the way of "convicting souls of sin, and converting
+ them to God." He was apprehended by the officers of the law in the midst
+ of one of his most flourishing revivals, under the twofold charge, i. Of
+ being the father of an illegitimate child, the young mother of which was a
+ member of his church; 2. Of defrauding one of his neighbors in a trade, to
+ the amount of nearly a thousand dollars&mdash;both of which charges he was
+ convicted of. A similar case, but possessing some worse features, occurred
+ a few years since in the county in which the author now resides. A
+ preacher, who had had criminal connection with a young woman of his
+ church, in order to conceal his guilt resorted to the damnable expedient
+ of administering poison to his victim shortly before his illicit
+ intercourse with her would have been made manifest by the birth of a
+ child, thus committing a double murder. He was apprehended for the crime
+ while carrying on "a most glorious revival," as it was styled by some of
+ the deluded congregation. Now to ascribe the irresistible power which
+ these two preachers exerted over their audience (in the way of "converting
+ them to God") to a divine source, as they claimed for it, would be to
+ trifle with common sense, common decency, and all honorable conceptions of
+ a God. These reverend scamps often instituted the high claim of being
+ "called of God" to their ministerial labors. But if we concede the claim,
+ we should have to conclude that God knew but little about them, for he
+ certainly would not knowingly employ such moral outlaws upon such an
+ important mission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus briefly spoken of the character of some of the actors and
+ agents in the work of conversion, we will now glance at the character of
+ some of the religions and religious ideas, and moral course of conduct, to
+ which the sinner is converted. It is evident that if an All-wise God had
+ anything to do in the process of converting people to any system of
+ religion, he would also convert them to correct moral habits. But in many
+ cases, after conversion they are no nearer right in this respect, and in
+ some cases further from it than before being thus sanctified. In some
+ cases their religion becomes worse, their religious ideas less sensible,
+ and their moral conduct more objectionable, by "the change of heart" in
+ "getting religion." Mr. Spencer informs us that the Vewas, a sect or tribe
+ of the Feegees, often cry for hours under conviction for sin. And what is
+ that sin? Why, the neglect to offer sacrifices to their God. And those
+ sacrifices consist in human beings, sometimes their own children. And
+ their conviction, conversion, and repentance only make them more diligent
+ in practicing this crime. It is evident, then, that their religion is at
+ war with their humanity, and the former always triumphs in the contest.
+ They are addicted to cannibalism, infanticide, and polygamy. But as the
+ process of "getting religion" never makes anybody more intelligent, the
+ "change of heart," with the Vewas, never changes their views, or opens
+ their eyes to see the enormity of their crimes. In "getting religion"
+ people get neither sense, knowledge, nor morality. They get neither a
+ larger stock, nor an improved quality, of either. Their moral conduct is
+ not often sensibly improved, materially or permanently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3d. <i>Scientific Errors, and Scientific Explanations of Conversion</i>.&mdash;The
+ phenomena of conversion and "getting religion" are so easily explained in
+ the light of science and philosophy, and that explanation is susceptible
+ of so many proofs and demonstrations, that it seems remarkably strange
+ that any persons claiming to be intelligent, and situated in the focal,
+ scientific light of the nineteenth century, should still be hampered with
+ the delusion that such phenomena are the direct display of the power of
+ God. It requires but little investigation and reflection to convince any
+ person that what is called conversion, and "repentance for sin," is
+ nothing but the revival of early educational impressions resuscitated by
+ the influence of mind on mind. No person has ever been known to get or
+ embrace a religion he was not biased in favor of prior to the time of his
+ conversion, unless we except a few weak-minded persons negative to any
+ influence, and convertible to any religion the priest may urge upon their
+ attention. A very strong proof of this statement is furnished by the
+ history of the Christian missionary enterprise. The reports of travelers
+ and sojourners in India show, that with two hundred years' labor, and two
+ hundred missionaries in the field during a part of that period, the
+ churches have not succeeded in converting one in ten thousand of the
+ Hindoos to the Christian religion&mdash;unless we except those who, while
+ children, were sent to Christian schools instituted by the missionaries
+ for the special purpose of converting and warping the young mind, and
+ welding it to the Christian faith before It should receive an unchangeable
+ and unyielding bias in favor of another religion. So fruitless has been
+ the effort to convert to Christianity those who were already established
+ in the religion of the country, that, according to the estimate of Colonel
+ Dow, each convert, on an average, has cost the missionary enterprise not
+ less than ten thousand dollars. An intelligent Hindoo, while lecturing
+ recently in London, made the remarkable statement, that conversions which
+ are made to the Christian religion are not amongst the intelligent or
+ learned classes, but are confined to the low, ignorant, and superstitious
+ classes, "who have not sense or intelligence enough to perceive the
+ difference between the <i>religion they are converted to, and that which
+ they are converted from.</i>" And the effort to convert the Mahomedans,
+ Chinese, Persians, and the disciples of other religions has been attended
+ with the same fruitless results&mdash;all seeming to warrant the
+ conclusion that God can do but little toward converting any nation to
+ Christianity which has always been biased in favor of another religion.
+ The reason why people are so easily converted from one sect to another in
+ Christian countries is owing to the fact that their religious convictions
+ are unsettled. The members of the different Christian sects are all mixed
+ up together in the various settlements throughout the country, and are
+ brought in daily contact with each other in the busy scenes of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence the children have the seeds of Methodism, Presbyterianism,
+ Baptistism, Quakerism, and various other isms implanted in their minds in
+ very early life. And which one of these will ultimately predominate
+ depends upon what priest they fall victims to first. Having thus the germs
+ of so many religious isms implanted in their minds, they are easily
+ shifted about, and converted from one sect to another. And this
+ shuttlecock process is called "getting religion," while, if they had lived
+ in a country where only one form of religion exists, they would be as hard
+ to convert as Mahomedans and Hindoos.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Repentance</i>.&mdash;Much importance is attached by the orthodox
+ churches to the act of getting religion in the dying hour,&mdash;called
+ "death-bed repentance,"&mdash;as if the person were better capable of
+ discriminating between right and wrong when his brain is deranged with
+ fever, and his whole system racked with disease and pain, than when in
+ health. Such repentance can do nothing more than prove the honesty of the
+ dying man or woman. For very often their doctrines, or religious belief,
+ will be found no nearer right, and sometimes more erroneous after
+ repentance than before, as repentance merely consists in the return to
+ early impressions&mdash;the revival of former convictions, which may be
+ either right or wrong, and are about as likely to be the latter as the
+ former. No instance can be found of a person condemning a wrong act, or a
+ wrong course of life, in his dying moments, unless he had previously
+ believed it to be wrong, or if he had always believed it to be right. How
+ much, then, does repentance do toward deciding what is right and what is
+ wrong? Mahomedanism we know to be deeply fraught with error, but we never
+ read nor heard of an instance of the many millions who had been educated
+ to believe it is right, condemning it on their death-beds, or repenting
+ for not having embraced Christianity, and led the life of a Christian, or
+ for adoring Mahomet instead of Jesus Christ. On the contrary we have a
+ well-authenticated instance of a Mahomedan (a Mr. Merton) who had embraced
+ Christianity, and lived the life of a Christian for many years, renouncing
+ it all, and returning to his primitive faith, when he was taken sick and
+ became apprehensive he was going to die: his early religious impressions,
+ returning involuntarily, wiped out his Christianity, and he died glorying
+ in Mahomedanism. And we have an equally well authenticated case of an
+ Indian of the Choctaw tribe, who had been taught to believe from early
+ life that the white man was his natural enemy, and that it was his right
+ and duty to kill him, repenting on his death-bed for having a short time
+ previously neglected, when the opportunity presented, to despatch a "pale
+ face" he met in his travels. Instead of killing him, he yielded for the
+ moment to the impulse of his better feelings, and passed him by. But on
+ reviewing his past life at the approach of death, he came to the
+ conclusion he had sinned in omitting to kill this man, and he grieved and
+ lamented sorely over this dereliction of apprehended duty. Here we have a
+ case of repentance sanctioning murder. Must we, therefore, conclude that
+ murder is morally right, or a righteous act? Certainly, according to
+ orthodox logic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their religious tracts assume that repentance is always for the right, and
+ is <i>prima facie</i> evidence of being right. If not, what does it prove,
+ or what moral value is it? According to orthodox teaching, being "a
+ murderer at heart," he was as consignable to perdition as if he had
+ committed the act. There is no escaping the conclusion, therefore, that
+ his repentance landed him in hell, or else proves murder to be right
+ according to orthodox logic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have known Quakers to leave their dying testimony against water
+ baptism; and Baptists, with their last breath, declare it is right, and a
+ sin to neglect it. Which is right? Who can tell? We have also known
+ Quakers to condemn dancing in their dying hours, but Shakers never;
+ because one had been taught that it is wrong, and the other that it is
+ right. And which testimony must we accept? Mahomedans often, when
+ approaching the confines of time, repent (sometimes in tears) for not
+ having lived out more rigidly the injunctions of the Koran, but never
+ regret not having been Christians. They often call upon Mohamet to aid
+ them through the gates of death: but not one of the million who die every
+ year ever calls upon Jesus Christ. What, then, does such a conflicting
+ jargon of death-bed repentance prove? What good can grow out of it, or
+ what moral value can possibly attach to it? It establishes simply two
+ principles,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1st. That repentance grows out of education.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2d. That it depends entirely upon previous convictions as to what it may
+ sanction, and what it may condemn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No Christian ever repents in favor of Mahomedan-ism; and no Mahomedan ever
+ lifts up his dying voice in favor of Christianity as being superior to his
+ own religion; and no Hindoo has ever been known to indulge in death-bed
+ lamentation for not having previously embraced either Christianity or
+ Mahomedanism; because their earlier education never turned their minds in
+ that direction. The mind has to be educated over again before it can
+ embrace a new religion, or even condemn a wrong act, which, up to that
+ period, it had always believed to be right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence it is evident repentance may lead a person to condemn what is right
+ and sanction what is wrong. How profoundly ignorant of religious history
+ and mental science must those persons therefore be who attach any
+ importance to those diseased and often incoherent utterances, called
+ "death-bed recantations," or who believe a thing the sooner because
+ sanctioned by a dying man or woman, or that they do anything toward
+ proving what is right or what is wrong with respect to either our belief
+ or our moral conduct! And yet we find the orthodox churches printing every
+ year, through their tract societies, stories of death-bed repentance in
+ tract form, and scattering them over the country by the million. As they
+ prove nothing but the honesty of the dying man or woman, they are not
+ worth the paper on which they are printed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The phenomenon of repentance is simply the operation of a natural law, by
+ which the last impressions made upon the mind are generally cancelled from
+ the memory first, by the progress of fever and disease, thus leaving the
+ earlier impressions to rule the judgment. The person is then virtually a
+ child, controlled by his early youthful convictions, with which, if his
+ late belief and conduct disagree, it causes a mental conflict, called
+ repentance. Thus, instead of being the visitation of God, as Christians
+ claim, repentance is shown to be the product of natural causes. The
+ conclusion is thus established beyond disproof, that the mental processes
+ called conversion, repentance, and "getting religion" are simply natural
+ psychological operations, depending upon education, organization, and
+ intelligence. They depend also upon intellect and scientific knowledge.
+ For persons of large intellectual brains, or extensive scientific culture,
+ never fall victims to these mental derangements. Hence those priests who
+ claim God as their author are either deplorably and inexcusably ignorant,
+ or lacking in moral honesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0044" id="link2HCH0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLIV. THE MORAL LESSONS OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1. The most important lesson deducible from all the religious systems,
+ commemorated in history, and noticed in this work, is, that all religious
+ conceptions, whether in the shape of doctrine, precept, prophecy, prayer,
+ religious devotion, or a belief in miracles, are a spontaneous outgrowth
+ of the moral and religious elements of the human mind. And to assign them
+ a higher origin is to ignore the developments of modern science, and
+ insult the highest intelligence of the age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. From the elevated scientific plane occupied by the most enlightened
+ portion of the present age, there is no difficulty in finding a
+ satisfactory solution for every event, every occurrence, and every
+ performance recorded in any of the numerous bibles which have long been
+ afloat in the world, and which have always constituted the sole basis for
+ the claim to a divine origin of all the religious systems of the past; so
+ that such a claim can be no longer vindicated by historically intelligent
+ people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. We have shown in this work that all the miraculous incidents related in
+ the history of Jesus Christ as a proof of his divinity can find a more
+ rational explanation than that which assigns them to divine agency. Some
+ of them are now known to lie within the natural capacity of the human mind
+ to achieve, others are explained by recently discovered natural laws.
+ Another class are now well understood mental or nervous phenomena. Other
+ stories, now regarded by the Christian world as referring to miraculous
+ achievements, were probably designed by the writer as mere fable or
+ metaphor. All the events in Christ's history, we have shown, are
+ susceptible of a hundred fold more rational explanation than that which
+ regards them as the feats of a God in violation of his own laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. We have also shown that the same marvelous incidents now found
+ incorporated in the Gospel history of Jesus Christ were related long
+ previously as a part of the sacred history of other Gods; such as being
+ miraculously conceived and born of a virgin; born on the 25th of December;
+ visited in infancy by angels and shepherds;' threatened by the ruler of
+ the country; being of royal lineage; receiving the same divine titles;
+ performing the same miracles, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a word, we have shown that various heathen Gods and Demigods had, long
+ before Christ's advent, filled the same chapter in history now reported of
+ him in the Christian New Testament. All these stories of the heathen Gods
+ prove as conclusively as any scientific problem can be demonstrated by
+ figures, that the same stories related of Jesus Christ have no other
+ foundation than that of heathen tradition. And will the Christian world,
+ then, hereafter stultify their common sense by ignoring these facts of
+ history so fatal to their claims? Past history points to an affirmative
+ answer to this question, as we will illustrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the early history of this country, several reports were published of
+ showers of blood being seen to fall in some of the sea-coast states, which
+ were regarded as a divine judgment. But the use of the telescope revealed
+ the fact that it was the ordure of butterflies, as those insects were seen
+ at the time in vast swarms. But the devout Christian, whose faith in his
+ religion has always been proof against the demonstrations of science,
+ would give it up. He would not accept the butterfly explanation, but
+ continued to teach his children that it came from God out of heaven as a
+ manifestation of displeasure toward the sins of the people. And it now
+ remains to be seen whether Christian professors at the present day will
+ manifest a similar folly by standing out against the demonstrated truths
+ and facts of this work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. We here cite it as the last and most sorrowful lesson of history, that
+ no facts, no proofs, no demonstrations of science can eradicate religious
+ errors from the human mind, if instilled in early life, and never
+ disturbed till the possessor arrives at mature age or middle life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0045" id="link2HCH0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLV. CONCLUSION AND REVIEW.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IN writing the concluding chapter of this work, the author deems it proper
+ to re-state some points, and elaborate others, and anticipate some
+ objections to some of the positions advanced. Each division of the subject
+ will be marked by a separate figure, and treated in a brief and succinct
+ manner, as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Several persons, who examined this work before it went to press, have
+ expressed the opinion that it must exert a powerful influence in the way
+ of producing an entire revolution in the religion of orthodox Christendom
+ sooner or later. But this must of course be the work of time, as moral
+ revolutions are not the work of a day. When the human system has been long
+ prostrated with chronic disease, no system of medication can restore it at
+ once to health. The same principle governing the mind makes it morally
+ impossible to eradicate its deeply-seated moral and religious errors in a
+ day by even the presentation of the most powerful and convincing truths
+ and demonstrations that can be brought to bear or operate upon the human
+ judgment. The mind instinctively repels everything (no difference how true
+ or how beautiful) that conflicts with its long-established opinions and
+ convictions. The fires of truth usually require much time to burn their
+ way through those incrustations of moral and religious error which often
+ environ the human mind as the products of a false education. But when they
+ once enter, the work of convincement is complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. It has been stated that the resemblance between Christianity and the
+ more ancient heathen systems is complete and absolute throughout in all
+ their essential doctrines, and principles, and precepts. And if it shall
+ be found, on a critical reading of this work after it comes from the
+ press, that there is one feature of Christianity which has not been traced
+ to pagan origin, or that any points of resemblance have been omitted, they
+ will be supplied in an appendix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. It has been stated that a transfiguration is related of Chrishna of
+ India (1200 B. C.) in the Hindoo bible (the Baghavat Gita), which is
+ strikingly similar to that of Christ. We will here present the proof.
+ "Abandoning the mortal form, he (Chrishna) appeared to his disciples in
+ all the divine eclat of his Divine Majesty, his brow encircled with such a
+ brilliant light that Adjouma and the other disciples, unable to bear it,
+ fell with their faces in the dust, and prayed the Lord (Chrishna) to
+ pardon their unworthiness. He replied, 'Have you not faith in me? Know ye
+ not, that whether present or absent in body, I will be ever present with
+ you to guard and protect you?'" (Gaghavat Gita.) How remarkable this to
+ the story of Christ's transfiguration!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Some readers, perhaps, will be surprised to observe that we have named
+ so many crucified gods to whom some writers assign a different death. But
+ we have followed, as we believe, the best authorities in doing so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. In our work, "The Bibles of Bibles," we have shown that the score of
+ bibles which have been extant in the world teach essentially the same
+ doctrines, principles, and precepts. There are to be found in the old
+ pagan bibles the same grand and beautiful truths mixed up with the same
+ mind-enslaving errors and deleterious superstitions as those contained in
+ the Christian bible. And the same exalted claim is set up by the disciples
+ of each for their respective holy books&mdash;that of being a direct
+ revelation from God, and inspired at the fountain of infinite wisdom. And
+ all were exalted, adored, and idolized by their respective admirers, as
+ containing a perfect embodiment of truth, without any admixture of error.
+ The ancient Persians carried their bibles in their bosoms, and read them
+ and prayed over them daily. The Hindoos often read their bible through on
+ their bended knees, and sometimes committed it all to memory. The Baghavat
+ has the following text: "The most important of all duties is to study the
+ Holy Scriptures, which is the word of Brahma and Chrishna, revealed to the
+ world." Some of the Mahomedans claim that immortal life can only be
+ obtained by reading the Koran, and that the reading of it is essential to
+ the progress and practice of good morals, and the advancement of
+ civilization; and that it will ultimately reform and civilize the world.
+ Both they and the Hindoos, like the Christian world, have numerous
+ commentaries, explaining the obscure texts of their bibles, and aiming to
+ reconcile their teachings with reason and science. And the disciples of
+ all bibles had a mode of doing away with the immoral teachings, and
+ concealing the worst features of their sacred books by bestowing on them a
+ spiritual meaning, as Christians do theirs, thus dressing up error in the
+ guise of truth. The Hindoo bible, the Mahomedan bible, and other holy
+ books, consign those who disbelieve in their teachings to eternal
+ damnation, denouncing them as infidels. In this respect, also, they are
+ like the Christian's bible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. "But then, after all (as some good pious Christian will probably
+ exclaim after reading this work), the bible and Christianity are essential
+ to the progress of good morals, and the advancement of the cause of
+ civilization, and the civilized world would sink into a state of heathen
+ darkness, demoralization, and savagism without them; for every enlightened
+ nation owes its present moral and intellectual greatness to the Christian
+ bible and the Christian religion, and would relapse into barbarism without
+ them." This is a mistake, a most egregious mistake, my good brother
+ Christian, as the following facts of history will show:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. There are heathen nations now existing who never saw a bible, and
+ others which flourished in the past, before our bible was written, who
+ nevertheless attained to a higher state of morals, and a higher state of
+ civilization in some respects, than any Christian nation known to history.
+ A whole volume of facts might be adduced, if we had space for them, drawn
+ from the ablest and most reliable authorities, to prove that India, Egypt,
+ Greece, and other countries had reached a high state of civilization
+ centuries before Christianity or any of its founders were even heat'd of,
+ or made their appearance in the world. India was distinguished for her
+ teaming, her laws, her legislation, her civil courts, her judicial
+ tribunals, her astronomers, her poets, her philosophers, her writers, her
+ moralists, her libraries, her men of literature, and her good morals
+ before Moses was found in the bulrushes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jacolliot says, "India gave civilization to the world." Egypt borrowed of
+ India, the Greeks of the Egyptians, and the Jews and Christians are
+ indebted to the Greeks for both their morals and their civilization.
+ Dubois, a Christian missionary, in his "Memoirs of India," testifies that
+ "kindness, justice, humanity, good faith, compassion, disinterestedness,
+ and in fact nearly all the moral virtues, were familiar to the ancient
+ Brahmans and Hindoos, and they taught them both by precept and example."
+ Can as much be said of any Christian nation? Certainly not. And the Rev.
+ D. O. Allen says they were distinguished for all the arts and refinement
+ of civilized life&mdash;thus placing them on the highest plane of
+ civilization and moral elevation. And other nations might be referred to.
+ Egypt had her vast temples of science, Chaldea her astronomical
+ observatories, and Greece her distinguished academies of learning, her
+ profound philosophers, and her high-toned moral writers and moral
+ teachers, while the Jews, "God's holy people." were in a state of
+ semibarbarism. So affirms the Rev. Albert Barnes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. No advancement has often been made in morals or civilization in any
+ country by the introduction of the Christian bible or the Christian
+ religion. It is the arts and sciences which accompany or follow the bible
+ which do the work. A proof of this statement is found in the fact, that no
+ improvement takes place in the morals of the people by the introduction of
+ the bible till the arts and sciences are also introduced amongst them. On
+ the contrary, the morals of many deteriorate by reading the bible alone,
+ because it sanctions as well as condemns every species of crime then known
+ to society. (For proof see Chap. XXXIX. of this work.) That India has
+ become corrupted and sunk in morals since the introduction of the
+ Christian bible, is admitted by the Rev. D. O. Allen, for twenty-five
+ years a missionary in that country. But science, especially moral science,
+ imparts a different influence. It explains the nature of crimes, and
+ teaches and demonstrates that a life of honesty and virtue can alone
+ produce true and real happiness, while the bible augments the temptation
+ to commit sin by teaching that "it is a sweet morsel to be rolled under
+ the tongue," and that its punitive effects may be entirely escaped by an
+ act of divine forgiveness. But science, either directly or by the
+ enlightening of the mind, teaches and convinces the wrong-doer that there
+ is no escape from the evil effects of a wrong or wicked act, and that sin
+ is not a "sweet morsel," but ultimately a <i>bitter pill</i>. And thus it
+ arrests the demoralizing effects of this pernicious doctrine of the
+ Christian bible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. It may startle some of the bible devotees to be told that their sacred
+ book, instead of being a prompter to civilization and good morals, is
+ really a hindrance to those ends; and that consequently nations without
+ bibles advance faster in these respects than those who are well supplied
+ with this book. But the facts of history seem to establish this as a fact.
+ As a proof we will contrast the present condition of heathen Japan with
+ that of Christian Abyssinia. Colonel Hall and Dr. Oliphant both testify
+ that no drunkenness, no fighting, no quarreling, no thefts, no robberies,
+ no rapes, no fornication, no domestic feuds or broils, and no fraudulent
+ dealing take place in Japan. No locks or keys are used, for none are
+ needed. There is no disposition to steal, or even to cheat, or overreach
+ in dealing. But in Christian Abyssinia, on the other hand, according to
+ Mr. Goodrich, where bibles and churches are numerous, and preaching and
+ praying are heard every day, nearly all the crimes above enumerated are
+ daily committed. The people go naked, eat raw flesh, cheat, lie, and
+ murder, and practice polygamy. Such a thing as a legitimate child, he
+ tells us, is not known. And thus it has been for fifteen hundred years,
+ while in the daily practice of reading their bible. The arts and sciences
+ have never been introduced amongst them. And this fact explains the cause
+ of their continued moral degradation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. According to Noah Webster, the cultivation of the arts and sciences is
+ essential to the progress of civilization and good morals. But bible
+ religion knows nothing about the arts and sciences. It don't even use the
+ words. Paul uses the word science only once, and then to condemn it. But
+ Jesus omits any allusion to science, philosophy, or natural law. So
+ thoroughly convinced were the early disciples of the Christian faith that
+ the teachings of their bible are inimical to the arts and sciences, that
+ they destroyed works of art wherever they could find them, and opposed
+ with a deadly aim every new discovery in the sciences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. As bibles represent only the morals and state of society in the age in
+ which they are written, and are not allowed to be altered or transcended,
+ they thus hold their disciples back in all coming time, and compel them to
+ teach and practice the morals of that semi-barbarous age as found taught
+ in their bibles. And thus bibles prevent the moral growth of the people as
+ effectually as the Chinese wooden shoes prevent the growth of the feet.
+ For a fuller exposition of this matter, see The Bible of Bibles, Chap.
+ XIV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_NOTE" id="link2H_NOTE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NOTES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ NOTE OF EXPLANATION.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Chapter XXXI. we have traced Christianity to Essenism. This may need a
+ fuller explanation than we have yet devoted to this point, though we have
+ stated several times we consider them essentially one. The Essenes had
+ their "Exoteric" and their "Esoteric" doctrines. The latter, which seems
+ to have included the incarnation atonement, trinity, and all the other
+ Budhist doctrines as set forth in Chapter XXXII. (and now included in the
+ term Christianity), they never published to the world. Hence Chapter XXXI.
+ sets forth only their Exoteric doctrines. But as Philo, Milman, Tytler,
+ and other eminent authors show they held all the doctrines of Budhism, we
+ assume they were a Budhist sect Hence, when we speak of Christianity
+ growing out of Budhism, in Chapter XXXII., we mean Budhism under the name
+ of Essenism. We believe Christianity is from Essenism and Budhism both,
+ because they are essentially one; and that Christianity is merely a
+ continuation of Budhism as taught by the Essenian sect of Budhists. Hence
+ we have sometimes used the term Essenism, and sometimes the term Budhism,
+ as being the fountain head of Christianity. We have stated Christ may have
+ been an Essene either by birth or by conversion. But our conviction now
+ is, that he was one by birth. And we now think it probable that that
+ portion of the Jewish nation which became known as Essenes sprang up in
+ the Budhist school of Pythagoras, in Alexandria, in the second or third
+ century before Christ, and thus became Essenian Budhists; i. e., a sect of
+ Jewish Budhists who called themselves Essenes. And consequently, neither
+ Christ nor his disciples made any changes in the Essenian religion, when
+ they changed its name to Christianity, except to ingraft a few unimportant
+ tenets borrowed from the principal Budhist sect We are now convinced that
+ Essenism was complete Budhism, that Christ was born of Essene parents, and
+ that no important changes were made by dropping the term Essenism, and
+ adopting the term Christianity in its place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOTE TO PAGE 178.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may not be improper to explain more fully the reason for the opinion
+ expressed on page 178, that the Gospel writer John did not believe that
+ Christ first came into existence through human birth, but believed that
+ he, like some of the oriental Gods, was "The Word" personified, without
+ the process of birth; though he may, like the heathen orientalists, have
+ cherished the tradition that the second God in the trinity (as he
+ represents Christ to be), after having sprung into existence as "The Word"
+ was subsequently subjected to human birth. Either so, or else his allusion
+ to "the mother of Christ" was done in condescension to the general belief
+ among the people, that he had a human mother. Be that as it may, he
+ declares, '"His Word was made flesh" (John i. 14); nearly the same
+ language used by the orientalists,&mdash;which with them did not imply
+ human birth. And the declaration, "All things were made by him" (John i.
+ 3), is proof positive he believed in Christ's existence as the creator,
+ before his human birth. Much of John's language is so strikingly similar
+ to that employed by the disciples of some of the oriental religions, who
+ believed that a second God emanated from the mouth of the Supreme, to
+ perform the act of creation, that we cannot resist the conviction that
+ this was John's belief; especially as many of them believed, like him,
+ that this creative "Word" became afterward a subject of human birth. Thus,
+ as we conceive, the proposition is established.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOTE TO PAGE 346.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our most reliable authorities testify that Babylon never was destroyed,
+ but successfully resisted, for one hundred and fifty years after Isaiah's
+ time, many of the most powerful sieges, and "the mightiest munitions of
+ war," conducted by seven of the most skilful generals that ever wielded
+ the sword&mdash;Cyrus, Darius, Alexander the Great, Antigonus, Demetrius,
+ Poliorcetes, and Antiochus. She then gradually declined by the removal of
+ her inhabitants to other and newer cities; thus falsifying the prediction
+ of Jeremiah (li. 8), "Her end has come," and of Isaiah (xiii. 22), "Her
+ days shall not be prolonged," and that "desolation shall come upon her in
+ a day," and her destruction shall be effected suddenly&mdash;all of which
+ are falsified by the facts just presented. And even if Babylon had been
+ destroyed, the present existence of Hillah, built in 1101 upon the same
+ spot, with a population, according to Wellstead, of twenty-five thousand,
+ is a signal overthrow of Jeremiah's prophecy, that it "shall become a
+ wilderness, wherein no man dwelleth" (li. 43), and of Isaiah, also, that
+ it should not be dwelt in from generation to generation. Jeremiah first
+ predicted that her sea and springs should dry up (li. 38), and then
+ declared the waves of the sea should come upon her (li. 42); and finally,
+ that she should sink to rise no more (li. 64). And Isaiah's prediction of
+ ruin and destruction included with Babylon, "the land of the Chaldeans"
+ (l. 39), which was then, and is yet, a great commercial country, with an
+ annual revenue at this time, according to Harvey Brydges, of a million
+ pounds sterling. Here, then, is a long series of prophecies falsified. Our
+ authority for saying that Hillah occupies the site of ancient Babylon is
+ Malte-Brun's Geography (page 655), which declares, "Hillah is situated
+ within the precincts of Babylon;" thus proving it is not "a wilderness,
+ wherein no man dwelleth." Had we space, we should present an extended view
+ of the prophecies.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg's The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors, by Kersey Graves
+
+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: The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors
+ Or, Christianity Before Christ
+
+Author: Kersey Graves
+
+Release Date: January 17, 2012 [EBook #38600]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIXTEEN SAVIORS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S SIXTEEN CRUCIFIED SAVIORS
+
+OR, CHRISTIANITY BEFORE CHRIST
+
+CONTAINING NEW, STARTLING, AND EXTRAORDINARY REVELATIONS IN RELIGIOUS
+HISTORY, WHICH DISCLOSE THE ORIENTAL ORIGIN OF ALL THE DOCTRINES,
+PRINCIPLES, PRECEPTS, AND MIRACLES OF THE CHRISTIAN NEW TESTAMENT, AND
+FURNISHING A KEY FOR UNLOCKING MANY OF ITS SACRED MYSTERIES, BESIDES
+COMPRISING THE HISTORY OF 16 HEATHEN CRUCIFIED GODS.
+
+By Kersey Graves
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+INVERSELY to the remoteness of time has been man's ascent toward the
+temple of knowledge. Truth has made its ingress into the human mind
+in the ratio by which man has attained the capacity to receive and
+appreciate it Hence, as we tread back the meandering pathway of human
+history, every step in the receding process brings us to a lower plane
+of intelligence and a state of mind more thoroughly encrusted with
+ignorance and superstition. It is, therefore, no source of surprise to
+learn, when we take a survey of the world two or three thousand years
+in the past, that every religious writer of that era committed errors on
+every subject which employed his pen, involving a scientific principle.
+Hence, the bible, or sacred book, to which he was a contributor, is
+now found to bear the marks of human imperfection. For the temple of
+knowledge was but partially reared, and its chambers but dimly lighted
+up. The intellectual brain was in a dark, feeble and dormant condition.
+Hence, the moral and religious feelings were drifted about without a
+pilot on the turbulent waves of superstition, and finally stranded on
+the shoals of bigotry. The Christian bible, like other bibles, having
+been written in an age when science was but budding into life, and
+philosophy had attained but a feeble growth, should be expected to teach
+many things incompatible with the principles of modern science.
+And accordingly it is found to contain, like other bibles, numerous
+statements so obviously at war with present established scientific
+truths that almost any school-boy, at the present day, can demonstrate
+their falsity. Let the unbiased reader examine and compare the oriental
+and Christian bibles together, and he will note the following facts,
+viz:--
+
+1. That the cardinal religious conceptions of all bibles are essentially
+the same--all running in parable grooves.
+
+2. That every chapter of every bible is but a transcript of the mental
+chart of the writer.
+
+3. That no bible, pagan or Christian, contains anything surpassing the
+natural, mental and moral capacity of the writer to originate. And hence
+no divine aid or inspiration was necessary for its production.
+
+4. That the moral and religious teachings of no bible reach a higher
+altitude than the intelligence and mental development of the age and
+country which produced it.
+
+5. That the Christian bible, in some respects, is superior to some of
+the other bibles, but only to the extent to which the age in which it
+was written was superior in intelligence and natural mental capacity to
+the era in which the older bibles were penned; and that this superiority
+consists not its more exalted religious conceptions, but only in the
+fact that, being of more modern origin, the progress of mind had worn
+away some of the legendary rubbish of the past. Being written in a later
+and more enlightened age, it is consequently a little less encrusted
+with mythological tradition and oriental imagery. Though not free from
+these elements, it possesses them in less degree. And by comparing
+Christ's history with those of the oriental Gods, it will be found:--
+
+1. That he taught no new doctrine or moral precept.
+
+2. That he inculcated the same religion and morality, which he
+elaborated, as other moral teachers, to great extremes.
+
+3. That Christ differs so little in his character, preaching, and
+practical life from some of the oriental Gods, that no person whose
+mind is not deplorably warped and biased by early training can call one
+divine while he considers the other human.
+
+4. That if Christ was a God, then all were Gods.
+
+The Author.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+The author desires to say that this work has been carefully reviewed
+and corrected, and some additions made, embracing two chapters from "the
+Bible of Bibles," and some explanatory notes, and is now able to place
+before the reader a greatly improved edition.
+
+The author also desires to say here, that the many flattering letters
+he has received from various parts of the country, from those who have
+supplied themselves with the work, excites in his mind the hope it will
+ultimately effect something towards achieving the important end sought
+to be attained by its publication--the banishment of that wide-spread
+delusion comprehended in the belief in an incarnate, virgin-born God,
+called Jesus Christ, and the infallibility of his teachings, with the
+numerous evils growing legitimately out of this belief--among the
+most important of which is, its cramping effect upon the mind of the
+possessor, which interdicts its growth, and thus constitutes a serious
+obstacle to the progress both of the individual and of society. And such
+has been the blinding effect of this delusion upon all who have fallen
+victims to its influence, that the numerous errors and evils of our
+popular system of religious faith, which constitutes its legitimate
+fruits, have passed from age to age, unnoticed by all except scientific
+and progressive minds, who are constantly bringing these errors and
+evils to light. This state of things has been a source of sorrow and
+regret to every philanthropist desiring the welfare of the race. And if
+this work shall achieve anything towards arresting this great evil, the
+author will feel that he is amply compensated for the years of toil and
+mental labor spent in its preparation.
+
+Note.--As the different works consulted have assigned different dates
+for the same event, the author has, in one or two cases, followed their
+example, accepting them as authority; as in the date of the birth and
+death of the Gods of Mexico. The reader will also notice that the name
+of the same God is found in different countries. Example--Adonis and
+Bacchus are found amongst the Gods of both Greece and Egypt.
+
+
+
+
+EXPLANATION
+
+"The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors." What an imposing title for a
+book! What startling developments of religious history it implies! Is
+it founded on fact or on fiction? If it has a basis of truth, where was
+such an extraordinary mine of sacred lore discovered? Where were such
+startling facts obtained as the title of the work suggests. These
+queries will doubtless arise as soliloquies in the minds of many readers
+on glancing at the title-page. And the author is disposed to gratify
+this natural and most probable, in some cases, excited curiosity by a
+brief explanation. In doing this, he deems it only necessary, to state
+that many of the most important facts collated in this work were derived
+from Sir Godfrey Higgins' Anacalypsis, a work as valuable as it is
+rare--a work comprising the result of twenty years' labor, devoted to
+the investigation of religious history. And although embodying many
+important historical facts which should have commanded for it a
+word-wide circulation, but a few copies of this invaluable treasury of
+religious knowledge have ever found their way into this country. One
+of these copies the author of this work obtained, at no inconsiderable
+expense, long enough to glean from its pages such facts as he presumed
+would be most interesting and instructive to the general reader, some
+of which will be found in nearly every chapter of this volume. With
+the facts and materials derived from this source, and two hundred other
+unimpeachable historical records, the present work might have been
+swelled to fourfold its present size without exhausting the author's
+ample store of materials and would have possessed such unwieldy
+dimensions but for a strict conformity to the most rigid rules of
+eclecticism and condensation. Encouraged by the extensive demand for his
+former work, "The Biography of Satan," which has passed through seven
+editions, the author cherishes the hope that the present work will
+meet with a circulation commensurate with the importance of the many
+invaluable facts which it contains. For he possesses the sad conviction
+that the many religious errors and evils which it is the object of
+this work to expose, operate very seriously to retard the moral and
+intellectual growth and prosperity of all Christian countries. They have
+the effect to injure mentally, morally and religiously the great body of
+Christian professors.
+
+Dr. Prince, of Long Island (now deceased), wrote to the author,
+respecting the thirty-fifth chapter of this work, entitled "The Logical
+View of the Incarnation," after he had seen it in the columns of a
+newspaper, "It is a masterly piece of logic, and will startle, if it
+does not revolutionize, the orthodox world. And the chapters comprising
+'The Philosophical View,' and 'The Physiological View,' were afterward
+pronounced specimens of profound and unanswerable logical reasoning." We
+thus call the reader's attention to these chapters in advance, in order
+to induce that thorough attention to their facts and arguments which
+will result in banishing from his mind the last vestiges of a belief (if
+he entertain any) in the doctrine of the divine incarnation.
+
+
+IMPORTANT FACTS CONSTITUTING THE BASIS OF THIS WORK.
+
+IGNORANCE of science and ignorance of history are the two great bulwarks
+of religious error. There is scarcely a tenet of religious faith now
+propagated to the world by the professed disciples of Christ but that,
+if subjected to a rigid test in the ordeal of modern science would be
+found to contain more or less error. Vast acquisitions have been made
+in the fields of science and history within the last half century, the
+moral lessons of which have done much to undermine and unsettle our
+popular system of religious faith, and to bring into disrepute or
+effectually change many of its long-cherished dogmas. The scientific and
+historical facts thus brought before the intelligent public, have served
+as keys for explaining many of the doctrines comprised in the popular
+creed. They have poured a flood of light upon our whole system of
+religion as now taught by its popular representatives, which have
+had the effect to reveal many of its errors to those who have had the
+temerity, or the curiosity, to investigate it upon these grounds. Many
+of the doctrines and miraculous events which have always been assigned a
+divine emanation by the disciples of the Christian faith, are, by these
+scientific and historical disclosures, shown to be explainable upon
+natural grounds, and to have exclusively a natural basis. Some of them
+are shown to be solvable by recently developed spiritual laws, while
+others are proven to be founded wholly in error. The intelligent
+community are now acquainted with many of these important facts, so that
+no man of science can be found in this enlightened age who can popularly
+be termed a Christian. No man can be found in any Christian country who
+has the established reputation of being a man of science, or who has
+made any proficiency in the whole curriculum of the sciences, whose
+creed, when examined by an orthodox committee, would not be pronounced
+unsound. It is true that many of the scientific class, not possessing
+the conviction that duty imposes the moral necessity of making living
+martyrs of themselves, have refrained from fully avowing or disclosing
+to the public their real convictions of the popular faith.
+
+The changes and improvements in religious ideas now observant in the
+most intelligent portion of the community, are due in part to the rapid
+progress of scientific discovery and the dissemination of scientific
+knowledge in Christian countries. The explorer in the field of religious
+history, however, comes in here for his meed of praise. New stores of
+historic facts and data may be reckoned among the recent acquisitions
+of the laborious archeologist; new fountains of religious history have
+recently been unsealed, which have had the effect to reveal many errors
+and false claims set up for the current religion of Christendom--a
+religion long regarded as settled and stereotyped. For many centuries
+subsequent to the establishment of the Christian religion, but little
+was known by its disciples of the character, claims and doctrines of
+the oriental systems of worship. These religions, in fact, were scarcely
+known to exist, because they had long been veiled in secrecy. They were
+found, in some cases, enshrined in religious books printed or written in
+a language so very ancient and obscure, as to bid defiance for
+centuries to the labors of the most indefatigable, profound and erudite
+archeological scholar to decipher it. That obstacle is now partially
+surmounted.
+
+The recent translation for the first time of the Hindoo Vedas into
+the English language (the oldest bible now extant or ever written) has
+revealed to the unwelcome gaze of the Christian reader the startling
+fact that "the heathen" had long been in possession of "holy books,"
+possessing essentially the same character, and teaching essentially the
+same doctrines as the Christian bible--there being, as Horace Greeley
+expressed it, "No doctrine of Christianity but what has been anticipated
+by the Vedas." (See Vol. II., Chap. i, of this work.)
+
+If, then, this heathen bible (compiled, according to the Christian
+missionary, Rev. D. G Allen, 1400 B. C.), contains all the doctrines of
+Christianity, then away goes over the dam all claim for the Christian
+bible as an original bible as an original revelation, or a work of
+divine inspiration.
+
+Bibles are thus shown to be of heathen and human origin, instead of
+heavenly and divine authorship, as claimed for them by their respective
+disciples--the Christian bible forming no exception to this statement.
+The latter, being essentially like other bibles, it must, of course,
+have had the same or a similar origin--a fact which, though it may be
+new and startling to millions, will be universally accepted as truth
+before the lapse of many generations, and a fact which confronts with
+open denial the claims of two hundred millions of Christian professors,
+who assert with unscrupulous boldness that every doctrine, principle and
+precept of their bible is of divine emanation.
+
+How utterly groundless and untenable is such a claim when arranged by
+the side of modern discoveries in religious history!
+
+Equally unsupportable is the declaration that "there is no other name
+given under heaven whereby men can be saved, than that of Jesus Christ
+and him crucified," when viewed in the light of the modern explorations
+of Sir Godfrey Higgins, which have disclosed the history of nearly a
+score of crucified Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, who, we have equal
+proof, died for the sins of mankind.
+
+Thus, the two prime articles of the Christian faith--Revelation and
+Crucifixion--are forever established as human and heathen conceptions.
+And the hope might be reasonably entertained that the important
+historical facts disclosed in this work will have the effect to open the
+eyes of the professors of the Christian religion to see their serious
+error in putting forth such exalted claims for their bible and their
+religion as that of being perfect products of infinite wisdom, did
+not the past history of all religious countries furnish sad proof that
+reason and logic, and even the most cogent and convincing facts of
+science and history often prove powerless when arrayed against a
+religious conviction, enstamped upon the mind for thousands of years in
+the past, and transmitted from parent to child until it has grown to a
+colossal stature, and become a part of the living tissues of the soul.
+
+No matter how glaringly absurd, how palpably erroneous, or how
+demonstrably false an opinion or doctrine is shown to be, they
+cannot see it, but will still continue to hug it to their bosoms as a
+divinely-revealed truth. No facts or evidence can prove an overmatch for
+the inherited convictions of a thousand generations. In this respect the
+Mahomedan, the Hindoo and the Christian all stand upon a level. It is
+about as easy to convince one as the other of their easily demonstrated
+errors.
+
+
+RELIGION OF NATURAL ORIGIN.
+
+Among the numerous errors traceable in the history of every religious
+sect, commemorated in the annals of the world, none possesses a
+more serious character, or has been attended with more deplorable
+consequences, than that of assigning a wrong origin to religion. Every
+bible, every sect, every creed, every catechism, and every orthodox
+sermon teaches that "religion is the gift of God," that "it is infused
+into the soul by the spirit and power of the Lord." Never was a greater
+mistake ever committed. Every student of anthropology, every person who
+has read any of the numerous modern works on mental science, and tested
+their easily-demonstrated facts, knows that religion is of _natural_ and
+not _supernatural_ origin; that it is a natural element of the
+_human mind_, and not a "_direct gift from God_;" that it grows as
+spontaneously out of the soul as flowers spring out of the ground. It is
+as natural as eating, sleeping or breathing. This conclusion is not the
+offspring of mere imagination. It is no hastily-concocted theory, but an
+oft-demonstrated and scientifically-established fact, which any person
+can test the truth of for himself.
+
+And this modern discovery will, at no distant day, revolutionize
+all systems of religious faith in existence, and either dissolve and
+dissipate them, or modify and establish them upon a more natural and
+enduring basis, expurgated of their dogmatic errors.
+
+Let us, then, labor to banish the wide-spread delusion believed and
+taught by a thousand systems of worship--Jew, Pagan and Christian--that
+"religion is of supernatural or divine origin," and the many ruinous
+errors; senseless dogmas and deplorable soul-crushing superstitions
+so thoroughly inwrought into the Christian system will vanish like fog
+before the morning sun, and be replaced by a religion which sensible,
+intelligent and scientific men and women can accept, and will delight to
+honor and practice.
+
+
+
+
+ADDRESS TO THE CLERGY.
+
+FRIENDS and brethren--teachers of the Christian faith: Will you believe
+us when we tell you the divine claims of your religion are
+gone--all swept away by the "logic of history," and nullified by the
+demonstrations of science?
+
+The recently opened fountains of historic law, many of whose potent
+facts will be found interspersed through the pages of this work, sweep
+away the last inch of ground on which can be predicated the least show
+for either the divine origin of the Christian religion, or the divinity
+of Jesus Christ.
+
+For these facts demonstrate beyond all cavil and criticism, and with
+a logical force which can leave not the vestige of a doubt upon any
+unbiased mind, that all its doctrines are an outgrowth from older
+heathen systems. Several systems of religion essentially the same in
+character and spirit as that religion now known as Christianity, and
+setting forth the same doctrines, principles and precepts, and several
+personages filling a chapter in history almost identical with that of
+Jesus Christ, it is now known to those who are up with the discoveries
+and intelligence of the age, were venerated in the East centuries before
+a religion called Christian, or a personage called Jesus Christ were
+known to history.
+
+Will you not, then, give it up that your religion is merely a human
+production, reconstructed from heathen materials--from oriental systems
+several thousand years older than yours--or will you continue, in spite
+of the unanimous and unalterable verdict of history, science, facts and
+logic, to proclaim to the world the now historically demonstrated
+error which you have so long preached, that God is the author of your
+religion, and Jesus Christ a Deity-begotten Messiah? Though you may have
+heretofore honestly believed these doctrines to be true, you can now no
+longer plead ignorance as an excuse for propagating such gigantic
+and serious errors, as they are now overwhelmingly demonstrated by a
+thousand facts of history to be untrue. You must abandon such exalted
+claims for your religion, or posterity will mark you as being "blind
+leaders of the blind." They will heap upon your honored names their
+unmitigated ridicule and condemnation. They will charge you as being
+either deplorably ignorant, or disloyal to the cause of truth. And shame
+and ignominy will be your portion.
+
+The following propositions (fatal to your claims for Christianity) are
+established beyond confutation by the historical facts cited in this
+work, viz:--
+
+1. There were many cases of the miraculous birth of Gods reported in
+history before the case of Jesus Christ.
+
+2 Also many other cases of Gods being born of virgin mothers.
+
+3. Many of these Gods, like Christ, were (reputedly) born on the 25th of
+December.
+
+4. Their advent into the world, like that of Jesus Christ, is in many
+cases claimed to have been foretold by "inspired prophets."
+
+5. Stars figured at the birth of several of them, as in the case of
+Christ.
+
+6. Also angels, shepherds, and magi, or "wise men."
+
+7. Many of them, like Christ, were claimed to be of royal or princely
+descent.
+
+8. Their lives, like his, were also threatened in infancy by the ruler
+of the country.
+
+9. Several of them, like him, gave early proof of divinity.
+
+10. And, like him, retired from the world and fasted.
+
+11. Also, like him, declared, "My kingdom is not of this world."
+
+12. Some of them preached a spiritual religion, too, like his.
+
+13. And were "anointed with oil," like him.
+
+14. Many of them, like him, were "crucified for the sins of the world."
+
+15. And after three days' interment "rose from the dead."
+
+16. And, finally, like him, are reported as ascending back to heaven.
+
+17. The same violent convulsions of nature at the crucifixion of several
+are reported.
+
+18. They were nearly all called "Saviors," "Son of God," "Messiah,"
+"Redeemer," "Lord," &c.
+
+19. Each one was the second member of the trinity of "Father, Son and
+Holy Ghost."
+
+20. The doctrines of "Original Sin," "Fall of Man," "The Atonement,"
+"The Trinity," "The Word," "Forgiveness," "An Angry God," "Future
+Endless Punishment," etc., etc. (see the author's "Biography of Satan,")
+were a part of the religion of each of these sin-atoning Gods, as
+found set forth in several oriental bibles and "holy books," similar in
+character and spirit to the Christian's bible, and written, like it,
+by "inspired and holy men" before the time of either Christ or Moses
+(before Moses, in some cases, at least). All these doctrines and
+declarations, and many others not here enumerated, the historical
+citations of this work abundantly prove, were taught in various
+oriental heathen nations centuries before the birth of Christ, or before
+Christianity, as a religion, was known in the world.
+
+Will you, then, after learning these facts, longer dare assert that
+Christianity is of divine emanation, or claim a special divine paternity
+for its author. Only the priest, who loves his _salary_ more than
+the cause of _truth_ (and I fear this class are numerous,) or who is
+deplorably ignorant of history, will have the effrontery or audacity to
+do so. For the historical facts herein set forth as clearly prove such
+assumptions to be false, as figures can demonstrate the truth of any
+mathematical problem. And no logic can overthrow, and no sophistry can
+set aside these facts.
+
+They will stand till the end of time in spite of your efforts either to
+evade, ignore, or invalidate them.
+
+We will here briefly state:--
+
+
+WHY ALL THE ANCIENT RELIGIONS WERE ALIKE.
+
+Two causes are obviously assignable for Christianity in all its
+essential features and phases, being so strikingly similar to the
+ancient pagan systems which preceded it, as also the close analogies of
+all the principal systems, whose doctrines and practical teachings have
+found a place on the pages of history.
+
+1. The primary and constituent elements and properties of human nature
+being essentially the same in all countries and all centuries, and the
+feeling called Religion being a spontaneous outgrowth of the devotional
+elements of the human mind, the coincidence would naturally produce
+similar feelings, similar thoughts, similar views and similar doctrines
+on the subject of religion in different countries, however widely
+separated. This accounts in part for the analogous features observable
+in all the primary systems of religious faith, which have flourished in
+the past ages.
+
+2. A more potent cause, however, for the proximate identity extending
+to such an elaborate detail, as is evinced by the foregoing schedule,
+is found in the historical incident which brought the disciples of the
+various systems of worship together, face to face, in the then grand
+religious emporium of the world--the royal and renowned city of
+Alexandria, the capital of Egypt Here, drawn together by various motives
+and influences, the devotee of India (the devout disciple of
+Buddhism), the ever-prayerful worshipper of "Mithra, the Mediator," the
+representatives of the crucified Quexalcoate of Mexico, the self-denying
+Essene, the superstitious Egyptian, the godly Chaldean, the imitative
+Judean founders of Christianity, and the disciples of other sin-atoning
+Gods, met and interchanged ideas, discussed their various dogmas,
+remolded their doctrines, and recast and rehabilitated their systems
+of religious faith by borrowing from each other, and from other systems
+there represented. In this way all became remarkably similar and alike
+in all their doctrines and details. And thus the mystery is solved,
+and the singular resemblance of all the ancient systems of religion
+satisfactorily accounted for. (For a fuller explanation of this matter,
+see Chapters XXX. and XXXI. of this work.)
+
+In conclusion, please note the following points:--
+
+1. The religious conceptions of the Old Testament are as easily traced
+to heathen sources as those of the New Testament. But we are compelled
+to exclude such an exposition from this work.
+
+2. The comparative exhibition of the doctrines and teachings of twenty
+bibles which proves them to be in their leading features essentially
+alike (originally designed for this volume), is found to be, when
+completed, of sufficient magnitude to constitute a volume of itself.
+
+3. Here I desire to impress upon the minds of my clerical brethren the
+important fact, that the gospel histories of Christ were written by men
+who had formerly been Jews (see Acts xxi. 20), and probably possessing
+the strong proclivity to imitate and borrow which their bible shows
+was characteristic of that nation; and being written many years after
+Christ's death, according to that standard Christian author, Dr.
+Lardner, it was impossible, under such circumstances, for them to
+separate (if they had desired to) the real facts and events of his life
+from the innumerable fictions and fables then afloat everywhere relative
+to the heathen Gods who had pre-enacted a similar history. Two reasons
+are thus furnished for their constructing a history of Christ almost
+identical with that of other Gods, as shown in chapters XXX., XXXI. and
+XXXII. of this work.
+
+4. The singular and senseless defense of your now tottering system
+we have known to be attempted by members of your order, by the
+self-complacent soliloquy "Christianity, whether divine or human, is
+good enough for me." But such a subterfuge betrays both a weak mind
+and a weak cause. The disciples of all the oriental systems cherished
+a similar feeling and a similar sentiment. And the deluded followers
+of Brigham Young exclaimed in like manner, "I want nothing better than
+Mormonism." "Snakes, lizards and frogs are good enough for me," a South
+Sea Islander once exclaimed to a missionary, when a reform diet was
+proposed. Such logic, if universally adopted, would keep the world
+eternally in barbarism. No progress can be made where such sentiments
+prevail. The truth is, no system of religion, whatever its ostensible
+marks of perfection, can long remain "good enough" for aspiring
+and progressive minds, unless occasionally improved, like other
+institutions. And then it should be borne in mind, that our controversy
+does not appertain so much to the character as to the origin of the
+Christian religion. Our many incontrovertible proofs, that it is
+of human and heathen origin, proves at the same time that it is an
+imperfect system, and as such, needing occasional improvement, like
+other institutions. And its assumed perfection and divine origin which
+have always guarded it from improvement, amply accounts for its present
+corrupt, immoral, declining and dying condition. And it will ere long
+die with paralysis, unless its assumption of divine perfection is soon
+exchanged for the principles of improvement and reconstruction. This
+policy alone can save it.
+
+5. We will here notice another feeble, futile and foolish expedient we
+have known resorted to by persons of your order to save your sinking
+cause when the evidence is presented with such cogency as to admit of no
+disproof, that all the important doctrines of Christianity were taught
+by older heathen systems before the era of Christ The plea is, that
+those systems were mere types, or ante-types, of the Christian religion.
+But this plea is of itself a borrowed subterfuge of heathenism, and is
+moreover devoid of evidence. The ancient Egyptians, also the Greeks,
+claimed that Brahminism was a type, or ante-type, of their religious
+systems. And Mahomedans now claim that both Judaism and Christianity
+were designed by God as foreshadowing types of religion of the Koran.
+And the disciples of more than a thousand systems of religion which have
+flourished in past ages, could have made such logic equally available in
+showing, in each case, that every system preceding theirs was designed
+by Infinite Wisdom as simply a typical or ante-typical forerunner of
+theirs. How ridiculous and senseless, therefore, is the argument thus
+shown to be when critically examined in the light of history! So much so
+as scarcely to merit a serious notice.
+
+6. Here permit us to say that we believe Christianity to be not only
+of human origin, but of natural origin also; I that is, a natural
+outgrowth, like other systems, of the religious elements of the human
+mind--a hypothesis which accounts most beautifully for the numerous
+human imperfections now visible in nearly every line of its teachings.
+
+Those imperfections correspond exactly to the imperfect minds which
+produced it.
+
+7. And we believe that the principle teacher of Christianity, "the man
+Christ Jesus," possessed a very exalted and superior mind for that age
+in the moral and religious departments, and in the intellectual to some
+extent also. But his superiority in these respects was not probably
+greater than that of Zera Colburn or Henry Salford in the mathematical
+department. And all probably derived their peculiar extraordinary traits
+of mind from the same causes--that of strong psychological influence
+impressed upon the mind of the mothers prior to their births. Had these
+ante-natal influences been as well understood then as now, we presume
+Christ would have escaped the fate of an exaltation to the Godhead.
+
+ [The author, stating the above, demonstrates that same
+ assumption of a _truth_ which he criticises in the
+ Christians, Mohamedens and other proponents of religions.
+ _Ed._]
+
+8. In conclusion, permit us to say that the numerous and overwhelming
+facts of this work render it utterly impossible that the exalted claims
+you put forth for your religion and its assumed author (that of a divine
+character) can be true. And posterity will so decide, whether you do or
+not.
+
+Cherishing for you naught but feelings of kindness and brotherly love,
+and desiring to promote the truth, we will answer any question, or
+discuss any proposition embraced in this work you may desire.
+
+Your brother,
+
+Kersey Graves.
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S SIXTEEN CRUCIFIED SAVIORS.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. RIVAL CLAIMS OF THE SAVIORS
+
+IT is claimed by the disciples of Jesus Christ, that he was of
+supernatural and divine origin; that he had a human being for a mother,
+and a God for his father; that, although he was woman-conceived, he
+was Deity-begotten, and molded in the human form, but comprehending in
+essence a full measure of the infinite Godhead; thus making him half
+human and half divine in his sublunary origin. It is claimed that he was
+full and perfect God, and perfect man; and while he was God, he was also
+the son of God, and as such was sent down by his father to save a fallen
+and guilty world; and that thus his mission pertained to the whole human
+race; and his inspired seers are made to declare that ultimately every
+nation, tongue, kindred, and people under heaven will acknowledge
+allegiance to his government, and concede his right to reign and rule
+the world; that "every knee must bow, and every tongue confess that
+Jesus is Lord, to the glory of God the Father."
+
+But we do not find that this prophecy has ever been or is likely to be
+fulfilled. We do not observe that this claim to the infinite deityship
+of Jesus Christ has been or is likely to be universally conceded. On
+the contrary, it is found that by a portion, and a large portion of the
+people of even those nations now called Christian, this claim has
+been steadily and unswervingly controverted, through the whole line of
+history, stretching through the nearly two thousand years which have
+elapsed since his advent to earth.
+
+Even some of those who are represented to have been personally
+acquainted with him--aye! some of his own brethren in the flesh,
+children in the same household, children of the same mother--had the
+temerity to question the tenableness of his claim to a divine emanation.
+And when we extend our researches to other countries, we find this
+claim, so far from being conceded, is denied and contested by whole
+nations upon other grounds. It is met and confronted by rival claims.
+
+Upon this ground hundreds of millions of the established believers
+in divine revelation--hundreds of millions of believers in the divine
+character and origin of religion--eject the pretentions set up for Jesus
+Christ. They admit both a God and a Savior, but do not accept Jesus of
+Nazareth as being either. They admit a Messiah, but not the Messiah;
+these nations contend that the title is misplaced which makes "the man
+Christ Jesus" the Savior of the world. They claim to have been honored
+with the birth of the true Savior among them, and defend this claim
+upon the ground of priority of date. They aver that the advent of their
+Messiahs were long prior to that of the Christians', and that this
+circumstance adjudicates for them a superiority of claim as to having
+had the true Messiah born upon their soil.
+
+It is argued that, as the story of the incarnation of the Christians'
+Savior is of more recent date than that of these oriental and ancient
+religions (as is conceded by Christians themselves), the origin of the
+former is thus indicated and foreshadowed as being an outgrowth from,
+if not a plagiarism upon the latter--a borrowed copy, of which the pagan
+stories furnish the original. Here, then, we observe a rivalship of
+claims, as to which of the remarkable personages who have figured in
+the world as Saviors, Messiahs, and Sons of God, in different ages and
+different countries, can be considered the true Savior and "sent of God"
+or whether all should be, or the claims of all rejected.
+
+For researches into oriental history reveal the remarkable fact that
+stories of incarnate Gods answering to and resembling the miraculous
+character of Jesus Christ have been prevalent in most if not all the
+principal religious heathen nations of antiquity; and the accounts and
+narrations of some of these deific incarnations bear such a striking
+resemblance to that of the Christian Savior--not only in their general
+features, but in some cases in the most minute details, from the legend
+of the immaculate conception to that of the crucifixion, and subsequent
+ascension into heaven--that one might almost be mistaken for the other.
+
+More than twenty claims of this kind--claims of beings invested with
+divine honor (deified)--have come forward and presented themselves at
+the bar of the world with their credentials, to contest the verdict of
+Christendom, in having proclaimed Jesus Christ, "the only son, and sent
+of God:" twenty Messiahs, Saviors, and Sons of God, according to history
+or tradition, have, in past times, descended from heaven, and taken upon
+themselves the form of men, clothing themselves with human flesh,
+and furnishing incontestable evidence of a divine origin, by various
+miracles, marvelous works, and superlative virtues; and finally these
+twenty Jesus Christs (accepting their character for the name) laid the
+foundation for the salvation of the world, and ascended back to heaven.
+
+1. Chrishna of Hindostan.
+
+2. Budha Sakia of India.
+
+3. Salivahana of Bermuda.
+
+4. Zulis, or Zhule, also Osiris and Orus, of Egypt.
+
+5. Odin of the Scandinavians.
+
+6. Crite of Chaldea.
+
+7. Zoroaster and Mithra of Persia.
+
+8. Baal and Taut, "the only Begotten of God," of Phenicia.
+
+9. Indra of Thibet.
+
+10. Bali of Afghanistan.
+
+11. Jao of Nepaul.
+
+12. Wittoba of the Bilingonese.
+
+13. Thammuz of Syria.
+
+14. Atys of Phrygia.
+
+15. Xamolxis of Thrace.
+
+16. Zoar of the Bonzes.
+
+17. Adad of Assyria.
+
+18. Deva Tat, and Sammonocadam of Siam.
+
+19. Alcides of Thebes.
+
+20. Mikado of the Sintoos.
+
+21. Beddru of Japan.
+
+22 Hesus or Eros, and Bremrillah, of the Druids.
+
+23. Thor, son of Odin, of the Gauls.
+
+24. Cadmus of Greece.
+
+25. Hil and Feta of the Mandaites.
+
+26. Gentaut and Quexalcote of Mexico.
+
+27. Universal Monarch of the Sibyls.
+
+28. Ischy of the Island of Formosa.
+
+29. Divine Teacher of Plato.
+
+30. Holy One of Xaca.
+
+31. Fohi and Tien of China.
+
+32. Adonis, son of the virgin Io of Greece.
+
+33. Ixion and Quirinus of Rome.
+
+34. Prometheus of Caucasus.
+
+35. Mohamud, or Mahomet, of Arabia.
+
+These have all received divine honors, have nearly all been worshiped
+as Gods, or sons of God; were mostly incarnated as Christs, Saviors,
+Messiahs, or Mediators; not a few of them were reputedly born of
+virgins; some of them filling a character almost identical with that
+ascribed by the Christian's bible to Jesus Christ; many of them,
+like him, are reported to have been crucified; and all of them, taken
+together, furnish a prototype and parallel for nearly every important
+incident and wonder-inciting miracle, doctrine and precept recorded
+in the New Testament, of the Christian's Savior. Surely, with so many
+Saviors the world cannot, or should not, be lost.
+
+We have now presented before us a two-fold ground for doubting and
+disputing the claims put forth by the Christian world in behalf of "Our
+Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." In the first place, allowing the question
+to be answered in the affirmative as to whether he was really a Savior,
+or supernatural being, or more than a mere man, a negative answer to
+which seems to have been sprung (as previously intimated) at the very
+hour of his birth, and that by his kindred, his own nearest relatives;
+as it is declared, "his own brethren did not believe on him"--a
+skepticism which has been growing deeper and broader from that day to
+this.
+
+And now, upon the heel of this question, we find another formidable
+query to be met and answered, viz.: Was he (Christ) the only Savior,
+seeing that a multitude of similar claims are now upon our council-board
+to be disposed of?
+
+We shall, however, leave the theologians of the various religious
+schools to adjust and settle this difficulty among themselves. We shall
+leave them to settle the question as best they can as to whether Jesus
+Christ was the only son and sent of God--"the only begotten of the
+Father," as John declares him to be (John i. 14)--in view of the fact
+that long prior to his time various personages, in different nations,
+were invested with the title "Son of God," and have left behind them
+similar proofs and credentials of the justness of their claims to such
+a title, if being essentially alike--as we shall prove and demonstrate
+them to be--can make their claims similar.
+
+We shall present an array of facts and historical proofs, drawn from
+numerous histories and the Holy Scriptures and bibles appertaining to
+these various Saviors, and which include a history of their lives
+and doctrines, that will go to show that in nearly all their leading
+features, and mostly even in their details, they are strikingly similar.
+
+A comparison, or parallel view, extended through their sacred histories,
+so as to include an exhibition presented in parallels of the teachings
+of their respective bibles, would make it clearly manifest that, with
+respect to nearly every important thought, deed, word, action, doctrine,
+principle, precept, tenet, ritual, ordinance or ceremony, and even
+the various important characters or personages, who figure in their
+religious dramas as Saviors, prophets, apostles, angels, devils, demons,
+exalted or fallen genii--in a word, nearly every miraculous or marvelous
+story, moral precept, or tenet of religious faith, noticed in either
+the Old or New Testament Scriptures of Christendom--from the Jewish
+cosmogony, or story of creation in Genesis, to the last legendary tale
+in St. John's "Arabian Nights" (alias the Apocalypse)--there is to be
+found an antitype for, or outline of, somewhere in the sacred records
+or bibles of the oriental heathen nations, making equal if not higher
+pretention to a divine emanation and divine inspiration, and admitted by
+all historians, even the most orthodox, to be of much more ancient date;
+for while Christians only claim, for the earthly advent of their Savior
+and the birth of their religion, a period less than nineteen hundred
+years in the past, on the contrary, most of the deific or divine
+incarnations of the heathen and their respective religions are, by the
+concurrent and united verdict of all history, assigned a date several
+hundred or several thousand years earlier, thus leaving the inference
+patent that so far as there has been any borrowing or transfer of
+materials from one system to another, Christianity has been the
+borrower.
+
+And as nearly the whole outline and constituent parts of the Christian
+system are found scattered through these older systems, the query is at
+once sprung as to whether Christianity did not derive its materials
+from these sources--that is, from heathenism, instead of from high
+heaven--as it claims.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. MESSIANIC PROPHECIES
+
+NEARLY all religious history is prophetic of the coming of Saviors,
+Messiahs, Redeemers, and virgin-born Gods. Most religious countries, and
+more than a score of religious systems, had a standing prophecy that a
+divine deliverer would descend from heaven and relieve them from their
+depressed state, and ameliorate their condition. And in most cases that
+prophecy was believed to have been fulfilled by the birth of a being,
+who, as he approached the goal of moral and intellectual manhood
+exhibited such remarkable proof of superiority of mind as to be readily
+accepted as the promised Messiah.
+
+We can only find room for a few citations and illustrations in proof
+of this statement. Many texts have been hunted out and marked in the
+Christian bible, by interested priests, as prophetic of the coming and
+mission of Christ. But a thorough, candid, and impartial investigation
+will convince any reader that _none of these texts_ have the remotest
+allusion to Christ, nor were they intended to have. On the contrary,
+most of them refer to events already past. The others are the
+mere ebullitions of pent-up feelings hopefully prayerful in their
+anticipation of better times, but very indefinite as to the period and
+the agencies or means in which, or by which, the desired reformation was
+to be brought about. A divine man was prayed for and hopefully expected.
+But no such being as Jesus Christ is anticipated, or alluded to, or
+dreamed of, by the prophecies. And it requires the most unwarrantable
+distortion to make one text refer to him.
+
+But this perversion has been wrought on many texts. We will cite one
+case in proof. In Isaiah's "famous prophecy" so-called, the phrase "Unto
+us a child is born" (Isa. ix. 6), the context clearly shows, refers to
+the prophet's own child, and the past tense, "is born," is an evidence
+the child was then born. And the title "Mighty God," found in the text,
+Dr. Beard shows should have been translated "the Mighty Hero," thus
+proving it has no reference to a God. And "the Everlasting Father"
+should have been rendered, according to this Christian writer, "the
+Father of the Everlasting Age." And other texts often quoted as
+prophecies by biased Christian writers, the doctor proves, are
+erroneously translated, and have no more reference to Christ than to
+Mahomet.
+
+It is true the Jews, in common with other nations, cherished strong
+anticipations of the arrival of a Mighty Deliverer amongst them; and
+this august personage some of them supposed would be a God, or a God-man
+(a demi-God). Hence, such prophetic utterances as "Behold, a king shall
+reign in righteousness" (Isa. xxxii. i), "And all nations shall flow
+unto Zion" (Isa. ii. 2).
+
+The Hindoo Budhists long previously indulged similar anticipations with
+respect to the triumph of their religion. Hence, their seers prophesied
+that at the end of the Cali Yug period, a divine child (Avatar, or
+Savior) would be born, who would understand the divine writings (the
+Holy Scriptures) and the sciences, without the labor of learning them.
+"He will supremely understand all things." "He will relieve the earth of
+sin, and cause justice and truth to reign everywhere. And will bring the
+whole earth into the acceptance of the Hindoo religion." And the Hindoo
+prophet Bala also predicted that a divine Savior would "become incarnate
+in the house of Yadu, and issue forth to mortal birth from the womb of
+Devaci (a Holy Virgin), and relieve the oppressed earth of its load of
+sin and sorrow." Much more similar language may be found in their holy
+bible, the Vedas. Colonel Wilford tells us the advent of their Savior
+Chrishna occurred in exact fulfillment of prophecy found in their sacred
+books.
+
+And the Chinese bible also contains a number of Messianic prophecies.
+In one of the five volumes a prophecy runs thus: "The Holy one, when he
+comes, will unite in himself all the virtues of heaven and earth. By his
+justice the world will be established in righteousness. He will labor
+and suffer much,.... and will finally offer up a sacrifice worthy of
+himself," i. e., worthy of a God. And a singular animal, called the
+Kilin (signifying the Lamb of God), was seen in the yard, with a stone
+in its mouth, on which was inscribed a prophecy of the event. And when
+the young God (Chang-ti) was born, in fulfillment of this prophecy,
+heavenly music, and angels and shepherds attended the scene. (See
+"History of China," by Martinus; also Halde's "History of China.")
+
+We will also give place to a Messianic prophecy of Persia. Mr. Faber,
+an English writer, in his "History of Idolatry," tells us that Zoroaster
+prophetically declared, that "A virgin should conceive and bear a son,
+and a star would appear blazing at midday to signalize the occurrence."
+"When you behold the star," said he to his followers, "follow it
+whithersoever it leads you. Adore the mysterious child, offering him
+gifts with profound humility. He is indeed the Almighty Word which
+created the heavens. He is indeed your Lord and everlasting Ring"
+(Faber, vol. ii. p. 92). Abulfaragius, in his "Historia Dynastarium,"
+and Maurice, in his "Indian Skeptics Refuted," both speak of this
+prophecy, fulfilled, according to Mr. Higgins, by the advent of the
+Persian and Chaldean God Josa. And Chalcidus (of the second century), in
+his "Comments on the Times of Plato," speaks of "a star which presaged
+neither disease nor death, but the descent of a God amongst men, and
+which is attested by Chaldean astronomers, who immediately hastened to
+adore the newborn deity, and present him gifts."
+
+We are compelled to omit, for the want of room, the notice of numerous
+Messianic prophecies found in the sacred writings of Egypt, Greece,
+Rome, Mexico, Arabia, and other countries, all of which tend to show
+that the same prophetic spirit pervaded all religious countries,
+reliable only to the extent it might have issued from an interior
+spiritual vision, or have been illuminated by departed spirits. And we
+find as much evidence that these pagan prophecies were inspired, and
+also fulfilled, as those found in Jew-Christian bible, thus reducing all
+to a common level. The possibility of the interior vision being expanded
+and illuminated by spiritual beings, so as to enable the possessor to
+forestall the occurrence of future events, we, however, by no means
+deny, since we have abundant proof of it in connection with the
+practical history of modern spiritualism. (See Chapter XXXIV., section
+2).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. PROPHECIES BY THE FIGURE OF A SERPENT
+
+The Seed of the Woman Bruising the Serpent's Head.
+
+"AND I will put emnity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed
+and her seed. It shall bruise thy head, and thou shall bruise his
+heel." (Gen. ill. 15.) This text is often cited by Christian writers and
+controversialists as prefiguring the mission of the Christian Savior,
+viz., the destruction of the serpent, alias the devil. St. John calls
+"the grand adversary of souls which deceiveth the whole world," "the
+dragon, the serpent, the devil, and Satan." (Rev. xii. 8.) The serpent,
+then, is the devil; that is, the dragon, the serpent, the devil and
+Satan are all one. The object of this chapter is to show the origin of
+the singular figure set forth in the first text quoted, and to prove
+that those Christian writers who assume it to be a revelation from
+heaven were profoundly ignorant of oriental history, as the same figure
+is found in several heathen systems of older date, as we will now cite
+the facts to prove.
+
+Some of the saviors or demigods of Egypt, India, Greece, Persia, Mexico
+and Etruria are represented as performing the same drama with the
+serpent or devil. "Osiris of Egypt (says Mr. Bryant) bruised the head
+of the serpent after it had bitten his heel." Descending to Greece, Mr.
+Faber relates that, "on the spheres Hercules is represented in the act
+of contending with the serpent, the head of which is placed under his
+foot; and this serpent guarded the tree with golden fruit in the midst
+of the garden Hesperides"--Eden. (Origin of Idolatry, vol. i. p. 443.)
+"And we may observe," says this author, "the same tradition in the
+Phoenician fable of Ophion or Ophiones." (Ibid.) In Genesis the serpent
+is the subject of two legends. But here it will be observed that they
+are both couched in one.
+
+Again, it is related by more than one oriental writer that Chrishna of
+India is represented on some very ancient sculptures and stone monuments
+with his heel on the head of a serpent. Mr. Maurice, in his Indian
+Antiquities, vol. ii., speaks of "Chrishna crushing the head of a
+serpent with his foot," and pronounces the striking similarity of this
+story with that found in the Christian bible as "very mysterious."
+Another author tells us "The image of Chrishna is sculptured in the
+ancient temples of India, sometimes wreathed in the folds of a serpent
+which is biting his foot, and sometimes treading victoriously on
+the head of a serpent." (Prog. Rel. Ideas, vol. i.) In the Mexican
+Antiquities, vol. vi., we are told, "A messenger from heaven announced
+to the first woman created (Suchiquecul), that she should bear a son who
+should bruise the serpent's head, and then presented her with a rose."
+Here is the origin of the Genesis legend, the rose being the fruit of
+the tree of "the knowledge of good and evil." "The ancient Persians,"
+says Volney, in his "Ruin of Empires," p. 169, "had the tradition of a
+virgin, from whom they predicted would be born, or would spring up, a
+shoot (a son) that would crush the serpent's head, and thus deliver the
+world from sin." And both the serpent and the virgin, he tells us,
+are represented imaginarily in the heavens, and pictured on their
+astronomical globes and spheres, as on those of the Romish Christian.
+(See Burritt's Geography of the Heavens.)
+
+In the ancient Etrurian story, instead of "the seed of the woman" (the
+virgin), it is the woman herself who is represented as standing with one
+foot on the head of a serpent, which has the twig of an apple tree in
+its mouth to which an apple is suspended (the forbidden fruit), while
+its tail is twisted around a celestial globe, thus reminding us of St.
+John's dragon hauling down one-third of the stars with his tail. (See
+Rev. xii. 4.) In the ancient celestial diagram of the Etrurian, the head
+of the virgin is surmounted with a crown of stars--doubtless the same
+legend from which St. John borrowed his metaphor of a "a woman with
+a crown of twelve stars on her head." (Rev. xiii.) "The _Regina
+Stellarum_" (Queen of the Stars), spoken of in some of the ancient
+systems appertains to the same fable. Also the tradition of Achilles
+of Greece being invulnerable in the heel, as related by Homer. The last
+clause of the first text quoted reads "_It_ shall bruise thy head"--a
+very curious prophetic reference to the savior of the world, if the text
+refers to him, to represent him as being of the neuter gender, for the
+neuter pronoun _it_ always refers to a thing without sex.
+
+In the further exposition of the serpent tradition, we are now brought
+to notice, and will trace to its origin, the story of the original
+transgression and fall of man--two cardinal doctrines of the Christian
+religion. Like every other tenet of the Christian faith, we find these
+doctrines taught in heathen systems much older than Christianity, and
+whose antiquity antedates even the birth of Moses. We will first notice
+the Persian tradition. "According to the doctrine of the Persians," says
+the Rev. J. C. Pitrat, "Meshia and Meshiane, the first man and first
+woman, were pure, and submitted to Ormuzd, their maker. But Ahriman (the
+evil one) saw them, and envied them their happiness. He approached them
+under the form of a serpent, presented fruits to them, and persuaded
+them that he was the maker of man, of animals, of plants, and of the
+beautiful universe in which they dwelt. They believed it. Since that
+time Ahriman was their master. Their natures became corrupt, and this
+corruption infested their whole posterity." This story is taken from the
+Vandidatsade of the Persians, pp. 305 and 428.
+
+The Indian or Hindoo story is furnished us by the Rev. Father Bouchat,
+in a letter to the bishops of Avranches, and runs thus: "Our Hindoos say
+the Gods tried by all means to obtain immortality. After many inquiries
+and trials, they conceived the idea that they would find it in the tree
+of life, which is the Chorcan (paradise). In fact they succeeded, and
+by eating once in a while of the fruits of that tree, they kept the
+precious treasure they so much valued. A famous snake, named Cheiden,
+saw that the tree of life had been found by the Gods of the second
+order. As probably he had been intrusted with guarding that tree,
+he became so angry because his vigilance had been deceived, that he
+immediately poured out an enormous quantity of poison, which spread over
+the whole earth." How much like this story is the story of St. John,
+"And the serpent cast out of his mouth water as a flood after the woman
+that he might cause her to be carried away of the flood!" (Rev. xii.
+15.)
+
+The idea of a snake or serpent inundating the earth from its mouth, as
+taught in both stories is so novel, and so far removed from the sphere
+of natural causes and possible events, that we are compelled to the
+conclusion that one is borrowed from the other, or both from a common
+original.
+
+And as facts cited in other chapters prove beyond dispute that the
+Hindoo system, containing this story, extends in antiquity far beyond
+the time of Moses, the question is thus settled as to which system
+borrowed the story from the other.
+
+Before closing the chapter, we wish to call the attention of the reader
+to the important fact that three out of four of the cardinal doctrines
+of the Christian faith are taught in the two heathen mythological
+stories of creation just presented, viz.:--
+
+1. Original sin.
+
+2. The fall of man caused by a serpent
+
+3. The consequent corruption and depravity of the human race.
+
+These doctrines, then, it must be admitted, are of heathen origin, and
+not, as Christians claim, "important truths revealed from heaven." For
+a historical exposition of the other cardinal doctrine of the Christian
+faith, viz., man's restoration by the atonement achieved through the
+crucifixion of a God, see Chapters xvi. and xxi.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. MIRACULOUS AND IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF THE GODS
+
+THE ancients very naturally concluded that an offspring of God (a son
+of God) should have a purer, higher and holier maternal origin than is
+incident to the lot of mortals, and this was to constitute one of the
+evidences of his emanation from the Deity--that is, of his supernatural
+or divine origin. He, as a matter of course, must not only have
+a different origin, but one in the highest degree superior and
+supernatural. He must not only be able to claim the highest _paternal_
+origin, but the highest _maternal_ also. And on the part of the mother,
+a sexual connection with the great Potentate of heaven would evince for
+her offspring the very acme of superiority with respect to his origin,
+moral perfection and authority. That the Savior was born of a woman
+could not possibly be made a matter of concealment. But his paternal
+parentage was not so obvious and apparent to general observation, being
+cognizant alone to the mother. This circumstance furnished the most
+propititious opportunity to concoct the story that "The Most High" had
+condescended and descended to become both a father and a grandfather to
+a human being, or a being apparently human at least.
+
+We say grandfather, because, if God (as the Christian bible itself
+frequently asserts, both directly and by implication) is father of the
+whole human family, then he was father to the maternal parent; so that
+her son, though deriving existence from him, would be his grandson as
+well as his son. Hence the corollary, _Jesus Christ was a grandson
+of God as well as a son of God_, and Jehovah both his father and
+grandfather.
+
+Again, to make the origin and character of the God and Savior stand
+higher for purity, and partake in the highest degree of the miraculous,
+the impression must go abroad that he was born of a woman _while she was
+yet a maiden_--i. e., before she was contaminated by illicit association
+with the masculine sex. Hence, nearly all the saviors were reputedly
+born of virgins. And the process of birth, too, was out of the line of
+natural causes, in order to invest the character of the savior with the
+_ne plus ultra_ of the miraculous.
+
+And hence it is related of Jesus Christ (in an Apocryphal Gospel), of
+Chrishna of India, and other saviors, that they were born through the
+mother's side.
+
+It is true our present canonical gospels are silent as to the manner
+of Christ's birth; but one of the Apocryphal gospels, which gives the
+matter in fuller detail, and whose authority in the earlier ages of the
+Christian church was not disputed, declares that the manner of his birth
+was as related above. And, besides, some of the early Christian fathers
+fully indorsed the story. The same is related in the pagan bibles of
+heathen Gods. The motives which originated the reports of the immaculate
+conception of the Saviors, it may be further remarked, were of a
+two-fold character:--
+
+1. To establish their spotless origin (as the word immaculate means
+spotless.)
+
+2. To make it appear that there was a Deific power and agency concerned
+in their conception.
+
+And we may observe here that it is not the Saviors alone who are
+reported to have been ushered into tangible existence without a human
+father, but it is declared of beings known and acknowledged to be men,
+as Plato, Pythagoras, Alexander, Augustus and a number of others. Of
+Plato an author remarks, "He was born of Paretonia, and begotten of
+Apollo, and not Ariston, his father." Both the manner, or process,
+and the source of the influence by which the Gods and Saviors were
+generated, seem to have been different in different countries, though
+the idea of "overshadowing with the Holy Ghost" seems to have been most
+current. Mr. Higgins says that "the Supreme First Cause was generally
+believe to overshadow, or in some other mysterious manner to impregnate,
+the mother of the God, or personage" (vol. i. 378). We are told that
+Pythais, the mother of Pythagoras, five hundred and fifty years B. C.,
+conceived by a spectre or ghost (of course the Holy Ghost) of the God
+Apollo, or God Sol.
+
+In Malcolm's "History of Persia" (vol. i. 494) the author tells us that
+"Zoroaster was born of an immaculate conception by a ray from the Divine
+Reason." The immaculate conception of Juno of Greece is thus described
+by the poet:--
+
+ "Juno touched the flower;
+ Its wondrous virtues such,
+ She touched it, and grew pregnant at the touch;
+ Then entered Thrace--the Propontic shore;
+ When mistress of her touch,
+ God Mars she bore."
+
+This case may certainly be set down as the _ne plus ultra_ of etiquette
+with respect to sexual commerce or purity of conception. The sweet odor
+of an expanded flower, we are here taught, is adequate to the conception
+and production of a God. Here we have "the immaculate conception" in the
+superlative degree, and while much more beautiful and grand it cannot be
+more senseless or unreasonable than the conception by a ghost. It proves
+at least that the doctrine of the immaculate conception is of very
+ancient date. And this fastidious maiden lady and immaculate virgin,
+Juno, not only conceived the God Mars by the touch of a flower, but she
+also (so the story reads) conceived Vulcan by being overshadowed by the
+wind--exactly a parallel case with that of the virgin Mary, as we find
+that ghost, in the original, means wind. Thus we observe that Vulcan,
+long before Jesus Christ, was "born of the Holy Ghost," i. e., both were
+conceived by the "Holy Wind." And the author of the "Perennial Calendar"
+speaks of the miraculous conception of Juno Jugulis, "the blessed virgin
+queen of heaven," and describes it as falling on the second of February,
+the very day which the early Christians celebrated with a festival, as
+being the date of the conception of the "ever Blessed Virgin Mary."
+
+Of the ancient Mexicans, it is said "they had the immaculate conception,
+the crucifixion, and the resurrection after three days." (Mex. Antiq.,
+vol. i.) And in an ancient work called "Codex Vaticanus," the immaculate
+conception is spoken of as a part of the history of Quexalcote, the
+Mexican Savior. "Suchiquecal," says the Mexican Antiquities, "was called
+the Queen of Heaven. She conceived a son without connection with a
+man"--a very obvious case of immaculate conception.
+
+Alvarez Semedo, in his "History of China," page 89, speaks of a sect in
+that country who worshiped a Savior known as Xaca, who was reputedly
+conceived of his mother, Maia, by a white elephant, which she saw in her
+sleep, and "for greater purity, she brought him forth from one of
+her sides." Colonel Tod, of England, tells us in his "History of the
+Rajahs," page 57, that Yu, the first Chinese monarch, was conceived by
+his mother being struck with a star while traveling.
+
+In the case of Christ, it will be recollected, the star did not appear
+till after his birth. But here the star is the author and agent of the
+conception.
+
+According to Ranking's "History of the Moguls," page 178, Tamerlane's
+mother (of Bermuda) professedly conceived by having had sexual
+intercourse with "the God of Day." The mother of Ghengis Khan, of
+Tartary, "being too modest to claim that she was the mother of the son
+of God, said only that he was the _son of the sun_." (History of Mogul,
+page 65.)
+
+Both Julis and Osiris of Egypt are spoken of by some authors as having
+been honored with a divine immaculate conception--the former being
+the son of the beautiful virgin Cronis Celestine, and "begotten by the
+Father of all Gods."
+
+Both Budha and Chrishna, of India, are reported as having been
+immaculately conceived. The mother of the latter (God) was (as the
+Hindoo Holy Book declares) overshadowed by the Supreme God, Brahma,
+while the spirit-author of the conception (that is, the Holy Ghost) was
+Naraan. The mother of Apollonius of Cappadocia, who was cotemporary
+with Jesus Christ (according to his history by Philostratus)--and his
+(Apollonius') disciple Damis testifies to the same effect gave birth
+to this God and rival Savior of Jesus Christ, by having been previously
+"overshadowed" by the supreme God Proteus. For the corporeal existence
+and earthly career of Augustus Caesar, the world has ostensibly to
+acknowledge itself indebted to the "overshadowing" influence and
+generating power of Jove, by whose divine influence he was immaculously
+conceived in the temple of Apollo, according to the statement of Nimrod,
+his biographer. The virgin mother Shing-Mon of China furnishes another
+case of immaculate conception. Possessing a sensibility too lofty and
+too refined to descend to the ordinary routine of the world, she gave
+birth to the God Yu from previous conception by a water lily. This
+case, with respect to the degree of procreative delicacy and refinement
+evinced, may be classed with that of Juno of Greece. Here it may be
+noted as a curious circumstance, that several of the virgin mothers
+of Gods and great men are specifically represented as going ten months
+between conception and delivery. The mothers of Hercules, Sakia,
+Guatama, Scipio, Arion, Solomon and Jesus Christ may be mentioned as
+samples of this character. This tradition probably grew out of the
+established belief in the ten sacred cycles which constitute the great
+prospective and portentous millennial epoch, as described in Chapter
+XXX. Arion, mentioned above, is represented as being both miraculously
+and immaculously conceived by the Gods in the citadel of Byrsa.
+
+In view of the foregoing facts, drawn from accredited histories,
+the reader will readily concede that the tradition of the miraculous
+conceptions of Gods (sons of God), Saviors and Messiahs was very
+prevalent in the world at a very ancient period of time, and long before
+the mother of Jesus was "overshadowed by the Most High." Indeed, says
+Mr. Higgins, "the belief in the immaculate conception extended to
+every nation in the world." And Grote, referring to Greece, makes the
+remarkable declaration, that "the furtive pregnancy of young women,
+often by a God, is one of the most frequently recurring incidents in
+the legendary narratives of the country." And we find that both the
+prevalency and great antiquity of the doctrine of the immaculate
+conception among the heathen is conceded by Christian writers themselves
+(of former ages) in their attempts to find arguments and commendatory
+precedents to justify their own belief in the doctrine. For proof of
+this, we need only cite the Christian writer Mr. Bailey, who remarks,
+"What I have said of St. Augustine is applicable also to Origen
+and Lactanius, who have endeavored to persuade us of the immaculate
+virginity of the mother of Jesus Christ by the example of similar events
+stored by the heathen." Here we have several Christian authorities cited
+by another writer, also a Christian, for placing the doctrine of the
+immaculate conception among the heathen legends in ages long anterior to
+Christ.
+
+With respect to the degree of credence to be attached to the story
+of the immaculate conception of the mother of Jesus, it need only be
+observed that there was no other person concerned in the transaction but
+herself who could possess positive, absolute knowledge of the parentage.
+And she, let it be noted, settles the matter forever, by virtually
+affirming that Joseph was his father in the declaration addressed to
+Jesus when she found him in the temple, "_I and thy father_ have sought
+thee sorrowing." (Luke ii. 48.) No one will dispute that the father here
+spoken of was Joseph, which amounts to a positive declaration by the
+mother, that Joseph was Jesus' father.
+
+
+IMMACULATE CONCEPTION AND MIRACULOUS BIRTH OF THE CHRISTIAN SAVIOR.
+
+The following considerations exhibit some of the numerous absurdities
+involved in the story of the miraculous birth of Jesus Christ.
+
+1. The evangelical narratives show that Christ himself did not claim to
+have a miraculous birth. He did not once allude to such an event; while
+if, as Christians claim, it is the principal evidence of his deityship,
+he certainly would have done so.
+
+2. His paternal genealogy, as made out by Matthew and Luke, completely
+disproves the story of his miraculous conception by a virgin. For they
+both trace his lineage through Joseph, which they could not do only on
+the assumption that Joseph was his father. This, of course, disproves
+his sireship by the Holy Ghost, ergo, the miraculous conception. It
+is the lineage and parentage of Joseph, and not Mary, that is given
+in tracing back his ancestry to the royal household--a fact which
+completely overthrows the story of his miraculous birth.
+
+3. And the fact that his _own disciple_ (Philip) declared him to be the
+_son of Joseph_, and that several texts show that it was the current
+impression, is still further confirmation of the conclusion.
+
+4. We find the story of the immaculate conception resting entirely upon
+the slender foundation comprised in the legends of an angel and a dream.
+We are told that Mary got it by an angel, and Joseph by a dream. And
+through these sources we have the whole groundwork and foundation of the
+story of the divinity of Jesus Christ.
+
+5. It should be noticed that we have neither Joseph's nor Mary's report
+of these things, but only Matthew and Luke's version of the affair.
+And we are not informed that either of them ever saw or conversed with
+Joseph or Mary on the subject. It is probable they got it from Dame
+Rumor, with her thousand tongues.
+
+6. If Christ were a miraculously born God, is it possible his mother
+would have reproved him for misconduct when she found him in the temple,
+as she must have known his character?
+
+7. If Mary was miraculously conceived, why was the important secret kept
+so long from Joseph? Why did she keep the "wool drawn over his eyes"
+till an angel had to be sent from heaven to let him into the secret?
+
+8. If she were a virtuously-minded woman, why did she thus attempt to
+deceive him?
+
+9. Why did not God inform Joseph by "inspiration" instead of employing
+the roundabout way of sending an angel to do it?
+
+10. We are told that "Mary was found with child of the Holy Ghost." But
+as we are not informed who found it out, or who made the discovery, or
+how it was made, is it not thus left in a very suspicious aspect?
+
+11. As the whole affair seems to have been based on dreams, and was
+carried on through dreams, and has no better foundation than dreams, why
+should we consider it entitled to any better credit than similar stories
+found in works on heathen mythology?
+
+12. And would it not prove that Christianity is rather a dreamy
+religion?
+
+13. Should not the astounding and incredible report of the birth of a
+God be based on a better foundation than that of dreams and angels and
+the legends of oriental mythology, to entitle it to the belief of an
+intelligent and scientific age?
+
+14. Or can any man of science entertain for a moment the superlative
+solecism of an Infinite God by any special act "overshadowing" a finite
+human female, especially as modern science teaches us that God is both
+male and female, and as much one as the other?
+
+15. As history teaches us the ancient orientalists believed that sexual
+commerce is sinful and contaminating to the child thus begotten and
+born, and hence had their incarnate Gods sent into the world through
+human virgins, can any unbiased mind resist the conviction that this is
+the source of the origin of the story of Christ's immaculate conception?
+
+16. And finally, if it were necessary for Christ to come into the world
+in such a way as to avoid the impure channel of human conception and
+parturition, why did he not descend directly from heaven in person? Why
+could he not "descend on the clouds" by his first advent, as the bible
+says he will do when he makes his second advent?
+
+17. Would not this course have furnished a hundred fold more convincing
+proof and demonstration of his divine power and divine attributes than
+the ridiculous story and inscrutable mystery of the divine conception,
+which is not susceptible of either investigation or proof?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. VIRGIN MOTHERS AND VIRGIN-BORN GODS
+
+THE report in authentic history of a case of a virtuous woman giving
+birth to a child with the usual form, and possessing the usual
+characteristics of a human being, and who should testify she had no male
+partner in the conception, might in an age of miracles and ignorance
+of natural law, be believed with implicit credulity. But in an age of
+intelligence, when the keys of science have unlocked the sacred shrines
+and hallowed vaults of sacerdotal mysteries, and modern researches of
+history have laid bare the fact that most ancient religious countries
+abound in reports of this character, a profound and general skepticism
+must be the result, and a total rejection of their truth by all men of
+science and historic intelligence.
+
+Many are the cases noted in history of young maidens claiming a
+paternity for their male offspring by a God.
+
+In Greece it became so common that the reigning king issued an edict,
+decreeing the death of all young women who should offer such an insult
+to deity as to lay to him the charge of begetting their children. The
+virgin Alcmene furnishes a case of a young woman claiming God as the
+father of her offspring, when she brought forth the divine Redeemer
+Alcides, 1280 years B. C. And Ceres, the virgin mother of Osiris,
+claimed that he was begotten by the "father of all Gods." Mr. Kenrick
+tells us the likeness of this virgin mother, with the divine child
+in her arms, may now be seen represented in sculpture on some of the
+ancient, ruined temples of that ruined empire. And Mr. Higgins makes
+the broad declaration that "the worship of this virgin mother, with her
+God-begotten child, prevailed everywhere." This author also quotes Mr.
+Riquord as saying, this son of God "was exhibited in effigy, lying in
+a manger, in the same manner the infant Jesus was afterward laid in the
+cave at Bethlehem." Mr. Higgins further testifies that the worship of
+this virgin God-mother (that is, the God and the mother) is of very
+ancient date and universal prevalence in all the eastern countries, as
+is proved by sculptured figures bearing the marks of great age.
+
+In corroboration of this statement we might cite many cases, if our
+space would permit, from the religious records of India, Egypt, Persia,
+Greece, Rome, Mexico, Thibet, etc. Maia, mother of Sakia and Yasoda of
+Chrishna; Celestine, mother of the crucified Zulis; Chimalman, mother of
+Quex-alcote; Semele, mother of the Egyptian Bacchus, and Minerva, mother
+of the Grecian Bacchus; Prudence, mother of Hercules; Alcmene, mother of
+Alcides; Shing-Mon, mother-of Yu, and Mayence, mother of Hesus, were
+all as confidently believed to be pure, holy and chaste virgins,
+while giving birth to these Gods, sons of God, Saviors and sin-atoning
+Mediators, as was Mary, mother of Jesus, and long before her time.
+
+Mr. Higgins remarks that the mother was still held to be a virgin, even
+after she had given birth to other children besides the deity-begotten
+bantling, which furnishes another striking parallel to the history of
+Mary, as she was still called a virgin after she had given birth to
+Jesus and his brothers James and John. And it is an incident worth
+noticing here, that, in the case of Mayence, virgin-mother of the
+God-sired Hesus of the Druids, the ancient traditions of the country,
+more than two thousand years old, represent her body as being enveloped
+in light, and a crown of twelve stars upon her head, corresponding
+exactly to the apocalyptic figure described by the mystagogue, St. John,
+in the twelfth chapter of his Revelation. She is also represented with
+her foot on the head of a serpent, according to Davie's "Universal
+Etymology." (Vide the case of the seed of the woman bruising the
+serpent's head, Gen. iii. 15.)
+
+Auguste Nichols tells us, in his "Philosophical Essays on Christianity,"
+that Io is called, in Eschylus, "the Chaste Virgin," and her son "the
+Son of God." (For other similar cases, see Guigne's History of the
+Huns.) Gonzales informs us he found on an ancient temple in India the
+Latin inscription _Patiuro virginis_, "the virgin about to bring forth."
+And similar inscriptions have been found on pagan temples in the country
+of the ancient Gauls. (For proof, see Riquord's Theology of the Ancient
+Gauls, Chapter X.) "He who hath ears to hear, let him hear," and
+treasure up these facts. According to Chinese history there were two
+beings--Tien and Chang-Ti--worshiped in that country as Gods more than
+twenty-five hundred years ago, born of virgins "who knew no man." The
+mother of the mighty and the almighty God Hercules, we are told, "knew
+only Jove."
+
+If history and tradition, then, are to be credited, God had many "well
+beloved sons," born of pious and holy virgins, besides Jesus Christ. And
+some of them are represented as being his "only begotten," and others his
+"first begotten," sons. And all these cases appear to be equally as well
+authenticated as the story of Jesus Christ. All stand upon a level, the
+same kind and the same amount of evidence being offered in each case.
+
+Here we will note it as a curious circumstance, that several of the
+above-named Saviors are represented as being black, Jesus Christ
+included with this number.
+
+There is as much evidence that the Christian Savior was a black man,
+or at least a dark man, as there is of his being the son of the Virgin
+Mary, or that he once lived and moved upon the earth. And that evidence
+is the testimony of his disciples, who had nearly as good an opportunity
+of knowing what his complexion was as the evangelists, who omit to say
+anything about it. In the pictures and portraits of Christ by the early
+Christians, he is uniformly represented as being black. And to make this
+the more certain, the red tinge is given to the lips; and the only text
+in the Christian bible quoted by orthodox Christians, as describing his
+complexion, represents it as being black. Solomon's declaration, "I am
+black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem" (Sol. i. 5), is often
+cited as referring to Christ. According to the bible itself, then, Jesus
+Christ was a black man.
+
+Let us suppose that, at some future time, he makes his second advent to
+the earth, as some Christians anticipate he will do, and that he comes
+in the character of a sable Messiah, how would he be received by our
+negro-hating Christians, of sensitive olfactory nerves? Would they
+worship a negro God? Let us imagine he enters one of our fashionable
+churches, with his "rough and ready" linsey-woolsey, seamless
+garment on, made of wild sea-grass, thus presenting a very forbidding
+appearance, and what would be the result? Would the sexton show him to
+a seat? Would he not rather point to the door, and exclaim, "Get out of
+here; no place here for niggers?" What a ludicrous series of ideas is
+thus suggested by the thought that Jesus Christ was a "darkey."
+
+And the tradition of divine Saviors being born of undefiled and
+undeflowered virgins has an astronomical chapter we must not omit
+to notice. The virgin, with her God-begotten child, was pictured
+imaginarily in the heavens from time immemorial. They are represented on
+the Hindoo zodiac, at least three thousand years old, and on the ancient
+Egyptian planispheres. And if you will examine "Burritt's Geography of
+the Heavens," you will find the infant God-son (the sun) is represented
+as being born into a new year on the 25th of December (the very date
+assigned for Christ's birth), and may be seen rising over the eastern
+horizon, out of Mary, Maria, or Mare (the Latin for _sea_), with the
+infant God in her arms, being heralded and preceded by a bright star,
+which rises immediately preceding the virgin and her child, thus
+suggesting the text, "We have seen his star in the east, and have come
+to worship him." (Matt. ii.8.) Such facts led the learned Alphonso to
+exclaim, "The adventures of Jesus Christ are all depicted among the
+stars."
+
+And such facts fasten the conviction on our mind that the stories of
+Gods cohabiting with young maids or virgins, and begetting other
+Gods, is of astrological origin--the story of Jesus Christ included. A
+critical research shows that astronomy and religion were interblended,
+interwoven, and confounded together at a very early period of time, so
+indissolubly, that it now becomes impossible to separate them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. STARS POINT OUT THE TIME AND THE SAVIORS' BIRTH-PLACE
+
+PROFUSION of evidence is furnished at every step along the devious
+pathway of sacred history, tending to show that all the systems of
+worship which have existed in the past have had a dip in "the halo
+of the heavenly orbs," and hence shine with a light derived from that
+source.
+
+We find the stars acting directly a conspicuous part at the births
+of several of the Saviors, besides figuring in some cases by marking
+important events in their subsequent history.
+
+Mr. Higgins remarks that "Among the ancients there seems to have been a
+very general idea that the arrival of Gods and great personages who
+were expected to come, would be announced by a star." And the cases of
+Abraham, Caesar, Pythagoras, Yu, Chrishna, and Christ, may be cited in
+proof of this declaration. A star figured either before or at the birth
+of each, according to their respective histories.
+
+And it is a historical fact that should be noted here that the practice
+of calculating nativities by the stars was in vogue in the era and
+country of Christ's birth, and had been for a long period previously in
+various countries. "We have seen his star in the east, and have come to
+worship him." (Matt. ii. i.) Now mark, here, it was not _the star_,
+nor _a star_, but "_his star_;" thus disclosing its unmistakable
+astrological features. Mr. Faber (in his "Origin of Idolatry," vol. ii.
+p. 77) reports Zoroaster (600 B. C.) as prophetically announcing to "the
+wise men" of that country that a Savior would be born, "attended by a
+star at noonday." For a fuller exposition of this case see Chapter II.
+
+In the history of the Hindoo Savior Chrishna, we are told that "as soon
+as Nared, who, having heard of his fame, had examined the stars, he
+declared him to be from God;" i. e., the Son of God' The Roman Calcidius
+speaks of "a wonderful star, presaging the descent of a God amongst
+men." (See Maurice's "Indian Skeptics Refuted," p. 62.) Quite suggestive
+of the star "apprising the wise men" of Christ's descent from above. And
+a star is said to have foretokened the birth of the Roman Julius Caesar.
+The Chinese God Yu was not only heralded by a star, but conceived and
+brought to mortal birth by a star.
+
+In Numbers xxiv. 17, it is declared "There shall come a star out of
+Jacob," etc. This is a text often quoted by Christian writers as having
+a prophetic reference to the Christian Messiah. But the same text
+declares further, "It shall destroy the children of Seth," a prediction
+which no rational interpretation can make apply to Jesus Christ. And
+then we find this star of Jacob or Judah (the same) represented on
+astronomical maps as a prominent star in the constellation Virgo (the
+Virgin), fancifully termed by the Hebrew Ephraim.
+
+It was known in the Syrian, Arabian and Persian systems of astronomy as
+Messaeil (suggestive of Messiah), and was considered the ruling genius
+of the constellation.
+
+The "star of Jacob," then, was simply a figure borrowed from the ancient
+pagan systems of astronomy, in which they fancifully represent a virgin
+rising with an infant Messiah (Messaeil) in her arms. Messaeil is, when
+analyzed, Messaeh-el (Messiah-God), and is found in the constellation
+Virgo, which commences rising at midnight, on the 25th of December, with
+this "star in the east" in her arms--the star which piloted "the wise
+men." The whole thing, then, is evidently an astronomical legend.
+
+Albert the Great, in his "Book on the Universe," tells us, "The sign
+of the celestial virgin rises above the horizon, at the moment we find
+fixed for the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ." To which we will add the
+declaration of Sir William Drummond, who, in his "Odipus Judaicus," p.
+27, most significantly remarks, "The anointed of _El_ the male infant,
+who rises in the arms of Virgo, was called Jesus by the Hebrews,... and
+was hailed as the anointed king or Messiah"--still further proof of the
+astrological origin of the story.
+
+Dr. Hales, in his "Chronology," calls Christ "the star of our
+salvation, the true Apollo, the sun of righteousness"--all of which are
+astronomical terms.
+
+And here we may recur to the fact that some of the early inhabitants
+of the earth regarded a star as a thing of life, because it appeared
+to move, and acted as though controlled by a living spirit. And this
+fetchic idea we observe lurking amongst the borrowed orientalisms of the
+Jewish Old Testament. The representation of the morning stars joining
+in a chorus and singing together (see Job xxxviii. 9), is an instance of
+this kind of fetchic conception.
+
+And then we find a much stronger and more conclusive case in the New
+Testament, where Matthew represents a star as breaking loose from its
+orbit, and traveling some millions of miles, in order to stand over the
+young child Jesus, as he lay amongst the oxen and asses in a stable.
+(See Matt. ii. 7.) Wonderfully accommodating star indeed! How did its
+inhabitants feel while thus traveling with the velocity of lightning?
+This achievement would not only require life, but an active
+intelligence, on the part of the star, as it is represented as being an
+act of the planet itself.
+
+"All nations," says Mr. Higgins, "once believed that the planetary
+bodies or their inhabitants controlled the affairs of men, and even
+their births." Hence the cant phrases, "My stars," "He is ill-starred,"
+etc., in use then, and still in use at the present day. The good or ill
+luck of a person was attributed to the good or evil stars which it was
+believed ruled at the hour of his birth.
+
+We find a counterpart to the story of Matthew's traveling star in
+Virgil's writings, who declares (60 B. C.) that a star guided AEneas in
+a journey westward from Troy. In the days of Pliny (see his "Natural
+History," Book II.), the people of Rome fancied they saw a God in a star
+or comet in the form of a man. The Apocryphal book of Seth relates that
+a star descended from heaven and lighted on a mountain, in the midst of
+which a divine child was seen bearing a cross. Christ betrays the same
+ignorance of astronomy, when he speaks of "the stars falling from heaven
+to the earth." (See Matt. xxiv. 29.) For if there could be any falling
+in the case, the falling would be in the other direction, and the earth
+would fall to the stars, as larger bodies always attract smaller ones.
+
+As shown above, the stupendous orbs of night were represented by Jew,
+Pagan and Christian as breaking away from their orbits, and running
+hither and thither, like a fly on a ceiling, or a ball from a
+sky-rocket, being regarded as mere jack-a-lanterns, that could appear
+anywhere at any time creative fancy might dictate or require; while
+science teaches that the stars are stupendous orbs, some of them a
+thousand times larger than the planet on which we live, and that they
+could not depart one rod from their accustomed orbits without breaking
+up the whole planetary system, and destroying the universe.
+
+And then observe the absurdity in Matthew's story, which teaches that
+the wise men followed the star in the east, when they, coming from the
+east, were, as a matter of course, traveling westward, which would place
+the star to their backs. That must be a _sui generis_ pilot or guide
+which follows after, instead of going before. Omitting further citations
+from history, we will only observe further that the ancient Hindoos,
+Egyptians, Chaldeans, Syrians, Mexicans, etc., took great account of
+stars, and employed them on all important occasions, especially on long
+journeys and at the births of Gods and great personages--a circumstance
+which aids in explaining the star chapter in the gospel history of
+Christ.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. ANGELS, SHEPHERDS AND MAGI VISIT THE INFANT SAVIORS
+
+IN an age when Gods and men were on the most familiar terms, and when
+the character of one furnished a transcript for the other, and when
+each consented to act a reciprocal part towards elevating, honoring and
+glorifying the other, the birth of a God or Messiah was, as a matter
+of course, regarded as an event of sufficient importance to attract
+the attention of the great ones of the earth, and even the denizens of
+heaven also.
+
+And hence we find it related in the history of several of the
+God-begotten Saviors of antiquity, that as soon as they were born into
+the world they were visited by "wise men from a distance" (or Magi, as
+they were called by the Persians and Brahmins). And in some cases they
+were likewise waited upon and adored by the neighboring shepherds; and
+even celestial spirits are reported in some instances as leaving their
+star-gilt homes to wing their way to the humble mansion, the rude
+tenement, containing a new-born God, that they might honor and adore
+"the Savior of men, the Savior of the world."
+
+The sacred biographies of both Confucius and Christ furnish examples
+of the angel host forsaking their golden pavilions in the skies to pay
+their devoirs to a Deity-begotten bantling, sent down by the "Father of
+Mercies," to save a guilt-laden world. And in both cases the Magi are
+reported as assembling to present their offerings to the infant God.
+
+In the case of Confucius (born 598 B. C.), it is declared, "Five wise
+men from a distance came to the house, celestial music was heard in the
+skies, and angels attended the scene." (See the Five Volumes.) Now let
+us observe how strikingly similar to this ancient legend, in each of the
+several characteristics, is the Christian story. Matthew (ii. 1) speaks
+of "wise men from the east" journeying to Jerusalem to visit the infant
+Christ, soon after his birth, amongst the mules and oxen in a stable,
+though he omits to state the number of itinerant adorers who presented
+themselves on the occasion.
+
+The Persian story is more specific, as it gives the number of Magi who
+visited the young Savior of that country as five.
+
+Luke (ii. 13) speaks of "a multitude of the heavenly host praising God,"
+in gratulation of the birth of the Judean Savior. Now, when we bear in
+mind that one method of praising God, with the orientals, was by
+music, as we will at once observe that this is only another mode of
+proclaiming, as in the case of Confucius, that "celestial music was
+heard in the skies."
+
+And "angels attended the scene" of Confucius' birth. So, likewise, Luke
+(ii. 15) relates that the angels, after rejoicing with the shepherds on
+the occasion of the birth of Christ, "went away into heaven."
+
+How complete the parallel! and, but for the digression, and monopoly of
+space, we might trace it much further, and show that Confucius, like
+Christ, had twelve chosen disciples; that he was descended from a royal
+house of princes, as Christ from the royal house of David; that he,
+in like manner, retired for a long period from the noise and bustle of
+society into religious contemplative seclusion; that he inculcated the
+same Golden Rule of doing to others as we desire them to act toward us,
+and other moral maxims equal in importance to anything that can be found
+in the Christian Scriptures, etc.
+
+But to the line of history. Other Saviors at birth, we are told, were
+visited by both angels and shepherds, also "wise men," at least great
+men. Chrishna, the eighth avatar of India (1200 B. C.) (so it is related
+by the "inspired penman" of their pagan theocracy) was visited by
+angels, shepherds and prophets (avatars). "Immediately after his birth
+he was visited by a chorus of devatas (angels), and surrounded by
+shepherds, all of whom were impressed with the conviction of his future
+greatness." We are informed further that "gold, frankincense and myrrh"
+were presented to him as offerings.
+
+The well-known modern traveler, Mr. Ditson, who visited India but a
+few years since, uses the emphatic declaration, "In fact, as soon as
+Chrishna was born he was saluted by a chorus of devatas, or angels." In
+the evangelical narrative of the Christian Savior an angel is reported
+to have saluted his mother thus: "Hail, thou that art highly favored;
+the Lord is with thee; blessed art thou among women." (Luke, i. 28.) And
+in the next chapter the angel is reported as joining with "the heavenly
+host" in praising God. A similar report is found in the Hindoo bible
+(the Ramayana), appertaining to the mother of the eighth Savior, of whom
+it is declared "Brahma and Siva, with a host of attending spirits, came
+to her and sang, 'In thy delivery, O favored among women, all nations
+shall have cause to exult.'" And when the celestial infant (Chrishna)
+appeared (it is related in a subsequent chapter), "a chorus of heavenly
+spirits saluted him with hymns; the whole room was illuminated by
+his light, and the countenance of his father and mother shone with
+brightness and glory (by reflection), their understandings were opened
+so that they knew him to be the Preserver of the world, and they began
+to worship him." The last text here quoted brings to mind Luke xxiv.
+45, which declares, "Then he (Christ) opened their (his parents)
+understandings."
+
+The ninth avatar of India (Sakia) furnishes to some extent a similar
+parallel. According to the account of an exploration made in India, and
+published in the New York Correspondent of 1828, "There is on a silver
+plate in a cave in India an inscription stating that about the time of
+the advent of Budha Sakia (600 B. C.), a saint in the woods learned by
+inspiration that another avatar (Messiah or Savior) had appeared in the
+house of Rajah of Lailas. Learning which, he flew through the air to the
+place, and when he beheld the new-born Savior he declared him to be the
+great avatar (Savior or prophet), and that he was destined to establish
+a new religion"--the New Covenant Religion.
+
+We next draw on the history of Greece. It is authentically related
+of Pythagoras (600 B.), that his fame having reached Miletas and
+neighboring cities, men renowned for wisdom (wise men) came to visit
+him. (Progress of Religious Ideas, vol. i.) In the Anacalypsis we are
+told that "Magi came from the East to offer gifts at Socrates' birth,
+bringing gold, frankincense and myrrh," the same kind of offering as
+that presented to the two divine infants Chrishna and Christ, according
+to their respective "inspired" biographers. (See Matt. ii. 4, and the
+Ramayana).
+
+And the legend of Mithra, of Persia, might also be included in our
+category of comparison, if we had space for it. All the four Saviors
+last named (if Socrates may be called such) are reported as having been
+honored and enriched with aromatic offerings at their respective births.
+And we have the statement from Mr. Higgins, that the same assortment of
+spices (with the gold) constituted the materials offered as gifts to
+the sun, in Persia more than three thousand years ago; and likewise in
+Arabia near the same era. And it may be stated here, that an ancient
+historic account of Zoroaster of Persia (6,000 B. C., according to
+Pliny and Aristotle), speaks of his having also been visited by Magi, or
+"Magia," at the period of his earthly advent.
+
+And it is, perhaps, well to note in this place, that "Magi" is the term
+used in the Apocryphal Gospels, to designate the "wise men" who visited
+Christ at birth; and that Magi, Magic and Magician are but variations of
+the same word, at least derivations from the same root, all suggesting
+a wisdom correlated to the Gods. Osiris, an incarnate deity of Egypt, we
+may cite as another case of an infantile God receiving signal honors and
+eclat at birth, as he was visited while yet in the cradle by a host of
+admiring adorers. "People flocked from all parts of the world to behold
+the heaven-born infant." Such a world-wide fame must have had the effect
+to attract, with the numerous crowd who thronged to see and worship him,
+no small number of "wise men."
+
+At this stage of our historical exposition, we will suggest it as rather
+a singular circumstance that the divine Father, in his infinite wisdom,
+should have chosen to reveal the intelligence of the birth of his son
+Jesus Christ to a set of nomadic heathen idolaters hundreds of miles
+distant (though known as "wise men" because of their skill in astrology)
+before he made it known to his own "chosen people" (the Jews), who had
+ever regarded themselves as the recipients of his special favors. And
+perhaps it is still more singular that these pagan pedestrians should
+have been denominated "wise men," while men of God's own election,
+according to the Christian bible, were often stigmatized and denounced
+as "fools," a ".generation of vipers," etc. But it so happens that
+"human reason" finds many Incongruities in "Divine Revelations."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. THE TWENTY-FIFTH OF DECEMBER THE BIRTHDAY OF THE GODS.
+
+DIVESTED of all explanation, the announcement of the fact that the time
+of the birth of many of the incarnated Gods and Saviors of antiquity was
+fixed at the same period, and this period the twenty-fifth of December,
+celebrated all over Christendom as the birthday of Jesus Christ, would
+sound marvelously strange, especially when it is noticed that this
+period formerly dated the birth of a new year--the birth of King
+Sol. And when we find that the ancient pagans were in the habit of
+celebrating this venerated twenty-fifth of December as the birthday
+of their Gods in the same manner Christians now celebrate it as the
+birthday of Christ, we are driven to admit that something more than mere
+fortuitous accident must be adduced to account for the coincidence.
+
+According to Dr. Lightfoot, the temple of Jerusalem was employed in
+celebrating the birthday of a pagan God (Adonis) on the very night
+Christians assign for the birth of Christ. And Robert Taylor informs us
+that nearly all the nations of the East were once in the habit of rising
+at midnight to celebrate the birthday of their Gods, on the twenty-fifth
+of December. And to this statement Mr. Higgins adds that, "At the first
+moment after midnight of the twenty-fourth of December, the ancient
+nations celebrated the accouchement of the queen of heaven and celestial
+virgin, and the birth of the God Sol, the Infant Savior, and the God of
+Day."
+
+Bacchus of Egypt, Bacchus of Greece, Adonis of Greece, Chrishna of
+India, Chang-ti of China, Chris of Chaldea, Mithra of Persia, Sakia of
+India, Jao Wapaul (a crucified Savior of ancient Britain), were all
+born on the twenty-fifth of December, according to their respective
+histories. Chrishna is represented to have been born at midnight on the
+twenty-fifth of the month Savarana, which answers to our December, and
+millions of his disciples celebrated his birthday by decorating their
+houses with garlands and gilt paper, and the bestowment of presents to
+friends. The Rev. Mr. Barret tells us, "It was once common for the women
+in Rome to perambulate the streets on the twenty-fifth of December,
+singing in a loud voice, 'Unto us a child is born this day.'"
+
+The twenty-fifth of December, then, it will be observed, was marked as
+the birthday of the incarnated Gods, Saviors, and Sons of God, of many
+of the religious systems of antiquity, long prior to the birth of Christ
+And why his birth was fixed at that date is not hard to account for.
+According to the celebrated Christian writer Mr. Goodrich, the Christian
+world had no chronology and recorded no dates for several centuries
+after the commencement of the Christian era. (See History of all
+Nations, p. 23.) No event of their history was marked by dates for
+nearly four hundred years. Hence, the time of Christ's birth is
+altogether a matter of conjecture, as is also every other event noticed
+in the Christian bible. This is proved by the fact that the ablest
+Christian writers and chronologists differ to the extent of thirty-five
+hundred years in fixing the time of every event in the bible. A Mr.
+Kennedy presents us with three hundred different chronological systems,
+by different Christian writers, all founded on the bible, and proving
+that the date of its various events are inextricably involved in a
+labyrinth of doubt, darkness and uncertainty.
+
+Relative to the time of Christ's birth, the "Encyclopedia Britannica"
+says: "Christians count one hundred and thirty-three contrary opinions
+of different authors concerning the year the Messiah appeared on
+earth--many of them celebrated writers." (Art. Chron.) Mark the
+declaration--one hundred and thirty-three different opinions as to the
+year Christ was born in; one hundred and thirty-three different years
+fixed on by different Christian chronologists as the time of the birth
+of the most extraordinary and most noted being, as Christians would
+have us believe, that ever appeared on earth. Think of an omnipotent God
+descending from heaven, performing astounding miracles, and presenting
+other proofs of being a God, and yet not one of the three hundred
+writers of that era take any notice of him, or make any note of
+his birth or any event of his life. This circumstance is of itself
+sufficient to banish and dissipate all faith in his divinity.
+
+It is evident, from the facts just presented, that all systems of
+Christian chronology are founded on mere conjecture, and hence should
+be rejected as worthless. What event of Christ's life, then, can be
+accepted as certain, when no record was made of it till the time was
+forgotten, and none for at least half a century after the dawn of the
+Christian era, according to Dr. Lardner, when nearly all who witnessed
+it must have been dead?
+
+We think the most reasonable conclusion in the case is, that Christ,
+instead of performing those Munchausen prodigies attributed to him--such
+as casting out devils, raising the dead, controlling the elements of
+nature, etc.--led such an ordinary, obscure life--excelling only in
+healing the sick and other noble deeds of charity and philanthropy--that
+he attracted but little notice by the higher classes, or by anybody but
+those of a similar turn of mind, till he was deified by Constantine, in
+the year 325 A. D. Hence, the time of his birth was not recorded, and
+was forgotten. Consequently, the twenty-fifth of December was selected
+as his birthday, because it was the birthday of other Gods, and because
+it was regarded by the heathen, from time immemorial, as the birthday
+of Sol, the glorious luminary of heaven, it being the period he is born
+again into a new year, and "commences again his journey and his life;"
+and because, also, this epoch was, as Sharon Turner informs us, in his
+"History of the Anglo-Saxons," the commencement of a new year up to the
+tenth century.
+
+These events signalized the twenty-fifth of December, and made it a
+period of sufficient importance to lead the early Christians to suppose
+it must have been the birthday of their Messiah. Mosheim, however,
+confesses that the day or the year in which it happened "has not been
+fixed with certainty, notwithstanding the profound researches of the
+learned." So that it is still an open question as to when Christ was
+born. What day of the month, what year, or what century it took place
+in, is still unknown. This circumstance is, as before suggested,
+sufficient of itself to utterly prostrate all faith in the divine claims
+for Jesus Christ. What would be thought of a witness who should testify
+in court to the truth of an occurrence of which he did not know the
+year, or even the century, in which it took place, or who could come no
+nearer than one hundred and thirty-three years in fixing or guessing at
+the time. Would the court accept such testimony?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. TITLES OF THE SAVIORS
+
+THE various deific titles applied to Jesus Christ in the New Testament
+are regarded by some Christian writers as presumptive evidence of his
+divinity. But the argument proves too much for the case; as we find the
+proof in history that many other beings, whom Christians regard as
+men, were honored and addressed by the same titles, such as God, Lord,
+Savior, Redeemer, Mediator, Messiah, etc.
+
+The Hindoo Chrishna, more than two thousand years ago, was prayerfully
+worshiped as "God the Most High." His disciple Amarca once addressed
+him thus: "Thou art the Lord of all things, the God of the universe, the
+emblem of mercy, the bestower of salvation. Be propitious O most High
+God," etc. Here he is addressed both as Lord and God. He is also styled
+"God of Gods."
+
+Adonis of Greece was addressed as "God Supreme," and Osiris of Egypt as
+"the Lord of Life." In Phrygia, it was "Lord Atys," as Christians say,
+"Lord Jesus Christ" Narayan of Bermuda was styled the "Holy Living God."
+The title "Son of God" was so common in nearly all religious countries
+as to excite but little awe or attention.
+
+St. Basil says, "Every uncommonly good man was called 'the Son of God.'"
+The "Asiatic Researches" says, "the Tamulese adored a divine Son of
+God," and Thor of the Scandinavians was denominated "the first-born Son
+of God" and so was Chrishna of India, and other demigods.
+
+It requires, therefore, a wide stretch of faith to believe that
+Jesus Christ was in any peculiar sense "the Son of God," because so
+denominated, or "the only begotten Son of God," when so many others are
+reported in history bearing that title.
+
+The title Savior is found in the legends of every religious country. So
+also God, Redeemer, and Mediator. "When a Mogul or Thibetan is asked
+who is Chrishna," says the Christian missionary Hue, "the reply is,
+instantly, 'the Savior of men.'" Budha was known as "the Savior, Creator
+and Wisdom of God," and Mithra as both Mediator and Savior, also as "the
+Redeemer," and Chrishna as "the Divine Redeemer," also "the Redeemer
+of the World." The terms Mediator and Intercessor were also frequently
+applied to him by his disciples. And both he and Quexalcote were hailed
+as "the Messiah." In short, most ancient religious nations were honored
+with or expected a Messiah.
+
+Was Jesus Christ the "Lamb of God?" (John i. 9.) So was Chrishna styled
+"the Holy Lamb." The Mexicans, preferring a full-grown sheep, had their
+"Ram of God." The Celts had their "Heifer of God," and the Egyptians
+their "Bull of God." All these terms are ludicrous emblems of Deity,
+representing him as a quadruped, as the title "Lamb of God" does Jesus
+Christ, a term no less ludicrous than the titles of the pagan Gods as
+cited above.
+
+And was Christ "the True Light?" (John i. 9.) So was Chrishna likewise
+called "the True Light," also "the Giver of Light," "the Inward Light,"
+etc. Osiris was "the Redeemer of Light," and Pythagoras was both "Light
+and Truth." Apollonius was styled the "True Light of the World;" while
+Simon Magus was called "the Light of all Men."
+
+Several nations had also their Christs, though in many cases the word is
+differently spelled. Chrest, the Greek mode of spelling Christ, may
+be found on several of the ancient tombstones of that country. The
+Christian writer Elsley, in his "Annotations of the Gospels" (vol. i. p.
+25), spells the word Christ in this manner, Chrest The people of
+Loretto had a black Savior, called Chrest, or Christ. Lucian, in his
+"Philopatris," admits the ancient Gentiles had the name of Christ, which
+shows it was a heathen title. The Chaldeans had their Chris, the Hindoos
+their Chrishna, the Greeks their Chrest, and the Christians their
+Christ, all, doubtless, derived from the same original root.
+
+As for Jesus, it was a common name among the Jews long before the advent
+of Christ. Josephus refers to seven or eight persons by that name, as
+"Jesus, brother of Onias," "Jesus, son of Phabet," etc. Joshua in the
+Greek form, Jesus, was in still more common use.
+
+Again, was Jesus Christ "the Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the
+End?" so, likewise, Chrishna proclaimed, "I am the Beginning, the
+Middle, and the End." Osiris and Chrishna were both proclaimed "Judge of
+the Dead," as Jesus was "Judge of quick and dead." Isaiah represents the
+Father as proclaiming, "I am Jehovah; besides me there is no Savior."
+(Isa. xliii. 11.) With what consistency, then, can Christ be called
+"_the Savior_," if there is but _one Savior_, and that is the Father?
+
+And other divine titles besides those above named--in fact, all those
+applied to Christ--are found used also in reference to the older pagan
+gods, and hence prove nothing.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE TERMS MEDIATOR, INTERCESSOR, ETC.
+
+Several causes contributed to originate a belief in the offices
+imaginarily assigned to divine God-descended Mediators, Redeemers, and
+Intercessors.
+
+1. In the first place, the Great Supreme God was believed to be too far
+off and too aristocratic to be on familiar terms with his subjects,
+or at all times accessible to their prayers. Hence, was gotten up a
+"Mediator," or middle God, to stand midway between the Great Supreme and
+the people, and transmit messages one from the other, and thus serve
+as agent for both parties. Confirmatory of this statement is the
+declaration of Mamoides, in his "Guide to the Erring," that "the ancient
+Sabeans conceived the principal God, on account of his great distance,
+to be inaccessible; and hence, in imitation of the people in their
+conduct toward their king, who had to address him through a person
+appointed for the purpose, they imaginarily employed a middle divinity,
+who was called a Mediator, to present their claims to the Supreme God."
+Here the whole secret is out, the whole thing is explained, and we now
+understand why Christ is called a Mediator, Intercessor, "Advocate with
+the Father," etc.
+
+2. Again, the Supreme God was supposed to be frequently angry with the
+people, and threatening to punish if not to destroy them. "I will punish
+the multitude." (Jer. xlvi. 25.) "I will destroy the people." (Ex.
+xxiii. 27). Hence, this middle divinity, this second person of the
+trinity, stepped in to plead and intercede on their behalf, being, as we
+must presume, a better-natured and more merciful being than the
+Father. And thus interceding, he received the titles of Intercessor and
+"Advocate with the Father." (1 John, ii. 1.)
+
+3. The principal circumstance, however, which led to the conception of
+a divine Savior was the desire to find some way to continue in sin and
+wrong-doing and escape its natural and legitimate consequences; in other
+words, to evade the penalty. Hence, it came to be believed that people
+might run riot in sin, and plunge into the indulgence of their passions
+and their lusts, till the hour of death approached, when they would have
+nothing to do but to ask forgiveness, and cast the burden of their sins
+and sufferings on the merits of "a crucified Savior and Redeemer,"
+who "suffered once for all, that we might escape," and thus dodge the
+penalty for sin. It was, as Mr. Fleurbach expresses it, "A realized
+wish to be free from the laws of morality, and escape the natural
+consequences of wrong doing."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. THE SAVIORS OF ROYAL DESCENT, BUT HUMBLE BIRTH
+
+WE have the singular coincidence presented in the histories of several
+of the Saviors of their lineal descent through a line of kings or
+princes, and yet commencing their probationary life under the most
+humble and adverse circumstances--being born in stables, caves, and
+other inauspicious situations.
+
+The story of their royal blood was calculated to add dignity to their
+characters, while their humble birth in the midst of poverty, and
+unmarked by ostentation, would evince their humility, meekness,
+condescension, and absence of pride, and thus proclaim a lesson of
+humility and resignation to their disciples and followers.
+
+Here, seems to be plainly indicated the motives for assigning them to
+such a birth, and such a character.
+
+Christ's lineal descent, it will be remembered, is professedly traced
+(though in a very zig-zag, disjointed manner) from the royal house of
+David. And yet his royal blood did not save him from the most ignoble
+and ignominious birth, and obscure exordium of his earth life.
+
+A singular story, and yet a similar story, is told of the Indian Savior
+Chrishna, who was, according to the Rev. Mr. Allen (India, p. 379) of
+the royal house of Kousa, traced back through many generations. Yet,
+in order to teach the world a lesson of true humility, and administer a
+just reprehension to pride, he submitted to be born in a cave, amid the
+denizens of subterranean abodes. And here let it be noted, the best and
+most orthodox writers concede that while Christ is said to have born
+in a manger, that manger was in a cave. Mr. Fleetwood (a very popular
+Christian writer) testifies in this matter that "the Greek fathers
+generally agree that the place of Christ's birth was a cave." (Life of
+Christ, p. 568.) Then the coincidence in this respect between Christ and
+Chrishna may be set down as complete.
+
+We have no means of learning how many of the Saviors were of royal
+blood, as the genealogy of some of them is not given. But those whose
+lineal descent is furnished us are almost uniformly traced to or evinced
+as springing from royal parentage, and practical humility--so far as it
+can be taught by an unostentatious birth--is a lesson taught by nearly
+all. Budha Sakia of Hindostan is directly traced through a royal
+pedigree.
+
+Speaking on this point, one writer remarks: "Tradition affirms that his
+mother was betrothed to a rajah, and of course her son belonged to
+the same royal caste that Chrishna did during his existence on earth."
+(Prog. Rel. Ideas, vol, i. 84.)
+
+"The Great Prophet" of Arabia (Mahomet) not only commenced his earthly
+career in a humble situation, but resembled Christ in having "nowhere to
+lay his head." It is said of the Great Prophet, "A cloak spread on the
+ground served him for a bed, and a skin filled with date leaves was his
+pillow." The genealogy of the God Yu (of China) is traced through a line
+of princes to a very remote origin, while his whole life was a lesson of
+practical humility, and proclaimed at every step, "This is the way; walk
+ye in it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. CHRIST'S GENEALOGY
+
+IN order to exalt the dignity and character of the Christian Messiah
+still higher than a mere claim for a divine origin paternally would have
+the effect to do, two of his assumed to be inspired biographers have set
+up for him a claim to a royal lineage through the maternal line.
+
+Hence, they tell us that he descended from and through a line of kings
+embracing the house of David. But in presenting the names, and the
+number of generations, in their attempts to make out this royal
+distinction, this kingly exaltation of birth, they exhibit a most
+egregious bungle, and the most barefaced tissue of discrepancies. For
+they not only differ widely with each other in this matter, but differ
+with the Old Testament genealogy, and differ with those texts which give
+the maternal ancestry of Jesus.
+
+Indeed, though varying as wide as the poles from each other, they both
+miss Jesus and arrive at Joseph in tracing down the generations from
+Abraham (unless we assume they intended to represent Joseph as being his
+father).
+
+Luke, in his gospel, names and counts off forty-one generations from
+David to Joseph, though he had previously represented it as being
+forty-two; but Matthew says that "from Abraham to David are fourteen
+generations," but according to his own showing, and according to his own
+list of names, there are but thirteen. And then he tells us there are
+but fourteen generations from David to the carrying away into Babylon.
+BUt according to the Old Testament genealogy (see i Chron. iii.) there
+were eighteen.
+
+And then the names comprised in the two genealogies of Matthew and Luke
+are so widely different from that found in Chronicles, as to set all
+analogy and agreement at defiance.
+
+In fact, in their whole list of names, from David down to Joseph, they
+only come together twice. Their names are all different but two, that of
+Salathiel and Zorobabel, which names alone are found in both lists.
+
+Matthew tells us that the son of David, through whom Joseph descended,
+was Solomon, but Luke says it was Nathan. The next name in Matthew's
+list is that of Roboam, but the corresponding name in Luke's list is
+Mattatha. Matthew's next name is Abia, which Luke gives as Menan, while
+Chronicles differs from both, and gives it as Abijah. Matthew says Joram
+begat Ozias, but Chronicles virtually declares Joram had no such son,
+although he had a great-great-grandson Uzziah. But Luke says, in effect,
+there was no such person in the genealogical tree, or family line,
+as either Joram, Ozias or Uzziah. Matthew says again, "Josias begat
+Jechonias and his brethren, about the time they were carried away to
+Babylon." (Matt. i. ii.)
+
+But Chronicles declares that Jechonias was Jehoiakim's son, and not
+Josiah's, and that Josiah had no such son. And, besides, we learn, from
+2 Kings xiii., that Josiah was killed eleven years before the exile
+to Babylon, and could not well beget a son after he had been defunct a
+tenth of a century.
+
+Matthew, after naming twenty-four generations as filling out the line,
+and making it complete between David and Jacob, concludes by saying,
+"and Jacob begat Joseph, the husband of Mary."
+
+But Luke, antecedent to spinning out his list to fourteen generations
+more than Matthew, i. e., making it fourteen generations longer,
+declares that "Joseph was the son of Heli." So that Joseph either had
+two fathers, Jacob and Heli; or Matthew or Luke, or both, were most
+egregiously mistaken, with all their "inspiration."
+
+Again, Luke says that Salathiel was the son of Neri; but Chronicles
+says he was the son of Jechonias. And after Chronicles had registered
+Zorobabel as the son of Penniah, Matthew and Luke, assuming to become
+"wise above what was written," both declare that he was the son of
+Salathiel. They agree here in contradicting Chronicles, which is
+the only instance but one of their agreement in the whole list of
+progenitors from David to Joseph.
+
+With this exception they contradict each other all the way through, and
+in many instances that of Chronicles, too.
+
+This is a strange way, indeed, of proving Jesus Christ to have had two
+fathers!--to be both the son of God and son of David! And it is still
+stranger that they should trace his genealogy to Joseph, if they did
+not consider him Joseph's son. Otherwise, the genealogy of "Sinbad the
+Sailor," or "Harry Haulaway," would have been as apropos.
+
+Such are the beautiful harmony and agreement in the words of "divine
+inspiration" which Christians prate so much about.
+
+And all this appears to be the result of an attempt to elevate the man
+Christ Jesus to a level with the demigods of antiquity, nearly all
+of whom claimed to be of royal or princely descent. Such continual
+blundering, guessing, cross-firing, and clashing of names as is
+exhibited in the foregoing exposition, reminds us of the Hibernian's
+reply when asked for the number and names of his brothers:
+
+"Well, sir, I have fourteen brothers, and they are all named Bill but
+Bob--his name is Tom."
+
+Matthew and Luke's attempt to exalt and dignify the character of Christ
+by making out for him a pure, holy and royal lineage we find, upon a
+critical examination not only proved a very signal but a very singular
+and ludicrous failure, for all his female anchors who are brought to
+notice were persons of libidinous or licentious tendencies, according to
+their own biblical history.
+
+"It is remarkable," says Dr. Alexander Walker, (a Christian writer, in
+his work on Woman, p. 330), "that in the genealogy of Christ only four
+women are named: Thamar, who seduced the father of her late husband, and
+Rachel, a common prostitute, and Ruth, who, instead of marrying one
+of her cousins, went to bed with another of them, and Bathsheba, an
+adulteress, who espoused David, the murderer of her first husband."
+
+What a pedigree for an incarnate God--a being ostensibly of spotless
+origin! though his impure ancestral origin does not detract from the
+high moral character and distinguished moral life which marks the
+history of "the man Christ Jesus," many incidents of whose life show him
+to have been what is now known as a spiritual medium.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE WORLD'S SAVIORS SAVED FROM DESTRUCTION IN INFANCY
+
+OF course such an extraordinary circumstance as the birth of a God into
+the world must be marked with unusual incidents and great eclat. This
+was first exhibited by angels, shepherds, prophets, magi or "wise men,"
+flocking around their cradles. In the second place we observe an unusual
+display of divine power and providential care on the part of the great
+Father God, who was still left in heaven to save the young saviors
+through their infancy.
+
+It is certainly a remarkable circumstance that so many of the infant
+Saviors should have been threatened with the most imminent danger of
+destruction, and yet in every case miraculously preserved, and thus were
+the _Saviors saved_.
+
+A jealousy seems to have existed in several instances in the mind of
+the tyrant king or ruler of the country that the young Saviors and
+prospective spiritual rulers (who were mostly of royal descent) would
+ultimately acquire such favor with the people, by such a display of
+superior power and greatness of mind, as to endanger his retaining
+peaceable possession of the secular throne; to express it in brief, he
+feared the young God would prove a rival king, and hence took measures
+to destroy him.
+
+In the case of the Christian Savior we are told that an angel, or "the
+angel," warned Joseph (the assumed father) to take the young Savior and
+God and flee with him into Egypt, because "Herod the king sought to
+destroy the young child's life," and had, in order to effect this end,
+decreed the destruction of all the children under two years old. And
+Joseph heeded the divine warning, and fled as directed. An angel and a
+dream, then, it will be observed, were the instrumentalities used to
+save the young Judean Savior from massacre.
+
+And strange as it may seem, we find the same agencies had been
+previously employed to effect the rescue of other Saviors likewise and
+similarly threatened.
+
+In the case of Chrishna of India, in particular, the similitude is very
+striking in nearly every feature of the whole story.
+
+In the first place there is the angel warning. In the Christian story we
+are not specifically informed how the tyrant Herod first became apprised
+of the birth of the Judean Savior. The Hindoo story is fuller, and
+indicates that the angel was not only sufficiently thoughtful to warn
+the parents to flee from a danger which threatened to dispossess them of
+a divine child, and the world of a Savior, but was condescending enough
+to apprise the tyrant ruler (Cansa) of his danger likewise--as we are
+told he heard an angel voice announcing that a rival ruler was born in
+his kingdom.
+
+And hence, like Herod, he set about concocting measures to destroy him
+without a direct attack. Why either of them should have taken such a
+circuitous or roundabout way of killing an infant, when the life of the
+strongest man, and every man in their kingdoms, was at their instant
+disposal, "divine inspiration" does not inform us.
+
+But so it was. And we must not seek to "become wise above what is
+written" in their bibles. Herod's decree required the destruction of
+all infants under two years of age (see Matt. ii. 16)--first ordering,
+however, "Go, and search diligently for the young child." (Matt. ii. 8.)
+Cansa's decree ran thus: "Let active search be made for whatever young
+children there may be upon earth, and let every boy in whom there may be
+found signs of unusual greatness be slain without remorse."
+
+Now, let it be specially noticed that there is to this day in the
+cave temple at Elephanta, in India, the sculptured likeness of a
+king represented with a drawn sword, and surrounded with slaughtered
+infants--admitted by all writers to be much older than Christianity. Mr
+Forbes, in his "Oriental Memories," vol. iii. p. 447, says, "The figures
+of the slaughtered infants in the cave of Elephanta represent them as
+being all boys, who are surrounded by groups of figures of men and women
+in the act, apparently, of supplicating for those children." And Mr.
+Higgins testifies relative to the case, that Chrishna was carried away
+by night, and concealed in a region remote from his natal place, for
+fear of a tyrant whose destroyer it had been foretold he would become,
+who, for that reason, had ordered all the male children born at that
+time to be slain. Sculptures in Elephanta attest the story where the
+tyrant is represented as destroying the children. The date of this
+sculpture is of the most remote antiquity. "He who hath ears to hear,
+let him hear," and deduce the pregnant inference. Joseph and Mary fled
+with the young Judean God into Egypt; Chrishna's parents likewise fled
+with the young Hindoo Savior to Gokul.
+
+Now, let us observe for a moment the chain or category or resemblance.
+
+1. There was an angel warning in each case relative to the impending
+danger.
+
+2. The governor or ruler was hostile in each case to the mission of the
+young Savior.
+
+3. A bloody decree was issued in both cases, having for its object the
+destruction of these infant Messiahs.
+
+4. The hurried flight of the parents takes place in each case.
+
+5. And it may be remarked further, that the "Gospel of the Infancy of
+Jesus," once believed by the Christian world to be "inspired," and which
+for hundreds of years passed current as divine authority, relates that
+Christ and his parents sojourned for a time at a place called Matarea,
+or Mathura, as Sir William Jones spells it, who says it was the birth
+place of Chrishna.
+
+It is further related in the case of Chrishna, that as he and his
+parents approached the River Jumna in their flight, the waters "parted
+hither and thither," so that they passed over "dry shod," like Moses and
+the Israelites in crossing the Red Sea. And here let it be noted that
+the representation of this flight, which is said to have occurred at
+midnight, is like that of the massacre perpetuated and attested by
+imperishable monuments of stone bearing evidence of being now several
+thousand years old.
+
+Sir William Jones says:--
+
+"The Indian incarnate God Chrishna, the Hindoos believe, had a virgin
+mother of the royal race, who was sought to be destroyed in his infancy
+about nine hundred years before Christ. It appears that he passed his
+life in working miracles, and preaching, and was so humble as to wash
+his friends' feet; at length, dying, but rising from the dead, he
+ascended into heaven in the presence of a multitude." The Cingalese
+relate nearly the same things of their "Budha." And several authors of
+Egyptian history refer to a story perpetuated in the Egyptian legends
+concerning the God Osiris, who was threatened with destruction by the
+tyrant Amulius, to save whom his parents fled and concealed him in an
+arm of the River Nile, as Christ was concealed in the same country, and,
+for aught that appears to the contrary, in the same locality. The
+mother of another and older Savior of Egypt fled by a timely warning to
+Epidamis before the birth of the divine child, and was there delivered
+of "our Lord and Savior," Horus. And the earthly or adopted father
+of the Grecian Savior, and God, Alcides, had to flee with him and his
+mother to Galem for protection from threatening danger.
+
+In the ninth and tenth volumes of the "Asiatic Researches," we find the
+story of the "only begotten" or "first begotten son of God," Salvahana,
+of Cape Comorin, son of a virgin mother (as were all the other Saviors
+referred to), and a carpenter by the name of Taishnea. (It will be
+remembered that Joseph, "foster-father of Jesus," was a carpenter.) The
+story of this "Son of God" presents several features very similar to
+that relating to Jesus. Sir William Jones, Colonel Wilford, and the Rev.
+Mr. Maurice all confess to the antiquity of this story, as originating
+before the birth of Christ. Speaking of Zoroaster of Persia (another
+case), 600 B. C., an author remarks, "Tradition reports that his mother
+had alarming dreams of evil spirits seeking to destroy the child to whom
+she was about to give birth. But a good spirit came to rescue him, and
+consoled her by saying, 'Fear not; God Ormuzd will protect the infant,
+who has sent him as a prophet to the people and the world who are
+waiting for him."
+
+China, too, presents us with a case of the threatened destruction of
+a Savior in infancy, evidently recorded more than two thousand five
+hundred years ago. It is the case of the God Yu, who was concealed in a
+manner similar to that of Moses--a commemoration of the story of which
+is perpetuated by an image or picture of the virgin mother with a babe
+upon her knee--sometimes in her arms. Now, let it be noted that these
+virgin-born Gods, who, we are told, came "to save the world," could not
+save themselves, but had to be protected and saved by other Gods.
+
+Without pursuing the subject further in detail, we may mention by way
+of recapitulation, that Chrishna, Alcides, Zoraster, Salvahana, Yu, to
+which list we may add Bacchus, Romulus, Moses and Cyrus, according to
+their reputed history, were threatened with death and destruction, but
+were providentially and miraculously preserved. The case of Augustus
+is related by Suetonius, that of Romulus by Livy, and that of Cyrus by
+Herodotus. It will be recollected that Pharaoh, like Herod, in order
+to reach the infant Moses, ordered the massacre of all the male infants
+(Herod making no distinction of sex), in order that he might, by this
+singular and circuitous method, reach the object of his jealousy and
+malignity without passing a direct sentence of death upon him.
+
+The whole story of Herod's slaughter edict, with the familiar history
+of its execution, like nearly every other miraculous incident related
+in "The Holy Scriptures," which detail their histories, are traceable in
+the skies. Herod, we are told, literally means hero of the skin--a term
+applied also to Hercules, a personification of the sun--because the
+sun, on entering the constellation of the Zodiac in July, was supposed
+or assumed to invest himself with the skin of the lion, and this became
+"the hero of the skin," or a hero with a new skin. Now this solar Herod,
+passing through the astronomical twins and young infants of May, was
+said to destroy them, though the word destroy is in the Greek anairean,
+which any person, on turning to the Greek lexicon, will observe means
+also to take away, pass through, or withdraw from, so that Pharaoh more
+properly passed through the infants than destroyed them.
+
+The text, "In Rama there was a voice heard," "Rachel weeping for her
+children," etc., is quoted by a writer (Strauss) as referring to the
+children slaughtered by Pharaoh. Let two things be noticed here: 1. Rama
+is the Indian and Phoenician name for the zodiac. 2. Rachel had but two
+children to weep for--Joseph and Benjamin--just the number found in the
+fifth sign, or May sign, of the zodiac. And Venus, among the ancient
+Assyrians and Phoenicians, was in tears when the sun, in his annual cross
+through the heavens, passed through or over the astronomical Twins
+(Gemini), doubtless fearfully apprehending their destruction.
+
+The case of the massacre is an illustration and example of the manner in
+which all the miraculous stories related in the Christian Scriptures,
+as having been practically exemplified in the life of Jesus Christ, are
+traceable to older sources, frequently terminating among the stars.
+
+
+SECTION II.--INCREDIBILITY OF THE STORY OF THE MASSACRE OF THE HEBREW
+INFANTS.
+
+1. It is a cogent and potent fact, calculated to render the story of the
+murder of the Hebrew children by Herod wholly incredible, that not
+one writer of that age, or that nation, or any other nation, makes any
+mention of the circumstance.
+
+2. Even the Rabbinical writers who detail his wicked life so minutely,
+and who bring to his charge so many flagitious acts, fail to record
+any notice of this horrible and atrocious deed, which must have been
+published far and wide, and known to all the writers of that age and
+country, had it occurred.
+
+3. And still more logically ruinous to the credit of the story is
+the omission of Josephus to throw out one hint that such a wholesale
+slaughter ever took place in Judea. And yet he not only lived in that
+country, but was related to Herod's wife, and regarded him as his most
+implacable enemy, and professes to write out the whole history of his
+wicked life in the most minute detail, devoting thirty-seven chapters of
+his large work to this subject, and apparently enumerates every evil
+act of his life. And yet Josephus says not a word about his inhuman and
+infamous butchery of the babes which Matthew charges him with (about
+fourteen thousand in number)--a bloody deed, unmatched in the annals of
+tyranny. Such facts prove the story not only incredible, but impossible.
+Josephus could not and would not have omitted to notice this the most
+notorious and nefarious act of his life, had it occurred. It, therefore,
+could not have occurred. And it is almost equally incredible that
+Roman historians, who furnish us with a particular account of Herod's
+character, should pass over in silence such a villainous and bloody
+deed.
+
+4. And then some of our ablest and most reliable chronologists have
+shown that Herod was not living at the time this bloody decree should
+have been issued by him; that he died about three years prior to that
+period, and hence could have been guilty of no such villainy, and
+highhanded murder, and cruel infanticide.
+
+5. And even if living, he would have been an old man (not less than
+sixty-eight according to Josephus). Hence, he could not have calculated
+on surviving long enough for the son of a village carpenter, then a
+babe, to oust him from his throne.
+
+6. It is wholly incredible, also, that Herod should have adopted such a
+roundabout method of destroying the object of his fear and envy when he
+could have singled him out, and put him to death at once, and thus avoid
+the felonious act of breaking the hearts of thousands of parents, and
+his most loyal subjects, too.
+
+7. From the foregoing considerations, we endorse the sentiment of the
+Rev. Edward Evanson, that it is "an incredible, borrowed fiction."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. THE SAVIORS EXHIBIT EARLY PROOFS OF DIVINITY.
+
+OF course, all Gods must be heroes--physically or intellectually, or
+both. The more danger they encounter, and the earlier they manifest a
+precocious or preternatural smartness, the more like Gods.
+
+And hence we find several of the Saviors in very early childhood
+displaying great physical prowess in meeting and conquering danger,
+while others exhibit their superiority mentally by vanquishing their
+opponents in argument. Christ first began to exhibit proof of his divine
+character and greatness by meeting and silencing the doctors in the
+temple when only about twelve years of age.
+
+And similar proofs of divinity at or near this age is found in the
+history of some of the pagan Saviors.
+
+Of Christ it is declared, "There went out a fame of him through all the
+region round about." (Luke iv. 14.) And of the Grecian Esculapius it
+is likewise declared, "The voice of fame soon published the birth of a
+miraculous child," and "the people flocked from all quarters to behold
+him." Of Confucius of China it is declared, "His extensive knowledge
+and great wisdom soon made him known, and kings were governed by his
+counsels, and the people adored him wherever he went." And it is further
+declared of this "Divine Man," that he seemed to arrive at reason and
+the perfect use of his faculties almost from infancy. It is reported of
+the God Chang-ti, that when questioned on the subject of government and
+the duties of princes and rulers while yet a child, his answers were
+such as to astonish the whole empire by his knowledge and wisdom.
+
+It is related of a Grecian God that he demolished the serpents which
+attempted to bite or destroy him while in his cradle. "The proof of
+Osiris's divinity was a blaze of light shining around his cradle soon
+after he was born. Relative to Pythagoras of the same country, we have
+it upon the authority of a Christian writer, that he exhibited such a
+remarkable character, even in youth, as to attract the attention of all
+who saw and heard him speak." And the author further testifies of
+him that he "never was at any time overcome with anger, laughter, or
+perturbation of mind or precipitation of conduct." "His fame having
+reached Miletus and neighboring cities," it is said by another writer,
+"the people flocked to see and hear him, and he was reverenced by
+multitudes."
+
+Luke declares of Christ, that the people "were astonished at his
+understanding and answers." (Luke ii. 47.) And the "Gospel of the
+Infancy" tells us that his tutor Zacheas was astonished at his learning,
+which reminds us of the statement found in "The Divine Word" of the
+Hindoos (The Mahabarat), that the parents of the Savior Chrishna, in
+making arrangements to give him an education, sent him to a learned
+Brahmin as tutor, whom he instantly astonished with his vast learning,
+and under whose tuition he mastered the whole circle of sciences in a
+day and a night. "Men, seeing the wonders performed by this child, told
+Nanda (his adopted father) that this could not possibly be his son."
+
+It is told of Budha Sakia of India that, "as soon as he was born, a
+light shone around his cradle, when he stood up and proclaimed his
+mission, and that the River Ganges daring this time rose in a miraculous
+manner, which was stilled by his divine power, as Christ stilled the
+tempest on the sea." "He was born," says the New American Cyclopedia
+(vol. iv. p. 61), "amidst great miracles, and soon as born, most
+solemnly proclaims his mission."
+
+Of Narayan, "the Holy," it is declared that "mysterious words dropped
+from his lips on various occasions, giving hints of his divine nature
+and the purposes for which he had come down to the earth." (Prog. Rel.
+Ideas, vol. i. p. 128.) The divine power and mission of Yu of China was
+very early evinced by the display of great miracles.
+
+And here let us observe that some of the Old Testament or Jewish
+heroes--as Moses, Solomon and Samuel--are reported as exhibiting great
+superiority of mind in very early life; thus proving (it was thought)
+that if they were not Gods, they were at least from God--that is,
+endowed by him with divine power while yet mere children. Thus the
+histories of all Gods and divine personages run in parallel grooves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. THE SAVIORS; KINGDOMS NOT OF THIS WORLD
+
+Retirement and Forty Days' Fasting.
+
+CHRIST taught, "My kingdom is not of this world."
+
+And we find that most of the other Saviors virtually and practically
+taught the same doctrine.
+
+The first practical evincement of it was exhibited by retiring from the
+world; that is, they retired from the noise and commotion, from the
+busy scenes of life, into some sequestered spot excluded from human
+observation. Christ is reported to have withdrawn from society, and to
+have spent some forty days in the wilderness fasting and being tempted
+by Satan--a man of straw conjured up in order to furnish the hero God
+something to combat with, that he might thereby exhibit practical proof
+of his divine power and prowess. It was simply the two kings or rulers
+of two hostile kingdoms (heaven and hell) contending for the mastery.
+
+Lord Kingsborough tells us, "The ancient Mexicans had a forty days' fast
+in honor and memory of one of their demigods or Saviors, who was
+tempted forty days on a mountain. He is called 'the Morning Star'." Mr.
+Kingsborough (being a Christian) remarks, "These things are very curious
+and mysterious."
+
+It is said of "the Son of God" and Savior Chrishna that "he imparted
+his doctrines and precepts in the silent depths of the forest." Of the
+Egyptian God Osiris, we are informed in his sacred legends, that "he
+observed both fasting and penance," while Pythagoras of Greece spent
+several years in meditation and retirement in a cave, and was much given
+to fasting, and often inculcated the doctrine of "forsaking the world"
+and "the things thereof." He taught these things both by precept and
+example, even to "the forsaking of relations." Both Confucius and the
+Divine Savior Chang-ti of China, "in order to attain to a more perfect
+state of holiness," spent several years in retirement and "divine
+meditation," the former in a wilderness, the latter on a mountain, and
+fasted, and their disciples after them often fasted in a very devout
+manner. The Persian Zoroaster also spent several years in retirement and
+"contemplation on true holiness"--partly in a wilderness and partly on a
+"holy mountain," "holy mountains" being the favorite places of resort of
+most of the holy Saviors, holy Gods, and holy men of antiquity. One of
+the most ancient Saviors, Thammuz, is reported to have spent "twelve
+years in devout and contemplative retirement from the busy world."
+According to the Christian bible, Moses, Elijah, and Christ, each fasted
+forty days, and a Mexican Savior, too (Quexalcote), spent forty days in
+a similar manner, and other cases are so reported.
+
+We may institute the inquiry here, "How happens this coincidence?"
+
+The answer is indicated by "the Hierophant," which says, "Jesus in his
+baptism and forty days' fast imitated the passage of the sun through the
+constellation Aquarius, where John, Joannes, or Janus the baptizer had
+his domicile, and baptized the earth with his yearly rains." Having been
+baptized in Jordan, he fasted forty days in the wilderness, in imitation
+of the passage of the sun from the constellation Aquarius through the
+Fishes to the Lamb or Ram of March. During the forty days when the sun
+is among the Fishes (in the sign of the Fish) the faithful Catholics,
+Episcopalians and Mahommedans abstain from meat and live upon the fishes
+during the season of Lent, as did the Jews and pagans, and did also
+Jesus, "to fulfill all righteousness."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE SAVIORS WERE REAL PERSONAGES
+
+IT is unwarrantably assumed by Christian writers that the incarnated
+Gods and crucified Saviors of the pagan religions were all either mere
+fabulous characters, or ordinary human beings invested with divine
+titles, and divine attributes; while, on the other hand, the assumption
+is put forth with equal boldness that Jesus Christ was a real divine
+personage, "seen and believed on in the world, and finally crucified on
+Mount Calvary."
+
+But we do not find the facts in history to warrant any such assumptions
+or any such distinctions. They all stand in these respects upon the same
+ground and on equal footing.
+
+And their respective disciples point to the same kind of evidence to
+prove their real existence and their divine character, and to prove
+that they once walked and talked amongst men, as well as now sit on the
+eternal throne in heaven "at the right hand of the father." And we
+find even Christian writers admitting the once _bona fide_ or personal
+existence on earth of most of the pagan Saviors.
+
+As to the two chief incarnated Gods of India--Chrishna and Sakia--there
+is scarcely "a peg left to hang a doubt upon" as to the fact of their
+having descended to the earth, taken upon themselves the form of men,
+and having been worshiped as veritable Gods.
+
+Indeed, we believe but few of the missionaries who have visited that
+country question the statement and general belief prevalent there of
+their once personal reality. Col. Todd, in his "History of the Rajahs"
+(p. 44), says: "We must discard the idea that the Mahabaret, the
+history of Rama, of Chrishna, and the five Padua brothers are mere
+allegories; colossal figures, ancient temples, and caves inscribed
+with characters yet unknown, confirm the reality, and their race, their
+cities, and their coins yet exist." To argue further the personal reality
+of this crucified God would be a waste of words, as it is generally
+admitted, both by historical writers and missionaries.
+
+Mr. Higgins declares, "Chrishna lived at the conclusion of the brazen
+age, which is calculated to have been eleven hundred or twelve hundred
+years before Christ." Here is a very positive and specific declaration
+as to his tangible actuality. Col. Dow, Mr. Robinson, and others use
+similar language.
+
+Relative to Bacchus, of whose history many writers have spoken as being
+wholly fabulous or fictitious, Diodorus Siculus says (lib. iii. p. 137),
+"the Libyans claim Bacchus, and say that he was the son of Ammon, a
+king of Libya; that he built a temple to his father, Ammon." And that
+world-wide famous historian (Mr. Goodrich) is still more explicit, if
+possible, as to his material entity. After giving it directly as his
+opinion that there was such a being, he says, "He planted vine-yards and
+fig-trees, and erected many noble cities." He moreover tells us, "His
+skill in legislation and agriculture is much praised" (p. 499).
+
+With respect to Osiris of Egypt, another God-Savior, Mr. Hittle declares
+unqualifiedly that "Herodotus saw the tomb of Osiris, at Sais nearly
+five centuries before Christ" (vol. i. p. 246). Rather a strong evidence
+of his previous personality certainly, but not more so than that
+furnished by the _New York Journal of Commerce_ a few years since,
+relative to the Egyptian Apis or Thulis, whose theophany was annually
+celebrated, at the rising of the Nile, with great festivities and
+devotion, several thousand years ago. The Paris correspondent of
+that journal, after speaking of Mr. Auguste Marietta's travels, "a
+distinguished scientific gentleman who for four years past had been
+employed by the French Government in making Egyptian researches," having
+returned home, says, "The most important of Mr. Marietta's discoveries
+was the tomb of Apis (Thulis), a monument excavated entirely in
+lime-rock." "There are (he says in conclusion) epitaphs, forming a
+chronological record of each of the Apis buried in the common tomb. The
+sculpture is of the date of the Pyramids, and the statues are in
+the best state of preservation; the colors are perfectly bright The
+execution is admirable, and they convey an exact idea of the physical
+character of the primitive population."
+
+The New American Cyclopedia (art. Apis) in speaking of this Egyptian
+God, tells us his lifetime was twenty-five years; in harmony with one of
+the theologico-astronomical cycles of the Egyptians. The same work and
+volume (p. 132), in speaking of the real existence of Adonis of Greece,
+tells us, upon the authority of the poet Panyasis, that he was a
+veritable son of Theias, king of Syria.
+
+But of all the characters who figured in the mythological works or
+lawless rhapsodies of the ancients, and worshiped by them as crucified
+Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, none has, perhaps, been so indubitably, so
+positively, and so universally set down as mythological or fabulous as
+that of Prometheus of Caucasus.
+
+And yet Mr. Lempriere, D. D., tells us in his Classical Dictionary that
+he was the son of Japetus. Sir Isaac Newton says he was a descendant of
+the famous African Sesostris; while that erudite and masterly historian
+(Mr. Higgins) seems to have entertained no doubt of his personal esse;
+nor, indeed, of many, if any, of the pagan Saviors, as the following
+declaration will show. He says, "Finding men in India and other
+countries of the same name of the inferior Gods (as it is quite common
+to name men for them) has led some to conclude that those deified men
+never existed, but are merely mythological names of the sun. True, the
+first supreme God of every nation (not excepting the Jews) was the sun.
+But more modernly the names were transferred to men." Again, he says,
+"Inasmuch as some of them are found to have been real bona fide human
+beings, there is nothing unreasonable in concluding that all were" And
+if we take into consideration the true and indisputable fact that the
+priests had everything at their disposal, and the strongest motives for
+concealing and suppressing, not to say garbling and destroying evidence,
+it is not to be wondered at that the histories of some of these Gods
+should be somewhat obscure and ambiguous. Further on he declares, "In
+every case the Savior was incarnate, and in nearly every case the place
+in which he was actually born was exhibited to the people." And upon the
+authority of the Hierophant, we will add, the memories of many of them
+have been consecrated and perpetuated by tombs placed beside their
+temples, which is perhaps the most convincing species of evidence that
+could be offered.
+
+The evidence, then, is precisely of the same character as that offered
+in the case of Jesus Christ to prove that the pagan Saviors did really
+possess a substantial, earthly and bodily existence. Though it is true
+that it never has been universally conceded or believed by Christian
+themselves that Jesus Christ ever had a personal or corporeal existence
+on earth.
+
+Cotilenius, in a note on Ignatius, Epistle to the Trallians, written in
+the third century of the Christian era, declares that "it is as absurd
+to deny the doctrine which taught that Jesus Christ's body was a phantom
+as to deny that the sun shone at midday." His physical body of course
+was meant, for it appears he believed in his eternal existence as a
+spirit in heaven.
+
+And we find whole sects advocating similar views in the early ages of
+the Christian church. "One of the most primitive and learned sects,"
+says a writer, "were the Manicheans, who denied that Jesus Christ ever
+existed in flesh and blood, but believed him to be a God in spirit only;"
+others denied him to be a God, but believed him to have been a prophet,
+or inspired character, like the Unitarians of the present day. Some
+denied his crucifixion, others asserted it. It is more than probable
+that this was the cause of dispute between Paul and Barnabas, mentioned
+in the Acts of the Apostles, seeing that Paul had laid such peculiar
+emphasis on "Jesus Christ and him crucified."
+
+And this conclusion is corroborated by its being expressly stated in the
+Gospel of Barnabas that "Jesus Christ was not crucified, but was carried
+to heaven by four angels." "There was a long list," says the same
+writer, "from the earliest times, of sincere Christians who denied that
+Jesus Christ rose from the dead;" while, as we may remark here, there
+could not have been at that early date any grounds for denying these
+things, had he really figured in the world in the miraculous and
+extraordinary and public manner as that related in the Gospels.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. SIXTEEN SAVIORS CRUCIFIED
+
+"For I determined not to know anything among you, save Jesus Christ
+and him crucified." (i Cor. ii. 2.) There must have existed a very
+considerable amount of skepticism in the community as to the truth of
+the report of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in the country and era of
+its occurrence to make it necessary thus to erect it into an important
+dogma, and make it imperative to believe it There must have been a large
+margin for distrusting its truth.
+
+The determination not to know anything but the crucifixion of Jesus
+Christ was narrowing down his knowledge to rather a small compass.
+
+And such a resolution would necessarily preclude him from acquainting
+himself with the history of any other cases of crucifixion that might
+have occurred before that of his own favorite Messiah. "What! Was
+there ever a case of crucifixion beside that of Jesus Christ?" a good
+Christian brother or sister sometimes exclaims, when the world's sixteen
+crucified Saviors are spoken of.
+
+We meet the question with the reply, You seem to be a disciple of
+Paul, whose position would not allow him to know of any other cases of
+crucifixion but that of Jesus Christ. Hence, he may have considered it
+meritorious to perpetuate his ignorance on the subject And you, perhaps,
+are ignorant from the same cause.
+
+It is the nature of all religions based on fear and unchangeable dogmas,
+to deter and thus exclude its disciples from all knowledge adverse
+to their own creeds. And sometimes their own religious systems are
+magnified to such an exalted appreciation above all others as to lead
+them to destroy the evidence of the existence of the latter for fear of
+their ultimate rivalry.
+
+Mr. Taylor informs us that some of the early disciples of the Christian
+faith demolished accessible monuments representing and memorializing the
+crucifixion of the ancient oriental sin-atoning Gods, so that they are
+now unknown in the annals of Christian history. Hence, the surprise
+excited in the minds of Christian professors when other cases are
+mentioned.
+
+Such influences as referred to above have shut out from the minds of the
+disciples of several religious systems a knowledge of all crucified Gods
+but their own. Hence, the Hindoo rejoices in knowing only "Chrishna and
+him crucified." The Persian entwines around his heart the remembrance
+only of the atoning sufferings on the cross of Mithra the Mediator. The
+Mexican daily sends up his earnest, soul-breathing prayer for the return
+of the spirit of his crucified Savior--Quexalcote. While the Caucasian,
+with equal devotion, chants daily praises to his slain "Divine
+Intercessor" for voluntarily offering himself upon the cross for the
+sins of a fallen race. And the Christian disciple hugs to his bosom
+the bloody cross of the murdered Jesus, unhaunted by the suspicion that
+other Gods died for the sins of man long anterior to the advent of the
+immaculate Nazarene.
+
+We will now lay before the reader a brief account of the crucifixion of
+more than a dozen virgin-born Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, predicated
+upon facts which have escaped the hands of the Christian iconoclasts
+determined to know only Jesus Christ crucified. We will first notice the
+case of the Indian God--Chrishna.
+
+
+I.--CRUCIFIXION OF CHRISHNA OF INDIA, 1200 B. C.
+
+Among the sin-atoning Gods who condescended in ancient times to forsake
+the throne of heaven, and descend upon the plains of India, through
+human birth, to suffer and die for the sins and transgressions of the
+human race, the eighth Avatar, or Savior, may be considered the most
+important and the most exalted character, as he led the most conspicuous
+life, and commanded the most devout and the most universal homage. And
+while some of the other incarnate demigods were invested with only a
+limited measure of the infinite deityship, Chrishna, according to the
+teachings of their New Testament (the Ramazand), comprehended in himself
+"a full measure of the God-head bodily." The evidence of his having been
+crucified is as conclusive as any other sacrificial or sin-atoning God,
+whose name has been memorialized in history, or embalmed as a sacred
+idol in the memories of his devout worshipers.
+
+Mr. Moore, an English traveler and writer, in a large collection of
+drawings taken from Hindoo sculptures and monuments, which he has
+arranged together in a work entitled "The Hindoo Pantheon," has one
+representing, suspended on the cross, the Hindoo crucified God and Son
+of God, "our Lord and Savior" Chrishna, with holes pierced in his
+feet, evidently intended to represent the nail-holes made by the act of
+crucifixion. Mr. Higgins, who examined this work, which he found in the
+British Museum, makes a report of a number of the transcript drawings
+intended to represent the crucifixion of this oriental and mediatorial
+God, which we will here condense. In plate ninety-eight this Savior is
+represented with a hole in the top of one foot, just above the toes,
+where the nail was inserted in the act of crucifixion.
+
+In another drawing he is represented exactly in the form of a Romish
+Christian crucifix, but not fixed or fastened to a tree, though the legs
+and feet are arranged in the usual way, with nail-holes in the latter.
+There is a halo of glory over it, emanating from the heavens above,
+just as we have seen Jesus Christ represented in a work by a Christian
+writer, entitled "Quarles' Emblems," also in other Christian books. In
+several of the icons (drawings) there are marks of holes in both feet,
+and in others of holes in the hands only. In the first drawing which
+he consulted the marks are very faint, so as to be scarcely visible.
+In figures four and five of plate eleven the figures have nail-holes in
+both feet, while the hands are not represented. Figure six has on it the
+representation of a round hole in the side. To his collar or shirt hangs
+an emblem of a heart, represented in the same manner as those attached
+to the imaginary likenesses of Jesus Christ, which may now be found in
+some Christian countries Figure ninety-one has a hole in one foot and a
+nail through the other, and a round nail or pin mark in one hand only,
+while the other is ornamented with a dove and a serpent (both emblems of
+deity in the Christian's bible).
+
+Now, we raise the query here, and drive it into the innermost temple
+of the Christian's conscience, with the overwhelming force of the
+unconquerable logic of history--_What does all this mean?_
+
+And if they will only let conviction have its perfect work while
+answering this question unhampered by the inherited prejudices of
+a thousand years, they can henceforth rejoice in the discovery of a
+glorious historical truth, calculated to disenthrall their minds from
+the soul-cramping superstitions of crosses, crucifixions and bloody
+atonements on which they have been accustomed to hang the salvation of
+the world.
+
+If the credibility of the relation of these incidents going to prove
+an astonishing coincidence in the sacred histories of the Hindoo and
+Christian Saviors, and demonstrating the doctrine of the crucifixion
+as having been practically realized, and preached to the world long
+anterior to the offering of a God "once for all" on Mount Calvary;
+if its credibility rested on mere _ex parte_ testimony, mere pagan
+tradition, or even upon the best digested and most authentic annals of
+the past that have escaped the ravages of time, there might still be a
+forlorn hope for the stickler for the Christian faith now struggling
+in the agonies of a credal skepticism, that the whole thing has been
+plagiarized from the Christian Gospels. For paper and parchment history
+can be--and has been--mutilated. But the verity of this account rests
+upon no such a precarious basis. Its antiquity, reaching far beyond
+the Christian era, is corroborated and demonstrated by imperishable
+monuments, deep-chiseled indentures burrowed into the granite rock,
+which bid defiance to the fingers of time, and even the hands of the
+frenzied iconoclast, to destroy or deface, though impelled and spurred
+on to the effort by the long-cherished conviction burning in his soul,
+that the salvation of the human race depends upon believing that "there
+is no other name given under heaven whereby men can be saved" than his
+own crucified God, and that all others are but thieves, robbers and
+antichrists. Some of the disciples of the oriental systems cherished
+this conviction, and Christians and Mahommedans seem to have inherited
+it in magnified proportions.
+
+Hence, we are credibly informed that some of the earlier Christian
+saints, having determined, like Paul, "to know only Jesus Christ and him
+crucified," made repeated efforts to obliterate these sacred facts (so
+fatally damaging to their one-sided creeds) from the page of history.
+Mr. Higgins suggests that if we could have persons less under the
+influence of sectarian prejudice to visit, examine, and report on
+the sculptures and monuments of India, covered over as they are with
+antiquated and significant figures appertaining to and illustrating
+their religious history, we might accumulate still more light bearing
+upon the history of the crucifixion of the Savior and sin-atoning
+Chrishna. "Most of our reports," he declares, "are fragmentary, if not
+one-sided, having come through the hands of Christian missionaries,
+bishops and priests."
+
+He informs us that a report on the Hindoo religion, made out by a
+deputation from the British Parliament, sent to India for the purpose of
+examining their sacred books and monuments, being left in the hands of
+a Christian bishop at Calcutta, and with instructions to forward it
+to England, was found, on its arrival in London, to be so horribly
+mutilated and eviscerated as to be scarcely cognizable. The account of
+the crucifixion was gone---cancelled out. The inference is patent.
+
+And we have it upon the authority of this same reliable and truthful
+writer (Sir Godfrey Higgins) that the author of the Hindoo Pantheon (Mr.
+Moor), after having announced his intention to publish it to the world,
+was visited and labored with by some of his devout Christian neighbors
+zealous "for the faith once delivered to the saints," who endeavored to
+dissuade him from publishing such facts to the world as he represented
+his book to contain, for fear it would have the effect to unsettle
+the faith of some of the weak brethren (some of the weak-kneed church
+members) in the soul-saving religion of Jesus Christ, by raising
+doubts in their minds as to the originality of the gospel story of the
+crucifixion of Christ, or at least of his having been crucified as a God
+for a sin-offering. His crucifixion is a possible event. It may be
+thus far a true narrative, but the adjunct of the atonement, with its
+efficacy to obliterate the effects of sin, connected with the idea that
+an infinite, omnipotent and self-existent God was put to death, when a
+human form was slain upon the cross--never, no, never. It is a thought
+too monstrous to find lodgment in an enlightened human mind.
+
+Another case evincing the same spirit as that narrated above is found in
+the circumstance of a Christian missionary (a Mr. Maurice) publishing
+a historical account of this man-god or demigod of the Hindoos, and
+omitting any allusion to his crucifixion; this was entirely left out,
+apparently from design. His death, resurrection and ascension were
+spoken of, but the crucifixion skipped over. He could not have been
+ignorant of this chapter in his history as the writers preceding him,
+from whom he copied, had related it.
+
+Among this number may be mentioned the learned French writer
+Monsieur Guigniant, who, in his "Religion of the Ancients," speaks so
+specifically of the crucifixion of this God, as to name the circumstance
+of his being nailed to a tree. He also states, that before his exit he
+made some remarkable prophecies appertaining to the crimes and miseries
+of the world in the approaching future, reminding us of the wars and
+rumors of wars predicted by the Christian Messiah. Mr. Higgins names the
+same circumstance.
+
+We have it upon the authority of more than one writer on Hindoo or
+Indian antiquities that there is a rock temple at Mathura in the form
+of a cross, and facing the four cardinal points of the compass, which
+is admitted by all beholders as presenting the proof in bold relief of
+extreme age, and inside of this temple stands a statue of "the Savior
+of men," Chrishna of India, presenting the proof of being coeval in
+construction with the temple itself by the circumstance of its being
+cut out of the same rock and constituting a part of the temple. (Further
+citations of this character will be found under the head of Parallels,
+Chapter XXXII.)
+
+Thus we have the proof deeply and indelibly carved in the old,
+time-chiseled rocks of India--that their "Lord and Savior Chrishna"
+atoned for the sins of a grief-stricken world by "pouring out his blood
+as a propitiatory offering" while stretched upon the cross. No wonder,
+in view of such historic bulwarks, Col. Wiseman, for ten years a
+Christian missionary should have exclaimed, "Can we be surprised that
+the enemies of our holy religion should seize upon this legend (the
+crucifixion of Chrishna) as containing the original of our gospel
+history?"
+
+Christian reader, please ponder over the facts of this chapter, and let
+conviction have its perfect work.
+
+
+LIFE, CHARACTER, RELIGION, AND MIRACLES OF CHRISHNA.
+
+The history of Chrishna Zeus (or Jeseus, as some writers spell it) is
+contained principally in the Baghavat Gita, the episode portion of the
+Mahabaret bible. The book is believed to be divinely inspired, like all
+other bibles; and the Hindoos claim for it an antiquity of six thousand
+years. Like Christ, he was of humble origin, and like him had to
+encounter opposition and persecution.
+
+But he seems to have been more successful in the propagation of his
+doctrines; for it is declared, "he soon became surrounded by many
+earnest followers, and the people in vast multitudes followed him,
+crying aloud, 'This is indeed the Redeemer promised to our fathers.'"
+His pathway was thickly strewn with miracles, which consisted in healing
+the sick, curing lepers, restoring the dumb, deaf and the blind, raising
+the dead, aiding the weak, comforting the sorrow-stricken, relieving the
+oppressed, casting out devils, etc. He come not ostensibly to destroy
+the previous relgion, but to purify it of its impurities, and to preach
+a better doctrine. He came, as he declared, "to reject evil and restore
+the reign of good, and redeem man from the consequences of the fall,
+and deliver the oppressed earth from its load of sin and suffering." His
+disciples believed him to be God himself, and millions worshiped him as
+such in the time of Alexander the Great, 330 B. C.
+
+The hundreds of counterparts to the history of Christ, proving their
+histories to be almost identical, will be found enumerated in Chapter
+XXXII., such as--1. His miraculous birth by a virgin. 2. The mother and
+child being visited by shepherds, wise men and the angelic host, who
+joyously sang, "In thy delivery, O favored among women, all nations
+shall have cause to exult." 3. The edict of the tyrant ruler Cansa,
+ordering all the first born to be put to death. 4. The miraculous escape
+of the mother and child from his bloody decree by the parting of the
+waves of the River Jumna to permit them to pass through on dry ground.
+5. The early retirement of Chrishna to a desert. 6. His baptism or
+ablution in the River Ganges, corresponding to Christ's baptism in
+Jordan. 7. His transfiguration at Madura, where he assured his disciples
+that "present or absent, I will always be with you." 8. He had a
+favorite disciple (Arjoon), who was his bosom friend, as John was
+Christ's. 9. He was anointed with oil by women, like Christ. 10. A
+somewhat similar fish story is told of him--his disciples being enabled
+by him to catch large draughts of the finny prey in their nets. (For
+three hundred other similar parallels, see Chapter XXXII.)
+
+Like Christ, he taught much by parables and precepts. A notable sermon
+preached by him is also reported, which we have not space for here.
+
+On one occasion, having returned from a ministerial journey, as he
+entered Madura, the people came out in crowds to meet him, strewing the
+ground with the branches of cocoa-nut trees, and desiring to hear him.
+He addressed them in parables--the conclusion and moral of one of which,
+called the parable of the fishes, runs thus: "And thus it is, O people
+of Madura, that you ought to protect the weak and each other, and not
+retaliate upon an enemy the wrongs he may have done you." Here we see
+the peace doctrine preached in its purity. "And thus it was," says a
+writer, "that Chrishna spread among the people the holy doctrines of
+purest morality, and initiated his hearers into the exalted principles
+of charity, of self-denial, and self-respect at a time when the desert
+countries of the west were inhabited only by savage tribes;" and we
+will add, long before Christianity was thought of. Purity of life
+and spiritual insight, we are told, were distinguishing traits in the
+character of this oriental sin-atoning Savior, and that "he was often
+moved with compassion for the downtrodden and the suffering."
+
+A Budhist in Ceylon, who sent his son to a Christian school, once
+remarked to a missionary, "I respect Christianity as a help to Budhism."
+Thus is disclosed the fact that the motives of some of "the heathen"
+in sending to Christian schools is the promotion of their own religion,
+which they consider superior, and in many respects most of them are.
+(For proof, see Chapter on Bibles.)
+
+We have the remarkable admission of the _Christian Examiner_ that "the
+best precepts of the (Christian) bible are contained in the Hindoo
+Baghavat." Then it is not true that "Christ spake as man never spake."
+And if his "best precepts" were previously recorded in an old heathen
+bible, then they afford no proof of his divinity. This suicidal
+concession of the _Examiner_ pulls up the claims of orthodox
+Christianity by the roots.
+
+And many of the precepts uttered by Chrishna display a profound wisdom
+and depth of thought equal to any of those attributed to Jesus Christ.
+In proof of the statement, we will cite a few examples out of the
+hundreds in our possession:--
+
+1. Those who do not control their passions cannot act properly toward
+others.
+
+2. The evils we inflict upon others follow us as our shadows follow our
+bodies.
+
+3. Only the humble are beloved of God.
+
+4. Virtue sustains the soul as the muscles sustain the body.
+
+5. When the poor man knocks at your door, take him and administer to
+his wants, for the poor are the chosen of God. (Christ said, "God hath
+chosen the poor.")
+
+6. Let your hand be always open to the unfortunate.
+
+7. Look not upon a woman with unchaste desires.
+
+8. Avoid envy, covetousness, falsehood, imposture and slander, and
+sexual desires.
+
+9. Above all things, cultivate love for your neighbor.
+
+10. When you die you leave your worldly wealth behind you, but your
+virtues and vices follow you.
+
+11. Contemn riches and worldly honor.
+
+12. Seek the company of the wicked in order to reform them.
+
+13. Do good for its own sake, and expect not your reward for it on
+earth.
+
+14. The soul is immortal, but must be pure and free from all sin and
+stain before it can return to Him who gave it.
+
+15. The soul is inclined to good when it follows the inward light.
+
+16. The soul is responsible to God for its actions, who has established
+rewards and punishments.
+
+17. Cultivate that inward knowledge which teaches what is right and
+wrong.
+
+18. Never take delight in another's misfortunes.
+
+19. It is better to forgive an injury than to avenge it
+
+20. You can accomplish by kindness what you cannot by force.
+
+21. A noble spirit finds a cure for injustice by forgetting it.
+
+22. Pardon the offense of others, but not your own.
+
+23. What you blame in others do not practice yourself.
+
+24. By forgiving an enemy you make many friends.
+
+25. Do right from hatred of evil, and not from fear of punishment.
+
+26. A wise man corrects his own errors by observing those of others.
+
+27. He who rules his temper conquers his greatest enemy.
+
+28. The wise man governs his passions, but the fool obeys them.
+
+29. Be at war with men's vices, but at peace with their persons.
+
+30. There should be no disagreement between your lives and your
+doctrine.
+
+31. Spend every day as though it were the last.
+
+32. Lead not one life in public and another in private.
+
+33. Anger in trying to torture others punishes itself.
+
+34. A disgraceful death is honorable when you die in a good cause.
+
+35. By growing familiar with vices, we learn to tolerate them easily.
+
+36. We must master our evil propensities, or they will master us.
+
+37. He who has conquered his propensities rules over a kingdom.
+
+38. Protect, love and assist others, if you would serve God.
+
+39. From thought springs the will, and from the will action, true or
+false, just or unjust.
+
+40. As the sandal tree perfumes the axe which fells it, so the good man
+sheds fragrance on his enemies.
+
+41. Spend a portion of each day in pious devotion.
+
+42. To love the virtues of others is to brighten your own.
+
+43. He who gives to the needy loses nothing himself.
+
+44. A good, wise and benevolent man cannot be rich.
+
+45. Much riches is a curse to the possessor.
+
+46. The wounds of the soul are more important than those of the body.
+
+47. The virtuous man is like the banyan tree, which shelters and
+protects all around it.
+
+48. Money does not satisfy the love of gain, but only stimulates it.
+
+49. Your greatest enemy is in your own bosom.
+
+50. To flee when charged is to confess your guilt.
+
+51. The wounds of conscience leave a scar.
+
+Compare these fifty-one precepts of Chrishna with the forty-two precepts
+of Christ, and you must confess they suffer nothing by the comparison.
+If we had space we would like to quote also from the Vedas. We will
+merely cite a few examples relative to woman.
+
+1. He who is cursed by woman is cursed by God.
+
+2. God will punish him who laughs at woman's sufferings.
+
+3. When woman is honored, God is honored.
+
+4. The virtuous woman will have but one husband, and the right-minded
+man but one wife.
+
+5. It is the highest crime to take advantage of the weakness of woman.
+
+6. Woman should be loved, respected and protected by husbands, fathers
+and brothers, etc. (For more, see Chapter on Bibles.)
+
+Before we close this chapter we must anticipate and answer an objection.
+It will be said that the reported amours of Chrishna and his reencounter
+with Cansa constitute a criticism on his character. If so, we will point
+to Christ's fight or angry combat with the money-changers in the temple
+as an offset to it And then it should be remembered that Chrishna's
+disciples claim that these stories are mere fable, or allegorical, and
+are not found in the most approved or canonical writings.
+
+
+II.--CRUCIFIXION OF THE HINDOO SAKIA, 600 B. C.
+
+How many Gods who figured in Hindoo history suffered death upon the
+cross as atoning offerings for the sins of mankind is a point not
+clearly established by their sacred books. But the death of the God
+above named, known as Sakia, Budha Sakia, or Sakia Muni, is distinctly
+referred to by several writers, both oriental and Christian, though
+there appears to be in Budhist countries different accounts of the death
+of the famous and extensively worshiped sin-atoning Saviors.
+
+In some countries, the story runs, a God was crucified by an arrow being
+driven through his body, which fastened him to a tree; the tree,
+with the arrow thus projecting at right angles, formed the cross,
+emblematical of the atoning sacrifice.
+
+Sakia, an account states, was crucified by his enemies for the humble
+act of plucking a flower in a garden--doubtless seized on as a mere
+pretext, rather than as being considered a crime.
+
+One of the accusations brought against Christ, it will be remembered,
+was that of plucking the ripened ears of corn on the Sabbath. And it is
+a remarkable circumstance, that in the pictures of Christian countries
+representing the virgin Mary with the infant Jesus in her arms, either
+the child or the mother is frequently represented with a bunch of
+flowers in the hand.
+
+Here, let it be noted, the association of flowers with divinely born
+Saviors, in India, is indicated in the religious books of that country
+to have originated from the conception of the virgin parting with the
+flowers of her virginity by giving birth to a divine child, whereby she
+lost the immortality of her physical nature, it being transferred by
+that act to her Deity-begotten son. And from this circumstance, Sakia
+is represented as having been crucified for abstracting a flower from a
+garden. That his crucifixion was designed as a sin-atoning offering, is
+evident from the following declaration found in his sacred biography,
+viz.: "He in mercy left Paradise, and came down to earth because he was
+filled with compassion for the sins and miseries of mankind. He sought
+to lead them into better paths, and took their sufferings upon himself
+that he might expiate their crimes and mitigate the punishment they must
+otherwise inevitably undergo." (Prog. Rel. Ideas, vol. i. p. 86.)
+
+He believed and taught his followers that all sin is inevitably
+punished, either in this or the future life; and so great were his
+sympathy and tenderness, that he condescended to suffer that punishment
+himself, by an ignominious death upon the cross, after which he
+descended into Hades (Hell), to suffer for a time (three days) for the
+inmates of that dreadful and horrible prison, that he might show he
+sympathized with them. After his resurrection, and before his ascension
+to heaven, as well as during his earthly sojourn, he imparted to the
+world some beautiful, lofty, and soul-elevating precepts.
+
+"The object of his mission," says a writer, "was to instruct those who
+were straying from the right path, and expiate the sins of mortals by
+his own suffering, and procure for them a happy entrance into Paradise
+by obedience to his precepts and prayers to his name." (Ibid.) "His
+followers always speak of him as one with God from all eternity."
+(Ibid.) His most common title was "the Savior of the World." He was also
+called "the Benevolent One," "the Dispenser of Grace," "the Source of
+Life," "the Light of the World," "the True Light," etc.
+
+His mother was a very pure, refined, pious and devout woman; never
+indulged in any impure thoughts, words or actions. She was so much
+esteemed for her virtues and for being the mother of a God, that an
+escort of ladies attended her wherever she went. The trees bowed before
+her as she passed through the forest, and flowers sprang up wherever her
+foot pressed the ground. She was saluted as "the Holy Virgin, Queen of
+Heaven."
+
+It is said that when her divine child was born, he stood upright and
+proclaimed, "I will put an end to the sufferings and sorrows of the
+world." And immediately a light shone around about the young Messiah. He
+spent much time in retirement, and like Christ in another respect, was
+once tempted by a demon who offered him all the honors and wealth of the
+world. But he rebuked the devil, saying, "Be gone; hinder me not."
+
+He began, like Christ, to preach his gospel and heal the sick when about
+twenty-eight years of age. And it is declared, "the blind saw, the deaf
+heard, the dumb spoke, the lame danced and the crooked became straight."
+Hence, the people declared, "He is no mortal child, but an incarnation
+of the Deity." His religion was of a very superior character. He
+proclaimed, "My law is a law of grace for all." His religion knew no
+race, no sex, no caste, and no aristocratic priesthood.
+
+"It taught," says Max Muller, "the equality of all men, and the
+brotherhood of the human race." "All men, without regard to rank, birth
+or nation," says Dunckar, "form, according to Budha's view, one great
+suffering association in this earthly vale of tears; therefore,
+the commandments of love, forbearance, patience, compassion, pity,
+brotherliness of all men." Klaproth (a German professor of oriental
+languages) says this religion is calculated to ennoble the human race.
+"It is difficult to comprehend," says a French writer (M. Leboulay),
+"how men, not assisted by revelation, could have soared so high, and
+approached so near the truth."
+
+Dunckar says this oriental God "taught self-denial, chastity,
+temperance, the control of the passions, to bear injustice from others,
+to suffer death quietly, and without hate of your persecutor, to
+grieve not for one's own misfortunes, but for those of others." An
+investigation of their history will show that that they lived up to
+these moral injunctions. "Besides the five great commandments," says a
+Wesleyan missionary (Spense Hardy) in his Dahmma Padam, "every shade
+of vice, hypocrisy, anger, pride, suspicion, greediness, gossiping, and
+cruelty to animals is guarded against by special precepts. Among the
+virtues, recommended, we find not only reverence for parents, care for
+children, submission to authority, gratitude, moderation in all things,
+submission in time of trial, equanimity at all times, but virtues,
+unknown in some systems of morality, such as the duty of forgiving
+injuries, and not rewarding evil for evil." And we will add, both
+charity and love are specially recommended.
+
+We have it also upon the authority of Dunckar that "Budha proclaimed
+that salvation and redemption have come for all, even the lowest
+and most abject classes." For he broke down the iron caste of the
+Brahminical code which had so long ruled India, and aimed to place all
+mankind upon a level. His followers have been stigmatize! by Christian
+professors as "idolaters." But Sir John Bowling, in his "Kingdom and
+People of Siam," denies that they are idolaters--"because," says he, "no
+Budhist believes his image to be God, or anything more than an outward
+representation of Deity." Their deific images are looked upon with the
+same views and feelings as a Christian venerates the photograph of his
+deceased friend. Hence, if one is an idolater, the other is also. With
+respect to the charge of polytheism, Missionary Hue says, "that although
+their religion embraces many inferior deities, who fill the same
+offices that angels do under the Christian system, yet,"--adds M.
+Hue--"monotheism is the real character of Buddhism;" and confirms the
+statement by the testimony of a Thibetan.
+
+It should be noted here that although Budhism succeeded in converting
+about three hundred millions, or one-third of the inhabitants of the
+globe, it was never propagated by the sword, and never persecuted the
+disciples of other religions. Its conquests were made by a rational
+appeal to the human mind. Mr. Hodgson says, "It recognizes the infinite
+capacity of the human intellect." And St. Hilaire declares, "Love for
+all beings is its nucleus; and to love our enemies, and not prosecute,
+are the virtues of this people." Max Muller says, "Its moral code, taken
+by itself, is one of the most perfect the world has ever known."
+
+Its five commandments are:--
+
+1. Thou shalt not kill.
+
+2. Thou shalt not steal.
+
+3. Thou shalt not commit adultery or any impurity.
+
+4. Thou shall not lie.
+
+5. Thou shalt not intoxicate thyself.
+
+To establish the above cited doctrines and precepts, Budha sent forth
+his disciples into the world to preach his gospel to every creature. And
+if any convert had committed a sin in word, thought or deed, he was to
+confess and repent. One of the tracts which they distributed declares,
+"There is undoubtedly a life after this, in which the virtuous may
+expect the reward of their good deeds.... Judgment takes place
+immediately after death."
+
+Budha and his followers set an example to the world of enduring
+opposition and persecution with great patience and non-resistance. And
+some of them suffered martyrdom rather than abandon their principles,
+and gloried in thus sealing their doctrines with their lives.
+
+A story is told of a rich merchant by the name of Purna, forsaking all
+to follow his lord and master; and also of his encountering and talking
+with a woman of low caste at a well, which reminds us of similar
+incidents in the history of Christ. But his enemies, becoming jealous
+and fearful of his growing power, finally crucified him near the foot
+of the Nepaul mountains, about 600 B. C. But after his death, burial and
+resurrection, we are told he ascended back to heaven, where millions of
+his followers believed he had existed with Brahma from all eternity.
+
+[Note.--In the cases of crucifixion which follow, nothing like accuracy
+can be expected with respect to the dates of their occurrence, as all
+history covering the period beyond the modern era, or prior to the
+time of Alexander the Great (330 B. C.) is involved in a labyrinth of
+uncertainty with respect to dates. Hence, bible chronologists differ
+to the extent of three thousand years with respect to the time of every
+event recorded in the Old Testament. Compare the Hebrew and Septuagint
+versions of the bible: The former makes the world three thousand nine
+hundred and forty four, and the latter five thousand two hundred and
+seventy years old at the birth of Christ--a difference of thirteen
+hundred and twenty-six years. And other translations differ still more
+widely. All the cases of crucifixion which follow occurred before the
+time of Christ, but the exact time of many of them cannot be fixed with
+certainty. ]
+
+
+III.--THAMMUZ OF SYRIA CRUCIFIED, 1160 B. C.
+
+The history of this God is furnished us in fragments by several writers,
+portions of which will be found in other chapters of this work. The
+fullest history extant of this God-Savior is probably that of Ctesias
+(400 B. C.), author of "Persika." The poet has perpetuated his memory in
+rhyme.
+
+ "Trust, ye saints, your Lord restored,
+ Trust ye in your risen Lord;
+ For the pains which Thammuz endured
+ Our salvation have procured."
+
+Mr. Higgins informs us (Anac. vol. i. p. 246) that this God was
+crucified at the period above named, as a sin-atoning offering The
+stanza just quoted is predicated upon the following Greek text,
+translated by Godwin: "Trust ye in God, for out of his loins salvation
+has come unto us." Julius Firmicus speaks of this God "rising from the
+dead for the salvation of the world." The Christian writer Parkhurst
+alludes to this Savior as preceding the advent of Christ, and as filling
+to some extent the same chapter in sacred history.
+
+
+IV.--CRUCIFIXION OF WITTOBA OF THE TELINGONESS, 552 B. C.
+
+We have a very conclusive historical proof of the crucifixion of this
+heathen God. Mr. Higgins tells us, "He is represented in his history
+with nail-holes in his hands and the soles of his feet." Nails, hammers
+and pincers are constantly seen represented on his crucifixes, and are
+objects of adoration among his followers. And the iron crown of Lombardy
+has within it a nail of what is claimed as his true original cross,
+and is much admired and venerated on that account. The worship of
+this crucified God, according to our author, prevails chiefly in the
+Travancore and other southern countries in the region of Madura.
+
+
+V.--IAO OF NEPAUL CRUCIFIED, 622 B. C.
+
+With respect to the crucifixion of this ancient Savior, we have this
+very definite and specific testimony that "he was crucified on a tree
+in Nepaul." (See Georgius, p. 202.) The name of this incarnate God and
+oriental Savior occurs frequently in the holy bibles and sacred books of
+other countries. Some suppose that lao (often spelt Jao) is the root of
+the name of the Jewish God Jehovah.
+
+
+VI.--HESUS OF THE CELTIC DRUIDS CRUCIFIED, 834 B. C.
+
+Mr. Higgins informs us that the Celtic Druids represent their God Hesus
+as having been crucified with a lamb on one side and an elephant on the
+other, and that this occurred long before the Christian era. Also that a
+representation of it may now be seen upon "the fire-tower of Brechin."
+
+In this symbolical representation of the crucifixion, the elephant,
+being the largest animal known, was chosen to represent the magnitude
+of the sins of the world, while the lamb, from its proverbial innocent
+nature, was chosen to represent the innocency of the victim (the God
+offered as a propitiatory sacrifice). And thus we have "the Lamb of
+God taking away the sins of the world"--symbolical language used with
+respect to the offering of Jesus Christ. And here is indicated very
+clearly the origin of the figure. It is evidently borrowed from the
+Druids. We have the statement of the above writer that this legend was
+found amongst the Canutes of Gaul long before Jesus Christ was known to
+history. (See Anac. vol. ii. p. 130.)
+
+
+VII.--QUEXALCOTE OF MEXICO CRUCIFIED, 587 B. C.
+
+Historical authority, relative to the crucifixion of this Mexican God,
+and to his execution upon the cross as a propitiatory sacrifice for the
+sins of mankind, is explicit, unequivocal and ineffaceable. The evidence
+is tangible, and indelibly engraven upon steel and metal plates. One
+of these plates represents him as having been crucified on a mountain;
+another represents him as having been crucified in the heavens, as St.
+Justin tells us Christ was. According to another writer, he is sometimes
+represented as having been nailed to a cross, and by other accounts as
+hanging with a cross in his hand. The "Mexican Antiquities" (vol. vi.
+p. 166) says, "Quexalcote is represented in the paintings of 'Codex
+Borgianus' as nailed to the cross." Sometimes two thieves are
+represented as having been crucified with him.
+
+That the advent of this crucified Savior and Mexican God was long
+anterior to the era of Christ, is admitted by Christian writers, as we
+have shown elsewhere. In the work above named "Codex Borgianus," may
+be found the account, not only of his crucifixion, but of his death,
+burial, descent into hell, and resurrection on the third day. And
+another work, entitled "Codex Vaticanus," contains the story of his
+immaculate birth by a virgin mother by the name of Chimalman.
+
+Many other incidences are found related of him in his sacred biography,
+in which we find the most striking counterparts to the more modern
+gospel story of Jesus Christ, such as his forty days' temptation and
+fasting, his riding on an ass, his purification in the temple, his
+baptism and regeneration by water, his forgiving of sins, being anointed
+with oil, etc. "All these things, and many more, found related of this
+Mexican God in their sacred books," says Lord Kingsborough (a Christian
+writer), "are curious and mysterious." (See the books above cited.)
+
+
+VIII.--QUIRINUS OF ROME CRUCIFIED, 506 B. C.
+
+The crucifixion of this Roman Savior is briefly noticed by Mr. Higgins,
+and is remarkable for presenting (like other crucified Gods) several
+parallel features to that of the Judean Savior, not only in the
+circumstances related as attending his crucifixion, but also in a
+considerable portion of his antecedent life.
+
+He is represented, like Christ:--
+
+1. As having been conceived and brought forth by a virgin.
+
+2. His life was sought by the reigning king (Amulius),
+
+3. He was of royal blood, his mother being of kingly descent.
+
+4. He was "put to death by wicked hands"--i. e., crucified.
+
+5. At his mortal exit the whole earth is said to have been enveloped in
+darkness, as in the case of Christ, Chrishna, and Prometheus.
+
+6. And finally he is resurrected, and ascends back to heaven.
+
+
+IX.--(AESCHYLUS) PROMETHEUS CRUCIFIED, 547 B. C.
+
+In the account of the crucifixion of Prometheus of Caucasus, as
+furnished by Seneca, Hesiod, and other writers, it is stated that he was
+nailed to an upright beam of timber, to which were affixed extended arms
+of wood, and that this cross was situated near the Caspian Straits. The
+modern story of this crucified God, which represents him as having been
+bound to a rock for thirty years, while vultures preyed upon his vitals,
+Mr. Higgins pronounces an impious Christian fraud. "For," says this
+learned historical writer, "I have seen the account which declares
+he was nailed to a cross with hammer and nails." (Anac. vol. i. 327.)
+Confirmatory of this statement is the declaration of Mr. Southwell, that
+"he exposed himself to the wrath of God in his zeal to save mankind."
+
+The poet, in portraying his propitiatory offering, says
+
+ "Lo! streaming from the fatal tree
+ His all atoning blood,
+ Is this the Infinite?--
+ Yes, 'tis he,
+ Prometheus, and a God!
+
+ "Well might the sun in darkness hide,
+ And veil his glories in,
+ When God, the great Prometheus, died
+ For man the creature's sin."
+
+The "New American Cyclopedia" (vol. i. p. 157) contains the following
+significant declaration relative to this sin-atoning oriental Savior:
+"It is doubtful whether there is to be found in the whole range of Greek
+letters deeper pathos than that of the divine woe of the beneficent
+demigod Prometheus, crucified on his Scythian crags for his love to
+mortals." Here we have first-class authority for the crucifixion of this
+oriental God.
+
+In Lempriere's "Classical Dictionary," Higgins' "Anacalypsis," and other
+works, may be found the following particulars relative to the final exit
+of the God above named, viz.:--
+
+1. That the whole frame of nature became convulsed.
+
+2. The earth shook, the rocks were rent, the graves were opened, and in
+a storm, which seemed to threaten the dissolution of the universe, the
+solemn scene forever closed, and "Our Lord and Savior" Prometheus gave
+up the ghost.
+
+"The cause for which he suffered," says Mr. Southwell, "was his love for
+the human race." Mr. Taylor makes the statement in his Syntagma (p. 95),
+that the whole story of Prometheus' crucifixion, burial and resurrection
+was acted in pantomime in Athens five hundred years before Christ, which
+proves its great antiquity. Minutius Felix, one of the most popular
+Christian writers of the second century (in his "Octavius," sect. 29),
+thus addresses the people of Rome: "Your victorious trophies not only
+represent a simple cross, but a cross with a man on it," and this man
+St. Jerome calls a God.
+
+These coincidences furnish still further proof that the tradition of the
+crucifixion of Gods has been very long prevalent among the heathen.
+
+
+X.--CRUCIFIXION OF THULIS OF EGYPT, 1700 B. C.
+
+Thulis of Egypt, whence comes "Ultima Thule," died the death of the
+cross about thirty-five hundred years ago.
+
+Ultima Thule was the island which marked the ultimate bounds of the
+extensive empire of this legitimate descendant of the Gods.
+
+This Egyptian Savior appears also to have been known as Zulis, and with
+this name--Mr. Wilkison tells us--"his history is curiously illustrated
+in the sculptures, made seventeen hundred years B. C., of a small,
+retired chamber lying nearly over the western adytum of the temple-" We
+are told twenty-eight lotus plants near his grave indicate the number
+of years he lived on the earth. After suffering a violent death, he
+was buried, but rose again, ascended into heaven, and there became "the
+judge of the dead," or of souls in a future state. Wilkison says he came
+down from heaven to benefit mankind, and that he was said to be "full of
+grace and truth."
+
+
+XI.--CRUCIFIXION OF INDRA OF THIBET, 725 B. C.
+
+The account of the crucifixion of the God and Savior Indra may be found
+in Georgius, Thibetinum Alphabetum, p. 230. A brief notice of the case
+is all we have space for here. In the work just referred to may be found
+plates representing this Thibetan Savior as having been nailed to
+the cross. There are five wounds, representing the nailholes and the
+piercing of the side. The antiquity of the story is beyond dispute.
+
+Marvelous stories are told of the birth of the Divine Redeemer. His
+mother was a virgin of black complexion, and hence his complexion was
+of the ebony hue, as in the case of Christ and some other sin-atoning
+Saviors. He descended from heaven on a mission of benevolence, and
+ascended back to the heavenly mansion after his crucifixion. He led
+a life of strict celibacy, which, he taught, was essential to true
+holiness. He inculcated great tenderness toward all living beings. He
+could walk upon the water or upon the air; he could foretell future
+events with great accuracy. He practiced the most devout contemplation,
+severe discipline of the body and mind, and acquired the most complete
+subjection of his passions. He was worshiped as a God who had existed
+as a spirit from all eternity, and his followers were called "Heavenly
+Teachers."
+
+
+XII.--ALCESTOS OF EURIPIDES CRUCIFIED, 600 B. C.
+
+The "English Classical Journal" (vol. xxxvii.) furnishes us with the
+story of another crucified God, known as Alcestos--a female God or
+Goddess; and in this respect, it is a novelty in sacred history, being
+the first, if not the only example of a feminine God atoning for the
+sins of the world upon the cross. The doctrine of the trinity and
+atoning offering for sin was inculcated as a part of her religion.
+
+
+XIII.--ATYS OF PHRYGIA CRUCIFIED, 1170 B. C.
+
+Speaking of this crucified Messiah, the Anacalypsis informs us that
+several histories are given of him, but all concur in representing
+him as having been an atoning offering for sin. And the Latin phrase
+"suspensus lingo," found in his history, indicates the manner of his
+death. He was suspended on a tree, crucified, buried and rose again.
+
+
+XIV.--CRITE OF CHALDEA CRUCIFIED, 1200 B. C.
+
+The Chaldeans, as Mr. Higgins informs us, have noted in their sacred
+books the account of the crucifixion of a God with the above name. He
+was also known as "the Redeemer," and was styled "the Ever Blessed Son
+of God," "the Savior of the Race," "the Atoning Offering for an Angry
+God." And when he was offered up, both heaven and earth were shaken to
+their foundations.
+
+
+XV.--BALI OF ORISSA CRUCIFIED, 725 B. C.
+
+We learn by the oriental books, that in the district of country known
+as Orissa, in Asia, they have the story of a crucified God, known by
+several names, including the above, all of which, we are told, signify
+"Lord Second," having reference to him as the second person or second
+member of the trinity, as most of the crucified Gods occupied that
+position in the trial of deities constituting the trinity, as indicated
+by the language "Father, Son, and Holy Ghost," the Son, in all cases,
+being the atoning offering, "the crucified Redeemer," and the second
+person of the trinity. This God Bali was also called Baliu, and
+sometimes Bel. The Anacalypsis informs us (vol. i. 257) that monuments
+of this crucified God, bearing great age, may be found amid the ruins
+of the magnificent city of Mahabalipore, partially buried amongst the
+figures of the temple.
+
+
+XVI.--MITHRA OF PERSIA CRUCIFIED, 600 B. C.
+
+This Persian God, according to Mr. Higgins, was "slain upon the cross to
+make atonement for mankind, and to take away the sins of the world." He
+was reputedly born on the twenty-fifth day of December, and crucified on
+a tree. It is a remarkable circumstance that two Christian writers (Mr.
+Faber and Mr. Bryant) both speak of his "being slain," and yet both omit
+to speak of the manner in which he was put to death. And the same policy
+has been pursued with respect to other crucified Gods of the pagans, as
+we have shown elsewhere.
+
+Our list is full, or we might note other cases of crucifixion. Devatat
+of Siam, Ixion of Rome, Apollonius of Tyana in Cappadocia, are all
+reported in history as having "died the death of the cross."
+
+Ixion, 400 B. C., according to Nimrod, was crucified on a wheel, the
+rim representing the world, and the spokes constituting the cross. It is
+declared, "He bore the burden of the world" (that is, "the sins of
+the world") on his back while suspended on the cross. Hence, he was
+sometimes called "the crucified spirit of the world."
+
+With respect to Apollonius, it is a remarkable, if not a suspicious
+circumstance that should not be passed unnoticed, that several Christian
+writers, while they recount a long list of miracles and remarkable
+incidents in the life of this Cappadocian Savior, extending through his
+whole life, and forming a parallel to similar incidents of the Christian
+Savior, not a word is said about his crucifixion.
+
+And a similar policy has been pursued with respect to Mithra and other
+sin-atoning Gods, including Chrishna and Prometheus, as before noticed.
+
+This important chapter in their history has been omitted by Christian
+writers for fear the relation of it would damage the credibility of the
+crucifixion of Christ, or lessen its spiritual force. For, like
+Paul, they were "determined to know nothing but Jesus Christ and
+him crucified" (i Cor. ii. 2) i. e., to _know_ no other God had been
+crucified but _Jesus Christ_. They thus exalted the tradition of the
+crucifixion into the most important dogma of the Christian faith. Hence,
+their efforts to conceal from the public a knowledge of the fact that it
+is of pagan origin.
+
+By reference to Mackey's "Lexicon of Freemasonry" (p. 35) we learn that
+Freemasons secretly taught the doctrine of the crucifixion, atonement
+and resurrection long anterior to the Christian era, and that similar
+doctrines were taught in "all the ancient mysteries," thus proving that
+the conception of these tenets of faith existed at a very early period
+of time.
+
+And it may be noted here, that the doctrine of salvation by crucifixion
+had likewise, with most of the ancient forms of religious faith, an
+astronomical representation--i. e., a representation in astronomical
+symbols. According to the emblematical figures comprised in their astral
+worship, people were saved by the sun's crucifixion or crossification,
+realized by _crossing_ over the equinoctial line into the season of
+spring, and thereby gave out a saving heat and light to the world and
+stimulated the generative organs of animal and vegetable life. It was
+from this conception that the ancients were in the habit of carving or
+painting the organs of generation upon the walls of their holy temples.
+The blood of the grape, which was ripened by the heat of the sun, as he
+crossed over by resurrection into spring, (i. e., was crucified), was
+symbolically "the blood of the cross," or "the blood of the Lamb."
+
+If we should be met here with the statement, that the stories of the
+ancient crucifixions of Gods were mere myths or fables, unwarrantably
+saddled on to their histories as mere romance, and have no foundation in
+fact, we reply--there is as much ground for suspecting the same thing as
+being true of Jesus Christ.
+
+One of the most celebrated and most frequently quoted Christian writers
+of the ancient bishops (Irenaeus) declares upon the authority of the
+martyr Polycarp, who claimed to have got it from St. John and all the
+elders of Asia, that Jesus Christ was not crucified, but lived to be
+about fifty years old.
+
+We find there has always been a margin for doubt amongst his own
+followers as to the fact of his crucifixion.
+
+Many of the early Christians and cotemporary Jews and Gentiles doubted
+it, and some openly disputed its ever having taken place. Others
+bestowed upon it a mere spiritual signification, and not a few
+considered it symbolical of a "holy life." One circumstance, calculated
+to lead to the entire discredit of the story of the crucifixion of
+Christ, is the relation, in connection with it, of a violent convulsion
+of nature, and the resurrection of the long-buried saints--events not
+supported by any authentic cotemporaneous history, sacred or profane.
+(See Chap. XVII., Aphanasia).
+
+And as these events must be set down as fabulous, they leave the mind
+in doubt with respect to the fact of the crucifixion itself, especially
+when the many absurdities involved in the doctrine of the crucifixion
+are brought to view, in connection with it, some of them so palpably
+erroneous that an unlettered savage could see and point them out.
+
+The Indian chief Red Jacket is reported to have replied to the Christian
+missionaries, when they urged upon his attention the benefits of
+Christ's death by crucifixion, "Brethren, if you white men murdered the
+son of the Great Spirit, we Indians have nothing to do with it, and it
+is none of our affair. If he had come among us, we would not have killed
+him. We would have treated him well. You must make amends for that crime
+yourselves."
+
+This view of the crucifixion suggested to the mind of an illiterate
+heathen we deem more sensible and rational than that of the orthodox
+Christians, which makes it a meritorious act and a moral necessity. For
+this would not only exonerate Judas from any criminality or guilt for
+the part he took in the affair, but would entitle him as well as Christ
+to the honorable title of a "Savior" for performing an act without which
+the crucifixion and consequent salvation of the world could not have
+been effected. If it was necessary for Christ to suffer death upon the
+cross as an atonement for sin, then the act of crucifixion was right,
+and a monument should be erected to the memory of Judas for bringing it
+about. We challenge Christian logic to find a flaw in this argument.
+
+And another important consideration arises here. If the inhabitants of
+this planet required the murderous death of a God as an atonement, we
+must presume that the eighty-five millions of inhabited worlds recently
+discovered by astronomers are, or have been, in equal need of a divine
+atonement. And this would require the crucifixion of eighty-five
+millions of Gods. Assuming one of these Gods to be crucified every
+minute, the whole would occupy a period of nearly twenty years. This
+would be killing off Gods at rather a rapid rate, and would make
+the work of the atonement and salvation a very murderous and bloody
+affair--a conception which brings to the mind a series of very revolting
+reflections.
+
+The conception of Gods coming down from heaven, and being born of
+virgins, and dying a violent death for the moral blunders of the people,
+originated in an age of the world when man was a savage, and dwelt
+exclusively upon the animal plane, and blood was the requisition for
+every offense. And it was an age when no world was known to exist but
+the one we inhabit. The stars were then supposed to be mere blazing
+tapers set in the azure vault to light this pygmy planet, or peep-holes
+for Gods to look out of heaven, to see and learn what is going on below.
+Such conceptions are in perfect keeping with the doctrine of the
+atoning crucifixion of Gods, which could never have originated or been
+entertained for a moment by an astronomer, with a knowledge of the
+existence of innumerable inhabited worlds. For as there is to the
+monotheistic Christian but one God, or Son of God, to be offered, he
+must be incarnated and crucified every day for a thousand years to make
+a sin-offering for each of these worlds--a conception too monstrous and
+preposterous to find a lodgment in a rational mind.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE BELIEF OF THE CRUCIFIXION OF GODS.
+
+It has always been presumed that death, and especially death by
+crucifixion, involved the highest state of suffering possible to be
+endured by mortals. Hence, the Gods must suffer in this way as an
+example of courage and fortitude, and to show themselves willing
+to undergo all the affliction and misery incident to the lot, and
+unavoidable to the lives, of their devoted worshipers. They must not
+only be equal, but superior to their subjects in this respect Hence,
+they would not merely die, but choose, or at least uncomplainingly
+submit to the most ignoble and ignominious mode of suffering death
+that could be devised, and that was crucifixion. This gave the highest
+finishing touch to the drama.
+
+And thus the legend of the crucifixion became the crowning chapter, the
+aggrandizing episode in the history of their lives. It was presumed that
+nothing less than a God could endure such excruciating tortures without
+complaining.
+
+Hence, when the victim was reported to have submitted with such
+fortitude that no murmur was heard to issue from his lips, this
+circumstance of itself was deemed sufficient evidence of his Godship.
+The story of the crucifixion, therefore, whether true or false, deified
+or helped deify many great men and exalt them to the rank of Gods.
+Though some of the disciples of Budhism, and some of the primitive
+professors of Christianity also (including, according to Christian
+history, Peter and his brother Andrew), voluntarily chose this mode
+of dying in imitation of their crucified Lord, without experiencing,
+however, the desired promotion to divine honors. They failed of an
+exaltation to the deityship, and hence are not now worshiped as Gods.
+
+Christian reader, what can you now make of the story of the crucifixion
+of Jesus Christ but a borrowed legend--at least the story of his being
+crucified _as a God!_
+
+Note.--The author desires it to be understood with respect to the cases
+of crucifixion here briefly narrated, that they are not vouched foras
+actual occurrences, of which there is much ground to doubt. It has
+neither been his aim or desire to prove them to be real historical
+events, nor to establish any certain number of cases. Indeed, he deems
+it unimportant to know, if it could be determined, whether they are fact
+or fiction, or whether one God was crucified, or many. The moral lesson
+designed to be taught by this chapter is, simply, that the belief in
+the crucifixion of Gods was prevalent in various oriental or heathen
+countries long prior to the reported crucifixion of Christ. If
+this point is established--which he feels certain no reader will
+dispute--then he is not concerned to know whether he has made out
+sixteen cases of crucifixion or not. Six will prove it as well as
+sixteen. In fact, one case is sufficient to establish the important
+proposition in view. The reader is, therefore, left to decide each case
+for himself, according as he may value the evidence presented. More
+authorities could have been adduced, and a more extended history
+presented of each God brought to notice. But this would have operated to
+exclude other matter, which the author considers of more importance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. THE APHANASIA, OR DARKNESS AT THE CRUCIFIXION.
+
+MATTHEW tells us (xxvii. 31) that when Christ was crucified, there was
+darkness all over the land for three hours, and "the earth did quake,
+and the rocks were rent, and many of the saints came out of their
+graves."
+
+Here we have a series of events spoken of so strange, so unusual and
+so extraordinary that, had they occurred, they must have attracted the
+attention of the whole world--especially the amazing scene of the sun's
+withdrawing his light and ceasing to shine, and thereby causing an
+almost total darkness near the middle of the day. And yet no writer
+of that age or country, or any other age or country, mentions the
+circumstance but Matthew. A phenomenon so terrible and so serious in its
+effects as literally to unhinge the planets and partially disorganize
+the universe must have excited the alarm and amazement of the whole
+world, and caused a serious disturbance in the affairs of nations. And
+yet strange, superlatively strange, not one of the numerous historians
+of that age makes the slightest allusion to such an astounding event.
+
+Even Seneca and the elder Pliny, who so particularly and minutely
+chronicle the events of those times, are as silent as the grave relative
+to this greatest event in the history of the world. Nor do Mark, Luke
+or John, who all furnish us with a history of the crucifixion, make the
+slightest hint at any of these wonder-exciting events, except Mark's
+incidental allusion to the darkness.
+
+Gibbon says, "It happened during the life of Seneca and the elder
+Pliny, who must have experienced its immediate effects, or received the
+earliest intelligence of the prodigy. Each of these philosophers, in a
+labored work, has recorded all the phenomena of Nature's earthquakes,
+meteors and eclipses, which his indefatigable curiosity could collect.
+Both the one and the other have omitted to mention the greatest
+phenomenon, to which the mortal eye has been witness since the creation
+of the world." (Gibbon, p. 451.)
+
+2. With reference to the "bodies" of the dead saints coming out of their
+tombs (for it is declared their "bodies arose," see Matt, xxvii. 52), many
+rather curious and puzzling questions might be started, which would at
+once disclose its utter absurdity.
+
+We might ask, for example
+
+1. Who were those "many saints" who came out of their graves, seeing
+there were as yet but few Christians to occupy graves, if they had been
+all dead, as the enumeration at Antioch made out only one hundred and
+twenty? (See Acts.) 2. How long had they lain in their graves?
+
+3. How long since their bodies had turned to dust, and been food for
+worms? 4. And would not those worms have to be hunted up and required to
+disgorge the contents of their stomachs in order to furnish the saints
+with the materials for their bodies again? 5. And were the shrouds or
+grave clothes of those saints also resurrected? or did they travel about
+in a state of nudity? 6. For what purpose were they re-animated? 7. And
+should not Matthew have furnished us, by way of proof, with the names
+of some of these ghostly visitors? 8. How long did they live the second
+time? 9. Did they die again, or did they ascend to heaven with their
+new-made bodies? 10. What business did they engage in? 11. Why have we
+not some account of what they said and did? 12. And what finally became
+of them?
+
+Until these questions are rationally answered, the story must be
+regarded as too incredible and too ludicrous to merit serious notice.
+
+3. Nearly all the phenomena represented as occurring at the crucifixion
+of Christ are reported to have been witnessed also at the final exit
+of Senerus, an ancient pagan demigod, who figured in history at a still
+more remote period of time. And similar incidents are related likewise
+in the legendary histories of several other heathen demigods and great
+men partially promoted to the honor of Gods. In the time-honored records
+of the oldest religion in the world, it is declared, "A cloud surrounded
+the moon; and the sun was darkened at noonday, and the sky rained fire
+and ashes during the crucifixion of the Indian God Chrishna." In the
+case of Osiris of Egypt, Mr. Southwell says, "As his birth had been
+attended by an eclipse of the sun, so his death was attended by a still
+greater darkness of the solar orb." At the critical juncture of the
+crucifixion of Prometheus, it is declared, "The whole frame of nature
+became convulsed, the earth shook, the rocks were rent, the graves
+opened, and in a storm which threatened the dissolution of the universe,
+the scene closed" (Higgins). According to Livy, the last hours of the
+mortal demise of Romulus were marked by a storm and by a solar eclipse.
+
+And similar stories are furnished us by several writers of Caesar and
+Alexander the Great. With respect to the latter, Mr. Nimrod says, "Six
+hours of darkness formed his aphanasia, and his soul, like Polycarp's,
+was seen to fly away in the form of a dove." (Nimrod, vol. iii. p.
+458.) "It is remarkable," says a writer, "what a host of respectable
+authorities vouch for an acknowledged fable--the preternatural darkness
+which followed Caesar's death." Gibbon alludes to this event when he
+speaks of "the singular defect of light which followed the murder of
+Caesar." He likewise says, "This season of darkness had already been
+celebrated by most of the poets and historians of that memorable age."
+(Gibbon, p. 452.) It is very remarkable that Pliny speaks of a darkness
+attending Caesar's death, but omits to mention such a scene as attending
+the crucifixion of Christ. Virgil also seeks to exalt this royal
+personage by relating this prodigy. (See his Georgius, p. 465.) Another
+writer says, "Similar prodigies were supposed or said to accompany the
+great men of former days."
+
+Let the reader make a note of this fact--that the same story was told
+of the graves opening, and the dead rising at the final mortal exit of
+several heathen Gods and several great men long before it was penned as
+a chapter in the history of Christ.
+
+Shakespeare, in his Hamlet says:--
+
+ "In the most high and palmy days of Rome,
+ A little ere the mighty Julius fell--
+ The graves stood tenantless, and the sheeted dead
+ Did squeak and gibber in the Roman streets."
+
+These historical citations strongly press the conclusion that this
+portion of the history of Christ was borrowed from old pagan legends.
+
+4. Many cases are recorded in history of the light of the sun being
+obscured at midday so as to result in almost total darkness, when it was
+known not to be produced by an eclipse. And it is probable that these
+natural events furnish the basis in part for those wild legends we have
+brought to notice. Humboldt relates in his Cosmos, that, "in the year
+358, before the earthquake of Numidia, the darkness was very dense for
+two or three hours." Another obscuration of the sun took place in the
+year 360, which lasted five or six hours, and was so dense that the
+stars were visible at midday. Another circumstance of this kind was
+witnessed on the nineteenth of May, 1730, which lasted eight hours. And
+so great was the darkness, that candles and lamps had to be lighted at
+midday to dine by. Similar events are chronicled for the years 1094,
+1206, 1241, 1547, and 1730. And if any such solar obscurations occurred
+near the mortal exit of any of the Gods above named, of course they
+would be seized on as a part of their practical history wrought up into
+hyperbole, and interwoven in their narratives, to give eclat to the
+pageantry of their biographies--a fact which helps to solve the mystery.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE STORY OF THE APHANASIA AT THE CRUCIFIXION.
+
+There is but little ground to doubt but that the various stories of a
+similar character then current in different countries, as shown above,
+first suggested the thought to Christ's biographers of investing
+history with the incredible events reported as being connected with the
+crucifixion. The principal motive, however, seems to have grown out of a
+desire to fulfill a prophecy of the Jewish prophet Joel, as we may find
+many of the important miraculous events ingrafted into Christ's history
+were recorded by way of fulfilling some prophecy. "That the prophecy
+might be fulfilled" is the very language his evangelical biographers
+use.
+
+Joel's prediction runs thus: "And I will show wonders in the heavens,
+and in the earth, flood and fire, and pillars of smoke. The sun shall
+be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great
+and terrible day of the Lord come." (Joel ii. 30.) A little impartial
+investigation will satisfy any unprejudiced mind that this poetic
+rhapsody has not the most remote allusion to the closing events in the
+life of Christ, and was not intended to have.
+
+But his biographers, writing a long time after his death, supposing and
+assuming that this and various other texts, which they quote from the
+prophets, had reference to him, and had been fulfilled, incorporated it
+into his history as a part of his practical life. The conviction that
+the prophecy _must have been fulfilled_, without knowing that it had,
+added to similar stories of other Gods, with which Christ's history
+became confounded, misled them into the conclusion that they were
+warranted in assuming that the incredible events they name were really
+witnessed at the mortal termination of Christ's earthly career, when
+they did not know it, and could not have known it.
+
+This view of the case becomes very rational and very forcible when we
+observe various texts quoted from the prophets by the gospel writers,
+or, rather, most butcheringly misquoted, tortured or distorted into
+Messianic prophecies, when the context shows they have no reference to
+Christ whatever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. DESCENT OF THE SAVIORS INTO HELL.
+
+THE next most important event in the histories of the Saviors after
+their crucifixion, and the act of giving up the ghost, is that of their
+descent into the infernal regions. That Jesus Christ descended into hell
+after his crucifixion is not expressly taught in the Christian bible,
+but it is a matter of such obvious inference from several passages of
+scripture, the early Christians taught it as a scriptural doctrine. Mr.
+Sears, a Christian writer, tells us that "on the doctrine of Christ's
+underground mission the early Christians were united.... It was a point
+too well settled to admit of dispute." (See Foregleams of Immortality,
+p. 262).
+
+And besides this testimony, the "Apostles' Creed" teaches the doctrine
+explicitly, which was once as good authority throughout Christendom as
+the bible itself; indeed, it may be considered as constituting a part
+of the bible prior to the council of Nice (A. D. 325), being supposed
+to have been written by the apostles themselves. It declares that "Jesus
+Christ suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified (dead) and buried.
+He descended into hell; the third day he rose again from the dead," etc.
+This testimony is very explicit.
+
+And Peter is supposed to refer to the same event when he says, "being
+put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the spirit, by which also
+he went and preached unto the spirits in prison." (i Peter iii. 18.) The
+word prison, which occurs in this text, has undoubted reference to the
+Christian fabled hell. For no possible sense can be attached to the
+word prison in this connection without such a construction. Where have
+spirits ever been supposed to be imprisoned but in hell? And then we
+find a text in the Acts of the Apostles, which seems to remove all
+doubt in the case, and banishes at once all ground for dispute. It is
+explicitly stated that "his soul was not left in hell, neither did his
+flesh see corruption." (Adis ii. 31.) Why talk about his soul not
+being left in hell if it had never been there? Language could hardly be
+plainer. The most positive declaration that Christ did descend into hell
+could not make it more certainly a scriptural Christian doctrine.
+
+We, then, rest the case here, and proceed to enumerate other cases of
+Gods and Saviors descending into Pandemonium (the realms of Pluto)
+long before Jesus Christ walked on the water or on the earth. It is
+unquestionably stated in the Hindoo bible, written more than three
+thousand years ago, that the Savior Chrishna "went down to hell to
+preach to the inmates of that dark and dreary prison, with the view of
+reforming them, and getting them back to heaven, and was willing himself
+to suffer to abridge the period of their torment." And certainly, in the
+midst of the fire and smoke of brimstone, it could not have been hard
+to effect their conversion or repentance. One writer tells us that "so
+great was his (Chrishna's) tenderness, that he even descended into
+hell to teach souls in bondage." Now observe how much "teaching souls in
+bondage" sounds like "preaching to souls in prison," as Peter represents
+Christ as doing. And can any reader doubt that the meaning in the two
+cases is the same? And must we not confess that we are greatly indebted
+to the Hindoo bible for an explanation of the two occult and mysterious
+texts which I have quoted from the Christian bible, and which have
+puzzled so many learned critics to explain, or find a meaning for?
+
+We have another case of a God descending into hell in the person or
+spirit of the Savior Quexalcote of Mexico, (300 B. C.) The story will
+be found in the Codex Borgianus, wherein is related the account of
+his death, and burial after crucifixion, his descent into hell, and
+subsequent resurrection. Of Adonis of Greece it is declared, that
+"after his descent into hell, he rose again to life and immortality."
+Prometheus of Caucasus (600 B. C.) likewise is represented as "suffering
+and descending into hell, rising again from the dead, and ascending
+to heaven." Horus of Greece is described as "first reigning a thousand
+years, then dying, and being buried for three days, at the end of which
+time he triumphed over Typhon, the evil principle, and rose again to
+life evermore." And Osiris of Egypt also is represented as making a
+descent into hell, and after a period of three days rose again.
+
+Homer and Virgil speak of several cases of descent into Pluto's
+dominions. Hercules, Ulysses and AEneas are represented as performing the
+hellward journey on, as we infer, benevolent missions. Higgins remarks,
+"The Gods became incarnate, and descended into hell to teach humility
+and set an example of suffering."
+
+The story of their descent into hell was doubtless invented to
+find employment for them during their three days of hibernation or
+conservation in the tomb, that they might not appear to be really dead
+nor idle in the time, and as a still further proof of their matchless
+and unrivalled capacity and fortitude for suffering.
+
+And the story of the three days' entombment is likewise clearly
+traceable in appearance to the astronomical incident of the sun's lying
+apparently dead, and buried, and motionless for nearly three days at the
+period of the vernal epoch, from the twenty-first to the twenty-fifth
+of March. It was a matter of belief or fancy that the sun remained
+stationary for about three days, when he gradually rose again
+"into newness of life." And hence, this period or era was chosen to
+figuratively represent the three days' descent of the Gods into hell.
+We are told that the Persians have an ancient astronomical figure
+representing the descent of a God, divine, into hell, and returning at
+the time that Orsus, the goddess of spring, had conquered the God or
+genus of winter, after the manner St. John describes the Lamb of God
+(see Rev. xii) as conquering the dragon, which may be interpreted as
+the Scorpion or Dragon of the first month of winter (October) being
+conquered by the Lamb of March or spring.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. RESURRECTION OF THE SAVIORS
+
+WE find presented in the canonized histories of several of the demigod
+Saviors the following remarkable coincidences appertaining to their
+death:--
+
+1. Their resurrection from the dead.
+
+2. Their lying in the tomb just three days.
+
+3. The resurrection of several of them about the time of the vernal
+equinox. The twenty-fifth of March is the period assigned by the
+Christian world generally for the resurrection of Christ, though some
+Christian writers have assigned other dates for this event. They all
+agree, however, that Christ rose from the dead, and that this occurred
+three days after the entombment. Bishop Theophilus of Cesarea remarks,
+relative to this event, "Since the birth of Christ is celebrated on the
+twenty-fifth of December,.... so also should the resurrection of Jesus
+be celebrated on the twenty-fifth of March, on whatever day of the week
+it may fall, the Lord having risen again on that day." (Cent. ii. Call,
+p. 118.) "All the ancient Christians," says a writer, "were persuaded
+that Christ was crucified on the twenty-third of March, and rose
+from the dead on the twenty-fifth." And accordingly Constantine and
+cotemporary Christians celebrated the twenty-fifth of March with
+great eclat as the date of the resurrection. The twenty-third and
+twenty-fifth, including the twenty-fourth, would comprise a period of
+three days, the time of the entombment.
+
+Now mark, Quexalcote of Mexico, Chris of Chaldea, Quirinus of Rome,
+Prometheus of Caucasus, Osiris of Egypt, Atys of Phrygia, and "Mithra
+the Mediator" of Persia did, according to their respective histories,
+rise from the dead after three days' burial, and the time of their
+resurrection is in several cases fixed for the twenty-fifth of March.
+And there is an account more than three thousand years old of the Hindoo
+crucified Savior Chrishna, three days after his interment, forsaking
+"the silent bourn, whence (as we are told) no traveler ever returns,"
+and laying aside the moldy cerements of the dead, again walking forth
+to mortal life, to be again seen, recognized, admired, and adored by his
+pious, devout and awe-stricken followers, and thus present to the gaze
+of a hoping yet doubting world "the first fruits of the resurrection."
+
+At the annual celebration of the resurrection of the Persian Savior
+"Mithra the Mediator," more than three thousand years ago, the priests
+were in the habit of exclaiming in a solemn and loud voice, "Cheer up,
+holy mourners; your God has come again to life; his sorrows and his
+sufferings will save you." (See Pitrat, p. 105.) The twenty-fifth of
+March was with the ancient Persians the commencement of a new year,
+and on that day was celebrated "the feast of the Neurone," and by the
+ancient Romans "the festival of the Hilaria." And we find the ancients
+had both the crucifixion and resurrection of a God symbolically and
+astronomically represented among the plants. "Their foundation," says
+Clement of Alexandria, "was the fictitious death and resurrection of
+the sun, the soul of the world, the principle of life and motion."
+The inauguration of spring (the twenty-fifth of March), and the summer
+solstice (the twenty-fifth of June), were both important periods with
+the ancients.
+
+Hence, the latter period was fixed on as the birthday of John the
+Baptist (as marked in the almanacs), when the sun begins to decline
+southward--that is, decrease. How appropriately, therefore, John is made
+to say, "I shall decrease, but he shall increase." And the consecrated
+twenty-fifth of March is also the day marked in our calendars as the
+date of the conception and annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. And
+it was likewise the period of the conception of the ancient Roman Virgin
+Asteria, and of the ever-chaste and holy virgin Iris, as well as the
+time of the conjugal embrace of the solar and lunar potentates of
+the visible universe. May we not, then, very appropriately exclaim of
+religion and astronomy, "what God hath joined together, let no man put
+asunder."
+
+Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
+
+With respect to the physical resurrection of the Christian Savior, it
+may be observed that, aside from the physical impossibility of such an
+occurrence, the account, as reported to us by his four "inspired" Gospel
+biographers, are so palpably at variance with each other, so entirely
+contradictory in their reports, as to render their testimony as
+infallible writers utterly unworthy of credence, and impels us to
+the conclusion that the event is both physically and historically
+incredible. There is scarcely one incident or particular in which they
+all agree. They are at loggerheads,--
+
+1. With respect to the time of its discovery.
+
+2. The persons who made the discovery (for no witness claims to have
+seen it).
+
+3. With respect to what took place at the sepulchre.
+
+4. What Peter saw and did there.
+
+5. And as to what occurred afterward, having a relation to that event.
+
+1. Relative to the time the witness or witnesses visited the sepulchre
+and learned of the resurrection, Matthew (chap. xxviii.) tells us, "It
+was at the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn;" but according to
+Mark (xvi.), the "Sabbath was past, and the sun was rising;" while
+John (chap. xx) declares "it was yet dark." Now there is certainly some
+difference between the three periods, "the dawning of the day," "the
+rising of the sun," and "the darkness of night." If the writers were
+_divinely_ inspired, there would be a perfect agreement.
+
+2. With respect to the persons who first visited the sepulchre, Matthew
+states that it was Mary Magdalene and another Mary; but Luke says it
+was "Mary Magdalene and Joanna, and Mary the mother of James, and other
+women;" while, according to John (and he virtually reiterates it),
+Mary Magdalene went alone. It will be observed, then, that the first
+"inspired" and "infallible" witness testifies there were two women; the
+second that there were four; and the third witness declares there was
+but one. What beautiful harmony! No court in the civilized world would
+accept such discordant testimony!
+
+3. And in relation to what took place at the tomb, Matthew testifies
+that "the angel of the Lord" sat upon a stone at the door of the
+sepulchre, and told the women their Lord was risen. But Luke steps
+forward here, and avers that instead of an angel they found two men
+there, not outside, but inside, and not sitting, but standing. But Mark
+sets the testimony of both these "inspired" witnesses aside by affirming
+there was but one man there, and he was sitting. While Matthew says
+"they," St. John says "she" (speaking of the person or persons who left
+the sepulchre). According to Matthew the angel who rolled away the stone
+from the sepulchre sent a message to the disciples. But Mark affirms
+that it was not an "angel" outside, but a "young man" inside, who did
+this. And here the question naturally arises: Why was it necessary for
+a being who could say, "I have power to lay down my life and take it
+up again" (John), to have an angel to roll away the stone from the
+sepulchre. Certainly, if he possessed such omnipotent power, he needed
+no aid from any being to perform such an act.
+
+4. And relative to Peter's visit to the tomb, there is a total disparity
+in the testimony of the witnesses. According to Luke, he did not go into
+the sepulchre, but only stooped down and looked in. But Mark affirms he
+did go in, and that it was the disciple who went with him who stooped
+down.
+
+5. And with respect to the events which occurred immediately subsequent
+to the resurrection, there is no less discrepancy, no nearer agreement,
+in the testimony of the evangelical witnesses. Matthew says that when
+Christ's disciples first met him after the resurrection, they worshiped
+him, and held him by the feet. (Matt, xxviii. 9) Strange, indeed, and
+wholly incredible, if John is a reliable witness, for he affirms he did
+not allow even his best and dearest friend (Mary) to touch him. And then
+John combats this testimony of his by declaring he invited the skeptical
+Thomas, not only to touch him, but to thrust his hand into his side for
+tangible proof of his identity.
+
+6. And why, let us ask here, was not the skeptical Thomas damned for
+his doubting, when we, who live thousands of miles from the place,
+and nearly two thousand years from the time, are often told by the
+priesthood we must "believe or be damned?"
+
+7. And if Thomas was really convinced by this occurrence, or if it ever
+took place, why have we no account of his subsequent life? What good was
+effected by his convincement if he never said or did anything afterward?
+
+8. John tells us Mary first saw Christ, after his resurrection, at the
+tomb, but Matthew says it was on her way home she first saw him.
+
+9. We are told by Luke (xxiv. 36) that when Christ appeared to his
+disciples on a certain occasion, they were frightened, supposing it
+to be a spirit. But John (xx. 20) says they were glad. Which must we
+believe?
+
+10. According to Matthew, the disciples were all present on this
+occasion; but according to John, Thomas was not there.
+
+11. Here let it be noted that none of the narrators claim to have seen
+Christ rise from the tomb, nor to have got it from anybody who did see
+it The only proof in this case is their declaration, "It came to pass."
+
+12. And we are prompted to ask here, how "it came to pass" that the
+chief priests and pharisees cherished sufficient faith in Christ's
+resurrection to set a watch for it, as Matthew reports, when his own
+disciples were too faithless in such an event to be present, or to
+believe he had risen after the report reached their ears; for we are
+told some doubted. (See Matt, xxiii.)
+
+13. And how came Matthew to know the soldiers were bribed to say
+Christ's body was stolen away by his disciples, when the disclosures of
+such a secret would have been death under the Roman government.
+
+14. And their confession of being asleep, as related by Matthew, would
+have subjected them to the same fatal penalty by the civil rulers of
+Rome.
+
+15. And if the soldiers were all asleep, can we not suggest several ways
+the body may have disappeared without being restored to life?
+
+16. And here we would ask if Christ rose from the dead in order to
+convince the world of his divine power, why did not the event take
+place in public? Why was it seen only by a few credulous and interested
+disciples?
+
+17. And if such an astonishing and miraculous event did occur, why does
+not one of the numerous cotemporary writers of those times make any
+allusion to it? Neither Pliny, Tacitus, nor Josephus, who detail the
+events very minutely, not only of those times, but of that very country,
+says a word about such a wonder-exciting occurrence. This fact of itself
+entirely overthrows the credibility of the story.
+
+18. And the fact that several Christian sects, which flourished near
+those times, as the Corinthians and Carpocratians, etc., rejected the
+story in toto, furnishes another powerful argument for discrediting it.
+
+19. And then add to this fact that his own chosen followers were
+upbraided for their unbelief in the matter.
+
+20. And what was Christ doing during the forty days between his
+resurrection and ascension, that he should only be seen a few times,
+and but a few minutes at a time, and by but a few persons, and those
+interested?
+
+21. And we would ask, likewise,--What more can be proved by Christ's
+physical resurrection than that of the resurrection of Lazarus, the
+widow's son, and several cases related in the Old Testament, or the
+numerous cases reported in oriental history?
+
+22. And what analogy is there in the resurrection of the dead body of a
+perfect and self-existent God and that of vile man?
+
+23. And why should Christ be called "the first fruits of the
+resurrection," when so many cases are reported as occurring before his?
+
+24. And why do Christians build their hopes of immortality almost
+entirely upon Christ's alleged resurrection, in view of the numerous
+facts we have cited showing it to be a mere sandy foundation?
+
+25. Of course no person who believes in modern spiritualism will
+discredit the story of Christ being visually recognized after his death
+_as a spirit_--for they have ocular proof that many such cases have
+occurred within the last decade of years. But it is the story of his
+physical resurrection we are combating--the reanimation of his flesh
+and bones after having been subjected three days to the laws of
+decomposition. Neither science nor sense can indorse such a story.
+
+26. It was a very easy matter, and very natural to mistake Christ's
+spiritual body for his physical body; for such mistakes have been made a
+thousand times in the world's history.
+
+27. Is it not strange, in view of the countless defects in the story of
+Christ's physical resurrection as enumerated above, that the orthodox
+Christian world should rely upon it as the great sheet anchor of their
+faith, and as their chief and almost their only hope of immortal life?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. REAPPEARANCE AND ASCENSION OF THE SAVIORS.
+
+MANY cases are related by their respective sacred narratives of the
+ancient Saviors, and other beings possessing the form of man, and
+previously recognized as men, reappearing to their disciples and
+friends, after having been consigned to the tomb for three days, or a
+longer or shorter period of time, and of their final ascension to the
+house of many mansions.
+
+It is related of the Indian or Hindoo Savior Chrishna, that after having
+risen from the dead, he appeared again to his disciples. "He ascended
+to Voiacantha (heaven), to Brahma," the first person of the trinity (he
+himself being the second), and that as he ascended, "all men saw him,
+and exclaimed, 'Lo! Chrishna's soul ascends to his native skies.'"
+And it is further related that, "attended by celestial spirits,.... he
+pursued by his own light the journey between earth and heaven, to the
+bright paradise whence he had descended."
+
+Of the ninth incarnation of India, the Savior Sakia, it is declared,
+that he "ascended to the celestial regions", and his pious and devout
+disciples point the skeptic to indelible impressions and ineffaceable
+footprints on the rocks of a high mountain as an imperishable proof of
+the declaration that he took his last leave of earth and made his ascent
+from that point.
+
+It is related of the crucified Prometheus, likewise, that after having
+given up the ghost on the cross, "descended to hell", Christ's soul was
+"not left in hell," see Acts ii. 31), "he rose again from the dead, and ascended into heaven."
+
+And then it is declared of the Egyptian Savior Alcides, that "after
+having been seen a number of times, he ascended to a higher life," going
+up, like Elijah, in "a chariot of fire."
+
+The story of the crucifixion of Quexalcote of Mexico, followed by his
+burial, resurrection and ascension, is distinctly related in the "holy"
+and inspired "gospels" of that country, which Lord Kingsborough admitted
+to be more than two thousand years old.
+
+Of Laotsi of China, it is said that when "he had completed his mission
+of benevolence, he ascended bodily alive into the paradise above."
+(Prog, of Rel. Ideas, vol. 214.) And it is related of Fo of the same
+country, that having completed his glorious mission on earth, he
+"ascended back to paradise, where he had previously existed from all
+eternity."
+
+It is related also in the ancient legends, that the Savior or God
+Xamalxis of Thrace, having died, and descended beneath the earth, and
+remained there three years, made his appearance again in the fourth year
+after his death, as he had previously foretold, and eventually ascended
+to heaven about 600 B. C. Even some of the Hindoo saints are reported
+in their "holy" and time-honored books to have been seen ascending to
+heaven. "And impressions on the rocks are shown," says an author, "said
+to be of footprints they had left when they ascended."
+
+It is related both by the Grecian biographer Plutarch, in his life
+of Romulus, and by a Roman historian, that the great founder of Rome
+(Romulus) suddenly ascended in a tempest during a solar eclipse, about
+713 B. C. And Julius Proculis, a Roman senator of great fame and high
+reputation, declared, under solemn oath, that he saw him, and talked
+with him after his death.
+
+
+ASTRONOMICAL VERSION OF THE STORY.
+
+Before dismissing this chapter, we may state that, in common with most
+other religious conceptions, the doctrine of the ascension has in the
+ancient legends an astronomical representation.
+
+Having said that a planet was buried because it sunk below the horizon,
+when it returned to light and gained its state of eminence, they spoke
+of it as dead, risen again, and ascended into heaven. (Volney, p. 143.)
+What is the story of the ascension of Christ worth in view of these
+ancient pagan traditions of earlier origin?
+
+
+ASCENSION OF THE CHRISTIAN SAVIOR.
+
+1. The different scriptural accounts of the ascension of Christ are,
+like the different stories of the resurrection, quite contradictory,
+and, hence, entitled to as little credit. In Luke (xxiv.), he is
+represented as ascending on the evening of the third day after the
+crucifixion. But the writer of Acts (i. 3) says he did not ascend
+till forty days after his resurrection; while, according to his own
+declaration to the thief on the cross, "This day shalt thou be with me
+in paradise," he must have ascended on the same day of his crucifixion.
+Which statement must we accept as inspired, or what is proved by such
+contradictory testimony?
+
+2. Which must we believe, Paul's declaration that he was seen by above
+_five hundred of the brethren_ at once (1 Cor. xv. 6), or the statement
+of the author of the Acts (i. 15), that there were _but one hundred and
+twenty brethren in all after that period?_
+
+3. How would his ascension do anything toward proving his divinity,
+unless it also proves the divinity of Enoch and Elijah, who are reported
+to have ascended long prior to that era?
+
+4. As these stories of the ascension of Christ, according to Lardner,
+were written many years after his crucifixion. Is it not hence probable
+they grew out of similar stories relative to the heathen Gods long
+previously prevalent in oriental countries?
+
+5. As these gospel writers could not have been present to witness the
+ascension, as it must have occurred before their time of active life,
+does not this fact of itself seriously damage the credibility of the
+accounts, and more especially as neither Mark nor Luke, who are the only
+reporters of the occurrence, were not disciples of Christ at the time,
+while Matthew and John, who were, say nothing about it?--another fact
+which casts a shade on the credibility of the story.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. THE ATONEMENT--ITS ORIENTAL OR HEATHEN ORIGIN.
+
+THERE were various practices in vogue amongst the orientalists, which
+originated with the design of appeasing the anger, and propitiating
+the favor of a presumed to be irascible deity. Most of these practices
+consisted in some kind of sacrifice or destructive offering called the
+"atonement." But here let it be observed, that the doctrine of atonement
+for sin, by sacrifice, was unfolded by degrees, and that the crucifixion
+of a God was not the first practical exhibition of it. On the contrary,
+it appears to have commenced with the most valueless or cheapest species
+of property then known. And from this starting-point ascended gradually,
+so as finally to embody the most costly commodities; and did not stop
+here, but reached forward till it laid its murderous hands on human
+beings, and immolated them upon its bloody altars. And finally, to cap
+the climax, it assumed the effrontery to drag a God off the throne
+of heaven, to stanch its blood-thirsty spirit, as evinced by Paul's
+declaration, "Without the shedding of blood there can be no remission of
+sin." Rather a bloody doctrine, and one which our humanity rejects with
+instinctive horror.
+
+We will trace the doctrine of the atonement briefly through its
+successive stages of growth and development.
+
+The idea seems to have started very early in the practical history of
+the human race, that the sacrifice and consequent deprivation of earthly
+goods, or some terrestial enjoyment, would have the effect to mitigate
+the anger, propitiate the favor, and obtain the mercy of an imaginary
+and vengeful God. This idea obviously was suggested by observing that
+their earthly rulers always smiled, and became less rigorous in their
+laws, and milder in their treatment of their subjects, when they made
+them presents of some valuable or desirable commodity. They soon learned
+that such offerings had the effect to check their cruel and bloody mode
+of governing the people; so that when their houses were shaken down,
+or swallowed up by earthquakes, the trees riven by lightning, and
+prostrated by storms, and their cattle swept away by floods, supposing
+it to be the work of an angry God, the thought arose in their minds at
+once, that perhaps his wrath could be abated by the same expedient as
+that which had served in the case of their mundane lords--that of making
+presents of property. But as this property could not be carried up to
+the celestial throne, the expedient was adopted of burning it, so that
+the substance or quintessence of it would be conveyed up to the heavenly
+Potentate in the shape of steam and smoke, which would make for him, as
+the Jews express it, "a sweet-smelling savor." Abundant and conspicuous
+is the evidence in history to show that the custom of burnt-offerings
+and atonements for sin originated in this way.
+
+The first species of property made use of for burnt-offerings appears to
+have been the fruits of the earth--vegetables, fruits, roots, etc.,--the
+lowest kind of property in point of value. But the thought soon
+naturally sprang up in the mind of the devotee, that a more valuable
+offering would sooner and more effectually secure the divine favor.
+Hence, levies were made on living herds of cattle, sheep, goats and
+other domestic animals. This was the second step in the ascending scale
+toward Gods.
+
+And here we find the key to open and solve the mystery of Jehovah's
+preferring Abel's offering to Cain's. While the latter consisted in mere
+inanimate substances, the former embraced the firstlings of the flock--a
+higher and more valuable species of property, and quite sufficient
+to induce the selfish Jehovah to prefer Abel's offering to Cain's, or
+rather for the selfish Jews to cherish this conception. In all nations
+where offerings were made, the conclusion became established in the
+minds of the people that the amount of God's favor procured in this way
+must be proportionate to the value of the commodity or victim offered
+up--a conviction which ultimately led to the seizure of human beings for
+the atoning offerings, which brings us to the third stage of growth in
+the atonement doctrine. Children frequently constituted the victims in
+this case. The sacrifice of Jephthah's daughter, as related in Judges
+xi. 30, and other cases cited by bible writers, (Isaiah xxxii. 25), and
+modern Christian authors, prove that this practice was in vogue among
+"God's holy people."
+
+One step more (constituting the _fourth_ stage of development) brings us
+to the sacrifice of Gods. The climax is now reached; the conception can
+go no higher. The ancient Birmese taught that while common property in
+burnt-offerings would procure the temporary favor of the ruling God, the
+sacrifice of human beings would secure his good pleasure for a thousand
+years, and cancel out all the sins committed in that period. And when
+one of the three Gods on the throne of heaven was dragged down, or
+_voluntarily came down_ (as some of the sects taught), and was put to
+death on the cross as an atonement for sin, such was the value of the
+victim, such the magnitude of the offering, that it "atoned for _all_
+sin, past, present and future, for all the human race."
+
+The Hindoos, cherishing this conception, taught that the crucifixion of
+their sin-atoning Savior Chrishna (1200 B. C.) put an end to both animal
+and human sacrifices, and accordingly such offerings ceased in most
+Hindoo countries centuries ago. Thus far back in the mire and midnight
+of human ignorance, and amid the clouds of mental darkness, while man
+dwelt upon the animal plane, and was governed by his brutal feelings,
+and "blood for blood" was the requisition for human offenses, originated
+the bloody, savage and revolting doctrine of the atonement.
+
+Another mode of adjudicating the sins of the people in vogue in some
+countries anterior to the custom of shedding blood as an expiation, was
+that of packing them on the back, head, or horns of some animal by
+a formal hocus-pocus process, and then driving the animal into a
+wilderness, or some other place so remote that the brute could not find
+its way back amongst the people with its cargo of sins. The cloth or
+fabric used for inclosing the sins and iniquities of the people was
+usually of a red or scarlet color--of the semblance of blood. In fact,
+it was generally dipped in blood. This, being lashed to the animal,
+would of course be exposed to the weather and the drenching rains, would
+consequently, in the course of time, fade and become white. Hence, we
+have the key to Isaiah's declaration, "Though your sins be (red) as
+scarlet, they shall become (white) as wool." (See Isaiah, i. 18.) And
+thus the meaning of this obscure text is clearly explained by tracing
+its origin to its oriental source.
+
+And there are many other texts in the Christian bible which might be
+elucidated in a similar manner by using oriental tradition, or oriental
+sacred books, as a key to unlock and explain their meaning. We have
+stated above that some animal was made use of by different nations to
+convey the imaginary load of the people's sins out of the country.
+For this purpose the Jews had their "scapegoat," the Egyptians their
+"scape-ox," the Hindoos their "scape-horse," the Chaldeans their
+"scape-ram," the Britons their "scape-bull," the Mexicans their
+"scape-lamb" and "scape-mouse," the Tamalese their "scape-hen," and
+the Christians at a later period their _scape-God_. Jesus Christ may
+properly be termed the scape-God of orthodox Christians, as he stands in
+the same relation to his disciples, who believe in the atonement, as the
+goat did to the Jews, and performs the same end and office. The goat and
+the other sin-offering animals took away the sin of the nation in each
+case respectively. In like manner Jesus Christ takes away the sin of
+the world, being called "the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the
+world." (John i. 29.) And more than two thousand years ago the Mexicans
+sacrificed a lamb as an atonement, which they called "the Lamb
+of God"--the same title scripturally applied to Jesus Christ. The
+conception in each case is, then, the same--that of the atonement for
+sin by the sacrifice of an innocent victim.
+
+The above citations show that the present custom of orthodox
+Christendom, in packing their sins upon the back of a God, is just
+the same substantially as that of various heathen nations, who were
+anciently in the habit of packing them upon the backs of various dumb
+animals. If some of our Christian brethren should protest against our
+speaking of the church's idea of atonement as that of packing their sins
+upon the back of a God, we will here prove the appropriateness of the
+term upon the authority of the bible. Peter expressly declares Christ
+bore our sins upon his own body on a tree (see 1 Peter ii. 24), just
+as the Jews declared the _goat bore their_ sins on his body, and the
+ancient Brahmins taught that the bulls and the heifers bore theirs away,
+etc., which shows that the whole conception is of purely heathen
+origin. And hereafter, when they laugh at the Jewish superstition of
+a scape-goat, let them bear in mind that more sensible and intelligent
+people may laugh in turn at their superstitious doctrine of a scape-God.
+
+These superstitious customs were simply expedients of different nations
+to evade the punishment of their sins--an attempt to shift their
+retributive consequences on to other beings. The divine atonement more
+especially possessed this character. This system teaches that the son
+of God and Savior of the world was sent down and incarnated, in order to
+die for the people, and thus suffer by proxy the punishment meted out
+by divine wrath for the sins of the whole world. The blood of a God must
+atone for the sins of the whole human family, as rams, goats, bullocks
+and other animals had atoned for the sins of families and nations under
+older systems. Thus taught Brahminism, Budhism, Persianism, and other
+religious systems, before the dawn of Christianity. The nucleus of the
+atoning system is founded in the doctrine, "Without the shedding of
+blood there is no remission for sin" (Rom. v. 9)--a monstrous and
+morally revolting doctrine--a doctrine which teaches us that _somebodys_
+blood must be shed, somebody's veins and arteries depleted, for every
+trivial offense committed against the moral law. Somebody must pay the
+penalty in blood, somebody must be slaughtered for every little foible
+or peccadillo or moral blunder into which erring man may chance to
+stumble while upon the pilgrimage of life, while journeying through the
+wilderness of time, even if a God has to be dragged from his throne in
+heaven, and murdered to accomplish it. Nothing less will mitigate the
+divine wrath.
+
+Whose soul--possessing the slightest moral sensibility--does not
+inwardly and instinctively revolt at such a doctrine? We would not teach
+it to the world, for it is founded in butchery and bloodshed, and is
+an old pagan superstition, which originated far back in the midnight of
+mental darkness and heathen ignorance, when the whole human race were
+under the lawless sway of their brutal propensities, and when the
+ennobling attributes of love, mercy and forgiveness had as yet found
+no place, no abiding home, in the human bosom. The bloody soul of the
+savage first gave it birth. We hold the doctrine to be a a high-handed
+insult to the All-loving Father, who, we are told, is "long-suffering in
+mercy," and "plentiful in forgiveness," to charge _Him_ with sanctioning
+such a doctrine, much less with originating it.
+
+There is no "mercy or forgiveness" in putting an innocent being to death
+for any pretext whatever. And for the Father to consent to the brutal
+assassination of His own innocent Son upon the cross to gratify an
+implacable revenge toward his own children, the workmanship of his own
+hands, rather than forgive a moral weakness implanted in their natures
+by a voluntary act of his own, and for which consequently he alone ought
+to be responsible, would be nothing short of murder in the first degree.
+
+We cherish no such conception. We cannot for a moment harbor a
+blasphemous doctrine, which represents the Universal Father as being a
+bloody-minded and murderous being, instead of a being of infinite love,
+infinite wisdom, and infinite in all the moral virtues. Such a character
+would be a deep-dyed stigma upon any human being. And no person actuated
+by a strict sense of justice would accept salvation upon any such terms
+as that prescribed by the Christian atonement.
+
+It is manifestly too unjust, too devoid of moral principle, besides
+being a flagrant violation of the first principles of civil and criminal
+jurisprudence. It is a double wrong to punish the innocent for the
+guilty. It is the infliction of injustice on the one hand, and the
+omission of justice on the other. It inflicts the highest penalty of
+the law upon an innocent being, whom that law ought to shield from
+punishment, while it exculpates and liberates the guilty party, whose
+punishment the moral law demands. It robs society of a useful man on
+the one hand, and turns a moral pest upon community on the other,
+thus committing a twofold wrong, or act of injustice. No court in any
+civilized country would be allowed to act upon such a principle; and
+the judge who should indorse it, or favor a law, or principle, which
+punishes the innocent for the guilty, would be ruled off the bench at
+once.
+
+Here, however, we are sometimes met with the plea, that the offering
+of Jesus Christ was a voluntary act, that it was made with his own
+free will. But the plea don't do away with either the injustice or
+criminality of the act.
+
+No innocent person has a right to suffer for the guilty, and the
+courts have no right to accept the offer or admit the substitute. An
+illustration will show this. If Jefferson Davis had been convicted of
+the crime of treason, and sentenced to be hung, and Abraham Lincoln had
+come forward and offered to be stretched upon the gallows in his place,
+is there a court in the civilized world which would have accepted the
+substitute, and hung Lincoln, and liberated Davis? To ask the question
+is but to answer it. It is an insult to reason, law and justice to
+entertain the proposition.
+
+The doctrine of the atonement also involves the infinite absurdity of
+God punishing himself to appease his own wrath. For if "the fullness of
+the Godhead dwelt in Christ bodily" (as taught in Col. ii. 9), then
+his death was the death of God--that is, a divine suicide, prompted and
+committed by a feeling of anger and revenge, which terminated the life
+of the Infinite Ruler--a doctrine utterly devoid of reason, science
+or sense. We are sometimes told man owes a debt to his Maker, and the
+atonement pays that debt. To be sure! And to whom is the debt owing, and
+who pays it? Why, the debt is owing to God, and God (in the person of
+Jesus Christ) pays it--pays it to himself. We will illustrate. A man
+approaches his neighbor, and says, "Sir, I owe you a thousand dollars,
+but can never pay it." "Very well, it makes no difference," replies the
+claimant, "I will pay it myself;" and forthwith thrusts his hand into
+his right pocket and extracts the money, transfers it to the left pocket
+and exclaims--"There, the debt is paid!" A curious way of paying debts,
+and one utterly devoid of sense. And yet the orthodox world have adopted
+it for their God. We find, however, that they carefully avoid practicing
+this principle themselves in their dealings with each other. When they
+have a claim against a neighbor, we do not find them ever thrusting
+their hands into their own pockets to pay it off, but sue him, and
+compel him to pay--if he refuses to do it without compulsion--thus
+proving they do not consider it a correct principle of trade.
+
+But we find, upon further investigation, that the assumed debt is not
+paid--after all.
+
+When a debt is paid, it is canceled, and dismissed from memory, and
+nothing more said about it. But in this case the sinner is told he
+must still suffer the penalty for every sin he commits, notwithstanding
+Christ died to atone for and cancel that sin.
+
+Where, then, is the virtue of the atonement? Like other doctrines of
+the orthodox creed, it is at war with reason and common sense, and every
+principle of sound morality, and will be marked by coming ages as a
+relic of barbarism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. THE HOLY GHOST OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN
+
+OF all the weird, fanciful, and fabulous stories appertaining to the
+Gods and other spiritual entities of the olden times, whose capricious
+adventures we find so profusely narrated in oriental mythology--of
+all the strange, mythical and mystical feats, and ever-varying and
+ever-diverging changes in the shape, appearance, sex, and modes of
+manifestation which characterize the hobgoblins or ghostly beings which
+comprise the esoteric stock of the ancient mysteries, that appertaining
+to the third member of "the hypostatic union," the Holy Ghost, seems to
+stand pre-eminent. And I propose here to submit the facts to show that
+the Holy Ghost story of the Christian Gospels, like the more ancient
+pagan versions of the same story, is marked by the same wild, discordant
+and legendary characteristics which abound in all the accounts of gods
+and ghosts found recorded in the religious books of various nations.
+
+The following brief exposition of the history and exploits of this
+anomalous, nondescript, chameleon-like being will clearly evince that
+the same fanciful, metaphorical and fabulous changes in the size, shape,
+sex and appearance of this third limb of the triune God are found in the
+Christian Scriptures which are disclosed in the more ancient oriental
+traditions.
+
+We will first exhibit a classification of the names and characteristics
+of this imaginary being drawn from the gospels and epistles of the
+Christian bible, by which it will be observed that scarcely any two
+references to it agree in assigning it the same character or attributes.
+
+1. In John xiv. 26, the Holy Ghost is spoken of as a person or personal
+God.
+
+2. In Luke iii. 22, the Holy Ghost changes, and assumes the form of a
+dove.
+
+3. In Matt. xiii. 16, the Holy Ghost becomes a spirit
+
+4. In John i. 32, the Holy Ghost is presented as an inanimate, senseless
+object.
+
+5. In John v. 7, the Holy Ghost becomes a God--the third member of the
+Trinity.'
+
+6. In Acts ii. 1, the Holy Ghost is averred to be "a mighty, rushing
+wind."
+
+7. In Acts x. 38, the Holy Ghost, we infer, from its mode of
+application, is an ointment.
+
+8. In John xx. 22, the Holy Ghost is the breath, as we legitimately
+infer by its being breathed into the mouth of the recipient after the
+ancient oriental custom.
+
+9. In Adis ii. 3, we learn the Holy Ghost "sat upon each of them,"
+probably in the form of a bird, as at Jesus' baptism.
+
+10. In Adis ii. 1, the Holy Ghost appears as "cloven tongues of fire."
+
+11. In Luke ii. 26, the Holy Ghost is the author of a revelation or
+inspiration.
+
+12. In Adis viii. 17, the Holy Ghost is a magnetic aura imparted by the
+"laying on of hands."
+
+13. In Mark i. 8, the Holy Ghost is a medium or element for baptism.
+
+14. In Adis xxviii. 25, the Holy Ghost appears with vocal organs, and
+speaks.
+
+15. In Heb. vi. 4, the Holy Ghost is dealt out or imparted by measure.
+
+16. In Luke iii. 22, the Holy Ghost appears with a tangible body.
+
+17. In Luke i. 5, and many other texts, we are taught people are filled
+with the Holy Ghost.
+
+18. In Matt. xi. 15, the Holy Ghost falls upon the people as a
+ponderable substance.
+
+19. In Luke iv. 1, the Holy Ghost is a God within a God--"Jesus being
+full of the Holy Ghost."
+
+20. In Acts xxi. 11, the Holy Ghost is a being of the masculine or
+feminine gender--"Thus saith the Holy Ghost," etc.
+
+21. In John i. 32, the Holy Ghost is of the neuter gender--"It (the
+Holy Ghost) abode upon him."
+
+22. In Matt. i. 18, the Holy Ghost becomes a vicarious agent in the
+procreation of another God; that is, this third member of the Trinity
+aids the first member (the Father) in the creation or generation of the
+second member of the triad of bachelor Gods--the Word, or Savior, or Son
+of God.
+
+Such are the ever-shifting scenes presented in the Scripture panorama
+of the Holy Ghost. Surpassing the fabulous changes of some of the more
+ancient demigods, the Christian Holy Ghost undergoes (as is shown by
+the above-quoted texts) a perpetual metathesis or metamorphosis--being
+variously presented on different occasions as a personal and rational
+being, a dove, a spirit, an inanimate object, a God, the wind or a wind,
+an ointment, the breath or a breath, cloven tongue of fire, a bird, or
+some other flying recumbent animal, a revelator or divine messenger,
+a medium or element for baptism, an intelligent, speaking being, a
+lifeless, bodiless, sexless being, a measurable fluid substance, a being
+possessing a body, ponderable, unconscious substance, a God dwelling
+within a God, and, finally--though really first in order--the author
+or agent of the incarnation of the second God in the Trinity (Jesus
+Christ).
+
+That many of these fabulous conceptions were drawn from mythological
+sources will be made manifest by the following facts of history:--
+
+1. _The Holy Ghost in the shape of a bird, a dove or a pigeon._ This is
+proven to be a very ancient pagan tradition, as it is found incorporated
+in several of the oriental religious systems. In ancient India, whose
+prolific spiritual fancies constitute the primary parentage of nearly
+all the doctrines, dogmas and superstitions found incorporated in
+the Christian Scriptures, a dove was uniformly the emblem of the Holy
+Spirit, or Spirit of God. Confirmatory of this statement, we find the
+declaration in the Anacalypsis, that a "dove stood for or represented
+a third member of the Trinity, and was the regenerator or regeneratory
+power." This meets the Christian idea of "regeneration and renewing
+of the Holy Ghost." (Titus iii. 5.) A person being baptized under the
+Brahminical theocracy was said to be "regenerated and born again," or, as
+the above-quoted writer expresses it, "They were born into the spirit,
+or the spirit into them"--that is, the "dove into or upon them," (As vide
+the case of the Christian's "Holy Ghost descending in bodily shape like
+a dove," and alighting on Christ's head at baptism, as related in Luke
+iii. 22.) In ancient Rome a dove or pigeon was the emblem of the female
+procreative energy, and frequently a legendary spirit, the accompaniment
+of Venus. And hence, as a writer remarks, "It is very appropriately
+represented as descending at baptism in the character of the third
+member of the Trinity." The same writer tells us, "The dove fills the
+Grecian oracles with their spirit and power." We find the dove, also,
+in the romantic eclogues of ancient Syria. In the time-chiseled Syrian
+temple of Hierapolis, Semiramis is represented with a dove on her head,
+thus constituting the prototype of the dove on the head of the Christian
+Messiah at baptism. And a dove was in more than one of the ancient
+religious systems--"The Spirit of God (Holy Ghost) moving on the face of
+the waters" at creation, as implied in Gen. i. 2, though a pigeon, was
+often indiscriminately substituted. In Howe's "Ancient Mysteries" it is
+related that "in St. Paul's Cathedral, at the feast of Whitsuntide, the
+descent of the Holy Ghost was performed by a white pigeon being let fly
+out of a hole in the midst of the roof of the great aisle." The dove
+and the pigeon, being but slight variations of the same species of the
+feathered tribe, were used indiscriminately.
+
+2. As evinced above, the Holy Ghost was the third member of the Trinity
+in several of the oriental systems. Father, Son and Holy Ghost, or
+Father, Word and Holy Ghost (1 John v. 7), are familiar Christian
+terms to express the divine triad, which shows the Holy Ghost to be
+the acknowledged third member of the Christian Trinity. And, as already
+suggested, the same is true of the more ancient systems. "The Holy
+Spirit and the Evil Spirit were, each in their turn (says Mr. Higgins),
+third member of the Trinity." We might, if space would allow, draw
+largely upon the ancient defunct systems in proof of this statement. "In
+these triads (says Mr. Hillell) the third member, as might be supposed,
+was not of equal rank with the other two." And hence, in the Theban
+Trinity, Khonso was inferior to Arion and Mant. In the Hindoo triad,
+Siva was subordinate to Brahma and Vishnu. And a score of similar
+examples might be adduced from the fancy-constructed trinities of other
+and older oriental religious systems (but for the inflexible rule of
+brevity which forbids their presentation here), with all of which the
+more modern Holy Ghost conception of the Christian world is an exact
+correspondence, as this imaginary, fabulous being is less conspicuous
+than and has always stood third in rank with the Father and second
+to the Son, alias the Word, and is now seldom addressed in practical
+Christian devotion; and thus the analogy is complete. Mr. Maurice
+says, "This notion of a third person in the Deity (the Holy Ghost) was
+diffused among all the nations of the earth." (See Ind. Antiq. vol. iv.
+p. 75a) And Mr. Worseley, in his "Voyage" (vol. i. p. 259), avers this
+doctrine to be "of very great antiquity, and generally received by all
+the Gothic and Celtic nations."
+
+3. The Holy Ghost was the Holy Breath which, in the Hindoo traditions,
+moved on the face of the waters at creation, and imparted life and
+vitality into everything created. A similar conception is recognized in
+the Christian Scriptures. In Psalms xxxiii. 6, we read, "By the Word of
+the Lord were the heavens made, and all the host of them by the breath
+of his mouth." Here is the Brahminical conception, square out, of the
+act of creation by the Divine Breath, which is the Holy Ghost, the same,
+also, which was breathed into Adam, by which he became "a living soul."
+M. Dubois observes, "The Prana, or principle of life, of the Hindoos is
+the breath of life by which the Creator (Brahma) animates the clay, and
+man became a living soul." (Page 293.)
+
+4. Holy Ghost, Holy Breath and Holy Wind appear to have been synonymous
+and convertible terms for the living vocal emanations from the mouth of
+the Supreme God, as memorialized in several of the pagan traditions.
+The last term (Holy Wind) is suggested by "the mighty rushing wind from
+heaven" which filled the house, or church, on the day of Pentecost. (See
+Acts ii. 2.) Several of the old religious systems recognize "the
+Holy Wind" as a term for the Holy Ghost. The doxology (reported by a
+missionary) in the religious service of the Syrian worship runs thus:--
+
+ "Praise to the Holy Spiritual Wind, which is the Holy Ghost;
+ Praise to the three persons which are one true God."
+
+Some writers maintain that the Hebrew _Ruk Aliem._ translated "Spirit of
+God" (Gen. i. 2) in our version, should read, "Wind of the Gods." And
+we find that the word _pneuma_ of our Greek New Testament, is sometimes
+translated "Ghost" and sometimes "Wind," as best suited the fancy of the
+translators. In John iii. 5, we find the word Spirit, and in verse eight
+both Wind and Spirit are found; and in Luke i. 35, we observe the term
+Holy Ghost--all translated from the same word. Let it be specially
+noted that in the Greek Testament the word _pneuma_ is used in all these
+cases, thus proving that Spirit, Holy Ghost and Wind are used in the
+Christian Scriptures as synonymous terms; and proving, also, that an
+unwarranted license has been assumed by translators in rendering the
+same word three different ways. M. Auvaroff, in his "Essays on the
+Eleusinian Mysteries," speaks of "the torch being ignited at the command
+of Hermes of Egypt, the spiritual agent in the workshop of creation,"
+relative to which statement a writer remarks, "Hermes appears in
+this instance as a personification of Wind or Spirit, as in the
+bible (meaning the Christian bible), God, Wind and Spirit are often
+interchangeable terms, and the Word appears to be from the same windy
+source."
+
+5. _The Holy Ghost as "a tongue of fire, which sat upon each of
+them" (the apostles)_. (See Acts. ii. 3.) Even this conception is an
+orientalism. Mr. Higgins tells us that "Budha, an incarnate God of the
+Hindoos (three thousand years ago), is often seen with a glory or tongue
+of fire upon his head." And the tradition of the visible manifestation
+of the Holy Ghost by fire was prevalent among the ancient Budhists,
+Celts, Druids and Etrurians. In fact, as our author truly remarks, "The
+Holy Ghost, or Holy Spirit, when visible, was always in the form of fire
+(or a bird), and was always accompanied with wisdom and power." Hence,
+is disclosed the origin of the ancient custom amongst the Hindoos,
+Persians and Chaldeans, of making offerings to the solar fire, emblem of
+the Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit.
+
+6. _Inspiration by the Holy Ghost_ (Luke ii. 26.) "Holy men of God,"
+including some of the prophets, are claimed to have been inspired by the
+Holy Ghost (See 2 Peter i. 21; Acts xxviii. 25.) In like manner, as
+we are informed by Mr. Cleland in his "Specimens" (see Appendix), the
+ancient Celts were not only "moved by the Holy Ghost" in their divine
+decrees and prophetic utterances, but they claimed that their Salic laws
+(seventy-two in number) were inspired by the "Salo Ghost" (Holy Ghost),
+known also as "the Wisdom of the Spirit, or the Voice of the Spirit."
+This author several times alludes to the fact, and exhibits the proof,
+that the doctrine of the Holy Ghost was known to this ancient people.
+
+7. _The Holy Ghost imparted by "the laying on of hands_." This, too, is
+an ancient oriental custom. "And by the imposition of hands on the head
+of the candidate," says Mr. Cleland, speaking of the Celts, "the Holy
+Ghost, or Holy Spirit, was conveyed." And thus was the Holy Spirit,
+Ghost, Gas, Wind, Electrical Fire or Spirit of Authority imparted to the
+hierophant or gospel novitiate. "And their public assemblies," continues
+our author, "were always opened by an invocation to the Holy Ghost."
+
+8. _Baptism by or into the Holy Ghost accompanied with fire_. (Matt.
+iii. 11.) This rite, too, is traceable to a very ancient period, and was
+practiced by several of the old symbolical and mythological systems.
+The Tuscans, or Etrurians, baptized with fire, wind (ghost) and water.
+Baptism into the first member of the Trinity (the Father) was with fire;
+baptism into the second member of the Trinity (the Word) was with water;
+while baptism into the third member of the Trinity (the Holy Ghost,
+or Holy Spirit) consisted of the initiatory spiritual or symbolical
+application of gas, gust, ghost, wind, or spirit. It appears from
+"Herbert's Travels," that, in "ancient countries", the child was taken to
+the priest, who named him (christened him) before the sacred fire after
+which ceremony he was sprinkled with "holy water" from a vessel made of
+the sacred tree known as "The Holme."
+
+9. _The Holy Ghost imparted by breathing_. (See John xx. 22).
+"Sometimes," says Mr. Higgins, relative to this custom among the ancient
+heathen, "the priest blew his breath upon the child, which was then
+considered baptized by _air, spiritus sanctus,_ or ghost--i. e., baptism
+by the Holy Ghost." In case of baptism, a portion of the Holy Ghost
+was supposed to be transferred from the priest to the candidate. "The
+practice of breathing in or upon," says our author, "was quite common
+among the ancient heathen."
+
+10. _The Holy Ghost as the agent in divine conception, or the
+procreation of other Gods_. Jesus is said to have been conceived by
+the Holy Ghost (see Matt. i. 18), and we find similar claims instituted
+still more anciently for other incarnate demigods. In the Mexican
+Trinity, Y, Zona was the father, Bacal the Word, and Eckvah the Holy
+Ghost, by the last of whom Chimalman conceived and brought forth the
+enfleshed God Quexalcote. (See Mex. Ant., vol. vi. p. 1650.) In the
+Hindoo mythos, Sakia was conceived by the Holy Ghost Nara-an.
+
+Other cases might be cited, proving the same point.
+
+Thus, we observe that the various heterogeneous conceptions, discordant
+traditions, and contradictory superstitions appertaining to that
+anomalous nondescript being known as the Holy Ghost, are traceable to
+various oriental countries, and to a very remote antiquity.
+
+We will only occupy space with one or two more historical citations of a
+general nature, tending to prove the prevalence of this ghostly myth
+in other countries, not yet cited. "Tell me, O thou strong in fire!"
+ejaculated Sesostris of Egypt, to the oracle, as reported by Manetho,
+"who before me could subjugate all things, and who shall after me?" But
+the oracle rebuked him, saying, "First God, then the Word, and with them
+the Spirit." (See Nimrod, vol. i. p. 119.) "And Plutarch, in his 'Life
+of Numa,'" says our oft-quoted author, "shows that the incarnation of
+the Holy Spirit was known both to the ancient Romans and Egyptians."
+
+The doctrine is thus shown to have been nearly universal.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE HOLY GHOST SUPERSTITION.
+
+The origin of the tradition respecting this fabulous and mythical being
+is easily traced to the ancient Brahminical trifold conception of the
+Deity, in which stands, in Trinity order, first, the God of power or
+might--Brahma or Brahm (the Father); second, the God of creation--the
+Word--answering to John's creative Word (see John i. 3); and third, the
+God of generation and regeneration--the Holy Spirit or Holy Ghost. The
+last member of the triune conception of the Deity was considered, under
+the Brahminical theocracy, the _living, vital, active, life-imparting
+agent_ in both the first and second births of men and the gods.
+
+It will be borne in mind by the reader that the Holy Ghost is
+represented in the Christian Scripture as being the active generating
+agent of Christ's conception, he being, as Matthew declares, "conceived
+by the Holy Ghost." The Holy Ghost was also the regenerating agent at
+his baptism. Although the specific object of the descent of the Holy
+Ghost on that occasion is not stated by Luke, who relates it; although
+it is not stated for what purpose the Holy Spirit, after assuming the
+form of a bird, alighted and sat upon his head, yet the motive is fully
+disclosed in the older mythical religions, where we find the matter in
+fuller detail.
+
+Baptism itself is claimed by all its Christian votaries as regenerating
+or imparting a new spiritual life; and this new spiritual life was
+believed by several nations, as before stated, to make its appearance in
+the character and shape of a bird--sometimes a pigeon, sometimes a dove;
+and thus the origin of this tradition is most clearly and unmistakably
+exposed.
+
+As the foregoing historical exposition exhibits the Holy Ghost as
+performing several distinct and discordant offices, so we likewise find
+it possessing at least two distinct genders, the masculine and neuter,
+i. e., no gender--changing, ghost-like, from one to the other, as
+occasion seemed to require.
+
+From all these metamorphoses it is shown and demonstrated that the
+sexual and other changes of this "mysterious" being equal many of the
+demigods of mythology. The primary windy conception of the Holy Ghost
+is traceable to that early period of society when the rude and untutored
+denizens of the earth, in their profound ignorance of natural causes,
+were very easily and naturally led into the belief that wherever there
+was motion there was a God, or the active manifestation of a God,
+whether it was in the wind, breath, water, fire, or the sun.
+
+Hence, the Buddhists had their god _Vasus_ who manifested himself
+variously in the shape or character of fire, wind, storms, gas,
+ghosts, gusts, and the breath, thus constituting a very nearly-allied
+counterpart to the Christian Holy Ghost, which Mr. Parkhurst tells us
+originally meant "air in motion." This god was believed to have sprung
+from the supreme, primordial God, which the ancient Brahmins and
+Buddhists generally believed was constituted of a fine, spiritual
+substance,--aura, anima, wind, ether, igneous fluid, or electrical fire,
+i. e., fire from the sun, giving rise to "baptism by fire" and hence, the
+third God, or third member of the Trinity, subsequently arising out of
+this compound being, was also necessarily composed of or consisted of
+the same properties--all of which were believed to be correlated, if not
+identical.
+
+Such is a complete, though brief, historical elucidation of that
+mysterious, imaginary being so corporally intangible that Faustus, of
+the third century, declared respecting it, "The Holy Spirit, the third
+majesty, has the air for his residence." And it is a fabulous God whose
+scriptural biography is invested with so many ludicrous and abstruse
+incidents as to incite several hundred Christian writers to labor
+hard with a "godly zeal," by a reconstruction of "God's Word" and
+a rehabiliment of the ghostly texts, to effect some kind of a
+reconciliation of the story with reason and common sense--with what
+success the reader is left to judge.
+
+
+THE UNPARDONABLE SIN AGAINST THE HOLY GHOST.
+
+Before dismissing our ghostly narrative, it may effect something in the
+way of mitigating the anxious fears of some of our Christian brothers
+and sisters to explain the nature of "the sin against the Holy Ghost,"
+and assign the reason for its being unpardonable. The sin against the
+Holy Ghost consisted, according to the ancient Mexican traditions, in
+resisting its operations in the second birth--that is, the regeneration
+of the heart or soul by the Holy Ghost. And as the rectification of the
+heart or soul was a prominent idea with Christ, there is scarcely any
+ground to doubt but that this was the notion he cherished of the nature
+of the sin against the Holy Ghost. And it was considered unpardonable,
+simply because as the pardoning and cleansing process consisted in,
+or was at least always accompanied with baptism by water, in which
+operation the Holy Ghost was the agent in effecting a "new birth,"
+therefore, when the ministrations or operations of this indispensable
+agent were resisted or rejected, there was no channel, no means, no
+possible mode left for the sinner to find a renewed acceptance with God.
+When a person sinned against the Father or the Word (the Son), he could
+find a door of forgiveness through the baptizing processes spiritual
+or elementary, of the Holy Ghost. But an offense committed against this
+third limb of the Godhead had the effect to close and bar the door so
+that there could be "no forgiveness, either in this life or that which
+is to come." To sin against the Holy Ghost was to tear down the scaffold
+by which the door of heaven was to be reached.
+
+And thus it is explained the great "_mystery of godliness_," the
+"unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost," which, on account of the
+frightful penalty annexed to it, while it is impossible to learn what it
+consists in--it being undefined and undefinable--has caused thousands,
+and probably millions, of the disciples of the Christian faith the most
+agonizing hours of alarm and despair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. THE DIVINE "WORD" OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN.
+
+The Word as Creator, as Second Person of the Trinity, and its
+Pre-Existence.
+
+
+THE WORD OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN.
+
+"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
+was God." (John i. i.) The doctrine of the divine creative word (from
+the Greek Logos) appears to have been coeval in its origin with that of
+the Trinity, if not inseparably connected with it, as it constitutes the
+second member of the Trinity of "Father, Word, and Holy Ghost" in most
+of the ancient systems of religion. Works on heathen mythology show that
+it was anciently a very prevalent custom to personify ideas, thoughts
+and words into angels and Gods. Words were first personated, and
+transformed into men, then into angels, and finally into Gods.
+
+And here is foreshadowed the origin of John's personification of "the
+Word made flesh." It was simply the word of the supreme God as it
+escaped from his mouth, assuming the form and characteristics of a
+divine being like himself, and taking position as a secondary God and
+second member of the Trinity. This was the orient conception, and it
+appears to have been John's. He evidently had no thought of Christ
+experiencing human birth, at first, or being born of a woman, but
+believed, like some of the orientalists, that he came out of the mouth
+of the Father, and was thus "made flesh." (John i. 2.) Not a word of
+Christ being born is found in John's Gospel, till after his existence as
+the Word is spoken of. (See first note in back of book.)
+
+
+THE WORD AS CREATOR.
+
+John also represents the Word as having been the Creator. "All things
+were made by him." (John i. 3.) And Peter declares, "By the word of God
+the heavens were of old." (2 iii. 5.) Now, let it be observed here, as
+a notable circumstance, that the Chinese bible, much older than the
+Christian's New Testament, likewise declares, "God pronounced the
+primeval Word, and his own eternal and glorious abode sprang into
+existence." Mr. Guizot, in a note on Gibbon's work, says, "According to
+the Zend-Avesta (the Persian bible, more than three thousand years old),
+it is by the Word, more ancient than the world, that Ormuzd created the
+universe."
+
+In like manner the sacred writings of the ancient Thibetans speak of
+"the Word which produced the world"--an exact counterpart to John's
+declaration, "All things were made by him." And the ancient Greek writer
+Amelias, speaking of the God Mercury, says, "And this plainly was
+the Logos (the Word), by whom all things were made, he being himself
+eternal," as Heraclitus would say,.... He assumed to be with God, and
+to be God, and in him everything that was made, has its life and being,
+who, descending into body, and putting on flesh, took the appearance of
+a man, though still retaining the majesty of his nature. Here is
+"the Word made flesh" set forth in most explicit terms. The Psalmist
+exclaims, "By the Word of God were the heavens made, and all the host of
+them by the Breath of his mouth." (Ps. xxxiii. 6.) Here is disclosed not
+only the conception of the Word as Creator, but also the Word and the
+Breath as synonymous terms, both of which conceptions oriental history
+amply proves to be of heathen derivation.
+
+It was anciently believed that the Word and Breath of God were the same,
+and possessed a vitalizing power, which, as they issued from his mouth,
+might be transformed into another being known as a secondary God. Both
+the Jews and the Christians seem to have inherited this belief, as
+evinced by the foregoing quotations from their bible. The most ancient
+tradition taught that the Word emanated from the mouth of the principal
+God, and "became flesh," that is, took form, as the ancient Brahmins
+expressed it, for the special purpose of serving as agent in the work of
+creation, that is, to become the creator of the external universe. St.
+John evidently borrowed this idea. Read his first chapter.
+
+
+PRE-EXISTENCE OF THE WORD.
+
+The pre-existence or previous existence of the Word, antecedent to the
+date of its metamorphosis into the human form, we find taught in several
+of the ancient systems of religion, as well as the more modern Christian
+system. Several texts in the Christian New Testament set forth the
+doctrine quite explicitly. Christ, as the Divine Word, declared, "Before
+Abraham was I am," and that he had an existence with the Father before
+the foundation of the world, etc., which is a distinct avowal of the
+doctrine of pre-existence.
+
+But oriental history proves the doctrine is much older than
+Christianity.
+
+The Hindoo very anciently taught that "the Word had existed with God
+from all eternity, and when spoken it became a glorious form, the
+aggregate embodiment of all the divine ideas, and performed the work of
+creation." And of Chrishna, it is affirmed that "while upon the earth he
+existed also in heaven." (See Baghavat Gita.)
+
+In like manner it is declared of an Egyptian God, that "though he was
+born into the world, he existed with his father God before the world was
+made." And parallel to this is the statement of the Chinese bible, that
+"though the Holy Word (Chang-si) will be born upon the earth, yet he
+existed before anything was made." Even for Pythagoras it was claimed
+he existed in heaven before he was born upon the earth. Mr. Higgins,
+in summing up the matter, declares, "All the old religions believed
+the world was created by the Word, and that this Word existed before
+creation" (Ana., vol. ii. p. 77), which clearly indicates the source of
+St John's creative Word.
+
+
+THE DUAL OR TWO-FOLD NAME OF THE WORD.
+
+In most cases the living Divine Word was known by different names and
+titles, prior to the era of its assuming the mortal form, from that by
+which it was known after its fleshly investment.
+
+Among the ancient Persians, the name for the divine spiritual Word was
+Honover. After its human birth, it was called "Mithra the Mediator."
+The Hindoo oriental term for the primeval Word was Om, or Aum. After
+assuming its most important incarnate form, it was known as Chrishna.
+The Chinese Holy Interior Word was Om-i-to, and its principal
+incarnation was Chang-ti or Ti-en-ti. The Japanese also proclaimed
+their belief in a Divine Word before the Christian era, which, in their
+language, was Amina. They taught, like John, that it came forth from the
+mouth of the Supreme God (Brahm) to perform the work of creation, after
+which, it was known as Sakia. And that popular Christian writer, Mr.
+Milman, informs us that the Jewish founders of Christianity believed in
+an original Divine Word, which they call Memra. When it descended to the
+earth, and "became flesh, and dwelt amongst us" (John i. 4.) according
+to the evangelist John, it was known as Jesus Christ. Mr. Milman states
+also, that "the appellation to the Word is found in the Indian (Hindoo),
+Persian, the Platonic, and the Alexandrian systems." (Hist, of Chr.,
+Book I., Chap. 2.)
+
+Thus, the question is settled by Christian testimony--that the various
+conceptions of the Divine Word are of heathen origin.
+
+
+THE WORD AS A SECOND MEMBER OF THE TRINITY.
+
+"There are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and
+the Holy Ghost." (1 John v. 7.) Observe, the Word is the second person
+in the Trinity. And this was its post in the Brahman, Hindoo, Persian,
+and other systems. "All religions," says a writer, "which taught the
+existence of the Word as a great primeval spirit, represent him as
+secondary to the supreme." (P. R. 3, vol. ii. p. 336.) "The Hindoos
+reverenced it next to Brahm." Mr. Higgins cuts the matter short by
+declaring "The Logos, or Word, was the second person of the Trinity
+in all the ancient systems, as in the Christian system," which again
+indicates its heathen origin.
+
+
+THE WORD AS A BIBLICAL TITLE.
+
+"The Word," "the Holy Word," "the Divine Word," etc., are terms now
+frequently applied to the Christian bible, without any suspicion of
+their heathen origin. The Zend-Avesta, the Persian bible, was always
+called "The Living Word of God," for that is the meaning of the term
+Zend-Avesta, and the oldest bible in the world is the Vedas, and
+it means both Word and Wisdom. Om, the Egyptian's Holy Word, they
+frequently applied both to their incarnate Gods and to their sacred
+writings.
+
+The practice of calling bibles "The Word of God" originated from the
+belief that, when the incarnate Word left the earth and returned to
+heaven, he infused a portion of his living spirits into the divine
+writings which contained his history and his doctrines, and which he
+himself had prompted his disciples to write as his "Last Revelation to
+man." They then must contain a portion of him, i. e., a portion of the
+Holy Word--hence, both were called "The Holy Word."
+
+And this heathen custom Christians borrowed.
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE WORD AS CREATOR.
+
+The motive which prompted a belief in the creative Word may be styled a
+theological necessity. It was believed that the principal God, like
+the rulers of earth, was too aristocratic to labor with his own hands.
+Hence, another God was originated to perform the work of creation, and
+called "The Word."
+
+The origin of the creative Word is still further indicated by
+Blackwood's Magazine.
+
+It says:--
+
+"Creation became impossible to a being already infinite, and was a
+derogation to a being already perfect. Some lower God, some Avatar, must
+be interposed (as an emanation from the mouth of the God supreme) to
+perform the subordinate task of creation. Hence, originated and came
+forth the Word as Creator."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. THE TRINITY VERY ANCIENTLY A CURRENT HEATHEN DOCTRINE
+
+"THERE are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and
+the Holy Ghost, and these three are one." (i John v. 7.) This text,
+which evidently discloses a belief in the existence of three separate
+and distinct beings in the Godhead, sets forth a doctrine which was
+anciently of almost universal prevalence. Nearly every nation, whether
+oriental or occidental, whose religious faith has been commemorated
+in history, discloses in its creed a belief in the trifold nature and
+triune division of the Deity. St. Jerome testifies unequivocally, "All
+the ancient nations believed in the Trinity."
+
+And a volume of facts and figures might be cited here, if we had space
+for them, in proof of this statement A text from one of the Hindoo
+bibles, (the Puranas) will evince the antiquity and prevalence of this
+belief in a nation of one hundred and fifty millions of people more than
+two thousand years ago. "O you three Lords!" ejaculated Attencion, "know
+that I recognize only one God. Inform me, therefore, which of you is the
+true divinity that I may address to him alone my vows and adorations."
+The three Gods, Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva, becoming manifest to him,
+replied, "Learn, O devotee, that there is no real distinction between
+us. What to you appears such is only by semblance. The single being
+appears under three forms by the acts of creation, preservation and
+destruction but he is one."
+
+Now, reader, note the remark here, that the ancient Christian fathers
+almost universally and unanimously proclaimed the doctrine of the
+Trinity as one of the leading tenets of the Christian faith, and as a
+doctrine derived directly by revelation from heaven. But here we find
+it most explicitly set forth by a disciple of a pagan religion more
+than three thousand years ago, as the Christian missionary D. O. Allen
+states, that the Hindoo bible, in which it was found was compiled
+fourteen hundred years before Christ, and written at a still earlier
+period. And we find the same doctrine very explicitly taught in the
+ancient Brahmin, Persian, Chaldean, Chinese, Mexican and Grecian systems
+--all much older than Christianity.
+
+No writer ever taught or avowed a belief in any tenet of religious faith
+more fully or plainly than Plato sets forth, the doctrine of the Trinity
+in his Phaedon, written four hundred years B. C. And his terms are found
+to be in most striking conformity to the Christian doctrine on this
+subject, as taught in the New Testament Plato's first term for the
+Trinity was in Greek--1. To Agathon, the supreme God or Father. 2. The
+Logos, which is the Greek term for the Word. And, 3. Psyche, which the
+Greek Lexicon defines to mean "soul, spirit or ghost"--of course, the
+Holy Ghost. Here we have the three terms of the Christian Trinity,
+Father, Word, and Holy Ghost, as plainly taught as language can express
+it, thus making Plato's exposition of the Trinity and definition of its
+terms, published four hundred years B. C., identical in meaning with
+those of St. John's, as found in his Gospel, and contained in the above
+quoted text. Where, then, is the foundation for the dogmatic claim
+on the part of the Christian professors for the divine origin of the
+Trinity doctrine?
+
+We will here cite the testimony of some Christian writers to prove
+that the Trinity is a pagan-derived doctrine. A _Christian bishop_,
+Mr. Powell, declares, "I not only confess but I _maintain_, such a
+similitude of Plato's and John's Trinity doctrines as bespeaks a common
+origin." (Thirteenth letter to Dr. Priestley.) What is that you say,
+bishop? "A common origin." Then you concede both are heaven-derived, or
+both heathen-derived. If the former, then revelation and heathenism are
+synonymous terms. If the latter, then Christianity stands on a level
+with heathen mythology. Which horn of the dilemma will you choose? St.
+Augustine confessed he found the beginning of John's Gospel in Plato's
+Phaedon, which is a concession of the whole ground.
+
+Another writer, Chataubron, speaks of an ancient Greek inscription
+on the great obelisk at Rome, which reads--1. The Mighty God. 2. The
+Begotten of God as Christ is declared to be "the only begotten of the
+Father" (John i. 14). And, 3. "Apollo the Spirit"--the Holy Spirit or
+Holy Ghost--thus presenting in plain language the three terms of the
+Trinity. And Mr. Cudworth, in corroboration of this report, says, "The
+Greeks had a first God, and second God, and third God, and the second
+was begotten by the first. And yet for all that," continues Mr.
+Cudworth, "they considered all these one."
+
+In the Platonic or Grecian Trinity, the first person was considered the
+planner of the work of creation, the second person the creator, and
+the third person the ghost or spirit which moved upon the face of the
+waters, and infused life into the mighty deep at creation--the same
+Holy Ghost which descended from heaven to infuse life into the waters at
+Christ's baptism; thus, the resemblance is complete. Mr. Basnage quotes
+a Christian writer of the fifth century as declaring, "The Athenian sage
+Plato marvelously anticipated one of the most important and mysterious
+doctrines of the Christian religion"--meaning the Trinity--an important
+concession truly.
+
+The oldest and probably the original form of the Trinity is that found
+in the Brahmin and Hindoo systems--the terms of which are--i. Brahma,
+the Father or supreme God. 2. Vishnu, the incarnate Word and Creator. 3.
+Siva, the Spirit of God, i. e., the Holy Spirit or Ghost--each answering
+to corresponding terms of the Christian Trinity, and yet two thousand
+years older, according to Dr. Smith.
+
+We have not allowable space for other facts and citations (as this work
+is designed as a mere epitome), although we have but entered upon the
+threshold of the evidence tending to prove that the Christian Trinity
+was born of heathen parents, that it is an offspring of heathen
+mythology, like other doctrines of the Christian faith, claimed by its
+disciples as the gift of divine revelation.
+
+Here let it be noted as a curious chapter in sacred history that the
+numerous divine Trinities which have constituted a part of nearly every
+religious system ever propagated to the world were composed, in every
+case, of male Gods. No female has ever yet been admitted into the triad
+of Gods composing the orthodox Trinity. Every member of the Trinity in
+every case is a male, and an old bachelor--a doctrine most flagrantly at
+war with the principles of modern philosophy.
+
+For this science teaches us that the endowment of a being with either
+male or female organs, presupposes the existence of the other sex; and
+that either sex, without the other would be a ludicrous anomaly, and a
+ludicrous distortion of nature unparalleled in the history of science.
+As sexual organs create an imperious desire for the other sex, no male
+or female could long enjoy full happiness in the absence of the other
+party. What an unhappy, lonesome place, therefore, the orthodox heaven
+must have been, during the eternity of the past, with no society but old
+bachelors! The Trinity was constituted of males simply because woman has
+always been considered a mere cipher in society--a mere tool for man's
+convenience, an appendage to his wants. Hence, instead of having a place
+among the Gods she led the practical life of a servant and a menial,
+which accounts for her exclusion from the Trinity. But the time is
+coming when she will rule both heaven and earth with the omnipotent
+power of her love nature. Then we shall have no "war in heaven," and no
+fighting on earth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. ABSOLUTION, AND THE CONFESSION OF SINS, OF HEATHEN ORIGIN
+
+SOME Christian writers have labored to make it appear that this is
+exclusively a Christian doctrine, while others have labored as hard to
+get it out of their bible, or make the people believe that it is not
+therein taught.
+
+We shall show, upon scriptural and historical authority, that both are
+wrong.
+
+There can be no question as to this rite having existed outside of
+Christianity, or of its being much older than Christianity. History
+proves both. Nor can it be successfully denied that it is taught in the
+Christian Scriptures, both the confessing of sins and that of forgiving
+sins. The apostle James, with respect to the former, is quite explicit.
+He enjoins, emphatically, "Confess your faults one to another." (James
+v. 16.) The practice of forgiving sins is also enjoined. "Forgiving one
+another" is recommended both in Ephesians (iv. 32) and Colossians. (iii.
+13). "And whatsoever ye shall lose on earth shall be loosed in heaven"
+(Matthew xviii 18), is interpreted as conferring the power to forgive
+sins.
+
+And then we remark that the practices both of confessing and forgiving
+sins are very ancient pagan rites and customs. Speaking of their
+prevalence in ancient India, the author of the Anacalypsis remarks, "The
+person offering sacrifices made a verbal confession of his sins, and
+received absolution." Auricular confession was also practiced among
+the ancient Mithriacs, or Persians, and the Parsees proper of the
+same country. Mr. Volney tells us, "They observed all the Christian
+sacraments, even to the laying on of hands in the confirmation." (211.)
+And the Christian Tertullian also tells us that "The priests of Mithra
+promised absolution from sin on confession and baptism," while another
+author adds, that "on such occasions Mithra marked his followers (the
+servants of God) in their foreheads," and that "he celebrated the
+sacrifice of bread, which is the resurrection."
+
+In the collection of the Jewish laws called "The Mishna," we are
+told the Jews confessed their sins by placing their hands upon a calf
+belonging to the priest, and that this was called "the Confession of
+Calves." (See Mishna, tom. ii. p. 394.) Confessing sins was practiced in
+ancient Mexico; also under Numa of Rome, whose priests, we are informed,
+had to clear their consciences by confessing their sins before they
+could offer sacrifices. The practice of confessing and forgiving sins
+as recommended in the Christian bible, and practiced by some of
+the Christian sects, has been the source of much practical evil by
+furnishing a pretext and license, to some extent, for the commission
+of crime and sin. While sins can be so easily obliterated they will
+be committed--perpetrated without much remorse or restraint. "In China
+(says the Rev. Mr. Pitrat, 232), the invocation of Omito is sufficient
+to remit the punishment of the greatest crimes." The same author tells
+us, "The ancient initiation of the pagans had tribunals of penance,
+where the priests, under the name of _Roes_, heard from the mouth of the
+sinners themselves the avowal of their sins of which their souls were
+to be purified, and from the punishment of which they wished to be
+exempted." (Page 37.) The granting of absolution for sin or misconduct
+among the early primitive Christians was so common, St. Cyprian informs
+us, that "thousands of reprieves were granted daily," which served as an
+indirect license to crime. And thus the doctrine of divine forgiveness,
+as taught by pagans and Christians, has proved to be demoralizing in its
+effects upon society.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. ORIGIN OF BAPTISM BY WATER, FIRE, BLOOD AND THE HOLY GHOST
+
+BAPTISM, in some of its various forms, is a very ancient rite, and was
+extensively practiced in several oriental countries. It was administered
+in a great varieties of forms, and with the use of different elements.
+Water was the most common, but fire and air, wind, spirit ghost were
+also used; and both the living and the dead were made the subjects of
+its solemn and imposing ceremonies.
+
+We will notice each of these modes of baptism separate--appropriating a
+brief space to each.
+
+1. Baptism by Water.
+
+"Baptism by water," says Mr. Higgins, "is a very old rite, being
+practised by the followers of Zoroaster, by the Romans, the Egyptians,
+and other nations." It was also vogue among the ancient Hindoos at
+a still earlier day Their mode of administering it was to dip the
+candidate for immersion three times in the watery element, in the same
+manner as is now practiced by some of the Christian sects during the
+performance of which the hierophant would ejaculate the following prayer
+and ceremony: "O Lord this man is impure, like the mud of this stream!
+But as thou cleanse and deliver his soul from sin as the water cleanses
+his body." They believed that water possesses the virtue of purifying
+both soul and body--the latter from filth and the former from sin. The
+ancient Mexican, Persians, Hindoos and Jews were in the habit of
+baptizing their infants soon after they were born. And the water used
+for this purpose was called "the water of regeneration." Paul speaks of
+being "saved by the washing of regeneration." (See Titus iii. 5.) Those
+who touched these infants before they were baptized were deemed impure.
+And as this was unavoidable on the part of the mothers, they were
+required, as in the cases of the mothers of Chrishna and Christ, to
+present themselves on the eighth day after accouchement to the priest in
+the temple to be purified. The Romans chose the eighth day for girls and
+the ninth for boys. The child was usually named (christened) at the time
+it was baptized. And in India, the name, or God's name, or some other
+mark, was engraven or written on the forehead. This custom is several
+times recognized in the Christian bible, both in the old and in the New
+Testament. (See Ezek. ix 4; Rev. xiv. 9; xix. 20, etc.) John speaks of a
+mark being made on the forehead. (See Rev. xiii. 16.) Also of the name
+of God being written on the forehead. (Rev. iii. 12.)
+
+
+THE DOVE DESCENDING AT BAPTISM.
+
+At this stage of our inquiry it may be stated that several of the
+ancient religious orders had the legend of a dove or pigeon descending at
+baptism--a counterpart to the evangelical story of "the Spirit of God
+descending in bodily shape like a dove," and alighting on the head of
+Jesus Christ while being baptized by John in Jordan. (See Luke iii. 22.)
+It will be observed here that the spirit, or soul, of God descended not
+only in the manner, but in "bodily shape like a dove." This accords with
+the tradition anciently prevalent among the Hindoos, Mexicans, Greeks,
+Romans and Persians, or Babylonians, that all souls, or spirits,
+possessed, or were capable of assuming, the form of a dove. Hence, it is
+reported of Polycarp, Semiramis, Caesar and others, that at death their
+souls, or spirits, were seen to leave the body in "bodily shape like
+a dove" and ascend to heaven. "The Divine Love, or Eros," says Mr.
+Higgins, "was supposed by the oriental heathen to descend often in the
+form of a dove to bless the candidate for baptism." These traditions,
+doubtless, gave rise to the story of the dove descending at Christ's
+baptism--that is God in the shape of a dove, for that is clearly the
+meaning of the text. We are also informed by our author just quoted,
+that a dove stood for and represented, among the orientalists, the third
+person of the Trinity, as it does in the gospel story of Christ--he
+being the second member of the Christian Trinity of Father, Son and Holy
+Ghost. It was considered "the regenerator, or regenerating spirit," and
+persons being baptized were said to be "born again" into the spirit or
+the spirit into them; that is, the dove into or upon them.
+
+What a master-key is furnished by these oriental religions for solving
+the mysteries of the Christian bible! How much more lucid than Divine
+Revelation--so-called!
+
+We will quote again from Higgins: "Among all nations, from the
+very earliest period, water has been used as a species of religious
+sacrament. Because, as it dripped from the clouds, it was observed
+to have the power of reviving drooping nature and creating anew, or
+regenerating the whole vegetable kingdom in spring, it was hence chosen
+as an emblem of spiritual regeneration and a medium of baptism. Water
+was the element by means of which everything was born again through the
+agency of the Eros, Dove, or Divine Love." And, hence, the ceremony of
+dipping or plunging (or, as it is modernly termed, baptizing) came into
+vogue for the remission of sins and "the regeneration into a new and
+more holy life."
+
+Some streams were supposed to have more efficacy in these respects than
+others. Hence, nearly all religious nations had their "Holy Rivers,"
+"Holy Water," "Sacred Pools," etc. The Hindoos resorted to the "Holy
+Ganges," the Egyptians to the "Holy Nile," the Chaldeans and Persians
+to the "Holy Euphrates," the Greeks to their "Holy Lustral Water," the
+Italians to the river Po, and the Jews and Christians to their holy
+river Jordan. If Jordan was not called "holy," it was undoubtedly
+considered so, else why did Elisha order Naaman to wash seven times
+in that stream instead of Damascus, which was much nearer and more
+accessible? And why was Christ baptized in Jordan? "And all the land of
+Judea, and they of Jerusalem, were baptized in Jordan, confessing their
+sins." (Matt iii. vi.) Why, as several streams were handier to a large
+portion of the candidates, simply because Jordan was considered to be
+"more holy." And Christians had their sacred pool of Bethesda, as the
+Hindoos had their Sahar.
+
+The rite of baptism was at first generally practiced in caves--as were
+also other religious rites; and as these caves were often difficult of
+access, and their mouths, doors or gates narrow and difficult to enter,
+they fully exemplify Christ's declaration, "Straight is the gate and
+narrow is the way that leadeth unto life." (Matt. vii. 14.) And when
+he declared, "Except a man be born of water and of the spirit he cannot
+enter the kingdom of heaven" (John iii. 5) he was only seconding the
+exhortation of the priests to enter these subterranean vaults and be
+baptized after the oriental and Jewish custom. Thus originated baptism
+by water in the form of dipping, or immersion.
+
+
+BAPTISM BY SPRINKLING.
+
+Owing to the scarcity of water in some countries, and its entire absence
+in others, and the fatal effects sometimes resulting from the practice
+of baptizing infants and invalids by immersion, a new mode of baptism
+eventually sprung up, now known as "sprinkling," in which sometimes
+water and sometimes blood was used. Virgil, Ovid and Cicero all speak
+of its prevalence amongst the ancient Romans or Latins. We are informed
+that the ancient Jews practiced it upon their women while in a state of
+nudity, the ceremony being administered by three rabbis, or priests. But
+the custom finally gave way to one more consonant with decorum. Blood,
+being considered "the life thereof" of man, was deemed more efficacious
+than water, and hence was often used in lieu of that element. The Greeks
+kept a "holy vessel" for this purpose, known as the Facina. The Romans
+used a brush, which may now be seen engraven upon some of their ancient
+coins and sculptured on their ancient temples. The Hindoos and Persians
+used a branch of laurel or some other shrub for sprinkling the repentant
+candidate, whether water or blood was used.
+
+In some countries the rite was practiced as a talisman against evil
+spirits. The Mexicans never approached their altars without sprinkling
+them with blood drawn from their own bodies, as the Jews sprinkled the
+walls and door-posts of their temples with blood under the requisition
+of the Levitical code. This mode of fancied purification by sprinkling
+either with water or blood we find recognized, and apparently
+sanctioned, in the Christian bible, both in the Old and New Testaments.
+Ezekiel says, "I will sprinkle clean water on you." (Ezek. xxxvi. 25.)
+Peter uses the phrase, "The sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ."
+(1 Peter i. 2.) And Paul makes use of the expression, "The blood of
+sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of Abel" (Heb. xii.
+24), which we regard as an indirect sanction of the senseless heathen
+idea of effecting spiritual purification by drops of blood. (See
+Potter's Antiquities and Herbert's Travels.)
+
+
+BAPTISM BY FIRE.
+
+Baptism by fire was a form or mode of application which seems to have
+been introduced from the belief that it was productive of a higher
+degree of purification. There were several ways of using fire in the
+baptismal rite. In some cases the candidate for immortality ran through
+blazing streams of fire--a custom which was called "the baptism of
+fire." M. de Humboldt, in his "Views of the Cordilleras and Monuments
+of America," informs us it prevailed in India, Chaldea and Syria,
+and throughout eastern Asia. It appears to have been gotten up as
+a substitute for sun-worship, as this luminary was believed to be
+constituted of fire, though in reality there never was any such thing as
+sun or solar worship. Christian writers represent the ancient Persians
+as has having been addicted to solar worship. But Firdausi, Cudworth
+and other authors declare that neither they nor any other nation ever
+worshiped the sun, but merely an imaginary Deity supposed to reside in
+the sun. Heathen nations have been charged with many things of which
+they were not guilty; though it is true that in the spirit of Christ's
+exhortation, "Whosoever loseth his life for my sake shall find it,"
+some of the candidates for the fiery ordeal voluntarily sacrificed their
+lives in the operation, under the persuasion that it was necessary to
+purify the soul, and would enable them to ascend to higher posts or
+planes of enjoyment in the celestial world. And some of them were taught
+that sins not expurgated by fire, or some other efficaciously renovating
+process in this life, would be punished by fire in the life to come.
+Here we will mention that there is a seeming recognition of this ancient
+heathen rite in both departments of the Christian's bible. Isaiah says,
+"When thou walkest through fire thou shalt not be burned." (lxiii.
+2.) And the Baptist John recognizes three modes of baptism: "I indeed
+baptize you with water, but he that cometh after me shall baptize you
+with fire and the Holy Ghost." (Matt. iii. 11). And Paul teaches the
+necessity of being purified by fire. (See i Cor. iii. 15.) So it is both
+a heathen and a Christian idea.
+
+
+BAPTISM BY THE HOLY GHOST.
+
+This fanciful ceremony is both a Christian and a heathen rite, and is
+undoubtedly of heathen origin. The mode of applying it was to breathe
+into or upon the seeker for divine favors. This was done by the priest,
+who, it was believed, imparted the Spirit of God by the process. The
+custom, Mr. Herbert informs us, was anciently quite common in oriental
+countries, and was at a later date borrowed by Christ and his apostles
+and incorporated into the Christian ceremonies. We find that Christ not
+only sanctioned it but practised it, as it is declared when he met his
+disciples after his resurrection "he breathed on them, and saith unto
+them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost." (John xx. 22.)
+
+And the following language of Ezekiel is evidently a sanction of the
+same heathen custom: "Thus saith the Lord God, Come from the four winds,
+O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live." (xxxvii.
+9.) Let it be borne in mind here that breath, air, wind, spirit and
+ghost were used as synonymous terms, according to Mr. Parkhurst (see
+Chap. XXII.), and this breathing was supposed to impart spiritual life,
+being nothing less than the Spirit of God, the same as that breathed
+into Adam when "he became a living soul." (See Gen. ii. 7.) For a fuller
+exposition see Chapter XXII.
+
+
+BAPTISM OF OR FOR THE DEAD.
+
+It was customary among the Hindoos and other nations to postpone baptism
+till near the supposed terminus of life, in order that the ablution
+might extinguish all the sins and misdeeds of the subject's earthly
+probation. But it sometimes happened that men and women were killed, or
+died unexpectedly, before the rite was administered. And as it would
+not do for these unfortunate souls to be deprived of the benefit of this
+soul-saving ordinance, the custom was devised of baptizing the defunct
+body, or more commonly some living person in its stead. The method of
+executing the latter expedient, according to St. Chrysostom, was to
+place some living person under the bed or couch on which the corpse
+was reclining, when the defunct was asked if he would be baptized. The
+living man, responding for the dead, answered in the affirmative. The
+corpse was then taken and dipped in a vessel prepared for the purpose.
+This silly practice was in vogue among the early Christians, and Paul
+seems to regard it as an important custom. "Else what shall they do
+which are baptized for the dead, if the dead rise not at all." (i Cor.
+xv. 9.)
+
+The inference derivable from this text is, that Paul held that the labor
+of baptizing the dead would be lost in the event of the falsification of
+the doctrine of the resurrection, but otherwise it would be valid--which
+evinces his faith in the senseless and superstitious practice. It will
+be observed from the historical exposition of this chapter that all the
+various ancient heathen modes and rites of baptism have been practiced
+by Christians, and are sanctioned by their bible.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. THE SACRAMENT OR EUCHARIST OF HEATHEN ORIGIN
+
+AT the feast of the Passover, Christ is represented, while distributing
+bread to his disciples, to have said, "Take, eat; this is my body"
+(Matt. xxvi. 26); and while handing round the consecrated cup, he
+enjoined, "Drink ye all of it, for this is my blood of the new covenant,
+which is shed for many for the remission of sins" (xxvi. 27). Here is
+a very clear and explicit indorsement of what is generally termed "the
+Eucharist or Sacrament." And nothing can be more susceptible of proof
+than that this rite or ordinance is of pagan origin, and was practically
+recognized many centuries prior to the dawn of the Christian era.
+
+So we observe, by the text above quoted, the Christian Savior and
+Lawgiver copied, or reproduced, an old pagan rite as a part of his
+professedly new and spiritual system, one of the most ancient and
+widely-extended formulas of pagandom. And stranger still, the catechisms
+of the Christian church represent this ordinance as having originated in
+the design and motive to keep the ancient Christian world in remembrance
+of the death and sufferings and sacrifice of Christ, while we find it
+existing long prior to his time, both among Jews and pagans, this being
+virtually admitted in the bible itself, so far as respects the pagans,
+thus proving that it did not originate with Christ, and therefore is
+not of Christian origin. For in Gen. viv. 18, we read, "And Melchisedek,
+king of Salem, brought forth bread and wine, and he was the priest
+of the Most High God." Because the Melchisedek here spoken of is
+represented as being "a priest of the Most High God," and showed so much
+respect to Abraham, it is presumed and assumed, by Christian writers,
+that he was a Jewish priest and king; and Mr. Faber (vol. i. p. 72)
+calls him "an incarnation of the son of God." But there is no intimation
+throughout the Jewish Scriptures of the Jews ever having had a king or
+priest by that name. And besides, Eupolemus (vol. i. p. 39), tells
+us that the temple of Melchisedek was the temple of Jupiter, in which
+Pythagoras studied philosophy. Then, again, according to some writers,
+the name is synonymous with Moloch, the God of war among the Greeks.
+Strange, then, that Melchisedek should be claimed as a priest and king
+among the Jews. Be this as it may, the case proves that the ceremony of
+offering bread and wine existed long before the era of Jesus Christ.
+
+And then we have much more and much stronger proof of this fact than
+is here furnished. The Christian Mr. Faber virtually admits it, when he
+tells us, "The devil led the heathen to anticipate Christ with respect
+to several things, as the mysteries of the Eucharist, etc." "And this
+very solemnity (says St Justin) the evil spirit introduced into the
+mysteries of Mithra." (Reeves, Justin, p. 86.) Mr. Higgins observes, "It
+was instituted hundreds of years before the Lord's death took place."
+Amongst the ancient religious orders and nations who practiced this
+rite, we may name the Essenes, Persians, Pythagoreans, Gnostics,
+Brahmins and Mexicans. For proof of its existence and antiquity among
+the last-named nation, we refer the reader to the "Travels" (chap. ii.)
+of that Christian writer, Father Acosta. Mr. Marolles, in his Memoirs
+(p. 215) quotes Tibullus as saying, "The pagan appeased the divinity
+with holy bread." And Tibullus, in a panegyric on Marcella, wrote, "A
+little cake, a little morsel of bread, appeased the divinities."
+
+And here we discover the idea which originated the ceremony. It was
+started, like animal sacrifices, for the purpose of appeasing the wrath
+or propitiating the favor of the angry Gods. Tracing the conception
+still further in the rear of its progress, and apparently to its primary
+inception, Mr. Higgins observes, "The whole paschal supper (the Lord's
+supper with the Christians) was in fact a festival of joy to celebrate
+the passage of the sun across the equinox of spring."
+
+We find one pagan writer who had intelligence enough to ridicule this
+senseless ceremonial custom, called "the sacrament." Cicero, some
+forty years before Christ, shows up the doctrine of the sacrament, or
+substantiation, in its true light. He asks, "How can a man be so stupid
+as to imagine that which he eats to be a God?" A writer quoted above
+says, "Mass, or the sacrifice of bread and wine, was common to many
+ancient nations." (Anac. vol. ii. p. 62.) According to Alnetonae, the
+ancient Brahmins had a kind of Eucharist called "prajadam." And the same
+writer informs us that the ancient Peruvians, "after sacrificing a lamb,
+mingled his blood with flour, and distributed it among the people."
+Writers on Grecian mythology relate that Ceres, the goddess of corn,
+gave her flesh to eat, and that Bacchus, the God of wine, gave blood to
+drink. Nor is there any evidence that Christ and his followers made a
+better use, or different use, or a more spiritual application of the
+sacrament, or ceremonial offering of bread and wine, than the pagans
+did, though some have claimed this. It was a species of symbolism with
+both, notwithstanding Mr. Glover, a Christian writer, declares, that
+"in the sacrament of the altar are the natural body and blood of Christ,
+verily and indeed." (See Glover's Remarks on Bishop Marsh's Compendious
+Review.) It may be noted here that the Persians, Pythagoreans, Essenes
+and Gnostics used water instead of wine, and that this mode of practice
+was less objectionable than that of the Christians, who (as sad
+experience proves) have too often laid the foundation for the ruin of
+some poor unsuspecting devotee, by luring him to the fatal fascination
+of the intoxicating bowl, by holding the sacred and ceremonial wine to
+his lips, while administering the sacrament or the Lord's supper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. ANOINTING WITH OIL OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN
+
+THE custom and ceremony of anointing with oil by way of imparting some
+fancied spiritual power and religious qualification seems to have been
+extensively practiced by the Jews and primitive Christians, and still
+more anciently by various oriental nations. Mark (xiv. 4), reports Jesus
+Christ as speaking commendingly of the practice, by which it was evident
+he was in favor of the superstitious custom. The apostle James not only
+sanctions it, but recommends it in the most specific language. "Is any
+sick among you, let him call for the elders of the church, and let them
+pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord." (James
+v. 14.)
+
+The practice of greasing or smearing with oil, it may be noted here, was
+in vogue from other motives besides the one here indicated. We find
+the statement in the New American Cyclopedia (vol. i. p. 620), that
+anointing with perfumed oil was in common use among the Greeks and
+Romans as a mark of hospitality to guests. And modern travelers in
+the East still find it a custom for visitors to be sprinkled with
+rose-water, or their head, face and beard "anointed with olive oil."
+"Anointing," we are also told, "is an ancient and still prevalent custom
+throughout the East, by pouring aromatic oils on persons as a token of
+honor.... It was also employed in consecrating priests, prophets and
+kings, and the places and instruments appointed for worship." (Ibid.)
+Joshua anointed the ten stones he set up in Jordan, and Jacob the stone
+on which he slept at the time of his great vision.
+
+The early Christians were in the habit of anointing the altars, and even
+the walls, of the churches, in the same manner as the images, obelisks,
+statues, etc., had long been consecrated by the devotees of the oriental
+systems. Aaron, Saul, David, Solomon, and even Jesus Christ were
+anointed with oil in the same way. David Malcom, in his "Essay on the
+Antiquity of the Britons," p. 144, says, "The Mexican king was anointed
+with Holy Unction by the high priest while dancing before the Lord."
+Vide the case of David "dancing before the Lord with all his might." Dr.
+Lightfoot, in his "Harmony of the New Testament," speaks of the custom
+among the Jews of anointing the sick on the Sabbath day (see Works, vol.
+i, p. 333; also Toland, Sect. Naz. p. 54), as afterwards recommended by
+the apostle James, as shown above. This accords exactly with the method
+of treating the sick in ancient India and other heathen countries
+several thousand years ago. For proof consult Hyde, Bryant, Tertullian
+and other writers. The custom of anointing the sick, accompanied with
+prayer and other ceremonies, was quite fashionable in the East long
+before the birth of either Jesus or James. One writer testifies that
+"the practice of anointing with oil, so much in vogue among the Jews,
+and sanctioned by Christ and his followers, was held in high esteem in
+nearly all the Eastern religions."
+
+The foregoing historical facts furnish still further proof that
+Christianity is the offspring of heathenism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. HOW MEN, INCLUDING JESUS CHRIST, CAME TO BE WORSHIPED AS
+GODS
+
+
+JESUS CHRIST A DEMIGOD, ACCORDING TO CHRISTIAN WRITERS.
+
+IT is truly surprising to observe the damaging concessions of some of
+the early Christian writers, ruinous to the dogmas of their own faith
+with respect to the divinity of Jesus Christ, placing him, as they do,
+on an exact level with the heathen demigods, proving that the belief in
+his divinity originated in the same manner the belief in theirs did,
+by which it is clearly shown to be a pagan derived doctrine. Several
+Christian writers admit the belief in earth-born Gods (called Sons of
+Gods), and their coming into the world by human birth was prevalent
+among the heathen long prior to the time of Christ. Hear the proof.
+
+We will first quote St. Justin relative to the prevalence of the belief
+among the ancient Greeks and Romans. Addressing them, he says, "The
+title of Son of God (As applied to Jesus Christ) is very justifiable
+upon the account of his wisdom, considering you have your Mercury in
+your worship, under the title of Word or Messenger of God." (Reeves
+Apol. p. 76.) Here is the proof that the tradition of the Son of God
+coming into the world, and "the Word becoming flesh," was established
+amongst the ancient Greeks and Romans long prior to the era of
+Christianity, or the birth of Christ.
+
+And yet more than a hundred millions of Christian professors can now be
+found, who, in their historic ignorance, suppose St. John was the first
+writer who taught the doctrine of "the Word becoming flesh," and that
+Jesus Christ was "the first and only begotten Son of God" who ever made
+his appearance on earth. How true it is that "ignorance is the mother of
+devotion" to creeds.
+
+How "the man Christ Jesus" came to be worshiped as a God, is pretty
+clearly indicated by Bishop Horne, who shows that the doctrine of the
+incarnation was of universal prevalence long before Jesus Christ came
+into the flesh. He says, "That God should, in some extraordinary manner,
+visit and dwell with man, is an idea, which, as we read the writings of
+the ancient heathen, meets us in a thousand different forms." If,
+then, the tradition of God being born into the world was so universally
+established in heathen countries before the Christian era, as here
+shown, why should not, and why will not, our good Christian brethren
+dismiss their prejudices, and tear the scales from their eyes, so as
+to see that this universal belief would as naturally lead to the
+deification and worship of "the man Christ Jesus" as water flows down a
+descending plane?
+
+And, certainly a thousand times more reasonable is the assumption
+that his deification originated in this way, than that, with all his
+frailties and foibles, he was entitled to the appellation of a God--a
+conclusion strongly corroborated by the testimony of that able Christian
+writer, Mr. Norton, who tells us that "many of the first Christians
+being converts from Gentileism, their imaginations were familiar with
+the reputed incarnation of heathen deities." How natural it would be for
+such converts to worship "the man Christ Jesus" as a God on account of
+his superior manhood!
+
+Again, that ancient pillar of the Christian church, St. Justin, concedes
+that the ancient oriental heathen held all the cardinal doctrines of
+the Christian faith relating to the incarnation long prior to the
+introduction and establishment of Christianity. Hear him: Addressing the
+pagans, he says, "For by declaring the Logos the first begotten Son of
+God, our Master, Jesus Christ, to be born of a virgin without any human
+mixture, and to be crucified, and dead, and to have risen again into
+heaven, we say no more in this than what you say of those whom you style
+the sons of Jove." (Reeves, Apol. vol. i. p. 69.) Now, Christian reader,
+mark the several important admissions which are made here:--
+
+1. Here is traced to ancient heathen tradition the belief in an
+incarnate Son of God.
+
+2. The doctrine of a "first begotten Son of God."
+
+3. Of his being born of a virgin.
+
+4. Of his crucifixion.
+
+5. Of his resurrection.
+
+6. Of his final ascension into heaven.
+
+All these cardinal doctrines of Christianity are here shown to have been
+in existence, and to have been preached by pagan priests long anterior
+to the Christian era, thus entirely oversetting the common belief of
+Christendom that these doctrines were never known or preached in the
+world until heralded by the first disciples of the Christian religion.
+A fatal mistake, truly! This suicidal admission of St Justin (a standard
+Christian writer) thus entirely uptrips all pretensions to originality
+in the fundamental doctrines of the Christian faith, and shows it to be
+a mere travesty of the more ancient heathen systems.
+
+And we have still other testimony to corroborate this conclusion. The
+French writer Bazin says, "The most ancient histories are those of Gods
+becoming incarnate in order to govern mankind." Again he says, "The
+idea sprang up everywhere from confused ideas of God, which prevailed
+everywhere among mankind that Gods formerly descended upon earth. The
+fertile imagination of the people of various nations converted men into
+Gods."
+
+And to the same effect is the declaration of Mr. Higgins, that "there
+was incarnate Gods in all religions." Sadly beclouded and warped indeed
+must be that mind which cannot see that here is set in as plain view as
+the cloudless sun at noonday, the origin of the deification of "the man
+Christ Jesus." No unbiased mind can possibly stave off the conclusion
+that such a universal prevalence of the practice of God-making
+throughout the religious world would cause such a man as Jesus Christ
+to be worshiped as a God--especially when we look at the various motives
+which promoted men to Gods, which we will now present.
+
+
+MOTIVES TO INCARNATION, OR THE CAUSE OF MEN BEING WORSHIPED AS GODS.
+
+The causes which led to the conception of Gods and Sons of God becoming
+clothed in human flesh--the manner in which the absurd idea originated
+of an infinite being descending from heaven, assuming the form of a man,
+being born of a pure and spotless virgin, and finally being killed by
+his own children, the subjects of his own government, are palpably plain
+and easily understood' in the light of oriental history.
+
+And at the same time it is so shockingly absurd, that the rapid march
+of science and civilization will soon inaugurate the era when the man
+or woman who shall still be found clinging to these childish and
+superstitious conceptions--the offspring of ignorance, and the relics
+of barbarism, and a certain proof of undeveloped or unenlightened
+minds--will be looked upon as deplorably ignorant and superstitious. We
+will proceed to enumerate some of the causes which promoted men to the
+dignity of Gods.
+
+1. God must come down to suffer and sympathize with the people.
+
+The people of all ancient religious countries were so externally-minded,
+that they demanded a God whom they could know by virtue of his
+corporeity, really sympathized with their sorrows, their sufferings,
+their wrongs, and their oppressions, and, like Jesus Christ, "touched
+with a feeling of our infirmities" (Heb. iv. 15)--a God so far invested
+with human attributes, human frailties, and human sympathies, that
+he could shoulder their burdens and their infirmities, and take upon
+himself a portion of their sufferings. Hence it is said of Christ,
+"himself took our infirmities." (Matt. iii. 17.)
+
+The same conception runs through the pagan systems. One writer sets
+forth the matter thus: "The Creator occasionally assumed a mortal form
+to assist mankind in great emergencies" (as Jesus Christ was afterward
+reported as being the Creator. See Col. i. 16.) "And as repeated
+sojourners on earth in various capacities, they (the Saviors) became
+practically acquainted with all the sorrows and temptations of humanity,
+and could justly judge of its sins while they sympathized with its
+weaknesses and its sufferings. When they again returned to the higher
+regions (heaven), they remembered the lower forms they had dwelt
+amongst, and felt a lively interest in the world they had once
+inhabited. They could penetrate even the secret thoughts of mortals."
+
+The people then demanding a God of sympathy and suffering (as shown
+above), their credulous imaginations would not be long in finding one.
+Let a man rise up in society endowed with an extraordinary degree of
+spirituality and sympathy for human suffering; let him, like Chrishna,
+Pythagoras, Christ, and Mahomet, spend his time in visiting the hovels
+of the poor, or consoling their sorrows, laboring to mitigate their
+griefs, and in performing acts of charity, disinterested alms and deeds
+of benevolence, kindness and love, and so certain would he sooner or
+later command the homage of a God. For this was always the mode adopted,
+in an ignorant, undeveloped, and unenlightened age, for accounting
+not merely for moral greatness, but for every species of mental and
+physical superiority, as will be hereafter shown. We will proceed to
+notice the second cause of men being invested with divine attributes.
+
+2. The people must and would have an external God they could see, hear,
+and talk to.
+
+All the oriental nations, as well as Christian, taught that "God was
+a spirit," but no nation or class of people, not even the founders of
+Christianity, entertained a consistent view of the doctrine. Only a
+few learned philosophers saw the scientific impossibility of an
+infinite spirit being crowded into the human form. Hence they alone
+were contented to "worship God in spirit and in truth." Every religious
+nation went counter to the spirit of this injunction in worshiping for a
+God a being in the human form. Even the founders of Christianity, though
+making high claims to spirituality, were too gross, too sensuous in
+their conceptions, too externally-minded, and too idolatrous in their
+feelings and proclivities, to be content to "worship God in spirit."
+Hence their deification of the "man Christ Jesus" to answer the
+requisition of an external worship, by which they violated the command
+to "worship God as a spirit." That the practice of promoting men to the
+Godhead originated with minds on the external plane, and evinces a want
+of spiritual development, is clearly set forth by the author of "The
+Nineteenth Century" (a Christian writer) who tells us, "The idea of the
+primitive ages were wholly sensuous, and the masses did not believe in
+anything except that which they could touch, see, hear and taste." A
+true description, no doubt, of the ancient pagan worshipers of demigods.
+But we warn the Christian reader not to cast anchor here, for we have
+at our elbow abundance of Christian testimony from the pens of the very
+oracles of the church to prove that the same state of things, the
+same state of society, the same state of mind, the same proclivity for
+God-making, existed with the people among whom Christ was born, and
+that it was owing to this sensuous, idolatrous state of mind among his
+disciples that he received the homage and title of a God.
+
+Hence the famous Archbishop Tillotson says, "Another very common notion,
+and rife in the heathen world, and a great source of their idolatry, was
+their deification of great men fit to be worshiped as Gods."... "There
+was a great inclination in mankind to the worship of a visible Deity.
+So God was pleased to appear in our nature, that they who were fond of a
+visible Deity might have one, even a true and natural incarnation of God
+the Father, the express image of his person." Now, we enjoin the reader
+to mark this testimony well, and impress it indelibly upon his memory.
+According to this orthodox Christian bishop, Jesus Christ appeared on
+earth as a God in condescension to the wishes of a people too devoid of
+spirituality, and too strongly inclined to idolatry, to worship God as a
+spirit. For he admits the worship of a God-man or a man-God is a species
+of idolatry. This tells the whole story of the apotheosis of "the man
+Christ Jesus." We have no doubt but that here is suggested one of the
+true causes of his elevation to the Deityship. Again he says, "The world
+was mightily bent on addressing their requests and supplications, not to
+the Deity immediately, but by some Mediator between the Gods and men."
+(See Wadsworth's Eccles. Biog. p. 172.) Here, then, we have the most
+conclusive proof that the belief in mediators is of pagan origin. We
+will now hear from another archbishop on this subject. In his "Caution
+to the Times" (p, 71 ), Archbishop Whately says, "As the Infinite Being
+is an object too remote and incomprehensible for our minds to dwell
+upon, he has manifested himself in his Son, the man Jesus Christ"
+Precisely so 1 just the kind of reasoning employed to account for the
+worship of man-Gods among the heathen. This logic fits one case as well
+as the other.
+
+The Christian writer F. D. Maurice declares in like manner, "We accept
+the fact of the incarnation (of Jesus Christ), because we feel that it
+is impossible to know the absolute invisible God without an incarnation,
+as man needs to know him, and craves to know him." (Logical Essay, p.
+79.) Here is more pagan logic--the same reasoning they employed to prove
+the divinity of their Saviors and demigods. And the Rev. Dr. Thomas
+Arnold declares, "It (the incarnation of Christ) was very necessary,
+especially at a time when men were so accustomed to worship their
+highest Gods under the form of men" (Sermon on Christian Life, p. 61.)
+Let the reader attentively observe the explicit avowal here made, and
+mark well its pregnant inferences. He makes Jesus Christ come into the
+world in condescension to the idolatrous rivalry of the Jews to be up
+with the heathen nations in worshiping God in the form of man; that
+is, the founders of Christianity, having been Jews, disclosed the true
+Jewish character in running after and adopting the customs of heathen
+countries then so rife--that of hunting up a great man, and making him
+a God--which was only one case out of many of the Jews adopting some
+of the numerous forms of idolatry and other religious customs of their
+heathen neighbors. Their whole history, as set forth in the Bible,
+proves, as we have shown in another chapter, that they were strongly
+prone to such acts. It is not strange, therefore, that they should and
+did convert "the man Christ Jesus" into a God. We will now listen to
+another Christian writer, the notable and noteworthy Dr. T. Chambers.
+"Whatever the falsely or superstitiously fearful imagination conjures up
+because of God being at a distance, can only be dispelled by God being
+brought nigh to us.... The veil which hides the unseen God from the eyes
+of mortals must be somehow withdrawn." (Select Works, vol. iii. p. 161.)
+Most significant indeed is this species of reasoning. It is the same
+kind of logic which had led to the promotion of more than a score of
+great men to the Godhead among the ancient heathen. "The veil which
+hides the unseen God must be removed'" says Dr. Chambers; and so had
+reasoned in soliloquy a thousand pagans long before, when determined to
+worship men for Gods. It is simply saying, "We are too carnally-minded
+to worship God in spirit; we must and will have a God of flesh and
+blood--a God who can be recognized by the external senses;" he must
+"become flesh, and dwell amongst us." (See John i. 14.) Our author
+continues: "Now all this (removing the veil from the unseen God) has
+been done once, and done only once in the person of Jesus Christ."
+(Ibid.) Mistake, most fatal mistake, brother Chambers! It has been done
+more than a score of times in various heathen countries--a fact which
+proves you ignorant of oriental history.
+
+Now let the reader mark the foregoing citations from standard Christian
+authors, setting forth some of the reasons which led the founders of
+Christianity to adopt a visible man-God in their worship in the
+person of Jesus Christ, Language could hardly be used to prove more
+conclusively that the whole thing grew out of an idolatrous proclivity
+to man-worship,--that is, the gross, sensuous, carnally-minded
+propensity to worship an extetnal, visible God,--proving, with the
+corroborative evidence of many other facts, that they were not a whit
+above the heathen in spiritual development. The reason employed by the
+Thibetan for the worship of the Hindoo Chrishna as a God, tells the
+whole story of the worship and the deification of Jesus Christ "We could
+not always have God behind the clouds; so we had him come down where we
+could see him." This is the same kind of reasoning made use of by the
+Christian writer above quoted, all of which discloses a state of mind
+among both heathen and Christians that would not long rest satisfied
+without deifying somebody, in order to have a visible God to worship. And
+hence Christians deified "the man Christ Jesus" for this purpose.
+
+"The more externally minded (says Fleurbach), the greater was the
+determination to worship a personal God"--God in the form of man. And as
+the Jewish founders of Christianity (as every chapter of their history
+demonstrates) were dwelling on the external plane, it was not an act
+of direct innovation, therefore, for them to fall into the habit of
+worshiping the personal Jesus as a God. It involved no serious incursion
+on previous thoughts or habits. And warped and blinded, indeed, must be
+that mind which cannot here discover the true key to the apotheosis of
+Jesus--one of the real causes of his being stripped of his manhood, and
+advanced to the Godhead. It was as naturally to be expected from the
+then state of the religious world, and the state of the Jewish mind
+concerned in the founding of Christianity, as that an autumnal crop of
+fruit should succeed the bloom of spring.
+
+Let it be specially noted, that all the Christian writers above cited
+tell us, in effect, that God sent his Son Jesus Christ into the world
+to be worshiped as a God in condescension to the ignorance and
+superstitious tendencies, and we will add, idolatrous proclivities of
+the people. From this stand-point we challenge the world to show why
+God may not have sent the oriental Saviors into the world for the
+same reason--that is, in condescension to the prejudices of the devout
+worshipers under the heathen systems. Why, then, is there not as
+much probability that he did do so? Why would he not be as likely to
+accommodate their ignorance and prejudices in this way as those of the
+founders of the Christian system. This question we shall keep standing
+before the Christian world till it is answered, and we challenge them to
+meet it, and overthrow it if they can.
+
+3. Men deified on account of mental and moral superiority.
+
+The ancient nations, in their entire ignorance of the philosophy of the
+human mind, and the laws controlling its actions, always accounted for
+the appearance of great men amongst them by supposing them to be Gods.
+Every country occasionally produced a man, who, by virtue of natural
+superiority, rose so high in the scale of moral and intellectual
+greatness as to fill the ideal of the people with respect to the
+characteristics of a God. So low, so limited, so narrow, so greatly
+circumscribed were the conceptions of deity, of the undeveloped and
+intellectually dwarfed minds of all religious countries in that age,
+that a man had to rise but a few degrees above the common level of the
+populace to become a God. He could "easily fill the bill," and exhibit
+all the qualities they assigned to the highest God in the heavens.
+And this is as true of the Jewish mind as that of any other nation, a
+portion of whom adored Jesus as a God. Or if they lacked anything in
+natural inclination, they made it up by imitation, a propensity which
+they possessed in no small degree, that is, a proneness to imitate the
+customs of other nations.
+
+Mr. Higgins tells us that "men of brilliant intellects and high moral
+attainments, and great healers (of which Christ was one), were almost
+certain to be deified." In like manner Archbishop Tillotson says, "they
+deified famous and eminent persons by advancing them after their death
+to the dignity of an inferior kind of Gods fit to be worshiped by men
+on earth." Mark the expression, "after their death" We have shown in
+another chapter that Jesus Christ was not generally considered a God,
+even by his followers, till more than three hundred years after
+his death, when Constantine declared him to be "God of very God"--a
+circumstance of itself sufficient to establish the conclusion that
+he did not possess this character. A God would be adored as such by
+everybody while living, but a man's worshipers rise up after his death,
+as in the case of "the man Christ Jesus." Great mental endowments,
+or great moral attainments, would, in most countries, bring the most
+ignorant down on their knees to worship such a man as a God. But it
+re-quired years, and sometimes centuries, to get him fully established
+among the Gods. This is as true of Jesus Christ as the other
+human-descended deities. Whatever amount of homage Jesus might have
+received while living, any person who will institute a thorough,
+unbiased scrutiny in the case will discover that it was his great
+healing powers and superior mental qualities which finally deified him.
+His ignorant admirers knew no way of accounting for such extraordinary
+qualities but to suppose him to be the embodiment of infinite wisdom.
+Like the Chinaman who exclaimed, "See the God in that man," when an
+Englishman cured a young woman of partial blindness by anointing her eyes
+with kerosene. Such a deed would deify almost any man, in almost any
+country, before the dawn of letters and the recognition of the science
+of mind.
+
+The missionary Rev. D. O. Allen's method of accounting for the
+deification of the Hindoo God Chrishna is so suggestive, that we here
+present it. He tells us that "as the exploits ascribed to Chrishna
+exceed mere human power, the difficulty was removed by placing him among
+the incarnations of Vishnu." (India, Ancient and Modern, p. 26.) Exactly
+so! We are glad of such historic information. We hope the Christian
+reader will note the lesson it suggests. For certainly, every reader,
+who has not had his reason shipwrecked on the shoals of a blind and
+dogmatic theology, can see here a key to unlock the great mystery of
+the Christian incarnation--the divinity of Jesus Christ As some of the
+exploits of Chrishna were supposed to "exceed mere human power," we
+are told the difficulty was explained by imagining him to be a God. How
+powerful the suggestion! how conclusive the explanation, not only for
+the Godhood of this sin-atoning Savior, but for that of "our Lord and
+Savior Jesus Christ," and all the other Lords, and Gods, and Saviors of
+antiquity! A single hint will sometimes explain whole volumes of obscure
+history, as does this of the Rev. Christian Hindoo missionary D. O.
+Allen. And surely, most deplorably blinded by superstition must be the
+two hundred millions of Christ worshipers, the three hundred millions
+who worship Chrishna, the one hundred and twenty million adorers of
+Confucius, the fifty millions of suppliants of Mithra the Mediator, and
+the one hundred and fifty millions of followers of Mahomet, who cannot
+see here a satisfactory solution of the deityship of all these Gods, and
+all the other man-Gods of antiquity.
+
+The question is sometimes asked, How could two hundred millions of
+people come to believe that Jesus was a God merely because of his
+superiority as a man? We will answer by pointing to the history of the
+Hindoo Chrishna, and by asking the same question with respect to his
+Godhead. How could three hundred millions of people be brought to
+believe in his divinity, and worship him as a God, merely because he was
+a superior human being? One question is as easily answered as the other,
+and posterity will answer both questions alike. When we observe it
+taught as an important and easily learned lesson of history, and one
+based on a thousand facts, that no man could rise to intellectual
+greatness or moral distinction in the era in which Christ was born
+without being advanced to the dignity of a God, and worshiped as such,
+it is really a source of humility and sorrow to every unshackled lover
+of truth and humanity to reflect that there are so many millions of
+people whose mental vision is so beclouded by a dogmatic and inexorable
+theology that they cannot see the logical potency of these facts,--that
+they cannot be even moved by this great and overwhelming amount of
+evidence against the divinity dogma, and observe that it explodes it
+into a thousand fragments, but still cling to the delusion that "the
+man Christ Jesus," with all the human qualities and human frailties
+with which his own history (the Gospels) invest him, was nevertheless
+a God,--ay, the monstrous delusion that any being possessing a _finite
+form_ could be an _infinite being_--a most self-evident and shocking
+absurdity. And we challenge all Christendom to show, or approximate one
+inch toward showing, that there was sufficient difference between Christ
+and Chrishna to require us to accept one as a man and the other as a
+God. It cannot be done.
+
+We have shown, then, by the foregoing exposition, that one cause of the
+deification of men was simply an attempt to solve the problem of
+human greatness,--an attempt to account for the moral and intellectual
+superiority of men which enabled them to perform deeds and otherwise
+exhibit a character far above the capacity of the multitude to
+comprehend, and which they could find no other way to account for than
+to suppose them to be Gods, while the low and groveling conceptions
+which most religious nations, and especially the Jews, had formed of
+the character and essential attributes of the Infinite Deity (often
+investing him with the most ignoble human attributes, human passions,
+and human imperfections), made it perfectly easy to convert their great
+men by imagination into Gods. The Jews represented God not only as
+a coming down from heaven in propria persona, and walking, talking,
+wrestling, &c., as a man (on one occasion we are told he and Jacob
+scuffled all night), but he is often represented as acting the part of
+a wicked man, such as lying (see 2 Chron. v. 22), getting mad (see Deut.
+i. 37), swearing, sanctioning the highhanded and demoralizing crimes of
+stealing (see Ex. iii. 2), of robbery (see Ex. xii. 36), of murder (see
+Deut. xiii. 2) and even fornication (see Gen. xxxi. 1, and Num. xxxi)
+and thus they invested Diety with such mean, low, despicable attributes
+as to reduce his moral character to a level with the most immoral man in
+society. So that it was very easy, if not very natural, to elevate their
+great men (if it really required any elevation) to a level with their
+God.
+
+Men and Gods were in character and conception so nearly alike, that it
+was easy to bring them on a level, or to mistake one for the other. And
+hence it is we find an incarnated God, Savior, Son of God, Redeemer,
+&c., figuring in the early history of nearly every oriental religious
+nation whose name and history has descended to us. Indeed, the practice
+of deifying men, or mistaking men for Gods, was once so common, so
+nearly universal, that it must require a mind very ignorant of oriental
+history to adore Jesus Christ as having been the only character of this
+kind who figured in the religious world. It was, as before suggested,
+deemed the most rational way of accounting for the marked superiority
+among men, to suppose that some men had a divine birth, and were
+begotten by the great Infinite Deity himself, and descended to the earth
+through the purest human (virgin) channel.
+
+As Mr. Higgins remarks, "Every person who possessed a striking
+superiority of mind, either for talent or goodness, was supposed
+anciently to have a portion of the divine mind or essence incorporated
+or incarnated in him." The Jews had a number of men whose names imply a
+participation in the divine nature, among which we will cite Elijah and
+Elisha (El-i-jah and El-i-sha), El being the Hebrew name or term for
+God, while Jah is Jehovah (see Ps. lxviii. 4), and Sha means a Savior.
+Elijah, then, is an approximation to God--Jehovah, and Elisha is
+God--a Savior. The character of men and Gods were cast in molds so
+approximately similar, so nearly identical, as to make the transition,
+or change from one to the other, so slight and easy; either of men into
+Gods or Gods into men, that several nations went so far as to teach
+that a man might by his own natural exertions, his own voluntary powers,
+raise himself to a level with the Diety, and thereby become a God.
+
+Mr. Ritter in his "History of Ancient Philosophy" (Chap. II.), tells
+us that some of the Budhist sect held that "a man by freeing himself
+by holiness of conduct from the obstacles of nature, may deliver his
+fellows from the corruption of the times, and become a benefactor and
+redeemer of his race, and also even become a God"--a "Budha"--i. e., a
+Savior and Son of God. Singular enough that the Christian should
+object to this doctrine as being rather blasphemous, when his own bible
+abundantly and explicitly teaches the same doctrine in effect!
+
+We find the same thing substantially taught over and over again in the
+Christian Scriptures. "Be ye perfect even as your Father in heaven is
+perfect" (Matt. v. 18), requires a man to become morally perfect as God,
+which is all that the Budhist precept requires or contemplates, and no
+man can become perfect as God without becoming a God. But we are not
+left to mere inference in the matter, We have the doctrine several times
+expressed and unquestionably taught in the Christian bible of man's
+power and prerogative to become either a God or Son of God. "Said I not
+that ye are Gods?" (Ex. iv. 16). "Behold now, we are the sons of God."
+(i John i. 2.)
+
+Here is the Budhist doctrine as explicitly stated as it can be taught.
+It is, then, a Christian bible doctrine as well as a pagan doctrine,
+that man can become a God, and that God can be born of woman, and
+thereby invested with all the frail and imperfect attributes of man. It
+cannot be considered a matter of marvel, therefore, that so many of the
+good, the great, and the wise men of almost every country, including
+"the man Christ Jesus," should be honored and adored with the titles
+of Deity, and worshiped as God absolute, "Son of God," "Savior,"
+"Redeemer," "Intercessor" "Mediator," &c.
+
+4. God comes down and is incarnated to fight and conquer the devil. We
+will proceed to enumerate other causes and motives which conspired in
+various cases to invest some one or more of the great men of a nation
+with divine honors, and adore them as veritable Gods and Saviors "come
+down to us in the form of men." It was a tenant of faith with most of
+the ancient religions, that almost at the dawn of human existence a
+devil or evil principle found its way into the world, to the great
+discomfiture of man and the no small annoyance of the Supreme Creator
+himself, and that hence there must needs be a Savior, a Redeemer, an
+Intercessor to combat and if possible "destroy the devil and his works."
+
+For this purpose appeared the Savior Chrishna, in India, the Savior
+Osiris, in Egypt, the God or Mediator Mithra, in Persia, the Redeemer
+Quexalcote, in Mexico, the Savior Jesus Christ, in Judea, &c. In the
+initiatory chapter on the transgression and fall of man, some of the
+oriental bibles graphically describe the scene of "the war in heaven"--a
+counterpart to the story of St. John, as found in the twelfth chapter
+of Revelation, wherein Michael and the dragon are represented as the
+captains and commander-in-chief of their respective embattled hosts,
+and in which the former was crowned as victor in the contest, as he
+succeeded in vanquishing and "casting out the evil one." In the pagan
+military drama the scene of the war in heaven is transferred to the
+earth. A God, a Savior (a Son of God), comes down to put a stop to the
+machinations of the "Evil One," i. e., to "destroy the devil and his
+works" as we are told Christ came for that purpose. (1 John iii. 8 ) See
+the Author's "Biography of Satan."
+
+The Egyptian story runs thus: "Osiris appeared on earth to benefit
+mankind, and after he had performed the duties of his mission, and had
+fallen a sacrifice to Typhon (the devil, or evil principle), which,
+however, he eventually overcame ('overcame the wicked one,' 1 John ii.
+11), by rising from the dead, after being crucified, he became the
+judge of mankind in a future state." (See Kerrick's "Ancient Egypt",
+also Wilkinson's "Egypt.")
+
+The Budhist, or Hindoo, version of the story is on this wise: "The
+prince (of darkness), or evil spirit, Ravana, or Mahesa, got into a
+contest and a war with the divine hero Rama, in which the latter proved
+victorious, and put to flight the army of 'the wicked one,' but not till
+after considerable injury had been done to the human family, and the
+whole order of the universe subverted; to rectify which, and to achieve
+a final and complete triumph over Ravana (the devil) and his works,
+and thus save the human race from utter destruction, the gods besought
+Vishnu (the second person of the Trinity) to descend to the earth and
+take upon himself the form and flesh of man. And it was argued that as
+the mission appertained to man, the God Vishnu, when he descended to the
+earth in the capacity of a Savior, should become half man and half God,
+and that the most feasible way to accomplish this end was for him to be
+born of a woman."
+
+And that the glory and honor of his triumph over Ravana, the devil,
+would be greater if achieved in this capacity than if he were to come
+down from heaven and conquer Ravana wholly with his attributes as a God,
+or wholly in his divine character--i.e., as absolute God, uninvested
+with human nature. The suggestion was approved by Vishnu, who descended
+and took upon himself "the form of man" ("the form of a servant"--Phil.
+ii. 7). And that his metamorphosis or earth-born life might be
+the purer, it was decided that he should be born of a woman wholly
+uncontaminated with man--that is, a virgin. And thus, far back in the
+midnight of mythology and fable, originated the story of divine Saviors
+and Gods being born of virgins--a conception now found incorporated in
+the religious histories of various ancient nations.
+
+And now let us observe how substantially the Christian story of a Savior
+conforms to the above. Jesus, like the Saviors of India and Egypt, was
+believed to be a man-God--half man and half God, and reputedly he came
+into the world, like them, to "destroy the devil and his works," or
+the works of the devil--that is, to put an end to the evil or malignant
+principle introduced into the world by the serpent in the garden
+of Eden; as it is declared "the seed of the woman shall bruise the
+serpent's head" (Gen. iii. 15)--which is interpreted as referring to
+Christ. And like these and various other pagan Saviors Jesus is assigned
+the highest and most ennobling human origin--a birth from a virgin. And,
+as in the instances above named, Jesus had also several encounters with
+the devil; first in the wilderness, then on a mountain, and finally,
+like them, falls a sacrifice to his insidious, malignant power acting
+through the agency and mediumship of Judas Iscariot; for his betrayal
+is ascribed wholly to Satan, whom John called the serpent, entering into
+Judas and prompting the act. (See Rev. xii. 3). And thus Christ, like
+the other saviors, falls a victim to the serpentine or satanic power
+acting through the instrumentality of a Judas Iscariot; but finally,
+triumphed, like the Savior of Egypt (Osiris), by rising from the
+dead--"the first fruits of immortality." And thus the stories run
+parallel--the more modern Christian with the more ancient pagan.
+
+ (For a full exposition of the belief and traditions
+ respecting a devil and a hell in all ages and all countries,
+ see the Author's "Biography of Satan.")
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX. SACRED CYCLES EXPLAINING THE ADVENT OF THE GODS
+
+The Master-Key to the Divinity of Jesus Christ.
+
+Extraordinary Revelations in History and Science.
+
+RECENT explorations in the field of oriental sacred history have
+revealed to the antiquarian some curious and deeply interesting facts
+appertaining to traditions founded on, and growing out of, astronomical
+phenomena and changes in the visible heavens, which throw much light on,
+and go far toward elucidating and furnishing a satisfactory explanation
+of many of the "mysteries" of the Christian bible. The works which we
+have consulted, containing the reports and results of researches of this
+character, tend to elucidate and establish the following conclusions:--
+
+1. That anciently, in religious countries, time was divided into Cycles,
+Aetas, or Neros.
+
+2. That these measures of time grew out of, and represented periodical
+changes, or periodically occurring phenomena in the astronomical
+heavens.
+
+3. That some religious nations had three Cycular periods of different
+lengths, representing three orders and degrees of miraculous births.
+In India the length of the first or shorter Cycle was thirty days,
+the length of one moon or month. Every change of the moon marked an
+important event in their religious history. Each change was supposed to
+denote the birth of some angel or celestial being known as an Eon.
+The second Cycular period was of six hundred years' duration, and
+was founded on a text of the sacred book of India, known as the Surya
+Sidhanta, which declares "the equinoctial point moves eastward one
+degree in thirty times twenty years" (thirty times twenty being 600). At
+every occurrence of this equinoctial change hightened by an eclipse of
+the sun or moon, or some other wonder-exciting phenomenon, a God was
+supposed to be born. Such a marvelous and terror-inspiring event, in
+the apprehensions of the credulous and superstitious populace of an
+unscientific age, could not be designed for anything less than the birth
+of a God or Divine Savior. Their theology teaches that such was the
+wickedness of man, that a God had to descend from heaven, and suffer and
+die for the people, in some way, every six hundred years.
+
+And this period was announced by the God's causing a collision of the
+sun and moon, or some other terror-exciting phenomena in the heavens
+above or the earth beneath. When one of these six hundred Cycular
+periods was about to expire, and another commence, every remarkable
+phenomenon in the heavens was watched and interpreted as being connected
+with it. And some person born at that period, who exhibited any
+remarkable or extraordinary trait of character, was certain to be
+promoted to the Godhead, as being miraculously born and brought forth
+for the special occasion. He was the Avatar Savior or Messiah for that
+Cycle. There were two extraordinary events to be accounted for--one was
+the display of unusual and terror-exciting phenomena in the heavens, and
+the other the birth of extraordinary men on earth. And it was natural
+for an ignorant age to associate them together, and make one aid in
+accounting for the other. And as these celestial phenomena were only
+witnessed at intervals distant apart, the thought naturally arose, and
+the conclusion was easily established, that they came periodically, and
+for the special purpose of heralding the birth of a God.
+
+And as tradition reported that similar events were witnessed six hundred
+years before the conviction was fixed in the popular mind, this was the
+established period intervening between these great epochs. And thus
+the six hundred year Cycular tradition became established in India, and
+finally spread through all the Eastern countries. We find traces of it
+in Egypt, Syria, Persia, Chaldea, China, Italy, and Judea. And the proof
+that the deification of great men in some countries grew out of this
+Cycular tradition is found in the fact that many of them were born at
+the commencement of Cycles. The Hindoos are able to recount the names
+of ten sin-atoning Saviors who made their appearance on earth at these
+regular intervals of six hundred years. The name of the first Avatar
+Mediator and Savior who forsook the throne of heaven to come down and
+die for the people was Matsa. Tradition and the sacred books fix his
+birth at about six thousand years B. C. The names and advent of the
+other sin-atoning Saviors occur in the following order: 2. Vurahay, 3.
+Kurma, 4. Nursu, 5. Waman, 6. Pursuram, 7. Kama, 8. Chrishna, 9. Sakia,
+10. Salavahana. The last named Savior was cotemporary with Jesus Christ.
+The God and Savior Sakia was born six hundred years B. C. "Our Lord
+and Savior" and "Son of God," Chrisna, was immaculately conceived and
+miraculously born, according to Higgins, 1200 B. C.
+
+A circumstance strongly confirming the conclusion that Cycular periods
+had much to do with the promotion of men to the dignity of Gods is, that
+most of the deified personages reported in history were, according to
+the best authorities, born near the commencement of Cycles. Recurring
+back to the eighth Cycle, we observe the advent of that period of
+Chrishna, Zoroaster 2d, Bali, Thammuz, Atys, Osiris, and several others.
+At the commencement of the ninth Cycle appeared Sakia, Quexalcote,
+Zoroaster 2d, Xion, Qairious, Prometheus, Mithra and many others.
+
+The tenth Cycle brought in Jesus Christ, Salavhana, Apollonious, and
+others that might be named. Mahomet succeeded Jesus Christ just six
+hundred years (he was born in the year 600 A. D.), which inaugurated
+another Cycle. Many facts are recorded in history proving the prevalence
+and sacredness of the Cycle idea in different countries. The story
+in Egypt of the bird called the Phoenix, being hatched, according to
+tradition, just 600 years B. C., and living to be just six hundred years
+old, and having the power to renew itself every six hundred years, shows
+the prevalence of the Cycular tradition in that country.
+
+We have the statement upon the records of history that when the first
+six hundred years after the foundation of Rome were about to expire,
+the people became greatly excited with the apprehension that some
+extraordinary event, must attend the occasion. And but for the influence
+of the philosophers, some extraordinary man would have been hunted up
+and promoted to divine honor as being the God born for that Cycle. The
+writings of Plato, Plutarch, Ovid, Cicero, Virgil, and Aristotle, all
+evince a belief in Cycles, and the belief that ten Cycles, or Aetas,
+were the measure, for the duration of the world. According to M. Faber,
+a new-born Savior was always expected to make his appearance at the
+commencement of one of these Cycles. Hence the deification of those
+personages above named, and many others that might be named. It is a
+remarkable circumstance that the Jewish bible should speak of Noah as
+being six hundred years old at the commencement of the flood, when it
+was a tradition amongst the ancient Egyptians that the ushering in of
+the six hundreth year Cycle was to be attended with a flood.
+
+And the time antecedent to Noah after creation, was the measure of three
+Cycles, according to the chronology of the Samaritan bible, it being
+6004-600+600= 1800 years from Adam to Noah. It is an interesting fact
+that those enigmatical figures made use of by Daniel, as also some of
+those found in the Apocalypse, are susceptible of a Cycular explanation.
+These occult prophecies, as they are supposed to be, which have puzzled
+and bewildered many thousands of Christian minds and bible expounders
+in their attempt to evolve their signification, are susceptible of a
+Cycular explanation. They are of easy solution on a Cycular basis, or
+with the Cycular key.
+
+Take, for example, Daniel's famous prophecy (so called) of the seventy
+weeks, as found in the ninth chapter, announcing the advent of a Messiah
+at the end of that period. We find by a calculation based on Tyson's
+"Historical Atlas," and Haskell's "Chronology and Universal History,"
+that Daniel lived in the hundred and tenth year of the ninth Cycle, at
+which time the prefigure seems to have been used. Assuming this as a
+basis, and multiplying seventy weeks by seven, to convert it into years,
+as Christian essayists are accustomed to doing, and we have as the
+result 70x7=490, which being added to one hundred and ten, the year that
+gave birth to the prophesy, makes six hundred, which exactly completes
+the Cycle, and furnishes a simple and beautiful explanation of a
+mystical figure, on which many thousands of conjectures, speculations,
+and guesses have been founded, but on which they have failed to throw
+any light.
+
+The 70x70=490 years, were wanting to complete the Cycle; and when this
+rolled away, it brought a new Cycle, and with it a new sin-atoning
+Savior was always expected in some countries (the country in which
+Daniel lived being one of this number); a new Messiah (or sin-atoning
+Savior), and some great man born at that time, was fixed upon and
+deified as being that Messiah. Hence the Jews, in imitation of their
+neighbors, yielding to their strong proclivities to borrow from and copy
+after heathen nations, selected "the man Christ Jesus" as their Messiah
+and Savior. The mystical era of Daniel, signified by "a time, times, and
+the dividing of time" (Dan. vii. 25), or, as St. John has it, "a time,
+times, and a half time" (see Rev. xii. 14) is explainable by the same
+Cycular key.
+
+Some writers have conjectured that Daniel was a Chaldean priest. If so,
+he must have had a knowledge of their astronomical Cycle of two
+thousand one hundred and sixty years, which completed the period of the
+precession of the equinoxes. Explained by this Cycle, his "time, times,
+and dividing of time, or half time," or "a time, another time, and
+a half time," as some writers have rendered it, would be 2160 f
+2160-I-1080 5400; nine Cycles exactly, as 600X9= 5400. Add this to the
+Cycle in which he lived, and we have 5400+600=6000, the great Millennial
+Cycle, when not only a new Savior and Messiah was to be born, but a new
+world also. Both the long and short Cycle (and one was a measure of the
+other) were expected to expire at that time, according to a Chaldean
+tradition. And thus is beautifully explained another "deep, dark and
+unfathomable mystery," which thousands of devout minds have exhausted
+their ingenuity in trying to find a meaning for. Again, look at the
+frightful nightmare visions of Daniel and the author of the Apocalypse,
+in which they saw a monstrous beast with seven heads and ten horns,
+though Daniel mentions only the horns. The seven heads were, in all
+probability, the seven auspicious months of the year in which some of
+the nations revealed in the enjoyment of, and praised and celebrated
+their fruitful, bountiful blessings, the year being divided into two
+seasons, seven summer months and five winter months.
+
+Now, let it be noted, St. John lived near the tenth Cycle, which answers
+to the ten horns of the beast. Hence is most forcibly suggested that
+interpretation of the figure. Daniel's ten horns should have been
+translated eleven horns, as he lived in the ninth Cycle, though so near
+the tenth, that he probably constructed his figure on the tenth. And
+Daniel's prophetic declaration (so considered), found in the eighth
+chapter, that it would be two thousand three hundred days until the
+sanctuary should be closed, is explainable in the same manner. According
+to Mr. Irving, Mr. Frere, and other writers, there was a large fraction
+over the three hundred days, making it nearer four hundred, and hence
+might have been so rendered, which would make 20004-400=2400; the exact
+length of four Cycles, 600x4=2400. And their are other mystical
+figures, frightful visions, and occult metaphors found in the Apocalypse
+susceptible of a Cycular solution. The Cycle is the true key for
+unlocking many of the ancient mysteries of various religions. The
+Chinese have always reckoned by Cycles of sixty years, instead of by
+centuries. (See New Am. Encyclop. vol. v. p. 105.)
+
+We will now bestow a brief notice on the Millennial Cycle: the
+sacred period of 6000 years, composed of ten of the smaller Cycles,
+600x10=6000. Dr. Hales says, "A tradition of Millennial ages prevailed
+throughout the east, and finally reached the west." (Chron. vol. i. p.
+44.) We are told by astronomers that if the angle which the plane of the
+ecliptic forms with the plane of the Equator had decreased gradually, as
+it was once supposed to do, the two planes would coincide in about six
+thousand years--a period which comprises ten of the smaller Cycles,
+600X10 =6000. And it was very easy and very natural for an ignorant and
+superstitious age to conclude that such a prodigious, astounding, and
+awful event as that of two stupendous orbits or planes coming in contact
+with each other, should be attended with some direful and calamitous
+event, and with a tremendous display of divine power. Nothing less than
+an entire revolution, if not the total destruction of the world, could
+comport with the majesty and magnitude of such an event.
+
+And this great crisis was to bring down the Omnipotent Divine Judge from
+the throne of heaven; that is, the Almighty being who caused it was to
+come down, or send his Son to call the nations to judgment, and drown
+the world, or set it on fire. The first destruction according to the
+tradition of the Chaldeans, Persians, Assyrians, Mexicans, and some
+other nations, was to be by water, and the next by fire, when the
+oceans, seas, and lakes were to be converted into ashes. And Christ's
+apostles seemed to have cherished this tradition. Peter says, "whereby
+the world that was then, being overflowed by water, perished. But the
+heavens and the earth which are now, by the same word are kept in store,
+reserved unto fire against the day of judgment," (2 Peter iii. 6.) This
+was a pagan belief long prior to the era of Peter. Josephus says, "Adam
+predicted that the world would be twice destroyed, once by water,
+next by fire." A writer says, "A glorious, blissful future attends the
+destruction of the world by fire, and the reappearance of Vishnu (i. e.,
+eleventh incarnation of Vishnu) has been for several thousand years the
+hopeful anticipation of India." "The last coming of Vishnu in power and
+glory," says another writer, "to consummate the final overthrow of evil,
+sin, and death, is so firmly fixed in the minds of the devotees,
+that they have an annual festival in commemoration of their prophesy
+referring to it, at which they exclaim, in a loud voice, 'When will the
+Divine Helper come? when will the Deliverer appear?'"
+
+At the consummation of this event, "a comet will roll under the moon and
+set the world on fire;" so affirms their bible. And the Persian bible,
+the Zend-Avesta, in like manner predicts that "a star, with a tail in
+course of its revolution, will strike the earth and set it on fire."
+Seneca predicts that "the time will come when the world will be wrapped
+in flames, and the opposite powers in conflict will mutually destroy
+each other."
+
+Ovid prophesies poetically,--
+
+ "For thus the stern, unyielding Fates decree.
+ That earth, air, heaven, with the capacious sea,
+ All shall fall victims to devouring fire,
+ And in fierce flames the blazing orbs expire."
+ Lucian, in a like spirit, exclaims,--
+
+ "One vast, appointed flame, by Fate's decree,
+ Shall waste yon azure heavens, the earth and sea."
+
+The Egyptians marked their houses with red, to indicate that the world
+would be destroyed by fire. Orpheus, 1200 B. C., at the inauguration
+of the eighth Cycle, entertained fearful forebodings of the speedy
+destruction of the world by water or fire. Some nations held that
+the alternate destruction of the world by water and fire had already
+occurred, and would occur again. Theopompus informs us that some of the
+orientalists believed that "the God of light and the God of darkness
+reigned by turn every six thousand years" (commencing with an
+astronomical Cycle of course), and that during this period the other
+was held in subjection, which finally resulted in "a war in heaven;" a
+counterpart to St. John's story. (See Rev. chap. xii.)
+
+This accords with Volney's statement, that "it was recorded in the
+sacred books of the Persians and Chaldeans that the world, composed of
+a total revolution of twelve thousand periods, was divided into two
+partial revolutions of six thousand years each--one being the reign of
+good, and the other the reign of evil." (Ruins, p. 244.) This belief was
+disseminated through most of the nations. One of these revolutions was
+produced, some believed, by a concussion of worlds, which displaced the
+ocean and seas, and thus produced a general flood, which drowned every
+living thing on the earth. The next revolution will be caused by a
+collision of worlds, which will produce fire, and burn the earth to
+ashes.
+
+Now, let it be noted that all of these grand epochs were founded on
+Cycles, and accompanied by the tradition of a God being born upon the
+earth (conceived by a virgin maid), or descending in person; that is,
+men were promoted to the Godhead. And in this way Jesus Christ was
+deified. Volney explains the matter thus: "Now, according to the Jewish
+computation, six thousand years had nearly elapsed since the supposed
+creation of the world (according to their chronology). This coincidence
+produced considerable fermentation in the minds of the people. Nothing
+was thought of but the approaching termination. The great Mediator and
+Final Judge was expected, and his advent desired, that an end might be
+put to their calamities." (Ruins, p. 168).
+
+Mr. Higgins corroborates this statement, when he tells us that "about
+the time of the Caesars, there seems to have been a general expectation
+that some Great One was to appear. And finally, when the Cycle had
+passed, the people, the Jew-Christians, began to look about to see who
+that Great One was. Some fixed on Herod, some on Julius Caesar, and some
+on others. But finally public opinion settled on one Jesus of Nazareth,
+on account of his superiority in morals and intellect, while the Hindoos
+deified Salavahana, the Greeks Apollonious, &c." And thus science and
+history join hand in hand to explain most beautifully and conclusively
+the greatest mystery that ever brought two hundred millions of people
+daily upon their knees--the apotheosis, or deification of "the man
+Christ Jesus."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI. CHRISTIANITY DERIVED FROM HEATHEN AND ORIENTAL SYSTEMS
+
+MORE than twenty thousand sermons are preached in the Christian pulpits,
+on every recurring Sabbath, to convince the people that the religion and
+morality taught and practiced by Jesus Christ was of divine emanation,
+and was never before taught in the world,--that his system of
+morality was without a parallel, and his practical life without a
+precedent,--that the doctrine of self-denial, humility, unselfishness,
+benevolence, and charity,--also devout piety, kind treatment of enemies,
+and love for the human race, which he preached and practiced, had never
+before been exemplified in the life and teachings of any individual or
+nation. But a thorough acquaintance with the history and moral systems
+of some of the oriental nations, and the practical lives of piety and
+self-denial exemplified in their leading men long anterior to the birth
+of Christ, and long before the name of Christianity was anywhere
+known, must convince any unprejudiced mind that such a claim is
+without foundation. And to prove it, we will here institute a critical
+comparison between Christianity and some of the older systems with
+respect to the essential spirit of their teachings, and observe how
+utterly untenable and groundless is the dogmatic assumption which claims
+for the Christian religion either any originality or any superiority. Of
+course if their is nothing new or original, there is nothing superior.
+
+We will first arrange Christianity side by side with the ancient system
+known as Essenism--a religion whose origin has never been discovered,
+though it is known that the Essenes existed in the days of Jonathan
+Maccabeus, B. C. 150, and that they were of Jewish origin, and
+constituted one of the three Jewish sects (the other two being Pharisees
+and Sadducees). We have but fragments of their history as furnished by
+Philo, Josephus, Pliny, and their copyists, Eusebius, Dr. Ginsburg, and
+others, on whose authority we will proceed to show that Alexandrian and
+Judean Essenism was identically the same system in spirit and essence as
+its successor Judean Christianity; in other words, Judean Christianity
+teaches the same doctrines and moral precepts which had been previously
+inculcated by the disciples of the Essenian religion.
+
+
+A PARALLEL EXHIBITION OF THE PRECEPTS AND PRACTICAL LIVES OF CHRIST AND
+THE ESSENES.
+
+We will condense from Philo, Josephus, and other authors.
+
+1. Philo says, "It is our first duty to seek the kingdom of God and his
+righteousness so the Essenes believed and taught."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Seek first the kingdom of God, and his
+righteousness, and all else shall be added." (Matt. vi. 33; Luke xii. 31.)
+
+2. Philo says, "They abjured all amusements, all elegances, and all
+pleasures of the senses."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Forsake the world and the things thereof."
+
+3. The Essenes say, "Lay up nothing on earth, but fix your mind solely
+on heaven."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Lay not up treasures on earth," &c.
+
+4. "The Essenes, having laid aside all the anxieties of life," says
+Philo, "and leaving society, they make their residence in solitary wilds
+and in gardens."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "They wandered in deserts, and in mountains, and
+in dens, and in caves of the earth." (Heb. xi. 38.)
+
+5. Josephus says, "They neither buy nor sell among themselves, but give
+of what they have to him that wanteth."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "And parted them (their goods) to all men as every
+man had need." (Acts ii. 45.)
+
+6. Eusebius says, "Even as it is related in the Acts of the Apostles,
+all (the Esseues)... were wont to sell their possessions and their
+substance, and divide among all according as any one had need, so that
+there was not one among them in want."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Neither was their any among them that lacked, for
+as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold them, and brought the
+price of the things that were sold, &c." (Acts iv. 34.)
+
+7. Eusebius says, "For whoever, of Christ's disciples, were owners of
+estates or houses, sold them, and brought the price thereof, and laid
+them at the apostles' feet, and distribution was made as every one had
+need. So Philo relates things exactly similar of the Essenes."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ (The text above quoted.)
+
+8. "Philo tells us (says Eusebius) that the Essenes forsook father,
+mother, brothers and sisters, houses and lands, for their religion."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Whosoever forsaketh not father and mother, houses
+and lands, &c. cannot be my disciples."
+
+9. "Their being sometimes called _monks_ was owing to their abstraction
+from the world," says Eusebius.
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "They are not of the world, even as I am not of
+the world." (John xvii. 16.)
+
+10. "And the name Ascetics was applied to them on account of their rigid
+discipline, their prayers, fasting, self-mortification, &c., as they
+made themselves eunuchs."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "There be eunuchs which have made themselves
+eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake."
+
+11. "They maintained a perfect community of goods, and an equality of
+external rank." (Mich. vol. iv. p. 83.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Whosoever will be chief among you, let him be
+your servant." (Matt. xx. 27.)
+
+12. "The Essenes had all things in common, and appointed one of their
+number to manage the common bag." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "And had all things in common." (Acts ii. 44; see
+also Acts iv. 32.)
+
+13. "All ornamental dress they (Essenes) detested." (Mich. vol. iv. p.
+83.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Whose adorning let it not be that outward
+adorning of plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold, and putting on of
+apparel." (1 Peter iii. 3.)
+
+14. "They would call no man master." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Be not called Rabbi, for one is your Master."
+(Matt, xxiii. 8.)
+
+15. "They said the Creator made all mankind equal." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "God hath made of one blood all them that dwell
+upon the earth."
+
+16. "They renounced oaths, saying, He who cannot be believed without
+swearing is condemned already." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Swear not at all."
+
+17. "They would not eat anything which had blood in it, or meat which
+had been offered to idols. Their food was hyssop, and bread, and salt;
+and water their only drink." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "That ye abstain from meat offered to idols, and
+from blood." (Acts xv. 29.)
+
+18. "Take nothing with them, neither meat or drink, nor anything
+necessary for the wants of the body."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Take nothing for your journey; neither staves nor
+script; neither bread, neither money, neither have two coats apiece."
+
+19. "They expounded the literal sense of the Holy Scriptures by
+allegory."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Which things are an allegory." (Gal. iv. 24.)
+
+20. "They abjured the pleasures of the body, not desiring mortal
+offspring, and they renounced marriage, believing it to be detrimental
+to a holy life." (Mich.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ It will be recollected that neither Jesus nor Paul
+ever married, and that they discouraged the marriage relation.
+Christ says, "They that shall be counted worthy of that world and the
+resurrection neither marry nor are given in marriage." And Paul says,
+"The unmarried careth for the things of the Lord." (i Cor. vii. 32.)
+
+21. "They strove to disengage their minds entirely from the world."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "If any man love the world, the love of the Father
+is not in him."
+
+22. "Devoting themselves to the Lord, they provide not for future
+subsistence."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Take no thought for the morrow, what ye shall eat
+and drink," &c.
+
+23. "Regarding the body as a prison, they were ashamed to give it
+sustenance." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Who shall change our _vile_ bodies?" (Phil. iii.
+21.)
+
+24. "They spent nearly all their time in silent meditation and inward
+prayer." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Men ought always to pray." (Luke xviii. 1.) "Pray
+without ceasing." (1 Thess. v. 17.)
+
+25. "Believing the poor were the Lord's favorites, they vowed perpetual
+chastity and poverty." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Blessed be ye poor." (Luke vi. 20.) "Hath not God
+chosen the poor?" (James ii. 5.)
+
+26. "They devoted themselves entirely to contemplation in divine
+things." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Mediate upon these (divine) things; give thyself
+wholly to them." (1 Tim. iv. 15.)
+
+27. "They fasted often, sometimes tasting food but once in three or even
+six days."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ Christ's disciples were "in fastings often." (2
+Cor. xi. 27; see also v. 34.)
+
+28. "They offered no sacrifices, believing that a serious and devout
+soul was most acceptable." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "There is no more offering for sin." (Heb. x. 18.)
+
+29. "They believed in and practiced baptizing the dead." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Else what shall they do which are baptized for
+the dead." (1 Cor. xv. 29.)
+
+30. "They gave a mystical sense to the Scriptures, disregarding the
+letter."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "The letter killeth, but the spirit maketh alive."
+(1 Cor. iii. 6.)
+
+31. "They taught by metaphors, symbols, and parables."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Without a parable spake he not unto them." (Matt.
+xiii. 34.)
+
+32. "They had many mysteries in their religion which they were sworn to
+keep secret."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "To you it is given to know the mysteries of
+the kingdom; to them it is not given." (Matt xiii. 11.) "Great is the
+mystery of godliness."
+
+33. "They had in their churches, bishops, elders, deacons, and priests."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Ordained elders in every church." (Acts xiv. 23.)
+For "deacons," see 1 Tim. iii. 1.
+
+34. "When assembled together they would often sing psalms."
+
+_Scripture parallel._ "Teaching and admonishing one another in psalms."
+(Col. iii. 16.)
+
+35. "They healed and cured the minds and bodies of those who joined
+them."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Healing all manner of sickness," &c. (Matt iv.
+23.)
+
+36. "They practiced certain ceremonial purifications by water."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "The accomplishment of the days of purification."
+(Acts xxi. 26.)
+
+37. "They assembled at the Sabbath festivals clothed in white garments."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Shall be clothed in white garments." (Rev. iii.
+4.)
+
+38. "They disbelieved in the resurrection of the external body."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "It is sown a natural body, it is raised a
+spiritual body." (1 Cor. xv. 44.)
+
+39. Pliny says, "They were the only sort of men who lived without money
+and without women."
+
+_Scripture parallel_\ "The love of money is the root of all evil." (1
+Tim. vi. 10.) Christ's disciples travelled without money and without
+scrip, and "eschew the lusts of the flesh."
+
+40. "They practiced the extremest charity to the poor." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Bestow all thy goods to feed the poor." (1 Cor.
+xiii. 3.)
+
+41. "They were skillful in interpreting dreams, and in foretelling
+future events."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Your sons and daughters shall prophesy, and your
+old men shall dream dreams." (Acts ii. 17.)
+
+42. "They believed in a paradise,... and in a place of never-ending
+lamentations."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Life everlasting." (Gal. viii. 8.) "Weeping,
+wailing, and gnashing of teeth." (Matt. xiii. 42.)
+
+43. "They affirmed," says Josephus, "that God foreordained all the
+events of human life."
+
+_Scripture parallel_' "Foreordained before the foundation of the world."
+(1 Peter.)
+
+44. "They believed in Mediators between God and the souls of men."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "One Mediator between God and men." (1 Tim. ii.
+5.)
+
+45. "They practiced the pantomimic representation of the death, burial,
+and resurrection of God"--Christ the Spirit.
+
+_Scripture parallel_. With respect to the death, burial, and
+resurrection of Christ, see 1 Cor. xv. 4.
+
+46. "They inculcated the forgiveness of injuries."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do." (Luke xxiii. 34.)
+
+47. "They totally disapproved of all war."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "If my kingdom were of this world, then would my
+servants fight." (John xviii. 36.)
+
+48. "They inculcated obedience to magistrates, and to the civil
+authorities."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Obey them which have the rule over you." (Heb.
+xiii. 17; xxvi. 65.)
+
+49. "They retired within themselves to receive interior revelations of
+divine truth." (c. ii. 71.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Every one of you hath a revelation." (1 Cor. xiv.
+26.)
+
+50. "They were scrupulous in speaking the truth."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ "Speaking all things in truth." (2 Cor. vii. 14.)
+
+51. "They perform many wonderful miracles."
+
+_Scripture parallel_ Many texts teach us that Christ and his apostles
+did the same.
+
+52. "Essenism put all its members upon the same level, forbidding the
+exercise of authority of one over another." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. Christ did the same. For proof, see Matt. xx. 25;
+Mark ix. 35.
+
+53. "Essenism laid the greatest stress on being meek and lowly in
+spirit." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. See Matt. v. 5; ix. 28.
+
+54. "The Essenes commended the poor in spirit, those who hunger and
+thirst after righteousness, and the merciful, and the pure in heart."
+(Dr Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. For proof that Christ did the same, see Matt.
+
+55. "The Essenes commended the peacemakers." (Dr. Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "Blessed are the peacemakers."
+
+56. "The Essenes declared their disciples must cast out evil spirits,
+and perform miraculous cures, as signs and proof of their faith." (Dr.
+Ginsburg.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. Christ's disciples were to cast out devils, heal
+the sick, and raise the dead, &c., as signs and proof of their faith.
+(Mark xvi. 17.)
+
+57. "They sacrificed the lusts of the flesh to gain spiritual
+happiness."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "You abstain from fleshly lusts." (1 Peter ii.
+11.)
+
+58. "The breaking of bread was a veritable ordinance among the Essenes."
+
+_Scripture parallel_. "He (Jesus) took bread, and gave thanks, and brake
+it." (Luke xxii. 19.)
+
+59. "The Essenes enjoined the loving of enemies." (Philo.)
+
+_Scripture parallel_. So did Christ say, "Love your enemies," &c.
+
+60. The Essenes enjoined, "Doing unto others as you would have them do
+unto you."
+
+_Scripture parallel_' The Confucian golden rule, as taught by Christ.
+
+This parallel might be extended much further, but we will proceed to
+present the reader with a general description of Essenism, as furnished
+us by Philo, Josephus, and some Christian writers. Philo, who was born
+in Alexandria 20 B. C., and lived to 60 A. D., and who was himself
+an Essenian Jew, in his account of them, says, "They do not lay up
+treasures of gold or silver,... but provide themselves only with the
+necessities of life." Paul afterwards, having caught the same spirit,
+advises the same course of life. "Having food and raiment, therewith be
+content." Contentment of mind they regarded as the greatest of riches.
+They make no instruments of war. They repudiate every inducement to
+covetousness. None are held as slaves, but all are free, and serve
+each other. They are instructed in piety and holiness, righteousness,
+economy, &c. They are guided by a threefold rule: love of God, love of
+virtue, and love of mankind. Of their love of God they give innumerable
+demonstrations, which is found in their constant and unalterable
+holiness throughout the whole of their lives, their avoidance of oaths
+and falsehoods, and their firm belief that God is the source of all
+good, but of nothing evil. "Of their love of virtue they give proof in
+their contempt for money, fame, and pleasures, their continence, easy
+satisfying of their wants, their simplicity, modesty," &c. Their love
+of man is proved by their benevolence and equality, and their having all
+things in common, which is beyond all deception. They reverence and take
+care of the aged, as children do their parents. (Condensed from Philo's
+treatise, "Every Virtuous Man is Free.")
+
+Josephus, 37 A. D., and who was also at one time a member of the
+Essenian Brotherhood, furnishes another fragmentary account of the
+Essenes in his "Jewish Wars," of which the following is the substance:--
+
+"They love each other more than others (that is, are "partial to the
+household of faith"); they despise riches, and have all things in
+common, so that there is neither abjectness of poverty nor distinction
+of riches among them; they change neither garments nor shoes till they
+are worn out or become unfit for use; they neither buy nor sell among
+themselves; their piety is extraordinary; they never speak about wordly
+matters before sunrise; they are girt about with a linen apron, and have
+a baptism of cold water; they eat but one kind of a food at a time, and
+commence with a prayer, and the priest must say grace before any one
+eats (that is, breaks and blesses as Christ did); they also return
+thanks after eating, and then put off their white garments; strangers
+were made welcome at their tables without money and without price; they
+give food to the hungry and the needy and show mercy to all; they curb
+their passions, restrain their anger, and claim to be ministers of
+peace; an oath they regard as worse than perjury; they excommunicate
+offenders ('Go tell it to the churches, says Christ); they condemn
+finery in dress; though condemning in most solemn terms oaths, members
+were admitted to the secret brotherhood by an oath ('See thou tell
+no man,' said Christ); they endured pain with heroic fortitude, and
+regarded an honorable death as better than long life; they read and
+study their Holy Scriptures from youth, often prophesy, and it was very
+seldom they failed in their predictions."
+
+Dr. Ginburg's testimony, abridged, is as follows:--
+
+"The Essenes had a high appreciations of the inspired law of God. The
+highest aim of their lives was to become fit temples of the Holy
+Ghost (see i Cor. vi. 19); also to perform miraculous cures, and to be
+spiritually qualified for forerunners of the Messiah. They taught the
+duty of mortifying the flesh and the lusts thereof, and to become
+meek and lowly in spirit; they answered by yea, yea, and nay, nay (see
+Matt.), scrupulously avoiding oaths; they avoided impure contact with
+the heathen and the world's people, and lived retired from the world,
+being in numbers about four thousand; they strove to be like the angels
+of heaven; there were no rich and poor, or masters and servants, amongst
+them; they lived peaceably with all men; a mysterious silence was
+observed while eating; a solemn oath was required on becoming a member
+of the secret order, which required three things:
+
+1. Love of God;
+
+2. Merciful justice to all men, and to avoid the wicked, and help the
+righteous;
+
+3. Purity of character, which implied love of truth, hatred of
+falsehood, and strict observance of 'the mysteries of godliness' to
+outsiders--that is, 'heathen and publicans;' they endured suffering for
+righteousness' sake, with rejoicings, and even _sought_ it; regarding
+the body as a prison for the soul, they desired the time to come to
+escape from it; they recognized eight different stages of spiritual
+growth and perfection: 1. Bodily purity; 2. Celibacy; 3. Spiritual
+purity; 4. The suppression of anger and malice, and the cultivation of a
+meek, lowly spirit; 5. The attainment of true holiness; 6. Becoming fit
+temples for the Holy Ghost; 7. The ability to perform miraculous cures,
+and raise the dead; 8. Becoming forerunners of the Messiah; and finally
+they took a solemn vow to exercise, piety toward God and justice toward
+all men, to hate the wicked, assist the good to keep clear of theft and
+unrighteous gains, to conceal none of their 'mysteries of godliness'
+from each other, or disclose them to others. 'Great is the mystery of
+godliness' ('See thou tell no man'); they were to walk humbly with God,
+shun bad society, forgive their enemies, sacrifice their passions, and
+crucify the lusts of the flesh; they disregarded bodily suffering,
+and even gloried in martyrdom, preaching and singing to God amid their
+sufferings; but in their domestic habits they were extremely filthy;
+they wore their clothes until they became ragged, filthy, and offensive,
+never changing them till they were wore out; their food consisted
+of bread and water, and wild roots and fruits of the palm tree; they
+enjoined their duty, not only of forgiving their enemies, but of seeking
+to benefit them, and of even blessing the destroyer who took life and
+property. Such was the religion, such the moral system, such the devout
+piety, and such the practical lives of the Essenian Jews, a religious
+sect which flourished in Alexandria and Judea several hundred
+years before the birth of Christ, and went out of history the hour
+Christianity came in.
+
+Now, as the foregoing exposition shows that Essenism and Christianity
+are most strikingly alike in all their essential features, that the
+former system contains nearly every important doctrine and precept of
+the Christian religion, the question occurs here as one of momentous
+import, how is this striking resemblance, this identity of character
+of the two religions, to be accounted for? Does it not go far toward
+proving that Christianity is an outgrowth, a legitimate offspring,
+of Judean Essenism? Indeed, are we not absolutely driven to such a
+conclusion? Let us briefly recite some of the important facts brought
+to light by the investigation of the character and history of these two
+religions, and see if those facts do not bring them together and weld
+them as one system--as one and the same religion.
+
+1. Both are alike, and Essenism is much the older system.
+
+2. Both religions are an outgrowth of Judaism.
+
+3. Both were known and taught in Judea and in Alexandria.
+
+4. Josephus living in Judea, and Philo in Alexandria, neither of them
+speaks of Christianity, or refers to any such religion by that name, and
+yet both describe a religion inculcating the same doctrines and moral
+precepts, which they call Essenism.
+
+Is not this very nearly conclusive proof that Essenism was only
+another name for Christianity--that it had not yet changed its name to
+Christianity? That famous standard author, Mr. Gibbon, was evidently of
+this opinion when he said, "Whether, indeed, the first of that sect (the
+Essenes) took the name of Christian when the appellation of Christian
+had as yet been nowhere announced, it is by no means necessary to
+discuss." (Book II. chap. xvi.) Here is evidence that Gibbon believed
+that the Essenes, after having borne that name for centuries, changed
+the appellation to Christian. And we find still stronger language than
+this in the writings of the same author expressive of this opinion. In
+a note to chapter xv. he says, "It is probable that the Therapeuts
+(Essenes) changed their name to Christians, as some writers affirm, and
+adopted some new articles of faith." Here the position is assumed that
+the Christian religion is an outgrowth of Essenism, that is, merely
+a continuation of that religion under a change of name, with a slight
+modification of its creed.
+
+5. And then we have the declaration of Christian writers, expressed in
+the most positive terms, that Essenism and Christianity were the
+same religion, the former name being used at an earlier period. Hear
+Eusebius, a standard ecclesiastical writer of the fourth century. He
+asserts positively, "Those ancient Therapeuts (Essenes) were Christians,
+and their ancient writings were our gospels." (Eccl. Hist. p. 63.) Hark!
+Hark! my good Christian reader, here is one of your own sworn witnessess
+testifying that the Essenes originated and established the Christian
+religion; i. e., the religion now known by that name. Will you then give
+it up? If not, we have other testimony of a similar character, rendering
+the proposition still stronger. Robert Taylor declares, "The learned
+Basnage has shown that the Essenes were really Christians centuries
+before Christ, and that they were actually in possession of those very
+writings which are now our Gospels and Epistles." (p. 81.) And then we
+have the declaration of the author of "Christ the Spirit" (p. no), that
+"the Christians were the later Essenes--that is, the Essenes of the time
+of Eusebius under a changed name, that name having been made at Antioch,
+where the disciples were first called Christian." The same writer
+suggests that "their sacred books are our sacred books." We will now
+hear Eusebius again: "It is highly probable that their (the Essenes')
+ancient commentaries, which Philo says the Essenes have, are the very
+Gospels and writings of the Apostles."
+
+Based upon this conclusion, he calls the Essenes "the first heralds of
+the gospel." "I find it, therefore, most probable," says Mr. Weilting,
+"that Jesus and John belonged literally to the society of the Essenes."
+And then the New American Encyclopedia furnishes us with the testimony
+of a very able English author of the last century (De Quincy), who
+concurs with all the writers cited above. "Mr. De Quincy (it says)
+identified the Essenes as being the early Christians; i. e., the early
+Christians were known as Essenes. Such testimony, coming from such a
+source, is entitled to much weight." (Vol. i. p. 157.) And to the same
+effect is the testimony of Bishop Marsh, who admits that our Gospels
+were drawn from those of the Essenes. (See his edition of Michaelis'
+translation of the New Testament.)
+
+Thus far historical _writers_. We will now lay before the reader some
+historical _facts_, fraught with unanswerable logical potency, and
+pointing to the same conclusion. It is a fact, and one of deep logical
+import, and tending to corroborate the conclusion of some of the writers
+cited above, who tell us the Christian Gospels were first composed by
+the Essenes; that the language in which those Gospels were originally
+written was Greek, the language in which the Alexandrian Essenes always
+wrote, while the evangelical writers, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
+being illiterate fishermen, could have had no knowledge of any but
+the Jewish, their own mother-tongue,--at least it is susceptible of
+satisfactory proof that they never wrote in any other language. Hence
+the conclusion is irresistible that they were not the original authors
+of the Gospels.
+
+The works of several authors are now lying at our elbow, who express
+the conviction unequivocally that the Gospels were copied, if not
+translated, from older writings. Mr. Le Clerc, one of the ablest writers
+of his time, maintained this position, and did it ably. Another writer,
+a Mr. Hatfield, was awarded a prize in 1793, by the theological faculty
+of Gottingen, for an essay, in which the position was ably argued that
+Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John were not the authors of the books which
+bear their names, but were mere copyists. Dr. Lessing and others concur
+with him in this conclusion. A circumstance confirming this verdict is
+found in the fact that the word _church_ occurs in our Gospels, which
+were written before such an institution was established by those who
+were then called Christians.
+
+"Go tell it to the church" (Matt, xviii. 17) was uttered before any
+steps had been taken by the then representatives of the Christian faith
+to organize such a body--an evidence this, that he alluded to the church
+of the Essenes, as there were no other churches in existence at the
+time; which leaves the inference patent and irresistible that he and
+his disciples were Essenes, perhaps then under the changed name of
+Christians. Centuries prior to that era the Essenes had not only
+churches, but their whole ecclesiastical nomenclature of bishops,
+deacons, elders, priests, disciples, scriptures, gospels, epistles,
+psalms, hymns, mystery, allegory, &c. If Christianity was re-established
+in the days of Christ and his apostles, they had nothing to originate,
+either with respect to doctrines, precepts, church polity, or
+ecclesiastical terms--all being established for them centuries before
+that era. With these facts in view, it seems impossible that the two
+religious orders--Essenes and Christians--could have been in existence
+at the same time as separate institutions. The former must have ended
+when the latter commenced.
+
+Josephus says, "the Essenes were scattered far and wide, and were in
+every city," being quite numerous in Judea in his time. But he makes no
+reference to any sect or religious order by the title of Christian--a
+strong inferential evidence, upon sound priori reasoning, that
+Christianity as yet was sailing under another name. Josephus must have
+known and named the fact, had there been a Christian sect or disciple
+there bearing that name. Impossible otherwise. We are then (upon the
+logical force of these and many other facts) driven to the conclusion
+that Christianity began when Essenism ended, and the change was only in
+name. I challenge the whole Christian world to find the historical proof
+that Christianity commenced one hour before the termination of Essenism,
+or of Essenism overlapping the Christian religion so far as to survive
+one day beyond or after its birth. I will confront them with the logic
+of dates, and defy them to find any proof except their own unauthorized,
+unauthenticated, and fictitious chronology, that a Christian was ever
+known in any country by that name prior to the time of Tacitus, 104
+A.D., who is the first of the three hundred writers of that era that
+makes any mention of Christianity, Christ, or a Christian. This was long
+after Josephus' time, which accounts most satisfactory for his omitting
+any allusion to Christ or Christianity. That religion had not yet
+dropped the name of Essenism and adopted that of Christianity.
+
+Now, hard indeed must distorted reason fight the ramparts of logic and
+history to resist the conviction, in view of the foregoing facts, that
+Christianity is simply an outcropping of Essenism, either direct or
+through Budhism. And even if it were possible to prove that the two
+religions never became welded together, yet it is not possible to
+disprove the striking identity of their doctrines, and the spirit of
+their precepts, and the practical lives of their disciples. And this
+identity, coupled with the fact that Essenism is the older system, is
+of itself most superlatively fatal to all pretension or claim to
+originality for the doctrines of the Christian faith.
+
+It is a matter of no importance whether Christianity was originally
+known by another name, so long as it can be shown that its doctrines
+had all been preached and proclaimed to the world centuries prior to
+the date assigned for its origin. And this is proved by the long list of
+paralellisms presented in the incipient pages of this chapter. And this
+proof explodes the pretensions of Christianity to an "original divine
+revelation," and brings it down to a level with pagan orientalism. And
+the fact that it sprang up in a country where its doctrine had long been
+taught by pagans and orientalists, must produce the conviction, deep and
+indelible, in all unbiased minds, that orientalism was the mother and
+heathenism the father of the Christian religion, even in the absence of
+any other proof. In fact, no other proof can be needed.
+
+And what are the arguments, it may be well here to inquire, with
+which orthodox Christians attempt to meet, combat, and vanquish the
+overwhelming mass of historical facts and historical testimonies we
+have presented in preceding pages, tending to prove and demonstrate the
+oriental origin of their religion and its identity with Essenism? Their
+whole argument is comprised in the naked postulate of the Rev. Mr.
+Paideaux, D. D., that "the Essenes did not believe in the resurrection
+of the physical body (but believed in a spiritual resurrection),
+and omit from their creed the Trinity and Incarnation doctrine, and
+therefore they could not have been the originators of the Christian
+religion;" but this argument is as easily demolished as a cobweb, as the
+following facts will prove:--
+
+1. We have but a fragment of the Essenian religion,--but one end of
+their creed,--mere scraps furnished us by Philo, Josephus, and Pliny. We
+have none of their sacred books apart from the Christian New Testament.
+
+2. They had secret books, as we have shown, in which doctrines were
+taught which they regarded as _too sacred to be thrown before the
+public_, as "pearls before swine." And no doctrines were regarded as
+more sacred or secret in that age than the doctrines of the Trinity and
+Incarnation. Christ's injunction, "See thou tell no man," was probably
+their motto, which prevented the publicity of a portion of their
+doctrines. And as their sacred books, containing their doctrines,
+perished with the extinction of the sect (except those now found in
+the Christian New Testament), a full knowledge of their doctrines,
+therefore, never reached the public mind. All religious sects had
+secret doctrines, designated as "Mysteries of Godliness," including
+the principal Jewish sects and the earliest Christian churches. It is,
+therefore, highly probable that if we were in possession of all their
+sacred books, we would be in possession of the proof that they believed
+and taught in their monasteries the doctrines above named. But we are
+not left to mere inference that the Essenes' creed did include the
+doctrines of the Trinity and the Divine Incarnation. We find skeletons
+of these doctrines scattered along the line of their history. Philo
+himself, an Essene teacher, most distinctly teaches the doctrine of "the
+Incarnation of the Divine Word or Logos." And "Son of God," "Mediator,"
+"Intercessor," and "Messiah," were familiar words with him. The idea
+often reappears in his writings, that the "Word could become flesh;"
+that the Son of God could appear as a personality, and return to the
+bosom of the Father. Moreover, one writer informs us that the Essenes
+celebrated the birth and death of a Divine Savior as a "Mystery of
+Godliness." And they claimed in their earlier history to be "forerunners
+of the Messiah"--a claim which would soon bring a Messiah before the
+world, that is, lead them to deify and worship some great man as "_The
+Messia_."
+
+As for the doctrine of the Trinity, we have the authority of Eusebius
+that they taught this doctrine too. So that it is not true that they
+did not recognize these two prime articles of the Christian faith, the
+Incarnation and Trinity doctrines. Some modern Christians assert that
+the Essenes not only omitted to teach these doctrines, but that, on the
+other hand, they taught other doctrines not taught in the Christian New
+Testament. This is not improbable. For the Christian religion has been
+characterized by frequent changes in its doctrines in every stage of its
+practical history, as was also the Jewish religion which preceded it,
+and from which it emanated. Judaism is a perpetual series of changes. It
+changed even the name of its God from Elohim to Jehovah. Its leader and
+founder Abram was changed to Abraham, and his grandson and successor
+from Jacob to Israel. And we have the works of many Christian writers
+in our possession who prove by their own bible that the Jews made many
+changes in their religious polity and religious doctrines. This is more
+especially observable when they came in contact with nations teaching
+a different religion. Their whole history shows they were prone to
+imitate, and borrow, and always did borrow on such occasions, and
+engraft the new doctrines thus obtained into their own creed, and thus
+effected important changes in their religion. We have the authority of
+Dr. Campbell for saying the Jews never believed and taught the doctrine
+of future punishment (and other doctrines that might be named) till
+after they were brought in contact with Persians in Babylon who had long
+taught these doctrines. (See Dissertation VI. ) And Dr. Enfield declares
+their theological opinions underwent thorough changes during this period
+of seventy years' captivity. Even their national title was changed at
+one period from Israelites to Jews. With all these changes of names,
+titles, and doctrines in view, it is not incredible that one of the
+Jewish sects should change its name from Essenes to Christians, and with
+this change modify some of the doctrines. And more especially as their
+title, according to Dr. Ginsburg, had been changed before from Chassidim
+to Essenes. And Philo at one period calls them Therapeuts, while
+Eusebius says the Therapeuts were Christians. Put this and that
+together, and the question is forever settled.
+
+Now, with all this overwhelming mass of historical evidence before us,
+"piled mountain high," tending to prove the truth of the proposition
+that Christianity is the offspring and outgrowth of ancient Judean
+Essenism, we feel certain that no sophistry, from interested charlatans
+or stereotyped creed worshipers, can stave off or obliterate the
+conviction in unprejudiced minds, that the proposition is most amply
+proven.
+
+We will now collate Christianity with another ancient religious system,
+which we are certain it will not be disputed, after the comparison
+is critically examined, contains the sum total of the doctrines and
+teachings of Christianity in all their details.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII. THREE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX STRIKING ANALOGIES BETWEEN
+CHRIST AND CHRISHNA
+
+
+I. THEIR MIRACULOUS HISTORY AND LEADING PRINCIPLES.
+
+1. The advent of each Savior was miraculously foretold by prophets.
+
+2. The fallen and degenerate condition of the human race is taught in
+the religion of each.
+
+3. A plan of restoration or salvation is provided for in each case.
+
+4. A divine Savior is considered necessary in both cases.
+
+5. The necessity of atoning for sin is taught in the religion of each.
+
+6. A God, or Son of God, is selected as the victim for the atoning
+sacrifice in each case.
+
+7. This God is sent down from heaven in each case in the form of a man.
+
+8. The God or Savior in each case is the second person of the Trinity.
+
+9. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was held to be really God incarnate.
+
+10. The mission of each Savior is the same.
+
+11. There is a resemblance in name-Chrishna and Christ.
+
+12. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was incarnated and born of a woman.
+
+13. The mother in each case was a holy virgin.
+
+14. The same peculiarities of a miraculous conception and birth are
+related of each.
+
+15. Each had an adopted earthly father.
+
+16. The father of Chrishna, as well as that of Christ, was a carpenter.
+
+17. God is claimed as the real father in both cases.
+
+18. A Spirit or Ghost was the author of the conception of each.
+
+19. There was rejoicing on earth when each Savior was born.
+
+20. There was also joy in heaven at the birth and advent of each.
+
+21. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was of royal descent.
+
+22. Their mothers were both reputedly pious women.
+
+23. The names of two mothers are somewhat similar--Mary and Maia.
+
+24. Each had a special female friend--Elizabeth in the one case, and the
+wife of Nanda in the other.
+
+25. Neither Savior was born in a house, but both in obscure situations.
+
+26. Both were born on the 25th of December.
+
+27. Both, at birth, were visited by wise men and shepards.
+
+28. The visitors conducted by a star in each case.
+
+29. The rite of purification observed by the mothers of each.
+
+30. An angel warning of impending danger in each case.
+
+31. The incumbent ruler was hostile in each case.
+
+32. A bloody decree in each case for the destruction of the infant
+Savior.
+
+33. A flight of the parents takes place in both cases.
+
+34. The parents of one sojourned at Muturea, the other at Mathura.
+
+35. Each Savior had a forerunner--John the Baptist in one case, Bali
+Rama in the other.
+
+36. Both were preternaturally smart in childhood.
+
+37. Each disputed with and vanquished learned opponents.
+
+38. Both became objects of search by their parents.
+
+39. And both occasioned anxiety, if not sorrow, to their parents.
+
+40. The mother of each had other children--that is children begotten by
+man as well as God.
+
+41. Both Saviors retired to, and spent considerable time in the
+wilderness.
+
+42. The religious rite of "fasting" was practiced by each Savior.
+
+43. Each delivered a noteworthy sermon, or series of moral lessons.
+
+44. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was called and considered God.
+
+45. Each was both God and the Son of God (so regarded).
+
+46. "Savior" was one of the divine titles of each.
+
+47. Each was designated "the Savior of man," "the Savior of the world,"
+&c.
+
+48. Both expressed a desire to "save all."
+
+49. Each sustained the character of a Messiah.
+
+50. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was a Redeemer.
+
+51. Each Savior was called "Shepard."
+
+52. Both were believed to be the Creator of the world.
+
+53. Each is sometimes spoken of, also, as only an agent in the creation.
+
+54. Both were the "Light and Life" of men.
+
+55. Each "brought life and immortality to light."
+
+56. Both are represented as "the seed of the woman bruising the
+serpent's head."
+
+57. Was Christ a "Dispenser of grace," so was the Hindoo Savior.
+
+58. One was "the lion of the tribe of Judah," the other "the lion of the
+tribe of Saki."
+
+59. Christ was "the Beginning of the End," Chrishna "the Beginning, the
+Middle, and the End."
+
+60. Both proclaimed, "I am the Resurrection."
+
+61. Each was "the way to the Father."
+
+62. Both represented emblematically "the Sun of Righteousness."
+
+63. Each is figuratively represented as being "all in all."
+
+64. Both speak of having existed prior to human birth.
+
+65. A dual existence--an existence in both heaven and earth at once--is
+claimed by or for both.
+
+66. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was "without sin."
+
+67. Both assumed the divine prerogative of forgiving sins.
+
+68. The mission of each was to deliver from sin.
+
+69. Both came to destroy the devil and his works.
+
+70. The doctrine of the "atonement" is practically realized in each
+case.
+
+71. Each made a voluntary offering for the sins of the world.
+
+72. Both were human as well as divine.
+
+73. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was worshiped as God absolute.
+
+74. Each was regarded as "the Lord from Heaven."
+
+75. Chrishna, as well as Christ, had applied to him all the attributes
+of God.
+
+76. Was Christ omniscient, so was Chrishna.
+
+77. Was one omnipotent, so was the other (so believed).
+
+78. And both are represented as being omnipresent.
+
+79. Each was believed to be divinely perfect.
+
+80. Was one "Lord of lords," so was the other.
+
+81. Each embodied the "power and wisdom of God."
+
+82. All power was committed unto each (so claimed).
+
+83. Chrishna performed many miracles as well as Christ.
+
+84. One of the first miracles of each was the cure of a leper.
+
+85. Each healed "all manner of diseases."
+
+86. The work of casting out devils constitutes a part of the mission of
+each.
+
+87. Each practically proved his power to raise the dead.
+
+88. A miracle appertaining to a tree is related of both.
+
+89. Both could read the thoughts of the people.
+
+90. The power to detect and eject evil spirits was claimed by both.
+
+91. Both had the keys or control of death.
+
+92. Each led an extraordinary life.
+
+93. Each had a character for supernatural greatness.
+
+94. Both possesed or claimed a oneness with the Father.
+
+95. A "oneness with his Lord and Master" is claimed, also, for the
+disciples of each.
+
+96. A strong reciprocal affection between Master and disciple in each
+case.
+
+97. Each offers to shoulder the burdens of his disciples.
+
+98. A portion of the life of each was spent in preaching.
+
+99. Both made converts by their miracles and preaching.
+
+100. A numerous retinue of believers springs up in each case.
+
+101. Both had commissioned apostles to proclaim their religion.
+
+102. Each was an innovator upon the antecedent religion.
+
+103. A beautiful reform in religion was inaugurated by each Savior.
+
+104. Each opposed the existing popular priesthood.
+
+105. Both abolished the law of lineal descent in the ancient priesthood.
+
+106. Each was an object of conspiracy by his enemies.
+
+107. Humility and external poverty distinguished the life of each.
+
+108. Each denounced riches and rich men, and loathed and detested
+wealth.
+
+109. Both had a character for meekness.
+
+110. Chastity or unmarried life was a distinguishing characteristic of
+each.
+
+111. Mercy was a noteworthy characteristic of each.
+
+112. Both were censured for associating with sinners.
+
+113. Each was a special friend to the poor.
+
+114. A poor widow woman receives marked attention by each.
+
+115. Each encounters a gentile woman at a well.
+
+116. Both submitted unresistingly to injuries and insults.
+
+117. General practical philanthropy and impartiality marks the life of
+each Savior.
+
+118. Each took more pleasure in repentant sinners than in virtuous
+saints.
+
+119. Both practically disclosed God's attempt to reconcile the world to
+himself.
+
+120. The closing incidents in the earth-life of each were strikingly
+similar.
+
+121. A memorable last supper marked the closing career of both.
+
+122. Both were put to death by "wicked hands."
+
+123. Chrishna, as well as Christ, was crucified.
+
+124. Darkness attended the crucifixion of each.
+
+125. Both were crucified between two thieves.
+
+126. Each is reported to have forgiven his enemies.
+
+127. The age of each at death corresponds (being between thirty and
+thirty-six years).
+
+128. Each, after giving up the ghost, descends into hell.
+
+129. The resurrection from the dead is a marked period in the history of
+each.
+
+130. Each ascends to heaven after his resurrection.
+
+131. Many people are reported to have witnessed the ascension in each
+case.
+
+132. Each is reported as having both descended and ascended.
+
+133. The head of each, while living on earth, was anointed with oil.
+
+
+II. DOCTRINES.
+
+134. There is a similarity in the doctrines of their respective
+religions.
+
+135. The same doctrines are propagated by the disciples of each.
+
+136. The doctrine of future rewards and punishments is a part of each
+system.
+
+137. Analogous views of heaven are found in each system.
+
+138. A third heaven is spoken of in each system.
+
+139. All sin must be punished according to the bible teachings of each.
+
+140. Each has a hell provided for the wicked.
+
+141. Both teach a hell of darkness and a hell of light.
+
+142. An immortal worm finds employment in the hell of each system ("the
+worm that dieth not.")
+
+143. The arch-demon of the under world uses brimstone for fuel in one
+case, and oil in the other.
+
+144. The motive for future punishment is in both cases the same.
+
+145. Each has a purgatory or sort of half-way house.
+
+146. Special divine judgments on nations are taught by each.
+
+147. A great and final day of judgment is taught by each.
+
+148. A general resurrection also is taught in each religion.
+
+149. That there is a "Judge of the dead" is a doctrine of each.
+
+150. Two witnesses are to report on human actions in the final assizes.
+
+151. We are furnished in each case with the dimension of heaven or "the
+holy city."
+
+152. Man is enjoined to strive against temptation to sin by each.
+
+153. And repentance for sin is a doctrine taught by the bible of each.
+
+154. Each has a prepared city for a paradise.
+
+155. The bibles of both teach that we have no continuing city here.
+
+156. Souls are carried to heaven by angels, as in the instance of
+Lazarus, in each case.
+
+157. A belief in angels or spirits is a tenant of each religion.
+
+158. The doctrine of fallen or evil angels is found in both system.
+
+159. Obsession by wicked or evil spirits is taught by each.
+
+160. Both teach that sickness or disease is caused by evil spirits.
+
+161. Each has a king-devil or arch-demon with a posse of subalterns or
+evil spirits.
+
+162. Both bibles record the story of a "hellaballoo" or war in heaven.
+
+163. Both teach that an evil man can neither do nor speak a good thing.
+
+164. Both teach that sin is a disadvantage in the present life as well
+as in the future.
+
+165. The doctrine of free will or free agency is taught by each.
+
+166. Predestination seems to be inferentially taught by each.
+
+167. In each case man is a prize in a lottery, with God and the devil
+for ticket-holders.
+
+168. Both make the devil (or devils) a scape-goat for sin.
+
+169. Both teach the devil or evil spirits as the primary cause of all
+evil.
+
+170. The destiny of both body and soul is pointed out by each.
+
+171. The true believers are known as "saints" under both systems.
+
+172. Saints with "white robes" are spoken of by each.
+
+173. Both specify "the Word of Logos" as God.
+
+174. Wisdom, too, is personified as God by the holy Scriptures of each.
+
+175. Both teach that God may be known by his works.
+
+176. The doctrine of one supreme God is taught in each bible.
+
+177. Light and truth are important words in the religious nomenclature
+of each.
+
+178. Both profess a high veneration for truth.
+
+179. "Where the treasure is, there is the heart also," is taught by
+each.
+
+180. "Seek and ye shall find" is a condition prescribed by each.
+
+181. Religious toleration is a virtue professed by both.
+
+182. All nations are professedly based on an equality by each.
+
+183. Both, however, enjoin partiality to "the household of faith."
+
+184. The doors of salvation are thrown open to high and low, rich and
+poor, by each.
+
+185. Each professes to have "the only true and saving faith."
+
+186. There is a mystery in the mission of each Savior.
+
+187. "Rama" is a well known word in the bible of each.
+
+188. "The understanding of the wise" is a phrase in each.
+
+189. Both speak figuratively of "the blind leading the blind."
+
+190. "A new heaven and a new earth" is spoken of by each.
+
+191. The doctrine of a Trinity in the Godhead is taught by each.
+
+192. Baptism by water is a tenant and ordinance of each.
+
+193. "Living water" is a metaphor found in each.
+
+194. Baptism by fire seems also to be recognized by each.
+
+195. Fasting is emphatically enjoined by each.
+
+196. Sacrifices are of secondary importance in each system, and are
+partially or wholly abandoned by each.
+
+197. The higher law is paramount to ceremonies in each religion.
+
+198. The bible of each religion literally condemns idolatry.
+
+199. Both also make concessions to idolatry.
+
+200. Polygamy is not literally encouraged nor openly condemned by
+either.
+
+201. The power to forgive sins is conferred on the disciples of each.
+
+202. The doctrine of blasphemy is recognized by each.
+
+203. Pantheism, or the reciprocal in-being of God in nature and nature
+in God, is taught by both.
+
+
+III. BIBLES AND HOLY SCRIPTURES.
+
+204. Each has a bible which is the idolized fountain of all religious
+teaching.
+
+205. Both have an Old Testament and a New Testament, virtually.
+
+206. The New Testament inaugurates a new and reform system of religion
+in each case.
+
+207. "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God" is the faith of the
+disciples of each.
+
+208. Each system claimed to have its inspired men to write its
+scriptures.
+
+209. Both hold a spiritual qualification necessary to understand their
+bibles.
+
+210. It is a sin to become "wise beyond what is written" in their
+respective bibles.
+
+211. Both recommend knowing the Scriptures in youth.
+
+212. Alteration of their respective bibles is divinely interdicted.
+
+213. The bible is an infallible rule of faith and practice in both
+cases.
+
+214. "All scripture is profitable for doctrine" is the faith of each.
+
+215. Both explain away the errors of their bibles.
+
+
+IV. SPIRITUALITY OF THE TWO RELIGIONS.
+
+216. The religion of Chrishna is pre-eminently spiritual no less than
+Christ's.
+
+217. Both teach that "to be carnally minded is death."
+
+218. External rites are practically dispensed with in each religion.
+
+219. The spiritual law written on the heart is recognized by each.
+
+220. "God is within you," Budhists teach as well as Christians.
+
+221. Both recognize an invisible spiritual Savior.
+
+222. "God dwells in the heart," say Hindoo as well as Christians.
+
+223 An inward recognition of the divine law is amply seen in both.
+
+224. Both confess allegiance to an inward monitor.
+
+225. The doctrine of inspiration and internal illumination is found in
+both.
+
+226. The indwelling Comforter is believed in by both.
+
+227. Both also teach that religion is an inward work.
+
+228. Both speak of being born again--i. e., the second birth.
+
+229. A spiritual body is also believed in by both.
+
+230. "Spiritual things are incomprehensible to the natural man" say
+each.
+
+231. God's spiritually sustaining power Budhists also acknowledge.
+
+232. Both give a spiritual interpretation to their bibles.
+
+233. Each has a new and more interior law superseding the old law.
+
+234. The spiritual cross--self-denial or asceticism--is a prominent
+feature of each religion.
+
+235. The duty of renouncing and abandoning the external world is
+solemnly enjoined by each.
+
+236. Budhists renounce the world more practically than Christians.
+
+237. Withdrawal or seclusion from society is recommended by each.
+
+238. Bodily suffering as a benefit to the soul is encouraged by each.
+
+239. Voluntary suffering for righteousness' sake is a virtue with each.
+
+240. The cross is a religious emblem in each system.
+
+241. Both glory in "the religion of the cross" as better than a religion
+without suffering.
+
+242. Hence both teach "the greater the cross the greater the crown."
+
+243. Earthly pleasures are regarded as evil by both.
+
+244. Contempt for the body as an enemy to the soul is visible in both.
+
+245. Retirement for religious contemplation is a duty with each.
+
+246. The forsaking of relations is also enjoined by each.
+
+247. Spiritual relationship is superior to external relationship with
+both.
+
+248. "To die is great gain" we are taught by each.
+
+249. A subjugation of the passions is a religious duty with each.
+
+250. The road to heaven is a narrow one with each.
+
+251. The same state of religious perfection is aspired to by the
+disciples of each.
+
+
+V. THE DOCTRINE OF FAITH OR BELIEF.
+
+252. Faith is an all-important element and doctrine with each.
+
+253. Heresy, or want of faith, is a sin of great magnitude with both.
+
+254. Faith in the Savior is a condition to salvation by both.
+
+255. Confessing the Savior is also required in both cases.
+
+256. "Believe or be damned" is the condition or profess to believe the
+terrible sine qua non to salvation by each.
+
+257. Skeptics or unbelievers are with both the chief of sinners.
+
+258. "Faith can remove mountains," either with a Bud-hist or a
+Christian.
+
+259. Both contrast faith with works.
+
+260. Faith without works is dead--so teach both Bud-hists and
+Christians.
+
+
+VI. THE DOCTRINE AND PRACTICE OF PRAYER.
+
+261. Prayer is an important rite in each religion.
+
+262. Private or secret prayer is recommended by both.
+
+263. Each has also a formula of prayer.
+
+264. "Pray without ceasing" is a Budhist as well as a Christian
+injunction.
+
+265. Praying to their respective Saviors in sickness and in health is a
+custom with both.
+
+266. The custom of praying for the dead is recognized in each system.
+
+
+VII. TREATMENT OF ENEMIES.
+
+267. It is a Hindoo as well as a Christian injunction to treat enemies
+kindly.
+
+268. Passive submission to injuries and abuse is enjoined by both.
+
+269. The holy Scriptures of both require us to pray for enemies, and
+feed them.
+
+270. And even love to enemies is a part of the spirit of each religion.
+
+
+VIII. THE MILLENNIUM.
+
+271. Hindoos, like Christians, prophesy of a great millennial era.
+
+272. There is a remarkable similarity in their notions with respect to
+it.
+
+273. Both anticipate a second advent or new Savior on the occasion.
+
+274. The destruction of the world also is to take place in both cases.
+
+275. And an entire renovation and a new order of things are to be
+established in each case.
+
+
+IX. MIRACLES.
+
+276. There is almost a constant display of miraculous power in each
+system.
+
+277. The disciples of both are professedly endowed with this power.
+
+278. Miraculous cures of the lame, the blind, and the sick are reported
+in both cases.
+
+279. Miracles of handling poisonous reptiles with impunity are reported
+by both.
+
+280. Swallowing deadly poison is enjoined by Christians and practiced by
+Hindoos.
+
+281. Many cases of the miraculous ejection of devils are reported by
+both.
+
+282. The miracle of thought-reading is displayed by both.
+
+283. The saints in both cases are reported as raising the dead.
+
+
+X. PRECEPTS.
+
+284. "The kingdom of heaven" was to be sought first of all things in
+each case.
+
+285. Love to God is a paramount obligation under each system.
+
+286. And the worship of God is an essential requisition in each
+religious polity.
+
+287. "Cease to do evil and learn to do well" is virtually enjoined by
+each.
+
+288. An inward knowledge of God is taught as essential by both systems.
+
+289. A reliance on works is discouraged by both.
+
+290. Purity of heart is inculcated by Hindoos as well as Christians.
+
+291. Speak and think evil of no man is a gospel injunction of each.
+
+292. A love of all beings is more prominently the spirit of Budhism than
+that of Christianity.
+
+293. The practice of strict godly virtue is enjoined by both.
+
+294. Moderation and temperance are recommended by both.
+
+295. Patience is a virtue in each religion.
+
+296. The duty of controlling our thoughts is taught by each.
+
+297. Charity has a high appreciation by each.
+
+298. Both make the poor objects of attention.
+
+299. The practice of hospitality is recommended by each.
+
+300. Humility is a duty and a virtue under both systems.
+
+301. Mirthfulness or light conversation is forbidden by each.
+
+302. Purity of life is a duty with Hindoos as well as Christians.
+
+303. Chasteness in conversation is inculcated by both.
+
+304. "Respect to persons" is a sin in the moral polity of both.
+
+305. Alms-giving is religiously enjoined by the holy Scriptures of both.
+
+306. Both teach that "it is better to give than to receive."
+
+307. Loyalty to rulers is a moral requisition of each system.
+
+308. Honor to father and mother is esteemed a great virtue by both.
+
+309. The correct training of children is with each a scriptural duty.
+
+310. "Look not upon a woman" is more than hinted by each.
+
+311. The reading of the holy Scriptures is enjoined by both.
+
+312. Lying or falsehood is with each a sin of great magnitude.
+
+313. Swearing is discountenanced by both religions.
+
+314. Theft or stealing is specially condemned by both.
+
+315. Both deprecate and condemn the practice of war.
+
+316. Both discountenance fighting.
+
+317. Neither of them professes to believe in slavery.
+
+318. Drunkenness and the use of wine are more specifically condemned by
+the Hindoo religion.
+
+319. Adultery and fornication are heinous sins in the eyes of both.
+
+320. Both condemn covetousness as a great sin.
+
+321. Budhists more practically condemn anger than Christians do.
+
+
+XI. MISCELLANEOUS ANALOGIES.
+
+322. Both have their apocryphal as well as their canonical Scriptures.
+
+323. Stories are found in the bible of each which would be rejected if
+found elsewhere.
+
+324. Both make their bible a finality in matters of faith.
+
+325. Both have had their councils and commentaries to reveal theis
+bibles over again.
+
+326. Numerous schisms, divisions, sects, and creeds have sprung up in
+each.
+
+327. Various religious reforms have sprung up under each.
+
+328. Conversion from one religious sect to another is common to both.
+
+329. Both religions have been troubled with numerous skeptics or
+infidels.
+
+330. Both have often resorted to new interpretations for their bibles to
+suit the times.
+
+331. The unconverted are stigmatized by each.
+
+332. "Knock and it shall be opened" is the invitation of each.
+
+333. Public confession of sins in class-meetings is known to each.
+
+334. Death-bed repentance often witnessed under both religious systems.
+
+335. A belief in haunted houses incident to the religious countries of
+both.
+
+336. A superior respect for woman claimed by each.
+
+337. An idolatrous veneration for religious ancestors by each.
+
+338. Each sustain a numerous horde of expensive priests.
+
+339. A divine call or illumination to preach claimed by each.
+
+340. Religious martyrdom the glory of each.
+
+341. Both have encountered "perils by sea and land" for their religion.
+
+342. He who loseth his life (for his religion) shall find it, say both.
+
+343. Both in ancient times suffered much persecution.
+
+344. The disciples of both have suffered death without flinching from
+the faith.
+
+345. Each sent numerous missionaries abroad to preach and convert.
+
+346. And, finally, each cherished the hope of converting the world to
+their religion.
+
+
+The author has in his possession historical quotations to prove the
+truth of each one of the above parallels. He has all the historical
+facts on which they were constructed found in and drawn from the
+sacred books of the Hindoo religion and the works of Christian writers
+descriptive of their religion. But they would swell the present volume
+to unwieldy dimensions, and far beyond its proper and prescribed limits,
+to present them here; they are therefore reserved for the second volume,
+and may be published in pamphlet form also.
+
+In proof of the correctness of the foregoing comparative analogies,
+we will now summon the testimony of various authors setting forth the
+historical character of the Hindoo God Chrishna, and the essential
+nature of his religion, so far as it approximates in its doctrines
+and moral teachings to the Christian religion. We will first hear from
+Colonel Wiseman, for ten years a Christian missionary in India.
+
+"There is one Indian (Hindoo) legend of considerable importance" says
+this writer... "This is the story of Chrishna, the Indian Apollo. In
+native legends he is represented as an Avatar, or incarnation of the
+Divinity. At his birth, choirs of Devitas (angels) sung hymns of praise,
+while shepherds surrounded his cradle. It was necessary to conceal his
+birth from the tyrant ruler, Cansa, to whom it had been foretold that
+the infant Savior should destroy him. The child escaped with his parents
+beyond the coast of Lamouna. For a time he lived in obscurity, and then
+commenced a public life distinguished for prowess and beneficence.
+He washed the feet of the Brahmins, and preached the most excellent
+doctrines; but at length the power of his enemies prevailed.... Before
+dying, he foretold the miseries which would take place in the Cali-yuga,
+or wicked age (Dark Age) of the world."
+
+"Chrishna (says another writer) taught his followers that they alone
+were the true believers of the saving faith; throwing down the barriers
+of caste, and elevating the dogmas of their faith above the sacerdotal
+class, he admitted every one who felt an inward desire to the ministry
+to the preaching of their religion. A system thus associating itself
+with the habits, feelings, and personal advantages of its disciples
+could not fail to make rapid progress." (Upham's History. Doctrines of
+Budhism.)
+
+"Budhism inculcates benevolence, tenderness, forgiveness of injuries,
+and love of enemies; and forbids sensuality, love of pleasure, and
+attachment to worldly objects." (Judson).
+
+"At the moment of his (Chrishna's) conception a God left heaven to enter
+the womb of his mother (a virgin). Immediately after his birth he was
+recognized as a divine personage, and it was predicted that he would
+surpass all previous divine incarnations in holiness. Every one adored
+him, saluting him as 'the God of Gods.' When twenty years of age he went
+into a desert, and lived there in the austerest retirement, poverty,
+simplicity, and virtue, spending his whole time in religious
+contemplation. He was tempted in various ways, but his self-denial
+resisted all the seductive approaches of sin. He declared, 'Religion
+is my essence.' He experienced a lively opposition from the priests
+attached to the ancient creeds (as Christ subsequently did). But he
+triumphed over all his enemies after holding a discussion with them (as
+Christ did with the doctors in the Temple). He revised the existing code
+of morals and the social law. He reduced the main principles of morality
+to four, viz: _mercy, aversion to cruelty, unbounded sympathy for all
+animated beings and the strictest adherence to the moral law._ He also
+gave a decalogue of commandments, viz.: 1. Not to kill. 2. Not to steal.
+3. To be chaste. 4. Not to testify falsely. 5. Not to lie. 6. Not to
+swear. 7. To avoid all impure words. 8. To be disinterested. 9. Not to
+take revenge. 10. And not to be superstitious. This code of morals
+was firmly established in the hearts of his followers." (Abridged from
+Hardy's Manual of Budhism.)
+
+"It was prophesied in olden times that a person would arise and redeem
+Hindostan from 'the yoke of bondage.' At midnight, when the birth of
+Chrishna was taking place, the clouds emitted low music, and poured
+down a rain of flowers. The celestial child was greeted with hymns by
+attending spirits.
+
+"The room was illuminated by his light, and the countenances of his
+father and mother emitted rays of glory, and they bowed in worship.'
+'The people believed he was a God.' They eagerly caught the words which
+fell from his lips, which taught his divine mission, and they called him
+the 'Holy One,' and finally the 'Living God.' He performed miraculous
+cures. At his birth a marvelous light illumined the earth. His followers
+baptised, and performed miraculous cures. And he, when a child,
+attracted attention by his miracles. While attending the herds with his
+foster-father a great serpent poisoned the river, which caused the death
+of cows and shepherd-boys when they drank of it, whom Chrishna restored
+to life by a look of divine power. His life was devoted to mercy and
+charity. He left paradise from pure compassion, to die for suffering
+sinners. He sought to lead men to better paths and lives of virtue
+and rectitude. He suffered to atone for the sins of the world; and the
+sinner, through faith in him, can be saved. Christ and Chrishna both
+taught the equality of man. Prayers addressed to Chrishna were after
+this fashion: 'O thou Supreme One! thy essence is inscrutable. Thou art
+all in all. The understanding of man cannot reach thy Almighty Power.
+I, who know nothing, fly to thee for protection. Show mercy unto me, and
+enable me to see and know thee.' Chrishna replies, 'Have faith in me.
+No one who worships me can perish. Address thyself to me as the
+only asylum. I will deliver thee from sin. I am animated with equal
+benevolence toward all beings. I know neither hatred nor partiality.
+Those who adore me devoutly are in me and I in them'"--"Christ within
+you the hope of glory." (Abridged from Mr. Tuttle.)
+
+"If we consider that Budhism proclaimed the equality of all men and
+women in the sight of God, that it denounced the impious pretensions
+of the most mischievous priesthood the world ever saw, and that it
+inculcated a pure system of practical morality, we must admit that
+the innovation was as advantageous as it was extensively spread and
+adopted." (Hue's Journey through China, chap. v.)
+
+"To Chrishna the Hindoos were indebted for a code of pure and practical
+morality, which inculcated charity and chastity, performance of good
+works, abstinence from evil, and general kindness to all living things."
+(Cunningham.)
+
+"Budhism never confounds right or wrong, and never excuses any sin"
+(Catharine Beecher.)
+
+"He (Chrishna) honored humanity by his virtues." (St Hilaire.)
+
+"It is probable that every incident in his (Chrisna's) life is founded
+in fact, which, if separated from surrounding fable, would afford
+a history that would scarce have any equal in the importance of the
+lessons it would teach." (Hardy's Manual of Budhism.)
+
+"He (Chrishna) undertakes and counsels a constant struggle against the
+body. In his eyes the body is the enemy of man's soul (as Paul thought
+when he spoke of 'our vile bodies.') He aims to subdue the body and the
+burning passions which consume it.... He requires humility, disregard of
+wordly wealth, patience and resignation in adversity, love to enemies,
+religious tolerance, horror at falsehood, avoidance of frivolous
+conversation, consideration and esteem for women, sanctity of the
+marriage relation, non-resistance to evil, confession of sins, and
+conversion." (St. Hilaire.)
+
+"Budhism has been called the Christianity of the East." (Abel Remuset.)
+
+"The doctrine and practical piety of their bible (the Baghavat Gita)
+bear a strong resemblance to those of the Holy Scriptures. It has
+scarcely a precept or principle that is not found in the (Christian)
+bible. And were the people to live up to its principles of peace
+and love, oppression and injury would be known no more within their
+borders... It has no mythology of obscene and ferocious deities, no
+sanguinary or impure observances, no self-inflicting tortures, no
+tyrannizing priesthood, no confounding of right and wrong by making
+certain iniquities laudable in worship. In its moral code, its
+description of the purity and peace of the first ages, and the
+shortening of man's life by sin, it seems to follow genuine traditions.
+In almost every respect it seems to be the best religion ever invented
+by man." (Rev. H. Malcom's Travels in Asia.)
+
+"If the morality of Budhism be examined, its exhortations to guard the
+will, to curb the thoughts, to exercise kindness towards others,
+to abstain from wrong to all, it propounds a very high standard of
+practice." (Upham's Doctrines and History of Budhism.)
+
+"It seeks the highest triumphants of humanity in the exercise of
+devotion, self-contemplation, and self-denial." (Theogony of the Hindoos,
+by Bjornsjerma.)
+
+"And the doctrines of Budhism are not alone in the beauty of their
+sentiments and the excellence of much of their morality. 'It is not
+permitted to you to return evil for evil' is one of the sentiments of
+Socrates." (Rev. H. S. Hardy's Eastern Monachism.)
+
+"Budhism insists on the necessity of taking the intellectual faculties
+for guides in philosophical researches." (Tiberghien.)
+
+"It sought to wean mankind from the pleasures and vanities of life
+by pointing to the transitoriness of all human enjoyment." (Smith's
+Mongolia.)
+
+"The principal characteristics of Budhism are the doctrines of mildness
+and the universal brotherhood of man." (Ibid.)
+
+"Life is a state of probation and misery, according to Budhism."
+(Upham, chap. vi.)
+
+"The Brahmins found fault with him (Chrishna) for receiving as
+disciples the outcasts of Hindoo society (as the Jews did Christ for
+fellowshipping publicans and sinners). But he (Chrishna) replied, 'My
+law is a law of mercy to all.'" (Hue's Voyages through China.)
+
+"Budhism attracted and furnished consolation for the poor and
+unfortunate." (Ibid.)
+
+"Budhism is a rationalistic and reform system as compared with
+Brahminism. Landresse expresses his high admiration of the heroism with
+which the Budhist missionaries before Christ crossed streams and seas
+which had arrested armies, and traversed deserts and mountains upon
+which no caravans dared to venture, and braved dangers and surmounted
+obstacles which had defied the omnipotence of the emperors." (A note on
+Landresse's _Foe Koui Ki._)
+
+"If we addressed a Mogul or Thibetan this question, Who is Chrishna?
+the reply was, instantly, 'The Savior of men.'" (Hue's Journey through
+China.)
+
+"Chrishna, the incarnate Deity of the Sanscrit romance continues to this
+hour the darling God of the women of India.... Chrishna was the person
+of Vishnu (God) himself in the human form." (Asiat. Researches, 260).
+
+"Respectable natives told me that some of the missionaries had told them
+that they were even now almost Christians" (owing to the two religions
+being so nearly alike). (Ibid).
+
+"All that converting the Hindoos to Christianity does for them is to
+change the object of their worship from Chrishna to Christ." (Robert
+Cheyne.)
+
+"Brahminism or Budhism in some of its forms is said to constitute the
+religion of considerably more than half the human race. It teaches the
+existence of one supreme eternal, and uncreated God, called Brahma, who
+created the world through Chrishna, the second member of the Trinity."
+Paul says, God created the world through Jesus Christ, the second member
+of the Christian Trinity. (Eph. iii. 9.) How striking the resemblance!
+"The doctrine of the incarnation, the descent of the Deity upon earth,
+and his manifestation in a human form for the redemption of mankind,
+seems to have existed in the shape of prophecy or fact in all ages of
+the world. Hindooism teaches nine of these incarnations. Furthermore, it
+teaches the doctrine of the Trinity, the fall and redemption of man,
+and a state of future rewards and punishments in a future life.... This
+religion in chief of Asia is traceable to remote ages. The doctrine of
+the Trinity is represented in the Elephantine cavern, and taught in
+the Mahabarat, which goes back for its origin nearly two thousand years
+before Christ." (New York Sunday Despatch, 1855.)
+
+"In the year 3600, Chrishna descended to the earth for the purpose of
+defeating the evil machinations of Chivan (the devil), as Christ 'came
+to destroy the devil and his works.' (See John iii. 8.) After a fierce
+combat with the devil, or serpent, he defeated him by bruising his
+head--he receiving, during the contest, a wound in the heel. ('It [the
+serpent] shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.'--Gen.
+iii. 15.) He died at last between two thieves.... He lead a pure and
+holy life, and was a meek, tender, and benevolent being, and enjoined
+charity, hospitality, and mercy, and forbade lying, prevarication,
+hypocrisy, and overreaching in dealing, and pilfering, and theft, and
+violence toward any being." (Lecture before the Free Press Association
+in 1827.)
+
+"The birthplace of the Hindoo hero (Chrishna) is called Mathura, which
+is easily changed, and by correct translation becomes Maturea, the place
+where Christ is said to have stopped, between Nazareth and Egypt... To
+show his humility he washed the feet of the Brahmins (as Christ is said
+to have washed the feet of the Jews--see John xiii. 14). One day a
+woman came to him and anointed his hair with oil, in return for which
+he healed her maladies. One of his first miracles was that of healing
+a leper, like Christ (See Mark i. 4). Finally, he was crucified, then
+descended to Hades. (It is said of Christ, 'his soul was not left in
+hell.'--Acts ii. 31.) He (Chrishna) rose from the dead and ascended to
+Voicontha (heaven.)" (Higgin's Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 239).
+
+Now, we ask, is it any wonder, in view of the foregoing historical
+exposition, that Eusebius should exclaim, "The religion of Jesus
+Christ is neither new nor strange?" (Eccl. Hist. ch. iv.) Truly did
+St. Augustine say, "This, in our day, is the Christian religion, not
+as having been unknown in former times, but as having recently received
+that name."
+
+Here, then, we pause to ask our good Christian reader, _Where is your
+original Christianity now?_ or what constitutes the revealed religion
+of Jesus Christ? or where is the evidence that any new religion was
+revealed by him or preached by him, seeing we have all his religion, as
+shown by the foregoing historical citations, included in an old heathen
+system more than a thousand years old when Jesus Christ was born?
+We find it all here in this old oriental system of Budhism--_every
+essential part, particle and principle_ of it. We find Christianity all
+here--its Alpha and Omega, its beginning and end. We find it here in
+all its details,--its root, essence, and entity,--all its "revealed
+doctrines," religious ideas, beautiful truths, senseless dogmas and
+oriental phantoms. Not, a doctrine, principle, or precept of the
+Christian system, but that is here proclaimed to the world ages before
+"the angels announced the birth of a divine babe in Bethlehem." Will
+you, then, persist in claiming that "truth, life, and immortality came
+by Jesus Christ," and that "Christ came to preach a new gospel to the
+world, and to set forth a new religion never before heard amongst men"
+(to use the language of Archbishop Tillotson), when the historical facts
+cited in this work demonstrate a hundred times over that such a position
+is palpably erroneous? Will you still persist, with all those undeniable
+facts staring you in the face (proving and reproving, with overwhelming
+demonstration, that the statement is untrue), in declaring that "the
+religion of Jesus Christ is the only true and soul-saving religion, and
+all other systems are mere straw, stubble, tradition, and superstition"
+(as asserted by a popular Christian writer), when no mathematician ever
+demonstrated a scientific problem more clearly than we have proved in
+these pages that all the principle systems of the past, by no means
+excepting Christianity, are essentially alike in every important
+particular--all of their cardinal doctrines being the same, differing
+only in unimportant details?
+
+Seeing, then, that all systems of religion have been found to be
+essentially alike in spirit and in practice, the all-important question
+arises here, What is the true cause assignable for this striking
+resemblance? How is it to be accounted for? Perhaps some of our good
+Christian readers, unacquainted with history, may cherish the thought
+that all the oriental systems brought to notice are but imitations of
+Christianity; that they were reconstructed out of materials obtained
+from that source; that Christianity is the parent, and they the
+off-spring. But, alas for their long-cherished idol, those who
+entertain such forlorn hopes are "sowing to the wind, and are doomed to
+disappointment." With the exception of Mahomedanism alone, Christianity
+is the youngest system in the whole catalogue. The historical facts to
+prove this statement are voluminous. But as it needs no proof to those
+who have read religious history, but little space will be occupied
+with citations for this purpose. With respect to the antiquity of the
+principal oriental system, we need only to quote the testimony of Sir
+William Jones, a devout Christian writer, who spent years in India,
+and whose testimony will be accepted by any person acquainted with his
+history. He makes the emphatic declaration, "That the name of Chrishna,
+and the general outline of his history, were long anterior to the birth
+of our Savior, and probably to the time of Homer (900 b. C.) we know
+very certainly." (Asiat. Res. vol. i. p. 254.) No guess-work about it.
+"_We know very certainly_."
+
+And being a scholar, a traveler, and a sojourner among the Hindoos, and
+well versed in their history, no person ever had a better opportunity
+to know than he. We will hear this renowned author further. "In the
+Sanscrit dictionary, compiled more than two thousand years ago, we have
+the whole history of the incarnate deity (Chrishna), born of a virgin,
+and miraculously escaping in his infancy from the reigning tyrant of
+his country (Cansa). He passed a life of the most extraordinary and
+incomprehensible devotion. His birth was concealed from the tyrant
+Cansa, to whom it had been predicted that one born at that time, and in
+that family, would destroy him;" i. e., destroy his power. (Asiat.
+Res. vol. i. p. 273.) This writer also states that the first Christian
+missionaries who entered India were astonished to find there a religion
+so near like their own, and could only account for it by supposing
+that the devil, foreseeing the advent of Christ, originated a system of
+religion in advance of his, and "just like it." Stated in other words,
+he got out the second edition of the gospel plan of salvation before the
+first edition was published or had an existence. Rather a smart trick
+this, thus to outwit God Almighty.
+
+With respect to the vast antiquity of the Hindoo oriental religion,
+which indicates it as being not only the source from which the materials
+of the Christian religion were drawn, but as being the parent of all the
+leading systems, with their three thousand subordinate branches which
+existed at a much earlier period than Christianity, we need only point
+to the deep chiseled sculptures and imperishable monuments enstamped
+on their time-honored temples, tombs, altars, vases, columns, pagodas,
+ruined towers, &c., which, with contemporary inscriptions, warrant us
+in antedating the religion of the Himmalehas far beyond the authentic
+records of any other religion that has floated down to us on the stream
+of time. The numerous images of their crucified Gods, Chrishna and Saki,
+emblazoned on their old rock temples in various parts of the country,
+some of which are constructed of clay porphyry, now the very hardest
+species of rock, with their attendant inscriptions in a language so very
+ancient as to be lost to the memory of man, vie with the Sanscrit in
+age, the oldest deciphered language in the world.
+
+All these and a hundred corroboratory historical facts fix on India as
+being the birthplace of the mother of all religions now existing, or
+that ever had an existence, while the great workshop in which they were
+subsequently remodeled was in Alexandria in Egypt, whose theological
+schools furnished the model for nearly every system now found noticed
+on the page of history--Christianity of course included. So much for
+the unrivaled antiquity of the Hindoo religion. Now, the more important
+query arises, What relationship does ancient heathen or Hindoo Budhism
+bear to Christianity? What is the evidence that the latter is an
+outgrowth of the former? As an answer to this question, the reader will
+please note the following facts of history:--
+
+1. Alexandria, the home of the world's great conqueror, was at one
+period of time the great focal center for religious speculation and
+propagandism, the great emporium for religious dogmas throughout the
+East, and a place of resort for the disciples of nearly every system of
+religious faith then existing.
+
+2. In this capital city, comprising about five hundred thousand
+inhabitants, were established a voluminous library, and vast theological
+schools, in which men of every religious order, and of every phase of
+faith, met and exchanged religious ideas, and borrowed new doctrines,
+with which they remodeled their former systems of faith, amounting in
+some cases to an entire change of their long-established creeds.
+
+3. In these theological schools the Jewish sect, which afterward became
+the founders of Christianity, were extensively represented; for, let it
+be noted, its first disciples and founders had all been Jews, probably
+of the Essene sect. "For a long time the Christians were but a Jewish
+sect," says M. Reuss' "History of Christian Theology." Alexander had,
+previous to this time (that is, about 330 b. c.), subjected the whole
+of Western Asia to his dominions, including, of course, "The Holy
+Land"--Judea.
+
+4. By this act a large portion of the Jewish nation were transferred
+from their own country to Alexandria. And this number was afterward
+vastly increased by Alexander's successor, Ptolemy Sotor, who carried off
+and settled in that credal city one hundred thousand more Jews.
+
+5. As the result, in part, of these repeated calamities, "the Lord's
+chosen people" were literally broken up. They lost their law, lost their
+leader and lawgiver, lost their language, lost the control of their
+country, the "_Promised Land"_ which (they verily believed) the Lord
+had deeded to them _in fee simple_, and ratified in the high court
+of heaven, and had declared they should hold and possess forever. And
+finally they partially lost their nationality, being literally dissolved
+and broken up; and were finally almost lost to history--the ten tribes
+disappearing entirely.
+
+6. The Jews had ever manifested a proneness for copying after the
+religious customs of their heathen neighbors, and engrafting their
+doctrines into their own creeds, as their bible history furnishes ample
+proof.
+
+7. In Alexandria a very superior opportunity was afforded for doing
+this, excelling in this respect any previous period of their history.
+
+8. The shattered condition of their own religion, with all its
+conventional creeds, customs, and ceremonies, now suspended and
+literally prostrated, as above shown, vastly augmented the temptation
+ever rife with them to make another change in their religion, and
+subject their creed to another installment of new doctrines, by which it
+became Christianity.
+
+9. The liberal character and tolerant spirit of the political and
+religious institutions of the kingdom of Alexandria, with its vast
+and attractive library of two hundred thousand volumes, established
+principally by Ptolemy Phila-delphus, with other attractive features
+already pointed out, furnished great facilities, as well as increased
+temptations to religious propagandists to absorb new theories, and make
+new creeds out of the vast medley of religious doctrines and speculative
+dogmas preached and propagated in that royal city by the disciples and
+representatives of nearly every religious system then in existence,
+brought together by the attractions above specified.
+
+10. Hence every consideration would lead us to conclude, taken in
+connection with the facts above stated, and the well-known borrowing
+proclivity and imitative propensity of the Jews, that they would not,
+and could not, withstand the overweening and overpowering temptation to
+make another radical change in their religion by a new draught on the
+boundless reservoir of speculative ideas, religious tenets, and specious
+theories then glowing in the popular schools of Alexandria.
+
+11. All the facts above enumerated would impel us to the conclusion that
+the Jews would--and every page of history touching the matter proves
+they did--make important changes in their religion by this contact with
+the oriental systems, as they had repeatedly done before. Some of this
+proof we will here present, to show how they originated Christianity.
+
+12. "The schools of Alexandria" says Mr. Enfield, a Christian writer,
+"by pretending to teach sublime doctrines concerning God and divine
+things, enticed men of different countries and religions, and among the
+rest the Jews, to study its mysteries, and incorporate them with their
+own.... The Jewish faith mixed with the Pythagorean, and afterward with
+the Egyptian oriental theology" (that is, they became Essenes in the
+Grecian school of Pythagoras, who taught the doctrines of that religious
+order, then Bud-hists in the Egyptian schools of Alexandria). And
+finally, with Christ as their leader, who taught the doctrines of
+both schools (they being essentially alike), they assumed the name of
+Christian in honor of him, and thus is Christianity from Essene Budhism.
+
+13. Beers in his "History of the Jews," sustains the above statement by
+the declaration that the Essenian Jews "fled to Egypt at the time of the
+Babylonian captivity, and there became acquainted with the Pythagorean
+philosophy, and ingrafted it upon the religion of Moses," which would
+make them Essenian Budhists--for Cunningham assures us that "the
+doctrine of Pythagoras were intensely Budhistic." (Philsa. Topus, chap.
+x.)
+
+14. We will condense a few more historical testimonies relative to the
+entire change of the Jewish faith, while in Alexandria, as well as on
+other occasions, to show how easy and natural it was for that portion of
+the Jews who afterward became the founders of Christianity to slide into
+and adopt Essenian Budhism, whose doctrines they took to constitute the
+Christian religion.
+
+15. Mr. Gibbon (chap. xxi.) declares that the theological opinions
+of the Jews underwent great changes by their contact with the various
+foreigners they found in Alexandria. Mr. Tytler likewise, in his
+"Universal History," assures us that the Jewish religion "became
+_totally changed by the intermixture of heathen doctrines_." Dr.
+Campbell also testifies that "their views came pretty much to coincide
+with those of the pagans." (See his Dissertation, vi.) And the author of
+"_The Expositor_ for 1854" complains that the pagan "theology stole upon
+them from every quarter, and mingled in all the views of the then known
+tribes, so that by the year 150 b. c., it had wrought visible changes in
+their notions and habits of thought." (P. 423.) Here we have the proof
+that the whole Jewish religion underwent a change in Alexandria.
+
+16. Now, most, certainly a nation or sect professing a religion so
+easily changed, and possessing a character so fickle, or so
+irrepressible as to yield on every slight occasion, and embrace every
+opportunity to imbibe new religious ideas and doctrines, would easily,
+if not naturally, slide into the adoption of the religious system then
+promulgated in Alexandria under the name of Budhism, and afterward
+remodeled or transformed, and called Christianity.
+
+17. The Jews of the Essenian order, as we have in part shown in a
+previous chapter, set forth in their creed all the leading doctrines now
+comprised in the Christian religion hundreds of years before the advent
+of Christ, not excepting the doctrine of the divine incarnation and its
+adjuncts, as these concomitants of the present popular faith, we will
+now prove, were not unknown to the Jewish theology, but constituted
+a part of the religion of some of the principal Jewish sects. That
+standard Christian author, Mr. Milman, in his "History of Christianity,"
+tells us that "the doctrine of the incarnation ('God manifest in the
+flesh') was the doctrine from the Ganges, and even the shores of the
+Yellow Sea to the Ilissus. It was the fundamental principle of
+the Indian Budhist religion and philosophy. It was the basis of
+Zoroasterism. It was pure Platonism. It was Platonic Judaism in the
+Alexandrian school." Here it is positively declared, by a popular
+Christian writer, whose work is a part of nearly every popular library
+in Christiandom as a standard authority, that the appearance of God
+amongst men in the human form, by human birth, was a doctrine of
+the Jewish religion in some of its branches, especially the Essenian
+branch--further proof that Christianity originated nothing, and gave
+utterance to no new doctrine or precepts, and performed no new miracles.
+Where, then, is the claim for its originality? On what ground is it
+predicated? Please answer us, good Christian brother.
+
+18. It is a question of no importance, if it could be settled, whether
+Christianity is a direct outgrowth from one of the new-fangled sects
+of Judaism, or whether it derived a portion of its doctrines from this
+source and the balance from ascetic Budhism. Yet we regard it as an
+incontrovertible proposition that it all grew out of Budhism originally,
+either directly or indirectly.
+
+19. Christ may have received his doctrines secondhanded, all or a
+portion from the Essenian Jews; for that sect held all the leading
+doctrines of Budhism (as we have shown in a previous chapter), which now
+goes under the name of the religion of Jesus Christ.
+
+20. Or we may indulge the not unreasonable hypothesis that the founders
+of Christianity, who republished the doctrines of Budhism and adopted
+them as their own, received them all direct from the disciples of that
+religious order; for "they were everywhere," as one writer (Mr. Taylor)
+declares, speaking of their extensive travels to propagate their
+doctrines through the world. And it was about that period, as Mr.
+Goodrich informs us, they sent out nine hundred missionaries, who made
+six millions of converts,--a small fraction of their present
+number (three hundred and eighty millions, as given by some of our
+geographies),--one third more than the entire census of Christendom, and
+six times the number of believers in the Christian religion, if we omit
+Greeks and Catholics. "It is." as a writer remarks, "the oldest and
+most widely spread religion in the world." And, whatever hypothesis may
+be adduced to account for the fact, Christianity is now all Budhism.
+
+21. It is impossible, with the historic darkness which at present
+environs and beclouds our pathway, to determine at what period or in
+what manner Christ became an Essene,--whether he was born of Essenian
+parents, or became a convert to the faith,--because the whole period of
+his life, with the exception of about three years, is a total blank in
+history. There is but one incident related of his movements by his
+bible biographers prior to his twenty-seventh year, leaving more than
+a quarter of a century of his probably active life unreported--a period
+that may have witnessed several important changes in his religion. We
+have not even his ancestry reported in his scriptural biography, in
+either parental line, unless we assume Joseph to have been his father.
+The parental lineage of his mother is entirely omitted Had we his
+line of ancestry, or could we trace him back to his national or family
+origin, we doubt not but we should there find a clue to the origin of
+his religion. We should find his ancestors were Essenian Jews.
+
+22. Nor can we fix the date when Essenian Budhism among the Jews
+received the name of Christianity for a similar reason. There is a
+link--a chain of events of four hundred years left out of the bible
+between Judaism and Christianity--thus lacking four hundred years of
+connecting the two religions together, or of showing how the latter
+grew out of the former. Malachi, the last book of the Old Testament,
+antedates the first events of Christian history four centuries, or
+twelve generations, thus leaving a wide and dark gap between them. And
+besides, we cannot find the name of Christ or Christianity mentioned in
+any of the contemporary histories of that era till one hundred and four
+years after the time fixed for Christ's birth by Christendom; Tacitus
+being the first writer who names either, and this was at that date.
+
+23. These facts disclose the whole secret with respect to the mystery
+and darkness thrown around the origin of the Christian religion--the
+how, the when, and the where of its origin. That chapter of Christian
+history is left out of the record. The bible account itself is
+but fragmentary, as it leaves nine tenths of Christ's history a
+blank,--twenty-seven years out of the thirty,--and omits all mention of
+his ancestors beyond his grandmother, and leaves even the time of his
+birth a blank. "The researches of the learned," says Mr. Mosheim (a
+standard Christian author), "though long and ably conducted, have been
+unable to fix the time of Christ's birth with certainty." (Eccl. Hist.
+p. 23.) Wonderful admission, truly, as it is an evidence that nothing
+else can be fixed "with certainty," with respect to the history of
+"the man Christ Jesus," only that his doctrines and precepts were all
+borrowed perhaps during the twenty-seven dark and mysteries years of his
+life, if not an Essene by birth.
+
+24. There is no escaping the conclusion that Christianity is a _borrowed
+system_--an outgrowth and remodeling of Budhism, with a change of name
+only. A thousand facts of history prove and proclaim it, and the verdict
+of posterity will be unanimous in affirming it.
+
+25. From the almost endless chain of analogies, exhibiting a striking
+resemblance even in their minute details of Christianity and Budhism,
+we are compelled to conclude that one furnished the materials for the
+other; that one is the offspring--the legitimate child--of the other.
+And as it is a settled historical fact that Budhism is much the older
+system, there is hence no difficulty in determining which is the parent
+and which is the child.
+
+26. In the Hindoo story of the creation of the human race, we find Adimo
+and Heva given as the names of the first man and woman answering to
+our Adam and Eve. And our Shem, Ham, and Japheth are traceable to their
+Sherma, Hama, and Jiapheta; the difference in the mode of spelling is
+probably owing to the difference in the languages. And under the new era
+we have Christ Jesus answering to their Chrishna Zeus, as some writers
+give the name of the eighth Avatar. And for Maia, a godmother, we have
+Mary. And other similar analogies might be pointed out besides the long
+string of strikingly similar events previously presented in the history
+of the two Saviors (Christ and Chrishna), amounting to hundreds.
+
+27. Such an almost countless list of similar and nearly identical
+incidents bids defiance, and absolutely sets at naught all attempts
+to account for it as a mere fortuitous accident. There is no
+other explanation possible but that Christianity is a re-vamp or
+re-establishment of Budhism.
+
+28. Here let it be noted that Christianity was not the only religion
+which was rehabilitated in the Alexandrian schools. On the contrary, all
+the popular oriental systems then in active being had long previously
+passed through the same representative theological schools and
+creed-making institutions of that royal and commercial city. All were
+remodeled in its theological workshops--a fact which accounts most
+conclusively for the same train of religions ideas and historical
+incidents being found in the later sacred books of each. And besides,
+Sir William Jones says, "The disciples of these various systems of
+religion had intercourse with each other long before the time of Christ,
+which would necessarily bring about a uniformity in the doctrines and
+general character of each system."
+
+29. The disciples of all the religious systems cited their initiatory
+miracles as a proof of being on familiar terms with God Almighty. They
+all (as is claimed) healed the sick; all restored the deaf, the dumb,
+and the blind; all cast out devils, and all raised the dead. (See
+chapter on Parallels.) In fact, all their miracles and legendary marvels
+run in parallel lines, because all were recast in the same creed-mold
+in Alexandria. A coincidence is thus beautifully explained, which would
+otherwise be hard to account for.
+
+30. Mr. Gibbon says, "It was in the school of Alexandria that the
+Christian theology appears to have assumed a regular and scientific
+form" (Decline, &c., chap. xv.); that is, the regular and scientific
+form of Budhism or Essenism.
+
+31. Pregnant with meaning is the text, "It was in the city of Antioch
+the disciples were first called Christians." (Acts xi. 36.) Here is
+conclusive proof that the disciples of the Christian faith were not
+always known by the same name, and were not at first called Christians.
+Then what were they called during the earlier years of their history?
+
+Here is a great and important query, and one involving a momentous
+problem. Couple the two facts together, that the disciples were first
+known as Christians at Antioch, and that the Essenian order of believers
+expired and went out of history about that period, and the question is
+at once and forever satisfactorily settled. It was not an infrequent act
+on making important changes in a religion, and adopting some new items
+of faith to change the title of the system, and give it a new name.
+
+After Alexander Campbell had made some modifications in his previous
+religious faith, and started a new church, his followers were popularly
+called Campbellites. Elias Hicks ingrafted some reform ideas into the
+Quaker faith, and instituted a new society of that order. Hence, and
+henceforth, his disciples were known as Hicksites. In like manner Jesus
+Christ having made some innovations in his inherited Jewish faith (which
+was of the Essene stamp) by ingrafting more of the Budhist doctrine into
+it, his followers were henceforth called Christians. How complete the
+analogy! Here let it be borne in mind, as powerfully confirmatory of
+this conclusion, that the first Christians were (as history affirms)
+"merely reformatory Jews." The twelve chosen were all Jews, probably of
+the Essene order. According to the Rev. Mr. Prideaux (Jewish History),
+the Jews of this order were first called Israelites, in common with the
+other tribes; then Chassidim; and thirdly Essenes. And finally, after
+the Essenian Jesus Christ, with some new radical ideas, proclaimed, "Ye
+have heard it hath been said by them of old time" thus and so, "but I
+say unto you" differently. The title was again changed, and they adopted
+or received the name of Christians--the Essenes going out of history
+at the very date Christians first appear in history. Put this and that
+together, and the chain is welded. Thus we can as easily trace the
+origin of Christianity as we can trace the origin of a root running
+beneath the soil in the direction of a certain tree. History, then,
+proclaims that to the honest, pious, deeply-devout, self-denying, yet
+ignorant, slothful, and filthy Budhistic Essenes must be awarded the
+honor or dishonor of giving birth to that system of religion now known
+as Christianity.
+
+
+CHRISHNA AS A GOD--ADDITIONAL FACTS.
+
+The following additional facts relative to the history, character, life,
+and teachings of Zeus Chrishna, or Jeseus Christna (as styled by one
+writer) are drawn mostly from the Vedas, Baghavat, Gita (Bible in
+India).
+
+1. _His Virgin Mother, her Character_.--The holy book declares, that
+"through her the designs of God were accomplished. She was pure and
+chaste; no animal food ever touched her lips; honey and milk were her
+sustenance; her time was spent in solitude, lost in the contemplation of
+God who showered upon her innumerable blessings; she looked upon death
+as the birth to a new and better life; when she traveled, a column of
+fire in the heavens went before her to guide her. One evening, as
+she was praying, she heard celestial music, and fell into a profound
+ecstasy, and being overshadowed by the spirit of God, she conceived the
+God Chrishna." (Baghavat, Gita).
+
+2. _Chrishna, his Life and Mission_.--This sin-atoning God was about
+sixteen when he commenced active life. Like Christ, he chose twelve
+disciples to aid him in propagating his doctrines. "He spent his time
+working miracles, resuscitating the dead, healing lepers, restoring
+the deaf and the blind, defending the weak against the strong, and the
+oppressed against the oppressor, and in proclaiming his divine mission
+to redeem man from original sin, and banish evil, and restore the reign
+of good." (Baghavat, Gita.) It is declared that he came to teach peace,
+charity, love to man, self-respect, the practice of good for its own
+sake, and faith in the inexhaustible goodness of the Creator; also to
+preach the immortality of the soul, and the doctrine of future rewards
+and punishments, and to vanquish the prince of darkness, Rakshas. It is
+further declared that "Brahma sent his son (Chrishna) upon the earth to
+die for the salvation of man." "His lofty precepts and the purity of his
+life spread his fame throughout all India, and finally won for him
+more than three millions of followers." "He inculcated the sublimest
+doctrines, and the purest morals, and the grand principles of charity
+and self-denial." "He forbade revenge, and commanded to return good
+for evil, and consoled the feeble and the unhappy." "He lived poor, and
+loved the poor." "He lived chaste, and enjoined chastity." "Problems the
+most lofty, and morals the most pure and sublime, and the future destiny
+of man, were themes which engaged his most profound attention."
+
+"Chrishna, we will venture to say (says the Bible in India) was the
+greatest of philosophers, not only of India, but of the entire world."
+"He was the grandest moral figure of ancient times." (Bible in India.)
+"Chrishna was a moralist and a philosopher." "We should admire his moral
+lessons, so sublime and so pure." "He was recognized as the 'Divine
+Word.'" "He received the title of Jeseus, which means pure Essense."
+Chrishna signifies the "Promised of God," the "Messiah." "When he
+preached, he often spoke from a mount. He also spoke in parables.
+'Parable plays a great part in the familiar instructions of this Hindoo
+Redeemer.'" He relates a very interesting parable of a fisherman who
+was much persecuted by his neighbors, but who in the time of a severe
+famine, when the people were suffering and dying for the want of food,
+being so noble as to return good for evil, he carried food to these same
+persecuting enemies, and thus saved them from starvation. "Therefore,"
+said he "do good to all, both the evil and the good, even your enemies."
+
+His addresses to the people were simple, but to his disciples they were
+elevated and philosophical. Such was the wisdom of his sermons and his
+parables, that the people crowded around him, eager to behold and hear
+him, "saying, This is indeed the Redeemer promised to our Fathers."
+Great multitudes followed him, exclaiming, "This is he who resuscitates
+the dead, and heals the lame, and the deaf, and the blind." On one
+occasion, as he entered Madura (as Christ once entered Jerusalem), "the
+people came out in flocks to meet him, and strewed branches in his way."
+On another occasion two women approached him, anointed him with oil,
+and worshiped him. When the people murmured at this waste, he replied,
+"Better is a little given with an humble heart than much given with
+ostentation." Such was his sense of decorum, that he admonished some
+girls he once observed playing in a state of nudity on the bank of a
+river after bathing. They repented, asked his forgiveness, and reformed.
+"The followers of Chrishna practiced all the virtues, and observed a
+complete abnegation of self (self-denial), and lived poor, hoping for a
+reward in the future life. They occupied all their time in the service
+of their Divine Master. Pure and majestic was their worship." Chrishna
+had a favorite disciple _Adjaurna_, who sustained to him the relation of
+John to Christ, while Angada acted the part of Judas by following him to
+the Ganges and betraying him.
+
+3. _His last Hours_.--"When Chrishna knew his hour had come, forbidding
+his disciples to follow him, he repaired to the bank of the River
+Ganges; and having performed three ablutions, he knelt down, and looking
+up to heaven, he prayed to Brahma." While nailed to the cross, the
+tree on which he was suspended became suddenly covered with great red
+flowers, which diffused their fragrance all around. And it is said
+he often appeared to his disciples after his death "in all his divine
+majesty."
+
+4. _The second Advent of Chrishna_.--"There is not a Hindoo or a Brahmin
+who does not look upon the second coming of Chrishna as an established
+article of faith." Their holy bibles (the Vedas and Gita) prophesy of
+him thus: "He shall come crowned with lights; he shall come, and the
+heavens and the earth shall be joyous; the stars shall pale before
+his splendor; the earth will be too small to contain him, for he is
+infinite, he is Almighty, he is Wisdom, he is Beauty, he is all and in
+all; and all men, all animated beings, beasts, birds, trees, and plants,
+will chant his praises; he will regenerate all bodies, and purify all
+souls." "He will be as sweet as honey and ambrosia, and as pure as
+the lamb without spot, or as the lips of a virgin. All hearts will be
+transported with joy. From the rising to the setting of the sun it will
+be a day of joy and exultation, when this God shall manifest his power
+and his glory, and reconcile the world unto himself." Such are a few of
+the prophetic utterances of his devout and prayerful disciples.
+
+"We find," says a writer, "in all the theogonies of different countries
+the hope of the advent of a God (either his first or his second
+coming)--a hope which sprang from a sense of their own imperfections and
+sufferings, which naturally induced them to look for a divine Redeemer."
+
+5. _Precepts of Chrishna_.--Numerous are the prescriptive admonitions
+found in the holy books which set forth the religion of "this heathen
+demigod" (so called by Christian professors). They appertain to all
+the duties of life, but are too numerous to be quoted here. Those
+appertaining to woman enjoin the most sacred regard for her rights,
+such as "woman should be protected with tenderness, and shielded with
+fostering solicitude." "There is no crime more odious than to persecute
+woman, or take advantage of her weakness." "Degrade woman and you
+degrade man." For other similar precepts, see Chapter XXXII. The
+injunctions to read their holy bible (the Vedas, &c.) are quite
+numerous, such as, "Let him study the holy Scriptures unceasingly"
+"Pray night and morning, and read the holy Scriptures in the attitude
+of devotion." And many of them read it through upon their knees. (See
+Chap. XLIV.) We have not space for a further exposition of this subject
+here; but it will be found more fully set forth in the pamphlet, "Christ
+and Chrishna Compared," which will, perhaps, become an Appendix to this
+work.
+
+It may be objected that there are precepts and stories to be found in
+the religion of this Hindoo God (Chrishna), which reflect but
+little credit or honor upon that religion. This is true. And similar
+reflections would materially damage the religion of Christianity also.
+The story of Christ beating and maltreating the money-changers in the
+temple, his cursing an innocent, unoffending, and unconscious fig tree,
+and his indulgence in profane swearing at his enemies,--"O ye fools
+and blind, ye generation of vipers, how can you escape the damnation
+of hell!"--does not reflect any credit upon his religion, viewed as
+a system. Defects, then, may be found in both systems. In viewing the
+analogies of the two religions, it should be noted that the Hindoos
+claim, with a forcible show of facts and logic, that the religion of
+Christianity grew out of theirs. It has not been long since a learned
+Hindoo maintained this position in a public debate with a missionary.
+If all these facts effect nothing in the way of inducing the Christian
+clergy to confess the falsity of their position in claiming their
+religion to be a direct emanation from God, it will be a sad commentary
+upon either their intelligence or their honesty.
+
+These historical facts, with those set forth in the preceding chapters,
+prove that the religion called Christianity, instead of being, as
+Christians claim, "the product of the Divine Mind," is the product
+of "heathen" minds; i. e., a spontaneous outgrowth of the moral and
+religious elements of the human mind. And therefore, for God to have
+revealed it over again to the founders of Christianity would have been
+superfluous, and a proof of his ignorance of history.
+
+Note.--The author deems it proper to state here, with respect to the
+comparison between Christ and Chrishna, that some of the doctrines which
+he has selected as constituting a part of the religion of the Hindoo
+Savior, are not found in the reported teachings of that deified
+moralist. But as they appear to breathe forth the same spirit, it is
+presumed he would have indorsed them, had they come under his notice. As
+Christians assume the liberty to arrange the doctrines of Paul and Peter
+under the head of Christianity because claimed to be in consonance with
+the religion of Christ, though not all taught by him, the author, in
+like manner, has assumed, that some doctrines taught by other systems
+and religious teachers of India accord with those taught by Chrishna,
+and hence has arranged them with his. The author's purpose is not to set
+forth the doctrines of any sect, any system, or any religious teacher,
+but to show that all the doctrines of Christianity are traceable to
+ancient India. But whether taught by this sect or that sect, it is
+foreign to our purpose to inquire; and hence, for convenience, he has
+arranged them all into one system, and designated them Chrishnianity
+(borrowing a new term). There can be no more impropriety, he presumes,
+in arranging the doctrines of the various conflicting sects of India
+into one system (including even Brahminism and Budhism), than to
+arrange, as Christians do, the doctrines taught by the antagnostic
+system of Catholicism and Protestantism, and their six hundred
+conflicting sects, under the head of Christianity. Hence, Christians, of
+course, will not fault the arrangement. The classification above alluded
+to comprises, in part, the religion of many of the Hindoo sects,
+but does not set forth all their doctrines, only those analogous to
+Christianity. Chrishna was a Vishnuite, and not a Brahmin, as some
+writers assume. He and Christ were both reformers, and departed from the
+ancient faith. Vishnuism appears to have finally centered in Budhism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII. APOLLONIUS, OSIRIS, MAGUS, ETC.--GODS
+
+
+MIRACULOUS ACHIEVEMENTS OF OTHER GODS AND DEMI-GODS OF ANTIQUITY.
+
+THE age in which Christ flourished, as before remarked, was
+pre-eminently an age of miracle. The practice of thaumaturgy, and the
+legends invested with the display of the miracle-working power, both
+preceding and subsequent to that era, rose to a great height. "All
+nations of that time," says a writer, "were mightily bent on working
+miracles." And the disciples who acted the part of biographers for the
+various crucified Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, throughout the East,
+seemed to vie with each other in setting off the lives and histories of
+their favorite objects of worship respectively, with marvelous exploits
+and the pageantry of the most astounding prodigies. And the miracles
+in each case were pretty much of the same character, thus indicating a
+common course for their origin,--all probably having been cast in the
+same mold--in the theological schools of the once famous, world-renowned
+city of Alexandria, the capital of Egypt. Having, in the preceding
+chapters, presented the miraculous achievements of the Hindoo Gods,
+Chrishna and Saki, we will here bring to notice those of other Gods.
+
+
+THE MIRACLES RECORDED OF ALCIDES, OSIRIS, AND OTHER GODS OF EGYPT.
+
+1. We have the miraculous birth by a virgin in the case of Alcides.
+
+2. Osiris, while a sucking infant in his cradle, killed two serpents
+which came to destroy him.
+
+3. Alcides performed many miraculous cures.
+
+4. According to Ovid he cured by a miracle the daughter of Archiades.
+
+5. Also the wife of Theogenes, after the doctors had given her up.
+
+6. And both these Gods converted water into wine.
+
+7. Both of them frequently cast out devils.
+
+8. Julius declares Alcides raised Tyndarus and Hippo-litus from the
+dead.
+
+9. When Zulis was crucified, the sun became dark and the moon refused to
+shine.
+
+10. Both he and Osiris were resurrected by a miracle.
+
+12. Both ascend to heaven in sight of many witnesses.
+
+12. And finally we are told that from Alexandria the whole empire became
+filled with the fame of these miracle-workers, who restored the blind to
+sight, cured the paralytic, caused the dumb to speak, the lame to walk,
+&c. All these miracles were as credibly related of these Gods as similar
+miracles of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+MIRACLES PERFORMED BY PYTHAGORAS AND OTHER GODS OF GREECE.
+
+1. Pythagoras was a spirit in heaven before he was born on earth.
+
+2. His birth was miraculously foretold.
+
+3. His mother conceived him by a specter (the Holy Ghost).
+
+4. His mother (Pytheas) was a holy virgin of great moral purity.
+
+5. Plato's mother, Paretonia (says Olympiodorus), conceived him by the
+God Apollo.
+
+6. Pythagoras in his youth astonishes the doctors by his wisdom.
+
+7. Was worshiped as the "Son of God," "Paraclete," "Child of Divinity,"
+&c.
+
+8. Coaid see events many ages in the future (says Richardson, his
+biographer).
+
+9. Could bring down the eagle from his lofty height by command.
+
+10. Could approach and subdue the wild, ferocious Daunian bear.
+
+11. Could, like Christ, appear at two places at once.
+
+12. Could walk on the water and travel on the air.
+
+13. Could discern and read the thoughts of his disciples.
+
+14. Could handle poisonous reptiles with impunity.
+
+15. Cured all manner of diseases.
+
+16. Restored sight to the blind.
+
+17. He "cast out devils."
+
+18. Jamblicus says he could allay storms on the sea.
+
+19. Raised several persons from the dead.
+
+20. And, finally, "a thousand other wonderful things are told of him,"
+says Jamblicus.
+
+With respect to his character, it is said that "for humility, and
+practical goodness, and the wisdom of his moral precepts, he stood
+without a rival." He discarded bloody sacrifices, discouraged wars,
+forbade the use of wine and other intoxicating drinks, enjoined the
+forgiveness of enemies and their kind treatment, and also respect to
+parents. He was a special friend to the poor, and taught that they
+were the favorites of God. "Blessed are ye poor." He practiced and
+recommended the silent worship of God. He retired from the world, and
+often fasted, and was a great enemy to riches (like Jesus Christ). He
+considered poverty a virtue, and despised the pomp of the world. He
+recommended (like Christ) the abandonment of parents, relations, and
+friends, houses and lands, &c., for religion's sake. His disciples, like
+those of Christ, had a common treasury and a general community of goods,
+to which all had free access, so that there was no poverty or suffering
+amongst them while the supply lasted. All shared alike. In fact, with
+respect to the spirit of his precepts, his moral lessons, and nearly his
+whole practical life, he bore a striking resemblance to Jesus Christ,
+and presented the same kind of evidence, and equally convincing
+evidence, of being a God. And as he was born into the world five hundred
+and fifty-four years before Christ, the latter probably obtained the
+materials of his moral system from that Grecian teacher, or in the same
+school of the Essenian Budhists, in which both Pythagoras and Christ
+appear to have taken lessons.
+
+
+MIRACLES OF THE ROMAN GODS QUIRINUS AND PROMETHEUS.
+
+1. Prometheus was honored with a miraculous birth.
+
+2. Quirinus was miraculously preserved in infancy, when threatened with
+destruction by the tyrant ruler Amulius.
+
+3. He performed the miracles, according to Seneca and Hesiod, of curing
+the sick, restoring the blind, raising the dead, and casting out devils.
+
+4. Both these Gods were crucified amid signs, and wonders, and miracles.
+
+5. All nature was convulsed, and the saints arose when they were
+crucified.
+
+6. The sun was also darkened, and refused to shine.
+
+7. Both descended to hell, and rose from it by divine power.
+
+8. And Prometheus was seen to ascend to heaven.
+
+We cite these lists of miraculous events as if real facts, not because
+we believe they were such, but as possessing the same degree of
+credibility as those related of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+MIRACLES AND RELIGION OF APOLLONIUS OF TYANA.
+
+1. Everything was subject to his miraculous power.
+
+2. He performed many miraculous cures.
+
+3. He restored sight to the blind.
+
+4. He cast out devils, which sometimes "cut up" like those of Christ
+
+5. He enabled the lame to walk.
+
+6. He re-animated the dead.
+
+7. He could read the thoughts of bystanders.
+
+8. Sometimes disappeared in a miraculous manner.
+
+9. Caused a tree to bloom, while Christ made another tree to wither
+away.
+
+10. The laws of nature obeyed him.
+
+11. Could speak in many languages he had never learned.
+
+12. Was at one time transfigured, like Christ
+
+13. His birth was miraculously foretold by an angel.
+
+14. Was born of a spotless virgin.
+
+15. There were demonstrations of joy and singing at his birth.
+
+16. Exhibited proofs in infancy of being a God.
+
+17. Manifested extraordinary wisdom in childhood.
+
+18. He was called "the Son of God."
+
+19. Also "the image of the Eternal Father manifested in the flesh."
+
+20. He was also styled "a prophet."
+
+21. Like Christ, he retired into mystic silence.
+
+22. His religion was one of exalted spirituality.
+
+23. He taught the doctrine of "the Inner Life."
+
+24. He possessed exalted views of purity and holiness.
+
+25. Like Christ, he was a religious ascetic.
+
+26. His religion, as in the case of Christ, forbade him to marry.
+
+27. He ate no animal food, and would wear no woolen garments.
+
+28. Gave his substance to the poor.
+
+29. Eschewed love for wine and women.
+
+30. Refrained from artificial ornaments and sumptuous living.
+
+31. He was a high-toned moral reformer.
+
+32. He condemned external sacrifices.
+
+33. Also condemned gladiatorial shows.
+
+34. He religiously opposed dancing and sexual pleasures.
+
+35. He recommended the pursuit of wisdom.
+
+36. Was of a serene temper, and never got angry.
+
+37. Was a true prophet, foresaw and foretold many future events.
+
+38. Foresaw a plague, and stopped it after it had commenced.
+
+39. Crowds were attracted by his great miracles and his wisdom.
+
+40. He disputed with and vanquished the wise men of Greece and Asia, as
+Christ did the learned doctors in the temple.
+
+41. When imprisoned by Domitian and loaded with chains, he disinthralled
+himself by divine power.
+
+42. He was followed by crowds when entering Alexandria, like Christ when
+entering Jerusalem.
+
+43. Was crucified amidst a display of divine power.
+
+44. He rose from the dead.
+
+45. Appeared to his disciples after his resurrection.
+
+46. Like Christ, he convinced a Tommy Didymus by getting him to feel the
+print of the nails in his hands and feet.
+
+47. Was seen by many witnesses after his resurrection, and was hailed by
+them as the "God Incarnate," "the Lord from Heaven."
+
+48. He finally ascended back to heaven, and now "sits at the right hand
+of the Father," pleading for a sinful world.
+
+49. When he entered the temple of Diana, "a voice from above was heard
+saying, 'Come to heaven."
+
+50. Accordingly he was seen no more on earth only as a spirit
+
+The reader will observe that the foregoing list of analogies, drawn from
+the history of Apollonius, as furnished us by his disciple Damos and his
+biographer Philostratus, are found also, in almost every particular, in
+the history of Jesus Christ. And the list might have been extended.
+It is declared, "A beauty shone in his countenance, and the words he
+uttered were divine," which reminds us of Christ's transfiguration. And
+his "staying a plague at Ephesus" revives the case of Christ stilling
+the tempest on the waters. Now, the question very naturally arises here,
+How came the histories of Apollonius and Christ to be so strikingly
+alike? Was one plagiarized from the other? As for the miraculous history
+of Apollonius being reconstructed from that of Jesus Christ, as some
+Christians have assumed, there is not the slightest foundation for such
+a conclusion, as the following facts will show, viz.:--
+
+1. The Cappadocian Savior (Apollonius) was born several years anterior
+to the advent of the Christian Savior, and appeared at an earlier date
+upon the stage of active life, and thus got the start of Christ in
+the promulgations of his doctrines and the exhibition of his miracles.
+Christ's active life, Christians concede and the bible proves, did not
+commence till about his twenty-eighth or thirtieth year, which was long
+after Apollonius had inaugurated his religion, and long after he had
+commenced the promulgation of his doctrines, and attested them by
+wonderful miracles, according to his biographer Philostratus.
+
+2. The New American Cyclopedia tells us, "Apollonius labored for the
+purity of Paganism, and to sustain its tottering edifice against the
+assaults of the Christians." So that, being placed in a hostile attitude
+toward the representatives of the Christian faith, it is not likely he
+would condescend to borrow their doctrines and the miraculous history of
+their incarnate God, to invest his own life with. He was probably one of
+the "anti-Christs" spoken of in the New Testament; but this circumstance
+reflects nothing dishonorable upon his character; for some of those
+distinguished personages denounced as "anti-Christ," by Christ's gospel
+biographers, were, according to impartial history, noble, honest, and
+righteous men. Their only offense consisted in robbing Christ of his
+divine laurels, by claiming similar titles, and claiming to perform the
+same kind of miracles; and there is as much proof that they did achieve
+these prodigies as that Christ did.
+
+3. The early Christian writers conceded that Apollonius and the other
+oriental Gods did perform the miracles which are ascribed to them
+by their respective disciples, but accounted for it by the childish
+expedient of obsession. Christ was assumed to perform miracles by
+divine power, they by the power of the devil--a childish and senseless
+distinction truly, and one which can have no logical force in this
+enlightened age.
+
+
+MIRACLES AND CLAIMS FOR SIMON MAGUS. B. C.
+
+1. It is declared, "he was in the beginning with God."
+
+2. That "he existed with God from all eternity."
+
+3. That "he took upon himself the form of a man."
+
+4. That "he was the Son of God," "the Word," &c.
+
+5. That "he was the second person in the godhead."
+
+6. That "he came down to destroy the devil and his works."
+
+7. That "he was the image of the Eternal Father."
+
+8. That "he was the first-born Son of God."
+
+9. That he could control the elements.
+
+10. That he could walk on the air as Christ did on the water.
+
+11. Could move anything by the command, "Be thou removed."
+
+12. That he could raise the dead.
+
+13. That he could transform himself into the image of any man.
+
+14. That he was "the Paraclete, or Comforter."
+
+15. That he came to "redeem the world from sin."
+
+16. Finally, he was the world's "Savior," "Redeemer," "the Only Begotten
+of the Father," and "through his name men are to be saved."
+
+The reader will call to mind that this Simon Magus is mentioned and
+condemned in the Acts of the Apostles, for offering to pay Peter for a
+bestowment of the gift of the Holy Ghost. And yet every philosopher
+in this age must concede that Magus' assumption in the case is more
+sensible and philosophical than that of Peter's. For the latter calls it
+"a gift from God," whereas every person now acquainted with the
+nature, principles, and science of animal magnetism, knows that such
+manifestation as that which Peter ascribes to God and the Holy Ghost, is
+a simple natural phenomenon; and that, consequently, it can be no more a
+violation of the rules of propriety to pay for the labor of making such
+developments than it is to pay a teacher for developing the mind of a
+child. It was certainly a greater act of courtesy to offer to pay for
+it than to demand it as a gratuitous favor. Hence we infer he excelled
+Peter in his demeanor as a gentleman, especially as he bore Peter's
+severe reprimand with patience, and apparently with a better spirit
+than that which dictated it. And we may remark here, also, that
+notwithstanding this Samaritan Jew is so unsparingly denounced by the
+godly Peter, and by the early Christian fathers also, yet we have the
+historical proof that he was an Honest, pious, and ardently devout man.
+His whole life was absorbed in the cause of religion, and his whole soul
+devoted to his religious duties and the worship of his God. Hence we
+think Peter's rebuke was uncalled for.
+
+Let the reader note the fact here that there are three circumstances
+amply sufficient to account for bibles and religious books being
+profusely supplied with the reports of groundless miracles.
+
+1. As everybody then believed in miracles (at least everybody who dared
+speak) there was nobody to investigate the reports of such occurrences,
+to learn whether they were true or false.
+
+2. The few who attempted to disprove the truth of those miraculous
+occurrences now found reported in sacred history, had their books
+burned, as in the case of Porphyry and Celsus, in the early history of
+Christianity, who called in question the truth of bible miracles.
+
+3. These marvelous facts were not usually recorded till long after the
+period in which they are said to have occurred, when the witnesses had
+left the stage of time, and every event exciting ay attention had grown
+to a monstrous prodigy. These circumstances, in an age of boundless
+credulity and scientific ignorance, which magnified every phenomenon,
+and looked upon every natural event as a direct display of divine power,
+accounts most fully and satisfactorily for the burdensome repetition of
+groundless miraculous stories found upon nearly every page of the sacred
+history of every religious nation, without driving us to the necessity
+of challenging the veracity of the writers who recorded them. They may
+all have been honest men.
+
+
+CONFUCIUS OF CHINA, BORN 551 B. C.
+
+This moral teacher, religious chieftain, and philosopher, though not
+subjected to the ignominious death of the cross, deserves a passing
+notice for the excellency of his morals and the acquisition of a
+world-wide fame. In the following particulars his history bears a strong
+analogy to that of Jesus Christ.
+
+1. He commenced as a religious teacher when about thirty years of age.
+
+2. The Golden Rule (see Chap. XXXIV.) was his favorite maxim.
+
+3. Most of his moral maxims were sound and of a high order. The New
+American Cyclopedia says (vol. v. p. 604), "His writings approach the
+Christian standard of morality;" and in some respects they excel.
+
+4. He traveled in different countries, preaching and teaching his
+doctrines.
+
+5. He made a host of converts, amounting now to one hundred and fifty
+millions.
+
+6. His religion and morals have been propagated by apostles and
+missionaries, some of whom are now traveling in this country, laboring
+to convert Christians to their superior religion and morals. "There was
+a time," says the work above quoted, "when European philosophers vied
+with each other in extolling Confucius as one of the sublimest teachers
+of truth among mankind."
+
+In the following respects his teachings were superior to those of
+Christ:--
+
+1. He taught that "the knowledge of one's self is the basis of all real
+advances in morals and manners." A lesson Christ neglected to teach.
+
+2. "The duties man owes to society and himself are minutely defined by
+Confucius," says the Cyclopedia. Another important work Christ partially
+omitted.
+
+He constructed several hundred beautiful and instructive moral maxims,
+which we have not space for here, and which amply prove that "the
+holiest truths were inculcated by pagan philosophers."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV. THE THREE PILLARS OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH--MIRACLES,
+PROPHECIES, AND PRECEPTS
+
+WHEN Christians are asked for the proof of the divinity of Jesus Christ,
+they point to his miracles and precepts, and the Messianic prophecies,
+said to have been fulfilled by his coming. And the same kind of evidence
+is adduced to prove the divine claims of their bible and its religion,
+including the Old Testament, which contains the prophecies. Their
+divine origin and supernatural character are claimed to be proved by the
+miracles, prophecies, and precepts found recorded in the Holy Book. All,
+then, stand or fall together--the divinity of Christ, and the divinity
+of the bible and its religion, all, rest on this threefold argument.
+All, it is claimed, are attested and proved by a threefold display of
+divine power, manifested,--
+
+1. By the performance of various acts, transcending human power and the
+laws of nature, called Miracles.
+
+2. By the discernment of events lying in the future which no human
+sagacity or prescience could have foreseen, unless aided by Omniscience;
+the display of such power being called Prophecy.
+
+3. By the enunciation of Moral Precepts beyond the mental capacity of
+human beings to originate.
+
+These three propositions cover the whole ground. They constitute the
+three grand pillars of the Christian faith, which, if shown to be
+untenable, must prostrate the whole superstructure to the ground. We
+will examine each separately, commencing with miracles.
+
+I. Miracles the first Pillar of the Christian Faith.
+
+We will not occupy space in discussing the various meanings assigned to
+the word miracle by different writers, but take the popular definition
+as given above, and proceed to inquire how much evidence can be deduced
+from the miracles represented as having been performed by Jesus Christ,
+toward proving his divinity and the truth of his religion. In the first
+place, it should be borne in mind that Christianity is not the only
+religion which appeals to miracles as a proof of its divine authorship.
+More than three hundred systems and sects are reported in history, most
+of which have, from time immemorial, gloried in being able to wield this
+knock-down argument as they claim it to be, in support of the truth and
+divine authenticity of their various systems of faith. We have briefly
+noticed some of the miraculous achievements reported in their sacred
+books, and ascribed to their Gods and sin-atoning Saviors, and compare
+them with similar ones related of Jesus Christ, commencing with Pagan
+Miracles.
+
+As the whole pathway of religious history is thickly be-studded with
+miracles wrought in all ages and countries, and every page of the
+oriental bibles and religious books is literally loaded down with the
+relation of these marvelous prodigies said to have been wrought by their
+Gods, Demigods, and crucified Saviors, it places a writer in a quandary
+to know where to begin to make a selection. We will express no opinion
+here as to whether these astounding feats were ever witnessed or not;
+but will merely state that they come to us as well authenticated as
+those reported in the Christian bible. There is as much evidence that
+Zoroaster, at the request of King Gustaph, caused a tree to spring up
+in a man's yard forthwith, of such magnificent proportions that no rope
+could be found large enough to reach around it, as that Jesus Christ
+caused a fig tree to wither away by merely cursing it. And we have
+the same kind of evidence that the Hindoo Messiah, Chrishna, of
+India, restored two boys to life who had been killed by the bites of
+serpents, as that Jesus Christ resurrected Lazarus and the widow's son
+of Nain; and as much proof that Bacchus turned water into wine, as that
+Jesus performed this act six hundred years after. And a hundred other
+similar comparisons might be drawn. The evidence of the truth of these
+performances in both cases, pagan and Christian, is simply the report
+of the writer. If there are any exceptions to be made in either case of
+better evidence, it will be found in favor of pagan religion; for its
+adherents are able in many cases to point to imperishable monuments of
+stone erected in commemoration of their miracles. And Mr. Goodrich tells
+us this is the highest species of evidence that can be offered to prove
+the truth of any ancient event. But as Christians, on the other hand,
+can find no such evidence to prove the performance of any miracles
+reported in their bible, it will be seen at once that the pagan miracles
+are the best authenticated. The famous historian Pausanias states upon
+current authority that Esculapius raised several persons from the
+dead, and names Hippolytus among the number, and then points to a
+stone monument erected as a proof of the occurrence--thus furnishing,
+according to Christian logic, the most conclusive proof of one of the
+most astounding miracles ever wrought. And yet no philosopher or man
+of science in this age can credit the literal truth of the story. But a
+spiritualist can easily conceive that he and others might have mistaken
+the risen spirits of those resurrected persons for their physical
+bodies, because they know that many mistakes of this kind have occurred
+in modern times.
+
+We might refer to many other cases of pagan miracles attested by
+monumental evidence if our space would permit--such as the names of many
+persons engraven upon the walls of the Temple of Serapis, miraculously
+carved by the God Esculapius. Strabo tells us the ancient temples are
+full of tablets describing miraculous cures performed by virgin-born
+Gods of those times, and names a case of two blind men being restored to
+sight by the son of God Alcides in the presence of a large multitude
+of people, "who acknowledged the miraculous power of the God with
+loud acclaim." Many spiritualists at the present day know by practical
+experience how these "miraculous cures" were performed. Without
+continuing the citation of cases, suffice it to say, the sin-atoning
+Gods of the orientals are reported as performing the same train of
+miracles assigned to Jesus Christ, such as performing astonishing cures,
+casting out devils, raising the dead, &c. Now, sadly warped indeed by
+education must be that mind which cannot see that if the account of
+such prodigies, reported in the history of Jesus Christ, can do anything
+towards proving him to have been a God, then the world must have been
+full of Gods long before his time. It is impossible to dodge or evade
+such a conclusion.
+
+Christians are in the habit of assuming that all the miraculous reports
+in the bible are unquestionably true, while those reported in pagan
+bibles are mere fables and fiction. But if they will reverse this
+proposition, it can be easier supported, because we have shown their
+miracles are better attested and authenticated. Their own bible admits
+that the heathen not only could and did perform miracles, but miraculous
+prodigies of the most astonishing character, equal to anything reported
+in their own religious history--such as transmuting water into blood,
+sticks into serpents, and stones into frogs. In a word, it is admitted
+they performed all the miraculous feats of Moses with the single
+exception of turning dust into lice. But certainly making lice was not
+a more difficult achievement than that of making frogs, and this is
+admitted they did do successfully.
+
+Hence it will be seen that the Egyptian pagans made as great a display
+of divine or miraculous power as "God's Holy People," according to the
+admission of the bible itself. And there is no intimation that the mode
+of performing the miracles was not the same in both cases, but a strong
+probability exists that it was, a conclusion confirmed by the bible
+report of the case which leads us to infer that they performed the
+miracles in the same way Moses did. For it is said, "The Egyptians did
+so with their enchantments"--that is, with the "enchanting rod" used
+on such occasions by the Egyptians, Assyrians, Babylonians, and other
+nations, including also the Jews. Now, as Moses always used the
+"enchanting rod" in performing miracles, called by him "the rod of God,
+the rod of divination," &c. (see Ex. iv. ), there is thus furnished the
+most satisfactory proof that he performed his miracles on this occasion,
+as well as all other occasions, by the same stratagem as the Egyptians
+and other nations did. And even if the mode adopted by the Egyptians had
+been different, it is still admitted they performed the miracles. In
+the name of reason and common sense, then, we ask if such facts as here
+presented with the case just referred to do not forever prostrate and
+annihilate all arguments based on miracles toward proving the divine
+character or divine origin of the religion of the bible, or towards
+proving
+
+Jesus Christ, or any other being reported to have performed miracles, as
+possessing divine attributes?
+
+
+CATHOLIC MIRACLES.
+
+Some of the most astonishing and best authenticated miracles ever
+performed by any religious sect we find reported in the history of the
+Roman Catholic church, looked upon and styled by the Protestants "the
+mother of Harlots and Abomination." And yet there is much stronger proof
+that the Catholic religion has the divine sanction, if miracles can
+furnish such proof. The editor of "The Official Memoirs" declares that
+during the Italian war in 1797, several pictures of the virgin Mary,
+situated in different parts of the country, were seen to open and shut
+their eyes for the space of six or seven months, and that no less than
+sixty thousand people actually saw this miracle performed, including
+many bishops, deacons, cardinals, and other officers of the church,
+whose names are given. And Forsyth's Italy (p. 344), written by a highly
+accredited author, tells us that a withered elm tree was suddenly
+restored to full life and vigor by coming in contact with the body of
+St. Zenobis, and that this miracle took place in the most public part
+of the town, in the presence of many thousands of people; that "it is
+recorded by contemporary historians, and inscribed upon a marble column
+now standing where the tree stood."
+
+Now, the question may be asked here, Would the people have allowed such
+an impudent trick to insult them as the erection of a monument for an
+event that never took place? If not, how is the matter to be explained?
+These are only specimens of a hundred more Catholic miracles of an
+astonishing character at our command. Several queries may be entertained
+in the solution of these stories. 1st, Were some phenomena really
+witnessed on which these stories were constructed, but which got
+magnified from a molehill to a mountain before they found their way
+into history? or, 2d, Were they manufactured as a pious fraud, which was
+rather a fashionable business with the early disciples of the Christian
+faith, according to Mr. Mosheim? Whatever answer may be given to these
+questions will explain the miracles of the Christian bible, excepting
+those which can be accounted for on natural principles.
+
+
+SATANIC MIRACLES.
+
+Among all the workers of miracles reported in the bible the devil seems
+to have been pre-eminent, and hence must come in for the better end of
+the argument toward proving him to have been a God. No miracle could
+excel the act of his "transforming himself into an angel of light," as
+stated in 2 Cor. xi. 14. It is not transcended by any other case, not
+even by Christ's transfiguration. And according to Paul he was endowed
+"with all power, and signs, and lying wonders." (Thess. ii. 9.) If,
+then, he possessed "all power," Christ, and no other God, could have
+possessed a miraculous power superior to his, for "all" comprehends the
+whole, beyond which nothing can reach. Where, then, is the evidence
+to come from to prove that Christ was a God, because he was
+a miracle-worker, or his religion divine, because attested by
+miracles--seeing the devil performed some of the most difficult miracles
+ever wrought? Should we not then change his title from that of a demon
+to a God, and place his religion amongst the divinely endowed systems?
+St. John represents the "Evil One" as having power to make "fire come
+down from heaven in the sight of men," and "to deceive those that dwell
+on the earth by means of those miracles which he hath power to do."
+(Rev. xiii.)
+
+Here the question arises, What can a miracle prove, what end can
+it serve, or what good can possibly arise from the display of the
+miracle-working power, when it is liable "to deceive those that
+dwell upon the earth?" Certainly, therefore, it proves nothing, and
+accomplishes nothing. And may not the apostles themselves have been
+deceived in ascribing some of the miracles they record to Jesus
+instead of the devil? Certainly we are drifted upon the quicksands of
+uncertainty by such a display of the miracle-working power, and are
+obnoxious to most fatal deception, which proves the total inutility and
+futility of such prodigies.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES NOT HIS OWN, BUT WROUGHT THROUGH HIM AND NOT BY HIM.
+
+How could Christ's miracles, assuming they were wrought, do anything
+toward proving his divinity, when he did not claim to be their author,
+but merely the agent or instrument in the hands of the Father, like the
+apostles, who are reported to have performed the same miracles? "The
+Father he doeth the work," is his own declaration. And the Apostles seem
+to have accepted his word, and his view of the matter. For proof listen
+to Peter: "Ye men of Israel, hear these words: Jesus of Nazareth, a man
+approved of God among you by miracles, and wonders, and signs, which
+God did by him in the midst of you, as ye yourselves do know." (Acts ii.
+22.) Let it be noted, then, the Christ's miracles were not performed by
+him as a God, but as "a man approved of God;" he was the mere medium or
+instrument in the case--a fact which banishes at once all grounds for
+controversy relative to his miracles serving the purpose of attesting
+his divinity, especially when it is conceded that men, magicians, and
+devils could achieve the same feats.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES DID NOT CONVINCE THE PEOPLE.
+
+As the miracles of Christ seem to have had little effect toward
+convincing the people of his claims to the godhead, it is evident they
+could have been but little superior to those performed by others, and
+therefore not designed, at least not calculated, to convince them that
+he was a God. The frequent instances in which he upbraids the people for
+their unbelief, and calls them fools, "slow of heart," &c., is a proof
+of this statement.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES NOT DESIGNED TO CONVINCE THE PEOPLE.
+
+A circumstance involving pretty strong proof that Christ's miraculous
+achievements were not considered as evidence of his divinity, is the
+fact that they were frequently performed in private, sometimes in the
+night, and often under the injunction of secrecy. "See thou tell no
+man," was the injunction, after the feat was performed, perhaps, in a
+private room. How can such facts be reconciled with the assumption that
+his miracles were designed to convince the people of his claims to the
+Divine Entity, as Christians frequently assert, when the people were not
+allowed to witness them, nor his disciples even to report them? Who
+can believe that he was a Divine Being, or Messiah, when he charged his
+disciples to "tell no man" that he was such a Being? Such incongruities
+verge to a contradiction. It is a logical contradiction to say that
+private miracles were designed to dissolve public skepticism. And yet
+many, if not most, of his reputed miraculous achievements were of this
+character. When he cured a blind man, he not only "led him out of the
+town" (Mark viii. 23), but forbid him, when his sight was restored,
+returning to the city, for fear he would publish it. When he resurrected
+Lazarus, he did not call the whole country around to witness it, but
+performed the act before a private party. The reanimation of Jairus's
+daughter was in the same concealed manner, in a private room, where
+nobody was admitted but his three confidential disciples (Peter, James,
+and John) and the parents, none of whom make any report of the case.
+How, therefore, the reporter (Mark) found it out, when he was not
+present, and none of the party were allowed to tell it to anybody, or
+why he should betray his trust by publishing it, if he was informed of
+it, is a "mystery of Godliness" not easily divined.
+
+When Christ cleansed the leper, he sent him to the priest, enjoining him
+to "say nothing to any man." The dumb, when restored to speech, was not
+allowed to exhibit any practical proof of the fact by using his tongue.
+His miraculous perambulation on the surface of the sea (walking on
+the water) was not only alone, but in the dark. His transfiguration,
+likewise, according to Dr. Barnes, took place in the night, his three
+favorite companions being the only witnesses, and they "heavy with
+sleep." And finally, the crowning miracle of all, the resurrection,
+is not only represented as taking place in the night, but without one
+substantial or terrestrial witness to report it. Verily such facts as
+these are not calculated to augment the faith jr work the conviction
+of a skeptic that these miracles were ever performed, seeing so few are
+reported as witnessing them, and even their testimony is not given. We
+have not the testimony of one person who claims to have been present and
+seen these wonders performed. Such facts are calculated to cast distrust
+upon the whole matter, especially when taken in connection with the
+fact that nine tenths of his life form a perfect blank in history. Is
+it possible, we ask, to reconcile such a fact with the belief of his
+divinity? Is it possible a God could lead a private life, or live
+twenty-seven years on earth, and do nothing worthy of note--a God known
+to nobody and noticed by nobody? Most transcendingly absurd is such a
+thought. Had Christ possessed the character that is claimed for him, not
+an hour of his life could have passed unaccompanied by some remarkable
+incident that would have been heralded abroad, and its record indelibly
+engraven upon the page of history; but instead of this, his acts were
+too commonplace to be noticed.
+
+
+ALL HISTORY IGNORES HIM.
+
+The fact that no history, sacred or profane,--that not one of the three
+hundred histories of that age,--makes the slightest allusion to Christ,
+or any of the miraculous incidents ingrafted into his life, certainly
+proves, with a cogency that no logic can overthrow, no sophistry can
+contradict, and no honest skepticism can resist, that there never was
+such a miraculously endowed being as his many orthodox disciples claim
+him to have been. The fact that Christ finds no place in the history of
+the era in which he lived,--that not one event of his life is recorded
+by anybody but his own interested and prejudiced biographers,--settles
+the conclusion, beyond cavil or criticism, that the godlike achievements
+ascribed to him are naught but fable or fiction. It not only proves
+he was not miraculously endowed, but proves he was not even naturally
+endowed to such an extraordinary degree as to make him an object of
+general attention. It would be a historical anomaly without a precedent,
+that Christ should have performed any of the extraordinary acts
+attributed to him in the Gospels, and no Roman or Grecian historian, and
+neither Philo nor Josephus, both writing in that age, and both living
+almost on the spot where they are said to have been witnessed, and both
+recording minutely all the religious events of that age and country,
+make the slightest mention of one of them, nor their reputed authors.
+Such a historical fact banishes the last shadow of faith in their
+reality.
+
+It is true a few lines are found in one of Josephus's large works
+alluding to Christ. But it is so manifestly a forgery, that we believe
+all modern critics of any note, even of the orthodox school, reject it
+as a base interpolation. Even Dr. Lardner, one of the ablest defenders
+of the Christian faith that ever wielded a pen in its support, and who
+has written ten large volumes to bolster it up, assigns nine cogent
+reasons (which we would insert here if we had space) for the conclusion
+that Josephus could not have penned those few lines found in his
+"Jewish Antiquities" referring to Christ. No Jew could possibly use such
+language. It would be a glaring absurdity to suppose a leading Jew
+could call Jesus "The Christ," when the whole Jewish nation have ever
+contested the claim with the sternest logic, and fought it to the bitter
+end. "It ought, therefore" (says Dr. Lardner, for the nine reasons which
+he assigns), "to be forever discarded from any place among the evidences
+of Christianity." (Life of Lardner by Dr. Kippis, p. 23.)
+
+As the passage is not found in any edition of Josephus prior to the era
+of Eusebius, the suspicion has fastened upon that Christian writer as
+being its author, who argued that falsehood might be used as a medicine
+for the benefit of the churches. (See his Eccles. Hist.) Origen, who
+lived before Eusebius, admitted Josephus makes no allusion to Christ. Of
+course the passage was not, then, in Josephus. One or two other similar
+passages have been found, in other authors of that era, which it is not
+necessary to notice here, as they are rejected by Christian writers. It
+must be conceded, therefore, that the numerous histories covering the
+epoch of the birth of Christ chronicle none of the astounding feats
+incorporated in his Gospel biographies as signalizing his earthly
+career, and make no mention of the reputed hero of these achievements,
+either by name or character. The conclusion is thus irresistibly forced
+upon us, not only that he was not a miracle-worker, but that he must
+have led rather an obscure life, entirely incompatible with his being
+a God or a Messiah, who came "to draw all men unto him." And it should
+also be noted here that none of Christ's famous biographers, Matthew,
+Mark, Luke, or John, are honored with a notice in history till one
+hundred and ninety years after the birth of Christ. And then the notice
+was by a Christian writer (Ireneus).
+
+"We look in vain," says a writer, "for any cotemporary notice of the
+Gospels, or Christ the subject of the Gospels, outside of the New
+Testament. So little was this 'king of the Jews' known, that the Romans
+were compelled to pay one of his apostles to turn traitor and act as
+guide before they could find him. It is impossible to observe this
+negative testimony of all history against Christ and his miracles, and
+not be struck with amazement, and seized with the conviction that he
+was not a God, and not a very extraordinary man." Who can believe that a
+God, from off the throne of heaven, could make his appearance on earth,
+and while performing the most astounding miracles ever recorded in
+any history, or that ever excited the credulity of any people, and be
+finally publicly crucified in the vicinity of a great city, and yet all
+the histories written in those times, both sacred and profane, pass over
+with entire silence the slightest notice of any of these extraordinary
+events. Impossible--most self-evidently impossible!! And when we find
+that this omission was so absolute that no record was made of the day or
+year of his birth by any person in the era in which he lived, and that
+they were finally forgotten, and hence that there are, as a writer
+informs us, no less then one hundred and thirty-three different opinions
+about the matter, the question assumes a still more serious aspect. From
+the logical potency of these facts we are driven to the conclusion that
+Christ received but little attention outside of the circle of his own
+credulous and interested followers, and consequently stands on a level
+with Chrishna of India, Mithra of Persia, Osiris of Egypt, and other
+demigods of antiquity, all whose miraculous legends were ingrafted in
+their histories long after their death. This leads us to consider
+
+
+HOW CHRIST'S INCREDIBLE LEGENDS GOT INTO HIS HISTORY.
+
+There is a remarkably easy and satisfactory way of accounting for
+all the marvelous feats and incredible stories found in the Gospel
+narratives of Jesus Christ, without assuming their reality or any
+intentional fraud or falsehood by the writers. When we learn that none
+of his evangelical biographies were penned (as Dr. Lardner affirms)
+till long after his death, we are no longer puzzled for a moment to
+understand exactly how many statements wholly incredible and morally
+impossible crept into his history, without challenging or calling
+in question the veracity or honesty of the writer. Perhaps the most
+powerful cord of moral conviction which holds the Christian professor to
+a belief in the divinity of Jesus Christ, is the difficulty of bringing
+himself to believe that the numerous miracles ascribed to him in the
+Gospels are merely the work of fiction, fabricated without a basis of
+truth, when they were evidently penned by men of the deepest piety and
+the strictest moral integrity. We ourselves were once environed
+with this difficulty. But it stands in our way no longer. We are
+disenthralled. We have solved the problem. We have found the true
+explanation. The key and clew to the whole secret is found in the simple
+fact, admitted by Christian writers and evidenced by the bible itself,
+that _no history of Christ's practical life was written out by a person
+claim-ing to have been an eyewitness_ of the events reported, nor until
+every incident and act of the noble-minded Nazarene had had ample
+time to become enormously magnified and distorted by rumor, fable, and
+fiction; so that it was impossible to discriminate or separate the real
+from the unreal, the true from the false, in his partly-forgotten life.
+It could not be done. A true history could not then be, nor have been
+written under such circumstances. It is manifestly impossible. The
+time for writing each Gospel is fixed by Dr. Lardner as follows, viz.:
+Matthew 62 A. D., Mark 64 A. D., Luke 63 or 64 A. D., and John 68 A. D.;
+thus allowing ample time for every noteworthy incident of his life to
+grow from molehills to mountains, and to swell into fiction, fable, and
+prodigy, a tendency to which was then very rife and very prevalent in
+all religious countries. Having made a note of this fact, let the
+reader treasure in memory, as another equally important fact, that the
+biography of no man of note who figured in that era, or who lived prior
+to the dawn of letters (if penned many years after his death, as was
+frequently the case), is free from a large percentage of extravagant
+detail, and simple incidents magnified into miracles. This was the
+uncurbed tendency of the age which ultimated into universal custom.
+
+The simplest incident in every man's life, who exhibited mind enough to
+attract attention, by rolling from year to year, and passing from mouth
+to mouth, invariably got to be finally swelled into such undue and
+enormous proportions, that it could only be accounted for by assuming
+the actor to have been a God. In this way many men of different
+countries, who had made a mark in the world, received divine honors
+and divine attributes, including such characters as Chrishna of India,
+Mithra of Persia, Quirinus of Rome, Eras of the Druids, Quexalcote of
+Mexico, Jesus Christ of Judea, and many others who might be mentioned.
+This circumstance deified them. The evidence of history to prove this
+declaration is abundant and irresistible.
+
+
+POSTHUMOUS HISTORIES ALONE DEIFIED MEN.
+
+To the two important facts above cited, viz., that Jesus Christ's
+evangelical histories were all written long after his death, and that
+unwritten histories of great men always become swollen and distorted
+with the lapse of time, let the reader add the equally significant
+fact that there is in all cases a vast difference in the biographies of
+famous men, penned during their actual lives, or immediately subsequent
+to their death, while every act and incident of their career was fresh
+and vigorous in the minds and memories of the cotemporaneous people,
+and before the ball of exaggerated rumor was set rolling, compared
+with those written at a later date, after molehills of fact had become
+mountains of fiction. The former are natural and reasonable, the latter
+unnatural and extravagant, and often fabulous. We will cite a few cases
+in proof. Let the reader compare the biographical sketches of Alexander
+the Great written near the epoch of his practical life, and those
+composed since the dawn of the Christian era, and he will find that the
+posthumous notices of him alone contain the story of the sun becoming
+obscured, and the earth developed in darkness, at the time of his mortal
+exit. It will be found, also, that Virgil's account of "the sheeted
+dead," rising from their graves at the time of Caesar's death, and which
+was written long after that famous hero left the stage of action, is
+omitted in all the cotemporary notices of that monarch, having crept in
+subsequently.
+
+In like manner, the various miracles recorded of Pythagoras by his
+biographer Jamblicus,--such as his walking on the air, stilling
+the tempest, raising the dead, &c.,--are not related of him by any
+cotemporaneous writers who lived in the era of his practical life. And
+let the reader compare, also, Damos' life of Apollonius with that of
+his later biography by Philostratus, as an illustration of the same
+historical fact. Mahomet and his biograhers might be included in the
+same category. It is a remarkable circumstance that neither Mahomet
+himself nor any of his immediate followers claim for him more than
+the humble title of prophet, or "God's holy prophet," while his later
+admirers and devout disciples have elevated him to the throne of heaven,
+and given him a seat among the Gods.
+
+And this historical analysis might be extended much farther if
+necessary. But cases enough have been cited to prove the principle and
+establish the proposition. And what is the lesson taught by these
+facts? A deeply-instructive and all-important one. From the foregoing
+historical illustrations we are impelled to the important conclusion,
+that the tissue of extravagant and incredible stories of demigod
+performances which run as a vein of fiction through the Gospel
+narrations of Jesus Christ, all grow out of long-continued rumor, in
+an age when the imagination was untamed and unbounded, and credulity
+uncurbed by a practical knowledge of the principles of science, and
+consequently the pen of the historian had lawless scope. All difficulty
+then vanishes, and the question is put forever at rest by assuming that
+if the Gospel histories of Jesus had been written by men who claimed to
+record only what they saw and heard themselves, we should have a more
+credible and instructive history of the great Judean reformer, freed
+from those Munchausen prodigies and that wild romance which mar the
+beauty and credibility of those now in popular use. This conclusion is
+not only natural, but irresistible, to a mind untrammeled by education
+and unbefogged by priestcraft. All that is wanting to convince us
+that miracles constitute no part of the real history of Christ, is a
+cotemporary instead of a posthumous biography--a history written in the
+age which knew him, and by an unprejudiced writer who witnessed all his
+movements. And we are perfectly willing to risk our reputation in this
+life, and our salvation in the next, by stating our conviction that this
+will be the unanimous verdict of posterity before fifty generations pass
+away.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES RECONSTRUCTED FROM FORMER MIRACLES.
+
+There are other circumstances than those noticed in the preceding
+chapter, which can aid us very materially in solving the problem
+of Christ's divinity; or, in other words, can aid us in tracing his
+miracles to their origin, and thus confirm the truth of the preceding
+proposition. Moses and the prophets were considered by the evangelists
+antetypes or archetypes of the coming Savior. Hence some of the more
+important incidents of their lives were hunted up and worked over again,
+to make them fit the life of Christ as the Messiah, reconstructed and
+applied to him as the second Moses, and a new prophet; for Moses is
+represented as saying, "A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up
+like unto me." Hence Moses comes in with the prophets as an antetype of
+Christ. The transfiguration of Christ is therefore constituted after
+the model of the transfiguration of Moses on Mount Sinai. And Christ is
+represented as raising the dead, not only because Elijah and Elisha had
+performed such miracles, but did it under circumstances which prove,
+as they suppose, he possessed superior power. For while they could only
+reanimate the body immediately after the breath had left it, Christ
+could raise a man after he had been dead four days (the case of
+Lazarus). Hence the New Prophet was superior to the old, and more like
+a God--the thing they desired to prove. Both Elijah and Christ are
+represented as raising a widows son,--Elijah being considered the
+special prototype of Christ, who, many believed, had re-appeared under
+the changed name of Elias. (See John v. 17.) And then we observe that
+while Elisha exhausted his skill in making three gallons of oil, Christ
+could make thirty gallons of wine--another proof of the superiority of
+the New Prophet. Then, again, the miracle of feeding one hundred
+men with twenty loaves is far excelled by the latter, who feeds five
+thousand men with five loaves. And both prophets, Elisha and Christ,
+encountered unfordable streams in their travels; the expedient of the
+former is to make a passage, but Christ performed the greater miracle
+of walking on the surface. And while Moses had to send the leper without
+the camp before he could heal him, Christ could heal him instantly with
+a single touch. The same slaughter of the infants is commanded by Herod,
+in order to destroy Christ, that Pharaoh had ordered to effect the
+destruction of Moses. And thus many of the miracles of Jesus can be
+accounted for as reconstructions of former miracles. It was simply a
+competition or rivalry between the New Messianic prophet and the old
+prophets. The New Prophet excels and comes off victorious in every case,
+and is thus considered to be a God. The object of the competition is to
+show that while the prophets, assisted by God, could perform marvelous
+deeds, Christ, being God himself, could perform greater. This was to be
+the proof of his being a God, that he could outvie the servants of God
+in every miraculous thing ascribed to them. This was one way adopted to
+prove his divinity.
+
+
+CHRIST'S MIRACLES MANUFACTURED FROM PROPHECIES.
+
+Several of Christs miracles seem to have grown out of the Messianic
+prophecies; that is, were manufactured in order to fulfill the
+prophecies. There was, as we learn by the Gospels, an impression deep
+and wide-spread among the disciples of Christ, that the Old Testament
+was full of texts foretelling the advent of their Messiah, and
+foreshadowing his practical life. Under this conviction, a number of
+passages are quoted in the Gospels from the prophets as referring to
+Christ, but which, however, the context shows could not possibly have
+been written with any such thought or intention. Matthew has five
+miracles appertaining to Christ, built on prophecies, in his first two
+chapters. And they are represented as taking place "in order that the
+prophecy might be fulfilled," that is, Matthew, writing sixty-four years
+after Christ's advent, assumes those miracles had taken place because
+the prophecy required their performance, and hence recorded it as a fact
+without knowing it to be such. A great deal of that kind of license was
+assumed in that and subsequent ages, as the facts of history are ample
+to prove. It was done under the religious conviction that the cause of
+God and the church required it to be done, and that therefore it was
+justifiable.
+
+
+STRICT VERACITY NOT REQUIRED OR OBSERVED.
+
+It is by no means necessary to assume that the recorders of the New
+Testament miracles knew they had been performed, or that they would
+hesitate to record them as facts because they did not know them to be
+such. We are under no moral obligation to suppose they knew anything
+about it. People in that age were not so nice or so morally exact, as
+to require proof of a thing before they stated it, or never to state it
+unless they had the proof for its being true. We would be Very far
+from accusing the apostolic writers of malicious falsehood, or criminal
+misrepresentation. But we find that the disciples of all religions, in
+that age of the world, considered it not only allowable, but a religious
+duty, in the absence of knowledge, to supply omissions by guess-work
+or conjecture; that is, to use assumption in the place of proof, and to
+state that a thing was so when there was no proof of it whatever, and
+even when the proof was against it. All religious history is full of the
+exhibition of this kind of elasticity of conscience. Even a species of
+pious lying was considered justifiable in many cases. Paul furnishes
+evidence of this, when he says, "If the truth of God hath more abounded
+through my lie unto his glory, why am I judged a sinner?" (Rom. iii.
+16.) "No sin to lie for the glory of God," seems to be the teaching of
+this text. Although Paul does not clearly disclose for what purpose
+this policy was employed, yet it can easily be inferred. A part of
+the important business of the New Testament writers was to build a
+reputation for Christ and his inspired band of disciples for working
+miracles. A fame for achieving "signs and wonders" was the great set
+off of the age. There seems to have been an almost boundless competition
+amongst the disciples of the various religious orders, including Jews,
+Pagans, and Christians, as to who could, or whose God could outstrip all
+competitors in achieving astonishing prodigies that should set the laws
+of nature at defiance. And no devout disciple, who had good inventive
+powers, would allow any rival to outdo him. Nothing could authenticate
+the claim of the adopted Messiah to the throne or heaven, or a
+participation in the Divine Essence, like a miraculous display of divine
+power. Hence the history of all the Gods and demi-gods of the illiterate
+ages, including that of Christ, is loaded down with miraculous feats.
+There is the clearest proof that Christ's disciples were in this general
+rivalry--this universal miracle-working _melee_.
+
+Two things very necessary to be accomplished, in the estimation of the
+apostles, were, first, to show that Christ outdid the heathen Gods,
+and even the prophets, in the display of the wonder-exciting miraculous
+power, and thus proved his divinity; and second, that the prophecies had
+been fulfilled in his coming and his practical life. And there is reason
+to believe all the New Testament miracles are founded on and grew out of
+prophecy. For, although we do not find prophecies in the Old Testament
+for every miracle related of Christ, yet it is probable, if we had the
+Book of God, "the Book of Jehu," "the Like of Hezekiah," and other
+lost books mentioned in the Old Testament, we should find the supposed
+prophecy for every miracle of the New Testament. We should there find
+the key to every miracle. The true explanation of the matter seems to
+be, that the apostolic writers, looking through the Old Testament, and
+finding texts therein which they believed to be prophetic of the display
+of the miraculous power of Jesus, and passages which they religiously
+believed foreshadowed his coming and mission, or some important event
+in his history, they were impressed with the deepest conviction that God
+would not suffer any prophecy to go unfulfilled. But when they sat down
+to write the history of their Messiah, long after his death, they found
+they had not the evidence before them that the prophecies had been
+fulfilled. A third of a century had rolled away since his history had
+been practically before the people. The subject of their narrative had
+long since gone to "the house of many mansions," and left not a note, or
+scratch of a pen, of any act of his life behind him. And the current of
+time had washed away, or partially obliterated, nearly every event
+of his earthly career. The witnesses had nearly all left the stage of
+action, and their voices were forever hushed in the silent tomb. What
+was to be done in such an emergency? It was all-important to show that
+the prophecies had been fulfilled to the letter in his practical life.
+This quandary, however, did not beset them long. The difficulty was
+easily surmounted. Every religious country, including Judea, was full
+of miraculous legends and astonishing prodigies appertaining to the
+terrestrial movements of their Gods and demigods, some of which had
+floated down on the stream of tradition from time immemorial. And all
+had become blended, confounded, and mixed up together, until it was
+impossible to know whence they originated, where they belonged, or to
+what God they appertained. These miraculous stories were so numerous,
+and so varied in character, that there was no little difficulty in
+finding which seemed to be the fulfillment of any Messianic prophecy
+that had been or might be found in the Old Testament; and thus of the
+hundreds of miraculous stories afloat, one was picked out and assumed
+to be the fulfillment of the prophecy. With the countless number of such
+stories before them, which had been for half a century current in the
+community, they set themselves to work to select and reject, prune and
+remodel, honestly believing that this miracle was intended to fulfill
+this prophecy, and that miracle that prophecy, &c. And accordingly we
+now find it so stated in the New Testament. As, for example, a story had
+long been going the rounds that the parents of a young God had to flee
+with him out of the country, to save his life from being destroyed by
+its jealous ruler. This they supposed must of course refer to Jesus,
+because they had found a supposed prophecy of such an event in the
+Jewish bible, when a more thorough acquaintance with history would have
+taught them that the story did not refer to the ruler of Judea (Herod),
+but to Cansa, an ancient, jealous, despotic king, who ruled India at a
+much earlier period. And the story of the darkness at the crucifixion
+they incorporated as a part of the history of Jesus, because they had
+seen a text in Joel which they supposed presaged such an event, while,
+if they had been well versed in oriental history, they would have known
+that it had long been recorded as the last chapter in the earthly drama
+of the Hindoo God Chrishna. And so of the other miracles now found
+related as a part of the history of Jesus. A historical investigation of
+the matter would have shown the Gospel writers that they were a part of
+the written history of other and more ancient Gods, and had never
+formed a part of the practical life of Jesus, or been realized in his
+experience. This is a more charitable and honorable explanation of the
+matter than that found in the assumption of some other writers, that
+every miracle was constructed for the occasion--that it is a sheer
+fabrication; and yet there are some plausible grounds for this solution
+of the case.
+
+These critical writers tell us there was a religious persuasion deeply
+enstamped upon the minds of all religious countries, that God often
+justified a departure from the truth--the conscientious or veracious
+faculty being in that age but feebly developed. And the bible itself
+is full of evidence to establish the allegation. The prophets often
+disclose it, and the apostles were their strict imitators. Ezekiel
+represents God as saying, "If a prophet is deceived, I the Lord deceived
+that prophet." (Ezek. xiv. 9.) And Jeremiah asks God, "Wilt thou be to
+me as a liar?" (Jer. xv. 8.) While the writer of Kings represents God
+as putting a lying spirit into the mouth of his own prophets, (i Kings
+xxii. 23.) And most certainly if God himself might thus habitually
+depart from the truth, it was an ample warrant for his apostles, as well
+as the prophets, to adopt the same expedient. The case of Paul lying for
+the glory of God, which we have cited from Romans iii. 4, proves they
+were morally capable of doing this. Mosheim tells us that among the
+early Christians, "it was an almost universally adopted maxim, that it
+was an act of virtue to deceive and lie, when by so doing they could
+promote the interest of the church." (Mosh. vol. i. p. 198.) And Mr.
+Higgins informs us that "great numbers, of every age and of every
+religion, have been guilty of systematic frauds and falsehoods
+to support their religions, to an extent of which we can have no
+conception. They not only practiced it, but they reduced it to system.
+They avowed it, and they justified it by declaring it to be meritorious
+to lie in a good cause." (Ana. vol. i. p. 143.) The reader who can
+hesitate to credit these statements only betrays his ignorance of the
+moral weakness of human nature, and the imperfect growth in that era of
+the veracious faculty, which consequently had but a feeble voice in
+the councils of the mind. Even the most pious and devout professors
+of religion did not consider a rigid conformity to truth necessary, or
+morally obligatory, in their labors to promote the glory of God and the
+salvation of souls. And when direct falsehood was not resorted to, the
+writer still allowed himself to color, magnify, and invent largely; that
+is, to draw copiously upon the resources of his imagination, in the way
+of supplying omissions and defects, and filling out missing links in the
+chain of history. And hence it is that all ancient sacred history is so
+profusely inlaid with stories and statements manifestly fabricated
+for the occasion, without any historical support, and therefore wholly
+incredible. Let the Christian reader not, however, misapprehend us by
+supposing we wish to drive him to the extreme alternative of accepting
+this as the true explanation, or as indicating the real origin of the
+incredible stories and senseless miraculous feats interwoven into the
+Gospel life of Jesus. We only offer it as a plausible, but not as the
+probable explanation. The above citations from the Scriptures and other
+history prove most clearly that sacred writers were morally capable of
+fabricating or manufacturing history to supply assumed omissions. And
+this explanation is twofold more reasonable than to accept the miracles
+as real occurrences, for such a belief would be at war with common
+sense, and prostrate our reason beneath our feet. But there is no
+necessity of adopting lying hypotheses, while the borrowing theory
+is amply adequate to account for every Gospel miracle. There is not a
+miraculous story or incredible legend incorporated in the New Testament
+as a part of the history of Jesus, that was not afloat in some shape or
+form, on the wings of tradition in nearly every religious country,
+ages before his birth. The model for each and every miracle was already
+constructed, was already in the market, and already a part of the
+history or tradition of other and older Gods. And all that was wanted
+to make it appear as a part of the history of the Christian's deified
+Jesus, was to fill in names and dates. Yes, history with a hundred
+tongues proclaims it as the real explanation of the incredible and
+the impossible in the history of Jesus Christ. And the evidence is so
+voluminous and so overwhelming to disprove the common Christian dogma
+which makes the son of Joseph and Mary a miracle-working God (a portion
+of which we have presented under the several propositions of this
+chapter), that it really demolishes the last timber in the Christian
+fabric, and leaves it a heap of ruins. And we are certain that if we
+could divest the Christian reader's mind, for a few moments, of an
+inherited and fostered prejudice, he would see that our explanation
+is much more rational, more probable, more beautiful than the popular
+belief, which degrades the illustrious Judean reformer to a level with
+the heathen thaumaturgist, and gives him the same undignified reputation
+as a miracle-worker.
+
+But we are sometimes told we are under as much moral obligation to
+believe in the miracles reported of Jesus, as to believe in any other
+portion of his history; that we must accept his Gospel history as a
+whole, or reject it in toto. But this is manifestly a false assumption,
+and one easily exploded. No person who is acquainted with Grecian
+history doubts that Alexander the Great was born in Macedonia, and
+founded a city in Egypt bearing his own name. Yet not one of those
+readers will credit for a moment what one of his biographers relates
+of him, that he stopped the sun in its course, or that he had no human
+father. We all accept Pythagoras as a real entity, while we reject the
+story of his walking on the air. Are we morally bound to accept Romulus
+and Remus, founders of Rome, as mere fabulous beings, because their
+biographers relate the incredible story of their being suckled by a
+wolf? Many other illustrations might be given in proof of the falsity of
+the assumption that, because a portion of a man's biography is found
+to be incredible, the whole must be rejected as false, as unworthy of
+credence. This would be to annihilate history. For no biography of any
+person, and no history of any nation, can be accepted as plenarily pure,
+unmixed truth. There is always more or less chaff with the grain, and it
+is our privilege and our duty to separate them. And by so doing we not
+only confer a favor on the cause of truth, but add to the luster and
+honor of the name of the deceased reformer; and especially is this true
+of the renowned Judean philanthropist and reformer. Much more lovely
+and beautiful would his evangelical history stand before the world
+if stripped of the wild, the weird, and the miraculous. Much more
+interesting is he when viewed and venerated as a man than when
+worshipped as a God, guilty of the frequent violation of his own laws,
+by the display of the miracle-working power.
+
+And much more beautiful and much more rational is the doctrine which
+accepts every event that ever occurred as the legitimate and harmonious
+operation of the great machinery of nature, than as the smart trick,
+the lawless caprice or wild feat, of an arbitrary, wonder-exciting God,
+performed not to make the people better, more moral or more righteous
+(for miracles cannot do this), but merely to make them gape and stare,
+and shout, What a smart God we have got!
+
+And then the belief in miracles involves an utter repudiation of all
+law, all order, and all system, and introduces in their stead chaos,
+anarchy, and universal confusion. It is simply "the doctrine of
+chance." which all orthodox Christendom professes to deprecate and
+execrate as the quintessence of atheism. But they make a mistake;
+"chance" is more legitimately the fruit of miracle than of atheism; an
+assertion which we will here briefly prove.
+
+If the sun may be arrested in his course through the heavens, "the moon
+turned into blood," and "the stars fall from the heaven,"--sticks turned
+into serpents, water into blood, and dust into lice,--all of which
+orthodox Christians profess to believe were witnessed in the days of
+Moses and Christ, then everything is thrown upon the wheel of chance;
+everything is involved in uncertainty. If the course of nature could be
+arrested, or the natural qualities of objects changed by the prayer of
+a prophet, patriarch, or apostle, then the food set before us to eat may
+suddenly, in compliance with the prayers of some absent saint, become
+a deadly poison; the clothes we wear may be instantly transformed into
+virulent adders, which may inflict the fatal sting before we suspect it;
+some favorite servant of God (a Moses or an Elijah) might be this
+moment praying to God to stop the dews from falling, or the rain from
+descending for the next three months, or three years, as the latter is
+reported as doing (see James v. 17), so that we could not plant with any
+certainty that the seed would grow, or that we should be rewarded by
+a crop. Such would be the incertitude, such the "chance" against us
+in everything in which we might engage, if it were true that God ever
+intercepts the action of his laws by working a miracle, that we should
+eventually become discouraged by this chaos of "chance," the wheels of
+industry would stop, and the car of civilization go backward. If it were
+true, as taught by orthodox Christians, that "God in his providence," or
+"God in the dispensation of his providence," often "visits people with
+sickness," then it would be useless to study the laws of health with a
+view of complying with them. For we could not know in any case whether
+our sickness had been brought upon us by, an "overruling providence,"
+or by our own imprudence. Our inventives to study and comply with these
+laws, if there could be any, would consequently be very weak indeed,
+for we might comply with every physiological requisition, and yet
+there would be several "chances," against us that to-morrow we may be
+stretched upon a "sick bed and rolling pillow by the visitation of God."
+Thus the doctrine of miracles is shown to be pre-eminently the doctrine
+of "chance."
+
+The doctrine of miraculous agency makes God an imperfect being, by
+implying that his laws were defective in their original construction,
+that by mistake he left some emergency unprovided for, and now has to
+supply the omission by an afterclap exercise of power. Or if his laws
+were originally perfect, then the working of a miracle would disturb
+them, and make them imperfect; if originally imperfect, then God
+himself must have been imperfect, and hence no God at all. Think of a
+wonderworking God violating, suspending, or intercepting his own laws.
+Such a God would be a puerile, short-sighted being, that only ignorant
+and uncultivated minds could admire and adore.
+
+The age of miracles, however, is gone. The belief in divine prodigies
+has receded before the advancing genius of civilization. It has
+died away in the exact ratio of the progress of science and general
+intelligence. And a thorough acquaintance with nature's laws will banish
+the last vestige of such a belief. Hence it is that the most illiterate
+and ignorant nations and tribes have always been able to recount the
+longest list of miraculous prodigies achieved by a disorderly God, who
+seems to have taken pleasure in violating his own laws, or suspending
+them, for the most trivial purposes.
+
+Yes, the time is approaching when the belief in a "miraculous
+interposition" or "special providences" must pass away under the lights
+of science and civilization, and be numbered amongst the things which
+have been and can be no more, and men will cherish more noble and
+elevated ideas of the great Ruler of the universe, who is infinite
+in order, infinite in wisdom, ay, infinite in all his attributes and
+virtues, ever unchangeably the same.
+
+
+II. Prophecy, the second Pillar of the Christian Faith, proves as much
+for Heathenism and Spiritualism.
+
+Truthful prophecy, attested to be such by its fulfillment, is assumed to
+be one of the basic pillars and one of the main proofs of the truth of
+the Christian religion. But the following consideration will show that
+this assumption has no logical force, or real, tangible foundation.
+
+First. Every ancient system of religion had its prophets and seers, who
+professed to be able to foresee events of the future. And we find but
+little difference in the proofs each one has left to the world that they
+possessed this power, if we except the Greeks and Romans, some of whom
+evidently excelled all the Jewish prophets in their ability to take
+cognizance of events lying behind the curtain of time. Tacitus, the
+Latin historian, prophesied the downfall of the Roman empire and its
+attendant calamities more than five hundred years before its occurrence,
+which was fulfilled to the letter. And Solon, one of the seven wise men
+of Greece, foresaw and foretold a series of calamities which befell
+the Athenians two hundred years before they were realized. A still more
+remarkable example is furnished in the history of Marcus Tullius Cicero,
+who, writing of the future, with his mind fixed on the west, about 50 B.
+C., exclaimed, "There will arise after many ages (if we may credit the
+Sibylline oracles), a hero who will deliver his oppressed countrymen
+from bondage"--a prophecy most signally fulfilled in the life of
+General Washington. Many other examples of heathen prophecy and their
+fulfillment might be cited, if we had space for them.
+
+Second. The history of modern spiritualism furnishes many cases of
+future events being predicted long before they took place. In fact, many
+of the most important events of modern times which have occurred in this
+and other countries, were foreseen and foretold by spiritual seers known
+as "seeing mediums," when there was not the slightest probability that
+such events would ever occur. We will cite one or two cases, by way
+of proof and illustration. A few years ago John P. Coles, of New York,
+known as a spiritual medium, prophesied, when under spirit control,
+that Nicholas of Russia would shortly have difficulty with his secretary
+Menzicoff, and just three months from that time would die--a prediction
+that was fulfilled to the very letter and to the very hour. And yet
+there was not the slightest probability, externally indicated, at the
+time the prophecy was uttered, that either of these events would ever be
+realized. And this prophecy, let it be noted, was published in the New
+York Times at least two months before it was verified, thus proving that
+the prediction was not an "afterclap" affair, but preceded the event.
+Take another example. The serious calamity which befell the ill-fated
+steamer known as the Arctic, which was lost at sea a number of years
+ago, with all on board, was prophetically described in minute detail,
+by a spirit medium, several months before it occurred; and was seen and
+described by another medium, while taking place more than a thousand
+miles distant. The proof is at our command. And the late disastrous
+war was foreseen and described by Cora Tappan, of New York, and other
+mediums, and its principal events pointed out long before the war broke
+out--a fact which is now a matter of history. These are only a few cases
+out of hundreds that might be cited of a similar character, drawn from
+the practical history of modern spiritualism. If, then, prophecy can do
+anything toward the truth or divine emanation of the Christian religion,
+it must do the same for the heathen and spiritual systems. And thus
+proving too much, it proves nothing at all.
+
+Third. The Jewish prophecies not fulfilled. We have examined critically
+the various texts of the Christian bible called prophecies, and find
+that, if claimed as predictions of the future events beyond the powers
+of the natural mind to foresee, they have all failed. But few of them
+have been fulfilled in any sense, and those few required no divine
+prescience to foresee the result. Many events have transpired in every
+country, which the natural sagacity of the most observant minds in that
+country had anticipated as the result of natural causes, such as the
+ravages and downfall of cities and the overthrow of empires by the
+merciless hand of war. The Jewish prophet, fostering a spirit of envy
+and enmity towards Egypt, Babylon, and other superior kingdoms, because
+they had been overpowered by them and long held in subjection to
+their superior sway, were always prophesying evil things of these
+principalities. And though some of the evils which constituted the
+burden of prophecy might have been reasonably anticipated as natural
+occurrences, it is a signal fact they never transpired at all,--such
+as the total destruction of Babylon, Tyre, Damascus, and other cities
+belonging to those hostile kingdoms the Jews so much envied and
+execrated. Look, for proof, at the case of Damascus. The prophets
+Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, all poured out their fulminatory thunders
+upon this city. Isaiah declared it should be a "ruinous heap." (Isa.
+xvii. I.) And Jeremiah predicted its destruction by fire. (Jer. xlix.
+27.) And yet, notwithstanding these predictions of ruin, Damascus still
+stands as "one of the paradises of the earth," as one writer styles it,
+with a population, according to Burckhart, of not less than two hundred
+and fifty thousand, being one of the most magnificent and prosperous
+commercial cities on the globe. Instead of being blotted out of
+existence, as the Jewish prophets prayed and predicted, it has suffered
+less by ravages of war and the scythe of time than almost any other city
+of the east. It has stood nearly three thousand years without becoming
+a "ruinous heap," or being consumed by fire or destroyed by war. (Jer.
+xlix. 26.) And the prophecy against Tyre has most signally failed also.
+Ezekiel declared it should be destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar, and never be
+found again. (Ezek. xxvi.-xxix.) But two hundred and fifty years after
+Nebuchadnezzar's time Alexander found it a strong commercial city. And
+it still contains a population of five thousand or more. St. Jerome, of
+the fourth century, declared it to be then the finest city of Phoenicia,
+and was astonished that Ezekiel's prophecy had so utterly failed.
+
+And Isaiah's famous prediction against Babylon furnishes another proof
+of the utter failure of Jewish prophecy. He declared, after predicting
+its destruction, "It shall never be inhabited, neither shall it be dwelt
+in from generation to generation, neither shall the Arabian pitch tent
+there." (Isa. xiii. 20.) Of course he desired it should be so. But,
+unfortunately for his credit as a prophet, it never suffered such a
+calamity. On the contrary, according to Layard and Rawlinson, British
+commissioners who recently visited the place, it now presents "all the
+activity of a hive of bees" (to use Layard's language), and contains
+several thousand inhabitants, though its name is, since rebuilt, called
+Hillah. And thus the prophecy is falsified. "No," exclaims a good
+Christian brother, in forlorn hope, it may be fulfilled yet. But if he
+will examine the language of the prophecy, he will find he is entirely
+cut off from this "saving clause." The prophet says, "Her time is near
+to come, and her days shall not be prolonged." (Isa. xiii. 22.) Thus it
+is evident the prophecy was to be fulfilled in that age and generation.
+The failure, then, is absolute and indisputable. And these are but mere
+samples of the complete failure of every text called a prophecy, when
+applied to the prognostication of future events. Numerous texts can
+be found in the prophets auguring evil for Egypt, which have made
+no approximation toward fulfillment. Ezekiel prophesied "the fall of
+Egypt," "the desolation of Egypt," "the destruction of Egypt," &c.,
+not one of which calamities has ever been realized in her experience.
+Prophecies respecting the restoration of the lost tribes and the
+perpetuity of the Israelitish throne are complete failures; also all
+"the Messianic prophecies," so called. (See Chap. II.) With respect
+to the prophecy on Babylon, it may be further observed that while the
+prophet declares, "Neither shall the Arabian pitch tent there" (Isa.
+xiii. 22), Layard declares that is the very thing they did do while
+he was there. He says he saw a number of Arabian tents pitched on
+the ground; thus proving a failure of the prophecy all round in every
+particular. (See note page Fourth). The bible itself is a witness that
+truthful prophecy can do nothing toward authenticating a religion,
+or toward proving the prophet divinely inspired. The same damaging
+concession is made here as in the case of miracles, that a heathen and
+an unbeliever could and did succeed as well as the true disciples of the
+faith. The proof of this statement is found in the history of Balaam.
+His figurative representation of a star coming out of Jacob and
+a scepter out of Judah (see Numb. chap. xxiv.) is often quoted
+by Christian writers as presaging or prefiguring the coming of
+Christ,--thus making a heathen and an unbeliever the oracle of a
+Messianic prophecy, and a heathen, too, of sinful and ungodly habits.
+So that the Christian subterfuge is not available here, that "God might
+make a righteous man of any nation the vehicle of prophecy." For we have
+the express declaration of the bible itself that he was not a righteous
+man, but the very reverse. Peter tells us, "He loved the wages of
+unrighteousness," at the very time this prophecy so called was uttered
+( see 2 Peter ii. 13 ), which prostrates forever the Christian plea the
+"he might have possessed the true spirit of prophecy by virtue of being
+a righteous man," and drives us to the admission that an unconverted
+savage and ungodly heathen unbeliever could make a true prophecy. It not
+being necessary, then, to be a Jew, or a Christian, or a believer, or
+even a moral man, to foresee or foretell the far-off important events
+of the future, the argument falls forever to the ground that the
+fulfillment of the Jewish prophecies, if admitted to have been
+fulfilled, could do anything toward proving the truth or divine
+acceptance of the religion of the bible, or its superiority over any
+heathen or oriental religion then or subsequently known to history, as
+they all present the same evidence of being endowed with the true spirit
+of prophecy. All argument for Christianity based on the prophecies,
+or "the gift of prophecy," is, then, forever at an end, as it has been
+shown that the power to foretell future events is not restricted by
+the bible itself to any nation, to any religion, to any faith, to any
+belief, or to any moral or religious qualification. What, then, is
+prophecy worth, or what does it prove? Another case, and one similar to
+that of Balaam in its essential points, is found in the New Testament.
+Caiaphas, though not claiming to be any part of a believer, utters a
+prophecy in the interest of the Christian religion for which the bible
+itself gives him full credit as a prophet. Here, then, is another case
+of a heathen stealing the Christian's thunder, and another proof that
+the spirit of true prophecy has never been confined to any nation or
+any religion; and hence, according to the teachings of the bible
+itself, does nothing at all toward establishing the exalted claims of
+Christianity, or toward proving its superiority over other systems of
+religion.
+
+
+III. Moral Precepts the third Pillar of the Christian Faith.
+
+It is declared, in view of the many wise precepts which issued from the
+mouth of Jesus Christ, that "he spake as never man spake." (John vii.
+46.) If this were true, then Gods must have been very numerous prior to
+the Christian era. For there is not one of the moral maxims or preceptive
+commands which he gave utterance to that cannot be found literally or
+substantially in the older bibles of other nations, or the writings
+of the Greek philosophers, and the religious dissertations of heathen
+moralists, who gave out moral and religious lessons for the instruction
+of the world long prior to the birth of Christ. Even the Golden Rule,
+which Christian writers, ignorant or oriental history, have erroneously
+ascribed to Jesus Christ, and lauded him as being the author of, is
+found variously expressed in the writings of several heathen or oriental
+nations. We find it in the Chinese bible at least live hundred years
+older than ours, almost word for word as Jesus uttered it. We will here
+present it as expressed by different writers.
+
+1. Golden Rule by Confucius, 500 B. C.
+
+"Do unto another what you would have him do unto you, and do not to
+another what you would not have him do unto you. Thou needest this law
+alone. It is the foundation of all the rest."
+
+2. Golden Rule by Aristotle, 385 B. C.
+
+"We should conduct ourselves toward others as we would have them act
+toward us."
+
+3. Golden Rule by Pittacus, 650 B. C.
+
+"Do not to your neighbor what you would take ill from him."
+
+4. Golden Rule by Thales, 464 B. C.
+
+"Avoid doing what you would blame others for doing."
+
+5. Golden Rule by Isocrates, 338 B. C.
+
+"Act toward others as you desire them to act toward you."
+
+6. Golden Rule by Aristippus, 365 B. C.
+
+"Cherish reciprocal benevolence, which will make you as anxious for
+another's welfare as your own."
+
+7. Golden Rule by Sextus, a Pythagorean, 406 B. C.
+
+"What you wish your neighbors to be to you, such be also to them."
+
+8. Golden Rule by Hillel, 50 B. C.
+
+"Do not to others what you would not like others to do to you."
+
+Here is the Golden Rule proclaimed by seven heathen moralists and a
+Jew long before it was republished by the founder of Christianity;
+thus proving it to be of heathen origin, and proving that it does not
+transcend the natural capacity of the human brain to originate, and
+hence needs no God to reveal it. Indeed, it is one of the most natural
+sentiments of the human mind. "Would I like to be treated thus?" is
+the first thought which naturally arises in the mind of a person
+when maltreating a neighbor; thus showing that the Golden Rule is a
+spontaneous utterance of the moral feelings of the human mind.
+
+
+LOVE AND KIND TREATMENT OF ENEMIES.
+
+Love to enemies is considered to be another praiseworthy precept, which
+Christ has erroneously the credit of being the author of. We have heard
+the declaration made in the Christian pulpit, that Jesus Christ was the
+first moral teacher who inculcated love to enemies; a most transcendent
+error, as the following historical citations will show. Most of the
+religious books and religious teachers of the ancient oriental heathen
+breathe forth a spirit of love and kindness toward enemies.
+
+The following is from the old Persian bible, the Sadder:--
+
+1.
+
+ "Forgive thy foes, nor that alone;
+ Their evil deeds with good repay;
+ Fill those with joy who leave thee none,
+ And kiss the hand upraised to slay."
+
+The Christian bible would be searched in vain to find a moral sentiment
+or precept superior to this. Certainly it is the loftiest sentiment of
+kindness toward enemies that ever issued from human lips, or was ever
+penned by mortal man. And yet it is found in an old heathen bible. Think
+of "kissing the hand upraised to slay." Never was love, and kindness,
+and forbearance toward enemies more sublimely expressed than in the old
+Persian ballad.
+
+2. "Treat thine enemy as though a friend, and he will become thy
+friend," was expressed by Publius Syrus, a Roman slave, which is a wiser
+admonition than that of Christ, "Love thine enemy," as it is a moral
+impossibility.
+
+3. "All nature cries aloud, 'Shall man do less than heal the smiter, and
+the railer bless?'" (Hafiz, a Mahomedan.)
+
+4. "Bridle thine anger, and forgive thine enemy; give unto him who takes
+from thee." (Koran, Mahomedan bible. )
+
+5. "Let no man be offended with those who are angry at him, but reply
+gently to those who curse him." (Code of Menu.)
+
+6. "Let him endure injuries, and despise no one." (Ibid.)
+
+7. "Commit no hostile action for your own preservation." (Ibid.)
+
+8. "To be revenged on enemies, become more virtuous." (Diogenes.)
+
+9. "To strike a man, or vex him with words, is a sin." (Zend-Avesta,
+Persian bible.)
+
+10. "Even the intention to strike is a sin." (Ibid.)
+
+11. "Desire not the death of thine enemy." (Confucius.)
+
+12. "Acknowledge benefits, but never revenge injuries." (Ibid.)
+
+13. "We may dislike an enemy without desiring revenge." (Ibid.)
+
+14. "Pardon the offenses of others, but never your own." (Publius
+Syrus.)
+
+15. "The noble spirit cures injustice by forgiving it." (Ibid.)
+
+16. "It is much better to be injured than to kill a man." (Pythagoras.)
+
+17. "You can accomplish by kindness what you cannot by force." (Publius
+Syrus.)
+
+18. "Better overlook an injury than avenge it." (Publius Syrus.)
+
+19. "It is enough to think ill of an enemy without avenging it."
+(Publius Syrus.)
+
+20. "It is a kingly spirit to return good deeds for evil ones." (Ibid.)
+
+21.
+
+ "Learn for yon orient shell to love thy foe,
+ And store with pearls the hand that brings thee woe;
+ Flee, like yon rock, from base, vindictive pride,
+ Emblaze with gems the wrist that rends thy side."
+
+ (Hafiz.)
+
+22. "To revenge yourself on an enemy, make him your friend."
+(Pythagoras.)
+
+23. "It is not permitted to a man who has received an injury to revenge
+it by doing another." (Socrates, in his Crito.)
+
+24. "Seek him who turns thee out, and pardon him who injures thee."
+(Koran.)
+
+25. "Return not evil for evil." (Socrates.)
+
+26. "Endure all things if you would serve God." (Sextus.)
+
+27. "Desire to be able to benefit your enemies." (Ibid.)
+
+28. "Receive an injury rather than do one." (Publius Syrus.)
+
+29. "Be at war with men's vices, but at peace with their persons."
+(Ibid.)
+
+30. "Cultivate friendship for an enemy." (Pittacus.)
+
+31. "Be kind to your friends that they may continue so, and to your
+enemies that they may become so." (Ibid.)
+
+32. "Prevent injuries if possible; if not, do not revenge them." (Ibid.)
+
+33. "An enemy should not be hated, but cured." (Seneca.)
+
+34. "To act unkindly toward an enemy will increase his hate."
+(Antonius.)
+
+35. "Be to everybody kind and friendly." (Ibid.)
+
+36. "Speak evil of no one, not even your enemies." (Pittacus.)
+
+Thus it will be observed that love and kindness toward all mankind, both
+friends and enemies, is not confined to the teachings of Christ or
+to the Christian religion, as many have erroneously supposed, but
+is unquestionably a natural sentiment of the moral instinct or moral
+impulses of the human mind, and hence is no proof that their teacher is
+either a God or divinely inspired.
+
+And we have in our possession nearly eight hundred more precepts (see
+vol. ii.) from the pens or mouths of the ancient heathen, enjoining just
+and kind treatment of women, and setting forth nearly all the duties of
+life, and teaching the immortality of the soul, &c. And these precepts
+breathe the same lofty moral sentiment and moral feeling as those quoted
+above. How ignorant and how conceited must be the Christian professor
+who supposes all goodness is confined to Christianity, or that it even
+possesses any great superiority over other religious systems! And
+how completely the three foregoing parts of this chapter, "Miracles,"
+"Prophecies," and "Precepts," prostrate the divine claims of
+Christianity, and leave not an inch of ground for them to rest upon!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV. LOGICAL OR COMMON SENSE VIEW OF THE DOCTRINE OF DIVINE
+INCARNATION
+
+THE incarnation of an infinite God is a shocking absurdity, and an
+infinite impossibility. We ask in all solemn earnestness, and in the
+name of the intuitive monitions of an unshackled reason and an unbiased
+conscience, can any man in his sober senses, who has been in the habit
+of reflecting before he believes, entertain for a moment the monstrous
+absurdity that the Almighty and Infinite Maker of the universe was once
+reduced to a little wailing infant, lying in senseless and helpless
+weakness on the lap of its mother, unable to walk a step, or lisp a
+word, or do aught but cry with pain or for nourishment stored in the
+mother's breast? What! Almighty God fallen from his burnished, dazzling
+throne in the lofty heavens, and reduced to helpless, senseless
+babyhood! Omnipotence shorn of all power but to breathe, and cry, and
+smile! What! that Omniscient Being, who "leads one world by day, and
+ten thousand more by night," becoming suddenly transformed into a human
+bantling, which knows no higher enjoyment that that of being "pleased
+with a rattle, and tickled with a straw!" Who can believe it? Ay, who
+dare believe it, if he would escape the charge of blasphemy? Then say
+not that "the man Christ Jesus," though standing at the top of the
+ladder of moral manhood, and high above the common plane of humanity,
+was yet a God--"the Infinite Ruler of the infinite universe." Who can
+believe that that Being, whose existence stretches to an eternity beyond
+human conception, yea, whom "the heaven of heavens cannot contain," was
+ever cooped up in a human body, reduced so near to nothing in dimensions
+as to be susceptible (as was Jesus) of being weighed in scales, and
+measured with a yardstick?
+
+We ask again, Who, from the deepest depths of his inmost, enlightened
+consciousness, can believe such revolting, such atheistical doctrine
+as this? Or who will venture to descend still lower, and conceive of
+an Almighty, Omnipresent Being, who fills all space above, around, and
+beneath, "from infinity below to yon fixed star above," and millions
+upon millions of miles beyond it, sinking and dwindling to that mere
+mite, speck, or monad state and condition comprehended in the initiatory
+step of embryonic existence? And then think of the Almighty, Omnipotent
+Creator of the universe lying in a manger with four-footed beasts and
+creeping things, sleeping with oxen and asses in a stable. Next he
+is seen an urchin on the street playing with marbles and jack-knives,
+absorbed and forgetful of the world around him. Who can believe that
+awfully majestic Being, who is represented by his own inspired book as
+being so transcendently grand and awe-inspiring that "no man san see
+him and live" (Ex. xxxiii. 20), was not only daily seen by hundreds and
+thousands, but was on such familiar terms with men, that they regarded
+him as their companion, and equal, and even sometimes coolly reprimanded
+him for supposed misdemeanors and errors? Could they believe this to be
+Almighty God? Impossible! Impossible! And then who can believe that that
+infinite Being, whom we have been taught to regard as absolutely and
+eternally unchangeable, could become subject to hunger and thirst
+(as did Jesus)? Or who can believe that the eternally and unceasingly
+watchful Omnipotent Deity, whose eye, we are told, "never slumbers,"
+could sink into unconscious sleep, become "to dumb forgetfulness a
+prey," night after night, for thirty years, oblivious, and unconscious
+of the world around him? Think of a being of incomprehensible majesty,
+dignity, and power, able to "shake the heavens and the earth also,"
+being unable to protect himself from insult, and was therefore derided
+and "spit upon," and finally overcome by his enemies, as is related of
+Jesus. Can any man believe, who has not made shipwreck of his senses, or
+banished Reason from her courts, that God 'Almighty, who comprehends
+in himself the most absolute and boundless perfection of goodness and
+wisdom, was tempted by demons, devils, and crawling serpents? Who can
+believe that the Lord, who owns "the cattle upon a thousand hills"
+(Psalm 1. io), and the countless host of worlds besides, that wheel
+their course through infinite space, had not "where to lay his head"?
+Who can believe that that was the all-wise, omnipotent, and omnipresent
+God, possessing all power in heaven above and the earth beneath, who was
+betrayed by weak, finite mortals? What! the Almighty Creator betrayed by
+a puny being of his own creation into the hands of his disobedient and
+rebellious children? Why could he not, if possessing "power to lay
+down his life, and take it up again" (John x. 17), cause that all these
+children of his (as we must assume they were, if he was Almighty God,
+and hence the Father of all) should love him, instead of hating him?
+Can any man believe that Jesus was possessed with omnipotent power
+while standing to be whipped (scourged) by Pontius Pilate, or that
+he possessed a power above that of finite mortals while in the act of
+praying, with such extreme ardor that the sweat dropped from his face,
+that the cup of death might pass from his lips, or while calling for an
+angel to support him in the hour of his mortal dissolution? or that He,
+"by whom all things exist," could cease himself to exist, by dying upon
+the cross between malefactors? Think of this, reader! and think of the
+eternal Creator, the infinite Deity, the omnipotent Jehovah, the Maker
+of worlds as numberless as the sands upon the sea-shore for multitude,
+fainting, bleeding, dying, and pouring out his own blood to appease his
+own wrath; dying an ignominious death to satisfy an implacable revenge!
+Away with such insulting mockery, such blasphemous flummery! It can
+only find place in the dark chambers of an unenlightened mind.
+
+Well has Watts said of Locke's skepticism,--
+
+ "Reason could scarcely sustain to see,
+ Or bear the infant Deity:
+ A ransomed world, a bleeding God,
+ And heaven appeased by flowing blood,
+ Were themes too painful to be understood."
+
+Yes, and too painful to be believed, too, Mr. Watts! Here we have a
+"bleeding God," an "infant Deity," and a vengeful God, appeased by
+murder and streams of "flowing blood." Gracious heavens! Whose reason
+does not revolt at such a picture? Whose soul does not sicken at
+the thought, and who would not prefer, infinitely prefer, to sink
+to annihilation, if not to perdition itself, to being thus saved by
+navigating a river of blood?? Dr. South hits off some of the absurdities
+involved in the Christian doctrine of the incarnation so forcibly and so
+lucidly, that we cannot resist the temptation to subjoin---here a few
+extracts from his sermon on the subject' "But now," says this Christian
+clergyman, "was there ever any wonder comparable to this, to behold the
+Lord (Jesus Christ) thus clothed in flesh, the Creator of all things,
+humbled, not only to the company, but also to the cognation, of his
+creatures? It is as if one should imagine the whole world not only
+represented upon, but also contained in, one of our own artificial
+globes, or the body of the sun enveloped in a cloud as big as a man's
+hand, all of which would be looked upon as astonishing impossibilities,
+and yet is as short of the other as the finite is of the infinite,
+between which the disparity is immeasurable. It is, as it were, to
+cancel the essential distances of things, to remove the bounds of
+nature, to bring heaven and earth, and what is more, both ends of the
+contradiction, together. Men cannot persuade themselves that a Deity and
+infinity should lie within so narrow a compass as the dimensions of
+a human body; that omnipotence, omnipresence should ever be wrapped in
+swaddling clothes, and debased to the homely usages of a stable and a
+manger; that the glorious Artificer of the whole universe, who spread
+out the heaven like a curtain, and laid the foundations of the earth,
+could ever turn carpenter, and exercise an inglorious trade in a little
+cell. They cannot imagine that He who once created and at present
+governs the world, and shall hereafter judge the world, should be abased
+in all his concerns and relations, be scourged, spit upon, mocked and at
+last crucified. All which are passages which lie extremely close to the
+notions of conceptions which reason has made to itself of that high
+and impossible perfection that resided in the divine Creator." (Sermon,
+1665.) Dr. South, it will be observed, admits that the doctrine of
+the divine incarnation involves many palpable absurdities and
+contradictions, and lies directly across the path of reason. Fatal
+admission to the doctrine of the deityship of Christ, but true, as his
+own elucidation of the subject demonstrates. To the author, since he
+first subjected the question to a logical scrutiny, and looked at it
+with an unbiased mind, it presents difficulties insurmountable, and
+absurdities innumerable. He can imagine nothing more transcendently
+shocking, revolting, and dwarfing to the mind, both morally and
+intellectually, than the thought of believing that a being born of and
+suckled by a woman, and possessing the mere form and dimensions of
+a man, can be regarded as the great Almighty and Omnipotent God, the
+Creator of unnumbered worlds, millions of which are larger than this
+planet, on which Jesus was born.
+
+And then, reader, look for a moment at some of the many childish
+incongruities and logical difficulties this giant absurdity drags with
+it. It represents Almighty God as coming into the world through the
+hands of a midwife, as passing through the process of gestation and
+parturition. It insults our reason with the idea that the great,
+infinite Jehovah could be molded into the human form--a thought that is
+shocking to the moral sense, and withering, cramping, and dwarfing to
+the intellectual mind, imposing upon it a heavy drag-chain which checks
+its expansion, and forbids its onward progress. Christians tell us that
+the human and the divine were united in "the man Christ Jesus." But this
+is a monstrous absurdity, which no truly rational and unbiased mind can
+accept for an instant--that of hitching, splicing, tying, or dovetailing
+together finite man with the infinite Jehovah, that of amalgamating
+and commingling human foibles with divine perfection. Think of wedding
+mortal weakness to omnipotent power, local man with the omnipresent
+Deity! Think of compounding the creature and the Creator in one and the
+same being! Think of the omnipresent "I AM," whose illimitable existence
+stretches far away throughout the expansive arena of a boundless
+universe, occupying a dwelling within the narrow confines of the human
+temple! As well essay to crowd the universe into your pocket, or the
+Himalayas Mountains into a thimble. On the other hand, think of a small
+compound of flesh, blood, and bones, a few feet in dimensions, and
+weighing perhaps not more than one hundred and fifty pounds avoirdupois,
+containing that infinite, omnipresent Being, whom, we are told (we
+repeat the quotation), "the heaven of heavens cannot contain"! And more
+than all, kind reader, I ask you if you can accept for a moment, without
+the immolation of your common sense, and the trampling of your reason
+beneath you feet, the monstrous thought that that mighty and almighty
+Architect who who created the countless myriads upon myriads of
+ponderous worlds, which now roll in majestic order, and eternal rotation
+along the great cerulean causeway of heaven, that mighty Architect who,
+from time beyond human computation, has been rolling out orb after orb,
+world after world, if not myriads at a time, ten thousand times, ten
+thousand of which would dwindle our little pygmy, Lilliputian planet
+into insignificance, if compared with it in size.
+
+I ask, and drive home the query to your inward consciousness, and the
+inmost temples of your sacred reason:
+
+Can you believe, after a moment's reflection, that a Being who is too
+vast, infinitely too vast in power and ubiquity to be grasped by the
+human understanding, did become (as did the finite and humble Jesus)
+a helpless, senseless, unconscious, human infant; a suckling, crying,
+squalling babe, powerless of speech, and unable to walk? Ay, worse,
+more startling still, we are shocked with the thought that this mighty
+World-builder, this infinite, omnipotent Creator, was reduced so near to
+the verge of nonenity, so near to the last glimmering spark or speck
+of existence, and the world so near without a God, as to become an
+inanimate foetus--a monad in the matrix of a human virgin? Shocking the
+thought! Blasphemous the doctrine! Believe it who will; believe it who
+can! We cannot; we would not; we are infinitely beyond it. Such a belief
+may be deposited by educational tradition in the affections, but to
+enter the temple of Reason, it never did, it never can. She never
+unbarred her doors to admit such monstrous, such enormous incongruities.
+and all these logical absurdities, and a thousand more, grow
+legitimately out of the doctrine of the divine incarnation,--out of
+the postulate which would (following in the line of the pagan
+superstitutions) elevate the finite, humble, mortal Jesus to the throne
+of heaven, the exclusive prerogative of Almighty God. Come away, my
+Christian friends, from such disparaging, such dishonorable views of the
+Deity, such blasphemous caricatures of Almighty God. Come away from such
+morally darkening and such intellectually dwarfing superstitutions, the
+moldering relics of oriental mythology, the expiring embers of childish
+credulity and tradition, which originated far back in the dark cradle
+of human existence, in the infancy of an undeveloped age, ruled by
+ignorance, superstition, and priestcraft. Yet millions of people laying
+claim to sense and intelligence, even now profess to believe it. Talk
+not to me of infidelity or blasphemy for denying the divinity or
+Godhead of Jesus Christ. The blasphemy lies in the other direction. The
+infidelity is with the opposite party. It is with those who thus make
+the dignity and character of Deity the sport of childish I baubles, the
+game of priestly tawdryism. And be assured, dear friends, one and
+all, that coming generations will mark the man who now worships "the
+man Christ Jesus" as being "very God" as an idolater, if not a
+blasphemer--for worshipping a finite man for an infinite God, even
+though the motives for such worship may be as pure as the pearly stream
+that issues forth from the golden fount which rolls and sparkles beneath
+the throne of Almighty God.
+
+ Note. The words Creator, Maker, &c., are used from a
+ Christian standpoint Science knows no Creator.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI. PHILOSOPHICAL ABSURDITIES OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE DIVINE
+INCARNATION
+
+THERE is a philosophical principle underlying the doctrine of the Divine
+Incarnation, whose logical deductions completely overthrow the claim of
+Jesus of Nazareth to the Godhead, and which we regard as settling the
+question as conclusively as any demonstrated problem in mathematics.
+This argument is predicated upon the philosophical axiom, that two
+infinite beings of any description of conception, cannot exist, either
+in whole or in part, at the same time; and per consequence, it is
+impossible that the Father and Son should both be God in a divine sense,
+either conjointly or separately. The word infinite comprehends all; it
+covers the whole ground; it fills the immensity of the universe, and
+fills it to repletion! so that there is no room left for any other being
+to exist. And whoever and whatever does exist must constitute a part of
+this infinite whole.
+
+Now, the Christian world concedes ( for it is the teaching of their
+Scriptures), that the Father is God, always and truly, perfect,
+complete, and absolute; that there is nothing wanting in him to
+constitute him God in the most comprehensive and absolute sense of the
+term; that he is all we can conceive of as constituting God, "the one
+only true God" (John xvii. 3), and was such from all eternity, before
+Jesus Christ was born into the world; and Paul puts the keystone into
+the arch by proclaiming, "To us there is but one God, the Father." (
+1 Cor. viii. 6.) Hence we have here a logical proposition (despite the
+sophistry of Christendom) as impregnable as the rocks of Gibraltar, that
+the Father alone is or can be God, which effectually shuts out every
+other and all other beings in the universe from any participation in the
+Godhead with the Father. And thus this parity of reasoning demonstrates
+that the very moment you attempt to make Christ God, or any part of the
+Godhead, you attempt a philosophical impossibility. You cannot introduce
+another being as God in the infinite sense until the first-named
+infinite God is dethroned and put out of existence, and this, of course,
+is a self-evident impossibility. It it were not such, then we should
+have two Gods, both absolute and infinite. On the other hand, if that
+other being (who with the Christians is Jesus Christ, with the Hindoos
+Chrishna, with the Budhists Sakia, &c. ) is introduced as only a part of
+the infinite and perfect God, then it is evident to every mind with the
+least philosophical perception, that some change or alteration must
+take place in the latter before such a union can be effected. But such
+a change, or any alteration, in a perfect infinite being would at once
+reduce him to a changeable and finite being, and thus he would cease to
+be God. For it is a clear philosophical and mathematical axiom, that a
+perfect and infinite being cannot become more than infinite. And if
+he could and should become less than infinite, he would at once become
+finite, and thus lose all the attributes of the Godhead. To say or
+assume, then, that Christ was God in the absolute or divine sense, and
+the Father also God absolute, and yet that there is but one God, or that
+the two could in any manner be united, so as to constitute but one God,
+is not only a glaring solecism, but a positive contradiction in terms,
+and an utter violation of the first axiomatic principles of philosophy
+and mathematics. It also asserts the illogical hypothesis, that a part
+can be equal to the whole; it first assumes the Father to be absolutely
+God, then assumes the Son also to be absolutely God, and finally
+assumes each to be only a part, and has to unite them to make whole and
+culminates the theological farce. Such is Christian ratiocination.
+
+Again, it is conceded by Christians, that the Father is an omnipresent
+being; and we have shown that it is a mathematical impossibility for two
+omnipresent beings, or two beings possessing any infinite attributes, to
+exist at one and the same time. Hence the clear logical deducsequence,
+not God. Again, we have another philosophical maxim or axiom familiar
+to every schoolboy, that no two substances or beings can occupy the same
+place at the same time; the first must be removed before the second can
+by any possibility be introduced, in order thus to make room for the
+latter. But as omnipresent means existing everywhere, there can be no
+place to remove on omnipresent being to, or rather there can be no place
+or space he can be withdrawn from in order to make room for another
+being, without his ceasing to be omnipresent himself, and thereby
+ceasing to be God.
+
+It is thus shown to be a demonstrable truth that the omnipresence of
+the Father does and must exclude that of the Son, and thus exclude the
+possibility of his apatheosis or incarnated deityship. In other words,
+it is established as a scientific principle upon a philosophical and
+mathematical basis, that Jesus Christ was not and could not be "the
+great I AM," "the only true God."
+
+We will notice one other philosophical absurdity involved in the
+doctrine of the divine incarnation--one other solecism comprehended
+in the childish notion which invests the infinite God with finite
+attributes. It is a well-established and well-understood axiom in
+philosocomplete God; and thereby that the Son could not be
+omnipresent, and that "the less cannot be made to contain the
+greater." A pint bottle cannot be made to contain a quart of wine. For
+the same reason a finite body cannot contain an infinite spirit. Hence
+philosophy presses the conclusion that "the man Christ Jesus" could not
+have comprehended in himself "the Godhead bodily," inasmuch as it would
+have required the infinite God to be incorporated in a finite human
+body. We are therefore compelled to reject the doctrine of the incarnate
+divinity, the belief in the deityship of Jesus Christ, because (with
+many other reasons enumerated elsewhere) it involves a direct tilt
+against some of the plainest principles of science, and challenges, ay,
+virtually overthrows, some of the fundamental laws of both natural and
+moral philosophy. No philosopher, therefore, does, or can believe in
+the absolute divinity of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII. PHYSIOLOGICAL ABSURDITIES OF THE DOCTRINE OF THE DIVINE
+INCARNATION
+
+THERE is also a physiological principle (discovered by the author)
+comprised in the doctrine of the Divine Incarnation fatal in its
+practical and logical application to the divinity of Jesus Christ,
+and all the other incarnate or flesh-invested Gods of antiquity. It is
+evidently fraught with much logical force. It is based upon the law of
+mental and physical correspondence. As is the physical conformation, so
+is the mentality, is a law of analogy which pilots us to nearly all our
+practical knowledge of the natural world. A knowledge of either serves
+as an index to the other.
+
+When we observe an animal possessing that physical form and construction
+peculiar to its species, we expect to find it practically exhibiting
+the nature, character, disposition, and habits peculiar to that class of
+animals. If it possesses, for example, the conformation of a sheep, we
+infer at once that it has the disposition of a sheep, and we are never
+disappointed in this conclusion. And when we encounter an animal with
+the tiger form, we expect to see exhibited the tiger spirit. If it
+possesses the well-known physical conformation of the tiger, we are
+never deceived or misled when we assign it a predatory disposition. If
+it is a tiger form, it is sure to be a tiger in character and habits.
+And so of all the genera and species of animals that range upon the face
+of the globe. We may travel through the whole field of animated
+nature, and observe the infallible operation of this beautiful law
+of correspondence till we come, however, to the crowning work of God,
+called Man. Here we find this law, this beautiful chain of analogy,
+broken by the doctrine of the "divine incarnation." God becomes a man,
+at least is made to exhibit every external appearance of a man. All
+external distinction between God and man is thus obliterated. So that
+the very first being we meet in the street or on the highway possessing
+the form, size, and physical conformation of a man, and presenting every
+other external appearance of being a man, may nevertheless be a God. And
+no less is this objection practically exemplified, and not less is the
+infraction of this beautiful law of analogy observable in the case of
+Jesus Christ, than in the numerous other incarnate Gods and demigods of
+antiquity. Being in appearance a man, how was he to be, or how could he
+be, visually distinguished from a man? Or how could those men who
+were cotemporary with him, know, as they approached him, or as they
+approached each other, whether they were meeting a man or a God? Seeing
+that "he was found in fashion as a man" (Phil. ii. 8), either he might
+be mistaken for a man, or they for a God. They were constantly liable to
+be confounded. If, then, the infinite deityship was lodged in the person
+of Jesus Christ, it is evident that that important fundamental law of
+nature--"as is the form, so is the character"--was utterly annulled,
+prostrated, annihilated, and banished from the world by the act. So
+that all was, and is henceforth and forever, chaos, confusion, and
+uncertainty. For if the principle can be violated in one instance, it
+may be in another, and in thousands of cases, ad infinitum. If one case
+could be allowed to occur, the principle is established, and nature's
+universal chain of analogy is broken and destroyed; for to intercept the
+law is to "break the tenth and ten thousandth link alike."
+
+Hence it is evident that if a being resembling a man may be a God, an
+animal resembling a cow may be a horse, and yonder stick a poisonous
+adder; and fatal may be the consequences, in thousands of instances, in
+judging or inferring the nature and character of an animal by its form
+and size. A supposed innocent animal might be a deadly enemy, or
+vice versa. Can we then believe, or dare we believe, a doctrine
+so atheistical in its tendencies as that the Infinite Diety was
+incorporated in the person of the meek and lowly Jesus, when it would
+thus set at naught, violate, prostrate, and utterly cancel from the
+world one of God's own fundamental laws, and one of the essential
+principles of natural science, and banish forever the co-ordinate
+harmony of the universe, and thus inaugurate a state of universal
+disorder, incertitude, anarchy, and misrule into the otherwise
+beautifully law-governed, well-regulated domain of nature? Certainly,
+most certainly not! If the incarnation of the Deity, should or
+could take place, there should be something strikingly peculiar, ay,
+infinitely peculiar, in his figure, size, and general appearance, in
+order to make him susceptible of being distinguished from the human.
+Otherwise, men would be liable to be constantly mistaking and worshiping
+each other for the Great Almighty and Ubiquitous God, and thus
+constantly blundering into idolatry. And we actually find several cases
+reported in the Scriptures (mark the fact well) of men, ay, the
+saints themselves, being led into this error; being led to commit "the
+high-handed sin of idolatry" in consequence of their previous acceptance
+of the belief in a man-God--that is, a God of human size and type. St.
+John, in two instances, was in the act of worshipping a being possessing
+the human form, whom he mistook for the omnipotent and omnipresent God.
+(See Rev. xix. 10, and xxii. 4.) Having, perhaps, been taught that
+"the fullness of the Godhead dwelt bodily in Christ Jesus," he probably
+mistook the being he met for Him, and hence offered to worship him. If,
+then, Christ's own "inspired disciples" could thus be betrayed into "the
+sin of idolatry" by having abolished the infinite distinction between
+the divine and the human, we surely find here a very weighty argument
+against such a leveling and equalizing doctrine. And certainly nothing
+could be better calculated to promote "the sin of idolatry" than thus to
+obliterate the broad, the infinitely grand line of demarkation between
+the infinite God and his finite creature man. Indeed, may we not here
+find the very origin and the cause of the now general prevalence
+of idolatry in pagan countries? Is it not directly traceable to the
+demolition of the broad, high, and insurmountable wall of distinction
+which ought forever to stand between a God of infinite attributes, and a
+being caged up in the human form? Certainly, most certainly it is. Hence
+here I would ask, How can Christians, after subscribing to the doctrine,
+"that the fullness of the Godhead dwelt bodily in the man Christ Jesus"
+(as Paul very appropriately calls him), condemn the people of any age or
+nation for worshipping as God their fellow-beings--that is, beings with
+the human form? Certainly the man who could believe that the infinite
+God could be comprehended or incorporated in the person of Jesus, could
+easily be brought to believe that the Grand Lama of Thibet is a proper
+object of divine worship. He only lacks the substitution of names.
+Substitute the Grand Lama for that of Jesus Christ, and the thing is
+done. And idolatry thus becomes an easily established institution, and
+its abolition in any country an absolute moral impossibility.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII. A HISTORICAL VIEW OF THE DIVINITY OF JESUS CHRIST.
+
+A MOST fatal distrust is thrown upon the miraculous portions of the
+history of Jesus Christ, as found in his Gospel narratives, by the
+discovery of the fact (brought to light through recent archaeological
+researches), that the same marvelous feats, the same miraculous
+incidents, which were recorded in his life, were long previously
+ingrafted into the sacred biographies of Gods and demigods no less
+adored and worshipped as beings possessing divine attributes. We
+shall leave the reader to account for the long list of astonishing
+coincidences, as we proceed to recapitulate and abridge from previous
+chapters, the almost innumerable parallel incidents running through
+the legendary history of the many demigods and sin-atoning saviors of
+antiquity. The historical vouchers are given. We shall first direct
+attention to the long string of corresponding events recorded in the
+sacred histories of ancient Hindoo Gods, as compared with those of Jesus
+Christ at a much later period.
+
+As far back as 1200 B. C., sacred records were extant and traditions
+were current, in the East, which taught that the heathen Savior
+(Chrishna) was, 1st, Immaculately conceived and born of a spotless
+virgin, "who had never known man." 2d, That the author of, or agent in,
+the conception, was a spirit or ghost (of course a Holy Ghost). 3d,
+That he was threatened in early infancy with death by the ruling tyrant,
+Cansa. 4th, That his parents had, consequently, to flee with him to
+Gokul for safety. 5th, That all the young male children under two years
+of age were slain by an order issued by Cansa, similar to that of Herod
+in Judea. 6th, That angels and shepherds attended his birth. 7th, That
+his birth and advent occurred on the 25th of December. 8th, That it
+occurred in accordance with previous prophecy. 9th, That he was presented
+at birth with frankincense, myrrh, &c. 10th, That he was saluted and
+worshipped as "the Savior of men," according to the report of the late
+Christian Missionary Huelith, That he led a life of humility and
+practical moral usefulness. 12th, That he wrought various astounding
+miracles, such as healing the sick, restoring sight to the blind,
+casting out devils, raising the dead to life, &c. 13th, That he was
+finally put to death upon the cross (i. e., crucified) between two
+thieves. 14th. After which he descended to hell, rose from the dead,
+and ascended back to heaven "in the sight of all men," as his biblical
+history declares. For hundreds of other similar parallels, including his
+doctrines and precepts, see Chapter XXXII.
+
+Now, all these were matters of the firmest belief, more than three
+thousand years ago, in the minds of millions of the most devout
+worshippers that ever bowed the knee in humble prayer to the Father of
+Mercies. The reader can draw his own deduction.
+
+And then we have presented similar brief lists of parallels in Chapter
+XXIII., comprised in a comparative view of the miraculous lives of the
+Judean and Egyptian Saviors, Christ, Alcides, Osiris, Tulis, &c. In
+this analogous exhibition, it will be observed the Egyptian Gods are
+reported, as remotely as 900 B. C, as performing, besides several of
+the miraculous achievements enumerated above, other miracles equally
+indicative of divine power, such as converting water into wine,
+causing "rain to descend from heaven," &c. And on the occasion of the
+crucifixion of Tulis we are told "the sun became darkened and the moon
+refused to shine."
+
+We find, also, several well-authenticated instances of raising the dead
+to life, in works portraying the miraculous achievements of the Egyptian
+Gods, the relation being given in such specific detail in some cases
+that the names of the reanimated dead are furnished. Tyndarus and
+Hypolitus were instances of this kind, both (according to Julius) having
+been raised from the dead. Descending the line of history, until we
+arrive at the confines of Grecian theology, we find here the same train
+of marvelous events recorded in the histories of their virgin-born Gods,
+as we have shown in Chapter XXXIII., such as their healing the sick and
+the cripples, causing the blind to see, the lame to walk, the dead to be
+resuscitated to life, &c. And cases, as we have shown, are reported of
+their reading the thoughts of their disciples, as Jesus did those of
+the woman of Samaria. Apollonius declares he knew many Hindoo saints to
+perform this achievement with entire strangers.
+
+Likewise Apollonius of Tyana and Simon Magus, both cotemporary with
+Jesus Christ, we have arranged in the historic parallel (see Chapter
+XXXIII.), with their long train of miracles, constituting an exact
+counterpart with those related in the Gospel history of Christ, and
+including in Apollonius's case, besides those specified in the
+histories of the Gods above named, the miracle of transfiguration, the
+resurrection from the dead, his visible ascent to heaven, &c., while
+Simon Magus was very expert in casting out devils, raising the dead,
+allaying storms, walking on the sea, &c.
+
+But without recapitulating further, we will recite some new historic
+facts not embraced in any of the preceding chapters of this work,
+and tending to demonstrate still further the universal analogy of all
+religions, past and present, in their claims for a miraculous power
+for their Gods and incarnate Saviors. The "New York Correspondent,"
+published in 1828, furnishes us the following brief history of an
+ancient Chinese God, known as Beddou:--
+
+"All the Eastern writers agree in placing the birth of Beddou 1027 B.
+C. The doctrines of this Deity prevailed over Japan, China, and Ceylon.
+According to the sacred tenets of his religion, 'God is incessantly
+rendering himself incarnate,' but his greatest and most solemn
+incarnation was three thousand years ago, in the province of Cashmere,
+under the name of Fot, or Beddou. He was believed to have sprung from
+the right intercostal of a virgin of the royal blood, who, when she
+became a mother, did not the less continue to be a virgin; that the king
+of the country, uneasy at his birth, was desirous to put him to death,
+and hence caused all the males that were born at the same period to be
+put to death, and also that, being saved by shepherds, he lived in
+the desert to the age of thirty years, at which time he opened his
+commission, preaching the doctrines of truth, and casting out devils;
+that he performed a multitude of the most astonishing miracles, spent
+his life fasting, and in the severest mortifications, and at his death
+bequeathed to his disciples the volume in which the principles of his
+religion are contained."
+
+Here, it will be observed, are some very striking counterparts to
+the miraculous incidents found related in the Gospel history of Jesus
+Christ. And no less analogous is the no less well-authenticated story
+of Quexalcote of Mexico, which the Rev. Mr. Maurice concedes to be, and
+Lord Kingsborough and Niebuhr (in his history of Rome) prove to be much
+older than the Gospel account of Jesus Christ According to Maurice's
+"Ind. Ant.," Humboldt's "Researches in Mexico," Lord Kingsbor-ough's
+"Mexican Ant.," and other works, the incarnate God Quexalcote was born
+(about 300 B. C.) of a spotless virgin, by the name Chimalman, and led a
+life of the deepest humility and piety; retired to a wilderness, fasted
+forty days, was worshipped as a God, and was finally crucified between
+two thieves; after which he was buried and descended into hell, but
+rose again the third day. The following is a part of Lord Kingsborough's
+testimony in the case: "The temptation of Quexalcote, the fast of forty
+days ordained by the Mexican ritual, the cup with which he was presented
+to drink (on the cross), the reed which was his sign, the 'Morning
+Star,' which he is designated, the 'Teoteepall, or Divine Stone,'
+which was laid on his altar, and which was likewise an object of
+adoration,--all these circumstances, connected with many others relating
+to Quexalcote of Mexico, but which are here omitted, are very curious
+and mysterious." (Vol. vi. p. 237, Mexican Ant.)
+
+Again "Quexalcote is represented, in the painting of Codex Borgianus, as
+nailed to the cross." (See Mex. Ant. vol. vi. p. 166.) One plate in
+this work represents him as being crucified in the heavens, one as being
+crucified between two thieves. Sometimes he is represented as being
+nailed to the cross, and sometimes as hanging with the cross in his
+hands. The same work speaks of his burial, descent into hell, and
+his resurrection; while the account of his immaculate conception and
+miraculous birth are found in a work called "Codex Vaticanus."
+
+Other parallel incidents could be cited, if we had space for them,
+appertaining to the history of this Mexican God. And parallels might
+also be constructed upon the histories of other ancient Gods,--as that
+of Sakia of India, Salivahana of Bermuda, Hesus, or Eros, of the Celtic
+Druids, Mithra of Persia, Hil and Feta of the Mandaites, &c.
+
+But we will close with the testimony of a French philosopher (Bagin) on
+the subject of deific incarnations. This writer says, "The most ancient
+histories are those of Gods who became incarnate in order to govern
+mankind. All those fables are the same in spirit, and sprang up
+everywhere from confused ideas, which have universally prevailed among
+mankind,--that Gods formerly descended upon earth."
+
+Now, we ask the Christian reader,--and it will be the first query
+of every man whose religious faith has not made shipwreck of his
+reason,--"What does all this mean? How are you going to sustain the
+declaration that Jesus Christ was the only son and sent of God, in
+view of these historic facts? Where are the superior credentials of his
+claim? How will you prove his apparently legendary history (that is, the
+miraculous portion of his history) to be real, and the others false?"
+We boldly aver it cannot be done. Please answer these questions, or
+relinquish your doctrine of the divinity of Jesus Christ.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX. THE SCRIPTURAL VIEW OF CHRIST'S DIVINITY.
+
+THE monstrous scientific paradox (as coming ages will regard it)
+comprehended in the conception of an almighty, omnipresent, and infinite
+Being, "the Creator of innumerable worlds," ("by him [Christ] were all
+things made that were made," John i. 3-10), being born of a frail and
+finite woman, as taught by both the oriental and Christian religion, is
+so exceedingly shocking to every rational mind, which has not been sadly
+warped, perverted, and coerced into the belief by early psychological
+influence, that we would naturally presume that those who, on the
+assumption of the remotest possibility of its truth, should venture
+to put forth a doctrine so glaringly unreasonable and so obviously
+untenable, would of course vindicate it and establish it by the
+strongest arguments and by the most unassailable and most irrefragable
+proofs; and that in setting forth a doctrine so manifestly at war with
+every law and analogy of nature and every principle of science, no
+language should have been used, nor the slightest admission made,
+that could possibly lead to the slightest degree of suspicion that the
+original authors and propagators of this doctrine had either any doubt
+of the truth of the doctrine themselves, or were wanting in the most
+ample, the most abundant proof to sustain it. No language, no text,
+not a word, not a syllable should have been used making the most remote
+concession damaging to the validity of the doctrine, so that not "the
+shadow of a shade of doubt" could be left on any mind of its truth.
+Omnipotent indeed should be the logic, and irresistible the proof,
+in support of a thesis or a doctrine which so squarely confronts and
+contradicts all the observation, all the experience, the whole range
+of scientific knowledge, and the common sense of mankind. How startling
+then, to every devout and honest professor of the Christian faith ought
+to be the recent discovery of the fact, that the great majority of the
+texts having any bearing upon the doctrine of the divinity of Jesus
+Christ,--a large majority of the passages in the very book on which the
+doctrine is predicated, and which is acknowledged as the sole warranty
+for such a belief,--are actually at variance with the doctrine, and
+actually amount to its virtual denial and overthrow. For we find, upon
+a critical examination of the matter, that at least three-fourths of the
+texts, both in the Gospels and Epistles, which relate to the divinity
+of Christ, specifically or by implication either teach a different and
+a contrary doctrine, or make concessions entirely fatal to it, by
+investing him with finite human qualities utterly incompatible with the
+character and attributes of a divine or infinite Being. How strange,
+then, how superlatively strange, that millions should yet hold to such
+a strange "freak of nature," such a dark relic of oriental heathenism,
+such a monstrously foolish and childish superstition, as that which
+teaches the infinite Creator and "Upholder of the universe" could
+be reduced so near to nonentity, as was required to pass through the
+ordinary stages of human generation, human birth, and human parturition,
+--a puerile notion which reason, science, nature, philosophy, and common
+sense, proclaim to be supremely absurd and self-evidently impossible,
+and which even the Scriptures fail to sustain,--a logical, scriptural
+exposition, of which we will here present a brief summary:--
+
+1. The essential attributes of a self-existing God and Creator, and
+"Upholder of all things." are infinitude, omnipotence, omniscience,
+and omnipresence, and any being not possessing all these attributes to
+repletion, or possessing any quality or characteristic in the slightest
+degree incompatible with any one of these attributes, cannot be a God
+in a divine sense, but must of necessity be a frail, fallible, finite
+being.
+
+2. Jesus Christ disclaims, hundreds of times over, directly or
+impliedly, the inherent possession of any one of these divine
+attributes.
+
+3. His evangelical biographers have invested him with the entire
+category of human qualities and characteristics, each one of which
+is entirely unbefitting a God, and taken together are the only
+distinguishing characteristics by which we can know a man from a God.
+
+4. Furthermore, there issued from his own mouth various sayings and
+concessions most fatal to the conception of his being a God.
+
+5. His devout biographers have reported various actions and movements
+in his practical life which we are compelled to regard as absolutely
+irreconcilable with the infinite majesty, lofty character, and supreme
+attributes of an almighty Being.
+
+6. These human qualities were so obvious to all who saw him and all
+who became acquainted with him, that doubts sprang up among his own
+immediate followers, which ultimately matured into an open avowal of
+disbelief in his divinity in that early age.
+
+7. Upon the axiomatical principles of philosophy it is an utter and
+absolute impossibility to unite in repletion the divine and the human in
+the same being.
+
+8. And then Christ had a human birth.
+
+9. He was constituted in part, like human beings, of flesh and blood.
+
+10. He became, on certain occasions, "an hungered," like finite beings.
+
+11. He also became thirsty (John xix. 28), like perishable mortals.
+
+12. He often slept, like mortals, and thus became "to dumb forgetfulness
+a prey."
+
+13. He sometimes became weary, like human beings. (See John iv. 6.)
+
+14. He was occasionally tempted, like fallible mortals. (Matt. iv. 1.)
+
+15. His "soul became exceeding sorrowful," as a frail, finite being.
+(Matt. xxvi. 38.)
+
+16. He disclosed the weakness of human passion by weeping. (John xi.
+35.)
+
+17. He was originally an imperfect being, "made perfect through
+suffering." (Heb. ii. 10.)
+
+18. He "increased in wisdom and stature" (Luke ii. 52); therefore he
+must have possessed finite, changeable, mortal attributes.
+
+19. And he finally died and was buried, like all perishable mortals. He
+could not possibly, from these considerations, have been a God. It
+is utterly impracticable to associate with or comprehend, in a God of
+infinite powers and infinite attributes, all or any of these finite
+human qualities.
+
+20. Dark, intellectually dark, indeed, must be that mind, and sunk,
+sorrowfully sunk in superstition, that can worship a being as the great
+omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent "I AM," who possessed all those
+qualities which were constitutionally characteristic of the pious, the
+noble, the devout, the Godlike, yet finite and fallible Jesus, according
+to his own admissions and the representations of his own interested
+biographers.
+
+21. The only step which the disciples of the Christian faith have made
+toward disproving or setting aside these arguments, objections, and
+difficulties, is that of assigning the incarnate Jesus a double or
+twofold nature--the amalgamation of the human and divine; a postulate
+and a groundless assumption, which we have proved and demonstrated by
+thirteen arguments, which we believe to be unanswerable, is not only
+absurd, illogical, and impossible, but foolish and ludicrous in the
+highest degree. (See vol. ii.)
+
+22. This senseless hypothesis, and every other assumption and argument
+made use of by the professors of the Christian faith to vindicate their
+favorite dogma of the divinity of Jesus, we have shown to be equally
+applicable to the demigods of the ancient heathen, more than twenty
+of whom were invested with the same combination of human and divine
+qualities which the followers and worshippers of Jesus claim for him.
+
+23. Testimony of the Father against the divinity of the Son. The Father
+utterly precludes the Son from any participation in the divine essence,
+or any claim in the Godhead, by such declarations as the following: "I
+am Jehovah, and beside me there is no Savior." (Isaiah xliii. 11.) How,
+then, we would ask, can Jesus Christ be the Savior? "I, Jehovah, am thy
+Savior and thy Redeemer." Then Christ can be neither the Savior nor
+Redeemer. "There is no God else beside me, a just God and a Savior;
+there is none beside me." (Isaiah xiv. 21.) So the Father virtually
+declares, according to "the inspired prophet Isaiah," that the Son, in a
+divine sense, cannot be either God, Savior, or Redeemer. Again, "I am
+Jehovah, thy God, and thou shalt not acknowledge a God beside me."
+(Hosea xiii. 4.) Here Christ is not only by implication cut off from the
+Godhead, but positively prohibited from being worshipped as God. And
+thus the testimony of the Father disproves and sets aside the divinity
+of the Son.
+
+24. Testimony of the mother. When Mary found, after a long search,
+her son Jesus in the temple, disputing with the doctors, and chided or
+reproved him for staying from home without the consent of his parents,
+and declared, "thy father and I sought thee, sorrowing" (Luke ii. 48),
+she proclaimed a twofold denial of his divinity. In the first place it
+cannot be possible that she regarded her son Jesus as "that awful Being,
+before whom e'en the devout saints bow in trembling fear," when she used
+such language and evinced such a spirit as she did. "Why hast thou thus
+dealt with us?" (Luke ii. 48) is her chiding language. And then, when
+she speaks of Joseph as his father, "thy father and I," she issues a
+declaration against his divinity which ought to be regarded as settling
+the question forever. For who could know better than the mother, or
+rather, who could know but the mother, who the father of the child Jesus
+was? And as she acknowledges it was Joseph, she thus repudiates the
+story of the immaculate conception, which constitutes the whole basis
+for the claim of his divinity. Hence the testimony of the mother, also,
+disproves his title to the Godhead.
+
+25. Testimony or disclaimer of the Son. We will show by a specific
+citation of twenty-five texts that there is not one attribute
+comprehended in or peculiar to a divine and infinite Being, but that
+Christ rejects as applicable to himself--that he most conclusively
+disclaims every attribute of a divine Being, both by precept and
+practice, and often in the most explicit language.
+
+26. By declaring, "The Son can do nothing of himself" (John v. 19),
+he most emphatically disclaims the attribute of omnipotence. For an
+omnipotent Being can need no aid, and can accept of none.
+
+27. When he acknowledged and avowed his ignorance of the day of
+judgment, which must be presumed to be the most important event in the
+world's history, he disclaimed the attribute of omniscience. "Of that
+day and hour knoweth no man, neither the Son, but the Father only."
+(Matt. xxiv. 36.) Now, as an omniscient Being must possess all
+knowledge, his avowed ignorance in this case is a confession he was not
+omniscient, and hence not a God.
+
+28. And when he declares, "I am glad for your sakes I was not there" (at
+the grave of Lazarus), he most distinctly disavows being omnipresent,
+and thus denies to himself another essential attribute of an infinite
+God.
+
+29. And the emphatic declaration, "I live by the Father" (John vi. 57),
+is a direct disclaimer of the attributes of self-existence; as a being
+who lives by another cannot be self-existent, and, per consequence, not
+the infinite God.
+
+30 He disclaims possessing infinite goodness, another essential
+attribute of a supreme divine Being. "Why callest thou me good? there is
+none good but one, that is God." (Mark x. 18.)
+
+31. He disclaim divine honors, and directed them to the father. "I honor
+my Father." (John viii. 49.) "I receive not honor from men." (John v.
+41.)
+
+32. He recommended supreme worship to the Father, and not to himself.
+"The true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth."
+(John iv. 21.)
+
+33. He ascribed supreme dominion to the Father. "Thine is the kingdom,
+and the power, and the glory forever." (Matt. vi. 13.)
+
+34. It will be seen, from the foregoing text, that Christ also
+acknowledges that the kingdom is the Father's. A God without a kingdom
+would be a ludicrous state of things.
+
+35. He conceded supreme authority to the Father.
+
+"My doctrine is not mine, but his that sent me." (John vii. 16.)
+
+36. He considered the Father as the supreme protector and preserver of
+even his own disciples. "I pray that thou shouldst keep them from the
+evil." (John xvii. 15.) What, omnipotence not able to protect his own
+disciples?
+
+37. In fine, he humbly acknowledged that his power, his will, his
+ministry, his mission, his authority, his works, his knowledge, and his
+very life, were all from, and belonged to and were under the control of,
+the Father. "I can do nothing of myself;" "I came to do the will of him
+that sent me." "The Father that dwelleth within me, he doeth the work,"
+&c. "A God within a God," is an old pagan Otaheitan doctrine.
+
+38. He declared that even spiritual communion was the work of the
+Father. (See John vi. 45.)
+
+39. He acknowledged himself controlled by the Father. (See John v. 30.)
+
+40. He acknowledged his entire helplessness and dependence on the
+Father. "The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father
+do." (John v. 19.)
+
+41. He acknowledged that even his body was the work of his Father; in
+other words, that he was dependent on his Father for his physical life.
+(See Heb. xvi. 5.)
+
+42. And more than all, he not only called the Father "the only true God"
+(John xvii. 3), but calls him "my Father and my God." (John xx. 17.)
+Now, it would be superlative nonsense to consider a being himself a
+God, or the God, who could use such language as is here ascribed to the
+humble Jesus. This text, this language, is sufficient of itself to
+show that Christ could not have laid any claim to the Godhead on any
+occasion, unless we degrade him to the charge of the most palpable and
+shameful contradiction.
+
+43. He uniformly directed his disciples to pray, not to him, but the
+Father. (See Matt. vi. 6.)
+
+44. On one occasion, as we have cited the proof (in Matt. xi. 11), he
+even acknowledged John the Baptist to be greater than he; while it
+must be patent to every reader that no man could be greater than the
+almighty, supreme Potentate of heaven and earth, in any sense whatever.
+
+45. Testimony of the disciples. Another remarkable proof of the human
+sireship of Jesus is, that one of his own disciples--ay, one of the
+chosen twelve, selected by him as being endowed with a perfect knowledge
+of his character, mission, and origin--this witness, thus posted and
+thus authorized, proclaims, in unequivocal language, that Jesus was the
+son of Joseph. Hear the language of Philip addressed to Nathanael.
+"We have found him of whom Moses, in the law and the prophets, did
+write--Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph." (John i. 45.) No language
+could be more explicit, no declaration more positive, that Jesus was the
+son of Joseph. And no higher authority could be adduced to settle the
+question, coming as it does from "headquarters." And what will, or
+what can, the devout stickler for the divinely paternal origin of Jesus
+Christ do with such testimony? It is a clincher which no sophistry can
+set aside, no reasoning can grapple with, and no logic overthrow.
+
+46. His disciples, instead of representing him as being "the only true
+God," often speak of him in contradistinction to God.
+
+47. They never speak of him as the God Christ Jesus, but as "the man
+Christ Jesus." ( 1 Tim. ii. 5.) "Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved of
+God." (Acts ii. 23.) It would certainly be blasphemy to speak of the
+Supreme Being as "a man approved of God." Christian reader, reflect upon
+this text. "By that man whom he (die Father) hath ordained" (Acts xvii.
+3), by the assumption of the Godhead of Christ, we would be presented
+with the double or twofold solecism, 1st. Of God being "ordained" by
+another God; and 2d. That of his being blasphemously called a "man."
+
+48. Paul's declaration has been cited, that "unto us there is but one
+God--the Father." ( 1 Cor. iv. 8. ) Now, it is plain to common sense,
+that if there is but one God, and that God is comprehended in the
+Father, then Christ is entirely excluded from the Godhead.
+
+49. If John's declaration be true, that "no man hath seen God at any
+time" (John iv. 12), then the important question arises, How could
+Christ be God, as he was seen by thousands of men, and seen hundreds of
+times?
+
+50. God the Father is declared to be the "One," "the Holy One," "the
+only One," &c., more than one hundred times, as if purposely to exclude
+the participation of any other being in the Godhead.
+
+51. This one, this only God, is shown to be the Father alone in more
+than four thousand texts, thirteen hundred and twenty-six of which are
+found in the New Testament.
+
+52. More than fifty texts have been found which declare, either
+explicitly or by implication, that God the Father has no equal, which
+effectually denies or shuts out the divine equality of the Son. "To whom
+will ye liken me, or shall I be equal with, saith the holy One." (Isaiah
+xl. 25.)
+
+53. Christ in the New Testament is called "man," and "the Son of
+man," eighty-four times,--egregious and dishonorable misnomers, most
+certainly, to apply to a supreme and infinite Deity. On the other hand,
+he is called God but three times, and denominates himself "the Son of
+God" but once, and that rather obscurely.
+
+54. The Father is spoken of, in several instances, as standing in the
+relation of God to the Son, as "the God of our Lord Jesus Christ" (Acts
+iii. 2.) "Ye are Christ's, and Christ is Gods." (i Cor. xi. 3.) Now,
+the God of a God is a polytheistic, heathen conception; and 1 no
+meaning or interpretation, as we have shown, can be I forced upon such
+texts as these, that will not admit a plurality of Gods, if we admit
+the titles as applicable to Christ, or that his scriptural biographers
+intend to apply such a title in a superior or supreme sense.
+
+55. Many texts make Christ the mere tool, agent, image, servant, or
+representative of God, as Christ, "the image of God" (Heb. i. 3),
+Christ, the appointed of God (Heb. iii. 1), Christ, "the servant of God"
+(Matt. xii. | 18), &c. To consider a being thus spoken of as himself the
+supreme God, is, as we have demonstrated, the very climax of absurdity
+and nonsense. To believe "the servant of God" is God himself,--that is,
+the servant of himself,--and that God and his "image" are the same, is
+to descend within one step of buffoonery.
+
+56. And then it has been ascertained that there are more than three
+hundred texts which declare, either expressly or by implication,
+Christ's subordination to and dependence on the Father, as, "I can do
+nothing of myself;" "Not mine, but his that sent me;" "I came to do the
+will of him that sent me" (John iv. 34); "I seek the will of my Father,"
+&c.
+
+57. And more than one hundred and fifty texts make the Son inferior to
+the Father, as "the Son knoweth not, but the Father does" (Mark viii.
+32); "My Father is greater than I;" "The Son can do nothing of himself"
+(John v. 19), &c.
+
+58. There are many divine titles applied to the Father which are never
+used in reference to the Son, as "Jehovah," "The Most High," "God
+Almighty," "The Almighty," &c.
+
+On the other hand, those few divine epithets or titles which are used in
+application to Jesus Christ, as Lord, God, Savior, Redeemer,
+Intercessor, &c., it has been shown were all used prior to the birth of
+Christ, in application to beings known and acknowledged to be men, and
+some of them are found so applied in the bible itself; as, for example,
+Moses is called a God in two instances, as we have shown, and cited the
+proof (in Ex. iv. 16, vii. 1), while the title of Lord is applied to men
+at this day, even in Christian countries. And instances have been cited
+in the bible of the term Savior being applied to men, both in the
+singular and plural numbers. (See 2 Kings xiii. 5, and Neh. ix. 27.)
+Seeing, then, that the most important divine titles which the writers of
+the New Testament have applied to Jesus were previously used in
+application to men, known and admitted to be such, it is therefore at
+once evident that those titles do nothing toward proving him to be the
+Great Divine Being, as the modern Christian world assume him to be, even
+if we base the argument wholly on scriptural grounds. While, on the
+other hand, we have demonstrated it to be an absolute impossibility to
+apply with any propriety or any sense to a divine infinite omnipotent
+Being those finite human qualities which are so frequently used with
+reference to Jesus throughout the New Testament. And hence, even if we
+should suppose or concede that the writers of the New Testament did
+really believe him to be the great Infinite Spirit, or the almighty,
+omnipotent God,'we must conclude they were mistaken, from their own
+language, from their own description of him, as well as his own virtual
+denial and rejection of such a claim, when he applied to himself, as he
+did in nine cases out of ten, strictly finite human qualities and human
+titles (as we have shown), wholly incompatible with the character of an
+infinite divine Being. We say, from the foregoing considerations, if the
+primitive disciples of Jesus did really believe him to be the great
+Infinite, both their descriptions of him and his description or
+representation of himself, would amply and most conclusively prove that
+they were mistaken. At least we are compelled to admit that there is
+either an error in applying divine titles to Jesus, or often an error in
+describing his qualities and powers, by himself and his original
+followers, as there is no compatibility or agreement between the two.
+Divine titles to such a being as they represent him to be, would be an
+egregious misnomer. We say, then, that it must be clearly and
+conclusively evident to every unbiased mind, from evidence furnished by
+the bible itself, that if the divine titles applied to Jesus were
+intended to have a divine significance, then they are misapplied. Yet we
+would not here conclude an intentional misrepresentation in the case,
+but simply a mistake growing out of a misconception, and the very
+limited childish conception, of the nature, character, and attributes
+of the "great positive Mind," so universally prevalent in that
+semi-barbarous age, and the apparently total ignorance of the
+distinguishing characteristics which separate the divine and the human.
+We will illustrate: some children, on passing through a wild portion of
+the State of Maine recently, reported they encountered a bear; and to
+prove they could not be mistaken in the animal, they described it as
+being a tall, slight-built animal, with long slender legs, of yellowish
+auburn hue, a short, white, bushy tail, cloven feet, large branchy
+horns, &c. Now, it will be seen at once that, while their description of
+the animal is evidently in the main correct, they had simply mistaken a
+deer for a bear, and hence misnamed the animal.
+
+In like manner we must conclude, from the repeated instances in which
+Christ's biographers have ascribed to him all the foibles, frailties,
+and finite qualities and characteristics of a human being, that if they
+have in any instance called him a God in a divine sense, it is an
+egregious misnomer. Their description of him makes him a man, and but a
+man, whatever may have been their opinion with respect to the propriety
+of calling him a God. And if the two do not harmonize, the former must
+rule the judgment in all cases. The truth is, the Jewish founders of
+Christianity entertained such a low, narrow, contracted, and mean
+opinion of Deity and the infinite distinction and distance between the
+divine and the human, that their theology reduced him to a level with
+man; and hence they usually described him as a man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL. A METONYMIC VIEW OF THE DIVINITY OF JESUS CHRIST
+
+IF Jesus Christ were truly God, or if there existed such a co-equal
+and co-essential oneness between the Father and the Son that they
+constituted but one being or divine essence, then what is true of one
+is true of the other, and a change of names and titles from one to the
+other cannot alter the sense of the text. Let us, then, substitute the
+titles found applied to the Son in the New Testament, to the Father, and
+observe the effect:--
+
+"My Son is greater than I." (John vii. 28.)
+
+"God can do nothing of himself." (John v. 19.)
+
+"I must be about my Son's business." (Luke ii. 49.)
+
+"The kingdom of heaven is not mine to give, but the Son's." (Matt. xx.
+23.)
+
+"I am come in my Son's name, and ye receive me not" (John v. 43.)
+
+"God cried, Jesus, why hast thou forsaken me?" (Matt. xiii. 28.)
+
+"No man hath seen Jesus at any time." (1 John i. 5-)
+
+"Jesus created all things by his Son." (Eph. iii. 9.)
+
+"God sat down (in heaven) at the right hand of Jesus." (Luke xxii. 69.)
+
+"There is one Jesus, one mediator between Jesus and men." (Gal. iii.
+20.)
+
+"Jesus gave his only begotten Father." (1 John iv. 9)
+
+"God knows not the hour, but Jesus does." (Mark viii. 32.)
+
+"God is the servant of Jesus." (Mark xii. 18.)
+
+"God is ordained by Jesus." (Acts xvii. 31.)
+
+"The head of God is Christ." (Eph. i. 3.)
+
+"We have an advocate with Jesus, God the righteous." (1 John ii. 1.)
+
+"Jesus gave all power to God." (Matt, xxviii. 18.)
+
+"God abode all night in prayer to Jesus." (Luke vi. 12.)
+
+"God came down from heaven to do the will of Jesus." (John vi. 38.)
+
+"Jesus has made the Father his high priest." (Heb. x. 24.)
+
+"Last of all, the Son sent the Father." (Matt. xxi. 39.)
+
+"Jesus will save the world by that God whom he hath ordained."
+
+"Jesus is God of the Father." (John xx. 17.)
+
+"Jesus hath exalted God, and given him a more excellent name." (Phil.
+ii. 9.)
+
+"Jesus hath made God a little lower than the angels." (Heb. ii. 9.)
+
+"God can do nothing except what he seeth Jesus do." (John v. 19.)
+
+Now, the question arises, Is the above representation a true one? Most
+certainly it must be, if Jesus and the Father are but one almighty
+Being. A change of names and titles cannot alter the truth nor the
+sense.
+
+To say that Chief Justice Chase has gone south; Secretary Chase has gone
+south; Governor Chase has gone south; Ex-Senator Chase has gone south,
+or Salmon P. Chase has gone south, are affirmations equally true and
+equally sensible, because they all have reference to the same being; the
+case is to plain to need argument.
+
+The above reversal of names and titles of Jesus and the Father may sound
+very unpleasant and rather grating to Christ-adoring Christians, simply
+because it is the transposition of the tides of two very scripturally
+dissimilar beings, instead of being, as generally taught by orthodox
+Christians, "one in essence, one in mind, one in body or being, and one
+in name," as the Rev. Mr. Barnes affirms. Most self-evidently false
+is his statement, based solely on scriptural ground. If Jesus is "very
+God," and there is but one God, then the foregoing transposition cannot
+mar the sense nor altar the truth of one text quoted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI. THE PRECEPTS AND PRACTICAL LIFE OF JESUS CHRIST; HIS TWO
+HUNDRED ERRORS
+
+THE exaltation of men to the character and homage of divine beings
+has always had the effect to draw a vail over their errors and
+imperfections, so as to render them imperceptible to those who worship
+them as Gods. This is true of nearly all the deified men of antiquity,
+who were adored as incarnate divinities, among which may be included
+the Christian's man-God, Jesus Christ. The practice of the followers of
+these Gods has been, when an error was pointed out in their teachings,
+brought to light by the progress of science and general intelligence,
+to bestow upon the text some new and unwarranted meaning, entirely
+incompatible with its literal reading, or else to insist with a godly
+zeal on the correctness of the sentiment inculcated by the text, and
+thus essay to make error pass for truth. In this way millions of the
+disciples of' these Gods have been misled and blinded, and made to
+believe by their religious teachers and their religious education, that
+everything taught by their assumed-to-be divine exemplars is perfect
+truth, in perfect harmony with science, sense, and true morals. Indeed,
+the perversion of the mind and judgment by a religious education has
+been in many cases carried to such an extreme as to cause their devout
+and prejudiced followers either to entirely overlook and ignore their
+erroneous teachings, or to magnify them into God-given truths, and thus,
+as before stated, clothe error with the livery of truth. This state of
+things, it has long been noticed by unprejudiced minds, exists amongst
+the millions of professed believers in the divinity of Jesus Christ.
+Hence the errors, both in his moral lessons and his practical life, have
+passed from age to age unnoticed, because his pious and awe-stricken
+followers, having been taught that he was a divine teacher, have assumed
+that his teachings must all be true; and hence, too, have instituted no
+scrutiny to determine their truth or falsity. But we will now proceed to
+show that the progress of' science and general intelligence has brought
+to light many errors, not only in his teachings, but in his practical
+life also. In enumerating them, we will arrange them under the head
+
+
+MORAL AND RELIGIOUS ERRORS.
+
+1. The first moral precept in the teachings of Christ, which we will
+bring to notice, is one of a numerous class, which may very properly
+be arranged under the head of Moral Extremism. We find many of his
+admonitions of this character. Nearly everything that is said is
+oversaid, carried to extremes--thus constituting an overwrought,
+extravagant system of morality, impracticable in its requisitions; as,
+for example, "Take no thought for the morrow." (Matt, v.) If the spirit
+of this injunction were carried out in practical life, there would be
+no grain sown and no seed planted in spring, no reaping done in harvest,
+and no crop garnered in autumn; and the result would be universal
+starvation in less than twelve months. But, fortunately for society, the
+Christian world have laid this positive injunction upon the table under
+the rule of "indefinite postponement."
+
+2. Christ's assumed-to-be most important requisition is found in the
+injunction, "Seek ye first the Kingdom of God, and his righteousness,
+and all else shall be added unto you." (Matt. vi. 33.) His early
+followers understood by this injunction, and doubtless understood it
+correctly, that they were to spend their lives in religious devotion,
+and neglect the practical duties of life, leaving "Providence" to take
+care of their families--a course of life which reduced many of them to
+the point of starvation.
+
+3. The disciple of Christ is required, "when smitten on one cheek," to
+turn the other also that is, when one cheek is pommeled into a jelly by
+some vile miscreant or drunken wretch, turn the other, to be smashed up
+in like manner. This is an extravagant requisition, which none of his
+modern disciples even attempt to observe.
+
+4. "Resist not evil" (Matt. v. 34) breathes forth a kindred spirit. This
+injunction requires you to stand with your hands in your pocket while
+being maltreated so cruelly and unmercifully that the forfeiture of
+your life may be the consequence--at least Christ's early followers so
+understood it.
+
+5. The disciple of Christ is required, when his cloak is formally
+wrested from him, to give up his coat also. (See Matt, v.) And to carry
+out the principle, if the marauder demands it, he must next give up his
+boots, then his shirt, and thus strip himself of all his garments, and
+go naked. This looks like an invitation and bribe to robbery.
+
+6. "Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth." (Matt. vi. 19.) This
+is another positive command of Christ, which the modern Christian world,
+by common consent, have laid on the table under the rule of "indefinite
+postponement," under the conviction that the wants of their families and
+the exigencies of sickness and old age cannot be served if they should
+live up to such an injunction.
+
+7. "Sell all that thou hast,... and come and follow me," is another
+command which bespeaks more piety than wisdom, as all who have attempted
+to comply with it have reduced their families to beggary and want.
+
+8. "If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him."
+Then he must hate it, as there are but the two principles, and "from
+hate proceed envy, strife, evil surmisings, and persecution." Evidently
+the remedy in this case for "worldly-mindedness" is worse than the
+disease.
+
+9. "He that cometh to me, and hateth not father, mother, brother, and
+sister, &c., cannot be my disciple." (Luke xiv. 26). This breathes forth
+the same spirit as the last text quoted above. Many learned expositions
+have been penned by Christian writers to make it appear, that hate in
+this case does not mean hate. But certainly it would be a slander upon
+infinite wisdom to leave it to be inferred that he could not say or
+"inspire" his disciples to say exactly what he meant, and to say it so
+plainly as to leave no possibility of being misunderstood, or leave any
+ground for dispute about the meaning.
+
+10. "Rejoice and be exceeding glad" when persecuted. (Matt. v. 4.) Now,
+as a state of rejoicing is the highest condition of happiness that can
+be realized, such advice must naturally prompt the religious zealot
+to court persecution, in order to obtain complete happiness, and
+consequently to pursue a dare-devil life to provoke persecution.
+
+11. "Whosoever shall seek to save his life, shall lose it," &c. (Luke
+xvii. 33.) Here is displayed the spirit of martyrdom which has made
+millions reckless of life, and goaded on the frenzied bigot to seek the
+fiery fagot and the halter. We regard it as another display of religious
+fanaticism.
+
+12. "Ye shall be hated of all men for my name's sake." (Matt. x. 12.)
+How repulsive must have been their doctrines or their conduct! No
+sensible religion could excite the universal hatred of mankind. For it
+would contain something adapted to the moral, religious, or spiritual
+taste of some class or portion of society, and hence make it and its
+disciples loved instead of hated. And then how could they be "hated of
+all men," when not one man in a thousand ever heard of them? Here is
+more of the extravagance of religious enthusiasm.
+
+13. "Shake off the dust of your feet" against those who cannot see
+the truth or utility of your doctrines. (Matt. x. 14.) Here Christ
+encourages in his disciples a spirit of contempt for the opinions of
+others calculated to make them "hated." A proper regard for the rules of
+good-breeding would have forbidden such rudeness toward strangers for a
+mere honest difference of opinion.
+
+14. "Take nothing for your journey, neither staff, nor scrip, nor purse"
+(Mark vi. 8); that is "sponge on your friends, and force yourselves on
+your enemies," the latter class of which seem to have been much the most
+numerous. A preacher who should attempt to carry out this advice at the
+present day would be stopped at the first toll-gate, and compelled to
+return. Here is more violation of the rules of good-breeding, and the
+common courtesies of civilized life.
+
+15. "Go and teach all nations," &c. Why issue an injunction that could
+not possibly be carried out? It never has been, and never will be,
+executed, for three-fourths of the human race have never yet heard of
+Christianity. It was not, therefore, a mark of wisdom, or a superior
+mind, to issue such an injunction.
+
+16. "And he that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that
+believeth not shall be damned." What intolerance, bigotry, relentless
+cruelty, and ignorance of the science of mind are here displayed! No
+philosopher would give utterance to, or indorse such a sentiment.
+It assumes that belief is a creature of the will, and that a man
+can believe anything he chooses, which is wide of the truth. And the
+assumption has been followed by persecution, misery, and bloodshed.
+
+17. "All things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall
+receive." (Matt. xxi. 22.) Here is an entire negation of natural law in
+the necessity of physical labor as a means to procure the comforts of
+life. When anything is wanted in the shape of food or raiment, it is
+to be obtained, according to this text, by going down on your knees
+and asking God to bestow it. But no Christian ever realized "all things
+whatsoever asked for in prayer," thought "believing with all his heart"
+he should obtain it. The author knows, by his own practical experience,
+that this declaration is not true. This promise has been falsified
+thousands of times by thousands of praying Christians.
+
+18. "Be not called rabbi." "Call no man your father." (Matt, xxiii.)
+The Christian world assume that much of what Christ taught is mere idle
+nonsense, or the incoherent utterings of a religious fanatic; for
+they pay no more practical attention to it than the barking of a dog.
+And here is one command treated in this manner: "Call no man father."
+Where is the Christian who refuses to call his earthly sire a father?
+
+19. "Call no man master." (Matt, xxiii.) And yet mister, which is the
+same thing, is the most common title in Christendom.
+
+20. He who enunciates the two words, "'Thou fool.' shall be in danger of
+hell fire." (Matt, xxii.) Mercy! Who, then, can be saved? For there is
+probably not a live Christian in the world who has not called somebody a
+"fool," when he knew him to be such, and could not with truthfulness be
+called anything else. Here, then, is another command universally ignored
+and "indefinitely postponed."
+
+21. "Swear not at all, neither by heaven nor earth." (Matt, v.) And yet
+no Christian refuses to indulge in legal, if not profane, swearing which
+the text evidently forbids.
+
+22. "Men ought always to pray." (Luke xviii.) No time to be allowed for
+eating or sleeping. More religious fanaticism.
+
+23. "Whosoever will be chief among you let him be your servant" (Matt.
+xx. 27); that is, no Christian professor shall be a president, governor,
+major-general, deacon, or priest. Another command laid on the table.
+
+24. "Love your enemies." (Matt. v. 44.) Then what kind of feeling should
+we cultivate toward friends? And how much did he love his enemies when
+he called them "fools," "liars," "hypocrites," "generation of vipers,"
+&c.? And yet he is held up as "our" example in love, meekness,
+and forbearance. But no man ever did love an enemy. It is a moral
+impossibility, as much so as to love bitter or nauseating food.
+The advice of the Roman slave Syrus is indicative of more sense and
+wisdom--"Treat your enemy kindly, and thus make him a friend."
+
+25. We are required to forgive an enemy four hundred and ninety times;
+that is, "seventy times seven." (Matt, vii.) Another outburst of
+religious enthusiasm; another proof of an overheated imagination.
+
+26. "Be ye perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect." (Matt. v.
+48.) Here is more of the religious extravagance of a mind uncultured
+by science. For it is self-evident that human beings can make no
+approximation to divine perfection. The distance between human
+imperfection and a perfect God is, and ever must be, infinite.
+
+27. Christ commended those who "became eunuchs for the kingdom of
+heaven's sake" (Matt. xix. 12)--a custom requiring a murderous,
+self-butchering process; destructive of the energies of life and the
+vigor of manhood, and rendering the subject weak, effeminate, and
+mopish, and unfit for the business of life. It is a low species of
+piety, and discloses a lamentable lack of a scientific knowledge of the
+true functions of the sexual organs on the part of Jesus.
+
+28. Christ also encouraged his disciples to "pluck out the eye," and
+"cut off the hand," as a means of rendering it impossible to perpetrate
+evil with those members. And we would suggest, if such advice is
+consistent with sound reasoning, the head also should be cut off, as a
+means of more effectually carrying out the same principle. Such advice
+never came from the mouth of a philosopher. It is a part of Christ's
+system of extravagant piety.
+
+29. He also taught the senseless, oriental tradition of "the
+unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost"--a fabulous being who figured
+more anciently in the history of various countries. (See Chapter
+XXII.) No philosopher or man of science could harbor such childish
+misconceptions as are embodied in this tradition, which neither
+describes the being nor explains the nature of the sin.
+
+30. We find many proofs, in Christ's Gospel history, that he believed
+in the ancient heathen tradition which taught that disease is caused by
+demons and evil spirits. (See Luke vii. 21, and viii. 2.)
+
+31. Many cases are reported of his relieving the obsessed by casting out
+the diabolical intruders, in imitation of the oriental custom long in
+vogue in various countries, by which he evinced a profound ignorance of
+the natural causes of disease.
+
+32. Christ also taught the old pagan superstition that "God is a God of
+anger," while modern science teaches that it would be as impossible for
+a God of perfect and infinite attributes to experience the feeling of
+anger as to commit suicide; and recent discoveries in physiology prove
+that anger is a species of suicide, and that it is also a species of
+insanity. Hence an angry God would be an insane God--an omnipotent
+lunatic, "ruling the kingdom of heaven," which would make heaven a
+lunatic asylum, and rather a dangerous place to live.
+
+33. And Christ's injunction to "fear God" also implies that he is an
+angry being. (See Luke xxiii. 40.) But y past history proves that "the
+fear of God" has always been the great lever of priestcraft, and the
+most paltry and pitiful motive that ever moved the human mind. It has
+paralyzed the noblest intellects, crushed the elasticity of youth, and
+augmented the hesitating indecision of old age, and finally filled the
+world with cowardly, trembling slaves. No philosopher will either love
+or worship a God he fears. "The fear of the Lord" is a very ancient
+heathen superstition.
+
+34. The inducement Christ holds out for leading a virtuous life by
+the promise of "Well done, thou good and faithful servant," bespeaks a
+childish ignorance of the nature of the human mind and the true science
+of life. It ranks with the promise of the nurse of sugar-plums to the
+boy if he would keep his garments unsoiled. (For the remainder of the
+two hundred errors of Christ, see Vol. II.)
+
+There are many other errors found in the precepts and practical life
+of Jesus Christ (which we are compelled to omit an exposition of
+here), such as his losing his temper, and abusing the money-changers by
+overthrowing their counting-table, and expelling them from the temple
+with a whip of cords when engaged in a lawful' and laudable business;
+his getting mad at and cursing the fig tree; his dooming Capernaum
+to hell in a fit of anger; his being deceived by two of his disciples
+(Peter and Judas), which prompted him to call them devils; his implied
+approval of David, with his fourteen crimes and penitentiary deeds, and
+also Abraham, with his falsehoods, polygamy, and incest, and his implied
+sanction of the Old Testament, with all its errors and numerous crimes;
+his promise to his twelve apostles to "sit upon the twelve thrones of
+Israel" in heaven, thus evincing a very limited and childish conception
+of the enjoyments of the future life; his puerile idea of sin,
+consisting in a personal affront to a personal God; his omission to say
+anything about human freedom, the inalienable rights of man, &c.
+
+
+THE SCIENTIFIC ERRORS OF CHRIST.
+
+That Jesus Christ was neither a natural or moral philosopher is evident
+from the following facts:--
+
+1. He never made any use of the word "philosophy."
+
+2. Never gave utterance to the word "science."
+
+3. Never spoke of a natural law, or assigned a natural cause for
+anything. The fact that he never made use of these words now so current
+in all civilized countries, is evidence that he was totally ignorant of
+these important branches of knowledge, the cultivation of which is now
+known to be essential to the progress of civilization. And yet it
+is claimed his religion has been a great lever in the advancement of
+civilization. But this is a mistake--a solemn mistake, as elsewhere
+shown. (See Chap. XLV.)
+
+4. Everything to Christ was miracle; everything was produced and
+controlled by the arbitrary power of an angry or irascible God.
+He evidently had no idea of a ruling principle in nature or of the
+existence of natural law, as controlling any event he witnessed. Hence
+he set no bounds to anything, and recognized no limits to the possible.
+He believed God to be a supernatural personal being, who possessed
+unlimited power, and who ruled and controlled everything by his
+arbitrary will, without any law or any limitation to its exercises.
+Hence he told his disciples they would have anything they prayed for in
+faith; that by faith they could roll mountains into the sea, or bring
+to a halt the rolling billows of the mighty deep. He evidently believed
+that the forked lightning, the out-bursting earth-shaking thunder,
+and the roaring, heaving volcano were but pliant tools or obsequious
+servants to the man of faith. And he displays no less ignorance of the
+laws of mind than the laws of nature; thus proving him to have been
+neither a natural, moral, nor mental philosopher. He omitted to teach
+the great moral lessons learned by human experience, of which he was
+evidently totally ignorant.
+
+5. He never taught that the practice of virtue contains its own reward.
+
+6. That the question of right and wrong of any action is to be decided
+by its effect upon the individual, or upon society.
+
+7. That no life can be displeasing to God which is useful to man.
+
+8. And he omitted to teach the most important lesson that can engage
+the attention of man, viz.: that the great purpose of life is
+self-development.
+
+9. That no person can attain or approximate to real happiness without
+bestowing a special attention to the cultivation and exercise of all
+the mental and physical faculties, so far as to keep them in a healthy
+condition. None of the important lessons above named are hinted at in
+his teachings, which, if punctually observed, would do more to advance
+the happiness of the human race than all the sermons Christ or Chrishna
+ever preached, or ever taught.
+
+10. And then he taught many doctrines which are plainly contradicted by
+the established principle of modern science, such as,--
+
+11. Diseases being produced by demons, devils, or wicked spirits. (See
+Mark ix. 20.)
+
+Christ nowhere assigns a natural cause for disease, or a scientific
+explanation for its cure.
+
+12. His rebuking a fever discloses a similar lack of scientific
+knowledge. ( See Luke iv. 39.)
+
+13. His belief in a literal hell and a lake of fire and brimstone (see
+Matt, xviii. 8) is an ancient heathen superstition science knows nothing
+about, and has no use for.
+
+14. His belief in a personal devil also (see Matt. xvii. 88), which is
+another oriental tradition, furnishes more sad proof of an utter want of
+scientific knowledge, as science has no place for and no use for such a
+being.
+
+15. Christ taught the unphilosophical doctrine of repentance, as he
+declared he "came to call sinners to repentance" (Matt. ix. 13)--a
+mental process, which consists merely in a revival of early impressions,
+and often leads a person to condemn that which is right, as well as that
+which is wrong. (For proof, see Chapter XLIII.)
+
+16. The doctrine of "forgiveness," which Christ so often inculcated,
+is also at variance with the teachings of science, as it can do nothing
+toward changing the nature of the act forgiven, or toward cancelling its
+previous effects upon society. Science teaches that every crime has its
+penalty attached to it, which no act of forgiveness, by God or man, can
+arrest or set aside.
+
+17. But nothing evinces, perhaps, more clearly Christ's total lack of
+scientific knowledge than his holding a man responsible for his belief,
+and condemning for disbelief, as he does in numerous instances (see Mark
+xvi. 16), for a man could as easily control the circulation of the blood
+in his veins as control his belief. Science teaches that belief depends
+upon evidence, and without it, it is impossible to believe, and with
+it, it is impossible to disbelieve. How foolish and unphilosophical,
+therefore, to condemn for either belief or disbelief!
+
+18. The numerous cases in which Christ speaks of the heart as being
+the seat of consciousness, instead of the brain, evinces a remarkable
+ignorance of the science of mental philosophy. He speaks of an "upright
+heart," "a pure heart," &'c., when "an upright liver," "a pure liver,"
+would be as sensible, as the latter has as much to do with the character
+as the former.
+
+19. And the many cases in which he makes it meritorious to have a right
+"faith," and places it above reason, and assumes it to be a voluntary
+act, shows his utter ignorance of the nature of the human mind.
+
+20. And Christ evinced a remarkable ignorance of the cause of physical
+defects, when he told his hearers a certain man was born blind, in order
+that he might cure him. (Matt. vii. 22.)
+
+21. And Christ's declaration, that those who marry are not worthy of
+being saved (see Luke xx. 34), shows that he was very ignorant of the
+nature of the sexual functions of the human system.
+
+22. Nothing could more completely demonstrate a total ignorance of the
+grand science of astronomy than Christ's prediction of the stars falling
+to the earth. (See Luke xxi. 25.)
+
+23. And the conflagration of the world, "the gathering of the elect,"
+and the realization of a fancied millennium, which he several times
+predicted would take place in his time, "before this generation pass
+away" (Matt, xxiv. 34), proves a like ignorance, both of astronomy and
+philosophy.
+
+24. And his cursing of the fig tree for not bearing fruit in the winter
+season (see Matt. xxi. 20), not only proves his ignorance of the laws of
+nature, but evinces a bad temper.
+
+25. Christ indorses the truth of Noah's flood story (see Luke xvii. 27),
+which every person at the present day, versed in science and natural
+law, knows is mere fiction, and never took place.
+
+And numerous other errors, evincing the most profound ignorance of
+science and natural law, might be pointed out in Christ's teachings,
+if we had space for them. It has always been alleged by orthodox
+Christendom, that Christ's teaching and moral system are so faultless as
+to challenge criticism, and so perfect as to defy improvement. But this
+is a serious mistake. For most of his precepts and moral inculcations
+which are not directly at war with the principles of science, or do not
+involve a flagrant violation of the laws of nature, are, nevertheless,
+characterized by a lawless and extravagant mode of expression peculiar
+to semi-savage life, and which, as it renders it impossible to reduce
+them to practice, shows they could not have emanated from a philosopher,
+or man of science, or a man of evenly-balanced mind. They impose upon
+the world a system of morality, pushed to such extremes that its own
+professed admirers do not live it out, or even attempt to do so. They
+long ago abandoned it as an impracticable duty. We will prove this by
+enumerating most of its requisitions, and showing that they are daily
+violated and trampled under foot by all Christendom. Where can the
+Christian professor be found who, 1. "takes no thought for the morrow"
+or, 2. who "lays not up treasure on earth," or, at least, tries to do
+it; or, 3. who "gives up all his property to the poor;" or who, "when
+his cloak is wrested from him by a robber," gives up his coat also;
+or who calls no man master or mister (the most common title in
+Christendom); or who calls no man father (if he has a father); or who
+calls no man a fool (when he knows he is a fool); or who, when one cheek
+is pommeled into a jelly by some vile miscreant or drunken wretch,
+turns the other to be battered up in the same way; or who prays without
+ceasing; or who rejoices when persecuted; or who forgives an enemy four
+hundred and ninety times (70 times 7); or who manifests by his practical
+life that he loves his enemies (the way he loves him is to report him to
+the grand jury, or hand him over to the sheriff); or who forsakes
+houses and land, and everything, "for the kingdom of heaven's sake." No
+Christian professor lives up to these precepts, or any of them, or even
+tries to do so. To talk, therefore, of finding a practical Christian,
+while nearly the whole moral code of Christ is thus daily and habitually
+outraged and trampled under foot by all the churches and every one of
+the two hundred millions of Christian professors, is bitter irony and
+supreme solecism. We would go five hundred miles, or pay five hundred
+dollars, to see a Christian. If a man can be a Christian while openly
+and habitually violating every precept of Christ, then the word has no
+meaning. These precepts, the Christian world finding to be impossible
+to practice, have unanimously laid upon the table under the rule of
+"indefinite postponement." They are the product of a mind with an
+ardent temperament, and the religious faculties developed to excess, and
+unrestrained by scientific or intellectual culture. A similar vein
+of extravagant religious duty is found in the Essenian, Budhist, and
+Pythagorean systems. As Zera Colburn possessed the mathematical faculty
+to excess, and Jenny Lind the musical talent, Christ in like manner was
+all religion. And from the extreme ardor of his religious feeling, thus
+derived, sprang his extravagant notions of the duties of life. This
+peculiarity of his organization explains the whole mystery.
+
+
+CHRIST AS A MAN, AND CHRIST AS A SECTARIAN.
+
+To every observant and unbiased mind a strange contrast must be visible
+in the practical life of Jesus Christ when viewed in his twofold
+capacity of a man and a priest. While standing upon the broad plane of
+humanity, with his deep sympathetic nature directed toward the poor,
+the unfortunate, and the downtrodden, there often gushed forth from
+his impassioned bosom the most sublime expressions of pity, and the
+strongest outburst of commiseration for wrongs and sufferings, and
+his noble goodness and tender love yearned with a throbbing heart to
+relieve them. But the moment he put on the sacerdotal robe, and assumed
+the character of a priest, that moment, if any one crossed his path by
+refusing to yield to his requisitions of faith, or dissented from his
+religious creed, his whole nature was seemingly changed. It was no
+longer, "Blessed are ye," but "Cursed are ye," or "Woe unto you." Like
+the founders of other religious systems, he was ardent toward friends
+and bitter toward enemies, and extolled his own religion, while he
+denounced all others. His way was the only way, and all who did not walk
+threin, or conform thereto, were loaded with curses and imprecations,
+and all who could not accomplish the impossible mental achievement of
+believing everything he set forth or urged upon their credence, and
+that, too, without evidence, were to be eternally damned. All who
+climbed up any other way were thieves and robbers. All who professed
+faith in any other religion than his were on the road to hell. Like the
+oriental Gods, he taught that the world was to be saved through faith in
+him and his religion. All who did not honor him were to be dishonored
+by the Father. And "without faith (in him and his religion), it is
+impossible to please God." He declared that all who were not for him
+were against him; and all who were not on the same road are "heathens
+and publicans." His disciples were enjoined to shake off the dust from
+their feet as a manifestation of displeasure toward those who could not
+conscientiously subscribe to their creeds and dogmas. Thus we discover
+a strong vein of intolerance and sectarianism in the religion of the
+otherwise, and in other respects, the kind and loving Jesus. Though
+most benignantly kind and affectionate while moving and acting under the
+controlling impulses of his lofty manhood, yet when his ardent religious
+feelings were touched, he became chafed, irritated, and sometimes
+intolerant. He then could tolerate no such thing as liberty of
+conscience, or freedom of thought, or the right to differ with him in
+religious belief. His extremely ardent devotional nature, when roused
+into action in defense of a stereotyped faith, eclipsed his more noble,
+lofty, and lovely traits, and often dimmed his mental vision, thus
+presenting in the same individual a strange medley, and a strange
+contrast of the most opposite traits of character. That such a being
+should have been considered and worshipped as a God, and for the
+very reason that he possessed such strange, contradictory traits of
+character, and often let his religion run riot with his reason, will be
+looked upon by posterity as one of the strangest chapters in the history
+of the human race. But so it is. Extraordinary good qualities, though
+intermingled with many errors and human foibles, have deified many men.
+
+Note. One Christian writer alleges, in defense of the objectionable
+precepts of Jesus Christ, that "He taught some errors in condescension
+to the ignorance of the people." If this be true, that he taught both
+truth and falsehood, then the question arises, How can we know which is
+which? By what rule can we discriminate them, as he himself furnishes
+none? Or how are we to determine that he taught truth at all? And then
+this plea would account for and excuse all the errors found in the
+teachings of the oriental Gods. If it will apply in one case, it will in
+the other. And thus it proves too much.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII. CHRIST AS A SPIRITUAL MEDIUM
+
+THERE are many incidents related in the life of Christ, which, when
+critically examined, furnish abundant evidence that he was what is now
+known as a spiritual medium. He unquestionably represented, and often
+practically exhibited, several important phases of modern mediumship.
+
+1. The many instantaneous cures which he wrought, as reported in his
+Gospel narrative, performed in the same manner that "spirit doctors" now
+heal the sick, prove that he was an excellent "healing medium."
+
+2. His declaration to Nathanael, "When thou wast under the fig tree, I
+saw thee," and his recounting to the woman of Samaria the deeds of
+her past life (acts similar to which are now performed every day by
+spiritualists), are evidence that he was also a "clairvoyant medium."
+
+3. His walking on the water (if the story is true), as D. D. Home has
+frequently, within the past few years, walked or floated on the air
+in the presence of many witnesses (including men of science, royal
+personages, and members of parliament), entitles him to the appellation
+of a "physical medium."
+
+4. And the circumstance of his pointing his disciples to the mark of
+the spear in his side, and the print of the nails in his hands, while
+amongst them as a spirit, has led many spiritualists to conclude he was
+also a "medium for materialization." His spirit was made to present the
+peculiar marks which had been inflicted upon his physical body, cases
+parallel to which are now witnessed every day by modern spiritualists.
+Hundreds of cases have occurred of departed spirits presenting
+themselves to their friends with all the peculiar marks which their
+physical bodies had long worn while in the earth life. And the former
+physical wounds have often been exhibited by the spirit in the same
+manner Christ exhibited his. And thus spiritualism explains the
+phenomenon which otherwise would be entirely incredible.
+
+5. And there is yet another phase of mediumship which Christ often
+exhibited in his practical life. He claimed to have frequent intercourse
+with some invisible being, whom he called "the Father." But as modern
+science has settled the question of the personality of God in the
+negative, we are led to conclude that Christ, like many eminent persons
+since his time, mistook some finite spirit for the great infinite but
+impersonal Father spirit--though his attendant invisible companion
+was probably a spirit of a very high order. And the great beauty and
+grandeur of his life are exhibited by his frequent intercourse with and
+dependence upon this his "guardian spirit." He declared he did nothing
+of himself, so dependent was he upon his invisible guide. And the
+strongest proof that he had a spirit companion, which he often looked to
+for counsel and aid, and that this was the being he called the Father,
+is furnished by the fact, that when he prayed to the Father, his
+petition was answered by an angel spirit. (See Luke xxii. 44.) And there
+is no account and no evidence of any invisible or spiritual being ever
+presenting itself to him but an angel or spirit. That he should have
+supposed this spirit to be the great infinite Father God was very
+natural. Thousands since, and some before his time, committed a
+similar mistake. The author has known several persons who had long had
+intercourse with some invisible being they supposed to be God, who have
+recently, by the light afforded by modern spiritualism, become entirely
+convinced that they had simply mistaken a finite spirit for the great
+Infinite Spirit. And did Christ live in our day, he would probably be
+rescued from a similar error in the same way. In conclusion, we will
+remark that it was doubtless his frequent displays of several very
+remarkable phases of spiritual mediumship that contributed much to lead
+the people into the error of supposing him to be God. And this fact will
+yet be known.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII. CONVERSION, REPENTANCE, AND "GETTING RELIGION" OF HEATHEN
+ORIGIN
+
+
+THEIR NUMEROUS EVILS AND ABSURDITIES.
+
+OF all the follies ever enacted or exhibited under the sun, and of all
+the ignorance of history, science, and human nature ever displayed in
+the history of the human race, that which stands out in bold relief,
+as pre-eminent, is the fashionable custom of conversion, or "getting
+religion." When the evidence lies all around us as thick as the fallen
+leaves of autumn, clustering on the pages of history, and proclaimed
+by every principle of mental science, that what is called conversion
+is nothing but a mental and temperamental or nervous phenomenon--a
+psychological process--how can we rank those amongst intelligent people
+who still claim it to be "the power of God operating upon the soul of
+the sinner"? Ignorance is the only plea that can acquit them of the
+charge of imbecility. The number who daily fall victims to this priestly
+delusion in various parts of the country may be reckoned by thousands.
+We propose in this chapter to exhibit some of the evils and absurdities
+of this widespread delusion and religious mono-mania. To do so the more
+effectually, we will arrange the presentation of the subject under four
+separate heads. We will attempt to show,--
+
+1. Its historical errors.
+
+2. Its logical errors.
+
+3. Its philosophical or scientific errors.
+
+4. Its moral evils.
+
+1st. _Its Historical Errors_.--Can we conceive it possible that the
+thousands of priests who are now employed in "converting souls to
+God" are so ignorant of history as not to know that it is an old pagan
+custom? that it was prevalent in heathen countries long before a single
+soul was converted to Christianity, and is carried on to some extent
+now, both among pagans and Mahomedans? From such facts it would
+appear (viewing the matter from the Christian stand-point) that God
+is indifferent as to what kind of religion, or what sort of religious
+nonsense, people are converted to, or whether it is truth or error they
+embrace, or whether it is a true religion or a false one they imbibe,
+so he gets them converted. According to Mr. Higgins, the practice of
+converting people from one sect to another by the popular priesthood
+was prevalent under the ancient Persian system, and was carried on there
+quite extensively more than three thousand years ago; and the process
+was essentially the same as that now in vogue amongst modem Methodists,
+and the effect the same. At their large revival meetings the whole
+congregation would sometimes become so affected under the eloquent
+ministrations of the officiating priest, as to cry, and shout, and
+prostrate themselves upon the ground, which was afterward found to be
+drenched with their tears; and on these occasions they would confess
+their sins to each other, and to their priests; and yet those very sins
+they condemned were, perhaps, amongst the best acts of their lives,
+while their real crimes were overlooked and justified, instead of being
+condemned, thus showing that an honest, just, and sensible God could
+have had nothing to do with it. And we have reports of similar scenes
+witnessed more recently among the Mahomedans. Major Denham furnishes us
+an account of some "revival meetings" he attended a few years since in
+Arabia, carried on by one of the Mahomedan sects. On one occasion the
+effect of the discourse of the preacher upon the audience in the way of
+"converting souls to God" was so powerful, that he could only convince
+himself that he was not in a Methodist revival meeting by a knowledge
+of his geographical position. The preacher's name was Malem Chadily, and
+here is a specimen of some of his language. "Turn, turn, sinner, unto
+God; confess he is good, and that Mahomet is his prophet; wash, and
+become clean of your sins, and paradise is open before you: without
+this nothing can save you from eternal fire." During this earnest appeal
+(says the major), tears flowed plentifully, and everybody appeared to be
+affected. One of his hearers, becoming converted, shouted, "Your words
+pierce my soul," and fell upon the floor. Now let it be borne in mind,
+that Mahomet is stigmatized and condemned by the Christian churches as
+"a false prophet," and his religion denounced as "a system of fraud,"
+"a false religion," &c. Of course, then, Christians will not argue, nor
+admit, that conversion, and "getting religion," in this case, is the
+work of God. A just God would have nothing to do in converting people
+to "a false religion." What explanation shall we adopt for it then?
+To assume it to be the work of the devil (the dernier resort for all
+religious difficulties), and conversions among Christians the work of
+God, when both are so clearly and obviously alike, is to insult common
+sense. To assume that two things, exactly alike in character, can be
+exactly and diametrically unlike in origin, is a scientific paradox
+which no person of common intelligence can swallow, or accept for a
+moment. Both, then, we must admit, have the same origin. This train of
+argument leads us to speak of--
+
+2d. _The Logical Absurdities of the Doctrine of Conversion_.--There
+are several circumstances which point, unmistakably as the needle to the
+pole, to the mundane origin of the phenomenon of conversion.
+
+The character of many of the priestly conductors who "run the battery,"
+is sufficient of itself to preclude the hypothesis of any divine agency
+in the matter. The most powerful revivalist we ever knew, the priest who
+could convert an audience the quickest, and bring down sinners to the
+mourners' bench faster than any other clergyman we ever heard "dealing
+out damnation" to the people, was a broad-shouldered, muscular,
+stentorian-voiced circuit rider of the "Buckeye State," who, as was
+afterward learned, was guilty of perpetrating some of the blackest
+crimes that ever blotted the page of human history, at the very time of
+his most successful career in the way of "convicting souls of sin, and
+converting them to God." He was apprehended by the officers of the law
+in the midst of one of his most flourishing revivals, under the twofold
+charge, i. Of being the father of an illegitimate child, the young
+mother of which was a member of his church; 2. Of defrauding one of his
+neighbors in a trade, to the amount of nearly a thousand dollars--both
+of which charges he was convicted of. A similar case, but possessing
+some worse features, occurred a few years since in the county in which
+the author now resides. A preacher, who had had criminal connection with
+a young woman of his church, in order to conceal his guilt resorted to
+the damnable expedient of administering poison to his victim shortly
+before his illicit intercourse with her would have been made manifest
+by the birth of a child, thus committing a double murder. He was
+apprehended for the crime while carrying on "a most glorious revival,"
+as it was styled by some of the deluded congregation. Now to ascribe the
+irresistible power which these two preachers exerted over their audience
+(in the way of "converting them to God") to a divine source, as they
+claimed for it, would be to trifle with common sense, common decency,
+and all honorable conceptions of a God. These reverend scamps often
+instituted the high claim of being "called of God" to their ministerial
+labors. But if we concede the claim, we should have to conclude that God
+knew but little about them, for he certainly would not knowingly employ
+such moral outlaws upon such an important mission.
+
+Having thus briefly spoken of the character of some of the actors and
+agents in the work of conversion, we will now glance at the character of
+some of the religions and religious ideas, and moral course of conduct,
+to which the sinner is converted. It is evident that if an All-wise God
+had anything to do in the process of converting people to any system
+of religion, he would also convert them to correct moral habits. But in
+many cases, after conversion they are no nearer right in this respect,
+and in some cases further from it than before being thus sanctified.
+In some cases their religion becomes worse, their religious ideas less
+sensible, and their moral conduct more objectionable, by "the change of
+heart" in "getting religion." Mr. Spencer informs us that the Vewas, a
+sect or tribe of the Feegees, often cry for hours under conviction for
+sin. And what is that sin? Why, the neglect to offer sacrifices to their
+God. And those sacrifices consist in human beings, sometimes their own
+children. And their conviction, conversion, and repentance only make
+them more diligent in practicing this crime. It is evident, then, that
+their religion is at war with their humanity, and the former always
+triumphs in the contest. They are addicted to cannibalism, infanticide,
+and polygamy. But as the process of "getting religion" never makes
+anybody more intelligent, the "change of heart," with the Vewas, never
+changes their views, or opens their eyes to see the enormity of their
+crimes. In "getting religion" people get neither sense, knowledge, nor
+morality. They get neither a larger stock, nor an improved quality, of
+either. Their moral conduct is not often sensibly improved, materially
+or permanently.
+
+3d. _Scientific Errors, and Scientific Explanations of Conversion_.--The
+phenomena of conversion and "getting religion" are so easily explained
+in the light of science and philosophy, and that explanation is
+susceptible of so many proofs and demonstrations, that it seems
+remarkably strange that any persons claiming to be intelligent, and
+situated in the focal, scientific light of the nineteenth century,
+should still be hampered with the delusion that such phenomena are the
+direct display of the power of God. It requires but little investigation
+and reflection to convince any person that what is called conversion,
+and "repentance for sin," is nothing but the revival of early
+educational impressions resuscitated by the influence of mind on mind.
+No person has ever been known to get or embrace a religion he was not
+biased in favor of prior to the time of his conversion, unless we except
+a few weak-minded persons negative to any influence, and convertible
+to any religion the priest may urge upon their attention. A very strong
+proof of this statement is furnished by the history of the Christian
+missionary enterprise. The reports of travelers and sojourners in India
+show, that with two hundred years' labor, and two hundred missionaries
+in the field during a part of that period, the churches have not
+succeeded in converting one in ten thousand of the Hindoos to the
+Christian religion--unless we except those who, while children, were
+sent to Christian schools instituted by the missionaries for the special
+purpose of converting and warping the young mind, and welding it to the
+Christian faith before It should receive an unchangeable and unyielding
+bias in favor of another religion. So fruitless has been the effort
+to convert to Christianity those who were already established in the
+religion of the country, that, according to the estimate of Colonel Dow,
+each convert, on an average, has cost the missionary enterprise not
+less than ten thousand dollars. An intelligent Hindoo, while lecturing
+recently in London, made the remarkable statement, that conversions
+which are made to the Christian religion are not amongst the intelligent
+or learned classes, but are confined to the low, ignorant, and
+superstitious classes, "who have not sense or intelligence enough to
+perceive the difference between the _religion they are converted to,
+and that which they are converted from._" And the effort to convert the
+Mahomedans, Chinese, Persians, and the disciples of other religions has
+been attended with the same fruitless results--all seeming to warrant
+the conclusion that God can do but little toward converting any nation
+to Christianity which has always been biased in favor of another
+religion. The reason why people are so easily converted from one sect to
+another in Christian countries is owing to the fact that their religious
+convictions are unsettled. The members of the different Christian sects
+are all mixed up together in the various settlements throughout the
+country, and are brought in daily contact with each other in the busy
+scenes of life.
+
+Hence the children have the seeds of Methodism, Presbyterianism,
+Baptistism, Quakerism, and various other isms implanted in their minds
+in very early life. And which one of these will ultimately predominate
+depends upon what priest they fall victims to first. Having thus the
+germs of so many religious isms implanted in their minds, they are
+easily shifted about, and converted from one sect to another. And this
+shuttlecock process is called "getting religion," while, if they had
+lived in a country where only one form of religion exists, they would be
+as hard to convert as Mahomedans and Hindoos.
+
+_Repentance_.--Much importance is attached by the orthodox churches
+to the act of getting religion in the dying hour,--called "death-bed
+repentance,"--as if the person were better capable of discriminating
+between right and wrong when his brain is deranged with fever, and his
+whole system racked with disease and pain, than when in health. Such
+repentance can do nothing more than prove the honesty of the dying man
+or woman. For very often their doctrines, or religious belief, will be
+found no nearer right, and sometimes more erroneous after repentance
+than before, as repentance merely consists in the return to early
+impressions--the revival of former convictions, which may be either
+right or wrong, and are about as likely to be the latter as the former.
+No instance can be found of a person condemning a wrong act, or a wrong
+course of life, in his dying moments, unless he had previously believed
+it to be wrong, or if he had always believed it to be right. How much,
+then, does repentance do toward deciding what is right and what is
+wrong? Mahomedanism we know to be deeply fraught with error, but we
+never read nor heard of an instance of the many millions who had been
+educated to believe it is right, condemning it on their death-beds, or
+repenting for not having embraced Christianity, and led the life of
+a Christian, or for adoring Mahomet instead of Jesus Christ. On the
+contrary we have a well-authenticated instance of a Mahomedan (a Mr.
+Merton) who had embraced Christianity, and lived the life of a Christian
+for many years, renouncing it all, and returning to his primitive faith,
+when he was taken sick and became apprehensive he was going to die:
+his early religious impressions, returning involuntarily, wiped out
+his Christianity, and he died glorying in Mahomedanism. And we have an
+equally well authenticated case of an Indian of the Choctaw tribe, who
+had been taught to believe from early life that the white man was his
+natural enemy, and that it was his right and duty to kill him, repenting
+on his death-bed for having a short time previously neglected, when the
+opportunity presented, to despatch a "pale face" he met in his travels.
+Instead of killing him, he yielded for the moment to the impulse of his
+better feelings, and passed him by. But on reviewing his past life
+at the approach of death, he came to the conclusion he had sinned in
+omitting to kill this man, and he grieved and lamented sorely over
+this dereliction of apprehended duty. Here we have a case of repentance
+sanctioning murder. Must we, therefore, conclude that murder is morally
+right, or a righteous act? Certainly, according to orthodox logic.
+
+Their religious tracts assume that repentance is always for the right,
+and is _prima facie_ evidence of being right. If not, what does it
+prove, or what moral value is it? According to orthodox teaching, being
+"a murderer at heart," he was as consignable to perdition as if he had
+committed the act. There is no escaping the conclusion, therefore, that
+his repentance landed him in hell, or else proves murder to be right
+according to orthodox logic.
+
+We have known Quakers to leave their dying testimony against water
+baptism; and Baptists, with their last breath, declare it is right, and
+a sin to neglect it. Which is right? Who can tell? We have also known
+Quakers to condemn dancing in their dying hours, but Shakers never;
+because one had been taught that it is wrong, and the other that it
+is right. And which testimony must we accept? Mahomedans often, when
+approaching the confines of time, repent (sometimes in tears) for not
+having lived out more rigidly the injunctions of the Koran, but never
+regret not having been Christians. They often call upon Mohamet to aid
+them through the gates of death: but not one of the million who die
+every year ever calls upon Jesus Christ. What, then, does such a
+conflicting jargon of death-bed repentance prove? What good can grow
+out of it, or what moral value can possibly attach to it? It establishes
+simply two principles,--
+
+1st. That repentance grows out of education.
+
+2d. That it depends entirely upon previous convictions as to what it may
+sanction, and what it may condemn.
+
+No Christian ever repents in favor of Mahomedan-ism; and no Mahomedan
+ever lifts up his dying voice in favor of Christianity as being superior
+to his own religion; and no Hindoo has ever been known to indulge
+in death-bed lamentation for not having previously embraced either
+Christianity or Mahomedanism; because their earlier education never
+turned their minds in that direction. The mind has to be educated over
+again before it can embrace a new religion, or even condemn a wrong act,
+which, up to that period, it had always believed to be right.
+
+Hence it is evident repentance may lead a person to condemn what is
+right and sanction what is wrong. How profoundly ignorant of religious
+history and mental science must those persons therefore be who attach
+any importance to those diseased and often incoherent utterances, called
+"death-bed recantations," or who believe a thing the sooner because
+sanctioned by a dying man or woman, or that they do anything toward
+proving what is right or what is wrong with respect to either our belief
+or our moral conduct! And yet we find the orthodox churches printing
+every year, through their tract societies, stories of death-bed
+repentance in tract form, and scattering them over the country by the
+million. As they prove nothing but the honesty of the dying man or
+woman, they are not worth the paper on which they are printed.
+
+The phenomenon of repentance is simply the operation of a natural law,
+by which the last impressions made upon the mind are generally cancelled
+from the memory first, by the progress of fever and disease, thus
+leaving the earlier impressions to rule the judgment. The person is then
+virtually a child, controlled by his early youthful convictions, with
+which, if his late belief and conduct disagree, it causes a mental
+conflict, called repentance. Thus, instead of being the visitation
+of God, as Christians claim, repentance is shown to be the product of
+natural causes. The conclusion is thus established beyond disproof,
+that the mental processes called conversion, repentance, and "getting
+religion" are simply natural psychological operations, depending
+upon education, organization, and intelligence. They depend also upon
+intellect and scientific knowledge. For persons of large intellectual
+brains, or extensive scientific culture, never fall victims to these
+mental derangements. Hence those priests who claim God as their author
+are either deplorably and inexcusably ignorant, or lacking in moral
+honesty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV. THE MORAL LESSONS OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY.
+
+1. The most important lesson deducible from all the religious systems,
+commemorated in history, and noticed in this work, is, that all
+religious conceptions, whether in the shape of doctrine, precept,
+prophecy, prayer, religious devotion, or a belief in miracles, are a
+spontaneous outgrowth of the moral and religious elements of the human
+mind. And to assign them a higher origin is to ignore the developments
+of modern science, and insult the highest intelligence of the age.
+
+2. From the elevated scientific plane occupied by the most enlightened
+portion of the present age, there is no difficulty in finding a
+satisfactory solution for every event, every occurrence, and every
+performance recorded in any of the numerous bibles which have long been
+afloat in the world, and which have always constituted the sole basis
+for the claim to a divine origin of all the religious systems of the
+past; so that such a claim can be no longer vindicated by historically
+intelligent people.
+
+3. We have shown in this work that all the miraculous incidents related
+in the history of Jesus Christ as a proof of his divinity can find a
+more rational explanation than that which assigns them to divine agency.
+Some of them are now known to lie within the natural capacity of the
+human mind to achieve, others are explained by recently discovered
+natural laws. Another class are now well understood mental or nervous
+phenomena. Other stories, now regarded by the Christian world as
+referring to miraculous achievements, were probably designed by the
+writer as mere fable or metaphor. All the events in Christ's history, we
+have shown, are susceptible of a hundred fold more rational explanation
+than that which regards them as the feats of a God in violation of his
+own laws.
+
+4. We have also shown that the same marvelous incidents now found
+incorporated in the Gospel history of Jesus Christ were related long
+previously as a part of the sacred history of other Gods; such as
+being miraculously conceived and born of a virgin; born on the 25th of
+December; visited in infancy by angels and shepherds;' threatened by the
+ruler of the country; being of royal lineage; receiving the same divine
+titles; performing the same miracles, &c.
+
+In a word, we have shown that various heathen Gods and Demigods had,
+long before Christ's advent, filled the same chapter in history now
+reported of him in the Christian New Testament. All these stories of
+the heathen Gods prove as conclusively as any scientific problem can be
+demonstrated by figures, that the same stories related of Jesus Christ
+have no other foundation than that of heathen tradition. And will the
+Christian world, then, hereafter stultify their common sense by ignoring
+these facts of history so fatal to their claims? Past history points to
+an affirmative answer to this question, as we will illustrate.
+
+In the early history of this country, several reports were published
+of showers of blood being seen to fall in some of the sea-coast states,
+which were regarded as a divine judgment. But the use of the telescope
+revealed the fact that it was the ordure of butterflies, as those
+insects were seen at the time in vast swarms. But the devout Christian,
+whose faith in his religion has always been proof against the
+demonstrations of science, would give it up. He would not accept the
+butterfly explanation, but continued to teach his children that it came
+from God out of heaven as a manifestation of displeasure toward the
+sins of the people. And it now remains to be seen whether Christian
+professors at the present day will manifest a similar folly by standing
+out against the demonstrated truths and facts of this work.
+
+5. We here cite it as the last and most sorrowful lesson of history,
+that no facts, no proofs, no demonstrations of science can eradicate
+religious errors from the human mind, if instilled in early life, and
+never disturbed till the possessor arrives at mature age or middle life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV. CONCLUSION AND REVIEW.
+
+IN writing the concluding chapter of this work, the author deems it
+proper to re-state some points, and elaborate others, and anticipate
+some objections to some of the positions advanced. Each division of the
+subject will be marked by a separate figure, and treated in a brief and
+succinct manner, as follows:--
+
+1. Several persons, who examined this work before it went to press, have
+expressed the opinion that it must exert a powerful influence in the
+way of producing an entire revolution in the religion of orthodox
+Christendom sooner or later. But this must of course be the work of
+time, as moral revolutions are not the work of a day. When the human
+system has been long prostrated with chronic disease, no system
+of medication can restore it at once to health. The same principle
+governing the mind makes it morally impossible to eradicate its
+deeply-seated moral and religious errors in a day by even the
+presentation of the most powerful and convincing truths and
+demonstrations that can be brought to bear or operate upon the human
+judgment. The mind instinctively repels everything (no difference how
+true or how beautiful) that conflicts with its long-established opinions
+and convictions. The fires of truth usually require much time to burn
+their way through those incrustations of moral and religious error which
+often environ the human mind as the products of a false education. But
+when they once enter, the work of convincement is complete.
+
+2. It has been stated that the resemblance between Christianity and the
+more ancient heathen systems is complete and absolute throughout in all
+their essential doctrines, and principles, and precepts. And if it shall
+be found, on a critical reading of this work after it comes from the
+press, that there is one feature of Christianity which has not been
+traced to pagan origin, or that any points of resemblance have been
+omitted, they will be supplied in an appendix.
+
+3. It has been stated that a transfiguration is related of Chrishna of
+India (1200 B. C.) in the Hindoo bible (the Baghavat Gita), which is
+strikingly similar to that of Christ. We will here present the proof.
+"Abandoning the mortal form, he (Chrishna) appeared to his disciples in
+all the divine eclat of his Divine Majesty, his brow encircled with such
+a brilliant light that Adjouma and the other disciples, unable to bear
+it, fell with their faces in the dust, and prayed the Lord (Chrishna) to
+pardon their unworthiness. He replied, 'Have you not faith in me? Know
+ye not, that whether present or absent in body, I will be ever present
+with you to guard and protect you?'" (Gaghavat Gita.) How remarkable
+this to the story of Christ's transfiguration!
+
+4. Some readers, perhaps, will be surprised to observe that we have
+named so many crucified gods to whom some writers assign a different
+death. But we have followed, as we believe, the best authorities in
+doing so.
+
+5. In our work, "The Bibles of Bibles," we have shown that the score of
+bibles which have been extant in the world teach essentially the same
+doctrines, principles, and precepts. There are to be found in the old
+pagan bibles the same grand and beautiful truths mixed up with the same
+mind-enslaving errors and deleterious superstitions as those contained
+in the Christian bible. And the same exalted claim is set up by the
+disciples of each for their respective holy books--that of being a
+direct revelation from God, and inspired at the fountain of infinite
+wisdom. And all were exalted, adored, and idolized by their respective
+admirers, as containing a perfect embodiment of truth, without any
+admixture of error. The ancient Persians carried their bibles in their
+bosoms, and read them and prayed over them daily. The Hindoos often read
+their bible through on their bended knees, and sometimes committed it
+all to memory. The Baghavat has the following text: "The most important
+of all duties is to study the Holy Scriptures, which is the word of
+Brahma and Chrishna, revealed to the world." Some of the Mahomedans
+claim that immortal life can only be obtained by reading the Koran, and
+that the reading of it is essential to the progress and practice of good
+morals, and the advancement of civilization; and that it will ultimately
+reform and civilize the world. Both they and the Hindoos, like the
+Christian world, have numerous commentaries, explaining the obscure
+texts of their bibles, and aiming to reconcile their teachings with
+reason and science. And the disciples of all bibles had a mode of doing
+away with the immoral teachings, and concealing the worst features
+of their sacred books by bestowing on them a spiritual meaning, as
+Christians do theirs, thus dressing up error in the guise of truth. The
+Hindoo bible, the Mahomedan bible, and other holy books, consign those
+who disbelieve in their teachings to eternal damnation, denouncing them
+as infidels. In this respect, also, they are like the Christian's bible.
+
+6. "But then, after all (as some good pious Christian will probably
+exclaim after reading this work), the bible and Christianity are
+essential to the progress of good morals, and the advancement of the
+cause of civilization, and the civilized world would sink into a state
+of heathen darkness, demoralization, and savagism without them; for
+every enlightened nation owes its present moral and intellectual
+greatness to the Christian bible and the Christian religion, and
+would relapse into barbarism without them." This is a mistake, a most
+egregious mistake, my good brother Christian, as the following facts of
+history will show:--
+
+1. There are heathen nations now existing who never saw a bible, and
+others which flourished in the past, before our bible was written, who
+nevertheless attained to a higher state of morals, and a higher state
+of civilization in some respects, than any Christian nation known to
+history. A whole volume of facts might be adduced, if we had space for
+them, drawn from the ablest and most reliable authorities, to prove that
+India, Egypt, Greece, and other countries had reached a high state of
+civilization centuries before Christianity or any of its founders
+were even heat'd of, or made their appearance in the world. India was
+distinguished for her teaming, her laws, her legislation, her civil
+courts, her judicial tribunals, her astronomers, her poets, her
+philosophers, her writers, her moralists, her libraries, her men of
+literature, and her good morals before Moses was found in the bulrushes.
+
+Jacolliot says, "India gave civilization to the world." Egypt borrowed
+of India, the Greeks of the Egyptians, and the Jews and Christians are
+indebted to the Greeks for both their morals and their civilization.
+Dubois, a Christian missionary, in his "Memoirs of India,"
+testifies that "kindness, justice, humanity, good faith, compassion,
+disinterestedness, and in fact nearly all the moral virtues, were
+familiar to the ancient Brahmans and Hindoos, and they taught them both
+by precept and example." Can as much be said of any Christian nation?
+Certainly not. And the Rev. D. O. Allen says they were distinguished for
+all the arts and refinement of civilized life--thus placing them on the
+highest plane of civilization and moral elevation. And other nations
+might be referred to. Egypt had her vast temples of science, Chaldea her
+astronomical observatories, and Greece her distinguished academies of
+learning, her profound philosophers, and her high-toned moral writers
+and moral teachers, while the Jews, "God's holy people." were in a
+state of semibarbarism. So affirms the Rev. Albert Barnes.
+
+2. No advancement has often been made in morals or civilization in any
+country by the introduction of the Christian bible or the Christian
+religion. It is the arts and sciences which accompany or follow the
+bible which do the work. A proof of this statement is found in the
+fact, that no improvement takes place in the morals of the people by
+the introduction of the bible till the arts and sciences are also
+introduced amongst them. On the contrary, the morals of many
+deteriorate by reading the bible alone, because it sanctions as well as
+condemns every species of crime then known to society. (For proof see
+Chap. XXXIX. of this work.) That India has become corrupted and sunk in
+morals since the introduction of the Christian bible, is admitted by the
+Rev. D. O. Allen, for twenty-five years a missionary in that country.
+But science, especially moral science, imparts a different influence. It
+explains the nature of crimes, and teaches and demonstrates that a life
+of honesty and virtue can alone produce true and real happiness, while
+the bible augments the temptation to commit sin by teaching that "it
+is a sweet morsel to be rolled under the tongue," and that its punitive
+effects may be entirely escaped by an act of divine forgiveness. But
+science, either directly or by the enlightening of the mind, teaches and
+convinces the wrong-doer that there is no escape from the evil effects
+of a wrong or wicked act, and that sin is not a "sweet morsel," but
+ultimately a _bitter pill_. And thus it arrests the demoralizing effects
+of this pernicious doctrine of the Christian bible.
+
+3. It may startle some of the bible devotees to be told that their
+sacred book, instead of being a prompter to civilization and good
+morals, is really a hindrance to those ends; and that consequently
+nations without bibles advance faster in these respects than those
+who are well supplied with this book. But the facts of history seem
+to establish this as a fact. As a proof we will contrast the present
+condition of heathen Japan with that of Christian Abyssinia. Colonel
+Hall and Dr. Oliphant both testify that no drunkenness, no fighting,
+no quarreling, no thefts, no robberies, no rapes, no fornication, no
+domestic feuds or broils, and no fraudulent dealing take place in Japan.
+No locks or keys are used, for none are needed. There is no disposition
+to steal, or even to cheat, or overreach in dealing. But in Christian
+Abyssinia, on the other hand, according to Mr. Goodrich, where bibles
+and churches are numerous, and preaching and praying are heard every
+day, nearly all the crimes above enumerated are daily committed. The
+people go naked, eat raw flesh, cheat, lie, and murder, and practice
+polygamy. Such a thing as a legitimate child, he tells us, is not known.
+And thus it has been for fifteen hundred years, while in the daily
+practice of reading their bible. The arts and sciences have never been
+introduced amongst them. And this fact explains the cause of their
+continued moral degradation.
+
+4. According to Noah Webster, the cultivation of the arts and sciences
+is essential to the progress of civilization and good morals. But bible
+religion knows nothing about the arts and sciences. It don't even use
+the words. Paul uses the word science only once, and then to condemn it.
+But Jesus omits any allusion to science, philosophy, or natural law.
+So thoroughly convinced were the early disciples of the Christian faith
+that the teachings of their bible are inimical to the arts and sciences,
+that they destroyed works of art wherever they could find them, and
+opposed with a deadly aim every new discovery in the sciences.
+
+5. As bibles represent only the morals and state of society in the
+age in which they are written, and are not allowed to be altered or
+transcended, they thus hold their disciples back in all coming time, and
+compel them to teach and practice the morals of that semi-barbarous
+age as found taught in their bibles. And thus bibles prevent the moral
+growth of the people as effectually as the Chinese wooden shoes prevent
+the growth of the feet. For a fuller exposition of this matter, see The
+Bible of Bibles, Chap. XIV.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES
+
+
+NOTE OF EXPLANATION.
+
+In Chapter XXXI. we have traced Christianity to Essenism. This may need
+a fuller explanation than we have yet devoted to this point, though we
+have stated several times we consider them essentially one. The Essenes
+had their "Exoteric" and their "Esoteric" doctrines. The latter, which
+seems to have included the incarnation atonement, trinity, and all the
+other Budhist doctrines as set forth in Chapter XXXII. (and now included
+in the term Christianity), they never published to the world. Hence
+Chapter XXXI. sets forth only their Exoteric doctrines. But as Philo,
+Milman, Tytler, and other eminent authors show they held all the
+doctrines of Budhism, we assume they were a Budhist sect Hence, when we
+speak of Christianity growing out of Budhism, in Chapter XXXII., we
+mean Budhism under the name of Essenism. We believe Christianity is from
+Essenism and Budhism both, because they are essentially one; and that
+Christianity is merely a continuation of Budhism as taught by the
+Essenian sect of Budhists. Hence we have sometimes used the term
+Essenism, and sometimes the term Budhism, as being the fountain head of
+Christianity. We have stated Christ may have been an Essene either by
+birth or by conversion. But our conviction now is, that he was one by
+birth. And we now think it probable that that portion of the Jewish
+nation which became known as Essenes sprang up in the Budhist school of
+Pythagoras, in Alexandria, in the second or third century before Christ,
+and thus became Essenian Budhists; i. e., a sect of Jewish Budhists
+who called themselves Essenes. And consequently, neither Christ nor his
+disciples made any changes in the Essenian religion, when they changed
+its name to Christianity, except to ingraft a few unimportant tenets
+borrowed from the principal Budhist sect We are now convinced that
+Essenism was complete Budhism, that Christ was born of Essene parents,
+and that no important changes were made by dropping the term Essenism,
+and adopting the term Christianity in its place.
+
+
+NOTE TO PAGE 178.
+
+It may not be improper to explain more fully the reason for the opinion
+expressed on page 178, that the Gospel writer John did not believe that
+Christ first came into existence through human birth, but believed that
+he, like some of the oriental Gods, was "The Word" personified, without
+the process of birth; though he may, like the heathen orientalists,
+have cherished the tradition that the second God in the trinity (as he
+represents Christ to be), after having sprung into existence as "The
+Word" was subsequently subjected to human birth. Either so, or else
+his allusion to "the mother of Christ" was done in condescension to the
+general belief among the people, that he had a human mother. Be that as
+it may, he declares, '"His Word was made flesh" (John i. 14); nearly the
+same language used by the orientalists,--which with them did not imply
+human birth. And the declaration, "All things were made by him" (John i.
+3), is proof positive he believed in Christ's existence as the creator,
+before his human birth. Much of John's language is so strikingly similar
+to that employed by the disciples of some of the oriental religions, who
+believed that a second God emanated from the mouth of the Supreme, to
+perform the act of creation, that we cannot resist the conviction that
+this was John's belief; especially as many of them believed, like him,
+that this creative "Word" became afterward a subject of human birth.
+Thus, as we conceive, the proposition is established.
+
+
+NOTE TO PAGE 346.
+
+Our most reliable authorities testify that Babylon never was destroyed,
+but successfully resisted, for one hundred and fifty years after
+Isaiah's time, many of the most powerful sieges, and "the mightiest
+munitions of war," conducted by seven of the most skilful generals that
+ever wielded the sword--Cyrus, Darius, Alexander the Great, Antigonus,
+Demetrius, Poliorcetes, and Antiochus. She then gradually declined
+by the removal of her inhabitants to other and newer cities; thus
+falsifying the prediction of Jeremiah (li. 8), "Her end has come,"
+and of Isaiah (xiii. 22), "Her days shall not be prolonged," and that
+"desolation shall come upon her in a day," and her destruction shall
+be effected suddenly--all of which are falsified by the facts just
+presented. And even if Babylon had been destroyed, the present existence
+of Hillah, built in 1101 upon the same spot, with a population,
+according to Wellstead, of twenty-five thousand, is a signal overthrow
+of Jeremiah's prophecy, that it "shall become a wilderness, wherein no
+man dwelleth" (li. 43), and of Isaiah, also, that it should not be dwelt
+in from generation to generation. Jeremiah first predicted that her sea
+and springs should dry up (li. 38), and then declared the waves of the
+sea should come upon her (li. 42); and finally, that she should sink to
+rise no more (li. 64). And Isaiah's prediction of ruin and destruction
+included with Babylon, "the land of the Chaldeans" (l. 39), which was
+then, and is yet, a great commercial country, with an annual revenue at
+this time, according to Harvey Brydges, of a million pounds sterling.
+Here, then, is a long series of prophecies falsified. Our authority for
+saying that Hillah occupies the site of ancient Babylon is Malte-Brun's
+Geography (page 655), which declares, "Hillah is situated within the
+precincts of Babylon;" thus proving it is not "a wilderness, wherein no
+man dwelleth." Had we space, we should present an extended view of the
+prophecies.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors, by
+Kersey Graves
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