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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 2
+(of 12), by Robert G. Ingersoll
+
+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 Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 2 (of 12)
+ Dresden Edition--Lectures
+
+Author: Robert G. Ingersoll
+
+Release Date: February 9, 2012 [EBook #38802]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKS OF INGERSOLL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WORKS OF ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
+
+"THE CLERGY KNOW, THAT I KNOW, THAT THEY KNOW, THAT THEY DO NOT KNOW."
+
+IN TWELVE VOLUMES, VOLUME II.
+
+LECTURES
+
+1900
+
+THE DRESDEN EDITION
+
+
+TO
+
+MRS. SUE. M. FARRELL,
+
+IN LAW MY SISTER,
+
+AND IN FACT MY FRIEND,
+
+THIS VOLUME,
+
+AS A TOKEN OF RESPECT AND LOVE, IS DEDICATED.
+
+CONTENTS OF VOLUME II.
+
+SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.
+
+(1879.)
+
+Preface--I. He who endeavors to control the Mind by Force is a
+Tyrant, and he who submits is a Slave--All I Ask--When a Religion
+is Founded--Freedom for the Orthodox Clergy--Every Minister an
+Attorney--Submission to the Orthodox and the Dead--Bounden Duty of
+the Ministry--The Minister Factory at Andover--II. Free Schools--No
+Sectarian Sciences--Religion and the Schools--Scientific
+Hypocrites--III. The Politicians and the Churches--IV. Man and Woman the
+Highest Possible Titles--Belief Dependent on Surroundings--Worship of
+Ancestors--Blindness Necessary to Keeping the Narrow Path--The Bible the
+Chain that Binds--A Bible of the Middle Ages and the Awe it Inspired--V.
+The Pentateuch--Moses Not the Author--Belief out of which Grew
+Religious Ceremonies--Egypt the Source of the Information of Moses--VI.
+Monday--Nothing, in the Light of Raw Material--The Story of Creation
+Begun--The Same Story, substantially, Found in the Records of Babylon,
+Egypt, and India--Inspiration Unnecessary to the Truth--Usefulness of
+Miracles to Fit Lies to Facts--Division of Darkness and Light--VII.
+Tuesday--The Firmament and Some Biblical Notions about it--Laws of
+Evaporation Unknown to the Inspired Writer--VIII. Wednesday--The Waters
+Gathered into Seas--Fruit and Nothing to Eat it--Five Epochs in the
+Organic History of the Earth--Balance between the Total Amounts of
+Animal and Vegetable Life--Vegetation Prior to the Appearance of the
+Sun--IX. Thursday--Sun and Moon Manufactured--Magnitude of the Solar
+Orb--Dimensions of Some of the Planets--Moses' Guess at the Size of Sun
+and Moon--Joshua's Control of the Heavenly Bodies--A Hypothesis Urged
+by Ministers--The Theory of "Refraction"--Rev. Henry Morey--Astronomical
+Knowledge of Chinese Savants--The Motion of the Earth Reversed by
+Jehovah for the Reassurance of Ahaz--"Errors" Renounced by Button--X.
+"He made the Stars Also"--Distance of the Nearest Star--XI.
+Friday--Whales and Other Living Creatures Produced--XII.
+Saturday--Reproduction Inaugurated--XIII. "Let Us Make Man"--Human
+Beings Created in the Physical Image and Likeness of God--Inquiry as
+to the Process Adopted--Development of Living Forms According to
+Evolution--How Were Adam and Eve Created?--The Rib Story--Age of
+Man Upon the Earth--A Statue Apparently Made before the World--XIV.
+Sunday--Sacredness of the Sabbath Destroyed by the Theory of Vast
+"Periods"--Reflections on the Sabbath--XV. The Necessity for a Good
+Memory--The Two Accounts of the Creation in Genesis I and II--Order
+of Creation in the First Account--Order of Creation in the Second
+Account--Fastidiousness of Adam in the Choice of a Helpmeet--Dr.
+Adam Clark's Commentary--Dr. Scott's Guess--Dr. Matthew Henry's
+Admission--The Blonde and Brunette Problem--The Result of Unbelief and
+the Reward of Faith--"Give Him a Harp"--XVI. The Garden--Location of
+Eden--The Four Rivers--The Tree of Knowledge--Andover Appealed
+To--XVII. The Fall--The Serpent--Dr. Adam Clark Gives a Zoological
+Explanation--Dr. Henry Dissents--Whence This Serpent?--XVIII.
+Dampness--A Race of Giants--Wickedness of Mankind--An Ark Constructed--A
+Universal Flood Indicated--Animals Probably Admitted to the Ark--How Did
+They Get There?--Problem of Food and Service--A Shoreless Sea Covered
+with Innumerable Dead--Drs. Clark and Henry on the Situation--The Ark
+Takes Ground--New Difficulties--Noah's Sacrifice--The Rainbow as a
+Memorandum--Babylonian, Egyptian, and Indian Legends of a Flood--XIX.
+Bacchus and Babel--Interest Attaching to Noah--Where Did Our First
+Parents and the Serpent Acquire a Common Language?--Babel and the
+Confusion of Tongues--XX. Faith in Filth--Immodesty of Biblical
+Diction--XXI. The Hebrews--God's Promises to Abraham--The Sojourning
+of Israel in Egypt--Marvelous Increase--Moses and Aaron--XXII.
+The Plagues--Competitive Miracle Working--Defeat of the Local
+Magicians--XXIII. The Flight Out of Egypt--Three Million People in a
+Desert--Destruction of Pharaoh ana His Host--Manna--A Superfluity of
+Quails--Rev. Alexander Cruden's Commentary--Hornets as Allies of the
+Israelites--Durability of the Clothing of the Jewish People--An Ointment
+Monopoly--Consecration of Priests--The Crime of Becoming a Mother--The
+Ten Commandments--Medical Ideas of Jehovah--Character of the God of
+the Pentateuch--XXIV. Confess and Avoid--XXV. "Inspired" Slavery--XXVI.
+"Inspired" Marriage-XXVII. "Inspired" War-XXVIII. "Inspired" Religious
+Liberty--XXIX. Conclusion.
+
+SOME REASONS WHY.
+
+(1881.)
+
+I--Religion makes Enemies--Hatred in the Name of Universal
+Benevolence--No Respect for the Rights of Barbarians--Literal
+Fulfillment of a New Testament Prophecy--II. Duties to God--Can we
+Assist God?--An Infinite Personality an Infinite Impossibility-Ill.
+Inspiration--What it Really Is--Indication of Clams--Multitudinous
+Laughter of the Sea--Horace Greeley and the Mammoth Trees--A Landscape
+Compared to a Table-cloth--The Supernatural is the Deformed--Inspiration
+in the Man as well as in the Book--Our Inspired Bible--IV. God's
+Experiment with the Jews--Miracles of One Religion never astonish the
+Priests of Another--"I am a Liar Myself"--V. Civilized Countries--Crimes
+once regarded as Divine Institutions--What the Believer in the
+Inspiration of the Bible is Compelled to Say--Passages apparently
+written by the Devil--VI. A Comparison of Books--Advancing a Cannibal
+from Missionary to Mutton--Contrast between the Utterances of Jehovah
+and those of Reputable Heathen--Epictetus, Cicero, Zeno,
+Seneca--the Hindu, Antoninus, Marcus Aurelius--The Avesta--VII.
+Monotheism--Egyptians before Moses taught there was but One God
+and Married but One Wife--Persians and Hindoos had a Single Supreme
+Deity--Rights of Roman Women--Marvels of Art achieved without the
+Assistance of Heaven--Probable Action of the Jewish Jehovah incarnated
+as Man--VIII. The New Testament--Doctrine of Eternal Pain brought to
+Light--Discrepancies--Human Weaknesses cannot be Predicated of
+Divine Wisdom--Why there are Four Gospels according to Irenæus--The
+Atonement--Remission of Sins under the Mosaic Dispensation--Christians
+say, "Charge it"--God's Forgiveness does not Repair an Injury--Suffering
+of Innocence for the Guilty--Salvation made Possible by Jehovah's
+Failure to Civilize the Jews--Necessity of Belief not taught in the
+Synoptic Gospels--Non-resistance the Offspring of Weakness--IX. Christ's
+Mission--All the Virtues had been Taught before his Advent--Perfect and
+Beautiful Thoughts of his Pagan Predecessors--St. Paul Contrasted
+with Heathen Writers--"The Quality of Mercy"--X. Eternal Pain--An
+Illustration of Eternal Punishment--Captain Kreuger of the Barque
+Tiger--XI. Civilizing Influence of the Bible--Its Effects on the
+Jews--If Christ was God, Did he not, in his Crucifixion, Reap what
+he had Sown?--Nothing can add to the Misery of a Nation whose King is
+Jehovah
+
+ORTHODOXY.
+
+(1884.)
+
+Orthodox Religion Dying Out--Religious Deaths and Births--The Religion
+of Reciprocity--Every Language has a Cemetery--Orthodox Institutions
+Survive through the Money invested in them--"Let us tell our Real
+Names"--The Blows that have Shattered the Shield and Shivered the Lance
+of Superstition--Mohammed's Successful Defence of the Sepulchre of
+Christ--The Destruction of Art--The Discovery of America--Although
+he made it himself, the Holy Ghost was Ignorant of the Form of this
+Earth--Copernicus and Kepler--Special Providence--The Man and the Ship
+he did not Take--A Thanksgiving Proclamation Contradicted--Charles
+Darwin--Henry Ward Beecher--The Creeds--The Latest Creed--God as
+a Governor--The Love of God--The Fall of Man--We are Bound
+by Representatives without a Chance to Vote against Them--The
+Atonement--The Doctrine of Depravity a Libel on the Human Race--The
+Second Birth--A Unitarian Universalist--Inspiration of the
+Scriptures--God a Victim of his own Tyranny--In the New Testament
+Trouble Commences at Death--The Reign of Truth and Love--The Old
+Spaniard who Died without an Enemy--The Wars it Brought--Consolation
+should be Denied to Murderers--At the Rate at which Heathen are being
+Converted, how long will it take to Establish Christ's Kingdom on
+Earth?--The Resurrection--The Judgment Day--Pious Evasions--"We shall
+not Die, but we shall all be Hanged"--"No Bible, no Civilization"
+Miracles of the New Testament--Nothing Written by Christ or his
+Contemporaries--Genealogy of Jesus--More Miracles--A Master of
+Death--Improbable that he would be Crucified--The Loaves and Fishes--How
+did it happen that the Miracles Convinced so Few?--The Resurrection--The
+Ascension--Was the Body Spiritual--Parting from the Disciples--Casting
+out Devils--Necessity of Belief--God should be consistent in the
+Matter of forgiving Enemies--Eternal Punishment--Some Good Men who are
+Damned--Another Objection--Love the only Bow on Life's dark Cloud--"Now
+is the accepted Time"--Rather than this Doctrine of Eternal Punishment
+Should be True--I would rather that every Planet should in its Orbit
+wheel a barren Star--What I Believe--Immortality--It existed long before
+Moses--Consolation--The Promises are so Far Away, and the Dead are so
+Near--Death a Wall or a Door--A Fable--Orpheus and Eurydice.
+
+MYTH AND MIRACLE.
+
+(1885.)
+
+I. Happiness the true End and Aim of Life--Spiritual People and
+their Literature--Shakespeare's Clowns superior to Inspired
+Writers--Beethoven's Sixth Symphony Preferred to the Five Books of
+Moses--Venus of Milo more Pleasing than the Presbyterian Creed--II.
+Religions Naturally Produced--Poets the Myth-makers--The Sleeping
+Beauty--Orpheus and Eurydice--Red Riding Hood--The Golden Age--Elysian
+Fields--The Flood Myth--Myths of the Seasons--III. The Sun-god--Jonah,
+Buddha, Chrisnna, Horus, Zoroaster--December 25th as a Birthday of
+Gods--Christ a Sun-God--The Cross a Symbol of the Life to Come--When
+Nature rocked the Cradle of the Infant World--IV. Difference between
+a Myth and a Miracle--Raising the Dead, Past and Present--Miracles
+of Jehovah--Miracles of Christ--Everything Told except the Truth--The
+Mistake of the World--V. Beginning of Investigation--The Stars as
+Witnesses against Superstition--Martyrdom of Bruno--Geology--Steam and
+Electricity--Nature forever the Same--Persistence of Force--Cathedral,
+Mosque, and Joss House have the same Foundation--Science the
+Providence of Man--VI. To Soften the Heart of God--Martyrs--The God was
+Silent--Credulity a Vice--Develop the Imagination--"The Skylark" and
+"The Daisy"--VII. How are we to Civilize the World?--Put Theology out
+of Religion--Divorce of Church and State--Secular Education--Godless
+Schools--VIII. The New Jerusalem--Knowledge of the Supernatural
+possessed by Savages--Beliefs of Primitive Peoples--Science is
+Modest--Theology Arrogant--Torque-mada and Bruno on the Day of
+Judgment--IX. Poison of Superstition in the Mother's Milk--Ability
+of Mistakes to take Care of Themselves--Longevity of Religious
+Lies--Mother's religion pleaded by the Cannibal--The Religion of
+Freedom--O Liberty, thou art the God of my Idolatry
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+For many years I have regarded the Pentateuch simply as a record of a
+barbarous people, in which are found a great number of the ceremonies
+of savagery, many absurd and unjust laws, and thousands of ideas
+inconsistent with known and demonstrated facts. To me it seemed almost
+a crime to teach that this record was written by inspired men; that
+slavery, polygamy, wars of conquest and extermination were right, and
+that there was a time when men could win the approbation of infinite
+Intelligence, Justice, and Mercy, by violating maidens and by butchering
+babes. To me it seemed more reasonable that savage men had made these
+laws; and I endeavored in a lecture, entitled "Some Mistakes of Moses,"
+to point out some of the errors, contradictions, and impossibilities
+contained in the Pentateuch. The lecture was never written and
+consequently never delivered twice the same. On several occasions it was
+reported and published without consent, and without revision. All these
+publications were grossly and glaringly incorrect As published, they
+have been answered several hundred times, and many of the clergy are
+still engaged in the great work. To keep these reverend gentlemen from
+wasting their talents on the mistakes of reporters and printers, I
+concluded to publish the principal points in all my lectures on this
+subject. And here, it may be proper for me to say, that arguments cannot
+be answered by personal abuse; that there is no logic in slander, and
+that falsehood, in the long run, defeats itself. People who love their
+enemies should, at least, tell the truth about their friends. Should it
+turn out that I am the worst man in the whole world, the story of the
+flood will remain just as improbable as before, and the contradictions
+of the Pentateuch will still demand an explanation.
+
+There was a time when a falsehood, fulminated from the pulpit, smote
+like a sword; but, the supply having greatly exceeded the demand,
+clerical misrepresentation has at last become almost an innocent
+amusement. Remembering that only a few years ago men, women, and even
+children, were imprisoned, tortured and burned, for having expressed
+in an exceedingly mild and gentle way, the ideas entertained by me, I
+congratulate myself that calumny is now the pulpit's last resort. The
+old instruments of torture are kept only to gratify curiosity; the
+chains are rusting away, and the demolition of time has allowed even the
+dungeons of the Inquisition to be visited by light. The church, impotent
+and malicious, regrets, not the abuse, but the loss of her power, and
+seeks to hold by falsehood what she gained by cruelty and force, by
+fire and fear. Christianity cannot live in peace with any other form of
+faith. If that religion be true, there is but one savior, one inspired
+book, and but one little narrow grass-grown path that leads to heaven.
+Such a religion is necessarily uncompromising, unreasoning, aggressive
+and insolent. Christianity has held all other creeds and forms in
+infinite contempt, divided the world into enemies and friends, and
+verified the awful declaration of its founder--a declaration that
+wet with blood the sword he came to bring, and made the horizon of a
+thousand years lurid with the fagots' flames.
+
+Too great praise challenges attention, and often brings to light a
+thousand faults that otherwise the general eye would never see. Were we
+allowed to read the Bible as we do all other books, we would admire its
+beauties, treasure its worthy thoughts, and account for all its absurd,
+grotesque and cruel things, by saying that its authors lived in rude,
+barbaric times. But we are told that it was written by inspired men;
+that it contains the will of God; that it is perfect, pure, and true in
+all its parts; the source and standard of all moral and religious truth;
+that it is the star and anchor of all human hope; the only guide for
+man, the only torch in Nature's night. These claims are so at variance
+with every known recorded fact, so palpably absurd, that every free
+unbiased soul is forced to raise the standard of revolt.
+
+We read the pagan sacred books with profit and delight. With myth and
+fable we are ever charmed, and find a pleasure in the endless repetition
+of the beautiful, poetic, and absurd. We find, in all these records of
+the past, philosophies and dreams, and efforts stained with tears,
+of great and tender souls who tried to pierce the mystery of life and
+death, to answer the eternal questions of the Whence and Whither, and
+vainly sought to make, with bits of shattered glass, a mirror that
+would, in very truth, reflect the face and form of Nature's perfect
+self.
+
+These myths were born of hopes, and fears, and tears, and smiles, and
+they were touched and colored by all there is of joy and grief between
+the rosy dawn of birth, and deaths sad night. They clothed even the
+stars with passion, and gave to gods the faults and frailties of the
+sons of men. In them, the winds and waves were music, and all the lakes,
+and streams, and springs,--the mountains, woods and perfumed dells were
+haunted by a thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of Spring
+with tremulous desire; made tawny Summer's billowed breast the throne
+and home of love; filled Autumn's arms with sun-kissed grapes, and
+gathered sheaves; and pictured Winter as a weak old king who felt,
+like Lear upon his withered face, Cordelia's tears. These myths, though
+false, are beautiful, and have for many ages and in countless ways,
+enriched the heart and kindled thought. But if the world were taught
+that all these things are true and all inspired of God, and that eternal
+punishment will be the lot of him who dares deny or doubt, the sweetest
+myth of all the Fable World would lose its beauty, and become a scorned
+and hateful thing to every brave and thoughtful man.
+
+Robert G. Ingersoll.
+
+Washington, D. C., Oct. 7th, 1879.
+
+
+
+
+SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.
+
+HE WHO ENDEAVORS TO CONTROL THE MIND BY FORCE IS A TYRANT, AND HE WHO
+SUBMITS IS A SLAVE.
+
+I.
+
+I want to do what little I can to make my country truly free, to broaden
+the intellectual horizon of our people, to destroy the prejudices born
+of ignorance and fear, to do away with the blind worship of the ignoble
+past, with the idea that all the great and good are dead, that the
+living are totally depraved, that all pleasures are sins, that sighs
+and groans are alone pleasing to God, that thought is dangerous, that
+intellectual courage is a crime, that cowardice is a virtue, that a
+certain belief is necessary to secure salvation, that to carry a cross
+in this world will give us a palm in the next, and that we must allow
+some priest to be the pilot of our souls.
+
+Until every soul is freely permitted to investigate every book, and
+creed, and dogma for itself, the world cannot be free. Mankind will be
+enslaved until there is mental grandeur enough to allow each man to have
+his thought and say. This earth will be a paradise when men can, upon
+all these questions differ, and yet grasp each other's hands as friends.
+It is amazing to me that a difference of opinion upon subjects that we
+know nothing with certainty about, should make us hate, persecute, and
+despise each other. Why a difference of opinion upon predestination,
+or the Trinity, should make people imprison and burn each other
+seems beyond the comprehension of man; and yet in all countries where
+Christians have existed, they have destroyed each other to the exact
+extent of their power. Why should a believer in God hate an atheist?
+Surely the atheist has not injured God, and surely he is human, capable
+of joy and pain, and entitled to all the rights of man. Would it not be
+far better to treat this atheist, at least, as well as he treats us?
+
+Christians tell me that they love their enemies, and yet all I ask
+is--not that they love their enemies, not that they love their friends
+even, but that they treat those who differ from them, with simple
+fairness.
+
+We do not wish to be forgiven, but we wish Christians to so act that we
+will not have to forgive them.
+
+If all will admit that all have an equal right to think, then the
+question is forever solved; but as long as organized and powerful
+churches, pretending to hold the keys of heaven and hell, denounce every
+person as an outcast and criminal who thinks for himself and denies
+their authority, the world will be filled with hatred and suffering. To
+hate man and worship God seems to be the sum of all the creeds.
+
+That which has happened in most countries has happened in ours. When
+a religion is founded, the educated, the powerful--that is to say, the
+priests and nobles, tell the ignorant and superstitious--that is to
+say, the people, that the religion of their country was given to their
+fathers by God himself; that it is the only true religion; that all
+others were conceived in falsehood and brought forth in fraud, and that
+all who believe in the true religion will be happy forever, while all
+others will burn in hell. For the purpose of governing the people, that
+is to say, for the purpose of being supported by the people, the priests
+and nobles declare this religion to be sacred, and that whoever adds to,
+or takes from it, will be burned here by man, and hereafter by God. The
+result of this is, that the priests and nobles will not allow the people
+to change; and when, after a time, the priests, having intellectually
+advanced, wish to take a step in the direction of progress, the people
+will not allow them to change. At first, the rabble are enslaved by the
+priests, and afterwards the rabble become the masters.
+
+One of the first things I wish to do, is to free the orthodox clergy.
+I am a great friend of theirs, and in spite of all they may say against
+me, I am going to do them a great and lasting service. Upon their necks
+are visible the marks of the collar, and upon their backs those of the
+lash. They are not allowed to read and think for themselves. They are
+taught like parrots, and the best are those who repeat, with the fewest
+mistakes, the sentences they have been taught. They sit like owls upon
+some dead limb of the tree of knowledge, and hoot the same old hoots
+that have been hooted for eighteen hundred years. Their congregations
+are not grand enough, nor sufficiently civilized, to be willing that
+the poor preachers shall think for themselves. They are not employed for
+that purpose. Investigation regarded as a dangerous experiment, and the
+ministers are warned that none of that kind of work will be tolerated.
+They are notified to stand by the old creed, and to avoid all original
+thought, as a mortal pestilence. Every minister is employed like an
+attorney--either for plaintiff or defendant,--and he is expected to
+be true to his client. If he changes his mind, he is regarded as
+a deserter, and denounced, hated, and slandered accordingly. Every
+orthodox clergyman agrees not to change. He contracts not to find new
+facts, and makes a bargain that he will deny them if he does. Such is
+the position of a Protestant minister in this nineteenth century. His
+condition excites my pity; and to better it, I am going to do what
+little I can.
+
+Some of the clergy have the independence to break away, and the
+intellect to maintain themselves as free men, but the most are compelled
+to submit to the dictation of the orthodox, and the dead. They are
+not employed to give their thoughts, but simply to repeat the ideas of
+others. They are not expected to give even the doubts that may suggest
+themselves, but are required to walk in the narrow, verdureless path
+trodden by the ignorance of the past. The forests and fields on either
+side are nothing to them. They must not even look at the purple hills,
+nor pause to hear the babble of the brooks. They must remain in the
+dusty road where the guide-boards are. They must confine themselves
+to the "fall of man," the expulsion from the garden, the "scheme of
+salvation," the "second birth," the atonement, the happiness of the
+redeemed, and the misery of the lost. They must be careful not to
+express any new ideas upon these great questions. It is much safer for
+them to quote from the works of the dead. The more vividly they describe
+the sufferings of the unregenerate, of those who attended theatres and
+balls, and drank wine in summer gardens on the Sabbath-day, and laughed
+at priests, the better ministers they are supposed to be. They must show
+that misery fits the good for heaven, while happiness prepares the bad
+for hell; that the wicked get all their good things in this life, and
+the good all their evil; that in this world God punishes the people he
+loves, and in the next, the ones he hates; that happiness makes us bad
+here, but not in heaven; that pain makes us good here, but not in hell.
+No matter how absurd these things may appear to the carnal mind, they
+must be preached and they must be believed. If they were reasonable,
+there would be no virtue in believing. Even the publicans and sinners
+believe reasonable things. To believe without evidence, or in spite of
+it, is accounted as righteousness to the sincere and humble Christian.
+
+The ministers are in duty bound to denounce all intellectual pride, and
+show that we are never quite so dear to God as when we admit that we are
+poor, corrupt and idiotic worms; that we never should have been born;
+that we ought to be damned without the least delay; that we are so
+infamous that we like to enjoy ourselves; that we love our wives and
+children better than our God; that we are generous only because we are
+vile; that we are honest from the meanest motives, and that sometimes we
+have fallen so low that we have had doubts about the inspiration of the
+Jewish Scriptures. In short, they are expected to denounce all pleasant
+paths and rustling trees, to curse the grass and flowers, and glorify
+the dust and weeds. They are expected to malign the wicked people in the
+green and happy fields, who sit and laugh beside the gurgling springs or
+climb the hills and wander as they will. They are expected to point out
+the dangers of freedom, the safety of implicit obedience, and to show
+the wickedness of philosophy, the goodness of faith, the immorality of
+science and the purity of ignorance.
+
+Now and then a few pious people discover some young man of a religious
+turn of mind and a consumptive habit of body, not quite sickly enough
+to die, nor healthy enough to be wicked. The idea occurs to them that
+he would make a good orthodox minister. They take up a contribution, and
+send the young man to some theological school where he can be taught to
+repeat a creed and despise reason. Should it turn out that the young
+man had some mind of his own, and, after graduating, should change his
+opinions and preach a different doctrine from that taught in the school,
+every man who contributed a dollar towards his education would feel that
+he had been robbed, and would denounce him as a dishonest and ungrateful
+wretch.
+
+The pulpit should not be a pillory. Congregations should allow the
+minister a little liberty. They should, at least, permit him to tell the
+truth.
+
+They have, in Massachusetts, at a place called Andover, a kind of
+minister factory, where each professor takes an oath once in five
+years--that time being considered the life of an oath--that he has not,
+during the last five years, and will not, during the next five years,
+intellectually advance. There is probably no oath that they could easier
+keep. Probably, since the foundation stone of that institution was laid
+there has not been a single case of perjury. The old creed is still
+taught. They still insist that God is infinitely wise, powerful and
+good, and that all men are totally depraved. They insist that the best
+man God ever made, deserved to be damned the moment he was finished.
+Andover puts its brand upon every minister it turns out, the same as
+Sheffield and Birmingham brand their wares, and all who see the brand
+know exactly what the minister believes, the books he has read, the
+arguments he relies on, and just what he intellectually is. They know
+just what he can be depended on to preach, and that he will continue to
+shrink and shrivel, and grow solemnly stupid day by day until he reaches
+the Andover of the grave and becomes truly orthodox forever.
+
+I have not singled out the Andover factory because it is worse than the
+others. They are all about the same. The professors, for the most part,
+are ministers who failed in the pulpit and were retired to the seminary
+on account of their deficiency in reason and their excess of faith. As
+a rule, they know nothing of this world, and far less of the next; but
+they have the power of stating the most absurd propositions with faces
+solemn as stupidity touched by fear.
+
+Something should be done for the liberation of these men. They should
+be allowed to grow--to have sunlight and air. They should no longer
+be chained and tied to confessions of faith, to mouldy books and
+musty creeds. Thousands of ministers are anxious to give their honest
+thoughts. The hands of wives and babes now stop their mouths. They
+must have bread, and so the husbands and fathers are forced to preach
+a doctrine that they hold in scorn. For the sake of shelter, food and
+clothes, they are obliged to defend the childish miracles of the past,
+and denounce the sublime discoveries of to-day. They are compelled to
+attack all modern thought, to point out the dangers of science, the
+wickedness of investigation and the corrupting influence of logic. It is
+for them to show that virtue rests upon ignorance and faith, while vice
+impudently feeds and fattens upon fact and demonstration. It is a part
+of their business to malign and vilify the Voltaires, Humes, Paines,
+Humboldts, Tyndalls, Haeckels, Darwins, Spencers, and Drapers, and
+to bow with uncovered heads before the murderers, adulterers, and
+persecutors of the world. They are, for the most part, engaged in
+poisoning the minds of the young, prejudicing children against science,
+teaching the astronomy and geology of the Bible, and inducing all to
+desert the sublime standard of reason.
+
+These orthodox ministers do not add to the sum of knowledge. They
+produce nothing. They live upon alms. They hate laughter and joy. They
+officiate at weddings, sprinkle water upon babes, and utter meaningless
+words and barren promises above the dead. They laugh at the agony of
+unbelievers, mock at their tears, and of their sorrows make a jest.
+There are some noble exceptions. Now and then a pulpit holds a brave
+and honest man. Their congregations are willing that they should
+think--willing that their ministers should have a little freedom.
+
+As we become civilized, more and more liberty will be accorded to these
+men, until finally ministers will give their best and highest thoughts.
+The congregations will finally get tired of hearing about the patriarchs
+and saints, the miracles and wonders, and will insist upon knowing
+something about the men and women of our day, and the accomplishments
+and discoveries of our time. They will finally insist upon knowing how
+to escape the evils of this world instead of the next. They will ask
+light upon the enigmas of this life. They will wish to know what we
+shall do with our criminals instead of what God will do with his--how
+we shall do away with beggary and want--with crime and misery--with
+prostitution, disease and famine,--with tyranny in all its cruel
+forms--with prisons and scaffolds, and how we shall reward the honest
+workers, and fill the world with happy homes! These are the problems
+for the pulpits and congregations of an enlightened future. If Science
+cannot finally answer these questions, it is a vain and worthless thing.
+
+The clergy, however, will continue to answer them in the old way, until
+their congregations are good enough to set them free. They will still
+talk about believing in the Lord Jesus Christ, as though that were the
+only remedy for all human ills. They will still teach that retrogression
+is the only path that leads to light; that we must go back, that faith
+is the only sure guide, and that reason is a delusive glare, lighting
+only the road to eternal pain.
+
+Until the clergy are free they cannot be intellectually honest. We can
+never tell what they really believe until they know that they can safely
+speak. They console themselves now by a secret resolution to be as
+liberal as they dare, with the hope that they can finally educate
+their congregations to the point of allowing them to think a little for
+themselves. They hardly know what they ought to do. The best part of
+their lives has been wasted in studying subjects of no possible value.
+Most of them are married, have families, and know but one way of making
+their living. Some of them say that if they do not preach these foolish
+dogmas, others will, and that they may through fear, after all, restrain
+mankind. Besides, they hate publicly to admit that they are mistaken,
+that the whole thing is a delusion, that the "scheme of salvation" is
+absurd, and that the Bible is no better than some other books, and worse
+than most.
+
+You can hardly expect a bishop to leave his palace, or the pope to
+vacate the Vatican. As long as people want popes, plenty of hypocrites
+will be found to take the place. And as long as labor fatigues, there
+will be found a good many men willing to preach once a week, if other
+folks will work and give them bread. In other words, while the demand
+lasts, the supply will never fail.
+
+If the people were a little more ignorant, astrology would flourish--if
+a little more enlightened, religion would perish!
+
+II. FREE SCHOOLS.
+
+It is also my desire to free the schools. When a professor in a college
+finds a fact, he should make it known, even if it is inconsistent with
+something Moses said. Public opinion must not compel the professor to
+hide a fact, and, "like the base Indian, throw the pearl away." With the
+single exception of Cornell, there is not a college in the United
+States where truth has ever been a welcome guest. The moment one of the
+teachers denies the inspiration of the Bible, he is discharged. If he
+discovers a fact inconsistent with that book, so much the worse for the
+fact, and especially for the discoverer of the fact. He must not corrupt
+the minds of his pupils with demonstrations. He must beware of
+every truth that cannot, in some way be made to harmonize with the
+superstitions of the Jews. Science has nothing in common with religion.
+Facts and miracles never did, and never will agree. They are not in the
+least related. They are deadly foes. What has religion to do with
+facts? Nothing. Can there be Methodist mathematics, Catholic astronomy,
+Presbyterian geology, Baptist biology, or Episcopal botany? Why, then,
+should a sectarian college exist? Only that which somebody knows should
+be taught in our schools. We should not collect taxes to pay people for
+guessing. The common school is the bread of life for the people, and it
+should not be touched by the withering hand of superstition.
+
+Our country will never be filled with great institutions of learning
+until there is an absolute divorce between Church and School. As long
+as the mutilated records of a barbarous people are placed by priest and
+professor above the reason of mankind, we shall reap but little benefit
+from church or school.
+
+Instead of dismissing professors for finding something out, let us
+rather discharge those who do not. Let each teacher understand that
+investigation is not dangerous for him; that his bread is safe, no
+matter how much truth he may discover, and that his salary will not be
+reduced, simply because he finds that the ancient Jews did not know the
+entire history of the world.
+
+Besides, it is not fair to make the Catholic support a Protestant
+school, nor is it just to collect taxes from infidels and atheists to
+support schools in which any system of religion is taught.
+
+The sciences are not sectarian. People do not persecute each other on
+account of disagreements in mathematics. Families are not divided about
+botany, and astronomy does not even tend to make a man hate his father
+and mother. It is what people do not know, that they persecute each
+other about. Science will bring, not a sword, but peace.
+
+Just as long as religion has control of the schools, science will be an
+outcast. Let us free our institutions of learning. Let us dedicate them
+to the science of eternal truth. Let us tell every teacher to ascertain
+all the facts he can--to give us light, to follow Nature, no matter
+where she leads; to be infinitely true to himself and us; to feel that
+he is without a chain, except the obligation to be honest; that he is
+bound by no books, by no creed, neither by the sayings of the dead nor
+of the living; that he is asked to look with his own eyes, to reason for
+himself without fear, to investigate in every possible direction, and to
+bring us the fruit of all his work.
+
+At present, a good many men engaged in scientific pursuits, and who
+have signally failed in gaining recognition among their fellows, are
+endeavoring to make reputations among the churches by delivering weak
+and vapid lectures upon the "harmony of Genesis and Geology." Like all
+hypocrites, these men overstate the case to such a degree, and so
+turn and pervert facts and words that they succeed only in gaining the
+applause of other hypocrites like themselves. Among the great scientists
+they are regarded as generals regard sutlers who trade with both armies.
+
+Surely the time must come when the wealth of the world will not be
+wasted in the propagation of ignorant creeds and miraculous mistakes.
+The time must come when churches and cathedrals will be dedicated to the
+use of man; when minister and priest will deem the discoveries of the
+living of more importance than the errors of the dead; when the truths
+of Nature will outrank the "sacred" falsehoods of the past, and when a
+single fact will outweigh all the miracles of Holy Writ.
+
+Who can over estimate the progress of the world if all the money
+wasted in superstition could be used to enlighten, elevate and civilize
+mankind?
+
+When every church becomes a school, every cathedral a university, every
+clergyman a teacher, and all their hearers brave and honest
+thinkers, then, and not until then, will the dream of poet, patriot,
+philanthropist and philosopher, become a real and blessed truth.
+
+III. THE POLITICIANS.
+
+I would like also to liberate the politician. At present, the successful
+office-seeker is a good deal like the centre of the earth; he weighs
+nothing himself, but draws everything else to him. There are so many
+societies, so many churches, so many isms, that it is almost impossible
+for an independent man to succeed in a political career. Candidates are
+forced to pretend that they are Catholics with Protestant proclivities,
+or Christians with liberal tendencies, or temperance men who now and
+then take a glass of wine, or, that although not members of any church
+their wives are, and that they subscribe liberally to all. The result of
+all this is that we reward hypocrisy and elect men entirely destitute of
+real principle; and this will never change until the people become grand
+enough to allow each other to do their own thinking, our Government
+should be entirely and purely secular. The religious views of a
+candidate should be kept entirely out of sight. He should not be
+compelled to give his opinion as to the inspiration of the Bible, the
+propriety of infant baptism, or the immaculate conception. All these
+things are private and personal. He should be allowed to settle such
+things for himself, and should he decide contrary to the law and will of
+God, let him settle the matter with God. The people ought to be wise
+enough to select as their officers men who know something of political
+affairs, who comprehend the present greatness, and clearly perceive the
+future grandeur of our country. If we were in a storm at sea, with deck
+wave-washed and masts strained and bent with storm, and it was necessary
+to reef the top sail, we certainly would not ask the brave sailor who
+volunteered to go aloft, what his opinion was on the five points of
+Calvinism. Our Government has nothing to do with religion. It is neither
+Christian nor pagan; it is secular. But as long as the people persist in
+voting for or against men on account of their religious views, just so
+long will hypocrisy hold place and power. Just so long will the
+candidates crawl in the dust--hide their opinions, flatter those with
+whom they differ, pretend to agree with those whom they despise; and
+just so long will honest men be trampled under foot. Churches are
+becoming political organizations. Nearly every Catholic is a Democrat;
+nearly every Methodist in the North is a Republican.
+
+It probably will not be long until the churches will divide as sharply
+upon political, as upon theological questions; and when that day comes,
+if there are not liberals enough to hold the balance of power, this
+Government will be destroyed. The liberty of man is not safe in the
+hands of any church. Wherever the Bible and sword are in partnership,
+man is a slave.
+
+All laws for the purpose of making man worship God, are born of the same
+spirit that kindled the fires of the _auto da fe_, and lovingly built
+the dungeons of the Inquisition. All laws defining and punishing
+blasphemy--making it a crime to give your honest ideas about the Bible,
+or to laugh at the ignorance of the ancient Jews, or to enjoy yourself
+on the Sabbath, or to give your opinion of Jehovah, were passed by
+impudent bigots, and should be at once repealed by honest men. An
+infinite God ought to be able to protect himself, without going in
+partnership with State Legislatures. Certainly he ought not so to act
+that laws become necessary to keep him from being laughed at. No one
+thinks of protecting Shakespeare from ridicule, by the threat of fine
+and imprisonment. It strikes me that God might write a book that would
+not necessarily excite the laughter of his children. In fact, I think
+it would be safe to say that a real God could produce a work that would
+excite the admiration of mankind. Surely politicians could be better
+employed than in passing laws to protect the literary reputation of the
+Jewish God.
+
+IV. MAN AND WOMAN
+
+Let us forget that we are Baptists, Methodists,
+
+Catholics, Presbyterians, or Freethinkers, and remember only that we are
+men and women. After all, man and woman are the highest possible titles.
+All other names belittle us, and show that we have, to a certain extent,
+given up our individuality, and have consented to wear the collar of
+authority--that we are followers. Throwing away these names, let us
+examine these questions not as partisans, but as human beings with hopes
+and fears in common.
+
+We know that our opinions depend, to a great degree, upon our
+surroundings--upon race, country, and education. We are all the result
+of numberless conditions, and inherit vices and virtues, truths and
+prejudices. If we had been born in England, surrounded by wealth and
+clothed with power, most of us would have been Episcopalians, and
+believed in church and state. We should have insisted that the people
+needed a religion, and that not having intellect enough to provide one
+for themselves, it was our duty to make one for them, and then compel
+them to support it. We should have believed it indecent to officiate in
+a pulpit without wearing a gown, and that prayers should be read from
+a book. Had we belonged to the lower classes, we might have been
+dissenters and protested against the mummeries of the High Church.
+Had we been born in Turkey, most of us would have been Mohammedans and
+believed in the inspiration of the Koran. We should have believed that
+Mohammed actually visited heaven and became acquainted with an angel by
+the name of Gabriel, who was so broad between the eyes that it required
+three hundred days for a very smart camel to travel the distance. If
+some man had denied this story we should probably have denounced him as
+a dangerous person, one who was endeavoring to undermine the foundations
+of society, and to destroy all distinction between virtue and vice. We
+should have said to him, "What do you propose to give us in place
+of that angel? We cannot afford to give up an angel of that size for
+nothing." We would have insisted that the best and wisest men
+believed the Koran. We would have quoted from the works and letters of
+philosophers, generals and sultans, to show that the Koran was the best
+of books, and that Turkey was indebted to that book and to that alone
+for its greatness and prosperity. We would have asked that man whether
+he knew more than all the great minds of his country, whether he was so
+much wiser than his fathers? We would have pointed out to him the fact
+that thousands had been consoled in the hour of death by passages from
+the Koran; that they had died with glazed eyes brightened by visions of
+the heavenly harem, and gladly left this world of grief and tears.
+We would have regarded Christians as the vilest of men, and on all
+occasions would have repeated "There is but one God, and Mohammed is his
+prophet!"
+
+So, if we had been born in India, we should in all probability have
+believed in the religion of that country. We should have regarded the
+old records as true and sacred, and looked upon a wandering priest as
+better than the men from whom he begged, and by whose labor he lived.
+We should have believed in a god with three heads instead of three gods
+with one head, as we do now.
+
+Now and then some one says that the religion of his father and mother
+is good enough for him, and wonders why anybody should desire a better.
+Surely we are not bound to follow our parents in religion any more than
+in politics, science or art. China has been petrified by the worship
+of ancestors. If our parents had been satisfied with the religion of
+theirs, we would be still less advanced than we are. If we are, in any
+way, bound by the belief of our fathers, the doctrine will hold good
+back to the first people who had a religion; and if this doctrine is
+true, we ought now to be believers in that first religion. In other
+words, we would all be barbarians. You cannot show real respect to your
+parents by perpetuating their errors. Good fathers and mothers wish
+their children to advance, to overcome obstacles which baffled them, and
+to correct the errors of their education. If you wish to reflect credit
+upon your parents, accomplish more than they did, solve problems that
+they could not understand, and build better than they knew. To sacrifice
+your manhood upon the grave of your father is an honor to neither. Why
+should a son who has examined a subject, throw away his reason and adopt
+the views of his mother? Is not such a course dishonorable to both?
+
+We must remember that this "ancestor" argument is as old at least as
+the second generation of men, that it has served no purpose except to
+enslave mankind, and results mostly from the fact that acquiescence
+is easier than investigation. This argument pushed to its logical
+conclusion, would prevent the advance of all people whose parents were
+not Freethinkers.
+
+It is hard for many people to give up the religion in which they were
+born; to admit that their fathers were utterly mistaken, and that the
+sacred records of their country are but collections of myths and fables.
+
+But when we look for a moment at the world, we find that each nation has
+its "sacred records"--its religion, and its ideas of worship. Certainly
+all cannot be right; and as it would require a life time to investigate
+the claims of these various systems, it is hardly fair to damn a man
+forever, simply because he happens to believe the wrong one. All these
+religions were produced by barbarians. Civilized nations have contented
+themselves with changing the religions of their barbaric ancestors, but
+they have made none. Nearly all these religions are intensely selfish.
+Each one was made by some contemptible little nation that regarded
+itself as of almost infinite importance, and looked upon the other
+nations as beneath the notice of their god. In all these countries it
+was a crime to deny the sacred records, to laugh at the priests, to
+speak disrespectfully of the gods, to fail to divide your substance
+with the lazy hypocrites who managed your affairs in the next world upon
+condition that you would support them in this. In the olden time
+these theological people who quartered themselves upon the honest
+and industrious, were called soothsayers, seers, charmers, prophets,
+enchanters, sorcerers, wizards, astrologers, and impostors, but now,
+they are known as clergymen.
+
+We are no exception to the general rule, and consequently have our
+sacred books as well as the rest. Of course, it is claimed by many of
+our people that our books are the only true ones, the only ones that the
+real God ever wrote, or had anything whatever to do with. They insist
+that all other sacred books were written by hypocrites and impostors;
+that the Jews were the only people that God ever had any personal
+intercourse with, and that all other prophets and seers were inspired
+only by impudence and mendacity. True, it seems somewhat strange that
+God should have chosen a barbarous and unknown people who had little or
+nothing to do with the other nations of the earth, as his messengers to
+the rest of mankind.
+
+It is not easy to account for an infinite God making people so low in
+the scale of intellect as to require a revelation. Neither is it easy to
+perceive why, if a revelation was necessary for all, it was made only
+to a few. Of course, I know that it is extremely wicked to suggest these
+thoughts, and that ignorance is the only armor that can effectually
+protect you from the wrath of God. I am aware that investigators with
+all their genius, never find the road to heaven; that those who look
+where they are going are sure to miss it, and that only those who
+voluntarily put out their eyes and implicitly depend upon blindness can
+surely keep the narrow path.
+
+Whoever reads our sacred book is compelled to believe it or suffer
+forever the torments of the lost. We are told that we have the privilege
+of examining it for ourselves; but this privilege is only extended to
+us on the condition that we believe it whether it appears reasonable or
+not. We may disagree with others as much as we please upon the meaning
+of all passages in the Bible, but we must not deny the truth of a single
+word. We must believe that the book is inspired. If we obey its every
+precept without believing in its inspiration we will be damned just as
+certainly as though we disobeyed its every word. We have no right to
+weigh it in the scales of reason--to test it by the laws of nature, or
+the facts of observation and experience. To do this, we are told, is to
+put ourselves above the word of God, and sit in judgment on the works of
+our creator.
+
+For my part, I cannot admit that belief is a voluntary thing. It seems
+to me that evidence, even in spite of ourselves, will have its weight,
+and that whatever our wish may be, we are compelled to stand with
+fairness by the scales, and give the exact result. It will not do to say
+that we reject the Bible because we are wicked. Our wickedness must be
+ascertained not from our belief but from our acts.
+
+I am told by the clergy that I ought not to attack the Bible; that I am
+leading thousands to perdition and rendering certain the damnation of my
+own soul. They have had the kindness to advise me that, if my object is
+to make converts, I am pursuing the wrong course. They tell me to use
+gentler expressions, and more cunning words. Do they really wish me
+to make more converts? If their advice is honest, they are traitors to
+their trust. If their advice is not honest, then they are unfair with
+me. Certainly they should wish me to pursue the course that will make
+the fewest converts, and yet they pretend to tell me how my influence
+could be increased. It may be, that upon this principle John Bright
+advises America to adopt free trade, so that our country can become a
+successful rival of Great Britain. Sometimes I think that even ministers
+are not entirely candid.
+
+Notwithstanding the advice of the clergy, I have concluded to pursue my
+own course, to tell my honest thoughts, and to have my freedom in this
+world whatever my fate may be in the next.
+
+The real oppressor, enslaver and corrupter of the people is the Bible.
+That book is the chain that binds, the dungeon that holds the clergy.
+That book spreads the pall of superstition over the colleges and
+schools. That book puts out the eyes of science, and makes honest
+investigation a crime. That book unmans the politician and degrades the
+people. That book fills the world with bigotry, hypocrisy and fear.
+It plays the same part in our country that has been played by "sacred
+records" in all the nations of the world.
+
+A little while ago I saw one of the Bibles of the Middle Ages. It was
+about two feet in length, and one and a half in width. It had immense
+oaken covers, with hasps, and clasps, and hinges large enough almost
+for the doors of a penitentiary. It was covered with pictures of winged
+angels and aureoled saints. In my imagination I saw this book carried
+to the cathedral altar in solemn pomp--heard the chant of robed and
+kneeling priests, felt the strange tremor of the organ's peal; saw the
+colored light streaming through windows stained and touched by blood
+and flame--the swinging censer with its perfumed incense rising to the
+mighty roof, dim with height and rich with legend carved in stone, while
+on the walls was hung, written in light, and shade, and all the colors
+that can tell of joy and tears, the pictured history of the martyred
+Christ. The people fell upon their knees. The book was opened, and the
+priest read the messages from God to man. To the multitude, the book
+itself was evidence enough that it was not the work of human hands. How
+could those little marks and lines and dots contain, like tombs, the
+thoughts of men, and how could they, touched by a ray of light from
+human eyes, give up their dead? How could these characters span the vast
+chasm dividing the present from the past, and make it possible for the
+living still to hear the voices of the dead?
+
+V. THE PENTATEUCH
+
+The first five books in our Bible are known as the Pentateuch. For a
+long time it was supposed that Moses was the author, and among the
+ignorant the supposition still prevails. As a matter of fact, it seems
+to be well settled that Moses had nothing to do with these books, and
+that they were not written until he had been dust and ashes for hundreds
+of years. But, as all the churches still insist that he was the author,
+that he wrote even an account of his own death and burial, let us speak
+of him as though these books were in fact written by him. As the
+Christians maintain that God was the real author, it makes but little
+difference whom he employed as his pen.
+
+Nearly all authors of sacred books have given an account of the creation
+of the universe, the origin of matter, and the destiny of the human
+race, all have pointed out the obligation that man is under to his
+creator for having placed him upon the earth, and allowed him to live
+and suffer, and have taught that nothing short of the most abject
+worship could possibly compensate God for his trouble and labor suffered
+and done for the good of man. They have nearly all insisted that we
+should thank God for all that is good in life; but they have not all
+informed us as to whom we should hold responsible for the evils we
+endure.
+
+Moses differed from most of the makers of sacred books by his failure
+to say anything of a future life, by failing to promise heaven, and to
+threaten hell. Upon the subject of a future state, there is not one
+word in the Pentateuch. Probably at that early day God did not deem
+it important to make a revelation as to the eternal destiny of man.
+He seems to have thought that he could control the Jews, at least, by
+rewards and punishments in this world, and so he kept the frightful
+realities of eternal joy and torment a profound secret from the people
+of his choice. He thought it far more important to tell the Jews their
+origin than to enlighten them as to their destiny.
+
+We must remember that every tribe and nation has some way in which, the
+more striking phenomena of nature are accounted for. These accounts
+are handed down by tradition, changed by numberless narrators as
+intelligence increases, or to account for newly discovered facts, or for
+the purpose of satisfying the appetite for the marvelous.
+
+The way in which a tribe or nation accounts for day and night, the
+change of seasons, the fall of snow and rain, the flight of birds,
+the origin of the rainbow, the peculiarities of animals, the dreams
+of sleep, the visions of the insane, the existence of earthquakes,
+volcanoes, storms, lightning and the thousand things that attract the
+attention and excite the wonder, fear or admiration of mankind, may be
+called the philosophy of that tribe or nation. And as all phenomena are,
+by savage and barbaric man accounted for as the action of intelligent
+beings for the accomplishment of certain objects, and as these beings
+were supposed to have the power to assist or injure man, certain things
+were supposed necessary for man to do in order to gain the assistance,
+and avoid the anger of these gods. Out of this belief grew certain
+ceremonies, and these ceremonies united with the belief, formed
+religion; and consequently every religion has for its foundation a
+misconception of the cause of phenomena.
+
+All worship is necessarily based upon the belief that some being exists
+who can, if he will, change the natural order of events. The savage
+prays to a stone that he calls a god, while the Christian prays to a god
+that he calls a spirit, and the prayers of both are equally useful. The
+savage and the Christian put behind the Universe an intelligent cause,
+and this cause whether represented by one god or many, has been, in all
+ages, the object of all worship. To carry a fetich, to utter a prayer,
+to count beads, to abstain from food, to sacrifice a lamb, a child or an
+enemy, are simply different ways by which the accomplishment of the same
+object is sought, and are all the offspring of the same error.
+
+Many systems of religion must have existed many ages before the art of
+writing was discovered, and must have passed through many changes before
+the stories, miracles, histories, prophecies and mistakes became fixed
+and petrified in written words. After that, change was possible only by
+giving new meanings to old words, a process rendered necessary by the
+continual acquisition of facts somewhat inconsistent with a literal
+interpretation of the "sacred records." In this way an honest faith
+often prolongs its life by dishonest methods; and in this way the
+Christians of to-day are trying to harmonize the Mosaic account of
+creation with the theories and discoveries of modern science.
+
+Admitting that Moses was the author of the Pentateuch, or that he gave
+to the Jews a religion, the question arises as to where he obtained
+his information. We are told by the theologians that he received his
+knowledge from God, and that every word he wrote was and is the exact
+truth. It is admitted at the same time that he was an adopted son of
+Pharaoh's daughter, and enjoyed the rank and privilege of a prince.
+Under such circumstances, he must have been well acquainted with the
+literature, philosophy and religion of the Egyptians, and must have
+known what they believed and taught as to the creation of the world.
+
+Now, if the account of the origin of this earth as given by Moses is
+substantially like that given by the Egyptians, then we must conclude
+that he learned it from them. Should we imagine that he was divinely
+inspired because he gave to the Jews what the Egyptians had given him?
+
+The Egyptian priests taught _first_, that a god created the original
+matter, leaving it in a state of chaos; _second_, that a god moulded it
+into form; _third_, that the breath of a god moved upon the face of
+the deep; _fourth_, that a god created simply by saying "Let it be;"
+_fifth_, that a god created light before the sun existed.
+
+Nothing can be clearer than that Moses received from the Egyptians the
+principal parts of his narrative, making such changes and additions as
+were necessary to satisfy the peculiar superstitions of his own people.
+
+If some man at the present day should assert that he had received from
+God the theories of evolution, the survival of the fittest, and the
+law of heredity, and we should afterwards find that he was not only an
+Englishman, but had lived in the family of Charles Darwin, we certainly
+would account for his having these theories in a natural way, So, if
+Darwin himself should pretend that he was inspired, and had obtained
+his peculiar theories from God, we should probably reply that his
+grandfather suggested the same ideas, and that Lamarck published
+substantially the same theories the same year that Mr. Darwin was born.
+
+Now, if we have sufficient courage, we will, by the same course of
+reasoning, account for the story of creation found in the Bible. We
+will say that it contains the belief of Moses, and that he received his
+information from the Egyptians, and not from God. If we take the account
+as the absolute truth and use it for the purpose of determining the
+value of modern thought, scientific advancement becomes impossible. And
+even if the account of the creation as given by Moses should turn out
+to be true, and should be so admitted by all the scientific world, the
+claim that he was inspired would still be without the least particle
+of proof. We would be forced to admit that he knew more than we had
+supposed. It certainly is no proof that a man is inspired simply because
+he is right.
+
+No one pretends that Shakespeare was inspired, and yet all the writers
+of the books of the Old Testament put together, could not have produced
+Hamlet.
+
+Why should we, looking upon some rough and awkward thing, or god in
+stone, say that it must have been produced by some inspired sculptor,
+and with the same breath pronounce the _Venus de Milo_ to be the work
+of man? Why should we, looking at some ancient daub of angel, saint or
+virgin, say its painter must have been assisted by a god?
+
+Let us account for all we see by the facts we know. If there are things
+for which we cannot account, let us wait for light. To account for
+anything by supernatural agencies is, in fact to say that we do not
+know. Theology is not what we know about God, but what we do not know
+about Nature. In order to increase our respect for the Bible, it became
+necessary for the priests to exalt and extol that book, and at the same
+time to decry and belittle the reasoning powers of man. The whole
+power of the pulpit has been used for hundreds of years to destroy the
+confidence of man in himself--to induce him to distrust his own powers
+of thought, to believe that he was wholly unable to decide any question
+for himself, and that all human virtue consists in faith and obedience.
+The church has said, "Believe, and obey! If you reason, you will become
+an unbeliever, and unbelievers will be lost. If you disobey, you will
+do so through vain pride and curiosity, and will, like Adam and Eve, be
+thrust from Paradise forever!"
+
+For my part, I care nothing for what the church says, except in so far
+as it accords with my reason; and the Bible is nothing to me, only in so
+far as it agrees with what I think or know.
+
+All books should be examined in the same spirit, and truth should be
+welcomed and falsehood exposed, no matter in what volume they may be
+found.
+
+Let us in this spirit examine the Pentateuch; and if anything appears
+unreasonable, contradictory or absurd, let us have the honesty and
+courage to admit it. Certainly no good can result either from deceiving
+ourselves or others. Many millions have implicitly believed this book,
+and have just as implicitly believed that polygamy was sanctioned by
+God. Millions have regarded this book as the foundation of all
+human progress, and at the same time looked upon slavery as a divine
+institution. Millions have declared this book to have been infinitely
+holy, and to prove that they were right, have imprisoned, robbed
+and burned their fellow-men. The inspiration of this book has been
+established by famine, sword and fire, by dungeon, chain and whip, by
+dagger and by rack, by force and fear and fraud, and generations have
+been frightened by threats of hell, and bribed with promises of heaven.
+
+Let us examine a portion of this book, not in the darkness of our fear,
+but in the light of reason.
+
+And first, let us examine the account given of the creation of this
+world, commenced, according to the Bible, on Monday morning about five
+thousand eight hundred and eighty-three years ago.
+
+VI. MONDAY.
+
+Moses commences his story by telling us that in the beginning God
+created the heaven and the earth.
+
+If this means anything, it means that God produced, caused to exist,
+called into being, the heaven and the earth. It will not do to say that
+he formed the heaven and the earth of previously existing matter. Moses
+conveys, and intended to convey the idea that the matter of which the
+heaven and the earth are composed, was created.
+
+It is impossible for me to conceive of something being created from
+nothing. Nothing, regarded in the light of a raw material, is a decided
+failure. I cannot conceive of matter apart from force. Neither is it
+possible to think of force disconnected with matter. You cannot imagine
+matter going back to absolute nothing. Neither can you imagine nothing
+being changed into something. You may be eternally damned if you do not
+say that you can conceive these things, but you cannot conceive them.
+
+Such is the constitution of the human mind that it cannot even think of
+a commencement or an end of matter, or force.
+
+If God created the universe, there was a time when he commenced to
+create. Back of that commencement there must have been an eternity. In
+that eternity what was this God doing? He certainly did not think.
+There was nothing to think about. He did not remember. Nothing had ever
+happened. What did he do? Can you imagine anything more absurd than an
+infinite intelligence in infinite nothing wasting an eternity?
+
+I do not pretend to tell how all these things really are; but I do
+insist that a statement that cannot possibly be comprehended by any
+human being, and that appears utterly impossible, repugnant to every
+fact of experience, and contrary to everything that we really know, must
+be rejected by every honest man.
+
+We can conceive of eternity, because we cannot conceive of a cessation
+of time. We can conceive of infinite space because we cannot conceive
+of so much matter that our imagination will not stand upon the farthest
+star, and see infinite space beyond. In other words, we cannot conceive
+of a cessation of time; therefore eternity is a necessity of the mind.
+Eternity sustains the same relation to time that space does to matter.
+
+In the time of Moses, it was perfectly safe for him to write an account
+of the creation of the world. He had simply to put in form the crude
+notions of the people. At that time, no other Jew could have written
+a better account. Upon that subject he felt at liberty to give his
+imagination full play. There was no one who could authoritatively
+contradict anything he might say. It was substantially the same story
+that had been imprinted in curious characters upon the clay records
+of Babylon, the gigantic monuments of Egypt, and the gloomy temples of
+India. In those days there was an almost infinite difference between
+the educated and ignorant. The people were controlled almost entirely
+by signs and wonders. By the lever of fear, priests moved the world. The
+sacred records were made and kept, and altered by them. The people could
+not read, and looked upon one who could, as almost a god. In our day it
+is hard to conceive of the influence of an educated class in a barbarous
+age. It was only necessary to produce the "sacred record," and ignorance
+fell upon its face. The people were taught that the record was inspired,
+and therefore true. They were not taught that it was true, and therefore
+inspired.
+
+After all, the real question is not whether the Bible is inspired, but
+whether it is true. If it is true, it does not need to be inspired. If
+it is true, it makes no difference whether it was written by a man or a
+god. The multiplication table is just as useful, just as true as though
+God had arranged the figures himself. If the Bible is really true,
+the claim of inspiration need not be urged; and if it is not true, its
+inspiration can hardly be established. As a matter of fact, the truth
+does not need to be inspired. Nothing needs inspiration except a
+falsehood or a mistake. Where truth ends, where probability stops,
+inspiration begins. A fact never went into partnership with a miracle.
+Truth does not need the assistance of miracle. A fact will fit every
+other fact in the Universe, because it is the product of all other
+facts. A lie will fit nothing except another lie made for the express
+purpose of fitting it. After a while the man gets tired of lying, and
+then the last lie will not fit the next fact, and then there is an
+opportunity to use a miracle. Just at that point, it is necessary to
+have a little inspiration.
+
+It seems to me that reason is the highest attribute of man, and that if
+there can be any communication from God to man, it must be addressed
+to his reason. It does not seem possible that in order to understand a
+message from God it is absolutely essential to throw our reason away.
+How could God make known his will to any being destitute of reason? How
+can any man accept as a revelation from God that which is unreasonable
+to him? God cannot make a revelation to another man for me. He must make
+it to me, and until he convinces my reason that it is true, I cannot
+receive it.
+
+The statement that in the beginning God created the heaven and the
+earth, I cannot accept. It is contrary to my reason, and I cannot
+believe it. It appears reasonable to me that force has existed from
+eternity. Force cannot, as it appears to me, exist apart from matter.
+Force, in its nature, is forever active, and without matter it could
+not act; and so I think matter must have existed forever. To conceive
+of matter without force, or of force without matter, or of a time when
+neither existed, or of a being who existed for an eternity without
+either, and who out of nothing created both, is to me utterly
+impossible. I may be damned on this account, but I cannot help it. In my
+judgment, Moses was mistaken.
+
+It will not do to say that Moses merely intended to tell what God did,
+in making the heavens and the earth out of matter then in existence.
+He distinctly states that in the _beginning_ God created them. If this
+account is true, we must believe that God, existing in infinite space
+surrounded by eternal nothing, naught and void, created, produced,
+called into being, willed into existence this universe of countless
+stars.
+
+The next thing we are told by this inspired gentleman is, that God
+created light, and proceeded to divide it from the darkness.
+
+Certainly, the person who wrote this believed that darkness was a thing,
+an entity, a material that could get mixed and tangled up with light,
+and that these entities, light and darkness, had to be separated. In his
+imagination he probably saw God throwing pieces and chunks of darkness
+on one side, and rays and beams of light on the other. It is hard for a
+man who has been born but once to understand these things. For my part,
+I cannot understand how light can be separated from darkness. I had
+always supposed that darkness was simply the absence of light, and that
+under no circumstances could it be necessary to take the darkness away
+from the light. It is certain, however, that Moses believed darkness to
+be a form of matter, because I find that in another place he speaks of
+a darkness that could be felt. They used to have on exhibition at Rome a
+bottle of the darkness that overspread Egypt.
+
+You cannot divide light from darkness any more than you can divide heat
+from cold. Cold is an absence of heat, and darkness is an absence of
+light. I suppose that we have no conception of absolute cold. We know
+only degrees of heat. Twenty degrees below zero is just twenty degrees
+warmer than forty degrees below zero. Neither cold nor darkness are
+entities, and these words express simply either the absolute or partial
+absence of heat or light. I cannot conceive how light can be divided
+from darkness, but I can conceive how a barbarian several thousand years
+ago, writing upon a subject about which he knew nothing, could make a
+mistake. The creator of light could not have written in this way. If
+such a being exists, he must have known the nature of that "mode of
+motion" that paints the earth on every eye, and clothes in garments
+seven-hued this universe of worlds.
+
+VII. TUESDAY.
+
+We are next informed by Moses that "God of the waters, and let it divide
+the waters from the waters;" and that "God made the firmament, and
+divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters
+which were above the firmament." What did the writer mean by the word
+firmament? Theologians now tell us that he meant an "expanse." This will
+not do. How could an expanse divide the waters from the waters, so that
+the waters above the expanse would not fall into and mingle with the
+waters below the expanse? The truth is that Moses regarded the firmament
+as a solid affair. It was where God lived, and where water was kept. It
+was for this reason that they used to pray for rain. They supposed that
+some angel could with a lever raise a gate and let out the quantity of
+moisture desired. It was with the water from this firmament that the
+world was drowned when the windows of heaven were opened. It was in this
+said Let there be a firmament in the midst firmament that the sons of
+God lived--the sons who "saw the daughters of men that they were
+fair and took them wives of all which they chose." The issue of such
+marriages were giants, and "the same became mighty men which were of
+old, men of renown."
+
+Nothing is clearer than that Moses regarded the firmament as a vast
+material division that separated the waters of the world, and upon
+whose floor God lived, surrounded by his sons. In no other way could he
+account for rain. Where did the water come from? He knew nothing about
+the laws of evaporation. He did not know that the sun wooed with amorous
+kisses the waves of the sea, and that they, clad in glorified mist
+rising to meet their lover, were, by disappointment, changed to tears
+and fell as rain.
+
+The idea that the firmament was the abode of the Deity must have been in
+the mind of Moses when he related the dream of Jacob. "And he dreamed,
+and behold, a ladder set upon the earth and the top of it reached to
+heaven; and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it; and
+behold the Lord stood above it and said, I am the Lord God."
+
+So, when the people were building the tower of Babel "the Lord came down
+to see the city, and the tower which the children of men builded. And
+the Lord said, Behold the people is one, and they have all one language:
+and this they begin to do; and nothing will be restrained from them
+which they imagined to do. Go to, let us go down and confound their
+language that they may not understand one another's speech."
+
+The man who wrote that absurd account must have believed that God lived
+above the earth, in the firmament. The same idea was in the mind of the
+Psalmist when he said that God "bowed the heavens and came down."
+
+Of course, God could easily remove any person bodily to heaven, as it
+was but a little way above the earth. "Enoch walked with God, and he was
+not, for God took him." The accounts in the Bible of the ascension of
+Elijah, Christ and St. Paul were born of the belief that the firmament
+was the dwelling-place of God. It probably never occurred to these
+writers that if the firmament was seven or eight miles away, Enoch and
+the rest would have been frozen perfectly stiff long before the journey
+could have been completed. Possibly Elijah might have made the voyage,
+as he was carried to heaven in a chariot of fire "by a whirlwind."
+
+The truth is, that Moses was mistaken, and upon that mistake the
+Christians located their heaven and their hell. The telescope destroyed
+the firmament, did away with the heaven of the New Testament, rendered
+the ascension of our Lord and the assumption of his Mother infinitely
+absurd, crumbled to chaos the gates and palaces of the New Jerusalem,
+and in their places gave to man a wilderness of worlds.
+
+VIII. WEDNESDAY.
+
+We are next informed by the historian of creation, that after God had
+finished making the firmament and had succeeded in dividing the waters
+by means of an "expanse," he proceeded "to gather the waters on the
+earth together in seas, so that the dry land might appear."
+
+Certainly the writer of this did not have any conception of the real
+form of the earth. He could not have known anything of the attraction of
+gravitation. He must have regarded the earth as flat and supposed that
+it required considerable force and power to induce the water to leave
+the mountains and collect in the valleys. Just as soon as the water was
+forced to run down hill, the dry land appeared, and the grass began to
+grow, and the mantles of green were thrown over the shoulders of the
+hills, and the trees laughed into bud and blossom, and the branches were
+laden with fruit. And all this happened before a ray had left the quiver
+of the sun, before a glittering beam had thrilled the bosom of a flower,
+and before the Dawn with trembling hands had drawn aside the curtains of
+the East and welcomed to her arms the eager god of Day.
+
+It does not seem to me that grass and trees could grow and ripen into
+seed and fruit without the sun. According to the account, this all
+happened on the third day. Now, if, as the Christians say, Moses did not
+mean by the word day a period of twenty-four hours, but an immense and
+almost measureless space of time, and as God did not, according to this
+view make any animals until the fifth day, that is, not for millions of
+years after he made the grass and trees, for what purpose did he cause
+the trees to bear fruit?
+
+Moses says that God said on the third day, "Let the earth bring forth
+grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after
+his kind, whose seed is in itself upon the earth; and it was so. And the
+earth brought forth grass and herb yielding seed after his kind, and the
+tree yielding fruit whose seed was in itself after his kind; and God saw
+that it was good, and the evening and the morning were the third day."
+
+There was nothing to eat this fruit; not an insect with painted wings
+sought the honey of the flowers; not a single living, breathing thing
+upon the earth. Plenty of grass, a great variety of herbs, an abundance
+of fruit, but not a mouth in all the world. If Moses is right, this
+state of things lasted only two days; but if the modern theologians are
+correct, it continued for millions of ages.
+
+"It is now well known that the organic history of the earth can be
+properly divided into five epochs--the Primordial, Primary, Secondary,
+Tertiary, and Quaternary. Each of these epochs is characterized by
+animal and vegetable life peculiar to itself. In the First will be found
+Algæ and Skulless Vertebrates, in the Second, Ferns and Fishes, in the
+Third, Pine Forests and Reptiles, in the Fourth, Foliaceous Forests and
+Mammals, and in the Fifth, Man."
+
+How much more reasonable this is than the idea that the earth was
+covered with grass, and herbs, and trees loaded with fruit for millions
+of years before an animal existed.
+
+There is, in Nature, an even balance forever kept between the total
+amounts of animal and vegetable life. "In her wonderful economy she must
+form and bountifully nourish her vegetable progeny--twin-brother life to
+her, with that of animals. The perfect balance between plant existences
+and animal existences must always be maintained, while matter courses
+through the eternal circle, becoming each in turn. If an animal be
+resolved into its ultimate constituents in a period according to the
+surrounding circumstances, say, of four hours, of four months, of four
+years, or even of four thousand years,--for it is impossible to deny
+that there may be instances of all these periods during which the
+process has continued--those elements which assume the gaseous form
+mingle at once with the atmosphere and are taken up from it without
+delay by the ever-open mouths of vegetable life. By a thousand pores
+in every leaf the carbonic acid which renders the atmosphere unfit for
+animal life is absorbed, the carbon being separated, and assimilated to
+form the vegetable fibre, which, as wood, makes and furnishes our houses
+and ships, is burned for our warmth, or is stored up under pressure for
+coal. All this carbon has played its part, and many parts in its time,
+as animal existences from monad up to man. Our mahogany of to-day has
+been many negroes in its turn, and before the African existed, was
+integral portions of many a generation of extinct species."
+
+It seems reasonable to suppose that certain kinds of vegetation-and
+certain kinds of animals should exist together, and that as the
+character of the vegetation changed, a corresponding change would take
+place in the animal world. It may be that I am led to these conclusions
+by "total depravity," or that I lack the necessary humility of spirit to
+satisfactorily harmonize Haeckel and Moses; or that I am carried away by
+pride, blinded by reason, given over to hardness of heart that I might
+be damned, but I never can believe that the earth was covered with
+leaves, and buds, and flowers, and fruits before the sun with glittering
+spear had driven back the hosts of Night.
+
+IX. THURSDAY.
+
+After the world was covered with vegetation, it occurred to Moses that
+it was about time to make a sun and moon; and so we are told that on the
+fourth day God said, "Let there be light in the firmament of the heaven
+to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs and for
+seasons, and for days and years; and let them be for lights in the
+firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth; and it was so. And
+God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the
+lesser light to rule the night; he made the stars also."
+
+Can we believe that the inspired writer had any idea of the size of the
+sun? Draw a circle five inches in diameter, and by its side thrust a pin
+through the paper. The hole made by the pin will sustain about the same
+relation to the circle that the earth does to the sun. Did he know that
+the sun was eight hundred and sixty thousand miles in diameter; that it
+was enveloped in an ocean of fire thousands of miles in depth, hotter
+even than the Christian's hell, over which sweep tempests of flame
+moving at the rate of one hundred miles a second, compared with which
+the wildest storm that ever wrecked the forests of this world was but a
+calm? Did he know that the sun every moment of time throws out as much
+heat as could be generated by the combustion of millions upon millions
+of tons of coal? Did he know that the volume of the earth is less than
+one-millionth of that of the sun? Did he know of the one hundred and
+four planets belonging to our solar system, all children of the sun? Did
+he know of Jupiter eighty-five thousand miles in diameter, hundreds
+of times as large as our earth, turning on his axis at the rate of
+twenty-five thousand miles an hour accompanied by four moons, making the
+tour of his orbit in fifty years, a distance of three thousand million
+miles? Did he know anything about Saturn, his rings and his eight moons?
+Did he have the faintest idea that all these planets were once a part of
+the sun; that the vast luminary was once thousands of millions of miles
+in diameter; that Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars were all
+born before our earth, and that by no possibility could this world have
+existed three days, nor three periods, nor three "good whiles" before
+its source, the sun?
+
+Moses supposed the sun to be about three or four feet in diameter and
+the moon about half that size. Compared with the earth they were but
+simple specks. This idea seems to have been shared by all the "inspired"
+men. We find in the book of Joshua that the sun stood still, and the
+moon stayed until the people had avenged themselves upon their enemies.
+"So the sun stood still in the midst of heaven, and hasted not to go
+down about a whole day."
+
+We are told that the sacred writer wrote in common speech as we do
+when we talk about the rising and setting of the sun, and that all he
+intended to say was that the earth ceased to turn on its axis "for about
+a whole day."
+
+My own opinion is that General Joshua knew no more about the motions of
+the earth than he did about mercy and justice. If he had known that the
+earth turned upon its axis at the rate of a thousand miles an hour, and
+swept in its course about the sun at the rate of sixty-eight thousand
+miles an hour, he would have doubled the hailstones, spoken of in the
+same chapter, that the Lord cast down from heaven, and allowed the sun
+and moon to rise and set in the usual way.
+
+It is impossible to conceive of a more absurd story than this about the
+stopping of the sun and moon, and yet nothing so excites the malice of
+the orthodox preacher as to call its truth in question. Some endeavor
+to account for the phenomenon by natural causes, while others attempt
+to show that God could, by the refraction of light have made the sun
+visible although actually shining on the opposite side of the earth. The
+last hypothesis has been seriously urged by ministers within the last
+few months. The Rev. Henry M. Morey of South Bend, Indiana, says "that
+the phenomenon was simply optical. The rotary motion of the earth was
+not disturbed, but the light of the sun was prolonged by the same laws
+of refraction and reflection by which the sun now appears to be above
+the horizon when it is really below. The medium through which the sun's
+rays passed may have been miraculously influenced so as to have caused
+the sun to linger above the horizon long after its usual time for
+disappearance."
+
+This is the latest and ripest product of Christian scholarship upon
+this question no doubt, but still it is not entirely satisfactory to me.
+According to the sacred account the sun did not linger, merely, above
+the horizon, but stood still "in the midst of heaven for about a
+whole day," that is to say, for about twelve hours. If the air was
+miraculously changed, so that it would refract the rays of the sun while
+the earth turned over as usual for "about a whole day," then, at the
+end of that time the sun must have been visible in the east, that is,
+it must by that time have been the next morning. According to this, that
+most wonderful day must have been at least thirty-six hours in length.
+We have first, the twelve hours of natural light, then twelve hours of
+"refracted and reflected" light. By that time it would again be morning,
+and the sun would shine for twelve hours more in the natural way, making
+thirty-six hours in all.
+
+If the Rev. Morey would depend a little less on "refraction" and a
+little more on "reflection," he would conclude that the whole story is
+simply a barbaric myth and fable.
+
+It hardly seems reasonable that God, if there is one, would either stop
+the globe, change the constitution of the atmosphere or the nature of
+light simply to afford Joshua an opportunity to kill people on that
+day when he could just as easily have waited until the next morning.
+It certainly cannot be very gratifying to God for us to believe such
+childish things.
+
+It has been demonstrated that force is eternal; that it is forever
+active, and eludes destruction by change of form. Motion is a form of
+force, and all arrested motion changes instantly to heat. The earth
+turns upon its axis at about one thousand miles an hour. Let it be
+stopped and a force beyond our imagination is changed to heat. It has
+been calculated that to stop the world would produce as much heat as the
+burning of a solid piece of coal three times the size of the earth.
+And yet we are asked to believe that this was done in order that one
+barbarian might defeat another. Such stories never would have been
+written, had not the belief been general that the heavenly bodies were
+as nothing compared with the earth.
+
+The view of Moses was acquiesced in by the Jewish people and by the
+Christian world for thousands of years. It is supposed that Moses
+lived about fifteen hundred years before Christ, and although he was
+"inspired," and obtained his information directly from God, he did not
+know as much about our solar system as the Chinese did a thousand
+years before he was born. "The Emperor Chwenhio adopted as an epoch, a
+conjunction of the planets Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, which has
+been shown by M. Bailly to have occurred no less than 2449 years before
+Christ." The ancient Chinese knew not only the motions of the planets,
+but they could calculate eclipses. "In the reign of the Emperor
+Chow-Kang, the chief astronomers, Ho and Hi were condemned to death for
+neglecting to announce a solar eclipse which took place 2169 B. C., a
+clear proof that the prediction of eclipses was a part of the duty of
+the imperial astronomers."
+
+Is it not strange that a Chinaman should find out by his own exertions
+more about the material universe than Moses could when assisted by its
+Creator?
+
+About eight hundred years after God gave Moses the principal facts about
+the creation of the "heaven and the earth" he performed another miracle
+far more wonderful than stopping the world. On this occasion he not
+only stopped the earth, but actually caused it to turn the other way.
+A Jewish king was sick, and God, in order to convince him that he would
+ultimately recover, offered to make the shadow on the dial go forward,
+or backward ten degrees. The king thought it was too easy a thing to
+make the shadow go forward, and asked that it be turned back. Thereupon,
+"Isaiah the prophet cried unto the Lord, and he brought the shadow
+ten degrees backward by which it had gone down in the dial of Ahaz." I
+hardly see how this miracle could be accounted for even by "refraction"
+and "reflection."
+
+It seems, from the account, that this stupendous miracle was performed
+after the king had been cured. The account of the shadow going backward
+is given in the eleventh verse of the twentieth chapter of Second Kings,
+while the cure is given in the seventh verse of the same chapter. "And
+Isaiah said, Take a lump of figs. And they took and laid it on the boil,
+and he recovered."
+
+Stopping the world and causing it to turn back ten degrees after that,
+seems to have been, as the boil was already cured by the figs, a useless
+display of power.
+
+The easiest way to account for all these wonders is to say that the
+"inspired" writers were mistaken. In this way a fearful burden is lifted
+from the credulity of man, and he is left free to believe the evidences
+of his own senses, and the demonstrations of science. In this way he can
+emancipate himself from the slavery of superstition, the control of the
+barbaric dead, and the despotism of the church.
+
+Only about a hundred years ago, Buffon, the naturalist, was compelled by
+the faculty of theology at Paris to publicly renounce fourteen "errors"
+in his work on Natural History because they were at variance with the
+Mosaic account of creation. The Pentateuch is still the scientific
+standard of the church, and ignorant priests, armed with that, pronounce
+sentence upon the vast accomplishments of modern thought.
+
+X. "HE MADE THE STARS ALSO."
+
+Moses came very near forgetting about the stars, and only gave five
+words to all the hosts of heaven. Can it be possible that he knew
+anything about the stars beyond the mere fact that he saw them shining
+above him?
+
+Did he know that the nearest star, the one we ought to be the best
+acquainted with, is twenty-one billion of miles away, and that it is
+a sun shining by its own light? Did he know of the next, that is
+thirty-seven billion miles distant? Is it possible that he was
+acquainted with Sirius, a sun two thousand six hundred and eighty-eight
+times larger than our own, surrounded by a system of heavenly bodies,
+several of which are already known, and distant from us eighty-two
+billion miles? Did he know that the Polar star that tells the mariner
+his course and guided slaves to liberty and joy, is distant from this
+little world two hundred and ninety-two billion miles, and that Capella
+wheels and shines one hundred and thirty-three billion miles beyond? Did
+he know that it would require about seventy-two years for light to reach
+us from this star? Did he know that light travels one hundred and
+eighty-five thousand miles a second? Did he know that some stars are so
+far away in the infinite abysses that five millions of years are
+required for their light to reach this globe?
+
+If this is true, and if as the Bible tells us, the stars were made after
+the earth, then this world has been wheeling in its orbit for at least
+five million years.
+
+It may be replied that it was not the intention of God to teach geology
+and astronomy. Then why did he say anything upon these subjects? and if
+he did say anything, why did he not give the facts?
+
+According to the sacred records God created, on the first day, the
+heaven and the earth, "moved upon the face of the waters," and made
+the light. On the second day he made the firmament or the "expanse" and
+divided the waters. On the third day he gathered the waters into seas,
+let the dry land appear and caused the earth to bring forth grass, herbs
+and fruit trees, and on the fourth day he made the sun, moon and stars
+and set them in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the earth.
+This division of labor is very striking. The work of the other days is
+as nothing when compared with that of the fourth. Is it possible that
+it required the same time and labor to make the grass, herbs and fruit
+trees, that it did to fill with countless constellations the infinite
+expanse of space?
+
+XI. FRIDAY.
+
+We are then told that on the next day "God the moving creatures that hath
+life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of
+heaven. And God created great whales and every living creature which the
+waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged
+fowl after his kind, and God saw that it was good. And God blessed them,
+saying, Be fruitful and multiply and fill the waters in the seas, and
+let fowl multiply in the earth."
+
+Is it true that while the dry land was covered with grass, and herbs,
+and trees bearing fruit, the ocean was absolutely devoid of life, and so
+remained for millions of years?
+
+If Moses meant twenty-four hours by the word day, then it would make but
+little difference on which of the six days animals were made; but if the
+word said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly day was used to express
+millions of ages, during which life was slowly evolved from monad up to
+man, then the account becomes infinitely absurd, puerile and foolish.
+There is not a scientist of high standing who will say that in his
+judgment the earth was covered with fruit-bearing trees before the
+moners, the ancestors it may be of the human race, felt in Laurentian
+seas the first faint throb of life. Nor is there one who will declare
+that there was a single spire of grass before the sun had poured upon
+the world his flood of gold.
+
+Why should men in the name of religion try to harmonize the
+contradictions that exist between Nature and a book? Why should
+philosophers be denounced for placing more reliance upon what they know
+than upon what they have been told? If there is a God, it is reasonably
+certain that he made the world, but it is by no means certain that he is
+the author of the Bible. Why then should we not place greater confidence
+in Nature than in a book? And even if this God made not only the world
+but the book besides, it does not follow that the book is the best part
+of creation, and the only part that we will be eternally punished for
+denying. It seems to me that it is quite as important to know something
+of the solar system, something of the physical history of this globe,
+as it is to know the adventures of Jonah or the diet of Ezekiel. For my
+part, I would infinitely prefer to know all the results of scientific
+investigation, than to be inspired as Moses was. Supposing the Bible to
+be true; why is it any worse or more wicked for Freethinkers to deny
+it, than for priests to deny the doctrine of evolution, or the dynamic
+theory of heat? Why should we be damned for laughing at Samson and his
+foxes, while others, holding the Nebular Hypothesis in utter contempt,
+go straight to heaven? It seems to me that a belief in the great truths
+of science are fully as essential to salvation, as the creed of any
+church. We are taught that a man may be perfectly acceptable to God
+even if he denies the rotundity of the earth, the Copernican system, the
+three laws of Kepler, the indestructibility of matter and the attraction
+of gravitation. And we are also taught that a man may be right upon
+all these questions, and yet, for failing to believe in the "scheme of
+salvation," be eternally lost.
+
+XII. SATURDAY.
+
+On this, the last day of creation, God said;--
+
+"Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle
+and creeping thing and beast of the earth after his kind; and it was
+so. And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after
+their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind;
+and God saw that it was good."
+
+Now, is it true that the seas were filled with fish, the sky with fowls,
+and the earth covered with grass, and herbs, and fruit bearing trees,
+millions of ages before there was a creeping thing in existence? Must
+we admit that plants and animals were the result of the fiat of some
+incomprehensible intelligence independent of the operation of what are
+known as natural causes? Why is a miracle any more necessary to account
+for yesterday than for to-day or for to-morrow?
+
+If there is an infinite Power, nothing can be more certain than that
+this Power works in accordance with what we call law, that is, by and
+through natural causes. If anything can be found without a pedigree of
+natural antecedents, it will then be time enough to talk about the fiat
+of creation. There must have been a time when plants and animals did not
+exist upon this globe. The question, and the only question is, whether
+they were naturally produced. If the account given by Moses is true,
+then the vegetable and animal existences are the result of certain
+special fiats of creation entirely independent of the operation of
+natural causes. This is so grossly improbable, so at variance with the
+experience and observation of mankind, that it cannot be adopted without
+abandoning forever the basis of scientific thought and action.
+
+It may be urged that we do not understand the sacred record correctly.
+To this it may be replied that for thousands of years the account of
+the creation has, by the Jewish and Christian world, been regarded as
+literally true. If it was inspired, of course God must have known just
+how it would be understood, and consequently must have intended that
+it should be understood just as he knew it would be. One man writing to
+another, may mean one thing, and yet be understood as meaning something
+else. Now, if the writer knew that he would be misunderstood, and also
+knew that he could use other words that would convey his real meaning,
+but did not, we would say that he used words on purpose to mislead, and
+was not an honest man.
+
+If a being of infinite wisdom wrote the Bible, or caused it to be
+written, he must have known exactly how his words would be interpreted
+by all the world, and he must have intended to convey the very meaning
+that was conveyed. He must have known that by reading that book, man
+would form erroneous views as to the shape, antiquity, and size of this
+world; that he would be misled as to the time and order of creation;
+that he would have the most childish and contemptible views of the
+creator; that the "sacred word" would be used to support slavery and
+polygamy; that it would build dungeons for the good, and light fagots
+to consume the brave, and therefore he must have intended that these
+results should follow. He also must have known that thousands and
+millions of men and women never could believe his Bible, and that the
+number of unbelievers would increase in the exact ratio of civilization,
+and therefore, he must have intended that result.
+
+Let us understand this. An honest finite being uses the best words, in
+his judgment, to convey his meaning. This is the best he can do, because
+he cannot certainly know the exact effect of his words on others. But an
+infinite being must know not only the real meaning of the words, but the
+exact meaning they will convey to every reader and hearer. He must know
+every meaning that they are capable of conveying to every mind. He must
+also know what explanations must be made to prevent misconception. If
+an infinite being cannot, in making a revelation to man, use such words
+that every person to whom a revelation is essential will understand
+distinctly what that revelation is, then a revelation from God through
+the instrumentality of language is impossible, or it is not essential
+that all should understand it correctly. It may be urged that millions
+have not the capacity to understand a revelation, although expressed in
+the plainest words. To this it seems a sufficient reply to ask, why a
+being of infinite power should create men so devoid of intelligence,
+that he cannot by any means make known to them his will? We are told
+that it is exceedingly plain, and that a wayfaring man, though a fool,
+need not err therein. This statement is refuted by the religious history
+of the Christian world. Every sect is a certificate that God has not
+plainly revealed his will to man. To each reader the Bible conveys a
+different meaning. About the meaning of this book, called a revelation,
+there have been ages of war, and centuries of sword and flame. If
+written by an infinite God, he must have known that these results must
+follow; and thus knowing, he must be responsible for all.
+
+Is it not infinitely more reasonable to say that this book is the work
+of man, that it is filled with mingled truth and error, with mistakes
+and facts, and reflects, too faithfully perhaps, the "very form and
+pressure of its time"?
+
+If there are mistakes in the Bible, certainly they were made by man. If
+there is anything contrary to nature, it was written by man. If there is
+anything immoral, cruel, heartless or infamous, it certainly was never
+written by a being worthy of the adoration of mankind.
+
+XIII. LET US MAKE MAN.
+
+We are next informed by the author of the Pentateuch that God said "Let
+us make man in our image, after our likeness," and that "God created man
+in his own image, in the image of God created he him--male and female
+created he them."
+
+If this account means anything, it means that man was created in the
+physical image and likeness of God. Moses while he speaks of man as
+having been made in the image of God, never speaks of God except as
+having the form of a man. He speaks of God as "walking in the garden
+in the cool of the day;" and that Adam and Eve "heard his voice." He is
+constantly telling what God said, and in a thousand passages he refers
+to him as not only having the human form, but as performing actions,
+such as man performs. The God of Moses was a God with hands, with feet,
+with the organs of speech.
+
+A God of passion, of hatred, of revenge, of affection, of repentance; a
+God who made mistakes:--in other words, an immense and powerful man.
+
+It will not do to say that Moses meant to convey the idea that God made
+man in his mental or moral image. Some have insisted that man was made
+in the moral image of God because he was made pure. Purity cannot be
+manufactured. A moral character cannot be made for man by a god.
+Every man must make his own moral character. Consequently, if God
+is infinitely pure, Adam and Eve were not made in his image in that
+respect. Others say that Adam and Eve were made in the mental image
+of God. If it is meant by that, that they were created with reasoning
+powers like, but not to the extent of those possessed by a god, then
+this may be admitted. But certainly this idea was not in the mind of
+Moses. He regarded the human form as being in the image of God, and for
+that reason always spoke of God as having that form. No one can read
+the Pentateuch without coming to the conclusion that the author supposed
+that man was created in the physical likeness of Deity. God said "Go to,
+let us go down." "God smelled a sweet savor;" "God repented him that he
+had made man;" "and God said;" and "walked;" and "talked;" and "rested."
+All these expressions are inconsistent with any other idea than that the
+person using them regarded God as having the form of man.
+
+As a matter of fact, it is impossible for a man to conceive of a
+personal God, other than as a being having the human form. No one can
+think of an infinite being having the form of a horse, or of a bird, or
+of any animal beneath man. It is one of the necessities of the mind to
+associate forms with intellectual capacities. The highest form of which
+we have any conception is man's, and consequently, his is the only form
+that we can find in imagination to give to a personal God, because all
+other forms are, in our minds, connected with lower intelligences.
+
+It is impossible to think of a personal God as a spirit without form.
+We can use these words, but they do not convey to the mind any real and
+tangible meaning. Every one who thinks of a personal God at all, thinks
+of him as having the human form. Take from God the idea of form; speak
+of him simply as an all pervading spirit--which means an all pervading
+something about which we know nothing--and Pantheism is the result.
+
+We are told that God made man; and the question naturally arises, how
+was this done? Was it by a process of "evolution," "development;" the
+"transmission of acquired habits;" the "survival of the fittest," or was
+the necessary amount of clay kneaded to the proper consistency, and then
+by the hands of God moulded into form? Modern science tells that man has
+been evolved, through countless epochs, from the lower forms; that he
+is the result of almost an infinite number of actions, reactions,
+experiences, states, forms, wants and adaptations. Did Moses intend
+to convey such a meaning, or did he believe that God took a sufficient
+amount of dust, made it the proper shape, and breathed into it the
+breath of life? Can any believer in the Bible give any reasonable
+account of this process of creation? Is it possible to imagine what
+was really done? Is there any theologian who will contend that man
+was created directly from the earth? Will he say that man was made
+substantially as he now is, with all his muscles properly developed for
+walking and speaking, and performing every variety of human action?
+That all his bones were formed as they now are, and all the relations of
+nerve, ligament, brain and motion as they are to-day?
+
+Looking back over the history of animal life from the lowest to
+the highest forms, we find that there has been a slow and gradual
+development; a certain but constant relation between want and
+production; between use and form. The Moner is said to be the simplest
+form of animal life that has yet been found. It has been described as
+"an organism without organs." It is a kind of structureless structure;
+a little mass of transparent jelly that can flatten itself out, and can
+expand and contract around its food. It can feed without a mouth, digest
+without a stomach, walk without feet, and reproduce itself by simple
+division. By taking this Moner as the commencement of animal life, or
+rather as the first animal, it is easy to follow the development of the
+organic structure through all the forms of life to man himself. In this
+way finally every muscle, bone and joint, every organ, form and function
+may be accounted for. In this way, and in this way only, can the
+existence of rudimentary organs be explained. Blot from the human mind
+the ideas of evolution, heredity, adaptation, and "the survival of
+the fittest," with which it has been enriched by Lamarck, Goethe,
+Darwin, Haeckel and Spencer, and all the facts in the history of animal
+life become utterly disconnected and meaningless.
+
+Shall we throw away all that has been discovered with regard to organic
+life, and in its place take the statements of one who lived in the
+rude morning of a barbaric day? Will anybody now contend that man was a
+direct and independent creation, and sustains and bears no relation to
+the animals below him? Belief upon this subject must be governed at
+last by evidence. Man cannot believe as he pleases. He can control his
+speech, and can say that he believes or disbelieves; but after all, his
+will cannot depress or raise the scales with which his reason finds the
+worth and weight of facts. If this is not so, investigation, evidence,
+judgment and reason are but empty words.
+
+I ask again, how were Adam and Eve created? In one account they are
+created male and female, and apparently at the same time. In the next
+account, Adam is made first, and Eve a long time afterwards, and from a
+part of the man. Did God simply by his creative fiat cause a rib slowly
+to expand, grow and divide into nerve, ligament, cartilage and flesh?
+How was the woman created from a rib? How was man created simply from
+dust? For my part, I cannot believe this statement.
+
+I may suffer for this in the world to come; and may, millions of years
+hence, sincerely wish that I had never investigated the subject, but had
+been content to take the ideas of the dead. I do not believe that any
+deity works in that way. So far as my experience goes, there is an
+unbroken procession of cause and effect. Each thing is a necessary link
+in an infinite chain; and I cannot conceive of this chain being broken
+even for one instant. Back of the simplest moner there is a cause,
+and back of that another, and so on, it seems to me, forever. In my
+philosophy I postulate neither beginning nor ending.
+
+If the Mosaic account is true, we know how long man has been upon this
+earth. If that account can be relied on, the first man was made about
+five thousand eight hundred and eighty-three years ago. Sixteen hundred
+and fifty-six years after the making of the first man, the inhabitants
+of the world, with the exception of eight people, were destroyed by
+a flood. This flood occurred only about four thousand two hundred and
+twenty-seven years ago. If this account is correct, at that time, only
+one kind of men existed. Noah and his family were certainly of the same
+blood. It therefore follows that all the differences we see between the
+various races of men have been caused in about four thousand years. If
+the account of the deluge is true, then since that event all the ancient
+kingdoms of the earth were founded, and their inhabitants passed through
+all the stages of savage, nomadic, barbaric and semi-civilized life;
+through the epochs of Stone, Bronze and Iron; established commerce,
+cultivated the arts, built cities, filled them with palaces and temples,
+invented writing, produced a literature and slowly fell to shapeless
+ruin. We must believe that all this has happened within a period of four
+thousand years.
+
+From representations found upon Egyptian granite made more than three
+thousand years ago, we know that the negro was as black, his lips as
+full, and his hair as closely curled then as now. If we know anything,
+we know that there was at that time substantially the same difference
+between the Egyptian and the Negro as now. If we know anything, we know
+that magnificent statues were made in Egypt four thousand years before
+our era--that is to say, about six thousand years ago. There was at
+the World's Exposition, in the Egyptian department, a statue of king
+Cephren, known to have been chiseled more than six thousand years ago.
+In other words, if the Mosaic account must be believed, this statue was
+made before the world. We also know, if we know anything, that men lived
+in v Europe with the hairy mammoth, the cave bear, the rhinoceros, and
+the hyena. Among the bones of these animals have been found the stone
+hatchets and flint arrows of our ancestors. In the caves where they
+lived have been discovered the remains of these animals that had been
+conquered, killed and devoured as food, hundreds of thousands of years
+ago.
+
+If these facts are true, Moses was mistaken. For my part, I have
+infinitely more confidence in the discoveries of to-day, than in the
+records of a barbarous people. It will not now do to say that man has
+existed upon this earth for only about six thousand years. One can
+hardly compute in his imagination the time necessary for man to emerge
+from the barbarous state, naked and helpless, surrounded by animals far
+more powerful than he, to progress and finally create the civilizations
+of India, Egypt and Athens. The distance from savagery to Shakespeare
+must be measured not by hundreds, but by millions of years.
+
+XIV. SUNDAY.
+
+"And on the seventh day God ended his work which he had made, and he
+rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had made. And God
+blessed the seventh day and sanctified it; because that in it he had
+rested from all his work which God created and made."
+
+The great work had been accomplished, the world, the sun, and moon, and
+all the hosts of heaven were finished; the earth was clothed in
+green, the seas were filled with life, the cattle wandered by the
+brooks--insects with painted wings were in the happy air, Adam and Eve
+were making each others acquaintance, and God was resting from his work.
+He was contemplating the accomplishments of a week.
+
+Because he rested on that day he sanctified it, and for that reason and
+for that alone, it was by the Jews considered a holy day. If he only
+rested on that day, there ought to be some account of what he did the
+following Monday. Did he rest on that day? What did he do after he
+got rested? Has he done anything in the way of creation since Saturday
+evening of the first week?
+
+It is now claimed by the "scientific" Christians that the "days" of
+creation were not ordinary days of twenty-four hours each, but immensely
+long periods of time. If they are right, then how long was the seventh
+day? Was that, too, a geologic period covering thousands of ages?
+That cannot be, because Adam and Eve were created the Saturday evening
+before, and according to the Bible that was about five thousand eight
+hundred and eighty-three years ago. I cannot state the time exactly,
+because there have been as many as one hundred and forty different
+opinions given by learned Biblical students as to the time between the
+creation of the world and the birth of Christ. We are quite certain,
+however, that, according to the Bible, it is not more than six thousand
+years since the creation of Adam. From this it would appear that the
+seventh day was not a geologic epoch, but was in fact a period of less
+than six thousand years, and probably of only twenty-four hours.
+
+The theologians who "answer" these things may take their choice. If they
+take the ground that the "days" were periods of twenty-four hours, then
+geology will force them to throw away the whole account. If, on the
+other hand, they admit that the days were vast "periods," then the
+sacredness of the Sabbath must be given up.
+
+There is found in the Bible no intimation that there was the least
+difference in the days. They are all spoken of in the same way. It may
+be replied that our translation is incorrect. If this is so, then only
+those who understand Hebrew, have had a revelation from God, and all the
+rest have been deceived.
+
+How is it possible to sanctify a space of time? Is rest holier than
+labor? If there is any difference between days, ought not that to be
+considered best in which the most useful labor has been performed?
+
+Of all the superstitions of mankind, this insanity about the "sacred
+Sabbath" is the most absurd. The idea of feeling it a duty to be solemn
+and sad one-seventh of the time! To think that we can please an infinite
+being by staying in some dark and sombre room, instead of walking in the
+perfumed fields! Why should God hate to see a man happy? Why should it
+excite his wrath to see a family in the woods, by some babbling stream,
+talking, laughing and loving? Nature works on that "sacred" day. The
+earth turns, the rivers run, the trees grow, buds burst into flower, and
+birds fill the air with song. Why should we look sad, and think about
+death, and hear about hell? Why should that day be filled with gloom
+instead of joy?
+
+A poor mechanic, working all the week in dust and noise, needs a day of
+rest and joy, a day to visit stream and wood--a day to live with wife
+and child; a day in which to laugh at care, and gather hope and strength
+for toils to come. And his weary wife needs a breath of sunny air, away
+from street and wall, amid the hills or by the margin of the sea, where
+she can sit and prattle with her babe, and fill with happy dreams the
+long, glad day.
+
+The "Sabbath" was born of asceticism, hatred of human joy, fanaticism,
+ignorance, egotism of priests and the cowardice of the people. This
+day, for thousands of years, has been dedicated to superstition, to the
+dissemination of mistakes, and the establishment of falsehoods. Every
+Freethinker, as a matter of duty, should violate this day. He should
+assert his independence, and do all within his power to wrest the
+Sabbath from the gloomy church and give it back to liberty and joy.
+Freethinkers should make the Sabbath a day of mirth and music; a day to
+spend with wife and child--a day of games, and books, and dreams--a day
+to put fresh flowers above our sleeping dead--a day of memory and hope,
+of love and rest.
+
+Why should we in this age of the world be dominated by the dead? Why
+should barbarian Jews who went down to death and dust three thousand
+years ago, control the living world? Why should we care for the
+superstition of men who began the Sabbath by paring their nails,
+"beginning at the fourth finger, then going to the second, then to the
+fifth, then to the third, and ending with the thumb?" How pleasing
+to God this must have been. The Jews were very careful of these nail
+parings. They who threw them upon the ground were wicked, because Satan
+used them to work evil upon the earth. They believed that upon the
+Sabbath, souls were allowed to leave purgatory and cool their
+burning souls in water. Fires were neither allowed to be kindled nor
+extinguished, and upon that day it was a sin to bind up wounds. "The
+lame might use a staff, but the blind could not." So strict was the
+Sabbath kept, that at one time "if a Jew on a journey was overtaken
+by the 'sacred day' in a wood, or on the highway, no matter where, nor
+under what circumstances, he must sit down," and there remain until the
+day was gone. "If he fell down in the dirt, there he was compelled to
+stay until the day was done." For violating the Sabbath, the punishment
+was death, for nothing short of the offender's blood could satisfy the
+wrath of God. There are, in the Old Testament, two reasons given for
+abstaining from labor on the Sabbath:--the resting of God, and the
+redemption of the Jews from the bondage of Egypt.
+
+Since the establishment of the Christian religion, the day has been
+changed, and Christians do not regard the day as holy upon which God
+actually rested, and which he sanctified. The Christian Sabbath, or
+the "Lord's day" was legally established by the murderer Constantine,
+because upon that day Christ was supposed to have risen from the dead.
+
+It is not easy to see where Christians got the right to disregard the
+direct command of God, to labor on the day he sanctified, and keep as
+sacred, a day upon which he commanded men to labor. The Sabbath of God
+is Saturday, and if any day is to be kept holy, that is the one, and not
+the Sunday of the Christian.
+
+Let us throw away these superstitions and take the higher, nobler
+ground, that every day should be rendered sacred by some loving act,
+by increasing the happinesss of man, giving birth to noble thoughts,
+putting in the path of toil some flower of joy, helping the unfortunate,
+lifting the fallen, dispelling gloom, destroying prejudice, defending
+the helpless and filling homes with light and love.
+
+XV. THE NECESSITY FOR A GOOD MEMORY.
+
+It must not be forgotten that there are two accounts of the creation
+in Genesis. The first account stops with the third verse of the second
+chapter. The chapters have been improperly divided. In the original
+Hebrew the Pentateuch was neither divided into chapters nor verses.
+There was not even any system of punctuation. It was written wholly with
+consonants, without vowels, and without any marks, dots, or lines to
+indicate them.
+
+These accounts are materially different, and both cannot be true. Let us
+see wherein they differ.
+
+The second account of the creation begins with the fourth verse of the
+second chapter, and is as follows:
+
+"These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they
+were created, in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the
+heavens.
+
+"And every plant of the field before it was in the earth, and every herb
+of the field before it grew; for the Lord God had not caused it to rain
+upon the earth, and there was not a man to till the ground.
+
+"But there went up a mist from the earth and watered the whole face of
+the ground.
+
+"And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed
+into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.
+
+"And the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden; and there he put
+the man whom he had formed.
+
+"And out of the ground made the Lord God to grow every tree that is
+pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the
+midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
+
+"And a river went out of Eden to water the garden; and from thence it
+was parted and became into four heads.
+
+"The name of the first is Pison; that is it which compasseth the whole
+land of Havilah, where there is gold.
+
+"And the gold of that land is good: there is bdellium and the onyx
+stone.
+
+"And the name of the second river is Gihon: the same is it that
+compasseth the whole land of Ethiopia.
+
+"And the name of the third river is Hiddekel; that is it which goeth
+toward the east of Assyria. And the fourth river is Euphrates.
+
+"And the Lord God took the man, and put him into the Garden of Eden to
+dress it and to keep it.
+
+"And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden
+thou mayest freely eat; But of the tree of the knowledge of good and
+evil, thou shalt not eat of it; for in the day that thou eatest thereof
+thou shalt surely die.
+
+"And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I
+will make him an helpmeet for him.
+
+"And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and
+every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would
+call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was
+the name thereof.
+
+"And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to
+every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found a helpmeet
+for him.
+
+"And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept;
+and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof;
+
+"And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman and
+brought her unto the man.
+
+"And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh; she
+shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of man.
+
+"Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave
+unto his wife; and they shall be one flesh.
+
+"And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed."
+
+Order of creation in the first account:
+
+1. The heaven and the earth, and light were made.
+
+2. The firmament was constructed and the waters divided.
+
+3. The waters gathered into seas--and then came dry land, grass, herbs
+and fruit trees.
+
+4. The sun and moon. He made the stars also.
+
+5. Fishes, fowls, and great whales.
+
+6. Beasts, cattle, every creeping thing, man and woman.
+
+Order of creation in the second account:
+
+1. The heavens and the earth.
+
+2. A mist went up from the earth, and watered the whole face of the
+ground.
+
+3. Created a man out of dust, by the name of Adam.
+
+4. Planted a garden eastward in Eden, and put the man in it.
+
+5. Created the beasts and fowls.
+
+6. Created a woman out of one of the man's ribs.
+
+In the second account, man was made _before_ the beasts and fowls. If
+this is true, the first account is false. And if the theologians of our
+time are correct in their view that the Mosaic day means thousands of
+ages, then, according to the second account, Adam existed millions of
+years before Eve was formed. He must have lived one Mosaic day before
+there were any trees, and another Mosaic day before the beasts and fowls
+were created. Will some kind clergymen tell us upon what kind of food
+Adam subsisted during these immense periods?
+
+In the second account a man is made, and the fact that he was without a
+helpmeet did not occur to the Lord God until a couple "of vast periods"
+afterwards. The Lord God suddenly coming to an appreciation of the
+situation said, "It is not good that the man should be alone. I will
+make him an helpmeet for him."
+
+Now, after concluding to make "an helpmeet" for Adam, what did the Lord
+God do? Did he at once proceed to make a woman? No. What did he do? He
+made the beasts, and tried to induce Adam to take one of them for "an
+helpmeet." If I am incorrect, read the following account, and tell me
+what it means:
+
+"And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I
+will make him an helpmeet for him.
+
+"And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and
+every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would
+call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was
+the name thereof.
+
+"And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to
+every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an helpmeet
+for him."
+
+Unless the Lord God was looking for an helpmeet for Adam, why did
+he cause the animals to pass before him? And why did he, after the
+menagerie had passed by, pathetically exclaim, "But for Adam there was
+not found an helpmeet for him"?
+
+It seems that Adam saw nothing that struck his fancy. The fairest ape,
+the sprightliest chimpanzee, the loveliest baboon, the most bewitching
+orangoutang, the most fascinating gorilla failed to touch with love's
+sweet pain, poor Adam's lonely heart. Let us rejoice that this was so.
+Had he fallen in love then, there never would have been a Freethinker in
+this world.
+
+Dr. Adam Clarke, speaking of this remarkable proceeding says:--"God
+caused the animals to pass before Adam to show him that no creature yet
+formed could make him a suitable companion; that Adam was convinced that
+none of these animals could be a suitable companion for him, and that
+therefore he must continue in a state that was not good (celibacy)
+unless he became a further debtor to the bounty of his maker, for among
+all the animals which he had formed, there was not a helpmeet for Adam."
+
+Upon this same subject, Dr. Scott informs us "that it was not conducive
+to the happiness of the man to remain without the consoling society,
+and endearment of tender friendship, nor consistent with the end of his
+creation to be without marriage by which the earth might be replenished
+and worshipers and servants raised up to render him praise and glory.
+Adam seems to have been vastly better acquainted by intuition or
+revelation with the distinct properties of every creature than the most
+sagacious observer since the fall of man.
+
+"Upon this review of the animals, not one was found in outward form his
+counterpart, nor one suited to engage his affections, participate in his
+enjoyments, or associate with him in the worship of God."
+
+Dr. Matthew Henry admits that "God brought all the animals together
+to see if there was a suitable match for Adam in any of the numerous
+families of the inferior creatures, but there was none. They were all
+looked over, but Adam could not be matched among them all. Therefore God
+created a new thing to be a helpmeet for him."
+
+Failing to satisfy Adam with any of the inferior animals, the Lord God
+caused a deep sleep to fall upon him, and while in this sleep took out
+one of Adam's ribs and "closed up the flesh instead thereof." And out of
+this rib, the Lord God made a woman, and brought her to the man.
+
+Was the Lord God compelled to take a part of the man because he had used
+up all the original "nothing" out of which the universe was made? Is it
+possible for any sane and intelligent man to believe this story? Must a
+man be born a second time before this account seems reasonable?
+
+Imagine the Lord God with a bone in his hand with which to start
+a woman, trying to make up his mind whether to make a blonde or a
+brunette!
+
+Just at this point it may be proper for me to warn all persons from
+laughing at or making light of, any stories found in the "Holy Bible."
+When you come to die, every laugh will be a thorn in your pillow. At
+that solemn moment, as you look back upon the records of your life, no
+matter how many men you may have wrecked and ruined; no matter how many
+women you have deceived and deserted, all that can be forgiven; but
+if you remember then that you have laughed at even one story in God's
+"sacred book" you will see through the gathering shadows of death the
+forked tongues of devils, and the leering eyes of fiends.
+
+These stories must be believed, or the work of regeneration can never be
+commenced. No matter how well you act your part, live as honestly as you
+may, clothe the naked, feed the hungry, divide your last farthing
+with the poor, and you are simply traveling the broad road that leads
+inevitably to eternal death, unless at the same time you implicitly
+believe the Bible to be the inspired word of God.
+
+Let me show you the result of unbelief. Let us suppose, for a moment,
+that we are at the Day of Judgment, listening to the trial of souls
+as they arrive. The Recording Secretary, or whoever does the
+cross-examining, says to a soul:
+
+Where are you from?
+
+I am from the Earth.
+
+What kind of a man were you?
+
+Well, I don't like to talk about myself. I suppose you can tell by
+looking at your books.
+
+No, sir. You must tell what kind of a man you were.
+
+Well, I was what you might call a first-rate fellow. I loved my wife and
+children. My home was my heaven. My fireside was a paradise to me. To
+sit there and see the lights and shadows fall upon the faces of those I
+loved, was to me a perfect joy.
+
+How did you treat your family?
+
+I never said an unkind word. I never caused my wife, nor one of my
+children, a moments pain.
+
+Did you pay your debts?
+
+I did not owe a dollar when I died, and left enough to pay my funeral
+expenses, and to keep the fierce wolf of want from the door of those I
+loved.
+
+Did you belong to any church?
+
+No, sir. They were too narrow, pinched and bigoted for me, I never
+thought that I could be very happy if other folks were damned.
+
+Did you believe in eternal punishment?
+
+Well, no. I always thought that God could get his revenge in far less
+time.
+
+Did you believe the rib story?
+
+Do you mean the Adam and Eve business?
+
+Yes! Did you believe that?
+
+To tell you the God's truth, that was just a little more than I could
+swallow.
+
+Away with him to hell!
+
+Next!
+
+Where are you from?
+
+I am from the world too.
+
+Did you belong to any church?
+
+Yes, sir, and to the Young Men's Christian Association besides.
+
+What was your business?
+
+Cashier in a Savings Bank.
+
+Did you ever run away with any money?
+
+Where I came from, a witness could not be compelled to criminate
+himself.
+
+The law is different here. Answer the question. Did you run away with
+any money?
+
+Yes, sir.
+
+How much?
+
+One hundred thousand dollars.
+
+Did you take anything else with you?
+
+Yes, sir.
+
+Well, what else?
+
+I took my neighbor's wife--we sang together in the choir.
+
+Did you have a wife and children of your own? Yes, sir.
+
+And you deserted them?
+
+Yes, sir, but such was my confidence in God that I believed he would
+take care of them.
+
+Have you heard of them since?
+
+No, sir.
+
+Did you believe in the rib story?
+
+Bless your soul, of course I did. A thousand times I regretted that
+there were no harder stories in the Bible, so that I could have shown my
+wealth of faith.
+
+Do you believe the rib story yet?
+
+Yes, with all my heart.
+
+Give him a harp!
+
+Well, as I was saying, God made a woman from Adam's rib. Of course, I do
+not know exactly how this was done, but when he got the woman finished,
+he presented her to Adam. He liked her, and they commenced house-keeping
+in the celebrated Garden of Eden.
+
+Must we, in order to be good, gentle and loving in our lives, believe
+that the creation of woman was a second thought? That Jehovah really
+endeavored to induce Adam to take one of the lower animals as an
+helpmeet for him? After all, is it not possible to live honest and
+courageous lives without believing these fables? It is said that from
+Mount Sinai God gave, amid thunderings and lightnings, ten commandments
+for the guidance of mankind; and yet among them is not found--"Thou
+shalt believe the Bible."
+
+XVI. THE GARDEN.
+
+In the first account we are told that God made man, male and female,
+and said to them "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth and
+subdue it."
+
+In the second account only the man is made, and he is put in a garden
+"to dress it and to keep it." He is not told to subdue the earth, but to
+dress and keep a garden.
+
+In the first account man is given every herb bearing seed upon the face
+of the earth and the fruit of every tree for food, and in the second,
+he is given only the fruit of all the trees in the garden with the
+exception "of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil" which was a
+deadly poison.
+
+There was issuing from this garden a river that was parted into four
+heads. The first of these, Pison, compassed the whole land of Havilah,
+the second, Gihon, that compassed the whole land of Ethiopia.
+
+The third, Heddekel, that flowed toward the east of Assyria, and the
+fourth, the Euphrates. Where are these four rivers now? The brave prow
+of discovery has visited every sea; the traveler has pressed with weary
+feet the soil of every clime; and yet there has been found no place from
+which four rivers sprang. The Euphrates still journeys to the gulf, but
+where are Pison, Gihon and the mighty Heddekel? Surely by going to the
+source of the Euphrates we ought to find either these three rivers or
+their ancient beds. Will some minister when he answers the "Mistakes of
+Moses" tell us where these rivers are or were? The maps of the world are
+incomplete without these mighty streams. We have discovered the sources
+of the Nile; the North Pole will soon be touched by an American; but
+these three rivers still rise in unknown hills, still flow through
+unknown lands, and empty still in unknown seas.
+
+The account of these four rivers is what the Rev. David Swing would call
+"a geographical poem." The orthodox clergy cover the whole affair with
+the blanket of allegory, while the "scientific" Christian folks talk
+about cataclysms, upheavals, earthquakes, and vast displacements of the
+earth's crust.
+
+The question, then arises, whether within the last six thousand years
+there have been such upheavals and displacements? Talk as you will about
+the vast "creative periods" that preceded the appearance of man; it
+is, according to the Bible, only about six thousand years since man was
+created. Moses gives us the generations of men from Adam until his day,
+and this account cannot be explained away by calling centuries, days.
+
+According to the second account of creation, these four rivers were
+made after the creation of man, and consequently they must have been
+obliterated by convulsions of Nature within six thousand years.
+
+Can we not account for these contradictions, absurdities, and falsehoods
+by simply saying that although the writer may have done his level best,
+he failed because he was limited in knowledge, led away by tradition,
+and depended too implicitly upon the correctness of his imagination?
+Is not such a course far more reasonable than to insist that all these
+things are true and must stand though every science shall fall to mental
+dust?
+
+Can any reason be given for not allowing man to eat of the fruit of the
+tree of knowledge? What kind of tree was that? If it is all an allegory,
+what truth is sought to be conveyed? Why should God object to that fruit
+being eaten by man? Why did he put it in the midst of the garden? There
+was certainly plenty of room outside. If he wished to keep man and this
+tree apart, why did he put them together? And why, after he had eaten,
+was he thrust out? The only answer that we have a right to give, is
+the one given in the Bible. "And the Lord God said, Behold the man has
+become as one of us to know good and evil; and now, lest he put forth
+his hand and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever:
+Therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the Garden of Eden, to till
+the ground from whence he was taken."
+
+Will some minister, some graduate of Andover, tell us what this means?
+Are we bound to believe it without knowing what the meaning is? If it is
+a revelation, what does it reveal? Did God object to education then, and
+does that account for the hostile attitude still assumed by theologians
+toward all scientific truth? Was there in the garden a tree of life, the
+eating of which would have rendered Adam and Eve immortal? Is it true,
+that after the Lord God drove them from the garden that he placed upon
+its Eastern side "Cherubim and a flaming sword which turned every way
+to keep the way of the tree of life?" Are the Cherubim and the flaming
+sword guarding that tree still, or was it destroyed, or did its rotting
+trunk, as the Rev. Robert Collyer suggests, "nourish a bank of violets"?
+
+What objection could God have had to the immortality of man? You
+see that after all, this sacred record, instead of assuring us of
+immortality, shows us only how we lost it. In this there is assuredly
+but little consolation.
+
+According to this story we have lost one Eden, but nowhere in the Mosaic
+books are we told how we may gain another. I know that the Christians
+tell us there is another, in which all true believers will finally be
+gathered, and enjoy the unspeakable happiness of seeing the unbelievers
+in hell; but they do not tell us where it is.
+
+Some commentators say that the Garden of Eden was in the third
+heaven--some in the fourth, others have located it in the moon, some
+in the air beyond the attraction of the earth, some on the earth, some
+under the earth, some inside the earth, some at the North Pole, others
+at the South, some in Tartary, some in China, some on the borders of the
+Ganges, some in the island of Ceylon, some in Armenia, some in Africa,
+some under the Equator, others in Mesopotamia, in Syria, Persia, Arabia,
+Babylon, Assyria, Palestine and Europe. Others have contended that
+it was invisible, that it was an allegory, and must be spiritually
+understood.
+
+But whether you understand these things or not, you must believe them.
+You may be laughed at in this world for insisting that God put Adam into
+a deep sleep and made a woman out of one of his ribs, but you will be
+crowned and glorified in the next. You will also have the pleasure of
+hearing the gentlemen howl there, who laughed at you here. While you
+will not be permitted to take any revenge, you will be allowed to
+smilingly express your entire acquiescence in the will of God. But where
+is the new Eden? No one knows. The one was lost, and the other has not
+been found.
+
+Is it true that man was once perfectly pure and innocent, and that
+he became degenerate by disobedience? No. The real truth is, and the
+history of man shows, that he has advanced. Events, like the pendulum of
+a clock have swung forward and back ward, but after all, man, like
+the hands, has gone steadily on. Man is growing grander. He is not
+degenerating. Nations and individuals fail and die, and make room
+for higher forms. The intellectual horizon of the world widens as the
+centuries pass. Ideals grow grander and purer; the difference between
+justice and mercy becomes less and less; liberty enlarges, and love
+intensifies as the years sweep on. The ages of force and fear, of
+cruelty and wrong, are behind us and the real Eden is beyond. It is said
+that a desire for knowledge lost us the Eden of the past; but whether
+that is true or not, it will certainly give us the Eden of the future.
+
+XVII. THE FALL.
+
+We are told that the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field,
+that he had a conversation with Eve, in which he gave his opinion about
+the effect of eating certain fruit; that he assured her it was good to
+eat, that it was pleasant to the eye, that it would make her wise; that
+she was induced to take some; that she persuaded her husband to try it;
+that God found it out, that he then cursed the snake; condemning it to
+crawl and eat the dust; that he multiplied the sorrows of Eve, cursed
+the ground for Adam's sake, started thistles and thorns, condemned man
+to eat the herb of the field in the sweat of his face, pronounced the
+curse of death, "Dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou return," made
+coats of skins for Adam and Eve, and drove them out of Eden.
+
+Who, and what was this serpent? Dr. Adam Clarke says:--"The serpent must
+have walked erect, for this is necessarily implied in his punishment.
+That he was endued with the gift of speech, also with reason. That these
+things were given to this creature. The woman no doubt having often seen
+him walking erect, and talking and reasoning, therefore she testifies
+no sort of surprise when he accosts her in the language related in
+the text. It therefore appears to me that a creature of the ape or
+orangoutang kind is here intended, and that Satan made use of this
+creature as the most proper instrument for the accomplishment of his
+murderous purposes against the life of the soul of man. Under this
+creature he lay hid, and by this creature he seduced our first parents.
+Such a creature answers to every part of the description in the text. It
+is evident from the structure of its limbs and its muscles that it might
+have been originally designed to walk erect, and that nothing else than
+the sovereign controlling power could induce it to put down hands--in
+every respect formed like those of man--and walk like those creatures
+whose claw-armed parts prove them to have been designed to walk on
+all fours. The stealthy cunning, and endless variety of the pranks
+and tricks of these creatures show them even now to be wiser and more
+intelligent than any other creature, man alone excepted. Being obliged
+to walk on all fours and gather their food from the ground, they are
+literally obliged to eat the dust; and though exceeding cunning,
+and careful in a variety of instances to separate that part which is
+wholesome and proper for food from that which is not so, in the article
+of cleanliness they are lost to all sense of propriety. Add to this
+their utter aversion to walk upright; it requires the utmost discipline
+to bring them to it, and scarcely anything offends or irritates them
+more than to be obliged to do it. Long observation of these animals
+enables me to state these facts. For earnest, attentive watching, and
+for chattering and babbling they (the ape) have no fellows in the animal
+world. Indeed, the ability and propensity to chatter, is all they have
+left of their original gift of speech, of which they appear to have been
+deprived at the fall as a part of their punishment."
+
+Here then is the "connecting link" between man and the lower creation.
+The serpent was simply an orang-outang that spoke Hebrew with the
+greatest ease, and had the outward appearance of a perfect gentleman,
+seductive in manner, plausible, polite, and most admirably calculated to
+deceive.
+
+It never did seem reasonable' to me that a long, cold and disgusting
+snake with an apple in his mouth, could deceive anybody; and I am glad,
+even at this late date to know that the something that persuaded Eve to
+taste the forbidden fruit was, at least, in the shape of a man.
+
+Dr. Henry does not agree with the zoological explanation of Mr. Clark,
+but insists that "it is certain that the devil that beguiled Eve is the
+old serpent, a malignant by creation, an angel of light, an immediate
+attendant upon God's throne, but by sin an apostate from his first
+state, and a rebel against God's crown and dignity. He who attacked
+our first parents was surely the prince of devils, the ring leader in
+rebellion. The devil chose to act his part in a serpent, because it is
+a specious creature, has a spotted, dappled skin, and then, went erect.
+Perhaps it was a flying serpent which seemed to come from on high, as a
+messenger from the upper world, one of the seraphim; because the serpent
+is a subtile creature. What Eve thought of this serpent speaking to her,
+we are not likely to tell, and, I believe, she herself did not know
+what to think of it. At first, perhaps, she supposed it might be a good
+angel, and yet afterwards might suspect something amiss. The person
+tempted was a woman, now alone, and at a distance from her husband,
+but near the forbidden tree. It was the devil's subtlety to assault the
+weaker vessel with his temptations, as we may suppose her inferior to
+Adam in knowledge, strength and presence of mind. Some think that Eve
+received the command not immediately from God, but at second hand from
+her husband, and might, therefore, be the more easily persuaded to
+discredit it. It was the policy of the devil to enter into discussion
+with her when she was alone. He took advantage by finding her near the
+forbidden tree. God permitted Satan to prevail over Eve, for wise and
+holy ends. Satan teaches men first to doubt, and then to deny. He makes
+skeptics first, and by degrees makes them atheists."
+
+We are compelled to admit that nothing could be more attractive to a
+woman than a snake walking erect, with a "spotted, dappled skin," unless
+it were a serpent with wings. Is it not humiliating to know that our
+ancestors believed these things? Why should we object to the Darwinian
+doctrine of descent after this?
+
+Our fathers thought it their duty to believe, thought it a sin to
+entertain the slightest doubt, and really supposed that their credulity
+was exceedingly, gratifying to God. To them, the story was entirely
+real. They could see the garden, hear the babble of waters, smell the
+perfume of flowers. They believed there was a tree where knowledge grew
+like plums or pears; and they could plainly see the serpent coiled amid
+its rustling leaves, coaxing Eve to violate the laws of God.
+
+Where did the serpent come from? On which of the six days was he
+created? Who made him? Is it possible that God would make a successful
+rival? He must have known that Adam and Eve would fall. He knew what
+a snake with a "spotted, dappled skin" could do with an inexperienced
+woman. Why did he not defend his children? He knew that if the serpent
+got into the garden, Adam and Eve would sin, that he would have to drive
+them out, that afterwards the world would be destroyed, and that he
+himself would die upon the cross.
+
+Again, I ask what and who was this serpent? He was not a man, for only
+one man had been made. He was not a woman. He was not a beast of the
+field, because "he was more subtile than any beast of the field which
+the Lord God had made." He was neither fish nor fowl, nor snake, because
+he had the power of speech, and did not crawl upon his belly until after
+he was cursed. Where did this serpent come from? Why was he not kept out
+of the garden? Why did not the Lord God take him by the tail and snap
+his head off? Why did he not put Adam and Eve on their guard about this
+serpent? They, of course, were not acquainted in the neighborhood, and
+knew nothing about the serpent's reputation for truth and veracity
+among his neighbors. Probably Adam saw him when he was looking for "an
+helpmeet" and gave him a name, but Eve had never met him before. She was
+not surprised to hear a serpent talk, as that was the first one she had
+ever met. Every thing being new to her, and her husband not being with
+her just at that moment, it need hardly excite our wonder that she
+tasted the fruit by way of experiment. Neither should we be surprised
+that when she saw it was good and pleasant to the eye, and a fruit to
+be desired to make one wise, she had the generosity to divide with her
+husband.
+
+Theologians have filled thousands of volumes with abuse of this serpent,
+but it seems that he told the exact truth. We are told that this serpent
+was, in fact, Satan, the greatest enemy of mankind, and that he entered
+the serpent, appearing to our first parents in its body. If this is
+so, why should the serpent have been cursed? Why should God curse the
+serpent for what had really been done by the devil? Did Satan remain
+in the body of the serpent, and in some mysterious manner share his
+punishment? Is it true that when we kill a snake we also destroy an evil
+spirit, or is there but one devil, and did he perish at the death of
+the first serpent? Is it on account of that transaction in the Garden
+of Eden, that all the descendants of Adam and Eve known as Jews and
+Christians hate serpents?
+
+Do you account for the snake-worship in Mexico, Africa and India in the
+same way?
+
+What was the form of the serpent when he entered the garden, and in what
+way did he move from place to place? Did he walk or fly? Certainly he
+did not crawl, because that mode of locomotion was pronounced upon him
+as a curse. Upon what food did he subsist before his conversation with
+Eve? We know that after that he lived upon dust, but what did he eat
+before? It may be that this is all poetic; and the truest poetry is,
+according to Touchstone, "the most feigning."
+
+In this same chapter we are informed that "unto Adam also and to his
+wife did the Lord God make coats of skins and clothed them." Where did
+the Lord God get those skins? He must have taken them from the animals;
+he was a butcher. Then he had to prepare them; he was a tanner. Then
+he made them into coats; he was a tailor. How did it happen that they
+needed coats of skins, when they had been perfectly comfortable in a
+nude condition? Did the "fall" produce a change in the climate?
+
+Is it really necessary to believe this account in order to be happy
+here, or hereafter? Does it tend to the elevation of the human race to
+speak of "God" as a butcher, tanner and tailor?
+
+And here, let me say once for all, that when I speak of God, I mean
+the being described by Moses; the Jehovah of the Jews. There may be for
+aught I know, somewhere in the unknown shoreless vast, some being whose
+dreams are constellations and within whose thought the infinite exists.
+About this being, if such an one exists, I have nothing to say. He has
+written no books, inspired no barbarians, required no worship, and has
+prepared no hell in which to burn the honest seeker after truth.
+
+When I speak of God, I mean that god who prevented man from putting
+forth his hand and taking also of the fruit of the tree of life that
+he might live forever; of that god who multiplied the agonies of woman,
+increased the weary toil of man, and in his anger drowned a world--of
+that god whose altars reeked with human blood, who butchered babes,
+violated maidens, enslaved men and filled the earth with cruelty and
+crime; of that god who made heaven for the few, hell for the many,
+and who will gloat forever and ever upon the writhings of the lost and
+damned.
+
+XVIII. DAMPNESS.
+
+"And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the
+earth, and daughters were born unto them.
+
+"That the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and
+they took them wives of all which they chose.
+
+"And the Lord said, My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that
+he also is flesh; yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years.
+
+"There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that
+when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare
+children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of
+renown.
+
+"And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and
+that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil
+continually.
+
+"And it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth, and it
+grieved him at his heart.
+
+"And the Lord said, I will destroy man whom I have created from the face
+of the earth; both man, and beast, and the creeping thing, and the fowls
+of the air; for it repenteth me that I have made them."
+
+From this account it seems that driving Adam and Eve out of Eden did not
+have the effect to improve them or their children. On the contrary, the
+world grew worse and worse. They were under the immediate control and
+government of God, and he from time to time made known his will; but in
+spite of this, man continued to increase in crime.
+
+Nothing in particular seems to have been done. Not a school was
+established. There was no written language. There was not a Bible in the
+world. The "scheme of salvation" was kept a profound secret. The five
+points of Calvinism had not been taught. Sunday schools had not been
+opened. In short, nothing had been done for the reformation of the
+world. God did not even keep his own sons at home, but allowed them to
+leave their abode in the firmament, and make love to the daughters
+of men. As a result of this, the world was filled with wickedness and
+giants to such an extent that God regretted "that he had made man on the
+earth, and it grieved him at his heart."
+
+Of course God knew when he made man, that he would afterwards regret
+it. He knew that the people would grow worse and worse until destruction
+would be the only remedy. He knew that he would have to kill all except
+Noah and his family, and it is hard to see why he did not make Noah and
+his family in the first place, and leave Adam and Eve in the original
+dust. He knew that they would be tempted, that he would have to drive
+them out of the garden to keep them from eating of the tree of life;
+that the whole thing would be a failure; that Satan would defeat his
+plan; that he could not reform the people; that his own sons would
+corrupt them, and that at last he would have to drown them all except
+Noah and his family. Why was the Garden of Eden planted? Why was the
+experiment made? Why were Adam and Eve exposed to the seductive arts of
+the serpent? Why did God wait until the cool of the day before looking
+after his children? Why was he not on hand in the morning?
+
+Why did he fill the world with his own children, knowing that he would
+have to destroy them? And why does this same God tell me how to raise my
+children when he had to drown his?
+
+It is a little curious that when God wished to reform the ante-diluvian
+world he said nothing about hell; that he had no revivals, no
+camp-meetings, no tracts, no outpourings of the Holy Ghost, no baptisms,
+no noon prayer meetings, and never mentioned the great doctrine of
+salvation by faith. If the orthodox creeds of the world are true, all
+those people went to hell without ever having heard that such a place
+existed. If eternal torment is a fact, surely these miserable wretches
+ought to have been warned. They were threatened only with water when
+they were in fact doomed to eternal fire!
+
+Is it not strange that God said nothing to Adam and Eve about a future
+life; that he should have kept these "infinite verities" to himself and
+allowed millions to live and die without the hope of heaven, or the fear
+of hell?
+
+It may be that hell was not made at that time. In the six days of
+creation nothing is said about the construction of a bottomless pit, and
+the serpent himself did not make his appearance until after the creation
+of man and woman. Perhaps he was made on the first Sunday, and from that
+fact came, it may be, the old couplet,
+
+ "And Satan still some mischief finds
+ For idle hands to do."
+
+The sacred historian failed also to tell us when the cherubim and the
+flaming sword were made, and said nothing about two of the persons
+composing the Trinity. It certainly would have been an easy thing to
+enlighten Adam and his immediate descendants. The world was then only
+about fifteen hundred and thirty-six years old, and only about three
+or four generations of men had lived. Adam had been dead only about six
+hundred and six years, and some of his grandchildren must, at that time,
+have been alive and well.
+
+It is hard to see why God did not civilize these people. He certainly
+had the power to use, and the wisdom to devise the proper means. What
+right has a god to fill a world with fiends? Can there be goodness in
+this? Why should he make experiments that he knows must fail? Is there
+wisdom in this? And what right has a man to charge an infinite being
+with wickedness and folly?
+
+According to Moses, God made up his mind not only to destroy the people,
+but the beasts and the creeping things, and the fowls of the air. What
+had the beasts, and the creeping things, and the birds done to excite
+the anger of God? Why did he repent having made them? Will some
+Christian give us an explanation of this matter? No good man will
+inflict unnecessary pain upon a beast; how then can we worship a god who
+cares nothing for the agonies of the dumb creatures that he made?
+
+Why did he make animals that he knew he would destroy? Does God delight
+in causing pain? He had the power to make the beasts, and fowls, and
+creeping things in his own good time and way, and it is to be presumed
+that he made them according to his wish. Why should he destroy them?
+They had committed no sin. They had eaten no forbidden fruit, made no
+aprons, nor tried to reach the tree of life. Yet this god, in blind
+unreasoning wrath destroyed "all flesh wherein was the breath of life,
+and every living thing beneath the sky, and every substance wherein was
+life that he had made."
+
+Jehovah having made up his mind to drown the world, told Noah to make
+an Ark of gopher wood three hundred cubits long, fifty cubits wide and
+thirty cubits high. A cubit is twenty-two inches; so that the ark was
+five hundred and fifty feet long, ninety-one feet and eight inches wide
+and fifty-five feet high. This ark was divided into three stories, and
+had on top, one window twenty-two inches square. Ventilation must have
+been one of Jehovah's hobbies. Think of a ship larger than the Great
+Eastern with only one window, and that but twenty-two inches square!
+
+The ark also had one door set in the side thereof that shut from the
+outside. As soon as this ship was finished, and properly victualed, Noah
+received seven days notice to get the animals in the ark.
+
+It is claimed by some of the scientific theologians that the flood was
+partial, that the waters covered only a small portion of the world, and
+that consequently only a few animals were in the ark. It is impossible
+to conceive of language that can more clearly convey the idea of a
+universal flood than that found in the inspired account. If the flood
+was only partial, why did God say he would "destroy all flesh wherein
+is the breath of life from under heaven, and that every thing that is
+in the earth shall die"? Why did he say "I will destroy man whom I have
+created from the face of the earth, both man and beast, and the creeping
+thing and the fowls of the air"? Why did he say "And every living
+substance that I have made will I destroy from off the face of the
+earth"? Would a partial, local flood have fulfilled these threats?
+
+Nothing can be clearer than that the writer of this account intended to
+convey, and did convey the idea that the flood was universal. Why should
+Christians try to deprive God of the glory of having wrought the most
+stupendous of miracles? Is it possible that the Infinite could not
+overwhelm with waves this atom called the earth? Do you doubt his power,
+his wisdom or his justice?
+
+Believers in miracles should not endeavor to explain them. There is but
+one way to explain anything, and that is to account for it by natural
+agencies. The moment you explain a miracle, it disappears. You should
+depend not upon explanation, but assertion. You should not be driven
+from the field because the miracle is shown to be unreasonable. You
+should reply that all miracles are unreasonable. Neither should you be
+in the least disheartened if it is shown to be impossible. The possible
+is not miraculous. You should take the ground that if miracles were
+reasonable, and possible, there would be no reward paid for believing
+them. The Christian has the goodness to believe, while the sinner asks
+for evidence. It is enough for God to work miracles without being called
+upon to substantiate them for the benefit of unbelievers.
+
+Only a few years ago, the Christians believed implicitly in the literal
+truth of every miracle recorded in the Bible. Whoever tried to explain
+them in some natural way, was looked upon as an infidel in disguise,
+but now he is regarded as a benefactor. The credulity of the church is
+decreasing, and the most marvelous miracles are now either "explained,"
+or allowed to take refuge behind the mistakes of the translators, or
+hide in the drapery of allegory.
+
+In the sixth chapter, Noah is ordered to take "of every living thing
+of all flesh, two of every sort into the ark--male and female." In the
+seventh chapter the order is changed, and Noah is commanded, according
+to the Protestant Bible, as follows: "Of every clean beast thou shalt
+take to thee by sevens, the male and his female, and of beasts that are
+not clean, by two, the male and his female. Of fowls also of the air by
+sevens, the male and the female."
+
+According to the Catholic Bible, Noah was commanded---"Of all clean
+beasts take seven and seven, the male and the female. But of the beasts
+that are unclean two and two, the male and the female. Of the fowls also
+of the air seven and seven, the male and the female."
+
+For the purpose of belittling this miracle, many commentators have
+taken the ground that Noah was not ordered to take seven males and seven
+females of each kind of clean beasts, but seven in all. Many Christians
+contend that only seven clean beasts of each kind were taken into the
+ark--three and a half of each sex.
+
+If the account in the seventh chapter means anything, it means _first_,
+that of each kind of clean beasts, fourteen were to be taken, seven
+males, and seven females; _second_, that of unclean beasts should be
+taken, two of each kind, one of each sex, and _third_, that he should
+take of every kind of fowls, seven of each sex.
+
+It is equally clear that the command in the 19th and 20th verses of the
+6th chapter, is to take two of each sort, one male and one female. And
+this agrees exactly with the account in the 7th, 8th, 9th, 14th, 15th,
+and 16th verses of the 7th chapter.
+
+The next question is, how many beasts, fowls and creeping things did
+Noah take into the ark?
+
+There are now known and classified at least twelve thousand five hundred
+species of birds. There are still vast territories in China, South
+America, and Africa unknown to the ornithologist.
+
+Of the birds, Noah took fourteen of each species, according to the 3d
+verse of the 7th chapter, "Of fowls also of the air by sevens, the male
+and the female," making a total of 175,000 birds.
+
+And right here allow me to ask a question. If the flood was simply a
+partial flood, why were birds taken into the ark? It seems to me that
+most birds, attending strictly to business, might avoid a partial flood.
+
+There are at least sixteen hundred and fifty-eight kinds of beasts. Let
+us suppose that twenty-five of these are clean. Of the clean, fourteen
+of each kind--seven of each sex--were taken. These amount to 350. Of
+the unclean--two of each kind, amounting to 3,266. There are some six
+hundred and fifty species of reptiles. Two of each kind amount to 1,300.
+And lastly, there are of insects including the creeping things, at least
+one million species, so that Noah and his folks had to get of these into
+the ark about 2,000,000.
+
+Animalculæ have not been taken into consideration. There are probably
+many hundreds of thousands of species; many of them invisible; and
+yet Noah had to pick them out by pairs. Very few people have any just
+conception of the trouble Noah had.
+
+We know that there are many animals on this continent not found in the
+Old World. These must have been carried from here to the ark, and then
+brought back afterwards. Were the peccary, armadillo, ant-eater, sloth,
+agouti, vampire-bat, marmoset, howling and prehensile-tailed monkey, the
+raccoon and muskrat carried by the angels from America to Asia? How did
+they get there? Did the polar bear leave his field of ice and journey
+toward the tropics? How did he know where the ark was? Did the kangaroo
+swim or jump from Australia to Asia? Did the giraffe, hippopotamus,
+antelope and orang-outang journey from Africa in search of the ark? Can
+absurdities go farther than this?
+
+What had these animals to eat while on the journey? What did they eat
+while in the ark? What did they drink? When the rain came, of course
+the rivers ran to the seas, and these seas rose and finally covered the
+world. The waters of the seas, mingled with those of the flood, would
+make all salt. It has been calculated that it required, to drown the
+world, about eight times as much water as was in all the seas. To find
+how salt the waters of the flood must have been, take eight quarts of
+fresh water, and add one quart from the sea. Such water would create
+instead of allaying thirst. Noah had to take in his ark fresh water for
+all his beasts, birds and living things. He had to take the proper food
+for all. How long was he in the ark? Three hundred and seventy-seven
+days! Think of the food necessary for the monsters of the ante-diluvian
+world!
+
+Eight persons did all the work. They attended to the wants of 175,000
+birds, 3,616 beasts, 1,300 reptiles, and 2,000,000 insects, saying
+nothing of countless animalculæ.
+
+Well, after they all got in, Noah pulled down the window, God shut the
+door, and the rain commenced.
+
+How long did it rain?
+
+Forty days.
+
+How deep did the water get?
+
+About five miles and a half.
+
+How much did it rain a day?
+
+Enough to cover the whole world to a depth of about seven hundred and
+forty-two feet.
+
+Some Christians say that the fountains of the great deep were broken up.
+Will they be kind enough to tell us what the fountains of the great deep
+are? Others say that God had vast stores of water in the center of the
+earth that he used on that occasion. How did these waters happen to run
+up hill?
+
+Gentlemen, allow me to tell you once more that you must not try to
+explain these things. Your efforts in that direction do no good, because
+your explanations are harder to believe than the miracle itself. Take my
+advice, stick to assertion, and let explanation alone.
+
+Then, as now, Dhawalagiri lifted its crown of snow twenty-nine thousand
+feet above the level of the sea, and on the cloudless cliffs of
+Chimborazo then, as now, sat the condor; and yet the waters rising seven
+hundred and twenty-six feet a day--thirty feet an hour, six inches
+a minute,--rose over the hills, over the volcanoes, filled the vast
+craters, extinguished all the fires, rose above every mountain peak
+until the vast world was but one shoreless sea covered with the
+innumerable dead.
+
+Was this the work of the most merciful God, the father of us all? If
+there is a God, can there be the slightest danger of incurring his
+displeasure by doubting even in a reverential way, the truth of such a
+cruel lie? If we think that God is kinder than he really is, will our
+poor souls be burned for that?
+
+How many trees can live under miles of water for a year? What became of
+the soil washed, scattered, dissolved, and covered with the _debris_ of
+a world? How were the tender plants and herbs preserved? How were the
+animals preserved after leaving the ark? There was no grass except such
+as had been submerged for a year. There were no animals to be devoured
+by the carnivorous beasts. What became of the birds that fed on worms
+and insects? What became of the birds that devoured other birds?
+
+It must be remembered that the pressure of the water when at the highest
+point--say twenty-nine thousand feet, would have been about eight
+hundred tons on each square foot. Such a pressure certainly would have
+destroyed nearly every vestige of vegetable life, so that when the
+animals came out of the ark, there was not a mouthful of food in the
+wide world. How were they supported until the world was again clothed
+with grass? How were those animals taken care of that subsisted on
+others? Where did the bees get honey, and the ants seeds? There was not
+a creeping thing upon the whole earth; not a breathing creature beneath
+the whole heavens; not a living substance. Where did the tenants of the
+ark get food?
+
+There is but one answer, if the story is true. The food necessary
+not only during the year of the flood, but sufficient for many months
+afterwards, must have been stored in the ark.
+
+There is probably not an animal in the world that will not, in a year,
+eat and drink ten times its weight. Noah must have provided food and
+water for a year while in the ark, and food for at least six months
+after they got ashore. It must have required for a pair of elephants,
+about one hundred and fifty tons of food and water. A couple of mammoths
+would have required about twice that amount. Of course there were other
+monsters that lived on trees; and in a year would have devoured quite a
+forest.
+
+How could eight persons have distributed this food, even if the ark had
+been large enough to hold it? How was the ark kept clean? We know how it
+was ventilated; but what was done with the filth? How were the animals
+watered? How were some portions of the ark heated for animals from the
+tropics, and others kept cool for the polar bears? How did the animals
+get back to their respective countries? Some had to creep back about
+six thousand miles, and they could only go a few feet a day. Some of the
+creeping things must have started for the ark just as soon as they were
+made, and kept up a steady jog for sixteen hundred years. Think of
+a couple of the slowest snails leaving a point opposite the ark and
+starting for the plains of Shinar, a distance of twelve thousand miles.
+Going at the rate of a mile a month, it would take them a thousand
+years. How did they get there? Polar bears must have gone several
+thousand miles, and so sudden a change in climate must have been
+exceedingly trying upon their health. How did they know the way to go?
+Of course, all the polar bears did not go. Only two were required. Who
+selected these?
+
+Two sloths had to make the journey from South America. These creatures
+cannot travel to exceed three rods a day. At this rate, they would make
+a mile in about a hundred days. They must have gone about six thousand
+five hundred miles, to reach the ark. Supposing them to have traveled by
+a reasonably direct route, in order to complete the journey before Noah
+hauled in the plank, they must have started several years before the
+world was created. We must also consider that these sloths had to board
+themselves on the way, and that most of their time had to be taken up
+getting food and water. It is exceedingly doubtful whether a sloth could
+travel six thousand miles and board himself in less than three thousand
+years.
+
+Volumes might be written upon the infinite absurdity of this most
+incredible, wicked and foolish of all the fables contained in that
+repository of the impossible, called the Bible. To me it is a matter
+of amazement, that it ever was for a moment believed by any intelligent
+human being.
+
+Dr. Adam Clarke says that "the animals were brought to the ark by the
+power of God, and their enmities were so removed or suspended, that the
+lion could dwell peaceably with the lamb, and the wolf sleep happily by
+the side of the kid. There is no positive evidence that animal food was
+ever used before the flood. Noah had the first grant of this kind."
+
+Dr. Scott remarks, "There seems to have been a very extraordinary
+miracle, perhaps by the ministration of angels, in bringing two of every
+species to Noah, and rendering them submissive, and peaceful with each
+other. Yet it seems not to have made any impression upon the hardened
+spectators. The suspension of the ferocity of the savage beasts during
+their continuance in the ark, is generally considered as an apt figure
+of the change that takes place in the disposition of sinners when they
+enter the true church of Christ."
+
+He believed the deluge to have been universal. In his day science had
+not demonstrated the absurdity of this belief, and he was not compelled
+to resort to some theory not found in the Bible. He insisted that "by
+some vast convulsion, the very bowels of the earth were forced upwards,
+and rain poured down in cataracts and water-spouts, with no intermission
+for forty days and nights, and until in every place a universal deluge
+was effected.
+
+"The presence of God was the only comfort of Noah in his dreary
+confinement, and in witnessing the dire devastation of the earth and its
+inhabitants, and especially of the human species--of his companions, his
+neighbors, his relatives--all those to whom he had preached, for whom he
+had prayed and over whom he had wept, and even of many who had helped to
+build the ark.
+
+"It seems that by a peculiar providential interposition, no animal of
+any sort died, although they had been shut up in the ark above a year;
+and it does not appear that there had been any increase of them during
+that time.
+
+"The Ark was flat-bottomed--square at each end--roofed like a house so
+that it terminated at the top in the breadth of a cubit. It was divided
+into many little cabins for its intended inhabitants. Pitched within and
+without to keep it tight and sweet, and lighted from the upper part.
+But it must, at first sight, be evident that so large a vessel, thus
+constructed, with so few persons on board, was utterly unfitted to
+weather out the deluge, except it was under the immediate guidance and
+protection of the Almighty."
+
+Dr. Henry furnished the Christian world with the following:--
+
+"As our bodies have in them the humors which, when God pleases, become
+the springs and seeds of mortal disease, so the earth had, in its
+bowels, those waters which, at God's command, sprung up and flooded it.
+
+"God made the world in six days, but he was forty days in destroying it,
+because he is slow to anger.
+
+"The hostilities between the animals in the ark ceased, and ravenous
+creatures became mild and manageable, so that the wolf lay down with the
+lamb, and the lion ate straw like an ox.
+
+"God shut the door of the ark to secure Noah and to keep him safe, and
+because it was necessary that the door should be shut very close lest
+the water should break in and sink the ark, and very fast lest others
+might break it down.
+
+"The waters rose so high that not only the low flat countries were
+deluged, but to make sure work and that none might escape, the tops of
+the highest mountains were overflowed fifteen cubits. That is, seven
+and a half yards, so that salvation was not hoped for from hills or
+mountains.
+
+"Perhaps some of the people got to the top of the ark, and hoped to
+shift for themselves there. But either they perished there for want of
+food, or the dashing rain washed them off the top. Others, it may be,
+hoped to prevail with Noah for admission into the ark, and plead old
+acquaintance.
+
+"'Have we not eaten and drank in thy presence? Hast thou not preached in
+our streets?' 'Yea,' said Noah, 'many a time, but to little purpose. I
+called but ye refused; and now it is not in my power to help you. God
+has shut the door and I cannot open it.'
+
+"We may suppose that some of those who perished in the deluge had
+themselves assisted Noah, or were employed by him in building the ark.
+
+"Hitherto, man had been confined to feed only upon the products of the
+earth. Fruits, herbs and roots, and all sorts of greens, and milk, which
+was the first grant; but the flood having perhaps washed away much
+of the fruits of the earth, and rendered them much less pleasant and
+nourishing, God enlarged the grant and allowed him to eat flesh, which
+perhaps man never thought of until now, that God directed him to it. Nor
+had he any more desire to it than the sheep has to suck blood like the
+wolf. But now, man is allowed to feed upon flesh as freely and safely as
+upon the green herb."
+
+Such was the debasing influence of a belief in the literal truth of the
+Bible upon these men, that their commentaries are filled with passages
+utterly devoid of common sense.
+
+Dr. Clarke speaking of the mammoth says:
+
+"This animal, an astonishing proof of God's power, he seems to have
+produced merely to show what he could do. And after suffering a few of
+them to propagate, he extinguished the race by a merciful providence,
+that they might not destroy both man and beast.
+
+"We are told that it would have been much easier for God to destroy all
+the people and make new ones, but he would not want to waste anything
+and no power or skill should be lavished where no necessity exists.
+
+"The animals were brought to the ark by the power of God."
+
+Again gentlemen, let me warn you of the danger of trying to explain a
+miracle. Let it alone. Say that you do not understand it, and do not
+expect to until taught in the schools of the New Jerusalem. The more
+reasons you give, the more unreasonable the miracle will appear. Through
+what you say in defence, people are led to think, and as soon as they
+really think, the miracle is thrown away.
+
+Among the most ignorant nations you will find the most wonders, among
+the most enlightened, the least. It is with individuals, the same as
+with nations. Ignorance believes, Intelligence examines and explains.
+
+For about seven months the ark, with its cargo of men, animals and
+insects, tossed and wandered without rudder or sail upon a boundless
+sea. At last it grounded on the mountains of Ararat; and about three
+months afterward the tops of the mountains became visible. It must not
+be forgotten that the mountain where the ark is supposed to have first
+touched bottom, was about seventeen thousand feet high. How were the
+animals from the tropics kept warm? When the waters were abated it would
+be intensely cold at a point seventeen thousand feet above the level of
+the sea. May be there were stoves, furnaces, fire places and steam coils
+in the ark, but they are not mentioned in the inspired narrative. How
+were the animals kept from freezing? It will not do to say that Ararat
+was not very high after all.
+
+If you will read the fourth and fifth verses of the eight chapter you
+will see that although "the ark rested in the seventh month, on the
+seventeenth day of the month, upon the mountains of Ararat, it was not
+until the first day of the tenth month that the tops of the mountains
+could be seen." From this it would seem that the ark must have rested
+upon about the highest peak in that country. Noah waited forty days
+more, and then for the first time opened the window and took a breath
+of fresh air. He then sent out a raven that did not return, then a dove
+that returned. He then waited seven days and sent forth a dove that
+returned not. From this he knew that the waters were abated. Is it
+possible that he could not see whether the waters had gone? Is it
+possible to conceive of a more perfectly childish way of ascertaining
+whether the earth was dry?
+
+At last Noah "removed the covering of the ark, and looked and behold the
+face of the ground was dry," and thereupon God told him to disembark. In
+his gratitude Noah built an altar and took of every clean beast and of
+every clean fowl, and offered burnt offerings. And the Lord smelled a
+sweet savor and said in his heart that he would not any more curse the
+ground for man's sake. For saying this in his heart the Lord gives as a
+reason, not that man is, or will be good, but because "the imagination
+of man's heart is evil from his youth." God destroyed man because "the
+wickedness of man was great in the earth, and _because every imagination
+of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually_." And he
+promised for the same reason not to destroy him again. Will some
+gentleman skilled in theology give us an explanation?
+
+After God had smelled the sweet savor of sacrifice, he seems to have
+changed his idea as to the proper diet for man. When Adam and Eve were
+created they were allowed to eat herbs bearing seed, and the fruit of
+trees. When they were turned out of Eden, God said to them "Thou shalt
+eat the herb of the field." In the first chapter of Genesis the "green
+herb" was given for food to the beasts, fowls and creeping things. Upon
+being expelled from the garden, Adam and Eve, as to their food, were
+put upon an equality with the lower animals. According to this, the
+ante-diluvians were vegetarians. This may account for their wickedness
+and longevity.
+
+After Noah sacrificed, and God smelled the sweet savor; he said--"Every
+moving thing that liveth shall be meat for you, even as the green herb
+have I given you all things." Afterward this same God changed his mind
+again, and divided the beasts and birds into clean and unclean, and made
+it a crime for man to eat the unclean. Probably food was so scarce when
+Noah was let out of the ark that Jehovah generously allowed him to eat
+anything and everything he could find.
+
+According to the account, God then made a covenant with Noah to the
+effect that he would not again destroy the world with a flood, and as
+the attesting witness of this contract, a rainbow was set in the cloud.
+This bow was placed in the sky so that it might perpetually remind God
+of his promise and covenant. Without this visible witness and reminder,
+it would seem that Jehovah was liable to forget the contract, and drown
+the world again. Did the rainbow originate in this way? Did God put it
+in the cloud simply to keep his agreement in his memory?
+
+For me it is impossible to believe the story of the deluge. It seems so
+cruel, so barbaric, so crude in detail, so absurd in all its parts,
+and so contrary to all we know of law, that even credulity itself is
+shocked.
+
+Many nations have preserved accounts of a deluge in which all people,
+except a family or two, were destroyed. Babylon was certainly a city
+before Jerusalem was founded. Egypt was in the height of her power when
+there were only seventy Jews in the world, and India had a literature
+before the name of Jehovah had passed the lips of superstition. An
+account of a general deluge "was discovered by George Smith, translated
+from another account that was written about two thousand years before
+Christ." Of course it is impossible to tell how long the story had
+lived in the memory of tradition before it was reduced to writing by the
+Babylonians. According to this account, which is, without doubt, much
+older than the one given by Moses, Tamzi built a ship at the command of
+the god Hea, and put in it his family and the beasts of the field. He
+pitched the ship inside and outside with bitumen, and as soon as it was
+finished, there came a flood of rain and "destroyed all life from the
+face of the whole earth. On the seventh day there was a calm, and the
+ship stranded on the mountain Nizir." Tamzi waited for seven days more,
+and then let out a dove. Afterwards, he let out a swallow, and that, as
+well as the dove returned. Then he let out a raven, and as that did not
+return, he concluded that the water had dried away, and thereupon
+left the ship. Then he made an offering to god, or the gods, and "Hea
+interceded with Bel," so that the earth might never again be drowned.
+
+This is the Babylonian story, told without the contradictions of the
+original. For in that, it seems, there are two accounts, as well as
+in the Bible. Is it not a strange coincidence that there should be
+contradictory accounts mingled in both the Babylonian and Jewish
+stories?
+
+In the Bible there are two accounts. In one account, Noah was to take
+two of all beasts, birds, and creeping things into the ark, while in the
+other, he was commanded to take of clean beasts, and all birds by
+sevens of each kind. According to one account, the flood only lasted
+one hundred and fifty days--as related in the third verse of the eighth
+chapter; while the other account fixes the time at three hundred and
+seventy-seven days. Both of these accounts cannot be true. Yet in order
+to be saved, it is not sufficient to believe one of them--you must
+believe both.
+
+Among the Egyptians there was a story to the effect that the great god
+Ra became utterly maddened with the people, and deliberately made up his
+mind that he would exterminate mankind. Thereupon he began to destroy,
+and continued in the terrible work until blood flowed in streams, when
+suddenly he ceased, and took an oath that he would not again destroy the
+human race. This myth was probably thousands of years old when Moses was
+born.
+
+So, in India, there was a fable about the flood. A fish warned Manu
+that a flood was coming. Manu built a "box" and the fish towed it to a
+mountain and saved all hands.
+
+The same kind of stories were told in Greece, and among our own Indian
+tribes. At one time the Christian pointed to the fact that many nations
+told of a flood, as evidence of the truth of the Mosaic account; but
+now, it having been shown that other accounts are much older, and
+equally reasonable, that argument has ceased to be of any great value.
+
+It is probable that all these accounts had a common origin. They were
+likely born of something in nature visible to all nations. The idea of a
+universal flood, produced by a god to drown the world on account of
+the sins of the people, is infinitely absurd. The solution of all these
+stories has been supposed to be, the existence of partial floods in most
+countries; and for a long time this solution was satisfactory. But the
+fact that these stories are greatly alike, that only one man is warned,
+that only one family is saved, that a boat is built, that birds are sent
+out to find if the water had abated, tend to show that they had a common
+origin. Admitting that there were severe floods in all countries; it
+certainly cannot follow that in each instance only one family would be
+saved, or that the same story would in each instance be told. It may be
+urged that the natural tendency of man to exaggerate calamities, might
+account for this agreement in all the accounts, and it must be admitted
+that there is some force in the suggestion. I believe, though, that the
+real origin of all these myths is the same, and that it was originally
+an effort to account for the sun, moon and stars. The sun and moon
+were the man and wife, or the god and goddess, and the stars were their
+children. From a celestial myth, it became a terrestrial one; the air,
+or ether-ocean became a flood, produced by rain, and the sun moon and
+stars became man, woman and children.
+
+In the original story, the mountain was the place where in the far east
+the sky was supposed to touch the earth, and it was there that the ship
+containing the celestial passengers finally rested from its voyage. But
+whatever may be the origin of the stories of the flood, whether told
+first by Hindu, Babylonian or Hebrew, we may rest perfectly assured that
+they are all equally false.
+
+XIX. BACCHUS AND BABEL.
+
+As soon as Noah had disembarked, he proceeded to plant a vineyard, and
+began to be a husbandman; and when the grapes were ripe he made wine and
+drank of it to excess; cursed his grandson, blessed Shem and Japheth, and
+after that lived for three hundred and fifty years. What he did during
+these three hundred and fifty years, we are not told. We never hear of
+him again. For three hundred and fifty years he lived among his sons,
+and daughters, and their descendants. He must have been a venerable man.
+He was the man to whom God had made known his intention of drowning the
+world. By his efforts, the human race had been saved. He must have been
+acquainted with Methuselah for six hundred years, and Methuselah was
+about two hundred and forty years old, when Adam died. Noah must himself
+have known the history of mankind, and must have been an object of
+almost infinite interest; and yet for three hundred and fifty years he
+is neither directly nor indirectly mentioned. When Noah died, Abraham
+must have been more than fifty years old; and Shem, the son of Noah,
+lived for several hundred years after the death of Abraham; and yet he
+is never mentioned. Noah when he died, was the oldest man in the whole
+world by about five hundred years; and everybody living at the time of
+his death knew that they were indebted to him, and yet no account is
+given of his burial. No monument was raised to mark the spot. This,
+however, is no more wonderful than the fact that no account is given of
+the death of Adam or of Eve, nor of the place of their burial. This may
+all be accounted for by the fact that the language of man was confounded
+at the building of the tower of Babel, whereby all tradition may have
+been lost, so that even the sons of Noah could not give an account of
+their voyage in the ark; and, consequently, some one had to be directly
+inspired to tell the story, after new languages had been formed.
+
+It has always been a mystery to me how Adam, Eve, and the serpent were
+taught the same language. Where did they get it? We know now, that
+it requires a great number of years to form a language; that it is of
+exceedingly slow growth. We also know that by language, man conveys to
+his fellows the impressions made upon him by what he sees, hears, smells
+and touches. We know that the language of the savage consists of a few
+sounds, capable of expressing only a few ideas or states of the
+mind, such as love, desire, fear, hatred, aversion and contempt. Many
+centuries are required to produce a language capable of expressing
+complex ideas. It does not seem to me that ideas can be manufactured by
+a deity and put in the brain of man. These ideas must be the result of
+observation and experience.
+
+Does anybody believe that God directly taught a language to Adam and
+Eve, or that he so made them that they, by intuition spoke Hebrew, or
+some language capable of conveying to each other their thoughts? How did
+the serpent learn the same language? Did God teach it to him, or did he
+happen to overhear God, when he was teaching Adam and Eve? We are told
+in the second chapter of Genesis that God caused all the animals to pass
+before Adam to see what he would call them. We cannot infer from this
+that God named the animals and informed Adam what to call them. Adam
+named them himself. Where did he get his words? We cannot imagine a man
+just made out of dust, without the experience of a moment, having the
+power to put his thoughts in language. In the first place, we cannot
+conceive of his having any thoughts until he has combined, through
+experience and observation, the impressions that nature had made upon
+him through the medium of his senses. We cannot imagine of his knowing
+anything, in the first instance, about different degrees of heat, nor
+about darkness, if he was made in the day-time, nor about light, if
+created at night, until the next morning. Before a man can have what we
+call thoughts, he must have had a little experience. Something must have
+happened to him before he can have a thought, and before he can express
+himself in language. Language is a growth, not a gift. We account now
+for the diversity of language by the fact that tribes and nations have
+had different experiences, different wants, different surroundings, and,
+one result of all these differences is, among other things, a difference
+in language. Nothing can be more absurd than to account for the
+different languages of the world by saying that the original language
+was confounded at the tower of Babel.
+
+According to the Bible, up to the time of the building of that tower,
+the whole earth was of one language and of one speech, and would have so
+remained until the present time had not an effort been made to build
+a tower whose top should reach into heaven. Can any one imagine what
+objection God would have to the building of such a tower? And how could
+the confusion of tongues prevent its construction? How could language
+be confounded? It could be confounded only by the destruction of memory.
+Did God destroy the memory of mankind at that time, and if so, how?
+Did he paralyze that portion of the brain presiding over the organs
+of articulation, so that they could not speak the words, although they
+remembered them clearly, or did he so touch the brain that they
+could not hear? Will some theologian, versed in the machinery of the
+miraculous, tell us in what way God confounded the language of mankind?
+
+Why would the confounding of the language make them separate? Why would
+they not stay together until they could understand each other? People
+will not separate, from weakness. When in trouble they come together
+and desire the assistance of each other. Why, in this instance, did they
+separate? What particular ones would naturally come together if nobody
+understood the language of any other person? Would it not have been just
+as hard to agree when and where to go, without any language to express
+the agreement, as to go on with the building of the tower?
+
+Is it possible that any one now believes that the whole world would be
+of one speech had the language not been confounded at Babel? Do we not
+know that every word was suggested in some way by the experience of men?
+Do we not know that words are continually dying, and continually being
+born; that every language has its cradle and its cemetery--its buds, its
+blossoms, its fruits and its withered leaves? Man has loved, enjoyed,
+hated, suffered and hoped, and all words have been born of these
+experiences.
+
+Why did "the Lord come down to see the city and the tower"? Could he
+not see them from where he lived or from where he was? Where did he come
+down from? Did he come in the daytime, or in the night? We are taught
+now that God is everywhere; that he inhabits immensity; that he is in
+every atom, and in every star. If this is true, why did he "come down to
+see the city and the tower?" Will some theologian explain this?
+
+After all, is it not much easier and altogether more reasonable to say
+that Moses was mistaken, that he knew little of the science of language,
+and that he guessed a great deal more than he investigated?
+
+XX. FAITH IN FILTH.
+
+No light whatever is shed upon what passed in the world after the
+confounding of language at Babel, until the birth of Abraham. But,
+before speaking of the history of the Jewish people, it may be proper
+for me to say that many things are recounted in Genesis, and other books
+attributed to Moses, of which I do not wish to speak. There are many
+pages of these books unfit to read, many stories not calculated, in my
+judgment, to improve the morals of mankind. I do not wish even to call
+the attention of my readers to these things, except in a general way. It
+is to be hoped that the time will come when such chapters and passages
+as cannot be read without leaving the blush of shame upon the cheek of
+modesty, will be left out, and not published as a part of the Bible. If
+there is a God, it certainly is blasphemous to attribute to him the
+authorship of pages too obscene, beastly and vulgar to be read in the
+presence of men and women.
+
+The believers in the Bible are loud in their denunciation of what they
+are pleased to call the immoral literature of the world; and yet few
+books have been published containing more moral filth than this inspired
+word of God. These stories are not redeemed by a single flash of wit or
+humor. They never rise above the dull details of stupid vice. For one,
+I cannot afford to soil my pages with extracts from them; and all such
+portions of the Scriptures I leave to be examined, written upon, and
+explained by the clergy. Clergymen may know some way by which they can
+extract honey from these flowers. Until these passages are expunged
+from the Old Testament, it is not a fit book to be read by either old
+or young. It contains pages that no minister in the United States would
+read to his congregation for any reward whatever. There are chapters
+that no gentleman would read in the presence of a lady. There are
+chapters that no father would read to his child. There are narratives
+utterly unfit to be told; and the time will come when mankind will
+wonder that such a book was ever called inspired.
+
+I know that in many books besides the Bible, there are immodest lines.
+Some of the greatest writers have soiled their pages with indecent
+words. We account for this by saying that the authors were human; that
+they catered to the taste and spirit of their times. We make excuses,
+but at the same time regret that in their works they left an impure
+word. But what shall we say of God? Is it possible that a being of
+infinite purity--the author of modesty, would smirch the pages of his
+book with stories lewd, licentious and obscene? If God is the author of
+the Bible, it is, of course, the standard by which all other books can,
+and should be measured. If the Bible is not obscene, what book is? Why
+should men be imprisoned simply for imitating God? The Christian world
+should never say another word against immoral books until it makes the
+inspired volume clean. These vile and filthy things were not written
+for the purpose of conveying and enforcing moral truth, but seem to
+have been written because the author loved an unclean thing. There is
+no moral depth below that occupied by the writer or publisher of obscene
+books, that stain with lust, the loving heart of youth. Such men should
+be imprisoned and their books destroyed. The literature of the world
+should be rendered decent, and no book should be published that cannot
+be read by, and in the hearing of the best and purest people. But as
+long as the Bible is considered as the work of God, it will be hard
+to make all men too good and pure to imitate it; and as long as it is
+imitated there will be vile and filthy books. The literature of our
+country will not be sweet and clean until the Bible ceases to be
+regarded as the production of a god.
+
+We are continually told that the Bible is the very foundation of modesty
+and morality; while many of its pages are so immodest and immoral that
+a minister, for reading them in the pulpit, would be instantly denounced
+as an unclean wretch. Every woman would leave the church, and if the men
+stayed, it would be for the purpose of chastising the minister.
+
+Is there any saving grace in hypocrisy? Will men become clean in speech
+by believing that God is unclean? Would it not be far better to admit
+that the Bible was written by barbarians in a barbarous, coarse and
+vulgar age? Would it not be safer to charge Moses with vulgarity,
+instead of God? Is it not altogether more probable that some ignorant
+Hebrew would write the vulgar words? The Christians tell me that God is
+the author of these vile and stupid things? I have examined the question
+to the best of my ability, and as to God my verdict is:--Not guilty.
+Faith should not rest in filth.
+
+Every foolish and immodest thing should be expunged from the Bible.
+Let us keep the good. Let us preserve every great and splendid thought,
+every wise and prudent maxim, every just law, every elevated idea, and
+every word calculated to make man nobler and purer, and let us have the
+courage to throw the rest away. The souls of children should not
+be stained and soiled. The charming instincts of youth should not be
+corrupted and defiled. The girls and boys should not be taught that
+unclean words were uttered by "inspired" lips. Teach them that these
+words were born of savagery and lust. Teach them that the unclean is the
+unholy, and that only the pure is sacred.
+
+XXI. THE HEBREWS.
+
+After language had been confounded and the people scattered, there
+appeared in the land of Canaan a tribe of Hebrews ruled by a chief or
+sheik called Abraham. They had a few cattle, lived in tents, practiced
+polygamy, wandered from place to place, and were the only folks in the
+whole world to whom God paid the slightest attention. At this time
+there were hundreds of cities in India filled with temples and palaces;
+millions of Egyptians worshiped Isis and Osiris, and had covered their
+land with marvelous monuments of industry, power and skill. But these
+civilizations were entirely neglected by the Deity, his whole attention
+being taken up with Abraham and his family.
+
+It seems, from the account, that God and Abraham were intimately
+acquainted, and conversed frequently upon a great variety of subjects.
+By the twelfth chapter of Genesis it appears that he made the following
+promises to Abraham. "I will make of thee a great nation, and I will
+bless thee, and make thy name great: and thou shalt be a blessing. And I
+will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee."
+
+After receiving this communication from the Almighty, Abraham went into
+the land of Canaan, and again God appeared to him and told him to take
+a heifer three years old, a goat of the same age, a sheep of equal
+antiquity, a turtle dove and a young pigeon. Whereupon Abraham killed
+the animals "and divided them in the midst, and laid each piece one
+against another." And it came to pass that when the sun went down and
+it was dark, behold a smoking furnace and a burning lamp that passed
+between the raw and bleeding meat. The killing of these animals was
+a preparation for receiving a visit from God. Should an American
+missionary in Central Africa find a negro chief surrounded by
+a butchered heifer, a goat and a sheep, with which to receive a
+communication from the infinite God, my opinion is, that the missionary
+would regard the proceeding as the direct result of savagery. And if
+the chief insisted that he had seen a smoking furnace and a burning
+lamp going up and down between the pieces of meat, the missionary would
+certainly conclude that the chief was not altogether right in his mind.
+
+If the Bible is true, this same God told Abraham to take and sacrifice
+his only son, or rather the only son of his wife, and a murder would
+have been committed had not God, just at the right moment, directed him
+to stay his hand and take a sheep instead.
+
+God made a great number of promises to Abraham, but few of them were
+ever kept. He agreed to make him the father of a great nation, but he
+did not. He solemnly promised to give him a great country, including all
+the land between the river of Egypt and the Euphrates, but he did not.
+
+In due time Abraham passed away, and his son Isaac took his place at
+the head of the tribe. Then came Jacob, who "watered stock" and enriched
+himself with the spoil of Laban. Joseph was sold into Egypt by his
+jealous brethren, where he became one of the chief men of the kingdom,
+and in a few years his father and brothers left their own country and
+settled in Egypt. At this time there were seventy Hebrews in the world,
+counting Joseph and his children. They remained in Egypt two hundred and
+fifteen years. It is claimed by some that they were in that country for
+four hundred and thirty years. This is a mistake. Josephus says they
+were in Egypt two hundred and fifteen years, and this statement is
+sustained by the best biblical scholars of all denominations. According
+to the 17th verse of the 3rd chapter of Galatians, it was four hundred
+and thirty years from the time the promise was made to Abraham to
+the giving of the law, and as the Hebrews did not go to Egypt for two
+hundred and fifteen years after the making of the promise to Abraham,
+they could in no event have been in Egypt more than two hundred and
+fifteen years. In our Bible the 40th verse of the 12th chapter of
+Exodus, is as follows:--
+
+"Now the sojourning of the children of Israel, who dwelt in Egypt, was
+four hundred and thirty years."
+
+This passage does not say that the sojourning was all done in Egypt;
+neither does it say that the children of Israel dwelt in Egypt four
+hundred and thirty years; but it does say that the sojourning of the
+children of Israel who dwelt in Egypt was four hundred and thirty
+years. The Vatican copy of the Septuagint renders the same passage as
+follows:--
+
+"The sojourning of the children of Israel which they sojourned in Egypt,
+and in the land of Canaan, was four hundred and thirty years."
+
+The Alexandrian version says:--"The sojourning of the children of Israel
+which they and their fathers sojourned in Egypt, and in the land of
+Canaan, was four hundred and thirty years."
+
+And in the Samaritan Bible we have:--"The sojourning of the children of
+Israel and of their fathers which they sojourned in the land of Canaan,
+and in the land of Egypt, was four hundred and thirty years."
+
+There were seventy souls when they went down into Egypt, and they
+remained two hundred and fifteen years, and at the end of that time they
+had increased to about three million. How do we know that there were
+three million at the end of two hundred and fifteen years? We know it
+because we are informed by Moses that "there were six hundred thousand
+men of war." Now, to each man of war, there must have been at least five
+other people. In every State in this Union there will be to each voter,
+five other persons at least, and we all know that there are always more
+voters than men of war. If there were six hundred thousand men of war,
+there must have been a population of at least three million. Is it
+possible that seventy people could increase to that extent in two
+hundred and fifteen years? You may say that it was a miracle; but
+what need was there of working a miracle? Why should God miraculously
+increase the number of slaves? If he wished miraculously to increase the
+population, why did he not wait until the people were free?
+
+In 1776, we had in the American Colonies about three millions of people.
+In one hundred years we doubled four times: that is to say, six, twelve,
+twenty-four, forty-eight million,--our present population.
+
+We must not forget that during all these years there has been pouring
+into our country a vast stream of emigration, and that this, taken
+in connection with the fact that our country is productive beyond all
+others, gave us only four doubles in one hundred years. Admitting that
+the Hebrews increased as rapidly without emigration as we, in this
+country, have with it, we will give to them four doubles each century,
+commencing with seventy people, and they would have, at the end of
+two hundred years, a population of seventeen thousand nine hundred and
+twenty. Giving them another double for the odd fifteen years and there
+would be, provided no deaths had occurred, thirty-five thousand eight
+hundred and forty people. And yet we are told that instead of having
+this number, they had increased to such an extent that they had six
+hundred thousand men of war; that is to say, a population of more than
+three millions?
+
+Every sensible man knows that this account is not, and cannot be true.
+We know that seventy people could not increase to three million in two
+hundred and fifteen years.
+
+About this time the Hebrews took a census, and found that there were
+twenty-two thousand two hundred and seventy-three first-born males.
+It is reasonable to suppose that there were about as many first-born
+females. This would make forty-four thousand five hundred and forty-six
+first-born children. Now, there must have been about as many mothers
+as there were first-born children. If there were only about forty-five
+thousand mothers and three millions of people, the mothers must have had
+on an average about sixty-six children apiece.
+
+At this time, the Hebrews were slaves, and had been for two hundred and
+fifteen years. A little while before, an order had been made by the
+Egyptians that all the male children of the Hebrews should be killed.
+One, contrary to this order, was saved in an ark made of bullrushes
+daubed with slime. This child was found by the daughter of Pharaoh, and
+was adopted, it seems, as her own, and, may be, was. He grew to be
+a man, sided with the Hebrews, killed an Egyptian that was smiting a
+slave, hid the body in the sand, and fled from Egypt to the land of
+Midian, became acquainted with a priest who had seven daughters, took
+the side of the daughters against the ill-mannered shepherds of that
+country, and married Zipporah, one of the girls, and became a shepherd
+for her father. Afterward, while tending his flock, the Lord appeared to
+him in a burning bush, and commanded him to go to the king of Egypt and
+demand from him the liberation of the Hebrews. In order to convince him
+that the something burning in the bush was actually God, the rod in his
+hand was changed into a serpent, which, upon being caught by the tail,
+became again a rod. Moses was also told to put his hand in his bosom,
+and when he took it out it was as leprous as snow. Quite a number of
+strange things were performed, and others promised. Moses then agreed to
+go back to Egypt provided his brother could go with him. Whereupon
+the Lord appeared to Aaron, and directed him to meet Moses in the
+wilderness. They met at the mount of God, went to Egypt, gathered
+together all the elders of the children of Israel, spake all the words
+which God had spoken unto Moses, and did all the signs in the sight of
+the people. The Israelites believed, bowed their heads and worshiped;
+and Moses and Aaron went in and told their message to Pharaoh the king.
+
+XXII. THE PLAGUES.
+
+Three millions of people were in slavery. They were treated with the
+utmost rigor, and so fearful were their masters that they might, in
+time, increase in numbers sufficient to avenge themselves, that they
+took from the arms of mothers all the male children and destroyed
+them. If the account given is true, the Egyptians were the most cruel,
+heartless and infamous people of which history gives any record. God
+finally made up his mind to free the Hebrews; and for the accomplishment
+of this purpose he sent, as his agents, Moses and Aaron, to the king
+of Egypt. In order that the king might know that these men had a divine
+mission, God gave Moses the power of changing a stick into a serpent,
+and water into blood. Moses and Aaron went before the king, stating that
+the Lord God of Israel ordered the king of Egypt to let the Hebrews
+go that they might hold a feast with God in the wilderness. Thereupon
+Pharaoh, the king, enquired who the Lord was, at the same time stating
+that he had never made his acquaintance, and knew nothing about him.
+To this they replied that the God of the Hebrews had met with them, and
+they asked to go a three days journey into the desert and sacrifice
+unto this God, fearing that if they did not he would fall upon them with
+pestilence or the sword. This interview seems to have hardened Pharaoh,
+for he ordered the tasks of the children of Israel to be increased; so
+that the only effect of the first appeal was to render still worse the
+condition of the Hebrews. Thereupon, Moses returned unto the Lord and
+said, "Lord, wherefore hast thou so evil entreated this people? Why is
+it that thou hast sent me? For since I came to Pharaoh to speak in thy
+name he hath done evil to this people; neither hast thou delivered thy
+people at all."
+
+Apparently stung by this reproach, God answered:--
+
+"Now shalt thou see what I will do to Pharoah; for with a strong hand
+shall he let them go; and with a strong hand shall he drive them out of
+his land."
+
+God then recounts the fact that he had appeared unto Abraham, Isaac and
+Jacob, that he had established a covenant with them to give them the
+land of Canaan, that he had heard the groanings of the children of
+Israel in Egyptian bondage; that their groanings had put him in mind of
+his covenant, and that he had made up his mind to redeem the children
+of Israel with a stretched-out arm and with great judgments. Moses then
+spoke to the children of Israel again, but they would listen to him no
+more. His first effort in their behalf had simply doubled their trouble
+and they seemed to have lost confidence in his power. Thereupon Jehovah
+promised Moses that he would make him a god unto Pharaoh, and that
+Aaron should be his prophet, but at the same time informed him that his
+message would be of no avail; that he would harden the heart of Pharaoh
+so that he would not listen; that he would so harden his heart that he
+might have an excuse for destroying the Egyptians. Accordingly, Moses
+and Aaron again went before Pharaoh. Moses said to Aaron;--"Cast down
+your rod before Pharaoh," which he did, and it became a serpent. Then
+Pharaoh not in the least surprised, called for his wise men and
+his sorcerers, and they threw down their rods and changed them into
+serpents. The serpent that had been changed from Aaron's rod was, at
+this time crawling upon the floor, and it proceeded to swallow the
+serpents that had been produced by the magicians of Egypt. What became
+of these serpents that were swallowed, whether they turned back into
+sticks again, is not stated. Can we believe that the stick was changed
+into a real living serpent, or did it assume simply the appearance of a
+serpent? If it bore only the appearance of a serpent it was a deception,
+and could not rise above the dignity of legerdemain. Is it necessary to
+believe that God is a kind of prestigiator--a sleight-of-hand performer,
+a magician or sorcerer? Can it be possible that an infinite being would
+endeavor to secure the liberation of a race by performing a miracle that
+could be equally performed by the sorcerers and magicians of a barbarian
+king?
+
+Not one word was said by Moses or Aaron as to the wickedness of
+depriving a human being of his liberty. Not a word was said in favor
+of liberty. Not the slightest intimation that a human being was justly
+entitled to the product of his own labor. Not a word about the cruelty
+of masters who would destroy even the babes of slave mothers. It seems
+to me wonderful that this God did not tell the king of Egypt that no
+nation could enslave another, without also enslaving itself; that it was
+impossible to put a chain around the limbs of a slave, without putting
+manacles upon the brain of the master. Why did he not tell him that a
+nation founded upon slavery could not stand? Instead of declaring these
+things, instead of appealing to justice, to mercy and to liberty, he
+resorted to feats of jugglery. Suppose we wished to make a treaty with
+a barbarous nation, and the President should employ a sleight-of-hand
+performer as envoy extraordinary, and instruct him, that when he came
+into the presence of the savage monarch, he should cast down an umbrella
+or a walking stick, which would change into a lizard or a turtle; what
+would we think? Would we not regard such a performance as beneath the
+dignity even of a President? And what would be our feelings if the
+savage king sent for his sorcerers and had them perform the same feat?
+If such things would appear puerile and foolish in the President of a
+great republic, what shall be said when they were resorted to by the
+creator of all worlds? How small, how contemptible such a God appears!
+Pharaoh, it seems, took about this view of the matter, and he would not
+be persuaded that such tricks were performed by an infinite being.
+
+Again, Moses and Aaron came before Pharaoh as he was going to the
+river's bank, and the same rod which had changed to a serpent, and,
+by this time changed back, was taken by Aaron, who, in the presence of
+Pharaoh, smote the water of the river, which was immediately turned to
+blood, as well as all the water in all the streams, ponds, and pools, as
+well as all water in vessels of wood and vessels of stone in the entire
+land of Egypt. As soon as all the waters in Egypt had been turned
+into blood, the magicians of that country did the same with their
+enchantments. We are not informed where they got the water to turn into
+blood, since all the water in Egypt had already been so changed. It
+seems from the account that the fish in the Nile died, and the river
+emitted a stench, and there was not a drop of water in the land of
+Egypt that had not been changed into blood. In consequence of this, the
+Egyptians digged "around about the river" for water to drink. Can we
+believe this story? Is it necessary to salvation to admit that all the
+rivers, pools, ponds and lakes of a country were changed into blood, in
+order that a king might be induced to allow the children of Israel the
+privilege of going a three days journey into the wilderness to make
+sacrifices to their God?
+
+It seems from the account that Pharaoh was told that the God of the
+Hebrews would, if he refused to let the Israelites go, change all the
+waters of Egypt into blood, and that, upon his refusal, they were so
+changed. This had, however, no influence upon him, for the reason that
+his own magicians did the same. It does not appear that Moses and Aaron
+expressed the least surprise at the success of the Egyptian sorcerers.
+At that time it was believed that each nation had its own god. The
+only claim that Moses and Aaron made for their God was, that he was the
+greatest and most powerful of all the gods, and that with anything like
+an equal chance he could vanquish the deity of any other nation.
+
+After the waters were changed to blood Moses and Aaron waited for seven
+days. At the end of that time God told Moses to again go to Pharaoh and
+demand the release of his people, and to inform him that, if he refused,
+God would strike all the borders of Egypt with frogs. That he would make
+frogs so plentiful that they would go into the houses of Pharaoh, into
+his bedchamber, upon his bed, into the houses of his servants, upon his
+people, into their ovens, and even into their kneading troughs.
+This threat had no effect whatever upon Pharaoh. And thereupon Aaron
+stretched out his hand over the waters of Egypt, and the frogs came
+up and covered the land. The magicians of Egypt did the same, and with
+their enchantments brought more frogs upon the land of Egypt.
+
+These magicians do not seem to have been original in their ideas, but
+so far as imitation is concerned, were perfect masters of their art. The
+frogs seem to have made such an impression upon Pharaoh that he sent
+for Moses and asked him to entreat the Lord that he would take away the
+frogs. Moses agreed to remove them from the houses and the land, and
+allow them to remain only in the rivers. Accordingly the frogs died out
+of the houses, and out of the villages, and out of the fields, and the
+people gathered them together in heaps. As soon as the frogs had left
+the houses and fields, the heart of Pharaoh became again hardened, and
+he refused to let the people go.
+
+Aaron then, according to the command of God, stretched out his hand,
+holding the rod, and smote the dust of the earth, and it became lice in
+man and in beast, and all the dust became lice throughout the land of
+Egypt. Pharaoh again sent for his magicians, and they sought to do
+the same with their enchantments, but they could not. Whereupon the
+sorcerers said unto Pharaoh: "This is the finger of God."
+
+Notwithstanding this, however, Pharaoh refused to let the Hebrews go.
+God then caused a grievous swarm of flies to come into the house of
+Pharaoh and into his servants' houses, and into all the land of Egypt,
+to such an extent that the whole land was corrupted by reason of the
+flies. But into that part of the country occupied by the children of
+Israel there came no flies. Thereupon Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron
+and said to them: "Go, and sacrifice to your God in this land." They
+were not willing to sacrifice in Egypt, and asked permission to go on a
+journey of three days into the wilderness. To this Pharaoh acceded, and
+in consideration of this Moses agreed to use his influence with the Lord
+to induce him to send the flies out of the country. He accordingly told
+the Lord of the bargain he had made with Pharaoh, and the Lord agreed to
+the compromise, and removed the flies from Pharaoh and from his servants
+and from his people, and there remained not a single fly in the land of
+Egypt. As soon as the flies were gone, Pharaoh again changed his mind,
+and concluded not to permit the children of Israel to depart. The Lord
+then directed Moses to go to Pharaoh and tell him that if he did not
+allow the children of Israel to depart, he would destroy his cattle, his
+horses, his camels and his sheep; that these animals would be afflicted
+with a grievous disease, but that the animals belonging to the Hebrews
+should not be so afflicted. Moses did as he was bid. On the next day all
+the cattle of Egypt died; that is to say, all the horses, all the asses,
+all the camels, all the oxen and all the sheep; but of the animals owned
+by the Israelites, not one perished. This disaster had no effect upon
+Pharaoh, and he still refused to let the children of Israel go. The Lord
+then told Moses and Aaron to take some ashes out of a furnace, and
+told Moses to sprinkle them toward the heavens in the sight of Pharaoh;
+saying that the ashes should become small dust in all the land of Egypt,
+and should be a boil breaking forth with blains upon man and upon beast
+throughout all the land.
+
+How these boils breaking out with blains, upon cattle that were already
+dead, should affect Pharaoh, is a little hard to understand. It must
+not be forgotten that all the cattle and all beasts had died with the
+murrain before the boils had broken out.
+
+This was a most decisive victory for Moses and Aaron. The boils were
+upon the magicians to that extent that they could not stand before
+Moses. But it had no effect upon Pharaoh, who seems to have been a man
+of great firmness. The Lord then instructed Moses to get up early in the
+morning and tell Pharaoh that he would stretch out his hand and smite
+his people with a pestilence, and would, on the morrow, cause it to rain
+a very grievous hail, such as had never been known in the land of Egypt.
+He also told Moses to give notice, so that they might get all the cattle
+that were in the fields under cover. It must be remembered that all
+these cattle had recently died of the murrain, and their dead bodies had
+been covered with boils and blains. This, however, had no effect, and
+Moses stretched forth his hand toward heaven, and the Lord sent thunder,
+and hail and lightning, and fire that ran along the ground, and the hail
+fell upon all the land of Egypt, and all that were in the fields, both
+man and beast, were smitten, and the hail smote every herb of the field,
+and broke every tree of the country except that portion inhabited by the
+children of Israel; there, there was no hail.
+
+During this hail storm Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron and admitted
+that he had sinned, that the Lord was righteous, and that the Egyptians
+were wicked, and requested them to ask the Lord that there be no more
+thunderings and hail, and that he would let the Hebrews go. Moses agreed
+that as soon as he got out of the city he would stretch forth his hands
+unto the Lord, and that the thunderings should cease and the hail should
+stop. But, when the rain and the hail and the thundering ceased, Pharaoh
+concluded that he would not let the children of Israel go.
+
+Again, God sent Moses and Aaron, instructing them to tell Pharaoh that
+if he refused to let the people go, the face of the earth would be
+covered with locusts, so that man would not be able to see the ground,
+and that these locusts would eat the residue of that which escaped from
+the hail; that they would eat every tree out of the field; that they
+would fill the houses of Pharaoh and the houses of all his servants, and
+the houses of all the Egyptians. Moses delivered the message, and went
+out from Pharaoh. Some of Pharaoh's servants entreated their master
+to let the children of Israel go. Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron and
+asked them, who wished to go into the wilderness to sacrifice. They
+replied that they wished to go with the young and old; with their sons
+and daughters, with flocks and herds. Pharaoh would not consent to this,
+but agreed that the men might go. Thereupon Pharaoh drove Moses and
+Aaron out of his sight. Then God told Moses to stretch forth his hand
+upon the land of Egypt for the locusts, that they might come up and eat
+every herb, even all that the hail had left. "And Moses stretched out
+his rod over the land of Egypt, and the Lord brought an east wind all
+that day and all that night; and when it was morning the east wind
+brought the locusts; and they came up over all the land of Egypt and
+rested upon all the coasts covering the face of the whole earth, so that
+the land was darkened; and they ate every herb and all the fruit of the
+trees which the hail had left, and there remained not any green thing
+on the trees or in the herbs of the field throughout the land of Egypt."
+Pharaoh then called for Moses and Aaron in great haste, admitted that
+he had sinned against the Lord their God and against them, asked their
+forgiveness and requested them to intercede with God that he might take
+away the locusts. They went out from his presence and asked the Lord to
+drive the locusts away, "And the Lord made a strong west wind which took
+away the locusts, and cast them into the Red Sea so that there remained
+not one locust in all the coasts of Egypt."
+
+As soon as the locusts were gone, Pharaoh changed his mind, and, in the
+language of the sacred text, "the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart so that
+he would not let the children of Israel go."
+
+The Lord then told Moses to stretch out his hand toward heaven that
+there might be darkness over the land of Egypt, "even darkness which
+might be felt." "And Moses stretched forth his hand toward heaven, and
+there was a thick darkness over the land of Egypt for three days during
+which time they saw not each other, neither arose any of the people from
+their places for three days; but the children of Israel had light in
+their dwellings."
+
+It strikes me that when the land of Egypt was covered with thick
+darkness--so thick that it could be felt, and when light was in the
+dwellings of the Israelites, there could have been no better time for
+the Hebrews to have left the country.
+
+Pharaoh again called for Moses, and told him that his people could go
+and serve the Lord, provided they would leave their flocks and herds.
+Moses would not agree to this, for the reason that they needed the
+flocks and herds for sacrifices and burnt offerings, and he did not know
+how many of the animals God might require, and for that reason he could
+not leave a single hoof. Upon the question of the cattle, they divided,
+and Pharaoh again refused to let the people go. God then commanded Moses
+to tell the Hebrews to borrow, each of his neighbor, jewels of silver
+and gold. By a miraculous interposition the Hebrews found favor in the
+sight of the Egyptians so that they loaned the articles asked for. After
+this, Moses again went to Pharaoh and told him that all the first-born
+in the land of Egypt, from the first-born of Pharaoh upon the throne,
+unto the first-born of the maid-servant who was behind the mill, as well
+as the first-born of beasts, should die.
+
+As all the beasts had been destroyed by disease and hail, it is
+troublesome to understand the meaning of the threat as to their
+first-born.
+
+Preparations were accordingly made for carrying this frightful threat
+into execution. Blood was put on the door-posts of all houses inhabited
+by Hebrews, so that God, as he passed through that land, might not be
+mistaken and destroy the first-born of the Jews. "And it came to pass
+that at midnight the Lord smote all the first-born in the land of Egypt,
+the first-born of Pharaoh who sat on the throne, and the first-born of
+the captive who was in the dungeon. And Pharaoh rose up in the night,
+and all his servants, and all the Egyptians, and there was a great cry
+in Egypt, for there was not a house where there was not one dead."
+
+What had these children done? Why should the babes in the cradle be
+destroyed on account of the crime of Pharaoh? Why should the cattle be
+destroyed because man had enslaved his brother? In those days women and
+children and cattle were put upon an exact equality, and all considered
+as the property of the men; and when man in some way excited the wrath
+of God, he punished them by destroying all their cattle, their wives,
+and their little ones. Where can words be found bitter enough to
+describe a god who would kill wives and babes because husbands and
+fathers had failed to keep his law? Every good man, and every good
+woman, must hate and despise such a deity.
+
+Upon the death of all the first-born Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron,
+and not only gave his consent that they might go with the Hebrews into
+the wilderness, but besought them to go at once.
+
+Is it possible that an infinite God, creator of all worlds and sustainer
+of all life, said to Pharaoh, "If you do not let my people go, I will
+turn all the water of your country into blood," and that upon the
+refusal of Pharaoh to release the people, God did turn all the waters
+into blood? Do you believe this?
+
+Do you believe that Pharaoh even after all the water was turned to
+blood, refused to let the Hebrews go, and that thereupon God told him he
+would cover his land with frogs? Do you believe this?
+
+Do you believe that after the land was covered with frogs Pharaoh still
+refused to let the people go, and that God then said to him, "I will
+cover you and all your people with lice?" Do you believe God would make
+this threat?
+
+Do you also believe that God told Pharaoh, "It you do not let these
+people go, I will fill all your houses and cover your country with
+flies?" Do you believe God makes such threats as this?
+
+Of course God must have known that turning the waters into blood,
+covering the country with frogs, infesting all flesh with lice, and
+filling all houses with flies, would not accomplish his object, and that
+all these plagues would have no effect whatever upon the Egyptian king.
+
+Do you believe that, failing to accomplish anything by the flies, God
+told Pharaoh that if he did not let the people go he would kill his
+cattle with murrain? Does such a threat sound God-like?
+
+Do you believe that, failing to effect anything by killing the cattle,
+this same God then threatened to afflict all the people with boils,
+including the magicians who had been rivaling him in the matter of
+miracles; and failing to do anything by boils, that he resorted to hail?
+Does this sound reasonable? The hail experiment having accomplished
+nothing, do you believe that God murdered the first-born of animals and
+men? Is it possible to conceive of anything more utterly absurd, stupid,
+revolting, cruel and senseless, than the miracles said to have been
+wrought by the Almighty for the purpose of inducing Pharaoh to liberate
+the children of Israel?
+
+Is it not altogether more reasonable to say that the Jewish people,
+being in slavery, accounted for the misfortunes and calamities, suffered
+by the Egyptians, by saying that they were the judgments of God?
+
+When the Armada of Spain was wrecked and scattered by the storm, the
+English people believed that God had interposed in their behalf,
+and publicly gave thanks. When the battle of Lepanto was won, it was
+believed by the Catholic world that the victory was given in answer to
+prayer. So, our fore-fathers in their Revolutionary struggle saw, or
+thought they saw, the hand of God, and most firmly believed that they
+achieved their independence by the interposition of the Most High.
+
+Now, it may be that while the Hebrews were enslaved by the Egyptians,
+there were plagues of locusts and flies. It may be that there were
+some diseases by which many of the cattle perished. It may be that a
+pestilence visited that country so that in nearly every house there
+was some one dead. If so, it was but natural for the enslaved and
+superstitious Jews to account for these calamities by saying that they
+were punishments sent by their God. Such ideas will be found in the
+history of every country.
+
+For a long time the Jews held these opinions, and they were handed from
+father to son simply by tradition. By the time a written language had
+been produced, thousands of additions had been made, and numberless
+details invented; so that we have not only an account of the plagues
+suffered by the Egyptians, but the whole woven into a connected story,
+containing the threats made by Moses and Aaron, the miracles wrought by
+them, the promises of Pharaoh, and finally the release of the Hebrews,
+as a result of the marvelous things performed in their behalf by
+Jehovah.
+
+In any event it is infinitely more probable that the author was
+misinformed, than that the God of this universe was guilty of these
+childish, heartless and infamous things. The solution of the whole
+matter is this:--Moses was mistaken.
+
+XXIII. THE FLIGHT.
+
+Three millions of people, with their flocks and herds, with borrowed
+jewelry and raiment, with unleavened dough in kneading troughs bound in
+their clothes upon their shoulders, in one night commenced their journey
+for the land of promise. We are not told how they were informed of the
+precise time to start. With all the modern appliances, it would require
+months of time to inform three millions of people of any fact.
+
+In this vast assemblage there were six hundred thousand men of war, and
+with them were the old, the young, the diseased and helpless. Where were
+those people going? They were going to the desert of Sinai, compared
+with which Sahara is a garden. Imagine an ocean of lava torn by
+storm and vexed by tempest, suddenly gazed at by a Gorgon and changed
+instantly to stone! Such was the desert of Sinai.
+
+All of the civilized nations of the world could not feed and support
+three millions of people on the desert of Sinai for forty years. It
+would cost more than one hundred thousand millions of dollars, and would
+bankrupt Christendom. They had with them their flocks and herds, and the
+sheep were so numerous that the Israelites sacrificed, at one time, more
+than one hundred and fifty thousand first-born lambs. How were these
+flocks supported? What did they eat? Where were meadows and pastures for
+them? There was no grass, no forests--nothing! There is no account
+of its having rained baled hay, nor is it even claimed that they were
+miraculously fed. To support these flocks, millions of acres of pasture
+would have been required. God did not take the Israelites through the
+land of the Philistines, for fear that when they saw the people of that
+country they would return to Egypt, but he took them by the way of
+the wilderness to the Red Sea, going before them by day in a pillar of
+cloud, and by night, in a pillar of fire.
+
+When it was told Pharaoh that the people had fled, he made ready
+and took six hundred chosen chariots of Egypt, and pursued after the
+children of Israel, overtaking them by the sea. As all the animals had
+long before that time been destroyed, we are not informed where Pharaoh
+obtained the horses for his chariots. The moment the children of Israel
+saw the hosts of Pharaoh, although they had six hundred thousand men
+of war, they immediately cried unto the Lord for protection. It is
+wonderful to me that a land that had been ravaged by the plagues
+described in the Bible, still had the power to put in the field an army
+that would carry terror to the hearts of six hundred thousand men of
+war. Even with the help of God, it seems, they were not strong enough
+to meet the Egyptians in the open field, but resorted to strategy. Moses
+again stretched forth his wonderful rod over the waters of the Red Sea,
+and they were divided, and the Hebrews passed through on dry land, the
+waters standing up like a wall on either side. The Egyptians pursued
+them; "and in the morning watch the Lord looked into the hosts of the
+Egyptians, through the pillar of fire," and proceeded to take the wheels
+off their chariots. As soon as the wheels were off, God told Moses to
+stretch out his hand over the sea. Moses did so, and immediately "the
+waters returned and covered the chariots and horsemen and all the hosts
+of Pharaoh that came into the sea, and there remained not so much as one
+of them."
+
+This account may be true, but still it hardly looks reasonable that God
+would take the wheels off the chariots. How did he do it? Did he pull
+out the linch-pins, or did he just take them off by main force?
+
+What a picture this presents to the mind! God the creator of the
+universe, maker of every shining, glittering star, engaged in pulling
+off the wheels of wagons, that he might convince Pharaoh of his
+greatness and power!
+
+Where were these people going? They were going to the promised land.
+How large a country was that? About twelve thousand square miles. About
+one-fifth the size of the State of Illinois. It was a frightful country,
+covered with rocks and desolation. How many people were in the promised
+land already? Moses tells us there were seven nations in that country
+mightier than the Jews. As there were at least three millions of Jews,
+there must have been at least twenty-one millions of people already in
+that country. These had to be driven out in order that room might be
+made for the chosen people of God.
+
+It seems, however, that God was not willing to take the children of
+Israel into the promised land immediately. They were not fit to inhabit
+the land of Canaan; so he made up his mind to allow them to wander upon
+the desert until all except two, who had left Egypt, should perish. Of
+all the slaves released from Egyptian bondage, only two were allowed to
+reach the promised land!
+
+As soon as the Hebrews crossed the Red Sea, they found themselves
+without food, and with water unfit to drink by reason of its bitterness,
+and they began to murmur against Moses, who cried unto the Lord, and
+"the Lord showed him a tree." Moses cast this tree into the waters,
+and they became sweet. "And it came to pass in the morning the dew lay
+around about the camp; and when the dew that lay was gone, behold,
+upon the face of the wilderness lay a small round thing, small as the
+hoar-frost upon the ground. And Moses said unto them, this is the bread
+which the Lord hath given you to eat." This manna was a very peculiar
+thing. It would melt in the sun, and yet they could cook it by seething
+and baking. One would as soon think of frying snow or of broiling
+icicles. But this manna had another remarkable quality. No matter how
+much or little any person gathered, he would have an exact omer; if he
+gathered more, it would shrink to that amount, and if he gathered less,
+it would swell exactly to that amount. What a magnificent substance
+manna would be with which to make a currency--shrinking and swelling
+according to the great laws of supply and demand!
+
+"Upon this manna the children of Israel lived for forty years, until
+they came to a habitable land. With this meat were they fed until
+they reached the borders of the land of Canaan." We are told in the
+twenty-first chapter of Numbers, that the people at last became tired
+of' the manna, complained of God, and asked Moses why he brought
+them out of the land of Egypt to die in the wilderness. And they
+said:--"There is no bread, nor have we any water. Our soul loatheth this
+light food."
+
+We are told by some commentators that the Jews lived on manna for forty
+years; by others that they lived upon it for only a short time. As
+a matter of fact the accounts differ, and this difference is the
+opportunity for commentators. It also allows us to exercise faith in
+believing that both accounts are true. If the accounts agreed, and were
+reasonable, they would be believed by the wicked and unregenerated. But
+as they are different and unreasonable, they are believed only by the
+good. Whenever a statement in the Bible is unreasonable, and you believe
+it, you are considered quite a good Christian. If the statement is
+grossly absurd and infinitely impossible, and you still believe it, you
+are a saint.
+
+The children of Israel were in the desert, and they were out of water.
+They had nothing to eat but manna, and this they had had so long that
+the soul of every person abhorred it. Under these circumstances they
+complained to Moses. Now, as God is infinite, he could just as well have
+furnished them with an abundance of the purest and coolest of water, and
+could, without the slightest trouble to himself, have given them three
+excellent meals a day, with a generous variety of meats and vegetables,
+it is very hard to see why he did not do so. It is still harder to
+conceive why he fell into a rage when the people mildly suggested that
+they would like a change of diet. Day after day, week after week, month
+after month, year after year, nothing but manna. No doubt they did
+the best they could by cooking it in different ways, but in spite of
+themselves they began to loathe its sight and taste, and so they asked
+Moses to use his influence to secure a change in the bill of fare.
+
+Now, I ask, whether it was unreasonable for the Jews to suggest that a
+little meat would be very gratefully received? It seems, however, that
+as soon as the request was made, this God of infinite mercy became
+infinitely enraged, and instead of granting it, went into partnership
+with serpents, for the purpose of punishing the hungry wretches to whom
+he had promised a land flowing with milk and honey.
+
+Where did these serpents come from? How did God convey the information
+to the serpents, that he wished them to go to the desert of Sinai and
+bite some Jews? It may be urged that these serpents were created for the
+express purpose of punishing the children of Israel for having had the
+presumption, like Oliver Twist, to ask for more.
+
+There is another account in the eleventh chapter of Numbers, of the
+people murmuring because of their food. They remembered the fish, the
+cucumbers, the melons, the leeks, the onions and the garlic of Egypt,
+and they asked for meat. The people went to the tent of Moses and asked
+him for flesh. Moses cried unto the Lord and asked him why he did not
+take care of the multitude. God thereupon agreed that they should have
+meat, not for a day or two, but for a month, until the meat should come
+out of their nostrils and become loathsome to them. He then caused a
+wind to bring quails from beyond the sea, and cast them into the camp,
+on every side of the camp around about for the space of a days journey.
+And the people gathered them, and while the flesh was yet between their
+teeth the wrath of God being provoked against them, struck them with
+an exceeding great plague. Serpents, also, were sent among them, and
+thousands perished for the crime of having been hungry.
+
+The Rev. Alexander Cruden commenting upon this account says:--
+
+"God caused a wind to rise that drove the quails within and about the
+camp of the Israelites; and it is in this that the miracle consists,
+that they were brought so seasonably to this place, and in so great
+numbers as to suffice above a million of persons above a month. Some
+authors affirm, that in those eastern and southern countries, quails
+are innumerable, so that in one part of Italy within the compass of five
+miles, there were taken about an hundred thousand of them every day for
+a month together; and that sometimes they fly so thick over the sea,
+that being weary they fall into ships, sometimes in such numbers, that
+they sink them with their weight."
+
+No wonder Mr. Cruden believed the Mosaic account.
+
+Must we believe that God made an arrangement with hornets for the
+purpose af securing their services in driving the Canaanites from
+the land of promise? Is this belief necessary unto salvation? Must we
+believe that God said to the Jews that he would send hornets before them
+to drive out the Canaanites, as related in the twenty-third chapter of
+Exodus, and the second chapter of Deuteronomy? How would the hornets
+know a Canaanite? In what way would God put it in the mind of a hornet
+to attack a Canaanite? Did God create hornets for that especial purpose,
+implanting an instinct to attack a Canaanite, but not a Hebrew? Can
+we conceive of the Almighty granting letters of marque and reprisal to
+hornets? Of course it is admitted that nothing in the world would
+be better calculated to make a man leave his native land than a few
+hornets. Is it possible for us to believe that an infinite being would
+resort to such expedients in order to drive the Canaanites from their
+country? He could just as easily have spoken the Canaanites out of
+existence as to have spoken the hornets in. In this way a vast amount of
+trouble, pain and suffering would have been saved. Is it possible that
+there is, in this country, an intelligent clergyman who will insist that
+these stories are true; that we must believe them in in order to be good
+people in this world, and glorified souls in the next?
+
+We are also told that God instructed the Hebrews to kill the Canaanites
+slowly, giving as a reason that the beasts of the field might increase
+upon his chosen people. When we take into consideration the fact that
+the Holy Land contained only about eleven or twelve thousand square
+miles, and was at that time inhabited by at least twenty-one millions of
+people, it does not seem reasonable that the wild beasts could have been
+numerous enough to cause any great alarm. The same ratio of population
+would give to the State of Illinois at least one hundred and twenty
+millions of inhabitants. Can anybody believe that, under such
+circumstances, the danger from wild beasts could be very great? What
+would we think of a general, invading such a State, if he should order
+his soldiers to kill the people slowly, lest the wild beasts might
+increase upon them? Is it possible that a God capable of doing the
+miracles recounted in the Old Testament could not, in some way, have
+disposed of the wild beasts? After the Canaanites were driven out, could
+he not have employed the hornets to drive out the wild beasts? Think of
+a God that could drive twenty-one millions of people out of the promised
+land, could raise up innumerable stinging flies, and could cover
+the earth with fiery serpents, and yet seems to have been perfectly
+powerless against the wild beasts of the land of Canaan!
+
+Speaking of these hornets, one of the good old commentators, whose
+views have long been considered of great value by the believers in the
+inspiration of the Bible, uses the following language:--"Hornets are a
+sort of strong flies, which the Lord used as instruments to plague
+the enemies of his people. They are of themselves very troublesome and
+mischievous, and those the Lord made use of were, it is thought, of an
+extraordinary bigness and perniciousness. It is said they live as the
+wasps, and that they have a king or captain, and pestilent stings
+as bees, and that, if twenty-seven of them sting man or beast, it is
+certain death to either. Nor is it strange that such creatures did drive
+out the Canaanites from their habitations; for many heathen writers give
+instances of some people driven from their seats by frogs, others by
+mice, others by bees and wasps. And it is said that a Christian city,
+being besieged by Sapores, king of Persia, was delivered by hornets; for
+the elephants and beasts being stung by them, waxed unruly, and so the
+whole army fled."
+
+Only a few years ago, all such stories were believed by the Christian
+world; and it is a historical fact, that Voltaire was the third man of
+any note in Europe, who took the ground that the mythologies of Greece
+and Rome were without foundation. Until his time, most Christians
+believed as thoroughly in the miracles ascribed to the Greek and Roman
+gods as in those of Christ and Jehovah. The Christian world cultivated
+credulity, not only as one of the virtues, but as the greatest of them
+all. But, when Luther and his followers left the Church of Rome, they
+were compelled to deny the power of the Catholic Church, at that time,
+to suspend the laws of nature, but took the ground that such power
+ceased with the apostolic age. They insisted that all things now
+happened in accordance with the laws of nature, with the exception of a
+few special interferences in favor of the Protestant Church in answer
+to prayer. They taught their children a double philosophy: by one, they
+were to show the impossibility of Catholic miracles, because opposed to
+the laws of nature; by the other, the probability of the miracles of the
+apostolic age, because they were in conformity with the statements of
+the Scriptures. They had two foundations: one, the law of nature, and
+the other, the word of God. The Protestants have endeavored to carry
+on this double process of reasoning, and the result has been a gradual
+increase of confidence in the law of nature, and a gradual decrease of
+confidence in the word of God.
+
+We are told, in this inspired account, that the clothing of the Jewish
+people did not wax old, and that their shoes refused to wear out. Some
+commentators have insisted that angels attended to the wardrobes of the
+Hebrews, patched their garments, and mended their shoes. Certain it is,
+however, that the same clothes lasted them for forty years, during the
+entire journey from Egypt to the Holy Land. Little boys starting out
+with their first pantaloons, grew as they traveled, and their clothes
+grew with them.
+
+Can it be necessary to believe a story like this? Will men make better
+husbands, fathers, neighbors, and citizens, simply by giving credence
+to these childish and impossible things? Certainly an infinite God could
+have transported the Jews to the Holy Land in a moment, and could, as
+easily, have removed the Canaanites to some other country. Surely there
+was no necessity for doing thousands and thousands of petty miracles,
+day after day for forty years, looking after the clothes of three
+millions of people, changing the nature of wool and linen and leather,
+so that they would not "wax old." Every step, every motion, would wear
+away some part of the clothing, some part of the shoes. Were these
+parts, so worn away, perpetually renewed, or was the nature of things
+so changed that they could not wear away? We know that whenever matter
+comes in contact with matter, certain atoms, by abrasion, are lost. Were
+these atoms gathered up every night by angels, and replaced on the soles
+of the shoes, on the elbows of coats, and on the knees of pantaloons, so
+that the next morning they would be precisely in the condition they were
+on the morning before? There must be a mistake somewhere.
+
+Can we believe that the real God, if there is one, ever ordered a man
+to be killed simply for making hair oil, or ointment? We are told in
+the thirtieth chapter of Exodus, that the Lord commanded Moses to take
+myrrh, cinnamon, sweet calamus, cassia, and olive oil, and make a
+holy ointment for the purpose of anointing the tabernacle, tables,
+candlesticks and other utensils, as well as Aaron and his sons; saying,
+at the same time, that whosoever compounded any like it, or whoever put
+any of it on a stranger, should be put to death. In the same chapter,
+the Lord furnishes Moses with a recipe for making a perfume, saying,
+that whoever should make any which smelled like it, should be cut off
+from his people. This, to me, sounds so unreasonable that I cannot
+believe it. Why should an infinite God care whether mankind made
+ointments and perfumes like his or not? Why should the Creator of all
+things threaten to kill a priest who approached his altar without having
+washed his hands and feet? These commandments and these penalties would
+disgrace the vainest tyrant that ever sat, by chance, upon a throne.
+There must be some mistake. I cannot believe that an infinite
+Intelligence appeared to Moses upon Mount Sinai having with him a
+variety of patterns for making a tabernacle, tongs, snuffers and dishes.
+Neither can I believe that God told Moses how to cut and trim a coat for
+a priest. Why should a God care about such things? Why should he insist
+on having buttons sewed in certain rows, and fringes of a certain color?
+Suppose an intelligent civilized man was to overhear, on Mount Sinai,
+the following instructions from God to Moses:--
+
+"You must consecrate my priests as follows:--You must kill a bullock
+for a sin offering, and have Aaron and his sons lay their hands upon the
+head of the bullock. Then you must take the blood and put it upon the
+horns of the altar round about with your finger, and pour some blood at
+the bottom of the altar to make a reconciliation; and of the fat that
+is upon the inwards, the caul above the liver and two kidneys, and
+their fat, and burn them upon the altar. You must get a ram for a burnt
+offering, and Aaron and his sons must lay their hands upon the head of
+the ram. Then you must kill it and sprinkle the blood upon the altar,
+and cut the ram into pieces, and burn the head, and the pieces, and the
+fat, and wash the inwards and the lungs in water and then burn the whole
+ram upon the altar for a sweet savor unto me. Then you must get another
+ram, and have Aaron and his sons lay their hands upon the head of that,
+then kill it and take of its blood, and put it on the top of Aaron's
+right ear, and on the thumb of his right hand, and on the great toe of
+his right foot. And you must also put a little of the blood upon the
+top of the right ears of Aaron's sons, and on the thumbs of their right
+hands and on the great toes of their right feet. And then you must take
+of the fat that is on the inwards, and the caul above the liver and the
+two kidneys, and their fat, and the right shoulder, and out of a basket
+of unleavened bread you must take one unleavened cake and another of oil
+bread, and one wafer, and put them on the fat of the right shoulder. And
+you must take of the anointing oil, and of the blood, and sprinkle it on
+Aaron, and on his garments, and on his sons' garments, and sanctify
+them and all their clothes."--Do you believe that he would have even
+suspected that the creator of the universe was talking?
+
+Can any one now tell why God commanded the Jews, when they were upon the
+desert of Sinai, to plant trees, telling them at the same time that they
+must not eat any of the fruit of such trees until after the fourth year?
+Trees could not have been planted in that desert, and if they had been,
+they could not have lived. Why did God tell Moses, while in the desert,
+to make curtains of fine linen? Where could he have obtained his flax?
+There was no land upon which it could have been produced. Why did he
+tell him to make things of gold, and silver, and precious stones, when
+they could not have been in possession of these things? There is but one
+answer, and that is, the Pentateuch was written hundreds of years after
+the Jews had settled in the Holy Land, and hundreds of years after Moses
+was dust and ashes.
+
+When the Jews had a written language, and that must have been long after
+their flight from Egypt, they wrote out their history and their laws.
+Tradition had filled the infancy of the nation with miracles and special
+interpositions in their behalf by Jehovah. Patriotism would not allow
+these wonders to grow small, and priestcraft never denied a miracle.
+There were traditions to the effect that God had spoken face to face
+with Moses; that he had given him the tables of the law, and had, in a
+thousand ways, made known his will; and whenever the priests wished to
+make new laws, or amend old ones, they pretended to have found something
+more that God said to Moses at Sinai. In this way obedience was more
+easily secured. Only a very few of the people could read, and, as a
+consequence, additions, interpolations and erasures had no fear of
+detection. In this way we account for the fact that Moses is made to
+speak of things that did not exist in his day, and were unknown for
+hundreds of years after his death.
+
+In the thirtieth chapter of Exodus, we are told that the people, when
+numbered, must give each one a half shekel after the shekel of the
+_sanctuary_. At that time no such money existed, and consequently the
+account could not, by any possibility, have been written until after
+there was a shekel of the sanctuary, and there was no such thing until
+long after the death of Moses. If we should read that Cæsar paid his
+troops in pounds, shillings and pence, we would certainly know that the
+account was not written by Cæsar, nor in his time, but we would know
+that it was written after the English had given these names to certain
+coins.
+
+So, we find, that when the Jews were upon the desert it was commanded
+that every mother should bring, as a sin offering, a couple of doves to
+the priests, and the priests were compelled to eat these doves in the
+most holy place. At the time this law appears to have been given, there
+were three million people, and only three priests, Aaron, Eleazer and
+Ithamar. Among three million people there would be, at least, three
+hundred births a day. Certainly we are not expected to believe that
+these three priests devoured six hundred pigeons every twenty-four
+hours.
+
+Why should a woman ask pardon of God for having been a mother? Why
+should that be considered a crime in Exodus, which is commanded as a
+duty in Genesis? Why should a mother be declared unclean? Why should
+giving birth to a daughter be regarded twice as criminal as giving birth
+to a son? Can we believe that such laws and ceremonies were made and
+instituted by a merciful and intelligent God? If there is anything in
+this poor world suggestive of, and standing for, all that is sweet,
+loving and pure, it is a mother holding in her thrilled and happy arms
+her prattling babe. Read the twelfth chapter of Leviticus, and you will
+see that when a woman became the mother of a boy she was so unclean
+that she was not allowed to touch a hallowed thing, nor to enter the
+sanctuary for forty days. If the babe was a girl, then the mother was
+unfit for eighty days, to enter the house of God, or to touch the sacred
+tongs and snuffers. These laws, born of barbarism, are unworthy of our
+day, and should be regarded simply as the mistakes of savages.
+
+Just as low in the scale of intelligence are the directions given in the
+fifth chapter of Numbers, for the trial of a wife of whom the husband
+was jealous. This foolish chapter has been the foundation of all appeals
+to God for the ascertainment of facts, such as the corsned, trial by
+battle, by water, and by fire, the last of which is our judicial oath.
+It is very easy to believe that in those days a guilty woman would
+be afraid to drink the water of jealousy and take the oath, and that,
+through fear, she might be made to confess. Admitting that the deception
+tended not only to prevent crime, but to discover it when committed,
+still, we cannot admit that an honest god would, for any purpose, resort
+to dishonest means. In all countries fear is employed as a means of
+getting at the truth, and in this there is nothing dishonest, provided
+falsehood is not resorted to for the purpose of producing the fear.
+Protestants laugh at Catholics because of their belief in the efficacy
+of holy water, and yet they teach their children that a little holy
+water, in which had been thrown some dust from the floor of the
+sanctuary, would, work a miracle in a woman's flesh. For hundreds of
+years our fathers believed that a perjurer could not swallow a piece of
+sacramental bread. Such stories belong to the childhood of our race, and
+are now believed only by mental infants and intellectual babes.
+
+I cannot believe that Moses had in his hands a couple of tables of
+stone, upon which God had written the Ten Commandments, and that when he
+saw the golden calf, and the dancing, that he dashed the tables to the
+earth and broke them in pieces. Neither do I believe that Moses took a
+golden calf, burnt it, ground it to powder, and made the people drink it
+with water, as related in the thirty-second chapter of Exodus.
+
+There is another account of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses,
+in the nineteenth and twentieth chapters of Exodus. In this account not
+one word is said about the people having made a golden calf, nor about
+the breaking of the tables of stone. In the thirty-fourth chapter of
+Exodus, there is an account of the renewal of the broken tables of
+the law, and the commandments are given, but they are not the same
+commandments mentioned in the twentieth chapter. There are two accounts
+of the same transaction. Both of these stories cannot be true, and yet
+both must be believed. Any one who will take the trouble to read
+the nineteenth and twentieth chapters, and the last verse of the
+thirty-first chapter, the thirty-second, thirty-third, and thirty-fourth
+chapters of Exodus, will be compelled to admit that both accounts cannot
+be true.
+
+From the last account it appears that while Moses was upon Mount Sinai
+receiving the commandments from God, the people brought their jewelry
+to Aaron and he cast for them a golden calf. This happened before any
+commandment against idolatry had been given. A god ought, certainly,
+to publish his laws before inflicting penalties for their violation. To
+inflict punishment for breaking unknown and unpublished laws is, in
+the last degree, cruel and unjust. It may be replied that the Jews knew
+better than to worship idols, before the law was given. If this is so,
+why should the law have been given? In all civilized countries, laws are
+made and promulgated, not simply for the purpose of informing the people
+as to what is right and wrong, but to inform them of the penalties to be
+visited upon those who violate the laws. When the Ten Commandments
+were given, no penalties were attached. Not one word was written on
+the tables of stone as to the punishments that would be inflicted for
+breaking any or all of the inspired laws. The people should not have
+been punished for violating a commandment before it was given. And yet,
+in this case, Moses commanded the sons of Levi to take their swords and
+slay every man his brother, his companion, and his neighbor. The brutal
+order was obeyed, and three thousand men were butchered.. The Levites
+consecrated themselves unto the Lord by murdering their sons, and their
+brothers, for having violated a commandment before it had been given.
+
+It has been contended for many years that the Ten Commandments are the
+foundation of all ideas of justice and of law. Eminent jurists have
+bowed to popular prejudice, and deformed their works by statements to
+the effect that the Mosaic laws are the fountains from which sprang all
+ideas of right and wrong. Nothing can be more stupidly false than such
+assertions. Thousands of years before Moses was born, the Egyptians
+had a code of laws. They had laws against blasphemy, murder, adultery,
+larceny, perjury, laws for the collection of debts, the enforcement
+of contracts, the ascertainment of damages, the redemption of property
+pawned, and upon nearly every subject of human interest. The Egyptian
+code was far better than the Mosaic.
+
+Laws spring from the instinct of self-preservation. Industry objected
+to supporting idleness, and laws were made against theft. Laws were made
+against murder, because a very large majority of the people have always
+objected to being murdered. All fundamental laws were born simply of the
+instinct of self-defence. Long before the Jewish savages assembled at
+the foot of Sinai, laws had been made and enforced, not only in Egypt
+and India, but by every tribe that ever existed.
+
+It is impossible for human beings to exist together, without certain
+rules of conduct, certain ideas of the proper and improper, of the right
+and wrong, growing out of the relation. Certain rules must be made,
+and must be enforced. This implies law, trial and punishment. Whoever
+produces anything by weary labor, does not need a revelation from heaven
+to teach him that he has a right to the thing produced. Not one of
+the learned gentlemen who pretend that the Mosaic laws are filled with
+justice and intelligence, would live, for a moment, in any country where
+such laws were in force.
+
+Nothing can be more wonderful than the medical ideas of Jehovah. He
+had the strangest notions about the cause and cure of disease. With
+him everything was miracle and wonder. In the fourteenth chapter of
+Leviticus, we find the law for cleansing a leper:--"Then shall the
+priest take for him that is to be cleansed, two birds, alive and clean,
+and cedar wood, and scarlet, and hyssop. And the priest shall command
+that one of the birds be killed in an _earthen_ vessel, over _running_
+water. As for the living bird, he shall take it, and the cedar wood, and
+the scarlet, and the hyssop, and shall dip them, and the living bird,
+in the blood of the bird that was killed over the running water. And he
+shall sprinkle upon him that is to be cleansed from the leprosy, seven
+times, and shall pronounce him clean, and shall let the living bird
+loose into the open field."
+
+We are told that God himself gave these directions to Moses. Does
+anybody believe this? Why should the bird be killed in an _earthen_
+vessel? Would the charm be broken if the vessel was of wood? Why over
+_running_ water? What would be thought of a physician now, who would
+give a prescription like that?
+
+Is it not strange that God, although he gave hundreds of directions for
+the purpose of discovering the presence of leprosy, and for cleansing
+the leper after he was healed, forgot to tell how that disease could be
+cured? Is it not wonderful that while God told his people what animals
+were fit for food, he failed to give a list of plants that man might
+eat? Why did he leave his children to find out the hurtful and the
+poisonous by experiment, knowing that experiment, in millions of cases,
+must be death?
+
+When reading the history of the Jewish people, of their flight from
+slavery to death, of their exchange of tyrants, I must confess that my
+sympathies are all aroused in their behalf. They were cheated,
+deceived and abused. Their god was quick-tempered, unreasonable, cruel,
+revengeful and dishonest. He was always promising but never performed.
+He wasted time in ceremony and childish detail, and in the exaggeration
+of what he had done. It is impossible for me to conceive of a character
+more utterly detestable than that of the Hebrew god. He had solemnly
+promised the Jews that he would take them from Egypt to a land flowing
+with milk and honey. He had led them to believe that in a little while
+their troubles would be over, and that they would soon in the land of
+Canaan, surrounded by their wives and little ones, forget, the stripes
+and tears of Egypt. After promising the poor wanderers again and again
+that he would lead them in safety to the promised land of joy and
+plenty, this God, forgetting every promise, said to the wretches in his
+power:--"Your carcasses shall fall in this wilderness and your children
+shall wander until your carcasses be wasted." This curse was the
+conclusion of the whole matter. Into this dust of death and night faded
+all the promises of God. Into this rottenness of wandering despair fell
+all the dreams of liberty and home. Millions of corpses were left to rot
+in the desert, and each one certified to the dishonesty of Jehovah. I
+cannot believe these things. They are so cruel and heartless, that my
+blood is chilled and my sense of justice shocked. A book that is equally
+abhorrent to my head and heart, cannot be accepted as a revelation from
+God.
+
+When we think of the poor Jews, destroyed, murdered, bitten by serpents,
+visited by plagues, decimated by famine, butchered by each other,
+swallowed by the earth, frightened, cursed, starved, deceived, robbed
+and outraged, how thankful we should be that we are not the chosen
+people of God. No wonder that they longed for the slavery of Egypt, and
+remembered with sorrow the unhappy day when they exchanged masters.
+Compared with Jehovah, Pharaoh was a benefactor, and the tyranny of
+Egypt was freedom to those who suffered the liberty of God.
+
+While reading the Pentateuch, I am filled with indignation, pity and
+horror. Nothing can be sadder than the history of the starved and
+frightened wretches who wandered over the desolate crags and sands of
+wilderness and desert, the prey of famine, sword, and plague. Ignorant
+and superstitious to the last degree, governed by falsehood, plundered
+by hypocrisy, they were the sport of priests, and the food of fear. God
+was their greatest enemy, and death their only friend.
+
+It is impossible to conceive of a more thoroughly despicable, hateful,
+and arrogant being, than the Jewish god. He is without a redeeming
+feature. In the mythology of the world he has no parallel. He, only, is
+never touched by agony and tears. He delights only in blood and pain.
+Human affections are naught to him. He cares neither for love nor music,
+beauty nor joy. A false friend, an unjust judge, a braggart, hypocrite,
+and tyrant, sincere in hatred, jealous, vain, and revengeful, false in
+promise, honest in curse, suspicious, ignorant, and changeable, infamous
+and hideous:--such is the God of the Pentateuch.
+
+XXIV. CONFESS AND AVOID
+
+The scientific Christians now admit that the Bible is not inspired in
+its astronomy, geology, botany, zoology, nor in any science. In other
+words, they admit that on these subjects, the Bible cannot be depended
+upon. If all the statements in the Scriptures were true, there would be
+no necessity for admitting that some of them are not inspired. A
+Christian will not admit that a passage in the Bible is uninspired,
+until he is satisfied that it is untrue. Orthodoxy itself has at last
+been compelled to say, that while a passage may be true and uninspired,
+it cannot be inspired if false.
+
+If the people of Europe had known as much of astronomy and geology when
+the Bible was introduced among them, as they do now, there never could
+have been one believer in the doctrine of inspiration. If the writers of
+the various parts of the Bible had known as much about the sciences as
+is now known by every intelligent man, the book never could have
+been written. It was produced by ignorance, and has been believed and
+defended by its author. It has lost power in the proportion that man
+has gained knowledge. A few years ago, this book was appealed to in the
+settlement of all scientific questions; but now, even the clergy
+confess that in such matters, it has ceased to speak with the voice
+of authority. For the establishment of facts, the word of man is now
+considered far better than the word of God. In the world of science,
+Jehovah was superseded by Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler. All that God
+told Moses, admitting the entire account to be true, is dust and ashes
+compared to the discoveries of Descartes, Laplace, and Humboldt. In
+matters of fact, the Bible has ceased to be regarded as a standard.
+Science has succeeded in breaking the chains of theology. A few years
+ago, Science endeavored to show that it was not inconsistent with the
+Bible. The tables have been turned, and now, Religion is endeavoring to
+prove that the Bible is not inconsistent with Science. The standard has
+been changed.
+
+For many ages, the Christians contended that the Bible, viewed simply as
+a literary performance, was beyond all other books, and that man without
+the assistance of God could not produce its equal. This claim was made
+when but few books existed, and the Bible, being the only book generally
+known, had no rival. But this claim, like the other, has been abandoned
+by many, and soon will be, by all. Com pared with Shakespeare's "book
+and volume of the brain," the "sacred" Bible shrinks and seems as feebly
+impotent and vain, as would a pipe of Fan, when some great organ, voiced
+with every tone, from the hoarse thunder of the sea to the winged warble
+of a mated bird, floods and fills cathedral aisles with all the wealth
+of sound.
+
+It is now maintained--and this appears to be the last fortification
+behind which the doctrine of inspiration skulks and crouches--that the
+Bible, although false and mistaken in its astronomy, geology, geography,
+history and philosophy, is inspired in its morality. It is now claimed
+that had it not been for this book, the world would have been inhabited
+only by savages, and that had it not been for the Holy Scriptures, man
+never would have even dreamed of the unity of God. A belief in one God
+is claimed to be a dogma of almost infinite importance, that with out
+this belief civilization is impossible, and that this fact is the sun
+around which all the virtues revolve. For my part, I think it infinitely
+more important to believe in man. Theology is a superstition--Humanity a
+religion.
+
+XXV. "INSPIRED" SLAVERY
+
+Perhaps the Bible was inspired upon the subject of human slavery. Is
+there, in the civilized world, to-day, a clergyman who believes in the
+divinity of slavery? Does the Bible teach man to enslave his brother? If
+it does, is it not blasphemous to say that it is inspired of God? If
+you find the institution of slavery upheld in a book said to have been
+written by God, what would you expect to find in a book inspired by the
+devil? Would you expect to find that book in favor of liberty? Modern
+Christians, ashamed of the God of the Old Testament, endeavor now to
+show that slavery was neither commanded nor opposed by Jehovah. Nothing
+can be plainer than the following passages from the twenty-fifth chapter
+of Leviticus. "Moreover of the children of the strangers that do sojourn
+among you, of them shall ye buy, and of their families that are with
+you, which they begat in your land: and they shall be your possession.
+And ye shall take them as an inheritance for your children after you, to
+inherit them for a possession, they shall be your bondmen forever. Both
+thy bondmen, and thy bondmaids, which thou shalt have, shall be of the
+heathen that are round about you; of them shall ye buy bondmen, and
+bondmaids."
+
+Can we believe in this, the Nineteenth Century, that these infamous
+passages were inspired by God? that God approved not only of human
+slavery, but instructed his chosen people to buy the women, children and
+babes of the heathen round about them? If it was right for the Hebrews
+to buy, it was also right for the heathen to sell. This God, by
+commanding the Hebrews to buy, approved of the selling of sons and
+daughters. The Canaanite who, tempted by gold, lured by avarice, sold
+from the arms of his wife the dimpled babe, simply made it possible for
+the Hebrews to obey the orders of their God. If God is the author of
+the Bible, the reading of these passages ought to cover his cheeks with
+shame. I ask the Christian world to-day, was it right for the heathen
+to sell their children? Was it right for God not only to uphold, but to
+command the infamous traffic in human flesh? Could the most revengeful
+fiend, the most malicious vagrant in the gloom of hell, sink to a lower
+moral depth than this?
+
+According to this God, his chosen people were not only commanded to buy
+of the heathen round about them, but were also permitted to buy each
+other for a term of years. The law governing the purchase of Jews is
+laid down in the twenty-first chapter of Exodus. "If thou buy a Hebrew
+servant, six years shall he serve: and in the seventh he shall go out
+free for nothing. If he came in by himself, he shall go out by himself:
+if he were married, then his wife shall go out with him. If his master
+have given him a wife, and she have borne him sons or daughters, the
+wife and her children shall be her master's, and he shall go out by
+himself. And if the servant shall plainly say, I love my master, my
+wife, and my children; I will not go out free: Then his master shall
+bring him unto the judges; he shall also bring him to the door, or unto
+the door-post: and his master shall bore his ear through with an awl:
+and he shall serve him forever."
+
+Do you believe that God was the author of this infamous law? Do you
+believe that the loving father of us all, turned the dimpled arms of
+babes into manacles of iron? Do you believe that he baited the dungeon
+of servitude with wife and child? Is it possible to love a God who would
+make such laws? Is it possible not to hate and despise him?
+
+The heathen are not spoken of as human beings. Their rights are never
+mentioned. They were the rightful food of the sword, and their bodies
+were made for stripes and chains.
+
+In the same chapter of the same inspired book, we are told that, "if a
+man smite his servant, or his maid, with a rod, and he dies under his
+hand, he shall be surely punished. Notwithstanding, if he continue a day
+or two, he shall not be punished, for he is his money."
+
+Must we believe that God called some of his children the money of
+others? Can we believe that God made lashes upon the naked back, a
+legal tender for labor performed? Must we regard the auction block as an
+altar? Were blood hounds apostles? Was the slave-pen a temple? Were the
+stealers and whippers of babes and women the justified children of God?
+
+It is now contended that while the Old Testament is touched with the
+barbarism of its time, that the New Testament is morally perfect, and
+that on its pages can be found no blot or stain. As a matter of fact,
+the New Testament is more decidedly in favor of human slavery than the
+old.
+
+For my part, I never will, I never can, worship a God who upholds the
+institution of slavery. Such a God I hate and defy. I neither want his
+heaven, nor fear his hell.
+
+XXXVI. "INSPIRED" MARRIAGE
+
+Is there an orthodox clergyman in the world, who will now declare that
+he believes the institution of polygamy to be right? Is there one who
+will publicly declare that, in his judgment, that institution ever was
+right? Was there ever a time in the history of the world when it was
+right to treat woman simply as property? Do not attempt to answer these
+questions by saying, that the Bible is an exceedingly good book, that we
+are indebted for our civilization to the sacred volume, and that without
+it, man would lapse into savagery, and mental night. This is no answer.
+Was there a time when the institution of polygamy was the highest
+expression of human virtue? Is there a Christian woman, civilized,
+intelligent, and free, who believes in the institution of polygamy? Are
+we better, purer, and more intelligent than God was four thousand years
+ago? Why should we imprison Mormons, and worship God? Polygamy is just
+as pure in Utah, as it could have been in the promised land. Love and
+Virtue are the same the whole world round, and Justice is the same in
+every star. All the languages of the world are not sufficient to express
+the filth of polygamy. It makes of man, a beast, of woman, a trembling
+slave. It destroys the fireside, makes virtue an outcast, takes from
+human speech its sweetest words, and leaves the heart a den, where crawl
+and hiss the slimy serpents of most loathsome lust. Civilization rests
+upon the family. The good family is the unit of good government. The
+virtues grow about the holy hearth of home--they cluster, bloom, and
+shed their perfume round the fireside where the one man loves the one
+woman. Lover--husband--wife--mother--father--child--home!--? without
+these sacred words, the world is but a lair, and men and women merely
+beasts.
+
+Why should the innocent maiden and the loving mother worship the
+heartless Jewish God? Why should they, with pure and stainless lips,
+read the vile record of inspired lust?
+
+The marriage of the one man to the one woman is the citadel and fortress
+of civilization. Without this, woman becomes the prey and slave of lust
+and power, and man goes back to savagery and crime. From the bottom of
+my heart I hate, abhor and execrate all theories of life, of which the
+pure and sacred home is not the corner-stone. Take from the world the
+family, the fireside, the children born of wedded love, and there is
+nothing left. The home where virtue dwells with love is like a lily with
+a heart of fire--the fairest flower in all the world.
+
+XXVII. "INSPIRED" WAR
+
+If the Bible be true, God commanded his chosen people to destroy men
+simply for the crime of defending their native land. They were not
+allowed to spare trembling and white-haired age, nor dimpled babes
+clasped in the mothers' arms. They were ordered to kill women, and to
+pierce, with the sword of war, the unborn child. "Our heavenly Father"
+commanded the Hebrews to kill the men and women, the fathers, sons and
+brothers, but to preserve the girls alive. Why were not the maidens also
+killed? Why were they spared? Read the thirty-first chapter of Numbers,
+and you will find that the maidens were given to the soldiers and the
+priests. Is there, in all the history of war, a more infamous thing than
+this? Is it possible that God permitted the violets of modesty, that
+grow and shed their perfume in the maiden's heart, to be trampled
+beneath the brutal feet of lust? If this was the order of God, what,
+under the same circumstances, would have been the command of a devil?
+When, in this age of the world, a woman, a wife, a mother, reads this
+record, she should, with scorn and loathing, throw the book away. A
+general, who now should make such an order, giving over to massacre
+and rapine a conquered people, would be held in execration by the whole
+civilized world. Yet, if the Bible be true, the supreme and infinite God
+was once a savage.
+
+A little while ago, out upon the western plains, in a little path
+leading to a cabin, were found the bodies of two children and their
+mother. Her breast was filled with wounds received in the defence of her
+darlings. They had been murdered by the savages. Suppose when looking at
+their lifeless forms, some one had said, "This was done by the command
+of God!" In Canaan there were countless scenes like this. There was
+no pity in inspired war. God raised the black flag, and commanded his
+soldiers to kill even the smiling infant in its mother's arms. Who
+is the blasphemer; the man who denies the existence of God, or he who
+covers the robes of the Infinite with innocent blood?
+
+We are told in the Pentateuch, that God, the father of us all, gave
+thousands of maidens, after having killed their fathers, their mothers,
+and their brothers, to satisfy the brutal lusts of savage men. If there
+be a God, I pray him to write in his book, opposite my name, that I
+denied this lie for him.
+
+XXVIII. "INSPIRED" RELIGIOUS LIBERTY.
+
+According to the Bible, God selected the Jewish people through whom to
+make known the great fact, that he was the only true and living God. For
+this purpose, he appeared on several occasions to Moses--came down to
+Sinai's top clothed in cloud and fire, and wrought a thousand miracles
+for the preservation and education of the Jewish people. In their
+presence he opened the waters of the sea. For them he caused bread to
+rain from heaven. To quench their thirst, water leaped from the dry and
+barren rock. Their enemies were miraculously destroyed; and for forty
+years, at least, this God took upon himself the government of the Jews.
+But, after all this, many of the people had less confidence in him than
+in gods of wood and stone. In moments of trouble, in periods of
+disaster, in the darkness of doubt, in the hunger and thirst of famine,
+instead of asking this God for aid, they turned and sought the help of
+senseless things. This God, with all his power and wisdom, could not
+even convince a few wandering and wretched savages that he was more
+potent than the idols of Egypt. This God was not willing that the Jews
+should think and investigate for themselves. For heresy, the penalty was
+death. Where this God reigned, intellectual liberty was unknown. He
+appealed only to brute force; he collected taxes by threatening plagues;
+he demanded worship on pain of sword and fire; acting as spy,
+inquisitor, judge and executioner.
+
+In the thirteenth chapter of Deuteronomy, we have the ideas of God as to
+mental freedom. "If thy brother, the son of thy mother, or thy son, or
+the wife of thy bosom, or thy friend which is as thine own soul, entice
+thee secretly, saying, Let us go and serve other gods, which thou hast
+not known, thou nor thy fathers; namely of the gods of the people which
+are around about you, nigh unto thee, or far off from thee, from the one
+end of the earth even unto the other end of the earth, Thou shalt not
+consent unto him, nor hearken unto him, neither shall thine eye pity
+him, neither shalt thou spare him, neither shalt thou conceal him. But
+thou shalt surely kill him; thine hand shall be first upon him to put
+him to death, and afterward the hand of all the people. And thou shalt
+stone him with stones that he die."
+
+This is the religious liberty of God; the toleration of Jehovah. If
+I had lived in Palestine at that time, and my wife, the mother of my
+children, had said to me, "I am tired of Jehovah, he is always asking
+for blood; he is never weary of killing; he is always telling of his
+might and strength; always telling what he has done for the Jews,
+always asking for sacrifices; for doves and lambs--blood, nothing
+but blood.--Let us worship the sun. Jehovah is too revengeful, too
+malignant, too exacting. Let us worship the sun. The sun has clothed the
+world in beauty; it has covered the earth with flowers; by its divine
+light I first saw your face, and my beautiful babe."--If I had obeyed
+the command of God, I would have killed her. My hand would have been
+first upon her, and after that the hands of all the people, and she
+would have been stoned with stones until she died. For my part, I would
+never kill my wife, even if commanded so to do by the real God of this
+universe. Think of taking up some ragged rock and hurling it against the
+white bosom filled with love for you; and when you saw oozing from
+the bruised lips of the death wound, the red current of her sweet
+life--think of looking up to heaven and receiving the congratulations of
+the infinite fiend whose commandment you had obeyed!
+
+Can we believe that any such command was ever given by a merciful and
+intelligent God? Suppose, however, that God did give this law to the
+Jews, and did tell them that whenever a man preached a heresy, or
+proposed to worship any other God that they should kill him; and suppose
+that afterward this same God took upon himself flesh, and came to this
+very chosen people and taught a different religion, and that thereupon
+the Jews crucified him; I ask you, did he not reap exactly what he
+had sown? What right would this God have to complain of a crucifixion
+suffered in accordance with his own command?
+
+Nothing can be more infamous than intellectual tyranny. To put chains
+upon the body is as nothing compared with putting shackles on the brain.
+No god is entitled to the worship or the respect of man who does not
+give, even to the meanest of his children, every right that he claims
+for himself.
+
+If the Pentateuch be true, religious persecution is a duty. The dungeons
+of the Inquisition were temples, and the clank of every chain upon
+the limbs of heresy was music in the ear of God. If the Pentateuch was
+inspired, every heretic should be destroyed; and every man who advocates
+a fact inconsistent with the sacred book, should be consumed by sword
+and flame.
+
+In the Old Testament no one is told to reason with a heretic, and not
+one word is said about relying upon argument, upon education, nor upon
+intellectual development--nothing except simple brute force. Is there
+to-day a Christian who will say that four thousand years ago, it was
+the duty of a husband to kill his wife if she differed with him upon
+the subject of religion? Is there one who will now say that, under such
+circumstances, the wife ought to have been killed? Why should God be so
+jealous of the wooden idols of the heathen? Could he not compete with
+Baal? Was he envious of the success of the Egyptian magicians? Was it
+not possible for him to make such a convincing display of his power as
+to silence forever the voice of unbelief? Did this God have to resort to
+force to make converts? Was he so ignorant of the structure of the human
+mind as to believe all honest doubt a crime? If he wished to do away
+with the idolatry of the Canaanites, why did he not appear to them? Why
+did he not give them the tables of the law? Why did he only make known
+his will to a few wandering savages in the desert of Sinai? Will some
+theologian have the kindness to answer these questions? Will some
+minister, who now believes in religious liberty, and eloquently
+denounces the intolerance of Catholicism, explain these things; will he
+tell us why he worships an intolerant God? Is a god who will burn a soul
+forever in another world, better than a Christian who burns the body for
+a few hours in this? Is there no intellectual liberty in heaven? Do the
+angels all discuss questions on the same side? Are all the investigators
+in perdition? Will the penitent thief, winged and crowned, laugh at the
+honest folks in hell? Will the agony of the damned increase or decrease
+the happiness of God? Will there be, in the universe, an eternal _auto
+da fe?_
+
+XXIX. CONCLUSION
+
+If the Pentateuch is not inspired in its astronomy, geology, geography,
+history or philosophy, if it is not inspired concerning slavery,
+polygamy, war, law, religious or political liberty, or the rights of
+men, women and children, what is it inspired in, or about? The unity
+of God?--that was believed long before Moses was born. Special
+providence?--that has been the doctrine of ignorance in all ages.
+The rights of property?--theft was always a crime. The sacrifice of
+animals?--that was a custom thousands of years before a Jew existed.
+The sacredness of life?--there have always been laws against murder.
+The wickedness of perjury?--truthfulness has always been a virtue.
+The beauty of chastity?--the Pentateuch does not teach it. Thou shalt
+worship no other God?--that has been the burden of all religions.
+
+Is it possible that the Pentateuch could not have been written by
+uninspired men? that the assistance of God was necessary to produce
+these books? Is it possible that Galileo ascertained the mechanical
+principles of "Virtual Velocity," the laws of falling bodies and of all
+motion; that Copernicus ascertained the true position of the earth and
+accounted for all celestial phenomena; that Kepler discovered his three
+laws--discoveries of such importance that the 8th of May, 1618, may be
+called the birthday of modern science; that Newton gave to the world
+the Method of Fluxions, the Theory of Universal Gravitation, and the
+Decomposition of Light; that Euclid, Cavalieri, Descartes, and Leibnitz,
+almost completed the science of mathematics; that all the discoveries
+in optics, hydrostatics, pneumatics and chemistry, the experiments,
+discoveries, and inventions of Galvani, Volta, Franklin and Morse, of
+Trevethick, Watt and Fulton and of all the pioneers of progress--that
+all this was accomplished by uninspired men, while the writer of the
+Pentateuch was directed and inspired by an infinite God? Is it possible
+that the codes of China, India, Egypt, Greece and Rome were made by man,
+and that the laws recorded in the Pentateuch were alone given by
+God? Is it possible that Æschylus and Shakespeare, Burns, and Beranger,
+Goethe and Schiller, and all the poets of the world, and all their
+wondrous tragedies and songs, are but the work of men, while no
+intelligence except the infinite God could be the author of the
+Pentateuch? Is it possible that of all the books that crowd the
+libraries of the world, the books of science, fiction, history and song,
+that all save only one, have been produced by man? Is it possible that
+of all these, the Bible only is the work of God?
+
+If the Pentateuch is inspired, the civilization of our day is a mistake
+and crime. There should be no political liberty. Heresy should be
+trodden out beneath the bigot's brutal feet. Husbands should divorce
+their wives at will, and make the mothers of their children houseless
+and weeping wanderers. Polygamy ought to be practiced; women should
+become slaves; we should buy the sons and daughters of the heathen and
+make them bondmen and bondwomen forever. We should sell our own flesh
+and blood, and have the right to kill our slaves. Men and women should
+be stoned to death for laboring on the seventh day. "Mediums," such
+as have familiar spirits, should be burned with fire. Every vestige of
+mental liberty should be destroyed, and reason's holy torch extinguished
+in the martyr's blood.
+
+Is it not far better and wiser to say that the Pentateuch while
+containing some good laws, some truths, some wise and useful things is,
+after all, deformed and blackened by the savagery of its time? Is it not
+far better and wiser to take the good and throw the bad away?
+
+Let us admit what we know to be true; that Moses was mistaken about a
+thousand things; that the story of creation is not true; that the Garden
+of Eden is a myth; that the serpent and the tree of knowledge, and the
+fall of man are but fragments of old mythologies lost and dead; that
+woman was not made out of a rib; that serpents never had the power of
+speech; that the sons of God did not marry the daughters of men; that
+the story of the flood and ark is not exactly true; that the tower of
+Babel is a mistake; that the confusion of tongues is a childish thing;
+that the origin of the rainbow is a foolish fancy; that Methuselah did
+not live nine hundred and sixty-nine years; that Enoch did not leave
+this world, taking with him his flesh and bones; that the story of Sodom
+and Gomorrah is somewhat improbable; that burning brimstone never fell
+like rain; that Lot's wife was not changed into chloride of sodium; that
+Jacob did not, in fact, put his hip out of joint wrestling with God;
+that the history of Tamar might just as well have been left out; that a
+belief in Pharaoh's dreams is not essential to salvation; that it makes
+but little difference whether the rod of Aaron was changed to a serpent
+or not; that of all the wonders said to have been performed in Egypt,
+the greatest is, that anybody ever believed the absurd account; that
+God did not torment the innocent cattle on account of the sins of their
+owners; that he did not kill the first born of the poor maid behind
+the mill because of Pharaoh's crimes; that flies and frogs were not
+ministers of God's wrath; that lice and locusts were not the executors
+of his will; that seventy people did not, in two hundred and fifteen
+years, increase to three million; that three priests could not eat
+six hundred pigeons in a day; that gazing at a brass serpent could not
+extract poison from the blood; that God did not go in partnership with
+hornets; that he did not murder people simply because they asked for
+something to eat; that he did not declare the making of hair oil
+and ointment an offence to be punished with death; that he did not
+miraculously preserve cloth and leather; that he was not afraid of wild
+beasts; that he did not punish heresy with sword and fire; that he was
+not jealous, revengeful, and unjust; that he knew all about the sun,
+moon, and stars; that he did not threaten to kill people for eating the
+fat of an ox; that he never told Aaron to draw cuts to see which of two
+goats should be killed; that he never objected to clothes made of woolen
+mixed with linen; that if he objected to dwarfs, people with flat noses
+and too many fingers, he ought not to have created such folks; that
+he did not demand human sacrifices as set forth in the last chapter
+of Leviticus; that he did not object to the raising of horses; that he
+never commanded widows to spit in the faces of their brothers-in-law;
+that several contradictory accounts of the same transaction cannot all
+be true; that God did not talk to Abraham as one man talks to another;
+that angels were not in the habit of walking about the earth eating veal
+dressed with milk and butter, and making bargains about the destruction
+of cities; that God never turned himself into a flame of fire, and lived
+in a bush; that he never met Moses in a hotel and tried to kill him;
+that it was absurd to perform miracles to induce a king to act in a
+certain way and then harden his heart so that he would refuse; that God
+was not kept from killing the Jews by the fear that the Egyptians would
+laugh at him; that he did not secretly bury a man and then allow the
+corpse to write an account of the funeral; that he never believed the
+firmament to be solid; that he knew slavery was and always would be a
+frightful crime; that polygamy is but stench and filth; that the brave
+soldier will always spare an unarmed foe; that only cruel cowards
+slay the conquered and the helpless; that no language can describe the
+murderer of a smiling babe; that God did not want the blood of doves and
+lambs; that he did not love the smell of burning flesh; that he did not
+want his altars daubed with blood; that he did not pretend that the sins
+of a people could be transferred to a goat; that he did not believe in
+witches, wizards, spooks, and devils; that he did not test the virtue of
+woman with dirty water; that he did not suppose that rabbits chewed the
+cud; that he never thought there were any four-footed birds; that he did
+not boast for several hundred years that he had vanquished an Egyptian
+king; that a dry stick did not bud, blossom, and bear almonds in one
+night; that manna did not shrink and swell, so that each man could
+gather only just one omer; that it was never wrong to "countenance the
+poor man in his cause;" that God never told a people not to live in
+peace with their neighbors; that he did not spend forty days with Moses
+on Mount Sinai giving him patterns for making clothes, tongs, basins,
+and snuffers; that maternity is not a sin; that physical deformity is
+not a crime; that an atonement cannot be made for the soul by shedding
+innocent blood; that killing a dove over running water will not make its
+blood a medicine; that a god who demands love knows nothing of the human
+heart; that one who frightens savages with loud noises is unworthy the
+love of civilized men; that one who destroys children on account of
+the sins of their fathers is a monster; that an infinite god never
+threatened to give people the itch; that he never sent wild beasts to
+devour babes; that he never ordered the violation of maidens; that
+he never regarded patriotism as a crime; that he never ordered the
+destruction of unborn children; that he never opened the earth and
+swallowed wives and babes because husbands and fathers had displeased
+him; that he never demanded that men should kill their sons and
+brothers, for the purpose of sanctifying themselves; that we cannot
+please God by believing the improbable; that credulity is not a virtue;
+that investigation is not a crime; that every mind should be free;
+that all religious persecution is infamous in God, as well as man; that
+without liberty, virtue is impossible; that without freedom, even love
+cannot exist; that every man should be allowed to think and to express
+his thoughts; that woman is the equal of man; that children should be
+governed by love and reason; that the family relation is sacred; that
+war is a hideous crime; that all intolerance is born of ignorance and
+hate; that the freedom of today is the hope of to-morrow; that the
+enlightened present ought not to fall upon its knees and blindly worship
+the barbaric past; and that every free, brave and enlightened man should
+publicly declare that all the ignorant, infamous, heartless, hideous
+things recorded in the "inspired" Pentateuch are not the words of God,
+but simply "Some Mistakes of Moses."
+
+
+
+
+SOME REASONS WHY
+
+I.
+
+RELIGION makes enemies instead of friends. That one word, "religion,"
+covers all the horizon of memory with visions of war, of outrage, of
+persecution, of tyranny, and death. That one word brings to the mind
+every instrument with which man has tortured man. In that one word are
+all the fagots and flames and dungeons of the past, and in that word is
+the infinite and eternal hell of the future.
+
+In the name of universal benevolence Christians have hated their
+fellow-men. Although they have been preaching universal love, the
+Christian nations are the warlike nations of the world. The most
+destructive weapons of war have been invented by Christians. The
+musket, the revolver, the rifled canon, the bombshell, the torpedo, the
+explosive bullet, have been invented by Christian brains.
+
+Above all other arts, the Christian world has placed the art of war.
+
+A Christian nation has never had the slightest respect for the rights of
+barbarians; neither has any Christian sect any respect for the rights
+of other sects. Anciently, the sects discussed with fire and sword, and
+even now, something happens almost every day to show that the old spirit
+that was in the Inquisition still slumbers in the Christian breast.
+
+Whoever imagines himself a favorite with God, holds other people in
+contempt.
+
+Whenever a man believes that he has the exact truth from God, there is
+in that man no spirit of compromise. He has not the modesty born of
+the imperfections of human nature; he has the arrogance of theological
+certainty and the tyranny born of ignorant assurance. Believing himself
+to be the slave of God, he imitates his master, and of all tyrants, the
+worst is a slave in power.
+
+When a man really believes that it is necessary to do a certain thing
+to be happy forever, or that a certain belief is necessary to ensure
+eternal joy, there is in that man no spirit of concession. He divides
+the whole world into saints and sinners, into believers and unbelievers,
+into God's sheep and Devil's goats, into people who will be glorified
+and people who will be damned.
+
+A Christian nation can make no compromise with one not Christian; it
+will either compel that nation to accept its doctrine, or it will wage
+war. If Christ, in fact, said "I came not to bring peace but a sword,"
+it is the only prophecy in the New Testament that has been literally
+fulfilled.
+
+II. DUTIES TO GOD.
+
+RELIGION is supposed to consist in a discharge of the duties we owe to
+God. In other words, we are taught that God is exceedingly anxious that
+we should believe a certain thing. For my part, I do not believe that
+there is any infinite being to whom we owe anything. The reason I say
+this is, we can not owe any duty to any being who requires nothing--to
+any being that we cannot possibly help, to any being whose happiness we
+cannot increase. If God is infinite, we cannot make him happier than
+he is. If God is infinite, we can neither give, nor can he receive,
+anything. Anything that we do or fail to do, cannot, in the slightest
+degree, affect an infinite God; consequently, no relations can exist
+between the finite and the Infinite, if by relations is meant mutual
+duties and obligations.
+
+Some tell us that it is the desire of God that we should worship him.
+What for? Why does he desire worship? Others tell us that we should
+sacrifice something to him. What for? Is he in want? Can we assist him?
+Is he unhappy? Is he in trouble? Does he need human sympathy? We cannot
+assist the Infinite, but we can assist our fellow-men. We can feed the
+hungry and clothe the naked, and enlighten the ignorant, and we can
+help, in some degree at least, toward covering this world with the
+mantle of joy.
+
+I do not believe there is any being in this universe who gives rain
+for praise, who gives sunshine for prayer, or who blesses a man simply
+because he kneels.
+
+The Infinite cannot receive praise or worship.
+
+The Infinite can neither hear nor answer prayer.
+
+An Infinite personality is an infinite impossibility.
+
+III. INSPIRATION.
+
+WE are told that we have in our possession the inspired will of God. What
+is meant by the word "inspired" is not exactly known; but whatever else
+it may mean, certainly it means that the "inspired" must be the true. If
+it is true, there is, in fact, no need of its being inspired--the truth
+will take care of itself.
+
+The church is forced to say that the Bible differs from all other books;
+it is forced to say that it contains the actual will of God. Let us then
+see what inspiration really is. A man looks at the sea, and the sea
+says something to him. It makes an impression upon his mind. It awakens
+memory, and this impression depends upon the man's experience--upon
+his intellectual capacity. Another looks upon the same sea. He has a
+different brain; he has had a different experience. The sea may speak
+to him of joy, to the other of grief and tears. The sea cannot tell the
+same thing to any two human beings, because no two human beings have had
+the same experience.
+
+A year ago, while the cars were going from Boston to Gloucester, we
+passed through Manchester. As the cars stopped, a lady sitting opposite,
+speaking to her husband, looking out of the window and catching, for the
+first time, a view of the sea, cried out, "Is it not beautiful!" and the
+husband replied, "I'll bet you could dig clams right here!"
+
+Another, standing upon the shore, listening to what the great Greek
+tragedian called "the multitudinous laughter of the sea," may say: Every
+drop has visited all the shores of the earth; every one has been frozen
+in the vast and icy North; every one has fallen in snow, has been
+whirled by storms around mountain peaks; every one has been kissed to
+vapor by the sun; every one has worn the seven-hued garment of light;
+every one has fallen in pleasant rain, gurgled from springs and laughed
+in brooks while lovers wooed upon the banks, and every one has rushed
+with mighty rivers back to the sea's embrace. Everything in nature tells
+a different story to all eyes that see and to all ears that hear.
+
+Once in my life, and once only, I heard Horace Greeley deliver a
+lecture. I think its title was, "Across the Continent." At last he
+reached the mammoth trees of California, and I thought "Here is an
+opportunity for the old man to indulge his fancy. Here are trees that
+have outlived a thousand human governments. There are limbs above his
+head older than the pyramids. While man was emerging from barbarism
+to something like civilization, these trees were growing. Older than
+history, every one appeared to be a memory, a witness, and a prophecy.
+The same wind that filled the sails of the Argonauts had swayed these
+trees." But these trees said nothing of this kind to Mr. Greeley. Upon
+these subjects not a word was told to him. Instead, he took his pencil,
+and after figuring awhile, remarked: "One of these trees, sawed into
+inch-boards, would make more than three hundred thousand feet of
+lumber."
+
+I was once riding on the cars in Illinois. There had been a violent
+thunder-storm. The rain had ceased, the sun was going down. The
+great clouds had floated toward the west, and there they assumed most
+wonderful architectural shapes. There were temples and palaces domed
+and turreted, and they were touched with silver, with amethyst and gold.
+They looked like the homes of the Titans, or the palaces of the gods.
+A man was sitting near me. I touched him and said, "Did you ever see
+anything so beautiful!" He looked out. He saw nothing of the cloud,
+nothing of the sun, nothing of the color; he saw only the country and
+replied, "Yes, it is beautiful; I always did like rolling land." On
+another occasion I was riding in a stage. There had been a snow, and
+after the snow a sleet, and all the trees were bent, and all the boughs
+were arched. Every fence, every log cabin had been transfigured, touched
+with a glory almost beyond this world. The great fields were a pure and
+perfect white; the forests, drooping beneath their load of gems, made
+wonderful caves, from which one almost expected to see troops of fairies
+come. The whole world looked like a bride, jewelled from head to foot.
+A German on the back seat, hearing our talk, and our exclamations of
+wonder leaned forward, looked out of the stage window and said: "Yes, it
+looks like a clean table cloth!"
+
+So, when we look upon a flower, a painting, a statue, a star, or a
+violet, the more we know, the more we have experienced, the more we
+have thought, the more we remember, the more the statue, the star,
+the painting, the violet has to tell. Nature says to me all that I am
+capable of understanding--gives all that I can receive.
+
+As with star, or flower, or sea, so with a book. A man reads
+Shakespeare. What does he get from him? All that he has the mind to
+understand. He gets his little cup full. Let another read him who knows
+nothing of the drama, nothing of the impersonations of passion, and what
+does he get? Almost nothing. Shakespeare has a different story for each
+reader. He is a world in which each recognizes his acquaintances--he may
+know a few, he may know all.
+
+The impression that nature makes upon the mind, the stories told by sea
+and star and flower, must be the natural food of thought. Leaving out
+for the moment the impression gained from ancestors, the hereditary
+fears and drifts and trends--the natural food of thought must be the
+impression made upon the brain by coming in contact through the medium
+of the five senses with what we call the outward world. The brain is
+natural. Its food is natural. The result, thought, must be natural. The
+supernatural can be constructed with no material except the natural. Of
+the supernatural we can have no conception. Thought may be deformed, and
+the thought of one may be strange to, and denominated as unnatural
+by, another; but it cannot be supernatural. It may be weak, it may be
+insane, but it is not supernatural. Above the natural man cannot rise,
+even with the aid of fancy's wings. There can can be deformed ideas,
+as there are deformed persons. There can be religions monstrous and
+misshapen, but they must be naturally produced. Some people have ideas
+about what they are pleased to call the supernatural; but what they
+call the supernatural is simply the deformed. The world is to each man
+according to each man. It takes the world as it really is and that man
+to make that man's world, and that man's world cannot exist without that
+man.
+
+You may ask, and what of all this? I reply, as with everything in
+nature, so with the Bible. It has a different story for each reader. Is
+then the Bible a different book to every human being who reads it? It
+is. Can God then, through the Bible, make the same revelation to two
+persons? He cannot. Why? Because the man who reads it is the man who
+inspires. Inspiration is in the man, as well as in the book. God should
+have inspired readers as well as writers.
+
+You may reply: "God knew that his book would be understood differently
+by each one, and that he really intended that it should be understood as
+it is understood by each." If this is so, then my understanding of the
+Bible is the real revelation to me. If this is so, I have no right to
+take the understanding of another. I must take the revelation made to me
+through my understanding, and by that revelation I must stand. Suppose
+then, that I do read this Bible honestly, fairly, and when I get through
+I am compelled to say, "The book is not true." If this is the honest
+result, then you are compelled to say, either that God has made no
+revelation to me, or that the revelation that it is not true, is the
+revelation made to me, and by which I am bound. If the book and my brain
+are both the work of the same Infinite God, whose fault is it that the
+book and the brain do not agree? Either God should have written a book
+to fit my brain, or should have made my brain to fit his book.
+
+The inspiration of the Bible depends upon the ignorance of him who
+reads. There was a time when its geology, its astronomy, its natural
+history, were inspired. That time has passed. There was a time when
+its morality satisfied the men who ruled mankind. That time has passed.
+There was a time when the tyrant regarded its laws as good; when the
+master believed in its liberty; when strength gloried in its passages;
+but these laws never satisfied the oppressed, they were never quoted by
+the slave.
+
+We have a sacred book, an inspired Bible, and I am told that this book
+was written by the same being who made every star, and who peopled
+infinite space with infinite worlds. I am also told that God created
+man, and that man is totally depraved. It has always seemed to me that
+an infinite being has no right to make imperfect things. I may be
+mistaken; but this is the only planet I have ever been on; I live in
+what might be called one of the rural districts of this universe,
+consequently I may be mistaken; I simply give the best and largest
+thought I have.
+
+IV. GOD'S EXPERIMENT WITH THE JEWS
+
+THE Bible tells us that men became so bad that God destroyed them all
+with the exception of eight persons; that afterwards he chose Abraham
+and some of his kindred, a wandering tribe, for the purpose of seeing
+whether or no they could be civilized. He had no time to waste with all
+the world. The Egyptians at that time, a vast and splendid nation,
+having a system of laws and free schools, believing in the marriage of
+the one man to the one woman; believing, too, in the rights of woman--a
+nation that had courts of justice and understood the philosophy of
+damages--these people had received no revelation from God,--they were
+left to grope in Nature's night. He had no time to civilize India,
+wherein had grown a civilization that fills the world with wonder
+still--a people with a language as perfect as ours, a people who had
+produced philosophers, scientists, poets. He had no time to waste on
+them; but he took a few, the tribe of Abraham. He established a perfect
+despotism--with no schools, with no philosophy, with no art, with no
+music--nothing but the sacrifices of dumb beasts--nothing but the abject
+worship of a slave. Not a word upon geology, upon astronomy; nothing,
+even, upon the science of medicine. Thus God spent hours and hours with
+Moses upon the top of Sinai, giving directions for ascertaining the
+presence of leprosy and for preventing its spread, but it never occurred
+to Jehovah to tell Moses how it could be cured. He told them a few
+things about what they might eat--prohibiting among other things
+four-footed birds, and one thing upon the subject of cooking. From the
+thunders and lightnings of Sinai he proclaimed this vast and wonderful
+fact: "Thou shalt not seethe a kid in its mother's milk." He took these
+people, according to our sacred Scriptures, under his immediate care,
+and for the purpose of controlling them he wrought wonderful miracles in
+their sight.
+
+Is it not a little curious that no priest of one religion has ever been
+able to astonish a priest of another religion by telling a miracle? Our
+missionaries tell the Hindoos the miracles of the Bible, and the Hindoo
+priests, without the movement of a muscle, hear them and then recite
+theirs, and theirs do not astonish our missionaries in the least! Is it
+not a little curious that the priests of one religion never believe the
+priests of another? Is it not a little strange that the believers
+in sacred books regard all except their own as having been made by
+hypocrites and fools?
+
+I heard the other day a story. A gentleman was telling some wonderful
+things and the listeners, with one exception, were saying, as he
+proceeded with his tale, "Is it possible?" "Did you ever hear anything
+so wonderful?" and when he had concluded, there was a kind of chorus
+of "Is it possible?" and "Can it be?" One man, however, sat perfectly
+quiet, utterly unmoved. Another listener said to him "Did you hear
+that?" and he replied "Yes." "Well," said the other, "You did not
+manifest much astonishment." "Oh, no," was the answer, "I am a liar
+myself."
+
+I am told by the sacred Scriptures that, as a matter of fact, God, even
+with the help of miracles, failed to civilize the Jews, and this shows
+of how little real benefit, after all, it is, to have a ruler much above
+the people, or to simply excite the wonder of mankind. Infinite wisdom,
+if the account be true, could not civilize a single tribe. Laws made by
+Jehovah himself were not obeyed, and every effort of Jehovah failed.
+It is claimed that God made known his law and inspired men to write
+and teach his will, and yet, it was found utterly impossible to reform
+mankind.
+
+V. CIVILIZED COUNTRIES
+
+IN all civilized countries, it is now passionately asserted that slavery
+is a crime; that a war of conquest is murder; that polygamy enslaves
+woman, degrades man and destroys home; that nothing is more infamous
+than the slaughter of decrepit men, of helpless mothers, and of
+prattling babes; that captured maidens should not be given to their
+captors; that wives should not be stoned to death for differing with
+their husbands on the subject of religion. We know that there was
+a time, in the history of most nations, when all these crimes were
+regarded as divine institutions. Nations entertaining this view now are
+regarded as savage, and, with the exception of the South Sea Islanders,
+Feejees, a few tribes in Central Africa, and some citizens of Delaware,
+no human beings are found degraded enough to agree upon these subjects
+with Jehovah.
+
+The only evidence we can have that a nation has ceased to be savage, is
+that it has abandoned these doctrines of savagery.
+
+To every one except a theologian, it is easy to account for these
+mistakes and crimes by saying that civilization is a painful growth;
+that the moral perceptions are cultivated through ages of tyranny, of
+crime, and of heroism; that it requires centuries for man to put out the
+eyes of self and hold in lofty and in equal poise the golden scales
+of Justice. Conscience is born of suffering. Mercy is the child of
+the imagination. Man advances as he becomes acquainted with his
+surroundings, with the mutual obligations of life, and learns to take
+advantage of the forces of nature.
+
+The believer in the inspiration of the Bible is compelled to say, that
+there was a time when slavery was right, when women could sell their
+babes, when polygamy was the highest form of virtue, when wars of
+extermination were waged with the sword of mercy, when religious
+toleration was a crime, and when death was the just penalty for having
+expressed an honest thought. He is compelled to insist that Jehovah is
+as bad now as he was then; that he is as good now as he was then. Once,
+all the crimes that I have mentioned were commanded by God; now they are
+prohibited. Once, God was in favor of them all; now the Devil is their
+defender. In other words, the Devil entertains the same opinion to-day
+that God held four thousand years ago. The Devil is as good now as
+Jehovah was then, and God was as bad then as the Devil is now. Other
+nations besides the Jews had similar laws and ideas--believed in and
+practiced the same crimes, and yet, it is not claimed that they received
+a revelation. They had no knowledge of the true God, and yet they
+practiced the same crimes, of their own motion, that the Jews did by
+command of Jehovah. From this it would seem that man can do wrong
+without a special revelation.
+
+The passages upholding slavery, polygamy, war and religious persecution
+are certainly not evidences of the inspiration of that book. Suppose
+nothing had been in the Old Testament upholding these crimes, would
+the modern Christian suspect that it was not inspired on that account?
+Suppose nothing had been in the Old Testament except laws in favor of
+these crimes, would it still be insisted that it was inspired? If the
+Devil had inspired a book, will some Christian tell us in what respect,
+on the subjects of slavery, polygamy, war and liberty, it would have
+differed from some parts of the Old Testament? Suppose we knew
+that after inspired men had finished the Bible the Devil had gotten
+possession of it and had written a few passages, what part would
+Christians now pick out as being probably his work? Which of the
+following passages would be selected as having been written by the
+Devil: "Love thy neighbor as thyself," or "Kill all the males among the
+little ones, and kill every woman, but all the women children keep alive
+for yourselves"?
+
+Is there a believer in the Bible who does not now wish that God, amid
+the thunders and lightnings of Sinai, had said to Moses that man should
+not own his fellow-man; that women should not sell their babes; that all
+men should be allowed to think and investigate for themselves, and that
+the sword never should be unsheathed to shed innocent blood? Is there
+a believer who would not be delighted to find that every one of the
+infamous passages are interpolations, and that the skirts of God were
+never reddened by the blood of maiden, wife, or babe? Is there an honest
+man who does not regret that God commanded a husband to stone his wife
+for suggesting the worship of some other God? Surely we do not need
+an inspired book to teach us that slavery is right, that polygamy is
+virtue, and that intellectual liberty is a crime.
+
+VI. A COMPARISON OF BOOKS
+
+LET us compare the gems of Jehovah with Pagan paste. It may be that
+the best way to illustrate what I have said, is to compare the supposed
+teachings of Jehovah with those of persons who never wrote an inspired
+line. In all ages of which any record has been preserved, men have given
+their ideas of justice, charity, liberty, love and law. If the Bible is
+the work of God, it should contain the sublimest truths, it should excel
+the works of man, it should contain the loftiest definitions of justice,
+the best conceptions of human liberty, the clearest outlines of duty,
+the tenderest and noblest thoughts. Upon every page should be found the
+luminous evidence of its divine origin. It should contain grander and
+more wonderful things than man has written.
+
+It may be said that it is unfair to call attention to bad things in the
+Bible. To this it may be replied that a divine being ought not to put
+bad things in his book. If the Bible now upholds what we call crimes,
+it will not do to say that it is not verbally inspired. If the words are
+not inspired, what is? It may be said, that the thoughts are inspired.
+This would include only thoughts expressed without words. If ideas are
+inspired, they must be expressed by inspired words--that is to say, by
+an inspired arrangement of words. If a sculptor were inspired of God to
+make a statue, we would not say that the marble was inspired, but
+the statue--that is to say, the relation of part to part, the married
+harmony of form and function. The language, the words, take the place of
+the marble, and it is the arrangement of the words that Christians claim
+to be inspired. If there is an uninspired word, or a word in the wrong
+place, until that word is known a doubt is cast on every word the book
+contains.
+
+If it was worth God's while to make a revelation at all, it was
+certainly worth his while to see that it was correctly made--that it was
+absolutely preserved.
+
+Why should God allow an inspired book to be interpolated? If it was
+worth while to inspire men to write it, it was worth while to
+inspire men to preserve it; and why should he allow another person to
+interpolate in it that which was not inspired? He certainly would not
+have allowed the man he inspired to write contrary to the inspiration.
+He should have preserved his revelation. Neither will it do to say that
+God adapted his revelation to the prejudices of man. It was necessary
+for him to adapt his revelation to the capacity of man, but certainly
+God would not confirm a barbarian in his prejudices. He would not
+fortify a heathen in his crimes....
+
+If a revelation is of any importance, it is to eradicate prejudice.
+They tell us now that the Jews were so ignorant, so bad, that God was
+compelled to justify their crimes, in order to have any influence
+with them. They say that if he had declared slavery and polygamy to be
+crimes, the Jews would have refused to receive the Ten Commandments.
+They tell us that God did the best he could; that his real intention was
+to lead them along slowly, so that in a few hundred years they would be
+induced to admit that larceny and murder and polygamy and slavery were
+not virtues. I suppose if we now wished to break a cannibal of the bad
+habit of devouring missionaries, we would first induce him to cook
+them in a certain way, saying: "To eat cooked missionary is one step
+in advance of eating your missionary raw. After a few years, a little
+mutton could be cooked with missionary, and year after year the amount
+of mutton could be increased and the amount of missionary decreased,
+until in the fullness of time the dish could be entirely mutton, and
+after that the missionaries would be absolutely safe."
+
+If there is anything of value, it is liberty--liberty of body, liberty
+of mind. The liberty of body is the reward of labor. Intellectual
+liberty is the air of the soul, the sunshine of the mind, and without
+it, the world is a prison, the universe a dungeon.
+
+If the Bible is really inspired, Jehovah commanded the Jewish people to
+buy the children of the strangers that sojourned among them, and ordered
+that the children thus bought should be an inheritance for the children
+of the Jews, and that they should be bondmen and bondwomen forever. Yet
+Epictetus, a man to whom no revelation was ever made, a man whose soul
+followed only the light of nature, and who had never heard of the Jewish
+God, was great enough to say: "Will you not remember that your servants
+are by nature your brothers, the children of God? In saying that you
+have bought them, you look down on the earth, and into the pit, on the
+wretched law of men long since dead, but you see not the laws of the
+gods."
+
+We find that Jehovah, speaking to his chosen people, assured them that
+their bondmen and their bondmaids must be "of the heathen that were
+round about them." "Of them," said Jehovah, "shall ye buy bondmen
+and bondmaids." And yet Cicero, a pagan, Cicero, who had never been
+enlightened by reading the Old Testament, had the moral grandeur to
+declare: "They who say that we should love our fellow-citizens but not
+foreigners, destroy the universal brotherhood of mankind, with which
+benevolence and justice would perish forever."
+
+If the Bible is inspired, Jehovah, God of all worlds, actually said:
+"And if a man smite his servant or his maid with a rod, and he die under
+his hand, he shall be sorely punished; notwithstanding, if he continue
+a day or two, he shall not be punished, for he is his money." And yet
+Zeno, founder of the Stoics, centuries before Christ was born, insisted
+that no man could be the owner of another, and that the title was bad,
+whether the slave had become so by conquest or by purchase.
+
+Jehovah ordered a Jewish general to make war, and gave, among others,
+this command: "When the Lord thy God shall drive them before thee, thou
+shalt smite them and utterly destroy them; thou shalt make no covenant
+with them, nor show mercy unto them." And yet Epictetus, whom we have
+already quoted, gave this marvelous rule for the guidance of human
+conduct: "Live with thy inferiors as thou wouldst have thy superiors
+live with thee."
+
+Is it possible, after all, that a being of infinite goodness and wisdom
+said: "I will heap mischief upon them; I will send mine arrows upon
+them; they shall be burned with hunger, and devoured with burning heat,
+and with bitter destruction. I will send the tooth of beasts upon them,
+with the poison of serpents of the dust. The sword without, and terror
+within, shall destroy both the young man and the virgin, the suckling
+also, with the man of gray hairs" while Seneca, an uninspired Roman,
+said: "The wise man will not pardon any crime that ought to be
+punished, but he will accomplish, in a nobler way, all that is sought
+in pardoning. He will spare some and watch over some, because of their
+youth, and others on account of their ignorance. His clemency will not
+fall short of justice, but will fulfill it perfectly."
+
+Can we believe that God ever said to any one: "Let his children be
+fatherless and his wife a widow; let his children be continually
+vagabonds, and beg; let them seek their bread also out of their desolate
+places; let the extortioner catch all that he hath, and let the stranger
+spoil his labor; let there be none to extend mercy unto him, neither let
+there be any to favor his fatherless children." If he ever said these
+words, surely he had never heard this line, this strain of music from
+the Hindu: "Sweet is the lute to those who have not heard the prattle of
+their own children."
+
+Jehovah, "from the clouds and darkness of Sinai," said to the Jews:
+"Thou shalt have no other gods before me.... Though shalt not bow down
+thyself to them nor serve them; for I, the Lord thy God, am a jealous
+God, visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon the children unto the
+third and fourth generation of them that hate me." Contrast this with
+the words put by the Hindu in the mouth of Brahma: "I am the same to all
+mankind. They who honestly serve other gods involuntarily worship me.
+I am he who partakest of all worship, and I am the reward of all
+worshipers."
+
+Compare these passages; the first a dungeon where crawl the things begot
+of jealous slime; the other, great as the domed firmament inlaid with
+suns. Is it possible that the real God ever said:
+
+"And if the prophet be deceived when he hath spoken a thing, I, the
+Lord, have deceived that prophet; and I will stretch out my hand upon
+him and will destroy him from the midst of my people." Compare that
+passage with one from a Pagan.
+
+"It is better to keep silence for the remainder of your life than to
+speak falsely."
+
+Can we believe that a being of infinite mercy gave this command:
+
+"Put every man his sword by his side, and go in and out from gate to
+gate, throughout the camp, and slay every man his brother, and every man
+his companion, and every man his neighbor; consecrate yourselves to-day
+to the Lord, even every man upon his son and upon his brother, that he
+may bestow a blessing upon you this day."
+
+Surely, that God was not animated by so great and magnanimous a spirit
+as was Antoninus, a Roman emperor, who declared that, "he had rather
+keep a single Roman citizen alive than slay a thousand enemies."
+
+Compare the laws given to the children of Israel, as it is claimed by
+the Creator of us all, with the following from Marcus Aurelius:
+
+"I have formed the ideal of a state, in which there is the same law
+for all, and equal rights, and equal liberty of speech established; an
+empire where nothing is honored so much as the freedom of the citizen."
+
+In the Avesta I find this: "I belong to five: to those who think good,
+to those who speak good, to those who do good, to those who hear, and to
+those who are pure."
+
+"Which is the one prayer which in greatness, goodness, and beauty is
+worth all that is between heaven and earth and between this earth and
+the stars? And he replied: To renounce all evil thoughts and words and
+works."
+
+VII.
+
+IT is claimed by the Christian world that one of the great reasons for
+giving an inspired book to the Jews was, that through them the world
+might learn that there is but one God. This piece of information has
+been supposed to be of infinite value. As a matter of fact, long before
+Moses was born, the Egyptians believed and taught that there was but
+one God--that is to say, that above all intelligences there was the one
+Supreme. They were guilty, too, of the same inconsistencies of modern
+Christians. They taught the doctrine of the Trinity--God the Father, God
+the Mother, and God the Son. God was frequently represented as father,
+mother and babe. They also taught that the soul had a divine origin;
+that after death it was to be judged according to the deeds done in the
+body; that those who had done well passed into perpetual joy, and those
+who had done evil into endless pain. In this they agreed with the most
+approved divine of the nineteenth century. Women were the equals of
+men, and Egypt was often governed by queens. In this, her government
+was vastly better than the one established by God. The laws were
+administered by courts much like ours. In Egypt there was a system of
+schools that gave the son of poverty a chance of advancement, and
+the highest offices were open to the successful scholar. The Egyptian
+married one wife. The wife was called "the lady of the house." The women
+were not secluded. The people were not divided into castes. There was
+nothing to prevent the rise of able and intelligent Egyptians. But like
+the Jehovah of the Jews, they made slaves of the captives of war.
+
+The ancient Persians believed in one God; and women helped to found the
+Parsee religion. Nothing can exceed some of the maxims of Zoroaster. The
+Hindoos taught that above all, and over all, was one eternal Supreme.
+They had a code of laws. They understood the philosophy of evidence and
+of damages. They knew better than to teach the doctrine of an eye for an
+eye, and a tooth for a tooth.
+
+They knew that when one man maimed another, it was not to the interest
+of society to have that man maimed, thus burdening the people with two
+cripples, but that it was better to make the man who maimed the other
+work to support him. In India, upon the death of a father, the daughters
+received twice as much from the estate as the sons.
+
+The Romans built temples to Truth, Faith, Valor, Concord, Modesty, and
+Charity, in which they offered sacrifices to the highest conceptions of
+human excellence. Women had rights; they presided in the temple; they
+officiated in holy offices; they guarded the sacred fires upon which the
+safety of Rome depended; and when Christ came, the grandest figure in
+the known world was the Roman mother.
+
+It will not do to say that some rude statue was made by an inspired
+sculptor, and that the Apollo of Belvidere, Venus de Milo, and the
+Gladiator were made by unaided men; that the daubs of the early ages
+were painted by divine assistance, while the Raphaels, the Angelos, and
+the Rembrandts did what they did without the help of heaven. It will not
+do to say, that the first hut was built by God, and the last palace by
+degraded man; that the hoarse songs of the savage tribes were made by
+the Deity, but that Hamlet and Lear were written by man; that the pipes
+of Pan were invented in heaven, and all other musical instruments on the
+earth.
+
+If the Jehovah of the Jews had taken upon himself flesh, and dwelt as a
+man among the people had he endeavored to govern, had he followed his
+own teachings, he would have been a slaveholder, a buyer of babes, and a
+beater of women. He would have waged wars of extermination. He would
+have killed grey-haired and trembling age, and would have sheathed his
+sword, in prattling, dimpled babes. He would have been a polygamist, and
+would have butchered his wife for differing with him on the subject of
+religion.
+
+VIII. THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+
+NE great objection to the Old Testament is the cruelty said to have been
+commanded by God. All these cruelties ceased with death. The vengeance
+of Jehovah stopped at the tomb. He never threatened to punish the dead;
+and there is not one word, from the first mistake in Genesis to the last
+curse of Malachi, containing the slightest intimation that God will take
+his revenge in another world. It was reserved for the New Testament
+to make known the doctrine of eternal pain. The teacher of universal
+benevolence rent the veil between time and eternity, and fixed the
+horrified gaze of man upon the lurid gulf of hell. Within the breast of
+non-resistance coiled the worm that never dies. Compared with this,
+the doctrine of slavery, the wars of extermination, the curses, the
+punishments of the Old Testament were all merciful and just.
+
+There is no time to speak of the conflicting statements in the various
+books composing the New Testament--no time to give the history of the
+manuscripts, the errors in translation, the interpolations made by the
+fathers and by their successors, the priests, and only time to speak of
+a few objections, including some absurdities and some contradictions.
+
+Where several witnesses testify to the same transaction, no matter how
+honest they may be, they will disagree upon minor matters, and such
+testimony is generally considered as evidence that the witnesses
+have not conspired among themselves. The differences in statement are
+accounted for from the facts that all do not see alike, and that all
+have not equally good memories; but when we claim that the witnesses are
+inspired, we must admit that he who inspired them did know exactly what
+occurred, and consequently there should be no disagreement, even in the
+minutest detail. The accounts should not only be substantially, but they
+should be actually, the same. The differences and contradictions can be
+accounted for by the weaknesses of human nature, but these weaknesses
+cannot be predicated of divine wisdom.
+
+And here let me ask: Why should there have been more than one correct
+account of what really happened? Why were four gospels necessary? It
+seems to me that one inspired gospel, containing all that happened, was
+enough. Copies of the one correct one could have been furnished to any
+extent. According to Doctor Davidson, Irenæus argues that the gospels
+were four in number, because there are four universal winds, four
+corners of the globe. Others have said, because there are four seasons;
+and these gentlemen might have added, because a donkey has four legs.
+For my part, I cannot even conceive of a reason for more than one
+gospel.
+
+According to one of these gospels, and according to the prevalent
+Christian belief, the Christian religion rests upon the doctrine of the
+atonement. If this doctrine is without foundation, the fabric falls; and
+it is without foundation, for it is repugnant to justice and mercy.
+The church tells us that the first man committed a crime for which all
+others are responsible. This absurdity was the father and mother of
+another--that a man can be rewarded for the good action of another. We
+are told that God made a law, with the penalty of eternal death. All
+men, they tell us, have broken this law. The law had to be vindicated.
+This could be done by damning everybody, but through what is known as
+the atonement the salvation of a few was made possible. They insist that
+the law demands the extreme penalty, that justice calls for its victim,
+that mercy ceases to plead, and that God by allowing the innocent to
+suffer in the place of the guilty settled satisfactory with the law. To
+carry out this scheme God was born as a babe, grew in stature, increased
+in knowledge, and at the age of thirty-three years having lived a life
+filled with kindness, having practiced every virtue, he was sacrificed
+as an atonement for man. It is claimed that he took our place, bore our
+sins, our guilt, and in this way satisfied the justice of God.
+
+Under the Mosaic dispensation there was no remission of sin except
+through the shedding of blood. When a man sinned he must bring to the
+priest a lamb, a bullock, a goat, or a pair of turtle-doves.
+
+The priest would lay his hand upon the animal and the sin of the man
+would be transferred to the beast. Then the animal would be killed in
+place of the sinner, and the blood thus shed would be sprinkled upon
+the altar. In this way Jehovah was satisfied. The greater the crime, the
+greater the sacrifice. There was a ratio between the value of the animal
+and the enormity of the sin.
+
+The most minute directions were given as to the killing of
+these animals. Every priest became a butcher, every synagogue a
+slaughter-house. Nothing could be more utterly shocking to a refined
+soul, nothing better calculated to harden the heart, than the continual
+shedding of innocent blood. This terrible system culminated in the
+sacrifice of Christ. His blood took the place of all other. It is not
+necessary to shed any more. The law at last is satisfied, satiated,
+surfeited.
+
+The idea that God wants blood is at the bottom of the atonement, and
+rests upon the most fearful savagery; and yet the Mosaic dispensation
+was better adapted to prevent the commission of sin than the Christian
+system. Under that dispensation, if you committed a sin, you had
+to bring a sacrifice--dove, sheep, or bullock, now, when a sin is
+committed, the Christian says, "Charge it," "Put it on the slate, If
+I don't pay it the Savior will." In this way, rascality is sold on a
+credit, and the credit system of religion breeds extravagance in sin.
+The Mosaic dispensation was based upon far better business principles.
+The debt had to be paid, and by the man who owed it. We are told that
+the sinner is in debt to God, and that the obligation is discharged by
+the Savior. The best that can be said of such a transaction is that the
+debt is transferred, not paid. As a matter of fact, the sinner is in
+debt to the person he has injured. If you injure a man, it is not enough
+to get the forgiveness of God--you must get the man's forgiveness, you
+must get your own. If a man puts his hand in the fire and God forgives
+him, his hand will smart just as badly. You must reap what you sow. No
+God can give you wheat when you sow tares, and no Devil can give you
+tares when you sow wheat. We must remember that in nature there are
+neither rewards nor punishments--there are consequences. The life and
+death of Christ do not constitute an atonement. They are worth the
+example, the moral force, the heroism of benevolence, and in so far as
+the life of Christ produces emulation in the direction of goodness, it
+has been of value to mankind.
+
+To make innocence suffer is the greatest sin, and it may be the only
+sin. How, then, is it possible to make the consequences of sin an
+atonement for sin, when the consequences of sin are to be borne by one
+who has not sinned, and the one who has sinned is to reap the reward of
+virtue? No honorable man should be willing that another should suffer
+for him. No good law can accept the sufferings of innocence as an
+atonement for the guilty; and besides, if there was no atonement until
+the crucifixion of Christ, what became of the countless millions who
+died before that time? We must remember that the Jews did not kill
+animals for the Gentiles. Jehovah hated foreigners. There was no way
+provided for the forgiveness of a heathen. What has become of the
+millions who have died since, without having heard of the atonement?
+What becomes of those who hear and do not believe? Can there be a law
+that demands that the guilty be rewarded. And yet, to reward the guilty
+is far nearer justice than to punish the innocent. If the doctrine of
+the atonement is true, there would have been no heaven had no atonement
+been made.
+
+If Judas had understood the Christian system, if he knew that Christ
+must be betrayed, and that God was depending on him to betray him, and
+that without the betrayal no human soul could be saved, what should
+Judas have done?
+
+Jehovah took special charge of the Jewish people. He did this for the
+purpose of civilizing them. If he had succeeded in civilizing them,
+he would have made the damnation of the entire human race a certainty;
+because if the Jews had been a civilized people when Christ appeared--a
+people who had not been hardened by the laws of Jehovah--they would not
+have crucified Christ, and as a consequence, the world would have been
+lost. If the Jews had believed in religious freedom, in the rights of
+thought and speech, if the Christian religion is true, not a human soul
+ever could have been saved. If, when Christ was on his way to Calvary,
+some brave soul had rescued him from the pious mob, he would not only
+have been damned for his pains, but would have rendered impossible the
+salvation of any human being.
+
+The Christian world has been trying for nearly two thousand years to
+explain the atonement, and every effort has ended in an admission that
+it cannot be understood, and a declaration that it must be believed. Has
+the promise and hope of forgiveness ever prevented the commission of
+a sin? Can men be made better by being taught that sin gives happiness
+here; that to live a virtuous life is to bear a cross; that men can
+repent between the last sin and the last breath; and that repentance
+washes every stain of the soul away? Is it good to teach that the
+serpent of regret will not hiss in the ear of memory; that the saved
+will not even pity the victims of their crimes; and that sins forgiven
+cease to affect the unhappy wretches sinned against?
+
+Another objection is, that a certain belief is necessary to save the
+soul. This doctrine, I admit, is taught in the gospel according to John,
+and in many of the epistles; I deny that it is taught in Matthew, Mark,
+or Luke. It is, however, asserted by the church that to believe is the
+only safe way. To this, I reply: Belief is not a voluntary thing. A man
+believes or disbelieves in spite of himself. They tell us that to
+believe is the safe way; but I say, the safe way is to be honest.
+Nothing can be safer than that. No man in the hour of death ever
+regretted having been honest. No man when the shadows of the last day
+were gathering about the pillow of death, ever regretted that he had
+given to his fellow-man his honest thought. No man, in the presence of
+eternity, ever wished that he had been a hypocrite. No man ever then
+regretted that he did not throw away his reason. It certainly cannot be
+necessary to throw away your reason to save your soul, because after
+that, your soul is not worth saving. The soul has a right to defend
+itself. My brain is my castle; and when I waive the right to defend it,
+I become an intellectual serf and slave.
+
+I do not admit that a man by doing me an injury can place me under
+obligations to do him a service. To render benefits for injuries is
+to ignore all distinctions between actions. He who treats friends and
+enemies alike has neither love nor justice. The idea of non-resistance
+never occurred to a man with power to defend himself. The mother of this
+doctrine was weakness. To allow a crime to be committed, even against
+yourself, when you can prevent it, is next to committing the crime
+yourself. The church has preached the doctrine of non-resistance, and
+under that banner has shed the blood of millions. In the folds of
+her sacred vestments have gleamed for centuries the daggers of
+assassination. With her cunning hands she wove the purple for hypocrisy
+and placed the crown upon the brow of crime. For more than a thousand
+years larceny held the scales of justice, hypocrisy wore the mitre and
+tiara, while beggars scorned the royal sons of toil, and ignorant fear
+denounced the liberty of thought.
+
+XI. CHRIST'S MISSION.
+
+HE came, they tell us, to make a revelation, and what did he reveal?
+"Love thy neighbor as thyself"? That was in the Old Testament. "Love
+God with all thy heart"? That was in the Old Testament. "Return good for
+evil"? That was said by Buddha, seven hundred years before Christ was
+born. "Do unto others as ye would that they should do unto you"? That
+was the doctrine of Lao-tsze. Did he come to give a rule of action?
+Zoroaster had done this long before: "Whenever thou art in doubt as to
+whether an action is good or bad, abstain from it." Did he come to tell
+us of another world? The immortality of the soul had been taught by the
+Hindoos, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans hundreds of years before he was
+born. What argument did he make in favor of immortality? What facts
+did he furnish? What star of hope did he put above the darkness of
+this world? Did he come simply to tell us that we should not revenge
+ourselves upon our enemies? Long before, Socrates had said: "One who
+is injured ought not to return the injury, for on no account can it be
+right to do an injustice; and it is not right to return an injury, or to
+do evil to any man, however much we have suffered from him." And Cicero
+had said: "Let us not listen to those who think we ought to be angry
+with our enemies, and who believe this to be great and manly. Nothing
+is so praiseworthy, nothing so clearly shows a great and noble soul, as
+clemency and readiness to forgive." Is there anything in the literature
+of the world more nearly perfect than this thought?
+
+Was it from Christ the world learned the first lesson of forbearance,
+when centuries and centuries before, Chrishna had said, "If a man strike
+thee, and in striking drop his staff, pick it up and hand it to him
+again?" Is it possible that the son of God threatened to say to a vast
+majority, of his children, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting
+fire prepared for the devil and his angels," while the Buddhist was
+great and tender enough to say:
+
+"Never will I seek nor receive private individual salvation; never
+enter into final peace alone; but forever and everywhere will I live
+and strive for the universal redemption of every creature throughout
+all worlds. Never will I leave this world of sin and sorrow and struggle
+until all are delivered. Until then, I will remain and suffer where I
+am?"
+
+Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this, from a
+Sufi?--"Better one moment of silent contemplation and inward love than
+seventy thousand years of outward worship."
+
+Is there anything comparable to this?--"Whoever carelessly treads on
+a worm that crawls on the earth, that heartless one is darkly alienate
+from God."
+
+Is there anything in the New Testament more beautiful than the story of
+the Sufi?
+
+For seven years a Sufi practised every virtue, and then he mounted the
+three steps that lead to the doors of Paradise. He knocked and a voice
+said: "Who is there?" The Sufi replied: "Thy servant, O God." But the
+doors remained closed.
+
+Yet seven other years the Sufi engaged in every good work. He comforted
+the sorrowing and divided his substance with the poor. Again he mounted
+the three steps, again knocked at the doors of Paradise, and again
+the voice asked: "Who is there?" and the Sufi replied: "Thy slave, O
+God."--But the doors remained closed.
+
+Yet seven other years the Sufi spent in works of charity, in visiting
+the imprisoned and the sick. Again he mounted the steps, again knocked
+at the celestial doors. Again he heard the question: "Who is there?" and
+he replied: "Thyself, O God."--The gates wide open flew.
+
+Is it possible that St. Paul was inspired of God, when he said: "Let the
+women learn in silence, with all subjection."--"Neither was the man
+created for the woman, but the woman for the man?"
+
+And is it possible that Epictetus, without the slightest aid from
+heaven, gave to the world this gem of love:
+
+"What is more delightful than to be so dear to your wife, as to be on
+that account dearer to yourself?"
+
+Did St. Paul express the sentiments of God when he wrote--
+
+"But I would have you know that the head of every man is Christ, and the
+head of every woman is the man, and the head of Christ is God. Wives,
+submit yourselves unto your husbands as unto the Lord?"
+
+And was the author of this, a poor despised heathen?--
+
+"In whatever house the husband is contented with the wife, and the wife
+with the husband, in that house will fortune dwell; but upon the house
+where women are not honored, let a curse be pronounced. Where the wife
+is honored, there the gods are truly worshiped."
+
+Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this?--
+
+"Shall I tell thee where nature is most blest and fair? It is where
+those we love abide. Though that space be small, it is ample above
+kingdoms; though it be a desert, through it run the rivers of Paradise."
+
+After reading the curses pronounced in the Old
+
+Testament upon Jew and heathen, the descriptions of slaughter, of
+treachery and of death, the destruction of women and babes; after you
+shall have read all the chapters of horror in the New Testament, the
+threatenings of fire and flame, then read this, from the greatest of
+human beings:
+
+ "The quality of mercy is not strained:
+ It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
+ Upon the place beneath. It is twice blessed;
+ It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.
+ 'Tis mightiest in the mightiest: it becomes
+ The throned monarch better than his crown."
+
+X. ETERNAL PAIN
+
+UPON passages in the New Testament rests the doctrine of eternal pain.
+This doctrine subverts every idea of justice. A finite being can neither
+commit an infinite sin, nor a sin against the Infinite. A being of
+infinite goodness and wisdom has no right to create any being whose life
+is not a blessing. Infinite wisdom has no right to create a failure,
+and surely a man destined to everlasting failure is not a conspicuous
+success. The doctrine of eternal punishment is the most infamous of
+all doctrines--born of ignorance, cruelty and fear. Around the angel of
+immortality, Christianity has coiled this serpent.
+
+Upon Love's breast the church has placed the eternal asp. And yet in
+the same book in which is taught this most frightful of dogmas, we are
+assured that "the Lord is good to all, and his tender mercies are over
+all his works."
+
+A few days ago upon the wide sea, was found a barque called "The
+Tiger," Captain Kreuger, in command. The vessel had been one hundred and
+twenty-six days upon the sea. For days the crew had been without water,
+without food, and were starving. For nine days not a drop had passed
+their lips. The crew consisted of the captain, a mate, and eleven men.
+At the end of one hundred and eighteen days from Liverpool they killed
+the captain's Newfoundland dog. This lasted them four days. During the
+next five days they had nothing. For weeks they had had no light
+and were unable to see the compass at night. On the one hundred and
+twenty-fifth day Captain Kreuger, a German, took a revolver in his hand,
+stood up before the men, and placing the weapon at his temple said:
+"Boys, we can't stand this much longer, and to save you all, I am
+willing to die." The mate grasped the revolver and begged the captain to
+wait another day. The next day, upon the horizon of their despair, they
+saw the smoke of the steamship Nebo. They were rescued.
+
+Suppose that Captain Kreuger was not a Christian, and suppose that he
+had sent the ball crashing through his brain, and had done so simply
+to keep the crew from starvation, do you tell me that a God of infinite
+mercy would forever damn that man?
+
+Do not misunderstand me. I insist that every passage in the Bible
+upholding crime was written by savage man. I insist that if there is
+a God, he is not, never was, and never will be in favor of slavery,
+polygamy, wars of extermination, or religious persecution. Does any
+Christian believe that if the real God were to write a book now, he
+would uphold the crimes commanded in the Old Testament? Has Jehovah
+improved? Has infinite mercy become more merciful? Has infinite wisdom
+intellectually advanced?
+
+WILL any one claim that the passages upholding slavery have liberated
+mankind? Are we indebted to polygamy for our modern homes? Was religious
+liberty born of that infamous verse in which the husband is commanded to
+kill his wife for worshiping an unknown God?
+
+The usual answer to these objections is, that no country has ever been
+civilized without a Bible. The Jews were the only people to whom Jehovah
+made his will directly known. Were they better than other nations? They
+read the Old Testament and one of the effects of such reading was, that
+they crucified a kind, loving, and perfectly innocent man. Certainly
+they could not have done worse, without a Bible. In crucifying Christ
+the Jews followed the teachings of his Father. If Jehovah was in fact
+God, and if that God took upon himself flesh and came among the Jews,
+and preached what the Jews understood to be blasphemy; and if the Jews
+in accordance with the laws given by this same Jehovah to Moses,
+crucified him, then I say, and I say it with infinite reverence, he
+reaped what he had sown. He became the victim of his own injustice.
+
+But I insist that these things are not true. I insist that the real God,
+if there is one, never commanded man to enslave his fellow-man, never
+told a mother to sell her babe, never established polygamy, never urged
+one nation to exterminate another, and never told a husband to kill his
+wife because she suggested the worship of another God.
+
+From the aspersions of the pulpit, from the slanders of the church,
+I seek to rescue the reputation of the Deity. I insist that the Old
+Testament would be a better book with all these passages left out; and
+whatever may be said of the rest of the Bible, the passages to which I
+have called attention can, with vastly more propriety, be attributed to
+a devil than to a god.
+
+Take from the New Testament the idea that belief is necessary to
+salvation; that Christ was offered as an atonement for the sins of
+mankind; that heaven is the reward of faith, and hell the penalty of
+honest investigation, and that the punishment of the human soul will go
+on forever; take from it all miracles and foolish stories, and I most
+cheerfully admit that the good passages are true. If they are true, it
+makes no difference whether they are inspired or not. Inspiration is
+only necessary to give authority to that which is repugnant to human
+reason. Only that which never happened needs to be substantiated by a
+miracle.
+
+The universe is natural.
+
+The church must cease to insist that passages upholding the institutions
+of savage men were inspired of God. The dogma of atonement must be
+abandoned. Good deeds must take the place of faith. The savagery of
+eternal punishment must be renounced. It must be admitted that credulity
+is not a virtue, and that investigation is not a crime. It must be
+admitted that miracles are the children of mendacity, and that nothing
+can be more wonderful than the majestic, unbroken, sublime, and eternal
+procession of causes and effects. Reason must be the arbiter. Inspired
+books attested by miracles cannot stand against a demonstrated fact. A
+religion that does not command the respect of the greatest minds will,
+in a little while, excite the mockery of all.
+
+A man who does not believe in intellectual liberty is a barbarian. Is
+it possible that God is intolerant? Could there be any progress, even
+in heaven, without intellectual liberty? Is the freedom of the future
+to exist only in perdition? Is it not, after all, barely possible that
+a man acting like Christ can be saved? Is a man to be eternally rewarded
+for believing according to evidence, without evidence, or against
+evidence? Are we to be saved because we are good, or because another was
+virtuous? Is credulity to be winged and crowned, whilst honest doubt is
+chained and damned.
+
+If Jehovah, was in fact God, he knew the end from the beginning. He
+knew that his Bible would be a breast-work behind which all tyranny
+and hypocrisy would crouch. He knew that his Bible would be the
+auction-block on which women would stand while their babes were sold
+from their arms. He knew that this Bible would be quoted by tyrants;
+that it would be the defence of robbers called kings, and of hypocrites
+called priests. He knew that he had taught the Jewish people nothing of
+importance. He knew that he had found them free and left them slaves. He
+knew that he had never fulfilled a single promise made to them. He knew
+that while other nations had advanced in art and science his chosen
+people were savage still. He promised them the world, and gave them a
+desert. He promised them liberty and he made them slaves. He promised
+them victory and he gave them defeat. He said they should be kings and
+he made them serfs. He promised them universal empire and gave them
+exile. When one finishes the Old Testament he is compelled to say:
+"Nothing can add to the misery of a nation whose king is Jehovah!"
+
+The Old Testament filled this world with tyranny and injustice, and the
+New gives us a future filled with pain for nearly all of the sons of
+men.
+
+The Old Testament describes the hell of the past, and the New the hell
+of the future.
+
+The Old Testament tells us the frightful things that God has done, the
+New the frightful things that he will do.
+
+These two books give us the sufferings of the past and the future--the
+injustice, the agony and the tears of both worlds.
+
+
+
+
+ORTHODOXY.
+
+A LECTURE.
+
+IT is utterly inconceivable that any man believing in the truth of the
+Christian religion should publicly deny it, because he who believes in
+that religion would believe that, by a public denial, he would peril the
+eternal salvation of his soul. It is conceivable, and without any great
+effort of the mind, that millions who do not believe in the Christian
+religion should openly say that they did. In a country where religion
+is supposed to be in power--where it has rewards for pretence, where it
+pays a premium upon hypocrisy, where it at least is willing to purchase
+silence--it is easily conceivable that millions pretend to believe what
+they do not. And yet I believe it has been charged against myself not
+only that I was insincere, but that I took the side I am on for the sake
+of popularity; and the audience to-night goes far toward justifying the
+accusation.
+
+Orthodox Religion Dying Out.
+
+It gives me immense pleasure to say to this audience that orthodox
+religion is dying out of the civilized world. It is a sick man. It has
+been attacked with two diseases--softening of the brain and ossification
+of the heart. It is a religion that no longer satisfies the intelligence
+of this country; that no longer satisfies the brain; a religion against
+which the heart of every civilized man and woman protests. It is a
+religion that gives hope only to a few; that puts a shadow upon the
+cradle; that wraps the coffin in darkness and fills the future of
+mankind with flame and fear. It is a religion that I am going to do what
+little I can while I live to destroy. In its place I want humanity,
+I want good fellowship, I want intellectual liberty--free lips, the
+discoveries and inventions of genius, the demonstrations of science--the
+religion of art, music and poetry--of good houses, good clothes, good
+wages--that is to say, the religion of this world.
+
+Religious Deaths and Births.
+
+We must remember that this is a world of progress, a world of perpetual
+change--a succession of coffins and cradles. There is perpetual death,
+and there is perpetual birth. By the grave of the old, forever stand
+youth and joy; and when an old religion dies, a better one is born. When
+we find out that an assertion is a falsehood a shining truth takes its
+place, and we need not fear the destruction of the false. The more false
+we destroy the more room there will be for the true.
+
+There was a time when the astrologer sought to read in the stars the
+fate of men and nations. The astrologer has faded from the world, but
+the astronomer has taken his place. There was a time when the poor
+alchemist, bent and wrinkled and old, over his crucible endeavored to
+find some secret by which he could change the baser metals into purest
+gold. The alchemist has gone; the chemist took his place; and, although
+he finds nothing to change metals into gold, he finds something that
+covers the earth with wealth. There was a time when the soothsayer and
+augur flourished. After them came the parson and the priest; and the
+parson and the priest must go. The preacher must go, and in his place
+must come the teacher--the real interpreter of Nature. We are done with
+the supernatural. We are through with the miraculous and the impossible.
+There was once the prophet who pretended to read the book of the future.
+His place has been taken by the philosopher, who reasons from cause to
+effect--who finds the facts by which we are surrounded and endeavors
+to reason from these premises and to tell what in all probability will
+happen. The prophet has gone, the philosopher is here. There was a time
+when man sought aid from heaven--when he prayed to the deaf sky. There
+was a time when everything depended on the supernaturalist. That time in
+Christendom is passing away. We now depend upon the naturalist--not upon
+the believer in ancient falsehoods, but on the discoverer of facts--on
+the demonstrater of truths. At last we are beginning to build on a
+solid foundation, and as we progress, the supernatural dies. The leaders
+of the intellectual world deny the existence of the supernatural. They
+take from all superstition its foundation.
+
+The Religion of Reciprocity.
+
+Supernatural religion will fade from this world, and in its place we
+shall have reason. In the place of the worship of something we know
+not of, will be the religion of mutual love and assistance--the great
+religion of reciprocity. Superstition must go. Science will remain. The
+church dies hard. The brain of the world is not yet developed. There
+are intellectual diseases as well as physical--there are pestilences and
+plagues of the mind.
+
+Whenever the new comes the old protests, and fights for its place as
+long as it has a particle of power. We are now having the same warfare
+between superstition and science that there was between the stage coach
+and the locomotive. But the stage coach had to go. It had its day of
+glory and power, but it is gone. It went West. In a little while it will
+be driven into the Pacific. So we find that there is the same conflict
+between the different sects and different schools not only of philosophy
+but of medicine.
+
+Recollect that everything except the demonstrated truth is liable
+to die. That is the order of Nature. Words die. Every language has a
+cemetery. Every now and then a word dies and a tombstone is erected, and
+across it is written "obsolete." New words are continually being born.
+There is a cradle in which a word is rocked. A thought is married to a
+sound, and a child-word is born. And there comes a time when the word
+gets old, and wrinkled, and expressionless, and is carried mournfully
+to the grave. So in the schools of medicine. You can remember, so can I,
+when the old allopathists, the bleeders and blisterers, reigned supreme.
+If there was anything the matter with a man they let out his blood.
+Called to the bedside, they took him on the point of a lancet to the
+edge of eternity, and then practiced all their art to bring him back.
+One can hardly imagine how perfect a constitution it took a few years
+ago to stand the assault of a doctor. And long after the old practice
+was found to be a mistake hundreds and thousands of the ancient
+physicians clung to it, carried around with them, in one pocket a bottle
+of jalap, and in the other a rusty lancet, sorry that they could not
+find some patient with faith enough to allow the experiment to be made
+again.
+
+So these schools, and these theories, and these religions die hard. What
+else can they do? Like the paintings of the old masters, they are kept
+alive because so much money has been invested in them. Think of the
+amount of money that has been invested in superstition! Think of the
+schools that have been founded for the more general diffusion of useless
+knowledge! Think of the colleges wherein men are taught that it is
+dangerous to think, and that they must never use their brains except
+in the act of faith! Think of the millions and billions of dollars that
+have been expended in churches, in temples, and in cathedrals! Think of
+the thousands and thousands of men who depend for their living upon the
+ignorance of mankind! Think of those who grow rich on credulity and
+who fatten on faith! Do you suppose they are going to die without a
+struggle? What are they to do? From the bottom of my heart I sympathize
+with the poor clergyman that has had all his common sense educated out
+of him, and is now to be thrown upon the cold and unbelieving world. His
+prayers are not answered; he gets no help from on high, and the pews are
+beginning to criticise the pulpit. What is the man to do? If he suddenly
+changes he is gone. If he preaches what he really believes he will get
+notice to quit. And yet, if he and the congregation would come together
+and be perfectly honest, they would all admit that they believe little
+and know nothing.
+
+Only a little while ago a couple of ladies were riding together from a
+revival, late at night, and one said to the other, as they rode along:
+"I am going to say something that will shock you, and I beg of you never
+to tell it to anybody else. I am going to tell it to you." "Well, what
+is it?" Said she: "I do not believe the Bible." The other replied:
+"Neither do I."
+
+I have often thought how splendid it would be if the ministers could but
+come together and say: "Now, let us be honest. Let us tell each other,
+honor bright"--like Dr. Curry, of Chicago, did in the meeting the other
+day--"just what we believe." They tell a story that in the old time a
+lot of people, about twenty, were in Texas in a little hotel, and one
+fellow got up before the fire, put his hands behind him, and said:
+"Boys, let us all tell our real names." If the ministers and their
+congregations would only tell their real thoughts they would find that
+they are nearly as bad as I am, and that they believe as little.
+
+Orthodoxy dies hard, and its defenders tell us that this fact shows that
+it is of divine origin. Judaism dies hard. It has lived several thousand
+years longer than Christianity. The religion of Mohammed dies hard.
+
+Buddhism dies hard. Why do all these religions die hard? Because
+intelligence increases slowly.
+
+Let me whisper in the ear of the Protestant: Catholicism dies hard. What
+does that prove? It proves that the people are ignorant and that the
+priests are cunning.
+
+Let me whisper in the ear of the Catholic: Protestantism dies hard. What
+does that prove? It proves that the people are superstitious and the
+preachers stupid.
+
+Let me whisper in all your ears: Infidelity is not dying--it is
+growing--it increases every day. And what does that prove? It
+proves that the people are learning more and more--that they are
+advancing--that the mind is getting free, and that the race is being
+civilized.
+
+The clergy know that I know that they know that they do not know.
+
+The Blows That Have Shattered the Shield and Shivered the Lance of
+Superstition.
+
+Mohammed.
+
+Mohammed wrested from the disciples of the cross the fairest part of
+Europe. It was known that he was an impostor, and that fact sowed the
+seeds of distrust and infidelity in the Christian world. Christians made
+an effort to rescue from the infidels the empty sepulchre of Christ.
+That commenced in the eleventh century and ended at the close of the
+thirteenth. Europe was almost depopulated. The fields were left waste,
+the villages were deserted, nations were impoverished, every man who
+owed a debt was discharged from payment if he put a cross upon his
+breast and joined the Crusades. No matter what crime he had committed,
+the doors of the prison were open for him to join the hosts of the
+cross. They believed that God would give them victory, and they carried
+in front of the first Crusade a goat and a goose, believing that both
+those animals were blessed by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost. And I
+may say that those same animals are in the lead to-day in the orthodox
+world. Until the year 1291 they endeavored to gain possession of that
+sepulchre, and finally the hosts of Christ were driven back, baffled and
+beaten,--a poor, miserable, religious rabble. They were driven back, and
+that fact sowed the seeds of distrust in Christendom. You know that at
+that time the world believed in trial by battle--that God would take
+the side of the right--and there had been a trial by battle between the
+cross and the crescent, and Mohammed had been victorious. Was God at
+that time governing the world? Was he endeavoring to spread his gospel?
+
+The Destruction of Art.
+
+You know that when Christianity came into power it destroyed every
+statue it could lay its ignorant hands upon. It defaced and obliterated
+every painting; it destroyed every beautiful building; it burned the
+manuscripts, both Greek and Latin; it destroyed all the history, all
+the poetry, all the philosophy it could find, and reduced to ashes every
+library that it could reach with its torch. And the result was, that the
+night of the Middle Ages fell upon the human race. But by accident,
+by chance, by oversight, a few of the manuscripts escaped the fury of
+religious zeal; and these manuscripts became the seed, the fruit of
+which is our civilization of to-day. A few statues had been buried; a
+few forms of beauty were dug from the earth that had protected them, and
+now the civilized world is filled with art, the walls are covered with
+paintings, and the niches filled with statuary. A few manuscripts were
+found and deciphered. The old languages were learned, and literature
+was again born. A new day dawned upon mankind. Every effort at mental
+improvement had been opposed by the church, and yet, the few things
+saved from the general wreck--a few poems, a few works of the ancient
+thinkers, a few forms wrought in stone, produced a new civilization
+destined to overthrow and destroy the fabric of superstition.
+
+The Discovery of America.
+
+What was the next blow that this church received? The discovery of
+America. The Holy Ghost who inspired men to write the Bible did not
+know of the existence of this continent, never dreamed of the Western
+Hemisphere. The Bible left out half the world. The Holy Ghost did not
+know that the earth is round. He did not dream that the earth is round.
+He believed it was flat, although he made it himself. At that time
+heaven was just beyond the clouds. It was there the gods lived, there
+the angels were, and it was against that heaven that Jacob's ladder
+leaned when the angels went up and down. It was to that heaven that
+Christ ascended after his resurrection. It was up there that the New
+Jerusalem was, with its streets of gold, and under this earth was
+perdition. There was where the devils lived; where a pit was dug for
+all unbelievers, and for men who had brains. I say that for this reason:
+Just in proportion that you have brains, your chances for eternal joy
+are lessened, according to this religion. And just in proportion that
+you lack brains your chances are increased. At last they found that the
+earth is round. It was circumnavigated by Magellan. In 1519 that brave
+man set sail. The church told him: "The earth is flat, my friend; don't
+go, you may fall off the edge." Magellan said: "I have seen the shadow
+of the earth upon the moon, and I have more confidence in the shadow
+than I have in the church." The ship went round. The earth was
+circumnavigated. Science passed its hand above it and beneath it, and
+where was the old heaven and where was the hell? Vanished forever! And
+they dwell now only in the religion of superstition. We found there was
+no place there for Jacob's ladder to lean against; no place there for
+the gods and angels to live; no place to hold the waters of the deluge;
+no place to which Christ could have ascended. The foundations of the
+New Jerusalem crumbled. The towers and domes fell, and in their places
+infinite space, sown with an infinite number of stars; not with New
+Jerusalems, but with countless constellations.
+
+Copernicus and Kepler.
+
+Then man began to grow great, and with that came Astronomy, In 1473
+Copernicus was born. In 1543 his great work appeared. In 1616 the system
+of Copernicus was condemned by the pope, by the infallible Catholic
+Church, and the church was about as near right upon that subject as upon
+any other. The system of Copernicus was denounced. And how long do you
+suppose the church fought that? Let me tell you. It was revoked by Pius
+VII. in the year of grace 1821. For two hundred and seventy-eight years
+after the death of Copernicus the church insisted that his system was
+false, and that the old Bible astronomy was true. Astronomy is the first
+help that we ever received from heaven. Then came Kepler in 1609, and
+you may almost date the birth of science from the night that Kepler
+discovered his first law. That was the break of the day. His first law,
+that the planets do not move in circles but in ellipses; his second law,
+that they describe equal spaces in equal times; his third law, that the
+squares of their periodic times are proportional to the cubes of their
+distances. That man gave us the key to the heavens. He opened the
+infinite book, and in it read three lines.
+
+I have not time to speak of Galileo, of Leonardo da Vinci, of Bruno, and
+of hundreds of others who contributed to the intellectual wealth of the
+world.
+
+Special Providence.
+
+The next thing that gave the church a blow was Statistics. We found by
+taking statistics that we could tell the average length of human life;
+that this human life did not depend upon infinite caprice; that it
+depended upon conditions, circumstances, laws and facts, and that these
+conditions, circumstances, and facts were during long periods of time
+substantially the same. And now, the man who depends entirely upon
+special providence gets his life insured. He has more confidence even
+in one of these companies than he has in the whole Trinity. We found by
+statistics that there were just so many crimes on an average committed;
+just so many crimes of one kind and so many of another; just so many
+suicides, so many deaths by drowning, so many accidents on an average,
+so many men marrying women, for instance, older than themselves; so many
+murders of a particular kind; just the same number of mistakes; and
+I say to-night, statistics utterly demolish the idea of special
+providence.
+
+Only the other day a gentleman was telling me of a case of special
+providence. He knew it. He had been the subject of it. A few years ago
+he was about to go on a ship when he was detained. He did not go, and
+the ship was lost with all on board.
+
+"Yes!" I said, "Do you think the people who were drowned believed in
+special providence?" Think of the infinite egotism of such a doctrine.
+Here is a man that fails to go upon a ship with five hundred passengers
+and they go down to the bottom of the sea--fathers, mothers, children,
+and loving husbands and wives waiting upon the chores of expectation.
+Here is one poor little wretch that did not happen to go! And he thinks
+that God, the Infinite Being, interfered in his poor little withered
+behalf and let the rest all go. That is special providence. Why does
+special providence allow all the crimes? Why are the wife-beaters
+protected, and why are the wives and children left defenceless if the
+hand of God is over us all? Who protects the insane? Why does Providence
+permit insanity? But the church cannot give up special providence. If
+there is no such thing, then no prayers, no worship, no churches, no
+priests. What would become of National Thanksgiving?
+
+You know we have a custom every year of issuing a proclamation of
+thanksgiving. We say to God, "Although you have afflicted all the other
+countries, although you have sent war, and desolation, and famine on
+everybody else, we have been such good children that you have been
+kind to us, and we hope you will keep on." It does not make a bit of
+difference whether we have good times or not--the thanksgiving is always
+exactly the same. I remember a few years ago a governor of Iowa got out
+a proclamation of that kind. He went on to tell how thankful the people
+were and how prosperous the State had been. There was a young fellow in
+that State who got out another proclamation, saying that he feared the
+Lord might be misled by official correspondence; that the governor's
+proclamation was entirely false; that the State was not prosperous; that
+the crops had been an almost utter failure; that nearly every farm in
+the State was mortgaged, and that if the Lord did not believe him, all
+he asked was that he would send some angel in whom he had confidence, to
+look the matter over and report.
+
+Charles Darwin.
+
+This century will be called Darwin's century. He was one of the greatest
+men who ever touched this globe. He has explained more of the phenomena
+of life than all of the religious teachers. Write the name of Charles
+Darwin on the one hand and the name of every theologian who ever lived
+on the other, and from that name has come more light to the world
+than from all of those. His doctrine of evolution, his doctrine of the
+survival of the fittest, his doctrine of the origin of species,
+has removed in every thinking mind the last vestige of orthodox
+Christianity. He has not only stated, but he has demonstrated, that the
+inspired writer knew nothing of this world, nothing of the origin of
+man, nothing of geology, nothing of astronomy, nothing of nature; that
+the Bible is a book written by ignorance--at the instigation of fear.
+Think of the men who replied to him. Only a few years ago there was no
+person too ignorant to successfully answer Charles Darwin; and the more
+ignorant he was the more cheerfully he undertook the task. He was held
+up to the ridicule, the scorn and contempt of the Christian world, and
+yet when he died, England was proud to put his dust with that of her
+noblest and her grandest. Charles Darwin conquered the intellectual
+world, and his doctrines are now accepted facts. His light has broken
+in on some of the clergy, and the greatest man who to-day occupies
+the pulpit of one of the orthodox: churches, Henry Ward Beecher, is a
+believer in the theories of Charles Darwin--a man of more genius than
+all the clergy of that entire church put together.
+
+And yet we are told in this little creed that orthodox religion is about
+to conquer the world! It will be driven to the wilds of Africa. It must
+go to some savage country; it has lost its hold upon civilization. It is
+unfortunate to have a religion that cannot be accepted by the intellect
+of a nation. It is unfortunate to have a religion against which every
+good and noble heart protests. Let us have a good religion or none. My
+pity has been excited by seeing these ministers endeavor to warp and
+twist the passages of Scripture to fit the demonstrations of science. Of
+course, I have not time to recount all the discoveries and events that
+have assisted in the destruction of superstition. Every fact is an
+enemy of the church. Every fact is a heretic. Every demonstration is
+an infidel. Everything that ever really happened testifies against the
+supernatural.
+
+The church teaches that man was created perfect, and that for six
+thousand years he has degenerated. Darwin demonstrated the falsity
+of this dogma. He shows that man has for thousands of ages steadily
+advanced; that the Garden of Eden is an ignorant myth; that the doctrine
+of original sin has no foundation in fact; that the atonement is an
+absurdity; that the serpent did not tempt, and that man did not "fall."
+
+Charles Darwin destroyed the foundation of orthodox Christianity. There
+is nothing left but faith in what we know could not and did not happen.
+Religion and science are enemies. One is a superstition; the other is
+a fact. One rests upon the false, the other upon the true. One is the
+result of fear and faith, the other of investigation and reason.
+
+The Creeds.
+
+I have been talking a great deal about the orthodox religion. Often,
+after having delivered a lecture, I have met some good, religious person
+who has said to me:
+
+"You do not tell it as we believe it."
+
+"Well, but I tell it as you have it written in your creed."
+
+"Oh, we don't mind the creed any more."
+
+"Then, why do you not change it?"
+
+"Oh, well, we understand it as it is, and if we tried to change it,
+maybe we would not agree."
+
+Possibly the creeds are in the best condition now. There is a tacit
+understanding that they do not believe them, that there is a way to
+get around them, and that they can read between the lines; that if they
+should meet now to form new creeds they would fail to agree; and that
+now they can say as they please, except in public. Whenever they do so
+in public the church, in self-defence, must try them; and I believe in
+trying every minister that does not preach the doctrine he agrees to.
+I have not the slightest sympathy with a Presbyterian preacher who
+endeavors to preach infidelity from a Presbyterian pulpit and receives
+Presbyterian money. When he changes his views he should step down and
+out like a man, and say, "I do not believe your doctrine, and I will not
+preach it. You must hire some other man." The Latest Creed.
+
+But I find that I have correctly interpreted the creeds. There was put
+into my hands the new Congregational creed. I have read it, and I will
+call your attention to it to-night, to find whether that church has made
+any advance; to find whether the sun of science has risen in the heavens
+in vain; whether they are still the children of intellectual darkness;
+whether they still consider it necessary for you to believe something
+that you by no possibility can understand, in order to be a winged angel
+forever. Now, let us see what their creed is. I will read a little of
+it.
+
+They commence by saying that they
+
+"_Believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth,
+and of all things visible and invisible_."
+
+They say, now, that there is the one personal God; that he is the maker
+of the universe and its ruler. I again ask the old question, Of what did
+he make it? If matter has not existed through eternity, then this God
+made it. Of what did he make it? What did he use for the purpose? There
+was nothing in the universe except this God. What had the God been doing
+for the eternity he had been living? He had made nothing--called nothing
+into existence; never had had an idea, because it is impossible to have
+an idea unless there is something to excite an idea. What had he been
+doing? Why does not the Congregational Church tell us? How do they know
+about this Infinite Being? And if he is infinite how can they comprehend
+him? What good is it to believe in something that you know you do not
+understand, and that you never can understand?
+
+In the Episcopalian creed God is described as follows:
+
+"_There is but one living and true God, everlasting, without body, parts
+or passions_."
+
+Think of that!--without body, parts, or passions.
+
+I defy any man in the world to write a better description of nothing.
+You cannot conceive of a finer word-painting of a vacuum than "without
+body, parts, or passions." And yet this God, without passions, is angry
+at the wicked every day; this God, without passions, is a jealous God,
+whose anger burneth to the lowest hell. This God, without passions,
+loves the whole human race; and this God, without passions, damns a
+large majority of mankind. This God without body, walked in the Garden
+of Eden, in the cool of the day. This God, without body, talked with
+Adam and Eve. This God, without body, or parts met Moses upon Mount
+Sinai, appeared at the door of the tabernacle, and talked with Moses
+face to face as a man speaketh to his friend. This description of God is
+simply an effort of the church to describe a something of which it has
+no conception.
+
+God as a Governor.
+
+So, too, I find the following:
+
+"_We believe that the Providence of God, by which he executes his
+eternal purposes in the government of the world, is in and over all
+events._"
+
+Is God the governor of the world? Is this established by the history of
+nations? What evidence can you find, if you are absolutely honest and
+not frightened, in the history of the world, that this universe is
+presided over by an infinitely wise and good God?
+
+How do you account for Russia? How do you account for Siberia? How do
+you account for the fact that whole races of men toiled beneath the
+master's lash for ages without recompense and without reward? How do you
+account for the fact that babes were sold from the arms of mothers--arms
+that had been reached toward God in supplication? How do you account for
+it? How do you account for the existence of martyrs? How do you account
+for the fact that this God allows people to be burned simply for loving
+him? Is justice always done? Is innocence always acquitted? Do the
+good succeed? Are the honest fed? Are the charitable clothed? Are the
+virtuous shielded? How do you account for the fact that the world has
+been filled with pain, and grief, and tears? How do you account for the
+fact that people have been swallowed by earthquakes, overwhelmned by
+volcanoes, and swept from the earth by storms? Is it easy to account
+for famine, for pestilence and plague if there be above us all a Ruler
+infinitely good, powerful and wise?
+
+I do not say there is none. I do not know. As I have said before, this
+is the only planet I was ever on. I live in one of the rural districts
+of the universe, and do not know about these things as much as the
+clergy pretend to, but if they know no more about the other world than
+they do about this, it is not worth mentioning.
+
+How do they answer all this? They say that God "permits" it. What would
+you say to me if I stood by and saw a ruffian beat out the brains of a
+child, when I had full and perfect power to prevent it? You would say
+truthfully that I was as bad as the murderer. Is it possible for this
+God to prevent it? Then, if he does not he is a fiend; he is no god.
+But they say he "permits" it. What for? So that we may have freedom of
+choice. What for? So that God may find, I suppose, who are good and who
+are bad. Did he not know that when he made us? Did he not know exactly
+just what he was making? Why should he make those whom he knew would be
+criminals? If I should make a machine that would walk your streets and
+take the lives of people you would hang me. And if God made a man whom
+he knew would commit murder, then God is guilty of that murder. If God
+made a man knowing that he would beat his wife, that he would starve
+his children, that he would strew on either side of his path of life the
+wrecks of ruined homes, then I say the being who knowingly called that
+wretch into existence is directly responsible. And yet we are to find
+the providence of God in the history of nations. What little I have read
+shows me that when man has been helped, man has done it; when the
+chains of slavery have been broken, they have been broken by man; when
+something bad has been done in the government of mankind, it is easy to
+trace it to man, and to fix the responsibility upon human beings. You
+need not look to the sky; you need throw neither praise nor blame upon
+gods; you can find the efficient causes nearer home--right here.
+
+The Love of God.
+
+What is the next thing I find in this creed?
+
+"_We believe that man was made in the image of God, that he might know,
+love, and obey God, and enjoy him forever._"
+
+I do not believe that anybody ever did love God, because nobody ever
+knew anything about him. We love each other. We love something that we
+know. We love something that our experience tells us is good and great
+and beautiful. We cannot by any possibility love the unknown. We can
+love truth, because truth adds to human happiness. We can love justice,
+because it preserves human joy. We can love charity. We can love every
+form of goodness that we know, or of which we can conceive, but we
+cannot love the infinitely unknown. And how can we be made in the image
+of something that has neither body, parts, nor passions?
+
+The Fall of Man.
+
+The Congregational Church has not outgrown the doctrine of "original
+sin." We are told that:
+
+"_Our first parents, by disobedience, fell under the condemnation
+of God, and that all men are so alienated from God that there is no
+salvation from the guilt and power of sin except through God's redeeming
+power._"
+
+Is there an intelligent man or woman now in the world who believes in
+the Garden of Eden story? If you find any man who believes it, strike
+his forehead and you will hear an echo. Something is for rent. Does any
+intelligent man now believe that God made man of dust, and woman of a
+rib, and put them in a garden, and put a tree in the midst of it? Was
+there not room outside of the garden to put his tree, if he did not want
+people to eat his apples?
+
+If I did not want a man to eat my fruit, I would not put him in my
+orchard.
+
+Does anybody now believe in the story of the serpent? I pity any man or
+woman who, in this nineteenth century, believes in that childish fable.
+Why did Adam and Eve disobey? Why, they were tempted. By whom? The
+devil. Who made the devil? God. What did God make him for? Why did
+he not tell Adam and Eve about this serpent? Why did he not watch the
+devil, instead of watching Adam and Eve? Instead of turning them out,
+why did he not keep him from getting in? Why did he not have his flood
+first, and drown the devil, before he made a man and woman.
+
+And yet, people who call themselves intelligent--professors in colleges
+and presidents of venerable institutions--teach children and young men
+that the Garden of Eden story is an absolute historical fact. I defy
+any man to think of a more childish thing. This God, waiting around
+Eden--knowing all the while what would happen--having made them on
+purpose so that it would happen, then does what? Holds all of us
+responsible, and we were not there. Here is a representative before the
+constituency had been born. Before I am bound by a representative I want
+a chance to vote for or against him; and if I had been there, and known
+all the circumstances, I should have voted "No!" And yet, I am held
+responsible.
+
+We are told by the Bible and by the churches that through this fall of
+man "_Sin and death entered the world?_"
+
+According to this, just as soon as Adam and Eve had partaken of the
+forbidden fruit, God began to contrive ways by which he could destroy
+the lives of his children. He invented all the diseases--all the fevers
+and coughs and colds--all the pains and plagues and pestilences--all the
+aches and agonies, the malaria and spores; so that when we take a breath
+of air we admit into our lungs unseen assassins; and, fearing that some
+might live too long, even under such circumstances, God invented the
+earthquake and volcano, the cyclone and lightning, animalcules to infest
+the heart and brain, so small that no eye can detect--no instrument
+reach. This was all owing to the disobedience of Adam and Eve!
+
+In his infinite goodness, God invented rheumatism and gout and
+dyspepsia, cancers and neuralgia, and is still inventing new diseases.
+Not only this', but he decreed the pangs of mothers, and that by the
+gates of love and life should crouch the dragons of death and pain.
+Fearing that some might, by accident, live too long, he planted
+poisonous vines and herbs that looked like food. He caught the serpents
+he had made and gave them fangs and curious organs, ingeniously devised
+to distill and deposit the deadly drop. He changed the nature of the
+beasts, that they might feed on human flesh. He cursed a world, and
+tainted every spring and source of joy. He poisoned every breath of air;
+corrupted even light, that it might bear disease on every ray; tainted
+every drop of blood in human veins; touched every nerve, that it
+might bear the double fruit of pain and joy; decreed all accidents and
+mistakes that maim and hurt and kill, and set the snares of life-long
+grief, baited with present pleasure,--with a moment's joy. Then and
+there he foreknew and foreordained all human tears. And yet all this is
+but the prelude, the introduction, to the infinite revenge of the good
+God. Increase and multiply all human griefs until the mind has reached
+imagination's farthest verge, then add eternity to time, and you may
+faintly tell, but never can conceive, the infinite horrors of this
+doctrine called "The Fall of Man." The Atonement.
+
+We are further told that:
+
+"_All men are so alienated from God that there is no alleviation from
+the guilt and power of sin except through God's redeeming grace;_"
+
+And that:
+
+"_We believe that the love of God to sinful man has found its highest
+expression in the redemptive work of his Son, who became man, uniting
+his divine nature with our human nature in one person; who was tempted
+like other men and yet without sin, and by his humiliation, his holy
+obedience, his sufferings, his death on the cross, and his resurrection,
+became a perfect redeemer; whose sacrifice of himself for the sins
+of the world declares the righteousness of God, and is the sole and
+sufficient ground of forgiveness and of reconciliation with him_."
+
+The absurdity of the doctrine known as "The Fall of Man," gave birth
+to that other absurdity known as "The Atonement." So that now it is
+insisted that, as we are rightfully charged with the sin of somebody
+else, we can rightfully be credited with the virtues of another. Let us
+leave out of our philosophy both these absurdities. Our creed will read
+a great deal better with both of them out, and will make far better
+sense.
+
+Now, in consequence of Adam's sin, everybody is alienated from God. How?
+Why? Oh, we are all depraved, you know; we all do wrong. Well, why?
+Is that because we are depraved? No. Why do we make so many mistakes?
+Because there is only one right way, and there is an almost infinite
+number of wrong ways; and as long as we are not perfect in our
+intellects we must make mistakes. "There is no darkness but ignorance,"
+and alienation, as they call it, from God, is simply a lack of
+intellect. Why were we not given better brains? That may account for the
+alienation.
+
+The church teaches that every soul that finds its way to the shore of
+this world is against God--naturally hates God; that the little dimpled
+child in the cradle is simply a chunk of depravity. Everybody against
+God! It is a libel upon the human race; it is a libel upon all the men
+who have worked for wife and child; upon all mothers who have suffered
+and labored, wept and worked; upon all the men who have died for their
+country; upon all who have fought for human liberty. Leave out the
+history of religion and there is little left to prove the depravity of
+man.
+
+Everybody that comes is against God! Every soul, they think, is like the
+wrecked Irishman, who drifted to an unknown island, and as he climbed
+the shore saw a man and said to him, "Have you a Government here?" The
+man replied "We have." "Well," said he, "I'm forninst it!"
+
+The church teaches us that such is the attitude of every soul in the
+universe of God. Ought a god to take any credit to himself for making
+depraved people? A god that cannot make a soul that is not totally
+depraved, I respectfully suggest, should retire from the business. And
+if a god has made us, knowing that we are totally depraved, why should
+we go to the same being to be "born again?"
+
+The Second Birth.
+
+The church insists that we must be "born again" and that all who are not
+the subjects of this second birth are heirs of everlasting fire. Would
+it not have been much better to have made another Adam and Eve? Would it
+not have been better to change Noah and his people, so that after that a
+second birth would not have been necessary? Why not purify the fountain
+of all human life? Why allow the earth to be peopled with depraved and
+monstrous beings, each one of whom must be re-made, re-formed, and born
+again?
+
+And yet, even reformation is not enough. If the man who steals
+becomes perfectly honest, that is not enough; if the man who hates his
+fellow-man, changes and loves his fellow-man, that is not enough; he
+must go through that mysterious thing called the second birth; he must
+be born again. He must have faith; he must believe something that
+he does not understand, and experience what they call "conversion."
+According to the church, nothing so excites the wrath of God--nothing so
+corrugates the brows of Jehovah with hatred--as a man relying on his own
+good works. He must admit that he ought to be damned, and that of the
+two he prefers it, before God will consent to save him.
+
+I met a man the other day, who said to me, "I am a Unitarian
+Universalist." "What do you mean by that?" I asked. "Well," said he,
+"this is what I mean: the Unitarian thinks he is too good to be damned,
+and the Universalist thinks God is too good to damn him, and I believe
+them both."
+
+Is it possible that the sacrifice of a perfect being was acceptable to
+God? Will he accept the agony of innocence for the punishment of guilt?
+Will he release Barabbas and crucify Christ?
+
+Inspiration.
+
+What is the next thing in this great creed?
+
+"_We believe that the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments are the
+record of God's revelation of Himself, the work of redemption; that
+they were written by men under the special guidance of the holy spirit;
+that they are able to make wise unto salvation; and that they constitute
+an authoritative standard by which religious teaching and human conduct
+are to be regulated and judged._"
+
+This is the creed of the Congregational Church; that is, the result
+reached by a high-joint commission appointed to draw up a creed for
+their churches; and there we have the statement that the Bible was
+written "by men under the special guidance of the Holy Spirit."
+
+What part of the Bible? All of it? All of it. And yet what is this Old
+Testament that was written by an infinitely good God? The being who
+wrote it did not know the shape of the world he had made; knew nothing
+of human nature. He commands men to love him, as if one could love upon
+command. The same God upheld the institution of human slavery; and the
+church says that the Bible that upholds that institution was written by
+men under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Then I disagree with the Holy
+Spirit.
+
+This church tells us that men under the guidance of the Holy Spirit
+upheld the institution of polygamy--I deny it; that under the
+guidance of the Holy Spirit these men upheld wars of extermination and
+conquest--I deny it; that under the guidance of the Holy Spirit these
+men wrote that it was right for a man to destroy the life of his wife if
+she happened to differ with him on the subject of religion--I deny it.
+And yet that is the book now upheld in this creed of the Congregational
+Church.
+
+If the devil had written upon the subject of slavery, which side would
+he have taken? Let every minister answer. If you knew the devil had
+written a work on human slavery, in your judgment, would he uphold
+slavery, or denounce it? Would you regard it as any evidence that he
+ever wrote it, if it upheld slavery? And yet, here you have a work
+upholding slavery, and you say that it was written by an infinitely good
+God! If the devil upheld polygamy, would you be surprised? If the devil
+wanted to kill men for differing with him would you be astonished? If
+the devil told a man to kill his wife, would you be shocked? And yet,
+you say, that is exactly what God did. If there be a God, then that
+creed is blasphemy. That creed is a libel upon him who sits on heaven's
+throne. If there be a God, I ask him to write in the book in which my
+account is kept, that I denied these lies for him.
+
+I do not believe in a slaveholding God! I do not worship a polygamous
+Holy Ghost, nor a Son who threatens eternal pain; I will not get upon my
+knees before any being who commands a husband to slay his wife because
+she expresses her honest thought. Suppose a book should be found old as
+the Old Testament in which slavery, polygamy and war are all denounced,
+would Christians think that it was written by the devil?
+
+Did it ever occur to you that if God wrote the Old Testament, and
+told the Jews to crucify or kill anybody that disagreed with them on
+religion, and that this God afterward took upon himself flesh and came
+to Jerusalem, and taught a different religion, and the Jews killed
+him--did it ever occur to you that he reaped exactly what he had sown?
+Did it ever occur to you that he fell a victim to his own tyranny, and
+was destroyed by his own hand? Of course I do not believe that any God
+ever was the author of the Bible, or that any God was ever crucified,
+or that any God was ever killed, or ever will be, but I want to ask you
+that question.
+
+Take this Old Testament, then, with all its stories of murder and
+massacre; with all its foolish and cruel fables; with all its infamous
+doctrines; with its spirit of caste; with its spirit of hatred, and
+tell me whether it was written by a good God. If you will read the
+maledictions and curses of that book, you will think that God, like
+Lear, had divided heaven among his daughters, and then, in the insanity
+of despair, had launched his curses on the human race.
+
+And yet, I must say--I must admit--that the Old Testament is better
+than the New. In the Old Testament, when God had a man dead, he let
+him alone. When he saw him quietly in his grave he was satisfied. The
+muscles relaxed, and the frown gave place to a smile. But in the New
+Testament the trouble commences at death. In the New Testament God is
+to wreak his revenge forever and ever. It was reserved for one who said,
+"Love your enemies," to tear asunder the veil between time and eternity
+and fix the horrified gaze of man upon the gulfs of eternal fire. The
+New Testament is just as much worse than the Old, as hell is worse than
+sleep; just as much worse, as infinite cruelty is worse than dreamless
+rest; and yet, the New Testament is claimed to be a gospel of love and
+peace.
+
+Is it possible that: "_The Scriptures constitute the authoritative
+standard by which religious teaching and human conduct are to be
+regulated and judged"?_
+
+Are we to judge of conduct by the Old Testament, by the New, or by both?
+According to the Old, the slaveholder was a just and generous man; a
+polygamist was a model of virtue. According to the New, the worst can be
+forgiven and the best can be lost. How can any book be a standard,
+when the standard itself must be measured by human reason? Is there a
+standard of a standard? Must not the reason be convinced? and, if so, is
+not the reason of each man the final arbiter of that man? If he takes a
+book as a standard, does he so take it because it is to him reasonable?
+In what way is the human reason to be ignored? Why should a book take
+its place, unless the reason has been convinced that the book is the
+proper standard? If this is so, the book rests upon the reason of those
+who adopt it. Are they to be saved because they act in accordance with
+their reason, and are others to be damned because they act by the same
+standard--their reason? No two are alike. Can we demand of all the same
+result? Suppose the compasses were not constant to the pole--no two
+compasses exactly alike--would you expect all ships to reach the same
+harbor?
+
+The Reign of Truth and Love.
+
+I also find in this creed the following:
+
+"_We believe that Jesus Christ came to establish among men the Kingdom
+of God, the reign of truth and love, of righteousness and peace!_"
+
+Well, that may have been the object of Jesus Christ. I do not deny it.
+But what was the result? The Christian world has caused more war than
+all the rest of the world beside. Most of the cunning instruments of
+death have been devised by Christians. All the wonderful machinery by
+which the life is blown from men, by which nations are conquered and
+enslaved--all these machines have been born in Christian brains. And yet
+he came to bring peace, they say; but the Testament says otherwise: "I
+came not to bring peace, but a sword." And the sword was brought. What
+are the Christian nations doing to-day in Europe? Is there a solitary
+Christian nation that will trust any other? How many millions of
+Christians are in the uniform of forgiveness, armed with the muskets of
+love?
+
+There was an old Spaniard on the bed of death, who sent for a priest,
+and the priest told him that he would have to forgive his enemies before
+he died. He said, "I have none." "What! no enemies?" "Not one," said the
+dying man; "I killed the last one three months ago."
+
+How many millions of Christians are now armed and equipped to destroy
+their fellow-Christians? Who are the men in Europe crying against war?
+Who wishes to have the nations disarmed? Is it the church? No; the men
+who do not believe in what they call this religion of peace. When there
+is a war, and when they make a few thousand widows and orphans; when
+they strew the plain with dead patriots, Christians assemble in their
+churches and sing "Te Deum Laudamus." Why? Because he has enabled a
+few of his children to kill some others of his children. This is the
+religion of peace--the religion that invented the Krupp gun, that will
+hurl a ball weighing two thousand pounds through twenty-four inches
+of solid steel. This is the religion of peace that covers the sea with
+men-of-war, clad in mail, in the name of universal forgiveness. This is
+the religion that drills and uniforms five millions of men to kill their
+fellows.
+
+The Wars It Brought.
+
+What effect has this religion had upon the nations of the earth? What
+have the nations been fighting about? What was the Thirty Years' War
+in Europe for? What was the war in Holland for? Why was it that England
+persecuted Scotland? Why is it that England persecutes Ireland even to
+this day? At the bottom of every one of these conflicts you will find
+a religious question. The religion of Jesus Christ, as preached by his
+church, causes war, bloodshed, hatred, and all uncharitableness; and
+why? Because, they say, a certain belief is necessary to salvation. They
+do not say, if you behave yourself you will get there; they do not say,
+if you pay your debts and love your wife and love your children, and are
+good to your friends, and your neighbors, and your country, you will
+get there; that will do you no good; you have got to believe a certain
+thing. No matter how bad you are, you can instantly be forgiven; and no
+matter how good you are, if you fail to believe that which you cannot
+understand, the moment you get to the day of judgment nothing is left
+but to damn you, and all the angels will shout "hallelujah."
+
+What do they teach to-day? Nearly every murderer goes to heaven; there
+is only one step from the gallows to God, only one jerk between the
+halter and heaven. That is taught by this church.
+
+I believe there ought to be a law to prevent the giving of the slightest
+religious consolation to any man who has been found guilty of murder.
+Let a Catholic understand that if he imbrues his hands in his brother's
+blood, he can have no extreme unction. Let it be understood that he
+can have no forgiveness through the church; and let the Protestant
+understand that when he has committed that crime the community will not
+pray him into heaven. Let him go with his victim. The victim, dying in
+his sins, goes to hell, and the murderer has the happiness of seeing him
+there. If heaven grows dull and monotonous, the murderer can again give
+life to the nerve of pleasure by watching the agony of his victim.
+
+The truth is, Christianity has not made friends; it has made enemies. It
+is not, as taught, the religion of peace, it is the religion of war.
+Why should a Christian hesitate to kill a man that his God is waiting
+to damn? Why should a Christian not destroy an infidel who is trying to
+assassinate his soul? Why should a Christian pity an unbeliever--one who
+has rejected the Bible--when he knows that God will be pitiless forever?
+And yet we are told, in this creed, that "_we believe in the ultimate
+prevalence of the Kingdom of Christ over all the earth._"
+
+What makes you? Do you judge from the manner in which you are getting
+along now? How many people are being born a year? About fifty millions.
+How many are you converting a year, really, truthfully? Five or six
+thousand. I think I have overstated the number. Is orthodox Christianity
+on the increase? No. There are a hundred times as many unbelievers in
+orthodox Christianity as there were ten years ago. What are you doing in
+the missionary world? How long is it since you converted a Chinaman?
+A fine missionary religion, to send missionaries with their Bibles and
+tracts to China, but if a Chinaman comes here, mob him, simply to show
+him the difference between the practical and theoretical workings of the
+Christian religion. How long since you have had an intelligent convert
+in India? In my judgment, never; there never has been an intelligent
+Hindoo converted from the time the first missionary put his foot on
+that soil; and never, in my judgment, has an intelligent Chinaman been
+converted since the first missionary touched that shore. Where are they?
+We hear nothing of them, except in the reports. They get money from poor
+old ladies, trembling on the edge of the grave, and go and tell them
+stories, how hungry the average Chinaman is for a copy of the New
+Testament, and paint the sad condition of a gentleman in the interior
+of Africa without the works of Dr. McCosh, longing for a copy of _The
+Princeton Review_,--in my judgment, a pamphlet that would suit a savage.
+Thus money is scared from the dying, and frightened from the old and
+feeble.
+
+About how long is it before this kingdom is to be established? No one
+objects to the establishment of peace and good will. Every good man
+longs for the time when war shall cease. We are all hoping for a day of
+universal justice--a day of universal freedom--when man shall control
+himself, when the passions shall become obedient to the intelligent
+will. But the coming of that day will not be hastened by preaching the
+doctrines of total depravity and eternal revenge. That sun will not rise
+the quicker for preaching salvation by faith. The star that shines
+above that dawn, the herald of that day, is Science, not
+superstition,--Reason, not religion.
+
+To show you how little advance has been made, how many intellectual bats
+and mental owls still haunt the temple, still roost above the altar,
+I call your attention to the fact that the Congregational Church,
+according to this creed; still believes in the resurrection of the dead,
+and in their Confession of Faith, attached to the creed, I find that
+they also believe in the literal resurrection of the body.
+
+The Resurrection.
+
+Does anybody believe that, who has the courage to think for himself?
+Here is a man, for instance, that weighs 200 pounds and gets sick
+and dies weighing 120; how much will he weigh in the morning of the
+resurrection? Here is a cannibal, who eats another man; and we know that
+the atoms you eat go into your body and become a part of you. After
+the cannibal has eaten the missionary, and appropriated his atoms to
+himself, and then dies, to whom will the atoms belong in the morning of
+the resurrection? Could the missionary maintain an action of replevin,
+and if so, what would the cannibal do for a body? It has been
+demonstrated, in so far as logic can demonstrate anything, that there
+is no creation and no destruction in Nature. It has been demonstrated,
+again and again, that the atoms in us have been in millions of other
+beings; have grown in the forests and in the grass, have blossomed in
+flowers, and been in the metals. In other words, there are atoms in each
+one of us that have been in millions of others; and when we die, these
+atoms return to the earth, again appear in grass and trees, are again
+eaten by animals, and again devoured by countless vegetable mouths and
+turned into wood; and yet this church, in the nineteenth century,'in a
+council composed of, and presided over by, professors and presidents
+of colleges and theologians, solemnly tells us that it believes in the
+literal resurrection of the body. This is almost enough to make
+one despair of the future--almost enough to convince a man of the
+immortality of the absurd. They know better. There is not one so
+ignorant but knows better.
+
+The Judgment-Day.
+
+And what is the next thing?
+
+"_We believe in a final judgment, the issues of which are everlasting
+punishment and everlasting life!_"
+
+At the final judgment all of us will be there. The thousands, and
+millions, and billions, and trillions, and quadrillions that have died
+will be there. The books will be opened, and each case will be called.
+The sheep and the goats will be divided. The unbelievers will be sent to
+the left, while the faithful will proudly walk to the right. The saved,
+without a tear, will bid an eternal farewell to those who loved them
+here--to those they loved. Nearly all the human race will go away to
+everlasting punishment, and the fortunate few to eternal life. This
+is the consolation of the Congregational Church! This is the hope that
+dispels the gloom of life!
+
+Pious Evasions.
+
+When the clergy are caught, they give a different meaning to the
+words and say the world was not made in seven days. They say "good
+whiles"--"epochs."
+
+And in this same Confession of Faith and in this creed they say that the
+Lord's day is holy--every seventh day. Suppose you lived near the North
+Pole where the day is three months long. Then which day would you keep?
+If you could get to the North Pole you could prevent Sunday from ever
+overtaking you. You could walk around the other way faster than the
+world could revolve. How would you keep Sunday then? Suppose we invent
+something that can go one thousand miles an hour? We can chase Sunday
+clear around the globe. Is there anything that can be more perfectly
+absurd than that a space of time can be holy? You might as well talk
+about a virtuous vacuum. We are now told that the Bible is not a
+scientific book, and that after all we cannot depend on what God said
+four thousand years ago--that his ways are not as our ways--that we must
+accept without evidence, and believe without understanding.
+
+I heard the other night of an old man. He was not very well educated,
+and he got into the notion that he must have reading of the Bible and
+family worship. There was a bad boy in the family, and they were reading
+the Bible by course. In the fifteenth chapter of Corinthians is this
+passage: "Behold, brethren, I show you a mystery; we shall not all
+die, but we shall all be changed." This boy had rubbed out the "c" in
+"changed." So when the old man put on his spectacles, and got down his
+Bible, he read: "Behold, brethren, I show you a mystery, we shall not
+all die, but we shall all be hanged." The old lady said, "Father, I
+don't think it reads that way." He said, "Who is reading this?" "Yes
+mother, it says 'hanged,' and, more than that, I see the sense of it.
+Pride is the besetting sin of the human heart, and if there is anything
+calculated to take the pride out of a man it is hanging." It is in this
+way that ministers avoid and explain the discoveries of Science.
+
+People ask me, if I take away the Bible what are we going to do? How can
+we get along without the revelation that no one understands? What are
+we going to do if we have no Bible to quarrel about What are we to do
+without hell? What are we going to do with our enemies? What are we
+going to do with the people we love but don't like?
+
+"No Bible, No Civilization."
+
+They tell me that there never would have been any civilization if it had
+not been for this Bible. The Jews had a Bible; the Romans had not. Which
+had the greater and the grander government? Let us be honest. Which of
+those nations produced the greatest poets, the greatest soldiers, the
+greatest orators, the greatest statesmen, the greatest sculptors? Rome
+had no Bible. God cared nothing for the Roman Empire. He let the men
+come up by chance. His time was taken up with the Jewish people. And
+yet Rome conquered the world, including the chosen people of God. The
+people who had the Bible were defeated by the people who had not. How
+was it possible for Lucretius to get along without the Bible?--how did
+the great and glorious of that empire? And what shall we say of Greece?
+No Bible. Compare Athens with Jerusalem. From Athens come the beauty and
+intellectual grace of the world. Compare the mythology of Greece with
+the mythology of Judea; one covering the earth with beauty, and the
+other filling heaven with hatred and injustice. The Hindoos had no
+Bible; they had been forsaken by the Creator, and yet they became the
+greatest metaphysicians of the world. Egypt had no Bible. Compare Egypt
+with Judea. What are we to do without the Bible? What became of the Jews
+who had a Bible? Their temple was destroyed and their city was taken;
+and they never found real prosperity until their God deserted them. The
+Turks attributed all their victories to the Koran. The Koran gave them
+their victories over the believers in the Bible. The priests of each
+nation have accounted for the prosperity of that nation by its religion.
+
+The Christians mistake an incident for a cause, and honestly imagine
+that the Bible is the foundation of modern liberty and law. They forget
+physical conditions, make no account of commerce, care nothing for
+inventions and discoveries, and ignorantly give the credit to their
+inspired book.
+
+The foundations of our civilization were laid centuries before
+Christianity was known. The intelligence of courage, of self-government,
+of energy, of industry, that uniting made the civilization of this
+century, did not come alone from Judea, but from every nation of the
+ancient world.
+
+Miracles of the New Testament.
+
+There are many things in the New Testament that I cannot accept as true.
+
+I cannot believe in the miraculous origin of Jesus Christ. I believe he
+was the son of Joseph and Mary; that Joseph and Mary had been duly and
+legally married; that he was the legitimate offspring of that union.
+Nobody ever believed the contrary until he had been dead at least one
+hundred and fifty years. Neither Matthew, Mark, nor Luke ever dreamed
+that he was of divine origin. He did not say to either Matthew, Mark,
+or Luke, or to any one in their hearing, that he was the Son of God,
+or that he was miraculously conceived. He did not say it. It may be
+asserted that he said it to John, but John did not write the gospel
+that bears his name. The angel Gabriel, who, they say, brought the news,
+never wrote a word upon the subject. The mother of Christ never wrote
+a word upon the subject. His alleged father never wrote a word upon
+the subject, and Joseph never admitted the story. We are lacking in
+the matter of witnesses. I would not believe such a story now. I cannot
+believe that it happened then. I would not believe people I know, much
+less would I believe people I do not know.
+
+At that time Matthew and Luke believed that Christ was the son of Joseph
+and Mary. And why? they say he descended from David, and in order to
+show that he was of the blood of David, they gave the genealogy of
+Joseph. And if Joseph was not his father, why did they not give the
+genealogy of Pontius Pilate or of Herod? Could they, by giving the
+genealogy of Joseph, show that he was of the blood of David if Joseph
+was in no way related to Christ? And yet that is the position into which
+the Christian world is driven. In the New Testament we find that in
+giving the genealogy of Christ it says, "who was the son of Joseph?" and
+the church has interpolated the words "as was supposed." Why did they
+give a supposed genealogy? It will not do. And that is a thing that
+cannot in any way, by any human testimony, be established.
+
+If it is important for us to know that he was the Son of God, I say,
+then, that it devolves upon God to give us the evidence. Let him write
+it across the face of the heavens, in every language of mankind. If it
+is necessary for us to believe it, let it grow on every leaf next
+year. No man should be damned for not believing, unless the evidence is
+overwhelming. And he ought not to be made to depend upon say so, or upon
+"as was supposed." He should have it directly, for himself. A man says
+that God told him a certain thing, and he tells me, and I have only his
+word. He may have been deceived. If God has a message for me he ought
+to tell it to me, and not to somebody that has been dead four or five
+thousand years, and in another language.
+
+Besides, God may have changed his mind on many things; he has on
+slavery, and polygamy at least, according to the church; and yet his
+church now wants to go and destroy polygamy in Utah with the sword. Why
+do they not send missionaries there with copies of the Old Testament?
+By reading the lives of Abraham and Isaac, and Lot, and a few other
+patriarchs who ought to have been in the penitentiary, maybe they can
+soften their hearts.
+
+More Miracles.
+
+There is another miracle I do not believe,--the resurrection. I want to
+speak about it as we would about any ordinary transaction. In the first
+place, I do not believe that any miracle was ever performed, and if
+there was, you cannot prove it. Why? Because it is altogether more
+reasonable to believe that the people were mistaken about it than that
+it happened. And why? Because, according to human experience, we know
+that people will not always tell the truth, and we never saw a miracle
+ourselves, and we must be governed by our experience; and if we go by
+our experience, we must say that the miracle never happened--that the
+witnesses were mistaken.
+
+A man comes into Jerusalem, and the first thing he does is to cure the
+blind. He lets the light of day visit the night of blindness. The eyes
+are opened, and the world is again pictured upon the brain. Another man
+is clothed with leprosy. He touches him and the disease falls from
+him, and he stands pure, and clean, and whole. Another man is deformed,
+wrinkled, and bent. He touches him, and throws around him again the
+garment of youth. A man is in his grave, and he says, "Come forth!"
+And the man walks in life, feeling his heart throb and his blood going
+joyously through his veins. They say that actually happened. I do not
+know.
+
+There is one wonderful thing about the dead people that were raised--we
+do not hear of them any more. What became of them? If there was a man
+in this city who had been raised from the dead, I would go to see him
+to-night. I would say, "Where were you when you got the notice to come
+back? What kind of a country is it? What kind of opening there for a
+young man? How did you like it? Did you meet there the friends you had
+lost? Is there a world without death, without pain, without a tear? Is
+there a land without a grave, and where good-bye is never heard?" Nobody
+ever paid the slightest attention to the dead who had been raised. They
+did not even excite interest when they died the second time. Nobody
+said, "Why, that man is not afraid. He has been there once. He has
+walked through the valley of the shadow." Not a word. They pass quietly
+away.
+
+I do not believe these miracles. There is something wrong somewhere
+about that business. I may suffer eternal punishment for all this, but I
+cannot, I do not, believe.
+
+There was a man who did all these things, and thereupon they crucified
+him. Let us be honest. Suppose a man came into this city and should meet
+a funeral procession, and say, "Who is dead?" and they should reply,
+"The son of a widow; her only support." Suppose he should say to the
+procession, "Halt!" and to the undertaker, "Take out that coffin,
+unscrew that lid. Young man, I say unto thee, arise!" and the dead
+should step from the coffin and in a moment afterward hold his mother in
+his arms. Suppose this stranger should go to your cemetery and find some
+woman holding a little child in each hand, while the tears fell upon a
+new-made grave, and he should say to her, "Who lies buried here?"
+and she should reply, "My husband;" and he should cry, "I say unto
+thee, oh grave, give up thy dead!" and the husband should rise, and in a
+moment after have his lips upon his wife's, and the little children with
+their arms around his neck; do you think that the people of this city
+would kill him? Do you think any one would wish to crucify him? Do
+you not rather believe that every one who had a loved one out in that
+cemetery would go to him, even upon their knees, and beg him to give
+back their dead? Do you believe that any man was ever crucified who was
+the master of death?
+
+Let me tell you to-night if there shall ever appear upon this earth the
+master, the monarch, of death, all human knees will touch the earth. He
+will not be crucified. All the living who fear death; all the living who
+have lost a loved one, will bow to him. And yet we are told that this
+worker of miracles, this man who could clothe the dead dust in the
+throbbing flesh of life, was crucified. I do not believe that he worked
+the miracles, I do not believe that he raised the dead, I do not believe
+that he claimed to be the Son of God, These things were told long after
+he was dead; told because the ignorant multitude demanded mystery and
+wonder; told, because at that time the miraculous was believed of all
+the illustrious dead. Stories that made Christianity powerful then,
+weaken it now. He who gains a triumph in a conflict with a devil, will
+be defeated by science.
+
+There is another thing about these foolish miracles. All could have
+been imitated. Men could pretend to be blind; confederates could feign
+sickness, and even death.
+
+It is not very difficult to limp or to hold an arm as though it were
+paralyzed; or to say that one is afflicted with "an issue of blood." It
+is easy to say that the son of a widow was raised from the dead, and
+if you fail to give the name of the son, or his mother, or the time and
+place where the wonder occurred, it is quite difficult to show that it
+did not happen.
+
+No one can be called upon to disprove anything that has not apparently
+been established. I say apparently, because there can be no real
+evidence in support of a miracle.
+
+How could we prove, for instance, the miracle of the loaves and fishes?
+There were plenty of other loaves and other fishes in the world? Each
+one of the five thousand could have had a loaf and a fish with him. We
+would have to show that there was no other possible way for the people
+to get the bread and fish except by miracle, and then we are only half
+through. We must then show that they did, in fact, get enough to
+feed five thousand people, and that more was left than was had in the
+beginning.
+
+Of course this is simply impossible. And let me ask, why was not the
+miracle substantiated by some of the multitude?
+
+Would it not have been a greater wonder if Christ had _created_ instead
+of multiplied the loaves and fishes?
+
+How can we now prove that a certain person more than eighteen hundred
+years ago was possessed by seven devils?
+
+How was it ever possible to prove a thing like that?
+
+How can it be established that some evil spirits could talk while others
+were dumb, and that the dumb ones were the hardest to control?
+
+If Christ wished to convince his fellow-men by miracles, why did he not
+do something that could not by any means have been a counterfeit?
+
+Instead of healing a withered arm, why did he not find some man whose
+arm had been cut off, and make another grow?
+
+If he wanted to raise the dead, why did he not raise some man of
+importance, some one known to all?
+
+Why did he do his miracles in the obscurity of the village, in the
+darkness of the hovel?
+
+Why call back to life people so insignificant that the public did not
+know of their death?
+
+Suppose that in May, 1865, a man had pretended to raise some person by
+the name of Smith from the dead, and suppose a religion had been founded
+on that miracle, would it not be natural for people, hundreds of years
+after the pretended miracle, to ask why the founder of that religion
+did not raise from the dead Abraham Lincoln, instead of the unknown and
+obscure Mr. Smith?
+
+How could any man now, in any court, by any known rule of evidence,
+substantiate one of the miracles of Christ?
+
+Must we believe anything that cannot in any way be substantiated?
+
+If miracles were necessary to convince men eighteen centuries ago, are
+they not necessary now?
+
+After all, how many men did Christ convince with his miracles? How many
+walked beneath the standard of the master of Nature?
+
+How did it happen that so many miracles convinced so few? I will
+tell you. The miracles were never performed. No other explanation is
+possible.
+
+It is infinitely absurd to say that a man who cured the sick, the halt
+and blind, raised the dead, cast out devils, controlled the winds and
+waves, created food and held obedient to his will the forces of the
+world, was put to death by men who knew his superhuman power and who
+had seen his wondrous works. If the crucifixion was public, the miracles
+were private. If the miracles had been public, the crucifixion could not
+have been. Do away with the miracles, and the superhuman character of
+Christ is destroyed. He becomes what he really was--a man. Do away with
+the wonders, and the teachings of Christ cease to be authoritative. They
+are then worth the reason, the truth that is in them, and nothing more.
+Do away with the miracles, and then we can measure the utterances of
+Christ with the standard of our reason. We are no longer intellectual
+serfs, believing what is unreasonable in obedience to the command of a
+supposed god. We no longer take counsel of our fears, of our cowardice,
+but boldly defend what our reason maintains.
+
+Christ takes his appropriate place with the other teachers of mankind.
+His life becomes reasonable and admirable. We have a man who hated
+oppression; who despised and denounced superstition and hypocrisy; who
+attacked the heartless church of his time; who excited the hatred of
+bigots and priests, and who rather than be false to his conception of
+truth, met and bravely suffered even death.
+
+The Resurrection.
+
+The miracle of the resurrection I do not and cannot believe. If it was
+the fact, if the dead Christ rose from the grave, why did he not appear
+to his enemies? Why did he not visit Pontius Pilate? Why did he not call
+upon Caiaphas, the high priest? upon Herod? Why did he not again enter
+the temple and end the old dispute with demonstration? Why did he not
+confront the Roman soldiers who had taken money to falsely swear that
+his body had been stolen by his friends? Why did he not make another
+triumphal entry into Jerusalem? Why did he not say to the multitude:
+"Here are the wounds in my feet, and in my hands, and in my side. I am
+the one you endeavored to kill, but Death is my slave"? Simply because
+the resurrection is a myth. It makes no difference with his teachings.
+They are just as good whether he wrought miracles or not. Twice two are
+four; that needs no miracle. Twice two are five--a miracle can not help
+that. Christ's teachings are worth their effect upon the human race.
+It makes no difference about miracle or wonder. In that day every
+one believed in the impossible. Nobody had any standing as teacher,
+philosopher, governor, king, general, about whom there was not supposed
+to be something miraculous. The earth was covered with the sons and
+daughters of gods and goddesses.
+
+In Greece, in Rome, in Egypt, in India, every great man was supposed to
+have had either a god for his father, or a goddess for his mother. They
+accounted for genius by divine origin. Earth and heaven were at that
+time near together. It was but a step for the gods from the blue arch
+to the green earth. Every lake and valley and mountain top was made rich
+with legends of the loves of gods. How could the early Christians have
+made converts to a man, among a people who believed so thoroughly in
+gods--in gods that had lived upon the earth; among a people who had
+erected temples to the sons and daughters of gods? Such people could not
+have been induced to worship a man--a man born among barbarous people,
+citizen of a nation weak and poor and paying tribute to the Roman power.
+The early Christians therefore preached the gospel of a god.
+
+The Ascension.
+
+I cannot believe in the miracle of the ascension, in the bodily
+ascension of Jesus Christ. Where was he going? In the light shed upon
+this question by the telescope, I again ask, where was he going?
+
+The New Jerusalem is not above us. The abode of the gods is not there.
+Where was he going? Which way did he go? Of course that depends upon
+the time of day he left. If he left in the evening, he went exactly
+the opposite way from that he would have gone had he ascended in the
+morning. What did he do with his body? How high did he go? In what way
+did he overcome the intense cold? The nearest station is the moon, two
+hundred and forty thousand miles away. Again I ask, where did he go? He
+must have had a natural body, for it was the same body that died. His
+body must have been material, otherwise he would not as he rose have
+circled with the earth, and he would have passed from the sight of his
+disciples at the rate of more than a thousand miles per hour.
+
+It may be said that his body was "spiritual." Then what became of the
+body that died? Just before his ascension we are told that he partook of
+broiled fish with his disciples. Was the fish "spiritual?"
+
+Who saw this miracle?
+
+They say the disciples saw it. Let us see what they say. Matthew did not
+think it was worth mentioning. He does not speak of it. On the contrary,
+he says that the last words of Christ were:
+
+"Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world." Is it
+possible that Matthew saw this, the most miraculous of miracles, and
+yet forgot to put it in his life of Christ? Think of the little miracles
+recorded by this saint, and then determine whether it is probable that
+he witnessed the ascension of Jesus Christ.
+
+Mark says: "So, then, after the Lord had spoken unto them he was
+received up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God." This is all
+he says about the most wonderful vision that ever astonished human eyes,
+a miracle great enough to have stuffed credulity to bursting; and yet
+all we have is this one, poor, meagre verse. We know now that most of
+the last chapter of Mark is an interpolation, and as a matter of fact,
+the author of Mark's gospel said nothing about the ascension one way or
+the other.
+
+Luke says: "And it came to pass while he blessed them he was parted from
+them and was carried up into Heaven."
+
+John does not mention it. He gives as Christ's last words this address
+to Peter: "Follow thou Me." Of course, he did not say that as he
+ascended. It seems to have made very little impression upon him; he
+writes the account as though tired of the story. He concludes with an
+impatient wave of the hand.
+
+In the Acts we have another account. A conversation is given not
+spoken of in any of the others, and we find there two men clad in white
+apparel, who said: "Ye men of Galilee why stand ye here gazing up into
+heaven? This same Jesus that was taken up into heaven shall so come in
+like manner as ye have seen him go up into heaven."
+
+Matthew did not see the men in white apparel, did not see the ascension.
+Mark forgot the entire transaction, and Luke did not think the men in
+white apparel worth mentioning. John had not confidence enough in the
+story to repeat it. And yet, upon such evidence, we are bound to believe
+in the bodily ascension, or suffer eternal pain.
+
+And here let me ask, why was not the ascension in public?
+
+Casting out Devils.
+
+Most of the miracles said to have been wrought by Christ were recorded
+to show his power over evil spirits. On many occasions, he is said to
+have "cast out devils"--devils who could speak, and devils who were
+dumb.
+
+For many years belief in the existence of evil spirits has been fading
+from the mind, and as this belief grew thin, ministers endeavored to
+give new meanings to the ancient words. They are inclined now to put
+"disease" in the place of "devils," and most of them say, that the
+poor wretches supposed to have been the homes of fiends, were simply
+suffering from epileptic fits! We must remember that Christ and these
+devils often conversed together. Is it possible that fits can talk?
+These devils often admitted that Christ was God. Can epilepsy certify to
+divinity? On one occasion the fits told their name, and made a contract
+to leave the body of a man provided they would be permitted to take
+possession of a herd of swine. Is it possible that fits carried Christ
+himself to the pinnacle of a temple? Did fits pretend to be the owner
+of the whole earth? Is Christ to be praised for resisting such a
+temptation? Is it conceivable that fits wanted Christ to fall down and
+worship them?
+
+The church must not abandon its belief in devils. Orthodoxy cannot
+afford to put out the fires of hell. Throw away a belief in the devil,
+and most of the miracles of the New Testament become impossible, even
+if we admit the supernatural. If there is no devil, who was the original
+tempter in the garden of Eden? If there is no hell, from what are
+we saved; to what purpose is the atonement? Upon the obverse of the
+Christian shield is God, upon the reverse, the devil. No devil, no hell.
+No hell, no atonement. No atonement, no preaching, no gospel.
+
+Necessity of Belief.
+
+Does belief depend upon evidence? I think it does somewhat in some
+cases. How is it when a jury is sworn to try a case, hearing all the
+evidence, hearing both sides, hearing the charge of the judge, hearing
+the law, are upon their oaths equally divided, six for the plaintiff and
+six for the defendant? Evidence does not have the same effect upon all
+people. Why? Our brains are not alike. They are not the same shape. We
+have not the same intelligence, or the same experience, the same sense.
+And yet I am held accountable for my belief. I must believe in the
+Trinity--three times one is one, once one is three, and my soul is to be
+eternally damned for failing to guess an arithmetical conundrum. That
+is the poison part of Christianity--that salvation depends upon
+belief. That is the accursed part, and until that dogma is discarded
+Christianity will be nothing but superstition.
+
+No man can control his belief. If I hear certain evidence I will believe
+a certain thing. If I fail to hear it I may never believe it. If it is
+adapted to my mind I may accept it; if it is not, I reject it. And what
+am I to go by? My brain. That is the only light I have from Nature, and
+if there be a God it is the only torch that this God has given me to
+find my way through the darkness and night called life. I do not depend
+upon hearsay for that. I do not have to take the word of any other man
+nor get upon my knees before a book. Here in the temple of the mind I
+consult the God, that is to say my reason, and the oracle speaks to me
+and I obey the oracle. What should I obey? Another man's oracle? Shall
+I take another man's word--not what he thinks, but what he says some God
+has said to him?
+
+I would not know a god if I should see one. I have said before, and I
+say again, the brain thinks in spite of me, and I am not responsible for
+my thoughts. I cannot control the beating of my heart. I cannot stop
+the blood that flows through the rivers of my veins. And yet I am held
+responsible for my belief. Then why does not God give me the evidence?
+They say he has. In what? In an inspired book. But I do not understand
+it as they do. Must I be false to my understanding? They say: "When you
+come to die you will be sorry if you do not." Will I be sorry when I
+come to die that I did not live a hypocrite? Will I be sorry that I
+did not say I was a Christian when I was not? Will the fact that I was
+honest put a thorn in the pillow of death? Cannot God forgive me for
+being honest? They say that when he was in Jerusalem he forgave his
+murderers, but now he will not forgive an honest man for differing from
+him on the subject of the Trinity.
+
+They say that God says to me, "Forgive your enemies." I say, "I do;" but
+he says, "I will damn mine." God should be consistent. If he wants me to
+forgive my enemies he should forgive his. I am asked to forgive enemies
+who can hurt me. God is only asked to forgive enemies who cannot hurt
+him. He certainly ought to be as generous as he asks us to be. And I
+want no God to forgive me unless I am willing to forgive others, and
+unless I do forgive others. All I ask, if that be true, is that this God
+should act according to his own doctrine. If I am to forgive my enemies,
+I ask him to forgive his. I do not believe in the religion of faith,
+but of kindness, of good deeds. The idea that man is responsible for his
+belief is at the bottom of religious intolerance and persecution.
+
+How inconsistent these Christians are! In St. Louis the other day I read
+an interview with a Christian minister--one who is now holding a
+revival. They call him the boy preacher--a name that he has borne for
+fifty or sixty years. The question was whether in these revivals, when
+they were trying to rescue souls from eternal torture, they would allow
+colored people to occupy seats with white people; and that revivalist,
+preaching the unsearchable riches of Christ, said he would not allow the
+colored people to sit with white people; they must go to the back of the
+church. These same Christians tell us that in heaven there will be no
+distinction. That Christ cares nothing for the color of the skin. That
+in Paradise white and black will sit together, swap harps, and cry
+hallelujah in chorus; yet this minister, believing as he says he does,
+that all men who fail to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ will eternally
+perish, was not willing that a colored man should sit by a white man and
+hear the gospel of everlasting peace.
+
+According to this revivalist, the ship of the world is going down;
+Christ is the only life-boat; and yet he is not willing that a colored
+man, with a soul to save, shall sit by the side of a white brother,
+and be rescued from eternal death. He admits that the white brother
+is totally depraved; that if the white brother had justice done him he
+would be damned; that it is only through the wonderful mercy of God that
+the white man is not in hell; and yet such a being, totally depraved,
+is too good to sit by a colored man! Total depravity becomes arrogant;
+total depravity draws the color line in religion, and an ambassador of
+Christ says to the black man, "Stand away; let your white brother hear
+first about the love of God."
+
+I believe in the religion of humanity. It is far better to love our
+fellow-men than to love God. We can help them. We cannot help him. We
+had better do what we can than to be always pretending to do what we
+cannot.
+
+Virtue is of no color; kindness, justice and love, of no complexion.
+
+Eternal Punishment.
+
+Now I come to the last part of this creed--the doctrine of eternal
+punishment. I have concluded that I will never deliver a lecture in
+which I will not attack the doctrine of eternal pain. That part of the
+Congregational creed would disgrace the lowest savage that crouches
+and crawls in the jungles of Africa. The man who now, in the nineteenth
+century, preaches the doctrine of eternal punishment, the doctrine of an
+eternal hell, has lived in vain. Think of that doctrine! The eternity of
+punishment! I find in this same creed--in this latest utterance of
+Congregationalism--that Christ is finally going to triumph in this world
+and establish his kingdom. This creed declares that "we believe in the
+ultimate prevalence of the kingdom of God over all the earth." If
+their doctrine is true he will never triumph in the other world. The
+Congregational Church does not believe in the ultimate prevalence of the
+kingdom of Christ in the world to come. There he is to meet with eternal
+failure. He will have billions in hell forever.
+
+In this world we never will be perfectly civilized as long as a gallows
+casts its shadow upon the earth. As long as there is a penitentiary,
+within the walls of which a human being is immured, we are not a
+perfectly civilized people. We shall never be perfectly civilized until
+we do away with crime. And yet, according to this Christian religion,
+God is to have an eternal penitentiary; he is to be an everlasting
+jailer, an everlasting turnkey, a warden of an infinite dungeon, and
+he is going to keep prisoners there forever, not for the purpose of
+reforming them--because they are never going to get any better, only
+worse--but for the purpose of purposeless punishment. And for what?
+For something they failed to believe in this world. Born in ignorance,
+supported by poverty, caught in the snares of temptation, deformed by
+toil, stupefied by want--and yet held responsible through the countless
+ages of eternity! No man can think of a greater horror; no man can dream
+of a greater absurdity. For the growth of that doctrine ignorance was
+soil and fear was rain. It came from the fanged mouths of serpents, and
+yet it is called "glad tidings of great joy." Some Who are Damned.
+
+We are told "God so loved the world" that he is going to damn almost
+everybody. If this orthodox religion be true, some of the greatest, and
+grandest, and best who ever lived are suffering God's torments to-night.
+It does not appear to make much difference with the members of the
+church. They go right on enjoying themselves about as well as ever. If
+this doctrine is true, Benjamin Franklin, one of the wisest and best of
+men, who did so much to give us here a free government, is suffering
+the tyranny of God to-night, although he endeavored to establish freedom
+among men. If the churches were honest, their preachers would tell their
+hearers: "Benjamin Franklin is in hell, and we warn all the youth not to
+imitate Benjamin Franklin. Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration
+of Independence, with its self-evident truths, has been damned these
+many years."
+
+That is what all the ministers ought to have the courage to say. Talk
+as you believe. Stand by your creed, or change it. I want to impress it
+upon your minds, because the thing I wish to do in this world is to put
+out the fires of hell. I will keep on as long as there is one little red
+coal left in the bottomless pit. As long as the ashes are warm I shall
+denounce this infamous doctrine.
+
+I want you to know that according to this creed the men who founded this
+great and splendid Government are in hell to-night. Most of the men who
+fought in the Revolutionary war, and wrested from the clutch of Great
+Britain this continent, have been rewarded by the eternal wrath of God.
+Thousands of the old Revolutionary soldiers are in torment tonight. Let
+the preachers have the courage to say so. The men who fought in 1812,
+and gave to the United States the freedom of the seas, have nearly all
+been damned. Thousands of heroes who served our country in the Civil
+war, hundreds who starved in prisons, are now in the dungeons of God,
+compared with which, Andersonville was Paradise. The greatest of heroes
+are there; the greatest of poets, the greatest scientists, the men who
+have made the world beautiful--they are all among the damned if this
+creed is true.
+
+Humboldt, who shed light, and who added to the intellectual wealth
+of mankind; Goethe, and Schiller, and Lessing, who almost created the
+German language--all gone--all suffering the wrath of God tonight, and
+every time an angel thinks of one of those men he gives his harp an
+extra twang. Laplace, who read the heavens like an open book--he is
+there. Robert Burns, the poet of human love--he is there. He wrote
+the "Prayer of Holy Willie." He fastened on the cross the Presbyterian
+creed, and there it is, a lingering crucifixion. Robert Burns increased
+the tenderness of the human heart. Dickens put a shield of pity before
+the flesh of childhood--God is getting even with him. Our own Ralph
+Waldo Emerson, although he had a thousand opportunities to hear
+Methodist clergymen, scorned the means of grace, lived to his highest
+ideal, gave to his fellow-men his best and truest thought, and yet his
+spirit is the sport and prey of fiends to-night.
+
+Longfellow, who has refined thousands of homes, did not believe in the
+miraculous origin of the Savior, doubted the report of Gabriel, loved
+his fellow-men, did what he could to free the slaves, to increase the
+happiness of man, yet God was waiting for his soul--waiting to cast
+him out and down forever. Thomas Paine, author of the "Rights of Man;"
+offering his life in both hemispheres for the freedom of the human race;
+one of the founders of this Republic, is now among the damned; and yet
+it seems to me that if he could only get God's attention long enough
+to point him to the American flag he would let him out. Auguste Comte,
+author of the "Positive Philosophy," who loved his fellow-men to that
+degree that he made of humanity a god, who wrote his great work in
+poverty, with his face covered with tears--they are getting their
+revenge on him now.
+
+Voltaire, who abolished torture in France; who did more for human
+liberty than any other man, living or dead; who was the assassin
+of superstition, and whose dagger still rusts in the heart of
+Catholicism--he is with the rest. All the priests who have been
+translated have had their happiness increased by looking at Voltaire.
+
+Giordano Bruno, the first star of the morning after the long night;
+Benedict Spinoza, the pantheist, the metaphysician, the pure and
+generous man; Diderot, the encyclopedist, who endeavored to get all
+knowledge in a small compass, so that he could put the peasant on an
+equality intellectually with the prince; Diderot, who wished to sow all
+over the world the seed of knowledge, and loved to labor for mankind,
+while the priests wanted to burn; who did all he could to put out the
+fires--he was lost, long, long ago. His cry for water has become so
+common that his voice is now recognized through all the realms of
+heaven, and the angels laughing, say to one another, "That is Diderot."
+
+David Hume, the Scotch philosopher, is there, with his inquiry about
+the "Human Understanding" and his argument against miracles. Beethoven,
+master of music, and Wagner, the Shakespeare of harmony, who made the
+air of this world rich forever, they are there; and to-night they have
+better music in hell than in heaven!
+
+Shelley, whose soul, like his own "Skylark," was a winged joy, has been
+damned for many, many years; and Shakespeare, the greatest of the human
+race, who did more to elevate mankind than all the priests who ever
+lived and died, he is there; but founders of inquisitions, builders
+of dungeons, makers of chains, inventors of instruments of torture,
+tearers, and burners, and branders of human flesh, stealers of babes,
+and sellers of husbands and wives and children, and they who kept the
+horizon lurid with the fagot's flame for a thousand years--are in heaven
+to-night. I wish heaven joy!
+
+That is the doctrine with which we are polluting the souls of children.
+That is the doctrine that puts a fiend by the dying bed and a prophecy
+of hell over every cradle. That is "glad tidings of great joy."
+
+Only a little while ago, when the great flood came upon the Ohio, sent
+by him who is ruling the world and paying particular attention to the
+affairs of nations, just in the gray of the morning they saw a house
+floating down and on its top a human being. A few men went out to the
+rescue. They found there a woman, a mother, and they wished to save her
+life. She said: "No, I am going to stay where I am. In this house I
+have three dead babes; I will not desert them." Think of a love so
+limitless--stronger and deeper than despair and death! And yet, the
+Christian religion says, that if that woman, that mother, did not happen
+to believe in their creed God would send her soul to eternal fire! If
+there is another world, and if in heaven they wear hats, when such a
+woman climbs the opposite bank of the Jordan, Christ should lift his to
+her.
+
+The doctrine of eternal pain is my trouble with this Christian religion.
+I reject it on account of its infinite heartlessness. I cannot tell them
+too often, that during our last war Christians, who knew that if they
+were shot they would go right to heaven, went and hired wicked men to
+take their places, perfectly willing that these men should go to hell
+provided they could stay at home. You see they are not honest in it,
+or they do not believe it, or as the people say, "they don't sense it."
+They have not imagination enough to conceive what it is they believe,
+and what a terrific falsehood they assert. And I beg of every one
+who hears me to-night, I beg, I implore, I beseech you, never to give
+another dollar to build a church in which that lie is preached. Never
+give another cent to send a missionary with his mouth stuffed with
+that falsehood to a foreign land. Why, they say, the heathen will go to
+heaven, any way, if you let them alone. What is the use of sending them
+to hell by enlightening them? Let them alone. The idea of going and
+telling a man a thing that if he does not believe, he will be damned,
+when the chances are ten to one that he will not believe it, is
+monstrous. Do not tell him here, and as quick as he gets to the other
+world and finds it is necessary to believe, he can say "Yes." Give him a
+chance.
+
+Another Objection.
+
+My objection to orthodox religion is that it destroys human love, and
+tells us that the love of this world is not necessary to make a heaven
+in the next.
+
+No matter about your wife, your children, your brother, your sister--no
+matter about all the affections of the human heart--when you get there,
+you will be with the angels. I do not know whether I would like the
+angels. I do not know whether the angels would like me. I would rather
+stand by the ones who have loved me and whom I know; and I can conceive
+of no heaven without the loved of this earth. That is the trouble with
+this Christian relief-ion. Leave your father, leave your mother, leave
+your wife, leave your children, leave everything and follow Jesus
+Christ. I will not. I will stay with my people. I will not sacrifice on
+the altar of a selfish fear all the grandest and noblest promptings of
+my heart.
+
+Do away with human love and what are we? What would we be in another
+world, and what would we be here? Can any one conceive of music without
+human love? Of art, or joy? Human love builds every home. Human love is
+the author of all beauty. Love paints every picture, and chisels every
+statue. Love builds every fireside. What could heaven be without human
+love? And yet that is what we are promised--a heaven with your wife
+lost, your mother lost, some of your children gone. And you expect to be
+made happy by falling in with some angel! Such a religion is infamous.
+Christianity holds human love for naught; and yet Love is the only bow
+on Life's dark cloud. It is the morning and the evening star. It shines
+upon the babe, and sheds its radiance on the quiet tomb. It is the
+mother of art, inspirer of poet, patriot and philosopher. It is the air
+and light of every heart--builder of every home, kindler of every fire
+on every hearth. It was the first to dream of immortality. It fills the
+world with melody--for music is the voice of love. Love is the magician,
+the enchanter, that changes worthless things to joy, and makes right
+royal kings and queens of common clay. It is the perfume of that
+wondrous flower, the heart, and without that sacred passion, that divine
+swoon, we are less than beasts; but with it, earth is heaven, and we are
+gods.
+
+And how are you to get to this heaven? On the efforts of another.
+You are to be a perpetual heavenly pauper, and you will have to admit
+through all eternity that you never would have been there if you had not
+been frightened. "I am here," you will say, "I have these wings, I have
+this musical instrument, because I was scared. I am here. The ones who
+loved me are among the damned; the ones I loved are also there--but I am
+here, that is enough."
+
+What a glorious' world heaven must be! No reformation in that world--not
+the slightest. If you die in Arkansas that is the end of you! Think of
+telling a boy in the next world, who lived and died in Delaware, that he
+had been fairly treated! Can anything be more infamous?
+
+All on an equality--the rich and the poor, those with parents loving
+them, those with every opportunity for education, on an equality with
+the poor, the abject and the ignorant--and this little day called life,
+this moment with a hope, a shadow and a tear, this little space between
+your mother's arms and the grave, balances eternity.
+
+God can do nothing for you when you get there. A Methodist preacher can
+do more for the soul here than its creator can there. The soul goes to
+heaven, where there is nothing but good society; no bad examples; and
+they are all there, Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and yet they can do
+nothing for that poor unfortunate except to damn him. Is there any sense
+in that?
+
+Why should this be a period of probation? It says in the Bible, I
+believe, "Now is the accepted time." When does that mean? That means
+whenever the passage is pronounced. "Now is the accepted time." It will
+be the same to-morrow, will it not? And just as appropriate then
+as to-day, and if appropriate at any time, appropriate through all
+eternity.
+
+What I say is this: There is no world--there can be no world--in which
+every human being will not have the eternal opportunity of doing right.
+
+That is my objection to this Christian religion; and if the love
+of earth is not the love of heaven, if those we love here are to be
+separated from us there, then I want eternal sleep. Give me a good cool
+grave rather than the furnace of Jehovah's wrath. I pray the angel of
+the resurrection to let me sleep. Gabriel, do not blow! Let me alone!
+If, when the grave bursts, I am not to meet the faces that have been my
+sunshine in this life, let me sleep. Rather than that this doctrine of
+endless punishment should be true, I would gladly see the fabric of our
+civilization crumbling fall to unmeaning chaos and to formless dust,
+where oblivion broods and even memory forgets. I would rather that the
+blind Samson of some imprisoned force, released by chance, should so
+wreck and strand the mighty world that man in stress and strain of want
+and fear should shudderingly crawl back to savage and barbaric night. I
+would rather that every planet should in its orbit wheel a barren star!
+
+What I Believe.
+
+I think it is better to love your children than to love God, a thousand
+times better, because you can help them, and I am inclined to think that
+God can get along without you. Certainly we cannot help a being without
+body, parts, or passions!
+
+I believe in the religion of the family. I believe that the roof-tree is
+sacred, from the smallest fibre that feels the soft cool clasp of earth,
+to the topmost flower that spreads its bosom to the sun, and like a
+spendthrift gives its perfume to the air. The home where virtue dwells
+with love is like a lily with a heart of fire--the fairest flower in all
+the world. And I tell you God cannot afford to damn a man in the next
+world who has made a happy family in this. God cannot afford to cast
+over the battlements of heaven the man who has a happy home upon this
+earth. God cannot afford to be unpitying to a human heart capable of
+pity. God cannot clothe with fire the man who has clothed the naked
+here; and God cannot send to eternal pain a man who has done something
+toward improving the condition of his fellow-man. If he can, I had
+rather go to hell than to heaven and keep the company of such a god.
+
+Immortality.
+
+They tell me that the next terrible thing I do is to take away the hope
+of immortality! I do not, I would not, I could not. Immortality was
+first dreamed of by human love; and yet the church is going to take
+human love out of immortality. We love, therefore we wish to live. A
+loved one dies and we wish to meet again; and from the affection of the
+human heart grew the great oak of the hope of immortality. Around
+that oak has climbed the poisonous vines of superstition. Theologians,
+pretenders, soothsayers, parsons, priests, popes, bishops, have taken
+advantage of that. They have stood by graves and promised heaven. They
+have stood by graves and prophesied a future filled with pain. They have
+erected their toll-gates on the highway of life and have collected money
+from fear.
+
+Neither the Bible nor the church gave us the idea of immortality. The
+Old Testament tells us how we lost immortality, and it does not say a
+word about another world, from the first mistake in Genesis to the last
+curse in Malachi. There is not in the Old Testament a burial service.
+
+No man in the Old Testament stands by the dead and says, "We shall meet
+again." From the top of Sinai came no hope of another world.
+
+And when we get to the New Testament, what do we find? "They that are
+accounted worthy to obtain that world and the resurrection of the dead."
+As though some would be counted unworthy to obtain the resurrection of
+the dead. And in another place. "Seek for honor, glory, immortality."
+If you have it, why seek it? And in another place, "God, who alone hath
+immortality." Yet they tell us that we get our idea of immortality from
+the Bible. I deny it.
+
+I would not destroy the faintest ray of human hope, but I deny that
+we got our idea of immortality from the Bible. It existed long before
+Moses. We find it symbolized through all Egypt, through all India.
+Wherever man has lived he has made another world in which to meet the
+lost of this.
+
+The history of this belief we find in tombs and temples wrought and
+carved by those who wept and hoped. Above their dead they laid the
+symbols of another life.
+
+We do not know. We do not prophesy a life of pain. We leave the dead
+with Nature, the mother of us all. Under the bow of hope, under the
+seven-hued arch, let the dead sleep.
+
+If Christ was in fact God, why did he not plainly say there is another
+life? Why did he not tell us something about it? Why did he not turn
+the tear-stained hope of immortality into the glad knowledge of another
+life? Why did he go dumbly to his death and leave the world in darkness
+and in doubt? Why? Because he was a man and did not know.
+
+What consolation has the orthodox religion for the widow of the
+unbeliever, the widow of a good, brave, kind man? What can the orthodox
+minister say to relieve the bursting heart of that woman? What can he
+say to relieve the aching hearts of the orphans as they kneel by the
+grave of that father, if that father did not happen to be an orthodox
+Christian? What consolation have they? When a Christian loses a friend
+the tears spring from his eyes as quickly as from the eyes of others.
+Their tears are as bitter as ours. Why? The echoes of the words spoken
+eighteen hundred years ago are so low, and the sounds of the clods upon
+the coffin are so loud; the promises are so far away, and the dead are
+so near.
+
+We do not know, we cannot say, whether death is a wall or a door; the
+beginning or end of a day; the spreading of pinions to soar, or the
+folding forever of wings; the rise or the set of a sun, or an endless
+life that brings the rapture of love to everyone. A Fable.
+
+There is the fable of Orpheus and Eurydice. Eurydice had been captured
+and taken to the infernal regions, and Orpheus went after her, taking
+with him his harp and playing as he went. When he came to Pluto's realm
+he began to play, and Sysiphus, charmed by the music, sat down upon the
+stone that he had been heaving up the mountain's side for so many years,
+and which continually rolled back upon him; Ixion paused upon his wheel
+of fire; Tantalus ceased his vain efforts for water; the daughters of
+the Danaides left off trying to fill their sieves with water; Pluto
+smiled, and for the first time in the history of hell the cheeks of the
+Furies were wet with tears. The god relented, and said, "Eurydice may
+go with you, but you must not look back." So Orpheus again threaded the
+caverns, playing as he went, and as he reached the light he failed to
+hear the footsteps of Eurydice. He looked back, and in a moment she was
+gone. Again and again Orpheus sought his love. Again and again looked
+back.
+
+This fable gives the idea of the perpetual effort made by the human mind
+to rescue truth from the clutch of error.
+
+Some time Orpheus will not look back. Some day Eurydice will reach the
+blessed light, and at last there will fade from the memory of men the
+monsters of superstition.
+
+
+
+
+MYTH AND MIRACLE.
+
+I.
+
+HAPPINESS is the true end and aim of life. It is the task of
+intelligence to ascertain the conditions of happiness, and when found
+the truly wise will live in accordance with them. By happiness is meant
+not simply the joy of eating and drinking--the gratification of the
+appetite--but good, wellbeing, in the highest and noblest forms. The joy
+that springs from obligation discharged, from duty done, from generous
+acts, from being true to the ideal, from a perception of the beautiful
+in nature, art and conduct. The happiness that is born of and gives
+birth to poetry and music, that follows the gratification of the highest
+wants.
+
+Happiness is the result of all that is really right and sane.
+
+But there are many people who regard the desire to be happy as a very
+low and degrading ambition. These people call themselves spiritual. They
+pretend to care nothing for the pleasures of "sense." They hold this
+world, this life, in contempt. They do not want happiness in this
+world--but in another. Here, happiness degrades--there, it purifies and
+ennobles.
+
+These spiritual people have been known as prophets, apostles, augurs,
+hermits, monks, priests, popes, bishops and parsons. They are devout and
+useless. They do not cultivate the soil. They produce nothing. They
+live on the labor of others. They are pious and parasitic. They pray
+for others, if the others will work for them. They claim to have been
+selected by the Infinite to instruct and govern mankind. They are "meek"
+and arrogant, "long-suffering" and revengeful.
+
+They ever have been, now are, and always will be the enemies of liberty,
+of investigation and science. They are believers in the supernatural,
+the miraculous and the absurd. They have filled the world with hatred,
+bigotry and fear. In defence of their creeds they have committed every
+crime and practiced every cruelty.
+
+They denounce as worldly and sensual those who are gross enough to love
+wives and children, to build homes, to fell the forests, to navigate the
+seas, to cultivate the earth, to chisel statues, to paint pictures and
+fill the world with love and art.
+
+They have denounced and maligned the thinkers, the poets, the
+dramatists, the composers, the actors, the orators, the workers--those
+who have conquered the world for man.
+
+According to them this world is only the vestibule of the next, a kind
+of school, an ordeal, a place of probation. They have always insisted
+that this life should be spent in preparing for the next; that those
+who supported and obeyed the "spiritual guides"--the shepherds, would
+be rewarded with an eternity of joy, and that all others would suffer
+eternal pain.
+
+These spiritual people have always hated labor. They have added nothing
+to the wealth of the world. They have always lived on alms--on the labor
+of others. They have always been the enemies of innocent pleasure, and
+of human love.
+
+These spiritual people have produced a literature. The books they have
+written are called sacred. Our sacred books are called the Bible.
+The Hindoos have the Vedas and many others, the Persians the Zend
+Avesta--the Egyptians had the Book of the Dead--the Aztecs the Popol
+Vuh, and the Mohammedans have the Koran.
+
+These books, for the most part, treat of the unknowable. They describe
+gods and winged phantoms of the air. They give accounts of the origin
+of the universe, the creation of man and the worlds beyond this. They
+contain nothing of value. Millions and millions of people have wasted
+their lives studying these absurd and ignorant books.
+
+The "spiritual people" in each country claimed that their books had been
+written by inspired men--that God was the real author, and that all men
+and women who denied this would be, after death, tormented forever.
+
+And yet, the worldly people, the uninspired, the wicked, have produced a
+far greater literature than the spiritual and the inspired.
+
+Not all the sacred books of the world equal Shakespeare's "volume of
+the brain." A purer philosophy, grander, nobler, fell from the lips of
+Shakespeare's clowns than the Old Testament, or the New, contains.
+
+The Declaration of Independence is nobler far than all the utterances
+from Sinai's cloud and flame. "A Man's a Man for a' That," by Robert
+Burns, is better than anything the sacred books contain. For my part, I
+would rather hear Beethoven's Sixth Symphony than to read the five books
+of Moses. Give me the Sixth Symphony--this sound-wrought picture of
+the fields and woods, of flowering hedge and happy home, where thrushes
+build and swallows fly, and mothers sing to babes; this echo of the
+babbled lullaby of brooks that, dallying, wind and fall where meadows
+bare their daisied bosoms to the sun; this joyous mimicry of summer
+rain, the laugh of children, and the rhythmic rustle of the whispering
+leaves; this strophe of peasant life; this perfect poem of content and
+love.
+
+I would rather listen to Tristan and Isolde--that Mississippi of
+melody--where the great notes, winged like eagles, lift the soul above
+the cares and griefs of this weary world--than to all the orthodox
+sermons ever preached. I would rather look at the Venus de Milo than to
+read the Presbyterian creed.
+
+The spiritual have endeavored to civilize the world through fear and
+faith--by the promise of reward and the threat of pain in other worlds.
+They taught men to hate and persecute their fellow-men. In all ages they
+have appealed to force. During all the years they have practiced fraud.
+They have pretended to have influence with the gods--that their prayers
+gave rain, sunshine and harvest--that their curses brought pestilence
+and famine, and that their blessings filled the world with plenty. They
+have subsisted on the fears their falsehoods created. Like poisonous
+vines, they have lived on the oak of labor. They have praised charity,
+but they never gave. They have denounced revenge, but they never
+forgave.
+
+Whenever the spiritual have had power, art has died, learning has
+languished, science has been despised, liberty destroyed, the thinkers
+have been imprisoned, the intelligent and honest have been outcasts, and
+the brave have been murdered.
+
+The "spiritual" have been, are, and always will be the enemies of the
+human race.
+
+For all the blessings that we now enjoy--for progress in every form, for
+science and art--for all that has lengthened life, that has conquered
+disease, that has lessened pain, for raiment, roof and food, for music
+in its highest forms--for the poetry that has ennobled and enriched our
+lives--for the marvellous machines now working for the world--for all
+this we are indebted to the worldly--to those who turned their attention
+to the affairs of this life. They have been the only benefactors of our
+race.
+
+II.
+
+AND yet all of these religions--these "sacred books," these priests,
+have been naturally produced. From the dens and caves of savagery to
+the palaces of civilization men have traveled by the necessary paths and
+roads. Back of every step has been the efficient cause. In the history
+of the world there has been no chance, no interference from without,
+nothing miraculous. Everything in accordance with and produced by the
+facts in nature.
+
+We need not blame the hypocritical and cruel. They thought and acted as
+they were compelled to think and act.
+
+In all ages man has tried to account for himself and his surroundings.
+He did the best he could. He wondered why the water ran, why the trees
+grew, why the clouds floated, why the stars shone, why the sun and moon
+journeyed through the heavens. He was troubled about life and death,
+about darkness and dreams. The seas, the volcanoes, the lightning and
+thunder, the earthquake and cyclone, filled him with fear. Behind all
+life and growth and motion, and even inanimate things, he placed
+a spirit--an intelligent being--a fetich, a person, something like
+himself--a god, controlled by love and hate. To him causes and effects
+became gods--supernatural beings. The Dawn was a maiden, wondrously
+fair, the Sun, a warrior and lover; the Night, a serpent, a wolf--the
+Wind, a musician; Winter, a wild beast; Autumn, Proserpine gathering
+flowers.
+
+Poets were the makers of these myths. They were the first to account for
+what they saw and felt. The great multitude mistook these fancies
+for facts. Myths strangely alike, were produced by most nations, and
+gradually took possession of the world.
+
+The Sleeping Beauty, a myth of the year, has been found among most
+peoples. In this myth, the Earth was a maiden--the Sun was her lover,
+She had fallen asleep in winter. Her blood was still and her breath had
+gone. In the Spring the lover came, clasped her in his arms, covered her
+lips and cheeks with kisses. She was thrilled, her heart began to beat,
+she breathed, her blood flowed, and she awoke to love and joy. This myth
+has made the circuit of the globe.
+
+So, Red Riding-Hood is the history of a day. Little Red Riding-Hood--the
+morning, touched with red, goes to visit her kindred, a day that is
+past. She is attacked by the wolf of night and is rescued by the hunter,
+Apollo, who pierces the heart of the beast with an arrow of light.
+
+The beautiful myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is the story of the year.
+Eurydice has been captured and carried to the infernal world. Orpheus,
+playing upon his harp, goes after her. Such is the effect of his music
+when he reaches the realm of Pluto, the laughterless, that Tantalus
+ceases his efforts to slake his thirst. He listens and forgets his
+withered lips, the daughters of the Danaides cease their vain efforts
+to fill the sieve with water, Sisyphus sits down on the stone that he
+so often had heaved against the mountain's misty side, Ixion pauses
+upon his wheel of fire, even Pluto smiles, and for the first time in the
+history of hell the cheeks of the Furies are wet with tears.
+
+"Give me back Eurydice," cried Orpheus, and Pluto said: "Take her, but
+look not back." Orpheus led the way and Eurydice followed. Just as he
+reached the upper world, he missed her footsteps, turned, looked, and
+she vanished.
+
+And thus the summer comes, is lost, and comes again through all the
+years.
+
+So, our ancestors believed in the Garden of Eden, in the Golden Age, in
+the blessed time when all were good and pure--when nature satisfied the
+wants of all. The race, like the old man, has golden dreams of youth.
+The morning was filled with light and life and joy, and the evening is
+always sad. When the old man was young, girls were beautiful and men
+were honest. He remembers his Eden. And so the whole world has had its
+age of gold.
+
+Our fathers were believers in the Elysian Fields. They were in the far,
+far West. They saw them at the setting of the sun. They saw the floating
+isles of gold in sapphire seas; the templed mist with spires and domes
+of emerald and amethyst; the magic caverns of the clouds, resplendent
+with the rays of every gem. And as they looked, they thought the curtain
+had been drawn aside and that their eyes had for a moment feasted on the
+glories of another world.
+
+The myth of the Flood has also been universal. Finding shells of the
+seas on plain and mountain, and everywhere some traces of the waves,
+they thought the world had been submerged--that God in wrath had drowned
+the race, except a few his mercy saved.
+
+The Hindus say that Menu, a holy man, dipped from the Ganges some water,
+and in the basin saw a little fish. The fish begged him to throw him
+back into the river, and Menu, having pity, cast him back. The fish then
+told Menu that there was to be a flood--told him to build an ark, to
+take on board, people, animals and food, and that when the flood came,
+he, the fish, would save him. The saint did as he was told, the flood
+came, the fish returned. By that time he had grown to be a whale with
+a horn in his head. About this horn Menu fastened a rope, attached the
+other end to the ark, and the fish towed the boat across the raging
+waves to a mountain's top, where it rested until the waters subsided.
+The name of this wonderful fish was Matsaya.
+
+Many other nations told similar stories of floods and arks and the
+sending forth of doves.
+
+In all these myths and legends of the past we find philosophies and
+dreams and efforts, stained with tears, of great and tender souls who
+tried to pierce the mysteries of life and death, to answer the questions
+of the whence and whither, and who vainly sought with bits of shattered
+glass to make a mirror that would in very truth reflect the face and
+form of Nature's perfect self. These myths were born of hopes and fears,
+of tears and smiles, and they were touched and colored by all there is
+of joy and grief between the rosy dawn of birth and death's sad night.
+They clothed even the stars with passion, and gave to gods the faults
+and frailties of the sons of men. In them the winds and waves were
+music, and all the springs, the mountains, woods and perfumed dells were
+haunted by a thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of Spring
+with tremulous desire, made tawny Summer's billowy breast the throne and
+home of love, filled Autumn's arms with sun-kissed grapes and gathered
+sheaves, and pictured Winter as a weak old king, who felt, like Lear,
+upon his withered face, Cordelia's tears.
+
+These myths, though false in fact, are beautiful and true in thought,
+and have for many ages and in countless ways enriched the heart and
+kindled thought.
+
+III.
+
+IN all probability the first religion was Sun-worship. Nothing could
+have been more natural. Light was life and warmth and love. The sun
+was the fireside of the world. The sun was the "all-seeing"--the "Sky
+Father." Darkness was grief and death, and in the shadows crawled the
+serpents of despair and fear.
+
+The sun was a great warrior, fighting the hosts of Night. Apollo was
+the sun, and he fought and conquered the serpent of Night. Agni, the
+generous, who loved the lowliest and visited the humblest, was the sun.
+He was the god of fire, and the crossed sticks that by friction leaped
+into flame were his emblem. It was said that, in spite of his goodness,
+he devoured his father and mother, the two pieces of wood being his
+parents. Baldur was the sun. He was in love with the Dawn--a maiden--he
+deserted her and traveled through the heavens alone. At the twilight
+they met, were reconciled, and the drops of dew were the tears of joy
+they shed.
+
+Chrishna was the sun. At his birth the Ganges thrilled from its source
+to the sea. All the trees, the dead as well as the living, burst into
+leaf and bud and flower.
+
+Hercules was a sun-god.
+
+Jonah the same, rescued from the fiends of Night and carried by the fish
+through the under world. Samson was a sun-god. His strength was in
+his hair--in his beams. He was shorn of his strength by Delilah, the
+shadow--the darkness. So, Osiris, Bacchus, Mithra, Hermes, Buddha,
+Quelzalcoatle, Prometheus, Zoroaster, Perseus, Codom Lao-tsze Fo-hi,
+Horus and Rameses were all sun-gods.
+
+All these gods had gods for fathers and all their mothers were virgins.
+
+The births of nearly all were announced by stars.
+
+When they were born there was celestial music--voices declared that a
+blessing had come upon the earth.
+
+When Buddha was born, the celestial choir sang: "This day is born
+for the good of men Buddha, and to dispel the darkness of their
+ignorance--to give joy and peace to the world."
+
+Chrishna was born in a cave, and protected by shepherds. Bacchus,
+Apollo, Mithra and Hermes were all born in caves. Buddha was born in an
+inn--according to some, under a tree.
+
+Tyrants sought to kill all of these gods when they were babes.
+
+When Chrishna was born, a tyrant killed the babes of the neighborhood.
+
+Buddha was the child of Maya, a virgin, in the kingdom of Madura. The
+king arrested Maya before the child was born, imprisoned her in a tower.
+During the night when the child was born, a great wind wrecked the
+tower, and carried mother and child to a place of safety. The next
+morning the king sent his soldiers to kill the babes, and when they came
+to Buddha and his mother, the babe appeared to be about twelve years of
+age, and the soldiers passed on.
+
+So Typhon sought in many ways to destroy the babe Horus. The king
+pursued the infant Zoroaster. Cadmus tried to kill the infant Bacchus.
+
+All of these gods were born on the 25th of December.
+
+Nearly all were worshiped by "wise men."
+
+All of them fasted for forty days.
+
+All met with a violent death.
+
+All rose from the dead.
+
+The history of these gods is the history of our Christ. He had a god for
+a father, a virgin for a mother. He was born in a manger, or a cave--on
+the 2 5th of December. His birth was announced by angels. He was
+worshiped by wise men, guided by a star. Herod, seeking his life, caused
+the death of many babes. Christ fasted for forty days. So, it rained for
+forty days before the flood--Moses was on Mt. Sinai for forty days. The
+temple had forty pillars and the Jews wandered in the wilderness for
+forty years. Christ met with a violent death, and rose from the dead.
+
+These things are not accidents--not coincidences. Christ was a sun-god.
+All religions have been born of sun-worship. To-day, when priests
+pray, they shut their eyes. This is a survival of sun-worship. When men
+worshiped the sun, they had to shut their eyes. Afterwards, to flatter
+idols, they pretended that the glory of their faces was more than the
+eyes could bear.
+
+In the religion of our day there is nothing original. All of its
+doctrines, its symbols and ceremonies are but the survivals of creeds
+that perished long ago. Baptism is far older than Christianity--than
+Judaism. The Hindus, the Egyptians, the Greeks and Romans had holy
+water. The eucharist was borrowed from the Pagans. Ceres was the goddess
+of the fields, Bacchus the god of the vine. At the harvest festival they
+made cakes of wheat and said: "These are the flesh of the goddess." They
+drank wine and cried: "This is the blood of our god."
+
+The cross has been a symbol for many thousands of years. It was a symbol
+of immortality--of life, of the god Agni, the form of the grave of a
+man. An ancient people of Italy, who lived long before the Romans, long
+before the Etruscans, so long that not one word of their language is
+known, used the cross, and beneath that emblem, carved on stone, their
+dead still rest. In the forests of Central America, ruined temples have
+been found, and on the walls the cross with the bleeding victim. On
+Babylonian cylinders is the impression of the cross. The Trinity came
+from Egypt. Osiris, Isis and Horus were worshiped thousands of years
+before our Father, Son and Holy Ghost were thought of. So the Tree of
+Life grew in India, China and among the Aztecs long before the Garden
+of Eden was planted. Long before our Bible was known, other nations
+had their sacred books, temples and altars, sacrifices, ceremonies and
+priests. The "Fall of Man" is far older than our religion, and so are
+the "Atonement" and the Scheme of Redemption.
+
+In our blessed religion there is nothing new, nothing original.
+
+Among the Egyptians the cross was a symbol of the life to come. And
+yet the first religion was, and all religions growing out of that, were
+naturally produced. Every brain was a field in which Nature sowed the
+seeds of thought. The rise and set of sun, the birth and death of day,
+the dawns of silver and the dusks of gold, the wonders of the rain and
+snow, the shroud of Winter and the many colored robe of Spring, the
+lonely moon with nightly loss or gain, the serpent lightning and the
+thunder's voice, the tempest's fury and the zephyr's sigh, the threat
+of storm and promise of the bow, cathedral clouds with dome and spire,
+earthquake and strange eclipse, frost and fire, the snow-crowned
+mountains with their tongues of flame, the fields of space sown thick
+with stars, the wandering comets hurrying past the fixed and sleepless
+sentinels of night, the marvels of the earth and air, the perfumed
+flower, the painted wing, the waveless pool that held within its magic
+breast the image of the startled face, the mimic echo that made a record
+in the viewless air, the pathless forests and the boundless seas,
+the ebb and flow of tides--the slow, deep breathing of some vague and
+monstrous life--the miracle of birth, the mystery of dream and death,
+and over all the silent and immeasurable dome. These were the warp and
+woof, and at the loom sat Love and Fancy, Hope and Fear, and wove the
+wondrous tapestries whereon we find pictures of gods and fairy lands
+and all the legends that were told when Nature rocked the cradle of the
+infant world.
+
+IV.
+
+WE must remember that there is a great difference. Myth is the
+idealization of a fact. A miracle is the counterfeit of a fact. There is
+the same difference between a myth and a miracle that there is between
+fiction and falsehood--between poetry and perjury. Miracles belong to
+the far past and the far future. The little line of sand, called the
+present, between the seas, belongs to common sense, to the natural.
+
+If you should tell a man that the dead were raised two thousand years
+ago, he would probably say: "Yes, I know that." If you should say that
+a hundred thousand years from now all the dead will be raised, he might
+say: "Probably they will." But if you should tell him that you saw a
+dead man raised and given life that day, he would likely ask the name of
+the insane asylum from which you had escaped.
+
+Our Bible is filled with accounts of miracles and yet they always fail
+to convince.
+
+Jehovah, according to the Scriptures, wrought hundreds of miracles for
+the benefit of the Jews. With many miracles he rescued them from
+slavery, guided them on their journey with a miraculous cloud by day and
+a miraculous pillar of fire by night--divided the sea that they might
+escape from the Egyptians, fed them with miraculous manna and
+supernatural quails, raised up hornets to attack their enemies, caused
+water to follow them wherever they wandered and in countless ways
+manifested his power, and yet the Jews cared nothing for these wonders.
+Not one of them seems to have been convinced that Jehovah had done
+anything for the people.
+
+In spite of all these miracles, the Jews had more confidence in a golden
+calf, made by themselves, than in Jehovah. The reason of this is, that
+the miracles were never performed, and never invented until hundreds of
+years after those, who had wandered over the desert of Sinai, were dust.
+
+The miracles attributed to Christ had no effect. No human being seems to
+have been convinced by them. Those whom he raised from the dead, cured
+of leprosy, or blindness, failed to become his followers. Not one of
+them appeared at his trial. Not one offered to bear witness of his
+miraculous power.
+
+To this there is but one explanation: The miracles were never performed.
+These stories were the growth of centuries. The casting out of devils,
+the changing of water into wine, feeding the multitude with a few loaves
+and fishes, resisting the devil, using a fish for a pocketbook, curing
+the blind with clay and saliva, stilling the tempest, walking on the
+water, the resurrection and ascension, happened and only happened, in
+the imaginations of men, who were not born until several generations
+after Christ was dead.
+
+In those days the world was filled with ignorance and fear. Miracles
+happened every day. The supernatural was expected. Gods were continually
+interfering with the affairs of this world. Everything was told
+except the truth, everything believed except the facts. History was a
+circumstantial account of occurrences that never occurred. Devils and
+goblins and ghosts were as plentiful as saints. The bones of the dead
+were used to cure the living. Cemeteries were hospitals and corpses were
+physicians. The saints practiced magic, the pious communed with God in
+dreams, and the course of events was changed by prayer. The credulous
+demanded the marvelous, the miraculous, and the priests supplied the
+demand. The sky was full of signs, omens of death and disaster, and the
+darkness thick with devils endeavoring to mislead and enslave the souls
+of men.
+
+Our fathers thought that everything had been made for man, and that
+demons and gods gave their entire attention to this world. The people
+believed that they were the sport and prey, the favorites or victims, of
+these phantoms. And they also believed that the Creator, the God, could
+be influenced by sacrifice, by prayers and ceremonies.
+
+This has been the mistake of the world. All the temples have been
+reared, all the altars erected, all the sacrifices offered, all the
+prayers uttered in vain. No god has interfered, no prayer has been
+answered, no help received from heaven. Nothing was created, nothing has
+happened for, or with reference to man. If not a human being lived,--if
+all Were in' their graves, the sun would continue to shine, the wheeling
+world would still pursue its flight, violets would spread their velvet
+bosoms to the day, the spendthrift roses give their perfume to the air,
+the climbing vines would hide with leaf and flower the fallen and the
+dead, the changing seasons would come-and go,-time would repeat the poem
+of the year, storms would wreck and whispering rains repair, Spring
+with deft and unseen hands would weave her robes of green, life with
+countless lips would seek fair Summer's swelling breasts, Autumn would
+reap the wealth of leaf and fruit and seed, Winter, the artist, would
+etch in frost the pines and ferns, while Wind and Wave and Fire, old
+architects, with ceaseless toil would still destroy and build, still
+wreck and change, and from the dust of death produce again the throb and
+breath of life.
+
+V.
+
+A FEW years ago a few men began to think, to investigate, to reason.
+They began to doubt the legends of the church, the miracles of the past.
+They began to notice what happened. They found that eclipses came at
+certain intervals and that their coming could be foretold. They became
+satisfied that the conduct of men had nothing to do with eclipses--and
+that the stars moved in their orbits unconscious of the sons of men.
+Galileo, Copernicus, and Kepler' destroyed the astronomy of the Bible,
+and demonstrated that the "inspired" story of creation could not be
+true, and that the church was as ignorant as the priests were dishonest.
+
+They found that the myth-makers were mistaken, that the sun and stars
+did not revolve about the earth, that the firmament was not solid,
+that the earth was not flat, and that the so-called philosophy of the
+theologians was absurd and idiotic.
+
+The stars became witnesses against the creeds of superstition.
+
+With the telescope the heavens were explored. The New Jerusalem could
+not be found.
+
+It had faded away.
+
+The church persecuted the astronomers and denied the facts. In
+February, in the year of grace sixteen hundred, the Catholic Church, the
+"Triumphant Beast," having in her hands, her paws, the keys of heaven
+and hell, accused Giordano Bruno of having declared that there were
+other worlds than this. He was tried, convicted, imprisoned in a dungeon
+for seven years. He was offered his liberty if he would recant. Bruno,
+the atheist, the philosopher, refused to stain his soul by denying what
+he believed to be true. He was taken from his cell by the priests, by
+those who loved their enemies, led to the place of execution. He was
+clad in a robe on which representations of devils had been painted--the
+devils that were soon to claim his soul. He was chained to a stake and
+about his body the wood was piled. Then priests, followers of Christ,
+lighted the fagots and flames consumed the greatest, the most perfect
+martyr, that ever suffered death.
+
+And yet the Italian agent of God, the infallible Leo XIII., only a few
+years ago, denounced Bruno, the "bravest of the brave," as a coward.
+
+The church murdered him, and the pope maligned his memory. Fagot and
+falsehood--two weapons of the church.
+
+A little while ago a few men began to examine rocks and soils,
+mountains, islands, reefs and seas. They noticed the valleys and deltas
+that had been formed by rivers, the many strata of lava that had been
+changed to soil, the vast deposits of metals and coal, the immense reefs
+that the coral had formed, the work of glaciers in the far past, the
+production of soil by the disintegration of rock, by the growth and
+decay of vegetation and the countless evidences of the countless ages
+through which the Earth has passed. The geologists read the history
+of the world written by wave and flame, attested by fossils, by the
+formation of rocks, by mountain ranges, by volcanoes, by rivers,
+islands, continents and seas.
+
+The geology of the Bible--of the "divinely inspired" church, of the
+"infallible" pope, was found to be utterly false and foolish.
+
+The Earth became a witness against the creeds of superstition.
+
+Then came Watt and Galvani with the miracles of steam and electricity,
+while countless inventors created the wonderful machines that do the
+work of the world. Investigation took the place of credulity. Men became
+dissatisfied with huts and rags, with crusts and creeds. They longed for
+the comforts, the luxuries of life. The intellectual horizon enlarged,
+new truths were discovered, old ideas were thrown aside, the brain was
+developed, the heart civilized and science was born. Humboldt, Laplace
+and hundreds of others explained the phenomena of nature, called
+attention to the ancient and venerable mistakes of sanctified ignorance
+and added to the sum of knowledge. Darwin and Haeckel gave their
+conclusions to the world. Men began to really think, the myths began
+to fade, the miracles to grow mean and small, and the great structure,
+known as theology, fell with a crash.
+
+Science denies the truth of myth and miracle, denies that human
+testimony can substantiate the miraculous, denies the existence of the
+supernatural. Science asserts the absolute, the unvarying uniformity
+of nature. Science insists that the present is the child of all the
+past,--that no power can change the past, and that nature is forever the
+same.
+
+The chemist has found that just so many atoms of one kind unite with
+just so many of another--no more, no less, always the same. No caprice
+in chemistry; no interference from without.
+
+The astronomers know that the planets remain in their orbits--that their
+forces are constant. They know that light is forever the same,
+always obeying the angle of incidence, traveling with the same
+rapidity,--casting the same shadow, under the same circumstances in
+all worlds. They know that the eclipses will occur at the times
+foretold--neither hastening nor delaying. They know that the attraction
+of gravitation is always the same, always in perfect proportion to mass
+and distance, neither weaker nor stronger, unvarying forever. They know
+that the facts in nature cannot be changed or destroyed, and that the
+qualities of all things are eternal.
+
+The men of science know that the atomic integrity of the metals is
+always the same, that each metal is true to its nature and that the
+particles cling to each other with the same tenacity,--the same force.
+They have demonstrated the persistence of force, that it is forever
+active, forever the same, and that it cannot be destroyed.
+
+These great truths have revolutionized the thought of the world.
+
+Every art, every employment, all study, all experiment, the value of
+experience, of judgment, of hope, all rest on a belief in the uniformity
+of nature, on the eternal persistence and indestructibility of force.
+
+Break one link in the infinite chain of cause and effect, and the Master
+of Nature appears. The broken link would become the throne of a god.
+
+The uniformity of Nature denies the supernatural and demonstrates that
+there is no interference from without. There is no place, no office left
+for gods. Ghosts fade from the brain and the shrivelled deities fall
+palsied from their thrones.
+
+The uniformity of Nature renders a belief in "special providence"
+impossible. Prayer becomes a useless agitation of the air, and religious
+ceremonies are but motions, pantomimes, mindless and meaningless.
+
+The naked savage, worshiping a wooden god, is the religious equal of the
+robed pope kneeling before an image of the Virgin. The poor African who
+carries roots and bark to protect himself from evil spirits is on the
+same intellectual plane of one who sprinkles his body with "holy water."
+
+All the creeds of Christendom, all the religions of the heathen world
+are equally absurd. The cathedral, the mosque and the joss house have
+the same foundation. Their builders do not believe in the uniformity
+of Nature, and the business of all priests is to induce a so-called
+infinite being to change the order of events, to make causes barren of
+effects and to produce effects without, and in spite of, natural causes.
+They all believe in the unthinkable and pray for the impossible.
+
+Science teaches us that there was no creation and that there can be no
+destruction. The infinite denies creation and defies destruction. An
+infinite person, an "infinite being" is an infinite impossibility.
+To conceive of such a being is beyond the power of the mind. Yet all
+religions rest upon the supposed existence of the unthinkable, the
+inconceivable. And the priests of these religions pretend to be
+perfectly familiar with the designs, will, and wishes of this
+unthinkable, this inconceivable.
+
+Science teaches that that which really is has always been, that behind
+every effect is the efficient and necessary cause, that there is in the
+universe neither chance nor interference, and that energy is eternal.
+Day by day the authority of the theologian grows weaker and weaker. As
+the people become intelligent they care less for preachers and more for
+teachers. Their confidence in knowledge, in thought and investigation
+increases. They are eager to know the discoveries, the useful truths,
+the important facts made, ascertained and demonstrated by the explorers
+in the domain of the natural. They are no longer satisfied with the
+platitudes of the pulpit, and the assertions of theologians. They are
+losing confidence in the "sacred Scriptures" and in the protecting power
+and goodness of the supernatural. They are satisfied that credulity is
+not a virtue and that investigation is not a crime.
+
+Science is the providence of man, the worker of true miracles, of
+real wonders. Science has "read a little in Nature's infinite book of
+secrecy." Science knows the circuits of the winds, the courses of the
+stars. Fire is his servant, and lightning his messenger. Science freed
+the slaves and gave liberty to their masters. Science taught man to
+enchain, not his fellows, but the forces of nature, forces that have no
+backs to be scarred, no limbs for chains to chill and eat, forces that
+have no hearts to break, forces that never know fatigue, forces that
+shed no tears. Science is the great physician. His touch has given
+sight. He has made the lame to leap, the deaf to hear, the dumb to
+speak, and in the pallid face his hand has set the rose of health.
+Science has given his beloved sleep and wrapped in happy dreams the
+throbbing nerves of pain. Science is the destroyer of disease, builder
+of happy homes, the preserver of life and love. Science is the teacher
+of every virtue, the enemy of every vice. Science has given the true
+basis of morals, the origin and office of conscience, revealed the
+nature of obligation, of duty, of virtue in its highest, noblest forms,
+and has demonstrated that true happiness is the only possible good.
+Science has slain the monsters of superstition, and destroyed the
+authority of inspired books. Science has read the records of the rocks,
+records that priestcraft cannot change, and on his wondrous scales has
+weighed the atom and the star.
+
+Science has founded the only true religion. Science is the only Savior
+of this world.
+
+VI.
+
+FOR many ages religion has been tried. For countless centuries man
+has sought for help from heaven. To soften the heart of God, mothers
+sacrificed their babes! but the God did not hear, did not see, and did
+not help. Naked savages were devoured by beasts, bitten by serpents,
+killed by flood and frost. They prayed for help, but their God was
+deaf. They built temples and altars, employed priests and gave of their
+substance, but the volcano destroyed and the famine came. For the sake
+of God millions murdered their fellow-men, but the God was silent.
+Millions of martyrs died for the honor of God, but the God was blind. He
+did not see the flames, the scaffolds. He did not hear the prayers,
+the groans. Thousands of priests in the name of God tortured their
+fellow-men, stretched them on racks, crushed their feet in iron boots,
+tore out their tongues, extinguished their eyes. The victims implored
+the protection of God, but their god did not hear, did not see. He
+was deaf and blind. He was willing that his enemies should torture his
+friends.
+
+Nations tried to destroy each other for the sake of God, and the banner
+of the cross dripping with blood floated over a thousand fields--but the
+god was silent. He neither knew nor cared. Pestilence covered the earth
+with dead, the priests prayed, the altars were heaped with sacrifices,
+but the god did not see, did not hear. The miseries of the world did
+not lessen the joys of heaven. The clouds gave no rain, the famine came,
+withered babes with pallid lips sought the breasts of dead mothers,
+while starving fathers knelt and prayed, but the god did not hear.
+Through many centuries millions were enslaved, babes were sold from
+mothers, husbands from wives, backs were scarred with the lash. The
+poor wretches lifted their clasped hands toward heaven and prayed for
+justice, for liberty--but their god did not hear. He cared nothing for
+the sufferings of slaves, nothing for the tears of wives and mothers,
+nothing for the agony of men. He answered no prayers. He broke no
+chains. He freed no slaves.
+
+The miserable wretches appealed to the priests of God, but they were on
+the other side. They defended the masters. The slaves had nothing to
+give.
+
+During all these years it was claimed by the theologians that their
+God was governing the world, that he was infinitely powerful, wise and
+good--and that the "powers" of the earth were "ordained" by him. During
+all these years the church was the enemy of progress. It hated all
+physicians and told the people to rely on prayer, amulets and relics.
+It persecuted the astronomers and geologists, denounced them as infidels
+and atheists, as enemies of the human race. It poisoned the fountains of
+learning and insisted that teachers should distort the facts in nature
+to the end that they might harmonize with the "inspired" book. During
+all these years the church misdirected the energies of man, and when it
+reached the zenith of its power, darkness fell upon the world.
+
+In all nations and in all ages, religion has failed. The gods have never
+interfered. Nature has produced and destroyed without mercy and without
+hatred. She has cared no more for man than for the leaves of the forest,
+no more for nations than for hills of ants, nothing for right or wrong,
+for life or death, for pain or joy.
+
+Man through his intelligence must protect himself. He gets no help from
+any other world. The church has always claimed and still claims that
+it is the only reforming power, that it makes men honest, virtuous
+and merciful, that it prevents violence and war, and that without its
+influence the race would return to barbarism.
+
+Nothing can exceed the absurdity of these claims.
+
+If we wish to improve the condition of mankind--if we wish for nobler
+men and women we must develop the brain, we must encourage thought
+and investigation. We must convince the world that credulity is
+a vice,--that there is no virtue in believing without, or against
+evidence, and that the really honest man is true to himself. We must
+fill the world with intellectual light. We must applaud mental courage.
+We must educate the children, rescue them from ignorance and crime.
+School-houses are the real temples, and teachers are the true priests.
+We must supply the wants of the mind, satisfy the hunger of the brain.
+The people should be familiar with the great poets, with the tragedies
+of Æschylus, the dramas of Shakespeare, with the poetry of Homer and
+Virgil. Shakespeare should be taught in every school, found in every
+house.
+
+Through photography the whole world may become acquainted with the great
+statues, the great paintings, the victories of art. In this way the mind
+is enlarged, the sympathies quickened, the appreciation of the beautiful
+intensified, the taste refined and the character ennobled.
+
+The great novels should be read by all. All should be acquainted with
+the men and women of fiction, with the ideal world. The imagination
+should be developed, trained and strengthened. Superstition has degraded
+art and literature. It gave us winged monsters, scenes from heaven and
+hell, representations of gods and devils, sculptured the absurd and
+painted the impossible in the name of Art. It gave us the dreams of the
+insane, the lives of fanatical saints, accounts of miracles and wonders,
+of cures wrought by the bones of the dead, descriptions of Paradise,
+purgatory and the eternal dungeon, discourses on baptism, on changing
+wine and wafers into the the blood and flesh of God, on the
+forgiveness of sins by priests, on fore-ordination and accountability,
+predestination and free will, on devils, ghosts and goblins, the
+ministrations of guardian angels, the virtue of belief and the
+wickedness of doubt. And this was called "sacred literature."
+
+The church taught that those who believed, counted beads, mumbled
+prayers, and gave their time or property for the support of the gospel
+were the good and that all others were traveling the "broad road" to
+eternal pain. According to the theologians, the best people, the
+saints, were dead, and real beauty was to be found only in heaven. They
+denounced the joys of life as husks and filthy rags, declared that the
+world had been cursed, and that it brought forth thistles and thorns
+because of the sins of man. They regarded the earth as a kind of dock,
+running out into the sea of eternity,--on which the pious waited for the
+ship on which they were to be transported to another world.
+
+But the real poets and the real artists clung to this world, to this
+life. They described and represented things that exist. They expressed
+thoughts of the brain, emotions of the heart, the griefs and joys, the
+hope and despair of men and women. They found strength and beauty
+on every hand. They found their angels here. They were true to human
+experience and they touched the brain and heart of the world. In
+the tragedies and comedies of life, in the smiles and tears, in the
+ecstasies of love, in the darkness of death, in the dawn of hope, they
+found their materials for statue and song, for poem and painting. Poetry
+and art are the children of this world, born and nourished here. They
+are human. They have left the winged monsters of heaven, the malicious
+deformities of hell, and have turned their attention to men and women,
+to the things of this life.
+
+There is a poem called "The Skylark," by Shelley, graceful as the
+motions of flames. Another by Robert Burns, called "The Daisy,"
+exquisite, perfect as the pearl of virtue in the beautiful breast of a
+loving girl. Between this lark and this daisy, neither above nor below,
+you will find all the poetry of the world. Eloquence, sublimity, poetry
+and art must have the foundation of fact, of reality. Imaginary worlds
+and beings are nothing to us.
+
+At last the old creeds are becoming cruel and vulgar. We now have
+imagination enough to put ourselves in the place of others. Believers
+in hell, in eternal pain, like murderers, lack imagination. The murderer
+has not imagination enough to see his victim dead. He does not see the
+sightless and pathetic eyes. He does not see the widow's arms about the
+corpse, her lips upon the dead. He does not hear the sobs of children.
+He does not see the funeral. He does not hear the clods as they fall on
+the coffin. He does not feel the hand of arrest, the scene of the trial
+is not before him. He does not hear the awful verdict, the sentence of
+the court, the last words. He does not see the scaffold, nor feel about
+his throat the deadly noose.
+
+Let us develop the brain, civilize the heart, and give wings to the
+imagination.
+
+VII.
+
+IF we abandon myth and miracle, if we discard the supernatural and the
+scheme of redemption, how are we to civilize the world?
+
+Is falsehood a reforming power? Is credulity the mother of virtue? Is
+there any saving grace in the impossible and absurd? Did wisdom perish
+with the dead? Must the civilized accept the religion of savages?
+
+If we wish to reform the world we must rely on truth, on fact, on
+reason. We must teach men that they are good or bad for themselves, that
+others cannot be good or bad for them, that they cannot be charged with
+the crimes, or credited with the virtues of others. We must discard the
+doctrine of the atonement, because it is absurd and immoral. We are not
+accountable for the sins of "Adam" and the virtues of Christ cannot be
+transferred to us. There can be no vicarious virtue, no vicarious vice.
+Why should the sufferings of the innocent atone for the crimes of the
+guilty. According to the doctrine of the atonement right and wrong do
+not exist in the nature of things, but in the arbitrary will of the
+Infinite. This is a subversion of all ideas of justice and mercy.
+
+An act is good, bad, or indifferent, according to its consequences. No
+power can step between an act and its natural consequences. A governor
+may pardon the criminal, but the natural consequences of the crime
+remain untouched. A god may forgive, but the consequences of the
+act forgiven, are still the same. We must teach the world that the
+consequences of a bad action cannot be avoided, that they are the
+invisible police, the unseen avengers, that accept no gifts, that hear
+no prayers, that no cunning can deceive.
+
+We do not need the forgiveness of gods, but of ourselves and the ones
+we injure. Restitution without repentance is far better than repentance
+without restitution.
+
+We know nothing of any god who rewards, punishes or forgives.
+
+We must teach our fellow-men that honor comes from within, not from
+without, that honor must be earned, that it is not alms, that even an
+infinite God could not enrich the beggar's palm with the gem of honor.
+
+Teach them also that happiness is the bud, the blossom and the fruit of
+good and noble actions, that it is not the gift of any god; that it must
+be earned by man--must be deserved.
+
+In this world of ours there is no magic, no sleight-of-hand, by which
+consequences can be made to punish the good and reward the bad.
+
+Teach men not to sacrifice this world for some other, but to turn their
+attention to the natural, to the affairs of this life. Teach them that
+theology has no known foundation, that it was born of ignorance and
+fear, that it has hardened the heart, polluted the imagination and made
+fiends of men.
+
+Theology is not for this world. It is no part of real religion. It has
+nothing to do with goodness or virtue. Religion does not consist in
+worshiping gods, but in adding to the well-being, the happiness of man.
+No human being knows whether any god exists or not, and all that has
+been said and written about "our god," or the gods of other people, has
+no known fact for a foundation. Words without thoughts, clouds without
+rain.
+
+Let us put theology out of religion.
+
+Church and state should be absolutely divorced. Priests pretend that
+they have been selected by, and that they get their power from God.
+Kings occupy their thrones in accordance with the will of God. The pope
+declares that he is the agent, the deputy of God and that by right
+he should rule the world. All these pretentions and assertions are
+perfectly absurd and yet they are acknowledged and believed by millions.
+Get theology out of government and kings will descend from their
+thrones. All will admit that governments get their powers from the
+consent of the governed, and that all persons in office are the servants
+of the people. Get theology out of government and chaplains will be
+dismissed from Legislatures, from Congress, from the army and navy. Get
+theology out of government and people will be allowed to express their
+honest thoughts about "inspired books" and superstitious creeds. Get
+theology out of government and priests will no longer steal a seventh of
+our time. Get theology out of government and the clergy will soon
+take their places with augurs and soothsayers, with necromancers and
+medicine-men.
+
+Get theology out of education. Nothing should be taught in a school that
+somebody does not know.
+
+There are plenty of things to be learned about this world, about this
+life. Every child should be taught to think, and that it is dangerous
+not to think. Children should not be taught the absurdities, the
+cruelties and imbecilities of superstition. No church should be allowed
+to control the common school, and public money should not be divided
+between the hateful and warring sects. The public school should be
+secular, and only the useful should be taught. Many of our colleges
+are under the control of churches. Presidents and professors are mostly
+ministers of the gospel and the result is that all facts inconsistent
+with the creeds are either suppressed or denied. Only those professors
+who are naturally stupid or mentally dishonest can retain their places.
+Those who tell the truth, who teach the facts, are discharged.
+
+In every college truth should be a welcome guest. Every professor
+should be a finder, and every student a learner, of facts. Theology and
+intellectual dishonesty go together. The teacher of children should be
+intelligent and perfectly sincere.
+
+Let us get theology out of education.
+
+The pious denounce the secular schools as godless. They should be. The
+sciences are all secular, all godless. Theology bears the same relation
+to science that the black art does to chemistry, that magic does to
+mathematics. It is something that cannot be taught, because it cannot
+be known. It has no foundation in fact. It neither produces, nor accords
+with, any image in the mind. It is not only unknowable but unthinkable.
+Through hundreds and thousands of generations men have been discussing,
+wrangling and fighting about theology. No advance has been made. The
+robed priest has only reached the point from which the savage tried to
+start.
+
+We know that theology always has and always will make enemies. It sows
+the seeds of hatred in families and nations. It is selfish, cruel,
+revengeful and malicious. It has heaven for the few and perdition
+for the many. We now know that credulity is not a virtue and that
+intellectual courage is. We must stop rewarding hypocrisy and bigotry.
+We must stop persecuting the thinkers, the investigators, the creators
+of light, the civilizers of the world.
+
+VIII.
+
+WILL the unknown, the mysteries of life and itiations of the mind,
+forever furnish food for superstition? Will the gods and ghosts perish
+or simply retreat before the advancing hosts of science, and continue to
+crouch and lurk just beyond the horizon of the known? Will darkness
+forever be the womb and mother of the supernatural?
+
+A little while ago priests told peasants that the New Jerusalem, the
+celestial city was just above the clouds. They said that its walls
+and domes and spires were just beyond the reach of human sight. The
+telescope was invented and those who looked at the wilderness of stars,
+saw no city, no throne. They said to the priests: "Where is your New
+Jerusalem?" The priests cheerfully and confidently replied. "It is just
+beyond where you see."
+
+At one time it was believed that a race of men existed "with their heads
+beneath their shoulders." Returning travelers from distant lands were
+asked about these wonderful people and all replied that they had not
+seen them. "Oh," said the believers in the monsters, "the men with heads
+beneath their shoulders live in a country that you did not visit." And
+so the monsters lived and flourished until all the world was known. We
+cannot know the universe. We cannot travel infinite distances, and so,
+somewhere in shoreless space there will always be room for gods and
+ghosts, for heavens and hells. And so it may be that superstition will
+live and linger until the world becomes intelligent enough to build upon
+the foundation of the known, to keep the imagination within the domain
+of the probable, and to believe in the natural--_until the supernatural
+shall have been demonstrated_.
+
+Savages knew all about gods, about heavens and hells before they knew
+anything about the world in which they lived. They were perfectly
+familiar with evil spirits, with the invisible phantoms of the air, long
+before they had any true conception of themselves. So, they knew all
+about the origin and destiny of the human race. They were absolutely
+certain about the problems, the solution of which, philosophers know, is
+beyond the limitations of the mind. They understood astrology, but not
+astronomy, knew something of magic, but nothing about chemistry. They
+were wise only as to those things about which nothing can be known.
+
+The poor Indian believed in the "Great Spirit" and saw "design" on every
+hand.--Trees were made that he might have bows and arrows, wood for his
+fire and bark for his wigwam--rivers and lakes to give him fish, wild
+beasts and corn that he might have food, and the animals had skins that
+he might have clothes.
+
+Primitive peoples all reasoned in the same way, and modern Christians
+follow their example. They knew but little of the world and thought that
+it had been made expressly for the use of man. They did not know that it
+was mostly water, that vast regions were locked in eternal ice and that
+in most countries the conditions were unfavorable to human life. They
+knew nothing of the countless enemies of man that live unseen in water,
+food and air. Back of the little good they knew they put gods and back
+of the evil, devils. They thought it of the greatest importance to gain
+the good will of the gods, who alone could protect them from the devils.
+Those who worshiped these gods, offered sacrifices, and obeyed priests,
+were considered loyal members of the tribe or community, and those who
+refused to worship were regarded as enemies and traitors. The believers,
+in order to protect themselves from the anger of the gods, exiled or
+destroyed the infidels.
+
+Believing as they did, the course they pursued was natural. They
+not only wished to protect themselves from disease and death, from
+pestilence and famine in this world but the souls of their children from
+eternal pain in the next. Their gods were savages who demanded flattery
+and worship not only, but the acceptance of a certain creed. As long
+as Christians believe in eternal punishment they will be the enemies of
+those who investigate and contend for the authority of reason, of those
+who demand evidence, who care nothing for the unsupported assertions of
+the dead or the illogical inferences of the living.
+
+Science always has been, is, and always will be modest, thoughtful,
+truthful. It has but one object: The ascertainment of truth. It has no
+prejudice, no hatred. It is in the realm of the intellect and cannot
+be swayed or changed by passion. It does not try to please God, to gain
+heaven or avoid hell. It is for this world, for the use of man. It is
+perfectly candid. It does not try to conceal, but to reveal. It is the
+enemy of mystery, of pretence and canc. It does not ask people to be
+solemn, but sensible. It calls for and insists on the use of all the
+senses, of all the faculties of the mind. It does not pretend to be
+"holy" or "inspired." It courts investigation, criticism and even
+denial. It asks for the application of every test, for trial by every
+standard. It knows nothing of blasphemy and does not ask for the
+imprisonment of those who ignorantly or knowingly deny the truth. The
+good that springs from a knowledge of the truth is the only reward it
+offers, and the evil resulting from ignorance is the only punishment it
+threatens. Its effort is to reform the world through intelligence.
+
+On the other hand theology is, always has been, and always will be,
+ignorant, arrogant, puerile and cruel. When the church had power,
+hypocrisy was crowned and honesty imprisoned. Fraud wore the tiara and
+truth was a convict, Liberty was in chains, Theology has always sent the
+worst to heaven, the best to hell.
+
+Let me give you a scene from the day of judgment. Christ is upon
+his throne, his secretary by his side. A soul appears. This is what
+happens--
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+Torquemada.
+
+"Were you a Christian?"
+
+I was.
+
+"Did you endeavor to convert your fellow-men?"
+
+I did. I tried to convert them by persuasion, by preaching and praying
+and even by force.
+
+"What did you do?"
+
+I put the heretics in prison, in chains. I tore out their tongues, put
+out their eyes, crushed their bones, stretched them upon racks, roasted
+their feet, and if they remained obdurate I flayed them alive or burned
+them at the stake.
+
+"And did you do all this for my glory?"
+
+Yes, all for you. I wanted to save some, I wanted to protect the young
+and the weak minded.
+
+"Did you believe the Bible, the miracles--that I was God, that I was
+born of a virgin and kept money in the mouth of a fish?"
+
+Yes, I believed it all. My reason was the slave of faith.
+
+"Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joys of thy
+Lord. I was hungry and you gave me meat, naked and you clothed me.."
+Another soul arises.
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+Giordano Bruno.
+
+"Were you a Christian?"
+
+At one time I was, but for many years I was a philosopher, a seeker
+after truth.
+
+"Did you seek to convert your fellow-men?"
+
+Not to Christianity, but to the religion of reason. I tried to
+develop their minds, to free them from the slavery of ignorance and
+superstition. In my day the church taught the holiness of credulity--the
+virtue of unquestioning obedience, and in your name tortured and
+destroyed the intelligent and courageous. I did what I could to civilize
+the world, to make men tolerant and merciful, to soften the hearts
+of priests, and banish torture from the world. I expressed my honest
+thoughts and walked in the light of reason.
+
+"Did you believe the Bible, the miracles? Did you believe that I was
+God, that I was born of a virgin and that I suffered myself to be killed
+by the Jews to appease the wrath of God--that is, of myself--so that God
+could save the souls of a few?"
+
+"No, I did not. I did not believe that God was ever born into my world,
+or that God learned the trade of a carpenter, or that he 'increased
+in knowledge,' or that he cast devils out of men, or that his garments
+could cure diseases, or that he allowed himself to be murdered, and in
+the hour of death "forsook" himself. These things I did not and could
+not believe. But I did all the good I could. I enlightened the ignorant,
+comforted the afflicted, defended the innocent, divided even my poverty
+with the poor, and did the best I could to increase the happiness of my
+fellow-men. I was a soldier in the army of progress.--I was arrested,
+imprisoned, tried and convicted by the church--by the 'Triumphant
+Beast.' I was burned at the stake by ignorant and heartless priests and
+my ashes given to the winds."
+
+Then Christ, his face growing dark, his brows contracted with wrath,
+with uplifted hands, with half averted face, cries or rather shrieks:
+"Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devil
+and his angels."
+
+This is the justice of God--the mercy of the compassionate Christ.
+This is the belief, the dream and hope of the orthodox theologian--"the
+consummation devoutly to be wished."
+
+Theology makes God a monster, a tyrant, a savage; makes man a servant,
+a serf, a slave; promises heaven to the obedient, the meek, the
+frightened, and threatens the self-reliant with the tortures of hell.
+
+It denounces reason and appeals to the passions--to hope and fear.
+It does not answer the arguments of those who attack, but resorts to
+sophistry, falsehood and slander. It is incapable of advancement. It
+keeps its back to the sunrise, lives on myth and miracle, and guards
+with a misers care the "sacred" superstitions of the past.
+
+In the great struggle between the supernatural and the natural, between
+gods and men, we have passed midnight. All the forces of civilization,
+all the facts that have been found, all the truths that have been
+discovered are the allies of science--the enemies of the supernatural.
+
+We need no myths, no miracles, no gods, no devils.
+
+IX.
+
+FOR thousands of generations the myths have been taught and the miracles
+believed. Every mother was a missionary and told with loving care the
+falsehoods of "faith" to her babe. The poison of superstition was in the
+mother's milk. She was honest and affectionate and her character, her
+goodness, her smiles and kisses, entered into, mingled with, and became
+a part of the superstition that she taught. Fathers, friends and priests
+united with the mothers, and the children thus taught, became the
+teachers of their children and so the creeds were kept alive.
+
+Childhood loves the romantic, the mysterious, the monstrous. It lives in
+a world where cause has nothing to do with effect, where the fairy waves
+her hand and the prince appears. Where wish creates the thing desired
+and facts become the slaves of amulet and charm. The individual lives
+the life of the race, and the child is charmed with what the race in its
+infancy produced.
+
+There seems to be the same difference between mistakes and facts
+that there is between weeds and corn. Mistakes seem to take care of
+themselves, while the facts have to be guarded with all possible care.
+Falsehoods like weeds flourish without care. Weeds care nothing for soil
+or rain. They not only ask no help but they almost defy destruction. In
+the minds of children, superstitions, legends, myths and miracles find a
+natural, and in most instances a lasting home. Thrown aside in manhood,
+forgotten or denied, in old age they oft return and linger to the end.
+
+This in part accounts for the longevity of religious lies. Ministers
+with clasped hands and uplifted eyes ask the man who is thinking for
+himself how he can be wicked and heartless enough to attack the religion
+of his mother. This question is regarded by the clergy as unanswerable.
+Of course it is not to be asked by the missionaries, of the Hindus and
+the Chinese. The heathen are expected to desert the religion of their
+mothers as Christ and his apostles deserted the religion of their
+mothers. It is right for Jews and heathen, but not for thinkers and
+philosophers.
+
+A cannibal was about to kill a missionary for food.
+
+The missionary objected and asked the cannibal how he could be so cruel
+and wicked.
+
+The cannibal replied that he followed the example of his mother. "My
+mother," said he, "was good enough for me. Her religion is my religion.
+The last time I saw her she was sitting, propped up against a tree,
+eating cold missionary."
+
+But now the mother argument has mostly lost its force, and men of mind
+are satisfied with nothing less than truth.
+
+The phenomena of nature have been investigated and the supernatural has
+not been found. The myths have faded from the imagination, and of them
+nothing remains but the poetic. The miraculous has become the absurd,
+the impossible. Gods and phantoms have been driven from the earth and
+sky. We are living in a natural world.
+
+Our fathers, some of them, demanded the freedom of religion. We have
+taken another step. We demand the Religion of Freedom.
+
+O Liberty, thou art the god of my idolatry! Thou art the only deity
+that hateth bended knees. In thy vast and unwalled temple, beneath the
+roofless dome, star-gemmed and luminous with suns, thy worshipers stand
+erect! They do not cringe, or crawl, or bend their foreheads to the
+earth. The dust has never borne the impress of their lips. Upon thy
+altars mothers do not sacrifice their babes, nor men their rights. Thou
+askest naught from man except the things that good men hate--the whip,
+the chain, the dungeon key. Thou hast no popes, no priests, who stand
+between their fellow-men and thee. Thou carest not for foolish forms,
+or selfish prayers. At thy sacred shrine hypocrisy does not bow, virtue
+does not tremble, superstition's feeble tapers do not burn, but Reason
+holds aloft her inextinguishable torch whose holy light will one day
+flood the world.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol.
+2 (of 12), by Robert G. Ingersoll
+
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+ The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 2 (of 12) by Robert G. Ingersoll
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 2
+(of 12), by Robert G. Ingersoll
+
+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 Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 2 (of 12)
+ Dresden Edition--Lectures
+
+Author: Robert G. Ingersoll
+
+Release Date: February 9, 2012 [EBook #38802]
+Last Updated: November 15, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKS OF INGERSOLL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="title" id="title"></a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE WORKS OF ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Robert G. Ingersoll
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ <i>"THE CLERGY KNOW, THAT I KNOW, THAT THEY KNOW, THAT THEY DO NOT KNOW."</i>
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ IN TWELVE VOLUMES, VOLUME II.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ LECTURES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ 1900
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h4>
+ THE DRESDEN EDITION
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> TO MRS. SUE. M. FARRELL, IN LAW MY SISTER, AND IN FACT MY
+ FRIEND, THIS VOLUME, AS A TOKEN OF RESPECT AND LOVE, IS DEDICATED. <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" border="3" cellpadding="4">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <big><big><a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38802/old/orig38802-h/main.htm">This
+ file has been formatted in a very plain format for use with tablet
+ readers. Those wishing to view this eBook in its normal more
+ appealing format for laptops and other computers may click on this
+ line to to view the original HTML file.</a></big></big>
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="Titlepage (63K)" src="images/Titlepage.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="Portrait (63K)" src="images/Portrait.jpg" width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Contents
+ </h3>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkTOC">CONTENTS OF VOLUME II.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkPREF">PREFACE.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link0002">SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link0003">SOME REASONS WHY</a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link0004">ORTHODOXY.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link0005">MYTH AND MIRACLE.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="linkTOC" id="linkTOC">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CONTENTS OF VOLUME II.
+ </h2>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link0002">SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> (1879.)<br /> Preface&mdash;I. He who endeavors to control the Mind
+ by Force is a<br /> Tyrant, and he who submits is a Slave&mdash;All I Ask&mdash;When
+ a Religion<br /> is Founded&mdash;Freedom for the Orthodox Clergy&mdash;Every
+ Minister an<br /> Attorney&mdash;Submission to the Orthodox and the Dead&mdash;Bounden
+ Duty of<br /> the Ministry&mdash;The Minister Factory at Andover&mdash;II.
+ Free Schools&mdash;No<br /> Sectarian Sciences&mdash;Religion and the
+ Schools&mdash;Scientific<br /> Hypocrites&mdash;III. The Politicians and
+ the Churches&mdash;IV. Man and Woman the<br /> Highest Possible Titles&mdash;Belief
+ Dependent on Surroundings&mdash;Worship of<br /> Ancestors&mdash;Blindness
+ Necessary to Keeping the Narrow Path&mdash;The Bible the<br /> Chain that
+ Binds&mdash;A Bible of the Middle Ages and the Awe it Inspired&mdash;V.<br />
+ The Pentateuch&mdash;Moses Not the Author&mdash;Belief out of which Grew<br />
+ Religious Ceremonies&mdash;Egypt the Source of the Information of Moses&mdash;VI.<br />
+ Monday&mdash;Nothing, in the Light of Raw Material&mdash;The Story of
+ Creation<br /> Begun&mdash;The Same Story, substantially, Found in the
+ Records of Babylon,<br /> Egypt, and India&mdash;Inspiration Unnecessary
+ to the Truth&mdash;Usefulness of<br /> Miracles to Fit Lies to Facts&mdash;Division
+ of Darkness and Light&mdash;VII.<br /> Tuesday&mdash;The Firmament and
+ Some Biblical Notions about it&mdash;Laws of<br /> Evaporation Unknown to
+ the Inspired Writer&mdash;VIII. Wednesday&mdash;The Waters<br /> Gathered
+ into Seas&mdash;Fruit and Nothing to Eat it&mdash;Five Epochs in the<br />
+ Organic History of the Earth&mdash;Balance between the Total Amounts of<br />
+ Animal and Vegetable Life&mdash;Vegetation Prior to the Appearance of
+ the<br /> Sun&mdash;IX. Thursday&mdash;Sun and Moon Manufactured&mdash;Magnitude
+ of the Solar<br /> Orb&mdash;Dimensions of Some of the Planets&mdash;Moses'
+ Guess at the Size of Sun<br /> and Moon&mdash;Joshua's Control of the
+ Heavenly Bodies&mdash;A Hypothesis Urged<br /> by Ministers&mdash;The
+ Theory of "Refraction"&mdash;Rev. Henry Morey&mdash;Astronomical<br />
+ Knowledge of Chinese Savants&mdash;The Motion of the Earth Reversed by<br />
+ Jehovah for the Reassurance of Ahaz&mdash;"Errors" Renounced by Button&mdash;X.<br />
+ "He made the Stars Also"&mdash;Distance of the Nearest Star&mdash;XI.<br />
+ Friday&mdash;Whales and Other Living Creatures Produced&mdash;XII.<br />
+ Saturday&mdash;Reproduction Inaugurated&mdash;XIII. "Let Us Make Man"&mdash;Human<br />
+ Beings Created in the Physical Image and Likeness of God&mdash;Inquiry
+ as<br /> to the Process Adopted&mdash;Development of Living Forms
+ According to<br /> Evolution&mdash;How Were Adam and Eve Created?&mdash;The
+ Rib Story&mdash;Age of<br /> Man Upon the Earth&mdash;A Statue Apparently
+ Made before the World&mdash;XIV.<br /> Sunday&mdash;Sacredness of the
+ Sabbath Destroyed by the Theory of Vast<br /> "Periods"&mdash;Reflections
+ on the Sabbath&mdash;XV. The Necessity for a Good<br /> Memory&mdash;The
+ Two Accounts of the Creation in Genesis I and II&mdash;Order<br /> of
+ Creation in the First Account&mdash;Order of Creation in the Second<br />
+ Account&mdash;Fastidiousness of Adam in the Choice of a Helpmeet&mdash;Dr.<br />
+ Adam Clark's Commentary&mdash;Dr. Scott's Guess&mdash;Dr. Matthew
+ Henry's<br /> Admission&mdash;The Blonde and Brunette Problem&mdash;The
+ Result of Unbelief and<br /> the Reward of Faith&mdash;"Give Him a Harp"&mdash;XVI.
+ The Garden&mdash;Location of<br /> Eden&mdash;The Four Rivers&mdash;The
+ Tree of Knowledge&mdash;Andover Appealed<br /> To&mdash;XVII. The Fall&mdash;The
+ Serpent&mdash;Dr. Adam Clark Gives a Zoological<br /> Explanation&mdash;Dr.
+ Henry Dissents&mdash;Whence This Serpent?&mdash;XVIII.<br /> Dampness&mdash;A
+ Race of Giants&mdash;Wickedness of Mankind&mdash;An Ark Constructed&mdash;A<br />
+ Universal Flood Indicated&mdash;Animals Probably Admitted to the Ark&mdash;How
+ Did<br /> They Get There?&mdash;Problem of Food and Service&mdash;A
+ Shoreless Sea Covered<br /> with Innumerable Dead&mdash;Drs. Clark and
+ Henry on the Situation&mdash;The Ark<br /> Takes Ground&mdash;New
+ Difficulties&mdash;Noah's Sacrifice&mdash;The Rainbow as a<br />
+ Memorandum&mdash;Babylonian, Egyptian, and Indian Legends of a Flood&mdash;XIX.<br />
+ Bacchus and Babel&mdash;Interest Attaching to Noah&mdash;Where Did Our
+ First<br /> Parents and the Serpent Acquire a Common Language?&mdash;Babel
+ and the<br /> Confusion of Tongues&mdash;XX. Faith in Filth&mdash;Immodesty
+ of Biblical<br /> Diction&mdash;XXI. The Hebrews&mdash;God's Promises to
+ Abraham&mdash;The Sojourning<br /> of Israel in Egypt&mdash;Marvelous
+ Increase&mdash;Moses and Aaron&mdash;XXII.<br /> The Plagues&mdash;Competitive
+ Miracle Working&mdash;Defeat of the Local<br /> Magicians&mdash;XXIII.
+ The Flight Out of Egypt&mdash;Three Million People in a<br /> Desert&mdash;Destruction
+ of Pharaoh ana His Host&mdash;Manna&mdash;A Superfluity of<br /> Quails&mdash;Rev.
+ Alexander Cruden's Commentary&mdash;Hornets as Allies of the<br />
+ Israelites&mdash;Durability of the Clothing of the Jewish People&mdash;An
+ Ointment<br /> Monopoly&mdash;Consecration of Priests&mdash;The Crime of
+ Becoming a Mother&mdash;The<br /> Ten Commandments&mdash;Medical Ideas of
+ Jehovah&mdash;Character of the God of<br /> the Pentateuch&mdash;XXIV.
+ Confess and Avoid&mdash;XXV. "Inspired" Slavery&mdash;XXVI.<br />
+ "Inspired" Marriage-XXVII. "Inspired" War-XXVIII. "Inspired" Religious<br />
+ Liberty&mdash;XXIX. Conclusion.<br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link0003">SOME REASONS WHY.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> (1881.)<br /> I&mdash;Religion makes Enemies&mdash;Hatred in the
+ Name of Universal<br /> Benevolence&mdash;No Respect for the Rights of
+ Barbarians&mdash;Literal<br /> Fulfillment of a New Testament Prophecy&mdash;II.
+ Duties to God&mdash;Can we<br /> Assist God?&mdash;An Infinite
+ Personality an Infinite Impossibility-Ill.<br /> Inspiration&mdash;What
+ it Really Is&mdash;Indication of Clams&mdash;Multitudinous<br /> Laughter
+ of the Sea&mdash;Horace Greeley and the Mammoth Trees&mdash;A Landscape<br />
+ Compared to a Table-cloth&mdash;The Supernatural is the Deformed&mdash;Inspiration<br />
+ in the Man as well as in the Book&mdash;Our Inspired Bible&mdash;IV.
+ God's<br /> Experiment with the Jews&mdash;Miracles of One Religion never
+ astonish the<br /> Priests of Another&mdash;"I am a Liar Myself"&mdash;V.
+ Civilized Countries&mdash;Crimes<br /> once regarded as Divine
+ Institutions&mdash;What the Believer in the<br /> Inspiration of the
+ Bible is Compelled to Say&mdash;Passages apparently<br /> written by the
+ Devil&mdash;VI. A Comparison of Books&mdash;Advancing a Cannibal<br />
+ from Missionary to Mutton&mdash;Contrast between the Utterances of
+ Jehovah<br /> and those of Reputable Heathen&mdash;Epictetus, Cicero,
+ Zeno,<br /> Seneca&mdash;the Hindu, Antoninus, Marcus Aurelius&mdash;The
+ Avesta&mdash;VII.<br /> Monotheism&mdash;Egyptians before Moses taught
+ there was but One God<br /> and Married but One Wife&mdash;Persians and
+ Hindoos had a Single Supreme<br /> Deity&mdash;Rights of Roman Women&mdash;Marvels
+ of Art achieved without the<br /> Assistance of Heaven&mdash;Probable
+ Action of the Jewish Jehovah incarnated<br /> as Man&mdash;VIII. The New
+ Testament&mdash;Doctrine of Eternal Pain brought to<br /> Light&mdash;Discrepancies&mdash;Human
+ Weaknesses cannot be Predicated of<br /> Divine Wisdom&mdash;Why there
+ are Four Gospels according to Iren&aelig;us&mdash;The<br /> Atonement&mdash;Remission
+ of Sins under the Mosaic Dispensation&mdash;Christians<br /> say, "Charge
+ it"&mdash;God's Forgiveness does not Repair an Injury&mdash;Suffering<br />
+ of Innocence for the Guilty&mdash;Salvation made Possible by Jehovah's<br />
+ Failure to Civilize the Jews&mdash;Necessity of Belief not taught in the<br />
+ Synoptic Gospels&mdash;Non-resistance the Offspring of Weakness&mdash;IX.
+ Christ's<br /> Mission&mdash;All the Virtues had been Taught before his
+ Advent&mdash;Perfect and<br /> Beautiful Thoughts of his Pagan
+ Predecessors&mdash;St. Paul Contrasted<br /> with Heathen Writers&mdash;"The
+ Quality of Mercy"&mdash;X. Eternal Pain&mdash;An<br /> Illustration of
+ Eternal Punishment&mdash;Captain Kreuger of the Barque<br /> Tiger&mdash;XI.
+ Civilizing Influence of the Bible&mdash;Its Effects on the<br /> Jews&mdash;If
+ Christ was God, Did he not, in his Crucifixion, Reap what<br /> he had
+ Sown?&mdash;Nothing can add to the Misery of a Nation whose King is<br />
+ Jehovah<br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link0004">ORTHODOXY.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> (1884.)<br /> Orthodox Religion Dying Out&mdash;Religious Deaths
+ and Births&mdash;The Religion<br /> of Reciprocity&mdash;Every Language
+ has a Cemetery&mdash;Orthodox Institutions<br /> Survive through the
+ Money invested in them&mdash;"Let us tell our Real<br /> Names"&mdash;The
+ Blows that have Shattered the Shield and Shivered the Lance<br /> of
+ Superstition&mdash;Mohammed's Successful Defence of the Sepulchre of<br />
+ Christ&mdash;The Destruction of Art&mdash;The Discovery of America&mdash;Although<br />
+ he made it himself, the Holy Ghost was Ignorant of the Form of this<br />
+ Earth&mdash;Copernicus and Kepler&mdash;Special Providence&mdash;The Man
+ and the Ship<br /> he did not Take&mdash;A Thanksgiving Proclamation
+ Contradicted&mdash;Charles<br /> Darwin&mdash;Henry Ward Beecher&mdash;The
+ Creeds&mdash;The Latest Creed&mdash;God as<br /> a Governor&mdash;The
+ Love of God&mdash;The Fall of Man&mdash;We are Bound<br /> by
+ Representatives without a Chance to Vote against Them&mdash;The<br />
+ Atonement&mdash;The Doctrine of Depravity a Libel on the Human Race&mdash;The<br />
+ Second Birth&mdash;A Unitarian Universalist&mdash;Inspiration of the<br />
+ Scriptures&mdash;God a Victim of his own Tyranny&mdash;In the New
+ Testament<br /> Trouble Commences at Death&mdash;The Reign of Truth and
+ Love&mdash;The Old<br /> Spaniard who Died without an Enemy&mdash;The
+ Wars it Brought&mdash;Consolation<br /> should be Denied to Murderers&mdash;At
+ the Rate at which Heathen are being<br /> Converted, how long will it
+ take to Establish Christ's Kingdom on<br /> Earth?&mdash;The Resurrection&mdash;The
+ Judgment Day&mdash;Pious Evasions&mdash;"We shall<br /> not Die, but we
+ shall all be Hanged"&mdash;"No Bible, no Civilization"<br /> Miracles of
+ the New Testament&mdash;Nothing Written by Christ or his<br />
+ Contemporaries&mdash;Genealogy of Jesus&mdash;More Miracles&mdash;A
+ Master of<br /> Death&mdash;Improbable that he would be Crucified&mdash;The
+ Loaves and Fishes&mdash;How<br /> did it happen that the Miracles
+ Convinced so Few?&mdash;The Resurrection&mdash;The<br /> Ascension&mdash;Was
+ the Body Spiritual&mdash;Parting from the Disciples&mdash;Casting<br />
+ out Devils&mdash;Necessity of Belief&mdash;God should be consistent in
+ the<br /> Matter of forgiving Enemies&mdash;Eternal Punishment&mdash;Some
+ Good Men who are<br /> Damned&mdash;Another Objection&mdash;Love the only
+ Bow on Life's dark Cloud&mdash;"Now<br /> is the accepted Time"&mdash;Rather
+ than this Doctrine of Eternal Punishment<br /> Should be True&mdash;I
+ would rather that every Planet should in its Orbit<br /> wheel a barren
+ Star&mdash;What I Believe&mdash;Immortality&mdash;It existed long before<br />
+ Moses&mdash;Consolation&mdash;The Promises are so Far Away, and the Dead
+ are so<br /> Near&mdash;Death a Wall or a Door&mdash;A Fable&mdash;Orpheus
+ and Eurydice.<br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link0005">MYTH AND MIRACLE.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (1885.)<br /> I. Happiness the true End and Aim of Life&mdash;Spiritual
+ People and<br /> their Literature&mdash;Shakespeare's Clowns superior to
+ Inspired<br /> Writers&mdash;Beethoven's Sixth Symphony Preferred to the
+ Five Books of<br /> Moses&mdash;Venus of Milo more Pleasing than the
+ Presbyterian Creed&mdash;II.<br /> Religions Naturally Produced&mdash;Poets
+ the Myth-makers&mdash;The Sleeping<br /> Beauty&mdash;Orpheus and
+ Eurydice&mdash;Red Riding Hood&mdash;The Golden Age&mdash;Elysian<br />
+ Fields&mdash;The Flood Myth&mdash;Myths of the Seasons&mdash;III. The
+ Sun-god&mdash;Jonah,<br /> Buddha, Chrisnna, Horus, Zoroaster&mdash;December
+ 25th as a Birthday of<br /> Gods&mdash;Christ a Sun-God&mdash;The Cross a
+ Symbol of the Life to Come&mdash;When<br /> Nature rocked the Cradle of
+ the Infant World&mdash;IV. Difference between<br /> a Myth and a Miracle&mdash;Raising
+ the Dead, Past and Present&mdash;Miracles<br /> of Jehovah&mdash;Miracles
+ of Christ&mdash;Everything Told except the Truth&mdash;The<br /> Mistake
+ of the World&mdash;V. Beginning of Investigation&mdash;The Stars as<br />
+ Witnesses against Superstition&mdash;Martyrdom of Bruno&mdash;Geology&mdash;Steam
+ and<br /> Electricity&mdash;Nature forever the Same&mdash;Persistence of
+ Force&mdash;Cathedral,<br /> Mosque, and Joss House have the same
+ Foundation&mdash;Science the<br /> Providence of Man&mdash;VI. To Soften
+ the Heart of God&mdash;Martyrs&mdash;The God was<br /> Silent&mdash;Credulity
+ a Vice&mdash;Develop the Imagination&mdash;"The Skylark" and<br /> "The
+ Daisy"&mdash;VII. How are we to Civilize the World?&mdash;Put Theology
+ out<br /> of Religion&mdash;Divorce of Church and State&mdash;Secular
+ Education&mdash;Godless<br /> Schools&mdash;VIII. The New Jerusalem&mdash;Knowledge
+ of the Supernatural<br /> possessed by Savages&mdash;Beliefs of Primitive
+ Peoples&mdash;Science is<br /> Modest&mdash;Theology Arrogant&mdash;Torque-mada
+ and Bruno on the Day of<br /> Judgment&mdash;IX. Poison of Superstition
+ in the Mother's Milk&mdash;Ability<br /> of Mistakes to take Care of
+ Themselves&mdash;Longevity of Religious<br /> Lies&mdash;Mother's
+ religion pleaded by the Cannibal&mdash;The Religion of<br /> Freedom&mdash;O
+ Liberty, thou art the God of my Idolatry<br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="linkPREF" id="linkPREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For many years I have regarded the Pentateuch simply as a record of a
+ barbarous people, in which are found a great number of the ceremonies of
+ savagery, many absurd and unjust laws, and thousands of ideas inconsistent
+ with known and demonstrated facts. To me it seemed almost a crime to teach
+ that this record was written by inspired men; that slavery, polygamy, wars
+ of conquest and extermination were right, and that there was a time when
+ men could win the approbation of infinite Intelligence, Justice, and
+ Mercy, by violating maidens and by butchering babes. To me it seemed more
+ reasonable that savage men had made these laws; and I endeavored in a
+ lecture, entitled "Some Mistakes of Moses," to point out some of the
+ errors, contradictions, and impossibilities contained in the Pentateuch.
+ The lecture was never written and consequently never delivered twice the
+ same. On several occasions it was reported and published without consent,
+ and without revision. All these publications were grossly and glaringly
+ incorrect As published, they have been answered several hundred times, and
+ many of the clergy are still engaged in the great work. To keep these
+ reverend gentlemen from wasting their talents on the mistakes of reporters
+ and printers, I concluded to publish the principal points in all my
+ lectures on this subject. And here, it may be proper for me to say, that
+ arguments cannot be answered by personal abuse; that there is no logic in
+ slander, and that falsehood, in the long run, defeats itself. People who
+ love their enemies should, at least, tell the truth about their friends.
+ Should it turn out that I am the worst man in the whole world, the story
+ of the flood will remain just as improbable as before, and the
+ contradictions of the Pentateuch will still demand an explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a time when a falsehood, fulminated from the pulpit, smote like
+ a sword; but, the supply having greatly exceeded the demand, clerical
+ misrepresentation has at last become almost an innocent amusement.
+ Remembering that only a few years ago men, women, and even children, were
+ imprisoned, tortured and burned, for having expressed in an exceedingly
+ mild and gentle way, the ideas entertained by me, I congratulate myself
+ that calumny is now the pulpit's last resort. The old instruments of
+ torture are kept only to gratify curiosity; the chains are rusting away,
+ and the demolition of time has allowed even the dungeons of the
+ Inquisition to be visited by light. The church, impotent and malicious,
+ regrets, not the abuse, but the loss of her power, and seeks to hold by
+ falsehood what she gained by cruelty and force, by fire and fear.
+ Christianity cannot live in peace with any other form of faith. If that
+ religion be true, there is but one savior, one inspired book, and but one
+ little narrow grass-grown path that leads to heaven. Such a religion is
+ necessarily uncompromising, unreasoning, aggressive and insolent.
+ Christianity has held all other creeds and forms in infinite contempt,
+ divided the world into enemies and friends, and verified the awful
+ declaration of its founder&mdash;a declaration that wet with blood the
+ sword he came to bring, and made the horizon of a thousand years lurid
+ with the fagots' flames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Too great praise challenges attention, and often brings to light a
+ thousand faults that otherwise the general eye would never see. Were we
+ allowed to read the Bible as we do all other books, we would admire its
+ beauties, treasure its worthy thoughts, and account for all its absurd,
+ grotesque and cruel things, by saying that its authors lived in rude,
+ barbaric times. But we are told that it was written by inspired men; that
+ it contains the will of God; that it is perfect, pure, and true in all its
+ parts; the source and standard of all moral and religious truth; that it
+ is the star and anchor of all human hope; the only guide for man, the only
+ torch in Nature's night. These claims are so at variance with every known
+ recorded fact, so palpably absurd, that every free unbiased soul is forced
+ to raise the standard of revolt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We read the pagan sacred books with profit and delight. With myth and
+ fable we are ever charmed, and find a pleasure in the endless repetition
+ of the beautiful, poetic, and absurd. We find, in all these records of the
+ past, philosophies and dreams, and efforts stained with tears, of great
+ and tender souls who tried to pierce the mystery of life and death, to
+ answer the eternal questions of the Whence and Whither, and vainly sought
+ to make, with bits of shattered glass, a mirror that would, in very truth,
+ reflect the face and form of Nature's perfect self.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These myths were born of hopes, and fears, and tears, and smiles, and they
+ were touched and colored by all there is of joy and grief between the rosy
+ dawn of birth, and deaths sad night. They clothed even the stars with
+ passion, and gave to gods the faults and frailties of the sons of men. In
+ them, the winds and waves were music, and all the lakes, and streams, and
+ springs,&mdash;the mountains, woods and perfumed dells were haunted by a
+ thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of Spring with tremulous
+ desire; made tawny Summer's billowed breast the throne and home of love;
+ filled Autumn's arms with sun-kissed grapes, and gathered sheaves; and
+ pictured Winter as a weak old king who felt, like Lear upon his withered
+ face, Cordelia's tears. These myths, though false, are beautiful, and have
+ for many ages and in countless ways, enriched the heart and kindled
+ thought. But if the world were taught that all these things are true and
+ all inspired of God, and that eternal punishment will be the lot of him
+ who dares deny or doubt, the sweetest myth of all the Fable World would
+ lose its beauty, and become a scorned and hateful thing to every brave and
+ thoughtful man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert G. Ingersoll.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Washington, D. C., Oct. 7th, 1879.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link0002" id="link0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HE WHO ENDEAVORS TO CONTROL THE MIND BY FORCE IS A TYRANT, AND HE WHO
+ SUBMITS IS A SLAVE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I want to do what little I can to make my country truly free, to broaden
+ the intellectual horizon of our people, to destroy the prejudices born of
+ ignorance and fear, to do away with the blind worship of the ignoble past,
+ with the idea that all the great and good are dead, that the living are
+ totally depraved, that all pleasures are sins, that sighs and groans are
+ alone pleasing to God, that thought is dangerous, that intellectual
+ courage is a crime, that cowardice is a virtue, that a certain belief is
+ necessary to secure salvation, that to carry a cross in this world will
+ give us a palm in the next, and that we must allow some priest to be the
+ pilot of our souls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until every soul is freely permitted to investigate every book, and creed,
+ and dogma for itself, the world cannot be free. Mankind will be enslaved
+ until there is mental grandeur enough to allow each man to have his
+ thought and say. This earth will be a paradise when men can, upon all
+ these questions differ, and yet grasp each other's hands as friends. It is
+ amazing to me that a difference of opinion upon subjects that we know
+ nothing with certainty about, should make us hate, persecute, and despise
+ each other. Why a difference of opinion upon predestination, or the
+ Trinity, should make people imprison and burn each other seems beyond the
+ comprehension of man; and yet in all countries where Christians have
+ existed, they have destroyed each other to the exact extent of their
+ power. Why should a believer in God hate an atheist? Surely the atheist
+ has not injured God, and surely he is human, capable of joy and pain, and
+ entitled to all the rights of man. Would it not be far better to treat
+ this atheist, at least, as well as he treats us?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christians tell me that they love their enemies, and yet all I ask is&mdash;not
+ that they love their enemies, not that they love their friends even, but
+ that they treat those who differ from them, with simple fairness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not wish to be forgiven, but we wish Christians to so act that we
+ will not have to forgive them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If all will admit that all have an equal right to think, then the question
+ is forever solved; but as long as organized and powerful churches,
+ pretending to hold the keys of heaven and hell, denounce every person as
+ an outcast and criminal who thinks for himself and denies their authority,
+ the world will be filled with hatred and suffering. To hate man and
+ worship God seems to be the sum of all the creeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That which has happened in most countries has happened in ours. When a
+ religion is founded, the educated, the powerful&mdash;that is to say, the
+ priests and nobles, tell the ignorant and superstitious&mdash;that is to
+ say, the people, that the religion of their country was given to their
+ fathers by God himself; that it is the only true religion; that all others
+ were conceived in falsehood and brought forth in fraud, and that all who
+ believe in the true religion will be happy forever, while all others will
+ burn in hell. For the purpose of governing the people, that is to say, for
+ the purpose of being supported by the people, the priests and nobles
+ declare this religion to be sacred, and that whoever adds to, or takes
+ from it, will be burned here by man, and hereafter by God. The result of
+ this is, that the priests and nobles will not allow the people to change;
+ and when, after a time, the priests, having intellectually advanced, wish
+ to take a step in the direction of progress, the people will not allow
+ them to change. At first, the rabble are enslaved by the priests, and
+ afterwards the rabble become the masters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the first things I wish to do, is to free the orthodox clergy. I am
+ a great friend of theirs, and in spite of all they may say against me, I
+ am going to do them a great and lasting service. Upon their necks are
+ visible the marks of the collar, and upon their backs those of the lash.
+ They are not allowed to read and think for themselves. They are taught
+ like parrots, and the best are those who repeat, with the fewest mistakes,
+ the sentences they have been taught. They sit like owls upon some dead
+ limb of the tree of knowledge, and hoot the same old hoots that have been
+ hooted for eighteen hundred years. Their congregations are not grand
+ enough, nor sufficiently civilized, to be willing that the poor preachers
+ shall think for themselves. They are not employed for that purpose.
+ Investigation regarded as a dangerous experiment, and the ministers are
+ warned that none of that kind of work will be tolerated. They are notified
+ to stand by the old creed, and to avoid all original thought, as a mortal
+ pestilence. Every minister is employed like an attorney&mdash;either for
+ plaintiff or defendant,&mdash;and he is expected to be true to his client.
+ If he changes his mind, he is regarded as a deserter, and denounced,
+ hated, and slandered accordingly. Every orthodox clergyman agrees not to
+ change. He contracts not to find new facts, and makes a bargain that he
+ will deny them if he does. Such is the position of a Protestant minister
+ in this nineteenth century. His condition excites my pity; and to better
+ it, I am going to do what little I can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the clergy have the independence to break away, and the intellect
+ to maintain themselves as free men, but the most are compelled to submit
+ to the dictation of the orthodox, and the dead. They are not employed to
+ give their thoughts, but simply to repeat the ideas of others. They are
+ not expected to give even the doubts that may suggest themselves, but are
+ required to walk in the narrow, verdureless path trodden by the ignorance
+ of the past. The forests and fields on either side are nothing to them.
+ They must not even look at the purple hills, nor pause to hear the babble
+ of the brooks. They must remain in the dusty road where the guide-boards
+ are. They must confine themselves to the "fall of man," the expulsion from
+ the garden, the "scheme of salvation," the "second birth," the atonement,
+ the happiness of the redeemed, and the misery of the lost. They must be
+ careful not to express any new ideas upon these great questions. It is
+ much safer for them to quote from the works of the dead. The more vividly
+ they describe the sufferings of the unregenerate, of those who attended
+ theatres and balls, and drank wine in summer gardens on the Sabbath-day,
+ and laughed at priests, the better ministers they are supposed to be. They
+ must show that misery fits the good for heaven, while happiness prepares
+ the bad for hell; that the wicked get all their good things in this life,
+ and the good all their evil; that in this world God punishes the people he
+ loves, and in the next, the ones he hates; that happiness makes us bad
+ here, but not in heaven; that pain makes us good here, but not in hell. No
+ matter how absurd these things may appear to the carnal mind, they must be
+ preached and they must be believed. If they were reasonable, there would
+ be no virtue in believing. Even the publicans and sinners believe
+ reasonable things. To believe without evidence, or in spite of it, is
+ accounted as righteousness to the sincere and humble Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ministers are in duty bound to denounce all intellectual pride, and
+ show that we are never quite so dear to God as when we admit that we are
+ poor, corrupt and idiotic worms; that we never should have been born; that
+ we ought to be damned without the least delay; that we are so infamous
+ that we like to enjoy ourselves; that we love our wives and children
+ better than our God; that we are generous only because we are vile; that
+ we are honest from the meanest motives, and that sometimes we have fallen
+ so low that we have had doubts about the inspiration of the Jewish
+ Scriptures. In short, they are expected to denounce all pleasant paths and
+ rustling trees, to curse the grass and flowers, and glorify the dust and
+ weeds. They are expected to malign the wicked people in the green and
+ happy fields, who sit and laugh beside the gurgling springs or climb the
+ hills and wander as they will. They are expected to point out the dangers
+ of freedom, the safety of implicit obedience, and to show the wickedness
+ of philosophy, the goodness of faith, the immorality of science and the
+ purity of ignorance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now and then a few pious people discover some young man of a religious
+ turn of mind and a consumptive habit of body, not quite sickly enough to
+ die, nor healthy enough to be wicked. The idea occurs to them that he
+ would make a good orthodox minister. They take up a contribution, and send
+ the young man to some theological school where he can be taught to repeat
+ a creed and despise reason. Should it turn out that the young man had some
+ mind of his own, and, after graduating, should change his opinions and
+ preach a different doctrine from that taught in the school, every man who
+ contributed a dollar towards his education would feel that he had been
+ robbed, and would denounce him as a dishonest and ungrateful wretch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pulpit should not be a pillory. Congregations should allow the
+ minister a little liberty. They should, at least, permit him to tell the
+ truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They have, in Massachusetts, at a place called Andover, a kind of minister
+ factory, where each professor takes an oath once in five years&mdash;that
+ time being considered the life of an oath&mdash;that he has not, during
+ the last five years, and will not, during the next five years,
+ intellectually advance. There is probably no oath that they could easier
+ keep. Probably, since the foundation stone of that institution was laid
+ there has not been a single case of perjury. The old creed is still
+ taught. They still insist that God is infinitely wise, powerful and good,
+ and that all men are totally depraved. They insist that the best man God
+ ever made, deserved to be damned the moment he was finished. Andover puts
+ its brand upon every minister it turns out, the same as Sheffield and
+ Birmingham brand their wares, and all who see the brand know exactly what
+ the minister believes, the books he has read, the arguments he relies on,
+ and just what he intellectually is. They know just what he can be depended
+ on to preach, and that he will continue to shrink and shrivel, and grow
+ solemnly stupid day by day until he reaches the Andover of the grave and
+ becomes truly orthodox forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have not singled out the Andover factory because it is worse than the
+ others. They are all about the same. The professors, for the most part,
+ are ministers who failed in the pulpit and were retired to the seminary on
+ account of their deficiency in reason and their excess of faith. As a
+ rule, they know nothing of this world, and far less of the next; but they
+ have the power of stating the most absurd propositions with faces solemn
+ as stupidity touched by fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something should be done for the liberation of these men. They should be
+ allowed to grow&mdash;to have sunlight and air. They should no longer be
+ chained and tied to confessions of faith, to mouldy books and musty
+ creeds. Thousands of ministers are anxious to give their honest thoughts.
+ The hands of wives and babes now stop their mouths. They must have bread,
+ and so the husbands and fathers are forced to preach a doctrine that they
+ hold in scorn. For the sake of shelter, food and clothes, they are obliged
+ to defend the childish miracles of the past, and denounce the sublime
+ discoveries of to-day. They are compelled to attack all modern thought, to
+ point out the dangers of science, the wickedness of investigation and the
+ corrupting influence of logic. It is for them to show that virtue rests
+ upon ignorance and faith, while vice impudently feeds and fattens upon
+ fact and demonstration. It is a part of their business to malign and
+ vilify the Voltaires, Humes, Paines, Humboldts, Tyndalls, Haeckels,
+ Darwins, Spencers, and Drapers, and to bow with uncovered heads before the
+ murderers, adulterers, and persecutors of the world. They are, for the
+ most part, engaged in poisoning the minds of the young, prejudicing
+ children against science, teaching the astronomy and geology of the Bible,
+ and inducing all to desert the sublime standard of reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These orthodox ministers do not add to the sum of knowledge. They produce
+ nothing. They live upon alms. They hate laughter and joy. They officiate
+ at weddings, sprinkle water upon babes, and utter meaningless words and
+ barren promises above the dead. They laugh at the agony of unbelievers,
+ mock at their tears, and of their sorrows make a jest. There are some
+ noble exceptions. Now and then a pulpit holds a brave and honest man.
+ Their congregations are willing that they should think&mdash;willing that
+ their ministers should have a little freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we become civilized, more and more liberty will be accorded to these
+ men, until finally ministers will give their best and highest thoughts.
+ The congregations will finally get tired of hearing about the patriarchs
+ and saints, the miracles and wonders, and will insist upon knowing
+ something about the men and women of our day, and the accomplishments and
+ discoveries of our time. They will finally insist upon knowing how to
+ escape the evils of this world instead of the next. They will ask light
+ upon the enigmas of this life. They will wish to know what we shall do
+ with our criminals instead of what God will do with his&mdash;how we shall
+ do away with beggary and want&mdash;with crime and misery&mdash;with
+ prostitution, disease and famine,&mdash;with tyranny in all its cruel
+ forms&mdash;with prisons and scaffolds, and how we shall reward the honest
+ workers, and fill the world with happy homes! These are the problems for
+ the pulpits and congregations of an enlightened future. If Science cannot
+ finally answer these questions, it is a vain and worthless thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergy, however, will continue to answer them in the old way, until
+ their congregations are good enough to set them free. They will still talk
+ about believing in the Lord Jesus Christ, as though that were the only
+ remedy for all human ills. They will still teach that retrogression is the
+ only path that leads to light; that we must go back, that faith is the
+ only sure guide, and that reason is a delusive glare, lighting only the
+ road to eternal pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until the clergy are free they cannot be intellectually honest. We can
+ never tell what they really believe until they know that they can safely
+ speak. They console themselves now by a secret resolution to be as liberal
+ as they dare, with the hope that they can finally educate their
+ congregations to the point of allowing them to think a little for
+ themselves. They hardly know what they ought to do. The best part of their
+ lives has been wasted in studying subjects of no possible value. Most of
+ them are married, have families, and know but one way of making their
+ living. Some of them say that if they do not preach these foolish dogmas,
+ others will, and that they may through fear, after all, restrain mankind.
+ Besides, they hate publicly to admit that they are mistaken, that the
+ whole thing is a delusion, that the "scheme of salvation" is absurd, and
+ that the Bible is no better than some other books, and worse than most.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You can hardly expect a bishop to leave his palace, or the pope to vacate
+ the Vatican. As long as people want popes, plenty of hypocrites will be
+ found to take the place. And as long as labor fatigues, there will be
+ found a good many men willing to preach once a week, if other folks will
+ work and give them bread. In other words, while the demand lasts, the
+ supply will never fail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the people were a little more ignorant, astrology would flourish&mdash;if
+ a little more enlightened, religion would perish!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. FREE SCHOOLS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is also my desire to free the schools. When a professor in a college
+ finds a fact, he should make it known, even if it is inconsistent with
+ something Moses said. Public opinion must not compel the professor to hide
+ a fact, and, "like the base Indian, throw the pearl away." With the single
+ exception of Cornell, there is not a college in the United States where
+ truth has ever been a welcome guest. The moment one of the teachers denies
+ the inspiration of the Bible, he is discharged. If he discovers a fact
+ inconsistent with that book, so much the worse for the fact, and
+ especially for the discoverer of the fact. He must not corrupt the minds
+ of his pupils with demonstrations. He must beware of every truth that
+ cannot, in some way be made to harmonize with the superstitions of the
+ Jews. Science has nothing in common with religion. Facts and miracles
+ never did, and never will agree. They are not in the least related. They
+ are deadly foes. What has religion to do with facts? Nothing. Can there be
+ Methodist mathematics, Catholic astronomy, Presbyterian geology, Baptist
+ biology, or Episcopal botany? Why, then, should a sectarian college exist?
+ Only that which somebody knows should be taught in our schools. We should
+ not collect taxes to pay people for guessing. The common school is the
+ bread of life for the people, and it should not be touched by the
+ withering hand of superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our country will never be filled with great institutions of learning until
+ there is an absolute divorce between Church and School. As long as the
+ mutilated records of a barbarous people are placed by priest and professor
+ above the reason of mankind, we shall reap but little benefit from church
+ or school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of dismissing professors for finding something out, let us rather
+ discharge those who do not. Let each teacher understand that investigation
+ is not dangerous for him; that his bread is safe, no matter how much truth
+ he may discover, and that his salary will not be reduced, simply because
+ he finds that the ancient Jews did not know the entire history of the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, it is not fair to make the Catholic support a Protestant school,
+ nor is it just to collect taxes from infidels and atheists to support
+ schools in which any system of religion is taught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sciences are not sectarian. People do not persecute each other on
+ account of disagreements in mathematics. Families are not divided about
+ botany, and astronomy does not even tend to make a man hate his father and
+ mother. It is what people do not know, that they persecute each other
+ about. Science will bring, not a sword, but peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as long as religion has control of the schools, science will be an
+ outcast. Let us free our institutions of learning. Let us dedicate them to
+ the science of eternal truth. Let us tell every teacher to ascertain all
+ the facts he can&mdash;to give us light, to follow Nature, no matter where
+ she leads; to be infinitely true to himself and us; to feel that he is
+ without a chain, except the obligation to be honest; that he is bound by
+ no books, by no creed, neither by the sayings of the dead nor of the
+ living; that he is asked to look with his own eyes, to reason for himself
+ without fear, to investigate in every possible direction, and to bring us
+ the fruit of all his work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At present, a good many men engaged in scientific pursuits, and who have
+ signally failed in gaining recognition among their fellows, are
+ endeavoring to make reputations among the churches by delivering weak and
+ vapid lectures upon the "harmony of Genesis and Geology." Like all
+ hypocrites, these men overstate the case to such a degree, and so turn and
+ pervert facts and words that they succeed only in gaining the applause of
+ other hypocrites like themselves. Among the great scientists they are
+ regarded as generals regard sutlers who trade with both armies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely the time must come when the wealth of the world will not be wasted
+ in the propagation of ignorant creeds and miraculous mistakes. The time
+ must come when churches and cathedrals will be dedicated to the use of
+ man; when minister and priest will deem the discoveries of the living of
+ more importance than the errors of the dead; when the truths of Nature
+ will outrank the "sacred" falsehoods of the past, and when a single fact
+ will outweigh all the miracles of Holy Writ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who can over estimate the progress of the world if all the money wasted in
+ superstition could be used to enlighten, elevate and civilize mankind?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When every church becomes a school, every cathedral a university, every
+ clergyman a teacher, and all their hearers brave and honest thinkers,
+ then, and not until then, will the dream of poet, patriot, philanthropist
+ and philosopher, become a real and blessed truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. THE POLITICIANS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would like also to liberate the politician. At present, the successful
+ office-seeker is a good deal like the centre of the earth; he weighs
+ nothing himself, but draws everything else to him. There are so many
+ societies, so many churches, so many isms, that it is almost impossible
+ for an independent man to succeed in a political career. Candidates are
+ forced to pretend that they are Catholics with Protestant proclivities, or
+ Christians with liberal tendencies, or temperance men who now and then
+ take a glass of wine, or, that although not members of any church their
+ wives are, and that they subscribe liberally to all. The result of all
+ this is that we reward hypocrisy and elect men entirely destitute of real
+ principle; and this will never change until the people become grand enough
+ to allow each other to do their own thinking, our Government should be
+ entirely and purely secular. The religious views of a candidate should be
+ kept entirely out of sight. He should not be compelled to give his opinion
+ as to the inspiration of the Bible, the propriety of infant baptism, or
+ the immaculate conception. All these things are private and personal. He
+ should be allowed to settle such things for himself, and should he decide
+ contrary to the law and will of God, let him settle the matter with God.
+ The people ought to be wise enough to select as their officers men who
+ know something of political affairs, who comprehend the present greatness,
+ and clearly perceive the future grandeur of our country. If we were in a
+ storm at sea, with deck wave-washed and masts strained and bent with
+ storm, and it was necessary to reef the top sail, we certainly would not
+ ask the brave sailor who volunteered to go aloft, what his opinion was on
+ the five points of Calvinism. Our Government has nothing to do with
+ religion. It is neither Christian nor pagan; it is secular. But as long as
+ the people persist in voting for or against men on account of their
+ religious views, just so long will hypocrisy hold place and power. Just so
+ long will the candidates crawl in the dust&mdash;hide their opinions,
+ flatter those with whom they differ, pretend to agree with those whom they
+ despise; and just so long will honest men be trampled under foot. Churches
+ are becoming political organizations. Nearly every Catholic is a Democrat;
+ nearly every Methodist in the North is a Republican.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It probably will not be long until the churches will divide as sharply
+ upon political, as upon theological questions; and when that day comes, if
+ there are not liberals enough to hold the balance of power, this
+ Government will be destroyed. The liberty of man is not safe in the hands
+ of any church. Wherever the Bible and sword are in partnership, man is a
+ slave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All laws for the purpose of making man worship God, are born of the same
+ spirit that kindled the fires of the <i>auto da fe</i>, and lovingly built
+ the dungeons of the Inquisition. All laws defining and punishing blasphemy&mdash;making
+ it a crime to give your honest ideas about the Bible, or to laugh at the
+ ignorance of the ancient Jews, or to enjoy yourself on the Sabbath, or to
+ give your opinion of Jehovah, were passed by impudent bigots, and should
+ be at once repealed by honest men. An infinite God ought to be able to
+ protect himself, without going in partnership with State Legislatures.
+ Certainly he ought not so to act that laws become necessary to keep him
+ from being laughed at. No one thinks of protecting Shakespeare from
+ ridicule, by the threat of fine and imprisonment. It strikes me that God
+ might write a book that would not necessarily excite the laughter of his
+ children. In fact, I think it would be safe to say that a real God could
+ produce a work that would excite the admiration of mankind. Surely
+ politicians could be better employed than in passing laws to protect the
+ literary reputation of the Jewish God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. MAN AND WOMAN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us forget that we are Baptists, Methodists,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Catholics, Presbyterians, or Freethinkers, and remember only that we are
+ men and women. After all, man and woman are the highest possible titles.
+ All other names belittle us, and show that we have, to a certain extent,
+ given up our individuality, and have consented to wear the collar of
+ authority&mdash;that we are followers. Throwing away these names, let us
+ examine these questions not as partisans, but as human beings with hopes
+ and fears in common.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that our opinions depend, to a great degree, upon our surroundings&mdash;upon
+ race, country, and education. We are all the result of numberless
+ conditions, and inherit vices and virtues, truths and prejudices. If we
+ had been born in England, surrounded by wealth and clothed with power,
+ most of us would have been Episcopalians, and believed in church and
+ state. We should have insisted that the people needed a religion, and that
+ not having intellect enough to provide one for themselves, it was our duty
+ to make one for them, and then compel them to support it. We should have
+ believed it indecent to officiate in a pulpit without wearing a gown, and
+ that prayers should be read from a book. Had we belonged to the lower
+ classes, we might have been dissenters and protested against the mummeries
+ of the High Church. Had we been born in Turkey, most of us would have been
+ Mohammedans and believed in the inspiration of the Koran. We should have
+ believed that Mohammed actually visited heaven and became acquainted with
+ an angel by the name of Gabriel, who was so broad between the eyes that it
+ required three hundred days for a very smart camel to travel the distance.
+ If some man had denied this story we should probably have denounced him as
+ a dangerous person, one who was endeavoring to undermine the foundations
+ of society, and to destroy all distinction between virtue and vice. We
+ should have said to him, "What do you propose to give us in place of that
+ angel? We cannot afford to give up an angel of that size for nothing." We
+ would have insisted that the best and wisest men believed the Koran. We
+ would have quoted from the works and letters of philosophers, generals and
+ sultans, to show that the Koran was the best of books, and that Turkey was
+ indebted to that book and to that alone for its greatness and prosperity.
+ We would have asked that man whether he knew more than all the great minds
+ of his country, whether he was so much wiser than his fathers? We would
+ have pointed out to him the fact that thousands had been consoled in the
+ hour of death by passages from the Koran; that they had died with glazed
+ eyes brightened by visions of the heavenly harem, and gladly left this
+ world of grief and tears. We would have regarded Christians as the vilest
+ of men, and on all occasions would have repeated "There is but one God,
+ and Mohammed is his prophet!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, if we had been born in India, we should in all probability have
+ believed in the religion of that country. We should have regarded the old
+ records as true and sacred, and looked upon a wandering priest as better
+ than the men from whom he begged, and by whose labor he lived. We should
+ have believed in a god with three heads instead of three gods with one
+ head, as we do now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now and then some one says that the religion of his father and mother is
+ good enough for him, and wonders why anybody should desire a better.
+ Surely we are not bound to follow our parents in religion any more than in
+ politics, science or art. China has been petrified by the worship of
+ ancestors. If our parents had been satisfied with the religion of theirs,
+ we would be still less advanced than we are. If we are, in any way, bound
+ by the belief of our fathers, the doctrine will hold good back to the
+ first people who had a religion; and if this doctrine is true, we ought
+ now to be believers in that first religion. In other words, we would all
+ be barbarians. You cannot show real respect to your parents by
+ perpetuating their errors. Good fathers and mothers wish their children to
+ advance, to overcome obstacles which baffled them, and to correct the
+ errors of their education. If you wish to reflect credit upon your
+ parents, accomplish more than they did, solve problems that they could not
+ understand, and build better than they knew. To sacrifice your manhood
+ upon the grave of your father is an honor to neither. Why should a son who
+ has examined a subject, throw away his reason and adopt the views of his
+ mother? Is not such a course dishonorable to both?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must remember that this "ancestor" argument is as old at least as the
+ second generation of men, that it has served no purpose except to enslave
+ mankind, and results mostly from the fact that acquiescence is easier than
+ investigation. This argument pushed to its logical conclusion, would
+ prevent the advance of all people whose parents were not Freethinkers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is hard for many people to give up the religion in which they were
+ born; to admit that their fathers were utterly mistaken, and that the
+ sacred records of their country are but collections of myths and fables.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when we look for a moment at the world, we find that each nation has
+ its "sacred records"&mdash;its religion, and its ideas of worship.
+ Certainly all cannot be right; and as it would require a life time to
+ investigate the claims of these various systems, it is hardly fair to damn
+ a man forever, simply because he happens to believe the wrong one. All
+ these religions were produced by barbarians. Civilized nations have
+ contented themselves with changing the religions of their barbaric
+ ancestors, but they have made none. Nearly all these religions are
+ intensely selfish. Each one was made by some contemptible little nation
+ that regarded itself as of almost infinite importance, and looked upon the
+ other nations as beneath the notice of their god. In all these countries
+ it was a crime to deny the sacred records, to laugh at the priests, to
+ speak disrespectfully of the gods, to fail to divide your substance with
+ the lazy hypocrites who managed your affairs in the next world upon
+ condition that you would support them in this. In the olden time these
+ theological people who quartered themselves upon the honest and
+ industrious, were called soothsayers, seers, charmers, prophets,
+ enchanters, sorcerers, wizards, astrologers, and impostors, but now, they
+ are known as clergymen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are no exception to the general rule, and consequently have our sacred
+ books as well as the rest. Of course, it is claimed by many of our people
+ that our books are the only true ones, the only ones that the real God
+ ever wrote, or had anything whatever to do with. They insist that all
+ other sacred books were written by hypocrites and impostors; that the Jews
+ were the only people that God ever had any personal intercourse with, and
+ that all other prophets and seers were inspired only by impudence and
+ mendacity. True, it seems somewhat strange that God should have chosen a
+ barbarous and unknown people who had little or nothing to do with the
+ other nations of the earth, as his messengers to the rest of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not easy to account for an infinite God making people so low in the
+ scale of intellect as to require a revelation. Neither is it easy to
+ perceive why, if a revelation was necessary for all, it was made only to a
+ few. Of course, I know that it is extremely wicked to suggest these
+ thoughts, and that ignorance is the only armor that can effectually
+ protect you from the wrath of God. I am aware that investigators with all
+ their genius, never find the road to heaven; that those who look where
+ they are going are sure to miss it, and that only those who voluntarily
+ put out their eyes and implicitly depend upon blindness can surely keep
+ the narrow path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whoever reads our sacred book is compelled to believe it or suffer forever
+ the torments of the lost. We are told that we have the privilege of
+ examining it for ourselves; but this privilege is only extended to us on
+ the condition that we believe it whether it appears reasonable or not. We
+ may disagree with others as much as we please upon the meaning of all
+ passages in the Bible, but we must not deny the truth of a single word. We
+ must believe that the book is inspired. If we obey its every precept
+ without believing in its inspiration we will be damned just as certainly
+ as though we disobeyed its every word. We have no right to weigh it in the
+ scales of reason&mdash;to test it by the laws of nature, or the facts of
+ observation and experience. To do this, we are told, is to put ourselves
+ above the word of God, and sit in judgment on the works of our creator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For my part, I cannot admit that belief is a voluntary thing. It seems to
+ me that evidence, even in spite of ourselves, will have its weight, and
+ that whatever our wish may be, we are compelled to stand with fairness by
+ the scales, and give the exact result. It will not do to say that we
+ reject the Bible because we are wicked. Our wickedness must be ascertained
+ not from our belief but from our acts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am told by the clergy that I ought not to attack the Bible; that I am
+ leading thousands to perdition and rendering certain the damnation of my
+ own soul. They have had the kindness to advise me that, if my object is to
+ make converts, I am pursuing the wrong course. They tell me to use gentler
+ expressions, and more cunning words. Do they really wish me to make more
+ converts? If their advice is honest, they are traitors to their trust. If
+ their advice is not honest, then they are unfair with me. Certainly they
+ should wish me to pursue the course that will make the fewest converts,
+ and yet they pretend to tell me how my influence could be increased. It
+ may be, that upon this principle John Bright advises America to adopt free
+ trade, so that our country can become a successful rival of Great Britain.
+ Sometimes I think that even ministers are not entirely candid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the advice of the clergy, I have concluded to pursue my
+ own course, to tell my honest thoughts, and to have my freedom in this
+ world whatever my fate may be in the next.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The real oppressor, enslaver and corrupter of the people is the Bible.
+ That book is the chain that binds, the dungeon that holds the clergy. That
+ book spreads the pall of superstition over the colleges and schools. That
+ book puts out the eyes of science, and makes honest investigation a crime.
+ That book unmans the politician and degrades the people. That book fills
+ the world with bigotry, hypocrisy and fear. It plays the same part in our
+ country that has been played by "sacred records" in all the nations of the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little while ago I saw one of the Bibles of the Middle Ages. It was
+ about two feet in length, and one and a half in width. It had immense
+ oaken covers, with hasps, and clasps, and hinges large enough almost for
+ the doors of a penitentiary. It was covered with pictures of winged angels
+ and aureoled saints. In my imagination I saw this book carried to the
+ cathedral altar in solemn pomp&mdash;heard the chant of robed and kneeling
+ priests, felt the strange tremor of the organ's peal; saw the colored
+ light streaming through windows stained and touched by blood and flame&mdash;the
+ swinging censer with its perfumed incense rising to the mighty roof, dim
+ with height and rich with legend carved in stone, while on the walls was
+ hung, written in light, and shade, and all the colors that can tell of joy
+ and tears, the pictured history of the martyred Christ. The people fell
+ upon their knees. The book was opened, and the priest read the messages
+ from God to man. To the multitude, the book itself was evidence enough
+ that it was not the work of human hands. How could those little marks and
+ lines and dots contain, like tombs, the thoughts of men, and how could
+ they, touched by a ray of light from human eyes, give up their dead? How
+ could these characters span the vast chasm dividing the present from the
+ past, and make it possible for the living still to hear the voices of the
+ dead?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. THE PENTATEUCH
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first five books in our Bible are known as the Pentateuch. For a long
+ time it was supposed that Moses was the author, and among the ignorant the
+ supposition still prevails. As a matter of fact, it seems to be well
+ settled that Moses had nothing to do with these books, and that they were
+ not written until he had been dust and ashes for hundreds of years. But,
+ as all the churches still insist that he was the author, that he wrote
+ even an account of his own death and burial, let us speak of him as though
+ these books were in fact written by him. As the Christians maintain that
+ God was the real author, it makes but little difference whom he employed
+ as his pen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly all authors of sacred books have given an account of the creation
+ of the universe, the origin of matter, and the destiny of the human race,
+ all have pointed out the obligation that man is under to his creator for
+ having placed him upon the earth, and allowed him to live and suffer, and
+ have taught that nothing short of the most abject worship could possibly
+ compensate God for his trouble and labor suffered and done for the good of
+ man. They have nearly all insisted that we should thank God for all that
+ is good in life; but they have not all informed us as to whom we should
+ hold responsible for the evils we endure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moses differed from most of the makers of sacred books by his failure to
+ say anything of a future life, by failing to promise heaven, and to
+ threaten hell. Upon the subject of a future state, there is not one word
+ in the Pentateuch. Probably at that early day God did not deem it
+ important to make a revelation as to the eternal destiny of man. He seems
+ to have thought that he could control the Jews, at least, by rewards and
+ punishments in this world, and so he kept the frightful realities of
+ eternal joy and torment a profound secret from the people of his choice.
+ He thought it far more important to tell the Jews their origin than to
+ enlighten them as to their destiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must remember that every tribe and nation has some way in which, the
+ more striking phenomena of nature are accounted for. These accounts are
+ handed down by tradition, changed by numberless narrators as intelligence
+ increases, or to account for newly discovered facts, or for the purpose of
+ satisfying the appetite for the marvelous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The way in which a tribe or nation accounts for day and night, the change
+ of seasons, the fall of snow and rain, the flight of birds, the origin of
+ the rainbow, the peculiarities of animals, the dreams of sleep, the
+ visions of the insane, the existence of earthquakes, volcanoes, storms,
+ lightning and the thousand things that attract the attention and excite
+ the wonder, fear or admiration of mankind, may be called the philosophy of
+ that tribe or nation. And as all phenomena are, by savage and barbaric man
+ accounted for as the action of intelligent beings for the accomplishment
+ of certain objects, and as these beings were supposed to have the power to
+ assist or injure man, certain things were supposed necessary for man to do
+ in order to gain the assistance, and avoid the anger of these gods. Out of
+ this belief grew certain ceremonies, and these ceremonies united with the
+ belief, formed religion; and consequently every religion has for its
+ foundation a misconception of the cause of phenomena.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All worship is necessarily based upon the belief that some being exists
+ who can, if he will, change the natural order of events. The savage prays
+ to a stone that he calls a god, while the Christian prays to a god that he
+ calls a spirit, and the prayers of both are equally useful. The savage and
+ the Christian put behind the Universe an intelligent cause, and this cause
+ whether represented by one god or many, has been, in all ages, the object
+ of all worship. To carry a fetich, to utter a prayer, to count beads, to
+ abstain from food, to sacrifice a lamb, a child or an enemy, are simply
+ different ways by which the accomplishment of the same object is sought,
+ and are all the offspring of the same error.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many systems of religion must have existed many ages before the art of
+ writing was discovered, and must have passed through many changes before
+ the stories, miracles, histories, prophecies and mistakes became fixed and
+ petrified in written words. After that, change was possible only by giving
+ new meanings to old words, a process rendered necessary by the continual
+ acquisition of facts somewhat inconsistent with a literal interpretation
+ of the "sacred records." In this way an honest faith often prolongs its
+ life by dishonest methods; and in this way the Christians of to-day are
+ trying to harmonize the Mosaic account of creation with the theories and
+ discoveries of modern science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Admitting that Moses was the author of the Pentateuch, or that he gave to
+ the Jews a religion, the question arises as to where he obtained his
+ information. We are told by the theologians that he received his knowledge
+ from God, and that every word he wrote was and is the exact truth. It is
+ admitted at the same time that he was an adopted son of Pharaoh's
+ daughter, and enjoyed the rank and privilege of a prince. Under such
+ circumstances, he must have been well acquainted with the literature,
+ philosophy and religion of the Egyptians, and must have known what they
+ believed and taught as to the creation of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, if the account of the origin of this earth as given by Moses is
+ substantially like that given by the Egyptians, then we must conclude that
+ he learned it from them. Should we imagine that he was divinely inspired
+ because he gave to the Jews what the Egyptians had given him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Egyptian priests taught <i>first</i>, that a god created the original
+ matter, leaving it in a state of chaos; <i>second</i>, that a god moulded
+ it into form; <i>third</i>, that the breath of a god moved upon the face
+ of the deep; <i>fourth</i>, that a god created simply by saying "Let it
+ be;" <i>fifth</i>, that a god created light before the sun existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing can be clearer than that Moses received from the Egyptians the
+ principal parts of his narrative, making such changes and additions as
+ were necessary to satisfy the peculiar superstitions of his own people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If some man at the present day should assert that he had received from God
+ the theories of evolution, the survival of the fittest, and the law of
+ heredity, and we should afterwards find that he was not only an
+ Englishman, but had lived in the family of Charles Darwin, we certainly
+ would account for his having these theories in a natural way, So, if
+ Darwin himself should pretend that he was inspired, and had obtained his
+ peculiar theories from God, we should probably reply that his grandfather
+ suggested the same ideas, and that Lamarck published substantially the
+ same theories the same year that Mr. Darwin was born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, if we have sufficient courage, we will, by the same course of
+ reasoning, account for the story of creation found in the Bible. We will
+ say that it contains the belief of Moses, and that he received his
+ information from the Egyptians, and not from God. If we take the account
+ as the absolute truth and use it for the purpose of determining the value
+ of modern thought, scientific advancement becomes impossible. And even if
+ the account of the creation as given by Moses should turn out to be true,
+ and should be so admitted by all the scientific world, the claim that he
+ was inspired would still be without the least particle of proof. We would
+ be forced to admit that he knew more than we had supposed. It certainly is
+ no proof that a man is inspired simply because he is right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one pretends that Shakespeare was inspired, and yet all the writers of
+ the books of the Old Testament put together, could not have produced
+ Hamlet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should we, looking upon some rough and awkward thing, or god in stone,
+ say that it must have been produced by some inspired sculptor, and with
+ the same breath pronounce the <i>Venus de Milo</i> to be the work of man?
+ Why should we, looking at some ancient daub of angel, saint or virgin, say
+ its painter must have been assisted by a god?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us account for all we see by the facts we know. If there are things
+ for which we cannot account, let us wait for light. To account for
+ anything by supernatural agencies is, in fact to say that we do not know.
+ Theology is not what we know about God, but what we do not know about
+ Nature. In order to increase our respect for the Bible, it became
+ necessary for the priests to exalt and extol that book, and at the same
+ time to decry and belittle the reasoning powers of man. The whole power of
+ the pulpit has been used for hundreds of years to destroy the confidence
+ of man in himself&mdash;to induce him to distrust his own powers of
+ thought, to believe that he was wholly unable to decide any question for
+ himself, and that all human virtue consists in faith and obedience. The
+ church has said, "Believe, and obey! If you reason, you will become an
+ unbeliever, and unbelievers will be lost. If you disobey, you will do so
+ through vain pride and curiosity, and will, like Adam and Eve, be thrust
+ from Paradise forever!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For my part, I care nothing for what the church says, except in so far as
+ it accords with my reason; and the Bible is nothing to me, only in so far
+ as it agrees with what I think or know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All books should be examined in the same spirit, and truth should be
+ welcomed and falsehood exposed, no matter in what volume they may be
+ found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us in this spirit examine the Pentateuch; and if anything appears
+ unreasonable, contradictory or absurd, let us have the honesty and courage
+ to admit it. Certainly no good can result either from deceiving ourselves
+ or others. Many millions have implicitly believed this book, and have just
+ as implicitly believed that polygamy was sanctioned by God. Millions have
+ regarded this book as the foundation of all human progress, and at the
+ same time looked upon slavery as a divine institution. Millions have
+ declared this book to have been infinitely holy, and to prove that they
+ were right, have imprisoned, robbed and burned their fellow-men. The
+ inspiration of this book has been established by famine, sword and fire,
+ by dungeon, chain and whip, by dagger and by rack, by force and fear and
+ fraud, and generations have been frightened by threats of hell, and bribed
+ with promises of heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us examine a portion of this book, not in the darkness of our fear,
+ but in the light of reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And first, let us examine the account given of the creation of this world,
+ commenced, according to the Bible, on Monday morning about five thousand
+ eight hundred and eighty-three years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. MONDAY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moses commences his story by telling us that in the beginning God created
+ the heaven and the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this means anything, it means that God produced, caused to exist,
+ called into being, the heaven and the earth. It will not do to say that he
+ formed the heaven and the earth of previously existing matter. Moses
+ conveys, and intended to convey the idea that the matter of which the
+ heaven and the earth are composed, was created.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible for me to conceive of something being created from
+ nothing. Nothing, regarded in the light of a raw material, is a decided
+ failure. I cannot conceive of matter apart from force. Neither is it
+ possible to think of force disconnected with matter. You cannot imagine
+ matter going back to absolute nothing. Neither can you imagine nothing
+ being changed into something. You may be eternally damned if you do not
+ say that you can conceive these things, but you cannot conceive them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is the constitution of the human mind that it cannot even think of a
+ commencement or an end of matter, or force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If God created the universe, there was a time when he commenced to create.
+ Back of that commencement there must have been an eternity. In that
+ eternity what was this God doing? He certainly did not think. There was
+ nothing to think about. He did not remember. Nothing had ever happened.
+ What did he do? Can you imagine anything more absurd than an infinite
+ intelligence in infinite nothing wasting an eternity?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not pretend to tell how all these things really are; but I do insist
+ that a statement that cannot possibly be comprehended by any human being,
+ and that appears utterly impossible, repugnant to every fact of
+ experience, and contrary to everything that we really know, must be
+ rejected by every honest man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We can conceive of eternity, because we cannot conceive of a cessation of
+ time. We can conceive of infinite space because we cannot conceive of so
+ much matter that our imagination will not stand upon the farthest star,
+ and see infinite space beyond. In other words, we cannot conceive of a
+ cessation of time; therefore eternity is a necessity of the mind. Eternity
+ sustains the same relation to time that space does to matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the time of Moses, it was perfectly safe for him to write an account of
+ the creation of the world. He had simply to put in form the crude notions
+ of the people. At that time, no other Jew could have written a better
+ account. Upon that subject he felt at liberty to give his imagination full
+ play. There was no one who could authoritatively contradict anything he
+ might say. It was substantially the same story that had been imprinted in
+ curious characters upon the clay records of Babylon, the gigantic
+ monuments of Egypt, and the gloomy temples of India. In those days there
+ was an almost infinite difference between the educated and ignorant. The
+ people were controlled almost entirely by signs and wonders. By the lever
+ of fear, priests moved the world. The sacred records were made and kept,
+ and altered by them. The people could not read, and looked upon one who
+ could, as almost a god. In our day it is hard to conceive of the influence
+ of an educated class in a barbarous age. It was only necessary to produce
+ the "sacred record," and ignorance fell upon its face. The people were
+ taught that the record was inspired, and therefore true. They were not
+ taught that it was true, and therefore inspired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all, the real question is not whether the Bible is inspired, but
+ whether it is true. If it is true, it does not need to be inspired. If it
+ is true, it makes no difference whether it was written by a man or a god.
+ The multiplication table is just as useful, just as true as though God had
+ arranged the figures himself. If the Bible is really true, the claim of
+ inspiration need not be urged; and if it is not true, its inspiration can
+ hardly be established. As a matter of fact, the truth does not need to be
+ inspired. Nothing needs inspiration except a falsehood or a mistake. Where
+ truth ends, where probability stops, inspiration begins. A fact never went
+ into partnership with a miracle. Truth does not need the assistance of
+ miracle. A fact will fit every other fact in the Universe, because it is
+ the product of all other facts. A lie will fit nothing except another lie
+ made for the express purpose of fitting it. After a while the man gets
+ tired of lying, and then the last lie will not fit the next fact, and then
+ there is an opportunity to use a miracle. Just at that point, it is
+ necessary to have a little inspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems to me that reason is the highest attribute of man, and that if
+ there can be any communication from God to man, it must be addressed to
+ his reason. It does not seem possible that in order to understand a
+ message from God it is absolutely essential to throw our reason away. How
+ could God make known his will to any being destitute of reason? How can
+ any man accept as a revelation from God that which is unreasonable to him?
+ God cannot make a revelation to another man for me. He must make it to me,
+ and until he convinces my reason that it is true, I cannot receive it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The statement that in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth,
+ I cannot accept. It is contrary to my reason, and I cannot believe it. It
+ appears reasonable to me that force has existed from eternity. Force
+ cannot, as it appears to me, exist apart from matter. Force, in its
+ nature, is forever active, and without matter it could not act; and so I
+ think matter must have existed forever. To conceive of matter without
+ force, or of force without matter, or of a time when neither existed, or
+ of a being who existed for an eternity without either, and who out of
+ nothing created both, is to me utterly impossible. I may be damned on this
+ account, but I cannot help it. In my judgment, Moses was mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will not do to say that Moses merely intended to tell what God did, in
+ making the heavens and the earth out of matter then in existence. He
+ distinctly states that in the <i>beginning</i> God created them. If this
+ account is true, we must believe that God, existing in infinite space
+ surrounded by eternal nothing, naught and void, created, produced, called
+ into being, willed into existence this universe of countless stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next thing we are told by this inspired gentleman is, that God created
+ light, and proceeded to divide it from the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, the person who wrote this believed that darkness was a thing,
+ an entity, a material that could get mixed and tangled up with light, and
+ that these entities, light and darkness, had to be separated. In his
+ imagination he probably saw God throwing pieces and chunks of darkness on
+ one side, and rays and beams of light on the other. It is hard for a man
+ who has been born but once to understand these things. For my part, I
+ cannot understand how light can be separated from darkness. I had always
+ supposed that darkness was simply the absence of light, and that under no
+ circumstances could it be necessary to take the darkness away from the
+ light. It is certain, however, that Moses believed darkness to be a form
+ of matter, because I find that in another place he speaks of a darkness
+ that could be felt. They used to have on exhibition at Rome a bottle of
+ the darkness that overspread Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You cannot divide light from darkness any more than you can divide heat
+ from cold. Cold is an absence of heat, and darkness is an absence of
+ light. I suppose that we have no conception of absolute cold. We know only
+ degrees of heat. Twenty degrees below zero is just twenty degrees warmer
+ than forty degrees below zero. Neither cold nor darkness are entities, and
+ these words express simply either the absolute or partial absence of heat
+ or light. I cannot conceive how light can be divided from darkness, but I
+ can conceive how a barbarian several thousand years ago, writing upon a
+ subject about which he knew nothing, could make a mistake. The creator of
+ light could not have written in this way. If such a being exists, he must
+ have known the nature of that "mode of motion" that paints the earth on
+ every eye, and clothes in garments seven-hued this universe of worlds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. TUESDAY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are next informed by Moses that "God of the waters, and let it divide
+ the waters from the waters;" and that "God made the firmament, and divided
+ the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above
+ the firmament." What did the writer mean by the word firmament?
+ Theologians now tell us that he meant an "expanse." This will not do. How
+ could an expanse divide the waters from the waters, so that the waters
+ above the expanse would not fall into and mingle with the waters below the
+ expanse? The truth is that Moses regarded the firmament as a solid affair.
+ It was where God lived, and where water was kept. It was for this reason
+ that they used to pray for rain. They supposed that some angel could with
+ a lever raise a gate and let out the quantity of moisture desired. It was
+ with the water from this firmament that the world was drowned when the
+ windows of heaven were opened. It was in this said Let there be a
+ firmament in the midst firmament that the sons of God lived&mdash;the sons
+ who "saw the daughters of men that they were fair and took them wives of
+ all which they chose." The issue of such marriages were giants, and "the
+ same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is clearer than that Moses regarded the firmament as a vast
+ material division that separated the waters of the world, and upon whose
+ floor God lived, surrounded by his sons. In no other way could he account
+ for rain. Where did the water come from? He knew nothing about the laws of
+ evaporation. He did not know that the sun wooed with amorous kisses the
+ waves of the sea, and that they, clad in glorified mist rising to meet
+ their lover, were, by disappointment, changed to tears and fell as rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idea that the firmament was the abode of the Deity must have been in
+ the mind of Moses when he related the dream of Jacob. "And he dreamed, and
+ behold, a ladder set upon the earth and the top of it reached to heaven;
+ and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it; and behold
+ the Lord stood above it and said, I am the Lord God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, when the people were building the tower of Babel "the Lord came down
+ to see the city, and the tower which the children of men builded. And the
+ Lord said, Behold the people is one, and they have all one language: and
+ this they begin to do; and nothing will be restrained from them which they
+ imagined to do. Go to, let us go down and confound their language that
+ they may not understand one another's speech."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man who wrote that absurd account must have believed that God lived
+ above the earth, in the firmament. The same idea was in the mind of the
+ Psalmist when he said that God "bowed the heavens and came down."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, God could easily remove any person bodily to heaven, as it was
+ but a little way above the earth. "Enoch walked with God, and he was not,
+ for God took him." The accounts in the Bible of the ascension of Elijah,
+ Christ and St. Paul were born of the belief that the firmament was the
+ dwelling-place of God. It probably never occurred to these writers that if
+ the firmament was seven or eight miles away, Enoch and the rest would have
+ been frozen perfectly stiff long before the journey could have been
+ completed. Possibly Elijah might have made the voyage, as he was carried
+ to heaven in a chariot of fire "by a whirlwind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth is, that Moses was mistaken, and upon that mistake the
+ Christians located their heaven and their hell. The telescope destroyed
+ the firmament, did away with the heaven of the New Testament, rendered the
+ ascension of our Lord and the assumption of his Mother infinitely absurd,
+ crumbled to chaos the gates and palaces of the New Jerusalem, and in their
+ places gave to man a wilderness of worlds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. WEDNESDAY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are next informed by the historian of creation, that after God had
+ finished making the firmament and had succeeded in dividing the waters by
+ means of an "expanse," he proceeded "to gather the waters on the earth
+ together in seas, so that the dry land might appear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the writer of this did not have any conception of the real form
+ of the earth. He could not have known anything of the attraction of
+ gravitation. He must have regarded the earth as flat and supposed that it
+ required considerable force and power to induce the water to leave the
+ mountains and collect in the valleys. Just as soon as the water was forced
+ to run down hill, the dry land appeared, and the grass began to grow, and
+ the mantles of green were thrown over the shoulders of the hills, and the
+ trees laughed into bud and blossom, and the branches were laden with
+ fruit. And all this happened before a ray had left the quiver of the sun,
+ before a glittering beam had thrilled the bosom of a flower, and before
+ the Dawn with trembling hands had drawn aside the curtains of the East and
+ welcomed to her arms the eager god of Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It does not seem to me that grass and trees could grow and ripen into seed
+ and fruit without the sun. According to the account, this all happened on
+ the third day. Now, if, as the Christians say, Moses did not mean by the
+ word day a period of twenty-four hours, but an immense and almost
+ measureless space of time, and as God did not, according to this view make
+ any animals until the fifth day, that is, not for millions of years after
+ he made the grass and trees, for what purpose did he cause the trees to
+ bear fruit?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moses says that God said on the third day, "Let the earth bring forth
+ grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after his
+ kind, whose seed is in itself upon the earth; and it was so. And the earth
+ brought forth grass and herb yielding seed after his kind, and the tree
+ yielding fruit whose seed was in itself after his kind; and God saw that
+ it was good, and the evening and the morning were the third day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was nothing to eat this fruit; not an insect with painted wings
+ sought the honey of the flowers; not a single living, breathing thing upon
+ the earth. Plenty of grass, a great variety of herbs, an abundance of
+ fruit, but not a mouth in all the world. If Moses is right, this state of
+ things lasted only two days; but if the modern theologians are correct, it
+ continued for millions of ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is now well known that the organic history of the earth can be
+ properly divided into five epochs&mdash;the Primordial, Primary,
+ Secondary, Tertiary, and Quaternary. Each of these epochs is characterized
+ by animal and vegetable life peculiar to itself. In the First will be
+ found Alg&aelig; and Skulless Vertebrates, in the Second, Ferns and
+ Fishes, in the Third, Pine Forests and Reptiles, in the Fourth, Foliaceous
+ Forests and Mammals, and in the Fifth, Man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How much more reasonable this is than the idea that the earth was covered
+ with grass, and herbs, and trees loaded with fruit for millions of years
+ before an animal existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is, in Nature, an even balance forever kept between the total
+ amounts of animal and vegetable life. "In her wonderful economy she must
+ form and bountifully nourish her vegetable progeny&mdash;twin-brother life
+ to her, with that of animals. The perfect balance between plant existences
+ and animal existences must always be maintained, while matter courses
+ through the eternal circle, becoming each in turn. If an animal be
+ resolved into its ultimate constituents in a period according to the
+ surrounding circumstances, say, of four hours, of four months, of four
+ years, or even of four thousand years,&mdash;for it is impossible to deny
+ that there may be instances of all these periods during which the process
+ has continued&mdash;those elements which assume the gaseous form mingle at
+ once with the atmosphere and are taken up from it without delay by the
+ ever-open mouths of vegetable life. By a thousand pores in every leaf the
+ carbonic acid which renders the atmosphere unfit for animal life is
+ absorbed, the carbon being separated, and assimilated to form the
+ vegetable fibre, which, as wood, makes and furnishes our houses and ships,
+ is burned for our warmth, or is stored up under pressure for coal. All
+ this carbon has played its part, and many parts in its time, as animal
+ existences from monad up to man. Our mahogany of to-day has been many
+ negroes in its turn, and before the African existed, was integral portions
+ of many a generation of extinct species."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems reasonable to suppose that certain kinds of vegetation-and
+ certain kinds of animals should exist together, and that as the character
+ of the vegetation changed, a corresponding change would take place in the
+ animal world. It may be that I am led to these conclusions by "total
+ depravity," or that I lack the necessary humility of spirit to
+ satisfactorily harmonize Haeckel and Moses; or that I am carried away by
+ pride, blinded by reason, given over to hardness of heart that I might be
+ damned, but I never can believe that the earth was covered with leaves,
+ and buds, and flowers, and fruits before the sun with glittering spear had
+ driven back the hosts of Night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX. THURSDAY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the world was covered with vegetation, it occurred to Moses that it
+ was about time to make a sun and moon; and so we are told that on the
+ fourth day God said, "Let there be light in the firmament of the heaven to
+ divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs and for seasons,
+ and for days and years; and let them be for lights in the firmament of the
+ heaven to give light upon the earth; and it was so. And God made two great
+ lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule
+ the night; he made the stars also."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can we believe that the inspired writer had any idea of the size of the
+ sun? Draw a circle five inches in diameter, and by its side thrust a pin
+ through the paper. The hole made by the pin will sustain about the same
+ relation to the circle that the earth does to the sun. Did he know that
+ the sun was eight hundred and sixty thousand miles in diameter; that it
+ was enveloped in an ocean of fire thousands of miles in depth, hotter even
+ than the Christian's hell, over which sweep tempests of flame moving at
+ the rate of one hundred miles a second, compared with which the wildest
+ storm that ever wrecked the forests of this world was but a calm? Did he
+ know that the sun every moment of time throws out as much heat as could be
+ generated by the combustion of millions upon millions of tons of coal? Did
+ he know that the volume of the earth is less than one-millionth of that of
+ the sun? Did he know of the one hundred and four planets belonging to our
+ solar system, all children of the sun? Did he know of Jupiter eighty-five
+ thousand miles in diameter, hundreds of times as large as our earth,
+ turning on his axis at the rate of twenty-five thousand miles an hour
+ accompanied by four moons, making the tour of his orbit in fifty years, a
+ distance of three thousand million miles? Did he know anything about
+ Saturn, his rings and his eight moons? Did he have the faintest idea that
+ all these planets were once a part of the sun; that the vast luminary was
+ once thousands of millions of miles in diameter; that Neptune, Uranus,
+ Saturn, Jupiter and Mars were all born before our earth, and that by no
+ possibility could this world have existed three days, nor three periods,
+ nor three "good whiles" before its source, the sun?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moses supposed the sun to be about three or four feet in diameter and the
+ moon about half that size. Compared with the earth they were but simple
+ specks. This idea seems to have been shared by all the "inspired" men. We
+ find in the book of Joshua that the sun stood still, and the moon stayed
+ until the people had avenged themselves upon their enemies. "So the sun
+ stood still in the midst of heaven, and hasted not to go down about a
+ whole day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told that the sacred writer wrote in common speech as we do when we
+ talk about the rising and setting of the sun, and that all he intended to
+ say was that the earth ceased to turn on its axis "for about a whole day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My own opinion is that General Joshua knew no more about the motions of
+ the earth than he did about mercy and justice. If he had known that the
+ earth turned upon its axis at the rate of a thousand miles an hour, and
+ swept in its course about the sun at the rate of sixty-eight thousand
+ miles an hour, he would have doubled the hailstones, spoken of in the same
+ chapter, that the Lord cast down from heaven, and allowed the sun and moon
+ to rise and set in the usual way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible to conceive of a more absurd story than this about the
+ stopping of the sun and moon, and yet nothing so excites the malice of the
+ orthodox preacher as to call its truth in question. Some endeavor to
+ account for the phenomenon by natural causes, while others attempt to show
+ that God could, by the refraction of light have made the sun visible
+ although actually shining on the opposite side of the earth. The last
+ hypothesis has been seriously urged by ministers within the last few
+ months. The Rev. Henry M. Morey of South Bend, Indiana, says "that the
+ phenomenon was simply optical. The rotary motion of the earth was not
+ disturbed, but the light of the sun was prolonged by the same laws of
+ refraction and reflection by which the sun now appears to be above the
+ horizon when it is really below. The medium through which the sun's rays
+ passed may have been miraculously influenced so as to have caused the sun
+ to linger above the horizon long after its usual time for disappearance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the latest and ripest product of Christian scholarship upon this
+ question no doubt, but still it is not entirely satisfactory to me.
+ According to the sacred account the sun did not linger, merely, above the
+ horizon, but stood still "in the midst of heaven for about a whole day,"
+ that is to say, for about twelve hours. If the air was miraculously
+ changed, so that it would refract the rays of the sun while the earth
+ turned over as usual for "about a whole day," then, at the end of that
+ time the sun must have been visible in the east, that is, it must by that
+ time have been the next morning. According to this, that most wonderful
+ day must have been at least thirty-six hours in length. We have first, the
+ twelve hours of natural light, then twelve hours of "refracted and
+ reflected" light. By that time it would again be morning, and the sun
+ would shine for twelve hours more in the natural way, making thirty-six
+ hours in all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Rev. Morey would depend a little less on "refraction" and a little
+ more on "reflection," he would conclude that the whole story is simply a
+ barbaric myth and fable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It hardly seems reasonable that God, if there is one, would either stop
+ the globe, change the constitution of the atmosphere or the nature of
+ light simply to afford Joshua an opportunity to kill people on that day
+ when he could just as easily have waited until the next morning. It
+ certainly cannot be very gratifying to God for us to believe such childish
+ things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been demonstrated that force is eternal; that it is forever active,
+ and eludes destruction by change of form. Motion is a form of force, and
+ all arrested motion changes instantly to heat. The earth turns upon its
+ axis at about one thousand miles an hour. Let it be stopped and a force
+ beyond our imagination is changed to heat. It has been calculated that to
+ stop the world would produce as much heat as the burning of a solid piece
+ of coal three times the size of the earth. And yet we are asked to believe
+ that this was done in order that one barbarian might defeat another. Such
+ stories never would have been written, had not the belief been general
+ that the heavenly bodies were as nothing compared with the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The view of Moses was acquiesced in by the Jewish people and by the
+ Christian world for thousands of years. It is supposed that Moses lived
+ about fifteen hundred years before Christ, and although he was "inspired,"
+ and obtained his information directly from God, he did not know as much
+ about our solar system as the Chinese did a thousand years before he was
+ born. "The Emperor Chwenhio adopted as an epoch, a conjunction of the
+ planets Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, which has been shown by M.
+ Bailly to have occurred no less than 2449 years before Christ." The
+ ancient Chinese knew not only the motions of the planets, but they could
+ calculate eclipses. "In the reign of the Emperor Chow-Kang, the chief
+ astronomers, Ho and Hi were condemned to death for neglecting to announce
+ a solar eclipse which took place 2169 B. C., a clear proof that the
+ prediction of eclipses was a part of the duty of the imperial
+ astronomers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not strange that a Chinaman should find out by his own exertions
+ more about the material universe than Moses could when assisted by its
+ Creator?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About eight hundred years after God gave Moses the principal facts about
+ the creation of the "heaven and the earth" he performed another miracle
+ far more wonderful than stopping the world. On this occasion he not only
+ stopped the earth, but actually caused it to turn the other way. A Jewish
+ king was sick, and God, in order to convince him that he would ultimately
+ recover, offered to make the shadow on the dial go forward, or backward
+ ten degrees. The king thought it was too easy a thing to make the shadow
+ go forward, and asked that it be turned back. Thereupon, "Isaiah the
+ prophet cried unto the Lord, and he brought the shadow ten degrees
+ backward by which it had gone down in the dial of Ahaz." I hardly see how
+ this miracle could be accounted for even by "refraction" and "reflection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems, from the account, that this stupendous miracle was performed
+ after the king had been cured. The account of the shadow going backward is
+ given in the eleventh verse of the twentieth chapter of Second Kings,
+ while the cure is given in the seventh verse of the same chapter. "And
+ Isaiah said, Take a lump of figs. And they took and laid it on the boil,
+ and he recovered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stopping the world and causing it to turn back ten degrees after that,
+ seems to have been, as the boil was already cured by the figs, a useless
+ display of power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The easiest way to account for all these wonders is to say that the
+ "inspired" writers were mistaken. In this way a fearful burden is lifted
+ from the credulity of man, and he is left free to believe the evidences of
+ his own senses, and the demonstrations of science. In this way he can
+ emancipate himself from the slavery of superstition, the control of the
+ barbaric dead, and the despotism of the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only about a hundred years ago, Buffon, the naturalist, was compelled by
+ the faculty of theology at Paris to publicly renounce fourteen "errors" in
+ his work on Natural History because they were at variance with the Mosaic
+ account of creation. The Pentateuch is still the scientific standard of
+ the church, and ignorant priests, armed with that, pronounce sentence upon
+ the vast accomplishments of modern thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ X. "HE MADE THE STARS ALSO."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moses came very near forgetting about the stars, and only gave five words
+ to all the hosts of heaven. Can it be possible that he knew anything about
+ the stars beyond the mere fact that he saw them shining above him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did he know that the nearest star, the one we ought to be the best
+ acquainted with, is twenty-one billion of miles away, and that it is a sun
+ shining by its own light? Did he know of the next, that is thirty-seven
+ billion miles distant? Is it possible that he was acquainted with Sirius,
+ a sun two thousand six hundred and eighty-eight times larger than our own,
+ surrounded by a system of heavenly bodies, several of which are already
+ known, and distant from us eighty-two billion miles? Did he know that the
+ Polar star that tells the mariner his course and guided slaves to liberty
+ and joy, is distant from this little world two hundred and ninety-two
+ billion miles, and that Capella wheels and shines one hundred and
+ thirty-three billion miles beyond? Did he know that it would require about
+ seventy-two years for light to reach us from this star? Did he know that
+ light travels one hundred and eighty-five thousand miles a second? Did he
+ know that some stars are so far away in the infinite abysses that five
+ millions of years are required for their light to reach this globe?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this is true, and if as the Bible tells us, the stars were made after
+ the earth, then this world has been wheeling in its orbit for at least
+ five million years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be replied that it was not the intention of God to teach geology
+ and astronomy. Then why did he say anything upon these subjects? and if he
+ did say anything, why did he not give the facts?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the sacred records God created, on the first day, the heaven
+ and the earth, "moved upon the face of the waters," and made the light. On
+ the second day he made the firmament or the "expanse" and divided the
+ waters. On the third day he gathered the waters into seas, let the dry
+ land appear and caused the earth to bring forth grass, herbs and fruit
+ trees, and on the fourth day he made the sun, moon and stars and set them
+ in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the earth. This division of
+ labor is very striking. The work of the other days is as nothing when
+ compared with that of the fourth. Is it possible that it required the same
+ time and labor to make the grass, herbs and fruit trees, that it did to
+ fill with countless constellations the infinite expanse of space?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. FRIDAY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are then told that on the next day "God the moving creatures that hath
+ life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of
+ heaven. And God created great whales and every living creature which the
+ waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged fowl
+ after his kind, and God saw that it was good. And God blessed them,
+ saying, Be fruitful and multiply and fill the waters in the seas, and let
+ fowl multiply in the earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it true that while the dry land was covered with grass, and herbs, and
+ trees bearing fruit, the ocean was absolutely devoid of life, and so
+ remained for millions of years?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Moses meant twenty-four hours by the word day, then it would make but
+ little difference on which of the six days animals were made; but if the
+ word said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly day was used to express
+ millions of ages, during which life was slowly evolved from monad up to
+ man, then the account becomes infinitely absurd, puerile and foolish.
+ There is not a scientist of high standing who will say that in his
+ judgment the earth was covered with fruit-bearing trees before the moners,
+ the ancestors it may be of the human race, felt in Laurentian seas the
+ first faint throb of life. Nor is there one who will declare that there
+ was a single spire of grass before the sun had poured upon the world his
+ flood of gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should men in the name of religion try to harmonize the contradictions
+ that exist between Nature and a book? Why should philosophers be denounced
+ for placing more reliance upon what they know than upon what they have
+ been told? If there is a God, it is reasonably certain that he made the
+ world, but it is by no means certain that he is the author of the Bible.
+ Why then should we not place greater confidence in Nature than in a book?
+ And even if this God made not only the world but the book besides, it does
+ not follow that the book is the best part of creation, and the only part
+ that we will be eternally punished for denying. It seems to me that it is
+ quite as important to know something of the solar system, something of the
+ physical history of this globe, as it is to know the adventures of Jonah
+ or the diet of Ezekiel. For my part, I would infinitely prefer to know all
+ the results of scientific investigation, than to be inspired as Moses was.
+ Supposing the Bible to be true; why is it any worse or more wicked for
+ Freethinkers to deny it, than for priests to deny the doctrine of
+ evolution, or the dynamic theory of heat? Why should we be damned for
+ laughing at Samson and his foxes, while others, holding the Nebular
+ Hypothesis in utter contempt, go straight to heaven? It seems to me that a
+ belief in the great truths of science are fully as essential to salvation,
+ as the creed of any church. We are taught that a man may be perfectly
+ acceptable to God even if he denies the rotundity of the earth, the
+ Copernican system, the three laws of Kepler, the indestructibility of
+ matter and the attraction of gravitation. And we are also taught that a
+ man may be right upon all these questions, and yet, for failing to believe
+ in the "scheme of salvation," be eternally lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII. SATURDAY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this, the last day of creation, God said;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle and
+ creeping thing and beast of the earth after his kind; and it was so. And
+ God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after their
+ kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind; and God
+ saw that it was good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, is it true that the seas were filled with fish, the sky with fowls,
+ and the earth covered with grass, and herbs, and fruit bearing trees,
+ millions of ages before there was a creeping thing in existence? Must we
+ admit that plants and animals were the result of the fiat of some
+ incomprehensible intelligence independent of the operation of what are
+ known as natural causes? Why is a miracle any more necessary to account
+ for yesterday than for to-day or for to-morrow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there is an infinite Power, nothing can be more certain than that this
+ Power works in accordance with what we call law, that is, by and through
+ natural causes. If anything can be found without a pedigree of natural
+ antecedents, it will then be time enough to talk about the fiat of
+ creation. There must have been a time when plants and animals did not
+ exist upon this globe. The question, and the only question is, whether
+ they were naturally produced. If the account given by Moses is true, then
+ the vegetable and animal existences are the result of certain special
+ fiats of creation entirely independent of the operation of natural causes.
+ This is so grossly improbable, so at variance with the experience and
+ observation of mankind, that it cannot be adopted without abandoning
+ forever the basis of scientific thought and action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be urged that we do not understand the sacred record correctly. To
+ this it may be replied that for thousands of years the account of the
+ creation has, by the Jewish and Christian world, been regarded as
+ literally true. If it was inspired, of course God must have known just how
+ it would be understood, and consequently must have intended that it should
+ be understood just as he knew it would be. One man writing to another, may
+ mean one thing, and yet be understood as meaning something else. Now, if
+ the writer knew that he would be misunderstood, and also knew that he
+ could use other words that would convey his real meaning, but did not, we
+ would say that he used words on purpose to mislead, and was not an honest
+ man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If a being of infinite wisdom wrote the Bible, or caused it to be written,
+ he must have known exactly how his words would be interpreted by all the
+ world, and he must have intended to convey the very meaning that was
+ conveyed. He must have known that by reading that book, man would form
+ erroneous views as to the shape, antiquity, and size of this world; that
+ he would be misled as to the time and order of creation; that he would
+ have the most childish and contemptible views of the creator; that the
+ "sacred word" would be used to support slavery and polygamy; that it would
+ build dungeons for the good, and light fagots to consume the brave, and
+ therefore he must have intended that these results should follow. He also
+ must have known that thousands and millions of men and women never could
+ believe his Bible, and that the number of unbelievers would increase in
+ the exact ratio of civilization, and therefore, he must have intended that
+ result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us understand this. An honest finite being uses the best words, in his
+ judgment, to convey his meaning. This is the best he can do, because he
+ cannot certainly know the exact effect of his words on others. But an
+ infinite being must know not only the real meaning of the words, but the
+ exact meaning they will convey to every reader and hearer. He must know
+ every meaning that they are capable of conveying to every mind. He must
+ also know what explanations must be made to prevent misconception. If an
+ infinite being cannot, in making a revelation to man, use such words that
+ every person to whom a revelation is essential will understand distinctly
+ what that revelation is, then a revelation from God through the
+ instrumentality of language is impossible, or it is not essential that all
+ should understand it correctly. It may be urged that millions have not the
+ capacity to understand a revelation, although expressed in the plainest
+ words. To this it seems a sufficient reply to ask, why a being of infinite
+ power should create men so devoid of intelligence, that he cannot by any
+ means make known to them his will? We are told that it is exceedingly
+ plain, and that a wayfaring man, though a fool, need not err therein. This
+ statement is refuted by the religious history of the Christian world.
+ Every sect is a certificate that God has not plainly revealed his will to
+ man. To each reader the Bible conveys a different meaning. About the
+ meaning of this book, called a revelation, there have been ages of war,
+ and centuries of sword and flame. If written by an infinite God, he must
+ have known that these results must follow; and thus knowing, he must be
+ responsible for all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not infinitely more reasonable to say that this book is the work of
+ man, that it is filled with mingled truth and error, with mistakes and
+ facts, and reflects, too faithfully perhaps, the "very form and pressure
+ of its time"?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there are mistakes in the Bible, certainly they were made by man. If
+ there is anything contrary to nature, it was written by man. If there is
+ anything immoral, cruel, heartless or infamous, it certainly was never
+ written by a being worthy of the adoration of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIII. LET US MAKE MAN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are next informed by the author of the Pentateuch that God said "Let us
+ make man in our image, after our likeness," and that "God created man in
+ his own image, in the image of God created he him&mdash;male and female
+ created he them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this account means anything, it means that man was created in the
+ physical image and likeness of God. Moses while he speaks of man as having
+ been made in the image of God, never speaks of God except as having the
+ form of a man. He speaks of God as "walking in the garden in the cool of
+ the day;" and that Adam and Eve "heard his voice." He is constantly
+ telling what God said, and in a thousand passages he refers to him as not
+ only having the human form, but as performing actions, such as man
+ performs. The God of Moses was a God with hands, with feet, with the
+ organs of speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A God of passion, of hatred, of revenge, of affection, of repentance; a
+ God who made mistakes:&mdash;in other words, an immense and powerful man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will not do to say that Moses meant to convey the idea that God made
+ man in his mental or moral image. Some have insisted that man was made in
+ the moral image of God because he was made pure. Purity cannot be
+ manufactured. A moral character cannot be made for man by a god. Every man
+ must make his own moral character. Consequently, if God is infinitely
+ pure, Adam and Eve were not made in his image in that respect. Others say
+ that Adam and Eve were made in the mental image of God. If it is meant by
+ that, that they were created with reasoning powers like, but not to the
+ extent of those possessed by a god, then this may be admitted. But
+ certainly this idea was not in the mind of Moses. He regarded the human
+ form as being in the image of God, and for that reason always spoke of God
+ as having that form. No one can read the Pentateuch without coming to the
+ conclusion that the author supposed that man was created in the physical
+ likeness of Deity. God said "Go to, let us go down." "God smelled a sweet
+ savor;" "God repented him that he had made man;" "and God said;" and
+ "walked;" and "talked;" and "rested." All these expressions are
+ inconsistent with any other idea than that the person using them regarded
+ God as having the form of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a matter of fact, it is impossible for a man to conceive of a personal
+ God, other than as a being having the human form. No one can think of an
+ infinite being having the form of a horse, or of a bird, or of any animal
+ beneath man. It is one of the necessities of the mind to associate forms
+ with intellectual capacities. The highest form of which we have any
+ conception is man's, and consequently, his is the only form that we can
+ find in imagination to give to a personal God, because all other forms
+ are, in our minds, connected with lower intelligences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible to think of a personal God as a spirit without form. We
+ can use these words, but they do not convey to the mind any real and
+ tangible meaning. Every one who thinks of a personal God at all, thinks of
+ him as having the human form. Take from God the idea of form; speak of him
+ simply as an all pervading spirit&mdash;which means an all pervading
+ something about which we know nothing&mdash;and Pantheism is the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told that God made man; and the question naturally arises, how was
+ this done? Was it by a process of "evolution," "development;" the
+ "transmission of acquired habits;" the "survival of the fittest," or was
+ the necessary amount of clay kneaded to the proper consistency, and then
+ by the hands of God moulded into form? Modern science tells that man has
+ been evolved, through countless epochs, from the lower forms; that he is
+ the result of almost an infinite number of actions, reactions,
+ experiences, states, forms, wants and adaptations. Did Moses intend to
+ convey such a meaning, or did he believe that God took a sufficient amount
+ of dust, made it the proper shape, and breathed into it the breath of
+ life? Can any believer in the Bible give any reasonable account of this
+ process of creation? Is it possible to imagine what was really done? Is
+ there any theologian who will contend that man was created directly from
+ the earth? Will he say that man was made substantially as he now is, with
+ all his muscles properly developed for walking and speaking, and
+ performing every variety of human action? That all his bones were formed
+ as they now are, and all the relations of nerve, ligament, brain and
+ motion as they are to-day?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Looking back over the history of animal life from the lowest to the
+ highest forms, we find that there has been a slow and gradual development;
+ a certain but constant relation between want and production; between use
+ and form. The Moner is said to be the simplest form of animal life that
+ has yet been found. It has been described as "an organism without organs."
+ It is a kind of structureless structure; a little mass of transparent
+ jelly that can flatten itself out, and can expand and contract around its
+ food. It can feed without a mouth, digest without a stomach, walk without
+ feet, and reproduce itself by simple division. By taking this Moner as the
+ commencement of animal life, or rather as the first animal, it is easy to
+ follow the development of the organic structure through all the forms of
+ life to man himself. In this way finally every muscle, bone and joint,
+ every organ, form and function may be accounted for. In this way, and in
+ this way only, can the existence of rudimentary organs be explained. Blot
+ from the human mind the ideas of evolution, heredity, adaptation, and "the
+ survival of the fittest," with which it has been enriched by Lamarck,
+ Goethe, Darwin, Haeckel and Spencer, and all the facts in the history of
+ animal life become utterly disconnected and meaningless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall we throw away all that has been discovered with regard to organic
+ life, and in its place take the statements of one who lived in the rude
+ morning of a barbaric day? Will anybody now contend that man was a direct
+ and independent creation, and sustains and bears no relation to the
+ animals below him? Belief upon this subject must be governed at last by
+ evidence. Man cannot believe as he pleases. He can control his speech, and
+ can say that he believes or disbelieves; but after all, his will cannot
+ depress or raise the scales with which his reason finds the worth and
+ weight of facts. If this is not so, investigation, evidence, judgment and
+ reason are but empty words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I ask again, how were Adam and Eve created? In one account they are
+ created male and female, and apparently at the same time. In the next
+ account, Adam is made first, and Eve a long time afterwards, and from a
+ part of the man. Did God simply by his creative fiat cause a rib slowly to
+ expand, grow and divide into nerve, ligament, cartilage and flesh? How was
+ the woman created from a rib? How was man created simply from dust? For my
+ part, I cannot believe this statement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I may suffer for this in the world to come; and may, millions of years
+ hence, sincerely wish that I had never investigated the subject, but had
+ been content to take the ideas of the dead. I do not believe that any
+ deity works in that way. So far as my experience goes, there is an
+ unbroken procession of cause and effect. Each thing is a necessary link in
+ an infinite chain; and I cannot conceive of this chain being broken even
+ for one instant. Back of the simplest moner there is a cause, and back of
+ that another, and so on, it seems to me, forever. In my philosophy I
+ postulate neither beginning nor ending.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Mosaic account is true, we know how long man has been upon this
+ earth. If that account can be relied on, the first man was made about five
+ thousand eight hundred and eighty-three years ago. Sixteen hundred and
+ fifty-six years after the making of the first man, the inhabitants of the
+ world, with the exception of eight people, were destroyed by a flood. This
+ flood occurred only about four thousand two hundred and twenty-seven years
+ ago. If this account is correct, at that time, only one kind of men
+ existed. Noah and his family were certainly of the same blood. It
+ therefore follows that all the differences we see between the various
+ races of men have been caused in about four thousand years. If the account
+ of the deluge is true, then since that event all the ancient kingdoms of
+ the earth were founded, and their inhabitants passed through all the
+ stages of savage, nomadic, barbaric and semi-civilized life; through the
+ epochs of Stone, Bronze and Iron; established commerce, cultivated the
+ arts, built cities, filled them with palaces and temples, invented
+ writing, produced a literature and slowly fell to shapeless ruin. We must
+ believe that all this has happened within a period of four thousand years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From representations found upon Egyptian granite made more than three
+ thousand years ago, we know that the negro was as black, his lips as full,
+ and his hair as closely curled then as now. If we know anything, we know
+ that there was at that time substantially the same difference between the
+ Egyptian and the Negro as now. If we know anything, we know that
+ magnificent statues were made in Egypt four thousand years before our era&mdash;that
+ is to say, about six thousand years ago. There was at the World's
+ Exposition, in the Egyptian department, a statue of king Cephren, known to
+ have been chiseled more than six thousand years ago. In other words, if
+ the Mosaic account must be believed, this statue was made before the
+ world. We also know, if we know anything, that men lived in v Europe with
+ the hairy mammoth, the cave bear, the rhinoceros, and the hyena. Among the
+ bones of these animals have been found the stone hatchets and flint arrows
+ of our ancestors. In the caves where they lived have been discovered the
+ remains of these animals that had been conquered, killed and devoured as
+ food, hundreds of thousands of years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If these facts are true, Moses was mistaken. For my part, I have
+ infinitely more confidence in the discoveries of to-day, than in the
+ records of a barbarous people. It will not now do to say that man has
+ existed upon this earth for only about six thousand years. One can hardly
+ compute in his imagination the time necessary for man to emerge from the
+ barbarous state, naked and helpless, surrounded by animals far more
+ powerful than he, to progress and finally create the civilizations of
+ India, Egypt and Athens. The distance from savagery to Shakespeare must be
+ measured not by hundreds, but by millions of years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIV. SUNDAY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And on the seventh day God ended his work which he had made, and he
+ rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had made. And God
+ blessed the seventh day and sanctified it; because that in it he had
+ rested from all his work which God created and made."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great work had been accomplished, the world, the sun, and moon, and
+ all the hosts of heaven were finished; the earth was clothed in green, the
+ seas were filled with life, the cattle wandered by the brooks&mdash;insects
+ with painted wings were in the happy air, Adam and Eve were making each
+ others acquaintance, and God was resting from his work. He was
+ contemplating the accomplishments of a week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Because he rested on that day he sanctified it, and for that reason and
+ for that alone, it was by the Jews considered a holy day. If he only
+ rested on that day, there ought to be some account of what he did the
+ following Monday. Did he rest on that day? What did he do after he got
+ rested? Has he done anything in the way of creation since Saturday evening
+ of the first week?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is now claimed by the "scientific" Christians that the "days" of
+ creation were not ordinary days of twenty-four hours each, but immensely
+ long periods of time. If they are right, then how long was the seventh
+ day? Was that, too, a geologic period covering thousands of ages? That
+ cannot be, because Adam and Eve were created the Saturday evening before,
+ and according to the Bible that was about five thousand eight hundred and
+ eighty-three years ago. I cannot state the time exactly, because there
+ have been as many as one hundred and forty different opinions given by
+ learned Biblical students as to the time between the creation of the world
+ and the birth of Christ. We are quite certain, however, that, according to
+ the Bible, it is not more than six thousand years since the creation of
+ Adam. From this it would appear that the seventh day was not a geologic
+ epoch, but was in fact a period of less than six thousand years, and
+ probably of only twenty-four hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The theologians who "answer" these things may take their choice. If they
+ take the ground that the "days" were periods of twenty-four hours, then
+ geology will force them to throw away the whole account. If, on the other
+ hand, they admit that the days were vast "periods," then the sacredness of
+ the Sabbath must be given up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is found in the Bible no intimation that there was the least
+ difference in the days. They are all spoken of in the same way. It may be
+ replied that our translation is incorrect. If this is so, then only those
+ who understand Hebrew, have had a revelation from God, and all the rest
+ have been deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How is it possible to sanctify a space of time? Is rest holier than labor?
+ If there is any difference between days, ought not that to be considered
+ best in which the most useful labor has been performed?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the superstitions of mankind, this insanity about the "sacred
+ Sabbath" is the most absurd. The idea of feeling it a duty to be solemn
+ and sad one-seventh of the time! To think that we can please an infinite
+ being by staying in some dark and sombre room, instead of walking in the
+ perfumed fields! Why should God hate to see a man happy? Why should it
+ excite his wrath to see a family in the woods, by some babbling stream,
+ talking, laughing and loving? Nature works on that "sacred" day. The earth
+ turns, the rivers run, the trees grow, buds burst into flower, and birds
+ fill the air with song. Why should we look sad, and think about death, and
+ hear about hell? Why should that day be filled with gloom instead of joy?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A poor mechanic, working all the week in dust and noise, needs a day of
+ rest and joy, a day to visit stream and wood&mdash;a day to live with wife
+ and child; a day in which to laugh at care, and gather hope and strength
+ for toils to come. And his weary wife needs a breath of sunny air, away
+ from street and wall, amid the hills or by the margin of the sea, where
+ she can sit and prattle with her babe, and fill with happy dreams the
+ long, glad day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "Sabbath" was born of asceticism, hatred of human joy, fanaticism,
+ ignorance, egotism of priests and the cowardice of the people. This day,
+ for thousands of years, has been dedicated to superstition, to the
+ dissemination of mistakes, and the establishment of falsehoods. Every
+ Freethinker, as a matter of duty, should violate this day. He should
+ assert his independence, and do all within his power to wrest the Sabbath
+ from the gloomy church and give it back to liberty and joy. Freethinkers
+ should make the Sabbath a day of mirth and music; a day to spend with wife
+ and child&mdash;a day of games, and books, and dreams&mdash;a day to put
+ fresh flowers above our sleeping dead&mdash;a day of memory and hope, of
+ love and rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should we in this age of the world be dominated by the dead? Why
+ should barbarian Jews who went down to death and dust three thousand years
+ ago, control the living world? Why should we care for the superstition of
+ men who began the Sabbath by paring their nails, "beginning at the fourth
+ finger, then going to the second, then to the fifth, then to the third,
+ and ending with the thumb?" How pleasing to God this must have been. The
+ Jews were very careful of these nail parings. They who threw them upon the
+ ground were wicked, because Satan used them to work evil upon the earth.
+ They believed that upon the Sabbath, souls were allowed to leave purgatory
+ and cool their burning souls in water. Fires were neither allowed to be
+ kindled nor extinguished, and upon that day it was a sin to bind up
+ wounds. "The lame might use a staff, but the blind could not." So strict
+ was the Sabbath kept, that at one time "if a Jew on a journey was
+ overtaken by the 'sacred day' in a wood, or on the highway, no matter
+ where, nor under what circumstances, he must sit down," and there remain
+ until the day was gone. "If he fell down in the dirt, there he was
+ compelled to stay until the day was done." For violating the Sabbath, the
+ punishment was death, for nothing short of the offender's blood could
+ satisfy the wrath of God. There are, in the Old Testament, two reasons
+ given for abstaining from labor on the Sabbath:&mdash;the resting of God,
+ and the redemption of the Jews from the bondage of Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the establishment of the Christian religion, the day has been
+ changed, and Christians do not regard the day as holy upon which God
+ actually rested, and which he sanctified. The Christian Sabbath, or the
+ "Lord's day" was legally established by the murderer Constantine, because
+ upon that day Christ was supposed to have risen from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not easy to see where Christians got the right to disregard the
+ direct command of God, to labor on the day he sanctified, and keep as
+ sacred, a day upon which he commanded men to labor. The Sabbath of God is
+ Saturday, and if any day is to be kept holy, that is the one, and not the
+ Sunday of the Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us throw away these superstitions and take the higher, nobler ground,
+ that every day should be rendered sacred by some loving act, by increasing
+ the happinesss of man, giving birth to noble thoughts, putting in the path
+ of toil some flower of joy, helping the unfortunate, lifting the fallen,
+ dispelling gloom, destroying prejudice, defending the helpless and filling
+ homes with light and love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XV. THE NECESSITY FOR A GOOD MEMORY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must not be forgotten that there are two accounts of the creation in
+ Genesis. The first account stops with the third verse of the second
+ chapter. The chapters have been improperly divided. In the original Hebrew
+ the Pentateuch was neither divided into chapters nor verses. There was not
+ even any system of punctuation. It was written wholly with consonants,
+ without vowels, and without any marks, dots, or lines to indicate them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These accounts are materially different, and both cannot be true. Let us
+ see wherein they differ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second account of the creation begins with the fourth verse of the
+ second chapter, and is as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were
+ created, in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And every plant of the field before it was in the earth, and every herb
+ of the field before it grew; for the Lord God had not caused it to rain
+ upon the earth, and there was not a man to till the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But there went up a mist from the earth and watered the whole face of the
+ ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into
+ his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden; and there he put the
+ man whom he had formed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And out of the ground made the Lord God to grow every tree that is
+ pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the
+ midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And a river went out of Eden to water the garden; and from thence it was
+ parted and became into four heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The name of the first is Pison; that is it which compasseth the whole
+ land of Havilah, where there is gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the gold of that land is good: there is bdellium and the onyx stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the name of the second river is Gihon: the same is it that compasseth
+ the whole land of Ethiopia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the name of the third river is Hiddekel; that is it which goeth
+ toward the east of Assyria. And the fourth river is Euphrates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Lord God took the man, and put him into the Garden of Eden to
+ dress it and to keep it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden
+ thou mayest freely eat; But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil,
+ thou shalt not eat of it; for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou
+ shalt surely die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I
+ will make him an helpmeet for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and
+ every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would
+ call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the
+ name thereof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to
+ every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found a helpmeet for
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept; and
+ he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman and
+ brought her unto the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh; she
+ shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave
+ unto his wife; and they shall be one flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Order of creation in the first account:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The heaven and the earth, and light were made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The firmament was constructed and the waters divided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The waters gathered into seas&mdash;and then came dry land, grass,
+ herbs and fruit trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. The sun and moon. He made the stars also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Fishes, fowls, and great whales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Beasts, cattle, every creeping thing, man and woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Order of creation in the second account:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The heavens and the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. A mist went up from the earth, and watered the whole face of the
+ ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Created a man out of dust, by the name of Adam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Planted a garden eastward in Eden, and put the man in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Created the beasts and fowls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. Created a woman out of one of the man's ribs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the second account, man was made <i>before</i> the beasts and fowls. If
+ this is true, the first account is false. And if the theologians of our
+ time are correct in their view that the Mosaic day means thousands of
+ ages, then, according to the second account, Adam existed millions of
+ years before Eve was formed. He must have lived one Mosaic day before
+ there were any trees, and another Mosaic day before the beasts and fowls
+ were created. Will some kind clergymen tell us upon what kind of food Adam
+ subsisted during these immense periods?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the second account a man is made, and the fact that he was without a
+ helpmeet did not occur to the Lord God until a couple "of vast periods"
+ afterwards. The Lord God suddenly coming to an appreciation of the
+ situation said, "It is not good that the man should be alone. I will make
+ him an helpmeet for him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, after concluding to make "an helpmeet" for Adam, what did the Lord
+ God do? Did he at once proceed to make a woman? No. What did he do? He
+ made the beasts, and tried to induce Adam to take one of them for "an
+ helpmeet." If I am incorrect, read the following account, and tell me what
+ it means:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I
+ will make him an helpmeet for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and
+ every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would
+ call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the
+ name thereof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to
+ every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an helpmeet for
+ him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unless the Lord God was looking for an helpmeet for Adam, why did he cause
+ the animals to pass before him? And why did he, after the menagerie had
+ passed by, pathetically exclaim, "But for Adam there was not found an
+ helpmeet for him"?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems that Adam saw nothing that struck his fancy. The fairest ape, the
+ sprightliest chimpanzee, the loveliest baboon, the most bewitching
+ orangoutang, the most fascinating gorilla failed to touch with love's
+ sweet pain, poor Adam's lonely heart. Let us rejoice that this was so. Had
+ he fallen in love then, there never would have been a Freethinker in this
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Adam Clarke, speaking of this remarkable proceeding says:&mdash;"God
+ caused the animals to pass before Adam to show him that no creature yet
+ formed could make him a suitable companion; that Adam was convinced that
+ none of these animals could be a suitable companion for him, and that
+ therefore he must continue in a state that was not good (celibacy) unless
+ he became a further debtor to the bounty of his maker, for among all the
+ animals which he had formed, there was not a helpmeet for Adam."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this same subject, Dr. Scott informs us "that it was not conducive to
+ the happiness of the man to remain without the consoling society, and
+ endearment of tender friendship, nor consistent with the end of his
+ creation to be without marriage by which the earth might be replenished
+ and worshipers and servants raised up to render him praise and glory. Adam
+ seems to have been vastly better acquainted by intuition or revelation
+ with the distinct properties of every creature than the most sagacious
+ observer since the fall of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon this review of the animals, not one was found in outward form his
+ counterpart, nor one suited to engage his affections, participate in his
+ enjoyments, or associate with him in the worship of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Matthew Henry admits that "God brought all the animals together to see
+ if there was a suitable match for Adam in any of the numerous families of
+ the inferior creatures, but there was none. They were all looked over, but
+ Adam could not be matched among them all. Therefore God created a new
+ thing to be a helpmeet for him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Failing to satisfy Adam with any of the inferior animals, the Lord God
+ caused a deep sleep to fall upon him, and while in this sleep took out one
+ of Adam's ribs and "closed up the flesh instead thereof." And out of this
+ rib, the Lord God made a woman, and brought her to the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was the Lord God compelled to take a part of the man because he had used
+ up all the original "nothing" out of which the universe was made? Is it
+ possible for any sane and intelligent man to believe this story? Must a
+ man be born a second time before this account seems reasonable?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imagine the Lord God with a bone in his hand with which to start a woman,
+ trying to make up his mind whether to make a blonde or a brunette!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at this point it may be proper for me to warn all persons from
+ laughing at or making light of, any stories found in the "Holy Bible."
+ When you come to die, every laugh will be a thorn in your pillow. At that
+ solemn moment, as you look back upon the records of your life, no matter
+ how many men you may have wrecked and ruined; no matter how many women you
+ have deceived and deserted, all that can be forgiven; but if you remember
+ then that you have laughed at even one story in God's "sacred book" you
+ will see through the gathering shadows of death the forked tongues of
+ devils, and the leering eyes of fiends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These stories must be believed, or the work of regeneration can never be
+ commenced. No matter how well you act your part, live as honestly as you
+ may, clothe the naked, feed the hungry, divide your last farthing with the
+ poor, and you are simply traveling the broad road that leads inevitably to
+ eternal death, unless at the same time you implicitly believe the Bible to
+ be the inspired word of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me show you the result of unbelief. Let us suppose, for a moment, that
+ we are at the Day of Judgment, listening to the trial of souls as they
+ arrive. The Recording Secretary, or whoever does the cross-examining, says
+ to a soul:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where are you from?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am from the Earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What kind of a man were you?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, I don't like to talk about myself. I suppose you can tell by looking
+ at your books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, sir. You must tell what kind of a man you were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, I was what you might call a first-rate fellow. I loved my wife and
+ children. My home was my heaven. My fireside was a paradise to me. To sit
+ there and see the lights and shadows fall upon the faces of those I loved,
+ was to me a perfect joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How did you treat your family?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I never said an unkind word. I never caused my wife, nor one of my
+ children, a moments pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you pay your debts?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not owe a dollar when I died, and left enough to pay my funeral
+ expenses, and to keep the fierce wolf of want from the door of those I
+ loved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you belong to any church?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, sir. They were too narrow, pinched and bigoted for me, I never thought
+ that I could be very happy if other folks were damned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you believe in eternal punishment?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, no. I always thought that God could get his revenge in far less
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you believe the rib story?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you mean the Adam and Eve business?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes! Did you believe that?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To tell you the God's truth, that was just a little more than I could
+ swallow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away with him to hell!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where are you from?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am from the world too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you belong to any church?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, sir, and to the Young Men's Christian Association besides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was your business?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cashier in a Savings Bank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you ever run away with any money?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where I came from, a witness could not be compelled to criminate himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The law is different here. Answer the question. Did you run away with any
+ money?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, sir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How much?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One hundred thousand dollars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you take anything else with you?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, sir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, what else?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took my neighbor's wife&mdash;we sang together in the choir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you have a wife and children of your own? Yes, sir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And you deserted them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, sir, but such was my confidence in God that I believed he would take
+ care of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Have you heard of them since?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, sir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did you believe in the rib story?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bless your soul, of course I did. A thousand times I regretted that there
+ were no harder stories in the Bible, so that I could have shown my wealth
+ of faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you believe the rib story yet?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, with all my heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Give him a harp!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, as I was saying, God made a woman from Adam's rib. Of course, I do
+ not know exactly how this was done, but when he got the woman finished, he
+ presented her to Adam. He liked her, and they commenced house-keeping in
+ the celebrated Garden of Eden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Must we, in order to be good, gentle and loving in our lives, believe that
+ the creation of woman was a second thought? That Jehovah really endeavored
+ to induce Adam to take one of the lower animals as an helpmeet for him?
+ After all, is it not possible to live honest and courageous lives without
+ believing these fables? It is said that from Mount Sinai God gave, amid
+ thunderings and lightnings, ten commandments for the guidance of mankind;
+ and yet among them is not found&mdash;"Thou shalt believe the Bible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVI. THE GARDEN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first account we are told that God made man, male and female, and
+ said to them "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth and
+ subdue it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the second account only the man is made, and he is put in a garden "to
+ dress it and to keep it." He is not told to subdue the earth, but to dress
+ and keep a garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first account man is given every herb bearing seed upon the face of
+ the earth and the fruit of every tree for food, and in the second, he is
+ given only the fruit of all the trees in the garden with the exception "of
+ the tree of the knowledge of good and evil" which was a deadly poison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was issuing from this garden a river that was parted into four
+ heads. The first of these, Pison, compassed the whole land of Havilah, the
+ second, Gihon, that compassed the whole land of Ethiopia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The third, Heddekel, that flowed toward the east of Assyria, and the
+ fourth, the Euphrates. Where are these four rivers now? The brave prow of
+ discovery has visited every sea; the traveler has pressed with weary feet
+ the soil of every clime; and yet there has been found no place from which
+ four rivers sprang. The Euphrates still journeys to the gulf, but where
+ are Pison, Gihon and the mighty Heddekel? Surely by going to the source of
+ the Euphrates we ought to find either these three rivers or their ancient
+ beds. Will some minister when he answers the "Mistakes of Moses" tell us
+ where these rivers are or were? The maps of the world are incomplete
+ without these mighty streams. We have discovered the sources of the Nile;
+ the North Pole will soon be touched by an American; but these three rivers
+ still rise in unknown hills, still flow through unknown lands, and empty
+ still in unknown seas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The account of these four rivers is what the Rev. David Swing would call
+ "a geographical poem." The orthodox clergy cover the whole affair with the
+ blanket of allegory, while the "scientific" Christian folks talk about
+ cataclysms, upheavals, earthquakes, and vast displacements of the earth's
+ crust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question, then arises, whether within the last six thousand years
+ there have been such upheavals and displacements? Talk as you will about
+ the vast "creative periods" that preceded the appearance of man; it is,
+ according to the Bible, only about six thousand years since man was
+ created. Moses gives us the generations of men from Adam until his day,
+ and this account cannot be explained away by calling centuries, days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the second account of creation, these four rivers were made
+ after the creation of man, and consequently they must have been
+ obliterated by convulsions of Nature within six thousand years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can we not account for these contradictions, absurdities, and falsehoods
+ by simply saying that although the writer may have done his level best, he
+ failed because he was limited in knowledge, led away by tradition, and
+ depended too implicitly upon the correctness of his imagination? Is not
+ such a course far more reasonable than to insist that all these things are
+ true and must stand though every science shall fall to mental dust?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can any reason be given for not allowing man to eat of the fruit of the
+ tree of knowledge? What kind of tree was that? If it is all an allegory,
+ what truth is sought to be conveyed? Why should God object to that fruit
+ being eaten by man? Why did he put it in the midst of the garden? There
+ was certainly plenty of room outside. If he wished to keep man and this
+ tree apart, why did he put them together? And why, after he had eaten, was
+ he thrust out? The only answer that we have a right to give, is the one
+ given in the Bible. "And the Lord God said, Behold the man has become as
+ one of us to know good and evil; and now, lest he put forth his hand and
+ take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever: Therefore the
+ Lord God sent him forth from the Garden of Eden, to till the ground from
+ whence he was taken."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will some minister, some graduate of Andover, tell us what this means? Are
+ we bound to believe it without knowing what the meaning is? If it is a
+ revelation, what does it reveal? Did God object to education then, and
+ does that account for the hostile attitude still assumed by theologians
+ toward all scientific truth? Was there in the garden a tree of life, the
+ eating of which would have rendered Adam and Eve immortal? Is it true,
+ that after the Lord God drove them from the garden that he placed upon its
+ Eastern side "Cherubim and a flaming sword which turned every way to keep
+ the way of the tree of life?" Are the Cherubim and the flaming sword
+ guarding that tree still, or was it destroyed, or did its rotting trunk,
+ as the Rev. Robert Collyer suggests, "nourish a bank of violets"?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What objection could God have had to the immortality of man? You see that
+ after all, this sacred record, instead of assuring us of immortality,
+ shows us only how we lost it. In this there is assuredly but little
+ consolation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to this story we have lost one Eden, but nowhere in the Mosaic
+ books are we told how we may gain another. I know that the Christians tell
+ us there is another, in which all true believers will finally be gathered,
+ and enjoy the unspeakable happiness of seeing the unbelievers in hell; but
+ they do not tell us where it is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some commentators say that the Garden of Eden was in the third heaven&mdash;some
+ in the fourth, others have located it in the moon, some in the air beyond
+ the attraction of the earth, some on the earth, some under the earth, some
+ inside the earth, some at the North Pole, others at the South, some in
+ Tartary, some in China, some on the borders of the Ganges, some in the
+ island of Ceylon, some in Armenia, some in Africa, some under the Equator,
+ others in Mesopotamia, in Syria, Persia, Arabia, Babylon, Assyria,
+ Palestine and Europe. Others have contended that it was invisible, that it
+ was an allegory, and must be spiritually understood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whether you understand these things or not, you must believe them. You
+ may be laughed at in this world for insisting that God put Adam into a
+ deep sleep and made a woman out of one of his ribs, but you will be
+ crowned and glorified in the next. You will also have the pleasure of
+ hearing the gentlemen howl there, who laughed at you here. While you will
+ not be permitted to take any revenge, you will be allowed to smilingly
+ express your entire acquiescence in the will of God. But where is the new
+ Eden? No one knows. The one was lost, and the other has not been found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it true that man was once perfectly pure and innocent, and that he
+ became degenerate by disobedience? No. The real truth is, and the history
+ of man shows, that he has advanced. Events, like the pendulum of a clock
+ have swung forward and back ward, but after all, man, like the hands, has
+ gone steadily on. Man is growing grander. He is not degenerating. Nations
+ and individuals fail and die, and make room for higher forms. The
+ intellectual horizon of the world widens as the centuries pass. Ideals
+ grow grander and purer; the difference between justice and mercy becomes
+ less and less; liberty enlarges, and love intensifies as the years sweep
+ on. The ages of force and fear, of cruelty and wrong, are behind us and
+ the real Eden is beyond. It is said that a desire for knowledge lost us
+ the Eden of the past; but whether that is true or not, it will certainly
+ give us the Eden of the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVII. THE FALL.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told that the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field,
+ that he had a conversation with Eve, in which he gave his opinion about
+ the effect of eating certain fruit; that he assured her it was good to
+ eat, that it was pleasant to the eye, that it would make her wise; that
+ she was induced to take some; that she persuaded her husband to try it;
+ that God found it out, that he then cursed the snake; condemning it to
+ crawl and eat the dust; that he multiplied the sorrows of Eve, cursed the
+ ground for Adam's sake, started thistles and thorns, condemned man to eat
+ the herb of the field in the sweat of his face, pronounced the curse of
+ death, "Dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou return," made coats of
+ skins for Adam and Eve, and drove them out of Eden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who, and what was this serpent? Dr. Adam Clarke says:&mdash;"The serpent
+ must have walked erect, for this is necessarily implied in his punishment.
+ That he was endued with the gift of speech, also with reason. That these
+ things were given to this creature. The woman no doubt having often seen
+ him walking erect, and talking and reasoning, therefore she testifies no
+ sort of surprise when he accosts her in the language related in the text.
+ It therefore appears to me that a creature of the ape or orangoutang kind
+ is here intended, and that Satan made use of this creature as the most
+ proper instrument for the accomplishment of his murderous purposes against
+ the life of the soul of man. Under this creature he lay hid, and by this
+ creature he seduced our first parents. Such a creature answers to every
+ part of the description in the text. It is evident from the structure of
+ its limbs and its muscles that it might have been originally designed to
+ walk erect, and that nothing else than the sovereign controlling power
+ could induce it to put down hands&mdash;in every respect formed like those
+ of man&mdash;and walk like those creatures whose claw-armed parts prove
+ them to have been designed to walk on all fours. The stealthy cunning, and
+ endless variety of the pranks and tricks of these creatures show them even
+ now to be wiser and more intelligent than any other creature, man alone
+ excepted. Being obliged to walk on all fours and gather their food from
+ the ground, they are literally obliged to eat the dust; and though
+ exceeding cunning, and careful in a variety of instances to separate that
+ part which is wholesome and proper for food from that which is not so, in
+ the article of cleanliness they are lost to all sense of propriety. Add to
+ this their utter aversion to walk upright; it requires the utmost
+ discipline to bring them to it, and scarcely anything offends or irritates
+ them more than to be obliged to do it. Long observation of these animals
+ enables me to state these facts. For earnest, attentive watching, and for
+ chattering and babbling they (the ape) have no fellows in the animal
+ world. Indeed, the ability and propensity to chatter, is all they have
+ left of their original gift of speech, of which they appear to have been
+ deprived at the fall as a part of their punishment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here then is the "connecting link" between man and the lower creation. The
+ serpent was simply an orang-outang that spoke Hebrew with the greatest
+ ease, and had the outward appearance of a perfect gentleman, seductive in
+ manner, plausible, polite, and most admirably calculated to deceive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It never did seem reasonable' to me that a long, cold and disgusting snake
+ with an apple in his mouth, could deceive anybody; and I am glad, even at
+ this late date to know that the something that persuaded Eve to taste the
+ forbidden fruit was, at least, in the shape of a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Henry does not agree with the zoological explanation of Mr. Clark, but
+ insists that "it is certain that the devil that beguiled Eve is the old
+ serpent, a malignant by creation, an angel of light, an immediate
+ attendant upon God's throne, but by sin an apostate from his first state,
+ and a rebel against God's crown and dignity. He who attacked our first
+ parents was surely the prince of devils, the ring leader in rebellion. The
+ devil chose to act his part in a serpent, because it is a specious
+ creature, has a spotted, dappled skin, and then, went erect. Perhaps it
+ was a flying serpent which seemed to come from on high, as a messenger
+ from the upper world, one of the seraphim; because the serpent is a
+ subtile creature. What Eve thought of this serpent speaking to her, we are
+ not likely to tell, and, I believe, she herself did not know what to think
+ of it. At first, perhaps, she supposed it might be a good angel, and yet
+ afterwards might suspect something amiss. The person tempted was a woman,
+ now alone, and at a distance from her husband, but near the forbidden
+ tree. It was the devil's subtlety to assault the weaker vessel with his
+ temptations, as we may suppose her inferior to Adam in knowledge, strength
+ and presence of mind. Some think that Eve received the command not
+ immediately from God, but at second hand from her husband, and might,
+ therefore, be the more easily persuaded to discredit it. It was the policy
+ of the devil to enter into discussion with her when she was alone. He took
+ advantage by finding her near the forbidden tree. God permitted Satan to
+ prevail over Eve, for wise and holy ends. Satan teaches men first to
+ doubt, and then to deny. He makes skeptics first, and by degrees makes
+ them atheists."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are compelled to admit that nothing could be more attractive to a woman
+ than a snake walking erect, with a "spotted, dappled skin," unless it were
+ a serpent with wings. Is it not humiliating to know that our ancestors
+ believed these things? Why should we object to the Darwinian doctrine of
+ descent after this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our fathers thought it their duty to believe, thought it a sin to
+ entertain the slightest doubt, and really supposed that their credulity
+ was exceedingly, gratifying to God. To them, the story was entirely real.
+ They could see the garden, hear the babble of waters, smell the perfume of
+ flowers. They believed there was a tree where knowledge grew like plums or
+ pears; and they could plainly see the serpent coiled amid its rustling
+ leaves, coaxing Eve to violate the laws of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where did the serpent come from? On which of the six days was he created?
+ Who made him? Is it possible that God would make a successful rival? He
+ must have known that Adam and Eve would fall. He knew what a snake with a
+ "spotted, dappled skin" could do with an inexperienced woman. Why did he
+ not defend his children? He knew that if the serpent got into the garden,
+ Adam and Eve would sin, that he would have to drive them out, that
+ afterwards the world would be destroyed, and that he himself would die
+ upon the cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, I ask what and who was this serpent? He was not a man, for only one
+ man had been made. He was not a woman. He was not a beast of the field,
+ because "he was more subtile than any beast of the field which the Lord
+ God had made." He was neither fish nor fowl, nor snake, because he had the
+ power of speech, and did not crawl upon his belly until after he was
+ cursed. Where did this serpent come from? Why was he not kept out of the
+ garden? Why did not the Lord God take him by the tail and snap his head
+ off? Why did he not put Adam and Eve on their guard about this serpent?
+ They, of course, were not acquainted in the neighborhood, and knew nothing
+ about the serpent's reputation for truth and veracity among his neighbors.
+ Probably Adam saw him when he was looking for "an helpmeet" and gave him a
+ name, but Eve had never met him before. She was not surprised to hear a
+ serpent talk, as that was the first one she had ever met. Every thing
+ being new to her, and her husband not being with her just at that moment,
+ it need hardly excite our wonder that she tasted the fruit by way of
+ experiment. Neither should we be surprised that when she saw it was good
+ and pleasant to the eye, and a fruit to be desired to make one wise, she
+ had the generosity to divide with her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Theologians have filled thousands of volumes with abuse of this serpent,
+ but it seems that he told the exact truth. We are told that this serpent
+ was, in fact, Satan, the greatest enemy of mankind, and that he entered
+ the serpent, appearing to our first parents in its body. If this is so,
+ why should the serpent have been cursed? Why should God curse the serpent
+ for what had really been done by the devil? Did Satan remain in the body
+ of the serpent, and in some mysterious manner share his punishment? Is it
+ true that when we kill a snake we also destroy an evil spirit, or is there
+ but one devil, and did he perish at the death of the first serpent? Is it
+ on account of that transaction in the Garden of Eden, that all the
+ descendants of Adam and Eve known as Jews and Christians hate serpents?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you account for the snake-worship in Mexico, Africa and India in the
+ same way?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was the form of the serpent when he entered the garden, and in what
+ way did he move from place to place? Did he walk or fly? Certainly he did
+ not crawl, because that mode of locomotion was pronounced upon him as a
+ curse. Upon what food did he subsist before his conversation with Eve? We
+ know that after that he lived upon dust, but what did he eat before? It
+ may be that this is all poetic; and the truest poetry is, according to
+ Touchstone, "the most feigning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this same chapter we are informed that "unto Adam also and to his wife
+ did the Lord God make coats of skins and clothed them." Where did the Lord
+ God get those skins? He must have taken them from the animals; he was a
+ butcher. Then he had to prepare them; he was a tanner. Then he made them
+ into coats; he was a tailor. How did it happen that they needed coats of
+ skins, when they had been perfectly comfortable in a nude condition? Did
+ the "fall" produce a change in the climate?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it really necessary to believe this account in order to be happy here,
+ or hereafter? Does it tend to the elevation of the human race to speak of
+ "God" as a butcher, tanner and tailor?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here, let me say once for all, that when I speak of God, I mean the
+ being described by Moses; the Jehovah of the Jews. There may be for aught
+ I know, somewhere in the unknown shoreless vast, some being whose dreams
+ are constellations and within whose thought the infinite exists. About
+ this being, if such an one exists, I have nothing to say. He has written
+ no books, inspired no barbarians, required no worship, and has prepared no
+ hell in which to burn the honest seeker after truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I speak of God, I mean that god who prevented man from putting forth
+ his hand and taking also of the fruit of the tree of life that he might
+ live forever; of that god who multiplied the agonies of woman, increased
+ the weary toil of man, and in his anger drowned a world&mdash;of that god
+ whose altars reeked with human blood, who butchered babes, violated
+ maidens, enslaved men and filled the earth with cruelty and crime; of that
+ god who made heaven for the few, hell for the many, and who will gloat
+ forever and ever upon the writhings of the lost and damned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XVIII. DAMPNESS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the earth,
+ and daughters were born unto them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and
+ they took them wives of all which they chose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Lord said, My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that
+ he also is flesh; yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that when
+ the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children
+ to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that
+ every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth, and it
+ grieved him at his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Lord said, I will destroy man whom I have created from the face
+ of the earth; both man, and beast, and the creeping thing, and the fowls
+ of the air; for it repenteth me that I have made them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this account it seems that driving Adam and Eve out of Eden did not
+ have the effect to improve them or their children. On the contrary, the
+ world grew worse and worse. They were under the immediate control and
+ government of God, and he from time to time made known his will; but in
+ spite of this, man continued to increase in crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing in particular seems to have been done. Not a school was
+ established. There was no written language. There was not a Bible in the
+ world. The "scheme of salvation" was kept a profound secret. The five
+ points of Calvinism had not been taught. Sunday schools had not been
+ opened. In short, nothing had been done for the reformation of the world.
+ God did not even keep his own sons at home, but allowed them to leave
+ their abode in the firmament, and make love to the daughters of men. As a
+ result of this, the world was filled with wickedness and giants to such an
+ extent that God regretted "that he had made man on the earth, and it
+ grieved him at his heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course God knew when he made man, that he would afterwards regret it.
+ He knew that the people would grow worse and worse until destruction would
+ be the only remedy. He knew that he would have to kill all except Noah and
+ his family, and it is hard to see why he did not make Noah and his family
+ in the first place, and leave Adam and Eve in the original dust. He knew
+ that they would be tempted, that he would have to drive them out of the
+ garden to keep them from eating of the tree of life; that the whole thing
+ would be a failure; that Satan would defeat his plan; that he could not
+ reform the people; that his own sons would corrupt them, and that at last
+ he would have to drown them all except Noah and his family. Why was the
+ Garden of Eden planted? Why was the experiment made? Why were Adam and Eve
+ exposed to the seductive arts of the serpent? Why did God wait until the
+ cool of the day before looking after his children? Why was he not on hand
+ in the morning?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why did he fill the world with his own children, knowing that he would
+ have to destroy them? And why does this same God tell me how to raise my
+ children when he had to drown his?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a little curious that when God wished to reform the ante-diluvian
+ world he said nothing about hell; that he had no revivals, no
+ camp-meetings, no tracts, no outpourings of the Holy Ghost, no baptisms,
+ no noon prayer meetings, and never mentioned the great doctrine of
+ salvation by faith. If the orthodox creeds of the world are true, all
+ those people went to hell without ever having heard that such a place
+ existed. If eternal torment is a fact, surely these miserable wretches
+ ought to have been warned. They were threatened only with water when they
+ were in fact doomed to eternal fire!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not strange that God said nothing to Adam and Eve about a future
+ life; that he should have kept these "infinite verities" to himself and
+ allowed millions to live and die without the hope of heaven, or the fear
+ of hell?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be that hell was not made at that time. In the six days of creation
+ nothing is said about the construction of a bottomless pit, and the
+ serpent himself did not make his appearance until after the creation of
+ man and woman. Perhaps he was made on the first Sunday, and from that fact
+ came, it may be, the old couplet,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "And Satan still some mischief finds
+ For idle hands to do."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The sacred historian failed also to tell us when the cherubim and the
+ flaming sword were made, and said nothing about two of the persons
+ composing the Trinity. It certainly would have been an easy thing to
+ enlighten Adam and his immediate descendants. The world was then only
+ about fifteen hundred and thirty-six years old, and only about three or
+ four generations of men had lived. Adam had been dead only about six
+ hundred and six years, and some of his grandchildren must, at that time,
+ have been alive and well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is hard to see why God did not civilize these people. He certainly had
+ the power to use, and the wisdom to devise the proper means. What right
+ has a god to fill a world with fiends? Can there be goodness in this? Why
+ should he make experiments that he knows must fail? Is there wisdom in
+ this? And what right has a man to charge an infinite being with wickedness
+ and folly?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Moses, God made up his mind not only to destroy the people,
+ but the beasts and the creeping things, and the fowls of the air. What had
+ the beasts, and the creeping things, and the birds done to excite the
+ anger of God? Why did he repent having made them? Will some Christian give
+ us an explanation of this matter? No good man will inflict unnecessary
+ pain upon a beast; how then can we worship a god who cares nothing for the
+ agonies of the dumb creatures that he made?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why did he make animals that he knew he would destroy? Does God delight in
+ causing pain? He had the power to make the beasts, and fowls, and creeping
+ things in his own good time and way, and it is to be presumed that he made
+ them according to his wish. Why should he destroy them? They had committed
+ no sin. They had eaten no forbidden fruit, made no aprons, nor tried to
+ reach the tree of life. Yet this god, in blind unreasoning wrath destroyed
+ "all flesh wherein was the breath of life, and every living thing beneath
+ the sky, and every substance wherein was life that he had made."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jehovah having made up his mind to drown the world, told Noah to make an
+ Ark of gopher wood three hundred cubits long, fifty cubits wide and thirty
+ cubits high. A cubit is twenty-two inches; so that the ark was five
+ hundred and fifty feet long, ninety-one feet and eight inches wide and
+ fifty-five feet high. This ark was divided into three stories, and had on
+ top, one window twenty-two inches square. Ventilation must have been one
+ of Jehovah's hobbies. Think of a ship larger than the Great Eastern with
+ only one window, and that but twenty-two inches square!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ark also had one door set in the side thereof that shut from the
+ outside. As soon as this ship was finished, and properly victualed, Noah
+ received seven days notice to get the animals in the ark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is claimed by some of the scientific theologians that the flood was
+ partial, that the waters covered only a small portion of the world, and
+ that consequently only a few animals were in the ark. It is impossible to
+ conceive of language that can more clearly convey the idea of a universal
+ flood than that found in the inspired account. If the flood was only
+ partial, why did God say he would "destroy all flesh wherein is the breath
+ of life from under heaven, and that every thing that is in the earth shall
+ die"? Why did he say "I will destroy man whom I have created from the face
+ of the earth, both man and beast, and the creeping thing and the fowls of
+ the air"? Why did he say "And every living substance that I have made will
+ I destroy from off the face of the earth"? Would a partial, local flood
+ have fulfilled these threats?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing can be clearer than that the writer of this account intended to
+ convey, and did convey the idea that the flood was universal. Why should
+ Christians try to deprive God of the glory of having wrought the most
+ stupendous of miracles? Is it possible that the Infinite could not
+ overwhelm with waves this atom called the earth? Do you doubt his power,
+ his wisdom or his justice?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Believers in miracles should not endeavor to explain them. There is but
+ one way to explain anything, and that is to account for it by natural
+ agencies. The moment you explain a miracle, it disappears. You should
+ depend not upon explanation, but assertion. You should not be driven from
+ the field because the miracle is shown to be unreasonable. You should
+ reply that all miracles are unreasonable. Neither should you be in the
+ least disheartened if it is shown to be impossible. The possible is not
+ miraculous. You should take the ground that if miracles were reasonable,
+ and possible, there would be no reward paid for believing them. The
+ Christian has the goodness to believe, while the sinner asks for evidence.
+ It is enough for God to work miracles without being called upon to
+ substantiate them for the benefit of unbelievers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a few years ago, the Christians believed implicitly in the literal
+ truth of every miracle recorded in the Bible. Whoever tried to explain
+ them in some natural way, was looked upon as an infidel in disguise, but
+ now he is regarded as a benefactor. The credulity of the church is
+ decreasing, and the most marvelous miracles are now either "explained," or
+ allowed to take refuge behind the mistakes of the translators, or hide in
+ the drapery of allegory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the sixth chapter, Noah is ordered to take "of every living thing of
+ all flesh, two of every sort into the ark&mdash;male and female." In the
+ seventh chapter the order is changed, and Noah is commanded, according to
+ the Protestant Bible, as follows: "Of every clean beast thou shalt take to
+ thee by sevens, the male and his female, and of beasts that are not clean,
+ by two, the male and his female. Of fowls also of the air by sevens, the
+ male and the female."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the Catholic Bible, Noah was commanded&mdash;-"Of all clean
+ beasts take seven and seven, the male and the female. But of the beasts
+ that are unclean two and two, the male and the female. Of the fowls also
+ of the air seven and seven, the male and the female."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the purpose of belittling this miracle, many commentators have taken
+ the ground that Noah was not ordered to take seven males and seven females
+ of each kind of clean beasts, but seven in all. Many Christians contend
+ that only seven clean beasts of each kind were taken into the ark&mdash;three
+ and a half of each sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the account in the seventh chapter means anything, it means <i>first</i>,
+ that of each kind of clean beasts, fourteen were to be taken, seven males,
+ and seven females; <i>second</i>, that of unclean beasts should be taken,
+ two of each kind, one of each sex, and <i>third</i>, that he should take
+ of every kind of fowls, seven of each sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is equally clear that the command in the 19th and 20th verses of the
+ 6th chapter, is to take two of each sort, one male and one female. And
+ this agrees exactly with the account in the 7th, 8th, 9th, 14th, 15th, and
+ 16th verses of the 7th chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next question is, how many beasts, fowls and creeping things did Noah
+ take into the ark?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are now known and classified at least twelve thousand five hundred
+ species of birds. There are still vast territories in China, South
+ America, and Africa unknown to the ornithologist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the birds, Noah took fourteen of each species, according to the 3d
+ verse of the 7th chapter, "Of fowls also of the air by sevens, the male
+ and the female," making a total of 175,000 birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And right here allow me to ask a question. If the flood was simply a
+ partial flood, why were birds taken into the ark? It seems to me that most
+ birds, attending strictly to business, might avoid a partial flood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are at least sixteen hundred and fifty-eight kinds of beasts. Let us
+ suppose that twenty-five of these are clean. Of the clean, fourteen of
+ each kind&mdash;seven of each sex&mdash;were taken. These amount to 350.
+ Of the unclean&mdash;two of each kind, amounting to 3,266. There are some
+ six hundred and fifty species of reptiles. Two of each kind amount to
+ 1,300. And lastly, there are of insects including the creeping things, at
+ least one million species, so that Noah and his folks had to get of these
+ into the ark about 2,000,000.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Animalcul&aelig; have not been taken into consideration. There are
+ probably many hundreds of thousands of species; many of them invisible;
+ and yet Noah had to pick them out by pairs. Very few people have any just
+ conception of the trouble Noah had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that there are many animals on this continent not found in the Old
+ World. These must have been carried from here to the ark, and then brought
+ back afterwards. Were the peccary, armadillo, ant-eater, sloth, agouti,
+ vampire-bat, marmoset, howling and prehensile-tailed monkey, the raccoon
+ and muskrat carried by the angels from America to Asia? How did they get
+ there? Did the polar bear leave his field of ice and journey toward the
+ tropics? How did he know where the ark was? Did the kangaroo swim or jump
+ from Australia to Asia? Did the giraffe, hippopotamus, antelope and
+ orang-outang journey from Africa in search of the ark? Can absurdities go
+ farther than this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What had these animals to eat while on the journey? What did they eat
+ while in the ark? What did they drink? When the rain came, of course the
+ rivers ran to the seas, and these seas rose and finally covered the world.
+ The waters of the seas, mingled with those of the flood, would make all
+ salt. It has been calculated that it required, to drown the world, about
+ eight times as much water as was in all the seas. To find how salt the
+ waters of the flood must have been, take eight quarts of fresh water, and
+ add one quart from the sea. Such water would create instead of allaying
+ thirst. Noah had to take in his ark fresh water for all his beasts, birds
+ and living things. He had to take the proper food for all. How long was he
+ in the ark? Three hundred and seventy-seven days! Think of the food
+ necessary for the monsters of the ante-diluvian world!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight persons did all the work. They attended to the wants of 175,000
+ birds, 3,616 beasts, 1,300 reptiles, and 2,000,000 insects, saying nothing
+ of countless animalcul&aelig;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, after they all got in, Noah pulled down the window, God shut the
+ door, and the rain commenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How long did it rain?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forty days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How deep did the water get?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About five miles and a half.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How much did it rain a day?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Enough to cover the whole world to a depth of about seven hundred and
+ forty-two feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some Christians say that the fountains of the great deep were broken up.
+ Will they be kind enough to tell us what the fountains of the great deep
+ are? Others say that God had vast stores of water in the center of the
+ earth that he used on that occasion. How did these waters happen to run up
+ hill?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gentlemen, allow me to tell you once more that you must not try to explain
+ these things. Your efforts in that direction do no good, because your
+ explanations are harder to believe than the miracle itself. Take my
+ advice, stick to assertion, and let explanation alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as now, Dhawalagiri lifted its crown of snow twenty-nine thousand
+ feet above the level of the sea, and on the cloudless cliffs of Chimborazo
+ then, as now, sat the condor; and yet the waters rising seven hundred and
+ twenty-six feet a day&mdash;thirty feet an hour, six inches a minute,&mdash;rose
+ over the hills, over the volcanoes, filled the vast craters, extinguished
+ all the fires, rose above every mountain peak until the vast world was but
+ one shoreless sea covered with the innumerable dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was this the work of the most merciful God, the father of us all? If there
+ is a God, can there be the slightest danger of incurring his displeasure
+ by doubting even in a reverential way, the truth of such a cruel lie? If
+ we think that God is kinder than he really is, will our poor souls be
+ burned for that?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How many trees can live under miles of water for a year? What became of
+ the soil washed, scattered, dissolved, and covered with the <i>debris</i>
+ of a world? How were the tender plants and herbs preserved? How were the
+ animals preserved after leaving the ark? There was no grass except such as
+ had been submerged for a year. There were no animals to be devoured by the
+ carnivorous beasts. What became of the birds that fed on worms and
+ insects? What became of the birds that devoured other birds?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be remembered that the pressure of the water when at the highest
+ point&mdash;say twenty-nine thousand feet, would have been about eight
+ hundred tons on each square foot. Such a pressure certainly would have
+ destroyed nearly every vestige of vegetable life, so that when the animals
+ came out of the ark, there was not a mouthful of food in the wide world.
+ How were they supported until the world was again clothed with grass? How
+ were those animals taken care of that subsisted on others? Where did the
+ bees get honey, and the ants seeds? There was not a creeping thing upon
+ the whole earth; not a breathing creature beneath the whole heavens; not a
+ living substance. Where did the tenants of the ark get food?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is but one answer, if the story is true. The food necessary not only
+ during the year of the flood, but sufficient for many months afterwards,
+ must have been stored in the ark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is probably not an animal in the world that will not, in a year, eat
+ and drink ten times its weight. Noah must have provided food and water for
+ a year while in the ark, and food for at least six months after they got
+ ashore. It must have required for a pair of elephants, about one hundred
+ and fifty tons of food and water. A couple of mammoths would have required
+ about twice that amount. Of course there were other monsters that lived on
+ trees; and in a year would have devoured quite a forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How could eight persons have distributed this food, even if the ark had
+ been large enough to hold it? How was the ark kept clean? We know how it
+ was ventilated; but what was done with the filth? How were the animals
+ watered? How were some portions of the ark heated for animals from the
+ tropics, and others kept cool for the polar bears? How did the animals get
+ back to their respective countries? Some had to creep back about six
+ thousand miles, and they could only go a few feet a day. Some of the
+ creeping things must have started for the ark just as soon as they were
+ made, and kept up a steady jog for sixteen hundred years. Think of a
+ couple of the slowest snails leaving a point opposite the ark and starting
+ for the plains of Shinar, a distance of twelve thousand miles. Going at
+ the rate of a mile a month, it would take them a thousand years. How did
+ they get there? Polar bears must have gone several thousand miles, and so
+ sudden a change in climate must have been exceedingly trying upon their
+ health. How did they know the way to go? Of course, all the polar bears
+ did not go. Only two were required. Who selected these?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two sloths had to make the journey from South America. These creatures
+ cannot travel to exceed three rods a day. At this rate, they would make a
+ mile in about a hundred days. They must have gone about six thousand five
+ hundred miles, to reach the ark. Supposing them to have traveled by a
+ reasonably direct route, in order to complete the journey before Noah
+ hauled in the plank, they must have started several years before the world
+ was created. We must also consider that these sloths had to board
+ themselves on the way, and that most of their time had to be taken up
+ getting food and water. It is exceedingly doubtful whether a sloth could
+ travel six thousand miles and board himself in less than three thousand
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Volumes might be written upon the infinite absurdity of this most
+ incredible, wicked and foolish of all the fables contained in that
+ repository of the impossible, called the Bible. To me it is a matter of
+ amazement, that it ever was for a moment believed by any intelligent human
+ being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Adam Clarke says that "the animals were brought to the ark by the
+ power of God, and their enmities were so removed or suspended, that the
+ lion could dwell peaceably with the lamb, and the wolf sleep happily by
+ the side of the kid. There is no positive evidence that animal food was
+ ever used before the flood. Noah had the first grant of this kind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Scott remarks, "There seems to have been a very extraordinary miracle,
+ perhaps by the ministration of angels, in bringing two of every species to
+ Noah, and rendering them submissive, and peaceful with each other. Yet it
+ seems not to have made any impression upon the hardened spectators. The
+ suspension of the ferocity of the savage beasts during their continuance
+ in the ark, is generally considered as an apt figure of the change that
+ takes place in the disposition of sinners when they enter the true church
+ of Christ."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He believed the deluge to have been universal. In his day science had not
+ demonstrated the absurdity of this belief, and he was not compelled to
+ resort to some theory not found in the Bible. He insisted that "by some
+ vast convulsion, the very bowels of the earth were forced upwards, and
+ rain poured down in cataracts and water-spouts, with no intermission for
+ forty days and nights, and until in every place a universal deluge was
+ effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The presence of God was the only comfort of Noah in his dreary
+ confinement, and in witnessing the dire devastation of the earth and its
+ inhabitants, and especially of the human species&mdash;of his companions,
+ his neighbors, his relatives&mdash;all those to whom he had preached, for
+ whom he had prayed and over whom he had wept, and even of many who had
+ helped to build the ark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems that by a peculiar providential interposition, no animal of any
+ sort died, although they had been shut up in the ark above a year; and it
+ does not appear that there had been any increase of them during that time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Ark was flat-bottomed&mdash;square at each end&mdash;roofed like a
+ house so that it terminated at the top in the breadth of a cubit. It was
+ divided into many little cabins for its intended inhabitants. Pitched
+ within and without to keep it tight and sweet, and lighted from the upper
+ part. But it must, at first sight, be evident that so large a vessel, thus
+ constructed, with so few persons on board, was utterly unfitted to weather
+ out the deluge, except it was under the immediate guidance and protection
+ of the Almighty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Henry furnished the Christian world with the following:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As our bodies have in them the humors which, when God pleases, become the
+ springs and seeds of mortal disease, so the earth had, in its bowels,
+ those waters which, at God's command, sprung up and flooded it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God made the world in six days, but he was forty days in destroying it,
+ because he is slow to anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The hostilities between the animals in the ark ceased, and ravenous
+ creatures became mild and manageable, so that the wolf lay down with the
+ lamb, and the lion ate straw like an ox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God shut the door of the ark to secure Noah and to keep him safe, and
+ because it was necessary that the door should be shut very close lest the
+ water should break in and sink the ark, and very fast lest others might
+ break it down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The waters rose so high that not only the low flat countries were
+ deluged, but to make sure work and that none might escape, the tops of the
+ highest mountains were overflowed fifteen cubits. That is, seven and a
+ half yards, so that salvation was not hoped for from hills or mountains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps some of the people got to the top of the ark, and hoped to shift
+ for themselves there. But either they perished there for want of food, or
+ the dashing rain washed them off the top. Others, it may be, hoped to
+ prevail with Noah for admission into the ark, and plead old acquaintance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Have we not eaten and drank in thy presence? Hast thou not preached in
+ our streets?' 'Yea,' said Noah, 'many a time, but to little purpose. I
+ called but ye refused; and now it is not in my power to help you. God has
+ shut the door and I cannot open it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We may suppose that some of those who perished in the deluge had
+ themselves assisted Noah, or were employed by him in building the ark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hitherto, man had been confined to feed only upon the products of the
+ earth. Fruits, herbs and roots, and all sorts of greens, and milk, which
+ was the first grant; but the flood having perhaps washed away much of the
+ fruits of the earth, and rendered them much less pleasant and nourishing,
+ God enlarged the grant and allowed him to eat flesh, which perhaps man
+ never thought of until now, that God directed him to it. Nor had he any
+ more desire to it than the sheep has to suck blood like the wolf. But now,
+ man is allowed to feed upon flesh as freely and safely as upon the green
+ herb."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the debasing influence of a belief in the literal truth of the
+ Bible upon these men, that their commentaries are filled with passages
+ utterly devoid of common sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Clarke speaking of the mammoth says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This animal, an astonishing proof of God's power, he seems to have
+ produced merely to show what he could do. And after suffering a few of
+ them to propagate, he extinguished the race by a merciful providence, that
+ they might not destroy both man and beast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are told that it would have been much easier for God to destroy all
+ the people and make new ones, but he would not want to waste anything and
+ no power or skill should be lavished where no necessity exists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The animals were brought to the ark by the power of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again gentlemen, let me warn you of the danger of trying to explain a
+ miracle. Let it alone. Say that you do not understand it, and do not
+ expect to until taught in the schools of the New Jerusalem. The more
+ reasons you give, the more unreasonable the miracle will appear. Through
+ what you say in defence, people are led to think, and as soon as they
+ really think, the miracle is thrown away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the most ignorant nations you will find the most wonders, among the
+ most enlightened, the least. It is with individuals, the same as with
+ nations. Ignorance believes, Intelligence examines and explains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For about seven months the ark, with its cargo of men, animals and
+ insects, tossed and wandered without rudder or sail upon a boundless sea.
+ At last it grounded on the mountains of Ararat; and about three months
+ afterward the tops of the mountains became visible. It must not be
+ forgotten that the mountain where the ark is supposed to have first
+ touched bottom, was about seventeen thousand feet high. How were the
+ animals from the tropics kept warm? When the waters were abated it would
+ be intensely cold at a point seventeen thousand feet above the level of
+ the sea. May be there were stoves, furnaces, fire places and steam coils
+ in the ark, but they are not mentioned in the inspired narrative. How were
+ the animals kept from freezing? It will not do to say that Ararat was not
+ very high after all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you will read the fourth and fifth verses of the eight chapter you will
+ see that although "the ark rested in the seventh month, on the seventeenth
+ day of the month, upon the mountains of Ararat, it was not until the first
+ day of the tenth month that the tops of the mountains could be seen." From
+ this it would seem that the ark must have rested upon about the highest
+ peak in that country. Noah waited forty days more, and then for the first
+ time opened the window and took a breath of fresh air. He then sent out a
+ raven that did not return, then a dove that returned. He then waited seven
+ days and sent forth a dove that returned not. From this he knew that the
+ waters were abated. Is it possible that he could not see whether the
+ waters had gone? Is it possible to conceive of a more perfectly childish
+ way of ascertaining whether the earth was dry?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Noah "removed the covering of the ark, and looked and behold the
+ face of the ground was dry," and thereupon God told him to disembark. In
+ his gratitude Noah built an altar and took of every clean beast and of
+ every clean fowl, and offered burnt offerings. And the Lord smelled a
+ sweet savor and said in his heart that he would not any more curse the
+ ground for man's sake. For saying this in his heart the Lord gives as a
+ reason, not that man is, or will be good, but because "the imagination of
+ man's heart is evil from his youth." God destroyed man because "the
+ wickedness of man was great in the earth, and <i>because every imagination
+ of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually</i>." And he
+ promised for the same reason not to destroy him again. Will some gentleman
+ skilled in theology give us an explanation?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After God had smelled the sweet savor of sacrifice, he seems to have
+ changed his idea as to the proper diet for man. When Adam and Eve were
+ created they were allowed to eat herbs bearing seed, and the fruit of
+ trees. When they were turned out of Eden, God said to them "Thou shalt eat
+ the herb of the field." In the first chapter of Genesis the "green herb"
+ was given for food to the beasts, fowls and creeping things. Upon being
+ expelled from the garden, Adam and Eve, as to their food, were put upon an
+ equality with the lower animals. According to this, the ante-diluvians
+ were vegetarians. This may account for their wickedness and longevity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Noah sacrificed, and God smelled the sweet savor; he said&mdash;"Every
+ moving thing that liveth shall be meat for you, even as the green herb
+ have I given you all things." Afterward this same God changed his mind
+ again, and divided the beasts and birds into clean and unclean, and made
+ it a crime for man to eat the unclean. Probably food was so scarce when
+ Noah was let out of the ark that Jehovah generously allowed him to eat
+ anything and everything he could find.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the account, God then made a covenant with Noah to the effect
+ that he would not again destroy the world with a flood, and as the
+ attesting witness of this contract, a rainbow was set in the cloud. This
+ bow was placed in the sky so that it might perpetually remind God of his
+ promise and covenant. Without this visible witness and reminder, it would
+ seem that Jehovah was liable to forget the contract, and drown the world
+ again. Did the rainbow originate in this way? Did God put it in the cloud
+ simply to keep his agreement in his memory?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For me it is impossible to believe the story of the deluge. It seems so
+ cruel, so barbaric, so crude in detail, so absurd in all its parts, and so
+ contrary to all we know of law, that even credulity itself is shocked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many nations have preserved accounts of a deluge in which all people,
+ except a family or two, were destroyed. Babylon was certainly a city
+ before Jerusalem was founded. Egypt was in the height of her power when
+ there were only seventy Jews in the world, and India had a literature
+ before the name of Jehovah had passed the lips of superstition. An account
+ of a general deluge "was discovered by George Smith, translated from
+ another account that was written about two thousand years before Christ."
+ Of course it is impossible to tell how long the story had lived in the
+ memory of tradition before it was reduced to writing by the Babylonians.
+ According to this account, which is, without doubt, much older than the
+ one given by Moses, Tamzi built a ship at the command of the god Hea, and
+ put in it his family and the beasts of the field. He pitched the ship
+ inside and outside with bitumen, and as soon as it was finished, there
+ came a flood of rain and "destroyed all life from the face of the whole
+ earth. On the seventh day there was a calm, and the ship stranded on the
+ mountain Nizir." Tamzi waited for seven days more, and then let out a
+ dove. Afterwards, he let out a swallow, and that, as well as the dove
+ returned. Then he let out a raven, and as that did not return, he
+ concluded that the water had dried away, and thereupon left the ship. Then
+ he made an offering to god, or the gods, and "Hea interceded with Bel," so
+ that the earth might never again be drowned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the Babylonian story, told without the contradictions of the
+ original. For in that, it seems, there are two accounts, as well as in the
+ Bible. Is it not a strange coincidence that there should be contradictory
+ accounts mingled in both the Babylonian and Jewish stories?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Bible there are two accounts. In one account, Noah was to take two
+ of all beasts, birds, and creeping things into the ark, while in the
+ other, he was commanded to take of clean beasts, and all birds by sevens
+ of each kind. According to one account, the flood only lasted one hundred
+ and fifty days&mdash;as related in the third verse of the eighth chapter;
+ while the other account fixes the time at three hundred and seventy-seven
+ days. Both of these accounts cannot be true. Yet in order to be saved, it
+ is not sufficient to believe one of them&mdash;you must believe both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the Egyptians there was a story to the effect that the great god Ra
+ became utterly maddened with the people, and deliberately made up his mind
+ that he would exterminate mankind. Thereupon he began to destroy, and
+ continued in the terrible work until blood flowed in streams, when
+ suddenly he ceased, and took an oath that he would not again destroy the
+ human race. This myth was probably thousands of years old when Moses was
+ born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, in India, there was a fable about the flood. A fish warned Manu that a
+ flood was coming. Manu built a "box" and the fish towed it to a mountain
+ and saved all hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same kind of stories were told in Greece, and among our own Indian
+ tribes. At one time the Christian pointed to the fact that many nations
+ told of a flood, as evidence of the truth of the Mosaic account; but now,
+ it having been shown that other accounts are much older, and equally
+ reasonable, that argument has ceased to be of any great value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is probable that all these accounts had a common origin. They were
+ likely born of something in nature visible to all nations. The idea of a
+ universal flood, produced by a god to drown the world on account of the
+ sins of the people, is infinitely absurd. The solution of all these
+ stories has been supposed to be, the existence of partial floods in most
+ countries; and for a long time this solution was satisfactory. But the
+ fact that these stories are greatly alike, that only one man is warned,
+ that only one family is saved, that a boat is built, that birds are sent
+ out to find if the water had abated, tend to show that they had a common
+ origin. Admitting that there were severe floods in all countries; it
+ certainly cannot follow that in each instance only one family would be
+ saved, or that the same story would in each instance be told. It may be
+ urged that the natural tendency of man to exaggerate calamities, might
+ account for this agreement in all the accounts, and it must be admitted
+ that there is some force in the suggestion. I believe, though, that the
+ real origin of all these myths is the same, and that it was originally an
+ effort to account for the sun, moon and stars. The sun and moon were the
+ man and wife, or the god and goddess, and the stars were their children.
+ From a celestial myth, it became a terrestrial one; the air, or
+ ether-ocean became a flood, produced by rain, and the sun moon and stars
+ became man, woman and children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the original story, the mountain was the place where in the far east
+ the sky was supposed to touch the earth, and it was there that the ship
+ containing the celestial passengers finally rested from its voyage. But
+ whatever may be the origin of the stories of the flood, whether told first
+ by Hindu, Babylonian or Hebrew, we may rest perfectly assured that they
+ are all equally false.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XIX. BACCHUS AND BABEL.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Noah had disembarked, he proceeded to plant a vineyard, and
+ began to be a husbandman; and when the grapes were ripe he made wine and
+ drank of it to excess; cursed his grandson, blessed Shem and Japheth, and
+ after that lived for three hundred and fifty years. What he did during
+ these three hundred and fifty years, we are not told. We never hear of him
+ again. For three hundred and fifty years he lived among his sons, and
+ daughters, and their descendants. He must have been a venerable man. He
+ was the man to whom God had made known his intention of drowning the
+ world. By his efforts, the human race had been saved. He must have been
+ acquainted with Methuselah for six hundred years, and Methuselah was about
+ two hundred and forty years old, when Adam died. Noah must himself have
+ known the history of mankind, and must have been an object of almost
+ infinite interest; and yet for three hundred and fifty years he is neither
+ directly nor indirectly mentioned. When Noah died, Abraham must have been
+ more than fifty years old; and Shem, the son of Noah, lived for several
+ hundred years after the death of Abraham; and yet he is never mentioned.
+ Noah when he died, was the oldest man in the whole world by about five
+ hundred years; and everybody living at the time of his death knew that
+ they were indebted to him, and yet no account is given of his burial. No
+ monument was raised to mark the spot. This, however, is no more wonderful
+ than the fact that no account is given of the death of Adam or of Eve, nor
+ of the place of their burial. This may all be accounted for by the fact
+ that the language of man was confounded at the building of the tower of
+ Babel, whereby all tradition may have been lost, so that even the sons of
+ Noah could not give an account of their voyage in the ark; and,
+ consequently, some one had to be directly inspired to tell the story,
+ after new languages had been formed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has always been a mystery to me how Adam, Eve, and the serpent were
+ taught the same language. Where did they get it? We know now, that it
+ requires a great number of years to form a language; that it is of
+ exceedingly slow growth. We also know that by language, man conveys to his
+ fellows the impressions made upon him by what he sees, hears, smells and
+ touches. We know that the language of the savage consists of a few sounds,
+ capable of expressing only a few ideas or states of the mind, such as
+ love, desire, fear, hatred, aversion and contempt. Many centuries are
+ required to produce a language capable of expressing complex ideas. It
+ does not seem to me that ideas can be manufactured by a deity and put in
+ the brain of man. These ideas must be the result of observation and
+ experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does anybody believe that God directly taught a language to Adam and Eve,
+ or that he so made them that they, by intuition spoke Hebrew, or some
+ language capable of conveying to each other their thoughts? How did the
+ serpent learn the same language? Did God teach it to him, or did he happen
+ to overhear God, when he was teaching Adam and Eve? We are told in the
+ second chapter of Genesis that God caused all the animals to pass before
+ Adam to see what he would call them. We cannot infer from this that God
+ named the animals and informed Adam what to call them. Adam named them
+ himself. Where did he get his words? We cannot imagine a man just made out
+ of dust, without the experience of a moment, having the power to put his
+ thoughts in language. In the first place, we cannot conceive of his having
+ any thoughts until he has combined, through experience and observation,
+ the impressions that nature had made upon him through the medium of his
+ senses. We cannot imagine of his knowing anything, in the first instance,
+ about different degrees of heat, nor about darkness, if he was made in the
+ day-time, nor about light, if created at night, until the next morning.
+ Before a man can have what we call thoughts, he must have had a little
+ experience. Something must have happened to him before he can have a
+ thought, and before he can express himself in language. Language is a
+ growth, not a gift. We account now for the diversity of language by the
+ fact that tribes and nations have had different experiences, different
+ wants, different surroundings, and, one result of all these differences
+ is, among other things, a difference in language. Nothing can be more
+ absurd than to account for the different languages of the world by saying
+ that the original language was confounded at the tower of Babel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the Bible, up to the time of the building of that tower, the
+ whole earth was of one language and of one speech, and would have so
+ remained until the present time had not an effort been made to build a
+ tower whose top should reach into heaven. Can any one imagine what
+ objection God would have to the building of such a tower? And how could
+ the confusion of tongues prevent its construction? How could language be
+ confounded? It could be confounded only by the destruction of memory. Did
+ God destroy the memory of mankind at that time, and if so, how? Did he
+ paralyze that portion of the brain presiding over the organs of
+ articulation, so that they could not speak the words, although they
+ remembered them clearly, or did he so touch the brain that they could not
+ hear? Will some theologian, versed in the machinery of the miraculous,
+ tell us in what way God confounded the language of mankind?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why would the confounding of the language make them separate? Why would
+ they not stay together until they could understand each other? People will
+ not separate, from weakness. When in trouble they come together and desire
+ the assistance of each other. Why, in this instance, did they separate?
+ What particular ones would naturally come together if nobody understood
+ the language of any other person? Would it not have been just as hard to
+ agree when and where to go, without any language to express the agreement,
+ as to go on with the building of the tower?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it possible that any one now believes that the whole world would be of
+ one speech had the language not been confounded at Babel? Do we not know
+ that every word was suggested in some way by the experience of men? Do we
+ not know that words are continually dying, and continually being born;
+ that every language has its cradle and its cemetery&mdash;its buds, its
+ blossoms, its fruits and its withered leaves? Man has loved, enjoyed,
+ hated, suffered and hoped, and all words have been born of these
+ experiences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why did "the Lord come down to see the city and the tower"? Could he not
+ see them from where he lived or from where he was? Where did he come down
+ from? Did he come in the daytime, or in the night? We are taught now that
+ God is everywhere; that he inhabits immensity; that he is in every atom,
+ and in every star. If this is true, why did he "come down to see the city
+ and the tower?" Will some theologian explain this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all, is it not much easier and altogether more reasonable to say
+ that Moses was mistaken, that he knew little of the science of language,
+ and that he guessed a great deal more than he investigated?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XX. FAITH IN FILTH.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No light whatever is shed upon what passed in the world after the
+ confounding of language at Babel, until the birth of Abraham. But, before
+ speaking of the history of the Jewish people, it may be proper for me to
+ say that many things are recounted in Genesis, and other books attributed
+ to Moses, of which I do not wish to speak. There are many pages of these
+ books unfit to read, many stories not calculated, in my judgment, to
+ improve the morals of mankind. I do not wish even to call the attention of
+ my readers to these things, except in a general way. It is to be hoped
+ that the time will come when such chapters and passages as cannot be read
+ without leaving the blush of shame upon the cheek of modesty, will be left
+ out, and not published as a part of the Bible. If there is a God, it
+ certainly is blasphemous to attribute to him the authorship of pages too
+ obscene, beastly and vulgar to be read in the presence of men and women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The believers in the Bible are loud in their denunciation of what they are
+ pleased to call the immoral literature of the world; and yet few books
+ have been published containing more moral filth than this inspired word of
+ God. These stories are not redeemed by a single flash of wit or humor.
+ They never rise above the dull details of stupid vice. For one, I cannot
+ afford to soil my pages with extracts from them; and all such portions of
+ the Scriptures I leave to be examined, written upon, and explained by the
+ clergy. Clergymen may know some way by which they can extract honey from
+ these flowers. Until these passages are expunged from the Old Testament,
+ it is not a fit book to be read by either old or young. It contains pages
+ that no minister in the United States would read to his congregation for
+ any reward whatever. There are chapters that no gentleman would read in
+ the presence of a lady. There are chapters that no father would read to
+ his child. There are narratives utterly unfit to be told; and the time
+ will come when mankind will wonder that such a book was ever called
+ inspired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I know that in many books besides the Bible, there are immodest lines.
+ Some of the greatest writers have soiled their pages with indecent words.
+ We account for this by saying that the authors were human; that they
+ catered to the taste and spirit of their times. We make excuses, but at
+ the same time regret that in their works they left an impure word. But
+ what shall we say of God? Is it possible that a being of infinite purity&mdash;the
+ author of modesty, would smirch the pages of his book with stories lewd,
+ licentious and obscene? If God is the author of the Bible, it is, of
+ course, the standard by which all other books can, and should be measured.
+ If the Bible is not obscene, what book is? Why should men be imprisoned
+ simply for imitating God? The Christian world should never say another
+ word against immoral books until it makes the inspired volume clean. These
+ vile and filthy things were not written for the purpose of conveying and
+ enforcing moral truth, but seem to have been written because the author
+ loved an unclean thing. There is no moral depth below that occupied by the
+ writer or publisher of obscene books, that stain with lust, the loving
+ heart of youth. Such men should be imprisoned and their books destroyed.
+ The literature of the world should be rendered decent, and no book should
+ be published that cannot be read by, and in the hearing of the best and
+ purest people. But as long as the Bible is considered as the work of God,
+ it will be hard to make all men too good and pure to imitate it; and as
+ long as it is imitated there will be vile and filthy books. The literature
+ of our country will not be sweet and clean until the Bible ceases to be
+ regarded as the production of a god.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are continually told that the Bible is the very foundation of modesty
+ and morality; while many of its pages are so immodest and immoral that a
+ minister, for reading them in the pulpit, would be instantly denounced as
+ an unclean wretch. Every woman would leave the church, and if the men
+ stayed, it would be for the purpose of chastising the minister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there any saving grace in hypocrisy? Will men become clean in speech by
+ believing that God is unclean? Would it not be far better to admit that
+ the Bible was written by barbarians in a barbarous, coarse and vulgar age?
+ Would it not be safer to charge Moses with vulgarity, instead of God? Is
+ it not altogether more probable that some ignorant Hebrew would write the
+ vulgar words? The Christians tell me that God is the author of these vile
+ and stupid things? I have examined the question to the best of my ability,
+ and as to God my verdict is:&mdash;Not guilty. Faith should not rest in
+ filth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every foolish and immodest thing should be expunged from the Bible. Let us
+ keep the good. Let us preserve every great and splendid thought, every
+ wise and prudent maxim, every just law, every elevated idea, and every
+ word calculated to make man nobler and purer, and let us have the courage
+ to throw the rest away. The souls of children should not be stained and
+ soiled. The charming instincts of youth should not be corrupted and
+ defiled. The girls and boys should not be taught that unclean words were
+ uttered by "inspired" lips. Teach them that these words were born of
+ savagery and lust. Teach them that the unclean is the unholy, and that
+ only the pure is sacred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXI. THE HEBREWS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After language had been confounded and the people scattered, there
+ appeared in the land of Canaan a tribe of Hebrews ruled by a chief or
+ sheik called Abraham. They had a few cattle, lived in tents, practiced
+ polygamy, wandered from place to place, and were the only folks in the
+ whole world to whom God paid the slightest attention. At this time there
+ were hundreds of cities in India filled with temples and palaces; millions
+ of Egyptians worshiped Isis and Osiris, and had covered their land with
+ marvelous monuments of industry, power and skill. But these civilizations
+ were entirely neglected by the Deity, his whole attention being taken up
+ with Abraham and his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems, from the account, that God and Abraham were intimately
+ acquainted, and conversed frequently upon a great variety of subjects. By
+ the twelfth chapter of Genesis it appears that he made the following
+ promises to Abraham. "I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless
+ thee, and make thy name great: and thou shalt be a blessing. And I will
+ bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After receiving this communication from the Almighty, Abraham went into
+ the land of Canaan, and again God appeared to him and told him to take a
+ heifer three years old, a goat of the same age, a sheep of equal
+ antiquity, a turtle dove and a young pigeon. Whereupon Abraham killed the
+ animals "and divided them in the midst, and laid each piece one against
+ another." And it came to pass that when the sun went down and it was dark,
+ behold a smoking furnace and a burning lamp that passed between the raw
+ and bleeding meat. The killing of these animals was a preparation for
+ receiving a visit from God. Should an American missionary in Central
+ Africa find a negro chief surrounded by a butchered heifer, a goat and a
+ sheep, with which to receive a communication from the infinite God, my
+ opinion is, that the missionary would regard the proceeding as the direct
+ result of savagery. And if the chief insisted that he had seen a smoking
+ furnace and a burning lamp going up and down between the pieces of meat,
+ the missionary would certainly conclude that the chief was not altogether
+ right in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Bible is true, this same God told Abraham to take and sacrifice his
+ only son, or rather the only son of his wife, and a murder would have been
+ committed had not God, just at the right moment, directed him to stay his
+ hand and take a sheep instead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God made a great number of promises to Abraham, but few of them were ever
+ kept. He agreed to make him the father of a great nation, but he did not.
+ He solemnly promised to give him a great country, including all the land
+ between the river of Egypt and the Euphrates, but he did not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In due time Abraham passed away, and his son Isaac took his place at the
+ head of the tribe. Then came Jacob, who "watered stock" and enriched
+ himself with the spoil of Laban. Joseph was sold into Egypt by his jealous
+ brethren, where he became one of the chief men of the kingdom, and in a
+ few years his father and brothers left their own country and settled in
+ Egypt. At this time there were seventy Hebrews in the world, counting
+ Joseph and his children. They remained in Egypt two hundred and fifteen
+ years. It is claimed by some that they were in that country for four
+ hundred and thirty years. This is a mistake. Josephus says they were in
+ Egypt two hundred and fifteen years, and this statement is sustained by
+ the best biblical scholars of all denominations. According to the 17th
+ verse of the 3rd chapter of Galatians, it was four hundred and thirty
+ years from the time the promise was made to Abraham to the giving of the
+ law, and as the Hebrews did not go to Egypt for two hundred and fifteen
+ years after the making of the promise to Abraham, they could in no event
+ have been in Egypt more than two hundred and fifteen years. In our Bible
+ the 40th verse of the 12th chapter of Exodus, is as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now the sojourning of the children of Israel, who dwelt in Egypt, was
+ four hundred and thirty years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This passage does not say that the sojourning was all done in Egypt;
+ neither does it say that the children of Israel dwelt in Egypt four
+ hundred and thirty years; but it does say that the sojourning of the
+ children of Israel who dwelt in Egypt was four hundred and thirty years.
+ The Vatican copy of the Septuagint renders the same passage as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The sojourning of the children of Israel which they sojourned in Egypt,
+ and in the land of Canaan, was four hundred and thirty years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Alexandrian version says:&mdash;"The sojourning of the children of
+ Israel which they and their fathers sojourned in Egypt, and in the land of
+ Canaan, was four hundred and thirty years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in the Samaritan Bible we have:&mdash;"The sojourning of the children
+ of Israel and of their fathers which they sojourned in the land of Canaan,
+ and in the land of Egypt, was four hundred and thirty years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were seventy souls when they went down into Egypt, and they remained
+ two hundred and fifteen years, and at the end of that time they had
+ increased to about three million. How do we know that there were three
+ million at the end of two hundred and fifteen years? We know it because we
+ are informed by Moses that "there were six hundred thousand men of war."
+ Now, to each man of war, there must have been at least five other people.
+ In every State in this Union there will be to each voter, five other
+ persons at least, and we all know that there are always more voters than
+ men of war. If there were six hundred thousand men of war, there must have
+ been a population of at least three million. Is it possible that seventy
+ people could increase to that extent in two hundred and fifteen years? You
+ may say that it was a miracle; but what need was there of working a
+ miracle? Why should God miraculously increase the number of slaves? If he
+ wished miraculously to increase the population, why did he not wait until
+ the people were free?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1776, we had in the American Colonies about three millions of people.
+ In one hundred years we doubled four times: that is to say, six, twelve,
+ twenty-four, forty-eight million,&mdash;our present population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must not forget that during all these years there has been pouring into
+ our country a vast stream of emigration, and that this, taken in
+ connection with the fact that our country is productive beyond all others,
+ gave us only four doubles in one hundred years. Admitting that the Hebrews
+ increased as rapidly without emigration as we, in this country, have with
+ it, we will give to them four doubles each century, commencing with
+ seventy people, and they would have, at the end of two hundred years, a
+ population of seventeen thousand nine hundred and twenty. Giving them
+ another double for the odd fifteen years and there would be, provided no
+ deaths had occurred, thirty-five thousand eight hundred and forty people.
+ And yet we are told that instead of having this number, they had increased
+ to such an extent that they had six hundred thousand men of war; that is
+ to say, a population of more than three millions?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every sensible man knows that this account is not, and cannot be true. We
+ know that seventy people could not increase to three million in two
+ hundred and fifteen years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About this time the Hebrews took a census, and found that there were
+ twenty-two thousand two hundred and seventy-three first-born males. It is
+ reasonable to suppose that there were about as many first-born females.
+ This would make forty-four thousand five hundred and forty-six first-born
+ children. Now, there must have been about as many mothers as there were
+ first-born children. If there were only about forty-five thousand mothers
+ and three millions of people, the mothers must have had on an average
+ about sixty-six children apiece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this time, the Hebrews were slaves, and had been for two hundred and
+ fifteen years. A little while before, an order had been made by the
+ Egyptians that all the male children of the Hebrews should be killed. One,
+ contrary to this order, was saved in an ark made of bullrushes daubed with
+ slime. This child was found by the daughter of Pharaoh, and was adopted,
+ it seems, as her own, and, may be, was. He grew to be a man, sided with
+ the Hebrews, killed an Egyptian that was smiting a slave, hid the body in
+ the sand, and fled from Egypt to the land of Midian, became acquainted
+ with a priest who had seven daughters, took the side of the daughters
+ against the ill-mannered shepherds of that country, and married Zipporah,
+ one of the girls, and became a shepherd for her father. Afterward, while
+ tending his flock, the Lord appeared to him in a burning bush, and
+ commanded him to go to the king of Egypt and demand from him the
+ liberation of the Hebrews. In order to convince him that the something
+ burning in the bush was actually God, the rod in his hand was changed into
+ a serpent, which, upon being caught by the tail, became again a rod. Moses
+ was also told to put his hand in his bosom, and when he took it out it was
+ as leprous as snow. Quite a number of strange things were performed, and
+ others promised. Moses then agreed to go back to Egypt provided his
+ brother could go with him. Whereupon the Lord appeared to Aaron, and
+ directed him to meet Moses in the wilderness. They met at the mount of
+ God, went to Egypt, gathered together all the elders of the children of
+ Israel, spake all the words which God had spoken unto Moses, and did all
+ the signs in the sight of the people. The Israelites believed, bowed their
+ heads and worshiped; and Moses and Aaron went in and told their message to
+ Pharaoh the king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXII. THE PLAGUES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three millions of people were in slavery. They were treated with the
+ utmost rigor, and so fearful were their masters that they might, in time,
+ increase in numbers sufficient to avenge themselves, that they took from
+ the arms of mothers all the male children and destroyed them. If the
+ account given is true, the Egyptians were the most cruel, heartless and
+ infamous people of which history gives any record. God finally made up his
+ mind to free the Hebrews; and for the accomplishment of this purpose he
+ sent, as his agents, Moses and Aaron, to the king of Egypt. In order that
+ the king might know that these men had a divine mission, God gave Moses
+ the power of changing a stick into a serpent, and water into blood. Moses
+ and Aaron went before the king, stating that the Lord God of Israel
+ ordered the king of Egypt to let the Hebrews go that they might hold a
+ feast with God in the wilderness. Thereupon Pharaoh, the king, enquired
+ who the Lord was, at the same time stating that he had never made his
+ acquaintance, and knew nothing about him. To this they replied that the
+ God of the Hebrews had met with them, and they asked to go a three days
+ journey into the desert and sacrifice unto this God, fearing that if they
+ did not he would fall upon them with pestilence or the sword. This
+ interview seems to have hardened Pharaoh, for he ordered the tasks of the
+ children of Israel to be increased; so that the only effect of the first
+ appeal was to render still worse the condition of the Hebrews. Thereupon,
+ Moses returned unto the Lord and said, "Lord, wherefore hast thou so evil
+ entreated this people? Why is it that thou hast sent me? For since I came
+ to Pharaoh to speak in thy name he hath done evil to this people; neither
+ hast thou delivered thy people at all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apparently stung by this reproach, God answered:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now shalt thou see what I will do to Pharoah; for with a strong hand
+ shall he let them go; and with a strong hand shall he drive them out of
+ his land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God then recounts the fact that he had appeared unto Abraham, Isaac and
+ Jacob, that he had established a covenant with them to give them the land
+ of Canaan, that he had heard the groanings of the children of Israel in
+ Egyptian bondage; that their groanings had put him in mind of his
+ covenant, and that he had made up his mind to redeem the children of
+ Israel with a stretched-out arm and with great judgments. Moses then spoke
+ to the children of Israel again, but they would listen to him no more. His
+ first effort in their behalf had simply doubled their trouble and they
+ seemed to have lost confidence in his power. Thereupon Jehovah promised
+ Moses that he would make him a god unto Pharaoh, and that Aaron should be
+ his prophet, but at the same time informed him that his message would be
+ of no avail; that he would harden the heart of Pharaoh so that he would
+ not listen; that he would so harden his heart that he might have an excuse
+ for destroying the Egyptians. Accordingly, Moses and Aaron again went
+ before Pharaoh. Moses said to Aaron;&mdash;"Cast down your rod before
+ Pharaoh," which he did, and it became a serpent. Then Pharaoh not in the
+ least surprised, called for his wise men and his sorcerers, and they threw
+ down their rods and changed them into serpents. The serpent that had been
+ changed from Aaron's rod was, at this time crawling upon the floor, and it
+ proceeded to swallow the serpents that had been produced by the magicians
+ of Egypt. What became of these serpents that were swallowed, whether they
+ turned back into sticks again, is not stated. Can we believe that the
+ stick was changed into a real living serpent, or did it assume simply the
+ appearance of a serpent? If it bore only the appearance of a serpent it
+ was a deception, and could not rise above the dignity of legerdemain. Is
+ it necessary to believe that God is a kind of prestigiator&mdash;a
+ sleight-of-hand performer, a magician or sorcerer? Can it be possible that
+ an infinite being would endeavor to secure the liberation of a race by
+ performing a miracle that could be equally performed by the sorcerers and
+ magicians of a barbarian king?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not one word was said by Moses or Aaron as to the wickedness of depriving
+ a human being of his liberty. Not a word was said in favor of liberty. Not
+ the slightest intimation that a human being was justly entitled to the
+ product of his own labor. Not a word about the cruelty of masters who
+ would destroy even the babes of slave mothers. It seems to me wonderful
+ that this God did not tell the king of Egypt that no nation could enslave
+ another, without also enslaving itself; that it was impossible to put a
+ chain around the limbs of a slave, without putting manacles upon the brain
+ of the master. Why did he not tell him that a nation founded upon slavery
+ could not stand? Instead of declaring these things, instead of appealing
+ to justice, to mercy and to liberty, he resorted to feats of jugglery.
+ Suppose we wished to make a treaty with a barbarous nation, and the
+ President should employ a sleight-of-hand performer as envoy
+ extraordinary, and instruct him, that when he came into the presence of
+ the savage monarch, he should cast down an umbrella or a walking stick,
+ which would change into a lizard or a turtle; what would we think? Would
+ we not regard such a performance as beneath the dignity even of a
+ President? And what would be our feelings if the savage king sent for his
+ sorcerers and had them perform the same feat? If such things would appear
+ puerile and foolish in the President of a great republic, what shall be
+ said when they were resorted to by the creator of all worlds? How small,
+ how contemptible such a God appears! Pharaoh, it seems, took about this
+ view of the matter, and he would not be persuaded that such tricks were
+ performed by an infinite being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, Moses and Aaron came before Pharaoh as he was going to the river's
+ bank, and the same rod which had changed to a serpent, and, by this time
+ changed back, was taken by Aaron, who, in the presence of Pharaoh, smote
+ the water of the river, which was immediately turned to blood, as well as
+ all the water in all the streams, ponds, and pools, as well as all water
+ in vessels of wood and vessels of stone in the entire land of Egypt. As
+ soon as all the waters in Egypt had been turned into blood, the magicians
+ of that country did the same with their enchantments. We are not informed
+ where they got the water to turn into blood, since all the water in Egypt
+ had already been so changed. It seems from the account that the fish in
+ the Nile died, and the river emitted a stench, and there was not a drop of
+ water in the land of Egypt that had not been changed into blood. In
+ consequence of this, the Egyptians digged "around about the river" for
+ water to drink. Can we believe this story? Is it necessary to salvation to
+ admit that all the rivers, pools, ponds and lakes of a country were
+ changed into blood, in order that a king might be induced to allow the
+ children of Israel the privilege of going a three days journey into the
+ wilderness to make sacrifices to their God?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems from the account that Pharaoh was told that the God of the
+ Hebrews would, if he refused to let the Israelites go, change all the
+ waters of Egypt into blood, and that, upon his refusal, they were so
+ changed. This had, however, no influence upon him, for the reason that his
+ own magicians did the same. It does not appear that Moses and Aaron
+ expressed the least surprise at the success of the Egyptian sorcerers. At
+ that time it was believed that each nation had its own god. The only claim
+ that Moses and Aaron made for their God was, that he was the greatest and
+ most powerful of all the gods, and that with anything like an equal chance
+ he could vanquish the deity of any other nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the waters were changed to blood Moses and Aaron waited for seven
+ days. At the end of that time God told Moses to again go to Pharaoh and
+ demand the release of his people, and to inform him that, if he refused,
+ God would strike all the borders of Egypt with frogs. That he would make
+ frogs so plentiful that they would go into the houses of Pharaoh, into his
+ bedchamber, upon his bed, into the houses of his servants, upon his
+ people, into their ovens, and even into their kneading troughs. This
+ threat had no effect whatever upon Pharaoh. And thereupon Aaron stretched
+ out his hand over the waters of Egypt, and the frogs came up and covered
+ the land. The magicians of Egypt did the same, and with their enchantments
+ brought more frogs upon the land of Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These magicians do not seem to have been original in their ideas, but so
+ far as imitation is concerned, were perfect masters of their art. The
+ frogs seem to have made such an impression upon Pharaoh that he sent for
+ Moses and asked him to entreat the Lord that he would take away the frogs.
+ Moses agreed to remove them from the houses and the land, and allow them
+ to remain only in the rivers. Accordingly the frogs died out of the
+ houses, and out of the villages, and out of the fields, and the people
+ gathered them together in heaps. As soon as the frogs had left the houses
+ and fields, the heart of Pharaoh became again hardened, and he refused to
+ let the people go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aaron then, according to the command of God, stretched out his hand,
+ holding the rod, and smote the dust of the earth, and it became lice in
+ man and in beast, and all the dust became lice throughout the land of
+ Egypt. Pharaoh again sent for his magicians, and they sought to do the
+ same with their enchantments, but they could not. Whereupon the sorcerers
+ said unto Pharaoh: "This is the finger of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding this, however, Pharaoh refused to let the Hebrews go. God
+ then caused a grievous swarm of flies to come into the house of Pharaoh
+ and into his servants' houses, and into all the land of Egypt, to such an
+ extent that the whole land was corrupted by reason of the flies. But into
+ that part of the country occupied by the children of Israel there came no
+ flies. Thereupon Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron and said to them: "Go,
+ and sacrifice to your God in this land." They were not willing to
+ sacrifice in Egypt, and asked permission to go on a journey of three days
+ into the wilderness. To this Pharaoh acceded, and in consideration of this
+ Moses agreed to use his influence with the Lord to induce him to send the
+ flies out of the country. He accordingly told the Lord of the bargain he
+ had made with Pharaoh, and the Lord agreed to the compromise, and removed
+ the flies from Pharaoh and from his servants and from his people, and
+ there remained not a single fly in the land of Egypt. As soon as the flies
+ were gone, Pharaoh again changed his mind, and concluded not to permit the
+ children of Israel to depart. The Lord then directed Moses to go to
+ Pharaoh and tell him that if he did not allow the children of Israel to
+ depart, he would destroy his cattle, his horses, his camels and his sheep;
+ that these animals would be afflicted with a grievous disease, but that
+ the animals belonging to the Hebrews should not be so afflicted. Moses did
+ as he was bid. On the next day all the cattle of Egypt died; that is to
+ say, all the horses, all the asses, all the camels, all the oxen and all
+ the sheep; but of the animals owned by the Israelites, not one perished.
+ This disaster had no effect upon Pharaoh, and he still refused to let the
+ children of Israel go. The Lord then told Moses and Aaron to take some
+ ashes out of a furnace, and told Moses to sprinkle them toward the heavens
+ in the sight of Pharaoh; saying that the ashes should become small dust in
+ all the land of Egypt, and should be a boil breaking forth with blains
+ upon man and upon beast throughout all the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How these boils breaking out with blains, upon cattle that were already
+ dead, should affect Pharaoh, is a little hard to understand. It must not
+ be forgotten that all the cattle and all beasts had died with the murrain
+ before the boils had broken out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a most decisive victory for Moses and Aaron. The boils were upon
+ the magicians to that extent that they could not stand before Moses. But
+ it had no effect upon Pharaoh, who seems to have been a man of great
+ firmness. The Lord then instructed Moses to get up early in the morning
+ and tell Pharaoh that he would stretch out his hand and smite his people
+ with a pestilence, and would, on the morrow, cause it to rain a very
+ grievous hail, such as had never been known in the land of Egypt. He also
+ told Moses to give notice, so that they might get all the cattle that were
+ in the fields under cover. It must be remembered that all these cattle had
+ recently died of the murrain, and their dead bodies had been covered with
+ boils and blains. This, however, had no effect, and Moses stretched forth
+ his hand toward heaven, and the Lord sent thunder, and hail and lightning,
+ and fire that ran along the ground, and the hail fell upon all the land of
+ Egypt, and all that were in the fields, both man and beast, were smitten,
+ and the hail smote every herb of the field, and broke every tree of the
+ country except that portion inhabited by the children of Israel; there,
+ there was no hail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this hail storm Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron and admitted that
+ he had sinned, that the Lord was righteous, and that the Egyptians were
+ wicked, and requested them to ask the Lord that there be no more
+ thunderings and hail, and that he would let the Hebrews go. Moses agreed
+ that as soon as he got out of the city he would stretch forth his hands
+ unto the Lord, and that the thunderings should cease and the hail should
+ stop. But, when the rain and the hail and the thundering ceased, Pharaoh
+ concluded that he would not let the children of Israel go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, God sent Moses and Aaron, instructing them to tell Pharaoh that if
+ he refused to let the people go, the face of the earth would be covered
+ with locusts, so that man would not be able to see the ground, and that
+ these locusts would eat the residue of that which escaped from the hail;
+ that they would eat every tree out of the field; that they would fill the
+ houses of Pharaoh and the houses of all his servants, and the houses of
+ all the Egyptians. Moses delivered the message, and went out from Pharaoh.
+ Some of Pharaoh's servants entreated their master to let the children of
+ Israel go. Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron and asked them, who wished to
+ go into the wilderness to sacrifice. They replied that they wished to go
+ with the young and old; with their sons and daughters, with flocks and
+ herds. Pharaoh would not consent to this, but agreed that the men might
+ go. Thereupon Pharaoh drove Moses and Aaron out of his sight. Then God
+ told Moses to stretch forth his hand upon the land of Egypt for the
+ locusts, that they might come up and eat every herb, even all that the
+ hail had left. "And Moses stretched out his rod over the land of Egypt,
+ and the Lord brought an east wind all that day and all that night; and
+ when it was morning the east wind brought the locusts; and they came up
+ over all the land of Egypt and rested upon all the coasts covering the
+ face of the whole earth, so that the land was darkened; and they ate every
+ herb and all the fruit of the trees which the hail had left, and there
+ remained not any green thing on the trees or in the herbs of the field
+ throughout the land of Egypt." Pharaoh then called for Moses and Aaron in
+ great haste, admitted that he had sinned against the Lord their God and
+ against them, asked their forgiveness and requested them to intercede with
+ God that he might take away the locusts. They went out from his presence
+ and asked the Lord to drive the locusts away, "And the Lord made a strong
+ west wind which took away the locusts, and cast them into the Red Sea so
+ that there remained not one locust in all the coasts of Egypt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the locusts were gone, Pharaoh changed his mind, and, in the
+ language of the sacred text, "the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart so that he
+ would not let the children of Israel go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lord then told Moses to stretch out his hand toward heaven that there
+ might be darkness over the land of Egypt, "even darkness which might be
+ felt." "And Moses stretched forth his hand toward heaven, and there was a
+ thick darkness over the land of Egypt for three days during which time
+ they saw not each other, neither arose any of the people from their places
+ for three days; but the children of Israel had light in their dwellings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It strikes me that when the land of Egypt was covered with thick darkness&mdash;so
+ thick that it could be felt, and when light was in the dwellings of the
+ Israelites, there could have been no better time for the Hebrews to have
+ left the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pharaoh again called for Moses, and told him that his people could go and
+ serve the Lord, provided they would leave their flocks and herds. Moses
+ would not agree to this, for the reason that they needed the flocks and
+ herds for sacrifices and burnt offerings, and he did not know how many of
+ the animals God might require, and for that reason he could not leave a
+ single hoof. Upon the question of the cattle, they divided, and Pharaoh
+ again refused to let the people go. God then commanded Moses to tell the
+ Hebrews to borrow, each of his neighbor, jewels of silver and gold. By a
+ miraculous interposition the Hebrews found favor in the sight of the
+ Egyptians so that they loaned the articles asked for. After this, Moses
+ again went to Pharaoh and told him that all the first-born in the land of
+ Egypt, from the first-born of Pharaoh upon the throne, unto the first-born
+ of the maid-servant who was behind the mill, as well as the first-born of
+ beasts, should die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As all the beasts had been destroyed by disease and hail, it is
+ troublesome to understand the meaning of the threat as to their
+ first-born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Preparations were accordingly made for carrying this frightful threat into
+ execution. Blood was put on the door-posts of all houses inhabited by
+ Hebrews, so that God, as he passed through that land, might not be
+ mistaken and destroy the first-born of the Jews. "And it came to pass that
+ at midnight the Lord smote all the first-born in the land of Egypt, the
+ first-born of Pharaoh who sat on the throne, and the first-born of the
+ captive who was in the dungeon. And Pharaoh rose up in the night, and all
+ his servants, and all the Egyptians, and there was a great cry in Egypt,
+ for there was not a house where there was not one dead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What had these children done? Why should the babes in the cradle be
+ destroyed on account of the crime of Pharaoh? Why should the cattle be
+ destroyed because man had enslaved his brother? In those days women and
+ children and cattle were put upon an exact equality, and all considered as
+ the property of the men; and when man in some way excited the wrath of
+ God, he punished them by destroying all their cattle, their wives, and
+ their little ones. Where can words be found bitter enough to describe a
+ god who would kill wives and babes because husbands and fathers had failed
+ to keep his law? Every good man, and every good woman, must hate and
+ despise such a deity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the death of all the first-born Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron, and
+ not only gave his consent that they might go with the Hebrews into the
+ wilderness, but besought them to go at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it possible that an infinite God, creator of all worlds and sustainer
+ of all life, said to Pharaoh, "If you do not let my people go, I will turn
+ all the water of your country into blood," and that upon the refusal of
+ Pharaoh to release the people, God did turn all the waters into blood? Do
+ you believe this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you believe that Pharaoh even after all the water was turned to blood,
+ refused to let the Hebrews go, and that thereupon God told him he would
+ cover his land with frogs? Do you believe this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you believe that after the land was covered with frogs Pharaoh still
+ refused to let the people go, and that God then said to him, "I will cover
+ you and all your people with lice?" Do you believe God would make this
+ threat?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you also believe that God told Pharaoh, "It you do not let these people
+ go, I will fill all your houses and cover your country with flies?" Do you
+ believe God makes such threats as this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course God must have known that turning the waters into blood, covering
+ the country with frogs, infesting all flesh with lice, and filling all
+ houses with flies, would not accomplish his object, and that all these
+ plagues would have no effect whatever upon the Egyptian king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you believe that, failing to accomplish anything by the flies, God told
+ Pharaoh that if he did not let the people go he would kill his cattle with
+ murrain? Does such a threat sound God-like?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you believe that, failing to effect anything by killing the cattle,
+ this same God then threatened to afflict all the people with boils,
+ including the magicians who had been rivaling him in the matter of
+ miracles; and failing to do anything by boils, that he resorted to hail?
+ Does this sound reasonable? The hail experiment having accomplished
+ nothing, do you believe that God murdered the first-born of animals and
+ men? Is it possible to conceive of anything more utterly absurd, stupid,
+ revolting, cruel and senseless, than the miracles said to have been
+ wrought by the Almighty for the purpose of inducing Pharaoh to liberate
+ the children of Israel?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not altogether more reasonable to say that the Jewish people, being
+ in slavery, accounted for the misfortunes and calamities, suffered by the
+ Egyptians, by saying that they were the judgments of God?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Armada of Spain was wrecked and scattered by the storm, the
+ English people believed that God had interposed in their behalf, and
+ publicly gave thanks. When the battle of Lepanto was won, it was believed
+ by the Catholic world that the victory was given in answer to prayer. So,
+ our fore-fathers in their Revolutionary struggle saw, or thought they saw,
+ the hand of God, and most firmly believed that they achieved their
+ independence by the interposition of the Most High.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, it may be that while the Hebrews were enslaved by the Egyptians,
+ there were plagues of locusts and flies. It may be that there were some
+ diseases by which many of the cattle perished. It may be that a pestilence
+ visited that country so that in nearly every house there was some one
+ dead. If so, it was but natural for the enslaved and superstitious Jews to
+ account for these calamities by saying that they were punishments sent by
+ their God. Such ideas will be found in the history of every country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a long time the Jews held these opinions, and they were handed from
+ father to son simply by tradition. By the time a written language had been
+ produced, thousands of additions had been made, and numberless details
+ invented; so that we have not only an account of the plagues suffered by
+ the Egyptians, but the whole woven into a connected story, containing the
+ threats made by Moses and Aaron, the miracles wrought by them, the
+ promises of Pharaoh, and finally the release of the Hebrews, as a result
+ of the marvelous things performed in their behalf by Jehovah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In any event it is infinitely more probable that the author was
+ misinformed, than that the God of this universe was guilty of these
+ childish, heartless and infamous things. The solution of the whole matter
+ is this:&mdash;Moses was mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIII. THE FLIGHT.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three millions of people, with their flocks and herds, with borrowed
+ jewelry and raiment, with unleavened dough in kneading troughs bound in
+ their clothes upon their shoulders, in one night commenced their journey
+ for the land of promise. We are not told how they were informed of the
+ precise time to start. With all the modern appliances, it would require
+ months of time to inform three millions of people of any fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this vast assemblage there were six hundred thousand men of war, and
+ with them were the old, the young, the diseased and helpless. Where were
+ those people going? They were going to the desert of Sinai, compared with
+ which Sahara is a garden. Imagine an ocean of lava torn by storm and vexed
+ by tempest, suddenly gazed at by a Gorgon and changed instantly to stone!
+ Such was the desert of Sinai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All of the civilized nations of the world could not feed and support three
+ millions of people on the desert of Sinai for forty years. It would cost
+ more than one hundred thousand millions of dollars, and would bankrupt
+ Christendom. They had with them their flocks and herds, and the sheep were
+ so numerous that the Israelites sacrificed, at one time, more than one
+ hundred and fifty thousand first-born lambs. How were these flocks
+ supported? What did they eat? Where were meadows and pastures for them?
+ There was no grass, no forests&mdash;nothing! There is no account of its
+ having rained baled hay, nor is it even claimed that they were
+ miraculously fed. To support these flocks, millions of acres of pasture
+ would have been required. God did not take the Israelites through the land
+ of the Philistines, for fear that when they saw the people of that country
+ they would return to Egypt, but he took them by the way of the wilderness
+ to the Red Sea, going before them by day in a pillar of cloud, and by
+ night, in a pillar of fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it was told Pharaoh that the people had fled, he made ready and took
+ six hundred chosen chariots of Egypt, and pursued after the children of
+ Israel, overtaking them by the sea. As all the animals had long before
+ that time been destroyed, we are not informed where Pharaoh obtained the
+ horses for his chariots. The moment the children of Israel saw the hosts
+ of Pharaoh, although they had six hundred thousand men of war, they
+ immediately cried unto the Lord for protection. It is wonderful to me that
+ a land that had been ravaged by the plagues described in the Bible, still
+ had the power to put in the field an army that would carry terror to the
+ hearts of six hundred thousand men of war. Even with the help of God, it
+ seems, they were not strong enough to meet the Egyptians in the open
+ field, but resorted to strategy. Moses again stretched forth his wonderful
+ rod over the waters of the Red Sea, and they were divided, and the Hebrews
+ passed through on dry land, the waters standing up like a wall on either
+ side. The Egyptians pursued them; "and in the morning watch the Lord
+ looked into the hosts of the Egyptians, through the pillar of fire," and
+ proceeded to take the wheels off their chariots. As soon as the wheels
+ were off, God told Moses to stretch out his hand over the sea. Moses did
+ so, and immediately "the waters returned and covered the chariots and
+ horsemen and all the hosts of Pharaoh that came into the sea, and there
+ remained not so much as one of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This account may be true, but still it hardly looks reasonable that God
+ would take the wheels off the chariots. How did he do it? Did he pull out
+ the linch-pins, or did he just take them off by main force?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a picture this presents to the mind! God the creator of the universe,
+ maker of every shining, glittering star, engaged in pulling off the wheels
+ of wagons, that he might convince Pharaoh of his greatness and power!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where were these people going? They were going to the promised land. How
+ large a country was that? About twelve thousand square miles. About
+ one-fifth the size of the State of Illinois. It was a frightful country,
+ covered with rocks and desolation. How many people were in the promised
+ land already? Moses tells us there were seven nations in that country
+ mightier than the Jews. As there were at least three millions of Jews,
+ there must have been at least twenty-one millions of people already in
+ that country. These had to be driven out in order that room might be made
+ for the chosen people of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems, however, that God was not willing to take the children of Israel
+ into the promised land immediately. They were not fit to inhabit the land
+ of Canaan; so he made up his mind to allow them to wander upon the desert
+ until all except two, who had left Egypt, should perish. Of all the slaves
+ released from Egyptian bondage, only two were allowed to reach the
+ promised land!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the Hebrews crossed the Red Sea, they found themselves without
+ food, and with water unfit to drink by reason of its bitterness, and they
+ began to murmur against Moses, who cried unto the Lord, and "the Lord
+ showed him a tree." Moses cast this tree into the waters, and they became
+ sweet. "And it came to pass in the morning the dew lay around about the
+ camp; and when the dew that lay was gone, behold, upon the face of the
+ wilderness lay a small round thing, small as the hoar-frost upon the
+ ground. And Moses said unto them, this is the bread which the Lord hath
+ given you to eat." This manna was a very peculiar thing. It would melt in
+ the sun, and yet they could cook it by seething and baking. One would as
+ soon think of frying snow or of broiling icicles. But this manna had
+ another remarkable quality. No matter how much or little any person
+ gathered, he would have an exact omer; if he gathered more, it would
+ shrink to that amount, and if he gathered less, it would swell exactly to
+ that amount. What a magnificent substance manna would be with which to
+ make a currency&mdash;shrinking and swelling according to the great laws
+ of supply and demand!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon this manna the children of Israel lived for forty years, until they
+ came to a habitable land. With this meat were they fed until they reached
+ the borders of the land of Canaan." We are told in the twenty-first
+ chapter of Numbers, that the people at last became tired of' the manna,
+ complained of God, and asked Moses why he brought them out of the land of
+ Egypt to die in the wilderness. And they said:&mdash;"There is no bread,
+ nor have we any water. Our soul loatheth this light food."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told by some commentators that the Jews lived on manna for forty
+ years; by others that they lived upon it for only a short time. As a
+ matter of fact the accounts differ, and this difference is the opportunity
+ for commentators. It also allows us to exercise faith in believing that
+ both accounts are true. If the accounts agreed, and were reasonable, they
+ would be believed by the wicked and unregenerated. But as they are
+ different and unreasonable, they are believed only by the good. Whenever a
+ statement in the Bible is unreasonable, and you believe it, you are
+ considered quite a good Christian. If the statement is grossly absurd and
+ infinitely impossible, and you still believe it, you are a saint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children of Israel were in the desert, and they were out of water.
+ They had nothing to eat but manna, and this they had had so long that the
+ soul of every person abhorred it. Under these circumstances they
+ complained to Moses. Now, as God is infinite, he could just as well have
+ furnished them with an abundance of the purest and coolest of water, and
+ could, without the slightest trouble to himself, have given them three
+ excellent meals a day, with a generous variety of meats and vegetables, it
+ is very hard to see why he did not do so. It is still harder to conceive
+ why he fell into a rage when the people mildly suggested that they would
+ like a change of diet. Day after day, week after week, month after month,
+ year after year, nothing but manna. No doubt they did the best they could
+ by cooking it in different ways, but in spite of themselves they began to
+ loathe its sight and taste, and so they asked Moses to use his influence
+ to secure a change in the bill of fare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, I ask, whether it was unreasonable for the Jews to suggest that a
+ little meat would be very gratefully received? It seems, however, that as
+ soon as the request was made, this God of infinite mercy became infinitely
+ enraged, and instead of granting it, went into partnership with serpents,
+ for the purpose of punishing the hungry wretches to whom he had promised a
+ land flowing with milk and honey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where did these serpents come from? How did God convey the information to
+ the serpents, that he wished them to go to the desert of Sinai and bite
+ some Jews? It may be urged that these serpents were created for the
+ express purpose of punishing the children of Israel for having had the
+ presumption, like Oliver Twist, to ask for more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is another account in the eleventh chapter of Numbers, of the people
+ murmuring because of their food. They remembered the fish, the cucumbers,
+ the melons, the leeks, the onions and the garlic of Egypt, and they asked
+ for meat. The people went to the tent of Moses and asked him for flesh.
+ Moses cried unto the Lord and asked him why he did not take care of the
+ multitude. God thereupon agreed that they should have meat, not for a day
+ or two, but for a month, until the meat should come out of their nostrils
+ and become loathsome to them. He then caused a wind to bring quails from
+ beyond the sea, and cast them into the camp, on every side of the camp
+ around about for the space of a days journey. And the people gathered
+ them, and while the flesh was yet between their teeth the wrath of God
+ being provoked against them, struck them with an exceeding great plague.
+ Serpents, also, were sent among them, and thousands perished for the crime
+ of having been hungry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. Alexander Cruden commenting upon this account says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God caused a wind to rise that drove the quails within and about the camp
+ of the Israelites; and it is in this that the miracle consists, that they
+ were brought so seasonably to this place, and in so great numbers as to
+ suffice above a million of persons above a month. Some authors affirm,
+ that in those eastern and southern countries, quails are innumerable, so
+ that in one part of Italy within the compass of five miles, there were
+ taken about an hundred thousand of them every day for a month together;
+ and that sometimes they fly so thick over the sea, that being weary they
+ fall into ships, sometimes in such numbers, that they sink them with their
+ weight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No wonder Mr. Cruden believed the Mosaic account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Must we believe that God made an arrangement with hornets for the purpose
+ af securing their services in driving the Canaanites from the land of
+ promise? Is this belief necessary unto salvation? Must we believe that God
+ said to the Jews that he would send hornets before them to drive out the
+ Canaanites, as related in the twenty-third chapter of Exodus, and the
+ second chapter of Deuteronomy? How would the hornets know a Canaanite? In
+ what way would God put it in the mind of a hornet to attack a Canaanite?
+ Did God create hornets for that especial purpose, implanting an instinct
+ to attack a Canaanite, but not a Hebrew? Can we conceive of the Almighty
+ granting letters of marque and reprisal to hornets? Of course it is
+ admitted that nothing in the world would be better calculated to make a
+ man leave his native land than a few hornets. Is it possible for us to
+ believe that an infinite being would resort to such expedients in order to
+ drive the Canaanites from their country? He could just as easily have
+ spoken the Canaanites out of existence as to have spoken the hornets in.
+ In this way a vast amount of trouble, pain and suffering would have been
+ saved. Is it possible that there is, in this country, an intelligent
+ clergyman who will insist that these stories are true; that we must
+ believe them in in order to be good people in this world, and glorified
+ souls in the next?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are also told that God instructed the Hebrews to kill the Canaanites
+ slowly, giving as a reason that the beasts of the field might increase
+ upon his chosen people. When we take into consideration the fact that the
+ Holy Land contained only about eleven or twelve thousand square miles, and
+ was at that time inhabited by at least twenty-one millions of people, it
+ does not seem reasonable that the wild beasts could have been numerous
+ enough to cause any great alarm. The same ratio of population would give
+ to the State of Illinois at least one hundred and twenty millions of
+ inhabitants. Can anybody believe that, under such circumstances, the
+ danger from wild beasts could be very great? What would we think of a
+ general, invading such a State, if he should order his soldiers to kill
+ the people slowly, lest the wild beasts might increase upon them? Is it
+ possible that a God capable of doing the miracles recounted in the Old
+ Testament could not, in some way, have disposed of the wild beasts? After
+ the Canaanites were driven out, could he not have employed the hornets to
+ drive out the wild beasts? Think of a God that could drive twenty-one
+ millions of people out of the promised land, could raise up innumerable
+ stinging flies, and could cover the earth with fiery serpents, and yet
+ seems to have been perfectly powerless against the wild beasts of the land
+ of Canaan!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Speaking of these hornets, one of the good old commentators, whose views
+ have long been considered of great value by the believers in the
+ inspiration of the Bible, uses the following language:&mdash;"Hornets are
+ a sort of strong flies, which the Lord used as instruments to plague the
+ enemies of his people. They are of themselves very troublesome and
+ mischievous, and those the Lord made use of were, it is thought, of an
+ extraordinary bigness and perniciousness. It is said they live as the
+ wasps, and that they have a king or captain, and pestilent stings as bees,
+ and that, if twenty-seven of them sting man or beast, it is certain death
+ to either. Nor is it strange that such creatures did drive out the
+ Canaanites from their habitations; for many heathen writers give instances
+ of some people driven from their seats by frogs, others by mice, others by
+ bees and wasps. And it is said that a Christian city, being besieged by
+ Sapores, king of Persia, was delivered by hornets; for the elephants and
+ beasts being stung by them, waxed unruly, and so the whole army fled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a few years ago, all such stories were believed by the Christian
+ world; and it is a historical fact, that Voltaire was the third man of any
+ note in Europe, who took the ground that the mythologies of Greece and
+ Rome were without foundation. Until his time, most Christians believed as
+ thoroughly in the miracles ascribed to the Greek and Roman gods as in
+ those of Christ and Jehovah. The Christian world cultivated credulity, not
+ only as one of the virtues, but as the greatest of them all. But, when
+ Luther and his followers left the Church of Rome, they were compelled to
+ deny the power of the Catholic Church, at that time, to suspend the laws
+ of nature, but took the ground that such power ceased with the apostolic
+ age. They insisted that all things now happened in accordance with the
+ laws of nature, with the exception of a few special interferences in favor
+ of the Protestant Church in answer to prayer. They taught their children a
+ double philosophy: by one, they were to show the impossibility of Catholic
+ miracles, because opposed to the laws of nature; by the other, the
+ probability of the miracles of the apostolic age, because they were in
+ conformity with the statements of the Scriptures. They had two
+ foundations: one, the law of nature, and the other, the word of God. The
+ Protestants have endeavored to carry on this double process of reasoning,
+ and the result has been a gradual increase of confidence in the law of
+ nature, and a gradual decrease of confidence in the word of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told, in this inspired account, that the clothing of the Jewish
+ people did not wax old, and that their shoes refused to wear out. Some
+ commentators have insisted that angels attended to the wardrobes of the
+ Hebrews, patched their garments, and mended their shoes. Certain it is,
+ however, that the same clothes lasted them for forty years, during the
+ entire journey from Egypt to the Holy Land. Little boys starting out with
+ their first pantaloons, grew as they traveled, and their clothes grew with
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can it be necessary to believe a story like this? Will men make better
+ husbands, fathers, neighbors, and citizens, simply by giving credence to
+ these childish and impossible things? Certainly an infinite God could have
+ transported the Jews to the Holy Land in a moment, and could, as easily,
+ have removed the Canaanites to some other country. Surely there was no
+ necessity for doing thousands and thousands of petty miracles, day after
+ day for forty years, looking after the clothes of three millions of
+ people, changing the nature of wool and linen and leather, so that they
+ would not "wax old." Every step, every motion, would wear away some part
+ of the clothing, some part of the shoes. Were these parts, so worn away,
+ perpetually renewed, or was the nature of things so changed that they
+ could not wear away? We know that whenever matter comes in contact with
+ matter, certain atoms, by abrasion, are lost. Were these atoms gathered up
+ every night by angels, and replaced on the soles of the shoes, on the
+ elbows of coats, and on the knees of pantaloons, so that the next morning
+ they would be precisely in the condition they were on the morning before?
+ There must be a mistake somewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can we believe that the real God, if there is one, ever ordered a man to
+ be killed simply for making hair oil, or ointment? We are told in the
+ thirtieth chapter of Exodus, that the Lord commanded Moses to take myrrh,
+ cinnamon, sweet calamus, cassia, and olive oil, and make a holy ointment
+ for the purpose of anointing the tabernacle, tables, candlesticks and
+ other utensils, as well as Aaron and his sons; saying, at the same time,
+ that whosoever compounded any like it, or whoever put any of it on a
+ stranger, should be put to death. In the same chapter, the Lord furnishes
+ Moses with a recipe for making a perfume, saying, that whoever should make
+ any which smelled like it, should be cut off from his people. This, to me,
+ sounds so unreasonable that I cannot believe it. Why should an infinite
+ God care whether mankind made ointments and perfumes like his or not? Why
+ should the Creator of all things threaten to kill a priest who approached
+ his altar without having washed his hands and feet? These commandments and
+ these penalties would disgrace the vainest tyrant that ever sat, by
+ chance, upon a throne. There must be some mistake. I cannot believe that
+ an infinite Intelligence appeared to Moses upon Mount Sinai having with
+ him a variety of patterns for making a tabernacle, tongs, snuffers and
+ dishes. Neither can I believe that God told Moses how to cut and trim a
+ coat for a priest. Why should a God care about such things? Why should he
+ insist on having buttons sewed in certain rows, and fringes of a certain
+ color? Suppose an intelligent civilized man was to overhear, on Mount
+ Sinai, the following instructions from God to Moses:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must consecrate my priests as follows:&mdash;You must kill a bullock
+ for a sin offering, and have Aaron and his sons lay their hands upon the
+ head of the bullock. Then you must take the blood and put it upon the
+ horns of the altar round about with your finger, and pour some blood at
+ the bottom of the altar to make a reconciliation; and of the fat that is
+ upon the inwards, the caul above the liver and two kidneys, and their fat,
+ and burn them upon the altar. You must get a ram for a burnt offering, and
+ Aaron and his sons must lay their hands upon the head of the ram. Then you
+ must kill it and sprinkle the blood upon the altar, and cut the ram into
+ pieces, and burn the head, and the pieces, and the fat, and wash the
+ inwards and the lungs in water and then burn the whole ram upon the altar
+ for a sweet savor unto me. Then you must get another ram, and have Aaron
+ and his sons lay their hands upon the head of that, then kill it and take
+ of its blood, and put it on the top of Aaron's right ear, and on the thumb
+ of his right hand, and on the great toe of his right foot. And you must
+ also put a little of the blood upon the top of the right ears of Aaron's
+ sons, and on the thumbs of their right hands and on the great toes of
+ their right feet. And then you must take of the fat that is on the
+ inwards, and the caul above the liver and the two kidneys, and their fat,
+ and the right shoulder, and out of a basket of unleavened bread you must
+ take one unleavened cake and another of oil bread, and one wafer, and put
+ them on the fat of the right shoulder. And you must take of the anointing
+ oil, and of the blood, and sprinkle it on Aaron, and on his garments, and
+ on his sons' garments, and sanctify them and all their clothes."&mdash;Do
+ you believe that he would have even suspected that the creator of the
+ universe was talking?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can any one now tell why God commanded the Jews, when they were upon the
+ desert of Sinai, to plant trees, telling them at the same time that they
+ must not eat any of the fruit of such trees until after the fourth year?
+ Trees could not have been planted in that desert, and if they had been,
+ they could not have lived. Why did God tell Moses, while in the desert, to
+ make curtains of fine linen? Where could he have obtained his flax? There
+ was no land upon which it could have been produced. Why did he tell him to
+ make things of gold, and silver, and precious stones, when they could not
+ have been in possession of these things? There is but one answer, and that
+ is, the Pentateuch was written hundreds of years after the Jews had
+ settled in the Holy Land, and hundreds of years after Moses was dust and
+ ashes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Jews had a written language, and that must have been long after
+ their flight from Egypt, they wrote out their history and their laws.
+ Tradition had filled the infancy of the nation with miracles and special
+ interpositions in their behalf by Jehovah. Patriotism would not allow
+ these wonders to grow small, and priestcraft never denied a miracle. There
+ were traditions to the effect that God had spoken face to face with Moses;
+ that he had given him the tables of the law, and had, in a thousand ways,
+ made known his will; and whenever the priests wished to make new laws, or
+ amend old ones, they pretended to have found something more that God said
+ to Moses at Sinai. In this way obedience was more easily secured. Only a
+ very few of the people could read, and, as a consequence, additions,
+ interpolations and erasures had no fear of detection. In this way we
+ account for the fact that Moses is made to speak of things that did not
+ exist in his day, and were unknown for hundreds of years after his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the thirtieth chapter of Exodus, we are told that the people, when
+ numbered, must give each one a half shekel after the shekel of the <i>sanctuary</i>.
+ At that time no such money existed, and consequently the account could
+ not, by any possibility, have been written until after there was a shekel
+ of the sanctuary, and there was no such thing until long after the death
+ of Moses. If we should read that C&aelig;sar paid his troops in pounds,
+ shillings and pence, we would certainly know that the account was not
+ written by C&aelig;sar, nor in his time, but we would know that it was
+ written after the English had given these names to certain coins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, we find, that when the Jews were upon the desert it was commanded that
+ every mother should bring, as a sin offering, a couple of doves to the
+ priests, and the priests were compelled to eat these doves in the most
+ holy place. At the time this law appears to have been given, there were
+ three million people, and only three priests, Aaron, Eleazer and Ithamar.
+ Among three million people there would be, at least, three hundred births
+ a day. Certainly we are not expected to believe that these three priests
+ devoured six hundred pigeons every twenty-four hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should a woman ask pardon of God for having been a mother? Why should
+ that be considered a crime in Exodus, which is commanded as a duty in
+ Genesis? Why should a mother be declared unclean? Why should giving birth
+ to a daughter be regarded twice as criminal as giving birth to a son? Can
+ we believe that such laws and ceremonies were made and instituted by a
+ merciful and intelligent God? If there is anything in this poor world
+ suggestive of, and standing for, all that is sweet, loving and pure, it is
+ a mother holding in her thrilled and happy arms her prattling babe. Read
+ the twelfth chapter of Leviticus, and you will see that when a woman
+ became the mother of a boy she was so unclean that she was not allowed to
+ touch a hallowed thing, nor to enter the sanctuary for forty days. If the
+ babe was a girl, then the mother was unfit for eighty days, to enter the
+ house of God, or to touch the sacred tongs and snuffers. These laws, born
+ of barbarism, are unworthy of our day, and should be regarded simply as
+ the mistakes of savages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as low in the scale of intelligence are the directions given in the
+ fifth chapter of Numbers, for the trial of a wife of whom the husband was
+ jealous. This foolish chapter has been the foundation of all appeals to
+ God for the ascertainment of facts, such as the corsned, trial by battle,
+ by water, and by fire, the last of which is our judicial oath. It is very
+ easy to believe that in those days a guilty woman would be afraid to drink
+ the water of jealousy and take the oath, and that, through fear, she might
+ be made to confess. Admitting that the deception tended not only to
+ prevent crime, but to discover it when committed, still, we cannot admit
+ that an honest god would, for any purpose, resort to dishonest means. In
+ all countries fear is employed as a means of getting at the truth, and in
+ this there is nothing dishonest, provided falsehood is not resorted to for
+ the purpose of producing the fear. Protestants laugh at Catholics because
+ of their belief in the efficacy of holy water, and yet they teach their
+ children that a little holy water, in which had been thrown some dust from
+ the floor of the sanctuary, would, work a miracle in a woman's flesh. For
+ hundreds of years our fathers believed that a perjurer could not swallow a
+ piece of sacramental bread. Such stories belong to the childhood of our
+ race, and are now believed only by mental infants and intellectual babes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot believe that Moses had in his hands a couple of tables of stone,
+ upon which God had written the Ten Commandments, and that when he saw the
+ golden calf, and the dancing, that he dashed the tables to the earth and
+ broke them in pieces. Neither do I believe that Moses took a golden calf,
+ burnt it, ground it to powder, and made the people drink it with water, as
+ related in the thirty-second chapter of Exodus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is another account of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses,
+ in the nineteenth and twentieth chapters of Exodus. In this account not
+ one word is said about the people having made a golden calf, nor about the
+ breaking of the tables of stone. In the thirty-fourth chapter of Exodus,
+ there is an account of the renewal of the broken tables of the law, and
+ the commandments are given, but they are not the same commandments
+ mentioned in the twentieth chapter. There are two accounts of the same
+ transaction. Both of these stories cannot be true, and yet both must be
+ believed. Any one who will take the trouble to read the nineteenth and
+ twentieth chapters, and the last verse of the thirty-first chapter, the
+ thirty-second, thirty-third, and thirty-fourth chapters of Exodus, will be
+ compelled to admit that both accounts cannot be true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the last account it appears that while Moses was upon Mount Sinai
+ receiving the commandments from God, the people brought their jewelry to
+ Aaron and he cast for them a golden calf. This happened before any
+ commandment against idolatry had been given. A god ought, certainly, to
+ publish his laws before inflicting penalties for their violation. To
+ inflict punishment for breaking unknown and unpublished laws is, in the
+ last degree, cruel and unjust. It may be replied that the Jews knew better
+ than to worship idols, before the law was given. If this is so, why should
+ the law have been given? In all civilized countries, laws are made and
+ promulgated, not simply for the purpose of informing the people as to what
+ is right and wrong, but to inform them of the penalties to be visited upon
+ those who violate the laws. When the Ten Commandments were given, no
+ penalties were attached. Not one word was written on the tables of stone
+ as to the punishments that would be inflicted for breaking any or all of
+ the inspired laws. The people should not have been punished for violating
+ a commandment before it was given. And yet, in this case, Moses commanded
+ the sons of Levi to take their swords and slay every man his brother, his
+ companion, and his neighbor. The brutal order was obeyed, and three
+ thousand men were butchered.. The Levites consecrated themselves unto the
+ Lord by murdering their sons, and their brothers, for having violated a
+ commandment before it had been given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been contended for many years that the Ten Commandments are the
+ foundation of all ideas of justice and of law. Eminent jurists have bowed
+ to popular prejudice, and deformed their works by statements to the effect
+ that the Mosaic laws are the fountains from which sprang all ideas of
+ right and wrong. Nothing can be more stupidly false than such assertions.
+ Thousands of years before Moses was born, the Egyptians had a code of
+ laws. They had laws against blasphemy, murder, adultery, larceny, perjury,
+ laws for the collection of debts, the enforcement of contracts, the
+ ascertainment of damages, the redemption of property pawned, and upon
+ nearly every subject of human interest. The Egyptian code was far better
+ than the Mosaic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Laws spring from the instinct of self-preservation. Industry objected to
+ supporting idleness, and laws were made against theft. Laws were made
+ against murder, because a very large majority of the people have always
+ objected to being murdered. All fundamental laws were born simply of the
+ instinct of self-defence. Long before the Jewish savages assembled at the
+ foot of Sinai, laws had been made and enforced, not only in Egypt and
+ India, but by every tribe that ever existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible for human beings to exist together, without certain rules
+ of conduct, certain ideas of the proper and improper, of the right and
+ wrong, growing out of the relation. Certain rules must be made, and must
+ be enforced. This implies law, trial and punishment. Whoever produces
+ anything by weary labor, does not need a revelation from heaven to teach
+ him that he has a right to the thing produced. Not one of the learned
+ gentlemen who pretend that the Mosaic laws are filled with justice and
+ intelligence, would live, for a moment, in any country where such laws
+ were in force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing can be more wonderful than the medical ideas of Jehovah. He had
+ the strangest notions about the cause and cure of disease. With him
+ everything was miracle and wonder. In the fourteenth chapter of Leviticus,
+ we find the law for cleansing a leper:&mdash;"Then shall the priest take
+ for him that is to be cleansed, two birds, alive and clean, and cedar
+ wood, and scarlet, and hyssop. And the priest shall command that one of
+ the birds be killed in an <i>earthen</i> vessel, over <i>running</i>
+ water. As for the living bird, he shall take it, and the cedar wood, and
+ the scarlet, and the hyssop, and shall dip them, and the living bird, in
+ the blood of the bird that was killed over the running water. And he shall
+ sprinkle upon him that is to be cleansed from the leprosy, seven times,
+ and shall pronounce him clean, and shall let the living bird loose into
+ the open field."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told that God himself gave these directions to Moses. Does anybody
+ believe this? Why should the bird be killed in an <i>earthen</i> vessel?
+ Would the charm be broken if the vessel was of wood? Why over <i>running</i>
+ water? What would be thought of a physician now, who would give a
+ prescription like that?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not strange that God, although he gave hundreds of directions for
+ the purpose of discovering the presence of leprosy, and for cleansing the
+ leper after he was healed, forgot to tell how that disease could be cured?
+ Is it not wonderful that while God told his people what animals were fit
+ for food, he failed to give a list of plants that man might eat? Why did
+ he leave his children to find out the hurtful and the poisonous by
+ experiment, knowing that experiment, in millions of cases, must be death?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When reading the history of the Jewish people, of their flight from
+ slavery to death, of their exchange of tyrants, I must confess that my
+ sympathies are all aroused in their behalf. They were cheated, deceived
+ and abused. Their god was quick-tempered, unreasonable, cruel, revengeful
+ and dishonest. He was always promising but never performed. He wasted time
+ in ceremony and childish detail, and in the exaggeration of what he had
+ done. It is impossible for me to conceive of a character more utterly
+ detestable than that of the Hebrew god. He had solemnly promised the Jews
+ that he would take them from Egypt to a land flowing with milk and honey.
+ He had led them to believe that in a little while their troubles would be
+ over, and that they would soon in the land of Canaan, surrounded by their
+ wives and little ones, forget, the stripes and tears of Egypt. After
+ promising the poor wanderers again and again that he would lead them in
+ safety to the promised land of joy and plenty, this God, forgetting every
+ promise, said to the wretches in his power:&mdash;"Your carcasses shall
+ fall in this wilderness and your children shall wander until your
+ carcasses be wasted." This curse was the conclusion of the whole matter.
+ Into this dust of death and night faded all the promises of God. Into this
+ rottenness of wandering despair fell all the dreams of liberty and home.
+ Millions of corpses were left to rot in the desert, and each one certified
+ to the dishonesty of Jehovah. I cannot believe these things. They are so
+ cruel and heartless, that my blood is chilled and my sense of justice
+ shocked. A book that is equally abhorrent to my head and heart, cannot be
+ accepted as a revelation from God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we think of the poor Jews, destroyed, murdered, bitten by serpents,
+ visited by plagues, decimated by famine, butchered by each other,
+ swallowed by the earth, frightened, cursed, starved, deceived, robbed and
+ outraged, how thankful we should be that we are not the chosen people of
+ God. No wonder that they longed for the slavery of Egypt, and remembered
+ with sorrow the unhappy day when they exchanged masters. Compared with
+ Jehovah, Pharaoh was a benefactor, and the tyranny of Egypt was freedom to
+ those who suffered the liberty of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While reading the Pentateuch, I am filled with indignation, pity and
+ horror. Nothing can be sadder than the history of the starved and
+ frightened wretches who wandered over the desolate crags and sands of
+ wilderness and desert, the prey of famine, sword, and plague. Ignorant and
+ superstitious to the last degree, governed by falsehood, plundered by
+ hypocrisy, they were the sport of priests, and the food of fear. God was
+ their greatest enemy, and death their only friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible to conceive of a more thoroughly despicable, hateful, and
+ arrogant being, than the Jewish god. He is without a redeeming feature. In
+ the mythology of the world he has no parallel. He, only, is never touched
+ by agony and tears. He delights only in blood and pain. Human affections
+ are naught to him. He cares neither for love nor music, beauty nor joy. A
+ false friend, an unjust judge, a braggart, hypocrite, and tyrant, sincere
+ in hatred, jealous, vain, and revengeful, false in promise, honest in
+ curse, suspicious, ignorant, and changeable, infamous and hideous:&mdash;such
+ is the God of the Pentateuch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIV. CONFESS AND AVOID
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scientific Christians now admit that the Bible is not inspired in its
+ astronomy, geology, botany, zoology, nor in any science. In other words,
+ they admit that on these subjects, the Bible cannot be depended upon. If
+ all the statements in the Scriptures were true, there would be no
+ necessity for admitting that some of them are not inspired. A Christian
+ will not admit that a passage in the Bible is uninspired, until he is
+ satisfied that it is untrue. Orthodoxy itself has at last been compelled
+ to say, that while a passage may be true and uninspired, it cannot be
+ inspired if false.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the people of Europe had known as much of astronomy and geology when
+ the Bible was introduced among them, as they do now, there never could
+ have been one believer in the doctrine of inspiration. If the writers of
+ the various parts of the Bible had known as much about the sciences as is
+ now known by every intelligent man, the book never could have been
+ written. It was produced by ignorance, and has been believed and defended
+ by its author. It has lost power in the proportion that man has gained
+ knowledge. A few years ago, this book was appealed to in the settlement of
+ all scientific questions; but now, even the clergy confess that in such
+ matters, it has ceased to speak with the voice of authority. For the
+ establishment of facts, the word of man is now considered far better than
+ the word of God. In the world of science, Jehovah was superseded by
+ Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler. All that God told Moses, admitting the
+ entire account to be true, is dust and ashes compared to the discoveries
+ of Descartes, Laplace, and Humboldt. In matters of fact, the Bible has
+ ceased to be regarded as a standard. Science has succeeded in breaking the
+ chains of theology. A few years ago, Science endeavored to show that it
+ was not inconsistent with the Bible. The tables have been turned, and now,
+ Religion is endeavoring to prove that the Bible is not inconsistent with
+ Science. The standard has been changed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many ages, the Christians contended that the Bible, viewed simply as a
+ literary performance, was beyond all other books, and that man without the
+ assistance of God could not produce its equal. This claim was made when
+ but few books existed, and the Bible, being the only book generally known,
+ had no rival. But this claim, like the other, has been abandoned by many,
+ and soon will be, by all. Com pared with Shakespeare's "book and volume of
+ the brain," the "sacred" Bible shrinks and seems as feebly impotent and
+ vain, as would a pipe of Fan, when some great organ, voiced with every
+ tone, from the hoarse thunder of the sea to the winged warble of a mated
+ bird, floods and fills cathedral aisles with all the wealth of sound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is now maintained&mdash;and this appears to be the last fortification
+ behind which the doctrine of inspiration skulks and crouches&mdash;that
+ the Bible, although false and mistaken in its astronomy, geology,
+ geography, history and philosophy, is inspired in its morality. It is now
+ claimed that had it not been for this book, the world would have been
+ inhabited only by savages, and that had it not been for the Holy
+ Scriptures, man never would have even dreamed of the unity of God. A
+ belief in one God is claimed to be a dogma of almost infinite importance,
+ that with out this belief civilization is impossible, and that this fact
+ is the sun around which all the virtues revolve. For my part, I think it
+ infinitely more important to believe in man. Theology is a superstition&mdash;Humanity
+ a religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXV. "INSPIRED" SLAVERY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the Bible was inspired upon the subject of human slavery. Is
+ there, in the civilized world, to-day, a clergyman who believes in the
+ divinity of slavery? Does the Bible teach man to enslave his brother? If
+ it does, is it not blasphemous to say that it is inspired of God? If you
+ find the institution of slavery upheld in a book said to have been written
+ by God, what would you expect to find in a book inspired by the devil?
+ Would you expect to find that book in favor of liberty? Modern Christians,
+ ashamed of the God of the Old Testament, endeavor now to show that slavery
+ was neither commanded nor opposed by Jehovah. Nothing can be plainer than
+ the following passages from the twenty-fifth chapter of Leviticus.
+ "Moreover of the children of the strangers that do sojourn among you, of
+ them shall ye buy, and of their families that are with you, which they
+ begat in your land: and they shall be your possession. And ye shall take
+ them as an inheritance for your children after you, to inherit them for a
+ possession, they shall be your bondmen forever. Both thy bondmen, and thy
+ bondmaids, which thou shalt have, shall be of the heathen that are round
+ about you; of them shall ye buy bondmen, and bondmaids."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can we believe in this, the Nineteenth Century, that these infamous
+ passages were inspired by God? that God approved not only of human
+ slavery, but instructed his chosen people to buy the women, children and
+ babes of the heathen round about them? If it was right for the Hebrews to
+ buy, it was also right for the heathen to sell. This God, by commanding
+ the Hebrews to buy, approved of the selling of sons and daughters. The
+ Canaanite who, tempted by gold, lured by avarice, sold from the arms of
+ his wife the dimpled babe, simply made it possible for the Hebrews to obey
+ the orders of their God. If God is the author of the Bible, the reading of
+ these passages ought to cover his cheeks with shame. I ask the Christian
+ world to-day, was it right for the heathen to sell their children? Was it
+ right for God not only to uphold, but to command the infamous traffic in
+ human flesh? Could the most revengeful fiend, the most malicious vagrant
+ in the gloom of hell, sink to a lower moral depth than this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to this God, his chosen people were not only commanded to buy of
+ the heathen round about them, but were also permitted to buy each other
+ for a term of years. The law governing the purchase of Jews is laid down
+ in the twenty-first chapter of Exodus. "If thou buy a Hebrew servant, six
+ years shall he serve: and in the seventh he shall go out free for nothing.
+ If he came in by himself, he shall go out by himself: if he were married,
+ then his wife shall go out with him. If his master have given him a wife,
+ and she have borne him sons or daughters, the wife and her children shall
+ be her master's, and he shall go out by himself. And if the servant shall
+ plainly say, I love my master, my wife, and my children; I will not go out
+ free: Then his master shall bring him unto the judges; he shall also bring
+ him to the door, or unto the door-post: and his master shall bore his ear
+ through with an awl: and he shall serve him forever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you believe that God was the author of this infamous law? Do you
+ believe that the loving father of us all, turned the dimpled arms of babes
+ into manacles of iron? Do you believe that he baited the dungeon of
+ servitude with wife and child? Is it possible to love a God who would make
+ such laws? Is it possible not to hate and despise him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heathen are not spoken of as human beings. Their rights are never
+ mentioned. They were the rightful food of the sword, and their bodies were
+ made for stripes and chains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same chapter of the same inspired book, we are told that, "if a man
+ smite his servant, or his maid, with a rod, and he dies under his hand, he
+ shall be surely punished. Notwithstanding, if he continue a day or two, he
+ shall not be punished, for he is his money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Must we believe that God called some of his children the money of others?
+ Can we believe that God made lashes upon the naked back, a legal tender
+ for labor performed? Must we regard the auction block as an altar? Were
+ blood hounds apostles? Was the slave-pen a temple? Were the stealers and
+ whippers of babes and women the justified children of God?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is now contended that while the Old Testament is touched with the
+ barbarism of its time, that the New Testament is morally perfect, and that
+ on its pages can be found no blot or stain. As a matter of fact, the New
+ Testament is more decidedly in favor of human slavery than the old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For my part, I never will, I never can, worship a God who upholds the
+ institution of slavery. Such a God I hate and defy. I neither want his
+ heaven, nor fear his hell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXXVI. "INSPIRED" MARRIAGE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there an orthodox clergyman in the world, who will now declare that he
+ believes the institution of polygamy to be right? Is there one who will
+ publicly declare that, in his judgment, that institution ever was right?
+ Was there ever a time in the history of the world when it was right to
+ treat woman simply as property? Do not attempt to answer these questions
+ by saying, that the Bible is an exceedingly good book, that we are
+ indebted for our civilization to the sacred volume, and that without it,
+ man would lapse into savagery, and mental night. This is no answer. Was
+ there a time when the institution of polygamy was the highest expression
+ of human virtue? Is there a Christian woman, civilized, intelligent, and
+ free, who believes in the institution of polygamy? Are we better, purer,
+ and more intelligent than God was four thousand years ago? Why should we
+ imprison Mormons, and worship God? Polygamy is just as pure in Utah, as it
+ could have been in the promised land. Love and Virtue are the same the
+ whole world round, and Justice is the same in every star. All the
+ languages of the world are not sufficient to express the filth of
+ polygamy. It makes of man, a beast, of woman, a trembling slave. It
+ destroys the fireside, makes virtue an outcast, takes from human speech
+ its sweetest words, and leaves the heart a den, where crawl and hiss the
+ slimy serpents of most loathsome lust. Civilization rests upon the family.
+ The good family is the unit of good government. The virtues grow about the
+ holy hearth of home&mdash;they cluster, bloom, and shed their perfume
+ round the fireside where the one man loves the one woman. Lover&mdash;husband&mdash;wife&mdash;mother&mdash;father&mdash;child&mdash;home!&mdash;?
+ without these sacred words, the world is but a lair, and men and women
+ merely beasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should the innocent maiden and the loving mother worship the heartless
+ Jewish God? Why should they, with pure and stainless lips, read the vile
+ record of inspired lust?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The marriage of the one man to the one woman is the citadel and fortress
+ of civilization. Without this, woman becomes the prey and slave of lust
+ and power, and man goes back to savagery and crime. From the bottom of my
+ heart I hate, abhor and execrate all theories of life, of which the pure
+ and sacred home is not the corner-stone. Take from the world the family,
+ the fireside, the children born of wedded love, and there is nothing left.
+ The home where virtue dwells with love is like a lily with a heart of fire&mdash;the
+ fairest flower in all the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVII. "INSPIRED" WAR
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Bible be true, God commanded his chosen people to destroy men
+ simply for the crime of defending their native land. They were not allowed
+ to spare trembling and white-haired age, nor dimpled babes clasped in the
+ mothers' arms. They were ordered to kill women, and to pierce, with the
+ sword of war, the unborn child. "Our heavenly Father" commanded the
+ Hebrews to kill the men and women, the fathers, sons and brothers, but to
+ preserve the girls alive. Why were not the maidens also killed? Why were
+ they spared? Read the thirty-first chapter of Numbers, and you will find
+ that the maidens were given to the soldiers and the priests. Is there, in
+ all the history of war, a more infamous thing than this? Is it possible
+ that God permitted the violets of modesty, that grow and shed their
+ perfume in the maiden's heart, to be trampled beneath the brutal feet of
+ lust? If this was the order of God, what, under the same circumstances,
+ would have been the command of a devil? When, in this age of the world, a
+ woman, a wife, a mother, reads this record, she should, with scorn and
+ loathing, throw the book away. A general, who now should make such an
+ order, giving over to massacre and rapine a conquered people, would be
+ held in execration by the whole civilized world. Yet, if the Bible be
+ true, the supreme and infinite God was once a savage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little while ago, out upon the western plains, in a little path leading
+ to a cabin, were found the bodies of two children and their mother. Her
+ breast was filled with wounds received in the defence of her darlings.
+ They had been murdered by the savages. Suppose when looking at their
+ lifeless forms, some one had said, "This was done by the command of God!"
+ In Canaan there were countless scenes like this. There was no pity in
+ inspired war. God raised the black flag, and commanded his soldiers to
+ kill even the smiling infant in its mother's arms. Who is the blasphemer;
+ the man who denies the existence of God, or he who covers the robes of the
+ Infinite with innocent blood?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told in the Pentateuch, that God, the father of us all, gave
+ thousands of maidens, after having killed their fathers, their mothers,
+ and their brothers, to satisfy the brutal lusts of savage men. If there be
+ a God, I pray him to write in his book, opposite my name, that I denied
+ this lie for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXVIII. "INSPIRED" RELIGIOUS LIBERTY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the Bible, God selected the Jewish people through whom to
+ make known the great fact, that he was the only true and living God. For
+ this purpose, he appeared on several occasions to Moses&mdash;came down to
+ Sinai's top clothed in cloud and fire, and wrought a thousand miracles for
+ the preservation and education of the Jewish people. In their presence he
+ opened the waters of the sea. For them he caused bread to rain from
+ heaven. To quench their thirst, water leaped from the dry and barren rock.
+ Their enemies were miraculously destroyed; and for forty years, at least,
+ this God took upon himself the government of the Jews. But, after all
+ this, many of the people had less confidence in him than in gods of wood
+ and stone. In moments of trouble, in periods of disaster, in the darkness
+ of doubt, in the hunger and thirst of famine, instead of asking this God
+ for aid, they turned and sought the help of senseless things. This God,
+ with all his power and wisdom, could not even convince a few wandering and
+ wretched savages that he was more potent than the idols of Egypt. This God
+ was not willing that the Jews should think and investigate for themselves.
+ For heresy, the penalty was death. Where this God reigned, intellectual
+ liberty was unknown. He appealed only to brute force; he collected taxes
+ by threatening plagues; he demanded worship on pain of sword and fire;
+ acting as spy, inquisitor, judge and executioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the thirteenth chapter of Deuteronomy, we have the ideas of God as to
+ mental freedom. "If thy brother, the son of thy mother, or thy son, or the
+ wife of thy bosom, or thy friend which is as thine own soul, entice thee
+ secretly, saying, Let us go and serve other gods, which thou hast not
+ known, thou nor thy fathers; namely of the gods of the people which are
+ around about you, nigh unto thee, or far off from thee, from the one end
+ of the earth even unto the other end of the earth, Thou shalt not consent
+ unto him, nor hearken unto him, neither shall thine eye pity him, neither
+ shalt thou spare him, neither shalt thou conceal him. But thou shalt
+ surely kill him; thine hand shall be first upon him to put him to death,
+ and afterward the hand of all the people. And thou shalt stone him with
+ stones that he die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the religious liberty of God; the toleration of Jehovah. If I had
+ lived in Palestine at that time, and my wife, the mother of my children,
+ had said to me, "I am tired of Jehovah, he is always asking for blood; he
+ is never weary of killing; he is always telling of his might and strength;
+ always telling what he has done for the Jews, always asking for
+ sacrifices; for doves and lambs&mdash;blood, nothing but blood.&mdash;Let
+ us worship the sun. Jehovah is too revengeful, too malignant, too
+ exacting. Let us worship the sun. The sun has clothed the world in beauty;
+ it has covered the earth with flowers; by its divine light I first saw
+ your face, and my beautiful babe."&mdash;If I had obeyed the command of
+ God, I would have killed her. My hand would have been first upon her, and
+ after that the hands of all the people, and she would have been stoned
+ with stones until she died. For my part, I would never kill my wife, even
+ if commanded so to do by the real God of this universe. Think of taking up
+ some ragged rock and hurling it against the white bosom filled with love
+ for you; and when you saw oozing from the bruised lips of the death wound,
+ the red current of her sweet life&mdash;think of looking up to heaven and
+ receiving the congratulations of the infinite fiend whose commandment you
+ had obeyed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can we believe that any such command was ever given by a merciful and
+ intelligent God? Suppose, however, that God did give this law to the Jews,
+ and did tell them that whenever a man preached a heresy, or proposed to
+ worship any other God that they should kill him; and suppose that
+ afterward this same God took upon himself flesh, and came to this very
+ chosen people and taught a different religion, and that thereupon the Jews
+ crucified him; I ask you, did he not reap exactly what he had sown? What
+ right would this God have to complain of a crucifixion suffered in
+ accordance with his own command?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing can be more infamous than intellectual tyranny. To put chains upon
+ the body is as nothing compared with putting shackles on the brain. No god
+ is entitled to the worship or the respect of man who does not give, even
+ to the meanest of his children, every right that he claims for himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Pentateuch be true, religious persecution is a duty. The dungeons
+ of the Inquisition were temples, and the clank of every chain upon the
+ limbs of heresy was music in the ear of God. If the Pentateuch was
+ inspired, every heretic should be destroyed; and every man who advocates a
+ fact inconsistent with the sacred book, should be consumed by sword and
+ flame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Old Testament no one is told to reason with a heretic, and not one
+ word is said about relying upon argument, upon education, nor upon
+ intellectual development&mdash;nothing except simple brute force. Is there
+ to-day a Christian who will say that four thousand years ago, it was the
+ duty of a husband to kill his wife if she differed with him upon the
+ subject of religion? Is there one who will now say that, under such
+ circumstances, the wife ought to have been killed? Why should God be so
+ jealous of the wooden idols of the heathen? Could he not compete with
+ Baal? Was he envious of the success of the Egyptian magicians? Was it not
+ possible for him to make such a convincing display of his power as to
+ silence forever the voice of unbelief? Did this God have to resort to
+ force to make converts? Was he so ignorant of the structure of the human
+ mind as to believe all honest doubt a crime? If he wished to do away with
+ the idolatry of the Canaanites, why did he not appear to them? Why did he
+ not give them the tables of the law? Why did he only make known his will
+ to a few wandering savages in the desert of Sinai? Will some theologian
+ have the kindness to answer these questions? Will some minister, who now
+ believes in religious liberty, and eloquently denounces the intolerance of
+ Catholicism, explain these things; will he tell us why he worships an
+ intolerant God? Is a god who will burn a soul forever in another world,
+ better than a Christian who burns the body for a few hours in this? Is
+ there no intellectual liberty in heaven? Do the angels all discuss
+ questions on the same side? Are all the investigators in perdition? Will
+ the penitent thief, winged and crowned, laugh at the honest folks in hell?
+ Will the agony of the damned increase or decrease the happiness of God?
+ Will there be, in the universe, an eternal <i>auto da fe?</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XXIX. CONCLUSION
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Pentateuch is not inspired in its astronomy, geology, geography,
+ history or philosophy, if it is not inspired concerning slavery, polygamy,
+ war, law, religious or political liberty, or the rights of men, women and
+ children, what is it inspired in, or about? The unity of God?&mdash;that
+ was believed long before Moses was born. Special providence?&mdash;that
+ has been the doctrine of ignorance in all ages. The rights of property?&mdash;theft
+ was always a crime. The sacrifice of animals?&mdash;that was a custom
+ thousands of years before a Jew existed. The sacredness of life?&mdash;there
+ have always been laws against murder. The wickedness of perjury?&mdash;truthfulness
+ has always been a virtue. The beauty of chastity?&mdash;the Pentateuch
+ does not teach it. Thou shalt worship no other God?&mdash;that has been
+ the burden of all religions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it possible that the Pentateuch could not have been written by
+ uninspired men? that the assistance of God was necessary to produce these
+ books? Is it possible that Galileo ascertained the mechanical principles
+ of "Virtual Velocity," the laws of falling bodies and of all motion; that
+ Copernicus ascertained the true position of the earth and accounted for
+ all celestial phenomena; that Kepler discovered his three laws&mdash;discoveries
+ of such importance that the 8th of May, 1618, may be called the birthday
+ of modern science; that Newton gave to the world the Method of Fluxions,
+ the Theory of Universal Gravitation, and the Decomposition of Light; that
+ Euclid, Cavalieri, Descartes, and Leibnitz, almost completed the science
+ of mathematics; that all the discoveries in optics, hydrostatics,
+ pneumatics and chemistry, the experiments, discoveries, and inventions of
+ Galvani, Volta, Franklin and Morse, of Trevethick, Watt and Fulton and of
+ all the pioneers of progress&mdash;that all this was accomplished by
+ uninspired men, while the writer of the Pentateuch was directed and
+ inspired by an infinite God? Is it possible that the codes of China,
+ India, Egypt, Greece and Rome were made by man, and that the laws recorded
+ in the Pentateuch were alone given by God? Is it possible that &#65533;?schylus
+ and Shakespeare, Burns, and Beranger, Goethe and Schiller, and all the
+ poets of the world, and all their wondrous tragedies and songs, are but
+ the work of men, while no intelligence except the infinite God could be
+ the author of the Pentateuch? Is it possible that of all the books that
+ crowd the libraries of the world, the books of science, fiction, history
+ and song, that all save only one, have been produced by man? Is it
+ possible that of all these, the Bible only is the work of God?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Pentateuch is inspired, the civilization of our day is a mistake
+ and crime. There should be no political liberty. Heresy should be trodden
+ out beneath the bigot's brutal feet. Husbands should divorce their wives
+ at will, and make the mothers of their children houseless and weeping
+ wanderers. Polygamy ought to be practiced; women should become slaves; we
+ should buy the sons and daughters of the heathen and make them bondmen and
+ bondwomen forever. We should sell our own flesh and blood, and have the
+ right to kill our slaves. Men and women should be stoned to death for
+ laboring on the seventh day. "Mediums," such as have familiar spirits,
+ should be burned with fire. Every vestige of mental liberty should be
+ destroyed, and reason's holy torch extinguished in the martyr's blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not far better and wiser to say that the Pentateuch while containing
+ some good laws, some truths, some wise and useful things is, after all,
+ deformed and blackened by the savagery of its time? Is it not far better
+ and wiser to take the good and throw the bad away?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us admit what we know to be true; that Moses was mistaken about a
+ thousand things; that the story of creation is not true; that the Garden
+ of Eden is a myth; that the serpent and the tree of knowledge, and the
+ fall of man are but fragments of old mythologies lost and dead; that woman
+ was not made out of a rib; that serpents never had the power of speech;
+ that the sons of God did not marry the daughters of men; that the story of
+ the flood and ark is not exactly true; that the tower of Babel is a
+ mistake; that the confusion of tongues is a childish thing; that the
+ origin of the rainbow is a foolish fancy; that Methuselah did not live
+ nine hundred and sixty-nine years; that Enoch did not leave this world,
+ taking with him his flesh and bones; that the story of Sodom and Gomorrah
+ is somewhat improbable; that burning brimstone never fell like rain; that
+ Lot's wife was not changed into chloride of sodium; that Jacob did not, in
+ fact, put his hip out of joint wrestling with God; that the history of
+ Tamar might just as well have been left out; that a belief in Pharaoh's
+ dreams is not essential to salvation; that it makes but little difference
+ whether the rod of Aaron was changed to a serpent or not; that of all the
+ wonders said to have been performed in Egypt, the greatest is, that
+ anybody ever believed the absurd account; that God did not torment the
+ innocent cattle on account of the sins of their owners; that he did not
+ kill the first born of the poor maid behind the mill because of Pharaoh's
+ crimes; that flies and frogs were not ministers of God's wrath; that lice
+ and locusts were not the executors of his will; that seventy people did
+ not, in two hundred and fifteen years, increase to three million; that
+ three priests could not eat six hundred pigeons in a day; that gazing at a
+ brass serpent could not extract poison from the blood; that God did not go
+ in partnership with hornets; that he did not murder people simply because
+ they asked for something to eat; that he did not declare the making of
+ hair oil and ointment an offence to be punished with death; that he did
+ not miraculously preserve cloth and leather; that he was not afraid of
+ wild beasts; that he did not punish heresy with sword and fire; that he
+ was not jealous, revengeful, and unjust; that he knew all about the sun,
+ moon, and stars; that he did not threaten to kill people for eating the
+ fat of an ox; that he never told Aaron to draw cuts to see which of two
+ goats should be killed; that he never objected to clothes made of woolen
+ mixed with linen; that if he objected to dwarfs, people with flat noses
+ and too many fingers, he ought not to have created such folks; that he did
+ not demand human sacrifices as set forth in the last chapter of Leviticus;
+ that he did not object to the raising of horses; that he never commanded
+ widows to spit in the faces of their brothers-in-law; that several
+ contradictory accounts of the same transaction cannot all be true; that
+ God did not talk to Abraham as one man talks to another; that angels were
+ not in the habit of walking about the earth eating veal dressed with milk
+ and butter, and making bargains about the destruction of cities; that God
+ never turned himself into a flame of fire, and lived in a bush; that he
+ never met Moses in a hotel and tried to kill him; that it was absurd to
+ perform miracles to induce a king to act in a certain way and then harden
+ his heart so that he would refuse; that God was not kept from killing the
+ Jews by the fear that the Egyptians would laugh at him; that he did not
+ secretly bury a man and then allow the corpse to write an account of the
+ funeral; that he never believed the firmament to be solid; that he knew
+ slavery was and always would be a frightful crime; that polygamy is but
+ stench and filth; that the brave soldier will always spare an unarmed foe;
+ that only cruel cowards slay the conquered and the helpless; that no
+ language can describe the murderer of a smiling babe; that God did not
+ want the blood of doves and lambs; that he did not love the smell of
+ burning flesh; that he did not want his altars daubed with blood; that he
+ did not pretend that the sins of a people could be transferred to a goat;
+ that he did not believe in witches, wizards, spooks, and devils; that he
+ did not test the virtue of woman with dirty water; that he did not suppose
+ that rabbits chewed the cud; that he never thought there were any
+ four-footed birds; that he did not boast for several hundred years that he
+ had vanquished an Egyptian king; that a dry stick did not bud, blossom,
+ and bear almonds in one night; that manna did not shrink and swell, so
+ that each man could gather only just one omer; that it was never wrong to
+ "countenance the poor man in his cause;" that God never told a people not
+ to live in peace with their neighbors; that he did not spend forty days
+ with Moses on Mount Sinai giving him patterns for making clothes, tongs,
+ basins, and snuffers; that maternity is not a sin; that physical deformity
+ is not a crime; that an atonement cannot be made for the soul by shedding
+ innocent blood; that killing a dove over running water will not make its
+ blood a medicine; that a god who demands love knows nothing of the human
+ heart; that one who frightens savages with loud noises is unworthy the
+ love of civilized men; that one who destroys children on account of the
+ sins of their fathers is a monster; that an infinite god never threatened
+ to give people the itch; that he never sent wild beasts to devour babes;
+ that he never ordered the violation of maidens; that he never regarded
+ patriotism as a crime; that he never ordered the destruction of unborn
+ children; that he never opened the earth and swallowed wives and babes
+ because husbands and fathers had displeased him; that he never demanded
+ that men should kill their sons and brothers, for the purpose of
+ sanctifying themselves; that we cannot please God by believing the
+ improbable; that credulity is not a virtue; that investigation is not a
+ crime; that every mind should be free; that all religious persecution is
+ infamous in God, as well as man; that without liberty, virtue is
+ impossible; that without freedom, even love cannot exist; that every man
+ should be allowed to think and to express his thoughts; that woman is the
+ equal of man; that children should be governed by love and reason; that
+ the family relation is sacred; that war is a hideous crime; that all
+ intolerance is born of ignorance and hate; that the freedom of today is
+ the hope of to-morrow; that the enlightened present ought not to fall upon
+ its knees and blindly worship the barbaric past; and that every free,
+ brave and enlightened man should publicly declare that all the ignorant,
+ infamous, heartless, hideous things recorded in the "inspired" Pentateuch
+ are not the words of God, but simply "Some Mistakes of Moses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link0003" id="link0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SOME REASONS WHY
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ RELIGION makes enemies instead of friends. That one word, "religion,"
+ covers all the horizon of memory with visions of war, of outrage, of
+ persecution, of tyranny, and death. That one word brings to the mind every
+ instrument with which man has tortured man. In that one word are all the
+ fagots and flames and dungeons of the past, and in that word is the
+ infinite and eternal hell of the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the name of universal benevolence Christians have hated their
+ fellow-men. Although they have been preaching universal love, the
+ Christian nations are the warlike nations of the world. The most
+ destructive weapons of war have been invented by Christians. The musket,
+ the revolver, the rifled canon, the bombshell, the torpedo, the explosive
+ bullet, have been invented by Christian brains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Above all other arts, the Christian world has placed the art of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Christian nation has never had the slightest respect for the rights of
+ barbarians; neither has any Christian sect any respect for the rights of
+ other sects. Anciently, the sects discussed with fire and sword, and even
+ now, something happens almost every day to show that the old spirit that
+ was in the Inquisition still slumbers in the Christian breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whoever imagines himself a favorite with God, holds other people in
+ contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever a man believes that he has the exact truth from God, there is in
+ that man no spirit of compromise. He has not the modesty born of the
+ imperfections of human nature; he has the arrogance of theological
+ certainty and the tyranny born of ignorant assurance. Believing himself to
+ be the slave of God, he imitates his master, and of all tyrants, the worst
+ is a slave in power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a man really believes that it is necessary to do a certain thing to
+ be happy forever, or that a certain belief is necessary to ensure eternal
+ joy, there is in that man no spirit of concession. He divides the whole
+ world into saints and sinners, into believers and unbelievers, into God's
+ sheep and Devil's goats, into people who will be glorified and people who
+ will be damned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Christian nation can make no compromise with one not Christian; it will
+ either compel that nation to accept its doctrine, or it will wage war. If
+ Christ, in fact, said "I came not to bring peace but a sword," it is the
+ only prophecy in the New Testament that has been literally fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. DUTIES TO GOD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RELIGION is supposed to consist in a discharge of the duties we owe to
+ God. In other words, we are taught that God is exceedingly anxious that we
+ should believe a certain thing. For my part, I do not believe that there
+ is any infinite being to whom we owe anything. The reason I say this is,
+ we can not owe any duty to any being who requires nothing&mdash;to any
+ being that we cannot possibly help, to any being whose happiness we cannot
+ increase. If God is infinite, we cannot make him happier than he is. If
+ God is infinite, we can neither give, nor can he receive, anything.
+ Anything that we do or fail to do, cannot, in the slightest degree, affect
+ an infinite God; consequently, no relations can exist between the finite
+ and the Infinite, if by relations is meant mutual duties and obligations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some tell us that it is the desire of God that we should worship him. What
+ for? Why does he desire worship? Others tell us that we should sacrifice
+ something to him. What for? Is he in want? Can we assist him? Is he
+ unhappy? Is he in trouble? Does he need human sympathy? We cannot assist
+ the Infinite, but we can assist our fellow-men. We can feed the hungry and
+ clothe the naked, and enlighten the ignorant, and we can help, in some
+ degree at least, toward covering this world with the mantle of joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not believe there is any being in this universe who gives rain for
+ praise, who gives sunshine for prayer, or who blesses a man simply because
+ he kneels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Infinite cannot receive praise or worship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Infinite can neither hear nor answer prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An Infinite personality is an infinite impossibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. INSPIRATION.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WE are told that we have in our possession the inspired will of God. What
+ is meant by the word "inspired" is not exactly known; but whatever else it
+ may mean, certainly it means that the "inspired" must be the true. If it
+ is true, there is, in fact, no need of its being inspired&mdash;the truth
+ will take care of itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church is forced to say that the Bible differs from all other books;
+ it is forced to say that it contains the actual will of God. Let us then
+ see what inspiration really is. A man looks at the sea, and the sea says
+ something to him. It makes an impression upon his mind. It awakens memory,
+ and this impression depends upon the man's experience&mdash;upon his
+ intellectual capacity. Another looks upon the same sea. He has a different
+ brain; he has had a different experience. The sea may speak to him of joy,
+ to the other of grief and tears. The sea cannot tell the same thing to any
+ two human beings, because no two human beings have had the same
+ experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A year ago, while the cars were going from Boston to Gloucester, we passed
+ through Manchester. As the cars stopped, a lady sitting opposite, speaking
+ to her husband, looking out of the window and catching, for the first
+ time, a view of the sea, cried out, "Is it not beautiful!" and the husband
+ replied, "I'll bet you could dig clams right here!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another, standing upon the shore, listening to what the great Greek
+ tragedian called "the multitudinous laughter of the sea," may say: Every
+ drop has visited all the shores of the earth; every one has been frozen in
+ the vast and icy North; every one has fallen in snow, has been whirled by
+ storms around mountain peaks; every one has been kissed to vapor by the
+ sun; every one has worn the seven-hued garment of light; every one has
+ fallen in pleasant rain, gurgled from springs and laughed in brooks while
+ lovers wooed upon the banks, and every one has rushed with mighty rivers
+ back to the sea's embrace. Everything in nature tells a different story to
+ all eyes that see and to all ears that hear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once in my life, and once only, I heard Horace Greeley deliver a lecture.
+ I think its title was, "Across the Continent." At last he reached the
+ mammoth trees of California, and I thought "Here is an opportunity for the
+ old man to indulge his fancy. Here are trees that have outlived a thousand
+ human governments. There are limbs above his head older than the pyramids.
+ While man was emerging from barbarism to something like civilization,
+ these trees were growing. Older than history, every one appeared to be a
+ memory, a witness, and a prophecy. The same wind that filled the sails of
+ the Argonauts had swayed these trees." But these trees said nothing of
+ this kind to Mr. Greeley. Upon these subjects not a word was told to him.
+ Instead, he took his pencil, and after figuring awhile, remarked: "One of
+ these trees, sawed into inch-boards, would make more than three hundred
+ thousand feet of lumber."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was once riding on the cars in Illinois. There had been a violent
+ thunder-storm. The rain had ceased, the sun was going down. The great
+ clouds had floated toward the west, and there they assumed most wonderful
+ architectural shapes. There were temples and palaces domed and turreted,
+ and they were touched with silver, with amethyst and gold. They looked
+ like the homes of the Titans, or the palaces of the gods. A man was
+ sitting near me. I touched him and said, "Did you ever see anything so
+ beautiful!" He looked out. He saw nothing of the cloud, nothing of the
+ sun, nothing of the color; he saw only the country and replied, "Yes, it
+ is beautiful; I always did like rolling land." On another occasion I was
+ riding in a stage. There had been a snow, and after the snow a sleet, and
+ all the trees were bent, and all the boughs were arched. Every fence,
+ every log cabin had been transfigured, touched with a glory almost beyond
+ this world. The great fields were a pure and perfect white; the forests,
+ drooping beneath their load of gems, made wonderful caves, from which one
+ almost expected to see troops of fairies come. The whole world looked like
+ a bride, jewelled from head to foot. A German on the back seat, hearing
+ our talk, and our exclamations of wonder leaned forward, looked out of the
+ stage window and said: "Yes, it looks like a clean table cloth!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, when we look upon a flower, a painting, a statue, a star, or a violet,
+ the more we know, the more we have experienced, the more we have thought,
+ the more we remember, the more the statue, the star, the painting, the
+ violet has to tell. Nature says to me all that I am capable of
+ understanding&mdash;gives all that I can receive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As with star, or flower, or sea, so with a book. A man reads Shakespeare.
+ What does he get from him? All that he has the mind to understand. He gets
+ his little cup full. Let another read him who knows nothing of the drama,
+ nothing of the impersonations of passion, and what does he get? Almost
+ nothing. Shakespeare has a different story for each reader. He is a world
+ in which each recognizes his acquaintances&mdash;he may know a few, he may
+ know all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The impression that nature makes upon the mind, the stories told by sea
+ and star and flower, must be the natural food of thought. Leaving out for
+ the moment the impression gained from ancestors, the hereditary fears and
+ drifts and trends&mdash;the natural food of thought must be the impression
+ made upon the brain by coming in contact through the medium of the five
+ senses with what we call the outward world. The brain is natural. Its food
+ is natural. The result, thought, must be natural. The supernatural can be
+ constructed with no material except the natural. Of the supernatural we
+ can have no conception. Thought may be deformed, and the thought of one
+ may be strange to, and denominated as unnatural by, another; but it cannot
+ be supernatural. It may be weak, it may be insane, but it is not
+ supernatural. Above the natural man cannot rise, even with the aid of
+ fancy's wings. There can can be deformed ideas, as there are deformed
+ persons. There can be religions monstrous and misshapen, but they must be
+ naturally produced. Some people have ideas about what they are pleased to
+ call the supernatural; but what they call the supernatural is simply the
+ deformed. The world is to each man according to each man. It takes the
+ world as it really is and that man to make that man's world, and that
+ man's world cannot exist without that man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You may ask, and what of all this? I reply, as with everything in nature,
+ so with the Bible. It has a different story for each reader. Is then the
+ Bible a different book to every human being who reads it? It is. Can God
+ then, through the Bible, make the same revelation to two persons? He
+ cannot. Why? Because the man who reads it is the man who inspires.
+ Inspiration is in the man, as well as in the book. God should have
+ inspired readers as well as writers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You may reply: "God knew that his book would be understood differently by
+ each one, and that he really intended that it should be understood as it
+ is understood by each." If this is so, then my understanding of the Bible
+ is the real revelation to me. If this is so, I have no right to take the
+ understanding of another. I must take the revelation made to me through my
+ understanding, and by that revelation I must stand. Suppose then, that I
+ do read this Bible honestly, fairly, and when I get through I am compelled
+ to say, "The book is not true." If this is the honest result, then you are
+ compelled to say, either that God has made no revelation to me, or that
+ the revelation that it is not true, is the revelation made to me, and by
+ which I am bound. If the book and my brain are both the work of the same
+ Infinite God, whose fault is it that the book and the brain do not agree?
+ Either God should have written a book to fit my brain, or should have made
+ my brain to fit his book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inspiration of the Bible depends upon the ignorance of him who reads.
+ There was a time when its geology, its astronomy, its natural history,
+ were inspired. That time has passed. There was a time when its morality
+ satisfied the men who ruled mankind. That time has passed. There was a
+ time when the tyrant regarded its laws as good; when the master believed
+ in its liberty; when strength gloried in its passages; but these laws
+ never satisfied the oppressed, they were never quoted by the slave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have a sacred book, an inspired Bible, and I am told that this book was
+ written by the same being who made every star, and who peopled infinite
+ space with infinite worlds. I am also told that God created man, and that
+ man is totally depraved. It has always seemed to me that an infinite being
+ has no right to make imperfect things. I may be mistaken; but this is the
+ only planet I have ever been on; I live in what might be called one of the
+ rural districts of this universe, consequently I may be mistaken; I simply
+ give the best and largest thought I have.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. GOD'S EXPERIMENT WITH THE JEWS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE Bible tells us that men became so bad that God destroyed them all with
+ the exception of eight persons; that afterwards he chose Abraham and some
+ of his kindred, a wandering tribe, for the purpose of seeing whether or no
+ they could be civilized. He had no time to waste with all the world. The
+ Egyptians at that time, a vast and splendid nation, having a system of
+ laws and free schools, believing in the marriage of the one man to the one
+ woman; believing, too, in the rights of woman&mdash;a nation that had
+ courts of justice and understood the philosophy of damages&mdash;these
+ people had received no revelation from God,&mdash;they were left to grope
+ in Nature's night. He had no time to civilize India, wherein had grown a
+ civilization that fills the world with wonder still&mdash;a people with a
+ language as perfect as ours, a people who had produced philosophers,
+ scientists, poets. He had no time to waste on them; but he took a few, the
+ tribe of Abraham. He established a perfect despotism&mdash;with no
+ schools, with no philosophy, with no art, with no music&mdash;nothing but
+ the sacrifices of dumb beasts&mdash;nothing but the abject worship of a
+ slave. Not a word upon geology, upon astronomy; nothing, even, upon the
+ science of medicine. Thus God spent hours and hours with Moses upon the
+ top of Sinai, giving directions for ascertaining the presence of leprosy
+ and for preventing its spread, but it never occurred to Jehovah to tell
+ Moses how it could be cured. He told them a few things about what they
+ might eat&mdash;prohibiting among other things four-footed birds, and one
+ thing upon the subject of cooking. From the thunders and lightnings of
+ Sinai he proclaimed this vast and wonderful fact: "Thou shalt not seethe a
+ kid in its mother's milk." He took these people, according to our sacred
+ Scriptures, under his immediate care, and for the purpose of controlling
+ them he wrought wonderful miracles in their sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not a little curious that no priest of one religion has ever been
+ able to astonish a priest of another religion by telling a miracle? Our
+ missionaries tell the Hindoos the miracles of the Bible, and the Hindoo
+ priests, without the movement of a muscle, hear them and then recite
+ theirs, and theirs do not astonish our missionaries in the least! Is it
+ not a little curious that the priests of one religion never believe the
+ priests of another? Is it not a little strange that the believers in
+ sacred books regard all except their own as having been made by hypocrites
+ and fools?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I heard the other day a story. A gentleman was telling some wonderful
+ things and the listeners, with one exception, were saying, as he proceeded
+ with his tale, "Is it possible?" "Did you ever hear anything so
+ wonderful?" and when he had concluded, there was a kind of chorus of "Is
+ it possible?" and "Can it be?" One man, however, sat perfectly quiet,
+ utterly unmoved. Another listener said to him "Did you hear that?" and he
+ replied "Yes." "Well," said the other, "You did not manifest much
+ astonishment." "Oh, no," was the answer, "I am a liar myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am told by the sacred Scriptures that, as a matter of fact, God, even
+ with the help of miracles, failed to civilize the Jews, and this shows of
+ how little real benefit, after all, it is, to have a ruler much above the
+ people, or to simply excite the wonder of mankind. Infinite wisdom, if the
+ account be true, could not civilize a single tribe. Laws made by Jehovah
+ himself were not obeyed, and every effort of Jehovah failed. It is claimed
+ that God made known his law and inspired men to write and teach his will,
+ and yet, it was found utterly impossible to reform mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. CIVILIZED COUNTRIES
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN all civilized countries, it is now passionately asserted that slavery
+ is a crime; that a war of conquest is murder; that polygamy enslaves
+ woman, degrades man and destroys home; that nothing is more infamous than
+ the slaughter of decrepit men, of helpless mothers, and of prattling
+ babes; that captured maidens should not be given to their captors; that
+ wives should not be stoned to death for differing with their husbands on
+ the subject of religion. We know that there was a time, in the history of
+ most nations, when all these crimes were regarded as divine institutions.
+ Nations entertaining this view now are regarded as savage, and, with the
+ exception of the South Sea Islanders, Feejees, a few tribes in Central
+ Africa, and some citizens of Delaware, no human beings are found degraded
+ enough to agree upon these subjects with Jehovah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only evidence we can have that a nation has ceased to be savage, is
+ that it has abandoned these doctrines of savagery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To every one except a theologian, it is easy to account for these mistakes
+ and crimes by saying that civilization is a painful growth; that the moral
+ perceptions are cultivated through ages of tyranny, of crime, and of
+ heroism; that it requires centuries for man to put out the eyes of self
+ and hold in lofty and in equal poise the golden scales of Justice.
+ Conscience is born of suffering. Mercy is the child of the imagination.
+ Man advances as he becomes acquainted with his surroundings, with the
+ mutual obligations of life, and learns to take advantage of the forces of
+ nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The believer in the inspiration of the Bible is compelled to say, that
+ there was a time when slavery was right, when women could sell their
+ babes, when polygamy was the highest form of virtue, when wars of
+ extermination were waged with the sword of mercy, when religious
+ toleration was a crime, and when death was the just penalty for having
+ expressed an honest thought. He is compelled to insist that Jehovah is as
+ bad now as he was then; that he is as good now as he was then. Once, all
+ the crimes that I have mentioned were commanded by God; now they are
+ prohibited. Once, God was in favor of them all; now the Devil is their
+ defender. In other words, the Devil entertains the same opinion to-day
+ that God held four thousand years ago. The Devil is as good now as Jehovah
+ was then, and God was as bad then as the Devil is now. Other nations
+ besides the Jews had similar laws and ideas&mdash;believed in and
+ practiced the same crimes, and yet, it is not claimed that they received a
+ revelation. They had no knowledge of the true God, and yet they practiced
+ the same crimes, of their own motion, that the Jews did by command of
+ Jehovah. From this it would seem that man can do wrong without a special
+ revelation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passages upholding slavery, polygamy, war and religious persecution
+ are certainly not evidences of the inspiration of that book. Suppose
+ nothing had been in the Old Testament upholding these crimes, would the
+ modern Christian suspect that it was not inspired on that account? Suppose
+ nothing had been in the Old Testament except laws in favor of these
+ crimes, would it still be insisted that it was inspired? If the Devil had
+ inspired a book, will some Christian tell us in what respect, on the
+ subjects of slavery, polygamy, war and liberty, it would have differed
+ from some parts of the Old Testament? Suppose we knew that after inspired
+ men had finished the Bible the Devil had gotten possession of it and had
+ written a few passages, what part would Christians now pick out as being
+ probably his work? Which of the following passages would be selected as
+ having been written by the Devil: "Love thy neighbor as thyself," or "Kill
+ all the males among the little ones, and kill every woman, but all the
+ women children keep alive for yourselves"?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there a believer in the Bible who does not now wish that God, amid the
+ thunders and lightnings of Sinai, had said to Moses that man should not
+ own his fellow-man; that women should not sell their babes; that all men
+ should be allowed to think and investigate for themselves, and that the
+ sword never should be unsheathed to shed innocent blood? Is there a
+ believer who would not be delighted to find that every one of the infamous
+ passages are interpolations, and that the skirts of God were never
+ reddened by the blood of maiden, wife, or babe? Is there an honest man who
+ does not regret that God commanded a husband to stone his wife for
+ suggesting the worship of some other God? Surely we do not need an
+ inspired book to teach us that slavery is right, that polygamy is virtue,
+ and that intellectual liberty is a crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. A COMPARISON OF BOOKS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LET us compare the gems of Jehovah with Pagan paste. It may be that the
+ best way to illustrate what I have said, is to compare the supposed
+ teachings of Jehovah with those of persons who never wrote an inspired
+ line. In all ages of which any record has been preserved, men have given
+ their ideas of justice, charity, liberty, love and law. If the Bible is
+ the work of God, it should contain the sublimest truths, it should excel
+ the works of man, it should contain the loftiest definitions of justice,
+ the best conceptions of human liberty, the clearest outlines of duty, the
+ tenderest and noblest thoughts. Upon every page should be found the
+ luminous evidence of its divine origin. It should contain grander and more
+ wonderful things than man has written.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be said that it is unfair to call attention to bad things in the
+ Bible. To this it may be replied that a divine being ought not to put bad
+ things in his book. If the Bible now upholds what we call crimes, it will
+ not do to say that it is not verbally inspired. If the words are not
+ inspired, what is? It may be said, that the thoughts are inspired. This
+ would include only thoughts expressed without words. If ideas are
+ inspired, they must be expressed by inspired words&mdash;that is to say,
+ by an inspired arrangement of words. If a sculptor were inspired of God to
+ make a statue, we would not say that the marble was inspired, but the
+ statue&mdash;that is to say, the relation of part to part, the married
+ harmony of form and function. The language, the words, take the place of
+ the marble, and it is the arrangement of the words that Christians claim
+ to be inspired. If there is an uninspired word, or a word in the wrong
+ place, until that word is known a doubt is cast on every word the book
+ contains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If it was worth God's while to make a revelation at all, it was certainly
+ worth his while to see that it was correctly made&mdash;that it was
+ absolutely preserved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should God allow an inspired book to be interpolated? If it was worth
+ while to inspire men to write it, it was worth while to inspire men to
+ preserve it; and why should he allow another person to interpolate in it
+ that which was not inspired? He certainly would not have allowed the man
+ he inspired to write contrary to the inspiration. He should have preserved
+ his revelation. Neither will it do to say that God adapted his revelation
+ to the prejudices of man. It was necessary for him to adapt his revelation
+ to the capacity of man, but certainly God would not confirm a barbarian in
+ his prejudices. He would not fortify a heathen in his crimes....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If a revelation is of any importance, it is to eradicate prejudice. They
+ tell us now that the Jews were so ignorant, so bad, that God was compelled
+ to justify their crimes, in order to have any influence with them. They
+ say that if he had declared slavery and polygamy to be crimes, the Jews
+ would have refused to receive the Ten Commandments. They tell us that God
+ did the best he could; that his real intention was to lead them along
+ slowly, so that in a few hundred years they would be induced to admit that
+ larceny and murder and polygamy and slavery were not virtues. I suppose if
+ we now wished to break a cannibal of the bad habit of devouring
+ missionaries, we would first induce him to cook them in a certain way,
+ saying: "To eat cooked missionary is one step in advance of eating your
+ missionary raw. After a few years, a little mutton could be cooked with
+ missionary, and year after year the amount of mutton could be increased
+ and the amount of missionary decreased, until in the fullness of time the
+ dish could be entirely mutton, and after that the missionaries would be
+ absolutely safe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there is anything of value, it is liberty&mdash;liberty of body,
+ liberty of mind. The liberty of body is the reward of labor. Intellectual
+ liberty is the air of the soul, the sunshine of the mind, and without it,
+ the world is a prison, the universe a dungeon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Bible is really inspired, Jehovah commanded the Jewish people to
+ buy the children of the strangers that sojourned among them, and ordered
+ that the children thus bought should be an inheritance for the children of
+ the Jews, and that they should be bondmen and bondwomen forever. Yet
+ Epictetus, a man to whom no revelation was ever made, a man whose soul
+ followed only the light of nature, and who had never heard of the Jewish
+ God, was great enough to say: "Will you not remember that your servants
+ are by nature your brothers, the children of God? In saying that you have
+ bought them, you look down on the earth, and into the pit, on the wretched
+ law of men long since dead, but you see not the laws of the gods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We find that Jehovah, speaking to his chosen people, assured them that
+ their bondmen and their bondmaids must be "of the heathen that were round
+ about them." "Of them," said Jehovah, "shall ye buy bondmen and
+ bondmaids." And yet Cicero, a pagan, Cicero, who had never been
+ enlightened by reading the Old Testament, had the moral grandeur to
+ declare: "They who say that we should love our fellow-citizens but not
+ foreigners, destroy the universal brotherhood of mankind, with which
+ benevolence and justice would perish forever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Bible is inspired, Jehovah, God of all worlds, actually said: "And
+ if a man smite his servant or his maid with a rod, and he die under his
+ hand, he shall be sorely punished; notwithstanding, if he continue a day
+ or two, he shall not be punished, for he is his money." And yet Zeno,
+ founder of the Stoics, centuries before Christ was born, insisted that no
+ man could be the owner of another, and that the title was bad, whether the
+ slave had become so by conquest or by purchase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jehovah ordered a Jewish general to make war, and gave, among others, this
+ command: "When the Lord thy God shall drive them before thee, thou shalt
+ smite them and utterly destroy them; thou shalt make no covenant with
+ them, nor show mercy unto them." And yet Epictetus, whom we have already
+ quoted, gave this marvelous rule for the guidance of human conduct: "Live
+ with thy inferiors as thou wouldst have thy superiors live with thee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it possible, after all, that a being of infinite goodness and wisdom
+ said: "I will heap mischief upon them; I will send mine arrows upon them;
+ they shall be burned with hunger, and devoured with burning heat, and with
+ bitter destruction. I will send the tooth of beasts upon them, with the
+ poison of serpents of the dust. The sword without, and terror within,
+ shall destroy both the young man and the virgin, the suckling also, with
+ the man of gray hairs" while Seneca, an uninspired Roman, said: "The wise
+ man will not pardon any crime that ought to be punished, but he will
+ accomplish, in a nobler way, all that is sought in pardoning. He will
+ spare some and watch over some, because of their youth, and others on
+ account of their ignorance. His clemency will not fall short of justice,
+ but will fulfill it perfectly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can we believe that God ever said to any one: "Let his children be
+ fatherless and his wife a widow; let his children be continually
+ vagabonds, and beg; let them seek their bread also out of their desolate
+ places; let the extortioner catch all that he hath, and let the stranger
+ spoil his labor; let there be none to extend mercy unto him, neither let
+ there be any to favor his fatherless children." If he ever said these
+ words, surely he had never heard this line, this strain of music from the
+ Hindu: "Sweet is the lute to those who have not heard the prattle of their
+ own children."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jehovah, "from the clouds and darkness of Sinai," said to the Jews: "Thou
+ shalt have no other gods before me.... Though shalt not bow down thyself
+ to them nor serve them; for I, the Lord thy God, am a jealous God,
+ visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon the children unto the third
+ and fourth generation of them that hate me." Contrast this with the words
+ put by the Hindu in the mouth of Brahma: "I am the same to all mankind.
+ They who honestly serve other gods involuntarily worship me. I am he who
+ partakest of all worship, and I am the reward of all worshipers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compare these passages; the first a dungeon where crawl the things begot
+ of jealous slime; the other, great as the domed firmament inlaid with
+ suns. Is it possible that the real God ever said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And if the prophet be deceived when he hath spoken a thing, I, the Lord,
+ have deceived that prophet; and I will stretch out my hand upon him and
+ will destroy him from the midst of my people." Compare that passage with
+ one from a Pagan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is better to keep silence for the remainder of your life than to speak
+ falsely."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can we believe that a being of infinite mercy gave this command:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Put every man his sword by his side, and go in and out from gate to gate,
+ throughout the camp, and slay every man his brother, and every man his
+ companion, and every man his neighbor; consecrate yourselves to-day to the
+ Lord, even every man upon his son and upon his brother, that he may bestow
+ a blessing upon you this day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely, that God was not animated by so great and magnanimous a spirit as
+ was Antoninus, a Roman emperor, who declared that, "he had rather keep a
+ single Roman citizen alive than slay a thousand enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compare the laws given to the children of Israel, as it is claimed by the
+ Creator of us all, with the following from Marcus Aurelius:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have formed the ideal of a state, in which there is the same law for
+ all, and equal rights, and equal liberty of speech established; an empire
+ where nothing is honored so much as the freedom of the citizen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Avesta I find this: "I belong to five: to those who think good, to
+ those who speak good, to those who do good, to those who hear, and to
+ those who are pure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which is the one prayer which in greatness, goodness, and beauty is worth
+ all that is between heaven and earth and between this earth and the stars?
+ And he replied: To renounce all evil thoughts and words and works."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IT is claimed by the Christian world that one of the great reasons for
+ giving an inspired book to the Jews was, that through them the world might
+ learn that there is but one God. This piece of information has been
+ supposed to be of infinite value. As a matter of fact, long before Moses
+ was born, the Egyptians believed and taught that there was but one God&mdash;that
+ is to say, that above all intelligences there was the one Supreme. They
+ were guilty, too, of the same inconsistencies of modern Christians. They
+ taught the doctrine of the Trinity&mdash;God the Father, God the Mother,
+ and God the Son. God was frequently represented as father, mother and
+ babe. They also taught that the soul had a divine origin; that after death
+ it was to be judged according to the deeds done in the body; that those
+ who had done well passed into perpetual joy, and those who had done evil
+ into endless pain. In this they agreed with the most approved divine of
+ the nineteenth century. Women were the equals of men, and Egypt was often
+ governed by queens. In this, her government was vastly better than the one
+ established by God. The laws were administered by courts much like ours.
+ In Egypt there was a system of schools that gave the son of poverty a
+ chance of advancement, and the highest offices were open to the successful
+ scholar. The Egyptian married one wife. The wife was called "the lady of
+ the house." The women were not secluded. The people were not divided into
+ castes. There was nothing to prevent the rise of able and intelligent
+ Egyptians. But like the Jehovah of the Jews, they made slaves of the
+ captives of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient Persians believed in one God; and women helped to found the
+ Parsee religion. Nothing can exceed some of the maxims of Zoroaster. The
+ Hindoos taught that above all, and over all, was one eternal Supreme. They
+ had a code of laws. They understood the philosophy of evidence and of
+ damages. They knew better than to teach the doctrine of an eye for an eye,
+ and a tooth for a tooth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They knew that when one man maimed another, it was not to the interest of
+ society to have that man maimed, thus burdening the people with two
+ cripples, but that it was better to make the man who maimed the other work
+ to support him. In India, upon the death of a father, the daughters
+ received twice as much from the estate as the sons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Romans built temples to Truth, Faith, Valor, Concord, Modesty, and
+ Charity, in which they offered sacrifices to the highest conceptions of
+ human excellence. Women had rights; they presided in the temple; they
+ officiated in holy offices; they guarded the sacred fires upon which the
+ safety of Rome depended; and when Christ came, the grandest figure in the
+ known world was the Roman mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will not do to say that some rude statue was made by an inspired
+ sculptor, and that the Apollo of Belvidere, Venus de Milo, and the
+ Gladiator were made by unaided men; that the daubs of the early ages were
+ painted by divine assistance, while the Raphaels, the Angelos, and the
+ Rembrandts did what they did without the help of heaven. It will not do to
+ say, that the first hut was built by God, and the last palace by degraded
+ man; that the hoarse songs of the savage tribes were made by the Deity,
+ but that Hamlet and Lear were written by man; that the pipes of Pan were
+ invented in heaven, and all other musical instruments on the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Jehovah of the Jews had taken upon himself flesh, and dwelt as a
+ man among the people had he endeavored to govern, had he followed his own
+ teachings, he would have been a slaveholder, a buyer of babes, and a
+ beater of women. He would have waged wars of extermination. He would have
+ killed grey-haired and trembling age, and would have sheathed his sword,
+ in prattling, dimpled babes. He would have been a polygamist, and would
+ have butchered his wife for differing with him on the subject of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NE great objection to the Old Testament is the cruelty said to have been
+ commanded by God. All these cruelties ceased with death. The vengeance of
+ Jehovah stopped at the tomb. He never threatened to punish the dead; and
+ there is not one word, from the first mistake in Genesis to the last curse
+ of Malachi, containing the slightest intimation that God will take his
+ revenge in another world. It was reserved for the New Testament to make
+ known the doctrine of eternal pain. The teacher of universal benevolence
+ rent the veil between time and eternity, and fixed the horrified gaze of
+ man upon the lurid gulf of hell. Within the breast of non-resistance
+ coiled the worm that never dies. Compared with this, the doctrine of
+ slavery, the wars of extermination, the curses, the punishments of the Old
+ Testament were all merciful and just.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no time to speak of the conflicting statements in the various
+ books composing the New Testament&mdash;no time to give the history of the
+ manuscripts, the errors in translation, the interpolations made by the
+ fathers and by their successors, the priests, and only time to speak of a
+ few objections, including some absurdities and some contradictions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where several witnesses testify to the same transaction, no matter how
+ honest they may be, they will disagree upon minor matters, and such
+ testimony is generally considered as evidence that the witnesses have not
+ conspired among themselves. The differences in statement are accounted for
+ from the facts that all do not see alike, and that all have not equally
+ good memories; but when we claim that the witnesses are inspired, we must
+ admit that he who inspired them did know exactly what occurred, and
+ consequently there should be no disagreement, even in the minutest detail.
+ The accounts should not only be substantially, but they should be
+ actually, the same. The differences and contradictions can be accounted
+ for by the weaknesses of human nature, but these weaknesses cannot be
+ predicated of divine wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here let me ask: Why should there have been more than one correct
+ account of what really happened? Why were four gospels necessary? It seems
+ to me that one inspired gospel, containing all that happened, was enough.
+ Copies of the one correct one could have been furnished to any extent.
+ According to Doctor Davidson, Iren&aelig;us argues that the gospels were
+ four in number, because there are four universal winds, four corners of
+ the globe. Others have said, because there are four seasons; and these
+ gentlemen might have added, because a donkey has four legs. For my part, I
+ cannot even conceive of a reason for more than one gospel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to one of these gospels, and according to the prevalent
+ Christian belief, the Christian religion rests upon the doctrine of the
+ atonement. If this doctrine is without foundation, the fabric falls; and
+ it is without foundation, for it is repugnant to justice and mercy. The
+ church tells us that the first man committed a crime for which all others
+ are responsible. This absurdity was the father and mother of another&mdash;that
+ a man can be rewarded for the good action of another. We are told that God
+ made a law, with the penalty of eternal death. All men, they tell us, have
+ broken this law. The law had to be vindicated. This could be done by
+ damning everybody, but through what is known as the atonement the
+ salvation of a few was made possible. They insist that the law demands the
+ extreme penalty, that justice calls for its victim, that mercy ceases to
+ plead, and that God by allowing the innocent to suffer in the place of the
+ guilty settled satisfactory with the law. To carry out this scheme God was
+ born as a babe, grew in stature, increased in knowledge, and at the age of
+ thirty-three years having lived a life filled with kindness, having
+ practiced every virtue, he was sacrificed as an atonement for man. It is
+ claimed that he took our place, bore our sins, our guilt, and in this way
+ satisfied the justice of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the Mosaic dispensation there was no remission of sin except through
+ the shedding of blood. When a man sinned he must bring to the priest a
+ lamb, a bullock, a goat, or a pair of turtle-doves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The priest would lay his hand upon the animal and the sin of the man would
+ be transferred to the beast. Then the animal would be killed in place of
+ the sinner, and the blood thus shed would be sprinkled upon the altar. In
+ this way Jehovah was satisfied. The greater the crime, the greater the
+ sacrifice. There was a ratio between the value of the animal and the
+ enormity of the sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most minute directions were given as to the killing of these animals.
+ Every priest became a butcher, every synagogue a slaughter-house. Nothing
+ could be more utterly shocking to a refined soul, nothing better
+ calculated to harden the heart, than the continual shedding of innocent
+ blood. This terrible system culminated in the sacrifice of Christ. His
+ blood took the place of all other. It is not necessary to shed any more.
+ The law at last is satisfied, satiated, surfeited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idea that God wants blood is at the bottom of the atonement, and rests
+ upon the most fearful savagery; and yet the Mosaic dispensation was better
+ adapted to prevent the commission of sin than the Christian system. Under
+ that dispensation, if you committed a sin, you had to bring a sacrifice&mdash;dove,
+ sheep, or bullock, now, when a sin is committed, the Christian says,
+ "Charge it," "Put it on the slate, If I don't pay it the Savior will." In
+ this way, rascality is sold on a credit, and the credit system of religion
+ breeds extravagance in sin. The Mosaic dispensation was based upon far
+ better business principles. The debt had to be paid, and by the man who
+ owed it. We are told that the sinner is in debt to God, and that the
+ obligation is discharged by the Savior. The best that can be said of such
+ a transaction is that the debt is transferred, not paid. As a matter of
+ fact, the sinner is in debt to the person he has injured. If you injure a
+ man, it is not enough to get the forgiveness of God&mdash;you must get the
+ man's forgiveness, you must get your own. If a man puts his hand in the
+ fire and God forgives him, his hand will smart just as badly. You must
+ reap what you sow. No God can give you wheat when you sow tares, and no
+ Devil can give you tares when you sow wheat. We must remember that in
+ nature there are neither rewards nor punishments&mdash;there are
+ consequences. The life and death of Christ do not constitute an atonement.
+ They are worth the example, the moral force, the heroism of benevolence,
+ and in so far as the life of Christ produces emulation in the direction of
+ goodness, it has been of value to mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To make innocence suffer is the greatest sin, and it may be the only sin.
+ How, then, is it possible to make the consequences of sin an atonement for
+ sin, when the consequences of sin are to be borne by one who has not
+ sinned, and the one who has sinned is to reap the reward of virtue? No
+ honorable man should be willing that another should suffer for him. No
+ good law can accept the sufferings of innocence as an atonement for the
+ guilty; and besides, if there was no atonement until the crucifixion of
+ Christ, what became of the countless millions who died before that time?
+ We must remember that the Jews did not kill animals for the Gentiles.
+ Jehovah hated foreigners. There was no way provided for the forgiveness of
+ a heathen. What has become of the millions who have died since, without
+ having heard of the atonement? What becomes of those who hear and do not
+ believe? Can there be a law that demands that the guilty be rewarded. And
+ yet, to reward the guilty is far nearer justice than to punish the
+ innocent. If the doctrine of the atonement is true, there would have been
+ no heaven had no atonement been made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Judas had understood the Christian system, if he knew that Christ must
+ be betrayed, and that God was depending on him to betray him, and that
+ without the betrayal no human soul could be saved, what should Judas have
+ done?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jehovah took special charge of the Jewish people. He did this for the
+ purpose of civilizing them. If he had succeeded in civilizing them, he
+ would have made the damnation of the entire human race a certainty;
+ because if the Jews had been a civilized people when Christ appeared&mdash;a
+ people who had not been hardened by the laws of Jehovah&mdash;they would
+ not have crucified Christ, and as a consequence, the world would have been
+ lost. If the Jews had believed in religious freedom, in the rights of
+ thought and speech, if the Christian religion is true, not a human soul
+ ever could have been saved. If, when Christ was on his way to Calvary,
+ some brave soul had rescued him from the pious mob, he would not only have
+ been damned for his pains, but would have rendered impossible the
+ salvation of any human being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Christian world has been trying for nearly two thousand years to
+ explain the atonement, and every effort has ended in an admission that it
+ cannot be understood, and a declaration that it must be believed. Has the
+ promise and hope of forgiveness ever prevented the commission of a sin?
+ Can men be made better by being taught that sin gives happiness here; that
+ to live a virtuous life is to bear a cross; that men can repent between
+ the last sin and the last breath; and that repentance washes every stain
+ of the soul away? Is it good to teach that the serpent of regret will not
+ hiss in the ear of memory; that the saved will not even pity the victims
+ of their crimes; and that sins forgiven cease to affect the unhappy
+ wretches sinned against?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another objection is, that a certain belief is necessary to save the soul.
+ This doctrine, I admit, is taught in the gospel according to John, and in
+ many of the epistles; I deny that it is taught in Matthew, Mark, or Luke.
+ It is, however, asserted by the church that to believe is the only safe
+ way. To this, I reply: Belief is not a voluntary thing. A man believes or
+ disbelieves in spite of himself. They tell us that to believe is the safe
+ way; but I say, the safe way is to be honest. Nothing can be safer than
+ that. No man in the hour of death ever regretted having been honest. No
+ man when the shadows of the last day were gathering about the pillow of
+ death, ever regretted that he had given to his fellow-man his honest
+ thought. No man, in the presence of eternity, ever wished that he had been
+ a hypocrite. No man ever then regretted that he did not throw away his
+ reason. It certainly cannot be necessary to throw away your reason to save
+ your soul, because after that, your soul is not worth saving. The soul has
+ a right to defend itself. My brain is my castle; and when I waive the
+ right to defend it, I become an intellectual serf and slave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not admit that a man by doing me an injury can place me under
+ obligations to do him a service. To render benefits for injuries is to
+ ignore all distinctions between actions. He who treats friends and enemies
+ alike has neither love nor justice. The idea of non-resistance never
+ occurred to a man with power to defend himself. The mother of this
+ doctrine was weakness. To allow a crime to be committed, even against
+ yourself, when you can prevent it, is next to committing the crime
+ yourself. The church has preached the doctrine of non-resistance, and
+ under that banner has shed the blood of millions. In the folds of her
+ sacred vestments have gleamed for centuries the daggers of assassination.
+ With her cunning hands she wove the purple for hypocrisy and placed the
+ crown upon the brow of crime. For more than a thousand years larceny held
+ the scales of justice, hypocrisy wore the mitre and tiara, while beggars
+ scorned the royal sons of toil, and ignorant fear denounced the liberty of
+ thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. CHRIST'S MISSION.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE came, they tell us, to make a revelation, and what did he reveal? "Love
+ thy neighbor as thyself"? That was in the Old Testament. "Love God with
+ all thy heart"? That was in the Old Testament. "Return good for evil"?
+ That was said by Buddha, seven hundred years before Christ was born. "Do
+ unto others as ye would that they should do unto you"? That was the
+ doctrine of Lao-tsze. Did he come to give a rule of action? Zoroaster had
+ done this long before: "Whenever thou art in doubt as to whether an action
+ is good or bad, abstain from it." Did he come to tell us of another world?
+ The immortality of the soul had been taught by the Hindoos, Egyptians,
+ Greeks, and Romans hundreds of years before he was born. What argument did
+ he make in favor of immortality? What facts did he furnish? What star of
+ hope did he put above the darkness of this world? Did he come simply to
+ tell us that we should not revenge ourselves upon our enemies? Long
+ before, Socrates had said: "One who is injured ought not to return the
+ injury, for on no account can it be right to do an injustice; and it is
+ not right to return an injury, or to do evil to any man, however much we
+ have suffered from him." And Cicero had said: "Let us not listen to those
+ who think we ought to be angry with our enemies, and who believe this to
+ be great and manly. Nothing is so praiseworthy, nothing so clearly shows a
+ great and noble soul, as clemency and readiness to forgive." Is there
+ anything in the literature of the world more nearly perfect than this
+ thought?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it from Christ the world learned the first lesson of forbearance, when
+ centuries and centuries before, Chrishna had said, "If a man strike thee,
+ and in striking drop his staff, pick it up and hand it to him again?" Is
+ it possible that the son of God threatened to say to a vast majority, of
+ his children, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire prepared
+ for the devil and his angels," while the Buddhist was great and tender
+ enough to say:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never will I seek nor receive private individual salvation; never enter
+ into final peace alone; but forever and everywhere will I live and strive
+ for the universal redemption of every creature throughout all worlds.
+ Never will I leave this world of sin and sorrow and struggle until all are
+ delivered. Until then, I will remain and suffer where I am?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this, from a Sufi?&mdash;"Better
+ one moment of silent contemplation and inward love than seventy thousand
+ years of outward worship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there anything comparable to this?&mdash;"Whoever carelessly treads on
+ a worm that crawls on the earth, that heartless one is darkly alienate
+ from God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there anything in the New Testament more beautiful than the story of
+ the Sufi?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For seven years a Sufi practised every virtue, and then he mounted the
+ three steps that lead to the doors of Paradise. He knocked and a voice
+ said: "Who is there?" The Sufi replied: "Thy servant, O God." But the
+ doors remained closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet seven other years the Sufi engaged in every good work. He comforted
+ the sorrowing and divided his substance with the poor. Again he mounted
+ the three steps, again knocked at the doors of Paradise, and again the
+ voice asked: "Who is there?" and the Sufi replied: "Thy slave, O God."&mdash;But
+ the doors remained closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet seven other years the Sufi spent in works of charity, in visiting the
+ imprisoned and the sick. Again he mounted the steps, again knocked at the
+ celestial doors. Again he heard the question: "Who is there?" and he
+ replied: "Thyself, O God."&mdash;The gates wide open flew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it possible that St. Paul was inspired of God, when he said: "Let the
+ women learn in silence, with all subjection."&mdash;"Neither was the man
+ created for the woman, but the woman for the man?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And is it possible that Epictetus, without the slightest aid from heaven,
+ gave to the world this gem of love:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is more delightful than to be so dear to your wife, as to be on that
+ account dearer to yourself?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did St. Paul express the sentiments of God when he wrote&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I would have you know that the head of every man is Christ, and the
+ head of every woman is the man, and the head of Christ is God. Wives,
+ submit yourselves unto your husbands as unto the Lord?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And was the author of this, a poor despised heathen?&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In whatever house the husband is contented with the wife, and the wife
+ with the husband, in that house will fortune dwell; but upon the house
+ where women are not honored, let a curse be pronounced. Where the wife is
+ honored, there the gods are truly worshiped."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this?&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall I tell thee where nature is most blest and fair? It is where those
+ we love abide. Though that space be small, it is ample above kingdoms;
+ though it be a desert, through it run the rivers of Paradise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After reading the curses pronounced in the Old
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Testament upon Jew and heathen, the descriptions of slaughter, of
+ treachery and of death, the destruction of women and babes; after you
+ shall have read all the chapters of horror in the New Testament, the
+ threatenings of fire and flame, then read this, from the greatest of human
+ beings:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The quality of mercy is not strained:
+ It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
+ Upon the place beneath. It is twice blessed;
+ It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.
+ 'Tis mightiest in the mightiest: it becomes
+ The throned monarch better than his crown."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ X. ETERNAL PAIN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ UPON passages in the New Testament rests the doctrine of eternal pain.
+ This doctrine subverts every idea of justice. A finite being can neither
+ commit an infinite sin, nor a sin against the Infinite. A being of
+ infinite goodness and wisdom has no right to create any being whose life
+ is not a blessing. Infinite wisdom has no right to create a failure, and
+ surely a man destined to everlasting failure is not a conspicuous success.
+ The doctrine of eternal punishment is the most infamous of all doctrines&mdash;born
+ of ignorance, cruelty and fear. Around the angel of immortality,
+ Christianity has coiled this serpent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon Love's breast the church has placed the eternal asp. And yet in the
+ same book in which is taught this most frightful of dogmas, we are assured
+ that "the Lord is good to all, and his tender mercies are over all his
+ works."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days ago upon the wide sea, was found a barque called "The Tiger,"
+ Captain Kreuger, in command. The vessel had been one hundred and
+ twenty-six days upon the sea. For days the crew had been without water,
+ without food, and were starving. For nine days not a drop had passed their
+ lips. The crew consisted of the captain, a mate, and eleven men. At the
+ end of one hundred and eighteen days from Liverpool they killed the
+ captain's Newfoundland dog. This lasted them four days. During the next
+ five days they had nothing. For weeks they had had no light and were
+ unable to see the compass at night. On the one hundred and twenty-fifth
+ day Captain Kreuger, a German, took a revolver in his hand, stood up
+ before the men, and placing the weapon at his temple said: "Boys, we can't
+ stand this much longer, and to save you all, I am willing to die." The
+ mate grasped the revolver and begged the captain to wait another day. The
+ next day, upon the horizon of their despair, they saw the smoke of the
+ steamship Nebo. They were rescued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suppose that Captain Kreuger was not a Christian, and suppose that he had
+ sent the ball crashing through his brain, and had done so simply to keep
+ the crew from starvation, do you tell me that a God of infinite mercy
+ would forever damn that man?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do not misunderstand me. I insist that every passage in the Bible
+ upholding crime was written by savage man. I insist that if there is a
+ God, he is not, never was, and never will be in favor of slavery,
+ polygamy, wars of extermination, or religious persecution. Does any
+ Christian believe that if the real God were to write a book now, he would
+ uphold the crimes commanded in the Old Testament? Has Jehovah improved?
+ Has infinite mercy become more merciful? Has infinite wisdom
+ intellectually advanced?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILL any one claim that the passages upholding slavery have liberated
+ mankind? Are we indebted to polygamy for our modern homes? Was religious
+ liberty born of that infamous verse in which the husband is commanded to
+ kill his wife for worshiping an unknown God?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The usual answer to these objections is, that no country has ever been
+ civilized without a Bible. The Jews were the only people to whom Jehovah
+ made his will directly known. Were they better than other nations? They
+ read the Old Testament and one of the effects of such reading was, that
+ they crucified a kind, loving, and perfectly innocent man. Certainly they
+ could not have done worse, without a Bible. In crucifying Christ the Jews
+ followed the teachings of his Father. If Jehovah was in fact God, and if
+ that God took upon himself flesh and came among the Jews, and preached
+ what the Jews understood to be blasphemy; and if the Jews in accordance
+ with the laws given by this same Jehovah to Moses, crucified him, then I
+ say, and I say it with infinite reverence, he reaped what he had sown. He
+ became the victim of his own injustice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I insist that these things are not true. I insist that the real God,
+ if there is one, never commanded man to enslave his fellow-man, never told
+ a mother to sell her babe, never established polygamy, never urged one
+ nation to exterminate another, and never told a husband to kill his wife
+ because she suggested the worship of another God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the aspersions of the pulpit, from the slanders of the church, I seek
+ to rescue the reputation of the Deity. I insist that the Old Testament
+ would be a better book with all these passages left out; and whatever may
+ be said of the rest of the Bible, the passages to which I have called
+ attention can, with vastly more propriety, be attributed to a devil than
+ to a god.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take from the New Testament the idea that belief is necessary to
+ salvation; that Christ was offered as an atonement for the sins of
+ mankind; that heaven is the reward of faith, and hell the penalty of
+ honest investigation, and that the punishment of the human soul will go on
+ forever; take from it all miracles and foolish stories, and I most
+ cheerfully admit that the good passages are true. If they are true, it
+ makes no difference whether they are inspired or not. Inspiration is only
+ necessary to give authority to that which is repugnant to human reason.
+ Only that which never happened needs to be substantiated by a miracle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The universe is natural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church must cease to insist that passages upholding the institutions
+ of savage men were inspired of God. The dogma of atonement must be
+ abandoned. Good deeds must take the place of faith. The savagery of
+ eternal punishment must be renounced. It must be admitted that credulity
+ is not a virtue, and that investigation is not a crime. It must be
+ admitted that miracles are the children of mendacity, and that nothing can
+ be more wonderful than the majestic, unbroken, sublime, and eternal
+ procession of causes and effects. Reason must be the arbiter. Inspired
+ books attested by miracles cannot stand against a demonstrated fact. A
+ religion that does not command the respect of the greatest minds will, in
+ a little while, excite the mockery of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man who does not believe in intellectual liberty is a barbarian. Is it
+ possible that God is intolerant? Could there be any progress, even in
+ heaven, without intellectual liberty? Is the freedom of the future to
+ exist only in perdition? Is it not, after all, barely possible that a man
+ acting like Christ can be saved? Is a man to be eternally rewarded for
+ believing according to evidence, without evidence, or against evidence?
+ Are we to be saved because we are good, or because another was virtuous?
+ Is credulity to be winged and crowned, whilst honest doubt is chained and
+ damned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Jehovah, was in fact God, he knew the end from the beginning. He knew
+ that his Bible would be a breast-work behind which all tyranny and
+ hypocrisy would crouch. He knew that his Bible would be the auction-block
+ on which women would stand while their babes were sold from their arms. He
+ knew that this Bible would be quoted by tyrants; that it would be the
+ defence of robbers called kings, and of hypocrites called priests. He knew
+ that he had taught the Jewish people nothing of importance. He knew that
+ he had found them free and left them slaves. He knew that he had never
+ fulfilled a single promise made to them. He knew that while other nations
+ had advanced in art and science his chosen people were savage still. He
+ promised them the world, and gave them a desert. He promised them liberty
+ and he made them slaves. He promised them victory and he gave them defeat.
+ He said they should be kings and he made them serfs. He promised them
+ universal empire and gave them exile. When one finishes the Old Testament
+ he is compelled to say: "Nothing can add to the misery of a nation whose
+ king is Jehovah!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Old Testament filled this world with tyranny and injustice, and the
+ New gives us a future filled with pain for nearly all of the sons of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Old Testament describes the hell of the past, and the New the hell of
+ the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Old Testament tells us the frightful things that God has done, the New
+ the frightful things that he will do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two books give us the sufferings of the past and the future&mdash;the
+ injustice, the agony and the tears of both worlds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link0004" id="link0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ORTHODOXY.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A LECTURE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ IT is utterly inconceivable that any man believing in the truth of the
+ Christian religion should publicly deny it, because he who believes in
+ that religion would believe that, by a public denial, he would peril the
+ eternal salvation of his soul. It is conceivable, and without any great
+ effort of the mind, that millions who do not believe in the Christian
+ religion should openly say that they did. In a country where religion is
+ supposed to be in power&mdash;where it has rewards for pretence, where it
+ pays a premium upon hypocrisy, where it at least is willing to purchase
+ silence&mdash;it is easily conceivable that millions pretend to believe
+ what they do not. And yet I believe it has been charged against myself not
+ only that I was insincere, but that I took the side I am on for the sake
+ of popularity; and the audience to-night goes far toward justifying the
+ accusation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orthodox Religion Dying Out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It gives me immense pleasure to say to this audience that orthodox
+ religion is dying out of the civilized world. It is a sick man. It has
+ been attacked with two diseases&mdash;softening of the brain and
+ ossification of the heart. It is a religion that no longer satisfies the
+ intelligence of this country; that no longer satisfies the brain; a
+ religion against which the heart of every civilized man and woman
+ protests. It is a religion that gives hope only to a few; that puts a
+ shadow upon the cradle; that wraps the coffin in darkness and fills the
+ future of mankind with flame and fear. It is a religion that I am going to
+ do what little I can while I live to destroy. In its place I want
+ humanity, I want good fellowship, I want intellectual liberty&mdash;free
+ lips, the discoveries and inventions of genius, the demonstrations of
+ science&mdash;the religion of art, music and poetry&mdash;of good houses,
+ good clothes, good wages&mdash;that is to say, the religion of this world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Religious Deaths and Births.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must remember that this is a world of progress, a world of perpetual
+ change&mdash;a succession of coffins and cradles. There is perpetual
+ death, and there is perpetual birth. By the grave of the old, forever
+ stand youth and joy; and when an old religion dies, a better one is born.
+ When we find out that an assertion is a falsehood a shining truth takes
+ its place, and we need not fear the destruction of the false. The more
+ false we destroy the more room there will be for the true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a time when the astrologer sought to read in the stars the fate
+ of men and nations. The astrologer has faded from the world, but the
+ astronomer has taken his place. There was a time when the poor alchemist,
+ bent and wrinkled and old, over his crucible endeavored to find some
+ secret by which he could change the baser metals into purest gold. The
+ alchemist has gone; the chemist took his place; and, although he finds
+ nothing to change metals into gold, he finds something that covers the
+ earth with wealth. There was a time when the soothsayer and augur
+ flourished. After them came the parson and the priest; and the parson and
+ the priest must go. The preacher must go, and in his place must come the
+ teacher&mdash;the real interpreter of Nature. We are done with the
+ supernatural. We are through with the miraculous and the impossible. There
+ was once the prophet who pretended to read the book of the future. His
+ place has been taken by the philosopher, who reasons from cause to effect&mdash;who
+ finds the facts by which we are surrounded and endeavors to reason from
+ these premises and to tell what in all probability will happen. The
+ prophet has gone, the philosopher is here. There was a time when man
+ sought aid from heaven&mdash;when he prayed to the deaf sky. There was a
+ time when everything depended on the supernaturalist. That time in
+ Christendom is passing away. We now depend upon the naturalist&mdash;not
+ upon the believer in ancient falsehoods, but on the discoverer of facts&mdash;on
+ the demonstrater of truths. At last we are beginning to build on a solid
+ foundation, and as we progress, the supernatural dies. The leaders of the
+ intellectual world deny the existence of the supernatural. They take from
+ all superstition its foundation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Religion of Reciprocity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Supernatural religion will fade from this world, and in its place we shall
+ have reason. In the place of the worship of something we know not of, will
+ be the religion of mutual love and assistance&mdash;the great religion of
+ reciprocity. Superstition must go. Science will remain. The church dies
+ hard. The brain of the world is not yet developed. There are intellectual
+ diseases as well as physical&mdash;there are pestilences and plagues of
+ the mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever the new comes the old protests, and fights for its place as long
+ as it has a particle of power. We are now having the same warfare between
+ superstition and science that there was between the stage coach and the
+ locomotive. But the stage coach had to go. It had its day of glory and
+ power, but it is gone. It went West. In a little while it will be driven
+ into the Pacific. So we find that there is the same conflict between the
+ different sects and different schools not only of philosophy but of
+ medicine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Recollect that everything except the demonstrated truth is liable to die.
+ That is the order of Nature. Words die. Every language has a cemetery.
+ Every now and then a word dies and a tombstone is erected, and across it
+ is written "obsolete." New words are continually being born. There is a
+ cradle in which a word is rocked. A thought is married to a sound, and a
+ child-word is born. And there comes a time when the word gets old, and
+ wrinkled, and expressionless, and is carried mournfully to the grave. So
+ in the schools of medicine. You can remember, so can I, when the old
+ allopathists, the bleeders and blisterers, reigned supreme. If there was
+ anything the matter with a man they let out his blood. Called to the
+ bedside, they took him on the point of a lancet to the edge of eternity,
+ and then practiced all their art to bring him back. One can hardly imagine
+ how perfect a constitution it took a few years ago to stand the assault of
+ a doctor. And long after the old practice was found to be a mistake
+ hundreds and thousands of the ancient physicians clung to it, carried
+ around with them, in one pocket a bottle of jalap, and in the other a
+ rusty lancet, sorry that they could not find some patient with faith
+ enough to allow the experiment to be made again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So these schools, and these theories, and these religions die hard. What
+ else can they do? Like the paintings of the old masters, they are kept
+ alive because so much money has been invested in them. Think of the amount
+ of money that has been invested in superstition! Think of the schools that
+ have been founded for the more general diffusion of useless knowledge!
+ Think of the colleges wherein men are taught that it is dangerous to
+ think, and that they must never use their brains except in the act of
+ faith! Think of the millions and billions of dollars that have been
+ expended in churches, in temples, and in cathedrals! Think of the
+ thousands and thousands of men who depend for their living upon the
+ ignorance of mankind! Think of those who grow rich on credulity and who
+ fatten on faith! Do you suppose they are going to die without a struggle?
+ What are they to do? From the bottom of my heart I sympathize with the
+ poor clergyman that has had all his common sense educated out of him, and
+ is now to be thrown upon the cold and unbelieving world. His prayers are
+ not answered; he gets no help from on high, and the pews are beginning to
+ criticise the pulpit. What is the man to do? If he suddenly changes he is
+ gone. If he preaches what he really believes he will get notice to quit.
+ And yet, if he and the congregation would come together and be perfectly
+ honest, they would all admit that they believe little and know nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a little while ago a couple of ladies were riding together from a
+ revival, late at night, and one said to the other, as they rode along: "I
+ am going to say something that will shock you, and I beg of you never to
+ tell it to anybody else. I am going to tell it to you." "Well, what is
+ it?" Said she: "I do not believe the Bible." The other replied: "Neither
+ do I."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have often thought how splendid it would be if the ministers could but
+ come together and say: "Now, let us be honest. Let us tell each other,
+ honor bright"&mdash;like Dr. Curry, of Chicago, did in the meeting the
+ other day&mdash;"just what we believe." They tell a story that in the old
+ time a lot of people, about twenty, were in Texas in a little hotel, and
+ one fellow got up before the fire, put his hands behind him, and said:
+ "Boys, let us all tell our real names." If the ministers and their
+ congregations would only tell their real thoughts they would find that
+ they are nearly as bad as I am, and that they believe as little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orthodoxy dies hard, and its defenders tell us that this fact shows that
+ it is of divine origin. Judaism dies hard. It has lived several thousand
+ years longer than Christianity. The religion of Mohammed dies hard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buddhism dies hard. Why do all these religions die hard? Because
+ intelligence increases slowly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me whisper in the ear of the Protestant: Catholicism dies hard. What
+ does that prove? It proves that the people are ignorant and that the
+ priests are cunning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me whisper in the ear of the Catholic: Protestantism dies hard. What
+ does that prove? It proves that the people are superstitious and the
+ preachers stupid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me whisper in all your ears: Infidelity is not dying&mdash;it is
+ growing&mdash;it increases every day. And what does that prove? It proves
+ that the people are learning more and more&mdash;that they are advancing&mdash;that
+ the mind is getting free, and that the race is being civilized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergy know that I know that they know that they do not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Blows That Have Shattered the Shield and Shivered the Lance of
+ Superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mohammed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mohammed wrested from the disciples of the cross the fairest part of
+ Europe. It was known that he was an impostor, and that fact sowed the
+ seeds of distrust and infidelity in the Christian world. Christians made
+ an effort to rescue from the infidels the empty sepulchre of Christ. That
+ commenced in the eleventh century and ended at the close of the
+ thirteenth. Europe was almost depopulated. The fields were left waste, the
+ villages were deserted, nations were impoverished, every man who owed a
+ debt was discharged from payment if he put a cross upon his breast and
+ joined the Crusades. No matter what crime he had committed, the doors of
+ the prison were open for him to join the hosts of the cross. They believed
+ that God would give them victory, and they carried in front of the first
+ Crusade a goat and a goose, believing that both those animals were blessed
+ by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost. And I may say that those same animals
+ are in the lead to-day in the orthodox world. Until the year 1291 they
+ endeavored to gain possession of that sepulchre, and finally the hosts of
+ Christ were driven back, baffled and beaten,&mdash;a poor, miserable,
+ religious rabble. They were driven back, and that fact sowed the seeds of
+ distrust in Christendom. You know that at that time the world believed in
+ trial by battle&mdash;that God would take the side of the right&mdash;and
+ there had been a trial by battle between the cross and the crescent, and
+ Mohammed had been victorious. Was God at that time governing the world?
+ Was he endeavoring to spread his gospel?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Destruction of Art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You know that when Christianity came into power it destroyed every statue
+ it could lay its ignorant hands upon. It defaced and obliterated every
+ painting; it destroyed every beautiful building; it burned the
+ manuscripts, both Greek and Latin; it destroyed all the history, all the
+ poetry, all the philosophy it could find, and reduced to ashes every
+ library that it could reach with its torch. And the result was, that the
+ night of the Middle Ages fell upon the human race. But by accident, by
+ chance, by oversight, a few of the manuscripts escaped the fury of
+ religious zeal; and these manuscripts became the seed, the fruit of which
+ is our civilization of to-day. A few statues had been buried; a few forms
+ of beauty were dug from the earth that had protected them, and now the
+ civilized world is filled with art, the walls are covered with paintings,
+ and the niches filled with statuary. A few manuscripts were found and
+ deciphered. The old languages were learned, and literature was again born.
+ A new day dawned upon mankind. Every effort at mental improvement had been
+ opposed by the church, and yet, the few things saved from the general
+ wreck&mdash;a few poems, a few works of the ancient thinkers, a few forms
+ wrought in stone, produced a new civilization destined to overthrow and
+ destroy the fabric of superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Discovery of America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was the next blow that this church received? The discovery of
+ America. The Holy Ghost who inspired men to write the Bible did not know
+ of the existence of this continent, never dreamed of the Western
+ Hemisphere. The Bible left out half the world. The Holy Ghost did not know
+ that the earth is round. He did not dream that the earth is round. He
+ believed it was flat, although he made it himself. At that time heaven was
+ just beyond the clouds. It was there the gods lived, there the angels
+ were, and it was against that heaven that Jacob's ladder leaned when the
+ angels went up and down. It was to that heaven that Christ ascended after
+ his resurrection. It was up there that the New Jerusalem was, with its
+ streets of gold, and under this earth was perdition. There was where the
+ devils lived; where a pit was dug for all unbelievers, and for men who had
+ brains. I say that for this reason: Just in proportion that you have
+ brains, your chances for eternal joy are lessened, according to this
+ religion. And just in proportion that you lack brains your chances are
+ increased. At last they found that the earth is round. It was
+ circumnavigated by Magellan. In 1519 that brave man set sail. The church
+ told him: "The earth is flat, my friend; don't go, you may fall off the
+ edge." Magellan said: "I have seen the shadow of the earth upon the moon,
+ and I have more confidence in the shadow than I have in the church." The
+ ship went round. The earth was circumnavigated. Science passed its hand
+ above it and beneath it, and where was the old heaven and where was the
+ hell? Vanished forever! And they dwell now only in the religion of
+ superstition. We found there was no place there for Jacob's ladder to lean
+ against; no place there for the gods and angels to live; no place to hold
+ the waters of the deluge; no place to which Christ could have ascended.
+ The foundations of the New Jerusalem crumbled. The towers and domes fell,
+ and in their places infinite space, sown with an infinite number of stars;
+ not with New Jerusalems, but with countless constellations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Copernicus and Kepler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then man began to grow great, and with that came Astronomy, In 1473
+ Copernicus was born. In 1543 his great work appeared. In 1616 the system
+ of Copernicus was condemned by the pope, by the infallible Catholic
+ Church, and the church was about as near right upon that subject as upon
+ any other. The system of Copernicus was denounced. And how long do you
+ suppose the church fought that? Let me tell you. It was revoked by Pius
+ VII. in the year of grace 1821. For two hundred and seventy-eight years
+ after the death of Copernicus the church insisted that his system was
+ false, and that the old Bible astronomy was true. Astronomy is the first
+ help that we ever received from heaven. Then came Kepler in 1609, and you
+ may almost date the birth of science from the night that Kepler discovered
+ his first law. That was the break of the day. His first law, that the
+ planets do not move in circles but in ellipses; his second law, that they
+ describe equal spaces in equal times; his third law, that the squares of
+ their periodic times are proportional to the cubes of their distances.
+ That man gave us the key to the heavens. He opened the infinite book, and
+ in it read three lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have not time to speak of Galileo, of Leonardo da Vinci, of Bruno, and
+ of hundreds of others who contributed to the intellectual wealth of the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Special Providence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next thing that gave the church a blow was Statistics. We found by
+ taking statistics that we could tell the average length of human life;
+ that this human life did not depend upon infinite caprice; that it
+ depended upon conditions, circumstances, laws and facts, and that these
+ conditions, circumstances, and facts were during long periods of time
+ substantially the same. And now, the man who depends entirely upon special
+ providence gets his life insured. He has more confidence even in one of
+ these companies than he has in the whole Trinity. We found by statistics
+ that there were just so many crimes on an average committed; just so many
+ crimes of one kind and so many of another; just so many suicides, so many
+ deaths by drowning, so many accidents on an average, so many men marrying
+ women, for instance, older than themselves; so many murders of a
+ particular kind; just the same number of mistakes; and I say to-night,
+ statistics utterly demolish the idea of special providence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only the other day a gentleman was telling me of a case of special
+ providence. He knew it. He had been the subject of it. A few years ago he
+ was about to go on a ship when he was detained. He did not go, and the
+ ship was lost with all on board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes!" I said, "Do you think the people who were drowned believed in
+ special providence?" Think of the infinite egotism of such a doctrine.
+ Here is a man that fails to go upon a ship with five hundred passengers
+ and they go down to the bottom of the sea&mdash;fathers, mothers,
+ children, and loving husbands and wives waiting upon the chores of
+ expectation. Here is one poor little wretch that did not happen to go! And
+ he thinks that God, the Infinite Being, interfered in his poor little
+ withered behalf and let the rest all go. That is special providence. Why
+ does special providence allow all the crimes? Why are the wife-beaters
+ protected, and why are the wives and children left defenceless if the hand
+ of God is over us all? Who protects the insane? Why does Providence permit
+ insanity? But the church cannot give up special providence. If there is no
+ such thing, then no prayers, no worship, no churches, no priests. What
+ would become of National Thanksgiving?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You know we have a custom every year of issuing a proclamation of
+ thanksgiving. We say to God, "Although you have afflicted all the other
+ countries, although you have sent war, and desolation, and famine on
+ everybody else, we have been such good children that you have been kind to
+ us, and we hope you will keep on." It does not make a bit of difference
+ whether we have good times or not&mdash;the thanksgiving is always exactly
+ the same. I remember a few years ago a governor of Iowa got out a
+ proclamation of that kind. He went on to tell how thankful the people were
+ and how prosperous the State had been. There was a young fellow in that
+ State who got out another proclamation, saying that he feared the Lord
+ might be misled by official correspondence; that the governor's
+ proclamation was entirely false; that the State was not prosperous; that
+ the crops had been an almost utter failure; that nearly every farm in the
+ State was mortgaged, and that if the Lord did not believe him, all he
+ asked was that he would send some angel in whom he had confidence, to look
+ the matter over and report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles Darwin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This century will be called Darwin's century. He was one of the greatest
+ men who ever touched this globe. He has explained more of the phenomena of
+ life than all of the religious teachers. Write the name of Charles Darwin
+ on the one hand and the name of every theologian who ever lived on the
+ other, and from that name has come more light to the world than from all
+ of those. His doctrine of evolution, his doctrine of the survival of the
+ fittest, his doctrine of the origin of species, has removed in every
+ thinking mind the last vestige of orthodox Christianity. He has not only
+ stated, but he has demonstrated, that the inspired writer knew nothing of
+ this world, nothing of the origin of man, nothing of geology, nothing of
+ astronomy, nothing of nature; that the Bible is a book written by
+ ignorance&mdash;at the instigation of fear. Think of the men who replied
+ to him. Only a few years ago there was no person too ignorant to
+ successfully answer Charles Darwin; and the more ignorant he was the more
+ cheerfully he undertook the task. He was held up to the ridicule, the
+ scorn and contempt of the Christian world, and yet when he died, England
+ was proud to put his dust with that of her noblest and her grandest.
+ Charles Darwin conquered the intellectual world, and his doctrines are now
+ accepted facts. His light has broken in on some of the clergy, and the
+ greatest man who to-day occupies the pulpit of one of the orthodox:
+ churches, Henry Ward Beecher, is a believer in the theories of Charles
+ Darwin&mdash;a man of more genius than all the clergy of that entire
+ church put together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet we are told in this little creed that orthodox religion is about
+ to conquer the world! It will be driven to the wilds of Africa. It must go
+ to some savage country; it has lost its hold upon civilization. It is
+ unfortunate to have a religion that cannot be accepted by the intellect of
+ a nation. It is unfortunate to have a religion against which every good
+ and noble heart protests. Let us have a good religion or none. My pity has
+ been excited by seeing these ministers endeavor to warp and twist the
+ passages of Scripture to fit the demonstrations of science. Of course, I
+ have not time to recount all the discoveries and events that have assisted
+ in the destruction of superstition. Every fact is an enemy of the church.
+ Every fact is a heretic. Every demonstration is an infidel. Everything
+ that ever really happened testifies against the supernatural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church teaches that man was created perfect, and that for six thousand
+ years he has degenerated. Darwin demonstrated the falsity of this dogma.
+ He shows that man has for thousands of ages steadily advanced; that the
+ Garden of Eden is an ignorant myth; that the doctrine of original sin has
+ no foundation in fact; that the atonement is an absurdity; that the
+ serpent did not tempt, and that man did not "fall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles Darwin destroyed the foundation of orthodox Christianity. There is
+ nothing left but faith in what we know could not and did not happen.
+ Religion and science are enemies. One is a superstition; the other is a
+ fact. One rests upon the false, the other upon the true. One is the result
+ of fear and faith, the other of investigation and reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Creeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have been talking a great deal about the orthodox religion. Often, after
+ having delivered a lecture, I have met some good, religious person who has
+ said to me:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You do not tell it as we believe it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, but I tell it as you have it written in your creed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, we don't mind the creed any more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then, why do you not change it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, well, we understand it as it is, and if we tried to change it, maybe
+ we would not agree."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Possibly the creeds are in the best condition now. There is a tacit
+ understanding that they do not believe them, that there is a way to get
+ around them, and that they can read between the lines; that if they should
+ meet now to form new creeds they would fail to agree; and that now they
+ can say as they please, except in public. Whenever they do so in public
+ the church, in self-defence, must try them; and I believe in trying every
+ minister that does not preach the doctrine he agrees to. I have not the
+ slightest sympathy with a Presbyterian preacher who endeavors to preach
+ infidelity from a Presbyterian pulpit and receives Presbyterian money.
+ When he changes his views he should step down and out like a man, and say,
+ "I do not believe your doctrine, and I will not preach it. You must hire
+ some other man." The Latest Creed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I find that I have correctly interpreted the creeds. There was put
+ into my hands the new Congregational creed. I have read it, and I will
+ call your attention to it to-night, to find whether that church has made
+ any advance; to find whether the sun of science has risen in the heavens
+ in vain; whether they are still the children of intellectual darkness;
+ whether they still consider it necessary for you to believe something that
+ you by no possibility can understand, in order to be a winged angel
+ forever. Now, let us see what their creed is. I will read a little of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They commence by saying that they
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth,
+ and of all things visible and invisible</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They say, now, that there is the one personal God; that he is the maker of
+ the universe and its ruler. I again ask the old question, Of what did he
+ make it? If matter has not existed through eternity, then this God made
+ it. Of what did he make it? What did he use for the purpose? There was
+ nothing in the universe except this God. What had the God been doing for
+ the eternity he had been living? He had made nothing&mdash;called nothing
+ into existence; never had had an idea, because it is impossible to have an
+ idea unless there is something to excite an idea. What had he been doing?
+ Why does not the Congregational Church tell us? How do they know about
+ this Infinite Being? And if he is infinite how can they comprehend him?
+ What good is it to believe in something that you know you do not
+ understand, and that you never can understand?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Episcopalian creed God is described as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>There is but one living and true God, everlasting, without body, parts
+ or passions</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Think of that!&mdash;without body, parts, or passions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I defy any man in the world to write a better description of nothing. You
+ cannot conceive of a finer word-painting of a vacuum than "without body,
+ parts, or passions." And yet this God, without passions, is angry at the
+ wicked every day; this God, without passions, is a jealous God, whose
+ anger burneth to the lowest hell. This God, without passions, loves the
+ whole human race; and this God, without passions, damns a large majority
+ of mankind. This God without body, walked in the Garden of Eden, in the
+ cool of the day. This God, without body, talked with Adam and Eve. This
+ God, without body, or parts met Moses upon Mount Sinai, appeared at the
+ door of the tabernacle, and talked with Moses face to face as a man
+ speaketh to his friend. This description of God is simply an effort of the
+ church to describe a something of which it has no conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God as a Governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, too, I find the following:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>We believe that the Providence of God, by which he executes his
+ eternal purposes in the government of the world, is in and over all
+ events.</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is God the governor of the world? Is this established by the history of
+ nations? What evidence can you find, if you are absolutely honest and not
+ frightened, in the history of the world, that this universe is presided
+ over by an infinitely wise and good God?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How do you account for Russia? How do you account for Siberia? How do you
+ account for the fact that whole races of men toiled beneath the master's
+ lash for ages without recompense and without reward? How do you account
+ for the fact that babes were sold from the arms of mothers&mdash;arms that
+ had been reached toward God in supplication? How do you account for it?
+ How do you account for the existence of martyrs? How do you account for
+ the fact that this God allows people to be burned simply for loving him?
+ Is justice always done? Is innocence always acquitted? Do the good
+ succeed? Are the honest fed? Are the charitable clothed? Are the virtuous
+ shielded? How do you account for the fact that the world has been filled
+ with pain, and grief, and tears? How do you account for the fact that
+ people have been swallowed by earthquakes, overwhelmned by volcanoes, and
+ swept from the earth by storms? Is it easy to account for famine, for
+ pestilence and plague if there be above us all a Ruler infinitely good,
+ powerful and wise?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not say there is none. I do not know. As I have said before, this is
+ the only planet I was ever on. I live in one of the rural districts of the
+ universe, and do not know about these things as much as the clergy pretend
+ to, but if they know no more about the other world than they do about
+ this, it is not worth mentioning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How do they answer all this? They say that God "permits" it. What would
+ you say to me if I stood by and saw a ruffian beat out the brains of a
+ child, when I had full and perfect power to prevent it? You would say
+ truthfully that I was as bad as the murderer. Is it possible for this God
+ to prevent it? Then, if he does not he is a fiend; he is no god. But they
+ say he "permits" it. What for? So that we may have freedom of choice. What
+ for? So that God may find, I suppose, who are good and who are bad. Did he
+ not know that when he made us? Did he not know exactly just what he was
+ making? Why should he make those whom he knew would be criminals? If I
+ should make a machine that would walk your streets and take the lives of
+ people you would hang me. And if God made a man whom he knew would commit
+ murder, then God is guilty of that murder. If God made a man knowing that
+ he would beat his wife, that he would starve his children, that he would
+ strew on either side of his path of life the wrecks of ruined homes, then
+ I say the being who knowingly called that wretch into existence is
+ directly responsible. And yet we are to find the providence of God in the
+ history of nations. What little I have read shows me that when man has
+ been helped, man has done it; when the chains of slavery have been broken,
+ they have been broken by man; when something bad has been done in the
+ government of mankind, it is easy to trace it to man, and to fix the
+ responsibility upon human beings. You need not look to the sky; you need
+ throw neither praise nor blame upon gods; you can find the efficient
+ causes nearer home&mdash;right here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Love of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is the next thing I find in this creed?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>We believe that man was made in the image of God, that he might know,
+ love, and obey God, and enjoy him forever.</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not believe that anybody ever did love God, because nobody ever knew
+ anything about him. We love each other. We love something that we know. We
+ love something that our experience tells us is good and great and
+ beautiful. We cannot by any possibility love the unknown. We can love
+ truth, because truth adds to human happiness. We can love justice, because
+ it preserves human joy. We can love charity. We can love every form of
+ goodness that we know, or of which we can conceive, but we cannot love the
+ infinitely unknown. And how can we be made in the image of something that
+ has neither body, parts, nor passions?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Fall of Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Congregational Church has not outgrown the doctrine of "original sin."
+ We are told that:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Our first parents, by disobedience, fell under the condemnation of
+ God, and that all men are so alienated from God that there is no salvation
+ from the guilt and power of sin except through God's redeeming power.</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there an intelligent man or woman now in the world who believes in the
+ Garden of Eden story? If you find any man who believes it, strike his
+ forehead and you will hear an echo. Something is for rent. Does any
+ intelligent man now believe that God made man of dust, and woman of a rib,
+ and put them in a garden, and put a tree in the midst of it? Was there not
+ room outside of the garden to put his tree, if he did not want people to
+ eat his apples?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I did not want a man to eat my fruit, I would not put him in my
+ orchard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does anybody now believe in the story of the serpent? I pity any man or
+ woman who, in this nineteenth century, believes in that childish fable.
+ Why did Adam and Eve disobey? Why, they were tempted. By whom? The devil.
+ Who made the devil? God. What did God make him for? Why did he not tell
+ Adam and Eve about this serpent? Why did he not watch the devil, instead
+ of watching Adam and Eve? Instead of turning them out, why did he not keep
+ him from getting in? Why did he not have his flood first, and drown the
+ devil, before he made a man and woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet, people who call themselves intelligent&mdash;professors in
+ colleges and presidents of venerable institutions&mdash;teach children and
+ young men that the Garden of Eden story is an absolute historical fact. I
+ defy any man to think of a more childish thing. This God, waiting around
+ Eden&mdash;knowing all the while what would happen&mdash;having made them
+ on purpose so that it would happen, then does what? Holds all of us
+ responsible, and we were not there. Here is a representative before the
+ constituency had been born. Before I am bound by a representative I want a
+ chance to vote for or against him; and if I had been there, and known all
+ the circumstances, I should have voted "No!" And yet, I am held
+ responsible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told by the Bible and by the churches that through this fall of man
+ "<i>Sin and death entered the world?</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to this, just as soon as Adam and Eve had partaken of the
+ forbidden fruit, God began to contrive ways by which he could destroy the
+ lives of his children. He invented all the diseases&mdash;all the fevers
+ and coughs and colds&mdash;all the pains and plagues and pestilences&mdash;all
+ the aches and agonies, the malaria and spores; so that when we take a
+ breath of air we admit into our lungs unseen assassins; and, fearing that
+ some might live too long, even under such circumstances, God invented the
+ earthquake and volcano, the cyclone and lightning, animalcules to infest
+ the heart and brain, so small that no eye can detect&mdash;no instrument
+ reach. This was all owing to the disobedience of Adam and Eve!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his infinite goodness, God invented rheumatism and gout and dyspepsia,
+ cancers and neuralgia, and is still inventing new diseases. Not only
+ this', but he decreed the pangs of mothers, and that by the gates of love
+ and life should crouch the dragons of death and pain. Fearing that some
+ might, by accident, live too long, he planted poisonous vines and herbs
+ that looked like food. He caught the serpents he had made and gave them
+ fangs and curious organs, ingeniously devised to distill and deposit the
+ deadly drop. He changed the nature of the beasts, that they might feed on
+ human flesh. He cursed a world, and tainted every spring and source of
+ joy. He poisoned every breath of air; corrupted even light, that it might
+ bear disease on every ray; tainted every drop of blood in human veins;
+ touched every nerve, that it might bear the double fruit of pain and joy;
+ decreed all accidents and mistakes that maim and hurt and kill, and set
+ the snares of life-long grief, baited with present pleasure,&mdash;with a
+ moment's joy. Then and there he foreknew and foreordained all human tears.
+ And yet all this is but the prelude, the introduction, to the infinite
+ revenge of the good God. Increase and multiply all human griefs until the
+ mind has reached imagination's farthest verge, then add eternity to time,
+ and you may faintly tell, but never can conceive, the infinite horrors of
+ this doctrine called "The Fall of Man." The Atonement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are further told that:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>All men are so alienated from God that there is no alleviation from
+ the guilt and power of sin except through God's redeeming grace;</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>We believe that the love of God to sinful man has found its highest
+ expression in the redemptive work of his Son, who became man, uniting his
+ divine nature with our human nature in one person; who was tempted like
+ other men and yet without sin, and by his humiliation, his holy obedience,
+ his sufferings, his death on the cross, and his resurrection, became a
+ perfect redeemer; whose sacrifice of himself for the sins of the world
+ declares the righteousness of God, and is the sole and sufficient ground
+ of forgiveness and of reconciliation with him</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The absurdity of the doctrine known as "The Fall of Man," gave birth to
+ that other absurdity known as "The Atonement." So that now it is insisted
+ that, as we are rightfully charged with the sin of somebody else, we can
+ rightfully be credited with the virtues of another. Let us leave out of
+ our philosophy both these absurdities. Our creed will read a great deal
+ better with both of them out, and will make far better sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, in consequence of Adam's sin, everybody is alienated from God. How?
+ Why? Oh, we are all depraved, you know; we all do wrong. Well, why? Is
+ that because we are depraved? No. Why do we make so many mistakes? Because
+ there is only one right way, and there is an almost infinite number of
+ wrong ways; and as long as we are not perfect in our intellects we must
+ make mistakes. "There is no darkness but ignorance," and alienation, as
+ they call it, from God, is simply a lack of intellect. Why were we not
+ given better brains? That may account for the alienation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church teaches that every soul that finds its way to the shore of this
+ world is against God&mdash;naturally hates God; that the little dimpled
+ child in the cradle is simply a chunk of depravity. Everybody against God!
+ It is a libel upon the human race; it is a libel upon all the men who have
+ worked for wife and child; upon all mothers who have suffered and labored,
+ wept and worked; upon all the men who have died for their country; upon
+ all who have fought for human liberty. Leave out the history of religion
+ and there is little left to prove the depravity of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody that comes is against God! Every soul, they think, is like the
+ wrecked Irishman, who drifted to an unknown island, and as he climbed the
+ shore saw a man and said to him, "Have you a Government here?" The man
+ replied "We have." "Well," said he, "I'm forninst it!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church teaches us that such is the attitude of every soul in the
+ universe of God. Ought a god to take any credit to himself for making
+ depraved people? A god that cannot make a soul that is not totally
+ depraved, I respectfully suggest, should retire from the business. And if
+ a god has made us, knowing that we are totally depraved, why should we go
+ to the same being to be "born again?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Second Birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church insists that we must be "born again" and that all who are not
+ the subjects of this second birth are heirs of everlasting fire. Would it
+ not have been much better to have made another Adam and Eve? Would it not
+ have been better to change Noah and his people, so that after that a
+ second birth would not have been necessary? Why not purify the fountain of
+ all human life? Why allow the earth to be peopled with depraved and
+ monstrous beings, each one of whom must be re-made, re-formed, and born
+ again?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet, even reformation is not enough. If the man who steals becomes
+ perfectly honest, that is not enough; if the man who hates his fellow-man,
+ changes and loves his fellow-man, that is not enough; he must go through
+ that mysterious thing called the second birth; he must be born again. He
+ must have faith; he must believe something that he does not understand,
+ and experience what they call "conversion." According to the church,
+ nothing so excites the wrath of God&mdash;nothing so corrugates the brows
+ of Jehovah with hatred&mdash;as a man relying on his own good works. He
+ must admit that he ought to be damned, and that of the two he prefers it,
+ before God will consent to save him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I met a man the other day, who said to me, "I am a Unitarian
+ Universalist." "What do you mean by that?" I asked. "Well," said he, "this
+ is what I mean: the Unitarian thinks he is too good to be damned, and the
+ Universalist thinks God is too good to damn him, and I believe them both."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it possible that the sacrifice of a perfect being was acceptable to
+ God? Will he accept the agony of innocence for the punishment of guilt?
+ Will he release Barabbas and crucify Christ?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is the next thing in this great creed?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>We believe that the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments are the
+ record of God's revelation of Himself, the work of redemption; that they
+ were written by men under the special guidance of the holy spirit; that
+ they are able to make wise unto salvation; and that they constitute an
+ authoritative standard by which religious teaching and human conduct are
+ to be regulated and judged.</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the creed of the Congregational Church; that is, the result
+ reached by a high-joint commission appointed to draw up a creed for their
+ churches; and there we have the statement that the Bible was written "by
+ men under the special guidance of the Holy Spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What part of the Bible? All of it? All of it. And yet what is this Old
+ Testament that was written by an infinitely good God? The being who wrote
+ it did not know the shape of the world he had made; knew nothing of human
+ nature. He commands men to love him, as if one could love upon command.
+ The same God upheld the institution of human slavery; and the church says
+ that the Bible that upholds that institution was written by men under the
+ guidance of the Holy Spirit. Then I disagree with the Holy Spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This church tells us that men under the guidance of the Holy Spirit upheld
+ the institution of polygamy&mdash;I deny it; that under the guidance of
+ the Holy Spirit these men upheld wars of extermination and conquest&mdash;I
+ deny it; that under the guidance of the Holy Spirit these men wrote that
+ it was right for a man to destroy the life of his wife if she happened to
+ differ with him on the subject of religion&mdash;I deny it. And yet that
+ is the book now upheld in this creed of the Congregational Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the devil had written upon the subject of slavery, which side would he
+ have taken? Let every minister answer. If you knew the devil had written a
+ work on human slavery, in your judgment, would he uphold slavery, or
+ denounce it? Would you regard it as any evidence that he ever wrote it, if
+ it upheld slavery? And yet, here you have a work upholding slavery, and
+ you say that it was written by an infinitely good God! If the devil upheld
+ polygamy, would you be surprised? If the devil wanted to kill men for
+ differing with him would you be astonished? If the devil told a man to
+ kill his wife, would you be shocked? And yet, you say, that is exactly
+ what God did. If there be a God, then that creed is blasphemy. That creed
+ is a libel upon him who sits on heaven's throne. If there be a God, I ask
+ him to write in the book in which my account is kept, that I denied these
+ lies for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not believe in a slaveholding God! I do not worship a polygamous Holy
+ Ghost, nor a Son who threatens eternal pain; I will not get upon my knees
+ before any being who commands a husband to slay his wife because she
+ expresses her honest thought. Suppose a book should be found old as the
+ Old Testament in which slavery, polygamy and war are all denounced, would
+ Christians think that it was written by the devil?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did it ever occur to you that if God wrote the Old Testament, and told the
+ Jews to crucify or kill anybody that disagreed with them on religion, and
+ that this God afterward took upon himself flesh and came to Jerusalem, and
+ taught a different religion, and the Jews killed him&mdash;did it ever
+ occur to you that he reaped exactly what he had sown? Did it ever occur to
+ you that he fell a victim to his own tyranny, and was destroyed by his own
+ hand? Of course I do not believe that any God ever was the author of the
+ Bible, or that any God was ever crucified, or that any God was ever
+ killed, or ever will be, but I want to ask you that question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take this Old Testament, then, with all its stories of murder and
+ massacre; with all its foolish and cruel fables; with all its infamous
+ doctrines; with its spirit of caste; with its spirit of hatred, and tell
+ me whether it was written by a good God. If you will read the maledictions
+ and curses of that book, you will think that God, like Lear, had divided
+ heaven among his daughters, and then, in the insanity of despair, had
+ launched his curses on the human race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet, I must say&mdash;I must admit&mdash;that the Old Testament is
+ better than the New. In the Old Testament, when God had a man dead, he let
+ him alone. When he saw him quietly in his grave he was satisfied. The
+ muscles relaxed, and the frown gave place to a smile. But in the New
+ Testament the trouble commences at death. In the New Testament God is to
+ wreak his revenge forever and ever. It was reserved for one who said,
+ "Love your enemies," to tear asunder the veil between time and eternity
+ and fix the horrified gaze of man upon the gulfs of eternal fire. The New
+ Testament is just as much worse than the Old, as hell is worse than sleep;
+ just as much worse, as infinite cruelty is worse than dreamless rest; and
+ yet, the New Testament is claimed to be a gospel of love and peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it possible that: "<i>The Scriptures constitute the authoritative
+ standard by which religious teaching and human conduct are to be regulated
+ and judged"?</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Are we to judge of conduct by the Old Testament, by the New, or by both?
+ According to the Old, the slaveholder was a just and generous man; a
+ polygamist was a model of virtue. According to the New, the worst can be
+ forgiven and the best can be lost. How can any book be a standard, when
+ the standard itself must be measured by human reason? Is there a standard
+ of a standard? Must not the reason be convinced? and, if so, is not the
+ reason of each man the final arbiter of that man? If he takes a book as a
+ standard, does he so take it because it is to him reasonable? In what way
+ is the human reason to be ignored? Why should a book take its place,
+ unless the reason has been convinced that the book is the proper standard?
+ If this is so, the book rests upon the reason of those who adopt it. Are
+ they to be saved because they act in accordance with their reason, and are
+ others to be damned because they act by the same standard&mdash;their
+ reason? No two are alike. Can we demand of all the same result? Suppose
+ the compasses were not constant to the pole&mdash;no two compasses exactly
+ alike&mdash;would you expect all ships to reach the same harbor?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Reign of Truth and Love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I also find in this creed the following:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>We believe that Jesus Christ came to establish among men the Kingdom
+ of God, the reign of truth and love, of righteousness and peace!</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, that may have been the object of Jesus Christ. I do not deny it. But
+ what was the result? The Christian world has caused more war than all the
+ rest of the world beside. Most of the cunning instruments of death have
+ been devised by Christians. All the wonderful machinery by which the life
+ is blown from men, by which nations are conquered and enslaved&mdash;all
+ these machines have been born in Christian brains. And yet he came to
+ bring peace, they say; but the Testament says otherwise: "I came not to
+ bring peace, but a sword." And the sword was brought. What are the
+ Christian nations doing to-day in Europe? Is there a solitary Christian
+ nation that will trust any other? How many millions of Christians are in
+ the uniform of forgiveness, armed with the muskets of love?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was an old Spaniard on the bed of death, who sent for a priest, and
+ the priest told him that he would have to forgive his enemies before he
+ died. He said, "I have none." "What! no enemies?" "Not one," said the
+ dying man; "I killed the last one three months ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How many millions of Christians are now armed and equipped to destroy
+ their fellow-Christians? Who are the men in Europe crying against war? Who
+ wishes to have the nations disarmed? Is it the church? No; the men who do
+ not believe in what they call this religion of peace. When there is a war,
+ and when they make a few thousand widows and orphans; when they strew the
+ plain with dead patriots, Christians assemble in their churches and sing
+ "Te Deum Laudamus." Why? Because he has enabled a few of his children to
+ kill some others of his children. This is the religion of peace&mdash;the
+ religion that invented the Krupp gun, that will hurl a ball weighing two
+ thousand pounds through twenty-four inches of solid steel. This is the
+ religion of peace that covers the sea with men-of-war, clad in mail, in
+ the name of universal forgiveness. This is the religion that drills and
+ uniforms five millions of men to kill their fellows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Wars It Brought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What effect has this religion had upon the nations of the earth? What have
+ the nations been fighting about? What was the Thirty Years' War in Europe
+ for? What was the war in Holland for? Why was it that England persecuted
+ Scotland? Why is it that England persecutes Ireland even to this day? At
+ the bottom of every one of these conflicts you will find a religious
+ question. The religion of Jesus Christ, as preached by his church, causes
+ war, bloodshed, hatred, and all uncharitableness; and why? Because, they
+ say, a certain belief is necessary to salvation. They do not say, if you
+ behave yourself you will get there; they do not say, if you pay your debts
+ and love your wife and love your children, and are good to your friends,
+ and your neighbors, and your country, you will get there; that will do you
+ no good; you have got to believe a certain thing. No matter how bad you
+ are, you can instantly be forgiven; and no matter how good you are, if you
+ fail to believe that which you cannot understand, the moment you get to
+ the day of judgment nothing is left but to damn you, and all the angels
+ will shout "hallelujah."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What do they teach to-day? Nearly every murderer goes to heaven; there is
+ only one step from the gallows to God, only one jerk between the halter
+ and heaven. That is taught by this church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believe there ought to be a law to prevent the giving of the slightest
+ religious consolation to any man who has been found guilty of murder. Let
+ a Catholic understand that if he imbrues his hands in his brother's blood,
+ he can have no extreme unction. Let it be understood that he can have no
+ forgiveness through the church; and let the Protestant understand that
+ when he has committed that crime the community will not pray him into
+ heaven. Let him go with his victim. The victim, dying in his sins, goes to
+ hell, and the murderer has the happiness of seeing him there. If heaven
+ grows dull and monotonous, the murderer can again give life to the nerve
+ of pleasure by watching the agony of his victim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth is, Christianity has not made friends; it has made enemies. It
+ is not, as taught, the religion of peace, it is the religion of war. Why
+ should a Christian hesitate to kill a man that his God is waiting to damn?
+ Why should a Christian not destroy an infidel who is trying to assassinate
+ his soul? Why should a Christian pity an unbeliever&mdash;one who has
+ rejected the Bible&mdash;when he knows that God will be pitiless forever?
+ And yet we are told, in this creed, that "<i>we believe in the ultimate
+ prevalence of the Kingdom of Christ over all the earth.</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What makes you? Do you judge from the manner in which you are getting
+ along now? How many people are being born a year? About fifty millions.
+ How many are you converting a year, really, truthfully? Five or six
+ thousand. I think I have overstated the number. Is orthodox Christianity
+ on the increase? No. There are a hundred times as many unbelievers in
+ orthodox Christianity as there were ten years ago. What are you doing in
+ the missionary world? How long is it since you converted a Chinaman? A
+ fine missionary religion, to send missionaries with their Bibles and
+ tracts to China, but if a Chinaman comes here, mob him, simply to show him
+ the difference between the practical and theoretical workings of the
+ Christian religion. How long since you have had an intelligent convert in
+ India? In my judgment, never; there never has been an intelligent Hindoo
+ converted from the time the first missionary put his foot on that soil;
+ and never, in my judgment, has an intelligent Chinaman been converted
+ since the first missionary touched that shore. Where are they? We hear
+ nothing of them, except in the reports. They get money from poor old
+ ladies, trembling on the edge of the grave, and go and tell them stories,
+ how hungry the average Chinaman is for a copy of the New Testament, and
+ paint the sad condition of a gentleman in the interior of Africa without
+ the works of Dr. McCosh, longing for a copy of <i>The Princeton Review</i>,&mdash;in
+ my judgment, a pamphlet that would suit a savage. Thus money is scared
+ from the dying, and frightened from the old and feeble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About how long is it before this kingdom is to be established? No one
+ objects to the establishment of peace and good will. Every good man longs
+ for the time when war shall cease. We are all hoping for a day of
+ universal justice&mdash;a day of universal freedom&mdash;when man shall
+ control himself, when the passions shall become obedient to the
+ intelligent will. But the coming of that day will not be hastened by
+ preaching the doctrines of total depravity and eternal revenge. That sun
+ will not rise the quicker for preaching salvation by faith. The star that
+ shines above that dawn, the herald of that day, is Science, not
+ superstition,&mdash;Reason, not religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To show you how little advance has been made, how many intellectual bats
+ and mental owls still haunt the temple, still roost above the altar, I
+ call your attention to the fact that the Congregational Church, according
+ to this creed; still believes in the resurrection of the dead, and in
+ their Confession of Faith, attached to the creed, I find that they also
+ believe in the literal resurrection of the body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Resurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does anybody believe that, who has the courage to think for himself? Here
+ is a man, for instance, that weighs 200 pounds and gets sick and dies
+ weighing 120; how much will he weigh in the morning of the resurrection?
+ Here is a cannibal, who eats another man; and we know that the atoms you
+ eat go into your body and become a part of you. After the cannibal has
+ eaten the missionary, and appropriated his atoms to himself, and then
+ dies, to whom will the atoms belong in the morning of the resurrection?
+ Could the missionary maintain an action of replevin, and if so, what would
+ the cannibal do for a body? It has been demonstrated, in so far as logic
+ can demonstrate anything, that there is no creation and no destruction in
+ Nature. It has been demonstrated, again and again, that the atoms in us
+ have been in millions of other beings; have grown in the forests and in
+ the grass, have blossomed in flowers, and been in the metals. In other
+ words, there are atoms in each one of us that have been in millions of
+ others; and when we die, these atoms return to the earth, again appear in
+ grass and trees, are again eaten by animals, and again devoured by
+ countless vegetable mouths and turned into wood; and yet this church, in
+ the nineteenth century,'in a council composed of, and presided over by,
+ professors and presidents of colleges and theologians, solemnly tells us
+ that it believes in the literal resurrection of the body. This is almost
+ enough to make one despair of the future&mdash;almost enough to convince a
+ man of the immortality of the absurd. They know better. There is not one
+ so ignorant but knows better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Judgment-Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what is the next thing?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>We believe in a final judgment, the issues of which are everlasting
+ punishment and everlasting life!</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the final judgment all of us will be there. The thousands, and
+ millions, and billions, and trillions, and quadrillions that have died
+ will be there. The books will be opened, and each case will be called. The
+ sheep and the goats will be divided. The unbelievers will be sent to the
+ left, while the faithful will proudly walk to the right. The saved,
+ without a tear, will bid an eternal farewell to those who loved them here&mdash;to
+ those they loved. Nearly all the human race will go away to everlasting
+ punishment, and the fortunate few to eternal life. This is the consolation
+ of the Congregational Church! This is the hope that dispels the gloom of
+ life!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pious Evasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the clergy are caught, they give a different meaning to the words and
+ say the world was not made in seven days. They say "good whiles"&mdash;"epochs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in this same Confession of Faith and in this creed they say that the
+ Lord's day is holy&mdash;every seventh day. Suppose you lived near the
+ North Pole where the day is three months long. Then which day would you
+ keep? If you could get to the North Pole you could prevent Sunday from
+ ever overtaking you. You could walk around the other way faster than the
+ world could revolve. How would you keep Sunday then? Suppose we invent
+ something that can go one thousand miles an hour? We can chase Sunday
+ clear around the globe. Is there anything that can be more perfectly
+ absurd than that a space of time can be holy? You might as well talk about
+ a virtuous vacuum. We are now told that the Bible is not a scientific
+ book, and that after all we cannot depend on what God said four thousand
+ years ago&mdash;that his ways are not as our ways&mdash;that we must
+ accept without evidence, and believe without understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I heard the other night of an old man. He was not very well educated, and
+ he got into the notion that he must have reading of the Bible and family
+ worship. There was a bad boy in the family, and they were reading the
+ Bible by course. In the fifteenth chapter of Corinthians is this passage:
+ "Behold, brethren, I show you a mystery; we shall not all die, but we
+ shall all be changed." This boy had rubbed out the "c" in "changed." So
+ when the old man put on his spectacles, and got down his Bible, he read:
+ "Behold, brethren, I show you a mystery, we shall not all die, but we
+ shall all be hanged." The old lady said, "Father, I don't think it reads
+ that way." He said, "Who is reading this?" "Yes mother, it says 'hanged,'
+ and, more than that, I see the sense of it. Pride is the besetting sin of
+ the human heart, and if there is anything calculated to take the pride out
+ of a man it is hanging." It is in this way that ministers avoid and
+ explain the discoveries of Science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People ask me, if I take away the Bible what are we going to do? How can
+ we get along without the revelation that no one understands? What are we
+ going to do if we have no Bible to quarrel about What are we to do without
+ hell? What are we going to do with our enemies? What are we going to do
+ with the people we love but don't like?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No Bible, No Civilization."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They tell me that there never would have been any civilization if it had
+ not been for this Bible. The Jews had a Bible; the Romans had not. Which
+ had the greater and the grander government? Let us be honest. Which of
+ those nations produced the greatest poets, the greatest soldiers, the
+ greatest orators, the greatest statesmen, the greatest sculptors? Rome had
+ no Bible. God cared nothing for the Roman Empire. He let the men come up
+ by chance. His time was taken up with the Jewish people. And yet Rome
+ conquered the world, including the chosen people of God. The people who
+ had the Bible were defeated by the people who had not. How was it possible
+ for Lucretius to get along without the Bible?&mdash;how did the great and
+ glorious of that empire? And what shall we say of Greece? No Bible.
+ Compare Athens with Jerusalem. From Athens come the beauty and
+ intellectual grace of the world. Compare the mythology of Greece with the
+ mythology of Judea; one covering the earth with beauty, and the other
+ filling heaven with hatred and injustice. The Hindoos had no Bible; they
+ had been forsaken by the Creator, and yet they became the greatest
+ metaphysicians of the world. Egypt had no Bible. Compare Egypt with Judea.
+ What are we to do without the Bible? What became of the Jews who had a
+ Bible? Their temple was destroyed and their city was taken; and they never
+ found real prosperity until their God deserted them. The Turks attributed
+ all their victories to the Koran. The Koran gave them their victories over
+ the believers in the Bible. The priests of each nation have accounted for
+ the prosperity of that nation by its religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Christians mistake an incident for a cause, and honestly imagine that
+ the Bible is the foundation of modern liberty and law. They forget
+ physical conditions, make no account of commerce, care nothing for
+ inventions and discoveries, and ignorantly give the credit to their
+ inspired book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foundations of our civilization were laid centuries before
+ Christianity was known. The intelligence of courage, of self-government,
+ of energy, of industry, that uniting made the civilization of this
+ century, did not come alone from Judea, but from every nation of the
+ ancient world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miracles of the New Testament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are many things in the New Testament that I cannot accept as true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot believe in the miraculous origin of Jesus Christ. I believe he
+ was the son of Joseph and Mary; that Joseph and Mary had been duly and
+ legally married; that he was the legitimate offspring of that union.
+ Nobody ever believed the contrary until he had been dead at least one
+ hundred and fifty years. Neither Matthew, Mark, nor Luke ever dreamed that
+ he was of divine origin. He did not say to either Matthew, Mark, or Luke,
+ or to any one in their hearing, that he was the Son of God, or that he was
+ miraculously conceived. He did not say it. It may be asserted that he said
+ it to John, but John did not write the gospel that bears his name. The
+ angel Gabriel, who, they say, brought the news, never wrote a word upon
+ the subject. The mother of Christ never wrote a word upon the subject. His
+ alleged father never wrote a word upon the subject, and Joseph never
+ admitted the story. We are lacking in the matter of witnesses. I would not
+ believe such a story now. I cannot believe that it happened then. I would
+ not believe people I know, much less would I believe people I do not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that time Matthew and Luke believed that Christ was the son of Joseph
+ and Mary. And why? they say he descended from David, and in order to show
+ that he was of the blood of David, they gave the genealogy of Joseph. And
+ if Joseph was not his father, why did they not give the genealogy of
+ Pontius Pilate or of Herod? Could they, by giving the genealogy of Joseph,
+ show that he was of the blood of David if Joseph was in no way related to
+ Christ? And yet that is the position into which the Christian world is
+ driven. In the New Testament we find that in giving the genealogy of
+ Christ it says, "who was the son of Joseph?" and the church has
+ interpolated the words "as was supposed." Why did they give a supposed
+ genealogy? It will not do. And that is a thing that cannot in any way, by
+ any human testimony, be established.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If it is important for us to know that he was the Son of God, I say, then,
+ that it devolves upon God to give us the evidence. Let him write it across
+ the face of the heavens, in every language of mankind. If it is necessary
+ for us to believe it, let it grow on every leaf next year. No man should
+ be damned for not believing, unless the evidence is overwhelming. And he
+ ought not to be made to depend upon say so, or upon "as was supposed." He
+ should have it directly, for himself. A man says that God told him a
+ certain thing, and he tells me, and I have only his word. He may have been
+ deceived. If God has a message for me he ought to tell it to me, and not
+ to somebody that has been dead four or five thousand years, and in another
+ language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, God may have changed his mind on many things; he has on slavery,
+ and polygamy at least, according to the church; and yet his church now
+ wants to go and destroy polygamy in Utah with the sword. Why do they not
+ send missionaries there with copies of the Old Testament? By reading the
+ lives of Abraham and Isaac, and Lot, and a few other patriarchs who ought
+ to have been in the penitentiary, maybe they can soften their hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More Miracles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is another miracle I do not believe,&mdash;the resurrection. I want
+ to speak about it as we would about any ordinary transaction. In the first
+ place, I do not believe that any miracle was ever performed, and if there
+ was, you cannot prove it. Why? Because it is altogether more reasonable to
+ believe that the people were mistaken about it than that it happened. And
+ why? Because, according to human experience, we know that people will not
+ always tell the truth, and we never saw a miracle ourselves, and we must
+ be governed by our experience; and if we go by our experience, we must say
+ that the miracle never happened&mdash;that the witnesses were mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man comes into Jerusalem, and the first thing he does is to cure the
+ blind. He lets the light of day visit the night of blindness. The eyes are
+ opened, and the world is again pictured upon the brain. Another man is
+ clothed with leprosy. He touches him and the disease falls from him, and
+ he stands pure, and clean, and whole. Another man is deformed, wrinkled,
+ and bent. He touches him, and throws around him again the garment of
+ youth. A man is in his grave, and he says, "Come forth!" And the man walks
+ in life, feeling his heart throb and his blood going joyously through his
+ veins. They say that actually happened. I do not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one wonderful thing about the dead people that were raised&mdash;we
+ do not hear of them any more. What became of them? If there was a man in
+ this city who had been raised from the dead, I would go to see him
+ to-night. I would say, "Where were you when you got the notice to come
+ back? What kind of a country is it? What kind of opening there for a young
+ man? How did you like it? Did you meet there the friends you had lost? Is
+ there a world without death, without pain, without a tear? Is there a land
+ without a grave, and where good-bye is never heard?" Nobody ever paid the
+ slightest attention to the dead who had been raised. They did not even
+ excite interest when they died the second time. Nobody said, "Why, that
+ man is not afraid. He has been there once. He has walked through the
+ valley of the shadow." Not a word. They pass quietly away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not believe these miracles. There is something wrong somewhere about
+ that business. I may suffer eternal punishment for all this, but I cannot,
+ I do not, believe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a man who did all these things, and thereupon they crucified
+ him. Let us be honest. Suppose a man came into this city and should meet a
+ funeral procession, and say, "Who is dead?" and they should reply, "The
+ son of a widow; her only support." Suppose he should say to the
+ procession, "Halt!" and to the undertaker, "Take out that coffin, unscrew
+ that lid. Young man, I say unto thee, arise!" and the dead should step
+ from the coffin and in a moment afterward hold his mother in his arms.
+ Suppose this stranger should go to your cemetery and find some woman
+ holding a little child in each hand, while the tears fell upon a new-made
+ grave, and he should say to her, "Who lies buried here?" and she should
+ reply, "My husband;" and he should cry, "I say unto thee, oh grave, give
+ up thy dead!" and the husband should rise, and in a moment after have his
+ lips upon his wife's, and the little children with their arms around his
+ neck; do you think that the people of this city would kill him? Do you
+ think any one would wish to crucify him? Do you not rather believe that
+ every one who had a loved one out in that cemetery would go to him, even
+ upon their knees, and beg him to give back their dead? Do you believe that
+ any man was ever crucified who was the master of death?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me tell you to-night if there shall ever appear upon this earth the
+ master, the monarch, of death, all human knees will touch the earth. He
+ will not be crucified. All the living who fear death; all the living who
+ have lost a loved one, will bow to him. And yet we are told that this
+ worker of miracles, this man who could clothe the dead dust in the
+ throbbing flesh of life, was crucified. I do not believe that he worked
+ the miracles, I do not believe that he raised the dead, I do not believe
+ that he claimed to be the Son of God, These things were told long after he
+ was dead; told because the ignorant multitude demanded mystery and wonder;
+ told, because at that time the miraculous was believed of all the
+ illustrious dead. Stories that made Christianity powerful then, weaken it
+ now. He who gains a triumph in a conflict with a devil, will be defeated
+ by science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is another thing about these foolish miracles. All could have been
+ imitated. Men could pretend to be blind; confederates could feign
+ sickness, and even death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not very difficult to limp or to hold an arm as though it were
+ paralyzed; or to say that one is afflicted with "an issue of blood." It is
+ easy to say that the son of a widow was raised from the dead, and if you
+ fail to give the name of the son, or his mother, or the time and place
+ where the wonder occurred, it is quite difficult to show that it did not
+ happen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one can be called upon to disprove anything that has not apparently
+ been established. I say apparently, because there can be no real evidence
+ in support of a miracle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How could we prove, for instance, the miracle of the loaves and fishes?
+ There were plenty of other loaves and other fishes in the world? Each one
+ of the five thousand could have had a loaf and a fish with him. We would
+ have to show that there was no other possible way for the people to get
+ the bread and fish except by miracle, and then we are only half through.
+ We must then show that they did, in fact, get enough to feed five thousand
+ people, and that more was left than was had in the beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course this is simply impossible. And let me ask, why was not the
+ miracle substantiated by some of the multitude?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would it not have been a greater wonder if Christ had <i>created</i>
+ instead of multiplied the loaves and fishes?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How can we now prove that a certain person more than eighteen hundred
+ years ago was possessed by seven devils?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How was it ever possible to prove a thing like that?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How can it be established that some evil spirits could talk while others
+ were dumb, and that the dumb ones were the hardest to control?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Christ wished to convince his fellow-men by miracles, why did he not do
+ something that could not by any means have been a counterfeit?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of healing a withered arm, why did he not find some man whose arm
+ had been cut off, and make another grow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he wanted to raise the dead, why did he not raise some man of
+ importance, some one known to all?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why did he do his miracles in the obscurity of the village, in the
+ darkness of the hovel?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why call back to life people so insignificant that the public did not know
+ of their death?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suppose that in May, 1865, a man had pretended to raise some person by the
+ name of Smith from the dead, and suppose a religion had been founded on
+ that miracle, would it not be natural for people, hundreds of years after
+ the pretended miracle, to ask why the founder of that religion did not
+ raise from the dead Abraham Lincoln, instead of the unknown and obscure
+ Mr. Smith?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How could any man now, in any court, by any known rule of evidence,
+ substantiate one of the miracles of Christ?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Must we believe anything that cannot in any way be substantiated?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If miracles were necessary to convince men eighteen centuries ago, are
+ they not necessary now?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all, how many men did Christ convince with his miracles? How many
+ walked beneath the standard of the master of Nature?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How did it happen that so many miracles convinced so few? I will tell you.
+ The miracles were never performed. No other explanation is possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is infinitely absurd to say that a man who cured the sick, the halt and
+ blind, raised the dead, cast out devils, controlled the winds and waves,
+ created food and held obedient to his will the forces of the world, was
+ put to death by men who knew his superhuman power and who had seen his
+ wondrous works. If the crucifixion was public, the miracles were private.
+ If the miracles had been public, the crucifixion could not have been. Do
+ away with the miracles, and the superhuman character of Christ is
+ destroyed. He becomes what he really was&mdash;a man. Do away with the
+ wonders, and the teachings of Christ cease to be authoritative. They are
+ then worth the reason, the truth that is in them, and nothing more. Do
+ away with the miracles, and then we can measure the utterances of Christ
+ with the standard of our reason. We are no longer intellectual serfs,
+ believing what is unreasonable in obedience to the command of a supposed
+ god. We no longer take counsel of our fears, of our cowardice, but boldly
+ defend what our reason maintains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christ takes his appropriate place with the other teachers of mankind. His
+ life becomes reasonable and admirable. We have a man who hated oppression;
+ who despised and denounced superstition and hypocrisy; who attacked the
+ heartless church of his time; who excited the hatred of bigots and
+ priests, and who rather than be false to his conception of truth, met and
+ bravely suffered even death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Resurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The miracle of the resurrection I do not and cannot believe. If it was the
+ fact, if the dead Christ rose from the grave, why did he not appear to his
+ enemies? Why did he not visit Pontius Pilate? Why did he not call upon
+ Caiaphas, the high priest? upon Herod? Why did he not again enter the
+ temple and end the old dispute with demonstration? Why did he not confront
+ the Roman soldiers who had taken money to falsely swear that his body had
+ been stolen by his friends? Why did he not make another triumphal entry
+ into Jerusalem? Why did he not say to the multitude: "Here are the wounds
+ in my feet, and in my hands, and in my side. I am the one you endeavored
+ to kill, but Death is my slave"? Simply because the resurrection is a
+ myth. It makes no difference with his teachings. They are just as good
+ whether he wrought miracles or not. Twice two are four; that needs no
+ miracle. Twice two are five&mdash;a miracle can not help that. Christ's
+ teachings are worth their effect upon the human race. It makes no
+ difference about miracle or wonder. In that day every one believed in the
+ impossible. Nobody had any standing as teacher, philosopher, governor,
+ king, general, about whom there was not supposed to be something
+ miraculous. The earth was covered with the sons and daughters of gods and
+ goddesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Greece, in Rome, in Egypt, in India, every great man was supposed to
+ have had either a god for his father, or a goddess for his mother. They
+ accounted for genius by divine origin. Earth and heaven were at that time
+ near together. It was but a step for the gods from the blue arch to the
+ green earth. Every lake and valley and mountain top was made rich with
+ legends of the loves of gods. How could the early Christians have made
+ converts to a man, among a people who believed so thoroughly in gods&mdash;in
+ gods that had lived upon the earth; among a people who had erected temples
+ to the sons and daughters of gods? Such people could not have been induced
+ to worship a man&mdash;a man born among barbarous people, citizen of a
+ nation weak and poor and paying tribute to the Roman power. The early
+ Christians therefore preached the gospel of a god.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ascension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot believe in the miracle of the ascension, in the bodily ascension
+ of Jesus Christ. Where was he going? In the light shed upon this question
+ by the telescope, I again ask, where was he going?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The New Jerusalem is not above us. The abode of the gods is not there.
+ Where was he going? Which way did he go? Of course that depends upon the
+ time of day he left. If he left in the evening, he went exactly the
+ opposite way from that he would have gone had he ascended in the morning.
+ What did he do with his body? How high did he go? In what way did he
+ overcome the intense cold? The nearest station is the moon, two hundred
+ and forty thousand miles away. Again I ask, where did he go? He must have
+ had a natural body, for it was the same body that died. His body must have
+ been material, otherwise he would not as he rose have circled with the
+ earth, and he would have passed from the sight of his disciples at the
+ rate of more than a thousand miles per hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be said that his body was "spiritual." Then what became of the body
+ that died? Just before his ascension we are told that he partook of
+ broiled fish with his disciples. Was the fish "spiritual?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who saw this miracle?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They say the disciples saw it. Let us see what they say. Matthew did not
+ think it was worth mentioning. He does not speak of it. On the contrary,
+ he says that the last words of Christ were:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world." Is it possible
+ that Matthew saw this, the most miraculous of miracles, and yet forgot to
+ put it in his life of Christ? Think of the little miracles recorded by
+ this saint, and then determine whether it is probable that he witnessed
+ the ascension of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mark says: "So, then, after the Lord had spoken unto them he was received
+ up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God." This is all he says
+ about the most wonderful vision that ever astonished human eyes, a miracle
+ great enough to have stuffed credulity to bursting; and yet all we have is
+ this one, poor, meagre verse. We know now that most of the last chapter of
+ Mark is an interpolation, and as a matter of fact, the author of Mark's
+ gospel said nothing about the ascension one way or the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luke says: "And it came to pass while he blessed them he was parted from
+ them and was carried up into Heaven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John does not mention it. He gives as Christ's last words this address to
+ Peter: "Follow thou Me." Of course, he did not say that as he ascended. It
+ seems to have made very little impression upon him; he writes the account
+ as though tired of the story. He concludes with an impatient wave of the
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Acts we have another account. A conversation is given not spoken of
+ in any of the others, and we find there two men clad in white apparel, who
+ said: "Ye men of Galilee why stand ye here gazing up into heaven? This
+ same Jesus that was taken up into heaven shall so come in like manner as
+ ye have seen him go up into heaven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matthew did not see the men in white apparel, did not see the ascension.
+ Mark forgot the entire transaction, and Luke did not think the men in
+ white apparel worth mentioning. John had not confidence enough in the
+ story to repeat it. And yet, upon such evidence, we are bound to believe
+ in the bodily ascension, or suffer eternal pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here let me ask, why was not the ascension in public?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Casting out Devils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of the miracles said to have been wrought by Christ were recorded to
+ show his power over evil spirits. On many occasions, he is said to have
+ "cast out devils"&mdash;devils who could speak, and devils who were dumb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many years belief in the existence of evil spirits has been fading
+ from the mind, and as this belief grew thin, ministers endeavored to give
+ new meanings to the ancient words. They are inclined now to put "disease"
+ in the place of "devils," and most of them say, that the poor wretches
+ supposed to have been the homes of fiends, were simply suffering from
+ epileptic fits! We must remember that Christ and these devils often
+ conversed together. Is it possible that fits can talk? These devils often
+ admitted that Christ was God. Can epilepsy certify to divinity? On one
+ occasion the fits told their name, and made a contract to leave the body
+ of a man provided they would be permitted to take possession of a herd of
+ swine. Is it possible that fits carried Christ himself to the pinnacle of
+ a temple? Did fits pretend to be the owner of the whole earth? Is Christ
+ to be praised for resisting such a temptation? Is it conceivable that fits
+ wanted Christ to fall down and worship them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church must not abandon its belief in devils. Orthodoxy cannot afford
+ to put out the fires of hell. Throw away a belief in the devil, and most
+ of the miracles of the New Testament become impossible, even if we admit
+ the supernatural. If there is no devil, who was the original tempter in
+ the garden of Eden? If there is no hell, from what are we saved; to what
+ purpose is the atonement? Upon the obverse of the Christian shield is God,
+ upon the reverse, the devil. No devil, no hell. No hell, no atonement. No
+ atonement, no preaching, no gospel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Necessity of Belief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does belief depend upon evidence? I think it does somewhat in some cases.
+ How is it when a jury is sworn to try a case, hearing all the evidence,
+ hearing both sides, hearing the charge of the judge, hearing the law, are
+ upon their oaths equally divided, six for the plaintiff and six for the
+ defendant? Evidence does not have the same effect upon all people. Why?
+ Our brains are not alike. They are not the same shape. We have not the
+ same intelligence, or the same experience, the same sense. And yet I am
+ held accountable for my belief. I must believe in the Trinity&mdash;three
+ times one is one, once one is three, and my soul is to be eternally damned
+ for failing to guess an arithmetical conundrum. That is the poison part of
+ Christianity&mdash;that salvation depends upon belief. That is the
+ accursed part, and until that dogma is discarded Christianity will be
+ nothing but superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No man can control his belief. If I hear certain evidence I will believe a
+ certain thing. If I fail to hear it I may never believe it. If it is
+ adapted to my mind I may accept it; if it is not, I reject it. And what am
+ I to go by? My brain. That is the only light I have from Nature, and if
+ there be a God it is the only torch that this God has given me to find my
+ way through the darkness and night called life. I do not depend upon
+ hearsay for that. I do not have to take the word of any other man nor get
+ upon my knees before a book. Here in the temple of the mind I consult the
+ God, that is to say my reason, and the oracle speaks to me and I obey the
+ oracle. What should I obey? Another man's oracle? Shall I take another
+ man's word&mdash;not what he thinks, but what he says some God has said to
+ him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would not know a god if I should see one. I have said before, and I say
+ again, the brain thinks in spite of me, and I am not responsible for my
+ thoughts. I cannot control the beating of my heart. I cannot stop the
+ blood that flows through the rivers of my veins. And yet I am held
+ responsible for my belief. Then why does not God give me the evidence?
+ They say he has. In what? In an inspired book. But I do not understand it
+ as they do. Must I be false to my understanding? They say: "When you come
+ to die you will be sorry if you do not." Will I be sorry when I come to
+ die that I did not live a hypocrite? Will I be sorry that I did not say I
+ was a Christian when I was not? Will the fact that I was honest put a
+ thorn in the pillow of death? Cannot God forgive me for being honest? They
+ say that when he was in Jerusalem he forgave his murderers, but now he
+ will not forgive an honest man for differing from him on the subject of
+ the Trinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They say that God says to me, "Forgive your enemies." I say, "I do;" but
+ he says, "I will damn mine." God should be consistent. If he wants me to
+ forgive my enemies he should forgive his. I am asked to forgive enemies
+ who can hurt me. God is only asked to forgive enemies who cannot hurt him.
+ He certainly ought to be as generous as he asks us to be. And I want no
+ God to forgive me unless I am willing to forgive others, and unless I do
+ forgive others. All I ask, if that be true, is that this God should act
+ according to his own doctrine. If I am to forgive my enemies, I ask him to
+ forgive his. I do not believe in the religion of faith, but of kindness,
+ of good deeds. The idea that man is responsible for his belief is at the
+ bottom of religious intolerance and persecution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How inconsistent these Christians are! In St. Louis the other day I read
+ an interview with a Christian minister&mdash;one who is now holding a
+ revival. They call him the boy preacher&mdash;a name that he has borne for
+ fifty or sixty years. The question was whether in these revivals, when
+ they were trying to rescue souls from eternal torture, they would allow
+ colored people to occupy seats with white people; and that revivalist,
+ preaching the unsearchable riches of Christ, said he would not allow the
+ colored people to sit with white people; they must go to the back of the
+ church. These same Christians tell us that in heaven there will be no
+ distinction. That Christ cares nothing for the color of the skin. That in
+ Paradise white and black will sit together, swap harps, and cry hallelujah
+ in chorus; yet this minister, believing as he says he does, that all men
+ who fail to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ will eternally perish, was
+ not willing that a colored man should sit by a white man and hear the
+ gospel of everlasting peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to this revivalist, the ship of the world is going down; Christ
+ is the only life-boat; and yet he is not willing that a colored man, with
+ a soul to save, shall sit by the side of a white brother, and be rescued
+ from eternal death. He admits that the white brother is totally depraved;
+ that if the white brother had justice done him he would be damned; that it
+ is only through the wonderful mercy of God that the white man is not in
+ hell; and yet such a being, totally depraved, is too good to sit by a
+ colored man! Total depravity becomes arrogant; total depravity draws the
+ color line in religion, and an ambassador of Christ says to the black man,
+ "Stand away; let your white brother hear first about the love of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believe in the religion of humanity. It is far better to love our
+ fellow-men than to love God. We can help them. We cannot help him. We had
+ better do what we can than to be always pretending to do what we cannot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Virtue is of no color; kindness, justice and love, of no complexion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eternal Punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now I come to the last part of this creed&mdash;the doctrine of eternal
+ punishment. I have concluded that I will never deliver a lecture in which
+ I will not attack the doctrine of eternal pain. That part of the
+ Congregational creed would disgrace the lowest savage that crouches and
+ crawls in the jungles of Africa. The man who now, in the nineteenth
+ century, preaches the doctrine of eternal punishment, the doctrine of an
+ eternal hell, has lived in vain. Think of that doctrine! The eternity of
+ punishment! I find in this same creed&mdash;in this latest utterance of
+ Congregationalism&mdash;that Christ is finally going to triumph in this
+ world and establish his kingdom. This creed declares that "we believe in
+ the ultimate prevalence of the kingdom of God over all the earth." If
+ their doctrine is true he will never triumph in the other world. The
+ Congregational Church does not believe in the ultimate prevalence of the
+ kingdom of Christ in the world to come. There he is to meet with eternal
+ failure. He will have billions in hell forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this world we never will be perfectly civilized as long as a gallows
+ casts its shadow upon the earth. As long as there is a penitentiary,
+ within the walls of which a human being is immured, we are not a perfectly
+ civilized people. We shall never be perfectly civilized until we do away
+ with crime. And yet, according to this Christian religion, God is to have
+ an eternal penitentiary; he is to be an everlasting jailer, an everlasting
+ turnkey, a warden of an infinite dungeon, and he is going to keep
+ prisoners there forever, not for the purpose of reforming them&mdash;because
+ they are never going to get any better, only worse&mdash;but for the
+ purpose of purposeless punishment. And for what? For something they failed
+ to believe in this world. Born in ignorance, supported by poverty, caught
+ in the snares of temptation, deformed by toil, stupefied by want&mdash;and
+ yet held responsible through the countless ages of eternity! No man can
+ think of a greater horror; no man can dream of a greater absurdity. For
+ the growth of that doctrine ignorance was soil and fear was rain. It came
+ from the fanged mouths of serpents, and yet it is called "glad tidings of
+ great joy." Some Who are Damned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told "God so loved the world" that he is going to damn almost
+ everybody. If this orthodox religion be true, some of the greatest, and
+ grandest, and best who ever lived are suffering God's torments to-night.
+ It does not appear to make much difference with the members of the church.
+ They go right on enjoying themselves about as well as ever. If this
+ doctrine is true, Benjamin Franklin, one of the wisest and best of men,
+ who did so much to give us here a free government, is suffering the
+ tyranny of God to-night, although he endeavored to establish freedom among
+ men. If the churches were honest, their preachers would tell their
+ hearers: "Benjamin Franklin is in hell, and we warn all the youth not to
+ imitate Benjamin Franklin. Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of
+ Independence, with its self-evident truths, has been damned these many
+ years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is what all the ministers ought to have the courage to say. Talk as
+ you believe. Stand by your creed, or change it. I want to impress it upon
+ your minds, because the thing I wish to do in this world is to put out the
+ fires of hell. I will keep on as long as there is one little red coal left
+ in the bottomless pit. As long as the ashes are warm I shall denounce this
+ infamous doctrine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I want you to know that according to this creed the men who founded this
+ great and splendid Government are in hell to-night. Most of the men who
+ fought in the Revolutionary war, and wrested from the clutch of Great
+ Britain this continent, have been rewarded by the eternal wrath of God.
+ Thousands of the old Revolutionary soldiers are in torment tonight. Let
+ the preachers have the courage to say so. The men who fought in 1812, and
+ gave to the United States the freedom of the seas, have nearly all been
+ damned. Thousands of heroes who served our country in the Civil war,
+ hundreds who starved in prisons, are now in the dungeons of God, compared
+ with which, Andersonville was Paradise. The greatest of heroes are there;
+ the greatest of poets, the greatest scientists, the men who have made the
+ world beautiful&mdash;they are all among the damned if this creed is true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Humboldt, who shed light, and who added to the intellectual wealth of
+ mankind; Goethe, and Schiller, and Lessing, who almost created the German
+ language&mdash;all gone&mdash;all suffering the wrath of God tonight, and
+ every time an angel thinks of one of those men he gives his harp an extra
+ twang. Laplace, who read the heavens like an open book&mdash;he is there.
+ Robert Burns, the poet of human love&mdash;he is there. He wrote the
+ "Prayer of Holy Willie." He fastened on the cross the Presbyterian creed,
+ and there it is, a lingering crucifixion. Robert Burns increased the
+ tenderness of the human heart. Dickens put a shield of pity before the
+ flesh of childhood&mdash;God is getting even with him. Our own Ralph Waldo
+ Emerson, although he had a thousand opportunities to hear Methodist
+ clergymen, scorned the means of grace, lived to his highest ideal, gave to
+ his fellow-men his best and truest thought, and yet his spirit is the
+ sport and prey of fiends to-night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Longfellow, who has refined thousands of homes, did not believe in the
+ miraculous origin of the Savior, doubted the report of Gabriel, loved his
+ fellow-men, did what he could to free the slaves, to increase the
+ happiness of man, yet God was waiting for his soul&mdash;waiting to cast
+ him out and down forever. Thomas Paine, author of the "Rights of Man;"
+ offering his life in both hemispheres for the freedom of the human race;
+ one of the founders of this Republic, is now among the damned; and yet it
+ seems to me that if he could only get God's attention long enough to point
+ him to the American flag he would let him out. Auguste Comte, author of
+ the "Positive Philosophy," who loved his fellow-men to that degree that he
+ made of humanity a god, who wrote his great work in poverty, with his face
+ covered with tears&mdash;they are getting their revenge on him now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Voltaire, who abolished torture in France; who did more for human liberty
+ than any other man, living or dead; who was the assassin of superstition,
+ and whose dagger still rusts in the heart of Catholicism&mdash;he is with
+ the rest. All the priests who have been translated have had their
+ happiness increased by looking at Voltaire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Giordano Bruno, the first star of the morning after the long night;
+ Benedict Spinoza, the pantheist, the metaphysician, the pure and generous
+ man; Diderot, the encyclopedist, who endeavored to get all knowledge in a
+ small compass, so that he could put the peasant on an equality
+ intellectually with the prince; Diderot, who wished to sow all over the
+ world the seed of knowledge, and loved to labor for mankind, while the
+ priests wanted to burn; who did all he could to put out the fires&mdash;he
+ was lost, long, long ago. His cry for water has become so common that his
+ voice is now recognized through all the realms of heaven, and the angels
+ laughing, say to one another, "That is Diderot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ David Hume, the Scotch philosopher, is there, with his inquiry about the
+ "Human Understanding" and his argument against miracles. Beethoven, master
+ of music, and Wagner, the Shakespeare of harmony, who made the air of this
+ world rich forever, they are there; and to-night they have better music in
+ hell than in heaven!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shelley, whose soul, like his own "Skylark," was a winged joy, has been
+ damned for many, many years; and Shakespeare, the greatest of the human
+ race, who did more to elevate mankind than all the priests who ever lived
+ and died, he is there; but founders of inquisitions, builders of dungeons,
+ makers of chains, inventors of instruments of torture, tearers, and
+ burners, and branders of human flesh, stealers of babes, and sellers of
+ husbands and wives and children, and they who kept the horizon lurid with
+ the fagot's flame for a thousand years&mdash;are in heaven to-night. I
+ wish heaven joy!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is the doctrine with which we are polluting the souls of children.
+ That is the doctrine that puts a fiend by the dying bed and a prophecy of
+ hell over every cradle. That is "glad tidings of great joy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a little while ago, when the great flood came upon the Ohio, sent by
+ him who is ruling the world and paying particular attention to the affairs
+ of nations, just in the gray of the morning they saw a house floating down
+ and on its top a human being. A few men went out to the rescue. They found
+ there a woman, a mother, and they wished to save her life. She said: "No,
+ I am going to stay where I am. In this house I have three dead babes; I
+ will not desert them." Think of a love so limitless&mdash;stronger and
+ deeper than despair and death! And yet, the Christian religion says, that
+ if that woman, that mother, did not happen to believe in their creed God
+ would send her soul to eternal fire! If there is another world, and if in
+ heaven they wear hats, when such a woman climbs the opposite bank of the
+ Jordan, Christ should lift his to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctrine of eternal pain is my trouble with this Christian religion. I
+ reject it on account of its infinite heartlessness. I cannot tell them too
+ often, that during our last war Christians, who knew that if they were
+ shot they would go right to heaven, went and hired wicked men to take
+ their places, perfectly willing that these men should go to hell provided
+ they could stay at home. You see they are not honest in it, or they do not
+ believe it, or as the people say, "they don't sense it." They have not
+ imagination enough to conceive what it is they believe, and what a
+ terrific falsehood they assert. And I beg of every one who hears me
+ to-night, I beg, I implore, I beseech you, never to give another dollar to
+ build a church in which that lie is preached. Never give another cent to
+ send a missionary with his mouth stuffed with that falsehood to a foreign
+ land. Why, they say, the heathen will go to heaven, any way, if you let
+ them alone. What is the use of sending them to hell by enlightening them?
+ Let them alone. The idea of going and telling a man a thing that if he
+ does not believe, he will be damned, when the chances are ten to one that
+ he will not believe it, is monstrous. Do not tell him here, and as quick
+ as he gets to the other world and finds it is necessary to believe, he can
+ say "Yes." Give him a chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another Objection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My objection to orthodox religion is that it destroys human love, and
+ tells us that the love of this world is not necessary to make a heaven in
+ the next.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No matter about your wife, your children, your brother, your sister&mdash;no
+ matter about all the affections of the human heart&mdash;when you get
+ there, you will be with the angels. I do not know whether I would like the
+ angels. I do not know whether the angels would like me. I would rather
+ stand by the ones who have loved me and whom I know; and I can conceive of
+ no heaven without the loved of this earth. That is the trouble with this
+ Christian relief-ion. Leave your father, leave your mother, leave your
+ wife, leave your children, leave everything and follow Jesus Christ. I
+ will not. I will stay with my people. I will not sacrifice on the altar of
+ a selfish fear all the grandest and noblest promptings of my heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do away with human love and what are we? What would we be in another
+ world, and what would we be here? Can any one conceive of music without
+ human love? Of art, or joy? Human love builds every home. Human love is
+ the author of all beauty. Love paints every picture, and chisels every
+ statue. Love builds every fireside. What could heaven be without human
+ love? And yet that is what we are promised&mdash;a heaven with your wife
+ lost, your mother lost, some of your children gone. And you expect to be
+ made happy by falling in with some angel! Such a religion is infamous.
+ Christianity holds human love for naught; and yet Love is the only bow on
+ Life's dark cloud. It is the morning and the evening star. It shines upon
+ the babe, and sheds its radiance on the quiet tomb. It is the mother of
+ art, inspirer of poet, patriot and philosopher. It is the air and light of
+ every heart&mdash;builder of every home, kindler of every fire on every
+ hearth. It was the first to dream of immortality. It fills the world with
+ melody&mdash;for music is the voice of love. Love is the magician, the
+ enchanter, that changes worthless things to joy, and makes right royal
+ kings and queens of common clay. It is the perfume of that wondrous
+ flower, the heart, and without that sacred passion, that divine swoon, we
+ are less than beasts; but with it, earth is heaven, and we are gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And how are you to get to this heaven? On the efforts of another. You are
+ to be a perpetual heavenly pauper, and you will have to admit through all
+ eternity that you never would have been there if you had not been
+ frightened. "I am here," you will say, "I have these wings, I have this
+ musical instrument, because I was scared. I am here. The ones who loved me
+ are among the damned; the ones I loved are also there&mdash;but I am here,
+ that is enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a glorious' world heaven must be! No reformation in that world&mdash;not
+ the slightest. If you die in Arkansas that is the end of you! Think of
+ telling a boy in the next world, who lived and died in Delaware, that he
+ had been fairly treated! Can anything be more infamous?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All on an equality&mdash;the rich and the poor, those with parents loving
+ them, those with every opportunity for education, on an equality with the
+ poor, the abject and the ignorant&mdash;and this little day called life,
+ this moment with a hope, a shadow and a tear, this little space between
+ your mother's arms and the grave, balances eternity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God can do nothing for you when you get there. A Methodist preacher can do
+ more for the soul here than its creator can there. The soul goes to
+ heaven, where there is nothing but good society; no bad examples; and they
+ are all there, Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and yet they can do nothing for
+ that poor unfortunate except to damn him. Is there any sense in that?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should this be a period of probation? It says in the Bible, I believe,
+ "Now is the accepted time." When does that mean? That means whenever the
+ passage is pronounced. "Now is the accepted time." It will be the same
+ to-morrow, will it not? And just as appropriate then as to-day, and if
+ appropriate at any time, appropriate through all eternity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What I say is this: There is no world&mdash;there can be no world&mdash;in
+ which every human being will not have the eternal opportunity of doing
+ right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is my objection to this Christian religion; and if the love of earth
+ is not the love of heaven, if those we love here are to be separated from
+ us there, then I want eternal sleep. Give me a good cool grave rather than
+ the furnace of Jehovah's wrath. I pray the angel of the resurrection to
+ let me sleep. Gabriel, do not blow! Let me alone! If, when the grave
+ bursts, I am not to meet the faces that have been my sunshine in this
+ life, let me sleep. Rather than that this doctrine of endless punishment
+ should be true, I would gladly see the fabric of our civilization
+ crumbling fall to unmeaning chaos and to formless dust, where oblivion
+ broods and even memory forgets. I would rather that the blind Samson of
+ some imprisoned force, released by chance, should so wreck and strand the
+ mighty world that man in stress and strain of want and fear should
+ shudderingly crawl back to savage and barbaric night. I would rather that
+ every planet should in its orbit wheel a barren star!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What I Believe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think it is better to love your children than to love God, a thousand
+ times better, because you can help them, and I am inclined to think that
+ God can get along without you. Certainly we cannot help a being without
+ body, parts, or passions!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believe in the religion of the family. I believe that the roof-tree is
+ sacred, from the smallest fibre that feels the soft cool clasp of earth,
+ to the topmost flower that spreads its bosom to the sun, and like a
+ spendthrift gives its perfume to the air. The home where virtue dwells
+ with love is like a lily with a heart of fire&mdash;the fairest flower in
+ all the world. And I tell you God cannot afford to damn a man in the next
+ world who has made a happy family in this. God cannot afford to cast over
+ the battlements of heaven the man who has a happy home upon this earth.
+ God cannot afford to be unpitying to a human heart capable of pity. God
+ cannot clothe with fire the man who has clothed the naked here; and God
+ cannot send to eternal pain a man who has done something toward improving
+ the condition of his fellow-man. If he can, I had rather go to hell than
+ to heaven and keep the company of such a god.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immortality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They tell me that the next terrible thing I do is to take away the hope of
+ immortality! I do not, I would not, I could not. Immortality was first
+ dreamed of by human love; and yet the church is going to take human love
+ out of immortality. We love, therefore we wish to live. A loved one dies
+ and we wish to meet again; and from the affection of the human heart grew
+ the great oak of the hope of immortality. Around that oak has climbed the
+ poisonous vines of superstition. Theologians, pretenders, soothsayers,
+ parsons, priests, popes, bishops, have taken advantage of that. They have
+ stood by graves and promised heaven. They have stood by graves and
+ prophesied a future filled with pain. They have erected their toll-gates
+ on the highway of life and have collected money from fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither the Bible nor the church gave us the idea of immortality. The Old
+ Testament tells us how we lost immortality, and it does not say a word
+ about another world, from the first mistake in Genesis to the last curse
+ in Malachi. There is not in the Old Testament a burial service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No man in the Old Testament stands by the dead and says, "We shall meet
+ again." From the top of Sinai came no hope of another world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when we get to the New Testament, what do we find? "They that are
+ accounted worthy to obtain that world and the resurrection of the dead."
+ As though some would be counted unworthy to obtain the resurrection of the
+ dead. And in another place. "Seek for honor, glory, immortality." If you
+ have it, why seek it? And in another place, "God, who alone hath
+ immortality." Yet they tell us that we get our idea of immortality from
+ the Bible. I deny it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would not destroy the faintest ray of human hope, but I deny that we got
+ our idea of immortality from the Bible. It existed long before Moses. We
+ find it symbolized through all Egypt, through all India. Wherever man has
+ lived he has made another world in which to meet the lost of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of this belief we find in tombs and temples wrought and carved
+ by those who wept and hoped. Above their dead they laid the symbols of
+ another life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not know. We do not prophesy a life of pain. We leave the dead with
+ Nature, the mother of us all. Under the bow of hope, under the seven-hued
+ arch, let the dead sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Christ was in fact God, why did he not plainly say there is another
+ life? Why did he not tell us something about it? Why did he not turn the
+ tear-stained hope of immortality into the glad knowledge of another life?
+ Why did he go dumbly to his death and leave the world in darkness and in
+ doubt? Why? Because he was a man and did not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What consolation has the orthodox religion for the widow of the
+ unbeliever, the widow of a good, brave, kind man? What can the orthodox
+ minister say to relieve the bursting heart of that woman? What can he say
+ to relieve the aching hearts of the orphans as they kneel by the grave of
+ that father, if that father did not happen to be an orthodox Christian?
+ What consolation have they? When a Christian loses a friend the tears
+ spring from his eyes as quickly as from the eyes of others. Their tears
+ are as bitter as ours. Why? The echoes of the words spoken eighteen
+ hundred years ago are so low, and the sounds of the clods upon the coffin
+ are so loud; the promises are so far away, and the dead are so near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not know, we cannot say, whether death is a wall or a door; the
+ beginning or end of a day; the spreading of pinions to soar, or the
+ folding forever of wings; the rise or the set of a sun, or an endless life
+ that brings the rapture of love to everyone. A Fable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is the fable of Orpheus and Eurydice. Eurydice had been captured and
+ taken to the infernal regions, and Orpheus went after her, taking with him
+ his harp and playing as he went. When he came to Pluto's realm he began to
+ play, and Sysiphus, charmed by the music, sat down upon the stone that he
+ had been heaving up the mountain's side for so many years, and which
+ continually rolled back upon him; Ixion paused upon his wheel of fire;
+ Tantalus ceased his vain efforts for water; the daughters of the Danaides
+ left off trying to fill their sieves with water; Pluto smiled, and for the
+ first time in the history of hell the cheeks of the Furies were wet with
+ tears. The god relented, and said, "Eurydice may go with you, but you must
+ not look back." So Orpheus again threaded the caverns, playing as he went,
+ and as he reached the light he failed to hear the footsteps of Eurydice.
+ He looked back, and in a moment she was gone. Again and again Orpheus
+ sought his love. Again and again looked back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This fable gives the idea of the perpetual effort made by the human mind
+ to rescue truth from the clutch of error.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some time Orpheus will not look back. Some day Eurydice will reach the
+ blessed light, and at last there will fade from the memory of men the
+ monsters of superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link0005" id="link0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MYTH AND MIRACLE.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ HAPPINESS is the true end and aim of life. It is the task of intelligence
+ to ascertain the conditions of happiness, and when found the truly wise
+ will live in accordance with them. By happiness is meant not simply the
+ joy of eating and drinking&mdash;the gratification of the appetite&mdash;but
+ good, wellbeing, in the highest and noblest forms. The joy that springs
+ from obligation discharged, from duty done, from generous acts, from being
+ true to the ideal, from a perception of the beautiful in nature, art and
+ conduct. The happiness that is born of and gives birth to poetry and
+ music, that follows the gratification of the highest wants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Happiness is the result of all that is really right and sane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there are many people who regard the desire to be happy as a very low
+ and degrading ambition. These people call themselves spiritual. They
+ pretend to care nothing for the pleasures of "sense." They hold this
+ world, this life, in contempt. They do not want happiness in this world&mdash;but
+ in another. Here, happiness degrades&mdash;there, it purifies and
+ ennobles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These spiritual people have been known as prophets, apostles, augurs,
+ hermits, monks, priests, popes, bishops and parsons. They are devout and
+ useless. They do not cultivate the soil. They produce nothing. They live
+ on the labor of others. They are pious and parasitic. They pray for
+ others, if the others will work for them. They claim to have been selected
+ by the Infinite to instruct and govern mankind. They are "meek" and
+ arrogant, "long-suffering" and revengeful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They ever have been, now are, and always will be the enemies of liberty,
+ of investigation and science. They are believers in the supernatural, the
+ miraculous and the absurd. They have filled the world with hatred, bigotry
+ and fear. In defence of their creeds they have committed every crime and
+ practiced every cruelty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They denounce as worldly and sensual those who are gross enough to love
+ wives and children, to build homes, to fell the forests, to navigate the
+ seas, to cultivate the earth, to chisel statues, to paint pictures and
+ fill the world with love and art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They have denounced and maligned the thinkers, the poets, the dramatists,
+ the composers, the actors, the orators, the workers&mdash;those who have
+ conquered the world for man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to them this world is only the vestibule of the next, a kind of
+ school, an ordeal, a place of probation. They have always insisted that
+ this life should be spent in preparing for the next; that those who
+ supported and obeyed the "spiritual guides"&mdash;the shepherds, would be
+ rewarded with an eternity of joy, and that all others would suffer eternal
+ pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These spiritual people have always hated labor. They have added nothing to
+ the wealth of the world. They have always lived on alms&mdash;on the labor
+ of others. They have always been the enemies of innocent pleasure, and of
+ human love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These spiritual people have produced a literature. The books they have
+ written are called sacred. Our sacred books are called the Bible. The
+ Hindoos have the Vedas and many others, the Persians the Zend Avesta&mdash;the
+ Egyptians had the Book of the Dead&mdash;the Aztecs the Popol Vuh, and the
+ Mohammedans have the Koran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These books, for the most part, treat of the unknowable. They describe
+ gods and winged phantoms of the air. They give accounts of the origin of
+ the universe, the creation of man and the worlds beyond this. They contain
+ nothing of value. Millions and millions of people have wasted their lives
+ studying these absurd and ignorant books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "spiritual people" in each country claimed that their books had been
+ written by inspired men&mdash;that God was the real author, and that all
+ men and women who denied this would be, after death, tormented forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet, the worldly people, the uninspired, the wicked, have produced a
+ far greater literature than the spiritual and the inspired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not all the sacred books of the world equal Shakespeare's "volume of the
+ brain." A purer philosophy, grander, nobler, fell from the lips of
+ Shakespeare's clowns than the Old Testament, or the New, contains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Declaration of Independence is nobler far than all the utterances from
+ Sinai's cloud and flame. "A Man's a Man for a' That," by Robert Burns, is
+ better than anything the sacred books contain. For my part, I would rather
+ hear Beethoven's Sixth Symphony than to read the five books of Moses. Give
+ me the Sixth Symphony&mdash;this sound-wrought picture of the fields and
+ woods, of flowering hedge and happy home, where thrushes build and
+ swallows fly, and mothers sing to babes; this echo of the babbled lullaby
+ of brooks that, dallying, wind and fall where meadows bare their daisied
+ bosoms to the sun; this joyous mimicry of summer rain, the laugh of
+ children, and the rhythmic rustle of the whispering leaves; this strophe
+ of peasant life; this perfect poem of content and love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would rather listen to Tristan and Isolde&mdash;that Mississippi of
+ melody&mdash;where the great notes, winged like eagles, lift the soul
+ above the cares and griefs of this weary world&mdash;than to all the
+ orthodox sermons ever preached. I would rather look at the Venus de Milo
+ than to read the Presbyterian creed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spiritual have endeavored to civilize the world through fear and faith&mdash;by
+ the promise of reward and the threat of pain in other worlds. They taught
+ men to hate and persecute their fellow-men. In all ages they have appealed
+ to force. During all the years they have practiced fraud. They have
+ pretended to have influence with the gods&mdash;that their prayers gave
+ rain, sunshine and harvest&mdash;that their curses brought pestilence and
+ famine, and that their blessings filled the world with plenty. They have
+ subsisted on the fears their falsehoods created. Like poisonous vines,
+ they have lived on the oak of labor. They have praised charity, but they
+ never gave. They have denounced revenge, but they never forgave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever the spiritual have had power, art has died, learning has
+ languished, science has been despised, liberty destroyed, the thinkers
+ have been imprisoned, the intelligent and honest have been outcasts, and
+ the brave have been murdered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "spiritual" have been, are, and always will be the enemies of the
+ human race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For all the blessings that we now enjoy&mdash;for progress in every form,
+ for science and art&mdash;for all that has lengthened life, that has
+ conquered disease, that has lessened pain, for raiment, roof and food, for
+ music in its highest forms&mdash;for the poetry that has ennobled and
+ enriched our lives&mdash;for the marvellous machines now working for the
+ world&mdash;for all this we are indebted to the worldly&mdash;to those who
+ turned their attention to the affairs of this life. They have been the
+ only benefactors of our race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AND yet all of these religions&mdash;these "sacred books," these priests,
+ have been naturally produced. From the dens and caves of savagery to the
+ palaces of civilization men have traveled by the necessary paths and
+ roads. Back of every step has been the efficient cause. In the history of
+ the world there has been no chance, no interference from without, nothing
+ miraculous. Everything in accordance with and produced by the facts in
+ nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We need not blame the hypocritical and cruel. They thought and acted as
+ they were compelled to think and act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all ages man has tried to account for himself and his surroundings. He
+ did the best he could. He wondered why the water ran, why the trees grew,
+ why the clouds floated, why the stars shone, why the sun and moon
+ journeyed through the heavens. He was troubled about life and death, about
+ darkness and dreams. The seas, the volcanoes, the lightning and thunder,
+ the earthquake and cyclone, filled him with fear. Behind all life and
+ growth and motion, and even inanimate things, he placed a spirit&mdash;an
+ intelligent being&mdash;a fetich, a person, something like himself&mdash;a
+ god, controlled by love and hate. To him causes and effects became gods&mdash;supernatural
+ beings. The Dawn was a maiden, wondrously fair, the Sun, a warrior and
+ lover; the Night, a serpent, a wolf&mdash;the Wind, a musician; Winter, a
+ wild beast; Autumn, Proserpine gathering flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poets were the makers of these myths. They were the first to account for
+ what they saw and felt. The great multitude mistook these fancies for
+ facts. Myths strangely alike, were produced by most nations, and gradually
+ took possession of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sleeping Beauty, a myth of the year, has been found among most
+ peoples. In this myth, the Earth was a maiden&mdash;the Sun was her lover,
+ She had fallen asleep in winter. Her blood was still and her breath had
+ gone. In the Spring the lover came, clasped her in his arms, covered her
+ lips and cheeks with kisses. She was thrilled, her heart began to beat,
+ she breathed, her blood flowed, and she awoke to love and joy. This myth
+ has made the circuit of the globe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, Red Riding-Hood is the history of a day. Little Red Riding-Hood&mdash;the
+ morning, touched with red, goes to visit her kindred, a day that is past.
+ She is attacked by the wolf of night and is rescued by the hunter, Apollo,
+ who pierces the heart of the beast with an arrow of light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beautiful myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is the story of the year.
+ Eurydice has been captured and carried to the infernal world. Orpheus,
+ playing upon his harp, goes after her. Such is the effect of his music
+ when he reaches the realm of Pluto, the laughterless, that Tantalus ceases
+ his efforts to slake his thirst. He listens and forgets his withered lips,
+ the daughters of the Danaides cease their vain efforts to fill the sieve
+ with water, Sisyphus sits down on the stone that he so often had heaved
+ against the mountain's misty side, Ixion pauses upon his wheel of fire,
+ even Pluto smiles, and for the first time in the history of hell the
+ cheeks of the Furies are wet with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give me back Eurydice," cried Orpheus, and Pluto said: "Take her, but
+ look not back." Orpheus led the way and Eurydice followed. Just as he
+ reached the upper world, he missed her footsteps, turned, looked, and she
+ vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus the summer comes, is lost, and comes again through all the years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, our ancestors believed in the Garden of Eden, in the Golden Age, in
+ the blessed time when all were good and pure&mdash;when nature satisfied
+ the wants of all. The race, like the old man, has golden dreams of youth.
+ The morning was filled with light and life and joy, and the evening is
+ always sad. When the old man was young, girls were beautiful and men were
+ honest. He remembers his Eden. And so the whole world has had its age of
+ gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our fathers were believers in the Elysian Fields. They were in the far,
+ far West. They saw them at the setting of the sun. They saw the floating
+ isles of gold in sapphire seas; the templed mist with spires and domes of
+ emerald and amethyst; the magic caverns of the clouds, resplendent with
+ the rays of every gem. And as they looked, they thought the curtain had
+ been drawn aside and that their eyes had for a moment feasted on the
+ glories of another world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The myth of the Flood has also been universal. Finding shells of the seas
+ on plain and mountain, and everywhere some traces of the waves, they
+ thought the world had been submerged&mdash;that God in wrath had drowned
+ the race, except a few his mercy saved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hindus say that Menu, a holy man, dipped from the Ganges some water,
+ and in the basin saw a little fish. The fish begged him to throw him back
+ into the river, and Menu, having pity, cast him back. The fish then told
+ Menu that there was to be a flood&mdash;told him to build an ark, to take
+ on board, people, animals and food, and that when the flood came, he, the
+ fish, would save him. The saint did as he was told, the flood came, the
+ fish returned. By that time he had grown to be a whale with a horn in his
+ head. About this horn Menu fastened a rope, attached the other end to the
+ ark, and the fish towed the boat across the raging waves to a mountain's
+ top, where it rested until the waters subsided. The name of this wonderful
+ fish was Matsaya.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many other nations told similar stories of floods and arks and the sending
+ forth of doves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all these myths and legends of the past we find philosophies and dreams
+ and efforts, stained with tears, of great and tender souls who tried to
+ pierce the mysteries of life and death, to answer the questions of the
+ whence and whither, and who vainly sought with bits of shattered glass to
+ make a mirror that would in very truth reflect the face and form of
+ Nature's perfect self. These myths were born of hopes and fears, of tears
+ and smiles, and they were touched and colored by all there is of joy and
+ grief between the rosy dawn of birth and death's sad night. They clothed
+ even the stars with passion, and gave to gods the faults and frailties of
+ the sons of men. In them the winds and waves were music, and all the
+ springs, the mountains, woods and perfumed dells were haunted by a
+ thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of Spring with tremulous
+ desire, made tawny Summer's billowy breast the throne and home of love,
+ filled Autumn's arms with sun-kissed grapes and gathered sheaves, and
+ pictured Winter as a weak old king, who felt, like Lear, upon his withered
+ face, Cordelia's tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These myths, though false in fact, are beautiful and true in thought, and
+ have for many ages and in countless ways enriched the heart and kindled
+ thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN all probability the first religion was Sun-worship. Nothing could have
+ been more natural. Light was life and warmth and love. The sun was the
+ fireside of the world. The sun was the "all-seeing"&mdash;the "Sky
+ Father." Darkness was grief and death, and in the shadows crawled the
+ serpents of despair and fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun was a great warrior, fighting the hosts of Night. Apollo was the
+ sun, and he fought and conquered the serpent of Night. Agni, the generous,
+ who loved the lowliest and visited the humblest, was the sun. He was the
+ god of fire, and the crossed sticks that by friction leaped into flame
+ were his emblem. It was said that, in spite of his goodness, he devoured
+ his father and mother, the two pieces of wood being his parents. Baldur
+ was the sun. He was in love with the Dawn&mdash;a maiden&mdash;he deserted
+ her and traveled through the heavens alone. At the twilight they met, were
+ reconciled, and the drops of dew were the tears of joy they shed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chrishna was the sun. At his birth the Ganges thrilled from its source to
+ the sea. All the trees, the dead as well as the living, burst into leaf
+ and bud and flower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hercules was a sun-god.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jonah the same, rescued from the fiends of Night and carried by the fish
+ through the under world. Samson was a sun-god. His strength was in his
+ hair&mdash;in his beams. He was shorn of his strength by Delilah, the
+ shadow&mdash;the darkness. So, Osiris, Bacchus, Mithra, Hermes, Buddha,
+ Quelzalcoatle, Prometheus, Zoroaster, Perseus, Codom Lao-tsze Fo-hi, Horus
+ and Rameses were all sun-gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these gods had gods for fathers and all their mothers were virgins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The births of nearly all were announced by stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they were born there was celestial music&mdash;voices declared that a
+ blessing had come upon the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Buddha was born, the celestial choir sang: "This day is born for the
+ good of men Buddha, and to dispel the darkness of their ignorance&mdash;to
+ give joy and peace to the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chrishna was born in a cave, and protected by shepherds. Bacchus, Apollo,
+ Mithra and Hermes were all born in caves. Buddha was born in an inn&mdash;according
+ to some, under a tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tyrants sought to kill all of these gods when they were babes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Chrishna was born, a tyrant killed the babes of the neighborhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buddha was the child of Maya, a virgin, in the kingdom of Madura. The king
+ arrested Maya before the child was born, imprisoned her in a tower. During
+ the night when the child was born, a great wind wrecked the tower, and
+ carried mother and child to a place of safety. The next morning the king
+ sent his soldiers to kill the babes, and when they came to Buddha and his
+ mother, the babe appeared to be about twelve years of age, and the
+ soldiers passed on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Typhon sought in many ways to destroy the babe Horus. The king pursued
+ the infant Zoroaster. Cadmus tried to kill the infant Bacchus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All of these gods were born on the 25th of December.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly all were worshiped by "wise men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All of them fasted for forty days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All met with a violent death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All rose from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of these gods is the history of our Christ. He had a god for a
+ father, a virgin for a mother. He was born in a manger, or a cave&mdash;on
+ the 2 5th of December. His birth was announced by angels. He was worshiped
+ by wise men, guided by a star. Herod, seeking his life, caused the death
+ of many babes. Christ fasted for forty days. So, it rained for forty days
+ before the flood&mdash;Moses was on Mt. Sinai for forty days. The temple
+ had forty pillars and the Jews wandered in the wilderness for forty years.
+ Christ met with a violent death, and rose from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These things are not accidents&mdash;not coincidences. Christ was a
+ sun-god. All religions have been born of sun-worship. To-day, when priests
+ pray, they shut their eyes. This is a survival of sun-worship. When men
+ worshiped the sun, they had to shut their eyes. Afterwards, to flatter
+ idols, they pretended that the glory of their faces was more than the eyes
+ could bear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the religion of our day there is nothing original. All of its
+ doctrines, its symbols and ceremonies are but the survivals of creeds that
+ perished long ago. Baptism is far older than Christianity&mdash;than
+ Judaism. The Hindus, the Egyptians, the Greeks and Romans had holy water.
+ The eucharist was borrowed from the Pagans. Ceres was the goddess of the
+ fields, Bacchus the god of the vine. At the harvest festival they made
+ cakes of wheat and said: "These are the flesh of the goddess." They drank
+ wine and cried: "This is the blood of our god."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cross has been a symbol for many thousands of years. It was a symbol
+ of immortality&mdash;of life, of the god Agni, the form of the grave of a
+ man. An ancient people of Italy, who lived long before the Romans, long
+ before the Etruscans, so long that not one word of their language is
+ known, used the cross, and beneath that emblem, carved on stone, their
+ dead still rest. In the forests of Central America, ruined temples have
+ been found, and on the walls the cross with the bleeding victim. On
+ Babylonian cylinders is the impression of the cross. The Trinity came from
+ Egypt. Osiris, Isis and Horus were worshiped thousands of years before our
+ Father, Son and Holy Ghost were thought of. So the Tree of Life grew in
+ India, China and among the Aztecs long before the Garden of Eden was
+ planted. Long before our Bible was known, other nations had their sacred
+ books, temples and altars, sacrifices, ceremonies and priests. The "Fall
+ of Man" is far older than our religion, and so are the "Atonement" and the
+ Scheme of Redemption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In our blessed religion there is nothing new, nothing original.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the Egyptians the cross was a symbol of the life to come. And yet
+ the first religion was, and all religions growing out of that, were
+ naturally produced. Every brain was a field in which Nature sowed the
+ seeds of thought. The rise and set of sun, the birth and death of day, the
+ dawns of silver and the dusks of gold, the wonders of the rain and snow,
+ the shroud of Winter and the many colored robe of Spring, the lonely moon
+ with nightly loss or gain, the serpent lightning and the thunder's voice,
+ the tempest's fury and the zephyr's sigh, the threat of storm and promise
+ of the bow, cathedral clouds with dome and spire, earthquake and strange
+ eclipse, frost and fire, the snow-crowned mountains with their tongues of
+ flame, the fields of space sown thick with stars, the wandering comets
+ hurrying past the fixed and sleepless sentinels of night, the marvels of
+ the earth and air, the perfumed flower, the painted wing, the waveless
+ pool that held within its magic breast the image of the startled face, the
+ mimic echo that made a record in the viewless air, the pathless forests
+ and the boundless seas, the ebb and flow of tides&mdash;the slow, deep
+ breathing of some vague and monstrous life&mdash;the miracle of birth, the
+ mystery of dream and death, and over all the silent and immeasurable dome.
+ These were the warp and woof, and at the loom sat Love and Fancy, Hope and
+ Fear, and wove the wondrous tapestries whereon we find pictures of gods
+ and fairy lands and all the legends that were told when Nature rocked the
+ cradle of the infant world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WE must remember that there is a great difference. Myth is the
+ idealization of a fact. A miracle is the counterfeit of a fact. There is
+ the same difference between a myth and a miracle that there is between
+ fiction and falsehood&mdash;between poetry and perjury. Miracles belong to
+ the far past and the far future. The little line of sand, called the
+ present, between the seas, belongs to common sense, to the natural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you should tell a man that the dead were raised two thousand years ago,
+ he would probably say: "Yes, I know that." If you should say that a
+ hundred thousand years from now all the dead will be raised, he might say:
+ "Probably they will." But if you should tell him that you saw a dead man
+ raised and given life that day, he would likely ask the name of the insane
+ asylum from which you had escaped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Bible is filled with accounts of miracles and yet they always fail to
+ convince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jehovah, according to the Scriptures, wrought hundreds of miracles for the
+ benefit of the Jews. With many miracles he rescued them from slavery,
+ guided them on their journey with a miraculous cloud by day and a
+ miraculous pillar of fire by night&mdash;divided the sea that they might
+ escape from the Egyptians, fed them with miraculous manna and supernatural
+ quails, raised up hornets to attack their enemies, caused water to follow
+ them wherever they wandered and in countless ways manifested his power,
+ and yet the Jews cared nothing for these wonders. Not one of them seems to
+ have been convinced that Jehovah had done anything for the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of all these miracles, the Jews had more confidence in a golden
+ calf, made by themselves, than in Jehovah. The reason of this is, that the
+ miracles were never performed, and never invented until hundreds of years
+ after those, who had wandered over the desert of Sinai, were dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The miracles attributed to Christ had no effect. No human being seems to
+ have been convinced by them. Those whom he raised from the dead, cured of
+ leprosy, or blindness, failed to become his followers. Not one of them
+ appeared at his trial. Not one offered to bear witness of his miraculous
+ power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this there is but one explanation: The miracles were never performed.
+ These stories were the growth of centuries. The casting out of devils, the
+ changing of water into wine, feeding the multitude with a few loaves and
+ fishes, resisting the devil, using a fish for a pocketbook, curing the
+ blind with clay and saliva, stilling the tempest, walking on the water,
+ the resurrection and ascension, happened and only happened, in the
+ imaginations of men, who were not born until several generations after
+ Christ was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In those days the world was filled with ignorance and fear. Miracles
+ happened every day. The supernatural was expected. Gods were continually
+ interfering with the affairs of this world. Everything was told except the
+ truth, everything believed except the facts. History was a circumstantial
+ account of occurrences that never occurred. Devils and goblins and ghosts
+ were as plentiful as saints. The bones of the dead were used to cure the
+ living. Cemeteries were hospitals and corpses were physicians. The saints
+ practiced magic, the pious communed with God in dreams, and the course of
+ events was changed by prayer. The credulous demanded the marvelous, the
+ miraculous, and the priests supplied the demand. The sky was full of
+ signs, omens of death and disaster, and the darkness thick with devils
+ endeavoring to mislead and enslave the souls of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our fathers thought that everything had been made for man, and that demons
+ and gods gave their entire attention to this world. The people believed
+ that they were the sport and prey, the favorites or victims, of these
+ phantoms. And they also believed that the Creator, the God, could be
+ influenced by sacrifice, by prayers and ceremonies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This has been the mistake of the world. All the temples have been reared,
+ all the altars erected, all the sacrifices offered, all the prayers
+ uttered in vain. No god has interfered, no prayer has been answered, no
+ help received from heaven. Nothing was created, nothing has happened for,
+ or with reference to man. If not a human being lived,&mdash;if all Were
+ in' their graves, the sun would continue to shine, the wheeling world
+ would still pursue its flight, violets would spread their velvet bosoms to
+ the day, the spendthrift roses give their perfume to the air, the climbing
+ vines would hide with leaf and flower the fallen and the dead, the
+ changing seasons would come-and go,-time would repeat the poem of the
+ year, storms would wreck and whispering rains repair, Spring with deft and
+ unseen hands would weave her robes of green, life with countless lips
+ would seek fair Summer's swelling breasts, Autumn would reap the wealth of
+ leaf and fruit and seed, Winter, the artist, would etch in frost the pines
+ and ferns, while Wind and Wave and Fire, old architects, with ceaseless
+ toil would still destroy and build, still wreck and change, and from the
+ dust of death produce again the throb and breath of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A FEW years ago a few men began to think, to investigate, to reason. They
+ began to doubt the legends of the church, the miracles of the past. They
+ began to notice what happened. They found that eclipses came at certain
+ intervals and that their coming could be foretold. They became satisfied
+ that the conduct of men had nothing to do with eclipses&mdash;and that the
+ stars moved in their orbits unconscious of the sons of men. Galileo,
+ Copernicus, and Kepler' destroyed the astronomy of the Bible, and
+ demonstrated that the "inspired" story of creation could not be true, and
+ that the church was as ignorant as the priests were dishonest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They found that the myth-makers were mistaken, that the sun and stars did
+ not revolve about the earth, that the firmament was not solid, that the
+ earth was not flat, and that the so-called philosophy of the theologians
+ was absurd and idiotic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stars became witnesses against the creeds of superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the telescope the heavens were explored. The New Jerusalem could not
+ be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had faded away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church persecuted the astronomers and denied the facts. In February,
+ in the year of grace sixteen hundred, the Catholic Church, the "Triumphant
+ Beast," having in her hands, her paws, the keys of heaven and hell,
+ accused Giordano Bruno of having declared that there were other worlds
+ than this. He was tried, convicted, imprisoned in a dungeon for seven
+ years. He was offered his liberty if he would recant. Bruno, the atheist,
+ the philosopher, refused to stain his soul by denying what he believed to
+ be true. He was taken from his cell by the priests, by those who loved
+ their enemies, led to the place of execution. He was clad in a robe on
+ which representations of devils had been painted&mdash;the devils that
+ were soon to claim his soul. He was chained to a stake and about his body
+ the wood was piled. Then priests, followers of Christ, lighted the fagots
+ and flames consumed the greatest, the most perfect martyr, that ever
+ suffered death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet the Italian agent of God, the infallible Leo XIII., only a few
+ years ago, denounced Bruno, the "bravest of the brave," as a coward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church murdered him, and the pope maligned his memory. Fagot and
+ falsehood&mdash;two weapons of the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little while ago a few men began to examine rocks and soils, mountains,
+ islands, reefs and seas. They noticed the valleys and deltas that had been
+ formed by rivers, the many strata of lava that had been changed to soil,
+ the vast deposits of metals and coal, the immense reefs that the coral had
+ formed, the work of glaciers in the far past, the production of soil by
+ the disintegration of rock, by the growth and decay of vegetation and the
+ countless evidences of the countless ages through which the Earth has
+ passed. The geologists read the history of the world written by wave and
+ flame, attested by fossils, by the formation of rocks, by mountain ranges,
+ by volcanoes, by rivers, islands, continents and seas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The geology of the Bible&mdash;of the "divinely inspired" church, of the
+ "infallible" pope, was found to be utterly false and foolish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earth became a witness against the creeds of superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came Watt and Galvani with the miracles of steam and electricity,
+ while countless inventors created the wonderful machines that do the work
+ of the world. Investigation took the place of credulity. Men became
+ dissatisfied with huts and rags, with crusts and creeds. They longed for
+ the comforts, the luxuries of life. The intellectual horizon enlarged, new
+ truths were discovered, old ideas were thrown aside, the brain was
+ developed, the heart civilized and science was born. Humboldt, Laplace and
+ hundreds of others explained the phenomena of nature, called attention to
+ the ancient and venerable mistakes of sanctified ignorance and added to
+ the sum of knowledge. Darwin and Haeckel gave their conclusions to the
+ world. Men began to really think, the myths began to fade, the miracles to
+ grow mean and small, and the great structure, known as theology, fell with
+ a crash.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Science denies the truth of myth and miracle, denies that human testimony
+ can substantiate the miraculous, denies the existence of the supernatural.
+ Science asserts the absolute, the unvarying uniformity of nature. Science
+ insists that the present is the child of all the past,&mdash;that no power
+ can change the past, and that nature is forever the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chemist has found that just so many atoms of one kind unite with just
+ so many of another&mdash;no more, no less, always the same. No caprice in
+ chemistry; no interference from without.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The astronomers know that the planets remain in their orbits&mdash;that
+ their forces are constant. They know that light is forever the same,
+ always obeying the angle of incidence, traveling with the same rapidity,&mdash;casting
+ the same shadow, under the same circumstances in all worlds. They know
+ that the eclipses will occur at the times foretold&mdash;neither hastening
+ nor delaying. They know that the attraction of gravitation is always the
+ same, always in perfect proportion to mass and distance, neither weaker
+ nor stronger, unvarying forever. They know that the facts in nature cannot
+ be changed or destroyed, and that the qualities of all things are eternal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men of science know that the atomic integrity of the metals is always
+ the same, that each metal is true to its nature and that the particles
+ cling to each other with the same tenacity,&mdash;the same force. They
+ have demonstrated the persistence of force, that it is forever active,
+ forever the same, and that it cannot be destroyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These great truths have revolutionized the thought of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every art, every employment, all study, all experiment, the value of
+ experience, of judgment, of hope, all rest on a belief in the uniformity
+ of nature, on the eternal persistence and indestructibility of force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Break one link in the infinite chain of cause and effect, and the Master
+ of Nature appears. The broken link would become the throne of a god.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The uniformity of Nature denies the supernatural and demonstrates that
+ there is no interference from without. There is no place, no office left
+ for gods. Ghosts fade from the brain and the shrivelled deities fall
+ palsied from their thrones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The uniformity of Nature renders a belief in "special providence"
+ impossible. Prayer becomes a useless agitation of the air, and religious
+ ceremonies are but motions, pantomimes, mindless and meaningless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The naked savage, worshiping a wooden god, is the religious equal of the
+ robed pope kneeling before an image of the Virgin. The poor African who
+ carries roots and bark to protect himself from evil spirits is on the same
+ intellectual plane of one who sprinkles his body with "holy water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the creeds of Christendom, all the religions of the heathen world are
+ equally absurd. The cathedral, the mosque and the joss house have the same
+ foundation. Their builders do not believe in the uniformity of Nature, and
+ the business of all priests is to induce a so-called infinite being to
+ change the order of events, to make causes barren of effects and to
+ produce effects without, and in spite of, natural causes. They all believe
+ in the unthinkable and pray for the impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Science teaches us that there was no creation and that there can be no
+ destruction. The infinite denies creation and defies destruction. An
+ infinite person, an "infinite being" is an infinite impossibility. To
+ conceive of such a being is beyond the power of the mind. Yet all
+ religions rest upon the supposed existence of the unthinkable, the
+ inconceivable. And the priests of these religions pretend to be perfectly
+ familiar with the designs, will, and wishes of this unthinkable, this
+ inconceivable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Science teaches that that which really is has always been, that behind
+ every effect is the efficient and necessary cause, that there is in the
+ universe neither chance nor interference, and that energy is eternal. Day
+ by day the authority of the theologian grows weaker and weaker. As the
+ people become intelligent they care less for preachers and more for
+ teachers. Their confidence in knowledge, in thought and investigation
+ increases. They are eager to know the discoveries, the useful truths, the
+ important facts made, ascertained and demonstrated by the explorers in the
+ domain of the natural. They are no longer satisfied with the platitudes of
+ the pulpit, and the assertions of theologians. They are losing confidence
+ in the "sacred Scriptures" and in the protecting power and goodness of the
+ supernatural. They are satisfied that credulity is not a virtue and that
+ investigation is not a crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Science is the providence of man, the worker of true miracles, of real
+ wonders. Science has "read a little in Nature's infinite book of secrecy."
+ Science knows the circuits of the winds, the courses of the stars. Fire is
+ his servant, and lightning his messenger. Science freed the slaves and
+ gave liberty to their masters. Science taught man to enchain, not his
+ fellows, but the forces of nature, forces that have no backs to be
+ scarred, no limbs for chains to chill and eat, forces that have no hearts
+ to break, forces that never know fatigue, forces that shed no tears.
+ Science is the great physician. His touch has given sight. He has made the
+ lame to leap, the deaf to hear, the dumb to speak, and in the pallid face
+ his hand has set the rose of health. Science has given his beloved sleep
+ and wrapped in happy dreams the throbbing nerves of pain. Science is the
+ destroyer of disease, builder of happy homes, the preserver of life and
+ love. Science is the teacher of every virtue, the enemy of every vice.
+ Science has given the true basis of morals, the origin and office of
+ conscience, revealed the nature of obligation, of duty, of virtue in its
+ highest, noblest forms, and has demonstrated that true happiness is the
+ only possible good. Science has slain the monsters of superstition, and
+ destroyed the authority of inspired books. Science has read the records of
+ the rocks, records that priestcraft cannot change, and on his wondrous
+ scales has weighed the atom and the star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Science has founded the only true religion. Science is the only Savior of
+ this world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FOR many ages religion has been tried. For countless centuries man has
+ sought for help from heaven. To soften the heart of God, mothers
+ sacrificed their babes! but the God did not hear, did not see, and did not
+ help. Naked savages were devoured by beasts, bitten by serpents, killed by
+ flood and frost. They prayed for help, but their God was deaf. They built
+ temples and altars, employed priests and gave of their substance, but the
+ volcano destroyed and the famine came. For the sake of God millions
+ murdered their fellow-men, but the God was silent. Millions of martyrs
+ died for the honor of God, but the God was blind. He did not see the
+ flames, the scaffolds. He did not hear the prayers, the groans. Thousands
+ of priests in the name of God tortured their fellow-men, stretched them on
+ racks, crushed their feet in iron boots, tore out their tongues,
+ extinguished their eyes. The victims implored the protection of God, but
+ their god did not hear, did not see. He was deaf and blind. He was willing
+ that his enemies should torture his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nations tried to destroy each other for the sake of God, and the banner of
+ the cross dripping with blood floated over a thousand fields&mdash;but the
+ god was silent. He neither knew nor cared. Pestilence covered the earth
+ with dead, the priests prayed, the altars were heaped with sacrifices, but
+ the god did not see, did not hear. The miseries of the world did not
+ lessen the joys of heaven. The clouds gave no rain, the famine came,
+ withered babes with pallid lips sought the breasts of dead mothers, while
+ starving fathers knelt and prayed, but the god did not hear. Through many
+ centuries millions were enslaved, babes were sold from mothers, husbands
+ from wives, backs were scarred with the lash. The poor wretches lifted
+ their clasped hands toward heaven and prayed for justice, for liberty&mdash;but
+ their god did not hear. He cared nothing for the sufferings of slaves,
+ nothing for the tears of wives and mothers, nothing for the agony of men.
+ He answered no prayers. He broke no chains. He freed no slaves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The miserable wretches appealed to the priests of God, but they were on
+ the other side. They defended the masters. The slaves had nothing to give.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During all these years it was claimed by the theologians that their God
+ was governing the world, that he was infinitely powerful, wise and good&mdash;and
+ that the "powers" of the earth were "ordained" by him. During all these
+ years the church was the enemy of progress. It hated all physicians and
+ told the people to rely on prayer, amulets and relics. It persecuted the
+ astronomers and geologists, denounced them as infidels and atheists, as
+ enemies of the human race. It poisoned the fountains of learning and
+ insisted that teachers should distort the facts in nature to the end that
+ they might harmonize with the "inspired" book. During all these years the
+ church misdirected the energies of man, and when it reached the zenith of
+ its power, darkness fell upon the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all nations and in all ages, religion has failed. The gods have never
+ interfered. Nature has produced and destroyed without mercy and without
+ hatred. She has cared no more for man than for the leaves of the forest,
+ no more for nations than for hills of ants, nothing for right or wrong,
+ for life or death, for pain or joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man through his intelligence must protect himself. He gets no help from
+ any other world. The church has always claimed and still claims that it is
+ the only reforming power, that it makes men honest, virtuous and merciful,
+ that it prevents violence and war, and that without its influence the race
+ would return to barbarism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing can exceed the absurdity of these claims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we wish to improve the condition of mankind&mdash;if we wish for nobler
+ men and women we must develop the brain, we must encourage thought and
+ investigation. We must convince the world that credulity is a vice,&mdash;that
+ there is no virtue in believing without, or against evidence, and that the
+ really honest man is true to himself. We must fill the world with
+ intellectual light. We must applaud mental courage. We must educate the
+ children, rescue them from ignorance and crime. School-houses are the real
+ temples, and teachers are the true priests. We must supply the wants of
+ the mind, satisfy the hunger of the brain. The people should be familiar
+ with the great poets, with the tragedies of &#65533;?schylus, the dramas
+ of Shakespeare, with the poetry of Homer and Virgil. Shakespeare should be
+ taught in every school, found in every house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through photography the whole world may become acquainted with the great
+ statues, the great paintings, the victories of art. In this way the mind
+ is enlarged, the sympathies quickened, the appreciation of the beautiful
+ intensified, the taste refined and the character ennobled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great novels should be read by all. All should be acquainted with the
+ men and women of fiction, with the ideal world. The imagination should be
+ developed, trained and strengthened. Superstition has degraded art and
+ literature. It gave us winged monsters, scenes from heaven and hell,
+ representations of gods and devils, sculptured the absurd and painted the
+ impossible in the name of Art. It gave us the dreams of the insane, the
+ lives of fanatical saints, accounts of miracles and wonders, of cures
+ wrought by the bones of the dead, descriptions of Paradise, purgatory and
+ the eternal dungeon, discourses on baptism, on changing wine and wafers
+ into the the blood and flesh of God, on the forgiveness of sins by
+ priests, on fore-ordination and accountability, predestination and free
+ will, on devils, ghosts and goblins, the ministrations of guardian angels,
+ the virtue of belief and the wickedness of doubt. And this was called
+ "sacred literature."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church taught that those who believed, counted beads, mumbled prayers,
+ and gave their time or property for the support of the gospel were the
+ good and that all others were traveling the "broad road" to eternal pain.
+ According to the theologians, the best people, the saints, were dead, and
+ real beauty was to be found only in heaven. They denounced the joys of
+ life as husks and filthy rags, declared that the world had been cursed,
+ and that it brought forth thistles and thorns because of the sins of man.
+ They regarded the earth as a kind of dock, running out into the sea of
+ eternity,&mdash;on which the pious waited for the ship on which they were
+ to be transported to another world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the real poets and the real artists clung to this world, to this life.
+ They described and represented things that exist. They expressed thoughts
+ of the brain, emotions of the heart, the griefs and joys, the hope and
+ despair of men and women. They found strength and beauty on every hand.
+ They found their angels here. They were true to human experience and they
+ touched the brain and heart of the world. In the tragedies and comedies of
+ life, in the smiles and tears, in the ecstasies of love, in the darkness
+ of death, in the dawn of hope, they found their materials for statue and
+ song, for poem and painting. Poetry and art are the children of this
+ world, born and nourished here. They are human. They have left the winged
+ monsters of heaven, the malicious deformities of hell, and have turned
+ their attention to men and women, to the things of this life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a poem called "The Skylark," by Shelley, graceful as the motions
+ of flames. Another by Robert Burns, called "The Daisy," exquisite, perfect
+ as the pearl of virtue in the beautiful breast of a loving girl. Between
+ this lark and this daisy, neither above nor below, you will find all the
+ poetry of the world. Eloquence, sublimity, poetry and art must have the
+ foundation of fact, of reality. Imaginary worlds and beings are nothing to
+ us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the old creeds are becoming cruel and vulgar. We now have
+ imagination enough to put ourselves in the place of others. Believers in
+ hell, in eternal pain, like murderers, lack imagination. The murderer has
+ not imagination enough to see his victim dead. He does not see the
+ sightless and pathetic eyes. He does not see the widow's arms about the
+ corpse, her lips upon the dead. He does not hear the sobs of children. He
+ does not see the funeral. He does not hear the clods as they fall on the
+ coffin. He does not feel the hand of arrest, the scene of the trial is not
+ before him. He does not hear the awful verdict, the sentence of the court,
+ the last words. He does not see the scaffold, nor feel about his throat
+ the deadly noose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us develop the brain, civilize the heart, and give wings to the
+ imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IF we abandon myth and miracle, if we discard the supernatural and the
+ scheme of redemption, how are we to civilize the world?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is falsehood a reforming power? Is credulity the mother of virtue? Is
+ there any saving grace in the impossible and absurd? Did wisdom perish
+ with the dead? Must the civilized accept the religion of savages?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we wish to reform the world we must rely on truth, on fact, on reason.
+ We must teach men that they are good or bad for themselves, that others
+ cannot be good or bad for them, that they cannot be charged with the
+ crimes, or credited with the virtues of others. We must discard the
+ doctrine of the atonement, because it is absurd and immoral. We are not
+ accountable for the sins of "Adam" and the virtues of Christ cannot be
+ transferred to us. There can be no vicarious virtue, no vicarious vice.
+ Why should the sufferings of the innocent atone for the crimes of the
+ guilty. According to the doctrine of the atonement right and wrong do not
+ exist in the nature of things, but in the arbitrary will of the Infinite.
+ This is a subversion of all ideas of justice and mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An act is good, bad, or indifferent, according to its consequences. No
+ power can step between an act and its natural consequences. A governor may
+ pardon the criminal, but the natural consequences of the crime remain
+ untouched. A god may forgive, but the consequences of the act forgiven,
+ are still the same. We must teach the world that the consequences of a bad
+ action cannot be avoided, that they are the invisible police, the unseen
+ avengers, that accept no gifts, that hear no prayers, that no cunning can
+ deceive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not need the forgiveness of gods, but of ourselves and the ones we
+ injure. Restitution without repentance is far better than repentance
+ without restitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know nothing of any god who rewards, punishes or forgives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must teach our fellow-men that honor comes from within, not from
+ without, that honor must be earned, that it is not alms, that even an
+ infinite God could not enrich the beggar's palm with the gem of honor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teach them also that happiness is the bud, the blossom and the fruit of
+ good and noble actions, that it is not the gift of any god; that it must
+ be earned by man&mdash;must be deserved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this world of ours there is no magic, no sleight-of-hand, by which
+ consequences can be made to punish the good and reward the bad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teach men not to sacrifice this world for some other, but to turn their
+ attention to the natural, to the affairs of this life. Teach them that
+ theology has no known foundation, that it was born of ignorance and fear,
+ that it has hardened the heart, polluted the imagination and made fiends
+ of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Theology is not for this world. It is no part of real religion. It has
+ nothing to do with goodness or virtue. Religion does not consist in
+ worshiping gods, but in adding to the well-being, the happiness of man. No
+ human being knows whether any god exists or not, and all that has been
+ said and written about "our god," or the gods of other people, has no
+ known fact for a foundation. Words without thoughts, clouds without rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us put theology out of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Church and state should be absolutely divorced. Priests pretend that they
+ have been selected by, and that they get their power from God. Kings
+ occupy their thrones in accordance with the will of God. The pope declares
+ that he is the agent, the deputy of God and that by right he should rule
+ the world. All these pretentions and assertions are perfectly absurd and
+ yet they are acknowledged and believed by millions. Get theology out of
+ government and kings will descend from their thrones. All will admit that
+ governments get their powers from the consent of the governed, and that
+ all persons in office are the servants of the people. Get theology out of
+ government and chaplains will be dismissed from Legislatures, from
+ Congress, from the army and navy. Get theology out of government and
+ people will be allowed to express their honest thoughts about "inspired
+ books" and superstitious creeds. Get theology out of government and
+ priests will no longer steal a seventh of our time. Get theology out of
+ government and the clergy will soon take their places with augurs and
+ soothsayers, with necromancers and medicine-men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Get theology out of education. Nothing should be taught in a school that
+ somebody does not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are plenty of things to be learned about this world, about this
+ life. Every child should be taught to think, and that it is dangerous not
+ to think. Children should not be taught the absurdities, the cruelties and
+ imbecilities of superstition. No church should be allowed to control the
+ common school, and public money should not be divided between the hateful
+ and warring sects. The public school should be secular, and only the
+ useful should be taught. Many of our colleges are under the control of
+ churches. Presidents and professors are mostly ministers of the gospel and
+ the result is that all facts inconsistent with the creeds are either
+ suppressed or denied. Only those professors who are naturally stupid or
+ mentally dishonest can retain their places. Those who tell the truth, who
+ teach the facts, are discharged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In every college truth should be a welcome guest. Every professor should
+ be a finder, and every student a learner, of facts. Theology and
+ intellectual dishonesty go together. The teacher of children should be
+ intelligent and perfectly sincere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us get theology out of education.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pious denounce the secular schools as godless. They should be. The
+ sciences are all secular, all godless. Theology bears the same relation to
+ science that the black art does to chemistry, that magic does to
+ mathematics. It is something that cannot be taught, because it cannot be
+ known. It has no foundation in fact. It neither produces, nor accords
+ with, any image in the mind. It is not only unknowable but unthinkable.
+ Through hundreds and thousands of generations men have been discussing,
+ wrangling and fighting about theology. No advance has been made. The robed
+ priest has only reached the point from which the savage tried to start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that theology always has and always will make enemies. It sows the
+ seeds of hatred in families and nations. It is selfish, cruel, revengeful
+ and malicious. It has heaven for the few and perdition for the many. We
+ now know that credulity is not a virtue and that intellectual courage is.
+ We must stop rewarding hypocrisy and bigotry. We must stop persecuting the
+ thinkers, the investigators, the creators of light, the civilizers of the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILL the unknown, the mysteries of life and itiations of the mind, forever
+ furnish food for superstition? Will the gods and ghosts perish or simply
+ retreat before the advancing hosts of science, and continue to crouch and
+ lurk just beyond the horizon of the known? Will darkness forever be the
+ womb and mother of the supernatural?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little while ago priests told peasants that the New Jerusalem, the
+ celestial city was just above the clouds. They said that its walls and
+ domes and spires were just beyond the reach of human sight. The telescope
+ was invented and those who looked at the wilderness of stars, saw no city,
+ no throne. They said to the priests: "Where is your New Jerusalem?" The
+ priests cheerfully and confidently replied. "It is just beyond where you
+ see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one time it was believed that a race of men existed "with their heads
+ beneath their shoulders." Returning travelers from distant lands were
+ asked about these wonderful people and all replied that they had not seen
+ them. "Oh," said the believers in the monsters, "the men with heads
+ beneath their shoulders live in a country that you did not visit." And so
+ the monsters lived and flourished until all the world was known. We cannot
+ know the universe. We cannot travel infinite distances, and so, somewhere
+ in shoreless space there will always be room for gods and ghosts, for
+ heavens and hells. And so it may be that superstition will live and linger
+ until the world becomes intelligent enough to build upon the foundation of
+ the known, to keep the imagination within the domain of the probable, and
+ to believe in the natural&mdash;<i>until the supernatural shall have been
+ demonstrated</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Savages knew all about gods, about heavens and hells before they knew
+ anything about the world in which they lived. They were perfectly familiar
+ with evil spirits, with the invisible phantoms of the air, long before
+ they had any true conception of themselves. So, they knew all about the
+ origin and destiny of the human race. They were absolutely certain about
+ the problems, the solution of which, philosophers know, is beyond the
+ limitations of the mind. They understood astrology, but not astronomy,
+ knew something of magic, but nothing about chemistry. They were wise only
+ as to those things about which nothing can be known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor Indian believed in the "Great Spirit" and saw "design" on every
+ hand.&mdash;Trees were made that he might have bows and arrows, wood for
+ his fire and bark for his wigwam&mdash;rivers and lakes to give him fish,
+ wild beasts and corn that he might have food, and the animals had skins
+ that he might have clothes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Primitive peoples all reasoned in the same way, and modern Christians
+ follow their example. They knew but little of the world and thought that
+ it had been made expressly for the use of man. They did not know that it
+ was mostly water, that vast regions were locked in eternal ice and that in
+ most countries the conditions were unfavorable to human life. They knew
+ nothing of the countless enemies of man that live unseen in water, food
+ and air. Back of the little good they knew they put gods and back of the
+ evil, devils. They thought it of the greatest importance to gain the good
+ will of the gods, who alone could protect them from the devils. Those who
+ worshiped these gods, offered sacrifices, and obeyed priests, were
+ considered loyal members of the tribe or community, and those who refused
+ to worship were regarded as enemies and traitors. The believers, in order
+ to protect themselves from the anger of the gods, exiled or destroyed the
+ infidels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Believing as they did, the course they pursued was natural. They not only
+ wished to protect themselves from disease and death, from pestilence and
+ famine in this world but the souls of their children from eternal pain in
+ the next. Their gods were savages who demanded flattery and worship not
+ only, but the acceptance of a certain creed. As long as Christians believe
+ in eternal punishment they will be the enemies of those who investigate
+ and contend for the authority of reason, of those who demand evidence, who
+ care nothing for the unsupported assertions of the dead or the illogical
+ inferences of the living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Science always has been, is, and always will be modest, thoughtful,
+ truthful. It has but one object: The ascertainment of truth. It has no
+ prejudice, no hatred. It is in the realm of the intellect and cannot be
+ swayed or changed by passion. It does not try to please God, to gain
+ heaven or avoid hell. It is for this world, for the use of man. It is
+ perfectly candid. It does not try to conceal, but to reveal. It is the
+ enemy of mystery, of pretence and canc. It does not ask people to be
+ solemn, but sensible. It calls for and insists on the use of all the
+ senses, of all the faculties of the mind. It does not pretend to be "holy"
+ or "inspired." It courts investigation, criticism and even denial. It asks
+ for the application of every test, for trial by every standard. It knows
+ nothing of blasphemy and does not ask for the imprisonment of those who
+ ignorantly or knowingly deny the truth. The good that springs from a
+ knowledge of the truth is the only reward it offers, and the evil
+ resulting from ignorance is the only punishment it threatens. Its effort
+ is to reform the world through intelligence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand theology is, always has been, and always will be,
+ ignorant, arrogant, puerile and cruel. When the church had power,
+ hypocrisy was crowned and honesty imprisoned. Fraud wore the tiara and
+ truth was a convict, Liberty was in chains, Theology has always sent the
+ worst to heaven, the best to hell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me give you a scene from the day of judgment. Christ is upon his
+ throne, his secretary by his side. A soul appears. This is what happens&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is your name?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torquemada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Were you a Christian?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you endeavor to convert your fellow-men?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did. I tried to convert them by persuasion, by preaching and praying and
+ even by force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What did you do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I put the heretics in prison, in chains. I tore out their tongues, put out
+ their eyes, crushed their bones, stretched them upon racks, roasted their
+ feet, and if they remained obdurate I flayed them alive or burned them at
+ the stake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And did you do all this for my glory?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, all for you. I wanted to save some, I wanted to protect the young and
+ the weak minded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you believe the Bible, the miracles&mdash;that I was God, that I was
+ born of a virgin and kept money in the mouth of a fish?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, I believed it all. My reason was the slave of faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joys of thy
+ Lord. I was hungry and you gave me meat, naked and you clothed me.."
+ Another soul arises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is your name?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Giordano Bruno.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Were you a Christian?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one time I was, but for many years I was a philosopher, a seeker after
+ truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you seek to convert your fellow-men?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not to Christianity, but to the religion of reason. I tried to develop
+ their minds, to free them from the slavery of ignorance and superstition.
+ In my day the church taught the holiness of credulity&mdash;the virtue of
+ unquestioning obedience, and in your name tortured and destroyed the
+ intelligent and courageous. I did what I could to civilize the world, to
+ make men tolerant and merciful, to soften the hearts of priests, and
+ banish torture from the world. I expressed my honest thoughts and walked
+ in the light of reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you believe the Bible, the miracles? Did you believe that I was God,
+ that I was born of a virgin and that I suffered myself to be killed by the
+ Jews to appease the wrath of God&mdash;that is, of myself&mdash;so that
+ God could save the souls of a few?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I did not. I did not believe that God was ever born into my world, or
+ that God learned the trade of a carpenter, or that he 'increased in
+ knowledge,' or that he cast devils out of men, or that his garments could
+ cure diseases, or that he allowed himself to be murdered, and in the hour
+ of death "forsook" himself. These things I did not and could not believe.
+ But I did all the good I could. I enlightened the ignorant, comforted the
+ afflicted, defended the innocent, divided even my poverty with the poor,
+ and did the best I could to increase the happiness of my fellow-men. I was
+ a soldier in the army of progress.&mdash;I was arrested, imprisoned, tried
+ and convicted by the church&mdash;by the 'Triumphant Beast.' I was burned
+ at the stake by ignorant and heartless priests and my ashes given to the
+ winds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Christ, his face growing dark, his brows contracted with wrath, with
+ uplifted hands, with half averted face, cries or rather shrieks: "Depart
+ from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his
+ angels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the justice of God&mdash;the mercy of the compassionate Christ.
+ This is the belief, the dream and hope of the orthodox theologian&mdash;"the
+ consummation devoutly to be wished."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Theology makes God a monster, a tyrant, a savage; makes man a servant, a
+ serf, a slave; promises heaven to the obedient, the meek, the frightened,
+ and threatens the self-reliant with the tortures of hell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It denounces reason and appeals to the passions&mdash;to hope and fear. It
+ does not answer the arguments of those who attack, but resorts to
+ sophistry, falsehood and slander. It is incapable of advancement. It keeps
+ its back to the sunrise, lives on myth and miracle, and guards with a
+ misers care the "sacred" superstitions of the past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the great struggle between the supernatural and the natural, between
+ gods and men, we have passed midnight. All the forces of civilization, all
+ the facts that have been found, all the truths that have been discovered
+ are the allies of science&mdash;the enemies of the supernatural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We need no myths, no miracles, no gods, no devils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IX.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FOR thousands of generations the myths have been taught and the miracles
+ believed. Every mother was a missionary and told with loving care the
+ falsehoods of "faith" to her babe. The poison of superstition was in the
+ mother's milk. She was honest and affectionate and her character, her
+ goodness, her smiles and kisses, entered into, mingled with, and became a
+ part of the superstition that she taught. Fathers, friends and priests
+ united with the mothers, and the children thus taught, became the teachers
+ of their children and so the creeds were kept alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Childhood loves the romantic, the mysterious, the monstrous. It lives in a
+ world where cause has nothing to do with effect, where the fairy waves her
+ hand and the prince appears. Where wish creates the thing desired and
+ facts become the slaves of amulet and charm. The individual lives the life
+ of the race, and the child is charmed with what the race in its infancy
+ produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There seems to be the same difference between mistakes and facts that
+ there is between weeds and corn. Mistakes seem to take care of themselves,
+ while the facts have to be guarded with all possible care. Falsehoods like
+ weeds flourish without care. Weeds care nothing for soil or rain. They not
+ only ask no help but they almost defy destruction. In the minds of
+ children, superstitions, legends, myths and miracles find a natural, and
+ in most instances a lasting home. Thrown aside in manhood, forgotten or
+ denied, in old age they oft return and linger to the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This in part accounts for the longevity of religious lies. Ministers with
+ clasped hands and uplifted eyes ask the man who is thinking for himself
+ how he can be wicked and heartless enough to attack the religion of his
+ mother. This question is regarded by the clergy as unanswerable. Of course
+ it is not to be asked by the missionaries, of the Hindus and the Chinese.
+ The heathen are expected to desert the religion of their mothers as Christ
+ and his apostles deserted the religion of their mothers. It is right for
+ Jews and heathen, but not for thinkers and philosophers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cannibal was about to kill a missionary for food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The missionary objected and asked the cannibal how he could be so cruel
+ and wicked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cannibal replied that he followed the example of his mother. "My
+ mother," said he, "was good enough for me. Her religion is my religion.
+ The last time I saw her she was sitting, propped up against a tree, eating
+ cold missionary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now the mother argument has mostly lost its force, and men of mind are
+ satisfied with nothing less than truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The phenomena of nature have been investigated and the supernatural has
+ not been found. The myths have faded from the imagination, and of them
+ nothing remains but the poetic. The miraculous has become the absurd, the
+ impossible. Gods and phantoms have been driven from the earth and sky. We
+ are living in a natural world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our fathers, some of them, demanded the freedom of religion. We have taken
+ another step. We demand the Religion of Freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O Liberty, thou art the god of my idolatry! Thou art the only deity that
+ hateth bended knees. In thy vast and unwalled temple, beneath the roofless
+ dome, star-gemmed and luminous with suns, thy worshipers stand erect! They
+ do not cringe, or crawl, or bend their foreheads to the earth. The dust
+ has never borne the impress of their lips. Upon thy altars mothers do not
+ sacrifice their babes, nor men their rights. Thou askest naught from man
+ except the things that good men hate&mdash;the whip, the chain, the
+ dungeon key. Thou hast no popes, no priests, who stand between their
+ fellow-men and thee. Thou carest not for foolish forms, or selfish
+ prayers. At thy sacred shrine hypocrisy does not bow, virtue does not
+ tremble, superstition's feeble tapers do not burn, but Reason holds aloft
+ her inextinguishable torch whose holy light will one day flood the world.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
+ <table summary="" border="3" cellpadding="4">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <big><big><a
+ href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38813/38813-h/38813-h.htm">
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR ALL 12 EBOOKS IN THIS SET</a></big></big>
+ </td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+ <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 2
+(of 12), by Robert G. Ingersoll
+
+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 Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 2 (of 12)
+ Dresden Edition--Lectures
+
+Author: Robert G. Ingersoll
+
+Release Date: February 9, 2012 [EBook #38802]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKS OF INGERSOLL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WORKS OF ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
+
+"THE CLERGY KNOW, THAT I KNOW, THAT THEY KNOW, THAT THEY DO NOT KNOW."
+
+IN TWELVE VOLUMES, VOLUME II.
+
+LECTURES
+
+1900
+
+THE DRESDEN EDITION
+
+
+TO
+
+MRS. SUE. M. FARRELL,
+
+IN LAW MY SISTER,
+
+AND IN FACT MY FRIEND,
+
+THIS VOLUME,
+
+AS A TOKEN OF RESPECT AND LOVE, IS DEDICATED.
+
+CONTENTS OF VOLUME II.
+
+SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.
+
+(1879.)
+
+Preface--I. He who endeavors to control the Mind by Force is a
+Tyrant, and he who submits is a Slave--All I Ask--When a Religion
+is Founded--Freedom for the Orthodox Clergy--Every Minister an
+Attorney--Submission to the Orthodox and the Dead--Bounden Duty of
+the Ministry--The Minister Factory at Andover--II. Free Schools--No
+Sectarian Sciences--Religion and the Schools--Scientific
+Hypocrites--III. The Politicians and the Churches--IV. Man and Woman the
+Highest Possible Titles--Belief Dependent on Surroundings--Worship of
+Ancestors--Blindness Necessary to Keeping the Narrow Path--The Bible the
+Chain that Binds--A Bible of the Middle Ages and the Awe it Inspired--V.
+The Pentateuch--Moses Not the Author--Belief out of which Grew
+Religious Ceremonies--Egypt the Source of the Information of Moses--VI.
+Monday--Nothing, in the Light of Raw Material--The Story of Creation
+Begun--The Same Story, substantially, Found in the Records of Babylon,
+Egypt, and India--Inspiration Unnecessary to the Truth--Usefulness of
+Miracles to Fit Lies to Facts--Division of Darkness and Light--VII.
+Tuesday--The Firmament and Some Biblical Notions about it--Laws of
+Evaporation Unknown to the Inspired Writer--VIII. Wednesday--The Waters
+Gathered into Seas--Fruit and Nothing to Eat it--Five Epochs in the
+Organic History of the Earth--Balance between the Total Amounts of
+Animal and Vegetable Life--Vegetation Prior to the Appearance of the
+Sun--IX. Thursday--Sun and Moon Manufactured--Magnitude of the Solar
+Orb--Dimensions of Some of the Planets--Moses' Guess at the Size of Sun
+and Moon--Joshua's Control of the Heavenly Bodies--A Hypothesis Urged
+by Ministers--The Theory of "Refraction"--Rev. Henry Morey--Astronomical
+Knowledge of Chinese Savants--The Motion of the Earth Reversed by
+Jehovah for the Reassurance of Ahaz--"Errors" Renounced by Button--X.
+"He made the Stars Also"--Distance of the Nearest Star--XI.
+Friday--Whales and Other Living Creatures Produced--XII.
+Saturday--Reproduction Inaugurated--XIII. "Let Us Make Man"--Human
+Beings Created in the Physical Image and Likeness of God--Inquiry as
+to the Process Adopted--Development of Living Forms According to
+Evolution--How Were Adam and Eve Created?--The Rib Story--Age of
+Man Upon the Earth--A Statue Apparently Made before the World--XIV.
+Sunday--Sacredness of the Sabbath Destroyed by the Theory of Vast
+"Periods"--Reflections on the Sabbath--XV. The Necessity for a Good
+Memory--The Two Accounts of the Creation in Genesis I and II--Order
+of Creation in the First Account--Order of Creation in the Second
+Account--Fastidiousness of Adam in the Choice of a Helpmeet--Dr.
+Adam Clark's Commentary--Dr. Scott's Guess--Dr. Matthew Henry's
+Admission--The Blonde and Brunette Problem--The Result of Unbelief and
+the Reward of Faith--"Give Him a Harp"--XVI. The Garden--Location of
+Eden--The Four Rivers--The Tree of Knowledge--Andover Appealed
+To--XVII. The Fall--The Serpent--Dr. Adam Clark Gives a Zoological
+Explanation--Dr. Henry Dissents--Whence This Serpent?--XVIII.
+Dampness--A Race of Giants--Wickedness of Mankind--An Ark Constructed--A
+Universal Flood Indicated--Animals Probably Admitted to the Ark--How Did
+They Get There?--Problem of Food and Service--A Shoreless Sea Covered
+with Innumerable Dead--Drs. Clark and Henry on the Situation--The Ark
+Takes Ground--New Difficulties--Noah's Sacrifice--The Rainbow as a
+Memorandum--Babylonian, Egyptian, and Indian Legends of a Flood--XIX.
+Bacchus and Babel--Interest Attaching to Noah--Where Did Our First
+Parents and the Serpent Acquire a Common Language?--Babel and the
+Confusion of Tongues--XX. Faith in Filth--Immodesty of Biblical
+Diction--XXI. The Hebrews--God's Promises to Abraham--The Sojourning
+of Israel in Egypt--Marvelous Increase--Moses and Aaron--XXII.
+The Plagues--Competitive Miracle Working--Defeat of the Local
+Magicians--XXIII. The Flight Out of Egypt--Three Million People in a
+Desert--Destruction of Pharaoh ana His Host--Manna--A Superfluity of
+Quails--Rev. Alexander Cruden's Commentary--Hornets as Allies of the
+Israelites--Durability of the Clothing of the Jewish People--An Ointment
+Monopoly--Consecration of Priests--The Crime of Becoming a Mother--The
+Ten Commandments--Medical Ideas of Jehovah--Character of the God of
+the Pentateuch--XXIV. Confess and Avoid--XXV. "Inspired" Slavery--XXVI.
+"Inspired" Marriage-XXVII. "Inspired" War-XXVIII. "Inspired" Religious
+Liberty--XXIX. Conclusion.
+
+SOME REASONS WHY.
+
+(1881.)
+
+I--Religion makes Enemies--Hatred in the Name of Universal
+Benevolence--No Respect for the Rights of Barbarians--Literal
+Fulfillment of a New Testament Prophecy--II. Duties to God--Can we
+Assist God?--An Infinite Personality an Infinite Impossibility-Ill.
+Inspiration--What it Really Is--Indication of Clams--Multitudinous
+Laughter of the Sea--Horace Greeley and the Mammoth Trees--A Landscape
+Compared to a Table-cloth--The Supernatural is the Deformed--Inspiration
+in the Man as well as in the Book--Our Inspired Bible--IV. God's
+Experiment with the Jews--Miracles of One Religion never astonish the
+Priests of Another--"I am a Liar Myself"--V. Civilized Countries--Crimes
+once regarded as Divine Institutions--What the Believer in the
+Inspiration of the Bible is Compelled to Say--Passages apparently
+written by the Devil--VI. A Comparison of Books--Advancing a Cannibal
+from Missionary to Mutton--Contrast between the Utterances of Jehovah
+and those of Reputable Heathen--Epictetus, Cicero, Zeno,
+Seneca--the Hindu, Antoninus, Marcus Aurelius--The Avesta--VII.
+Monotheism--Egyptians before Moses taught there was but One God
+and Married but One Wife--Persians and Hindoos had a Single Supreme
+Deity--Rights of Roman Women--Marvels of Art achieved without the
+Assistance of Heaven--Probable Action of the Jewish Jehovah incarnated
+as Man--VIII. The New Testament--Doctrine of Eternal Pain brought to
+Light--Discrepancies--Human Weaknesses cannot be Predicated of
+Divine Wisdom--Why there are Four Gospels according to Irenaeus--The
+Atonement--Remission of Sins under the Mosaic Dispensation--Christians
+say, "Charge it"--God's Forgiveness does not Repair an Injury--Suffering
+of Innocence for the Guilty--Salvation made Possible by Jehovah's
+Failure to Civilize the Jews--Necessity of Belief not taught in the
+Synoptic Gospels--Non-resistance the Offspring of Weakness--IX. Christ's
+Mission--All the Virtues had been Taught before his Advent--Perfect and
+Beautiful Thoughts of his Pagan Predecessors--St. Paul Contrasted
+with Heathen Writers--"The Quality of Mercy"--X. Eternal Pain--An
+Illustration of Eternal Punishment--Captain Kreuger of the Barque
+Tiger--XI. Civilizing Influence of the Bible--Its Effects on the
+Jews--If Christ was God, Did he not, in his Crucifixion, Reap what
+he had Sown?--Nothing can add to the Misery of a Nation whose King is
+Jehovah
+
+ORTHODOXY.
+
+(1884.)
+
+Orthodox Religion Dying Out--Religious Deaths and Births--The Religion
+of Reciprocity--Every Language has a Cemetery--Orthodox Institutions
+Survive through the Money invested in them--"Let us tell our Real
+Names"--The Blows that have Shattered the Shield and Shivered the Lance
+of Superstition--Mohammed's Successful Defence of the Sepulchre of
+Christ--The Destruction of Art--The Discovery of America--Although
+he made it himself, the Holy Ghost was Ignorant of the Form of this
+Earth--Copernicus and Kepler--Special Providence--The Man and the Ship
+he did not Take--A Thanksgiving Proclamation Contradicted--Charles
+Darwin--Henry Ward Beecher--The Creeds--The Latest Creed--God as
+a Governor--The Love of God--The Fall of Man--We are Bound
+by Representatives without a Chance to Vote against Them--The
+Atonement--The Doctrine of Depravity a Libel on the Human Race--The
+Second Birth--A Unitarian Universalist--Inspiration of the
+Scriptures--God a Victim of his own Tyranny--In the New Testament
+Trouble Commences at Death--The Reign of Truth and Love--The Old
+Spaniard who Died without an Enemy--The Wars it Brought--Consolation
+should be Denied to Murderers--At the Rate at which Heathen are being
+Converted, how long will it take to Establish Christ's Kingdom on
+Earth?--The Resurrection--The Judgment Day--Pious Evasions--"We shall
+not Die, but we shall all be Hanged"--"No Bible, no Civilization"
+Miracles of the New Testament--Nothing Written by Christ or his
+Contemporaries--Genealogy of Jesus--More Miracles--A Master of
+Death--Improbable that he would be Crucified--The Loaves and Fishes--How
+did it happen that the Miracles Convinced so Few?--The Resurrection--The
+Ascension--Was the Body Spiritual--Parting from the Disciples--Casting
+out Devils--Necessity of Belief--God should be consistent in the
+Matter of forgiving Enemies--Eternal Punishment--Some Good Men who are
+Damned--Another Objection--Love the only Bow on Life's dark Cloud--"Now
+is the accepted Time"--Rather than this Doctrine of Eternal Punishment
+Should be True--I would rather that every Planet should in its Orbit
+wheel a barren Star--What I Believe--Immortality--It existed long before
+Moses--Consolation--The Promises are so Far Away, and the Dead are so
+Near--Death a Wall or a Door--A Fable--Orpheus and Eurydice.
+
+MYTH AND MIRACLE.
+
+(1885.)
+
+I. Happiness the true End and Aim of Life--Spiritual People and
+their Literature--Shakespeare's Clowns superior to Inspired
+Writers--Beethoven's Sixth Symphony Preferred to the Five Books of
+Moses--Venus of Milo more Pleasing than the Presbyterian Creed--II.
+Religions Naturally Produced--Poets the Myth-makers--The Sleeping
+Beauty--Orpheus and Eurydice--Red Riding Hood--The Golden Age--Elysian
+Fields--The Flood Myth--Myths of the Seasons--III. The Sun-god--Jonah,
+Buddha, Chrisnna, Horus, Zoroaster--December 25th as a Birthday of
+Gods--Christ a Sun-God--The Cross a Symbol of the Life to Come--When
+Nature rocked the Cradle of the Infant World--IV. Difference between
+a Myth and a Miracle--Raising the Dead, Past and Present--Miracles
+of Jehovah--Miracles of Christ--Everything Told except the Truth--The
+Mistake of the World--V. Beginning of Investigation--The Stars as
+Witnesses against Superstition--Martyrdom of Bruno--Geology--Steam and
+Electricity--Nature forever the Same--Persistence of Force--Cathedral,
+Mosque, and Joss House have the same Foundation--Science the
+Providence of Man--VI. To Soften the Heart of God--Martyrs--The God was
+Silent--Credulity a Vice--Develop the Imagination--"The Skylark" and
+"The Daisy"--VII. How are we to Civilize the World?--Put Theology out
+of Religion--Divorce of Church and State--Secular Education--Godless
+Schools--VIII. The New Jerusalem--Knowledge of the Supernatural
+possessed by Savages--Beliefs of Primitive Peoples--Science is
+Modest--Theology Arrogant--Torque-mada and Bruno on the Day of
+Judgment--IX. Poison of Superstition in the Mother's Milk--Ability
+of Mistakes to take Care of Themselves--Longevity of Religious
+Lies--Mother's religion pleaded by the Cannibal--The Religion of
+Freedom--O Liberty, thou art the God of my Idolatry
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+For many years I have regarded the Pentateuch simply as a record of a
+barbarous people, in which are found a great number of the ceremonies
+of savagery, many absurd and unjust laws, and thousands of ideas
+inconsistent with known and demonstrated facts. To me it seemed almost
+a crime to teach that this record was written by inspired men; that
+slavery, polygamy, wars of conquest and extermination were right, and
+that there was a time when men could win the approbation of infinite
+Intelligence, Justice, and Mercy, by violating maidens and by butchering
+babes. To me it seemed more reasonable that savage men had made these
+laws; and I endeavored in a lecture, entitled "Some Mistakes of Moses,"
+to point out some of the errors, contradictions, and impossibilities
+contained in the Pentateuch. The lecture was never written and
+consequently never delivered twice the same. On several occasions it was
+reported and published without consent, and without revision. All these
+publications were grossly and glaringly incorrect As published, they
+have been answered several hundred times, and many of the clergy are
+still engaged in the great work. To keep these reverend gentlemen from
+wasting their talents on the mistakes of reporters and printers, I
+concluded to publish the principal points in all my lectures on this
+subject. And here, it may be proper for me to say, that arguments cannot
+be answered by personal abuse; that there is no logic in slander, and
+that falsehood, in the long run, defeats itself. People who love their
+enemies should, at least, tell the truth about their friends. Should it
+turn out that I am the worst man in the whole world, the story of the
+flood will remain just as improbable as before, and the contradictions
+of the Pentateuch will still demand an explanation.
+
+There was a time when a falsehood, fulminated from the pulpit, smote
+like a sword; but, the supply having greatly exceeded the demand,
+clerical misrepresentation has at last become almost an innocent
+amusement. Remembering that only a few years ago men, women, and even
+children, were imprisoned, tortured and burned, for having expressed
+in an exceedingly mild and gentle way, the ideas entertained by me, I
+congratulate myself that calumny is now the pulpit's last resort. The
+old instruments of torture are kept only to gratify curiosity; the
+chains are rusting away, and the demolition of time has allowed even the
+dungeons of the Inquisition to be visited by light. The church, impotent
+and malicious, regrets, not the abuse, but the loss of her power, and
+seeks to hold by falsehood what she gained by cruelty and force, by
+fire and fear. Christianity cannot live in peace with any other form of
+faith. If that religion be true, there is but one savior, one inspired
+book, and but one little narrow grass-grown path that leads to heaven.
+Such a religion is necessarily uncompromising, unreasoning, aggressive
+and insolent. Christianity has held all other creeds and forms in
+infinite contempt, divided the world into enemies and friends, and
+verified the awful declaration of its founder--a declaration that
+wet with blood the sword he came to bring, and made the horizon of a
+thousand years lurid with the fagots' flames.
+
+Too great praise challenges attention, and often brings to light a
+thousand faults that otherwise the general eye would never see. Were we
+allowed to read the Bible as we do all other books, we would admire its
+beauties, treasure its worthy thoughts, and account for all its absurd,
+grotesque and cruel things, by saying that its authors lived in rude,
+barbaric times. But we are told that it was written by inspired men;
+that it contains the will of God; that it is perfect, pure, and true in
+all its parts; the source and standard of all moral and religious truth;
+that it is the star and anchor of all human hope; the only guide for
+man, the only torch in Nature's night. These claims are so at variance
+with every known recorded fact, so palpably absurd, that every free
+unbiased soul is forced to raise the standard of revolt.
+
+We read the pagan sacred books with profit and delight. With myth and
+fable we are ever charmed, and find a pleasure in the endless repetition
+of the beautiful, poetic, and absurd. We find, in all these records of
+the past, philosophies and dreams, and efforts stained with tears,
+of great and tender souls who tried to pierce the mystery of life and
+death, to answer the eternal questions of the Whence and Whither, and
+vainly sought to make, with bits of shattered glass, a mirror that
+would, in very truth, reflect the face and form of Nature's perfect
+self.
+
+These myths were born of hopes, and fears, and tears, and smiles, and
+they were touched and colored by all there is of joy and grief between
+the rosy dawn of birth, and deaths sad night. They clothed even the
+stars with passion, and gave to gods the faults and frailties of the
+sons of men. In them, the winds and waves were music, and all the lakes,
+and streams, and springs,--the mountains, woods and perfumed dells were
+haunted by a thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of Spring
+with tremulous desire; made tawny Summer's billowed breast the throne
+and home of love; filled Autumn's arms with sun-kissed grapes, and
+gathered sheaves; and pictured Winter as a weak old king who felt,
+like Lear upon his withered face, Cordelia's tears. These myths, though
+false, are beautiful, and have for many ages and in countless ways,
+enriched the heart and kindled thought. But if the world were taught
+that all these things are true and all inspired of God, and that eternal
+punishment will be the lot of him who dares deny or doubt, the sweetest
+myth of all the Fable World would lose its beauty, and become a scorned
+and hateful thing to every brave and thoughtful man.
+
+Robert G. Ingersoll.
+
+Washington, D. C., Oct. 7th, 1879.
+
+
+
+
+SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.
+
+HE WHO ENDEAVORS TO CONTROL THE MIND BY FORCE IS A TYRANT, AND HE WHO
+SUBMITS IS A SLAVE.
+
+I.
+
+I want to do what little I can to make my country truly free, to broaden
+the intellectual horizon of our people, to destroy the prejudices born
+of ignorance and fear, to do away with the blind worship of the ignoble
+past, with the idea that all the great and good are dead, that the
+living are totally depraved, that all pleasures are sins, that sighs
+and groans are alone pleasing to God, that thought is dangerous, that
+intellectual courage is a crime, that cowardice is a virtue, that a
+certain belief is necessary to secure salvation, that to carry a cross
+in this world will give us a palm in the next, and that we must allow
+some priest to be the pilot of our souls.
+
+Until every soul is freely permitted to investigate every book, and
+creed, and dogma for itself, the world cannot be free. Mankind will be
+enslaved until there is mental grandeur enough to allow each man to have
+his thought and say. This earth will be a paradise when men can, upon
+all these questions differ, and yet grasp each other's hands as friends.
+It is amazing to me that a difference of opinion upon subjects that we
+know nothing with certainty about, should make us hate, persecute, and
+despise each other. Why a difference of opinion upon predestination,
+or the Trinity, should make people imprison and burn each other
+seems beyond the comprehension of man; and yet in all countries where
+Christians have existed, they have destroyed each other to the exact
+extent of their power. Why should a believer in God hate an atheist?
+Surely the atheist has not injured God, and surely he is human, capable
+of joy and pain, and entitled to all the rights of man. Would it not be
+far better to treat this atheist, at least, as well as he treats us?
+
+Christians tell me that they love their enemies, and yet all I ask
+is--not that they love their enemies, not that they love their friends
+even, but that they treat those who differ from them, with simple
+fairness.
+
+We do not wish to be forgiven, but we wish Christians to so act that we
+will not have to forgive them.
+
+If all will admit that all have an equal right to think, then the
+question is forever solved; but as long as organized and powerful
+churches, pretending to hold the keys of heaven and hell, denounce every
+person as an outcast and criminal who thinks for himself and denies
+their authority, the world will be filled with hatred and suffering. To
+hate man and worship God seems to be the sum of all the creeds.
+
+That which has happened in most countries has happened in ours. When
+a religion is founded, the educated, the powerful--that is to say, the
+priests and nobles, tell the ignorant and superstitious--that is to
+say, the people, that the religion of their country was given to their
+fathers by God himself; that it is the only true religion; that all
+others were conceived in falsehood and brought forth in fraud, and that
+all who believe in the true religion will be happy forever, while all
+others will burn in hell. For the purpose of governing the people, that
+is to say, for the purpose of being supported by the people, the priests
+and nobles declare this religion to be sacred, and that whoever adds to,
+or takes from it, will be burned here by man, and hereafter by God. The
+result of this is, that the priests and nobles will not allow the people
+to change; and when, after a time, the priests, having intellectually
+advanced, wish to take a step in the direction of progress, the people
+will not allow them to change. At first, the rabble are enslaved by the
+priests, and afterwards the rabble become the masters.
+
+One of the first things I wish to do, is to free the orthodox clergy.
+I am a great friend of theirs, and in spite of all they may say against
+me, I am going to do them a great and lasting service. Upon their necks
+are visible the marks of the collar, and upon their backs those of the
+lash. They are not allowed to read and think for themselves. They are
+taught like parrots, and the best are those who repeat, with the fewest
+mistakes, the sentences they have been taught. They sit like owls upon
+some dead limb of the tree of knowledge, and hoot the same old hoots
+that have been hooted for eighteen hundred years. Their congregations
+are not grand enough, nor sufficiently civilized, to be willing that
+the poor preachers shall think for themselves. They are not employed for
+that purpose. Investigation regarded as a dangerous experiment, and the
+ministers are warned that none of that kind of work will be tolerated.
+They are notified to stand by the old creed, and to avoid all original
+thought, as a mortal pestilence. Every minister is employed like an
+attorney--either for plaintiff or defendant,--and he is expected to
+be true to his client. If he changes his mind, he is regarded as
+a deserter, and denounced, hated, and slandered accordingly. Every
+orthodox clergyman agrees not to change. He contracts not to find new
+facts, and makes a bargain that he will deny them if he does. Such is
+the position of a Protestant minister in this nineteenth century. His
+condition excites my pity; and to better it, I am going to do what
+little I can.
+
+Some of the clergy have the independence to break away, and the
+intellect to maintain themselves as free men, but the most are compelled
+to submit to the dictation of the orthodox, and the dead. They are
+not employed to give their thoughts, but simply to repeat the ideas of
+others. They are not expected to give even the doubts that may suggest
+themselves, but are required to walk in the narrow, verdureless path
+trodden by the ignorance of the past. The forests and fields on either
+side are nothing to them. They must not even look at the purple hills,
+nor pause to hear the babble of the brooks. They must remain in the
+dusty road where the guide-boards are. They must confine themselves
+to the "fall of man," the expulsion from the garden, the "scheme of
+salvation," the "second birth," the atonement, the happiness of the
+redeemed, and the misery of the lost. They must be careful not to
+express any new ideas upon these great questions. It is much safer for
+them to quote from the works of the dead. The more vividly they describe
+the sufferings of the unregenerate, of those who attended theatres and
+balls, and drank wine in summer gardens on the Sabbath-day, and laughed
+at priests, the better ministers they are supposed to be. They must show
+that misery fits the good for heaven, while happiness prepares the bad
+for hell; that the wicked get all their good things in this life, and
+the good all their evil; that in this world God punishes the people he
+loves, and in the next, the ones he hates; that happiness makes us bad
+here, but not in heaven; that pain makes us good here, but not in hell.
+No matter how absurd these things may appear to the carnal mind, they
+must be preached and they must be believed. If they were reasonable,
+there would be no virtue in believing. Even the publicans and sinners
+believe reasonable things. To believe without evidence, or in spite of
+it, is accounted as righteousness to the sincere and humble Christian.
+
+The ministers are in duty bound to denounce all intellectual pride, and
+show that we are never quite so dear to God as when we admit that we are
+poor, corrupt and idiotic worms; that we never should have been born;
+that we ought to be damned without the least delay; that we are so
+infamous that we like to enjoy ourselves; that we love our wives and
+children better than our God; that we are generous only because we are
+vile; that we are honest from the meanest motives, and that sometimes we
+have fallen so low that we have had doubts about the inspiration of the
+Jewish Scriptures. In short, they are expected to denounce all pleasant
+paths and rustling trees, to curse the grass and flowers, and glorify
+the dust and weeds. They are expected to malign the wicked people in the
+green and happy fields, who sit and laugh beside the gurgling springs or
+climb the hills and wander as they will. They are expected to point out
+the dangers of freedom, the safety of implicit obedience, and to show
+the wickedness of philosophy, the goodness of faith, the immorality of
+science and the purity of ignorance.
+
+Now and then a few pious people discover some young man of a religious
+turn of mind and a consumptive habit of body, not quite sickly enough
+to die, nor healthy enough to be wicked. The idea occurs to them that
+he would make a good orthodox minister. They take up a contribution, and
+send the young man to some theological school where he can be taught to
+repeat a creed and despise reason. Should it turn out that the young
+man had some mind of his own, and, after graduating, should change his
+opinions and preach a different doctrine from that taught in the school,
+every man who contributed a dollar towards his education would feel that
+he had been robbed, and would denounce him as a dishonest and ungrateful
+wretch.
+
+The pulpit should not be a pillory. Congregations should allow the
+minister a little liberty. They should, at least, permit him to tell the
+truth.
+
+They have, in Massachusetts, at a place called Andover, a kind of
+minister factory, where each professor takes an oath once in five
+years--that time being considered the life of an oath--that he has not,
+during the last five years, and will not, during the next five years,
+intellectually advance. There is probably no oath that they could easier
+keep. Probably, since the foundation stone of that institution was laid
+there has not been a single case of perjury. The old creed is still
+taught. They still insist that God is infinitely wise, powerful and
+good, and that all men are totally depraved. They insist that the best
+man God ever made, deserved to be damned the moment he was finished.
+Andover puts its brand upon every minister it turns out, the same as
+Sheffield and Birmingham brand their wares, and all who see the brand
+know exactly what the minister believes, the books he has read, the
+arguments he relies on, and just what he intellectually is. They know
+just what he can be depended on to preach, and that he will continue to
+shrink and shrivel, and grow solemnly stupid day by day until he reaches
+the Andover of the grave and becomes truly orthodox forever.
+
+I have not singled out the Andover factory because it is worse than the
+others. They are all about the same. The professors, for the most part,
+are ministers who failed in the pulpit and were retired to the seminary
+on account of their deficiency in reason and their excess of faith. As
+a rule, they know nothing of this world, and far less of the next; but
+they have the power of stating the most absurd propositions with faces
+solemn as stupidity touched by fear.
+
+Something should be done for the liberation of these men. They should
+be allowed to grow--to have sunlight and air. They should no longer
+be chained and tied to confessions of faith, to mouldy books and
+musty creeds. Thousands of ministers are anxious to give their honest
+thoughts. The hands of wives and babes now stop their mouths. They
+must have bread, and so the husbands and fathers are forced to preach
+a doctrine that they hold in scorn. For the sake of shelter, food and
+clothes, they are obliged to defend the childish miracles of the past,
+and denounce the sublime discoveries of to-day. They are compelled to
+attack all modern thought, to point out the dangers of science, the
+wickedness of investigation and the corrupting influence of logic. It is
+for them to show that virtue rests upon ignorance and faith, while vice
+impudently feeds and fattens upon fact and demonstration. It is a part
+of their business to malign and vilify the Voltaires, Humes, Paines,
+Humboldts, Tyndalls, Haeckels, Darwins, Spencers, and Drapers, and
+to bow with uncovered heads before the murderers, adulterers, and
+persecutors of the world. They are, for the most part, engaged in
+poisoning the minds of the young, prejudicing children against science,
+teaching the astronomy and geology of the Bible, and inducing all to
+desert the sublime standard of reason.
+
+These orthodox ministers do not add to the sum of knowledge. They
+produce nothing. They live upon alms. They hate laughter and joy. They
+officiate at weddings, sprinkle water upon babes, and utter meaningless
+words and barren promises above the dead. They laugh at the agony of
+unbelievers, mock at their tears, and of their sorrows make a jest.
+There are some noble exceptions. Now and then a pulpit holds a brave
+and honest man. Their congregations are willing that they should
+think--willing that their ministers should have a little freedom.
+
+As we become civilized, more and more liberty will be accorded to these
+men, until finally ministers will give their best and highest thoughts.
+The congregations will finally get tired of hearing about the patriarchs
+and saints, the miracles and wonders, and will insist upon knowing
+something about the men and women of our day, and the accomplishments
+and discoveries of our time. They will finally insist upon knowing how
+to escape the evils of this world instead of the next. They will ask
+light upon the enigmas of this life. They will wish to know what we
+shall do with our criminals instead of what God will do with his--how
+we shall do away with beggary and want--with crime and misery--with
+prostitution, disease and famine,--with tyranny in all its cruel
+forms--with prisons and scaffolds, and how we shall reward the honest
+workers, and fill the world with happy homes! These are the problems
+for the pulpits and congregations of an enlightened future. If Science
+cannot finally answer these questions, it is a vain and worthless thing.
+
+The clergy, however, will continue to answer them in the old way, until
+their congregations are good enough to set them free. They will still
+talk about believing in the Lord Jesus Christ, as though that were the
+only remedy for all human ills. They will still teach that retrogression
+is the only path that leads to light; that we must go back, that faith
+is the only sure guide, and that reason is a delusive glare, lighting
+only the road to eternal pain.
+
+Until the clergy are free they cannot be intellectually honest. We can
+never tell what they really believe until they know that they can safely
+speak. They console themselves now by a secret resolution to be as
+liberal as they dare, with the hope that they can finally educate
+their congregations to the point of allowing them to think a little for
+themselves. They hardly know what they ought to do. The best part of
+their lives has been wasted in studying subjects of no possible value.
+Most of them are married, have families, and know but one way of making
+their living. Some of them say that if they do not preach these foolish
+dogmas, others will, and that they may through fear, after all, restrain
+mankind. Besides, they hate publicly to admit that they are mistaken,
+that the whole thing is a delusion, that the "scheme of salvation" is
+absurd, and that the Bible is no better than some other books, and worse
+than most.
+
+You can hardly expect a bishop to leave his palace, or the pope to
+vacate the Vatican. As long as people want popes, plenty of hypocrites
+will be found to take the place. And as long as labor fatigues, there
+will be found a good many men willing to preach once a week, if other
+folks will work and give them bread. In other words, while the demand
+lasts, the supply will never fail.
+
+If the people were a little more ignorant, astrology would flourish--if
+a little more enlightened, religion would perish!
+
+II. FREE SCHOOLS.
+
+It is also my desire to free the schools. When a professor in a college
+finds a fact, he should make it known, even if it is inconsistent with
+something Moses said. Public opinion must not compel the professor to
+hide a fact, and, "like the base Indian, throw the pearl away." With the
+single exception of Cornell, there is not a college in the United
+States where truth has ever been a welcome guest. The moment one of the
+teachers denies the inspiration of the Bible, he is discharged. If he
+discovers a fact inconsistent with that book, so much the worse for the
+fact, and especially for the discoverer of the fact. He must not corrupt
+the minds of his pupils with demonstrations. He must beware of
+every truth that cannot, in some way be made to harmonize with the
+superstitions of the Jews. Science has nothing in common with religion.
+Facts and miracles never did, and never will agree. They are not in the
+least related. They are deadly foes. What has religion to do with
+facts? Nothing. Can there be Methodist mathematics, Catholic astronomy,
+Presbyterian geology, Baptist biology, or Episcopal botany? Why, then,
+should a sectarian college exist? Only that which somebody knows should
+be taught in our schools. We should not collect taxes to pay people for
+guessing. The common school is the bread of life for the people, and it
+should not be touched by the withering hand of superstition.
+
+Our country will never be filled with great institutions of learning
+until there is an absolute divorce between Church and School. As long
+as the mutilated records of a barbarous people are placed by priest and
+professor above the reason of mankind, we shall reap but little benefit
+from church or school.
+
+Instead of dismissing professors for finding something out, let us
+rather discharge those who do not. Let each teacher understand that
+investigation is not dangerous for him; that his bread is safe, no
+matter how much truth he may discover, and that his salary will not be
+reduced, simply because he finds that the ancient Jews did not know the
+entire history of the world.
+
+Besides, it is not fair to make the Catholic support a Protestant
+school, nor is it just to collect taxes from infidels and atheists to
+support schools in which any system of religion is taught.
+
+The sciences are not sectarian. People do not persecute each other on
+account of disagreements in mathematics. Families are not divided about
+botany, and astronomy does not even tend to make a man hate his father
+and mother. It is what people do not know, that they persecute each
+other about. Science will bring, not a sword, but peace.
+
+Just as long as religion has control of the schools, science will be an
+outcast. Let us free our institutions of learning. Let us dedicate them
+to the science of eternal truth. Let us tell every teacher to ascertain
+all the facts he can--to give us light, to follow Nature, no matter
+where she leads; to be infinitely true to himself and us; to feel that
+he is without a chain, except the obligation to be honest; that he is
+bound by no books, by no creed, neither by the sayings of the dead nor
+of the living; that he is asked to look with his own eyes, to reason for
+himself without fear, to investigate in every possible direction, and to
+bring us the fruit of all his work.
+
+At present, a good many men engaged in scientific pursuits, and who
+have signally failed in gaining recognition among their fellows, are
+endeavoring to make reputations among the churches by delivering weak
+and vapid lectures upon the "harmony of Genesis and Geology." Like all
+hypocrites, these men overstate the case to such a degree, and so
+turn and pervert facts and words that they succeed only in gaining the
+applause of other hypocrites like themselves. Among the great scientists
+they are regarded as generals regard sutlers who trade with both armies.
+
+Surely the time must come when the wealth of the world will not be
+wasted in the propagation of ignorant creeds and miraculous mistakes.
+The time must come when churches and cathedrals will be dedicated to the
+use of man; when minister and priest will deem the discoveries of the
+living of more importance than the errors of the dead; when the truths
+of Nature will outrank the "sacred" falsehoods of the past, and when a
+single fact will outweigh all the miracles of Holy Writ.
+
+Who can over estimate the progress of the world if all the money
+wasted in superstition could be used to enlighten, elevate and civilize
+mankind?
+
+When every church becomes a school, every cathedral a university, every
+clergyman a teacher, and all their hearers brave and honest
+thinkers, then, and not until then, will the dream of poet, patriot,
+philanthropist and philosopher, become a real and blessed truth.
+
+III. THE POLITICIANS.
+
+I would like also to liberate the politician. At present, the successful
+office-seeker is a good deal like the centre of the earth; he weighs
+nothing himself, but draws everything else to him. There are so many
+societies, so many churches, so many isms, that it is almost impossible
+for an independent man to succeed in a political career. Candidates are
+forced to pretend that they are Catholics with Protestant proclivities,
+or Christians with liberal tendencies, or temperance men who now and
+then take a glass of wine, or, that although not members of any church
+their wives are, and that they subscribe liberally to all. The result of
+all this is that we reward hypocrisy and elect men entirely destitute of
+real principle; and this will never change until the people become grand
+enough to allow each other to do their own thinking, our Government
+should be entirely and purely secular. The religious views of a
+candidate should be kept entirely out of sight. He should not be
+compelled to give his opinion as to the inspiration of the Bible, the
+propriety of infant baptism, or the immaculate conception. All these
+things are private and personal. He should be allowed to settle such
+things for himself, and should he decide contrary to the law and will of
+God, let him settle the matter with God. The people ought to be wise
+enough to select as their officers men who know something of political
+affairs, who comprehend the present greatness, and clearly perceive the
+future grandeur of our country. If we were in a storm at sea, with deck
+wave-washed and masts strained and bent with storm, and it was necessary
+to reef the top sail, we certainly would not ask the brave sailor who
+volunteered to go aloft, what his opinion was on the five points of
+Calvinism. Our Government has nothing to do with religion. It is neither
+Christian nor pagan; it is secular. But as long as the people persist in
+voting for or against men on account of their religious views, just so
+long will hypocrisy hold place and power. Just so long will the
+candidates crawl in the dust--hide their opinions, flatter those with
+whom they differ, pretend to agree with those whom they despise; and
+just so long will honest men be trampled under foot. Churches are
+becoming political organizations. Nearly every Catholic is a Democrat;
+nearly every Methodist in the North is a Republican.
+
+It probably will not be long until the churches will divide as sharply
+upon political, as upon theological questions; and when that day comes,
+if there are not liberals enough to hold the balance of power, this
+Government will be destroyed. The liberty of man is not safe in the
+hands of any church. Wherever the Bible and sword are in partnership,
+man is a slave.
+
+All laws for the purpose of making man worship God, are born of the same
+spirit that kindled the fires of the _auto da fe_, and lovingly built
+the dungeons of the Inquisition. All laws defining and punishing
+blasphemy--making it a crime to give your honest ideas about the Bible,
+or to laugh at the ignorance of the ancient Jews, or to enjoy yourself
+on the Sabbath, or to give your opinion of Jehovah, were passed by
+impudent bigots, and should be at once repealed by honest men. An
+infinite God ought to be able to protect himself, without going in
+partnership with State Legislatures. Certainly he ought not so to act
+that laws become necessary to keep him from being laughed at. No one
+thinks of protecting Shakespeare from ridicule, by the threat of fine
+and imprisonment. It strikes me that God might write a book that would
+not necessarily excite the laughter of his children. In fact, I think
+it would be safe to say that a real God could produce a work that would
+excite the admiration of mankind. Surely politicians could be better
+employed than in passing laws to protect the literary reputation of the
+Jewish God.
+
+IV. MAN AND WOMAN
+
+Let us forget that we are Baptists, Methodists,
+
+Catholics, Presbyterians, or Freethinkers, and remember only that we are
+men and women. After all, man and woman are the highest possible titles.
+All other names belittle us, and show that we have, to a certain extent,
+given up our individuality, and have consented to wear the collar of
+authority--that we are followers. Throwing away these names, let us
+examine these questions not as partisans, but as human beings with hopes
+and fears in common.
+
+We know that our opinions depend, to a great degree, upon our
+surroundings--upon race, country, and education. We are all the result
+of numberless conditions, and inherit vices and virtues, truths and
+prejudices. If we had been born in England, surrounded by wealth and
+clothed with power, most of us would have been Episcopalians, and
+believed in church and state. We should have insisted that the people
+needed a religion, and that not having intellect enough to provide one
+for themselves, it was our duty to make one for them, and then compel
+them to support it. We should have believed it indecent to officiate in
+a pulpit without wearing a gown, and that prayers should be read from
+a book. Had we belonged to the lower classes, we might have been
+dissenters and protested against the mummeries of the High Church.
+Had we been born in Turkey, most of us would have been Mohammedans and
+believed in the inspiration of the Koran. We should have believed that
+Mohammed actually visited heaven and became acquainted with an angel by
+the name of Gabriel, who was so broad between the eyes that it required
+three hundred days for a very smart camel to travel the distance. If
+some man had denied this story we should probably have denounced him as
+a dangerous person, one who was endeavoring to undermine the foundations
+of society, and to destroy all distinction between virtue and vice. We
+should have said to him, "What do you propose to give us in place
+of that angel? We cannot afford to give up an angel of that size for
+nothing." We would have insisted that the best and wisest men
+believed the Koran. We would have quoted from the works and letters of
+philosophers, generals and sultans, to show that the Koran was the best
+of books, and that Turkey was indebted to that book and to that alone
+for its greatness and prosperity. We would have asked that man whether
+he knew more than all the great minds of his country, whether he was so
+much wiser than his fathers? We would have pointed out to him the fact
+that thousands had been consoled in the hour of death by passages from
+the Koran; that they had died with glazed eyes brightened by visions of
+the heavenly harem, and gladly left this world of grief and tears.
+We would have regarded Christians as the vilest of men, and on all
+occasions would have repeated "There is but one God, and Mohammed is his
+prophet!"
+
+So, if we had been born in India, we should in all probability have
+believed in the religion of that country. We should have regarded the
+old records as true and sacred, and looked upon a wandering priest as
+better than the men from whom he begged, and by whose labor he lived.
+We should have believed in a god with three heads instead of three gods
+with one head, as we do now.
+
+Now and then some one says that the religion of his father and mother
+is good enough for him, and wonders why anybody should desire a better.
+Surely we are not bound to follow our parents in religion any more than
+in politics, science or art. China has been petrified by the worship
+of ancestors. If our parents had been satisfied with the religion of
+theirs, we would be still less advanced than we are. If we are, in any
+way, bound by the belief of our fathers, the doctrine will hold good
+back to the first people who had a religion; and if this doctrine is
+true, we ought now to be believers in that first religion. In other
+words, we would all be barbarians. You cannot show real respect to your
+parents by perpetuating their errors. Good fathers and mothers wish
+their children to advance, to overcome obstacles which baffled them, and
+to correct the errors of their education. If you wish to reflect credit
+upon your parents, accomplish more than they did, solve problems that
+they could not understand, and build better than they knew. To sacrifice
+your manhood upon the grave of your father is an honor to neither. Why
+should a son who has examined a subject, throw away his reason and adopt
+the views of his mother? Is not such a course dishonorable to both?
+
+We must remember that this "ancestor" argument is as old at least as
+the second generation of men, that it has served no purpose except to
+enslave mankind, and results mostly from the fact that acquiescence
+is easier than investigation. This argument pushed to its logical
+conclusion, would prevent the advance of all people whose parents were
+not Freethinkers.
+
+It is hard for many people to give up the religion in which they were
+born; to admit that their fathers were utterly mistaken, and that the
+sacred records of their country are but collections of myths and fables.
+
+But when we look for a moment at the world, we find that each nation has
+its "sacred records"--its religion, and its ideas of worship. Certainly
+all cannot be right; and as it would require a life time to investigate
+the claims of these various systems, it is hardly fair to damn a man
+forever, simply because he happens to believe the wrong one. All these
+religions were produced by barbarians. Civilized nations have contented
+themselves with changing the religions of their barbaric ancestors, but
+they have made none. Nearly all these religions are intensely selfish.
+Each one was made by some contemptible little nation that regarded
+itself as of almost infinite importance, and looked upon the other
+nations as beneath the notice of their god. In all these countries it
+was a crime to deny the sacred records, to laugh at the priests, to
+speak disrespectfully of the gods, to fail to divide your substance
+with the lazy hypocrites who managed your affairs in the next world upon
+condition that you would support them in this. In the olden time
+these theological people who quartered themselves upon the honest
+and industrious, were called soothsayers, seers, charmers, prophets,
+enchanters, sorcerers, wizards, astrologers, and impostors, but now,
+they are known as clergymen.
+
+We are no exception to the general rule, and consequently have our
+sacred books as well as the rest. Of course, it is claimed by many of
+our people that our books are the only true ones, the only ones that the
+real God ever wrote, or had anything whatever to do with. They insist
+that all other sacred books were written by hypocrites and impostors;
+that the Jews were the only people that God ever had any personal
+intercourse with, and that all other prophets and seers were inspired
+only by impudence and mendacity. True, it seems somewhat strange that
+God should have chosen a barbarous and unknown people who had little or
+nothing to do with the other nations of the earth, as his messengers to
+the rest of mankind.
+
+It is not easy to account for an infinite God making people so low in
+the scale of intellect as to require a revelation. Neither is it easy to
+perceive why, if a revelation was necessary for all, it was made only
+to a few. Of course, I know that it is extremely wicked to suggest these
+thoughts, and that ignorance is the only armor that can effectually
+protect you from the wrath of God. I am aware that investigators with
+all their genius, never find the road to heaven; that those who look
+where they are going are sure to miss it, and that only those who
+voluntarily put out their eyes and implicitly depend upon blindness can
+surely keep the narrow path.
+
+Whoever reads our sacred book is compelled to believe it or suffer
+forever the torments of the lost. We are told that we have the privilege
+of examining it for ourselves; but this privilege is only extended to
+us on the condition that we believe it whether it appears reasonable or
+not. We may disagree with others as much as we please upon the meaning
+of all passages in the Bible, but we must not deny the truth of a single
+word. We must believe that the book is inspired. If we obey its every
+precept without believing in its inspiration we will be damned just as
+certainly as though we disobeyed its every word. We have no right to
+weigh it in the scales of reason--to test it by the laws of nature, or
+the facts of observation and experience. To do this, we are told, is to
+put ourselves above the word of God, and sit in judgment on the works of
+our creator.
+
+For my part, I cannot admit that belief is a voluntary thing. It seems
+to me that evidence, even in spite of ourselves, will have its weight,
+and that whatever our wish may be, we are compelled to stand with
+fairness by the scales, and give the exact result. It will not do to say
+that we reject the Bible because we are wicked. Our wickedness must be
+ascertained not from our belief but from our acts.
+
+I am told by the clergy that I ought not to attack the Bible; that I am
+leading thousands to perdition and rendering certain the damnation of my
+own soul. They have had the kindness to advise me that, if my object is
+to make converts, I am pursuing the wrong course. They tell me to use
+gentler expressions, and more cunning words. Do they really wish me
+to make more converts? If their advice is honest, they are traitors to
+their trust. If their advice is not honest, then they are unfair with
+me. Certainly they should wish me to pursue the course that will make
+the fewest converts, and yet they pretend to tell me how my influence
+could be increased. It may be, that upon this principle John Bright
+advises America to adopt free trade, so that our country can become a
+successful rival of Great Britain. Sometimes I think that even ministers
+are not entirely candid.
+
+Notwithstanding the advice of the clergy, I have concluded to pursue my
+own course, to tell my honest thoughts, and to have my freedom in this
+world whatever my fate may be in the next.
+
+The real oppressor, enslaver and corrupter of the people is the Bible.
+That book is the chain that binds, the dungeon that holds the clergy.
+That book spreads the pall of superstition over the colleges and
+schools. That book puts out the eyes of science, and makes honest
+investigation a crime. That book unmans the politician and degrades the
+people. That book fills the world with bigotry, hypocrisy and fear.
+It plays the same part in our country that has been played by "sacred
+records" in all the nations of the world.
+
+A little while ago I saw one of the Bibles of the Middle Ages. It was
+about two feet in length, and one and a half in width. It had immense
+oaken covers, with hasps, and clasps, and hinges large enough almost
+for the doors of a penitentiary. It was covered with pictures of winged
+angels and aureoled saints. In my imagination I saw this book carried
+to the cathedral altar in solemn pomp--heard the chant of robed and
+kneeling priests, felt the strange tremor of the organ's peal; saw the
+colored light streaming through windows stained and touched by blood
+and flame--the swinging censer with its perfumed incense rising to the
+mighty roof, dim with height and rich with legend carved in stone, while
+on the walls was hung, written in light, and shade, and all the colors
+that can tell of joy and tears, the pictured history of the martyred
+Christ. The people fell upon their knees. The book was opened, and the
+priest read the messages from God to man. To the multitude, the book
+itself was evidence enough that it was not the work of human hands. How
+could those little marks and lines and dots contain, like tombs, the
+thoughts of men, and how could they, touched by a ray of light from
+human eyes, give up their dead? How could these characters span the vast
+chasm dividing the present from the past, and make it possible for the
+living still to hear the voices of the dead?
+
+V. THE PENTATEUCH
+
+The first five books in our Bible are known as the Pentateuch. For a
+long time it was supposed that Moses was the author, and among the
+ignorant the supposition still prevails. As a matter of fact, it seems
+to be well settled that Moses had nothing to do with these books, and
+that they were not written until he had been dust and ashes for hundreds
+of years. But, as all the churches still insist that he was the author,
+that he wrote even an account of his own death and burial, let us speak
+of him as though these books were in fact written by him. As the
+Christians maintain that God was the real author, it makes but little
+difference whom he employed as his pen.
+
+Nearly all authors of sacred books have given an account of the creation
+of the universe, the origin of matter, and the destiny of the human
+race, all have pointed out the obligation that man is under to his
+creator for having placed him upon the earth, and allowed him to live
+and suffer, and have taught that nothing short of the most abject
+worship could possibly compensate God for his trouble and labor suffered
+and done for the good of man. They have nearly all insisted that we
+should thank God for all that is good in life; but they have not all
+informed us as to whom we should hold responsible for the evils we
+endure.
+
+Moses differed from most of the makers of sacred books by his failure
+to say anything of a future life, by failing to promise heaven, and to
+threaten hell. Upon the subject of a future state, there is not one
+word in the Pentateuch. Probably at that early day God did not deem
+it important to make a revelation as to the eternal destiny of man.
+He seems to have thought that he could control the Jews, at least, by
+rewards and punishments in this world, and so he kept the frightful
+realities of eternal joy and torment a profound secret from the people
+of his choice. He thought it far more important to tell the Jews their
+origin than to enlighten them as to their destiny.
+
+We must remember that every tribe and nation has some way in which, the
+more striking phenomena of nature are accounted for. These accounts
+are handed down by tradition, changed by numberless narrators as
+intelligence increases, or to account for newly discovered facts, or for
+the purpose of satisfying the appetite for the marvelous.
+
+The way in which a tribe or nation accounts for day and night, the
+change of seasons, the fall of snow and rain, the flight of birds,
+the origin of the rainbow, the peculiarities of animals, the dreams
+of sleep, the visions of the insane, the existence of earthquakes,
+volcanoes, storms, lightning and the thousand things that attract the
+attention and excite the wonder, fear or admiration of mankind, may be
+called the philosophy of that tribe or nation. And as all phenomena are,
+by savage and barbaric man accounted for as the action of intelligent
+beings for the accomplishment of certain objects, and as these beings
+were supposed to have the power to assist or injure man, certain things
+were supposed necessary for man to do in order to gain the assistance,
+and avoid the anger of these gods. Out of this belief grew certain
+ceremonies, and these ceremonies united with the belief, formed
+religion; and consequently every religion has for its foundation a
+misconception of the cause of phenomena.
+
+All worship is necessarily based upon the belief that some being exists
+who can, if he will, change the natural order of events. The savage
+prays to a stone that he calls a god, while the Christian prays to a god
+that he calls a spirit, and the prayers of both are equally useful. The
+savage and the Christian put behind the Universe an intelligent cause,
+and this cause whether represented by one god or many, has been, in all
+ages, the object of all worship. To carry a fetich, to utter a prayer,
+to count beads, to abstain from food, to sacrifice a lamb, a child or an
+enemy, are simply different ways by which the accomplishment of the same
+object is sought, and are all the offspring of the same error.
+
+Many systems of religion must have existed many ages before the art of
+writing was discovered, and must have passed through many changes before
+the stories, miracles, histories, prophecies and mistakes became fixed
+and petrified in written words. After that, change was possible only by
+giving new meanings to old words, a process rendered necessary by the
+continual acquisition of facts somewhat inconsistent with a literal
+interpretation of the "sacred records." In this way an honest faith
+often prolongs its life by dishonest methods; and in this way the
+Christians of to-day are trying to harmonize the Mosaic account of
+creation with the theories and discoveries of modern science.
+
+Admitting that Moses was the author of the Pentateuch, or that he gave
+to the Jews a religion, the question arises as to where he obtained
+his information. We are told by the theologians that he received his
+knowledge from God, and that every word he wrote was and is the exact
+truth. It is admitted at the same time that he was an adopted son of
+Pharaoh's daughter, and enjoyed the rank and privilege of a prince.
+Under such circumstances, he must have been well acquainted with the
+literature, philosophy and religion of the Egyptians, and must have
+known what they believed and taught as to the creation of the world.
+
+Now, if the account of the origin of this earth as given by Moses is
+substantially like that given by the Egyptians, then we must conclude
+that he learned it from them. Should we imagine that he was divinely
+inspired because he gave to the Jews what the Egyptians had given him?
+
+The Egyptian priests taught _first_, that a god created the original
+matter, leaving it in a state of chaos; _second_, that a god moulded it
+into form; _third_, that the breath of a god moved upon the face of
+the deep; _fourth_, that a god created simply by saying "Let it be;"
+_fifth_, that a god created light before the sun existed.
+
+Nothing can be clearer than that Moses received from the Egyptians the
+principal parts of his narrative, making such changes and additions as
+were necessary to satisfy the peculiar superstitions of his own people.
+
+If some man at the present day should assert that he had received from
+God the theories of evolution, the survival of the fittest, and the
+law of heredity, and we should afterwards find that he was not only an
+Englishman, but had lived in the family of Charles Darwin, we certainly
+would account for his having these theories in a natural way, So, if
+Darwin himself should pretend that he was inspired, and had obtained
+his peculiar theories from God, we should probably reply that his
+grandfather suggested the same ideas, and that Lamarck published
+substantially the same theories the same year that Mr. Darwin was born.
+
+Now, if we have sufficient courage, we will, by the same course of
+reasoning, account for the story of creation found in the Bible. We
+will say that it contains the belief of Moses, and that he received his
+information from the Egyptians, and not from God. If we take the account
+as the absolute truth and use it for the purpose of determining the
+value of modern thought, scientific advancement becomes impossible. And
+even if the account of the creation as given by Moses should turn out
+to be true, and should be so admitted by all the scientific world, the
+claim that he was inspired would still be without the least particle
+of proof. We would be forced to admit that he knew more than we had
+supposed. It certainly is no proof that a man is inspired simply because
+he is right.
+
+No one pretends that Shakespeare was inspired, and yet all the writers
+of the books of the Old Testament put together, could not have produced
+Hamlet.
+
+Why should we, looking upon some rough and awkward thing, or god in
+stone, say that it must have been produced by some inspired sculptor,
+and with the same breath pronounce the _Venus de Milo_ to be the work
+of man? Why should we, looking at some ancient daub of angel, saint or
+virgin, say its painter must have been assisted by a god?
+
+Let us account for all we see by the facts we know. If there are things
+for which we cannot account, let us wait for light. To account for
+anything by supernatural agencies is, in fact to say that we do not
+know. Theology is not what we know about God, but what we do not know
+about Nature. In order to increase our respect for the Bible, it became
+necessary for the priests to exalt and extol that book, and at the same
+time to decry and belittle the reasoning powers of man. The whole
+power of the pulpit has been used for hundreds of years to destroy the
+confidence of man in himself--to induce him to distrust his own powers
+of thought, to believe that he was wholly unable to decide any question
+for himself, and that all human virtue consists in faith and obedience.
+The church has said, "Believe, and obey! If you reason, you will become
+an unbeliever, and unbelievers will be lost. If you disobey, you will
+do so through vain pride and curiosity, and will, like Adam and Eve, be
+thrust from Paradise forever!"
+
+For my part, I care nothing for what the church says, except in so far
+as it accords with my reason; and the Bible is nothing to me, only in so
+far as it agrees with what I think or know.
+
+All books should be examined in the same spirit, and truth should be
+welcomed and falsehood exposed, no matter in what volume they may be
+found.
+
+Let us in this spirit examine the Pentateuch; and if anything appears
+unreasonable, contradictory or absurd, let us have the honesty and
+courage to admit it. Certainly no good can result either from deceiving
+ourselves or others. Many millions have implicitly believed this book,
+and have just as implicitly believed that polygamy was sanctioned by
+God. Millions have regarded this book as the foundation of all
+human progress, and at the same time looked upon slavery as a divine
+institution. Millions have declared this book to have been infinitely
+holy, and to prove that they were right, have imprisoned, robbed
+and burned their fellow-men. The inspiration of this book has been
+established by famine, sword and fire, by dungeon, chain and whip, by
+dagger and by rack, by force and fear and fraud, and generations have
+been frightened by threats of hell, and bribed with promises of heaven.
+
+Let us examine a portion of this book, not in the darkness of our fear,
+but in the light of reason.
+
+And first, let us examine the account given of the creation of this
+world, commenced, according to the Bible, on Monday morning about five
+thousand eight hundred and eighty-three years ago.
+
+VI. MONDAY.
+
+Moses commences his story by telling us that in the beginning God
+created the heaven and the earth.
+
+If this means anything, it means that God produced, caused to exist,
+called into being, the heaven and the earth. It will not do to say that
+he formed the heaven and the earth of previously existing matter. Moses
+conveys, and intended to convey the idea that the matter of which the
+heaven and the earth are composed, was created.
+
+It is impossible for me to conceive of something being created from
+nothing. Nothing, regarded in the light of a raw material, is a decided
+failure. I cannot conceive of matter apart from force. Neither is it
+possible to think of force disconnected with matter. You cannot imagine
+matter going back to absolute nothing. Neither can you imagine nothing
+being changed into something. You may be eternally damned if you do not
+say that you can conceive these things, but you cannot conceive them.
+
+Such is the constitution of the human mind that it cannot even think of
+a commencement or an end of matter, or force.
+
+If God created the universe, there was a time when he commenced to
+create. Back of that commencement there must have been an eternity. In
+that eternity what was this God doing? He certainly did not think.
+There was nothing to think about. He did not remember. Nothing had ever
+happened. What did he do? Can you imagine anything more absurd than an
+infinite intelligence in infinite nothing wasting an eternity?
+
+I do not pretend to tell how all these things really are; but I do
+insist that a statement that cannot possibly be comprehended by any
+human being, and that appears utterly impossible, repugnant to every
+fact of experience, and contrary to everything that we really know, must
+be rejected by every honest man.
+
+We can conceive of eternity, because we cannot conceive of a cessation
+of time. We can conceive of infinite space because we cannot conceive
+of so much matter that our imagination will not stand upon the farthest
+star, and see infinite space beyond. In other words, we cannot conceive
+of a cessation of time; therefore eternity is a necessity of the mind.
+Eternity sustains the same relation to time that space does to matter.
+
+In the time of Moses, it was perfectly safe for him to write an account
+of the creation of the world. He had simply to put in form the crude
+notions of the people. At that time, no other Jew could have written
+a better account. Upon that subject he felt at liberty to give his
+imagination full play. There was no one who could authoritatively
+contradict anything he might say. It was substantially the same story
+that had been imprinted in curious characters upon the clay records
+of Babylon, the gigantic monuments of Egypt, and the gloomy temples of
+India. In those days there was an almost infinite difference between
+the educated and ignorant. The people were controlled almost entirely
+by signs and wonders. By the lever of fear, priests moved the world. The
+sacred records were made and kept, and altered by them. The people could
+not read, and looked upon one who could, as almost a god. In our day it
+is hard to conceive of the influence of an educated class in a barbarous
+age. It was only necessary to produce the "sacred record," and ignorance
+fell upon its face. The people were taught that the record was inspired,
+and therefore true. They were not taught that it was true, and therefore
+inspired.
+
+After all, the real question is not whether the Bible is inspired, but
+whether it is true. If it is true, it does not need to be inspired. If
+it is true, it makes no difference whether it was written by a man or a
+god. The multiplication table is just as useful, just as true as though
+God had arranged the figures himself. If the Bible is really true,
+the claim of inspiration need not be urged; and if it is not true, its
+inspiration can hardly be established. As a matter of fact, the truth
+does not need to be inspired. Nothing needs inspiration except a
+falsehood or a mistake. Where truth ends, where probability stops,
+inspiration begins. A fact never went into partnership with a miracle.
+Truth does not need the assistance of miracle. A fact will fit every
+other fact in the Universe, because it is the product of all other
+facts. A lie will fit nothing except another lie made for the express
+purpose of fitting it. After a while the man gets tired of lying, and
+then the last lie will not fit the next fact, and then there is an
+opportunity to use a miracle. Just at that point, it is necessary to
+have a little inspiration.
+
+It seems to me that reason is the highest attribute of man, and that if
+there can be any communication from God to man, it must be addressed
+to his reason. It does not seem possible that in order to understand a
+message from God it is absolutely essential to throw our reason away.
+How could God make known his will to any being destitute of reason? How
+can any man accept as a revelation from God that which is unreasonable
+to him? God cannot make a revelation to another man for me. He must make
+it to me, and until he convinces my reason that it is true, I cannot
+receive it.
+
+The statement that in the beginning God created the heaven and the
+earth, I cannot accept. It is contrary to my reason, and I cannot
+believe it. It appears reasonable to me that force has existed from
+eternity. Force cannot, as it appears to me, exist apart from matter.
+Force, in its nature, is forever active, and without matter it could
+not act; and so I think matter must have existed forever. To conceive
+of matter without force, or of force without matter, or of a time when
+neither existed, or of a being who existed for an eternity without
+either, and who out of nothing created both, is to me utterly
+impossible. I may be damned on this account, but I cannot help it. In my
+judgment, Moses was mistaken.
+
+It will not do to say that Moses merely intended to tell what God did,
+in making the heavens and the earth out of matter then in existence.
+He distinctly states that in the _beginning_ God created them. If this
+account is true, we must believe that God, existing in infinite space
+surrounded by eternal nothing, naught and void, created, produced,
+called into being, willed into existence this universe of countless
+stars.
+
+The next thing we are told by this inspired gentleman is, that God
+created light, and proceeded to divide it from the darkness.
+
+Certainly, the person who wrote this believed that darkness was a thing,
+an entity, a material that could get mixed and tangled up with light,
+and that these entities, light and darkness, had to be separated. In his
+imagination he probably saw God throwing pieces and chunks of darkness
+on one side, and rays and beams of light on the other. It is hard for a
+man who has been born but once to understand these things. For my part,
+I cannot understand how light can be separated from darkness. I had
+always supposed that darkness was simply the absence of light, and that
+under no circumstances could it be necessary to take the darkness away
+from the light. It is certain, however, that Moses believed darkness to
+be a form of matter, because I find that in another place he speaks of
+a darkness that could be felt. They used to have on exhibition at Rome a
+bottle of the darkness that overspread Egypt.
+
+You cannot divide light from darkness any more than you can divide heat
+from cold. Cold is an absence of heat, and darkness is an absence of
+light. I suppose that we have no conception of absolute cold. We know
+only degrees of heat. Twenty degrees below zero is just twenty degrees
+warmer than forty degrees below zero. Neither cold nor darkness are
+entities, and these words express simply either the absolute or partial
+absence of heat or light. I cannot conceive how light can be divided
+from darkness, but I can conceive how a barbarian several thousand years
+ago, writing upon a subject about which he knew nothing, could make a
+mistake. The creator of light could not have written in this way. If
+such a being exists, he must have known the nature of that "mode of
+motion" that paints the earth on every eye, and clothes in garments
+seven-hued this universe of worlds.
+
+VII. TUESDAY.
+
+We are next informed by Moses that "God of the waters, and let it divide
+the waters from the waters;" and that "God made the firmament, and
+divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters
+which were above the firmament." What did the writer mean by the word
+firmament? Theologians now tell us that he meant an "expanse." This will
+not do. How could an expanse divide the waters from the waters, so that
+the waters above the expanse would not fall into and mingle with the
+waters below the expanse? The truth is that Moses regarded the firmament
+as a solid affair. It was where God lived, and where water was kept. It
+was for this reason that they used to pray for rain. They supposed that
+some angel could with a lever raise a gate and let out the quantity of
+moisture desired. It was with the water from this firmament that the
+world was drowned when the windows of heaven were opened. It was in this
+said Let there be a firmament in the midst firmament that the sons of
+God lived--the sons who "saw the daughters of men that they were
+fair and took them wives of all which they chose." The issue of such
+marriages were giants, and "the same became mighty men which were of
+old, men of renown."
+
+Nothing is clearer than that Moses regarded the firmament as a vast
+material division that separated the waters of the world, and upon
+whose floor God lived, surrounded by his sons. In no other way could he
+account for rain. Where did the water come from? He knew nothing about
+the laws of evaporation. He did not know that the sun wooed with amorous
+kisses the waves of the sea, and that they, clad in glorified mist
+rising to meet their lover, were, by disappointment, changed to tears
+and fell as rain.
+
+The idea that the firmament was the abode of the Deity must have been in
+the mind of Moses when he related the dream of Jacob. "And he dreamed,
+and behold, a ladder set upon the earth and the top of it reached to
+heaven; and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it; and
+behold the Lord stood above it and said, I am the Lord God."
+
+So, when the people were building the tower of Babel "the Lord came down
+to see the city, and the tower which the children of men builded. And
+the Lord said, Behold the people is one, and they have all one language:
+and this they begin to do; and nothing will be restrained from them
+which they imagined to do. Go to, let us go down and confound their
+language that they may not understand one another's speech."
+
+The man who wrote that absurd account must have believed that God lived
+above the earth, in the firmament. The same idea was in the mind of the
+Psalmist when he said that God "bowed the heavens and came down."
+
+Of course, God could easily remove any person bodily to heaven, as it
+was but a little way above the earth. "Enoch walked with God, and he was
+not, for God took him." The accounts in the Bible of the ascension of
+Elijah, Christ and St. Paul were born of the belief that the firmament
+was the dwelling-place of God. It probably never occurred to these
+writers that if the firmament was seven or eight miles away, Enoch and
+the rest would have been frozen perfectly stiff long before the journey
+could have been completed. Possibly Elijah might have made the voyage,
+as he was carried to heaven in a chariot of fire "by a whirlwind."
+
+The truth is, that Moses was mistaken, and upon that mistake the
+Christians located their heaven and their hell. The telescope destroyed
+the firmament, did away with the heaven of the New Testament, rendered
+the ascension of our Lord and the assumption of his Mother infinitely
+absurd, crumbled to chaos the gates and palaces of the New Jerusalem,
+and in their places gave to man a wilderness of worlds.
+
+VIII. WEDNESDAY.
+
+We are next informed by the historian of creation, that after God had
+finished making the firmament and had succeeded in dividing the waters
+by means of an "expanse," he proceeded "to gather the waters on the
+earth together in seas, so that the dry land might appear."
+
+Certainly the writer of this did not have any conception of the real
+form of the earth. He could not have known anything of the attraction of
+gravitation. He must have regarded the earth as flat and supposed that
+it required considerable force and power to induce the water to leave
+the mountains and collect in the valleys. Just as soon as the water was
+forced to run down hill, the dry land appeared, and the grass began to
+grow, and the mantles of green were thrown over the shoulders of the
+hills, and the trees laughed into bud and blossom, and the branches were
+laden with fruit. And all this happened before a ray had left the quiver
+of the sun, before a glittering beam had thrilled the bosom of a flower,
+and before the Dawn with trembling hands had drawn aside the curtains of
+the East and welcomed to her arms the eager god of Day.
+
+It does not seem to me that grass and trees could grow and ripen into
+seed and fruit without the sun. According to the account, this all
+happened on the third day. Now, if, as the Christians say, Moses did not
+mean by the word day a period of twenty-four hours, but an immense and
+almost measureless space of time, and as God did not, according to this
+view make any animals until the fifth day, that is, not for millions of
+years after he made the grass and trees, for what purpose did he cause
+the trees to bear fruit?
+
+Moses says that God said on the third day, "Let the earth bring forth
+grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after
+his kind, whose seed is in itself upon the earth; and it was so. And the
+earth brought forth grass and herb yielding seed after his kind, and the
+tree yielding fruit whose seed was in itself after his kind; and God saw
+that it was good, and the evening and the morning were the third day."
+
+There was nothing to eat this fruit; not an insect with painted wings
+sought the honey of the flowers; not a single living, breathing thing
+upon the earth. Plenty of grass, a great variety of herbs, an abundance
+of fruit, but not a mouth in all the world. If Moses is right, this
+state of things lasted only two days; but if the modern theologians are
+correct, it continued for millions of ages.
+
+"It is now well known that the organic history of the earth can be
+properly divided into five epochs--the Primordial, Primary, Secondary,
+Tertiary, and Quaternary. Each of these epochs is characterized by
+animal and vegetable life peculiar to itself. In the First will be found
+Algae and Skulless Vertebrates, in the Second, Ferns and Fishes, in the
+Third, Pine Forests and Reptiles, in the Fourth, Foliaceous Forests and
+Mammals, and in the Fifth, Man."
+
+How much more reasonable this is than the idea that the earth was
+covered with grass, and herbs, and trees loaded with fruit for millions
+of years before an animal existed.
+
+There is, in Nature, an even balance forever kept between the total
+amounts of animal and vegetable life. "In her wonderful economy she must
+form and bountifully nourish her vegetable progeny--twin-brother life to
+her, with that of animals. The perfect balance between plant existences
+and animal existences must always be maintained, while matter courses
+through the eternal circle, becoming each in turn. If an animal be
+resolved into its ultimate constituents in a period according to the
+surrounding circumstances, say, of four hours, of four months, of four
+years, or even of four thousand years,--for it is impossible to deny
+that there may be instances of all these periods during which the
+process has continued--those elements which assume the gaseous form
+mingle at once with the atmosphere and are taken up from it without
+delay by the ever-open mouths of vegetable life. By a thousand pores
+in every leaf the carbonic acid which renders the atmosphere unfit for
+animal life is absorbed, the carbon being separated, and assimilated to
+form the vegetable fibre, which, as wood, makes and furnishes our houses
+and ships, is burned for our warmth, or is stored up under pressure for
+coal. All this carbon has played its part, and many parts in its time,
+as animal existences from monad up to man. Our mahogany of to-day has
+been many negroes in its turn, and before the African existed, was
+integral portions of many a generation of extinct species."
+
+It seems reasonable to suppose that certain kinds of vegetation-and
+certain kinds of animals should exist together, and that as the
+character of the vegetation changed, a corresponding change would take
+place in the animal world. It may be that I am led to these conclusions
+by "total depravity," or that I lack the necessary humility of spirit to
+satisfactorily harmonize Haeckel and Moses; or that I am carried away by
+pride, blinded by reason, given over to hardness of heart that I might
+be damned, but I never can believe that the earth was covered with
+leaves, and buds, and flowers, and fruits before the sun with glittering
+spear had driven back the hosts of Night.
+
+IX. THURSDAY.
+
+After the world was covered with vegetation, it occurred to Moses that
+it was about time to make a sun and moon; and so we are told that on the
+fourth day God said, "Let there be light in the firmament of the heaven
+to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs and for
+seasons, and for days and years; and let them be for lights in the
+firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth; and it was so. And
+God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the
+lesser light to rule the night; he made the stars also."
+
+Can we believe that the inspired writer had any idea of the size of the
+sun? Draw a circle five inches in diameter, and by its side thrust a pin
+through the paper. The hole made by the pin will sustain about the same
+relation to the circle that the earth does to the sun. Did he know that
+the sun was eight hundred and sixty thousand miles in diameter; that it
+was enveloped in an ocean of fire thousands of miles in depth, hotter
+even than the Christian's hell, over which sweep tempests of flame
+moving at the rate of one hundred miles a second, compared with which
+the wildest storm that ever wrecked the forests of this world was but a
+calm? Did he know that the sun every moment of time throws out as much
+heat as could be generated by the combustion of millions upon millions
+of tons of coal? Did he know that the volume of the earth is less than
+one-millionth of that of the sun? Did he know of the one hundred and
+four planets belonging to our solar system, all children of the sun? Did
+he know of Jupiter eighty-five thousand miles in diameter, hundreds
+of times as large as our earth, turning on his axis at the rate of
+twenty-five thousand miles an hour accompanied by four moons, making the
+tour of his orbit in fifty years, a distance of three thousand million
+miles? Did he know anything about Saturn, his rings and his eight moons?
+Did he have the faintest idea that all these planets were once a part of
+the sun; that the vast luminary was once thousands of millions of miles
+in diameter; that Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars were all
+born before our earth, and that by no possibility could this world have
+existed three days, nor three periods, nor three "good whiles" before
+its source, the sun?
+
+Moses supposed the sun to be about three or four feet in diameter and
+the moon about half that size. Compared with the earth they were but
+simple specks. This idea seems to have been shared by all the "inspired"
+men. We find in the book of Joshua that the sun stood still, and the
+moon stayed until the people had avenged themselves upon their enemies.
+"So the sun stood still in the midst of heaven, and hasted not to go
+down about a whole day."
+
+We are told that the sacred writer wrote in common speech as we do
+when we talk about the rising and setting of the sun, and that all he
+intended to say was that the earth ceased to turn on its axis "for about
+a whole day."
+
+My own opinion is that General Joshua knew no more about the motions of
+the earth than he did about mercy and justice. If he had known that the
+earth turned upon its axis at the rate of a thousand miles an hour, and
+swept in its course about the sun at the rate of sixty-eight thousand
+miles an hour, he would have doubled the hailstones, spoken of in the
+same chapter, that the Lord cast down from heaven, and allowed the sun
+and moon to rise and set in the usual way.
+
+It is impossible to conceive of a more absurd story than this about the
+stopping of the sun and moon, and yet nothing so excites the malice of
+the orthodox preacher as to call its truth in question. Some endeavor
+to account for the phenomenon by natural causes, while others attempt
+to show that God could, by the refraction of light have made the sun
+visible although actually shining on the opposite side of the earth. The
+last hypothesis has been seriously urged by ministers within the last
+few months. The Rev. Henry M. Morey of South Bend, Indiana, says "that
+the phenomenon was simply optical. The rotary motion of the earth was
+not disturbed, but the light of the sun was prolonged by the same laws
+of refraction and reflection by which the sun now appears to be above
+the horizon when it is really below. The medium through which the sun's
+rays passed may have been miraculously influenced so as to have caused
+the sun to linger above the horizon long after its usual time for
+disappearance."
+
+This is the latest and ripest product of Christian scholarship upon
+this question no doubt, but still it is not entirely satisfactory to me.
+According to the sacred account the sun did not linger, merely, above
+the horizon, but stood still "in the midst of heaven for about a
+whole day," that is to say, for about twelve hours. If the air was
+miraculously changed, so that it would refract the rays of the sun while
+the earth turned over as usual for "about a whole day," then, at the
+end of that time the sun must have been visible in the east, that is,
+it must by that time have been the next morning. According to this, that
+most wonderful day must have been at least thirty-six hours in length.
+We have first, the twelve hours of natural light, then twelve hours of
+"refracted and reflected" light. By that time it would again be morning,
+and the sun would shine for twelve hours more in the natural way, making
+thirty-six hours in all.
+
+If the Rev. Morey would depend a little less on "refraction" and a
+little more on "reflection," he would conclude that the whole story is
+simply a barbaric myth and fable.
+
+It hardly seems reasonable that God, if there is one, would either stop
+the globe, change the constitution of the atmosphere or the nature of
+light simply to afford Joshua an opportunity to kill people on that
+day when he could just as easily have waited until the next morning.
+It certainly cannot be very gratifying to God for us to believe such
+childish things.
+
+It has been demonstrated that force is eternal; that it is forever
+active, and eludes destruction by change of form. Motion is a form of
+force, and all arrested motion changes instantly to heat. The earth
+turns upon its axis at about one thousand miles an hour. Let it be
+stopped and a force beyond our imagination is changed to heat. It has
+been calculated that to stop the world would produce as much heat as the
+burning of a solid piece of coal three times the size of the earth.
+And yet we are asked to believe that this was done in order that one
+barbarian might defeat another. Such stories never would have been
+written, had not the belief been general that the heavenly bodies were
+as nothing compared with the earth.
+
+The view of Moses was acquiesced in by the Jewish people and by the
+Christian world for thousands of years. It is supposed that Moses
+lived about fifteen hundred years before Christ, and although he was
+"inspired," and obtained his information directly from God, he did not
+know as much about our solar system as the Chinese did a thousand
+years before he was born. "The Emperor Chwenhio adopted as an epoch, a
+conjunction of the planets Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, which has
+been shown by M. Bailly to have occurred no less than 2449 years before
+Christ." The ancient Chinese knew not only the motions of the planets,
+but they could calculate eclipses. "In the reign of the Emperor
+Chow-Kang, the chief astronomers, Ho and Hi were condemned to death for
+neglecting to announce a solar eclipse which took place 2169 B. C., a
+clear proof that the prediction of eclipses was a part of the duty of
+the imperial astronomers."
+
+Is it not strange that a Chinaman should find out by his own exertions
+more about the material universe than Moses could when assisted by its
+Creator?
+
+About eight hundred years after God gave Moses the principal facts about
+the creation of the "heaven and the earth" he performed another miracle
+far more wonderful than stopping the world. On this occasion he not
+only stopped the earth, but actually caused it to turn the other way.
+A Jewish king was sick, and God, in order to convince him that he would
+ultimately recover, offered to make the shadow on the dial go forward,
+or backward ten degrees. The king thought it was too easy a thing to
+make the shadow go forward, and asked that it be turned back. Thereupon,
+"Isaiah the prophet cried unto the Lord, and he brought the shadow
+ten degrees backward by which it had gone down in the dial of Ahaz." I
+hardly see how this miracle could be accounted for even by "refraction"
+and "reflection."
+
+It seems, from the account, that this stupendous miracle was performed
+after the king had been cured. The account of the shadow going backward
+is given in the eleventh verse of the twentieth chapter of Second Kings,
+while the cure is given in the seventh verse of the same chapter. "And
+Isaiah said, Take a lump of figs. And they took and laid it on the boil,
+and he recovered."
+
+Stopping the world and causing it to turn back ten degrees after that,
+seems to have been, as the boil was already cured by the figs, a useless
+display of power.
+
+The easiest way to account for all these wonders is to say that the
+"inspired" writers were mistaken. In this way a fearful burden is lifted
+from the credulity of man, and he is left free to believe the evidences
+of his own senses, and the demonstrations of science. In this way he can
+emancipate himself from the slavery of superstition, the control of the
+barbaric dead, and the despotism of the church.
+
+Only about a hundred years ago, Buffon, the naturalist, was compelled by
+the faculty of theology at Paris to publicly renounce fourteen "errors"
+in his work on Natural History because they were at variance with the
+Mosaic account of creation. The Pentateuch is still the scientific
+standard of the church, and ignorant priests, armed with that, pronounce
+sentence upon the vast accomplishments of modern thought.
+
+X. "HE MADE THE STARS ALSO."
+
+Moses came very near forgetting about the stars, and only gave five
+words to all the hosts of heaven. Can it be possible that he knew
+anything about the stars beyond the mere fact that he saw them shining
+above him?
+
+Did he know that the nearest star, the one we ought to be the best
+acquainted with, is twenty-one billion of miles away, and that it is
+a sun shining by its own light? Did he know of the next, that is
+thirty-seven billion miles distant? Is it possible that he was
+acquainted with Sirius, a sun two thousand six hundred and eighty-eight
+times larger than our own, surrounded by a system of heavenly bodies,
+several of which are already known, and distant from us eighty-two
+billion miles? Did he know that the Polar star that tells the mariner
+his course and guided slaves to liberty and joy, is distant from this
+little world two hundred and ninety-two billion miles, and that Capella
+wheels and shines one hundred and thirty-three billion miles beyond? Did
+he know that it would require about seventy-two years for light to reach
+us from this star? Did he know that light travels one hundred and
+eighty-five thousand miles a second? Did he know that some stars are so
+far away in the infinite abysses that five millions of years are
+required for their light to reach this globe?
+
+If this is true, and if as the Bible tells us, the stars were made after
+the earth, then this world has been wheeling in its orbit for at least
+five million years.
+
+It may be replied that it was not the intention of God to teach geology
+and astronomy. Then why did he say anything upon these subjects? and if
+he did say anything, why did he not give the facts?
+
+According to the sacred records God created, on the first day, the
+heaven and the earth, "moved upon the face of the waters," and made
+the light. On the second day he made the firmament or the "expanse" and
+divided the waters. On the third day he gathered the waters into seas,
+let the dry land appear and caused the earth to bring forth grass, herbs
+and fruit trees, and on the fourth day he made the sun, moon and stars
+and set them in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the earth.
+This division of labor is very striking. The work of the other days is
+as nothing when compared with that of the fourth. Is it possible that
+it required the same time and labor to make the grass, herbs and fruit
+trees, that it did to fill with countless constellations the infinite
+expanse of space?
+
+XI. FRIDAY.
+
+We are then told that on the next day "God the moving creatures that hath
+life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of
+heaven. And God created great whales and every living creature which the
+waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged
+fowl after his kind, and God saw that it was good. And God blessed them,
+saying, Be fruitful and multiply and fill the waters in the seas, and
+let fowl multiply in the earth."
+
+Is it true that while the dry land was covered with grass, and herbs,
+and trees bearing fruit, the ocean was absolutely devoid of life, and so
+remained for millions of years?
+
+If Moses meant twenty-four hours by the word day, then it would make but
+little difference on which of the six days animals were made; but if the
+word said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly day was used to express
+millions of ages, during which life was slowly evolved from monad up to
+man, then the account becomes infinitely absurd, puerile and foolish.
+There is not a scientist of high standing who will say that in his
+judgment the earth was covered with fruit-bearing trees before the
+moners, the ancestors it may be of the human race, felt in Laurentian
+seas the first faint throb of life. Nor is there one who will declare
+that there was a single spire of grass before the sun had poured upon
+the world his flood of gold.
+
+Why should men in the name of religion try to harmonize the
+contradictions that exist between Nature and a book? Why should
+philosophers be denounced for placing more reliance upon what they know
+than upon what they have been told? If there is a God, it is reasonably
+certain that he made the world, but it is by no means certain that he is
+the author of the Bible. Why then should we not place greater confidence
+in Nature than in a book? And even if this God made not only the world
+but the book besides, it does not follow that the book is the best part
+of creation, and the only part that we will be eternally punished for
+denying. It seems to me that it is quite as important to know something
+of the solar system, something of the physical history of this globe,
+as it is to know the adventures of Jonah or the diet of Ezekiel. For my
+part, I would infinitely prefer to know all the results of scientific
+investigation, than to be inspired as Moses was. Supposing the Bible to
+be true; why is it any worse or more wicked for Freethinkers to deny
+it, than for priests to deny the doctrine of evolution, or the dynamic
+theory of heat? Why should we be damned for laughing at Samson and his
+foxes, while others, holding the Nebular Hypothesis in utter contempt,
+go straight to heaven? It seems to me that a belief in the great truths
+of science are fully as essential to salvation, as the creed of any
+church. We are taught that a man may be perfectly acceptable to God
+even if he denies the rotundity of the earth, the Copernican system, the
+three laws of Kepler, the indestructibility of matter and the attraction
+of gravitation. And we are also taught that a man may be right upon
+all these questions, and yet, for failing to believe in the "scheme of
+salvation," be eternally lost.
+
+XII. SATURDAY.
+
+On this, the last day of creation, God said;--
+
+"Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle
+and creeping thing and beast of the earth after his kind; and it was
+so. And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after
+their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind;
+and God saw that it was good."
+
+Now, is it true that the seas were filled with fish, the sky with fowls,
+and the earth covered with grass, and herbs, and fruit bearing trees,
+millions of ages before there was a creeping thing in existence? Must
+we admit that plants and animals were the result of the fiat of some
+incomprehensible intelligence independent of the operation of what are
+known as natural causes? Why is a miracle any more necessary to account
+for yesterday than for to-day or for to-morrow?
+
+If there is an infinite Power, nothing can be more certain than that
+this Power works in accordance with what we call law, that is, by and
+through natural causes. If anything can be found without a pedigree of
+natural antecedents, it will then be time enough to talk about the fiat
+of creation. There must have been a time when plants and animals did not
+exist upon this globe. The question, and the only question is, whether
+they were naturally produced. If the account given by Moses is true,
+then the vegetable and animal existences are the result of certain
+special fiats of creation entirely independent of the operation of
+natural causes. This is so grossly improbable, so at variance with the
+experience and observation of mankind, that it cannot be adopted without
+abandoning forever the basis of scientific thought and action.
+
+It may be urged that we do not understand the sacred record correctly.
+To this it may be replied that for thousands of years the account of
+the creation has, by the Jewish and Christian world, been regarded as
+literally true. If it was inspired, of course God must have known just
+how it would be understood, and consequently must have intended that
+it should be understood just as he knew it would be. One man writing to
+another, may mean one thing, and yet be understood as meaning something
+else. Now, if the writer knew that he would be misunderstood, and also
+knew that he could use other words that would convey his real meaning,
+but did not, we would say that he used words on purpose to mislead, and
+was not an honest man.
+
+If a being of infinite wisdom wrote the Bible, or caused it to be
+written, he must have known exactly how his words would be interpreted
+by all the world, and he must have intended to convey the very meaning
+that was conveyed. He must have known that by reading that book, man
+would form erroneous views as to the shape, antiquity, and size of this
+world; that he would be misled as to the time and order of creation;
+that he would have the most childish and contemptible views of the
+creator; that the "sacred word" would be used to support slavery and
+polygamy; that it would build dungeons for the good, and light fagots
+to consume the brave, and therefore he must have intended that these
+results should follow. He also must have known that thousands and
+millions of men and women never could believe his Bible, and that the
+number of unbelievers would increase in the exact ratio of civilization,
+and therefore, he must have intended that result.
+
+Let us understand this. An honest finite being uses the best words, in
+his judgment, to convey his meaning. This is the best he can do, because
+he cannot certainly know the exact effect of his words on others. But an
+infinite being must know not only the real meaning of the words, but the
+exact meaning they will convey to every reader and hearer. He must know
+every meaning that they are capable of conveying to every mind. He must
+also know what explanations must be made to prevent misconception. If
+an infinite being cannot, in making a revelation to man, use such words
+that every person to whom a revelation is essential will understand
+distinctly what that revelation is, then a revelation from God through
+the instrumentality of language is impossible, or it is not essential
+that all should understand it correctly. It may be urged that millions
+have not the capacity to understand a revelation, although expressed in
+the plainest words. To this it seems a sufficient reply to ask, why a
+being of infinite power should create men so devoid of intelligence,
+that he cannot by any means make known to them his will? We are told
+that it is exceedingly plain, and that a wayfaring man, though a fool,
+need not err therein. This statement is refuted by the religious history
+of the Christian world. Every sect is a certificate that God has not
+plainly revealed his will to man. To each reader the Bible conveys a
+different meaning. About the meaning of this book, called a revelation,
+there have been ages of war, and centuries of sword and flame. If
+written by an infinite God, he must have known that these results must
+follow; and thus knowing, he must be responsible for all.
+
+Is it not infinitely more reasonable to say that this book is the work
+of man, that it is filled with mingled truth and error, with mistakes
+and facts, and reflects, too faithfully perhaps, the "very form and
+pressure of its time"?
+
+If there are mistakes in the Bible, certainly they were made by man. If
+there is anything contrary to nature, it was written by man. If there is
+anything immoral, cruel, heartless or infamous, it certainly was never
+written by a being worthy of the adoration of mankind.
+
+XIII. LET US MAKE MAN.
+
+We are next informed by the author of the Pentateuch that God said "Let
+us make man in our image, after our likeness," and that "God created man
+in his own image, in the image of God created he him--male and female
+created he them."
+
+If this account means anything, it means that man was created in the
+physical image and likeness of God. Moses while he speaks of man as
+having been made in the image of God, never speaks of God except as
+having the form of a man. He speaks of God as "walking in the garden
+in the cool of the day;" and that Adam and Eve "heard his voice." He is
+constantly telling what God said, and in a thousand passages he refers
+to him as not only having the human form, but as performing actions,
+such as man performs. The God of Moses was a God with hands, with feet,
+with the organs of speech.
+
+A God of passion, of hatred, of revenge, of affection, of repentance; a
+God who made mistakes:--in other words, an immense and powerful man.
+
+It will not do to say that Moses meant to convey the idea that God made
+man in his mental or moral image. Some have insisted that man was made
+in the moral image of God because he was made pure. Purity cannot be
+manufactured. A moral character cannot be made for man by a god.
+Every man must make his own moral character. Consequently, if God
+is infinitely pure, Adam and Eve were not made in his image in that
+respect. Others say that Adam and Eve were made in the mental image
+of God. If it is meant by that, that they were created with reasoning
+powers like, but not to the extent of those possessed by a god, then
+this may be admitted. But certainly this idea was not in the mind of
+Moses. He regarded the human form as being in the image of God, and for
+that reason always spoke of God as having that form. No one can read
+the Pentateuch without coming to the conclusion that the author supposed
+that man was created in the physical likeness of Deity. God said "Go to,
+let us go down." "God smelled a sweet savor;" "God repented him that he
+had made man;" "and God said;" and "walked;" and "talked;" and "rested."
+All these expressions are inconsistent with any other idea than that the
+person using them regarded God as having the form of man.
+
+As a matter of fact, it is impossible for a man to conceive of a
+personal God, other than as a being having the human form. No one can
+think of an infinite being having the form of a horse, or of a bird, or
+of any animal beneath man. It is one of the necessities of the mind to
+associate forms with intellectual capacities. The highest form of which
+we have any conception is man's, and consequently, his is the only form
+that we can find in imagination to give to a personal God, because all
+other forms are, in our minds, connected with lower intelligences.
+
+It is impossible to think of a personal God as a spirit without form.
+We can use these words, but they do not convey to the mind any real and
+tangible meaning. Every one who thinks of a personal God at all, thinks
+of him as having the human form. Take from God the idea of form; speak
+of him simply as an all pervading spirit--which means an all pervading
+something about which we know nothing--and Pantheism is the result.
+
+We are told that God made man; and the question naturally arises, how
+was this done? Was it by a process of "evolution," "development;" the
+"transmission of acquired habits;" the "survival of the fittest," or was
+the necessary amount of clay kneaded to the proper consistency, and then
+by the hands of God moulded into form? Modern science tells that man has
+been evolved, through countless epochs, from the lower forms; that he
+is the result of almost an infinite number of actions, reactions,
+experiences, states, forms, wants and adaptations. Did Moses intend
+to convey such a meaning, or did he believe that God took a sufficient
+amount of dust, made it the proper shape, and breathed into it the
+breath of life? Can any believer in the Bible give any reasonable
+account of this process of creation? Is it possible to imagine what
+was really done? Is there any theologian who will contend that man
+was created directly from the earth? Will he say that man was made
+substantially as he now is, with all his muscles properly developed for
+walking and speaking, and performing every variety of human action?
+That all his bones were formed as they now are, and all the relations of
+nerve, ligament, brain and motion as they are to-day?
+
+Looking back over the history of animal life from the lowest to
+the highest forms, we find that there has been a slow and gradual
+development; a certain but constant relation between want and
+production; between use and form. The Moner is said to be the simplest
+form of animal life that has yet been found. It has been described as
+"an organism without organs." It is a kind of structureless structure;
+a little mass of transparent jelly that can flatten itself out, and can
+expand and contract around its food. It can feed without a mouth, digest
+without a stomach, walk without feet, and reproduce itself by simple
+division. By taking this Moner as the commencement of animal life, or
+rather as the first animal, it is easy to follow the development of the
+organic structure through all the forms of life to man himself. In this
+way finally every muscle, bone and joint, every organ, form and function
+may be accounted for. In this way, and in this way only, can the
+existence of rudimentary organs be explained. Blot from the human mind
+the ideas of evolution, heredity, adaptation, and "the survival of
+the fittest," with which it has been enriched by Lamarck, Goethe,
+Darwin, Haeckel and Spencer, and all the facts in the history of animal
+life become utterly disconnected and meaningless.
+
+Shall we throw away all that has been discovered with regard to organic
+life, and in its place take the statements of one who lived in the
+rude morning of a barbaric day? Will anybody now contend that man was a
+direct and independent creation, and sustains and bears no relation to
+the animals below him? Belief upon this subject must be governed at
+last by evidence. Man cannot believe as he pleases. He can control his
+speech, and can say that he believes or disbelieves; but after all, his
+will cannot depress or raise the scales with which his reason finds the
+worth and weight of facts. If this is not so, investigation, evidence,
+judgment and reason are but empty words.
+
+I ask again, how were Adam and Eve created? In one account they are
+created male and female, and apparently at the same time. In the next
+account, Adam is made first, and Eve a long time afterwards, and from a
+part of the man. Did God simply by his creative fiat cause a rib slowly
+to expand, grow and divide into nerve, ligament, cartilage and flesh?
+How was the woman created from a rib? How was man created simply from
+dust? For my part, I cannot believe this statement.
+
+I may suffer for this in the world to come; and may, millions of years
+hence, sincerely wish that I had never investigated the subject, but had
+been content to take the ideas of the dead. I do not believe that any
+deity works in that way. So far as my experience goes, there is an
+unbroken procession of cause and effect. Each thing is a necessary link
+in an infinite chain; and I cannot conceive of this chain being broken
+even for one instant. Back of the simplest moner there is a cause,
+and back of that another, and so on, it seems to me, forever. In my
+philosophy I postulate neither beginning nor ending.
+
+If the Mosaic account is true, we know how long man has been upon this
+earth. If that account can be relied on, the first man was made about
+five thousand eight hundred and eighty-three years ago. Sixteen hundred
+and fifty-six years after the making of the first man, the inhabitants
+of the world, with the exception of eight people, were destroyed by
+a flood. This flood occurred only about four thousand two hundred and
+twenty-seven years ago. If this account is correct, at that time, only
+one kind of men existed. Noah and his family were certainly of the same
+blood. It therefore follows that all the differences we see between the
+various races of men have been caused in about four thousand years. If
+the account of the deluge is true, then since that event all the ancient
+kingdoms of the earth were founded, and their inhabitants passed through
+all the stages of savage, nomadic, barbaric and semi-civilized life;
+through the epochs of Stone, Bronze and Iron; established commerce,
+cultivated the arts, built cities, filled them with palaces and temples,
+invented writing, produced a literature and slowly fell to shapeless
+ruin. We must believe that all this has happened within a period of four
+thousand years.
+
+From representations found upon Egyptian granite made more than three
+thousand years ago, we know that the negro was as black, his lips as
+full, and his hair as closely curled then as now. If we know anything,
+we know that there was at that time substantially the same difference
+between the Egyptian and the Negro as now. If we know anything, we know
+that magnificent statues were made in Egypt four thousand years before
+our era--that is to say, about six thousand years ago. There was at
+the World's Exposition, in the Egyptian department, a statue of king
+Cephren, known to have been chiseled more than six thousand years ago.
+In other words, if the Mosaic account must be believed, this statue was
+made before the world. We also know, if we know anything, that men lived
+in v Europe with the hairy mammoth, the cave bear, the rhinoceros, and
+the hyena. Among the bones of these animals have been found the stone
+hatchets and flint arrows of our ancestors. In the caves where they
+lived have been discovered the remains of these animals that had been
+conquered, killed and devoured as food, hundreds of thousands of years
+ago.
+
+If these facts are true, Moses was mistaken. For my part, I have
+infinitely more confidence in the discoveries of to-day, than in the
+records of a barbarous people. It will not now do to say that man has
+existed upon this earth for only about six thousand years. One can
+hardly compute in his imagination the time necessary for man to emerge
+from the barbarous state, naked and helpless, surrounded by animals far
+more powerful than he, to progress and finally create the civilizations
+of India, Egypt and Athens. The distance from savagery to Shakespeare
+must be measured not by hundreds, but by millions of years.
+
+XIV. SUNDAY.
+
+"And on the seventh day God ended his work which he had made, and he
+rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had made. And God
+blessed the seventh day and sanctified it; because that in it he had
+rested from all his work which God created and made."
+
+The great work had been accomplished, the world, the sun, and moon, and
+all the hosts of heaven were finished; the earth was clothed in
+green, the seas were filled with life, the cattle wandered by the
+brooks--insects with painted wings were in the happy air, Adam and Eve
+were making each others acquaintance, and God was resting from his work.
+He was contemplating the accomplishments of a week.
+
+Because he rested on that day he sanctified it, and for that reason and
+for that alone, it was by the Jews considered a holy day. If he only
+rested on that day, there ought to be some account of what he did the
+following Monday. Did he rest on that day? What did he do after he
+got rested? Has he done anything in the way of creation since Saturday
+evening of the first week?
+
+It is now claimed by the "scientific" Christians that the "days" of
+creation were not ordinary days of twenty-four hours each, but immensely
+long periods of time. If they are right, then how long was the seventh
+day? Was that, too, a geologic period covering thousands of ages?
+That cannot be, because Adam and Eve were created the Saturday evening
+before, and according to the Bible that was about five thousand eight
+hundred and eighty-three years ago. I cannot state the time exactly,
+because there have been as many as one hundred and forty different
+opinions given by learned Biblical students as to the time between the
+creation of the world and the birth of Christ. We are quite certain,
+however, that, according to the Bible, it is not more than six thousand
+years since the creation of Adam. From this it would appear that the
+seventh day was not a geologic epoch, but was in fact a period of less
+than six thousand years, and probably of only twenty-four hours.
+
+The theologians who "answer" these things may take their choice. If they
+take the ground that the "days" were periods of twenty-four hours, then
+geology will force them to throw away the whole account. If, on the
+other hand, they admit that the days were vast "periods," then the
+sacredness of the Sabbath must be given up.
+
+There is found in the Bible no intimation that there was the least
+difference in the days. They are all spoken of in the same way. It may
+be replied that our translation is incorrect. If this is so, then only
+those who understand Hebrew, have had a revelation from God, and all the
+rest have been deceived.
+
+How is it possible to sanctify a space of time? Is rest holier than
+labor? If there is any difference between days, ought not that to be
+considered best in which the most useful labor has been performed?
+
+Of all the superstitions of mankind, this insanity about the "sacred
+Sabbath" is the most absurd. The idea of feeling it a duty to be solemn
+and sad one-seventh of the time! To think that we can please an infinite
+being by staying in some dark and sombre room, instead of walking in the
+perfumed fields! Why should God hate to see a man happy? Why should it
+excite his wrath to see a family in the woods, by some babbling stream,
+talking, laughing and loving? Nature works on that "sacred" day. The
+earth turns, the rivers run, the trees grow, buds burst into flower, and
+birds fill the air with song. Why should we look sad, and think about
+death, and hear about hell? Why should that day be filled with gloom
+instead of joy?
+
+A poor mechanic, working all the week in dust and noise, needs a day of
+rest and joy, a day to visit stream and wood--a day to live with wife
+and child; a day in which to laugh at care, and gather hope and strength
+for toils to come. And his weary wife needs a breath of sunny air, away
+from street and wall, amid the hills or by the margin of the sea, where
+she can sit and prattle with her babe, and fill with happy dreams the
+long, glad day.
+
+The "Sabbath" was born of asceticism, hatred of human joy, fanaticism,
+ignorance, egotism of priests and the cowardice of the people. This
+day, for thousands of years, has been dedicated to superstition, to the
+dissemination of mistakes, and the establishment of falsehoods. Every
+Freethinker, as a matter of duty, should violate this day. He should
+assert his independence, and do all within his power to wrest the
+Sabbath from the gloomy church and give it back to liberty and joy.
+Freethinkers should make the Sabbath a day of mirth and music; a day to
+spend with wife and child--a day of games, and books, and dreams--a day
+to put fresh flowers above our sleeping dead--a day of memory and hope,
+of love and rest.
+
+Why should we in this age of the world be dominated by the dead? Why
+should barbarian Jews who went down to death and dust three thousand
+years ago, control the living world? Why should we care for the
+superstition of men who began the Sabbath by paring their nails,
+"beginning at the fourth finger, then going to the second, then to the
+fifth, then to the third, and ending with the thumb?" How pleasing
+to God this must have been. The Jews were very careful of these nail
+parings. They who threw them upon the ground were wicked, because Satan
+used them to work evil upon the earth. They believed that upon the
+Sabbath, souls were allowed to leave purgatory and cool their
+burning souls in water. Fires were neither allowed to be kindled nor
+extinguished, and upon that day it was a sin to bind up wounds. "The
+lame might use a staff, but the blind could not." So strict was the
+Sabbath kept, that at one time "if a Jew on a journey was overtaken
+by the 'sacred day' in a wood, or on the highway, no matter where, nor
+under what circumstances, he must sit down," and there remain until the
+day was gone. "If he fell down in the dirt, there he was compelled to
+stay until the day was done." For violating the Sabbath, the punishment
+was death, for nothing short of the offender's blood could satisfy the
+wrath of God. There are, in the Old Testament, two reasons given for
+abstaining from labor on the Sabbath:--the resting of God, and the
+redemption of the Jews from the bondage of Egypt.
+
+Since the establishment of the Christian religion, the day has been
+changed, and Christians do not regard the day as holy upon which God
+actually rested, and which he sanctified. The Christian Sabbath, or
+the "Lord's day" was legally established by the murderer Constantine,
+because upon that day Christ was supposed to have risen from the dead.
+
+It is not easy to see where Christians got the right to disregard the
+direct command of God, to labor on the day he sanctified, and keep as
+sacred, a day upon which he commanded men to labor. The Sabbath of God
+is Saturday, and if any day is to be kept holy, that is the one, and not
+the Sunday of the Christian.
+
+Let us throw away these superstitions and take the higher, nobler
+ground, that every day should be rendered sacred by some loving act,
+by increasing the happinesss of man, giving birth to noble thoughts,
+putting in the path of toil some flower of joy, helping the unfortunate,
+lifting the fallen, dispelling gloom, destroying prejudice, defending
+the helpless and filling homes with light and love.
+
+XV. THE NECESSITY FOR A GOOD MEMORY.
+
+It must not be forgotten that there are two accounts of the creation
+in Genesis. The first account stops with the third verse of the second
+chapter. The chapters have been improperly divided. In the original
+Hebrew the Pentateuch was neither divided into chapters nor verses.
+There was not even any system of punctuation. It was written wholly with
+consonants, without vowels, and without any marks, dots, or lines to
+indicate them.
+
+These accounts are materially different, and both cannot be true. Let us
+see wherein they differ.
+
+The second account of the creation begins with the fourth verse of the
+second chapter, and is as follows:
+
+"These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they
+were created, in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the
+heavens.
+
+"And every plant of the field before it was in the earth, and every herb
+of the field before it grew; for the Lord God had not caused it to rain
+upon the earth, and there was not a man to till the ground.
+
+"But there went up a mist from the earth and watered the whole face of
+the ground.
+
+"And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed
+into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.
+
+"And the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden; and there he put
+the man whom he had formed.
+
+"And out of the ground made the Lord God to grow every tree that is
+pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the
+midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
+
+"And a river went out of Eden to water the garden; and from thence it
+was parted and became into four heads.
+
+"The name of the first is Pison; that is it which compasseth the whole
+land of Havilah, where there is gold.
+
+"And the gold of that land is good: there is bdellium and the onyx
+stone.
+
+"And the name of the second river is Gihon: the same is it that
+compasseth the whole land of Ethiopia.
+
+"And the name of the third river is Hiddekel; that is it which goeth
+toward the east of Assyria. And the fourth river is Euphrates.
+
+"And the Lord God took the man, and put him into the Garden of Eden to
+dress it and to keep it.
+
+"And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden
+thou mayest freely eat; But of the tree of the knowledge of good and
+evil, thou shalt not eat of it; for in the day that thou eatest thereof
+thou shalt surely die.
+
+"And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I
+will make him an helpmeet for him.
+
+"And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and
+every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would
+call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was
+the name thereof.
+
+"And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to
+every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found a helpmeet
+for him.
+
+"And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept;
+and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof;
+
+"And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman and
+brought her unto the man.
+
+"And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh; she
+shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of man.
+
+"Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave
+unto his wife; and they shall be one flesh.
+
+"And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed."
+
+Order of creation in the first account:
+
+1. The heaven and the earth, and light were made.
+
+2. The firmament was constructed and the waters divided.
+
+3. The waters gathered into seas--and then came dry land, grass, herbs
+and fruit trees.
+
+4. The sun and moon. He made the stars also.
+
+5. Fishes, fowls, and great whales.
+
+6. Beasts, cattle, every creeping thing, man and woman.
+
+Order of creation in the second account:
+
+1. The heavens and the earth.
+
+2. A mist went up from the earth, and watered the whole face of the
+ground.
+
+3. Created a man out of dust, by the name of Adam.
+
+4. Planted a garden eastward in Eden, and put the man in it.
+
+5. Created the beasts and fowls.
+
+6. Created a woman out of one of the man's ribs.
+
+In the second account, man was made _before_ the beasts and fowls. If
+this is true, the first account is false. And if the theologians of our
+time are correct in their view that the Mosaic day means thousands of
+ages, then, according to the second account, Adam existed millions of
+years before Eve was formed. He must have lived one Mosaic day before
+there were any trees, and another Mosaic day before the beasts and fowls
+were created. Will some kind clergymen tell us upon what kind of food
+Adam subsisted during these immense periods?
+
+In the second account a man is made, and the fact that he was without a
+helpmeet did not occur to the Lord God until a couple "of vast periods"
+afterwards. The Lord God suddenly coming to an appreciation of the
+situation said, "It is not good that the man should be alone. I will
+make him an helpmeet for him."
+
+Now, after concluding to make "an helpmeet" for Adam, what did the Lord
+God do? Did he at once proceed to make a woman? No. What did he do? He
+made the beasts, and tried to induce Adam to take one of them for "an
+helpmeet." If I am incorrect, read the following account, and tell me
+what it means:
+
+"And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I
+will make him an helpmeet for him.
+
+"And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and
+every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would
+call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was
+the name thereof.
+
+"And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to
+every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an helpmeet
+for him."
+
+Unless the Lord God was looking for an helpmeet for Adam, why did
+he cause the animals to pass before him? And why did he, after the
+menagerie had passed by, pathetically exclaim, "But for Adam there was
+not found an helpmeet for him"?
+
+It seems that Adam saw nothing that struck his fancy. The fairest ape,
+the sprightliest chimpanzee, the loveliest baboon, the most bewitching
+orangoutang, the most fascinating gorilla failed to touch with love's
+sweet pain, poor Adam's lonely heart. Let us rejoice that this was so.
+Had he fallen in love then, there never would have been a Freethinker in
+this world.
+
+Dr. Adam Clarke, speaking of this remarkable proceeding says:--"God
+caused the animals to pass before Adam to show him that no creature yet
+formed could make him a suitable companion; that Adam was convinced that
+none of these animals could be a suitable companion for him, and that
+therefore he must continue in a state that was not good (celibacy)
+unless he became a further debtor to the bounty of his maker, for among
+all the animals which he had formed, there was not a helpmeet for Adam."
+
+Upon this same subject, Dr. Scott informs us "that it was not conducive
+to the happiness of the man to remain without the consoling society,
+and endearment of tender friendship, nor consistent with the end of his
+creation to be without marriage by which the earth might be replenished
+and worshipers and servants raised up to render him praise and glory.
+Adam seems to have been vastly better acquainted by intuition or
+revelation with the distinct properties of every creature than the most
+sagacious observer since the fall of man.
+
+"Upon this review of the animals, not one was found in outward form his
+counterpart, nor one suited to engage his affections, participate in his
+enjoyments, or associate with him in the worship of God."
+
+Dr. Matthew Henry admits that "God brought all the animals together
+to see if there was a suitable match for Adam in any of the numerous
+families of the inferior creatures, but there was none. They were all
+looked over, but Adam could not be matched among them all. Therefore God
+created a new thing to be a helpmeet for him."
+
+Failing to satisfy Adam with any of the inferior animals, the Lord God
+caused a deep sleep to fall upon him, and while in this sleep took out
+one of Adam's ribs and "closed up the flesh instead thereof." And out of
+this rib, the Lord God made a woman, and brought her to the man.
+
+Was the Lord God compelled to take a part of the man because he had used
+up all the original "nothing" out of which the universe was made? Is it
+possible for any sane and intelligent man to believe this story? Must a
+man be born a second time before this account seems reasonable?
+
+Imagine the Lord God with a bone in his hand with which to start
+a woman, trying to make up his mind whether to make a blonde or a
+brunette!
+
+Just at this point it may be proper for me to warn all persons from
+laughing at or making light of, any stories found in the "Holy Bible."
+When you come to die, every laugh will be a thorn in your pillow. At
+that solemn moment, as you look back upon the records of your life, no
+matter how many men you may have wrecked and ruined; no matter how many
+women you have deceived and deserted, all that can be forgiven; but
+if you remember then that you have laughed at even one story in God's
+"sacred book" you will see through the gathering shadows of death the
+forked tongues of devils, and the leering eyes of fiends.
+
+These stories must be believed, or the work of regeneration can never be
+commenced. No matter how well you act your part, live as honestly as you
+may, clothe the naked, feed the hungry, divide your last farthing
+with the poor, and you are simply traveling the broad road that leads
+inevitably to eternal death, unless at the same time you implicitly
+believe the Bible to be the inspired word of God.
+
+Let me show you the result of unbelief. Let us suppose, for a moment,
+that we are at the Day of Judgment, listening to the trial of souls
+as they arrive. The Recording Secretary, or whoever does the
+cross-examining, says to a soul:
+
+Where are you from?
+
+I am from the Earth.
+
+What kind of a man were you?
+
+Well, I don't like to talk about myself. I suppose you can tell by
+looking at your books.
+
+No, sir. You must tell what kind of a man you were.
+
+Well, I was what you might call a first-rate fellow. I loved my wife and
+children. My home was my heaven. My fireside was a paradise to me. To
+sit there and see the lights and shadows fall upon the faces of those I
+loved, was to me a perfect joy.
+
+How did you treat your family?
+
+I never said an unkind word. I never caused my wife, nor one of my
+children, a moments pain.
+
+Did you pay your debts?
+
+I did not owe a dollar when I died, and left enough to pay my funeral
+expenses, and to keep the fierce wolf of want from the door of those I
+loved.
+
+Did you belong to any church?
+
+No, sir. They were too narrow, pinched and bigoted for me, I never
+thought that I could be very happy if other folks were damned.
+
+Did you believe in eternal punishment?
+
+Well, no. I always thought that God could get his revenge in far less
+time.
+
+Did you believe the rib story?
+
+Do you mean the Adam and Eve business?
+
+Yes! Did you believe that?
+
+To tell you the God's truth, that was just a little more than I could
+swallow.
+
+Away with him to hell!
+
+Next!
+
+Where are you from?
+
+I am from the world too.
+
+Did you belong to any church?
+
+Yes, sir, and to the Young Men's Christian Association besides.
+
+What was your business?
+
+Cashier in a Savings Bank.
+
+Did you ever run away with any money?
+
+Where I came from, a witness could not be compelled to criminate
+himself.
+
+The law is different here. Answer the question. Did you run away with
+any money?
+
+Yes, sir.
+
+How much?
+
+One hundred thousand dollars.
+
+Did you take anything else with you?
+
+Yes, sir.
+
+Well, what else?
+
+I took my neighbor's wife--we sang together in the choir.
+
+Did you have a wife and children of your own? Yes, sir.
+
+And you deserted them?
+
+Yes, sir, but such was my confidence in God that I believed he would
+take care of them.
+
+Have you heard of them since?
+
+No, sir.
+
+Did you believe in the rib story?
+
+Bless your soul, of course I did. A thousand times I regretted that
+there were no harder stories in the Bible, so that I could have shown my
+wealth of faith.
+
+Do you believe the rib story yet?
+
+Yes, with all my heart.
+
+Give him a harp!
+
+Well, as I was saying, God made a woman from Adam's rib. Of course, I do
+not know exactly how this was done, but when he got the woman finished,
+he presented her to Adam. He liked her, and they commenced house-keeping
+in the celebrated Garden of Eden.
+
+Must we, in order to be good, gentle and loving in our lives, believe
+that the creation of woman was a second thought? That Jehovah really
+endeavored to induce Adam to take one of the lower animals as an
+helpmeet for him? After all, is it not possible to live honest and
+courageous lives without believing these fables? It is said that from
+Mount Sinai God gave, amid thunderings and lightnings, ten commandments
+for the guidance of mankind; and yet among them is not found--"Thou
+shalt believe the Bible."
+
+XVI. THE GARDEN.
+
+In the first account we are told that God made man, male and female,
+and said to them "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth and
+subdue it."
+
+In the second account only the man is made, and he is put in a garden
+"to dress it and to keep it." He is not told to subdue the earth, but to
+dress and keep a garden.
+
+In the first account man is given every herb bearing seed upon the face
+of the earth and the fruit of every tree for food, and in the second,
+he is given only the fruit of all the trees in the garden with the
+exception "of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil" which was a
+deadly poison.
+
+There was issuing from this garden a river that was parted into four
+heads. The first of these, Pison, compassed the whole land of Havilah,
+the second, Gihon, that compassed the whole land of Ethiopia.
+
+The third, Heddekel, that flowed toward the east of Assyria, and the
+fourth, the Euphrates. Where are these four rivers now? The brave prow
+of discovery has visited every sea; the traveler has pressed with weary
+feet the soil of every clime; and yet there has been found no place from
+which four rivers sprang. The Euphrates still journeys to the gulf, but
+where are Pison, Gihon and the mighty Heddekel? Surely by going to the
+source of the Euphrates we ought to find either these three rivers or
+their ancient beds. Will some minister when he answers the "Mistakes of
+Moses" tell us where these rivers are or were? The maps of the world are
+incomplete without these mighty streams. We have discovered the sources
+of the Nile; the North Pole will soon be touched by an American; but
+these three rivers still rise in unknown hills, still flow through
+unknown lands, and empty still in unknown seas.
+
+The account of these four rivers is what the Rev. David Swing would call
+"a geographical poem." The orthodox clergy cover the whole affair with
+the blanket of allegory, while the "scientific" Christian folks talk
+about cataclysms, upheavals, earthquakes, and vast displacements of the
+earth's crust.
+
+The question, then arises, whether within the last six thousand years
+there have been such upheavals and displacements? Talk as you will about
+the vast "creative periods" that preceded the appearance of man; it
+is, according to the Bible, only about six thousand years since man was
+created. Moses gives us the generations of men from Adam until his day,
+and this account cannot be explained away by calling centuries, days.
+
+According to the second account of creation, these four rivers were
+made after the creation of man, and consequently they must have been
+obliterated by convulsions of Nature within six thousand years.
+
+Can we not account for these contradictions, absurdities, and falsehoods
+by simply saying that although the writer may have done his level best,
+he failed because he was limited in knowledge, led away by tradition,
+and depended too implicitly upon the correctness of his imagination?
+Is not such a course far more reasonable than to insist that all these
+things are true and must stand though every science shall fall to mental
+dust?
+
+Can any reason be given for not allowing man to eat of the fruit of the
+tree of knowledge? What kind of tree was that? If it is all an allegory,
+what truth is sought to be conveyed? Why should God object to that fruit
+being eaten by man? Why did he put it in the midst of the garden? There
+was certainly plenty of room outside. If he wished to keep man and this
+tree apart, why did he put them together? And why, after he had eaten,
+was he thrust out? The only answer that we have a right to give, is
+the one given in the Bible. "And the Lord God said, Behold the man has
+become as one of us to know good and evil; and now, lest he put forth
+his hand and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever:
+Therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the Garden of Eden, to till
+the ground from whence he was taken."
+
+Will some minister, some graduate of Andover, tell us what this means?
+Are we bound to believe it without knowing what the meaning is? If it is
+a revelation, what does it reveal? Did God object to education then, and
+does that account for the hostile attitude still assumed by theologians
+toward all scientific truth? Was there in the garden a tree of life, the
+eating of which would have rendered Adam and Eve immortal? Is it true,
+that after the Lord God drove them from the garden that he placed upon
+its Eastern side "Cherubim and a flaming sword which turned every way
+to keep the way of the tree of life?" Are the Cherubim and the flaming
+sword guarding that tree still, or was it destroyed, or did its rotting
+trunk, as the Rev. Robert Collyer suggests, "nourish a bank of violets"?
+
+What objection could God have had to the immortality of man? You
+see that after all, this sacred record, instead of assuring us of
+immortality, shows us only how we lost it. In this there is assuredly
+but little consolation.
+
+According to this story we have lost one Eden, but nowhere in the Mosaic
+books are we told how we may gain another. I know that the Christians
+tell us there is another, in which all true believers will finally be
+gathered, and enjoy the unspeakable happiness of seeing the unbelievers
+in hell; but they do not tell us where it is.
+
+Some commentators say that the Garden of Eden was in the third
+heaven--some in the fourth, others have located it in the moon, some
+in the air beyond the attraction of the earth, some on the earth, some
+under the earth, some inside the earth, some at the North Pole, others
+at the South, some in Tartary, some in China, some on the borders of the
+Ganges, some in the island of Ceylon, some in Armenia, some in Africa,
+some under the Equator, others in Mesopotamia, in Syria, Persia, Arabia,
+Babylon, Assyria, Palestine and Europe. Others have contended that
+it was invisible, that it was an allegory, and must be spiritually
+understood.
+
+But whether you understand these things or not, you must believe them.
+You may be laughed at in this world for insisting that God put Adam into
+a deep sleep and made a woman out of one of his ribs, but you will be
+crowned and glorified in the next. You will also have the pleasure of
+hearing the gentlemen howl there, who laughed at you here. While you
+will not be permitted to take any revenge, you will be allowed to
+smilingly express your entire acquiescence in the will of God. But where
+is the new Eden? No one knows. The one was lost, and the other has not
+been found.
+
+Is it true that man was once perfectly pure and innocent, and that
+he became degenerate by disobedience? No. The real truth is, and the
+history of man shows, that he has advanced. Events, like the pendulum of
+a clock have swung forward and back ward, but after all, man, like
+the hands, has gone steadily on. Man is growing grander. He is not
+degenerating. Nations and individuals fail and die, and make room
+for higher forms. The intellectual horizon of the world widens as the
+centuries pass. Ideals grow grander and purer; the difference between
+justice and mercy becomes less and less; liberty enlarges, and love
+intensifies as the years sweep on. The ages of force and fear, of
+cruelty and wrong, are behind us and the real Eden is beyond. It is said
+that a desire for knowledge lost us the Eden of the past; but whether
+that is true or not, it will certainly give us the Eden of the future.
+
+XVII. THE FALL.
+
+We are told that the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field,
+that he had a conversation with Eve, in which he gave his opinion about
+the effect of eating certain fruit; that he assured her it was good to
+eat, that it was pleasant to the eye, that it would make her wise; that
+she was induced to take some; that she persuaded her husband to try it;
+that God found it out, that he then cursed the snake; condemning it to
+crawl and eat the dust; that he multiplied the sorrows of Eve, cursed
+the ground for Adam's sake, started thistles and thorns, condemned man
+to eat the herb of the field in the sweat of his face, pronounced the
+curse of death, "Dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou return," made
+coats of skins for Adam and Eve, and drove them out of Eden.
+
+Who, and what was this serpent? Dr. Adam Clarke says:--"The serpent must
+have walked erect, for this is necessarily implied in his punishment.
+That he was endued with the gift of speech, also with reason. That these
+things were given to this creature. The woman no doubt having often seen
+him walking erect, and talking and reasoning, therefore she testifies
+no sort of surprise when he accosts her in the language related in
+the text. It therefore appears to me that a creature of the ape or
+orangoutang kind is here intended, and that Satan made use of this
+creature as the most proper instrument for the accomplishment of his
+murderous purposes against the life of the soul of man. Under this
+creature he lay hid, and by this creature he seduced our first parents.
+Such a creature answers to every part of the description in the text. It
+is evident from the structure of its limbs and its muscles that it might
+have been originally designed to walk erect, and that nothing else than
+the sovereign controlling power could induce it to put down hands--in
+every respect formed like those of man--and walk like those creatures
+whose claw-armed parts prove them to have been designed to walk on
+all fours. The stealthy cunning, and endless variety of the pranks
+and tricks of these creatures show them even now to be wiser and more
+intelligent than any other creature, man alone excepted. Being obliged
+to walk on all fours and gather their food from the ground, they are
+literally obliged to eat the dust; and though exceeding cunning,
+and careful in a variety of instances to separate that part which is
+wholesome and proper for food from that which is not so, in the article
+of cleanliness they are lost to all sense of propriety. Add to this
+their utter aversion to walk upright; it requires the utmost discipline
+to bring them to it, and scarcely anything offends or irritates them
+more than to be obliged to do it. Long observation of these animals
+enables me to state these facts. For earnest, attentive watching, and
+for chattering and babbling they (the ape) have no fellows in the animal
+world. Indeed, the ability and propensity to chatter, is all they have
+left of their original gift of speech, of which they appear to have been
+deprived at the fall as a part of their punishment."
+
+Here then is the "connecting link" between man and the lower creation.
+The serpent was simply an orang-outang that spoke Hebrew with the
+greatest ease, and had the outward appearance of a perfect gentleman,
+seductive in manner, plausible, polite, and most admirably calculated to
+deceive.
+
+It never did seem reasonable' to me that a long, cold and disgusting
+snake with an apple in his mouth, could deceive anybody; and I am glad,
+even at this late date to know that the something that persuaded Eve to
+taste the forbidden fruit was, at least, in the shape of a man.
+
+Dr. Henry does not agree with the zoological explanation of Mr. Clark,
+but insists that "it is certain that the devil that beguiled Eve is the
+old serpent, a malignant by creation, an angel of light, an immediate
+attendant upon God's throne, but by sin an apostate from his first
+state, and a rebel against God's crown and dignity. He who attacked
+our first parents was surely the prince of devils, the ring leader in
+rebellion. The devil chose to act his part in a serpent, because it is
+a specious creature, has a spotted, dappled skin, and then, went erect.
+Perhaps it was a flying serpent which seemed to come from on high, as a
+messenger from the upper world, one of the seraphim; because the serpent
+is a subtile creature. What Eve thought of this serpent speaking to her,
+we are not likely to tell, and, I believe, she herself did not know
+what to think of it. At first, perhaps, she supposed it might be a good
+angel, and yet afterwards might suspect something amiss. The person
+tempted was a woman, now alone, and at a distance from her husband,
+but near the forbidden tree. It was the devil's subtlety to assault the
+weaker vessel with his temptations, as we may suppose her inferior to
+Adam in knowledge, strength and presence of mind. Some think that Eve
+received the command not immediately from God, but at second hand from
+her husband, and might, therefore, be the more easily persuaded to
+discredit it. It was the policy of the devil to enter into discussion
+with her when she was alone. He took advantage by finding her near the
+forbidden tree. God permitted Satan to prevail over Eve, for wise and
+holy ends. Satan teaches men first to doubt, and then to deny. He makes
+skeptics first, and by degrees makes them atheists."
+
+We are compelled to admit that nothing could be more attractive to a
+woman than a snake walking erect, with a "spotted, dappled skin," unless
+it were a serpent with wings. Is it not humiliating to know that our
+ancestors believed these things? Why should we object to the Darwinian
+doctrine of descent after this?
+
+Our fathers thought it their duty to believe, thought it a sin to
+entertain the slightest doubt, and really supposed that their credulity
+was exceedingly, gratifying to God. To them, the story was entirely
+real. They could see the garden, hear the babble of waters, smell the
+perfume of flowers. They believed there was a tree where knowledge grew
+like plums or pears; and they could plainly see the serpent coiled amid
+its rustling leaves, coaxing Eve to violate the laws of God.
+
+Where did the serpent come from? On which of the six days was he
+created? Who made him? Is it possible that God would make a successful
+rival? He must have known that Adam and Eve would fall. He knew what
+a snake with a "spotted, dappled skin" could do with an inexperienced
+woman. Why did he not defend his children? He knew that if the serpent
+got into the garden, Adam and Eve would sin, that he would have to drive
+them out, that afterwards the world would be destroyed, and that he
+himself would die upon the cross.
+
+Again, I ask what and who was this serpent? He was not a man, for only
+one man had been made. He was not a woman. He was not a beast of the
+field, because "he was more subtile than any beast of the field which
+the Lord God had made." He was neither fish nor fowl, nor snake, because
+he had the power of speech, and did not crawl upon his belly until after
+he was cursed. Where did this serpent come from? Why was he not kept out
+of the garden? Why did not the Lord God take him by the tail and snap
+his head off? Why did he not put Adam and Eve on their guard about this
+serpent? They, of course, were not acquainted in the neighborhood, and
+knew nothing about the serpent's reputation for truth and veracity
+among his neighbors. Probably Adam saw him when he was looking for "an
+helpmeet" and gave him a name, but Eve had never met him before. She was
+not surprised to hear a serpent talk, as that was the first one she had
+ever met. Every thing being new to her, and her husband not being with
+her just at that moment, it need hardly excite our wonder that she
+tasted the fruit by way of experiment. Neither should we be surprised
+that when she saw it was good and pleasant to the eye, and a fruit to
+be desired to make one wise, she had the generosity to divide with her
+husband.
+
+Theologians have filled thousands of volumes with abuse of this serpent,
+but it seems that he told the exact truth. We are told that this serpent
+was, in fact, Satan, the greatest enemy of mankind, and that he entered
+the serpent, appearing to our first parents in its body. If this is
+so, why should the serpent have been cursed? Why should God curse the
+serpent for what had really been done by the devil? Did Satan remain
+in the body of the serpent, and in some mysterious manner share his
+punishment? Is it true that when we kill a snake we also destroy an evil
+spirit, or is there but one devil, and did he perish at the death of
+the first serpent? Is it on account of that transaction in the Garden
+of Eden, that all the descendants of Adam and Eve known as Jews and
+Christians hate serpents?
+
+Do you account for the snake-worship in Mexico, Africa and India in the
+same way?
+
+What was the form of the serpent when he entered the garden, and in what
+way did he move from place to place? Did he walk or fly? Certainly he
+did not crawl, because that mode of locomotion was pronounced upon him
+as a curse. Upon what food did he subsist before his conversation with
+Eve? We know that after that he lived upon dust, but what did he eat
+before? It may be that this is all poetic; and the truest poetry is,
+according to Touchstone, "the most feigning."
+
+In this same chapter we are informed that "unto Adam also and to his
+wife did the Lord God make coats of skins and clothed them." Where did
+the Lord God get those skins? He must have taken them from the animals;
+he was a butcher. Then he had to prepare them; he was a tanner. Then
+he made them into coats; he was a tailor. How did it happen that they
+needed coats of skins, when they had been perfectly comfortable in a
+nude condition? Did the "fall" produce a change in the climate?
+
+Is it really necessary to believe this account in order to be happy
+here, or hereafter? Does it tend to the elevation of the human race to
+speak of "God" as a butcher, tanner and tailor?
+
+And here, let me say once for all, that when I speak of God, I mean
+the being described by Moses; the Jehovah of the Jews. There may be for
+aught I know, somewhere in the unknown shoreless vast, some being whose
+dreams are constellations and within whose thought the infinite exists.
+About this being, if such an one exists, I have nothing to say. He has
+written no books, inspired no barbarians, required no worship, and has
+prepared no hell in which to burn the honest seeker after truth.
+
+When I speak of God, I mean that god who prevented man from putting
+forth his hand and taking also of the fruit of the tree of life that
+he might live forever; of that god who multiplied the agonies of woman,
+increased the weary toil of man, and in his anger drowned a world--of
+that god whose altars reeked with human blood, who butchered babes,
+violated maidens, enslaved men and filled the earth with cruelty and
+crime; of that god who made heaven for the few, hell for the many,
+and who will gloat forever and ever upon the writhings of the lost and
+damned.
+
+XVIII. DAMPNESS.
+
+"And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the
+earth, and daughters were born unto them.
+
+"That the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and
+they took them wives of all which they chose.
+
+"And the Lord said, My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that
+he also is flesh; yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years.
+
+"There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that
+when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare
+children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of
+renown.
+
+"And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and
+that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil
+continually.
+
+"And it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth, and it
+grieved him at his heart.
+
+"And the Lord said, I will destroy man whom I have created from the face
+of the earth; both man, and beast, and the creeping thing, and the fowls
+of the air; for it repenteth me that I have made them."
+
+From this account it seems that driving Adam and Eve out of Eden did not
+have the effect to improve them or their children. On the contrary, the
+world grew worse and worse. They were under the immediate control and
+government of God, and he from time to time made known his will; but in
+spite of this, man continued to increase in crime.
+
+Nothing in particular seems to have been done. Not a school was
+established. There was no written language. There was not a Bible in the
+world. The "scheme of salvation" was kept a profound secret. The five
+points of Calvinism had not been taught. Sunday schools had not been
+opened. In short, nothing had been done for the reformation of the
+world. God did not even keep his own sons at home, but allowed them to
+leave their abode in the firmament, and make love to the daughters
+of men. As a result of this, the world was filled with wickedness and
+giants to such an extent that God regretted "that he had made man on the
+earth, and it grieved him at his heart."
+
+Of course God knew when he made man, that he would afterwards regret
+it. He knew that the people would grow worse and worse until destruction
+would be the only remedy. He knew that he would have to kill all except
+Noah and his family, and it is hard to see why he did not make Noah and
+his family in the first place, and leave Adam and Eve in the original
+dust. He knew that they would be tempted, that he would have to drive
+them out of the garden to keep them from eating of the tree of life;
+that the whole thing would be a failure; that Satan would defeat his
+plan; that he could not reform the people; that his own sons would
+corrupt them, and that at last he would have to drown them all except
+Noah and his family. Why was the Garden of Eden planted? Why was the
+experiment made? Why were Adam and Eve exposed to the seductive arts of
+the serpent? Why did God wait until the cool of the day before looking
+after his children? Why was he not on hand in the morning?
+
+Why did he fill the world with his own children, knowing that he would
+have to destroy them? And why does this same God tell me how to raise my
+children when he had to drown his?
+
+It is a little curious that when God wished to reform the ante-diluvian
+world he said nothing about hell; that he had no revivals, no
+camp-meetings, no tracts, no outpourings of the Holy Ghost, no baptisms,
+no noon prayer meetings, and never mentioned the great doctrine of
+salvation by faith. If the orthodox creeds of the world are true, all
+those people went to hell without ever having heard that such a place
+existed. If eternal torment is a fact, surely these miserable wretches
+ought to have been warned. They were threatened only with water when
+they were in fact doomed to eternal fire!
+
+Is it not strange that God said nothing to Adam and Eve about a future
+life; that he should have kept these "infinite verities" to himself and
+allowed millions to live and die without the hope of heaven, or the fear
+of hell?
+
+It may be that hell was not made at that time. In the six days of
+creation nothing is said about the construction of a bottomless pit, and
+the serpent himself did not make his appearance until after the creation
+of man and woman. Perhaps he was made on the first Sunday, and from that
+fact came, it may be, the old couplet,
+
+ "And Satan still some mischief finds
+ For idle hands to do."
+
+The sacred historian failed also to tell us when the cherubim and the
+flaming sword were made, and said nothing about two of the persons
+composing the Trinity. It certainly would have been an easy thing to
+enlighten Adam and his immediate descendants. The world was then only
+about fifteen hundred and thirty-six years old, and only about three
+or four generations of men had lived. Adam had been dead only about six
+hundred and six years, and some of his grandchildren must, at that time,
+have been alive and well.
+
+It is hard to see why God did not civilize these people. He certainly
+had the power to use, and the wisdom to devise the proper means. What
+right has a god to fill a world with fiends? Can there be goodness in
+this? Why should he make experiments that he knows must fail? Is there
+wisdom in this? And what right has a man to charge an infinite being
+with wickedness and folly?
+
+According to Moses, God made up his mind not only to destroy the people,
+but the beasts and the creeping things, and the fowls of the air. What
+had the beasts, and the creeping things, and the birds done to excite
+the anger of God? Why did he repent having made them? Will some
+Christian give us an explanation of this matter? No good man will
+inflict unnecessary pain upon a beast; how then can we worship a god who
+cares nothing for the agonies of the dumb creatures that he made?
+
+Why did he make animals that he knew he would destroy? Does God delight
+in causing pain? He had the power to make the beasts, and fowls, and
+creeping things in his own good time and way, and it is to be presumed
+that he made them according to his wish. Why should he destroy them?
+They had committed no sin. They had eaten no forbidden fruit, made no
+aprons, nor tried to reach the tree of life. Yet this god, in blind
+unreasoning wrath destroyed "all flesh wherein was the breath of life,
+and every living thing beneath the sky, and every substance wherein was
+life that he had made."
+
+Jehovah having made up his mind to drown the world, told Noah to make
+an Ark of gopher wood three hundred cubits long, fifty cubits wide and
+thirty cubits high. A cubit is twenty-two inches; so that the ark was
+five hundred and fifty feet long, ninety-one feet and eight inches wide
+and fifty-five feet high. This ark was divided into three stories, and
+had on top, one window twenty-two inches square. Ventilation must have
+been one of Jehovah's hobbies. Think of a ship larger than the Great
+Eastern with only one window, and that but twenty-two inches square!
+
+The ark also had one door set in the side thereof that shut from the
+outside. As soon as this ship was finished, and properly victualed, Noah
+received seven days notice to get the animals in the ark.
+
+It is claimed by some of the scientific theologians that the flood was
+partial, that the waters covered only a small portion of the world, and
+that consequently only a few animals were in the ark. It is impossible
+to conceive of language that can more clearly convey the idea of a
+universal flood than that found in the inspired account. If the flood
+was only partial, why did God say he would "destroy all flesh wherein
+is the breath of life from under heaven, and that every thing that is
+in the earth shall die"? Why did he say "I will destroy man whom I have
+created from the face of the earth, both man and beast, and the creeping
+thing and the fowls of the air"? Why did he say "And every living
+substance that I have made will I destroy from off the face of the
+earth"? Would a partial, local flood have fulfilled these threats?
+
+Nothing can be clearer than that the writer of this account intended to
+convey, and did convey the idea that the flood was universal. Why should
+Christians try to deprive God of the glory of having wrought the most
+stupendous of miracles? Is it possible that the Infinite could not
+overwhelm with waves this atom called the earth? Do you doubt his power,
+his wisdom or his justice?
+
+Believers in miracles should not endeavor to explain them. There is but
+one way to explain anything, and that is to account for it by natural
+agencies. The moment you explain a miracle, it disappears. You should
+depend not upon explanation, but assertion. You should not be driven
+from the field because the miracle is shown to be unreasonable. You
+should reply that all miracles are unreasonable. Neither should you be
+in the least disheartened if it is shown to be impossible. The possible
+is not miraculous. You should take the ground that if miracles were
+reasonable, and possible, there would be no reward paid for believing
+them. The Christian has the goodness to believe, while the sinner asks
+for evidence. It is enough for God to work miracles without being called
+upon to substantiate them for the benefit of unbelievers.
+
+Only a few years ago, the Christians believed implicitly in the literal
+truth of every miracle recorded in the Bible. Whoever tried to explain
+them in some natural way, was looked upon as an infidel in disguise,
+but now he is regarded as a benefactor. The credulity of the church is
+decreasing, and the most marvelous miracles are now either "explained,"
+or allowed to take refuge behind the mistakes of the translators, or
+hide in the drapery of allegory.
+
+In the sixth chapter, Noah is ordered to take "of every living thing
+of all flesh, two of every sort into the ark--male and female." In the
+seventh chapter the order is changed, and Noah is commanded, according
+to the Protestant Bible, as follows: "Of every clean beast thou shalt
+take to thee by sevens, the male and his female, and of beasts that are
+not clean, by two, the male and his female. Of fowls also of the air by
+sevens, the male and the female."
+
+According to the Catholic Bible, Noah was commanded---"Of all clean
+beasts take seven and seven, the male and the female. But of the beasts
+that are unclean two and two, the male and the female. Of the fowls also
+of the air seven and seven, the male and the female."
+
+For the purpose of belittling this miracle, many commentators have
+taken the ground that Noah was not ordered to take seven males and seven
+females of each kind of clean beasts, but seven in all. Many Christians
+contend that only seven clean beasts of each kind were taken into the
+ark--three and a half of each sex.
+
+If the account in the seventh chapter means anything, it means _first_,
+that of each kind of clean beasts, fourteen were to be taken, seven
+males, and seven females; _second_, that of unclean beasts should be
+taken, two of each kind, one of each sex, and _third_, that he should
+take of every kind of fowls, seven of each sex.
+
+It is equally clear that the command in the 19th and 20th verses of the
+6th chapter, is to take two of each sort, one male and one female. And
+this agrees exactly with the account in the 7th, 8th, 9th, 14th, 15th,
+and 16th verses of the 7th chapter.
+
+The next question is, how many beasts, fowls and creeping things did
+Noah take into the ark?
+
+There are now known and classified at least twelve thousand five hundred
+species of birds. There are still vast territories in China, South
+America, and Africa unknown to the ornithologist.
+
+Of the birds, Noah took fourteen of each species, according to the 3d
+verse of the 7th chapter, "Of fowls also of the air by sevens, the male
+and the female," making a total of 175,000 birds.
+
+And right here allow me to ask a question. If the flood was simply a
+partial flood, why were birds taken into the ark? It seems to me that
+most birds, attending strictly to business, might avoid a partial flood.
+
+There are at least sixteen hundred and fifty-eight kinds of beasts. Let
+us suppose that twenty-five of these are clean. Of the clean, fourteen
+of each kind--seven of each sex--were taken. These amount to 350. Of
+the unclean--two of each kind, amounting to 3,266. There are some six
+hundred and fifty species of reptiles. Two of each kind amount to 1,300.
+And lastly, there are of insects including the creeping things, at least
+one million species, so that Noah and his folks had to get of these into
+the ark about 2,000,000.
+
+Animalculae have not been taken into consideration. There are probably
+many hundreds of thousands of species; many of them invisible; and
+yet Noah had to pick them out by pairs. Very few people have any just
+conception of the trouble Noah had.
+
+We know that there are many animals on this continent not found in the
+Old World. These must have been carried from here to the ark, and then
+brought back afterwards. Were the peccary, armadillo, ant-eater, sloth,
+agouti, vampire-bat, marmoset, howling and prehensile-tailed monkey, the
+raccoon and muskrat carried by the angels from America to Asia? How did
+they get there? Did the polar bear leave his field of ice and journey
+toward the tropics? How did he know where the ark was? Did the kangaroo
+swim or jump from Australia to Asia? Did the giraffe, hippopotamus,
+antelope and orang-outang journey from Africa in search of the ark? Can
+absurdities go farther than this?
+
+What had these animals to eat while on the journey? What did they eat
+while in the ark? What did they drink? When the rain came, of course
+the rivers ran to the seas, and these seas rose and finally covered the
+world. The waters of the seas, mingled with those of the flood, would
+make all salt. It has been calculated that it required, to drown the
+world, about eight times as much water as was in all the seas. To find
+how salt the waters of the flood must have been, take eight quarts of
+fresh water, and add one quart from the sea. Such water would create
+instead of allaying thirst. Noah had to take in his ark fresh water for
+all his beasts, birds and living things. He had to take the proper food
+for all. How long was he in the ark? Three hundred and seventy-seven
+days! Think of the food necessary for the monsters of the ante-diluvian
+world!
+
+Eight persons did all the work. They attended to the wants of 175,000
+birds, 3,616 beasts, 1,300 reptiles, and 2,000,000 insects, saying
+nothing of countless animalculae.
+
+Well, after they all got in, Noah pulled down the window, God shut the
+door, and the rain commenced.
+
+How long did it rain?
+
+Forty days.
+
+How deep did the water get?
+
+About five miles and a half.
+
+How much did it rain a day?
+
+Enough to cover the whole world to a depth of about seven hundred and
+forty-two feet.
+
+Some Christians say that the fountains of the great deep were broken up.
+Will they be kind enough to tell us what the fountains of the great deep
+are? Others say that God had vast stores of water in the center of the
+earth that he used on that occasion. How did these waters happen to run
+up hill?
+
+Gentlemen, allow me to tell you once more that you must not try to
+explain these things. Your efforts in that direction do no good, because
+your explanations are harder to believe than the miracle itself. Take my
+advice, stick to assertion, and let explanation alone.
+
+Then, as now, Dhawalagiri lifted its crown of snow twenty-nine thousand
+feet above the level of the sea, and on the cloudless cliffs of
+Chimborazo then, as now, sat the condor; and yet the waters rising seven
+hundred and twenty-six feet a day--thirty feet an hour, six inches
+a minute,--rose over the hills, over the volcanoes, filled the vast
+craters, extinguished all the fires, rose above every mountain peak
+until the vast world was but one shoreless sea covered with the
+innumerable dead.
+
+Was this the work of the most merciful God, the father of us all? If
+there is a God, can there be the slightest danger of incurring his
+displeasure by doubting even in a reverential way, the truth of such a
+cruel lie? If we think that God is kinder than he really is, will our
+poor souls be burned for that?
+
+How many trees can live under miles of water for a year? What became of
+the soil washed, scattered, dissolved, and covered with the _debris_ of
+a world? How were the tender plants and herbs preserved? How were the
+animals preserved after leaving the ark? There was no grass except such
+as had been submerged for a year. There were no animals to be devoured
+by the carnivorous beasts. What became of the birds that fed on worms
+and insects? What became of the birds that devoured other birds?
+
+It must be remembered that the pressure of the water when at the highest
+point--say twenty-nine thousand feet, would have been about eight
+hundred tons on each square foot. Such a pressure certainly would have
+destroyed nearly every vestige of vegetable life, so that when the
+animals came out of the ark, there was not a mouthful of food in the
+wide world. How were they supported until the world was again clothed
+with grass? How were those animals taken care of that subsisted on
+others? Where did the bees get honey, and the ants seeds? There was not
+a creeping thing upon the whole earth; not a breathing creature beneath
+the whole heavens; not a living substance. Where did the tenants of the
+ark get food?
+
+There is but one answer, if the story is true. The food necessary
+not only during the year of the flood, but sufficient for many months
+afterwards, must have been stored in the ark.
+
+There is probably not an animal in the world that will not, in a year,
+eat and drink ten times its weight. Noah must have provided food and
+water for a year while in the ark, and food for at least six months
+after they got ashore. It must have required for a pair of elephants,
+about one hundred and fifty tons of food and water. A couple of mammoths
+would have required about twice that amount. Of course there were other
+monsters that lived on trees; and in a year would have devoured quite a
+forest.
+
+How could eight persons have distributed this food, even if the ark had
+been large enough to hold it? How was the ark kept clean? We know how it
+was ventilated; but what was done with the filth? How were the animals
+watered? How were some portions of the ark heated for animals from the
+tropics, and others kept cool for the polar bears? How did the animals
+get back to their respective countries? Some had to creep back about
+six thousand miles, and they could only go a few feet a day. Some of the
+creeping things must have started for the ark just as soon as they were
+made, and kept up a steady jog for sixteen hundred years. Think of
+a couple of the slowest snails leaving a point opposite the ark and
+starting for the plains of Shinar, a distance of twelve thousand miles.
+Going at the rate of a mile a month, it would take them a thousand
+years. How did they get there? Polar bears must have gone several
+thousand miles, and so sudden a change in climate must have been
+exceedingly trying upon their health. How did they know the way to go?
+Of course, all the polar bears did not go. Only two were required. Who
+selected these?
+
+Two sloths had to make the journey from South America. These creatures
+cannot travel to exceed three rods a day. At this rate, they would make
+a mile in about a hundred days. They must have gone about six thousand
+five hundred miles, to reach the ark. Supposing them to have traveled by
+a reasonably direct route, in order to complete the journey before Noah
+hauled in the plank, they must have started several years before the
+world was created. We must also consider that these sloths had to board
+themselves on the way, and that most of their time had to be taken up
+getting food and water. It is exceedingly doubtful whether a sloth could
+travel six thousand miles and board himself in less than three thousand
+years.
+
+Volumes might be written upon the infinite absurdity of this most
+incredible, wicked and foolish of all the fables contained in that
+repository of the impossible, called the Bible. To me it is a matter
+of amazement, that it ever was for a moment believed by any intelligent
+human being.
+
+Dr. Adam Clarke says that "the animals were brought to the ark by the
+power of God, and their enmities were so removed or suspended, that the
+lion could dwell peaceably with the lamb, and the wolf sleep happily by
+the side of the kid. There is no positive evidence that animal food was
+ever used before the flood. Noah had the first grant of this kind."
+
+Dr. Scott remarks, "There seems to have been a very extraordinary
+miracle, perhaps by the ministration of angels, in bringing two of every
+species to Noah, and rendering them submissive, and peaceful with each
+other. Yet it seems not to have made any impression upon the hardened
+spectators. The suspension of the ferocity of the savage beasts during
+their continuance in the ark, is generally considered as an apt figure
+of the change that takes place in the disposition of sinners when they
+enter the true church of Christ."
+
+He believed the deluge to have been universal. In his day science had
+not demonstrated the absurdity of this belief, and he was not compelled
+to resort to some theory not found in the Bible. He insisted that "by
+some vast convulsion, the very bowels of the earth were forced upwards,
+and rain poured down in cataracts and water-spouts, with no intermission
+for forty days and nights, and until in every place a universal deluge
+was effected.
+
+"The presence of God was the only comfort of Noah in his dreary
+confinement, and in witnessing the dire devastation of the earth and its
+inhabitants, and especially of the human species--of his companions, his
+neighbors, his relatives--all those to whom he had preached, for whom he
+had prayed and over whom he had wept, and even of many who had helped to
+build the ark.
+
+"It seems that by a peculiar providential interposition, no animal of
+any sort died, although they had been shut up in the ark above a year;
+and it does not appear that there had been any increase of them during
+that time.
+
+"The Ark was flat-bottomed--square at each end--roofed like a house so
+that it terminated at the top in the breadth of a cubit. It was divided
+into many little cabins for its intended inhabitants. Pitched within and
+without to keep it tight and sweet, and lighted from the upper part.
+But it must, at first sight, be evident that so large a vessel, thus
+constructed, with so few persons on board, was utterly unfitted to
+weather out the deluge, except it was under the immediate guidance and
+protection of the Almighty."
+
+Dr. Henry furnished the Christian world with the following:--
+
+"As our bodies have in them the humors which, when God pleases, become
+the springs and seeds of mortal disease, so the earth had, in its
+bowels, those waters which, at God's command, sprung up and flooded it.
+
+"God made the world in six days, but he was forty days in destroying it,
+because he is slow to anger.
+
+"The hostilities between the animals in the ark ceased, and ravenous
+creatures became mild and manageable, so that the wolf lay down with the
+lamb, and the lion ate straw like an ox.
+
+"God shut the door of the ark to secure Noah and to keep him safe, and
+because it was necessary that the door should be shut very close lest
+the water should break in and sink the ark, and very fast lest others
+might break it down.
+
+"The waters rose so high that not only the low flat countries were
+deluged, but to make sure work and that none might escape, the tops of
+the highest mountains were overflowed fifteen cubits. That is, seven
+and a half yards, so that salvation was not hoped for from hills or
+mountains.
+
+"Perhaps some of the people got to the top of the ark, and hoped to
+shift for themselves there. But either they perished there for want of
+food, or the dashing rain washed them off the top. Others, it may be,
+hoped to prevail with Noah for admission into the ark, and plead old
+acquaintance.
+
+"'Have we not eaten and drank in thy presence? Hast thou not preached in
+our streets?' 'Yea,' said Noah, 'many a time, but to little purpose. I
+called but ye refused; and now it is not in my power to help you. God
+has shut the door and I cannot open it.'
+
+"We may suppose that some of those who perished in the deluge had
+themselves assisted Noah, or were employed by him in building the ark.
+
+"Hitherto, man had been confined to feed only upon the products of the
+earth. Fruits, herbs and roots, and all sorts of greens, and milk, which
+was the first grant; but the flood having perhaps washed away much
+of the fruits of the earth, and rendered them much less pleasant and
+nourishing, God enlarged the grant and allowed him to eat flesh, which
+perhaps man never thought of until now, that God directed him to it. Nor
+had he any more desire to it than the sheep has to suck blood like the
+wolf. But now, man is allowed to feed upon flesh as freely and safely as
+upon the green herb."
+
+Such was the debasing influence of a belief in the literal truth of the
+Bible upon these men, that their commentaries are filled with passages
+utterly devoid of common sense.
+
+Dr. Clarke speaking of the mammoth says:
+
+"This animal, an astonishing proof of God's power, he seems to have
+produced merely to show what he could do. And after suffering a few of
+them to propagate, he extinguished the race by a merciful providence,
+that they might not destroy both man and beast.
+
+"We are told that it would have been much easier for God to destroy all
+the people and make new ones, but he would not want to waste anything
+and no power or skill should be lavished where no necessity exists.
+
+"The animals were brought to the ark by the power of God."
+
+Again gentlemen, let me warn you of the danger of trying to explain a
+miracle. Let it alone. Say that you do not understand it, and do not
+expect to until taught in the schools of the New Jerusalem. The more
+reasons you give, the more unreasonable the miracle will appear. Through
+what you say in defence, people are led to think, and as soon as they
+really think, the miracle is thrown away.
+
+Among the most ignorant nations you will find the most wonders, among
+the most enlightened, the least. It is with individuals, the same as
+with nations. Ignorance believes, Intelligence examines and explains.
+
+For about seven months the ark, with its cargo of men, animals and
+insects, tossed and wandered without rudder or sail upon a boundless
+sea. At last it grounded on the mountains of Ararat; and about three
+months afterward the tops of the mountains became visible. It must not
+be forgotten that the mountain where the ark is supposed to have first
+touched bottom, was about seventeen thousand feet high. How were the
+animals from the tropics kept warm? When the waters were abated it would
+be intensely cold at a point seventeen thousand feet above the level of
+the sea. May be there were stoves, furnaces, fire places and steam coils
+in the ark, but they are not mentioned in the inspired narrative. How
+were the animals kept from freezing? It will not do to say that Ararat
+was not very high after all.
+
+If you will read the fourth and fifth verses of the eight chapter you
+will see that although "the ark rested in the seventh month, on the
+seventeenth day of the month, upon the mountains of Ararat, it was not
+until the first day of the tenth month that the tops of the mountains
+could be seen." From this it would seem that the ark must have rested
+upon about the highest peak in that country. Noah waited forty days
+more, and then for the first time opened the window and took a breath
+of fresh air. He then sent out a raven that did not return, then a dove
+that returned. He then waited seven days and sent forth a dove that
+returned not. From this he knew that the waters were abated. Is it
+possible that he could not see whether the waters had gone? Is it
+possible to conceive of a more perfectly childish way of ascertaining
+whether the earth was dry?
+
+At last Noah "removed the covering of the ark, and looked and behold the
+face of the ground was dry," and thereupon God told him to disembark. In
+his gratitude Noah built an altar and took of every clean beast and of
+every clean fowl, and offered burnt offerings. And the Lord smelled a
+sweet savor and said in his heart that he would not any more curse the
+ground for man's sake. For saying this in his heart the Lord gives as a
+reason, not that man is, or will be good, but because "the imagination
+of man's heart is evil from his youth." God destroyed man because "the
+wickedness of man was great in the earth, and _because every imagination
+of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually_." And he
+promised for the same reason not to destroy him again. Will some
+gentleman skilled in theology give us an explanation?
+
+After God had smelled the sweet savor of sacrifice, he seems to have
+changed his idea as to the proper diet for man. When Adam and Eve were
+created they were allowed to eat herbs bearing seed, and the fruit of
+trees. When they were turned out of Eden, God said to them "Thou shalt
+eat the herb of the field." In the first chapter of Genesis the "green
+herb" was given for food to the beasts, fowls and creeping things. Upon
+being expelled from the garden, Adam and Eve, as to their food, were
+put upon an equality with the lower animals. According to this, the
+ante-diluvians were vegetarians. This may account for their wickedness
+and longevity.
+
+After Noah sacrificed, and God smelled the sweet savor; he said--"Every
+moving thing that liveth shall be meat for you, even as the green herb
+have I given you all things." Afterward this same God changed his mind
+again, and divided the beasts and birds into clean and unclean, and made
+it a crime for man to eat the unclean. Probably food was so scarce when
+Noah was let out of the ark that Jehovah generously allowed him to eat
+anything and everything he could find.
+
+According to the account, God then made a covenant with Noah to the
+effect that he would not again destroy the world with a flood, and as
+the attesting witness of this contract, a rainbow was set in the cloud.
+This bow was placed in the sky so that it might perpetually remind God
+of his promise and covenant. Without this visible witness and reminder,
+it would seem that Jehovah was liable to forget the contract, and drown
+the world again. Did the rainbow originate in this way? Did God put it
+in the cloud simply to keep his agreement in his memory?
+
+For me it is impossible to believe the story of the deluge. It seems so
+cruel, so barbaric, so crude in detail, so absurd in all its parts,
+and so contrary to all we know of law, that even credulity itself is
+shocked.
+
+Many nations have preserved accounts of a deluge in which all people,
+except a family or two, were destroyed. Babylon was certainly a city
+before Jerusalem was founded. Egypt was in the height of her power when
+there were only seventy Jews in the world, and India had a literature
+before the name of Jehovah had passed the lips of superstition. An
+account of a general deluge "was discovered by George Smith, translated
+from another account that was written about two thousand years before
+Christ." Of course it is impossible to tell how long the story had
+lived in the memory of tradition before it was reduced to writing by the
+Babylonians. According to this account, which is, without doubt, much
+older than the one given by Moses, Tamzi built a ship at the command of
+the god Hea, and put in it his family and the beasts of the field. He
+pitched the ship inside and outside with bitumen, and as soon as it was
+finished, there came a flood of rain and "destroyed all life from the
+face of the whole earth. On the seventh day there was a calm, and the
+ship stranded on the mountain Nizir." Tamzi waited for seven days more,
+and then let out a dove. Afterwards, he let out a swallow, and that, as
+well as the dove returned. Then he let out a raven, and as that did not
+return, he concluded that the water had dried away, and thereupon
+left the ship. Then he made an offering to god, or the gods, and "Hea
+interceded with Bel," so that the earth might never again be drowned.
+
+This is the Babylonian story, told without the contradictions of the
+original. For in that, it seems, there are two accounts, as well as
+in the Bible. Is it not a strange coincidence that there should be
+contradictory accounts mingled in both the Babylonian and Jewish
+stories?
+
+In the Bible there are two accounts. In one account, Noah was to take
+two of all beasts, birds, and creeping things into the ark, while in the
+other, he was commanded to take of clean beasts, and all birds by
+sevens of each kind. According to one account, the flood only lasted
+one hundred and fifty days--as related in the third verse of the eighth
+chapter; while the other account fixes the time at three hundred and
+seventy-seven days. Both of these accounts cannot be true. Yet in order
+to be saved, it is not sufficient to believe one of them--you must
+believe both.
+
+Among the Egyptians there was a story to the effect that the great god
+Ra became utterly maddened with the people, and deliberately made up his
+mind that he would exterminate mankind. Thereupon he began to destroy,
+and continued in the terrible work until blood flowed in streams, when
+suddenly he ceased, and took an oath that he would not again destroy the
+human race. This myth was probably thousands of years old when Moses was
+born.
+
+So, in India, there was a fable about the flood. A fish warned Manu
+that a flood was coming. Manu built a "box" and the fish towed it to a
+mountain and saved all hands.
+
+The same kind of stories were told in Greece, and among our own Indian
+tribes. At one time the Christian pointed to the fact that many nations
+told of a flood, as evidence of the truth of the Mosaic account; but
+now, it having been shown that other accounts are much older, and
+equally reasonable, that argument has ceased to be of any great value.
+
+It is probable that all these accounts had a common origin. They were
+likely born of something in nature visible to all nations. The idea of a
+universal flood, produced by a god to drown the world on account of
+the sins of the people, is infinitely absurd. The solution of all these
+stories has been supposed to be, the existence of partial floods in most
+countries; and for a long time this solution was satisfactory. But the
+fact that these stories are greatly alike, that only one man is warned,
+that only one family is saved, that a boat is built, that birds are sent
+out to find if the water had abated, tend to show that they had a common
+origin. Admitting that there were severe floods in all countries; it
+certainly cannot follow that in each instance only one family would be
+saved, or that the same story would in each instance be told. It may be
+urged that the natural tendency of man to exaggerate calamities, might
+account for this agreement in all the accounts, and it must be admitted
+that there is some force in the suggestion. I believe, though, that the
+real origin of all these myths is the same, and that it was originally
+an effort to account for the sun, moon and stars. The sun and moon
+were the man and wife, or the god and goddess, and the stars were their
+children. From a celestial myth, it became a terrestrial one; the air,
+or ether-ocean became a flood, produced by rain, and the sun moon and
+stars became man, woman and children.
+
+In the original story, the mountain was the place where in the far east
+the sky was supposed to touch the earth, and it was there that the ship
+containing the celestial passengers finally rested from its voyage. But
+whatever may be the origin of the stories of the flood, whether told
+first by Hindu, Babylonian or Hebrew, we may rest perfectly assured that
+they are all equally false.
+
+XIX. BACCHUS AND BABEL.
+
+As soon as Noah had disembarked, he proceeded to plant a vineyard, and
+began to be a husbandman; and when the grapes were ripe he made wine and
+drank of it to excess; cursed his grandson, blessed Shem and Japheth, and
+after that lived for three hundred and fifty years. What he did during
+these three hundred and fifty years, we are not told. We never hear of
+him again. For three hundred and fifty years he lived among his sons,
+and daughters, and their descendants. He must have been a venerable man.
+He was the man to whom God had made known his intention of drowning the
+world. By his efforts, the human race had been saved. He must have been
+acquainted with Methuselah for six hundred years, and Methuselah was
+about two hundred and forty years old, when Adam died. Noah must himself
+have known the history of mankind, and must have been an object of
+almost infinite interest; and yet for three hundred and fifty years he
+is neither directly nor indirectly mentioned. When Noah died, Abraham
+must have been more than fifty years old; and Shem, the son of Noah,
+lived for several hundred years after the death of Abraham; and yet he
+is never mentioned. Noah when he died, was the oldest man in the whole
+world by about five hundred years; and everybody living at the time of
+his death knew that they were indebted to him, and yet no account is
+given of his burial. No monument was raised to mark the spot. This,
+however, is no more wonderful than the fact that no account is given of
+the death of Adam or of Eve, nor of the place of their burial. This may
+all be accounted for by the fact that the language of man was confounded
+at the building of the tower of Babel, whereby all tradition may have
+been lost, so that even the sons of Noah could not give an account of
+their voyage in the ark; and, consequently, some one had to be directly
+inspired to tell the story, after new languages had been formed.
+
+It has always been a mystery to me how Adam, Eve, and the serpent were
+taught the same language. Where did they get it? We know now, that
+it requires a great number of years to form a language; that it is of
+exceedingly slow growth. We also know that by language, man conveys to
+his fellows the impressions made upon him by what he sees, hears, smells
+and touches. We know that the language of the savage consists of a few
+sounds, capable of expressing only a few ideas or states of the
+mind, such as love, desire, fear, hatred, aversion and contempt. Many
+centuries are required to produce a language capable of expressing
+complex ideas. It does not seem to me that ideas can be manufactured by
+a deity and put in the brain of man. These ideas must be the result of
+observation and experience.
+
+Does anybody believe that God directly taught a language to Adam and
+Eve, or that he so made them that they, by intuition spoke Hebrew, or
+some language capable of conveying to each other their thoughts? How did
+the serpent learn the same language? Did God teach it to him, or did he
+happen to overhear God, when he was teaching Adam and Eve? We are told
+in the second chapter of Genesis that God caused all the animals to pass
+before Adam to see what he would call them. We cannot infer from this
+that God named the animals and informed Adam what to call them. Adam
+named them himself. Where did he get his words? We cannot imagine a man
+just made out of dust, without the experience of a moment, having the
+power to put his thoughts in language. In the first place, we cannot
+conceive of his having any thoughts until he has combined, through
+experience and observation, the impressions that nature had made upon
+him through the medium of his senses. We cannot imagine of his knowing
+anything, in the first instance, about different degrees of heat, nor
+about darkness, if he was made in the day-time, nor about light, if
+created at night, until the next morning. Before a man can have what we
+call thoughts, he must have had a little experience. Something must have
+happened to him before he can have a thought, and before he can express
+himself in language. Language is a growth, not a gift. We account now
+for the diversity of language by the fact that tribes and nations have
+had different experiences, different wants, different surroundings, and,
+one result of all these differences is, among other things, a difference
+in language. Nothing can be more absurd than to account for the
+different languages of the world by saying that the original language
+was confounded at the tower of Babel.
+
+According to the Bible, up to the time of the building of that tower,
+the whole earth was of one language and of one speech, and would have so
+remained until the present time had not an effort been made to build
+a tower whose top should reach into heaven. Can any one imagine what
+objection God would have to the building of such a tower? And how could
+the confusion of tongues prevent its construction? How could language
+be confounded? It could be confounded only by the destruction of memory.
+Did God destroy the memory of mankind at that time, and if so, how?
+Did he paralyze that portion of the brain presiding over the organs
+of articulation, so that they could not speak the words, although they
+remembered them clearly, or did he so touch the brain that they
+could not hear? Will some theologian, versed in the machinery of the
+miraculous, tell us in what way God confounded the language of mankind?
+
+Why would the confounding of the language make them separate? Why would
+they not stay together until they could understand each other? People
+will not separate, from weakness. When in trouble they come together
+and desire the assistance of each other. Why, in this instance, did they
+separate? What particular ones would naturally come together if nobody
+understood the language of any other person? Would it not have been just
+as hard to agree when and where to go, without any language to express
+the agreement, as to go on with the building of the tower?
+
+Is it possible that any one now believes that the whole world would be
+of one speech had the language not been confounded at Babel? Do we not
+know that every word was suggested in some way by the experience of men?
+Do we not know that words are continually dying, and continually being
+born; that every language has its cradle and its cemetery--its buds, its
+blossoms, its fruits and its withered leaves? Man has loved, enjoyed,
+hated, suffered and hoped, and all words have been born of these
+experiences.
+
+Why did "the Lord come down to see the city and the tower"? Could he
+not see them from where he lived or from where he was? Where did he come
+down from? Did he come in the daytime, or in the night? We are taught
+now that God is everywhere; that he inhabits immensity; that he is in
+every atom, and in every star. If this is true, why did he "come down to
+see the city and the tower?" Will some theologian explain this?
+
+After all, is it not much easier and altogether more reasonable to say
+that Moses was mistaken, that he knew little of the science of language,
+and that he guessed a great deal more than he investigated?
+
+XX. FAITH IN FILTH.
+
+No light whatever is shed upon what passed in the world after the
+confounding of language at Babel, until the birth of Abraham. But,
+before speaking of the history of the Jewish people, it may be proper
+for me to say that many things are recounted in Genesis, and other books
+attributed to Moses, of which I do not wish to speak. There are many
+pages of these books unfit to read, many stories not calculated, in my
+judgment, to improve the morals of mankind. I do not wish even to call
+the attention of my readers to these things, except in a general way. It
+is to be hoped that the time will come when such chapters and passages
+as cannot be read without leaving the blush of shame upon the cheek of
+modesty, will be left out, and not published as a part of the Bible. If
+there is a God, it certainly is blasphemous to attribute to him the
+authorship of pages too obscene, beastly and vulgar to be read in the
+presence of men and women.
+
+The believers in the Bible are loud in their denunciation of what they
+are pleased to call the immoral literature of the world; and yet few
+books have been published containing more moral filth than this inspired
+word of God. These stories are not redeemed by a single flash of wit or
+humor. They never rise above the dull details of stupid vice. For one,
+I cannot afford to soil my pages with extracts from them; and all such
+portions of the Scriptures I leave to be examined, written upon, and
+explained by the clergy. Clergymen may know some way by which they can
+extract honey from these flowers. Until these passages are expunged
+from the Old Testament, it is not a fit book to be read by either old
+or young. It contains pages that no minister in the United States would
+read to his congregation for any reward whatever. There are chapters
+that no gentleman would read in the presence of a lady. There are
+chapters that no father would read to his child. There are narratives
+utterly unfit to be told; and the time will come when mankind will
+wonder that such a book was ever called inspired.
+
+I know that in many books besides the Bible, there are immodest lines.
+Some of the greatest writers have soiled their pages with indecent
+words. We account for this by saying that the authors were human; that
+they catered to the taste and spirit of their times. We make excuses,
+but at the same time regret that in their works they left an impure
+word. But what shall we say of God? Is it possible that a being of
+infinite purity--the author of modesty, would smirch the pages of his
+book with stories lewd, licentious and obscene? If God is the author of
+the Bible, it is, of course, the standard by which all other books can,
+and should be measured. If the Bible is not obscene, what book is? Why
+should men be imprisoned simply for imitating God? The Christian world
+should never say another word against immoral books until it makes the
+inspired volume clean. These vile and filthy things were not written
+for the purpose of conveying and enforcing moral truth, but seem to
+have been written because the author loved an unclean thing. There is
+no moral depth below that occupied by the writer or publisher of obscene
+books, that stain with lust, the loving heart of youth. Such men should
+be imprisoned and their books destroyed. The literature of the world
+should be rendered decent, and no book should be published that cannot
+be read by, and in the hearing of the best and purest people. But as
+long as the Bible is considered as the work of God, it will be hard
+to make all men too good and pure to imitate it; and as long as it is
+imitated there will be vile and filthy books. The literature of our
+country will not be sweet and clean until the Bible ceases to be
+regarded as the production of a god.
+
+We are continually told that the Bible is the very foundation of modesty
+and morality; while many of its pages are so immodest and immoral that
+a minister, for reading them in the pulpit, would be instantly denounced
+as an unclean wretch. Every woman would leave the church, and if the men
+stayed, it would be for the purpose of chastising the minister.
+
+Is there any saving grace in hypocrisy? Will men become clean in speech
+by believing that God is unclean? Would it not be far better to admit
+that the Bible was written by barbarians in a barbarous, coarse and
+vulgar age? Would it not be safer to charge Moses with vulgarity,
+instead of God? Is it not altogether more probable that some ignorant
+Hebrew would write the vulgar words? The Christians tell me that God is
+the author of these vile and stupid things? I have examined the question
+to the best of my ability, and as to God my verdict is:--Not guilty.
+Faith should not rest in filth.
+
+Every foolish and immodest thing should be expunged from the Bible.
+Let us keep the good. Let us preserve every great and splendid thought,
+every wise and prudent maxim, every just law, every elevated idea, and
+every word calculated to make man nobler and purer, and let us have the
+courage to throw the rest away. The souls of children should not
+be stained and soiled. The charming instincts of youth should not be
+corrupted and defiled. The girls and boys should not be taught that
+unclean words were uttered by "inspired" lips. Teach them that these
+words were born of savagery and lust. Teach them that the unclean is the
+unholy, and that only the pure is sacred.
+
+XXI. THE HEBREWS.
+
+After language had been confounded and the people scattered, there
+appeared in the land of Canaan a tribe of Hebrews ruled by a chief or
+sheik called Abraham. They had a few cattle, lived in tents, practiced
+polygamy, wandered from place to place, and were the only folks in the
+whole world to whom God paid the slightest attention. At this time
+there were hundreds of cities in India filled with temples and palaces;
+millions of Egyptians worshiped Isis and Osiris, and had covered their
+land with marvelous monuments of industry, power and skill. But these
+civilizations were entirely neglected by the Deity, his whole attention
+being taken up with Abraham and his family.
+
+It seems, from the account, that God and Abraham were intimately
+acquainted, and conversed frequently upon a great variety of subjects.
+By the twelfth chapter of Genesis it appears that he made the following
+promises to Abraham. "I will make of thee a great nation, and I will
+bless thee, and make thy name great: and thou shalt be a blessing. And I
+will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee."
+
+After receiving this communication from the Almighty, Abraham went into
+the land of Canaan, and again God appeared to him and told him to take
+a heifer three years old, a goat of the same age, a sheep of equal
+antiquity, a turtle dove and a young pigeon. Whereupon Abraham killed
+the animals "and divided them in the midst, and laid each piece one
+against another." And it came to pass that when the sun went down and
+it was dark, behold a smoking furnace and a burning lamp that passed
+between the raw and bleeding meat. The killing of these animals was
+a preparation for receiving a visit from God. Should an American
+missionary in Central Africa find a negro chief surrounded by
+a butchered heifer, a goat and a sheep, with which to receive a
+communication from the infinite God, my opinion is, that the missionary
+would regard the proceeding as the direct result of savagery. And if
+the chief insisted that he had seen a smoking furnace and a burning
+lamp going up and down between the pieces of meat, the missionary would
+certainly conclude that the chief was not altogether right in his mind.
+
+If the Bible is true, this same God told Abraham to take and sacrifice
+his only son, or rather the only son of his wife, and a murder would
+have been committed had not God, just at the right moment, directed him
+to stay his hand and take a sheep instead.
+
+God made a great number of promises to Abraham, but few of them were
+ever kept. He agreed to make him the father of a great nation, but he
+did not. He solemnly promised to give him a great country, including all
+the land between the river of Egypt and the Euphrates, but he did not.
+
+In due time Abraham passed away, and his son Isaac took his place at
+the head of the tribe. Then came Jacob, who "watered stock" and enriched
+himself with the spoil of Laban. Joseph was sold into Egypt by his
+jealous brethren, where he became one of the chief men of the kingdom,
+and in a few years his father and brothers left their own country and
+settled in Egypt. At this time there were seventy Hebrews in the world,
+counting Joseph and his children. They remained in Egypt two hundred and
+fifteen years. It is claimed by some that they were in that country for
+four hundred and thirty years. This is a mistake. Josephus says they
+were in Egypt two hundred and fifteen years, and this statement is
+sustained by the best biblical scholars of all denominations. According
+to the 17th verse of the 3rd chapter of Galatians, it was four hundred
+and thirty years from the time the promise was made to Abraham to
+the giving of the law, and as the Hebrews did not go to Egypt for two
+hundred and fifteen years after the making of the promise to Abraham,
+they could in no event have been in Egypt more than two hundred and
+fifteen years. In our Bible the 40th verse of the 12th chapter of
+Exodus, is as follows:--
+
+"Now the sojourning of the children of Israel, who dwelt in Egypt, was
+four hundred and thirty years."
+
+This passage does not say that the sojourning was all done in Egypt;
+neither does it say that the children of Israel dwelt in Egypt four
+hundred and thirty years; but it does say that the sojourning of the
+children of Israel who dwelt in Egypt was four hundred and thirty
+years. The Vatican copy of the Septuagint renders the same passage as
+follows:--
+
+"The sojourning of the children of Israel which they sojourned in Egypt,
+and in the land of Canaan, was four hundred and thirty years."
+
+The Alexandrian version says:--"The sojourning of the children of Israel
+which they and their fathers sojourned in Egypt, and in the land of
+Canaan, was four hundred and thirty years."
+
+And in the Samaritan Bible we have:--"The sojourning of the children of
+Israel and of their fathers which they sojourned in the land of Canaan,
+and in the land of Egypt, was four hundred and thirty years."
+
+There were seventy souls when they went down into Egypt, and they
+remained two hundred and fifteen years, and at the end of that time they
+had increased to about three million. How do we know that there were
+three million at the end of two hundred and fifteen years? We know it
+because we are informed by Moses that "there were six hundred thousand
+men of war." Now, to each man of war, there must have been at least five
+other people. In every State in this Union there will be to each voter,
+five other persons at least, and we all know that there are always more
+voters than men of war. If there were six hundred thousand men of war,
+there must have been a population of at least three million. Is it
+possible that seventy people could increase to that extent in two
+hundred and fifteen years? You may say that it was a miracle; but
+what need was there of working a miracle? Why should God miraculously
+increase the number of slaves? If he wished miraculously to increase the
+population, why did he not wait until the people were free?
+
+In 1776, we had in the American Colonies about three millions of people.
+In one hundred years we doubled four times: that is to say, six, twelve,
+twenty-four, forty-eight million,--our present population.
+
+We must not forget that during all these years there has been pouring
+into our country a vast stream of emigration, and that this, taken
+in connection with the fact that our country is productive beyond all
+others, gave us only four doubles in one hundred years. Admitting that
+the Hebrews increased as rapidly without emigration as we, in this
+country, have with it, we will give to them four doubles each century,
+commencing with seventy people, and they would have, at the end of
+two hundred years, a population of seventeen thousand nine hundred and
+twenty. Giving them another double for the odd fifteen years and there
+would be, provided no deaths had occurred, thirty-five thousand eight
+hundred and forty people. And yet we are told that instead of having
+this number, they had increased to such an extent that they had six
+hundred thousand men of war; that is to say, a population of more than
+three millions?
+
+Every sensible man knows that this account is not, and cannot be true.
+We know that seventy people could not increase to three million in two
+hundred and fifteen years.
+
+About this time the Hebrews took a census, and found that there were
+twenty-two thousand two hundred and seventy-three first-born males.
+It is reasonable to suppose that there were about as many first-born
+females. This would make forty-four thousand five hundred and forty-six
+first-born children. Now, there must have been about as many mothers
+as there were first-born children. If there were only about forty-five
+thousand mothers and three millions of people, the mothers must have had
+on an average about sixty-six children apiece.
+
+At this time, the Hebrews were slaves, and had been for two hundred and
+fifteen years. A little while before, an order had been made by the
+Egyptians that all the male children of the Hebrews should be killed.
+One, contrary to this order, was saved in an ark made of bullrushes
+daubed with slime. This child was found by the daughter of Pharaoh, and
+was adopted, it seems, as her own, and, may be, was. He grew to be
+a man, sided with the Hebrews, killed an Egyptian that was smiting a
+slave, hid the body in the sand, and fled from Egypt to the land of
+Midian, became acquainted with a priest who had seven daughters, took
+the side of the daughters against the ill-mannered shepherds of that
+country, and married Zipporah, one of the girls, and became a shepherd
+for her father. Afterward, while tending his flock, the Lord appeared to
+him in a burning bush, and commanded him to go to the king of Egypt and
+demand from him the liberation of the Hebrews. In order to convince him
+that the something burning in the bush was actually God, the rod in his
+hand was changed into a serpent, which, upon being caught by the tail,
+became again a rod. Moses was also told to put his hand in his bosom,
+and when he took it out it was as leprous as snow. Quite a number of
+strange things were performed, and others promised. Moses then agreed to
+go back to Egypt provided his brother could go with him. Whereupon
+the Lord appeared to Aaron, and directed him to meet Moses in the
+wilderness. They met at the mount of God, went to Egypt, gathered
+together all the elders of the children of Israel, spake all the words
+which God had spoken unto Moses, and did all the signs in the sight of
+the people. The Israelites believed, bowed their heads and worshiped;
+and Moses and Aaron went in and told their message to Pharaoh the king.
+
+XXII. THE PLAGUES.
+
+Three millions of people were in slavery. They were treated with the
+utmost rigor, and so fearful were their masters that they might, in
+time, increase in numbers sufficient to avenge themselves, that they
+took from the arms of mothers all the male children and destroyed
+them. If the account given is true, the Egyptians were the most cruel,
+heartless and infamous people of which history gives any record. God
+finally made up his mind to free the Hebrews; and for the accomplishment
+of this purpose he sent, as his agents, Moses and Aaron, to the king
+of Egypt. In order that the king might know that these men had a divine
+mission, God gave Moses the power of changing a stick into a serpent,
+and water into blood. Moses and Aaron went before the king, stating that
+the Lord God of Israel ordered the king of Egypt to let the Hebrews
+go that they might hold a feast with God in the wilderness. Thereupon
+Pharaoh, the king, enquired who the Lord was, at the same time stating
+that he had never made his acquaintance, and knew nothing about him.
+To this they replied that the God of the Hebrews had met with them, and
+they asked to go a three days journey into the desert and sacrifice
+unto this God, fearing that if they did not he would fall upon them with
+pestilence or the sword. This interview seems to have hardened Pharaoh,
+for he ordered the tasks of the children of Israel to be increased; so
+that the only effect of the first appeal was to render still worse the
+condition of the Hebrews. Thereupon, Moses returned unto the Lord and
+said, "Lord, wherefore hast thou so evil entreated this people? Why is
+it that thou hast sent me? For since I came to Pharaoh to speak in thy
+name he hath done evil to this people; neither hast thou delivered thy
+people at all."
+
+Apparently stung by this reproach, God answered:--
+
+"Now shalt thou see what I will do to Pharoah; for with a strong hand
+shall he let them go; and with a strong hand shall he drive them out of
+his land."
+
+God then recounts the fact that he had appeared unto Abraham, Isaac and
+Jacob, that he had established a covenant with them to give them the
+land of Canaan, that he had heard the groanings of the children of
+Israel in Egyptian bondage; that their groanings had put him in mind of
+his covenant, and that he had made up his mind to redeem the children
+of Israel with a stretched-out arm and with great judgments. Moses then
+spoke to the children of Israel again, but they would listen to him no
+more. His first effort in their behalf had simply doubled their trouble
+and they seemed to have lost confidence in his power. Thereupon Jehovah
+promised Moses that he would make him a god unto Pharaoh, and that
+Aaron should be his prophet, but at the same time informed him that his
+message would be of no avail; that he would harden the heart of Pharaoh
+so that he would not listen; that he would so harden his heart that he
+might have an excuse for destroying the Egyptians. Accordingly, Moses
+and Aaron again went before Pharaoh. Moses said to Aaron;--"Cast down
+your rod before Pharaoh," which he did, and it became a serpent. Then
+Pharaoh not in the least surprised, called for his wise men and
+his sorcerers, and they threw down their rods and changed them into
+serpents. The serpent that had been changed from Aaron's rod was, at
+this time crawling upon the floor, and it proceeded to swallow the
+serpents that had been produced by the magicians of Egypt. What became
+of these serpents that were swallowed, whether they turned back into
+sticks again, is not stated. Can we believe that the stick was changed
+into a real living serpent, or did it assume simply the appearance of a
+serpent? If it bore only the appearance of a serpent it was a deception,
+and could not rise above the dignity of legerdemain. Is it necessary to
+believe that God is a kind of prestigiator--a sleight-of-hand performer,
+a magician or sorcerer? Can it be possible that an infinite being would
+endeavor to secure the liberation of a race by performing a miracle that
+could be equally performed by the sorcerers and magicians of a barbarian
+king?
+
+Not one word was said by Moses or Aaron as to the wickedness of
+depriving a human being of his liberty. Not a word was said in favor
+of liberty. Not the slightest intimation that a human being was justly
+entitled to the product of his own labor. Not a word about the cruelty
+of masters who would destroy even the babes of slave mothers. It seems
+to me wonderful that this God did not tell the king of Egypt that no
+nation could enslave another, without also enslaving itself; that it was
+impossible to put a chain around the limbs of a slave, without putting
+manacles upon the brain of the master. Why did he not tell him that a
+nation founded upon slavery could not stand? Instead of declaring these
+things, instead of appealing to justice, to mercy and to liberty, he
+resorted to feats of jugglery. Suppose we wished to make a treaty with
+a barbarous nation, and the President should employ a sleight-of-hand
+performer as envoy extraordinary, and instruct him, that when he came
+into the presence of the savage monarch, he should cast down an umbrella
+or a walking stick, which would change into a lizard or a turtle; what
+would we think? Would we not regard such a performance as beneath the
+dignity even of a President? And what would be our feelings if the
+savage king sent for his sorcerers and had them perform the same feat?
+If such things would appear puerile and foolish in the President of a
+great republic, what shall be said when they were resorted to by the
+creator of all worlds? How small, how contemptible such a God appears!
+Pharaoh, it seems, took about this view of the matter, and he would not
+be persuaded that such tricks were performed by an infinite being.
+
+Again, Moses and Aaron came before Pharaoh as he was going to the
+river's bank, and the same rod which had changed to a serpent, and,
+by this time changed back, was taken by Aaron, who, in the presence of
+Pharaoh, smote the water of the river, which was immediately turned to
+blood, as well as all the water in all the streams, ponds, and pools, as
+well as all water in vessels of wood and vessels of stone in the entire
+land of Egypt. As soon as all the waters in Egypt had been turned
+into blood, the magicians of that country did the same with their
+enchantments. We are not informed where they got the water to turn into
+blood, since all the water in Egypt had already been so changed. It
+seems from the account that the fish in the Nile died, and the river
+emitted a stench, and there was not a drop of water in the land of
+Egypt that had not been changed into blood. In consequence of this, the
+Egyptians digged "around about the river" for water to drink. Can we
+believe this story? Is it necessary to salvation to admit that all the
+rivers, pools, ponds and lakes of a country were changed into blood, in
+order that a king might be induced to allow the children of Israel the
+privilege of going a three days journey into the wilderness to make
+sacrifices to their God?
+
+It seems from the account that Pharaoh was told that the God of the
+Hebrews would, if he refused to let the Israelites go, change all the
+waters of Egypt into blood, and that, upon his refusal, they were so
+changed. This had, however, no influence upon him, for the reason that
+his own magicians did the same. It does not appear that Moses and Aaron
+expressed the least surprise at the success of the Egyptian sorcerers.
+At that time it was believed that each nation had its own god. The
+only claim that Moses and Aaron made for their God was, that he was the
+greatest and most powerful of all the gods, and that with anything like
+an equal chance he could vanquish the deity of any other nation.
+
+After the waters were changed to blood Moses and Aaron waited for seven
+days. At the end of that time God told Moses to again go to Pharaoh and
+demand the release of his people, and to inform him that, if he refused,
+God would strike all the borders of Egypt with frogs. That he would make
+frogs so plentiful that they would go into the houses of Pharaoh, into
+his bedchamber, upon his bed, into the houses of his servants, upon his
+people, into their ovens, and even into their kneading troughs.
+This threat had no effect whatever upon Pharaoh. And thereupon Aaron
+stretched out his hand over the waters of Egypt, and the frogs came
+up and covered the land. The magicians of Egypt did the same, and with
+their enchantments brought more frogs upon the land of Egypt.
+
+These magicians do not seem to have been original in their ideas, but
+so far as imitation is concerned, were perfect masters of their art. The
+frogs seem to have made such an impression upon Pharaoh that he sent
+for Moses and asked him to entreat the Lord that he would take away the
+frogs. Moses agreed to remove them from the houses and the land, and
+allow them to remain only in the rivers. Accordingly the frogs died out
+of the houses, and out of the villages, and out of the fields, and the
+people gathered them together in heaps. As soon as the frogs had left
+the houses and fields, the heart of Pharaoh became again hardened, and
+he refused to let the people go.
+
+Aaron then, according to the command of God, stretched out his hand,
+holding the rod, and smote the dust of the earth, and it became lice in
+man and in beast, and all the dust became lice throughout the land of
+Egypt. Pharaoh again sent for his magicians, and they sought to do
+the same with their enchantments, but they could not. Whereupon the
+sorcerers said unto Pharaoh: "This is the finger of God."
+
+Notwithstanding this, however, Pharaoh refused to let the Hebrews go.
+God then caused a grievous swarm of flies to come into the house of
+Pharaoh and into his servants' houses, and into all the land of Egypt,
+to such an extent that the whole land was corrupted by reason of the
+flies. But into that part of the country occupied by the children of
+Israel there came no flies. Thereupon Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron
+and said to them: "Go, and sacrifice to your God in this land." They
+were not willing to sacrifice in Egypt, and asked permission to go on a
+journey of three days into the wilderness. To this Pharaoh acceded, and
+in consideration of this Moses agreed to use his influence with the Lord
+to induce him to send the flies out of the country. He accordingly told
+the Lord of the bargain he had made with Pharaoh, and the Lord agreed to
+the compromise, and removed the flies from Pharaoh and from his servants
+and from his people, and there remained not a single fly in the land of
+Egypt. As soon as the flies were gone, Pharaoh again changed his mind,
+and concluded not to permit the children of Israel to depart. The Lord
+then directed Moses to go to Pharaoh and tell him that if he did not
+allow the children of Israel to depart, he would destroy his cattle, his
+horses, his camels and his sheep; that these animals would be afflicted
+with a grievous disease, but that the animals belonging to the Hebrews
+should not be so afflicted. Moses did as he was bid. On the next day all
+the cattle of Egypt died; that is to say, all the horses, all the asses,
+all the camels, all the oxen and all the sheep; but of the animals owned
+by the Israelites, not one perished. This disaster had no effect upon
+Pharaoh, and he still refused to let the children of Israel go. The Lord
+then told Moses and Aaron to take some ashes out of a furnace, and
+told Moses to sprinkle them toward the heavens in the sight of Pharaoh;
+saying that the ashes should become small dust in all the land of Egypt,
+and should be a boil breaking forth with blains upon man and upon beast
+throughout all the land.
+
+How these boils breaking out with blains, upon cattle that were already
+dead, should affect Pharaoh, is a little hard to understand. It must
+not be forgotten that all the cattle and all beasts had died with the
+murrain before the boils had broken out.
+
+This was a most decisive victory for Moses and Aaron. The boils were
+upon the magicians to that extent that they could not stand before
+Moses. But it had no effect upon Pharaoh, who seems to have been a man
+of great firmness. The Lord then instructed Moses to get up early in the
+morning and tell Pharaoh that he would stretch out his hand and smite
+his people with a pestilence, and would, on the morrow, cause it to rain
+a very grievous hail, such as had never been known in the land of Egypt.
+He also told Moses to give notice, so that they might get all the cattle
+that were in the fields under cover. It must be remembered that all
+these cattle had recently died of the murrain, and their dead bodies had
+been covered with boils and blains. This, however, had no effect, and
+Moses stretched forth his hand toward heaven, and the Lord sent thunder,
+and hail and lightning, and fire that ran along the ground, and the hail
+fell upon all the land of Egypt, and all that were in the fields, both
+man and beast, were smitten, and the hail smote every herb of the field,
+and broke every tree of the country except that portion inhabited by the
+children of Israel; there, there was no hail.
+
+During this hail storm Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron and admitted
+that he had sinned, that the Lord was righteous, and that the Egyptians
+were wicked, and requested them to ask the Lord that there be no more
+thunderings and hail, and that he would let the Hebrews go. Moses agreed
+that as soon as he got out of the city he would stretch forth his hands
+unto the Lord, and that the thunderings should cease and the hail should
+stop. But, when the rain and the hail and the thundering ceased, Pharaoh
+concluded that he would not let the children of Israel go.
+
+Again, God sent Moses and Aaron, instructing them to tell Pharaoh that
+if he refused to let the people go, the face of the earth would be
+covered with locusts, so that man would not be able to see the ground,
+and that these locusts would eat the residue of that which escaped from
+the hail; that they would eat every tree out of the field; that they
+would fill the houses of Pharaoh and the houses of all his servants, and
+the houses of all the Egyptians. Moses delivered the message, and went
+out from Pharaoh. Some of Pharaoh's servants entreated their master
+to let the children of Israel go. Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron and
+asked them, who wished to go into the wilderness to sacrifice. They
+replied that they wished to go with the young and old; with their sons
+and daughters, with flocks and herds. Pharaoh would not consent to this,
+but agreed that the men might go. Thereupon Pharaoh drove Moses and
+Aaron out of his sight. Then God told Moses to stretch forth his hand
+upon the land of Egypt for the locusts, that they might come up and eat
+every herb, even all that the hail had left. "And Moses stretched out
+his rod over the land of Egypt, and the Lord brought an east wind all
+that day and all that night; and when it was morning the east wind
+brought the locusts; and they came up over all the land of Egypt and
+rested upon all the coasts covering the face of the whole earth, so that
+the land was darkened; and they ate every herb and all the fruit of the
+trees which the hail had left, and there remained not any green thing
+on the trees or in the herbs of the field throughout the land of Egypt."
+Pharaoh then called for Moses and Aaron in great haste, admitted that
+he had sinned against the Lord their God and against them, asked their
+forgiveness and requested them to intercede with God that he might take
+away the locusts. They went out from his presence and asked the Lord to
+drive the locusts away, "And the Lord made a strong west wind which took
+away the locusts, and cast them into the Red Sea so that there remained
+not one locust in all the coasts of Egypt."
+
+As soon as the locusts were gone, Pharaoh changed his mind, and, in the
+language of the sacred text, "the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart so that
+he would not let the children of Israel go."
+
+The Lord then told Moses to stretch out his hand toward heaven that
+there might be darkness over the land of Egypt, "even darkness which
+might be felt." "And Moses stretched forth his hand toward heaven, and
+there was a thick darkness over the land of Egypt for three days during
+which time they saw not each other, neither arose any of the people from
+their places for three days; but the children of Israel had light in
+their dwellings."
+
+It strikes me that when the land of Egypt was covered with thick
+darkness--so thick that it could be felt, and when light was in the
+dwellings of the Israelites, there could have been no better time for
+the Hebrews to have left the country.
+
+Pharaoh again called for Moses, and told him that his people could go
+and serve the Lord, provided they would leave their flocks and herds.
+Moses would not agree to this, for the reason that they needed the
+flocks and herds for sacrifices and burnt offerings, and he did not know
+how many of the animals God might require, and for that reason he could
+not leave a single hoof. Upon the question of the cattle, they divided,
+and Pharaoh again refused to let the people go. God then commanded Moses
+to tell the Hebrews to borrow, each of his neighbor, jewels of silver
+and gold. By a miraculous interposition the Hebrews found favor in the
+sight of the Egyptians so that they loaned the articles asked for. After
+this, Moses again went to Pharaoh and told him that all the first-born
+in the land of Egypt, from the first-born of Pharaoh upon the throne,
+unto the first-born of the maid-servant who was behind the mill, as well
+as the first-born of beasts, should die.
+
+As all the beasts had been destroyed by disease and hail, it is
+troublesome to understand the meaning of the threat as to their
+first-born.
+
+Preparations were accordingly made for carrying this frightful threat
+into execution. Blood was put on the door-posts of all houses inhabited
+by Hebrews, so that God, as he passed through that land, might not be
+mistaken and destroy the first-born of the Jews. "And it came to pass
+that at midnight the Lord smote all the first-born in the land of Egypt,
+the first-born of Pharaoh who sat on the throne, and the first-born of
+the captive who was in the dungeon. And Pharaoh rose up in the night,
+and all his servants, and all the Egyptians, and there was a great cry
+in Egypt, for there was not a house where there was not one dead."
+
+What had these children done? Why should the babes in the cradle be
+destroyed on account of the crime of Pharaoh? Why should the cattle be
+destroyed because man had enslaved his brother? In those days women and
+children and cattle were put upon an exact equality, and all considered
+as the property of the men; and when man in some way excited the wrath
+of God, he punished them by destroying all their cattle, their wives,
+and their little ones. Where can words be found bitter enough to
+describe a god who would kill wives and babes because husbands and
+fathers had failed to keep his law? Every good man, and every good
+woman, must hate and despise such a deity.
+
+Upon the death of all the first-born Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron,
+and not only gave his consent that they might go with the Hebrews into
+the wilderness, but besought them to go at once.
+
+Is it possible that an infinite God, creator of all worlds and sustainer
+of all life, said to Pharaoh, "If you do not let my people go, I will
+turn all the water of your country into blood," and that upon the
+refusal of Pharaoh to release the people, God did turn all the waters
+into blood? Do you believe this?
+
+Do you believe that Pharaoh even after all the water was turned to
+blood, refused to let the Hebrews go, and that thereupon God told him he
+would cover his land with frogs? Do you believe this?
+
+Do you believe that after the land was covered with frogs Pharaoh still
+refused to let the people go, and that God then said to him, "I will
+cover you and all your people with lice?" Do you believe God would make
+this threat?
+
+Do you also believe that God told Pharaoh, "It you do not let these
+people go, I will fill all your houses and cover your country with
+flies?" Do you believe God makes such threats as this?
+
+Of course God must have known that turning the waters into blood,
+covering the country with frogs, infesting all flesh with lice, and
+filling all houses with flies, would not accomplish his object, and that
+all these plagues would have no effect whatever upon the Egyptian king.
+
+Do you believe that, failing to accomplish anything by the flies, God
+told Pharaoh that if he did not let the people go he would kill his
+cattle with murrain? Does such a threat sound God-like?
+
+Do you believe that, failing to effect anything by killing the cattle,
+this same God then threatened to afflict all the people with boils,
+including the magicians who had been rivaling him in the matter of
+miracles; and failing to do anything by boils, that he resorted to hail?
+Does this sound reasonable? The hail experiment having accomplished
+nothing, do you believe that God murdered the first-born of animals and
+men? Is it possible to conceive of anything more utterly absurd, stupid,
+revolting, cruel and senseless, than the miracles said to have been
+wrought by the Almighty for the purpose of inducing Pharaoh to liberate
+the children of Israel?
+
+Is it not altogether more reasonable to say that the Jewish people,
+being in slavery, accounted for the misfortunes and calamities, suffered
+by the Egyptians, by saying that they were the judgments of God?
+
+When the Armada of Spain was wrecked and scattered by the storm, the
+English people believed that God had interposed in their behalf,
+and publicly gave thanks. When the battle of Lepanto was won, it was
+believed by the Catholic world that the victory was given in answer to
+prayer. So, our fore-fathers in their Revolutionary struggle saw, or
+thought they saw, the hand of God, and most firmly believed that they
+achieved their independence by the interposition of the Most High.
+
+Now, it may be that while the Hebrews were enslaved by the Egyptians,
+there were plagues of locusts and flies. It may be that there were
+some diseases by which many of the cattle perished. It may be that a
+pestilence visited that country so that in nearly every house there
+was some one dead. If so, it was but natural for the enslaved and
+superstitious Jews to account for these calamities by saying that they
+were punishments sent by their God. Such ideas will be found in the
+history of every country.
+
+For a long time the Jews held these opinions, and they were handed from
+father to son simply by tradition. By the time a written language had
+been produced, thousands of additions had been made, and numberless
+details invented; so that we have not only an account of the plagues
+suffered by the Egyptians, but the whole woven into a connected story,
+containing the threats made by Moses and Aaron, the miracles wrought by
+them, the promises of Pharaoh, and finally the release of the Hebrews,
+as a result of the marvelous things performed in their behalf by
+Jehovah.
+
+In any event it is infinitely more probable that the author was
+misinformed, than that the God of this universe was guilty of these
+childish, heartless and infamous things. The solution of the whole
+matter is this:--Moses was mistaken.
+
+XXIII. THE FLIGHT.
+
+Three millions of people, with their flocks and herds, with borrowed
+jewelry and raiment, with unleavened dough in kneading troughs bound in
+their clothes upon their shoulders, in one night commenced their journey
+for the land of promise. We are not told how they were informed of the
+precise time to start. With all the modern appliances, it would require
+months of time to inform three millions of people of any fact.
+
+In this vast assemblage there were six hundred thousand men of war, and
+with them were the old, the young, the diseased and helpless. Where were
+those people going? They were going to the desert of Sinai, compared
+with which Sahara is a garden. Imagine an ocean of lava torn by
+storm and vexed by tempest, suddenly gazed at by a Gorgon and changed
+instantly to stone! Such was the desert of Sinai.
+
+All of the civilized nations of the world could not feed and support
+three millions of people on the desert of Sinai for forty years. It
+would cost more than one hundred thousand millions of dollars, and would
+bankrupt Christendom. They had with them their flocks and herds, and the
+sheep were so numerous that the Israelites sacrificed, at one time, more
+than one hundred and fifty thousand first-born lambs. How were these
+flocks supported? What did they eat? Where were meadows and pastures for
+them? There was no grass, no forests--nothing! There is no account
+of its having rained baled hay, nor is it even claimed that they were
+miraculously fed. To support these flocks, millions of acres of pasture
+would have been required. God did not take the Israelites through the
+land of the Philistines, for fear that when they saw the people of that
+country they would return to Egypt, but he took them by the way of
+the wilderness to the Red Sea, going before them by day in a pillar of
+cloud, and by night, in a pillar of fire.
+
+When it was told Pharaoh that the people had fled, he made ready
+and took six hundred chosen chariots of Egypt, and pursued after the
+children of Israel, overtaking them by the sea. As all the animals had
+long before that time been destroyed, we are not informed where Pharaoh
+obtained the horses for his chariots. The moment the children of Israel
+saw the hosts of Pharaoh, although they had six hundred thousand men
+of war, they immediately cried unto the Lord for protection. It is
+wonderful to me that a land that had been ravaged by the plagues
+described in the Bible, still had the power to put in the field an army
+that would carry terror to the hearts of six hundred thousand men of
+war. Even with the help of God, it seems, they were not strong enough
+to meet the Egyptians in the open field, but resorted to strategy. Moses
+again stretched forth his wonderful rod over the waters of the Red Sea,
+and they were divided, and the Hebrews passed through on dry land, the
+waters standing up like a wall on either side. The Egyptians pursued
+them; "and in the morning watch the Lord looked into the hosts of the
+Egyptians, through the pillar of fire," and proceeded to take the wheels
+off their chariots. As soon as the wheels were off, God told Moses to
+stretch out his hand over the sea. Moses did so, and immediately "the
+waters returned and covered the chariots and horsemen and all the hosts
+of Pharaoh that came into the sea, and there remained not so much as one
+of them."
+
+This account may be true, but still it hardly looks reasonable that God
+would take the wheels off the chariots. How did he do it? Did he pull
+out the linch-pins, or did he just take them off by main force?
+
+What a picture this presents to the mind! God the creator of the
+universe, maker of every shining, glittering star, engaged in pulling
+off the wheels of wagons, that he might convince Pharaoh of his
+greatness and power!
+
+Where were these people going? They were going to the promised land.
+How large a country was that? About twelve thousand square miles. About
+one-fifth the size of the State of Illinois. It was a frightful country,
+covered with rocks and desolation. How many people were in the promised
+land already? Moses tells us there were seven nations in that country
+mightier than the Jews. As there were at least three millions of Jews,
+there must have been at least twenty-one millions of people already in
+that country. These had to be driven out in order that room might be
+made for the chosen people of God.
+
+It seems, however, that God was not willing to take the children of
+Israel into the promised land immediately. They were not fit to inhabit
+the land of Canaan; so he made up his mind to allow them to wander upon
+the desert until all except two, who had left Egypt, should perish. Of
+all the slaves released from Egyptian bondage, only two were allowed to
+reach the promised land!
+
+As soon as the Hebrews crossed the Red Sea, they found themselves
+without food, and with water unfit to drink by reason of its bitterness,
+and they began to murmur against Moses, who cried unto the Lord, and
+"the Lord showed him a tree." Moses cast this tree into the waters,
+and they became sweet. "And it came to pass in the morning the dew lay
+around about the camp; and when the dew that lay was gone, behold,
+upon the face of the wilderness lay a small round thing, small as the
+hoar-frost upon the ground. And Moses said unto them, this is the bread
+which the Lord hath given you to eat." This manna was a very peculiar
+thing. It would melt in the sun, and yet they could cook it by seething
+and baking. One would as soon think of frying snow or of broiling
+icicles. But this manna had another remarkable quality. No matter how
+much or little any person gathered, he would have an exact omer; if he
+gathered more, it would shrink to that amount, and if he gathered less,
+it would swell exactly to that amount. What a magnificent substance
+manna would be with which to make a currency--shrinking and swelling
+according to the great laws of supply and demand!
+
+"Upon this manna the children of Israel lived for forty years, until
+they came to a habitable land. With this meat were they fed until
+they reached the borders of the land of Canaan." We are told in the
+twenty-first chapter of Numbers, that the people at last became tired
+of' the manna, complained of God, and asked Moses why he brought
+them out of the land of Egypt to die in the wilderness. And they
+said:--"There is no bread, nor have we any water. Our soul loatheth this
+light food."
+
+We are told by some commentators that the Jews lived on manna for forty
+years; by others that they lived upon it for only a short time. As
+a matter of fact the accounts differ, and this difference is the
+opportunity for commentators. It also allows us to exercise faith in
+believing that both accounts are true. If the accounts agreed, and were
+reasonable, they would be believed by the wicked and unregenerated. But
+as they are different and unreasonable, they are believed only by the
+good. Whenever a statement in the Bible is unreasonable, and you believe
+it, you are considered quite a good Christian. If the statement is
+grossly absurd and infinitely impossible, and you still believe it, you
+are a saint.
+
+The children of Israel were in the desert, and they were out of water.
+They had nothing to eat but manna, and this they had had so long that
+the soul of every person abhorred it. Under these circumstances they
+complained to Moses. Now, as God is infinite, he could just as well have
+furnished them with an abundance of the purest and coolest of water, and
+could, without the slightest trouble to himself, have given them three
+excellent meals a day, with a generous variety of meats and vegetables,
+it is very hard to see why he did not do so. It is still harder to
+conceive why he fell into a rage when the people mildly suggested that
+they would like a change of diet. Day after day, week after week, month
+after month, year after year, nothing but manna. No doubt they did
+the best they could by cooking it in different ways, but in spite of
+themselves they began to loathe its sight and taste, and so they asked
+Moses to use his influence to secure a change in the bill of fare.
+
+Now, I ask, whether it was unreasonable for the Jews to suggest that a
+little meat would be very gratefully received? It seems, however, that
+as soon as the request was made, this God of infinite mercy became
+infinitely enraged, and instead of granting it, went into partnership
+with serpents, for the purpose of punishing the hungry wretches to whom
+he had promised a land flowing with milk and honey.
+
+Where did these serpents come from? How did God convey the information
+to the serpents, that he wished them to go to the desert of Sinai and
+bite some Jews? It may be urged that these serpents were created for the
+express purpose of punishing the children of Israel for having had the
+presumption, like Oliver Twist, to ask for more.
+
+There is another account in the eleventh chapter of Numbers, of the
+people murmuring because of their food. They remembered the fish, the
+cucumbers, the melons, the leeks, the onions and the garlic of Egypt,
+and they asked for meat. The people went to the tent of Moses and asked
+him for flesh. Moses cried unto the Lord and asked him why he did not
+take care of the multitude. God thereupon agreed that they should have
+meat, not for a day or two, but for a month, until the meat should come
+out of their nostrils and become loathsome to them. He then caused a
+wind to bring quails from beyond the sea, and cast them into the camp,
+on every side of the camp around about for the space of a days journey.
+And the people gathered them, and while the flesh was yet between their
+teeth the wrath of God being provoked against them, struck them with
+an exceeding great plague. Serpents, also, were sent among them, and
+thousands perished for the crime of having been hungry.
+
+The Rev. Alexander Cruden commenting upon this account says:--
+
+"God caused a wind to rise that drove the quails within and about the
+camp of the Israelites; and it is in this that the miracle consists,
+that they were brought so seasonably to this place, and in so great
+numbers as to suffice above a million of persons above a month. Some
+authors affirm, that in those eastern and southern countries, quails
+are innumerable, so that in one part of Italy within the compass of five
+miles, there were taken about an hundred thousand of them every day for
+a month together; and that sometimes they fly so thick over the sea,
+that being weary they fall into ships, sometimes in such numbers, that
+they sink them with their weight."
+
+No wonder Mr. Cruden believed the Mosaic account.
+
+Must we believe that God made an arrangement with hornets for the
+purpose af securing their services in driving the Canaanites from
+the land of promise? Is this belief necessary unto salvation? Must we
+believe that God said to the Jews that he would send hornets before them
+to drive out the Canaanites, as related in the twenty-third chapter of
+Exodus, and the second chapter of Deuteronomy? How would the hornets
+know a Canaanite? In what way would God put it in the mind of a hornet
+to attack a Canaanite? Did God create hornets for that especial purpose,
+implanting an instinct to attack a Canaanite, but not a Hebrew? Can
+we conceive of the Almighty granting letters of marque and reprisal to
+hornets? Of course it is admitted that nothing in the world would
+be better calculated to make a man leave his native land than a few
+hornets. Is it possible for us to believe that an infinite being would
+resort to such expedients in order to drive the Canaanites from their
+country? He could just as easily have spoken the Canaanites out of
+existence as to have spoken the hornets in. In this way a vast amount of
+trouble, pain and suffering would have been saved. Is it possible that
+there is, in this country, an intelligent clergyman who will insist that
+these stories are true; that we must believe them in in order to be good
+people in this world, and glorified souls in the next?
+
+We are also told that God instructed the Hebrews to kill the Canaanites
+slowly, giving as a reason that the beasts of the field might increase
+upon his chosen people. When we take into consideration the fact that
+the Holy Land contained only about eleven or twelve thousand square
+miles, and was at that time inhabited by at least twenty-one millions of
+people, it does not seem reasonable that the wild beasts could have been
+numerous enough to cause any great alarm. The same ratio of population
+would give to the State of Illinois at least one hundred and twenty
+millions of inhabitants. Can anybody believe that, under such
+circumstances, the danger from wild beasts could be very great? What
+would we think of a general, invading such a State, if he should order
+his soldiers to kill the people slowly, lest the wild beasts might
+increase upon them? Is it possible that a God capable of doing the
+miracles recounted in the Old Testament could not, in some way, have
+disposed of the wild beasts? After the Canaanites were driven out, could
+he not have employed the hornets to drive out the wild beasts? Think of
+a God that could drive twenty-one millions of people out of the promised
+land, could raise up innumerable stinging flies, and could cover
+the earth with fiery serpents, and yet seems to have been perfectly
+powerless against the wild beasts of the land of Canaan!
+
+Speaking of these hornets, one of the good old commentators, whose
+views have long been considered of great value by the believers in the
+inspiration of the Bible, uses the following language:--"Hornets are a
+sort of strong flies, which the Lord used as instruments to plague
+the enemies of his people. They are of themselves very troublesome and
+mischievous, and those the Lord made use of were, it is thought, of an
+extraordinary bigness and perniciousness. It is said they live as the
+wasps, and that they have a king or captain, and pestilent stings
+as bees, and that, if twenty-seven of them sting man or beast, it is
+certain death to either. Nor is it strange that such creatures did drive
+out the Canaanites from their habitations; for many heathen writers give
+instances of some people driven from their seats by frogs, others by
+mice, others by bees and wasps. And it is said that a Christian city,
+being besieged by Sapores, king of Persia, was delivered by hornets; for
+the elephants and beasts being stung by them, waxed unruly, and so the
+whole army fled."
+
+Only a few years ago, all such stories were believed by the Christian
+world; and it is a historical fact, that Voltaire was the third man of
+any note in Europe, who took the ground that the mythologies of Greece
+and Rome were without foundation. Until his time, most Christians
+believed as thoroughly in the miracles ascribed to the Greek and Roman
+gods as in those of Christ and Jehovah. The Christian world cultivated
+credulity, not only as one of the virtues, but as the greatest of them
+all. But, when Luther and his followers left the Church of Rome, they
+were compelled to deny the power of the Catholic Church, at that time,
+to suspend the laws of nature, but took the ground that such power
+ceased with the apostolic age. They insisted that all things now
+happened in accordance with the laws of nature, with the exception of a
+few special interferences in favor of the Protestant Church in answer
+to prayer. They taught their children a double philosophy: by one, they
+were to show the impossibility of Catholic miracles, because opposed to
+the laws of nature; by the other, the probability of the miracles of the
+apostolic age, because they were in conformity with the statements of
+the Scriptures. They had two foundations: one, the law of nature, and
+the other, the word of God. The Protestants have endeavored to carry
+on this double process of reasoning, and the result has been a gradual
+increase of confidence in the law of nature, and a gradual decrease of
+confidence in the word of God.
+
+We are told, in this inspired account, that the clothing of the Jewish
+people did not wax old, and that their shoes refused to wear out. Some
+commentators have insisted that angels attended to the wardrobes of the
+Hebrews, patched their garments, and mended their shoes. Certain it is,
+however, that the same clothes lasted them for forty years, during the
+entire journey from Egypt to the Holy Land. Little boys starting out
+with their first pantaloons, grew as they traveled, and their clothes
+grew with them.
+
+Can it be necessary to believe a story like this? Will men make better
+husbands, fathers, neighbors, and citizens, simply by giving credence
+to these childish and impossible things? Certainly an infinite God could
+have transported the Jews to the Holy Land in a moment, and could, as
+easily, have removed the Canaanites to some other country. Surely there
+was no necessity for doing thousands and thousands of petty miracles,
+day after day for forty years, looking after the clothes of three
+millions of people, changing the nature of wool and linen and leather,
+so that they would not "wax old." Every step, every motion, would wear
+away some part of the clothing, some part of the shoes. Were these
+parts, so worn away, perpetually renewed, or was the nature of things
+so changed that they could not wear away? We know that whenever matter
+comes in contact with matter, certain atoms, by abrasion, are lost. Were
+these atoms gathered up every night by angels, and replaced on the soles
+of the shoes, on the elbows of coats, and on the knees of pantaloons, so
+that the next morning they would be precisely in the condition they were
+on the morning before? There must be a mistake somewhere.
+
+Can we believe that the real God, if there is one, ever ordered a man
+to be killed simply for making hair oil, or ointment? We are told in
+the thirtieth chapter of Exodus, that the Lord commanded Moses to take
+myrrh, cinnamon, sweet calamus, cassia, and olive oil, and make a
+holy ointment for the purpose of anointing the tabernacle, tables,
+candlesticks and other utensils, as well as Aaron and his sons; saying,
+at the same time, that whosoever compounded any like it, or whoever put
+any of it on a stranger, should be put to death. In the same chapter,
+the Lord furnishes Moses with a recipe for making a perfume, saying,
+that whoever should make any which smelled like it, should be cut off
+from his people. This, to me, sounds so unreasonable that I cannot
+believe it. Why should an infinite God care whether mankind made
+ointments and perfumes like his or not? Why should the Creator of all
+things threaten to kill a priest who approached his altar without having
+washed his hands and feet? These commandments and these penalties would
+disgrace the vainest tyrant that ever sat, by chance, upon a throne.
+There must be some mistake. I cannot believe that an infinite
+Intelligence appeared to Moses upon Mount Sinai having with him a
+variety of patterns for making a tabernacle, tongs, snuffers and dishes.
+Neither can I believe that God told Moses how to cut and trim a coat for
+a priest. Why should a God care about such things? Why should he insist
+on having buttons sewed in certain rows, and fringes of a certain color?
+Suppose an intelligent civilized man was to overhear, on Mount Sinai,
+the following instructions from God to Moses:--
+
+"You must consecrate my priests as follows:--You must kill a bullock
+for a sin offering, and have Aaron and his sons lay their hands upon the
+head of the bullock. Then you must take the blood and put it upon the
+horns of the altar round about with your finger, and pour some blood at
+the bottom of the altar to make a reconciliation; and of the fat that
+is upon the inwards, the caul above the liver and two kidneys, and
+their fat, and burn them upon the altar. You must get a ram for a burnt
+offering, and Aaron and his sons must lay their hands upon the head of
+the ram. Then you must kill it and sprinkle the blood upon the altar,
+and cut the ram into pieces, and burn the head, and the pieces, and the
+fat, and wash the inwards and the lungs in water and then burn the whole
+ram upon the altar for a sweet savor unto me. Then you must get another
+ram, and have Aaron and his sons lay their hands upon the head of that,
+then kill it and take of its blood, and put it on the top of Aaron's
+right ear, and on the thumb of his right hand, and on the great toe of
+his right foot. And you must also put a little of the blood upon the
+top of the right ears of Aaron's sons, and on the thumbs of their right
+hands and on the great toes of their right feet. And then you must take
+of the fat that is on the inwards, and the caul above the liver and the
+two kidneys, and their fat, and the right shoulder, and out of a basket
+of unleavened bread you must take one unleavened cake and another of oil
+bread, and one wafer, and put them on the fat of the right shoulder. And
+you must take of the anointing oil, and of the blood, and sprinkle it on
+Aaron, and on his garments, and on his sons' garments, and sanctify
+them and all their clothes."--Do you believe that he would have even
+suspected that the creator of the universe was talking?
+
+Can any one now tell why God commanded the Jews, when they were upon the
+desert of Sinai, to plant trees, telling them at the same time that they
+must not eat any of the fruit of such trees until after the fourth year?
+Trees could not have been planted in that desert, and if they had been,
+they could not have lived. Why did God tell Moses, while in the desert,
+to make curtains of fine linen? Where could he have obtained his flax?
+There was no land upon which it could have been produced. Why did he
+tell him to make things of gold, and silver, and precious stones, when
+they could not have been in possession of these things? There is but one
+answer, and that is, the Pentateuch was written hundreds of years after
+the Jews had settled in the Holy Land, and hundreds of years after Moses
+was dust and ashes.
+
+When the Jews had a written language, and that must have been long after
+their flight from Egypt, they wrote out their history and their laws.
+Tradition had filled the infancy of the nation with miracles and special
+interpositions in their behalf by Jehovah. Patriotism would not allow
+these wonders to grow small, and priestcraft never denied a miracle.
+There were traditions to the effect that God had spoken face to face
+with Moses; that he had given him the tables of the law, and had, in a
+thousand ways, made known his will; and whenever the priests wished to
+make new laws, or amend old ones, they pretended to have found something
+more that God said to Moses at Sinai. In this way obedience was more
+easily secured. Only a very few of the people could read, and, as a
+consequence, additions, interpolations and erasures had no fear of
+detection. In this way we account for the fact that Moses is made to
+speak of things that did not exist in his day, and were unknown for
+hundreds of years after his death.
+
+In the thirtieth chapter of Exodus, we are told that the people, when
+numbered, must give each one a half shekel after the shekel of the
+_sanctuary_. At that time no such money existed, and consequently the
+account could not, by any possibility, have been written until after
+there was a shekel of the sanctuary, and there was no such thing until
+long after the death of Moses. If we should read that Caesar paid his
+troops in pounds, shillings and pence, we would certainly know that the
+account was not written by Caesar, nor in his time, but we would know
+that it was written after the English had given these names to certain
+coins.
+
+So, we find, that when the Jews were upon the desert it was commanded
+that every mother should bring, as a sin offering, a couple of doves to
+the priests, and the priests were compelled to eat these doves in the
+most holy place. At the time this law appears to have been given, there
+were three million people, and only three priests, Aaron, Eleazer and
+Ithamar. Among three million people there would be, at least, three
+hundred births a day. Certainly we are not expected to believe that
+these three priests devoured six hundred pigeons every twenty-four
+hours.
+
+Why should a woman ask pardon of God for having been a mother? Why
+should that be considered a crime in Exodus, which is commanded as a
+duty in Genesis? Why should a mother be declared unclean? Why should
+giving birth to a daughter be regarded twice as criminal as giving birth
+to a son? Can we believe that such laws and ceremonies were made and
+instituted by a merciful and intelligent God? If there is anything in
+this poor world suggestive of, and standing for, all that is sweet,
+loving and pure, it is a mother holding in her thrilled and happy arms
+her prattling babe. Read the twelfth chapter of Leviticus, and you will
+see that when a woman became the mother of a boy she was so unclean
+that she was not allowed to touch a hallowed thing, nor to enter the
+sanctuary for forty days. If the babe was a girl, then the mother was
+unfit for eighty days, to enter the house of God, or to touch the sacred
+tongs and snuffers. These laws, born of barbarism, are unworthy of our
+day, and should be regarded simply as the mistakes of savages.
+
+Just as low in the scale of intelligence are the directions given in the
+fifth chapter of Numbers, for the trial of a wife of whom the husband
+was jealous. This foolish chapter has been the foundation of all appeals
+to God for the ascertainment of facts, such as the corsned, trial by
+battle, by water, and by fire, the last of which is our judicial oath.
+It is very easy to believe that in those days a guilty woman would
+be afraid to drink the water of jealousy and take the oath, and that,
+through fear, she might be made to confess. Admitting that the deception
+tended not only to prevent crime, but to discover it when committed,
+still, we cannot admit that an honest god would, for any purpose, resort
+to dishonest means. In all countries fear is employed as a means of
+getting at the truth, and in this there is nothing dishonest, provided
+falsehood is not resorted to for the purpose of producing the fear.
+Protestants laugh at Catholics because of their belief in the efficacy
+of holy water, and yet they teach their children that a little holy
+water, in which had been thrown some dust from the floor of the
+sanctuary, would, work a miracle in a woman's flesh. For hundreds of
+years our fathers believed that a perjurer could not swallow a piece of
+sacramental bread. Such stories belong to the childhood of our race, and
+are now believed only by mental infants and intellectual babes.
+
+I cannot believe that Moses had in his hands a couple of tables of
+stone, upon which God had written the Ten Commandments, and that when he
+saw the golden calf, and the dancing, that he dashed the tables to the
+earth and broke them in pieces. Neither do I believe that Moses took a
+golden calf, burnt it, ground it to powder, and made the people drink it
+with water, as related in the thirty-second chapter of Exodus.
+
+There is another account of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses,
+in the nineteenth and twentieth chapters of Exodus. In this account not
+one word is said about the people having made a golden calf, nor about
+the breaking of the tables of stone. In the thirty-fourth chapter of
+Exodus, there is an account of the renewal of the broken tables of
+the law, and the commandments are given, but they are not the same
+commandments mentioned in the twentieth chapter. There are two accounts
+of the same transaction. Both of these stories cannot be true, and yet
+both must be believed. Any one who will take the trouble to read
+the nineteenth and twentieth chapters, and the last verse of the
+thirty-first chapter, the thirty-second, thirty-third, and thirty-fourth
+chapters of Exodus, will be compelled to admit that both accounts cannot
+be true.
+
+From the last account it appears that while Moses was upon Mount Sinai
+receiving the commandments from God, the people brought their jewelry
+to Aaron and he cast for them a golden calf. This happened before any
+commandment against idolatry had been given. A god ought, certainly,
+to publish his laws before inflicting penalties for their violation. To
+inflict punishment for breaking unknown and unpublished laws is, in
+the last degree, cruel and unjust. It may be replied that the Jews knew
+better than to worship idols, before the law was given. If this is so,
+why should the law have been given? In all civilized countries, laws are
+made and promulgated, not simply for the purpose of informing the people
+as to what is right and wrong, but to inform them of the penalties to be
+visited upon those who violate the laws. When the Ten Commandments
+were given, no penalties were attached. Not one word was written on
+the tables of stone as to the punishments that would be inflicted for
+breaking any or all of the inspired laws. The people should not have
+been punished for violating a commandment before it was given. And yet,
+in this case, Moses commanded the sons of Levi to take their swords and
+slay every man his brother, his companion, and his neighbor. The brutal
+order was obeyed, and three thousand men were butchered.. The Levites
+consecrated themselves unto the Lord by murdering their sons, and their
+brothers, for having violated a commandment before it had been given.
+
+It has been contended for many years that the Ten Commandments are the
+foundation of all ideas of justice and of law. Eminent jurists have
+bowed to popular prejudice, and deformed their works by statements to
+the effect that the Mosaic laws are the fountains from which sprang all
+ideas of right and wrong. Nothing can be more stupidly false than such
+assertions. Thousands of years before Moses was born, the Egyptians
+had a code of laws. They had laws against blasphemy, murder, adultery,
+larceny, perjury, laws for the collection of debts, the enforcement
+of contracts, the ascertainment of damages, the redemption of property
+pawned, and upon nearly every subject of human interest. The Egyptian
+code was far better than the Mosaic.
+
+Laws spring from the instinct of self-preservation. Industry objected
+to supporting idleness, and laws were made against theft. Laws were made
+against murder, because a very large majority of the people have always
+objected to being murdered. All fundamental laws were born simply of the
+instinct of self-defence. Long before the Jewish savages assembled at
+the foot of Sinai, laws had been made and enforced, not only in Egypt
+and India, but by every tribe that ever existed.
+
+It is impossible for human beings to exist together, without certain
+rules of conduct, certain ideas of the proper and improper, of the right
+and wrong, growing out of the relation. Certain rules must be made,
+and must be enforced. This implies law, trial and punishment. Whoever
+produces anything by weary labor, does not need a revelation from heaven
+to teach him that he has a right to the thing produced. Not one of
+the learned gentlemen who pretend that the Mosaic laws are filled with
+justice and intelligence, would live, for a moment, in any country where
+such laws were in force.
+
+Nothing can be more wonderful than the medical ideas of Jehovah. He
+had the strangest notions about the cause and cure of disease. With
+him everything was miracle and wonder. In the fourteenth chapter of
+Leviticus, we find the law for cleansing a leper:--"Then shall the
+priest take for him that is to be cleansed, two birds, alive and clean,
+and cedar wood, and scarlet, and hyssop. And the priest shall command
+that one of the birds be killed in an _earthen_ vessel, over _running_
+water. As for the living bird, he shall take it, and the cedar wood, and
+the scarlet, and the hyssop, and shall dip them, and the living bird,
+in the blood of the bird that was killed over the running water. And he
+shall sprinkle upon him that is to be cleansed from the leprosy, seven
+times, and shall pronounce him clean, and shall let the living bird
+loose into the open field."
+
+We are told that God himself gave these directions to Moses. Does
+anybody believe this? Why should the bird be killed in an _earthen_
+vessel? Would the charm be broken if the vessel was of wood? Why over
+_running_ water? What would be thought of a physician now, who would
+give a prescription like that?
+
+Is it not strange that God, although he gave hundreds of directions for
+the purpose of discovering the presence of leprosy, and for cleansing
+the leper after he was healed, forgot to tell how that disease could be
+cured? Is it not wonderful that while God told his people what animals
+were fit for food, he failed to give a list of plants that man might
+eat? Why did he leave his children to find out the hurtful and the
+poisonous by experiment, knowing that experiment, in millions of cases,
+must be death?
+
+When reading the history of the Jewish people, of their flight from
+slavery to death, of their exchange of tyrants, I must confess that my
+sympathies are all aroused in their behalf. They were cheated,
+deceived and abused. Their god was quick-tempered, unreasonable, cruel,
+revengeful and dishonest. He was always promising but never performed.
+He wasted time in ceremony and childish detail, and in the exaggeration
+of what he had done. It is impossible for me to conceive of a character
+more utterly detestable than that of the Hebrew god. He had solemnly
+promised the Jews that he would take them from Egypt to a land flowing
+with milk and honey. He had led them to believe that in a little while
+their troubles would be over, and that they would soon in the land of
+Canaan, surrounded by their wives and little ones, forget, the stripes
+and tears of Egypt. After promising the poor wanderers again and again
+that he would lead them in safety to the promised land of joy and
+plenty, this God, forgetting every promise, said to the wretches in his
+power:--"Your carcasses shall fall in this wilderness and your children
+shall wander until your carcasses be wasted." This curse was the
+conclusion of the whole matter. Into this dust of death and night faded
+all the promises of God. Into this rottenness of wandering despair fell
+all the dreams of liberty and home. Millions of corpses were left to rot
+in the desert, and each one certified to the dishonesty of Jehovah. I
+cannot believe these things. They are so cruel and heartless, that my
+blood is chilled and my sense of justice shocked. A book that is equally
+abhorrent to my head and heart, cannot be accepted as a revelation from
+God.
+
+When we think of the poor Jews, destroyed, murdered, bitten by serpents,
+visited by plagues, decimated by famine, butchered by each other,
+swallowed by the earth, frightened, cursed, starved, deceived, robbed
+and outraged, how thankful we should be that we are not the chosen
+people of God. No wonder that they longed for the slavery of Egypt, and
+remembered with sorrow the unhappy day when they exchanged masters.
+Compared with Jehovah, Pharaoh was a benefactor, and the tyranny of
+Egypt was freedom to those who suffered the liberty of God.
+
+While reading the Pentateuch, I am filled with indignation, pity and
+horror. Nothing can be sadder than the history of the starved and
+frightened wretches who wandered over the desolate crags and sands of
+wilderness and desert, the prey of famine, sword, and plague. Ignorant
+and superstitious to the last degree, governed by falsehood, plundered
+by hypocrisy, they were the sport of priests, and the food of fear. God
+was their greatest enemy, and death their only friend.
+
+It is impossible to conceive of a more thoroughly despicable, hateful,
+and arrogant being, than the Jewish god. He is without a redeeming
+feature. In the mythology of the world he has no parallel. He, only, is
+never touched by agony and tears. He delights only in blood and pain.
+Human affections are naught to him. He cares neither for love nor music,
+beauty nor joy. A false friend, an unjust judge, a braggart, hypocrite,
+and tyrant, sincere in hatred, jealous, vain, and revengeful, false in
+promise, honest in curse, suspicious, ignorant, and changeable, infamous
+and hideous:--such is the God of the Pentateuch.
+
+XXIV. CONFESS AND AVOID
+
+The scientific Christians now admit that the Bible is not inspired in
+its astronomy, geology, botany, zoology, nor in any science. In other
+words, they admit that on these subjects, the Bible cannot be depended
+upon. If all the statements in the Scriptures were true, there would be
+no necessity for admitting that some of them are not inspired. A
+Christian will not admit that a passage in the Bible is uninspired,
+until he is satisfied that it is untrue. Orthodoxy itself has at last
+been compelled to say, that while a passage may be true and uninspired,
+it cannot be inspired if false.
+
+If the people of Europe had known as much of astronomy and geology when
+the Bible was introduced among them, as they do now, there never could
+have been one believer in the doctrine of inspiration. If the writers of
+the various parts of the Bible had known as much about the sciences as
+is now known by every intelligent man, the book never could have
+been written. It was produced by ignorance, and has been believed and
+defended by its author. It has lost power in the proportion that man
+has gained knowledge. A few years ago, this book was appealed to in the
+settlement of all scientific questions; but now, even the clergy
+confess that in such matters, it has ceased to speak with the voice
+of authority. For the establishment of facts, the word of man is now
+considered far better than the word of God. In the world of science,
+Jehovah was superseded by Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler. All that God
+told Moses, admitting the entire account to be true, is dust and ashes
+compared to the discoveries of Descartes, Laplace, and Humboldt. In
+matters of fact, the Bible has ceased to be regarded as a standard.
+Science has succeeded in breaking the chains of theology. A few years
+ago, Science endeavored to show that it was not inconsistent with the
+Bible. The tables have been turned, and now, Religion is endeavoring to
+prove that the Bible is not inconsistent with Science. The standard has
+been changed.
+
+For many ages, the Christians contended that the Bible, viewed simply as
+a literary performance, was beyond all other books, and that man without
+the assistance of God could not produce its equal. This claim was made
+when but few books existed, and the Bible, being the only book generally
+known, had no rival. But this claim, like the other, has been abandoned
+by many, and soon will be, by all. Com pared with Shakespeare's "book
+and volume of the brain," the "sacred" Bible shrinks and seems as feebly
+impotent and vain, as would a pipe of Fan, when some great organ, voiced
+with every tone, from the hoarse thunder of the sea to the winged warble
+of a mated bird, floods and fills cathedral aisles with all the wealth
+of sound.
+
+It is now maintained--and this appears to be the last fortification
+behind which the doctrine of inspiration skulks and crouches--that the
+Bible, although false and mistaken in its astronomy, geology, geography,
+history and philosophy, is inspired in its morality. It is now claimed
+that had it not been for this book, the world would have been inhabited
+only by savages, and that had it not been for the Holy Scriptures, man
+never would have even dreamed of the unity of God. A belief in one God
+is claimed to be a dogma of almost infinite importance, that with out
+this belief civilization is impossible, and that this fact is the sun
+around which all the virtues revolve. For my part, I think it infinitely
+more important to believe in man. Theology is a superstition--Humanity a
+religion.
+
+XXV. "INSPIRED" SLAVERY
+
+Perhaps the Bible was inspired upon the subject of human slavery. Is
+there, in the civilized world, to-day, a clergyman who believes in the
+divinity of slavery? Does the Bible teach man to enslave his brother? If
+it does, is it not blasphemous to say that it is inspired of God? If
+you find the institution of slavery upheld in a book said to have been
+written by God, what would you expect to find in a book inspired by the
+devil? Would you expect to find that book in favor of liberty? Modern
+Christians, ashamed of the God of the Old Testament, endeavor now to
+show that slavery was neither commanded nor opposed by Jehovah. Nothing
+can be plainer than the following passages from the twenty-fifth chapter
+of Leviticus. "Moreover of the children of the strangers that do sojourn
+among you, of them shall ye buy, and of their families that are with
+you, which they begat in your land: and they shall be your possession.
+And ye shall take them as an inheritance for your children after you, to
+inherit them for a possession, they shall be your bondmen forever. Both
+thy bondmen, and thy bondmaids, which thou shalt have, shall be of the
+heathen that are round about you; of them shall ye buy bondmen, and
+bondmaids."
+
+Can we believe in this, the Nineteenth Century, that these infamous
+passages were inspired by God? that God approved not only of human
+slavery, but instructed his chosen people to buy the women, children and
+babes of the heathen round about them? If it was right for the Hebrews
+to buy, it was also right for the heathen to sell. This God, by
+commanding the Hebrews to buy, approved of the selling of sons and
+daughters. The Canaanite who, tempted by gold, lured by avarice, sold
+from the arms of his wife the dimpled babe, simply made it possible for
+the Hebrews to obey the orders of their God. If God is the author of
+the Bible, the reading of these passages ought to cover his cheeks with
+shame. I ask the Christian world to-day, was it right for the heathen
+to sell their children? Was it right for God not only to uphold, but to
+command the infamous traffic in human flesh? Could the most revengeful
+fiend, the most malicious vagrant in the gloom of hell, sink to a lower
+moral depth than this?
+
+According to this God, his chosen people were not only commanded to buy
+of the heathen round about them, but were also permitted to buy each
+other for a term of years. The law governing the purchase of Jews is
+laid down in the twenty-first chapter of Exodus. "If thou buy a Hebrew
+servant, six years shall he serve: and in the seventh he shall go out
+free for nothing. If he came in by himself, he shall go out by himself:
+if he were married, then his wife shall go out with him. If his master
+have given him a wife, and she have borne him sons or daughters, the
+wife and her children shall be her master's, and he shall go out by
+himself. And if the servant shall plainly say, I love my master, my
+wife, and my children; I will not go out free: Then his master shall
+bring him unto the judges; he shall also bring him to the door, or unto
+the door-post: and his master shall bore his ear through with an awl:
+and he shall serve him forever."
+
+Do you believe that God was the author of this infamous law? Do you
+believe that the loving father of us all, turned the dimpled arms of
+babes into manacles of iron? Do you believe that he baited the dungeon
+of servitude with wife and child? Is it possible to love a God who would
+make such laws? Is it possible not to hate and despise him?
+
+The heathen are not spoken of as human beings. Their rights are never
+mentioned. They were the rightful food of the sword, and their bodies
+were made for stripes and chains.
+
+In the same chapter of the same inspired book, we are told that, "if a
+man smite his servant, or his maid, with a rod, and he dies under his
+hand, he shall be surely punished. Notwithstanding, if he continue a day
+or two, he shall not be punished, for he is his money."
+
+Must we believe that God called some of his children the money of
+others? Can we believe that God made lashes upon the naked back, a
+legal tender for labor performed? Must we regard the auction block as an
+altar? Were blood hounds apostles? Was the slave-pen a temple? Were the
+stealers and whippers of babes and women the justified children of God?
+
+It is now contended that while the Old Testament is touched with the
+barbarism of its time, that the New Testament is morally perfect, and
+that on its pages can be found no blot or stain. As a matter of fact,
+the New Testament is more decidedly in favor of human slavery than the
+old.
+
+For my part, I never will, I never can, worship a God who upholds the
+institution of slavery. Such a God I hate and defy. I neither want his
+heaven, nor fear his hell.
+
+XXXVI. "INSPIRED" MARRIAGE
+
+Is there an orthodox clergyman in the world, who will now declare that
+he believes the institution of polygamy to be right? Is there one who
+will publicly declare that, in his judgment, that institution ever was
+right? Was there ever a time in the history of the world when it was
+right to treat woman simply as property? Do not attempt to answer these
+questions by saying, that the Bible is an exceedingly good book, that we
+are indebted for our civilization to the sacred volume, and that without
+it, man would lapse into savagery, and mental night. This is no answer.
+Was there a time when the institution of polygamy was the highest
+expression of human virtue? Is there a Christian woman, civilized,
+intelligent, and free, who believes in the institution of polygamy? Are
+we better, purer, and more intelligent than God was four thousand years
+ago? Why should we imprison Mormons, and worship God? Polygamy is just
+as pure in Utah, as it could have been in the promised land. Love and
+Virtue are the same the whole world round, and Justice is the same in
+every star. All the languages of the world are not sufficient to express
+the filth of polygamy. It makes of man, a beast, of woman, a trembling
+slave. It destroys the fireside, makes virtue an outcast, takes from
+human speech its sweetest words, and leaves the heart a den, where crawl
+and hiss the slimy serpents of most loathsome lust. Civilization rests
+upon the family. The good family is the unit of good government. The
+virtues grow about the holy hearth of home--they cluster, bloom, and
+shed their perfume round the fireside where the one man loves the one
+woman. Lover--husband--wife--mother--father--child--home!--? without
+these sacred words, the world is but a lair, and men and women merely
+beasts.
+
+Why should the innocent maiden and the loving mother worship the
+heartless Jewish God? Why should they, with pure and stainless lips,
+read the vile record of inspired lust?
+
+The marriage of the one man to the one woman is the citadel and fortress
+of civilization. Without this, woman becomes the prey and slave of lust
+and power, and man goes back to savagery and crime. From the bottom of
+my heart I hate, abhor and execrate all theories of life, of which the
+pure and sacred home is not the corner-stone. Take from the world the
+family, the fireside, the children born of wedded love, and there is
+nothing left. The home where virtue dwells with love is like a lily with
+a heart of fire--the fairest flower in all the world.
+
+XXVII. "INSPIRED" WAR
+
+If the Bible be true, God commanded his chosen people to destroy men
+simply for the crime of defending their native land. They were not
+allowed to spare trembling and white-haired age, nor dimpled babes
+clasped in the mothers' arms. They were ordered to kill women, and to
+pierce, with the sword of war, the unborn child. "Our heavenly Father"
+commanded the Hebrews to kill the men and women, the fathers, sons and
+brothers, but to preserve the girls alive. Why were not the maidens also
+killed? Why were they spared? Read the thirty-first chapter of Numbers,
+and you will find that the maidens were given to the soldiers and the
+priests. Is there, in all the history of war, a more infamous thing than
+this? Is it possible that God permitted the violets of modesty, that
+grow and shed their perfume in the maiden's heart, to be trampled
+beneath the brutal feet of lust? If this was the order of God, what,
+under the same circumstances, would have been the command of a devil?
+When, in this age of the world, a woman, a wife, a mother, reads this
+record, she should, with scorn and loathing, throw the book away. A
+general, who now should make such an order, giving over to massacre
+and rapine a conquered people, would be held in execration by the whole
+civilized world. Yet, if the Bible be true, the supreme and infinite God
+was once a savage.
+
+A little while ago, out upon the western plains, in a little path
+leading to a cabin, were found the bodies of two children and their
+mother. Her breast was filled with wounds received in the defence of her
+darlings. They had been murdered by the savages. Suppose when looking at
+their lifeless forms, some one had said, "This was done by the command
+of God!" In Canaan there were countless scenes like this. There was
+no pity in inspired war. God raised the black flag, and commanded his
+soldiers to kill even the smiling infant in its mother's arms. Who
+is the blasphemer; the man who denies the existence of God, or he who
+covers the robes of the Infinite with innocent blood?
+
+We are told in the Pentateuch, that God, the father of us all, gave
+thousands of maidens, after having killed their fathers, their mothers,
+and their brothers, to satisfy the brutal lusts of savage men. If there
+be a God, I pray him to write in his book, opposite my name, that I
+denied this lie for him.
+
+XXVIII. "INSPIRED" RELIGIOUS LIBERTY.
+
+According to the Bible, God selected the Jewish people through whom to
+make known the great fact, that he was the only true and living God. For
+this purpose, he appeared on several occasions to Moses--came down to
+Sinai's top clothed in cloud and fire, and wrought a thousand miracles
+for the preservation and education of the Jewish people. In their
+presence he opened the waters of the sea. For them he caused bread to
+rain from heaven. To quench their thirst, water leaped from the dry and
+barren rock. Their enemies were miraculously destroyed; and for forty
+years, at least, this God took upon himself the government of the Jews.
+But, after all this, many of the people had less confidence in him than
+in gods of wood and stone. In moments of trouble, in periods of
+disaster, in the darkness of doubt, in the hunger and thirst of famine,
+instead of asking this God for aid, they turned and sought the help of
+senseless things. This God, with all his power and wisdom, could not
+even convince a few wandering and wretched savages that he was more
+potent than the idols of Egypt. This God was not willing that the Jews
+should think and investigate for themselves. For heresy, the penalty was
+death. Where this God reigned, intellectual liberty was unknown. He
+appealed only to brute force; he collected taxes by threatening plagues;
+he demanded worship on pain of sword and fire; acting as spy,
+inquisitor, judge and executioner.
+
+In the thirteenth chapter of Deuteronomy, we have the ideas of God as to
+mental freedom. "If thy brother, the son of thy mother, or thy son, or
+the wife of thy bosom, or thy friend which is as thine own soul, entice
+thee secretly, saying, Let us go and serve other gods, which thou hast
+not known, thou nor thy fathers; namely of the gods of the people which
+are around about you, nigh unto thee, or far off from thee, from the one
+end of the earth even unto the other end of the earth, Thou shalt not
+consent unto him, nor hearken unto him, neither shall thine eye pity
+him, neither shalt thou spare him, neither shalt thou conceal him. But
+thou shalt surely kill him; thine hand shall be first upon him to put
+him to death, and afterward the hand of all the people. And thou shalt
+stone him with stones that he die."
+
+This is the religious liberty of God; the toleration of Jehovah. If
+I had lived in Palestine at that time, and my wife, the mother of my
+children, had said to me, "I am tired of Jehovah, he is always asking
+for blood; he is never weary of killing; he is always telling of his
+might and strength; always telling what he has done for the Jews,
+always asking for sacrifices; for doves and lambs--blood, nothing
+but blood.--Let us worship the sun. Jehovah is too revengeful, too
+malignant, too exacting. Let us worship the sun. The sun has clothed the
+world in beauty; it has covered the earth with flowers; by its divine
+light I first saw your face, and my beautiful babe."--If I had obeyed
+the command of God, I would have killed her. My hand would have been
+first upon her, and after that the hands of all the people, and she
+would have been stoned with stones until she died. For my part, I would
+never kill my wife, even if commanded so to do by the real God of this
+universe. Think of taking up some ragged rock and hurling it against the
+white bosom filled with love for you; and when you saw oozing from
+the bruised lips of the death wound, the red current of her sweet
+life--think of looking up to heaven and receiving the congratulations of
+the infinite fiend whose commandment you had obeyed!
+
+Can we believe that any such command was ever given by a merciful and
+intelligent God? Suppose, however, that God did give this law to the
+Jews, and did tell them that whenever a man preached a heresy, or
+proposed to worship any other God that they should kill him; and suppose
+that afterward this same God took upon himself flesh, and came to this
+very chosen people and taught a different religion, and that thereupon
+the Jews crucified him; I ask you, did he not reap exactly what he
+had sown? What right would this God have to complain of a crucifixion
+suffered in accordance with his own command?
+
+Nothing can be more infamous than intellectual tyranny. To put chains
+upon the body is as nothing compared with putting shackles on the brain.
+No god is entitled to the worship or the respect of man who does not
+give, even to the meanest of his children, every right that he claims
+for himself.
+
+If the Pentateuch be true, religious persecution is a duty. The dungeons
+of the Inquisition were temples, and the clank of every chain upon
+the limbs of heresy was music in the ear of God. If the Pentateuch was
+inspired, every heretic should be destroyed; and every man who advocates
+a fact inconsistent with the sacred book, should be consumed by sword
+and flame.
+
+In the Old Testament no one is told to reason with a heretic, and not
+one word is said about relying upon argument, upon education, nor upon
+intellectual development--nothing except simple brute force. Is there
+to-day a Christian who will say that four thousand years ago, it was
+the duty of a husband to kill his wife if she differed with him upon
+the subject of religion? Is there one who will now say that, under such
+circumstances, the wife ought to have been killed? Why should God be so
+jealous of the wooden idols of the heathen? Could he not compete with
+Baal? Was he envious of the success of the Egyptian magicians? Was it
+not possible for him to make such a convincing display of his power as
+to silence forever the voice of unbelief? Did this God have to resort to
+force to make converts? Was he so ignorant of the structure of the human
+mind as to believe all honest doubt a crime? If he wished to do away
+with the idolatry of the Canaanites, why did he not appear to them? Why
+did he not give them the tables of the law? Why did he only make known
+his will to a few wandering savages in the desert of Sinai? Will some
+theologian have the kindness to answer these questions? Will some
+minister, who now believes in religious liberty, and eloquently
+denounces the intolerance of Catholicism, explain these things; will he
+tell us why he worships an intolerant God? Is a god who will burn a soul
+forever in another world, better than a Christian who burns the body for
+a few hours in this? Is there no intellectual liberty in heaven? Do the
+angels all discuss questions on the same side? Are all the investigators
+in perdition? Will the penitent thief, winged and crowned, laugh at the
+honest folks in hell? Will the agony of the damned increase or decrease
+the happiness of God? Will there be, in the universe, an eternal _auto
+da fe?_
+
+XXIX. CONCLUSION
+
+If the Pentateuch is not inspired in its astronomy, geology, geography,
+history or philosophy, if it is not inspired concerning slavery,
+polygamy, war, law, religious or political liberty, or the rights of
+men, women and children, what is it inspired in, or about? The unity
+of God?--that was believed long before Moses was born. Special
+providence?--that has been the doctrine of ignorance in all ages.
+The rights of property?--theft was always a crime. The sacrifice of
+animals?--that was a custom thousands of years before a Jew existed.
+The sacredness of life?--there have always been laws against murder.
+The wickedness of perjury?--truthfulness has always been a virtue.
+The beauty of chastity?--the Pentateuch does not teach it. Thou shalt
+worship no other God?--that has been the burden of all religions.
+
+Is it possible that the Pentateuch could not have been written by
+uninspired men? that the assistance of God was necessary to produce
+these books? Is it possible that Galileo ascertained the mechanical
+principles of "Virtual Velocity," the laws of falling bodies and of all
+motion; that Copernicus ascertained the true position of the earth and
+accounted for all celestial phenomena; that Kepler discovered his three
+laws--discoveries of such importance that the 8th of May, 1618, may be
+called the birthday of modern science; that Newton gave to the world
+the Method of Fluxions, the Theory of Universal Gravitation, and the
+Decomposition of Light; that Euclid, Cavalieri, Descartes, and Leibnitz,
+almost completed the science of mathematics; that all the discoveries
+in optics, hydrostatics, pneumatics and chemistry, the experiments,
+discoveries, and inventions of Galvani, Volta, Franklin and Morse, of
+Trevethick, Watt and Fulton and of all the pioneers of progress--that
+all this was accomplished by uninspired men, while the writer of the
+Pentateuch was directed and inspired by an infinite God? Is it possible
+that the codes of China, India, Egypt, Greece and Rome were made by man,
+and that the laws recorded in the Pentateuch were alone given by
+God? Is it possible that AEschylus and Shakespeare, Burns, and Beranger,
+Goethe and Schiller, and all the poets of the world, and all their
+wondrous tragedies and songs, are but the work of men, while no
+intelligence except the infinite God could be the author of the
+Pentateuch? Is it possible that of all the books that crowd the
+libraries of the world, the books of science, fiction, history and song,
+that all save only one, have been produced by man? Is it possible that
+of all these, the Bible only is the work of God?
+
+If the Pentateuch is inspired, the civilization of our day is a mistake
+and crime. There should be no political liberty. Heresy should be
+trodden out beneath the bigot's brutal feet. Husbands should divorce
+their wives at will, and make the mothers of their children houseless
+and weeping wanderers. Polygamy ought to be practiced; women should
+become slaves; we should buy the sons and daughters of the heathen and
+make them bondmen and bondwomen forever. We should sell our own flesh
+and blood, and have the right to kill our slaves. Men and women should
+be stoned to death for laboring on the seventh day. "Mediums," such
+as have familiar spirits, should be burned with fire. Every vestige of
+mental liberty should be destroyed, and reason's holy torch extinguished
+in the martyr's blood.
+
+Is it not far better and wiser to say that the Pentateuch while
+containing some good laws, some truths, some wise and useful things is,
+after all, deformed and blackened by the savagery of its time? Is it not
+far better and wiser to take the good and throw the bad away?
+
+Let us admit what we know to be true; that Moses was mistaken about a
+thousand things; that the story of creation is not true; that the Garden
+of Eden is a myth; that the serpent and the tree of knowledge, and the
+fall of man are but fragments of old mythologies lost and dead; that
+woman was not made out of a rib; that serpents never had the power of
+speech; that the sons of God did not marry the daughters of men; that
+the story of the flood and ark is not exactly true; that the tower of
+Babel is a mistake; that the confusion of tongues is a childish thing;
+that the origin of the rainbow is a foolish fancy; that Methuselah did
+not live nine hundred and sixty-nine years; that Enoch did not leave
+this world, taking with him his flesh and bones; that the story of Sodom
+and Gomorrah is somewhat improbable; that burning brimstone never fell
+like rain; that Lot's wife was not changed into chloride of sodium; that
+Jacob did not, in fact, put his hip out of joint wrestling with God;
+that the history of Tamar might just as well have been left out; that a
+belief in Pharaoh's dreams is not essential to salvation; that it makes
+but little difference whether the rod of Aaron was changed to a serpent
+or not; that of all the wonders said to have been performed in Egypt,
+the greatest is, that anybody ever believed the absurd account; that
+God did not torment the innocent cattle on account of the sins of their
+owners; that he did not kill the first born of the poor maid behind
+the mill because of Pharaoh's crimes; that flies and frogs were not
+ministers of God's wrath; that lice and locusts were not the executors
+of his will; that seventy people did not, in two hundred and fifteen
+years, increase to three million; that three priests could not eat
+six hundred pigeons in a day; that gazing at a brass serpent could not
+extract poison from the blood; that God did not go in partnership with
+hornets; that he did not murder people simply because they asked for
+something to eat; that he did not declare the making of hair oil
+and ointment an offence to be punished with death; that he did not
+miraculously preserve cloth and leather; that he was not afraid of wild
+beasts; that he did not punish heresy with sword and fire; that he was
+not jealous, revengeful, and unjust; that he knew all about the sun,
+moon, and stars; that he did not threaten to kill people for eating the
+fat of an ox; that he never told Aaron to draw cuts to see which of two
+goats should be killed; that he never objected to clothes made of woolen
+mixed with linen; that if he objected to dwarfs, people with flat noses
+and too many fingers, he ought not to have created such folks; that
+he did not demand human sacrifices as set forth in the last chapter
+of Leviticus; that he did not object to the raising of horses; that he
+never commanded widows to spit in the faces of their brothers-in-law;
+that several contradictory accounts of the same transaction cannot all
+be true; that God did not talk to Abraham as one man talks to another;
+that angels were not in the habit of walking about the earth eating veal
+dressed with milk and butter, and making bargains about the destruction
+of cities; that God never turned himself into a flame of fire, and lived
+in a bush; that he never met Moses in a hotel and tried to kill him;
+that it was absurd to perform miracles to induce a king to act in a
+certain way and then harden his heart so that he would refuse; that God
+was not kept from killing the Jews by the fear that the Egyptians would
+laugh at him; that he did not secretly bury a man and then allow the
+corpse to write an account of the funeral; that he never believed the
+firmament to be solid; that he knew slavery was and always would be a
+frightful crime; that polygamy is but stench and filth; that the brave
+soldier will always spare an unarmed foe; that only cruel cowards
+slay the conquered and the helpless; that no language can describe the
+murderer of a smiling babe; that God did not want the blood of doves and
+lambs; that he did not love the smell of burning flesh; that he did not
+want his altars daubed with blood; that he did not pretend that the sins
+of a people could be transferred to a goat; that he did not believe in
+witches, wizards, spooks, and devils; that he did not test the virtue of
+woman with dirty water; that he did not suppose that rabbits chewed the
+cud; that he never thought there were any four-footed birds; that he did
+not boast for several hundred years that he had vanquished an Egyptian
+king; that a dry stick did not bud, blossom, and bear almonds in one
+night; that manna did not shrink and swell, so that each man could
+gather only just one omer; that it was never wrong to "countenance the
+poor man in his cause;" that God never told a people not to live in
+peace with their neighbors; that he did not spend forty days with Moses
+on Mount Sinai giving him patterns for making clothes, tongs, basins,
+and snuffers; that maternity is not a sin; that physical deformity is
+not a crime; that an atonement cannot be made for the soul by shedding
+innocent blood; that killing a dove over running water will not make its
+blood a medicine; that a god who demands love knows nothing of the human
+heart; that one who frightens savages with loud noises is unworthy the
+love of civilized men; that one who destroys children on account of
+the sins of their fathers is a monster; that an infinite god never
+threatened to give people the itch; that he never sent wild beasts to
+devour babes; that he never ordered the violation of maidens; that
+he never regarded patriotism as a crime; that he never ordered the
+destruction of unborn children; that he never opened the earth and
+swallowed wives and babes because husbands and fathers had displeased
+him; that he never demanded that men should kill their sons and
+brothers, for the purpose of sanctifying themselves; that we cannot
+please God by believing the improbable; that credulity is not a virtue;
+that investigation is not a crime; that every mind should be free;
+that all religious persecution is infamous in God, as well as man; that
+without liberty, virtue is impossible; that without freedom, even love
+cannot exist; that every man should be allowed to think and to express
+his thoughts; that woman is the equal of man; that children should be
+governed by love and reason; that the family relation is sacred; that
+war is a hideous crime; that all intolerance is born of ignorance and
+hate; that the freedom of today is the hope of to-morrow; that the
+enlightened present ought not to fall upon its knees and blindly worship
+the barbaric past; and that every free, brave and enlightened man should
+publicly declare that all the ignorant, infamous, heartless, hideous
+things recorded in the "inspired" Pentateuch are not the words of God,
+but simply "Some Mistakes of Moses."
+
+
+
+
+SOME REASONS WHY
+
+I.
+
+RELIGION makes enemies instead of friends. That one word, "religion,"
+covers all the horizon of memory with visions of war, of outrage, of
+persecution, of tyranny, and death. That one word brings to the mind
+every instrument with which man has tortured man. In that one word are
+all the fagots and flames and dungeons of the past, and in that word is
+the infinite and eternal hell of the future.
+
+In the name of universal benevolence Christians have hated their
+fellow-men. Although they have been preaching universal love, the
+Christian nations are the warlike nations of the world. The most
+destructive weapons of war have been invented by Christians. The
+musket, the revolver, the rifled canon, the bombshell, the torpedo, the
+explosive bullet, have been invented by Christian brains.
+
+Above all other arts, the Christian world has placed the art of war.
+
+A Christian nation has never had the slightest respect for the rights of
+barbarians; neither has any Christian sect any respect for the rights
+of other sects. Anciently, the sects discussed with fire and sword, and
+even now, something happens almost every day to show that the old spirit
+that was in the Inquisition still slumbers in the Christian breast.
+
+Whoever imagines himself a favorite with God, holds other people in
+contempt.
+
+Whenever a man believes that he has the exact truth from God, there is
+in that man no spirit of compromise. He has not the modesty born of
+the imperfections of human nature; he has the arrogance of theological
+certainty and the tyranny born of ignorant assurance. Believing himself
+to be the slave of God, he imitates his master, and of all tyrants, the
+worst is a slave in power.
+
+When a man really believes that it is necessary to do a certain thing
+to be happy forever, or that a certain belief is necessary to ensure
+eternal joy, there is in that man no spirit of concession. He divides
+the whole world into saints and sinners, into believers and unbelievers,
+into God's sheep and Devil's goats, into people who will be glorified
+and people who will be damned.
+
+A Christian nation can make no compromise with one not Christian; it
+will either compel that nation to accept its doctrine, or it will wage
+war. If Christ, in fact, said "I came not to bring peace but a sword,"
+it is the only prophecy in the New Testament that has been literally
+fulfilled.
+
+II. DUTIES TO GOD.
+
+RELIGION is supposed to consist in a discharge of the duties we owe to
+God. In other words, we are taught that God is exceedingly anxious that
+we should believe a certain thing. For my part, I do not believe that
+there is any infinite being to whom we owe anything. The reason I say
+this is, we can not owe any duty to any being who requires nothing--to
+any being that we cannot possibly help, to any being whose happiness we
+cannot increase. If God is infinite, we cannot make him happier than
+he is. If God is infinite, we can neither give, nor can he receive,
+anything. Anything that we do or fail to do, cannot, in the slightest
+degree, affect an infinite God; consequently, no relations can exist
+between the finite and the Infinite, if by relations is meant mutual
+duties and obligations.
+
+Some tell us that it is the desire of God that we should worship him.
+What for? Why does he desire worship? Others tell us that we should
+sacrifice something to him. What for? Is he in want? Can we assist him?
+Is he unhappy? Is he in trouble? Does he need human sympathy? We cannot
+assist the Infinite, but we can assist our fellow-men. We can feed the
+hungry and clothe the naked, and enlighten the ignorant, and we can
+help, in some degree at least, toward covering this world with the
+mantle of joy.
+
+I do not believe there is any being in this universe who gives rain
+for praise, who gives sunshine for prayer, or who blesses a man simply
+because he kneels.
+
+The Infinite cannot receive praise or worship.
+
+The Infinite can neither hear nor answer prayer.
+
+An Infinite personality is an infinite impossibility.
+
+III. INSPIRATION.
+
+WE are told that we have in our possession the inspired will of God. What
+is meant by the word "inspired" is not exactly known; but whatever else
+it may mean, certainly it means that the "inspired" must be the true. If
+it is true, there is, in fact, no need of its being inspired--the truth
+will take care of itself.
+
+The church is forced to say that the Bible differs from all other books;
+it is forced to say that it contains the actual will of God. Let us then
+see what inspiration really is. A man looks at the sea, and the sea
+says something to him. It makes an impression upon his mind. It awakens
+memory, and this impression depends upon the man's experience--upon
+his intellectual capacity. Another looks upon the same sea. He has a
+different brain; he has had a different experience. The sea may speak
+to him of joy, to the other of grief and tears. The sea cannot tell the
+same thing to any two human beings, because no two human beings have had
+the same experience.
+
+A year ago, while the cars were going from Boston to Gloucester, we
+passed through Manchester. As the cars stopped, a lady sitting opposite,
+speaking to her husband, looking out of the window and catching, for the
+first time, a view of the sea, cried out, "Is it not beautiful!" and the
+husband replied, "I'll bet you could dig clams right here!"
+
+Another, standing upon the shore, listening to what the great Greek
+tragedian called "the multitudinous laughter of the sea," may say: Every
+drop has visited all the shores of the earth; every one has been frozen
+in the vast and icy North; every one has fallen in snow, has been
+whirled by storms around mountain peaks; every one has been kissed to
+vapor by the sun; every one has worn the seven-hued garment of light;
+every one has fallen in pleasant rain, gurgled from springs and laughed
+in brooks while lovers wooed upon the banks, and every one has rushed
+with mighty rivers back to the sea's embrace. Everything in nature tells
+a different story to all eyes that see and to all ears that hear.
+
+Once in my life, and once only, I heard Horace Greeley deliver a
+lecture. I think its title was, "Across the Continent." At last he
+reached the mammoth trees of California, and I thought "Here is an
+opportunity for the old man to indulge his fancy. Here are trees that
+have outlived a thousand human governments. There are limbs above his
+head older than the pyramids. While man was emerging from barbarism
+to something like civilization, these trees were growing. Older than
+history, every one appeared to be a memory, a witness, and a prophecy.
+The same wind that filled the sails of the Argonauts had swayed these
+trees." But these trees said nothing of this kind to Mr. Greeley. Upon
+these subjects not a word was told to him. Instead, he took his pencil,
+and after figuring awhile, remarked: "One of these trees, sawed into
+inch-boards, would make more than three hundred thousand feet of
+lumber."
+
+I was once riding on the cars in Illinois. There had been a violent
+thunder-storm. The rain had ceased, the sun was going down. The
+great clouds had floated toward the west, and there they assumed most
+wonderful architectural shapes. There were temples and palaces domed
+and turreted, and they were touched with silver, with amethyst and gold.
+They looked like the homes of the Titans, or the palaces of the gods.
+A man was sitting near me. I touched him and said, "Did you ever see
+anything so beautiful!" He looked out. He saw nothing of the cloud,
+nothing of the sun, nothing of the color; he saw only the country and
+replied, "Yes, it is beautiful; I always did like rolling land." On
+another occasion I was riding in a stage. There had been a snow, and
+after the snow a sleet, and all the trees were bent, and all the boughs
+were arched. Every fence, every log cabin had been transfigured, touched
+with a glory almost beyond this world. The great fields were a pure and
+perfect white; the forests, drooping beneath their load of gems, made
+wonderful caves, from which one almost expected to see troops of fairies
+come. The whole world looked like a bride, jewelled from head to foot.
+A German on the back seat, hearing our talk, and our exclamations of
+wonder leaned forward, looked out of the stage window and said: "Yes, it
+looks like a clean table cloth!"
+
+So, when we look upon a flower, a painting, a statue, a star, or a
+violet, the more we know, the more we have experienced, the more we
+have thought, the more we remember, the more the statue, the star,
+the painting, the violet has to tell. Nature says to me all that I am
+capable of understanding--gives all that I can receive.
+
+As with star, or flower, or sea, so with a book. A man reads
+Shakespeare. What does he get from him? All that he has the mind to
+understand. He gets his little cup full. Let another read him who knows
+nothing of the drama, nothing of the impersonations of passion, and what
+does he get? Almost nothing. Shakespeare has a different story for each
+reader. He is a world in which each recognizes his acquaintances--he may
+know a few, he may know all.
+
+The impression that nature makes upon the mind, the stories told by sea
+and star and flower, must be the natural food of thought. Leaving out
+for the moment the impression gained from ancestors, the hereditary
+fears and drifts and trends--the natural food of thought must be the
+impression made upon the brain by coming in contact through the medium
+of the five senses with what we call the outward world. The brain is
+natural. Its food is natural. The result, thought, must be natural. The
+supernatural can be constructed with no material except the natural. Of
+the supernatural we can have no conception. Thought may be deformed, and
+the thought of one may be strange to, and denominated as unnatural
+by, another; but it cannot be supernatural. It may be weak, it may be
+insane, but it is not supernatural. Above the natural man cannot rise,
+even with the aid of fancy's wings. There can can be deformed ideas,
+as there are deformed persons. There can be religions monstrous and
+misshapen, but they must be naturally produced. Some people have ideas
+about what they are pleased to call the supernatural; but what they
+call the supernatural is simply the deformed. The world is to each man
+according to each man. It takes the world as it really is and that man
+to make that man's world, and that man's world cannot exist without that
+man.
+
+You may ask, and what of all this? I reply, as with everything in
+nature, so with the Bible. It has a different story for each reader. Is
+then the Bible a different book to every human being who reads it? It
+is. Can God then, through the Bible, make the same revelation to two
+persons? He cannot. Why? Because the man who reads it is the man who
+inspires. Inspiration is in the man, as well as in the book. God should
+have inspired readers as well as writers.
+
+You may reply: "God knew that his book would be understood differently
+by each one, and that he really intended that it should be understood as
+it is understood by each." If this is so, then my understanding of the
+Bible is the real revelation to me. If this is so, I have no right to
+take the understanding of another. I must take the revelation made to me
+through my understanding, and by that revelation I must stand. Suppose
+then, that I do read this Bible honestly, fairly, and when I get through
+I am compelled to say, "The book is not true." If this is the honest
+result, then you are compelled to say, either that God has made no
+revelation to me, or that the revelation that it is not true, is the
+revelation made to me, and by which I am bound. If the book and my brain
+are both the work of the same Infinite God, whose fault is it that the
+book and the brain do not agree? Either God should have written a book
+to fit my brain, or should have made my brain to fit his book.
+
+The inspiration of the Bible depends upon the ignorance of him who
+reads. There was a time when its geology, its astronomy, its natural
+history, were inspired. That time has passed. There was a time when
+its morality satisfied the men who ruled mankind. That time has passed.
+There was a time when the tyrant regarded its laws as good; when the
+master believed in its liberty; when strength gloried in its passages;
+but these laws never satisfied the oppressed, they were never quoted by
+the slave.
+
+We have a sacred book, an inspired Bible, and I am told that this book
+was written by the same being who made every star, and who peopled
+infinite space with infinite worlds. I am also told that God created
+man, and that man is totally depraved. It has always seemed to me that
+an infinite being has no right to make imperfect things. I may be
+mistaken; but this is the only planet I have ever been on; I live in
+what might be called one of the rural districts of this universe,
+consequently I may be mistaken; I simply give the best and largest
+thought I have.
+
+IV. GOD'S EXPERIMENT WITH THE JEWS
+
+THE Bible tells us that men became so bad that God destroyed them all
+with the exception of eight persons; that afterwards he chose Abraham
+and some of his kindred, a wandering tribe, for the purpose of seeing
+whether or no they could be civilized. He had no time to waste with all
+the world. The Egyptians at that time, a vast and splendid nation,
+having a system of laws and free schools, believing in the marriage of
+the one man to the one woman; believing, too, in the rights of woman--a
+nation that had courts of justice and understood the philosophy of
+damages--these people had received no revelation from God,--they were
+left to grope in Nature's night. He had no time to civilize India,
+wherein had grown a civilization that fills the world with wonder
+still--a people with a language as perfect as ours, a people who had
+produced philosophers, scientists, poets. He had no time to waste on
+them; but he took a few, the tribe of Abraham. He established a perfect
+despotism--with no schools, with no philosophy, with no art, with no
+music--nothing but the sacrifices of dumb beasts--nothing but the abject
+worship of a slave. Not a word upon geology, upon astronomy; nothing,
+even, upon the science of medicine. Thus God spent hours and hours with
+Moses upon the top of Sinai, giving directions for ascertaining the
+presence of leprosy and for preventing its spread, but it never occurred
+to Jehovah to tell Moses how it could be cured. He told them a few
+things about what they might eat--prohibiting among other things
+four-footed birds, and one thing upon the subject of cooking. From the
+thunders and lightnings of Sinai he proclaimed this vast and wonderful
+fact: "Thou shalt not seethe a kid in its mother's milk." He took these
+people, according to our sacred Scriptures, under his immediate care,
+and for the purpose of controlling them he wrought wonderful miracles in
+their sight.
+
+Is it not a little curious that no priest of one religion has ever been
+able to astonish a priest of another religion by telling a miracle? Our
+missionaries tell the Hindoos the miracles of the Bible, and the Hindoo
+priests, without the movement of a muscle, hear them and then recite
+theirs, and theirs do not astonish our missionaries in the least! Is it
+not a little curious that the priests of one religion never believe the
+priests of another? Is it not a little strange that the believers
+in sacred books regard all except their own as having been made by
+hypocrites and fools?
+
+I heard the other day a story. A gentleman was telling some wonderful
+things and the listeners, with one exception, were saying, as he
+proceeded with his tale, "Is it possible?" "Did you ever hear anything
+so wonderful?" and when he had concluded, there was a kind of chorus
+of "Is it possible?" and "Can it be?" One man, however, sat perfectly
+quiet, utterly unmoved. Another listener said to him "Did you hear
+that?" and he replied "Yes." "Well," said the other, "You did not
+manifest much astonishment." "Oh, no," was the answer, "I am a liar
+myself."
+
+I am told by the sacred Scriptures that, as a matter of fact, God, even
+with the help of miracles, failed to civilize the Jews, and this shows
+of how little real benefit, after all, it is, to have a ruler much above
+the people, or to simply excite the wonder of mankind. Infinite wisdom,
+if the account be true, could not civilize a single tribe. Laws made by
+Jehovah himself were not obeyed, and every effort of Jehovah failed.
+It is claimed that God made known his law and inspired men to write
+and teach his will, and yet, it was found utterly impossible to reform
+mankind.
+
+V. CIVILIZED COUNTRIES
+
+IN all civilized countries, it is now passionately asserted that slavery
+is a crime; that a war of conquest is murder; that polygamy enslaves
+woman, degrades man and destroys home; that nothing is more infamous
+than the slaughter of decrepit men, of helpless mothers, and of
+prattling babes; that captured maidens should not be given to their
+captors; that wives should not be stoned to death for differing with
+their husbands on the subject of religion. We know that there was
+a time, in the history of most nations, when all these crimes were
+regarded as divine institutions. Nations entertaining this view now are
+regarded as savage, and, with the exception of the South Sea Islanders,
+Feejees, a few tribes in Central Africa, and some citizens of Delaware,
+no human beings are found degraded enough to agree upon these subjects
+with Jehovah.
+
+The only evidence we can have that a nation has ceased to be savage, is
+that it has abandoned these doctrines of savagery.
+
+To every one except a theologian, it is easy to account for these
+mistakes and crimes by saying that civilization is a painful growth;
+that the moral perceptions are cultivated through ages of tyranny, of
+crime, and of heroism; that it requires centuries for man to put out the
+eyes of self and hold in lofty and in equal poise the golden scales
+of Justice. Conscience is born of suffering. Mercy is the child of
+the imagination. Man advances as he becomes acquainted with his
+surroundings, with the mutual obligations of life, and learns to take
+advantage of the forces of nature.
+
+The believer in the inspiration of the Bible is compelled to say, that
+there was a time when slavery was right, when women could sell their
+babes, when polygamy was the highest form of virtue, when wars of
+extermination were waged with the sword of mercy, when religious
+toleration was a crime, and when death was the just penalty for having
+expressed an honest thought. He is compelled to insist that Jehovah is
+as bad now as he was then; that he is as good now as he was then. Once,
+all the crimes that I have mentioned were commanded by God; now they are
+prohibited. Once, God was in favor of them all; now the Devil is their
+defender. In other words, the Devil entertains the same opinion to-day
+that God held four thousand years ago. The Devil is as good now as
+Jehovah was then, and God was as bad then as the Devil is now. Other
+nations besides the Jews had similar laws and ideas--believed in and
+practiced the same crimes, and yet, it is not claimed that they received
+a revelation. They had no knowledge of the true God, and yet they
+practiced the same crimes, of their own motion, that the Jews did by
+command of Jehovah. From this it would seem that man can do wrong
+without a special revelation.
+
+The passages upholding slavery, polygamy, war and religious persecution
+are certainly not evidences of the inspiration of that book. Suppose
+nothing had been in the Old Testament upholding these crimes, would
+the modern Christian suspect that it was not inspired on that account?
+Suppose nothing had been in the Old Testament except laws in favor of
+these crimes, would it still be insisted that it was inspired? If the
+Devil had inspired a book, will some Christian tell us in what respect,
+on the subjects of slavery, polygamy, war and liberty, it would have
+differed from some parts of the Old Testament? Suppose we knew
+that after inspired men had finished the Bible the Devil had gotten
+possession of it and had written a few passages, what part would
+Christians now pick out as being probably his work? Which of the
+following passages would be selected as having been written by the
+Devil: "Love thy neighbor as thyself," or "Kill all the males among the
+little ones, and kill every woman, but all the women children keep alive
+for yourselves"?
+
+Is there a believer in the Bible who does not now wish that God, amid
+the thunders and lightnings of Sinai, had said to Moses that man should
+not own his fellow-man; that women should not sell their babes; that all
+men should be allowed to think and investigate for themselves, and that
+the sword never should be unsheathed to shed innocent blood? Is there
+a believer who would not be delighted to find that every one of the
+infamous passages are interpolations, and that the skirts of God were
+never reddened by the blood of maiden, wife, or babe? Is there an honest
+man who does not regret that God commanded a husband to stone his wife
+for suggesting the worship of some other God? Surely we do not need
+an inspired book to teach us that slavery is right, that polygamy is
+virtue, and that intellectual liberty is a crime.
+
+VI. A COMPARISON OF BOOKS
+
+LET us compare the gems of Jehovah with Pagan paste. It may be that
+the best way to illustrate what I have said, is to compare the supposed
+teachings of Jehovah with those of persons who never wrote an inspired
+line. In all ages of which any record has been preserved, men have given
+their ideas of justice, charity, liberty, love and law. If the Bible is
+the work of God, it should contain the sublimest truths, it should excel
+the works of man, it should contain the loftiest definitions of justice,
+the best conceptions of human liberty, the clearest outlines of duty,
+the tenderest and noblest thoughts. Upon every page should be found the
+luminous evidence of its divine origin. It should contain grander and
+more wonderful things than man has written.
+
+It may be said that it is unfair to call attention to bad things in the
+Bible. To this it may be replied that a divine being ought not to put
+bad things in his book. If the Bible now upholds what we call crimes,
+it will not do to say that it is not verbally inspired. If the words are
+not inspired, what is? It may be said, that the thoughts are inspired.
+This would include only thoughts expressed without words. If ideas are
+inspired, they must be expressed by inspired words--that is to say, by
+an inspired arrangement of words. If a sculptor were inspired of God to
+make a statue, we would not say that the marble was inspired, but
+the statue--that is to say, the relation of part to part, the married
+harmony of form and function. The language, the words, take the place of
+the marble, and it is the arrangement of the words that Christians claim
+to be inspired. If there is an uninspired word, or a word in the wrong
+place, until that word is known a doubt is cast on every word the book
+contains.
+
+If it was worth God's while to make a revelation at all, it was
+certainly worth his while to see that it was correctly made--that it was
+absolutely preserved.
+
+Why should God allow an inspired book to be interpolated? If it was
+worth while to inspire men to write it, it was worth while to
+inspire men to preserve it; and why should he allow another person to
+interpolate in it that which was not inspired? He certainly would not
+have allowed the man he inspired to write contrary to the inspiration.
+He should have preserved his revelation. Neither will it do to say that
+God adapted his revelation to the prejudices of man. It was necessary
+for him to adapt his revelation to the capacity of man, but certainly
+God would not confirm a barbarian in his prejudices. He would not
+fortify a heathen in his crimes....
+
+If a revelation is of any importance, it is to eradicate prejudice.
+They tell us now that the Jews were so ignorant, so bad, that God was
+compelled to justify their crimes, in order to have any influence
+with them. They say that if he had declared slavery and polygamy to be
+crimes, the Jews would have refused to receive the Ten Commandments.
+They tell us that God did the best he could; that his real intention was
+to lead them along slowly, so that in a few hundred years they would be
+induced to admit that larceny and murder and polygamy and slavery were
+not virtues. I suppose if we now wished to break a cannibal of the bad
+habit of devouring missionaries, we would first induce him to cook
+them in a certain way, saying: "To eat cooked missionary is one step
+in advance of eating your missionary raw. After a few years, a little
+mutton could be cooked with missionary, and year after year the amount
+of mutton could be increased and the amount of missionary decreased,
+until in the fullness of time the dish could be entirely mutton, and
+after that the missionaries would be absolutely safe."
+
+If there is anything of value, it is liberty--liberty of body, liberty
+of mind. The liberty of body is the reward of labor. Intellectual
+liberty is the air of the soul, the sunshine of the mind, and without
+it, the world is a prison, the universe a dungeon.
+
+If the Bible is really inspired, Jehovah commanded the Jewish people to
+buy the children of the strangers that sojourned among them, and ordered
+that the children thus bought should be an inheritance for the children
+of the Jews, and that they should be bondmen and bondwomen forever. Yet
+Epictetus, a man to whom no revelation was ever made, a man whose soul
+followed only the light of nature, and who had never heard of the Jewish
+God, was great enough to say: "Will you not remember that your servants
+are by nature your brothers, the children of God? In saying that you
+have bought them, you look down on the earth, and into the pit, on the
+wretched law of men long since dead, but you see not the laws of the
+gods."
+
+We find that Jehovah, speaking to his chosen people, assured them that
+their bondmen and their bondmaids must be "of the heathen that were
+round about them." "Of them," said Jehovah, "shall ye buy bondmen
+and bondmaids." And yet Cicero, a pagan, Cicero, who had never been
+enlightened by reading the Old Testament, had the moral grandeur to
+declare: "They who say that we should love our fellow-citizens but not
+foreigners, destroy the universal brotherhood of mankind, with which
+benevolence and justice would perish forever."
+
+If the Bible is inspired, Jehovah, God of all worlds, actually said:
+"And if a man smite his servant or his maid with a rod, and he die under
+his hand, he shall be sorely punished; notwithstanding, if he continue
+a day or two, he shall not be punished, for he is his money." And yet
+Zeno, founder of the Stoics, centuries before Christ was born, insisted
+that no man could be the owner of another, and that the title was bad,
+whether the slave had become so by conquest or by purchase.
+
+Jehovah ordered a Jewish general to make war, and gave, among others,
+this command: "When the Lord thy God shall drive them before thee, thou
+shalt smite them and utterly destroy them; thou shalt make no covenant
+with them, nor show mercy unto them." And yet Epictetus, whom we have
+already quoted, gave this marvelous rule for the guidance of human
+conduct: "Live with thy inferiors as thou wouldst have thy superiors
+live with thee."
+
+Is it possible, after all, that a being of infinite goodness and wisdom
+said: "I will heap mischief upon them; I will send mine arrows upon
+them; they shall be burned with hunger, and devoured with burning heat,
+and with bitter destruction. I will send the tooth of beasts upon them,
+with the poison of serpents of the dust. The sword without, and terror
+within, shall destroy both the young man and the virgin, the suckling
+also, with the man of gray hairs" while Seneca, an uninspired Roman,
+said: "The wise man will not pardon any crime that ought to be
+punished, but he will accomplish, in a nobler way, all that is sought
+in pardoning. He will spare some and watch over some, because of their
+youth, and others on account of their ignorance. His clemency will not
+fall short of justice, but will fulfill it perfectly."
+
+Can we believe that God ever said to any one: "Let his children be
+fatherless and his wife a widow; let his children be continually
+vagabonds, and beg; let them seek their bread also out of their desolate
+places; let the extortioner catch all that he hath, and let the stranger
+spoil his labor; let there be none to extend mercy unto him, neither let
+there be any to favor his fatherless children." If he ever said these
+words, surely he had never heard this line, this strain of music from
+the Hindu: "Sweet is the lute to those who have not heard the prattle of
+their own children."
+
+Jehovah, "from the clouds and darkness of Sinai," said to the Jews:
+"Thou shalt have no other gods before me.... Though shalt not bow down
+thyself to them nor serve them; for I, the Lord thy God, am a jealous
+God, visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon the children unto the
+third and fourth generation of them that hate me." Contrast this with
+the words put by the Hindu in the mouth of Brahma: "I am the same to all
+mankind. They who honestly serve other gods involuntarily worship me.
+I am he who partakest of all worship, and I am the reward of all
+worshipers."
+
+Compare these passages; the first a dungeon where crawl the things begot
+of jealous slime; the other, great as the domed firmament inlaid with
+suns. Is it possible that the real God ever said:
+
+"And if the prophet be deceived when he hath spoken a thing, I, the
+Lord, have deceived that prophet; and I will stretch out my hand upon
+him and will destroy him from the midst of my people." Compare that
+passage with one from a Pagan.
+
+"It is better to keep silence for the remainder of your life than to
+speak falsely."
+
+Can we believe that a being of infinite mercy gave this command:
+
+"Put every man his sword by his side, and go in and out from gate to
+gate, throughout the camp, and slay every man his brother, and every man
+his companion, and every man his neighbor; consecrate yourselves to-day
+to the Lord, even every man upon his son and upon his brother, that he
+may bestow a blessing upon you this day."
+
+Surely, that God was not animated by so great and magnanimous a spirit
+as was Antoninus, a Roman emperor, who declared that, "he had rather
+keep a single Roman citizen alive than slay a thousand enemies."
+
+Compare the laws given to the children of Israel, as it is claimed by
+the Creator of us all, with the following from Marcus Aurelius:
+
+"I have formed the ideal of a state, in which there is the same law
+for all, and equal rights, and equal liberty of speech established; an
+empire where nothing is honored so much as the freedom of the citizen."
+
+In the Avesta I find this: "I belong to five: to those who think good,
+to those who speak good, to those who do good, to those who hear, and to
+those who are pure."
+
+"Which is the one prayer which in greatness, goodness, and beauty is
+worth all that is between heaven and earth and between this earth and
+the stars? And he replied: To renounce all evil thoughts and words and
+works."
+
+VII.
+
+IT is claimed by the Christian world that one of the great reasons for
+giving an inspired book to the Jews was, that through them the world
+might learn that there is but one God. This piece of information has
+been supposed to be of infinite value. As a matter of fact, long before
+Moses was born, the Egyptians believed and taught that there was but
+one God--that is to say, that above all intelligences there was the one
+Supreme. They were guilty, too, of the same inconsistencies of modern
+Christians. They taught the doctrine of the Trinity--God the Father, God
+the Mother, and God the Son. God was frequently represented as father,
+mother and babe. They also taught that the soul had a divine origin;
+that after death it was to be judged according to the deeds done in the
+body; that those who had done well passed into perpetual joy, and those
+who had done evil into endless pain. In this they agreed with the most
+approved divine of the nineteenth century. Women were the equals of
+men, and Egypt was often governed by queens. In this, her government
+was vastly better than the one established by God. The laws were
+administered by courts much like ours. In Egypt there was a system of
+schools that gave the son of poverty a chance of advancement, and
+the highest offices were open to the successful scholar. The Egyptian
+married one wife. The wife was called "the lady of the house." The women
+were not secluded. The people were not divided into castes. There was
+nothing to prevent the rise of able and intelligent Egyptians. But like
+the Jehovah of the Jews, they made slaves of the captives of war.
+
+The ancient Persians believed in one God; and women helped to found the
+Parsee religion. Nothing can exceed some of the maxims of Zoroaster. The
+Hindoos taught that above all, and over all, was one eternal Supreme.
+They had a code of laws. They understood the philosophy of evidence and
+of damages. They knew better than to teach the doctrine of an eye for an
+eye, and a tooth for a tooth.
+
+They knew that when one man maimed another, it was not to the interest
+of society to have that man maimed, thus burdening the people with two
+cripples, but that it was better to make the man who maimed the other
+work to support him. In India, upon the death of a father, the daughters
+received twice as much from the estate as the sons.
+
+The Romans built temples to Truth, Faith, Valor, Concord, Modesty, and
+Charity, in which they offered sacrifices to the highest conceptions of
+human excellence. Women had rights; they presided in the temple; they
+officiated in holy offices; they guarded the sacred fires upon which the
+safety of Rome depended; and when Christ came, the grandest figure in
+the known world was the Roman mother.
+
+It will not do to say that some rude statue was made by an inspired
+sculptor, and that the Apollo of Belvidere, Venus de Milo, and the
+Gladiator were made by unaided men; that the daubs of the early ages
+were painted by divine assistance, while the Raphaels, the Angelos, and
+the Rembrandts did what they did without the help of heaven. It will not
+do to say, that the first hut was built by God, and the last palace by
+degraded man; that the hoarse songs of the savage tribes were made by
+the Deity, but that Hamlet and Lear were written by man; that the pipes
+of Pan were invented in heaven, and all other musical instruments on the
+earth.
+
+If the Jehovah of the Jews had taken upon himself flesh, and dwelt as a
+man among the people had he endeavored to govern, had he followed his
+own teachings, he would have been a slaveholder, a buyer of babes, and a
+beater of women. He would have waged wars of extermination. He would
+have killed grey-haired and trembling age, and would have sheathed his
+sword, in prattling, dimpled babes. He would have been a polygamist, and
+would have butchered his wife for differing with him on the subject of
+religion.
+
+VIII. THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+
+NE great objection to the Old Testament is the cruelty said to have been
+commanded by God. All these cruelties ceased with death. The vengeance
+of Jehovah stopped at the tomb. He never threatened to punish the dead;
+and there is not one word, from the first mistake in Genesis to the last
+curse of Malachi, containing the slightest intimation that God will take
+his revenge in another world. It was reserved for the New Testament
+to make known the doctrine of eternal pain. The teacher of universal
+benevolence rent the veil between time and eternity, and fixed the
+horrified gaze of man upon the lurid gulf of hell. Within the breast of
+non-resistance coiled the worm that never dies. Compared with this,
+the doctrine of slavery, the wars of extermination, the curses, the
+punishments of the Old Testament were all merciful and just.
+
+There is no time to speak of the conflicting statements in the various
+books composing the New Testament--no time to give the history of the
+manuscripts, the errors in translation, the interpolations made by the
+fathers and by their successors, the priests, and only time to speak of
+a few objections, including some absurdities and some contradictions.
+
+Where several witnesses testify to the same transaction, no matter how
+honest they may be, they will disagree upon minor matters, and such
+testimony is generally considered as evidence that the witnesses
+have not conspired among themselves. The differences in statement are
+accounted for from the facts that all do not see alike, and that all
+have not equally good memories; but when we claim that the witnesses are
+inspired, we must admit that he who inspired them did know exactly what
+occurred, and consequently there should be no disagreement, even in the
+minutest detail. The accounts should not only be substantially, but they
+should be actually, the same. The differences and contradictions can be
+accounted for by the weaknesses of human nature, but these weaknesses
+cannot be predicated of divine wisdom.
+
+And here let me ask: Why should there have been more than one correct
+account of what really happened? Why were four gospels necessary? It
+seems to me that one inspired gospel, containing all that happened, was
+enough. Copies of the one correct one could have been furnished to any
+extent. According to Doctor Davidson, Irenaeus argues that the gospels
+were four in number, because there are four universal winds, four
+corners of the globe. Others have said, because there are four seasons;
+and these gentlemen might have added, because a donkey has four legs.
+For my part, I cannot even conceive of a reason for more than one
+gospel.
+
+According to one of these gospels, and according to the prevalent
+Christian belief, the Christian religion rests upon the doctrine of the
+atonement. If this doctrine is without foundation, the fabric falls; and
+it is without foundation, for it is repugnant to justice and mercy.
+The church tells us that the first man committed a crime for which all
+others are responsible. This absurdity was the father and mother of
+another--that a man can be rewarded for the good action of another. We
+are told that God made a law, with the penalty of eternal death. All
+men, they tell us, have broken this law. The law had to be vindicated.
+This could be done by damning everybody, but through what is known as
+the atonement the salvation of a few was made possible. They insist that
+the law demands the extreme penalty, that justice calls for its victim,
+that mercy ceases to plead, and that God by allowing the innocent to
+suffer in the place of the guilty settled satisfactory with the law. To
+carry out this scheme God was born as a babe, grew in stature, increased
+in knowledge, and at the age of thirty-three years having lived a life
+filled with kindness, having practiced every virtue, he was sacrificed
+as an atonement for man. It is claimed that he took our place, bore our
+sins, our guilt, and in this way satisfied the justice of God.
+
+Under the Mosaic dispensation there was no remission of sin except
+through the shedding of blood. When a man sinned he must bring to the
+priest a lamb, a bullock, a goat, or a pair of turtle-doves.
+
+The priest would lay his hand upon the animal and the sin of the man
+would be transferred to the beast. Then the animal would be killed in
+place of the sinner, and the blood thus shed would be sprinkled upon
+the altar. In this way Jehovah was satisfied. The greater the crime, the
+greater the sacrifice. There was a ratio between the value of the animal
+and the enormity of the sin.
+
+The most minute directions were given as to the killing of
+these animals. Every priest became a butcher, every synagogue a
+slaughter-house. Nothing could be more utterly shocking to a refined
+soul, nothing better calculated to harden the heart, than the continual
+shedding of innocent blood. This terrible system culminated in the
+sacrifice of Christ. His blood took the place of all other. It is not
+necessary to shed any more. The law at last is satisfied, satiated,
+surfeited.
+
+The idea that God wants blood is at the bottom of the atonement, and
+rests upon the most fearful savagery; and yet the Mosaic dispensation
+was better adapted to prevent the commission of sin than the Christian
+system. Under that dispensation, if you committed a sin, you had
+to bring a sacrifice--dove, sheep, or bullock, now, when a sin is
+committed, the Christian says, "Charge it," "Put it on the slate, If
+I don't pay it the Savior will." In this way, rascality is sold on a
+credit, and the credit system of religion breeds extravagance in sin.
+The Mosaic dispensation was based upon far better business principles.
+The debt had to be paid, and by the man who owed it. We are told that
+the sinner is in debt to God, and that the obligation is discharged by
+the Savior. The best that can be said of such a transaction is that the
+debt is transferred, not paid. As a matter of fact, the sinner is in
+debt to the person he has injured. If you injure a man, it is not enough
+to get the forgiveness of God--you must get the man's forgiveness, you
+must get your own. If a man puts his hand in the fire and God forgives
+him, his hand will smart just as badly. You must reap what you sow. No
+God can give you wheat when you sow tares, and no Devil can give you
+tares when you sow wheat. We must remember that in nature there are
+neither rewards nor punishments--there are consequences. The life and
+death of Christ do not constitute an atonement. They are worth the
+example, the moral force, the heroism of benevolence, and in so far as
+the life of Christ produces emulation in the direction of goodness, it
+has been of value to mankind.
+
+To make innocence suffer is the greatest sin, and it may be the only
+sin. How, then, is it possible to make the consequences of sin an
+atonement for sin, when the consequences of sin are to be borne by one
+who has not sinned, and the one who has sinned is to reap the reward of
+virtue? No honorable man should be willing that another should suffer
+for him. No good law can accept the sufferings of innocence as an
+atonement for the guilty; and besides, if there was no atonement until
+the crucifixion of Christ, what became of the countless millions who
+died before that time? We must remember that the Jews did not kill
+animals for the Gentiles. Jehovah hated foreigners. There was no way
+provided for the forgiveness of a heathen. What has become of the
+millions who have died since, without having heard of the atonement?
+What becomes of those who hear and do not believe? Can there be a law
+that demands that the guilty be rewarded. And yet, to reward the guilty
+is far nearer justice than to punish the innocent. If the doctrine of
+the atonement is true, there would have been no heaven had no atonement
+been made.
+
+If Judas had understood the Christian system, if he knew that Christ
+must be betrayed, and that God was depending on him to betray him, and
+that without the betrayal no human soul could be saved, what should
+Judas have done?
+
+Jehovah took special charge of the Jewish people. He did this for the
+purpose of civilizing them. If he had succeeded in civilizing them,
+he would have made the damnation of the entire human race a certainty;
+because if the Jews had been a civilized people when Christ appeared--a
+people who had not been hardened by the laws of Jehovah--they would not
+have crucified Christ, and as a consequence, the world would have been
+lost. If the Jews had believed in religious freedom, in the rights of
+thought and speech, if the Christian religion is true, not a human soul
+ever could have been saved. If, when Christ was on his way to Calvary,
+some brave soul had rescued him from the pious mob, he would not only
+have been damned for his pains, but would have rendered impossible the
+salvation of any human being.
+
+The Christian world has been trying for nearly two thousand years to
+explain the atonement, and every effort has ended in an admission that
+it cannot be understood, and a declaration that it must be believed. Has
+the promise and hope of forgiveness ever prevented the commission of
+a sin? Can men be made better by being taught that sin gives happiness
+here; that to live a virtuous life is to bear a cross; that men can
+repent between the last sin and the last breath; and that repentance
+washes every stain of the soul away? Is it good to teach that the
+serpent of regret will not hiss in the ear of memory; that the saved
+will not even pity the victims of their crimes; and that sins forgiven
+cease to affect the unhappy wretches sinned against?
+
+Another objection is, that a certain belief is necessary to save the
+soul. This doctrine, I admit, is taught in the gospel according to John,
+and in many of the epistles; I deny that it is taught in Matthew, Mark,
+or Luke. It is, however, asserted by the church that to believe is the
+only safe way. To this, I reply: Belief is not a voluntary thing. A man
+believes or disbelieves in spite of himself. They tell us that to
+believe is the safe way; but I say, the safe way is to be honest.
+Nothing can be safer than that. No man in the hour of death ever
+regretted having been honest. No man when the shadows of the last day
+were gathering about the pillow of death, ever regretted that he had
+given to his fellow-man his honest thought. No man, in the presence of
+eternity, ever wished that he had been a hypocrite. No man ever then
+regretted that he did not throw away his reason. It certainly cannot be
+necessary to throw away your reason to save your soul, because after
+that, your soul is not worth saving. The soul has a right to defend
+itself. My brain is my castle; and when I waive the right to defend it,
+I become an intellectual serf and slave.
+
+I do not admit that a man by doing me an injury can place me under
+obligations to do him a service. To render benefits for injuries is
+to ignore all distinctions between actions. He who treats friends and
+enemies alike has neither love nor justice. The idea of non-resistance
+never occurred to a man with power to defend himself. The mother of this
+doctrine was weakness. To allow a crime to be committed, even against
+yourself, when you can prevent it, is next to committing the crime
+yourself. The church has preached the doctrine of non-resistance, and
+under that banner has shed the blood of millions. In the folds of
+her sacred vestments have gleamed for centuries the daggers of
+assassination. With her cunning hands she wove the purple for hypocrisy
+and placed the crown upon the brow of crime. For more than a thousand
+years larceny held the scales of justice, hypocrisy wore the mitre and
+tiara, while beggars scorned the royal sons of toil, and ignorant fear
+denounced the liberty of thought.
+
+XI. CHRIST'S MISSION.
+
+HE came, they tell us, to make a revelation, and what did he reveal?
+"Love thy neighbor as thyself"? That was in the Old Testament. "Love
+God with all thy heart"? That was in the Old Testament. "Return good for
+evil"? That was said by Buddha, seven hundred years before Christ was
+born. "Do unto others as ye would that they should do unto you"? That
+was the doctrine of Lao-tsze. Did he come to give a rule of action?
+Zoroaster had done this long before: "Whenever thou art in doubt as to
+whether an action is good or bad, abstain from it." Did he come to tell
+us of another world? The immortality of the soul had been taught by the
+Hindoos, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans hundreds of years before he was
+born. What argument did he make in favor of immortality? What facts
+did he furnish? What star of hope did he put above the darkness of
+this world? Did he come simply to tell us that we should not revenge
+ourselves upon our enemies? Long before, Socrates had said: "One who
+is injured ought not to return the injury, for on no account can it be
+right to do an injustice; and it is not right to return an injury, or to
+do evil to any man, however much we have suffered from him." And Cicero
+had said: "Let us not listen to those who think we ought to be angry
+with our enemies, and who believe this to be great and manly. Nothing
+is so praiseworthy, nothing so clearly shows a great and noble soul, as
+clemency and readiness to forgive." Is there anything in the literature
+of the world more nearly perfect than this thought?
+
+Was it from Christ the world learned the first lesson of forbearance,
+when centuries and centuries before, Chrishna had said, "If a man strike
+thee, and in striking drop his staff, pick it up and hand it to him
+again?" Is it possible that the son of God threatened to say to a vast
+majority, of his children, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting
+fire prepared for the devil and his angels," while the Buddhist was
+great and tender enough to say:
+
+"Never will I seek nor receive private individual salvation; never
+enter into final peace alone; but forever and everywhere will I live
+and strive for the universal redemption of every creature throughout
+all worlds. Never will I leave this world of sin and sorrow and struggle
+until all are delivered. Until then, I will remain and suffer where I
+am?"
+
+Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this, from a
+Sufi?--"Better one moment of silent contemplation and inward love than
+seventy thousand years of outward worship."
+
+Is there anything comparable to this?--"Whoever carelessly treads on
+a worm that crawls on the earth, that heartless one is darkly alienate
+from God."
+
+Is there anything in the New Testament more beautiful than the story of
+the Sufi?
+
+For seven years a Sufi practised every virtue, and then he mounted the
+three steps that lead to the doors of Paradise. He knocked and a voice
+said: "Who is there?" The Sufi replied: "Thy servant, O God." But the
+doors remained closed.
+
+Yet seven other years the Sufi engaged in every good work. He comforted
+the sorrowing and divided his substance with the poor. Again he mounted
+the three steps, again knocked at the doors of Paradise, and again
+the voice asked: "Who is there?" and the Sufi replied: "Thy slave, O
+God."--But the doors remained closed.
+
+Yet seven other years the Sufi spent in works of charity, in visiting
+the imprisoned and the sick. Again he mounted the steps, again knocked
+at the celestial doors. Again he heard the question: "Who is there?" and
+he replied: "Thyself, O God."--The gates wide open flew.
+
+Is it possible that St. Paul was inspired of God, when he said: "Let the
+women learn in silence, with all subjection."--"Neither was the man
+created for the woman, but the woman for the man?"
+
+And is it possible that Epictetus, without the slightest aid from
+heaven, gave to the world this gem of love:
+
+"What is more delightful than to be so dear to your wife, as to be on
+that account dearer to yourself?"
+
+Did St. Paul express the sentiments of God when he wrote--
+
+"But I would have you know that the head of every man is Christ, and the
+head of every woman is the man, and the head of Christ is God. Wives,
+submit yourselves unto your husbands as unto the Lord?"
+
+And was the author of this, a poor despised heathen?--
+
+"In whatever house the husband is contented with the wife, and the wife
+with the husband, in that house will fortune dwell; but upon the house
+where women are not honored, let a curse be pronounced. Where the wife
+is honored, there the gods are truly worshiped."
+
+Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this?--
+
+"Shall I tell thee where nature is most blest and fair? It is where
+those we love abide. Though that space be small, it is ample above
+kingdoms; though it be a desert, through it run the rivers of Paradise."
+
+After reading the curses pronounced in the Old
+
+Testament upon Jew and heathen, the descriptions of slaughter, of
+treachery and of death, the destruction of women and babes; after you
+shall have read all the chapters of horror in the New Testament, the
+threatenings of fire and flame, then read this, from the greatest of
+human beings:
+
+ "The quality of mercy is not strained:
+ It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
+ Upon the place beneath. It is twice blessed;
+ It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.
+ 'Tis mightiest in the mightiest: it becomes
+ The throned monarch better than his crown."
+
+X. ETERNAL PAIN
+
+UPON passages in the New Testament rests the doctrine of eternal pain.
+This doctrine subverts every idea of justice. A finite being can neither
+commit an infinite sin, nor a sin against the Infinite. A being of
+infinite goodness and wisdom has no right to create any being whose life
+is not a blessing. Infinite wisdom has no right to create a failure,
+and surely a man destined to everlasting failure is not a conspicuous
+success. The doctrine of eternal punishment is the most infamous of
+all doctrines--born of ignorance, cruelty and fear. Around the angel of
+immortality, Christianity has coiled this serpent.
+
+Upon Love's breast the church has placed the eternal asp. And yet in
+the same book in which is taught this most frightful of dogmas, we are
+assured that "the Lord is good to all, and his tender mercies are over
+all his works."
+
+A few days ago upon the wide sea, was found a barque called "The
+Tiger," Captain Kreuger, in command. The vessel had been one hundred and
+twenty-six days upon the sea. For days the crew had been without water,
+without food, and were starving. For nine days not a drop had passed
+their lips. The crew consisted of the captain, a mate, and eleven men.
+At the end of one hundred and eighteen days from Liverpool they killed
+the captain's Newfoundland dog. This lasted them four days. During the
+next five days they had nothing. For weeks they had had no light
+and were unable to see the compass at night. On the one hundred and
+twenty-fifth day Captain Kreuger, a German, took a revolver in his hand,
+stood up before the men, and placing the weapon at his temple said:
+"Boys, we can't stand this much longer, and to save you all, I am
+willing to die." The mate grasped the revolver and begged the captain to
+wait another day. The next day, upon the horizon of their despair, they
+saw the smoke of the steamship Nebo. They were rescued.
+
+Suppose that Captain Kreuger was not a Christian, and suppose that he
+had sent the ball crashing through his brain, and had done so simply
+to keep the crew from starvation, do you tell me that a God of infinite
+mercy would forever damn that man?
+
+Do not misunderstand me. I insist that every passage in the Bible
+upholding crime was written by savage man. I insist that if there is
+a God, he is not, never was, and never will be in favor of slavery,
+polygamy, wars of extermination, or religious persecution. Does any
+Christian believe that if the real God were to write a book now, he
+would uphold the crimes commanded in the Old Testament? Has Jehovah
+improved? Has infinite mercy become more merciful? Has infinite wisdom
+intellectually advanced?
+
+WILL any one claim that the passages upholding slavery have liberated
+mankind? Are we indebted to polygamy for our modern homes? Was religious
+liberty born of that infamous verse in which the husband is commanded to
+kill his wife for worshiping an unknown God?
+
+The usual answer to these objections is, that no country has ever been
+civilized without a Bible. The Jews were the only people to whom Jehovah
+made his will directly known. Were they better than other nations? They
+read the Old Testament and one of the effects of such reading was, that
+they crucified a kind, loving, and perfectly innocent man. Certainly
+they could not have done worse, without a Bible. In crucifying Christ
+the Jews followed the teachings of his Father. If Jehovah was in fact
+God, and if that God took upon himself flesh and came among the Jews,
+and preached what the Jews understood to be blasphemy; and if the Jews
+in accordance with the laws given by this same Jehovah to Moses,
+crucified him, then I say, and I say it with infinite reverence, he
+reaped what he had sown. He became the victim of his own injustice.
+
+But I insist that these things are not true. I insist that the real God,
+if there is one, never commanded man to enslave his fellow-man, never
+told a mother to sell her babe, never established polygamy, never urged
+one nation to exterminate another, and never told a husband to kill his
+wife because she suggested the worship of another God.
+
+From the aspersions of the pulpit, from the slanders of the church,
+I seek to rescue the reputation of the Deity. I insist that the Old
+Testament would be a better book with all these passages left out; and
+whatever may be said of the rest of the Bible, the passages to which I
+have called attention can, with vastly more propriety, be attributed to
+a devil than to a god.
+
+Take from the New Testament the idea that belief is necessary to
+salvation; that Christ was offered as an atonement for the sins of
+mankind; that heaven is the reward of faith, and hell the penalty of
+honest investigation, and that the punishment of the human soul will go
+on forever; take from it all miracles and foolish stories, and I most
+cheerfully admit that the good passages are true. If they are true, it
+makes no difference whether they are inspired or not. Inspiration is
+only necessary to give authority to that which is repugnant to human
+reason. Only that which never happened needs to be substantiated by a
+miracle.
+
+The universe is natural.
+
+The church must cease to insist that passages upholding the institutions
+of savage men were inspired of God. The dogma of atonement must be
+abandoned. Good deeds must take the place of faith. The savagery of
+eternal punishment must be renounced. It must be admitted that credulity
+is not a virtue, and that investigation is not a crime. It must be
+admitted that miracles are the children of mendacity, and that nothing
+can be more wonderful than the majestic, unbroken, sublime, and eternal
+procession of causes and effects. Reason must be the arbiter. Inspired
+books attested by miracles cannot stand against a demonstrated fact. A
+religion that does not command the respect of the greatest minds will,
+in a little while, excite the mockery of all.
+
+A man who does not believe in intellectual liberty is a barbarian. Is
+it possible that God is intolerant? Could there be any progress, even
+in heaven, without intellectual liberty? Is the freedom of the future
+to exist only in perdition? Is it not, after all, barely possible that
+a man acting like Christ can be saved? Is a man to be eternally rewarded
+for believing according to evidence, without evidence, or against
+evidence? Are we to be saved because we are good, or because another was
+virtuous? Is credulity to be winged and crowned, whilst honest doubt is
+chained and damned.
+
+If Jehovah, was in fact God, he knew the end from the beginning. He
+knew that his Bible would be a breast-work behind which all tyranny
+and hypocrisy would crouch. He knew that his Bible would be the
+auction-block on which women would stand while their babes were sold
+from their arms. He knew that this Bible would be quoted by tyrants;
+that it would be the defence of robbers called kings, and of hypocrites
+called priests. He knew that he had taught the Jewish people nothing of
+importance. He knew that he had found them free and left them slaves. He
+knew that he had never fulfilled a single promise made to them. He knew
+that while other nations had advanced in art and science his chosen
+people were savage still. He promised them the world, and gave them a
+desert. He promised them liberty and he made them slaves. He promised
+them victory and he gave them defeat. He said they should be kings and
+he made them serfs. He promised them universal empire and gave them
+exile. When one finishes the Old Testament he is compelled to say:
+"Nothing can add to the misery of a nation whose king is Jehovah!"
+
+The Old Testament filled this world with tyranny and injustice, and the
+New gives us a future filled with pain for nearly all of the sons of
+men.
+
+The Old Testament describes the hell of the past, and the New the hell
+of the future.
+
+The Old Testament tells us the frightful things that God has done, the
+New the frightful things that he will do.
+
+These two books give us the sufferings of the past and the future--the
+injustice, the agony and the tears of both worlds.
+
+
+
+
+ORTHODOXY.
+
+A LECTURE.
+
+IT is utterly inconceivable that any man believing in the truth of the
+Christian religion should publicly deny it, because he who believes in
+that religion would believe that, by a public denial, he would peril the
+eternal salvation of his soul. It is conceivable, and without any great
+effort of the mind, that millions who do not believe in the Christian
+religion should openly say that they did. In a country where religion
+is supposed to be in power--where it has rewards for pretence, where it
+pays a premium upon hypocrisy, where it at least is willing to purchase
+silence--it is easily conceivable that millions pretend to believe what
+they do not. And yet I believe it has been charged against myself not
+only that I was insincere, but that I took the side I am on for the sake
+of popularity; and the audience to-night goes far toward justifying the
+accusation.
+
+Orthodox Religion Dying Out.
+
+It gives me immense pleasure to say to this audience that orthodox
+religion is dying out of the civilized world. It is a sick man. It has
+been attacked with two diseases--softening of the brain and ossification
+of the heart. It is a religion that no longer satisfies the intelligence
+of this country; that no longer satisfies the brain; a religion against
+which the heart of every civilized man and woman protests. It is a
+religion that gives hope only to a few; that puts a shadow upon the
+cradle; that wraps the coffin in darkness and fills the future of
+mankind with flame and fear. It is a religion that I am going to do what
+little I can while I live to destroy. In its place I want humanity,
+I want good fellowship, I want intellectual liberty--free lips, the
+discoveries and inventions of genius, the demonstrations of science--the
+religion of art, music and poetry--of good houses, good clothes, good
+wages--that is to say, the religion of this world.
+
+Religious Deaths and Births.
+
+We must remember that this is a world of progress, a world of perpetual
+change--a succession of coffins and cradles. There is perpetual death,
+and there is perpetual birth. By the grave of the old, forever stand
+youth and joy; and when an old religion dies, a better one is born. When
+we find out that an assertion is a falsehood a shining truth takes its
+place, and we need not fear the destruction of the false. The more false
+we destroy the more room there will be for the true.
+
+There was a time when the astrologer sought to read in the stars the
+fate of men and nations. The astrologer has faded from the world, but
+the astronomer has taken his place. There was a time when the poor
+alchemist, bent and wrinkled and old, over his crucible endeavored to
+find some secret by which he could change the baser metals into purest
+gold. The alchemist has gone; the chemist took his place; and, although
+he finds nothing to change metals into gold, he finds something that
+covers the earth with wealth. There was a time when the soothsayer and
+augur flourished. After them came the parson and the priest; and the
+parson and the priest must go. The preacher must go, and in his place
+must come the teacher--the real interpreter of Nature. We are done with
+the supernatural. We are through with the miraculous and the impossible.
+There was once the prophet who pretended to read the book of the future.
+His place has been taken by the philosopher, who reasons from cause to
+effect--who finds the facts by which we are surrounded and endeavors
+to reason from these premises and to tell what in all probability will
+happen. The prophet has gone, the philosopher is here. There was a time
+when man sought aid from heaven--when he prayed to the deaf sky. There
+was a time when everything depended on the supernaturalist. That time in
+Christendom is passing away. We now depend upon the naturalist--not upon
+the believer in ancient falsehoods, but on the discoverer of facts--on
+the demonstrater of truths. At last we are beginning to build on a
+solid foundation, and as we progress, the supernatural dies. The leaders
+of the intellectual world deny the existence of the supernatural. They
+take from all superstition its foundation.
+
+The Religion of Reciprocity.
+
+Supernatural religion will fade from this world, and in its place we
+shall have reason. In the place of the worship of something we know
+not of, will be the religion of mutual love and assistance--the great
+religion of reciprocity. Superstition must go. Science will remain. The
+church dies hard. The brain of the world is not yet developed. There
+are intellectual diseases as well as physical--there are pestilences and
+plagues of the mind.
+
+Whenever the new comes the old protests, and fights for its place as
+long as it has a particle of power. We are now having the same warfare
+between superstition and science that there was between the stage coach
+and the locomotive. But the stage coach had to go. It had its day of
+glory and power, but it is gone. It went West. In a little while it will
+be driven into the Pacific. So we find that there is the same conflict
+between the different sects and different schools not only of philosophy
+but of medicine.
+
+Recollect that everything except the demonstrated truth is liable
+to die. That is the order of Nature. Words die. Every language has a
+cemetery. Every now and then a word dies and a tombstone is erected, and
+across it is written "obsolete." New words are continually being born.
+There is a cradle in which a word is rocked. A thought is married to a
+sound, and a child-word is born. And there comes a time when the word
+gets old, and wrinkled, and expressionless, and is carried mournfully
+to the grave. So in the schools of medicine. You can remember, so can I,
+when the old allopathists, the bleeders and blisterers, reigned supreme.
+If there was anything the matter with a man they let out his blood.
+Called to the bedside, they took him on the point of a lancet to the
+edge of eternity, and then practiced all their art to bring him back.
+One can hardly imagine how perfect a constitution it took a few years
+ago to stand the assault of a doctor. And long after the old practice
+was found to be a mistake hundreds and thousands of the ancient
+physicians clung to it, carried around with them, in one pocket a bottle
+of jalap, and in the other a rusty lancet, sorry that they could not
+find some patient with faith enough to allow the experiment to be made
+again.
+
+So these schools, and these theories, and these religions die hard. What
+else can they do? Like the paintings of the old masters, they are kept
+alive because so much money has been invested in them. Think of the
+amount of money that has been invested in superstition! Think of the
+schools that have been founded for the more general diffusion of useless
+knowledge! Think of the colleges wherein men are taught that it is
+dangerous to think, and that they must never use their brains except
+in the act of faith! Think of the millions and billions of dollars that
+have been expended in churches, in temples, and in cathedrals! Think of
+the thousands and thousands of men who depend for their living upon the
+ignorance of mankind! Think of those who grow rich on credulity and
+who fatten on faith! Do you suppose they are going to die without a
+struggle? What are they to do? From the bottom of my heart I sympathize
+with the poor clergyman that has had all his common sense educated out
+of him, and is now to be thrown upon the cold and unbelieving world. His
+prayers are not answered; he gets no help from on high, and the pews are
+beginning to criticise the pulpit. What is the man to do? If he suddenly
+changes he is gone. If he preaches what he really believes he will get
+notice to quit. And yet, if he and the congregation would come together
+and be perfectly honest, they would all admit that they believe little
+and know nothing.
+
+Only a little while ago a couple of ladies were riding together from a
+revival, late at night, and one said to the other, as they rode along:
+"I am going to say something that will shock you, and I beg of you never
+to tell it to anybody else. I am going to tell it to you." "Well, what
+is it?" Said she: "I do not believe the Bible." The other replied:
+"Neither do I."
+
+I have often thought how splendid it would be if the ministers could but
+come together and say: "Now, let us be honest. Let us tell each other,
+honor bright"--like Dr. Curry, of Chicago, did in the meeting the other
+day--"just what we believe." They tell a story that in the old time a
+lot of people, about twenty, were in Texas in a little hotel, and one
+fellow got up before the fire, put his hands behind him, and said:
+"Boys, let us all tell our real names." If the ministers and their
+congregations would only tell their real thoughts they would find that
+they are nearly as bad as I am, and that they believe as little.
+
+Orthodoxy dies hard, and its defenders tell us that this fact shows that
+it is of divine origin. Judaism dies hard. It has lived several thousand
+years longer than Christianity. The religion of Mohammed dies hard.
+
+Buddhism dies hard. Why do all these religions die hard? Because
+intelligence increases slowly.
+
+Let me whisper in the ear of the Protestant: Catholicism dies hard. What
+does that prove? It proves that the people are ignorant and that the
+priests are cunning.
+
+Let me whisper in the ear of the Catholic: Protestantism dies hard. What
+does that prove? It proves that the people are superstitious and the
+preachers stupid.
+
+Let me whisper in all your ears: Infidelity is not dying--it is
+growing--it increases every day. And what does that prove? It
+proves that the people are learning more and more--that they are
+advancing--that the mind is getting free, and that the race is being
+civilized.
+
+The clergy know that I know that they know that they do not know.
+
+The Blows That Have Shattered the Shield and Shivered the Lance of
+Superstition.
+
+Mohammed.
+
+Mohammed wrested from the disciples of the cross the fairest part of
+Europe. It was known that he was an impostor, and that fact sowed the
+seeds of distrust and infidelity in the Christian world. Christians made
+an effort to rescue from the infidels the empty sepulchre of Christ.
+That commenced in the eleventh century and ended at the close of the
+thirteenth. Europe was almost depopulated. The fields were left waste,
+the villages were deserted, nations were impoverished, every man who
+owed a debt was discharged from payment if he put a cross upon his
+breast and joined the Crusades. No matter what crime he had committed,
+the doors of the prison were open for him to join the hosts of the
+cross. They believed that God would give them victory, and they carried
+in front of the first Crusade a goat and a goose, believing that both
+those animals were blessed by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost. And I
+may say that those same animals are in the lead to-day in the orthodox
+world. Until the year 1291 they endeavored to gain possession of that
+sepulchre, and finally the hosts of Christ were driven back, baffled and
+beaten,--a poor, miserable, religious rabble. They were driven back, and
+that fact sowed the seeds of distrust in Christendom. You know that at
+that time the world believed in trial by battle--that God would take
+the side of the right--and there had been a trial by battle between the
+cross and the crescent, and Mohammed had been victorious. Was God at
+that time governing the world? Was he endeavoring to spread his gospel?
+
+The Destruction of Art.
+
+You know that when Christianity came into power it destroyed every
+statue it could lay its ignorant hands upon. It defaced and obliterated
+every painting; it destroyed every beautiful building; it burned the
+manuscripts, both Greek and Latin; it destroyed all the history, all
+the poetry, all the philosophy it could find, and reduced to ashes every
+library that it could reach with its torch. And the result was, that the
+night of the Middle Ages fell upon the human race. But by accident,
+by chance, by oversight, a few of the manuscripts escaped the fury of
+religious zeal; and these manuscripts became the seed, the fruit of
+which is our civilization of to-day. A few statues had been buried; a
+few forms of beauty were dug from the earth that had protected them, and
+now the civilized world is filled with art, the walls are covered with
+paintings, and the niches filled with statuary. A few manuscripts were
+found and deciphered. The old languages were learned, and literature
+was again born. A new day dawned upon mankind. Every effort at mental
+improvement had been opposed by the church, and yet, the few things
+saved from the general wreck--a few poems, a few works of the ancient
+thinkers, a few forms wrought in stone, produced a new civilization
+destined to overthrow and destroy the fabric of superstition.
+
+The Discovery of America.
+
+What was the next blow that this church received? The discovery of
+America. The Holy Ghost who inspired men to write the Bible did not
+know of the existence of this continent, never dreamed of the Western
+Hemisphere. The Bible left out half the world. The Holy Ghost did not
+know that the earth is round. He did not dream that the earth is round.
+He believed it was flat, although he made it himself. At that time
+heaven was just beyond the clouds. It was there the gods lived, there
+the angels were, and it was against that heaven that Jacob's ladder
+leaned when the angels went up and down. It was to that heaven that
+Christ ascended after his resurrection. It was up there that the New
+Jerusalem was, with its streets of gold, and under this earth was
+perdition. There was where the devils lived; where a pit was dug for
+all unbelievers, and for men who had brains. I say that for this reason:
+Just in proportion that you have brains, your chances for eternal joy
+are lessened, according to this religion. And just in proportion that
+you lack brains your chances are increased. At last they found that the
+earth is round. It was circumnavigated by Magellan. In 1519 that brave
+man set sail. The church told him: "The earth is flat, my friend; don't
+go, you may fall off the edge." Magellan said: "I have seen the shadow
+of the earth upon the moon, and I have more confidence in the shadow
+than I have in the church." The ship went round. The earth was
+circumnavigated. Science passed its hand above it and beneath it, and
+where was the old heaven and where was the hell? Vanished forever! And
+they dwell now only in the religion of superstition. We found there was
+no place there for Jacob's ladder to lean against; no place there for
+the gods and angels to live; no place to hold the waters of the deluge;
+no place to which Christ could have ascended. The foundations of the
+New Jerusalem crumbled. The towers and domes fell, and in their places
+infinite space, sown with an infinite number of stars; not with New
+Jerusalems, but with countless constellations.
+
+Copernicus and Kepler.
+
+Then man began to grow great, and with that came Astronomy, In 1473
+Copernicus was born. In 1543 his great work appeared. In 1616 the system
+of Copernicus was condemned by the pope, by the infallible Catholic
+Church, and the church was about as near right upon that subject as upon
+any other. The system of Copernicus was denounced. And how long do you
+suppose the church fought that? Let me tell you. It was revoked by Pius
+VII. in the year of grace 1821. For two hundred and seventy-eight years
+after the death of Copernicus the church insisted that his system was
+false, and that the old Bible astronomy was true. Astronomy is the first
+help that we ever received from heaven. Then came Kepler in 1609, and
+you may almost date the birth of science from the night that Kepler
+discovered his first law. That was the break of the day. His first law,
+that the planets do not move in circles but in ellipses; his second law,
+that they describe equal spaces in equal times; his third law, that the
+squares of their periodic times are proportional to the cubes of their
+distances. That man gave us the key to the heavens. He opened the
+infinite book, and in it read three lines.
+
+I have not time to speak of Galileo, of Leonardo da Vinci, of Bruno, and
+of hundreds of others who contributed to the intellectual wealth of the
+world.
+
+Special Providence.
+
+The next thing that gave the church a blow was Statistics. We found by
+taking statistics that we could tell the average length of human life;
+that this human life did not depend upon infinite caprice; that it
+depended upon conditions, circumstances, laws and facts, and that these
+conditions, circumstances, and facts were during long periods of time
+substantially the same. And now, the man who depends entirely upon
+special providence gets his life insured. He has more confidence even
+in one of these companies than he has in the whole Trinity. We found by
+statistics that there were just so many crimes on an average committed;
+just so many crimes of one kind and so many of another; just so many
+suicides, so many deaths by drowning, so many accidents on an average,
+so many men marrying women, for instance, older than themselves; so many
+murders of a particular kind; just the same number of mistakes; and
+I say to-night, statistics utterly demolish the idea of special
+providence.
+
+Only the other day a gentleman was telling me of a case of special
+providence. He knew it. He had been the subject of it. A few years ago
+he was about to go on a ship when he was detained. He did not go, and
+the ship was lost with all on board.
+
+"Yes!" I said, "Do you think the people who were drowned believed in
+special providence?" Think of the infinite egotism of such a doctrine.
+Here is a man that fails to go upon a ship with five hundred passengers
+and they go down to the bottom of the sea--fathers, mothers, children,
+and loving husbands and wives waiting upon the chores of expectation.
+Here is one poor little wretch that did not happen to go! And he thinks
+that God, the Infinite Being, interfered in his poor little withered
+behalf and let the rest all go. That is special providence. Why does
+special providence allow all the crimes? Why are the wife-beaters
+protected, and why are the wives and children left defenceless if the
+hand of God is over us all? Who protects the insane? Why does Providence
+permit insanity? But the church cannot give up special providence. If
+there is no such thing, then no prayers, no worship, no churches, no
+priests. What would become of National Thanksgiving?
+
+You know we have a custom every year of issuing a proclamation of
+thanksgiving. We say to God, "Although you have afflicted all the other
+countries, although you have sent war, and desolation, and famine on
+everybody else, we have been such good children that you have been
+kind to us, and we hope you will keep on." It does not make a bit of
+difference whether we have good times or not--the thanksgiving is always
+exactly the same. I remember a few years ago a governor of Iowa got out
+a proclamation of that kind. He went on to tell how thankful the people
+were and how prosperous the State had been. There was a young fellow in
+that State who got out another proclamation, saying that he feared the
+Lord might be misled by official correspondence; that the governor's
+proclamation was entirely false; that the State was not prosperous; that
+the crops had been an almost utter failure; that nearly every farm in
+the State was mortgaged, and that if the Lord did not believe him, all
+he asked was that he would send some angel in whom he had confidence, to
+look the matter over and report.
+
+Charles Darwin.
+
+This century will be called Darwin's century. He was one of the greatest
+men who ever touched this globe. He has explained more of the phenomena
+of life than all of the religious teachers. Write the name of Charles
+Darwin on the one hand and the name of every theologian who ever lived
+on the other, and from that name has come more light to the world
+than from all of those. His doctrine of evolution, his doctrine of the
+survival of the fittest, his doctrine of the origin of species,
+has removed in every thinking mind the last vestige of orthodox
+Christianity. He has not only stated, but he has demonstrated, that the
+inspired writer knew nothing of this world, nothing of the origin of
+man, nothing of geology, nothing of astronomy, nothing of nature; that
+the Bible is a book written by ignorance--at the instigation of fear.
+Think of the men who replied to him. Only a few years ago there was no
+person too ignorant to successfully answer Charles Darwin; and the more
+ignorant he was the more cheerfully he undertook the task. He was held
+up to the ridicule, the scorn and contempt of the Christian world, and
+yet when he died, England was proud to put his dust with that of her
+noblest and her grandest. Charles Darwin conquered the intellectual
+world, and his doctrines are now accepted facts. His light has broken
+in on some of the clergy, and the greatest man who to-day occupies
+the pulpit of one of the orthodox: churches, Henry Ward Beecher, is a
+believer in the theories of Charles Darwin--a man of more genius than
+all the clergy of that entire church put together.
+
+And yet we are told in this little creed that orthodox religion is about
+to conquer the world! It will be driven to the wilds of Africa. It must
+go to some savage country; it has lost its hold upon civilization. It is
+unfortunate to have a religion that cannot be accepted by the intellect
+of a nation. It is unfortunate to have a religion against which every
+good and noble heart protests. Let us have a good religion or none. My
+pity has been excited by seeing these ministers endeavor to warp and
+twist the passages of Scripture to fit the demonstrations of science. Of
+course, I have not time to recount all the discoveries and events that
+have assisted in the destruction of superstition. Every fact is an
+enemy of the church. Every fact is a heretic. Every demonstration is
+an infidel. Everything that ever really happened testifies against the
+supernatural.
+
+The church teaches that man was created perfect, and that for six
+thousand years he has degenerated. Darwin demonstrated the falsity
+of this dogma. He shows that man has for thousands of ages steadily
+advanced; that the Garden of Eden is an ignorant myth; that the doctrine
+of original sin has no foundation in fact; that the atonement is an
+absurdity; that the serpent did not tempt, and that man did not "fall."
+
+Charles Darwin destroyed the foundation of orthodox Christianity. There
+is nothing left but faith in what we know could not and did not happen.
+Religion and science are enemies. One is a superstition; the other is
+a fact. One rests upon the false, the other upon the true. One is the
+result of fear and faith, the other of investigation and reason.
+
+The Creeds.
+
+I have been talking a great deal about the orthodox religion. Often,
+after having delivered a lecture, I have met some good, religious person
+who has said to me:
+
+"You do not tell it as we believe it."
+
+"Well, but I tell it as you have it written in your creed."
+
+"Oh, we don't mind the creed any more."
+
+"Then, why do you not change it?"
+
+"Oh, well, we understand it as it is, and if we tried to change it,
+maybe we would not agree."
+
+Possibly the creeds are in the best condition now. There is a tacit
+understanding that they do not believe them, that there is a way to
+get around them, and that they can read between the lines; that if they
+should meet now to form new creeds they would fail to agree; and that
+now they can say as they please, except in public. Whenever they do so
+in public the church, in self-defence, must try them; and I believe in
+trying every minister that does not preach the doctrine he agrees to.
+I have not the slightest sympathy with a Presbyterian preacher who
+endeavors to preach infidelity from a Presbyterian pulpit and receives
+Presbyterian money. When he changes his views he should step down and
+out like a man, and say, "I do not believe your doctrine, and I will not
+preach it. You must hire some other man." The Latest Creed.
+
+But I find that I have correctly interpreted the creeds. There was put
+into my hands the new Congregational creed. I have read it, and I will
+call your attention to it to-night, to find whether that church has made
+any advance; to find whether the sun of science has risen in the heavens
+in vain; whether they are still the children of intellectual darkness;
+whether they still consider it necessary for you to believe something
+that you by no possibility can understand, in order to be a winged angel
+forever. Now, let us see what their creed is. I will read a little of
+it.
+
+They commence by saying that they
+
+"_Believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth,
+and of all things visible and invisible_."
+
+They say, now, that there is the one personal God; that he is the maker
+of the universe and its ruler. I again ask the old question, Of what did
+he make it? If matter has not existed through eternity, then this God
+made it. Of what did he make it? What did he use for the purpose? There
+was nothing in the universe except this God. What had the God been doing
+for the eternity he had been living? He had made nothing--called nothing
+into existence; never had had an idea, because it is impossible to have
+an idea unless there is something to excite an idea. What had he been
+doing? Why does not the Congregational Church tell us? How do they know
+about this Infinite Being? And if he is infinite how can they comprehend
+him? What good is it to believe in something that you know you do not
+understand, and that you never can understand?
+
+In the Episcopalian creed God is described as follows:
+
+"_There is but one living and true God, everlasting, without body, parts
+or passions_."
+
+Think of that!--without body, parts, or passions.
+
+I defy any man in the world to write a better description of nothing.
+You cannot conceive of a finer word-painting of a vacuum than "without
+body, parts, or passions." And yet this God, without passions, is angry
+at the wicked every day; this God, without passions, is a jealous God,
+whose anger burneth to the lowest hell. This God, without passions,
+loves the whole human race; and this God, without passions, damns a
+large majority of mankind. This God without body, walked in the Garden
+of Eden, in the cool of the day. This God, without body, talked with
+Adam and Eve. This God, without body, or parts met Moses upon Mount
+Sinai, appeared at the door of the tabernacle, and talked with Moses
+face to face as a man speaketh to his friend. This description of God is
+simply an effort of the church to describe a something of which it has
+no conception.
+
+God as a Governor.
+
+So, too, I find the following:
+
+"_We believe that the Providence of God, by which he executes his
+eternal purposes in the government of the world, is in and over all
+events._"
+
+Is God the governor of the world? Is this established by the history of
+nations? What evidence can you find, if you are absolutely honest and
+not frightened, in the history of the world, that this universe is
+presided over by an infinitely wise and good God?
+
+How do you account for Russia? How do you account for Siberia? How do
+you account for the fact that whole races of men toiled beneath the
+master's lash for ages without recompense and without reward? How do you
+account for the fact that babes were sold from the arms of mothers--arms
+that had been reached toward God in supplication? How do you account for
+it? How do you account for the existence of martyrs? How do you account
+for the fact that this God allows people to be burned simply for loving
+him? Is justice always done? Is innocence always acquitted? Do the
+good succeed? Are the honest fed? Are the charitable clothed? Are the
+virtuous shielded? How do you account for the fact that the world has
+been filled with pain, and grief, and tears? How do you account for the
+fact that people have been swallowed by earthquakes, overwhelmned by
+volcanoes, and swept from the earth by storms? Is it easy to account
+for famine, for pestilence and plague if there be above us all a Ruler
+infinitely good, powerful and wise?
+
+I do not say there is none. I do not know. As I have said before, this
+is the only planet I was ever on. I live in one of the rural districts
+of the universe, and do not know about these things as much as the
+clergy pretend to, but if they know no more about the other world than
+they do about this, it is not worth mentioning.
+
+How do they answer all this? They say that God "permits" it. What would
+you say to me if I stood by and saw a ruffian beat out the brains of a
+child, when I had full and perfect power to prevent it? You would say
+truthfully that I was as bad as the murderer. Is it possible for this
+God to prevent it? Then, if he does not he is a fiend; he is no god.
+But they say he "permits" it. What for? So that we may have freedom of
+choice. What for? So that God may find, I suppose, who are good and who
+are bad. Did he not know that when he made us? Did he not know exactly
+just what he was making? Why should he make those whom he knew would be
+criminals? If I should make a machine that would walk your streets and
+take the lives of people you would hang me. And if God made a man whom
+he knew would commit murder, then God is guilty of that murder. If God
+made a man knowing that he would beat his wife, that he would starve
+his children, that he would strew on either side of his path of life the
+wrecks of ruined homes, then I say the being who knowingly called that
+wretch into existence is directly responsible. And yet we are to find
+the providence of God in the history of nations. What little I have read
+shows me that when man has been helped, man has done it; when the
+chains of slavery have been broken, they have been broken by man; when
+something bad has been done in the government of mankind, it is easy to
+trace it to man, and to fix the responsibility upon human beings. You
+need not look to the sky; you need throw neither praise nor blame upon
+gods; you can find the efficient causes nearer home--right here.
+
+The Love of God.
+
+What is the next thing I find in this creed?
+
+"_We believe that man was made in the image of God, that he might know,
+love, and obey God, and enjoy him forever._"
+
+I do not believe that anybody ever did love God, because nobody ever
+knew anything about him. We love each other. We love something that we
+know. We love something that our experience tells us is good and great
+and beautiful. We cannot by any possibility love the unknown. We can
+love truth, because truth adds to human happiness. We can love justice,
+because it preserves human joy. We can love charity. We can love every
+form of goodness that we know, or of which we can conceive, but we
+cannot love the infinitely unknown. And how can we be made in the image
+of something that has neither body, parts, nor passions?
+
+The Fall of Man.
+
+The Congregational Church has not outgrown the doctrine of "original
+sin." We are told that:
+
+"_Our first parents, by disobedience, fell under the condemnation
+of God, and that all men are so alienated from God that there is no
+salvation from the guilt and power of sin except through God's redeeming
+power._"
+
+Is there an intelligent man or woman now in the world who believes in
+the Garden of Eden story? If you find any man who believes it, strike
+his forehead and you will hear an echo. Something is for rent. Does any
+intelligent man now believe that God made man of dust, and woman of a
+rib, and put them in a garden, and put a tree in the midst of it? Was
+there not room outside of the garden to put his tree, if he did not want
+people to eat his apples?
+
+If I did not want a man to eat my fruit, I would not put him in my
+orchard.
+
+Does anybody now believe in the story of the serpent? I pity any man or
+woman who, in this nineteenth century, believes in that childish fable.
+Why did Adam and Eve disobey? Why, they were tempted. By whom? The
+devil. Who made the devil? God. What did God make him for? Why did
+he not tell Adam and Eve about this serpent? Why did he not watch the
+devil, instead of watching Adam and Eve? Instead of turning them out,
+why did he not keep him from getting in? Why did he not have his flood
+first, and drown the devil, before he made a man and woman.
+
+And yet, people who call themselves intelligent--professors in colleges
+and presidents of venerable institutions--teach children and young men
+that the Garden of Eden story is an absolute historical fact. I defy
+any man to think of a more childish thing. This God, waiting around
+Eden--knowing all the while what would happen--having made them on
+purpose so that it would happen, then does what? Holds all of us
+responsible, and we were not there. Here is a representative before the
+constituency had been born. Before I am bound by a representative I want
+a chance to vote for or against him; and if I had been there, and known
+all the circumstances, I should have voted "No!" And yet, I am held
+responsible.
+
+We are told by the Bible and by the churches that through this fall of
+man "_Sin and death entered the world?_"
+
+According to this, just as soon as Adam and Eve had partaken of the
+forbidden fruit, God began to contrive ways by which he could destroy
+the lives of his children. He invented all the diseases--all the fevers
+and coughs and colds--all the pains and plagues and pestilences--all the
+aches and agonies, the malaria and spores; so that when we take a breath
+of air we admit into our lungs unseen assassins; and, fearing that some
+might live too long, even under such circumstances, God invented the
+earthquake and volcano, the cyclone and lightning, animalcules to infest
+the heart and brain, so small that no eye can detect--no instrument
+reach. This was all owing to the disobedience of Adam and Eve!
+
+In his infinite goodness, God invented rheumatism and gout and
+dyspepsia, cancers and neuralgia, and is still inventing new diseases.
+Not only this', but he decreed the pangs of mothers, and that by the
+gates of love and life should crouch the dragons of death and pain.
+Fearing that some might, by accident, live too long, he planted
+poisonous vines and herbs that looked like food. He caught the serpents
+he had made and gave them fangs and curious organs, ingeniously devised
+to distill and deposit the deadly drop. He changed the nature of the
+beasts, that they might feed on human flesh. He cursed a world, and
+tainted every spring and source of joy. He poisoned every breath of air;
+corrupted even light, that it might bear disease on every ray; tainted
+every drop of blood in human veins; touched every nerve, that it
+might bear the double fruit of pain and joy; decreed all accidents and
+mistakes that maim and hurt and kill, and set the snares of life-long
+grief, baited with present pleasure,--with a moment's joy. Then and
+there he foreknew and foreordained all human tears. And yet all this is
+but the prelude, the introduction, to the infinite revenge of the good
+God. Increase and multiply all human griefs until the mind has reached
+imagination's farthest verge, then add eternity to time, and you may
+faintly tell, but never can conceive, the infinite horrors of this
+doctrine called "The Fall of Man." The Atonement.
+
+We are further told that:
+
+"_All men are so alienated from God that there is no alleviation from
+the guilt and power of sin except through God's redeeming grace;_"
+
+And that:
+
+"_We believe that the love of God to sinful man has found its highest
+expression in the redemptive work of his Son, who became man, uniting
+his divine nature with our human nature in one person; who was tempted
+like other men and yet without sin, and by his humiliation, his holy
+obedience, his sufferings, his death on the cross, and his resurrection,
+became a perfect redeemer; whose sacrifice of himself for the sins
+of the world declares the righteousness of God, and is the sole and
+sufficient ground of forgiveness and of reconciliation with him_."
+
+The absurdity of the doctrine known as "The Fall of Man," gave birth
+to that other absurdity known as "The Atonement." So that now it is
+insisted that, as we are rightfully charged with the sin of somebody
+else, we can rightfully be credited with the virtues of another. Let us
+leave out of our philosophy both these absurdities. Our creed will read
+a great deal better with both of them out, and will make far better
+sense.
+
+Now, in consequence of Adam's sin, everybody is alienated from God. How?
+Why? Oh, we are all depraved, you know; we all do wrong. Well, why?
+Is that because we are depraved? No. Why do we make so many mistakes?
+Because there is only one right way, and there is an almost infinite
+number of wrong ways; and as long as we are not perfect in our
+intellects we must make mistakes. "There is no darkness but ignorance,"
+and alienation, as they call it, from God, is simply a lack of
+intellect. Why were we not given better brains? That may account for the
+alienation.
+
+The church teaches that every soul that finds its way to the shore of
+this world is against God--naturally hates God; that the little dimpled
+child in the cradle is simply a chunk of depravity. Everybody against
+God! It is a libel upon the human race; it is a libel upon all the men
+who have worked for wife and child; upon all mothers who have suffered
+and labored, wept and worked; upon all the men who have died for their
+country; upon all who have fought for human liberty. Leave out the
+history of religion and there is little left to prove the depravity of
+man.
+
+Everybody that comes is against God! Every soul, they think, is like the
+wrecked Irishman, who drifted to an unknown island, and as he climbed
+the shore saw a man and said to him, "Have you a Government here?" The
+man replied "We have." "Well," said he, "I'm forninst it!"
+
+The church teaches us that such is the attitude of every soul in the
+universe of God. Ought a god to take any credit to himself for making
+depraved people? A god that cannot make a soul that is not totally
+depraved, I respectfully suggest, should retire from the business. And
+if a god has made us, knowing that we are totally depraved, why should
+we go to the same being to be "born again?"
+
+The Second Birth.
+
+The church insists that we must be "born again" and that all who are not
+the subjects of this second birth are heirs of everlasting fire. Would
+it not have been much better to have made another Adam and Eve? Would it
+not have been better to change Noah and his people, so that after that a
+second birth would not have been necessary? Why not purify the fountain
+of all human life? Why allow the earth to be peopled with depraved and
+monstrous beings, each one of whom must be re-made, re-formed, and born
+again?
+
+And yet, even reformation is not enough. If the man who steals
+becomes perfectly honest, that is not enough; if the man who hates his
+fellow-man, changes and loves his fellow-man, that is not enough; he
+must go through that mysterious thing called the second birth; he must
+be born again. He must have faith; he must believe something that
+he does not understand, and experience what they call "conversion."
+According to the church, nothing so excites the wrath of God--nothing so
+corrugates the brows of Jehovah with hatred--as a man relying on his own
+good works. He must admit that he ought to be damned, and that of the
+two he prefers it, before God will consent to save him.
+
+I met a man the other day, who said to me, "I am a Unitarian
+Universalist." "What do you mean by that?" I asked. "Well," said he,
+"this is what I mean: the Unitarian thinks he is too good to be damned,
+and the Universalist thinks God is too good to damn him, and I believe
+them both."
+
+Is it possible that the sacrifice of a perfect being was acceptable to
+God? Will he accept the agony of innocence for the punishment of guilt?
+Will he release Barabbas and crucify Christ?
+
+Inspiration.
+
+What is the next thing in this great creed?
+
+"_We believe that the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments are the
+record of God's revelation of Himself, the work of redemption; that
+they were written by men under the special guidance of the holy spirit;
+that they are able to make wise unto salvation; and that they constitute
+an authoritative standard by which religious teaching and human conduct
+are to be regulated and judged._"
+
+This is the creed of the Congregational Church; that is, the result
+reached by a high-joint commission appointed to draw up a creed for
+their churches; and there we have the statement that the Bible was
+written "by men under the special guidance of the Holy Spirit."
+
+What part of the Bible? All of it? All of it. And yet what is this Old
+Testament that was written by an infinitely good God? The being who
+wrote it did not know the shape of the world he had made; knew nothing
+of human nature. He commands men to love him, as if one could love upon
+command. The same God upheld the institution of human slavery; and the
+church says that the Bible that upholds that institution was written by
+men under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Then I disagree with the Holy
+Spirit.
+
+This church tells us that men under the guidance of the Holy Spirit
+upheld the institution of polygamy--I deny it; that under the
+guidance of the Holy Spirit these men upheld wars of extermination and
+conquest--I deny it; that under the guidance of the Holy Spirit these
+men wrote that it was right for a man to destroy the life of his wife if
+she happened to differ with him on the subject of religion--I deny it.
+And yet that is the book now upheld in this creed of the Congregational
+Church.
+
+If the devil had written upon the subject of slavery, which side would
+he have taken? Let every minister answer. If you knew the devil had
+written a work on human slavery, in your judgment, would he uphold
+slavery, or denounce it? Would you regard it as any evidence that he
+ever wrote it, if it upheld slavery? And yet, here you have a work
+upholding slavery, and you say that it was written by an infinitely good
+God! If the devil upheld polygamy, would you be surprised? If the devil
+wanted to kill men for differing with him would you be astonished? If
+the devil told a man to kill his wife, would you be shocked? And yet,
+you say, that is exactly what God did. If there be a God, then that
+creed is blasphemy. That creed is a libel upon him who sits on heaven's
+throne. If there be a God, I ask him to write in the book in which my
+account is kept, that I denied these lies for him.
+
+I do not believe in a slaveholding God! I do not worship a polygamous
+Holy Ghost, nor a Son who threatens eternal pain; I will not get upon my
+knees before any being who commands a husband to slay his wife because
+she expresses her honest thought. Suppose a book should be found old as
+the Old Testament in which slavery, polygamy and war are all denounced,
+would Christians think that it was written by the devil?
+
+Did it ever occur to you that if God wrote the Old Testament, and
+told the Jews to crucify or kill anybody that disagreed with them on
+religion, and that this God afterward took upon himself flesh and came
+to Jerusalem, and taught a different religion, and the Jews killed
+him--did it ever occur to you that he reaped exactly what he had sown?
+Did it ever occur to you that he fell a victim to his own tyranny, and
+was destroyed by his own hand? Of course I do not believe that any God
+ever was the author of the Bible, or that any God was ever crucified,
+or that any God was ever killed, or ever will be, but I want to ask you
+that question.
+
+Take this Old Testament, then, with all its stories of murder and
+massacre; with all its foolish and cruel fables; with all its infamous
+doctrines; with its spirit of caste; with its spirit of hatred, and
+tell me whether it was written by a good God. If you will read the
+maledictions and curses of that book, you will think that God, like
+Lear, had divided heaven among his daughters, and then, in the insanity
+of despair, had launched his curses on the human race.
+
+And yet, I must say--I must admit--that the Old Testament is better
+than the New. In the Old Testament, when God had a man dead, he let
+him alone. When he saw him quietly in his grave he was satisfied. The
+muscles relaxed, and the frown gave place to a smile. But in the New
+Testament the trouble commences at death. In the New Testament God is
+to wreak his revenge forever and ever. It was reserved for one who said,
+"Love your enemies," to tear asunder the veil between time and eternity
+and fix the horrified gaze of man upon the gulfs of eternal fire. The
+New Testament is just as much worse than the Old, as hell is worse than
+sleep; just as much worse, as infinite cruelty is worse than dreamless
+rest; and yet, the New Testament is claimed to be a gospel of love and
+peace.
+
+Is it possible that: "_The Scriptures constitute the authoritative
+standard by which religious teaching and human conduct are to be
+regulated and judged"?_
+
+Are we to judge of conduct by the Old Testament, by the New, or by both?
+According to the Old, the slaveholder was a just and generous man; a
+polygamist was a model of virtue. According to the New, the worst can be
+forgiven and the best can be lost. How can any book be a standard,
+when the standard itself must be measured by human reason? Is there a
+standard of a standard? Must not the reason be convinced? and, if so, is
+not the reason of each man the final arbiter of that man? If he takes a
+book as a standard, does he so take it because it is to him reasonable?
+In what way is the human reason to be ignored? Why should a book take
+its place, unless the reason has been convinced that the book is the
+proper standard? If this is so, the book rests upon the reason of those
+who adopt it. Are they to be saved because they act in accordance with
+their reason, and are others to be damned because they act by the same
+standard--their reason? No two are alike. Can we demand of all the same
+result? Suppose the compasses were not constant to the pole--no two
+compasses exactly alike--would you expect all ships to reach the same
+harbor?
+
+The Reign of Truth and Love.
+
+I also find in this creed the following:
+
+"_We believe that Jesus Christ came to establish among men the Kingdom
+of God, the reign of truth and love, of righteousness and peace!_"
+
+Well, that may have been the object of Jesus Christ. I do not deny it.
+But what was the result? The Christian world has caused more war than
+all the rest of the world beside. Most of the cunning instruments of
+death have been devised by Christians. All the wonderful machinery by
+which the life is blown from men, by which nations are conquered and
+enslaved--all these machines have been born in Christian brains. And yet
+he came to bring peace, they say; but the Testament says otherwise: "I
+came not to bring peace, but a sword." And the sword was brought. What
+are the Christian nations doing to-day in Europe? Is there a solitary
+Christian nation that will trust any other? How many millions of
+Christians are in the uniform of forgiveness, armed with the muskets of
+love?
+
+There was an old Spaniard on the bed of death, who sent for a priest,
+and the priest told him that he would have to forgive his enemies before
+he died. He said, "I have none." "What! no enemies?" "Not one," said the
+dying man; "I killed the last one three months ago."
+
+How many millions of Christians are now armed and equipped to destroy
+their fellow-Christians? Who are the men in Europe crying against war?
+Who wishes to have the nations disarmed? Is it the church? No; the men
+who do not believe in what they call this religion of peace. When there
+is a war, and when they make a few thousand widows and orphans; when
+they strew the plain with dead patriots, Christians assemble in their
+churches and sing "Te Deum Laudamus." Why? Because he has enabled a
+few of his children to kill some others of his children. This is the
+religion of peace--the religion that invented the Krupp gun, that will
+hurl a ball weighing two thousand pounds through twenty-four inches
+of solid steel. This is the religion of peace that covers the sea with
+men-of-war, clad in mail, in the name of universal forgiveness. This is
+the religion that drills and uniforms five millions of men to kill their
+fellows.
+
+The Wars It Brought.
+
+What effect has this religion had upon the nations of the earth? What
+have the nations been fighting about? What was the Thirty Years' War
+in Europe for? What was the war in Holland for? Why was it that England
+persecuted Scotland? Why is it that England persecutes Ireland even to
+this day? At the bottom of every one of these conflicts you will find
+a religious question. The religion of Jesus Christ, as preached by his
+church, causes war, bloodshed, hatred, and all uncharitableness; and
+why? Because, they say, a certain belief is necessary to salvation. They
+do not say, if you behave yourself you will get there; they do not say,
+if you pay your debts and love your wife and love your children, and are
+good to your friends, and your neighbors, and your country, you will
+get there; that will do you no good; you have got to believe a certain
+thing. No matter how bad you are, you can instantly be forgiven; and no
+matter how good you are, if you fail to believe that which you cannot
+understand, the moment you get to the day of judgment nothing is left
+but to damn you, and all the angels will shout "hallelujah."
+
+What do they teach to-day? Nearly every murderer goes to heaven; there
+is only one step from the gallows to God, only one jerk between the
+halter and heaven. That is taught by this church.
+
+I believe there ought to be a law to prevent the giving of the slightest
+religious consolation to any man who has been found guilty of murder.
+Let a Catholic understand that if he imbrues his hands in his brother's
+blood, he can have no extreme unction. Let it be understood that he
+can have no forgiveness through the church; and let the Protestant
+understand that when he has committed that crime the community will not
+pray him into heaven. Let him go with his victim. The victim, dying in
+his sins, goes to hell, and the murderer has the happiness of seeing him
+there. If heaven grows dull and monotonous, the murderer can again give
+life to the nerve of pleasure by watching the agony of his victim.
+
+The truth is, Christianity has not made friends; it has made enemies. It
+is not, as taught, the religion of peace, it is the religion of war.
+Why should a Christian hesitate to kill a man that his God is waiting
+to damn? Why should a Christian not destroy an infidel who is trying to
+assassinate his soul? Why should a Christian pity an unbeliever--one who
+has rejected the Bible--when he knows that God will be pitiless forever?
+And yet we are told, in this creed, that "_we believe in the ultimate
+prevalence of the Kingdom of Christ over all the earth._"
+
+What makes you? Do you judge from the manner in which you are getting
+along now? How many people are being born a year? About fifty millions.
+How many are you converting a year, really, truthfully? Five or six
+thousand. I think I have overstated the number. Is orthodox Christianity
+on the increase? No. There are a hundred times as many unbelievers in
+orthodox Christianity as there were ten years ago. What are you doing in
+the missionary world? How long is it since you converted a Chinaman?
+A fine missionary religion, to send missionaries with their Bibles and
+tracts to China, but if a Chinaman comes here, mob him, simply to show
+him the difference between the practical and theoretical workings of the
+Christian religion. How long since you have had an intelligent convert
+in India? In my judgment, never; there never has been an intelligent
+Hindoo converted from the time the first missionary put his foot on
+that soil; and never, in my judgment, has an intelligent Chinaman been
+converted since the first missionary touched that shore. Where are they?
+We hear nothing of them, except in the reports. They get money from poor
+old ladies, trembling on the edge of the grave, and go and tell them
+stories, how hungry the average Chinaman is for a copy of the New
+Testament, and paint the sad condition of a gentleman in the interior
+of Africa without the works of Dr. McCosh, longing for a copy of _The
+Princeton Review_,--in my judgment, a pamphlet that would suit a savage.
+Thus money is scared from the dying, and frightened from the old and
+feeble.
+
+About how long is it before this kingdom is to be established? No one
+objects to the establishment of peace and good will. Every good man
+longs for the time when war shall cease. We are all hoping for a day of
+universal justice--a day of universal freedom--when man shall control
+himself, when the passions shall become obedient to the intelligent
+will. But the coming of that day will not be hastened by preaching the
+doctrines of total depravity and eternal revenge. That sun will not rise
+the quicker for preaching salvation by faith. The star that shines
+above that dawn, the herald of that day, is Science, not
+superstition,--Reason, not religion.
+
+To show you how little advance has been made, how many intellectual bats
+and mental owls still haunt the temple, still roost above the altar,
+I call your attention to the fact that the Congregational Church,
+according to this creed; still believes in the resurrection of the dead,
+and in their Confession of Faith, attached to the creed, I find that
+they also believe in the literal resurrection of the body.
+
+The Resurrection.
+
+Does anybody believe that, who has the courage to think for himself?
+Here is a man, for instance, that weighs 200 pounds and gets sick
+and dies weighing 120; how much will he weigh in the morning of the
+resurrection? Here is a cannibal, who eats another man; and we know that
+the atoms you eat go into your body and become a part of you. After
+the cannibal has eaten the missionary, and appropriated his atoms to
+himself, and then dies, to whom will the atoms belong in the morning of
+the resurrection? Could the missionary maintain an action of replevin,
+and if so, what would the cannibal do for a body? It has been
+demonstrated, in so far as logic can demonstrate anything, that there
+is no creation and no destruction in Nature. It has been demonstrated,
+again and again, that the atoms in us have been in millions of other
+beings; have grown in the forests and in the grass, have blossomed in
+flowers, and been in the metals. In other words, there are atoms in each
+one of us that have been in millions of others; and when we die, these
+atoms return to the earth, again appear in grass and trees, are again
+eaten by animals, and again devoured by countless vegetable mouths and
+turned into wood; and yet this church, in the nineteenth century,'in a
+council composed of, and presided over by, professors and presidents
+of colleges and theologians, solemnly tells us that it believes in the
+literal resurrection of the body. This is almost enough to make
+one despair of the future--almost enough to convince a man of the
+immortality of the absurd. They know better. There is not one so
+ignorant but knows better.
+
+The Judgment-Day.
+
+And what is the next thing?
+
+"_We believe in a final judgment, the issues of which are everlasting
+punishment and everlasting life!_"
+
+At the final judgment all of us will be there. The thousands, and
+millions, and billions, and trillions, and quadrillions that have died
+will be there. The books will be opened, and each case will be called.
+The sheep and the goats will be divided. The unbelievers will be sent to
+the left, while the faithful will proudly walk to the right. The saved,
+without a tear, will bid an eternal farewell to those who loved them
+here--to those they loved. Nearly all the human race will go away to
+everlasting punishment, and the fortunate few to eternal life. This
+is the consolation of the Congregational Church! This is the hope that
+dispels the gloom of life!
+
+Pious Evasions.
+
+When the clergy are caught, they give a different meaning to the
+words and say the world was not made in seven days. They say "good
+whiles"--"epochs."
+
+And in this same Confession of Faith and in this creed they say that the
+Lord's day is holy--every seventh day. Suppose you lived near the North
+Pole where the day is three months long. Then which day would you keep?
+If you could get to the North Pole you could prevent Sunday from ever
+overtaking you. You could walk around the other way faster than the
+world could revolve. How would you keep Sunday then? Suppose we invent
+something that can go one thousand miles an hour? We can chase Sunday
+clear around the globe. Is there anything that can be more perfectly
+absurd than that a space of time can be holy? You might as well talk
+about a virtuous vacuum. We are now told that the Bible is not a
+scientific book, and that after all we cannot depend on what God said
+four thousand years ago--that his ways are not as our ways--that we must
+accept without evidence, and believe without understanding.
+
+I heard the other night of an old man. He was not very well educated,
+and he got into the notion that he must have reading of the Bible and
+family worship. There was a bad boy in the family, and they were reading
+the Bible by course. In the fifteenth chapter of Corinthians is this
+passage: "Behold, brethren, I show you a mystery; we shall not all
+die, but we shall all be changed." This boy had rubbed out the "c" in
+"changed." So when the old man put on his spectacles, and got down his
+Bible, he read: "Behold, brethren, I show you a mystery, we shall not
+all die, but we shall all be hanged." The old lady said, "Father, I
+don't think it reads that way." He said, "Who is reading this?" "Yes
+mother, it says 'hanged,' and, more than that, I see the sense of it.
+Pride is the besetting sin of the human heart, and if there is anything
+calculated to take the pride out of a man it is hanging." It is in this
+way that ministers avoid and explain the discoveries of Science.
+
+People ask me, if I take away the Bible what are we going to do? How can
+we get along without the revelation that no one understands? What are
+we going to do if we have no Bible to quarrel about What are we to do
+without hell? What are we going to do with our enemies? What are we
+going to do with the people we love but don't like?
+
+"No Bible, No Civilization."
+
+They tell me that there never would have been any civilization if it had
+not been for this Bible. The Jews had a Bible; the Romans had not. Which
+had the greater and the grander government? Let us be honest. Which of
+those nations produced the greatest poets, the greatest soldiers, the
+greatest orators, the greatest statesmen, the greatest sculptors? Rome
+had no Bible. God cared nothing for the Roman Empire. He let the men
+come up by chance. His time was taken up with the Jewish people. And
+yet Rome conquered the world, including the chosen people of God. The
+people who had the Bible were defeated by the people who had not. How
+was it possible for Lucretius to get along without the Bible?--how did
+the great and glorious of that empire? And what shall we say of Greece?
+No Bible. Compare Athens with Jerusalem. From Athens come the beauty and
+intellectual grace of the world. Compare the mythology of Greece with
+the mythology of Judea; one covering the earth with beauty, and the
+other filling heaven with hatred and injustice. The Hindoos had no
+Bible; they had been forsaken by the Creator, and yet they became the
+greatest metaphysicians of the world. Egypt had no Bible. Compare Egypt
+with Judea. What are we to do without the Bible? What became of the Jews
+who had a Bible? Their temple was destroyed and their city was taken;
+and they never found real prosperity until their God deserted them. The
+Turks attributed all their victories to the Koran. The Koran gave them
+their victories over the believers in the Bible. The priests of each
+nation have accounted for the prosperity of that nation by its religion.
+
+The Christians mistake an incident for a cause, and honestly imagine
+that the Bible is the foundation of modern liberty and law. They forget
+physical conditions, make no account of commerce, care nothing for
+inventions and discoveries, and ignorantly give the credit to their
+inspired book.
+
+The foundations of our civilization were laid centuries before
+Christianity was known. The intelligence of courage, of self-government,
+of energy, of industry, that uniting made the civilization of this
+century, did not come alone from Judea, but from every nation of the
+ancient world.
+
+Miracles of the New Testament.
+
+There are many things in the New Testament that I cannot accept as true.
+
+I cannot believe in the miraculous origin of Jesus Christ. I believe he
+was the son of Joseph and Mary; that Joseph and Mary had been duly and
+legally married; that he was the legitimate offspring of that union.
+Nobody ever believed the contrary until he had been dead at least one
+hundred and fifty years. Neither Matthew, Mark, nor Luke ever dreamed
+that he was of divine origin. He did not say to either Matthew, Mark,
+or Luke, or to any one in their hearing, that he was the Son of God,
+or that he was miraculously conceived. He did not say it. It may be
+asserted that he said it to John, but John did not write the gospel
+that bears his name. The angel Gabriel, who, they say, brought the news,
+never wrote a word upon the subject. The mother of Christ never wrote
+a word upon the subject. His alleged father never wrote a word upon
+the subject, and Joseph never admitted the story. We are lacking in
+the matter of witnesses. I would not believe such a story now. I cannot
+believe that it happened then. I would not believe people I know, much
+less would I believe people I do not know.
+
+At that time Matthew and Luke believed that Christ was the son of Joseph
+and Mary. And why? they say he descended from David, and in order to
+show that he was of the blood of David, they gave the genealogy of
+Joseph. And if Joseph was not his father, why did they not give the
+genealogy of Pontius Pilate or of Herod? Could they, by giving the
+genealogy of Joseph, show that he was of the blood of David if Joseph
+was in no way related to Christ? And yet that is the position into which
+the Christian world is driven. In the New Testament we find that in
+giving the genealogy of Christ it says, "who was the son of Joseph?" and
+the church has interpolated the words "as was supposed." Why did they
+give a supposed genealogy? It will not do. And that is a thing that
+cannot in any way, by any human testimony, be established.
+
+If it is important for us to know that he was the Son of God, I say,
+then, that it devolves upon God to give us the evidence. Let him write
+it across the face of the heavens, in every language of mankind. If it
+is necessary for us to believe it, let it grow on every leaf next
+year. No man should be damned for not believing, unless the evidence is
+overwhelming. And he ought not to be made to depend upon say so, or upon
+"as was supposed." He should have it directly, for himself. A man says
+that God told him a certain thing, and he tells me, and I have only his
+word. He may have been deceived. If God has a message for me he ought
+to tell it to me, and not to somebody that has been dead four or five
+thousand years, and in another language.
+
+Besides, God may have changed his mind on many things; he has on
+slavery, and polygamy at least, according to the church; and yet his
+church now wants to go and destroy polygamy in Utah with the sword. Why
+do they not send missionaries there with copies of the Old Testament?
+By reading the lives of Abraham and Isaac, and Lot, and a few other
+patriarchs who ought to have been in the penitentiary, maybe they can
+soften their hearts.
+
+More Miracles.
+
+There is another miracle I do not believe,--the resurrection. I want to
+speak about it as we would about any ordinary transaction. In the first
+place, I do not believe that any miracle was ever performed, and if
+there was, you cannot prove it. Why? Because it is altogether more
+reasonable to believe that the people were mistaken about it than that
+it happened. And why? Because, according to human experience, we know
+that people will not always tell the truth, and we never saw a miracle
+ourselves, and we must be governed by our experience; and if we go by
+our experience, we must say that the miracle never happened--that the
+witnesses were mistaken.
+
+A man comes into Jerusalem, and the first thing he does is to cure the
+blind. He lets the light of day visit the night of blindness. The eyes
+are opened, and the world is again pictured upon the brain. Another man
+is clothed with leprosy. He touches him and the disease falls from
+him, and he stands pure, and clean, and whole. Another man is deformed,
+wrinkled, and bent. He touches him, and throws around him again the
+garment of youth. A man is in his grave, and he says, "Come forth!"
+And the man walks in life, feeling his heart throb and his blood going
+joyously through his veins. They say that actually happened. I do not
+know.
+
+There is one wonderful thing about the dead people that were raised--we
+do not hear of them any more. What became of them? If there was a man
+in this city who had been raised from the dead, I would go to see him
+to-night. I would say, "Where were you when you got the notice to come
+back? What kind of a country is it? What kind of opening there for a
+young man? How did you like it? Did you meet there the friends you had
+lost? Is there a world without death, without pain, without a tear? Is
+there a land without a grave, and where good-bye is never heard?" Nobody
+ever paid the slightest attention to the dead who had been raised. They
+did not even excite interest when they died the second time. Nobody
+said, "Why, that man is not afraid. He has been there once. He has
+walked through the valley of the shadow." Not a word. They pass quietly
+away.
+
+I do not believe these miracles. There is something wrong somewhere
+about that business. I may suffer eternal punishment for all this, but I
+cannot, I do not, believe.
+
+There was a man who did all these things, and thereupon they crucified
+him. Let us be honest. Suppose a man came into this city and should meet
+a funeral procession, and say, "Who is dead?" and they should reply,
+"The son of a widow; her only support." Suppose he should say to the
+procession, "Halt!" and to the undertaker, "Take out that coffin,
+unscrew that lid. Young man, I say unto thee, arise!" and the dead
+should step from the coffin and in a moment afterward hold his mother in
+his arms. Suppose this stranger should go to your cemetery and find some
+woman holding a little child in each hand, while the tears fell upon a
+new-made grave, and he should say to her, "Who lies buried here?"
+and she should reply, "My husband;" and he should cry, "I say unto
+thee, oh grave, give up thy dead!" and the husband should rise, and in a
+moment after have his lips upon his wife's, and the little children with
+their arms around his neck; do you think that the people of this city
+would kill him? Do you think any one would wish to crucify him? Do
+you not rather believe that every one who had a loved one out in that
+cemetery would go to him, even upon their knees, and beg him to give
+back their dead? Do you believe that any man was ever crucified who was
+the master of death?
+
+Let me tell you to-night if there shall ever appear upon this earth the
+master, the monarch, of death, all human knees will touch the earth. He
+will not be crucified. All the living who fear death; all the living who
+have lost a loved one, will bow to him. And yet we are told that this
+worker of miracles, this man who could clothe the dead dust in the
+throbbing flesh of life, was crucified. I do not believe that he worked
+the miracles, I do not believe that he raised the dead, I do not believe
+that he claimed to be the Son of God, These things were told long after
+he was dead; told because the ignorant multitude demanded mystery and
+wonder; told, because at that time the miraculous was believed of all
+the illustrious dead. Stories that made Christianity powerful then,
+weaken it now. He who gains a triumph in a conflict with a devil, will
+be defeated by science.
+
+There is another thing about these foolish miracles. All could have
+been imitated. Men could pretend to be blind; confederates could feign
+sickness, and even death.
+
+It is not very difficult to limp or to hold an arm as though it were
+paralyzed; or to say that one is afflicted with "an issue of blood." It
+is easy to say that the son of a widow was raised from the dead, and
+if you fail to give the name of the son, or his mother, or the time and
+place where the wonder occurred, it is quite difficult to show that it
+did not happen.
+
+No one can be called upon to disprove anything that has not apparently
+been established. I say apparently, because there can be no real
+evidence in support of a miracle.
+
+How could we prove, for instance, the miracle of the loaves and fishes?
+There were plenty of other loaves and other fishes in the world? Each
+one of the five thousand could have had a loaf and a fish with him. We
+would have to show that there was no other possible way for the people
+to get the bread and fish except by miracle, and then we are only half
+through. We must then show that they did, in fact, get enough to
+feed five thousand people, and that more was left than was had in the
+beginning.
+
+Of course this is simply impossible. And let me ask, why was not the
+miracle substantiated by some of the multitude?
+
+Would it not have been a greater wonder if Christ had _created_ instead
+of multiplied the loaves and fishes?
+
+How can we now prove that a certain person more than eighteen hundred
+years ago was possessed by seven devils?
+
+How was it ever possible to prove a thing like that?
+
+How can it be established that some evil spirits could talk while others
+were dumb, and that the dumb ones were the hardest to control?
+
+If Christ wished to convince his fellow-men by miracles, why did he not
+do something that could not by any means have been a counterfeit?
+
+Instead of healing a withered arm, why did he not find some man whose
+arm had been cut off, and make another grow?
+
+If he wanted to raise the dead, why did he not raise some man of
+importance, some one known to all?
+
+Why did he do his miracles in the obscurity of the village, in the
+darkness of the hovel?
+
+Why call back to life people so insignificant that the public did not
+know of their death?
+
+Suppose that in May, 1865, a man had pretended to raise some person by
+the name of Smith from the dead, and suppose a religion had been founded
+on that miracle, would it not be natural for people, hundreds of years
+after the pretended miracle, to ask why the founder of that religion
+did not raise from the dead Abraham Lincoln, instead of the unknown and
+obscure Mr. Smith?
+
+How could any man now, in any court, by any known rule of evidence,
+substantiate one of the miracles of Christ?
+
+Must we believe anything that cannot in any way be substantiated?
+
+If miracles were necessary to convince men eighteen centuries ago, are
+they not necessary now?
+
+After all, how many men did Christ convince with his miracles? How many
+walked beneath the standard of the master of Nature?
+
+How did it happen that so many miracles convinced so few? I will
+tell you. The miracles were never performed. No other explanation is
+possible.
+
+It is infinitely absurd to say that a man who cured the sick, the halt
+and blind, raised the dead, cast out devils, controlled the winds and
+waves, created food and held obedient to his will the forces of the
+world, was put to death by men who knew his superhuman power and who
+had seen his wondrous works. If the crucifixion was public, the miracles
+were private. If the miracles had been public, the crucifixion could not
+have been. Do away with the miracles, and the superhuman character of
+Christ is destroyed. He becomes what he really was--a man. Do away with
+the wonders, and the teachings of Christ cease to be authoritative. They
+are then worth the reason, the truth that is in them, and nothing more.
+Do away with the miracles, and then we can measure the utterances of
+Christ with the standard of our reason. We are no longer intellectual
+serfs, believing what is unreasonable in obedience to the command of a
+supposed god. We no longer take counsel of our fears, of our cowardice,
+but boldly defend what our reason maintains.
+
+Christ takes his appropriate place with the other teachers of mankind.
+His life becomes reasonable and admirable. We have a man who hated
+oppression; who despised and denounced superstition and hypocrisy; who
+attacked the heartless church of his time; who excited the hatred of
+bigots and priests, and who rather than be false to his conception of
+truth, met and bravely suffered even death.
+
+The Resurrection.
+
+The miracle of the resurrection I do not and cannot believe. If it was
+the fact, if the dead Christ rose from the grave, why did he not appear
+to his enemies? Why did he not visit Pontius Pilate? Why did he not call
+upon Caiaphas, the high priest? upon Herod? Why did he not again enter
+the temple and end the old dispute with demonstration? Why did he not
+confront the Roman soldiers who had taken money to falsely swear that
+his body had been stolen by his friends? Why did he not make another
+triumphal entry into Jerusalem? Why did he not say to the multitude:
+"Here are the wounds in my feet, and in my hands, and in my side. I am
+the one you endeavored to kill, but Death is my slave"? Simply because
+the resurrection is a myth. It makes no difference with his teachings.
+They are just as good whether he wrought miracles or not. Twice two are
+four; that needs no miracle. Twice two are five--a miracle can not help
+that. Christ's teachings are worth their effect upon the human race.
+It makes no difference about miracle or wonder. In that day every
+one believed in the impossible. Nobody had any standing as teacher,
+philosopher, governor, king, general, about whom there was not supposed
+to be something miraculous. The earth was covered with the sons and
+daughters of gods and goddesses.
+
+In Greece, in Rome, in Egypt, in India, every great man was supposed to
+have had either a god for his father, or a goddess for his mother. They
+accounted for genius by divine origin. Earth and heaven were at that
+time near together. It was but a step for the gods from the blue arch
+to the green earth. Every lake and valley and mountain top was made rich
+with legends of the loves of gods. How could the early Christians have
+made converts to a man, among a people who believed so thoroughly in
+gods--in gods that had lived upon the earth; among a people who had
+erected temples to the sons and daughters of gods? Such people could not
+have been induced to worship a man--a man born among barbarous people,
+citizen of a nation weak and poor and paying tribute to the Roman power.
+The early Christians therefore preached the gospel of a god.
+
+The Ascension.
+
+I cannot believe in the miracle of the ascension, in the bodily
+ascension of Jesus Christ. Where was he going? In the light shed upon
+this question by the telescope, I again ask, where was he going?
+
+The New Jerusalem is not above us. The abode of the gods is not there.
+Where was he going? Which way did he go? Of course that depends upon
+the time of day he left. If he left in the evening, he went exactly
+the opposite way from that he would have gone had he ascended in the
+morning. What did he do with his body? How high did he go? In what way
+did he overcome the intense cold? The nearest station is the moon, two
+hundred and forty thousand miles away. Again I ask, where did he go? He
+must have had a natural body, for it was the same body that died. His
+body must have been material, otherwise he would not as he rose have
+circled with the earth, and he would have passed from the sight of his
+disciples at the rate of more than a thousand miles per hour.
+
+It may be said that his body was "spiritual." Then what became of the
+body that died? Just before his ascension we are told that he partook of
+broiled fish with his disciples. Was the fish "spiritual?"
+
+Who saw this miracle?
+
+They say the disciples saw it. Let us see what they say. Matthew did not
+think it was worth mentioning. He does not speak of it. On the contrary,
+he says that the last words of Christ were:
+
+"Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world." Is it
+possible that Matthew saw this, the most miraculous of miracles, and
+yet forgot to put it in his life of Christ? Think of the little miracles
+recorded by this saint, and then determine whether it is probable that
+he witnessed the ascension of Jesus Christ.
+
+Mark says: "So, then, after the Lord had spoken unto them he was
+received up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God." This is all
+he says about the most wonderful vision that ever astonished human eyes,
+a miracle great enough to have stuffed credulity to bursting; and yet
+all we have is this one, poor, meagre verse. We know now that most of
+the last chapter of Mark is an interpolation, and as a matter of fact,
+the author of Mark's gospel said nothing about the ascension one way or
+the other.
+
+Luke says: "And it came to pass while he blessed them he was parted from
+them and was carried up into Heaven."
+
+John does not mention it. He gives as Christ's last words this address
+to Peter: "Follow thou Me." Of course, he did not say that as he
+ascended. It seems to have made very little impression upon him; he
+writes the account as though tired of the story. He concludes with an
+impatient wave of the hand.
+
+In the Acts we have another account. A conversation is given not
+spoken of in any of the others, and we find there two men clad in white
+apparel, who said: "Ye men of Galilee why stand ye here gazing up into
+heaven? This same Jesus that was taken up into heaven shall so come in
+like manner as ye have seen him go up into heaven."
+
+Matthew did not see the men in white apparel, did not see the ascension.
+Mark forgot the entire transaction, and Luke did not think the men in
+white apparel worth mentioning. John had not confidence enough in the
+story to repeat it. And yet, upon such evidence, we are bound to believe
+in the bodily ascension, or suffer eternal pain.
+
+And here let me ask, why was not the ascension in public?
+
+Casting out Devils.
+
+Most of the miracles said to have been wrought by Christ were recorded
+to show his power over evil spirits. On many occasions, he is said to
+have "cast out devils"--devils who could speak, and devils who were
+dumb.
+
+For many years belief in the existence of evil spirits has been fading
+from the mind, and as this belief grew thin, ministers endeavored to
+give new meanings to the ancient words. They are inclined now to put
+"disease" in the place of "devils," and most of them say, that the
+poor wretches supposed to have been the homes of fiends, were simply
+suffering from epileptic fits! We must remember that Christ and these
+devils often conversed together. Is it possible that fits can talk?
+These devils often admitted that Christ was God. Can epilepsy certify to
+divinity? On one occasion the fits told their name, and made a contract
+to leave the body of a man provided they would be permitted to take
+possession of a herd of swine. Is it possible that fits carried Christ
+himself to the pinnacle of a temple? Did fits pretend to be the owner
+of the whole earth? Is Christ to be praised for resisting such a
+temptation? Is it conceivable that fits wanted Christ to fall down and
+worship them?
+
+The church must not abandon its belief in devils. Orthodoxy cannot
+afford to put out the fires of hell. Throw away a belief in the devil,
+and most of the miracles of the New Testament become impossible, even
+if we admit the supernatural. If there is no devil, who was the original
+tempter in the garden of Eden? If there is no hell, from what are
+we saved; to what purpose is the atonement? Upon the obverse of the
+Christian shield is God, upon the reverse, the devil. No devil, no hell.
+No hell, no atonement. No atonement, no preaching, no gospel.
+
+Necessity of Belief.
+
+Does belief depend upon evidence? I think it does somewhat in some
+cases. How is it when a jury is sworn to try a case, hearing all the
+evidence, hearing both sides, hearing the charge of the judge, hearing
+the law, are upon their oaths equally divided, six for the plaintiff and
+six for the defendant? Evidence does not have the same effect upon all
+people. Why? Our brains are not alike. They are not the same shape. We
+have not the same intelligence, or the same experience, the same sense.
+And yet I am held accountable for my belief. I must believe in the
+Trinity--three times one is one, once one is three, and my soul is to be
+eternally damned for failing to guess an arithmetical conundrum. That
+is the poison part of Christianity--that salvation depends upon
+belief. That is the accursed part, and until that dogma is discarded
+Christianity will be nothing but superstition.
+
+No man can control his belief. If I hear certain evidence I will believe
+a certain thing. If I fail to hear it I may never believe it. If it is
+adapted to my mind I may accept it; if it is not, I reject it. And what
+am I to go by? My brain. That is the only light I have from Nature, and
+if there be a God it is the only torch that this God has given me to
+find my way through the darkness and night called life. I do not depend
+upon hearsay for that. I do not have to take the word of any other man
+nor get upon my knees before a book. Here in the temple of the mind I
+consult the God, that is to say my reason, and the oracle speaks to me
+and I obey the oracle. What should I obey? Another man's oracle? Shall
+I take another man's word--not what he thinks, but what he says some God
+has said to him?
+
+I would not know a god if I should see one. I have said before, and I
+say again, the brain thinks in spite of me, and I am not responsible for
+my thoughts. I cannot control the beating of my heart. I cannot stop
+the blood that flows through the rivers of my veins. And yet I am held
+responsible for my belief. Then why does not God give me the evidence?
+They say he has. In what? In an inspired book. But I do not understand
+it as they do. Must I be false to my understanding? They say: "When you
+come to die you will be sorry if you do not." Will I be sorry when I
+come to die that I did not live a hypocrite? Will I be sorry that I
+did not say I was a Christian when I was not? Will the fact that I was
+honest put a thorn in the pillow of death? Cannot God forgive me for
+being honest? They say that when he was in Jerusalem he forgave his
+murderers, but now he will not forgive an honest man for differing from
+him on the subject of the Trinity.
+
+They say that God says to me, "Forgive your enemies." I say, "I do;" but
+he says, "I will damn mine." God should be consistent. If he wants me to
+forgive my enemies he should forgive his. I am asked to forgive enemies
+who can hurt me. God is only asked to forgive enemies who cannot hurt
+him. He certainly ought to be as generous as he asks us to be. And I
+want no God to forgive me unless I am willing to forgive others, and
+unless I do forgive others. All I ask, if that be true, is that this God
+should act according to his own doctrine. If I am to forgive my enemies,
+I ask him to forgive his. I do not believe in the religion of faith,
+but of kindness, of good deeds. The idea that man is responsible for his
+belief is at the bottom of religious intolerance and persecution.
+
+How inconsistent these Christians are! In St. Louis the other day I read
+an interview with a Christian minister--one who is now holding a
+revival. They call him the boy preacher--a name that he has borne for
+fifty or sixty years. The question was whether in these revivals, when
+they were trying to rescue souls from eternal torture, they would allow
+colored people to occupy seats with white people; and that revivalist,
+preaching the unsearchable riches of Christ, said he would not allow the
+colored people to sit with white people; they must go to the back of the
+church. These same Christians tell us that in heaven there will be no
+distinction. That Christ cares nothing for the color of the skin. That
+in Paradise white and black will sit together, swap harps, and cry
+hallelujah in chorus; yet this minister, believing as he says he does,
+that all men who fail to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ will eternally
+perish, was not willing that a colored man should sit by a white man and
+hear the gospel of everlasting peace.
+
+According to this revivalist, the ship of the world is going down;
+Christ is the only life-boat; and yet he is not willing that a colored
+man, with a soul to save, shall sit by the side of a white brother,
+and be rescued from eternal death. He admits that the white brother
+is totally depraved; that if the white brother had justice done him he
+would be damned; that it is only through the wonderful mercy of God that
+the white man is not in hell; and yet such a being, totally depraved,
+is too good to sit by a colored man! Total depravity becomes arrogant;
+total depravity draws the color line in religion, and an ambassador of
+Christ says to the black man, "Stand away; let your white brother hear
+first about the love of God."
+
+I believe in the religion of humanity. It is far better to love our
+fellow-men than to love God. We can help them. We cannot help him. We
+had better do what we can than to be always pretending to do what we
+cannot.
+
+Virtue is of no color; kindness, justice and love, of no complexion.
+
+Eternal Punishment.
+
+Now I come to the last part of this creed--the doctrine of eternal
+punishment. I have concluded that I will never deliver a lecture in
+which I will not attack the doctrine of eternal pain. That part of the
+Congregational creed would disgrace the lowest savage that crouches
+and crawls in the jungles of Africa. The man who now, in the nineteenth
+century, preaches the doctrine of eternal punishment, the doctrine of an
+eternal hell, has lived in vain. Think of that doctrine! The eternity of
+punishment! I find in this same creed--in this latest utterance of
+Congregationalism--that Christ is finally going to triumph in this world
+and establish his kingdom. This creed declares that "we believe in the
+ultimate prevalence of the kingdom of God over all the earth." If
+their doctrine is true he will never triumph in the other world. The
+Congregational Church does not believe in the ultimate prevalence of the
+kingdom of Christ in the world to come. There he is to meet with eternal
+failure. He will have billions in hell forever.
+
+In this world we never will be perfectly civilized as long as a gallows
+casts its shadow upon the earth. As long as there is a penitentiary,
+within the walls of which a human being is immured, we are not a
+perfectly civilized people. We shall never be perfectly civilized until
+we do away with crime. And yet, according to this Christian religion,
+God is to have an eternal penitentiary; he is to be an everlasting
+jailer, an everlasting turnkey, a warden of an infinite dungeon, and
+he is going to keep prisoners there forever, not for the purpose of
+reforming them--because they are never going to get any better, only
+worse--but for the purpose of purposeless punishment. And for what?
+For something they failed to believe in this world. Born in ignorance,
+supported by poverty, caught in the snares of temptation, deformed by
+toil, stupefied by want--and yet held responsible through the countless
+ages of eternity! No man can think of a greater horror; no man can dream
+of a greater absurdity. For the growth of that doctrine ignorance was
+soil and fear was rain. It came from the fanged mouths of serpents, and
+yet it is called "glad tidings of great joy." Some Who are Damned.
+
+We are told "God so loved the world" that he is going to damn almost
+everybody. If this orthodox religion be true, some of the greatest, and
+grandest, and best who ever lived are suffering God's torments to-night.
+It does not appear to make much difference with the members of the
+church. They go right on enjoying themselves about as well as ever. If
+this doctrine is true, Benjamin Franklin, one of the wisest and best of
+men, who did so much to give us here a free government, is suffering
+the tyranny of God to-night, although he endeavored to establish freedom
+among men. If the churches were honest, their preachers would tell their
+hearers: "Benjamin Franklin is in hell, and we warn all the youth not to
+imitate Benjamin Franklin. Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration
+of Independence, with its self-evident truths, has been damned these
+many years."
+
+That is what all the ministers ought to have the courage to say. Talk
+as you believe. Stand by your creed, or change it. I want to impress it
+upon your minds, because the thing I wish to do in this world is to put
+out the fires of hell. I will keep on as long as there is one little red
+coal left in the bottomless pit. As long as the ashes are warm I shall
+denounce this infamous doctrine.
+
+I want you to know that according to this creed the men who founded this
+great and splendid Government are in hell to-night. Most of the men who
+fought in the Revolutionary war, and wrested from the clutch of Great
+Britain this continent, have been rewarded by the eternal wrath of God.
+Thousands of the old Revolutionary soldiers are in torment tonight. Let
+the preachers have the courage to say so. The men who fought in 1812,
+and gave to the United States the freedom of the seas, have nearly all
+been damned. Thousands of heroes who served our country in the Civil
+war, hundreds who starved in prisons, are now in the dungeons of God,
+compared with which, Andersonville was Paradise. The greatest of heroes
+are there; the greatest of poets, the greatest scientists, the men who
+have made the world beautiful--they are all among the damned if this
+creed is true.
+
+Humboldt, who shed light, and who added to the intellectual wealth
+of mankind; Goethe, and Schiller, and Lessing, who almost created the
+German language--all gone--all suffering the wrath of God tonight, and
+every time an angel thinks of one of those men he gives his harp an
+extra twang. Laplace, who read the heavens like an open book--he is
+there. Robert Burns, the poet of human love--he is there. He wrote
+the "Prayer of Holy Willie." He fastened on the cross the Presbyterian
+creed, and there it is, a lingering crucifixion. Robert Burns increased
+the tenderness of the human heart. Dickens put a shield of pity before
+the flesh of childhood--God is getting even with him. Our own Ralph
+Waldo Emerson, although he had a thousand opportunities to hear
+Methodist clergymen, scorned the means of grace, lived to his highest
+ideal, gave to his fellow-men his best and truest thought, and yet his
+spirit is the sport and prey of fiends to-night.
+
+Longfellow, who has refined thousands of homes, did not believe in the
+miraculous origin of the Savior, doubted the report of Gabriel, loved
+his fellow-men, did what he could to free the slaves, to increase the
+happiness of man, yet God was waiting for his soul--waiting to cast
+him out and down forever. Thomas Paine, author of the "Rights of Man;"
+offering his life in both hemispheres for the freedom of the human race;
+one of the founders of this Republic, is now among the damned; and yet
+it seems to me that if he could only get God's attention long enough
+to point him to the American flag he would let him out. Auguste Comte,
+author of the "Positive Philosophy," who loved his fellow-men to that
+degree that he made of humanity a god, who wrote his great work in
+poverty, with his face covered with tears--they are getting their
+revenge on him now.
+
+Voltaire, who abolished torture in France; who did more for human
+liberty than any other man, living or dead; who was the assassin
+of superstition, and whose dagger still rusts in the heart of
+Catholicism--he is with the rest. All the priests who have been
+translated have had their happiness increased by looking at Voltaire.
+
+Giordano Bruno, the first star of the morning after the long night;
+Benedict Spinoza, the pantheist, the metaphysician, the pure and
+generous man; Diderot, the encyclopedist, who endeavored to get all
+knowledge in a small compass, so that he could put the peasant on an
+equality intellectually with the prince; Diderot, who wished to sow all
+over the world the seed of knowledge, and loved to labor for mankind,
+while the priests wanted to burn; who did all he could to put out the
+fires--he was lost, long, long ago. His cry for water has become so
+common that his voice is now recognized through all the realms of
+heaven, and the angels laughing, say to one another, "That is Diderot."
+
+David Hume, the Scotch philosopher, is there, with his inquiry about
+the "Human Understanding" and his argument against miracles. Beethoven,
+master of music, and Wagner, the Shakespeare of harmony, who made the
+air of this world rich forever, they are there; and to-night they have
+better music in hell than in heaven!
+
+Shelley, whose soul, like his own "Skylark," was a winged joy, has been
+damned for many, many years; and Shakespeare, the greatest of the human
+race, who did more to elevate mankind than all the priests who ever
+lived and died, he is there; but founders of inquisitions, builders
+of dungeons, makers of chains, inventors of instruments of torture,
+tearers, and burners, and branders of human flesh, stealers of babes,
+and sellers of husbands and wives and children, and they who kept the
+horizon lurid with the fagot's flame for a thousand years--are in heaven
+to-night. I wish heaven joy!
+
+That is the doctrine with which we are polluting the souls of children.
+That is the doctrine that puts a fiend by the dying bed and a prophecy
+of hell over every cradle. That is "glad tidings of great joy."
+
+Only a little while ago, when the great flood came upon the Ohio, sent
+by him who is ruling the world and paying particular attention to the
+affairs of nations, just in the gray of the morning they saw a house
+floating down and on its top a human being. A few men went out to the
+rescue. They found there a woman, a mother, and they wished to save her
+life. She said: "No, I am going to stay where I am. In this house I
+have three dead babes; I will not desert them." Think of a love so
+limitless--stronger and deeper than despair and death! And yet, the
+Christian religion says, that if that woman, that mother, did not happen
+to believe in their creed God would send her soul to eternal fire! If
+there is another world, and if in heaven they wear hats, when such a
+woman climbs the opposite bank of the Jordan, Christ should lift his to
+her.
+
+The doctrine of eternal pain is my trouble with this Christian religion.
+I reject it on account of its infinite heartlessness. I cannot tell them
+too often, that during our last war Christians, who knew that if they
+were shot they would go right to heaven, went and hired wicked men to
+take their places, perfectly willing that these men should go to hell
+provided they could stay at home. You see they are not honest in it,
+or they do not believe it, or as the people say, "they don't sense it."
+They have not imagination enough to conceive what it is they believe,
+and what a terrific falsehood they assert. And I beg of every one
+who hears me to-night, I beg, I implore, I beseech you, never to give
+another dollar to build a church in which that lie is preached. Never
+give another cent to send a missionary with his mouth stuffed with
+that falsehood to a foreign land. Why, they say, the heathen will go to
+heaven, any way, if you let them alone. What is the use of sending them
+to hell by enlightening them? Let them alone. The idea of going and
+telling a man a thing that if he does not believe, he will be damned,
+when the chances are ten to one that he will not believe it, is
+monstrous. Do not tell him here, and as quick as he gets to the other
+world and finds it is necessary to believe, he can say "Yes." Give him a
+chance.
+
+Another Objection.
+
+My objection to orthodox religion is that it destroys human love, and
+tells us that the love of this world is not necessary to make a heaven
+in the next.
+
+No matter about your wife, your children, your brother, your sister--no
+matter about all the affections of the human heart--when you get there,
+you will be with the angels. I do not know whether I would like the
+angels. I do not know whether the angels would like me. I would rather
+stand by the ones who have loved me and whom I know; and I can conceive
+of no heaven without the loved of this earth. That is the trouble with
+this Christian relief-ion. Leave your father, leave your mother, leave
+your wife, leave your children, leave everything and follow Jesus
+Christ. I will not. I will stay with my people. I will not sacrifice on
+the altar of a selfish fear all the grandest and noblest promptings of
+my heart.
+
+Do away with human love and what are we? What would we be in another
+world, and what would we be here? Can any one conceive of music without
+human love? Of art, or joy? Human love builds every home. Human love is
+the author of all beauty. Love paints every picture, and chisels every
+statue. Love builds every fireside. What could heaven be without human
+love? And yet that is what we are promised--a heaven with your wife
+lost, your mother lost, some of your children gone. And you expect to be
+made happy by falling in with some angel! Such a religion is infamous.
+Christianity holds human love for naught; and yet Love is the only bow
+on Life's dark cloud. It is the morning and the evening star. It shines
+upon the babe, and sheds its radiance on the quiet tomb. It is the
+mother of art, inspirer of poet, patriot and philosopher. It is the air
+and light of every heart--builder of every home, kindler of every fire
+on every hearth. It was the first to dream of immortality. It fills the
+world with melody--for music is the voice of love. Love is the magician,
+the enchanter, that changes worthless things to joy, and makes right
+royal kings and queens of common clay. It is the perfume of that
+wondrous flower, the heart, and without that sacred passion, that divine
+swoon, we are less than beasts; but with it, earth is heaven, and we are
+gods.
+
+And how are you to get to this heaven? On the efforts of another.
+You are to be a perpetual heavenly pauper, and you will have to admit
+through all eternity that you never would have been there if you had not
+been frightened. "I am here," you will say, "I have these wings, I have
+this musical instrument, because I was scared. I am here. The ones who
+loved me are among the damned; the ones I loved are also there--but I am
+here, that is enough."
+
+What a glorious' world heaven must be! No reformation in that world--not
+the slightest. If you die in Arkansas that is the end of you! Think of
+telling a boy in the next world, who lived and died in Delaware, that he
+had been fairly treated! Can anything be more infamous?
+
+All on an equality--the rich and the poor, those with parents loving
+them, those with every opportunity for education, on an equality with
+the poor, the abject and the ignorant--and this little day called life,
+this moment with a hope, a shadow and a tear, this little space between
+your mother's arms and the grave, balances eternity.
+
+God can do nothing for you when you get there. A Methodist preacher can
+do more for the soul here than its creator can there. The soul goes to
+heaven, where there is nothing but good society; no bad examples; and
+they are all there, Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and yet they can do
+nothing for that poor unfortunate except to damn him. Is there any sense
+in that?
+
+Why should this be a period of probation? It says in the Bible, I
+believe, "Now is the accepted time." When does that mean? That means
+whenever the passage is pronounced. "Now is the accepted time." It will
+be the same to-morrow, will it not? And just as appropriate then
+as to-day, and if appropriate at any time, appropriate through all
+eternity.
+
+What I say is this: There is no world--there can be no world--in which
+every human being will not have the eternal opportunity of doing right.
+
+That is my objection to this Christian religion; and if the love
+of earth is not the love of heaven, if those we love here are to be
+separated from us there, then I want eternal sleep. Give me a good cool
+grave rather than the furnace of Jehovah's wrath. I pray the angel of
+the resurrection to let me sleep. Gabriel, do not blow! Let me alone!
+If, when the grave bursts, I am not to meet the faces that have been my
+sunshine in this life, let me sleep. Rather than that this doctrine of
+endless punishment should be true, I would gladly see the fabric of our
+civilization crumbling fall to unmeaning chaos and to formless dust,
+where oblivion broods and even memory forgets. I would rather that the
+blind Samson of some imprisoned force, released by chance, should so
+wreck and strand the mighty world that man in stress and strain of want
+and fear should shudderingly crawl back to savage and barbaric night. I
+would rather that every planet should in its orbit wheel a barren star!
+
+What I Believe.
+
+I think it is better to love your children than to love God, a thousand
+times better, because you can help them, and I am inclined to think that
+God can get along without you. Certainly we cannot help a being without
+body, parts, or passions!
+
+I believe in the religion of the family. I believe that the roof-tree is
+sacred, from the smallest fibre that feels the soft cool clasp of earth,
+to the topmost flower that spreads its bosom to the sun, and like a
+spendthrift gives its perfume to the air. The home where virtue dwells
+with love is like a lily with a heart of fire--the fairest flower in all
+the world. And I tell you God cannot afford to damn a man in the next
+world who has made a happy family in this. God cannot afford to cast
+over the battlements of heaven the man who has a happy home upon this
+earth. God cannot afford to be unpitying to a human heart capable of
+pity. God cannot clothe with fire the man who has clothed the naked
+here; and God cannot send to eternal pain a man who has done something
+toward improving the condition of his fellow-man. If he can, I had
+rather go to hell than to heaven and keep the company of such a god.
+
+Immortality.
+
+They tell me that the next terrible thing I do is to take away the hope
+of immortality! I do not, I would not, I could not. Immortality was
+first dreamed of by human love; and yet the church is going to take
+human love out of immortality. We love, therefore we wish to live. A
+loved one dies and we wish to meet again; and from the affection of the
+human heart grew the great oak of the hope of immortality. Around
+that oak has climbed the poisonous vines of superstition. Theologians,
+pretenders, soothsayers, parsons, priests, popes, bishops, have taken
+advantage of that. They have stood by graves and promised heaven. They
+have stood by graves and prophesied a future filled with pain. They have
+erected their toll-gates on the highway of life and have collected money
+from fear.
+
+Neither the Bible nor the church gave us the idea of immortality. The
+Old Testament tells us how we lost immortality, and it does not say a
+word about another world, from the first mistake in Genesis to the last
+curse in Malachi. There is not in the Old Testament a burial service.
+
+No man in the Old Testament stands by the dead and says, "We shall meet
+again." From the top of Sinai came no hope of another world.
+
+And when we get to the New Testament, what do we find? "They that are
+accounted worthy to obtain that world and the resurrection of the dead."
+As though some would be counted unworthy to obtain the resurrection of
+the dead. And in another place. "Seek for honor, glory, immortality."
+If you have it, why seek it? And in another place, "God, who alone hath
+immortality." Yet they tell us that we get our idea of immortality from
+the Bible. I deny it.
+
+I would not destroy the faintest ray of human hope, but I deny that
+we got our idea of immortality from the Bible. It existed long before
+Moses. We find it symbolized through all Egypt, through all India.
+Wherever man has lived he has made another world in which to meet the
+lost of this.
+
+The history of this belief we find in tombs and temples wrought and
+carved by those who wept and hoped. Above their dead they laid the
+symbols of another life.
+
+We do not know. We do not prophesy a life of pain. We leave the dead
+with Nature, the mother of us all. Under the bow of hope, under the
+seven-hued arch, let the dead sleep.
+
+If Christ was in fact God, why did he not plainly say there is another
+life? Why did he not tell us something about it? Why did he not turn
+the tear-stained hope of immortality into the glad knowledge of another
+life? Why did he go dumbly to his death and leave the world in darkness
+and in doubt? Why? Because he was a man and did not know.
+
+What consolation has the orthodox religion for the widow of the
+unbeliever, the widow of a good, brave, kind man? What can the orthodox
+minister say to relieve the bursting heart of that woman? What can he
+say to relieve the aching hearts of the orphans as they kneel by the
+grave of that father, if that father did not happen to be an orthodox
+Christian? What consolation have they? When a Christian loses a friend
+the tears spring from his eyes as quickly as from the eyes of others.
+Their tears are as bitter as ours. Why? The echoes of the words spoken
+eighteen hundred years ago are so low, and the sounds of the clods upon
+the coffin are so loud; the promises are so far away, and the dead are
+so near.
+
+We do not know, we cannot say, whether death is a wall or a door; the
+beginning or end of a day; the spreading of pinions to soar, or the
+folding forever of wings; the rise or the set of a sun, or an endless
+life that brings the rapture of love to everyone. A Fable.
+
+There is the fable of Orpheus and Eurydice. Eurydice had been captured
+and taken to the infernal regions, and Orpheus went after her, taking
+with him his harp and playing as he went. When he came to Pluto's realm
+he began to play, and Sysiphus, charmed by the music, sat down upon the
+stone that he had been heaving up the mountain's side for so many years,
+and which continually rolled back upon him; Ixion paused upon his wheel
+of fire; Tantalus ceased his vain efforts for water; the daughters of
+the Danaides left off trying to fill their sieves with water; Pluto
+smiled, and for the first time in the history of hell the cheeks of the
+Furies were wet with tears. The god relented, and said, "Eurydice may
+go with you, but you must not look back." So Orpheus again threaded the
+caverns, playing as he went, and as he reached the light he failed to
+hear the footsteps of Eurydice. He looked back, and in a moment she was
+gone. Again and again Orpheus sought his love. Again and again looked
+back.
+
+This fable gives the idea of the perpetual effort made by the human mind
+to rescue truth from the clutch of error.
+
+Some time Orpheus will not look back. Some day Eurydice will reach the
+blessed light, and at last there will fade from the memory of men the
+monsters of superstition.
+
+
+
+
+MYTH AND MIRACLE.
+
+I.
+
+HAPPINESS is the true end and aim of life. It is the task of
+intelligence to ascertain the conditions of happiness, and when found
+the truly wise will live in accordance with them. By happiness is meant
+not simply the joy of eating and drinking--the gratification of the
+appetite--but good, wellbeing, in the highest and noblest forms. The joy
+that springs from obligation discharged, from duty done, from generous
+acts, from being true to the ideal, from a perception of the beautiful
+in nature, art and conduct. The happiness that is born of and gives
+birth to poetry and music, that follows the gratification of the highest
+wants.
+
+Happiness is the result of all that is really right and sane.
+
+But there are many people who regard the desire to be happy as a very
+low and degrading ambition. These people call themselves spiritual. They
+pretend to care nothing for the pleasures of "sense." They hold this
+world, this life, in contempt. They do not want happiness in this
+world--but in another. Here, happiness degrades--there, it purifies and
+ennobles.
+
+These spiritual people have been known as prophets, apostles, augurs,
+hermits, monks, priests, popes, bishops and parsons. They are devout and
+useless. They do not cultivate the soil. They produce nothing. They
+live on the labor of others. They are pious and parasitic. They pray
+for others, if the others will work for them. They claim to have been
+selected by the Infinite to instruct and govern mankind. They are "meek"
+and arrogant, "long-suffering" and revengeful.
+
+They ever have been, now are, and always will be the enemies of liberty,
+of investigation and science. They are believers in the supernatural,
+the miraculous and the absurd. They have filled the world with hatred,
+bigotry and fear. In defence of their creeds they have committed every
+crime and practiced every cruelty.
+
+They denounce as worldly and sensual those who are gross enough to love
+wives and children, to build homes, to fell the forests, to navigate the
+seas, to cultivate the earth, to chisel statues, to paint pictures and
+fill the world with love and art.
+
+They have denounced and maligned the thinkers, the poets, the
+dramatists, the composers, the actors, the orators, the workers--those
+who have conquered the world for man.
+
+According to them this world is only the vestibule of the next, a kind
+of school, an ordeal, a place of probation. They have always insisted
+that this life should be spent in preparing for the next; that those
+who supported and obeyed the "spiritual guides"--the shepherds, would
+be rewarded with an eternity of joy, and that all others would suffer
+eternal pain.
+
+These spiritual people have always hated labor. They have added nothing
+to the wealth of the world. They have always lived on alms--on the labor
+of others. They have always been the enemies of innocent pleasure, and
+of human love.
+
+These spiritual people have produced a literature. The books they have
+written are called sacred. Our sacred books are called the Bible.
+The Hindoos have the Vedas and many others, the Persians the Zend
+Avesta--the Egyptians had the Book of the Dead--the Aztecs the Popol
+Vuh, and the Mohammedans have the Koran.
+
+These books, for the most part, treat of the unknowable. They describe
+gods and winged phantoms of the air. They give accounts of the origin
+of the universe, the creation of man and the worlds beyond this. They
+contain nothing of value. Millions and millions of people have wasted
+their lives studying these absurd and ignorant books.
+
+The "spiritual people" in each country claimed that their books had been
+written by inspired men--that God was the real author, and that all men
+and women who denied this would be, after death, tormented forever.
+
+And yet, the worldly people, the uninspired, the wicked, have produced a
+far greater literature than the spiritual and the inspired.
+
+Not all the sacred books of the world equal Shakespeare's "volume of
+the brain." A purer philosophy, grander, nobler, fell from the lips of
+Shakespeare's clowns than the Old Testament, or the New, contains.
+
+The Declaration of Independence is nobler far than all the utterances
+from Sinai's cloud and flame. "A Man's a Man for a' That," by Robert
+Burns, is better than anything the sacred books contain. For my part, I
+would rather hear Beethoven's Sixth Symphony than to read the five books
+of Moses. Give me the Sixth Symphony--this sound-wrought picture of
+the fields and woods, of flowering hedge and happy home, where thrushes
+build and swallows fly, and mothers sing to babes; this echo of the
+babbled lullaby of brooks that, dallying, wind and fall where meadows
+bare their daisied bosoms to the sun; this joyous mimicry of summer
+rain, the laugh of children, and the rhythmic rustle of the whispering
+leaves; this strophe of peasant life; this perfect poem of content and
+love.
+
+I would rather listen to Tristan and Isolde--that Mississippi of
+melody--where the great notes, winged like eagles, lift the soul above
+the cares and griefs of this weary world--than to all the orthodox
+sermons ever preached. I would rather look at the Venus de Milo than to
+read the Presbyterian creed.
+
+The spiritual have endeavored to civilize the world through fear and
+faith--by the promise of reward and the threat of pain in other worlds.
+They taught men to hate and persecute their fellow-men. In all ages they
+have appealed to force. During all the years they have practiced fraud.
+They have pretended to have influence with the gods--that their prayers
+gave rain, sunshine and harvest--that their curses brought pestilence
+and famine, and that their blessings filled the world with plenty. They
+have subsisted on the fears their falsehoods created. Like poisonous
+vines, they have lived on the oak of labor. They have praised charity,
+but they never gave. They have denounced revenge, but they never
+forgave.
+
+Whenever the spiritual have had power, art has died, learning has
+languished, science has been despised, liberty destroyed, the thinkers
+have been imprisoned, the intelligent and honest have been outcasts, and
+the brave have been murdered.
+
+The "spiritual" have been, are, and always will be the enemies of the
+human race.
+
+For all the blessings that we now enjoy--for progress in every form, for
+science and art--for all that has lengthened life, that has conquered
+disease, that has lessened pain, for raiment, roof and food, for music
+in its highest forms--for the poetry that has ennobled and enriched our
+lives--for the marvellous machines now working for the world--for all
+this we are indebted to the worldly--to those who turned their attention
+to the affairs of this life. They have been the only benefactors of our
+race.
+
+II.
+
+AND yet all of these religions--these "sacred books," these priests,
+have been naturally produced. From the dens and caves of savagery to
+the palaces of civilization men have traveled by the necessary paths and
+roads. Back of every step has been the efficient cause. In the history
+of the world there has been no chance, no interference from without,
+nothing miraculous. Everything in accordance with and produced by the
+facts in nature.
+
+We need not blame the hypocritical and cruel. They thought and acted as
+they were compelled to think and act.
+
+In all ages man has tried to account for himself and his surroundings.
+He did the best he could. He wondered why the water ran, why the trees
+grew, why the clouds floated, why the stars shone, why the sun and moon
+journeyed through the heavens. He was troubled about life and death,
+about darkness and dreams. The seas, the volcanoes, the lightning and
+thunder, the earthquake and cyclone, filled him with fear. Behind all
+life and growth and motion, and even inanimate things, he placed
+a spirit--an intelligent being--a fetich, a person, something like
+himself--a god, controlled by love and hate. To him causes and effects
+became gods--supernatural beings. The Dawn was a maiden, wondrously
+fair, the Sun, a warrior and lover; the Night, a serpent, a wolf--the
+Wind, a musician; Winter, a wild beast; Autumn, Proserpine gathering
+flowers.
+
+Poets were the makers of these myths. They were the first to account for
+what they saw and felt. The great multitude mistook these fancies
+for facts. Myths strangely alike, were produced by most nations, and
+gradually took possession of the world.
+
+The Sleeping Beauty, a myth of the year, has been found among most
+peoples. In this myth, the Earth was a maiden--the Sun was her lover,
+She had fallen asleep in winter. Her blood was still and her breath had
+gone. In the Spring the lover came, clasped her in his arms, covered her
+lips and cheeks with kisses. She was thrilled, her heart began to beat,
+she breathed, her blood flowed, and she awoke to love and joy. This myth
+has made the circuit of the globe.
+
+So, Red Riding-Hood is the history of a day. Little Red Riding-Hood--the
+morning, touched with red, goes to visit her kindred, a day that is
+past. She is attacked by the wolf of night and is rescued by the hunter,
+Apollo, who pierces the heart of the beast with an arrow of light.
+
+The beautiful myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is the story of the year.
+Eurydice has been captured and carried to the infernal world. Orpheus,
+playing upon his harp, goes after her. Such is the effect of his music
+when he reaches the realm of Pluto, the laughterless, that Tantalus
+ceases his efforts to slake his thirst. He listens and forgets his
+withered lips, the daughters of the Danaides cease their vain efforts
+to fill the sieve with water, Sisyphus sits down on the stone that he
+so often had heaved against the mountain's misty side, Ixion pauses
+upon his wheel of fire, even Pluto smiles, and for the first time in the
+history of hell the cheeks of the Furies are wet with tears.
+
+"Give me back Eurydice," cried Orpheus, and Pluto said: "Take her, but
+look not back." Orpheus led the way and Eurydice followed. Just as he
+reached the upper world, he missed her footsteps, turned, looked, and
+she vanished.
+
+And thus the summer comes, is lost, and comes again through all the
+years.
+
+So, our ancestors believed in the Garden of Eden, in the Golden Age, in
+the blessed time when all were good and pure--when nature satisfied the
+wants of all. The race, like the old man, has golden dreams of youth.
+The morning was filled with light and life and joy, and the evening is
+always sad. When the old man was young, girls were beautiful and men
+were honest. He remembers his Eden. And so the whole world has had its
+age of gold.
+
+Our fathers were believers in the Elysian Fields. They were in the far,
+far West. They saw them at the setting of the sun. They saw the floating
+isles of gold in sapphire seas; the templed mist with spires and domes
+of emerald and amethyst; the magic caverns of the clouds, resplendent
+with the rays of every gem. And as they looked, they thought the curtain
+had been drawn aside and that their eyes had for a moment feasted on the
+glories of another world.
+
+The myth of the Flood has also been universal. Finding shells of the
+seas on plain and mountain, and everywhere some traces of the waves,
+they thought the world had been submerged--that God in wrath had drowned
+the race, except a few his mercy saved.
+
+The Hindus say that Menu, a holy man, dipped from the Ganges some water,
+and in the basin saw a little fish. The fish begged him to throw him
+back into the river, and Menu, having pity, cast him back. The fish then
+told Menu that there was to be a flood--told him to build an ark, to
+take on board, people, animals and food, and that when the flood came,
+he, the fish, would save him. The saint did as he was told, the flood
+came, the fish returned. By that time he had grown to be a whale with
+a horn in his head. About this horn Menu fastened a rope, attached the
+other end to the ark, and the fish towed the boat across the raging
+waves to a mountain's top, where it rested until the waters subsided.
+The name of this wonderful fish was Matsaya.
+
+Many other nations told similar stories of floods and arks and the
+sending forth of doves.
+
+In all these myths and legends of the past we find philosophies and
+dreams and efforts, stained with tears, of great and tender souls who
+tried to pierce the mysteries of life and death, to answer the questions
+of the whence and whither, and who vainly sought with bits of shattered
+glass to make a mirror that would in very truth reflect the face and
+form of Nature's perfect self. These myths were born of hopes and fears,
+of tears and smiles, and they were touched and colored by all there is
+of joy and grief between the rosy dawn of birth and death's sad night.
+They clothed even the stars with passion, and gave to gods the faults
+and frailties of the sons of men. In them the winds and waves were
+music, and all the springs, the mountains, woods and perfumed dells were
+haunted by a thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of Spring
+with tremulous desire, made tawny Summer's billowy breast the throne and
+home of love, filled Autumn's arms with sun-kissed grapes and gathered
+sheaves, and pictured Winter as a weak old king, who felt, like Lear,
+upon his withered face, Cordelia's tears.
+
+These myths, though false in fact, are beautiful and true in thought,
+and have for many ages and in countless ways enriched the heart and
+kindled thought.
+
+III.
+
+IN all probability the first religion was Sun-worship. Nothing could
+have been more natural. Light was life and warmth and love. The sun
+was the fireside of the world. The sun was the "all-seeing"--the "Sky
+Father." Darkness was grief and death, and in the shadows crawled the
+serpents of despair and fear.
+
+The sun was a great warrior, fighting the hosts of Night. Apollo was
+the sun, and he fought and conquered the serpent of Night. Agni, the
+generous, who loved the lowliest and visited the humblest, was the sun.
+He was the god of fire, and the crossed sticks that by friction leaped
+into flame were his emblem. It was said that, in spite of his goodness,
+he devoured his father and mother, the two pieces of wood being his
+parents. Baldur was the sun. He was in love with the Dawn--a maiden--he
+deserted her and traveled through the heavens alone. At the twilight
+they met, were reconciled, and the drops of dew were the tears of joy
+they shed.
+
+Chrishna was the sun. At his birth the Ganges thrilled from its source
+to the sea. All the trees, the dead as well as the living, burst into
+leaf and bud and flower.
+
+Hercules was a sun-god.
+
+Jonah the same, rescued from the fiends of Night and carried by the fish
+through the under world. Samson was a sun-god. His strength was in
+his hair--in his beams. He was shorn of his strength by Delilah, the
+shadow--the darkness. So, Osiris, Bacchus, Mithra, Hermes, Buddha,
+Quelzalcoatle, Prometheus, Zoroaster, Perseus, Codom Lao-tsze Fo-hi,
+Horus and Rameses were all sun-gods.
+
+All these gods had gods for fathers and all their mothers were virgins.
+
+The births of nearly all were announced by stars.
+
+When they were born there was celestial music--voices declared that a
+blessing had come upon the earth.
+
+When Buddha was born, the celestial choir sang: "This day is born
+for the good of men Buddha, and to dispel the darkness of their
+ignorance--to give joy and peace to the world."
+
+Chrishna was born in a cave, and protected by shepherds. Bacchus,
+Apollo, Mithra and Hermes were all born in caves. Buddha was born in an
+inn--according to some, under a tree.
+
+Tyrants sought to kill all of these gods when they were babes.
+
+When Chrishna was born, a tyrant killed the babes of the neighborhood.
+
+Buddha was the child of Maya, a virgin, in the kingdom of Madura. The
+king arrested Maya before the child was born, imprisoned her in a tower.
+During the night when the child was born, a great wind wrecked the
+tower, and carried mother and child to a place of safety. The next
+morning the king sent his soldiers to kill the babes, and when they came
+to Buddha and his mother, the babe appeared to be about twelve years of
+age, and the soldiers passed on.
+
+So Typhon sought in many ways to destroy the babe Horus. The king
+pursued the infant Zoroaster. Cadmus tried to kill the infant Bacchus.
+
+All of these gods were born on the 25th of December.
+
+Nearly all were worshiped by "wise men."
+
+All of them fasted for forty days.
+
+All met with a violent death.
+
+All rose from the dead.
+
+The history of these gods is the history of our Christ. He had a god for
+a father, a virgin for a mother. He was born in a manger, or a cave--on
+the 2 5th of December. His birth was announced by angels. He was
+worshiped by wise men, guided by a star. Herod, seeking his life, caused
+the death of many babes. Christ fasted for forty days. So, it rained for
+forty days before the flood--Moses was on Mt. Sinai for forty days. The
+temple had forty pillars and the Jews wandered in the wilderness for
+forty years. Christ met with a violent death, and rose from the dead.
+
+These things are not accidents--not coincidences. Christ was a sun-god.
+All religions have been born of sun-worship. To-day, when priests
+pray, they shut their eyes. This is a survival of sun-worship. When men
+worshiped the sun, they had to shut their eyes. Afterwards, to flatter
+idols, they pretended that the glory of their faces was more than the
+eyes could bear.
+
+In the religion of our day there is nothing original. All of its
+doctrines, its symbols and ceremonies are but the survivals of creeds
+that perished long ago. Baptism is far older than Christianity--than
+Judaism. The Hindus, the Egyptians, the Greeks and Romans had holy
+water. The eucharist was borrowed from the Pagans. Ceres was the goddess
+of the fields, Bacchus the god of the vine. At the harvest festival they
+made cakes of wheat and said: "These are the flesh of the goddess." They
+drank wine and cried: "This is the blood of our god."
+
+The cross has been a symbol for many thousands of years. It was a symbol
+of immortality--of life, of the god Agni, the form of the grave of a
+man. An ancient people of Italy, who lived long before the Romans, long
+before the Etruscans, so long that not one word of their language is
+known, used the cross, and beneath that emblem, carved on stone, their
+dead still rest. In the forests of Central America, ruined temples have
+been found, and on the walls the cross with the bleeding victim. On
+Babylonian cylinders is the impression of the cross. The Trinity came
+from Egypt. Osiris, Isis and Horus were worshiped thousands of years
+before our Father, Son and Holy Ghost were thought of. So the Tree of
+Life grew in India, China and among the Aztecs long before the Garden
+of Eden was planted. Long before our Bible was known, other nations
+had their sacred books, temples and altars, sacrifices, ceremonies and
+priests. The "Fall of Man" is far older than our religion, and so are
+the "Atonement" and the Scheme of Redemption.
+
+In our blessed religion there is nothing new, nothing original.
+
+Among the Egyptians the cross was a symbol of the life to come. And
+yet the first religion was, and all religions growing out of that, were
+naturally produced. Every brain was a field in which Nature sowed the
+seeds of thought. The rise and set of sun, the birth and death of day,
+the dawns of silver and the dusks of gold, the wonders of the rain and
+snow, the shroud of Winter and the many colored robe of Spring, the
+lonely moon with nightly loss or gain, the serpent lightning and the
+thunder's voice, the tempest's fury and the zephyr's sigh, the threat
+of storm and promise of the bow, cathedral clouds with dome and spire,
+earthquake and strange eclipse, frost and fire, the snow-crowned
+mountains with their tongues of flame, the fields of space sown thick
+with stars, the wandering comets hurrying past the fixed and sleepless
+sentinels of night, the marvels of the earth and air, the perfumed
+flower, the painted wing, the waveless pool that held within its magic
+breast the image of the startled face, the mimic echo that made a record
+in the viewless air, the pathless forests and the boundless seas,
+the ebb and flow of tides--the slow, deep breathing of some vague and
+monstrous life--the miracle of birth, the mystery of dream and death,
+and over all the silent and immeasurable dome. These were the warp and
+woof, and at the loom sat Love and Fancy, Hope and Fear, and wove the
+wondrous tapestries whereon we find pictures of gods and fairy lands
+and all the legends that were told when Nature rocked the cradle of the
+infant world.
+
+IV.
+
+WE must remember that there is a great difference. Myth is the
+idealization of a fact. A miracle is the counterfeit of a fact. There is
+the same difference between a myth and a miracle that there is between
+fiction and falsehood--between poetry and perjury. Miracles belong to
+the far past and the far future. The little line of sand, called the
+present, between the seas, belongs to common sense, to the natural.
+
+If you should tell a man that the dead were raised two thousand years
+ago, he would probably say: "Yes, I know that." If you should say that
+a hundred thousand years from now all the dead will be raised, he might
+say: "Probably they will." But if you should tell him that you saw a
+dead man raised and given life that day, he would likely ask the name of
+the insane asylum from which you had escaped.
+
+Our Bible is filled with accounts of miracles and yet they always fail
+to convince.
+
+Jehovah, according to the Scriptures, wrought hundreds of miracles for
+the benefit of the Jews. With many miracles he rescued them from
+slavery, guided them on their journey with a miraculous cloud by day and
+a miraculous pillar of fire by night--divided the sea that they might
+escape from the Egyptians, fed them with miraculous manna and
+supernatural quails, raised up hornets to attack their enemies, caused
+water to follow them wherever they wandered and in countless ways
+manifested his power, and yet the Jews cared nothing for these wonders.
+Not one of them seems to have been convinced that Jehovah had done
+anything for the people.
+
+In spite of all these miracles, the Jews had more confidence in a golden
+calf, made by themselves, than in Jehovah. The reason of this is, that
+the miracles were never performed, and never invented until hundreds of
+years after those, who had wandered over the desert of Sinai, were dust.
+
+The miracles attributed to Christ had no effect. No human being seems to
+have been convinced by them. Those whom he raised from the dead, cured
+of leprosy, or blindness, failed to become his followers. Not one of
+them appeared at his trial. Not one offered to bear witness of his
+miraculous power.
+
+To this there is but one explanation: The miracles were never performed.
+These stories were the growth of centuries. The casting out of devils,
+the changing of water into wine, feeding the multitude with a few loaves
+and fishes, resisting the devil, using a fish for a pocketbook, curing
+the blind with clay and saliva, stilling the tempest, walking on the
+water, the resurrection and ascension, happened and only happened, in
+the imaginations of men, who were not born until several generations
+after Christ was dead.
+
+In those days the world was filled with ignorance and fear. Miracles
+happened every day. The supernatural was expected. Gods were continually
+interfering with the affairs of this world. Everything was told
+except the truth, everything believed except the facts. History was a
+circumstantial account of occurrences that never occurred. Devils and
+goblins and ghosts were as plentiful as saints. The bones of the dead
+were used to cure the living. Cemeteries were hospitals and corpses were
+physicians. The saints practiced magic, the pious communed with God in
+dreams, and the course of events was changed by prayer. The credulous
+demanded the marvelous, the miraculous, and the priests supplied the
+demand. The sky was full of signs, omens of death and disaster, and the
+darkness thick with devils endeavoring to mislead and enslave the souls
+of men.
+
+Our fathers thought that everything had been made for man, and that
+demons and gods gave their entire attention to this world. The people
+believed that they were the sport and prey, the favorites or victims, of
+these phantoms. And they also believed that the Creator, the God, could
+be influenced by sacrifice, by prayers and ceremonies.
+
+This has been the mistake of the world. All the temples have been
+reared, all the altars erected, all the sacrifices offered, all the
+prayers uttered in vain. No god has interfered, no prayer has been
+answered, no help received from heaven. Nothing was created, nothing has
+happened for, or with reference to man. If not a human being lived,--if
+all Were in' their graves, the sun would continue to shine, the wheeling
+world would still pursue its flight, violets would spread their velvet
+bosoms to the day, the spendthrift roses give their perfume to the air,
+the climbing vines would hide with leaf and flower the fallen and the
+dead, the changing seasons would come-and go,-time would repeat the poem
+of the year, storms would wreck and whispering rains repair, Spring
+with deft and unseen hands would weave her robes of green, life with
+countless lips would seek fair Summer's swelling breasts, Autumn would
+reap the wealth of leaf and fruit and seed, Winter, the artist, would
+etch in frost the pines and ferns, while Wind and Wave and Fire, old
+architects, with ceaseless toil would still destroy and build, still
+wreck and change, and from the dust of death produce again the throb and
+breath of life.
+
+V.
+
+A FEW years ago a few men began to think, to investigate, to reason.
+They began to doubt the legends of the church, the miracles of the past.
+They began to notice what happened. They found that eclipses came at
+certain intervals and that their coming could be foretold. They became
+satisfied that the conduct of men had nothing to do with eclipses--and
+that the stars moved in their orbits unconscious of the sons of men.
+Galileo, Copernicus, and Kepler' destroyed the astronomy of the Bible,
+and demonstrated that the "inspired" story of creation could not be
+true, and that the church was as ignorant as the priests were dishonest.
+
+They found that the myth-makers were mistaken, that the sun and stars
+did not revolve about the earth, that the firmament was not solid,
+that the earth was not flat, and that the so-called philosophy of the
+theologians was absurd and idiotic.
+
+The stars became witnesses against the creeds of superstition.
+
+With the telescope the heavens were explored. The New Jerusalem could
+not be found.
+
+It had faded away.
+
+The church persecuted the astronomers and denied the facts. In
+February, in the year of grace sixteen hundred, the Catholic Church, the
+"Triumphant Beast," having in her hands, her paws, the keys of heaven
+and hell, accused Giordano Bruno of having declared that there were
+other worlds than this. He was tried, convicted, imprisoned in a dungeon
+for seven years. He was offered his liberty if he would recant. Bruno,
+the atheist, the philosopher, refused to stain his soul by denying what
+he believed to be true. He was taken from his cell by the priests, by
+those who loved their enemies, led to the place of execution. He was
+clad in a robe on which representations of devils had been painted--the
+devils that were soon to claim his soul. He was chained to a stake and
+about his body the wood was piled. Then priests, followers of Christ,
+lighted the fagots and flames consumed the greatest, the most perfect
+martyr, that ever suffered death.
+
+And yet the Italian agent of God, the infallible Leo XIII., only a few
+years ago, denounced Bruno, the "bravest of the brave," as a coward.
+
+The church murdered him, and the pope maligned his memory. Fagot and
+falsehood--two weapons of the church.
+
+A little while ago a few men began to examine rocks and soils,
+mountains, islands, reefs and seas. They noticed the valleys and deltas
+that had been formed by rivers, the many strata of lava that had been
+changed to soil, the vast deposits of metals and coal, the immense reefs
+that the coral had formed, the work of glaciers in the far past, the
+production of soil by the disintegration of rock, by the growth and
+decay of vegetation and the countless evidences of the countless ages
+through which the Earth has passed. The geologists read the history
+of the world written by wave and flame, attested by fossils, by the
+formation of rocks, by mountain ranges, by volcanoes, by rivers,
+islands, continents and seas.
+
+The geology of the Bible--of the "divinely inspired" church, of the
+"infallible" pope, was found to be utterly false and foolish.
+
+The Earth became a witness against the creeds of superstition.
+
+Then came Watt and Galvani with the miracles of steam and electricity,
+while countless inventors created the wonderful machines that do the
+work of the world. Investigation took the place of credulity. Men became
+dissatisfied with huts and rags, with crusts and creeds. They longed for
+the comforts, the luxuries of life. The intellectual horizon enlarged,
+new truths were discovered, old ideas were thrown aside, the brain was
+developed, the heart civilized and science was born. Humboldt, Laplace
+and hundreds of others explained the phenomena of nature, called
+attention to the ancient and venerable mistakes of sanctified ignorance
+and added to the sum of knowledge. Darwin and Haeckel gave their
+conclusions to the world. Men began to really think, the myths began
+to fade, the miracles to grow mean and small, and the great structure,
+known as theology, fell with a crash.
+
+Science denies the truth of myth and miracle, denies that human
+testimony can substantiate the miraculous, denies the existence of the
+supernatural. Science asserts the absolute, the unvarying uniformity
+of nature. Science insists that the present is the child of all the
+past,--that no power can change the past, and that nature is forever the
+same.
+
+The chemist has found that just so many atoms of one kind unite with
+just so many of another--no more, no less, always the same. No caprice
+in chemistry; no interference from without.
+
+The astronomers know that the planets remain in their orbits--that their
+forces are constant. They know that light is forever the same,
+always obeying the angle of incidence, traveling with the same
+rapidity,--casting the same shadow, under the same circumstances in
+all worlds. They know that the eclipses will occur at the times
+foretold--neither hastening nor delaying. They know that the attraction
+of gravitation is always the same, always in perfect proportion to mass
+and distance, neither weaker nor stronger, unvarying forever. They know
+that the facts in nature cannot be changed or destroyed, and that the
+qualities of all things are eternal.
+
+The men of science know that the atomic integrity of the metals is
+always the same, that each metal is true to its nature and that the
+particles cling to each other with the same tenacity,--the same force.
+They have demonstrated the persistence of force, that it is forever
+active, forever the same, and that it cannot be destroyed.
+
+These great truths have revolutionized the thought of the world.
+
+Every art, every employment, all study, all experiment, the value of
+experience, of judgment, of hope, all rest on a belief in the uniformity
+of nature, on the eternal persistence and indestructibility of force.
+
+Break one link in the infinite chain of cause and effect, and the Master
+of Nature appears. The broken link would become the throne of a god.
+
+The uniformity of Nature denies the supernatural and demonstrates that
+there is no interference from without. There is no place, no office left
+for gods. Ghosts fade from the brain and the shrivelled deities fall
+palsied from their thrones.
+
+The uniformity of Nature renders a belief in "special providence"
+impossible. Prayer becomes a useless agitation of the air, and religious
+ceremonies are but motions, pantomimes, mindless and meaningless.
+
+The naked savage, worshiping a wooden god, is the religious equal of the
+robed pope kneeling before an image of the Virgin. The poor African who
+carries roots and bark to protect himself from evil spirits is on the
+same intellectual plane of one who sprinkles his body with "holy water."
+
+All the creeds of Christendom, all the religions of the heathen world
+are equally absurd. The cathedral, the mosque and the joss house have
+the same foundation. Their builders do not believe in the uniformity
+of Nature, and the business of all priests is to induce a so-called
+infinite being to change the order of events, to make causes barren of
+effects and to produce effects without, and in spite of, natural causes.
+They all believe in the unthinkable and pray for the impossible.
+
+Science teaches us that there was no creation and that there can be no
+destruction. The infinite denies creation and defies destruction. An
+infinite person, an "infinite being" is an infinite impossibility.
+To conceive of such a being is beyond the power of the mind. Yet all
+religions rest upon the supposed existence of the unthinkable, the
+inconceivable. And the priests of these religions pretend to be
+perfectly familiar with the designs, will, and wishes of this
+unthinkable, this inconceivable.
+
+Science teaches that that which really is has always been, that behind
+every effect is the efficient and necessary cause, that there is in the
+universe neither chance nor interference, and that energy is eternal.
+Day by day the authority of the theologian grows weaker and weaker. As
+the people become intelligent they care less for preachers and more for
+teachers. Their confidence in knowledge, in thought and investigation
+increases. They are eager to know the discoveries, the useful truths,
+the important facts made, ascertained and demonstrated by the explorers
+in the domain of the natural. They are no longer satisfied with the
+platitudes of the pulpit, and the assertions of theologians. They are
+losing confidence in the "sacred Scriptures" and in the protecting power
+and goodness of the supernatural. They are satisfied that credulity is
+not a virtue and that investigation is not a crime.
+
+Science is the providence of man, the worker of true miracles, of
+real wonders. Science has "read a little in Nature's infinite book of
+secrecy." Science knows the circuits of the winds, the courses of the
+stars. Fire is his servant, and lightning his messenger. Science freed
+the slaves and gave liberty to their masters. Science taught man to
+enchain, not his fellows, but the forces of nature, forces that have no
+backs to be scarred, no limbs for chains to chill and eat, forces that
+have no hearts to break, forces that never know fatigue, forces that
+shed no tears. Science is the great physician. His touch has given
+sight. He has made the lame to leap, the deaf to hear, the dumb to
+speak, and in the pallid face his hand has set the rose of health.
+Science has given his beloved sleep and wrapped in happy dreams the
+throbbing nerves of pain. Science is the destroyer of disease, builder
+of happy homes, the preserver of life and love. Science is the teacher
+of every virtue, the enemy of every vice. Science has given the true
+basis of morals, the origin and office of conscience, revealed the
+nature of obligation, of duty, of virtue in its highest, noblest forms,
+and has demonstrated that true happiness is the only possible good.
+Science has slain the monsters of superstition, and destroyed the
+authority of inspired books. Science has read the records of the rocks,
+records that priestcraft cannot change, and on his wondrous scales has
+weighed the atom and the star.
+
+Science has founded the only true religion. Science is the only Savior
+of this world.
+
+VI.
+
+FOR many ages religion has been tried. For countless centuries man
+has sought for help from heaven. To soften the heart of God, mothers
+sacrificed their babes! but the God did not hear, did not see, and did
+not help. Naked savages were devoured by beasts, bitten by serpents,
+killed by flood and frost. They prayed for help, but their God was
+deaf. They built temples and altars, employed priests and gave of their
+substance, but the volcano destroyed and the famine came. For the sake
+of God millions murdered their fellow-men, but the God was silent.
+Millions of martyrs died for the honor of God, but the God was blind. He
+did not see the flames, the scaffolds. He did not hear the prayers,
+the groans. Thousands of priests in the name of God tortured their
+fellow-men, stretched them on racks, crushed their feet in iron boots,
+tore out their tongues, extinguished their eyes. The victims implored
+the protection of God, but their god did not hear, did not see. He
+was deaf and blind. He was willing that his enemies should torture his
+friends.
+
+Nations tried to destroy each other for the sake of God, and the banner
+of the cross dripping with blood floated over a thousand fields--but the
+god was silent. He neither knew nor cared. Pestilence covered the earth
+with dead, the priests prayed, the altars were heaped with sacrifices,
+but the god did not see, did not hear. The miseries of the world did
+not lessen the joys of heaven. The clouds gave no rain, the famine came,
+withered babes with pallid lips sought the breasts of dead mothers,
+while starving fathers knelt and prayed, but the god did not hear.
+Through many centuries millions were enslaved, babes were sold from
+mothers, husbands from wives, backs were scarred with the lash. The
+poor wretches lifted their clasped hands toward heaven and prayed for
+justice, for liberty--but their god did not hear. He cared nothing for
+the sufferings of slaves, nothing for the tears of wives and mothers,
+nothing for the agony of men. He answered no prayers. He broke no
+chains. He freed no slaves.
+
+The miserable wretches appealed to the priests of God, but they were on
+the other side. They defended the masters. The slaves had nothing to
+give.
+
+During all these years it was claimed by the theologians that their
+God was governing the world, that he was infinitely powerful, wise and
+good--and that the "powers" of the earth were "ordained" by him. During
+all these years the church was the enemy of progress. It hated all
+physicians and told the people to rely on prayer, amulets and relics.
+It persecuted the astronomers and geologists, denounced them as infidels
+and atheists, as enemies of the human race. It poisoned the fountains of
+learning and insisted that teachers should distort the facts in nature
+to the end that they might harmonize with the "inspired" book. During
+all these years the church misdirected the energies of man, and when it
+reached the zenith of its power, darkness fell upon the world.
+
+In all nations and in all ages, religion has failed. The gods have never
+interfered. Nature has produced and destroyed without mercy and without
+hatred. She has cared no more for man than for the leaves of the forest,
+no more for nations than for hills of ants, nothing for right or wrong,
+for life or death, for pain or joy.
+
+Man through his intelligence must protect himself. He gets no help from
+any other world. The church has always claimed and still claims that
+it is the only reforming power, that it makes men honest, virtuous
+and merciful, that it prevents violence and war, and that without its
+influence the race would return to barbarism.
+
+Nothing can exceed the absurdity of these claims.
+
+If we wish to improve the condition of mankind--if we wish for nobler
+men and women we must develop the brain, we must encourage thought
+and investigation. We must convince the world that credulity is
+a vice,--that there is no virtue in believing without, or against
+evidence, and that the really honest man is true to himself. We must
+fill the world with intellectual light. We must applaud mental courage.
+We must educate the children, rescue them from ignorance and crime.
+School-houses are the real temples, and teachers are the true priests.
+We must supply the wants of the mind, satisfy the hunger of the brain.
+The people should be familiar with the great poets, with the tragedies
+of AEschylus, the dramas of Shakespeare, with the poetry of Homer and
+Virgil. Shakespeare should be taught in every school, found in every
+house.
+
+Through photography the whole world may become acquainted with the great
+statues, the great paintings, the victories of art. In this way the mind
+is enlarged, the sympathies quickened, the appreciation of the beautiful
+intensified, the taste refined and the character ennobled.
+
+The great novels should be read by all. All should be acquainted with
+the men and women of fiction, with the ideal world. The imagination
+should be developed, trained and strengthened. Superstition has degraded
+art and literature. It gave us winged monsters, scenes from heaven and
+hell, representations of gods and devils, sculptured the absurd and
+painted the impossible in the name of Art. It gave us the dreams of the
+insane, the lives of fanatical saints, accounts of miracles and wonders,
+of cures wrought by the bones of the dead, descriptions of Paradise,
+purgatory and the eternal dungeon, discourses on baptism, on changing
+wine and wafers into the the blood and flesh of God, on the
+forgiveness of sins by priests, on fore-ordination and accountability,
+predestination and free will, on devils, ghosts and goblins, the
+ministrations of guardian angels, the virtue of belief and the
+wickedness of doubt. And this was called "sacred literature."
+
+The church taught that those who believed, counted beads, mumbled
+prayers, and gave their time or property for the support of the gospel
+were the good and that all others were traveling the "broad road" to
+eternal pain. According to the theologians, the best people, the
+saints, were dead, and real beauty was to be found only in heaven. They
+denounced the joys of life as husks and filthy rags, declared that the
+world had been cursed, and that it brought forth thistles and thorns
+because of the sins of man. They regarded the earth as a kind of dock,
+running out into the sea of eternity,--on which the pious waited for the
+ship on which they were to be transported to another world.
+
+But the real poets and the real artists clung to this world, to this
+life. They described and represented things that exist. They expressed
+thoughts of the brain, emotions of the heart, the griefs and joys, the
+hope and despair of men and women. They found strength and beauty
+on every hand. They found their angels here. They were true to human
+experience and they touched the brain and heart of the world. In
+the tragedies and comedies of life, in the smiles and tears, in the
+ecstasies of love, in the darkness of death, in the dawn of hope, they
+found their materials for statue and song, for poem and painting. Poetry
+and art are the children of this world, born and nourished here. They
+are human. They have left the winged monsters of heaven, the malicious
+deformities of hell, and have turned their attention to men and women,
+to the things of this life.
+
+There is a poem called "The Skylark," by Shelley, graceful as the
+motions of flames. Another by Robert Burns, called "The Daisy,"
+exquisite, perfect as the pearl of virtue in the beautiful breast of a
+loving girl. Between this lark and this daisy, neither above nor below,
+you will find all the poetry of the world. Eloquence, sublimity, poetry
+and art must have the foundation of fact, of reality. Imaginary worlds
+and beings are nothing to us.
+
+At last the old creeds are becoming cruel and vulgar. We now have
+imagination enough to put ourselves in the place of others. Believers
+in hell, in eternal pain, like murderers, lack imagination. The murderer
+has not imagination enough to see his victim dead. He does not see the
+sightless and pathetic eyes. He does not see the widow's arms about the
+corpse, her lips upon the dead. He does not hear the sobs of children.
+He does not see the funeral. He does not hear the clods as they fall on
+the coffin. He does not feel the hand of arrest, the scene of the trial
+is not before him. He does not hear the awful verdict, the sentence of
+the court, the last words. He does not see the scaffold, nor feel about
+his throat the deadly noose.
+
+Let us develop the brain, civilize the heart, and give wings to the
+imagination.
+
+VII.
+
+IF we abandon myth and miracle, if we discard the supernatural and the
+scheme of redemption, how are we to civilize the world?
+
+Is falsehood a reforming power? Is credulity the mother of virtue? Is
+there any saving grace in the impossible and absurd? Did wisdom perish
+with the dead? Must the civilized accept the religion of savages?
+
+If we wish to reform the world we must rely on truth, on fact, on
+reason. We must teach men that they are good or bad for themselves, that
+others cannot be good or bad for them, that they cannot be charged with
+the crimes, or credited with the virtues of others. We must discard the
+doctrine of the atonement, because it is absurd and immoral. We are not
+accountable for the sins of "Adam" and the virtues of Christ cannot be
+transferred to us. There can be no vicarious virtue, no vicarious vice.
+Why should the sufferings of the innocent atone for the crimes of the
+guilty. According to the doctrine of the atonement right and wrong do
+not exist in the nature of things, but in the arbitrary will of the
+Infinite. This is a subversion of all ideas of justice and mercy.
+
+An act is good, bad, or indifferent, according to its consequences. No
+power can step between an act and its natural consequences. A governor
+may pardon the criminal, but the natural consequences of the crime
+remain untouched. A god may forgive, but the consequences of the
+act forgiven, are still the same. We must teach the world that the
+consequences of a bad action cannot be avoided, that they are the
+invisible police, the unseen avengers, that accept no gifts, that hear
+no prayers, that no cunning can deceive.
+
+We do not need the forgiveness of gods, but of ourselves and the ones
+we injure. Restitution without repentance is far better than repentance
+without restitution.
+
+We know nothing of any god who rewards, punishes or forgives.
+
+We must teach our fellow-men that honor comes from within, not from
+without, that honor must be earned, that it is not alms, that even an
+infinite God could not enrich the beggar's palm with the gem of honor.
+
+Teach them also that happiness is the bud, the blossom and the fruit of
+good and noble actions, that it is not the gift of any god; that it must
+be earned by man--must be deserved.
+
+In this world of ours there is no magic, no sleight-of-hand, by which
+consequences can be made to punish the good and reward the bad.
+
+Teach men not to sacrifice this world for some other, but to turn their
+attention to the natural, to the affairs of this life. Teach them that
+theology has no known foundation, that it was born of ignorance and
+fear, that it has hardened the heart, polluted the imagination and made
+fiends of men.
+
+Theology is not for this world. It is no part of real religion. It has
+nothing to do with goodness or virtue. Religion does not consist in
+worshiping gods, but in adding to the well-being, the happiness of man.
+No human being knows whether any god exists or not, and all that has
+been said and written about "our god," or the gods of other people, has
+no known fact for a foundation. Words without thoughts, clouds without
+rain.
+
+Let us put theology out of religion.
+
+Church and state should be absolutely divorced. Priests pretend that
+they have been selected by, and that they get their power from God.
+Kings occupy their thrones in accordance with the will of God. The pope
+declares that he is the agent, the deputy of God and that by right
+he should rule the world. All these pretentions and assertions are
+perfectly absurd and yet they are acknowledged and believed by millions.
+Get theology out of government and kings will descend from their
+thrones. All will admit that governments get their powers from the
+consent of the governed, and that all persons in office are the servants
+of the people. Get theology out of government and chaplains will be
+dismissed from Legislatures, from Congress, from the army and navy. Get
+theology out of government and people will be allowed to express their
+honest thoughts about "inspired books" and superstitious creeds. Get
+theology out of government and priests will no longer steal a seventh of
+our time. Get theology out of government and the clergy will soon
+take their places with augurs and soothsayers, with necromancers and
+medicine-men.
+
+Get theology out of education. Nothing should be taught in a school that
+somebody does not know.
+
+There are plenty of things to be learned about this world, about this
+life. Every child should be taught to think, and that it is dangerous
+not to think. Children should not be taught the absurdities, the
+cruelties and imbecilities of superstition. No church should be allowed
+to control the common school, and public money should not be divided
+between the hateful and warring sects. The public school should be
+secular, and only the useful should be taught. Many of our colleges
+are under the control of churches. Presidents and professors are mostly
+ministers of the gospel and the result is that all facts inconsistent
+with the creeds are either suppressed or denied. Only those professors
+who are naturally stupid or mentally dishonest can retain their places.
+Those who tell the truth, who teach the facts, are discharged.
+
+In every college truth should be a welcome guest. Every professor
+should be a finder, and every student a learner, of facts. Theology and
+intellectual dishonesty go together. The teacher of children should be
+intelligent and perfectly sincere.
+
+Let us get theology out of education.
+
+The pious denounce the secular schools as godless. They should be. The
+sciences are all secular, all godless. Theology bears the same relation
+to science that the black art does to chemistry, that magic does to
+mathematics. It is something that cannot be taught, because it cannot
+be known. It has no foundation in fact. It neither produces, nor accords
+with, any image in the mind. It is not only unknowable but unthinkable.
+Through hundreds and thousands of generations men have been discussing,
+wrangling and fighting about theology. No advance has been made. The
+robed priest has only reached the point from which the savage tried to
+start.
+
+We know that theology always has and always will make enemies. It sows
+the seeds of hatred in families and nations. It is selfish, cruel,
+revengeful and malicious. It has heaven for the few and perdition
+for the many. We now know that credulity is not a virtue and that
+intellectual courage is. We must stop rewarding hypocrisy and bigotry.
+We must stop persecuting the thinkers, the investigators, the creators
+of light, the civilizers of the world.
+
+VIII.
+
+WILL the unknown, the mysteries of life and itiations of the mind,
+forever furnish food for superstition? Will the gods and ghosts perish
+or simply retreat before the advancing hosts of science, and continue to
+crouch and lurk just beyond the horizon of the known? Will darkness
+forever be the womb and mother of the supernatural?
+
+A little while ago priests told peasants that the New Jerusalem, the
+celestial city was just above the clouds. They said that its walls
+and domes and spires were just beyond the reach of human sight. The
+telescope was invented and those who looked at the wilderness of stars,
+saw no city, no throne. They said to the priests: "Where is your New
+Jerusalem?" The priests cheerfully and confidently replied. "It is just
+beyond where you see."
+
+At one time it was believed that a race of men existed "with their heads
+beneath their shoulders." Returning travelers from distant lands were
+asked about these wonderful people and all replied that they had not
+seen them. "Oh," said the believers in the monsters, "the men with heads
+beneath their shoulders live in a country that you did not visit." And
+so the monsters lived and flourished until all the world was known. We
+cannot know the universe. We cannot travel infinite distances, and so,
+somewhere in shoreless space there will always be room for gods and
+ghosts, for heavens and hells. And so it may be that superstition will
+live and linger until the world becomes intelligent enough to build upon
+the foundation of the known, to keep the imagination within the domain
+of the probable, and to believe in the natural--_until the supernatural
+shall have been demonstrated_.
+
+Savages knew all about gods, about heavens and hells before they knew
+anything about the world in which they lived. They were perfectly
+familiar with evil spirits, with the invisible phantoms of the air, long
+before they had any true conception of themselves. So, they knew all
+about the origin and destiny of the human race. They were absolutely
+certain about the problems, the solution of which, philosophers know, is
+beyond the limitations of the mind. They understood astrology, but not
+astronomy, knew something of magic, but nothing about chemistry. They
+were wise only as to those things about which nothing can be known.
+
+The poor Indian believed in the "Great Spirit" and saw "design" on every
+hand.--Trees were made that he might have bows and arrows, wood for his
+fire and bark for his wigwam--rivers and lakes to give him fish, wild
+beasts and corn that he might have food, and the animals had skins that
+he might have clothes.
+
+Primitive peoples all reasoned in the same way, and modern Christians
+follow their example. They knew but little of the world and thought that
+it had been made expressly for the use of man. They did not know that it
+was mostly water, that vast regions were locked in eternal ice and that
+in most countries the conditions were unfavorable to human life. They
+knew nothing of the countless enemies of man that live unseen in water,
+food and air. Back of the little good they knew they put gods and back
+of the evil, devils. They thought it of the greatest importance to gain
+the good will of the gods, who alone could protect them from the devils.
+Those who worshiped these gods, offered sacrifices, and obeyed priests,
+were considered loyal members of the tribe or community, and those who
+refused to worship were regarded as enemies and traitors. The believers,
+in order to protect themselves from the anger of the gods, exiled or
+destroyed the infidels.
+
+Believing as they did, the course they pursued was natural. They
+not only wished to protect themselves from disease and death, from
+pestilence and famine in this world but the souls of their children from
+eternal pain in the next. Their gods were savages who demanded flattery
+and worship not only, but the acceptance of a certain creed. As long
+as Christians believe in eternal punishment they will be the enemies of
+those who investigate and contend for the authority of reason, of those
+who demand evidence, who care nothing for the unsupported assertions of
+the dead or the illogical inferences of the living.
+
+Science always has been, is, and always will be modest, thoughtful,
+truthful. It has but one object: The ascertainment of truth. It has no
+prejudice, no hatred. It is in the realm of the intellect and cannot
+be swayed or changed by passion. It does not try to please God, to gain
+heaven or avoid hell. It is for this world, for the use of man. It is
+perfectly candid. It does not try to conceal, but to reveal. It is the
+enemy of mystery, of pretence and canc. It does not ask people to be
+solemn, but sensible. It calls for and insists on the use of all the
+senses, of all the faculties of the mind. It does not pretend to be
+"holy" or "inspired." It courts investigation, criticism and even
+denial. It asks for the application of every test, for trial by every
+standard. It knows nothing of blasphemy and does not ask for the
+imprisonment of those who ignorantly or knowingly deny the truth. The
+good that springs from a knowledge of the truth is the only reward it
+offers, and the evil resulting from ignorance is the only punishment it
+threatens. Its effort is to reform the world through intelligence.
+
+On the other hand theology is, always has been, and always will be,
+ignorant, arrogant, puerile and cruel. When the church had power,
+hypocrisy was crowned and honesty imprisoned. Fraud wore the tiara and
+truth was a convict, Liberty was in chains, Theology has always sent the
+worst to heaven, the best to hell.
+
+Let me give you a scene from the day of judgment. Christ is upon
+his throne, his secretary by his side. A soul appears. This is what
+happens--
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+Torquemada.
+
+"Were you a Christian?"
+
+I was.
+
+"Did you endeavor to convert your fellow-men?"
+
+I did. I tried to convert them by persuasion, by preaching and praying
+and even by force.
+
+"What did you do?"
+
+I put the heretics in prison, in chains. I tore out their tongues, put
+out their eyes, crushed their bones, stretched them upon racks, roasted
+their feet, and if they remained obdurate I flayed them alive or burned
+them at the stake.
+
+"And did you do all this for my glory?"
+
+Yes, all for you. I wanted to save some, I wanted to protect the young
+and the weak minded.
+
+"Did you believe the Bible, the miracles--that I was God, that I was
+born of a virgin and kept money in the mouth of a fish?"
+
+Yes, I believed it all. My reason was the slave of faith.
+
+"Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joys of thy
+Lord. I was hungry and you gave me meat, naked and you clothed me.."
+Another soul arises.
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+Giordano Bruno.
+
+"Were you a Christian?"
+
+At one time I was, but for many years I was a philosopher, a seeker
+after truth.
+
+"Did you seek to convert your fellow-men?"
+
+Not to Christianity, but to the religion of reason. I tried to
+develop their minds, to free them from the slavery of ignorance and
+superstition. In my day the church taught the holiness of credulity--the
+virtue of unquestioning obedience, and in your name tortured and
+destroyed the intelligent and courageous. I did what I could to civilize
+the world, to make men tolerant and merciful, to soften the hearts
+of priests, and banish torture from the world. I expressed my honest
+thoughts and walked in the light of reason.
+
+"Did you believe the Bible, the miracles? Did you believe that I was
+God, that I was born of a virgin and that I suffered myself to be killed
+by the Jews to appease the wrath of God--that is, of myself--so that God
+could save the souls of a few?"
+
+"No, I did not. I did not believe that God was ever born into my world,
+or that God learned the trade of a carpenter, or that he 'increased
+in knowledge,' or that he cast devils out of men, or that his garments
+could cure diseases, or that he allowed himself to be murdered, and in
+the hour of death "forsook" himself. These things I did not and could
+not believe. But I did all the good I could. I enlightened the ignorant,
+comforted the afflicted, defended the innocent, divided even my poverty
+with the poor, and did the best I could to increase the happiness of my
+fellow-men. I was a soldier in the army of progress.--I was arrested,
+imprisoned, tried and convicted by the church--by the 'Triumphant
+Beast.' I was burned at the stake by ignorant and heartless priests and
+my ashes given to the winds."
+
+Then Christ, his face growing dark, his brows contracted with wrath,
+with uplifted hands, with half averted face, cries or rather shrieks:
+"Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devil
+and his angels."
+
+This is the justice of God--the mercy of the compassionate Christ.
+This is the belief, the dream and hope of the orthodox theologian--"the
+consummation devoutly to be wished."
+
+Theology makes God a monster, a tyrant, a savage; makes man a servant,
+a serf, a slave; promises heaven to the obedient, the meek, the
+frightened, and threatens the self-reliant with the tortures of hell.
+
+It denounces reason and appeals to the passions--to hope and fear.
+It does not answer the arguments of those who attack, but resorts to
+sophistry, falsehood and slander. It is incapable of advancement. It
+keeps its back to the sunrise, lives on myth and miracle, and guards
+with a misers care the "sacred" superstitions of the past.
+
+In the great struggle between the supernatural and the natural, between
+gods and men, we have passed midnight. All the forces of civilization,
+all the facts that have been found, all the truths that have been
+discovered are the allies of science--the enemies of the supernatural.
+
+We need no myths, no miracles, no gods, no devils.
+
+IX.
+
+FOR thousands of generations the myths have been taught and the miracles
+believed. Every mother was a missionary and told with loving care the
+falsehoods of "faith" to her babe. The poison of superstition was in the
+mother's milk. She was honest and affectionate and her character, her
+goodness, her smiles and kisses, entered into, mingled with, and became
+a part of the superstition that she taught. Fathers, friends and priests
+united with the mothers, and the children thus taught, became the
+teachers of their children and so the creeds were kept alive.
+
+Childhood loves the romantic, the mysterious, the monstrous. It lives in
+a world where cause has nothing to do with effect, where the fairy waves
+her hand and the prince appears. Where wish creates the thing desired
+and facts become the slaves of amulet and charm. The individual lives
+the life of the race, and the child is charmed with what the race in its
+infancy produced.
+
+There seems to be the same difference between mistakes and facts
+that there is between weeds and corn. Mistakes seem to take care of
+themselves, while the facts have to be guarded with all possible care.
+Falsehoods like weeds flourish without care. Weeds care nothing for soil
+or rain. They not only ask no help but they almost defy destruction. In
+the minds of children, superstitions, legends, myths and miracles find a
+natural, and in most instances a lasting home. Thrown aside in manhood,
+forgotten or denied, in old age they oft return and linger to the end.
+
+This in part accounts for the longevity of religious lies. Ministers
+with clasped hands and uplifted eyes ask the man who is thinking for
+himself how he can be wicked and heartless enough to attack the religion
+of his mother. This question is regarded by the clergy as unanswerable.
+Of course it is not to be asked by the missionaries, of the Hindus and
+the Chinese. The heathen are expected to desert the religion of their
+mothers as Christ and his apostles deserted the religion of their
+mothers. It is right for Jews and heathen, but not for thinkers and
+philosophers.
+
+A cannibal was about to kill a missionary for food.
+
+The missionary objected and asked the cannibal how he could be so cruel
+and wicked.
+
+The cannibal replied that he followed the example of his mother. "My
+mother," said he, "was good enough for me. Her religion is my religion.
+The last time I saw her she was sitting, propped up against a tree,
+eating cold missionary."
+
+But now the mother argument has mostly lost its force, and men of mind
+are satisfied with nothing less than truth.
+
+The phenomena of nature have been investigated and the supernatural has
+not been found. The myths have faded from the imagination, and of them
+nothing remains but the poetic. The miraculous has become the absurd,
+the impossible. Gods and phantoms have been driven from the earth and
+sky. We are living in a natural world.
+
+Our fathers, some of them, demanded the freedom of religion. We have
+taken another step. We demand the Religion of Freedom.
+
+O Liberty, thou art the god of my idolatry! Thou art the only deity
+that hateth bended knees. In thy vast and unwalled temple, beneath the
+roofless dome, star-gemmed and luminous with suns, thy worshipers stand
+erect! They do not cringe, or crawl, or bend their foreheads to the
+earth. The dust has never borne the impress of their lips. Upon thy
+altars mothers do not sacrifice their babes, nor men their rights. Thou
+askest naught from man except the things that good men hate--the whip,
+the chain, the dungeon key. Thou hast no popes, no priests, who stand
+between their fellow-men and thee. Thou carest not for foolish forms,
+or selfish prayers. At thy sacred shrine hypocrisy does not bow, virtue
+does not tremble, superstition's feeble tapers do not burn, but Reason
+holds aloft her inextinguishable torch whose holy light will one day
+flood the world.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol.
+2 (of 12), by Robert G. Ingersoll
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #38802 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/38802)
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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html lang="en">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
+ content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+<title>
+ The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 2 (of 12)
+ by Robert G. Ingersoll
+</title>
+
+
+<style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ body { text-align:justify}
+ P { margin:15%;
+ margin-top: .75em;
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em;
+ margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 40%; margin-bottom: .75em; font-size: 110%;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 5%;}
+ .indent {font-style: italic; font-size: 100%; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ CENTER { padding: 10px;}
+ PRE { font-family: Times; font-style: italic; font-size: 100%; margin-left: 25%;}
+ -->
+</style>
+
+
+</head>
+<body>
+
+<div style="height: 8em;"><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br></div>
+<a name="title"></a>
+<h1>
+ THE WORKS OF ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
+</h1><br>
+
+<h2>By Robert G. Ingersoll</h2>
+
+<br><br>
+
+<center>
+"THE CLERGY KNOW, THAT I KNOW, THAT THEY KNOW, THAT THEY DO NOT KNOW."
+</center>
+
+<h3>
+IN TWELVE VOLUMES, VOLUME II.
+</h3><br>
+
+<h2>
+LECTURES
+</h2><br>
+
+<h3>
+1900
+</h3><br>
+
+<h4>
+THE DRESDEN EDITION
+</h4>
+<br><br>
+<center>
+TO
+</center>
+<center>
+MRS. SUE. M. FARRELL,
+</center>
+<center>
+IN LAW MY SISTER,
+</center>
+<center>
+AND IN FACT MY FRIEND,
+</center>
+<center>
+THIS VOLUME,
+</center>
+<center>
+AS A TOKEN OF RESPECT AND LOVE, IS DEDICATED.
+</center>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<br />
+<center>
+<img alt="Titlepage (63K)" src="images/Titlepage.jpg" height="1250" width="728" />
+</center>
+<br />
+
+<br />
+<center>
+<img alt="Portrait (63K)" src="images/Portrait.jpg" height="1070" width="723" />
+</center>
+<br />
+
+
+<h3>Contents</h3>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#linkTOC">
+CONTENTS OF VOLUME II.
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#linkPREF">
+PREFACE.
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#link0002">
+SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#link0003">
+SOME REASONS WHY
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#link0004">
+ORTHODOXY.
+</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#link0005">
+MYTH AND MIRACLE.
+</a></p>
+
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<a name="linkTOC"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+<h2>
+ CONTENTS OF VOLUME II.
+</h2>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#link0002">
+SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.
+</a></p>
+
+<br>
+(1879.)
+<br>
+Preface&mdash;I. He who endeavors to control the Mind by Force is a
+<br>
+Tyrant, and he who submits is a Slave&mdash;All I Ask&mdash;When a Religion
+<br>
+is Founded&mdash;Freedom for the Orthodox Clergy&mdash;Every Minister an
+<br>
+Attorney&mdash;Submission to the Orthodox and the Dead&mdash;Bounden Duty of
+<br>
+the Ministry&mdash;The Minister Factory at Andover&mdash;II. Free Schools&mdash;No
+<br>
+Sectarian Sciences&mdash;Religion and the Schools&mdash;Scientific
+<br>
+Hypocrites&mdash;III. The Politicians and the Churches&mdash;IV. Man and Woman the
+<br>
+Highest Possible Titles&mdash;Belief Dependent on Surroundings&mdash;Worship of
+<br>
+Ancestors&mdash;Blindness Necessary to Keeping the Narrow Path&mdash;The Bible the
+<br>
+Chain that Binds&mdash;A Bible of the Middle Ages and the Awe it Inspired&mdash;V.
+<br>
+The Pentateuch&mdash;Moses Not the Author&mdash;Belief out of which Grew
+<br>
+Religious Ceremonies&mdash;Egypt the Source of the Information of Moses&mdash;VI.
+<br>
+Monday&mdash;Nothing, in the Light of Raw Material&mdash;The Story of Creation
+<br>
+Begun&mdash;The Same Story, substantially, Found in the Records of Babylon,
+<br>
+Egypt, and India&mdash;Inspiration Unnecessary to the Truth&mdash;Usefulness of
+<br>
+Miracles to Fit Lies to Facts&mdash;Division of Darkness and Light&mdash;VII.
+<br>
+Tuesday&mdash;The Firmament and Some Biblical Notions about it&mdash;Laws of
+<br>
+Evaporation Unknown to the Inspired Writer&mdash;VIII. Wednesday&mdash;The Waters
+<br>
+Gathered into Seas&mdash;Fruit and Nothing to Eat it&mdash;Five Epochs in the
+<br>
+Organic History of the Earth&mdash;Balance between the Total Amounts of
+<br>
+Animal and Vegetable Life&mdash;Vegetation Prior to the Appearance of the
+<br>
+Sun&mdash;IX. Thursday&mdash;Sun and Moon Manufactured&mdash;Magnitude of the Solar
+<br>
+Orb&mdash;Dimensions of Some of the Planets&mdash;Moses' Guess at the Size of Sun
+<br>
+and Moon&mdash;Joshua's Control of the Heavenly Bodies&mdash;A Hypothesis Urged
+<br>
+by Ministers&mdash;The Theory of "Refraction"&mdash;Rev. Henry Morey&mdash;Astronomical
+<br>
+Knowledge of Chinese Savants&mdash;The Motion of the Earth Reversed by
+<br>
+Jehovah for the Reassurance of Ahaz&mdash;"Errors" Renounced by Button&mdash;X.
+<br>
+"He made the Stars Also"&mdash;Distance of the Nearest Star&mdash;XI.
+<br>
+Friday&mdash;Whales and Other Living Creatures Produced&mdash;XII.
+<br>
+Saturday&mdash;Reproduction Inaugurated&mdash;XIII. "Let Us Make Man"&mdash;Human
+<br>
+Beings Created in the Physical Image and Likeness of God&mdash;Inquiry as
+<br>
+to the Process Adopted&mdash;Development of Living Forms According to
+<br>
+Evolution&mdash;How Were Adam and Eve Created?&mdash;The Rib Story&mdash;Age of
+<br>
+Man Upon the Earth&mdash;A Statue Apparently Made before the World&mdash;XIV.
+<br>
+Sunday&mdash;Sacredness of the Sabbath Destroyed by the Theory of Vast
+<br>
+"Periods"&mdash;Reflections on the Sabbath&mdash;XV. The Necessity for a Good
+<br>
+Memory&mdash;The Two Accounts of the Creation in Genesis I and II&mdash;Order
+<br>
+of Creation in the First Account&mdash;Order of Creation in the Second
+<br>
+Account&mdash;Fastidiousness of Adam in the Choice of a Helpmeet&mdash;Dr.
+<br>
+Adam Clark's Commentary&mdash;Dr. Scott's Guess&mdash;Dr. Matthew Henry's
+<br>
+Admission&mdash;The Blonde and Brunette Problem&mdash;The Result of Unbelief and
+<br>
+the Reward of Faith&mdash;"Give Him a Harp"&mdash;XVI. The Garden&mdash;Location of
+<br>
+Eden&mdash;The Four Rivers&mdash;The Tree of Knowledge&mdash;Andover Appealed
+<br>
+To&mdash;XVII. The Fall&mdash;The Serpent&mdash;Dr. Adam Clark Gives a Zoological
+<br>
+Explanation&mdash;Dr. Henry Dissents&mdash;Whence This Serpent?&mdash;XVIII.
+<br>
+Dampness&mdash;A Race of Giants&mdash;Wickedness of Mankind&mdash;An Ark Constructed&mdash;A
+<br>
+Universal Flood Indicated&mdash;Animals Probably Admitted to the Ark&mdash;How Did
+<br>
+They Get There?&mdash;Problem of Food and Service&mdash;A Shoreless Sea Covered
+<br>
+with Innumerable Dead&mdash;Drs. Clark and Henry on the Situation&mdash;The Ark
+<br>
+Takes Ground&mdash;New Difficulties&mdash;Noah's Sacrifice&mdash;The Rainbow as a
+<br>
+Memorandum&mdash;Babylonian, Egyptian, and Indian Legends of a Flood&mdash;XIX.
+<br>
+Bacchus and Babel&mdash;Interest Attaching to Noah&mdash;Where Did Our First
+<br>
+Parents and the Serpent Acquire a Common Language?&mdash;Babel and the
+<br>
+Confusion of Tongues&mdash;XX. Faith in Filth&mdash;Immodesty of Biblical
+<br>
+Diction&mdash;XXI. The Hebrews&mdash;God's Promises to Abraham&mdash;The Sojourning
+<br>
+of Israel in Egypt&mdash;Marvelous Increase&mdash;Moses and Aaron&mdash;XXII.
+<br>
+The Plagues&mdash;Competitive Miracle Working&mdash;Defeat of the Local
+<br>
+Magicians&mdash;XXIII. The Flight Out of Egypt&mdash;Three Million People in a
+<br>
+Desert&mdash;Destruction of Pharaoh ana His Host&mdash;Manna&mdash;A Superfluity of
+<br>
+Quails&mdash;Rev. Alexander Cruden's Commentary&mdash;Hornets as Allies of the
+<br>
+Israelites&mdash;Durability of the Clothing of the Jewish People&mdash;An Ointment
+<br>
+Monopoly&mdash;Consecration of Priests&mdash;The Crime of Becoming a Mother&mdash;The
+<br>
+Ten Commandments&mdash;Medical Ideas of Jehovah&mdash;Character of the God of
+<br>
+the Pentateuch&mdash;XXIV. Confess and Avoid&mdash;XXV. "Inspired" Slavery&mdash;XXVI.
+<br>
+"Inspired" Marriage-XXVII. "Inspired" War-XXVIII. "Inspired" Religious
+<br>
+Liberty&mdash;XXIX. Conclusion.
+<br>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#link0003">
+SOME REASONS WHY.
+</a></p>
+
+<br>
+(1881.)
+<br>
+I&mdash;Religion makes Enemies&mdash;Hatred in the Name of Universal
+<br>
+Benevolence&mdash;No Respect for the Rights of Barbarians&mdash;Literal
+<br>
+Fulfillment of a New Testament Prophecy&mdash;II. Duties to God&mdash;Can we
+<br>
+Assist God?&mdash;An Infinite Personality an Infinite Impossibility-Ill.
+<br>
+Inspiration&mdash;What it Really Is&mdash;Indication of Clams&mdash;Multitudinous
+<br>
+Laughter of the Sea&mdash;Horace Greeley and the Mammoth Trees&mdash;A Landscape
+<br>
+Compared to a Table-cloth&mdash;The Supernatural is the Deformed&mdash;Inspiration
+<br>
+in the Man as well as in the Book&mdash;Our Inspired Bible&mdash;IV. God's
+<br>
+Experiment with the Jews&mdash;Miracles of One Religion never astonish the
+<br>
+Priests of Another&mdash;"I am a Liar Myself"&mdash;V. Civilized Countries&mdash;Crimes
+<br>
+once regarded as Divine Institutions&mdash;What the Believer in the
+<br>
+Inspiration of the Bible is Compelled to Say&mdash;Passages apparently
+<br>
+written by the Devil&mdash;VI. A Comparison of Books&mdash;Advancing a Cannibal
+<br>
+from Missionary to Mutton&mdash;Contrast between the Utterances of Jehovah
+<br>
+and those of Reputable Heathen&mdash;Epictetus, Cicero, Zeno,
+<br>
+Seneca&mdash;the Hindu, Antoninus, Marcus Aurelius&mdash;The Avesta&mdash;VII.
+<br>
+Monotheism&mdash;Egyptians before Moses taught there was but One God
+<br>
+and Married but One Wife&mdash;Persians and Hindoos had a Single Supreme
+<br>
+Deity&mdash;Rights of Roman Women&mdash;Marvels of Art achieved without the
+<br>
+Assistance of Heaven&mdash;Probable Action of the Jewish Jehovah incarnated
+<br>
+as Man&mdash;VIII. The New Testament&mdash;Doctrine of Eternal Pain brought to
+<br>
+Light&mdash;Discrepancies&mdash;Human Weaknesses cannot be Predicated of
+<br>
+Divine Wisdom&mdash;Why there are Four Gospels according to Irenæus&mdash;The
+<br>
+Atonement&mdash;Remission of Sins under the Mosaic Dispensation&mdash;Christians
+<br>
+say, "Charge it"&mdash;God's Forgiveness does not Repair an Injury&mdash;Suffering
+<br>
+of Innocence for the Guilty&mdash;Salvation made Possible by Jehovah's
+<br>
+Failure to Civilize the Jews&mdash;Necessity of Belief not taught in the
+<br>
+Synoptic Gospels&mdash;Non-resistance the Offspring of Weakness&mdash;IX. Christ's
+<br>
+Mission&mdash;All the Virtues had been Taught before his Advent&mdash;Perfect and
+<br>
+Beautiful Thoughts of his Pagan Predecessors&mdash;St. Paul Contrasted
+<br>
+with Heathen Writers&mdash;"The Quality of Mercy"&mdash;X. Eternal Pain&mdash;An
+<br>
+Illustration of Eternal Punishment&mdash;Captain Kreuger of the Barque
+<br>
+Tiger&mdash;XI. Civilizing Influence of the Bible&mdash;Its Effects on the
+<br>
+Jews&mdash;If Christ was God, Did he not, in his Crucifixion, Reap what
+<br>
+he had Sown?&mdash;Nothing can add to the Misery of a Nation whose King is
+<br>
+Jehovah
+<br>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#link0004">
+ORTHODOXY.
+</a></p>
+<br>
+(1884.)
+<br>
+Orthodox Religion Dying Out&mdash;Religious Deaths and Births&mdash;The Religion
+<br>
+of Reciprocity&mdash;Every Language has a Cemetery&mdash;Orthodox Institutions
+<br>
+Survive through the Money invested in them&mdash;"Let us tell our Real
+<br>
+Names"&mdash;The Blows that have Shattered the Shield and Shivered the Lance
+<br>
+of Superstition&mdash;Mohammed's Successful Defence of the Sepulchre of
+<br>
+Christ&mdash;The Destruction of Art&mdash;The Discovery of America&mdash;Although
+<br>
+he made it himself, the Holy Ghost was Ignorant of the Form of this
+<br>
+Earth&mdash;Copernicus and Kepler&mdash;Special Providence&mdash;The Man and the Ship
+<br>
+he did not Take&mdash;A Thanksgiving Proclamation Contradicted&mdash;Charles
+<br>
+Darwin&mdash;Henry Ward Beecher&mdash;The Creeds&mdash;The Latest Creed&mdash;God as
+<br>
+a Governor&mdash;The Love of God&mdash;The Fall of Man&mdash;We are Bound
+<br>
+by Representatives without a Chance to Vote against Them&mdash;The
+<br>
+Atonement&mdash;The Doctrine of Depravity a Libel on the Human Race&mdash;The
+<br>
+Second Birth&mdash;A Unitarian Universalist&mdash;Inspiration of the
+<br>
+Scriptures&mdash;God a Victim of his own Tyranny&mdash;In the New Testament
+<br>
+Trouble Commences at Death&mdash;The Reign of Truth and Love&mdash;The Old
+<br>
+Spaniard who Died without an Enemy&mdash;The Wars it Brought&mdash;Consolation
+<br>
+should be Denied to Murderers&mdash;At the Rate at which Heathen are being
+<br>
+Converted, how long will it take to Establish Christ's Kingdom on
+<br>
+Earth?&mdash;The Resurrection&mdash;The Judgment Day&mdash;Pious Evasions&mdash;"We shall
+<br>
+not Die, but we shall all be Hanged"&mdash;"No Bible, no Civilization"
+<br>
+Miracles of the New Testament&mdash;Nothing Written by Christ or his
+<br>
+Contemporaries&mdash;Genealogy of Jesus&mdash;More Miracles&mdash;A Master of
+<br>
+Death&mdash;Improbable that he would be Crucified&mdash;The Loaves and Fishes&mdash;How
+<br>
+did it happen that the Miracles Convinced so Few?&mdash;The Resurrection&mdash;The
+<br>
+Ascension&mdash;Was the Body Spiritual&mdash;Parting from the Disciples&mdash;Casting
+<br>
+out Devils&mdash;Necessity of Belief&mdash;God should be consistent in the
+<br>
+Matter of forgiving Enemies&mdash;Eternal Punishment&mdash;Some Good Men who are
+<br>
+Damned&mdash;Another Objection&mdash;Love the only Bow on Life's dark Cloud&mdash;"Now
+<br>
+is the accepted Time"&mdash;Rather than this Doctrine of Eternal Punishment
+<br>
+Should be True&mdash;I would rather that every Planet should in its Orbit
+<br>
+wheel a barren Star&mdash;What I Believe&mdash;Immortality&mdash;It existed long before
+<br>
+Moses&mdash;Consolation&mdash;The Promises are so Far Away, and the Dead are so
+<br>
+Near&mdash;Death a Wall or a Door&mdash;A Fable&mdash;Orpheus and Eurydice.
+<br>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#link0005">
+MYTH AND MIRACLE.
+</a></p>
+(1885.)
+<br>
+I. Happiness the true End and Aim of Life&mdash;Spiritual People and
+<br>
+their Literature&mdash;Shakespeare's Clowns superior to Inspired
+<br>
+Writers&mdash;Beethoven's Sixth Symphony Preferred to the Five Books of
+<br>
+Moses&mdash;Venus of Milo more Pleasing than the Presbyterian Creed&mdash;II.
+<br>
+Religions Naturally Produced&mdash;Poets the Myth-makers&mdash;The Sleeping
+<br>
+Beauty&mdash;Orpheus and Eurydice&mdash;Red Riding Hood&mdash;The Golden Age&mdash;Elysian
+<br>
+Fields&mdash;The Flood Myth&mdash;Myths of the Seasons&mdash;III. The Sun-god&mdash;Jonah,
+<br>
+Buddha, Chrisnna, Horus, Zoroaster&mdash;December 25th as a Birthday of
+<br>
+Gods&mdash;Christ a Sun-God&mdash;The Cross a Symbol of the Life to Come&mdash;When
+<br>
+Nature rocked the Cradle of the Infant World&mdash;IV. Difference between
+<br>
+a Myth and a Miracle&mdash;Raising the Dead, Past and Present&mdash;Miracles
+<br>
+of Jehovah&mdash;Miracles of Christ&mdash;Everything Told except the Truth&mdash;The
+<br>
+Mistake of the World&mdash;V. Beginning of Investigation&mdash;The Stars as
+<br>
+Witnesses against Superstition&mdash;Martyrdom of Bruno&mdash;Geology&mdash;Steam and
+<br>
+Electricity&mdash;Nature forever the Same&mdash;Persistence of Force&mdash;Cathedral,
+<br>
+Mosque, and Joss House have the same Foundation&mdash;Science the
+<br>
+Providence of Man&mdash;VI. To Soften the Heart of God&mdash;Martyrs&mdash;The God was
+<br>
+Silent&mdash;Credulity a Vice&mdash;Develop the Imagination&mdash;"The Skylark" and
+<br>
+"The Daisy"&mdash;VII. How are we to Civilize the World?&mdash;Put Theology out
+<br>
+of Religion&mdash;Divorce of Church and State&mdash;Secular Education&mdash;Godless
+<br>
+Schools&mdash;VIII. The New Jerusalem&mdash;Knowledge of the Supernatural
+<br>
+possessed by Savages&mdash;Beliefs of Primitive Peoples&mdash;Science is
+<br>
+Modest&mdash;Theology Arrogant&mdash;Torque-mada and Bruno on the Day of
+<br>
+Judgment&mdash;IX. Poison of Superstition in the Mother's Milk&mdash;Ability
+<br>
+of Mistakes to take Care of Themselves&mdash;Longevity of Religious
+<br>
+Lies&mdash;Mother's religion pleaded by the Cannibal&mdash;The Religion of
+<br>
+Freedom&mdash;O Liberty, thou art the God of my Idolatry
+<br>
+</blockquote>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<a name="linkPREF"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+<h2>
+ PREFACE.
+</h2>
+<p>
+For many years I have regarded the Pentateuch simply as a record of a
+barbarous people, in which are found a great number of the ceremonies
+of savagery, many absurd and unjust laws, and thousands of ideas
+inconsistent with known and demonstrated facts. To me it seemed almost
+a crime to teach that this record was written by inspired men; that
+slavery, polygamy, wars of conquest and extermination were right, and
+that there was a time when men could win the approbation of infinite
+Intelligence, Justice, and Mercy, by violating maidens and by butchering
+babes. To me it seemed more reasonable that savage men had made these
+laws; and I endeavored in a lecture, entitled "Some Mistakes of Moses,"
+to point out some of the errors, contradictions, and impossibilities
+contained in the Pentateuch. The lecture was never written and
+consequently never delivered twice the same. On several occasions it was
+reported and published without consent, and without revision. All these
+publications were grossly and glaringly incorrect As published, they
+have been answered several hundred times, and many of the clergy are
+still engaged in the great work. To keep these reverend gentlemen from
+wasting their talents on the mistakes of reporters and printers, I
+concluded to publish the principal points in all my lectures on this
+subject. And here, it may be proper for me to say, that arguments cannot
+be answered by personal abuse; that there is no logic in slander, and
+that falsehood, in the long run, defeats itself. People who love their
+enemies should, at least, tell the truth about their friends. Should it
+turn out that I am the worst man in the whole world, the story of the
+flood will remain just as improbable as before, and the contradictions
+of the Pentateuch will still demand an explanation.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a time when a falsehood, fulminated from the pulpit, smote
+like a sword; but, the supply having greatly exceeded the demand,
+clerical misrepresentation has at last become almost an innocent
+amusement. Remembering that only a few years ago men, women, and even
+children, were imprisoned, tortured and burned, for having expressed
+in an exceedingly mild and gentle way, the ideas entertained by me, I
+congratulate myself that calumny is now the pulpit's last resort. The
+old instruments of torture are kept only to gratify curiosity; the
+chains are rusting away, and the demolition of time has allowed even the
+dungeons of the Inquisition to be visited by light. The church, impotent
+and malicious, regrets, not the abuse, but the loss of her power, and
+seeks to hold by falsehood what she gained by cruelty and force, by
+fire and fear. Christianity cannot live in peace with any other form of
+faith. If that religion be true, there is but one savior, one inspired
+book, and but one little narrow grass-grown path that leads to heaven.
+Such a religion is necessarily uncompromising, unreasoning, aggressive
+and insolent. Christianity has held all other creeds and forms in
+infinite contempt, divided the world into enemies and friends, and
+verified the awful declaration of its founder&mdash;a declaration that
+wet with blood the sword he came to bring, and made the horizon of a
+thousand years lurid with the fagots' flames.
+</p>
+<p>
+Too great praise challenges attention, and often brings to light a
+thousand faults that otherwise the general eye would never see. Were we
+allowed to read the Bible as we do all other books, we would admire its
+beauties, treasure its worthy thoughts, and account for all its absurd,
+grotesque and cruel things, by saying that its authors lived in rude,
+barbaric times. But we are told that it was written by inspired men;
+that it contains the will of God; that it is perfect, pure, and true in
+all its parts; the source and standard of all moral and religious truth;
+that it is the star and anchor of all human hope; the only guide for
+man, the only torch in Nature's night. These claims are so at variance
+with every known recorded fact, so palpably absurd, that every free
+unbiased soul is forced to raise the standard of revolt.
+</p>
+<p>
+We read the pagan sacred books with profit and delight. With myth and
+fable we are ever charmed, and find a pleasure in the endless repetition
+of the beautiful, poetic, and absurd. We find, in all these records of
+the past, philosophies and dreams, and efforts stained with tears,
+of great and tender souls who tried to pierce the mystery of life and
+death, to answer the eternal questions of the Whence and Whither, and
+vainly sought to make, with bits of shattered glass, a mirror that
+would, in very truth, reflect the face and form of Nature's perfect
+self.
+</p>
+<p>
+These myths were born of hopes, and fears, and tears, and smiles, and
+they were touched and colored by all there is of joy and grief between
+the rosy dawn of birth, and deaths sad night. They clothed even the
+stars with passion, and gave to gods the faults and frailties of the
+sons of men. In them, the winds and waves were music, and all the lakes,
+and streams, and springs,&mdash;the mountains, woods and perfumed dells were
+haunted by a thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of Spring
+with tremulous desire; made tawny Summer's billowed breast the throne
+and home of love; filled Autumn's arms with sun-kissed grapes, and
+gathered sheaves; and pictured Winter as a weak old king who felt,
+like Lear upon his withered face, Cordelia's tears. These myths, though
+false, are beautiful, and have for many ages and in countless ways,
+enriched the heart and kindled thought. But if the world were taught
+that all these things are true and all inspired of God, and that eternal
+punishment will be the lot of him who dares deny or doubt, the sweetest
+myth of all the Fable World would lose its beauty, and become a scorned
+and hateful thing to every brave and thoughtful man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Robert G. Ingersoll.
+</p>
+<p>
+Washington, D. C., Oct. 7th, 1879.
+</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<a name="link0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+<h2>
+ SOME MISTAKES OF MOSES.
+</h2>
+<p>
+HE WHO ENDEAVORS TO CONTROL THE MIND BY FORCE IS A TYRANT, AND HE WHO
+SUBMITS IS A SLAVE.
+</p>
+<center>
+I.
+</center>
+<p>
+I want to do what little I can to make my country truly free, to broaden
+the intellectual horizon of our people, to destroy the prejudices born
+of ignorance and fear, to do away with the blind worship of the ignoble
+past, with the idea that all the great and good are dead, that the
+living are totally depraved, that all pleasures are sins, that sighs
+and groans are alone pleasing to God, that thought is dangerous, that
+intellectual courage is a crime, that cowardice is a virtue, that a
+certain belief is necessary to secure salvation, that to carry a cross
+in this world will give us a palm in the next, and that we must allow
+some priest to be the pilot of our souls.
+</p>
+<p>
+Until every soul is freely permitted to investigate every book, and
+creed, and dogma for itself, the world cannot be free. Mankind will be
+enslaved until there is mental grandeur enough to allow each man to have
+his thought and say. This earth will be a paradise when men can, upon
+all these questions differ, and yet grasp each other's hands as friends.
+It is amazing to me that a difference of opinion upon subjects that we
+know nothing with certainty about, should make us hate, persecute, and
+despise each other. Why a difference of opinion upon predestination,
+or the Trinity, should make people imprison and burn each other
+seems beyond the comprehension of man; and yet in all countries where
+Christians have existed, they have destroyed each other to the exact
+extent of their power. Why should a believer in God hate an atheist?
+Surely the atheist has not injured God, and surely he is human, capable
+of joy and pain, and entitled to all the rights of man. Would it not be
+far better to treat this atheist, at least, as well as he treats us?
+</p>
+<p>
+Christians tell me that they love their enemies, and yet all I ask
+is&mdash;not that they love their enemies, not that they love their friends
+even, but that they treat those who differ from them, with simple
+fairness.
+</p>
+<p>
+We do not wish to be forgiven, but we wish Christians to so act that we
+will not have to forgive them.
+</p>
+<p>
+If all will admit that all have an equal right to think, then the
+question is forever solved; but as long as organized and powerful
+churches, pretending to hold the keys of heaven and hell, denounce every
+person as an outcast and criminal who thinks for himself and denies
+their authority, the world will be filled with hatred and suffering. To
+hate man and worship God seems to be the sum of all the creeds.
+</p>
+<p>
+That which has happened in most countries has happened in ours. When
+a religion is founded, the educated, the powerful&mdash;that is to say, the
+priests and nobles, tell the ignorant and superstitious&mdash;that is to
+say, the people, that the religion of their country was given to their
+fathers by God himself; that it is the only true religion; that all
+others were conceived in falsehood and brought forth in fraud, and that
+all who believe in the true religion will be happy forever, while all
+others will burn in hell. For the purpose of governing the people, that
+is to say, for the purpose of being supported by the people, the priests
+and nobles declare this religion to be sacred, and that whoever adds to,
+or takes from it, will be burned here by man, and hereafter by God. The
+result of this is, that the priests and nobles will not allow the people
+to change; and when, after a time, the priests, having intellectually
+advanced, wish to take a step in the direction of progress, the people
+will not allow them to change. At first, the rabble are enslaved by the
+priests, and afterwards the rabble become the masters.
+</p>
+<p>
+One of the first things I wish to do, is to free the orthodox clergy.
+I am a great friend of theirs, and in spite of all they may say against
+me, I am going to do them a great and lasting service. Upon their necks
+are visible the marks of the collar, and upon their backs those of the
+lash. They are not allowed to read and think for themselves. They are
+taught like parrots, and the best are those who repeat, with the fewest
+mistakes, the sentences they have been taught. They sit like owls upon
+some dead limb of the tree of knowledge, and hoot the same old hoots
+that have been hooted for eighteen hundred years. Their congregations
+are not grand enough, nor sufficiently civilized, to be willing that
+the poor preachers shall think for themselves. They are not employed for
+that purpose. Investigation regarded as a dangerous experiment, and the
+ministers are warned that none of that kind of work will be tolerated.
+They are notified to stand by the old creed, and to avoid all original
+thought, as a mortal pestilence. Every minister is employed like an
+attorney&mdash;either for plaintiff or defendant,&mdash;and he is expected to
+be true to his client. If he changes his mind, he is regarded as
+a deserter, and denounced, hated, and slandered accordingly. Every
+orthodox clergyman agrees not to change. He contracts not to find new
+facts, and makes a bargain that he will deny them if he does. Such is
+the position of a Protestant minister in this nineteenth century. His
+condition excites my pity; and to better it, I am going to do what
+little I can.
+</p>
+<p>
+Some of the clergy have the independence to break away, and the
+intellect to maintain themselves as free men, but the most are compelled
+to submit to the dictation of the orthodox, and the dead. They are
+not employed to give their thoughts, but simply to repeat the ideas of
+others. They are not expected to give even the doubts that may suggest
+themselves, but are required to walk in the narrow, verdureless path
+trodden by the ignorance of the past. The forests and fields on either
+side are nothing to them. They must not even look at the purple hills,
+nor pause to hear the babble of the brooks. They must remain in the
+dusty road where the guide-boards are. They must confine themselves
+to the "fall of man," the expulsion from the garden, the "scheme of
+salvation," the "second birth," the atonement, the happiness of the
+redeemed, and the misery of the lost. They must be careful not to
+express any new ideas upon these great questions. It is much safer for
+them to quote from the works of the dead. The more vividly they describe
+the sufferings of the unregenerate, of those who attended theatres and
+balls, and drank wine in summer gardens on the Sabbath-day, and laughed
+at priests, the better ministers they are supposed to be. They must show
+that misery fits the good for heaven, while happiness prepares the bad
+for hell; that the wicked get all their good things in this life, and
+the good all their evil; that in this world God punishes the people he
+loves, and in the next, the ones he hates; that happiness makes us bad
+here, but not in heaven; that pain makes us good here, but not in hell.
+No matter how absurd these things may appear to the carnal mind, they
+must be preached and they must be believed. If they were reasonable,
+there would be no virtue in believing. Even the publicans and sinners
+believe reasonable things. To believe without evidence, or in spite of
+it, is accounted as righteousness to the sincere and humble Christian.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ministers are in duty bound to denounce all intellectual pride, and
+show that we are never quite so dear to God as when we admit that we are
+poor, corrupt and idiotic worms; that we never should have been born;
+that we ought to be damned without the least delay; that we are so
+infamous that we like to enjoy ourselves; that we love our wives and
+children better than our God; that we are generous only because we are
+vile; that we are honest from the meanest motives, and that sometimes we
+have fallen so low that we have had doubts about the inspiration of the
+Jewish Scriptures. In short, they are expected to denounce all pleasant
+paths and rustling trees, to curse the grass and flowers, and glorify
+the dust and weeds. They are expected to malign the wicked people in the
+green and happy fields, who sit and laugh beside the gurgling springs or
+climb the hills and wander as they will. They are expected to point out
+the dangers of freedom, the safety of implicit obedience, and to show
+the wickedness of philosophy, the goodness of faith, the immorality of
+science and the purity of ignorance.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now and then a few pious people discover some young man of a religious
+turn of mind and a consumptive habit of body, not quite sickly enough
+to die, nor healthy enough to be wicked. The idea occurs to them that
+he would make a good orthodox minister. They take up a contribution, and
+send the young man to some theological school where he can be taught to
+repeat a creed and despise reason. Should it turn out that the young
+man had some mind of his own, and, after graduating, should change his
+opinions and preach a different doctrine from that taught in the school,
+every man who contributed a dollar towards his education would feel that
+he had been robbed, and would denounce him as a dishonest and ungrateful
+wretch.
+</p>
+<p>
+The pulpit should not be a pillory. Congregations should allow the
+minister a little liberty. They should, at least, permit him to tell the
+truth.
+</p>
+<p>
+They have, in Massachusetts, at a place called Andover, a kind of
+minister factory, where each professor takes an oath once in five
+years&mdash;that time being considered the life of an oath&mdash;that he has not,
+during the last five years, and will not, during the next five years,
+intellectually advance. There is probably no oath that they could easier
+keep. Probably, since the foundation stone of that institution was laid
+there has not been a single case of perjury. The old creed is still
+taught. They still insist that God is infinitely wise, powerful and
+good, and that all men are totally depraved. They insist that the best
+man God ever made, deserved to be damned the moment he was finished.
+Andover puts its brand upon every minister it turns out, the same as
+Sheffield and Birmingham brand their wares, and all who see the brand
+know exactly what the minister believes, the books he has read, the
+arguments he relies on, and just what he intellectually is. They know
+just what he can be depended on to preach, and that he will continue to
+shrink and shrivel, and grow solemnly stupid day by day until he reaches
+the Andover of the grave and becomes truly orthodox forever.
+</p>
+<p>
+I have not singled out the Andover factory because it is worse than the
+others. They are all about the same. The professors, for the most part,
+are ministers who failed in the pulpit and were retired to the seminary
+on account of their deficiency in reason and their excess of faith. As
+a rule, they know nothing of this world, and far less of the next; but
+they have the power of stating the most absurd propositions with faces
+solemn as stupidity touched by fear.
+</p>
+<p>
+Something should be done for the liberation of these men. They should
+be allowed to grow&mdash;to have sunlight and air. They should no longer
+be chained and tied to confessions of faith, to mouldy books and
+musty creeds. Thousands of ministers are anxious to give their honest
+thoughts. The hands of wives and babes now stop their mouths. They
+must have bread, and so the husbands and fathers are forced to preach
+a doctrine that they hold in scorn. For the sake of shelter, food and
+clothes, they are obliged to defend the childish miracles of the past,
+and denounce the sublime discoveries of to-day. They are compelled to
+attack all modern thought, to point out the dangers of science, the
+wickedness of investigation and the corrupting influence of logic. It is
+for them to show that virtue rests upon ignorance and faith, while vice
+impudently feeds and fattens upon fact and demonstration. It is a part
+of their business to malign and vilify the Voltaires, Humes, Paines,
+Humboldts, Tyndalls, Haeckels, Darwins, Spencers, and Drapers, and
+to bow with uncovered heads before the murderers, adulterers, and
+persecutors of the world. They are, for the most part, engaged in
+poisoning the minds of the young, prejudicing children against science,
+teaching the astronomy and geology of the Bible, and inducing all to
+desert the sublime standard of reason.
+</p>
+<p>
+These orthodox ministers do not add to the sum of knowledge. They
+produce nothing. They live upon alms. They hate laughter and joy. They
+officiate at weddings, sprinkle water upon babes, and utter meaningless
+words and barren promises above the dead. They laugh at the agony of
+unbelievers, mock at their tears, and of their sorrows make a jest.
+There are some noble exceptions. Now and then a pulpit holds a brave
+and honest man. Their congregations are willing that they should
+think&mdash;willing that their ministers should have a little freedom.
+</p>
+<p>
+As we become civilized, more and more liberty will be accorded to these
+men, until finally ministers will give their best and highest thoughts.
+The congregations will finally get tired of hearing about the patriarchs
+and saints, the miracles and wonders, and will insist upon knowing
+something about the men and women of our day, and the accomplishments
+and discoveries of our time. They will finally insist upon knowing how
+to escape the evils of this world instead of the next. They will ask
+light upon the enigmas of this life. They will wish to know what we
+shall do with our criminals instead of what God will do with his&mdash;how
+we shall do away with beggary and want&mdash;with crime and misery&mdash;with
+prostitution, disease and famine,&mdash;with tyranny in all its cruel
+forms&mdash;with prisons and scaffolds, and how we shall reward the honest
+workers, and fill the world with happy homes! These are the problems
+for the pulpits and congregations of an enlightened future. If Science
+cannot finally answer these questions, it is a vain and worthless thing.
+</p>
+<p>
+The clergy, however, will continue to answer them in the old way, until
+their congregations are good enough to set them free. They will still
+talk about believing in the Lord Jesus Christ, as though that were the
+only remedy for all human ills. They will still teach that retrogression
+is the only path that leads to light; that we must go back, that faith
+is the only sure guide, and that reason is a delusive glare, lighting
+only the road to eternal pain.
+</p>
+<p>
+Until the clergy are free they cannot be intellectually honest. We can
+never tell what they really believe until they know that they can safely
+speak. They console themselves now by a secret resolution to be as
+liberal as they dare, with the hope that they can finally educate
+their congregations to the point of allowing them to think a little for
+themselves. They hardly know what they ought to do. The best part of
+their lives has been wasted in studying subjects of no possible value.
+Most of them are married, have families, and know but one way of making
+their living. Some of them say that if they do not preach these foolish
+dogmas, others will, and that they may through fear, after all, restrain
+mankind. Besides, they hate publicly to admit that they are mistaken,
+that the whole thing is a delusion, that the "scheme of salvation" is
+absurd, and that the Bible is no better than some other books, and worse
+than most.
+</p>
+<p>
+You can hardly expect a bishop to leave his palace, or the pope to
+vacate the Vatican. As long as people want popes, plenty of hypocrites
+will be found to take the place. And as long as labor fatigues, there
+will be found a good many men willing to preach once a week, if other
+folks will work and give them bread. In other words, while the demand
+lasts, the supply will never fail.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the people were a little more ignorant, astrology would flourish&mdash;if
+a little more enlightened, religion would perish!
+</p>
+<center>
+II. FREE SCHOOLS.
+</center>
+<p>
+It is also my desire to free the schools. When a professor in a college
+finds a fact, he should make it known, even if it is inconsistent with
+something Moses said. Public opinion must not compel the professor to
+hide a fact, and, "like the base Indian, throw the pearl away." With the
+single exception of Cornell, there is not a college in the United
+States where truth has ever been a welcome guest. The moment one of the
+teachers denies the inspiration of the Bible, he is discharged. If he
+discovers a fact inconsistent with that book, so much the worse for the
+fact, and especially for the discoverer of the fact. He must not corrupt
+the minds of his pupils with demonstrations. He must beware of
+every truth that cannot, in some way be made to harmonize with the
+superstitions of the Jews. Science has nothing in common with religion.
+Facts and miracles never did, and never will agree. They are not in the
+least related. They are deadly foes. What has religion to do with
+facts? Nothing. Can there be Methodist mathematics, Catholic astronomy,
+Presbyterian geology, Baptist biology, or Episcopal botany? Why, then,
+should a sectarian college exist? Only that which somebody knows should
+be taught in our schools. We should not collect taxes to pay people for
+guessing. The common school is the bread of life for the people, and it
+should not be touched by the withering hand of superstition.
+</p>
+<p>
+Our country will never be filled with great institutions of learning
+until there is an absolute divorce between Church and School. As long
+as the mutilated records of a barbarous people are placed by priest and
+professor above the reason of mankind, we shall reap but little benefit
+from church or school.
+</p>
+<p>
+Instead of dismissing professors for finding something out, let us
+rather discharge those who do not. Let each teacher understand that
+investigation is not dangerous for him; that his bread is safe, no
+matter how much truth he may discover, and that his salary will not be
+reduced, simply because he finds that the ancient Jews did not know the
+entire history of the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Besides, it is not fair to make the Catholic support a Protestant
+school, nor is it just to collect taxes from infidels and atheists to
+support schools in which any system of religion is taught.
+</p>
+<p>
+The sciences are not sectarian. People do not persecute each other on
+account of disagreements in mathematics. Families are not divided about
+botany, and astronomy does not even tend to make a man hate his father
+and mother. It is what people do not know, that they persecute each
+other about. Science will bring, not a sword, but peace.
+</p>
+<p>
+Just as long as religion has control of the schools, science will be an
+outcast. Let us free our institutions of learning. Let us dedicate them
+to the science of eternal truth. Let us tell every teacher to ascertain
+all the facts he can&mdash;to give us light, to follow Nature, no matter
+where she leads; to be infinitely true to himself and us; to feel that
+he is without a chain, except the obligation to be honest; that he is
+bound by no books, by no creed, neither by the sayings of the dead nor
+of the living; that he is asked to look with his own eyes, to reason for
+himself without fear, to investigate in every possible direction, and to
+bring us the fruit of all his work.
+</p>
+<p>
+At present, a good many men engaged in scientific pursuits, and who
+have signally failed in gaining recognition among their fellows, are
+endeavoring to make reputations among the churches by delivering weak
+and vapid lectures upon the "harmony of Genesis and Geology." Like all
+hypocrites, these men overstate the case to such a degree, and so
+turn and pervert facts and words that they succeed only in gaining the
+applause of other hypocrites like themselves. Among the great scientists
+they are regarded as generals regard sutlers who trade with both armies.
+</p>
+<p>
+Surely the time must come when the wealth of the world will not be
+wasted in the propagation of ignorant creeds and miraculous mistakes.
+The time must come when churches and cathedrals will be dedicated to the
+use of man; when minister and priest will deem the discoveries of the
+living of more importance than the errors of the dead; when the truths
+of Nature will outrank the "sacred" falsehoods of the past, and when a
+single fact will outweigh all the miracles of Holy Writ.
+</p>
+<p>
+Who can over estimate the progress of the world if all the money
+wasted in superstition could be used to enlighten, elevate and civilize
+mankind?
+</p>
+<p>
+When every church becomes a school, every cathedral a university, every
+clergyman a teacher, and all their hearers brave and honest
+thinkers, then, and not until then, will the dream of poet, patriot,
+philanthropist and philosopher, become a real and blessed truth.
+</p>
+<center>
+III. THE POLITICIANS.
+</center>
+<p>
+I would like also to liberate the politician. At present, the successful
+office-seeker is a good deal like the centre of the earth; he weighs
+nothing himself, but draws everything else to him. There are so many
+societies, so many churches, so many isms, that it is almost impossible
+for an independent man to succeed in a political career. Candidates are
+forced to pretend that they are Catholics with Protestant proclivities,
+or Christians with liberal tendencies, or temperance men who now and
+then take a glass of wine, or, that although not members of any church
+their wives are, and that they subscribe liberally to all. The result of
+all this is that we reward hypocrisy and elect men entirely destitute of
+real principle; and this will never change until the people become grand
+enough to allow each other to do their own thinking, our Government
+should be entirely and purely secular. The religious views of a
+candidate should be kept entirely out of sight. He should not be
+compelled to give his opinion as to the inspiration of the Bible, the
+propriety of infant baptism, or the immaculate conception. All these
+things are private and personal. He should be allowed to settle such
+things for himself, and should he decide contrary to the law and will of
+God, let him settle the matter with God. The people ought to be wise
+enough to select as their officers men who know something of political
+affairs, who comprehend the present greatness, and clearly perceive the
+future grandeur of our country. If we were in a storm at sea, with deck
+wave-washed and masts strained and bent with storm, and it was necessary
+to reef the top sail, we certainly would not ask the brave sailor who
+volunteered to go aloft, what his opinion was on the five points of
+Calvinism. Our Government has nothing to do with religion. It is neither
+Christian nor pagan; it is secular. But as long as the people persist in
+voting for or against men on account of their religious views, just so
+long will hypocrisy hold place and power. Just so long will the
+candidates crawl in the dust&mdash;hide their opinions, flatter those with
+whom they differ, pretend to agree with those whom they despise; and
+just so long will honest men be trampled under foot. Churches are
+becoming political organizations. Nearly every Catholic is a Democrat;
+nearly every Methodist in the North is a Republican.
+</p>
+<p>
+It probably will not be long until the churches will divide as sharply
+upon political, as upon theological questions; and when that day comes,
+if there are not liberals enough to hold the balance of power, this
+Government will be destroyed. The liberty of man is not safe in the
+hands of any church. Wherever the Bible and sword are in partnership,
+man is a slave.
+</p>
+<p>
+All laws for the purpose of making man worship God, are born of the same
+spirit that kindled the fires of the <i>auto da fe</i>, and lovingly built
+the dungeons of the Inquisition. All laws defining and punishing
+blasphemy&mdash;making it a crime to give your honest ideas about the Bible,
+or to laugh at the ignorance of the ancient Jews, or to enjoy yourself
+on the Sabbath, or to give your opinion of Jehovah, were passed by
+impudent bigots, and should be at once repealed by honest men. An
+infinite God ought to be able to protect himself, without going in
+partnership with State Legislatures. Certainly he ought not so to act
+that laws become necessary to keep him from being laughed at. No one
+thinks of protecting Shakespeare from ridicule, by the threat of fine
+and imprisonment. It strikes me that God might write a book that would
+not necessarily excite the laughter of his children. In fact, I think
+it would be safe to say that a real God could produce a work that would
+excite the admiration of mankind. Surely politicians could be better
+employed than in passing laws to protect the literary reputation of the
+Jewish God.
+</p>
+<center>
+IV. MAN AND WOMAN
+</center>
+<p>
+Let us forget that we are Baptists, Methodists,
+</p>
+<p>
+Catholics, Presbyterians, or Freethinkers, and remember only that we are
+men and women. After all, man and woman are the highest possible titles.
+All other names belittle us, and show that we have, to a certain extent,
+given up our individuality, and have consented to wear the collar of
+authority&mdash;that we are followers. Throwing away these names, let us
+examine these questions not as partisans, but as human beings with hopes
+and fears in common.
+</p>
+<p>
+We know that our opinions depend, to a great degree, upon our
+surroundings&mdash;upon race, country, and education. We are all the result
+of numberless conditions, and inherit vices and virtues, truths and
+prejudices. If we had been born in England, surrounded by wealth and
+clothed with power, most of us would have been Episcopalians, and
+believed in church and state. We should have insisted that the people
+needed a religion, and that not having intellect enough to provide one
+for themselves, it was our duty to make one for them, and then compel
+them to support it. We should have believed it indecent to officiate in
+a pulpit without wearing a gown, and that prayers should be read from
+a book. Had we belonged to the lower classes, we might have been
+dissenters and protested against the mummeries of the High Church.
+Had we been born in Turkey, most of us would have been Mohammedans and
+believed in the inspiration of the Koran. We should have believed that
+Mohammed actually visited heaven and became acquainted with an angel by
+the name of Gabriel, who was so broad between the eyes that it required
+three hundred days for a very smart camel to travel the distance. If
+some man had denied this story we should probably have denounced him as
+a dangerous person, one who was endeavoring to undermine the foundations
+of society, and to destroy all distinction between virtue and vice. We
+should have said to him, "What do you propose to give us in place
+of that angel? We cannot afford to give up an angel of that size for
+nothing." We would have insisted that the best and wisest men
+believed the Koran. We would have quoted from the works and letters of
+philosophers, generals and sultans, to show that the Koran was the best
+of books, and that Turkey was indebted to that book and to that alone
+for its greatness and prosperity. We would have asked that man whether
+he knew more than all the great minds of his country, whether he was so
+much wiser than his fathers? We would have pointed out to him the fact
+that thousands had been consoled in the hour of death by passages from
+the Koran; that they had died with glazed eyes brightened by visions of
+the heavenly harem, and gladly left this world of grief and tears.
+We would have regarded Christians as the vilest of men, and on all
+occasions would have repeated "There is but one God, and Mohammed is his
+prophet!"
+</p>
+<p>
+So, if we had been born in India, we should in all probability have
+believed in the religion of that country. We should have regarded the
+old records as true and sacred, and looked upon a wandering priest as
+better than the men from whom he begged, and by whose labor he lived.
+We should have believed in a god with three heads instead of three gods
+with one head, as we do now.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now and then some one says that the religion of his father and mother
+is good enough for him, and wonders why anybody should desire a better.
+Surely we are not bound to follow our parents in religion any more than
+in politics, science or art. China has been petrified by the worship
+of ancestors. If our parents had been satisfied with the religion of
+theirs, we would be still less advanced than we are. If we are, in any
+way, bound by the belief of our fathers, the doctrine will hold good
+back to the first people who had a religion; and if this doctrine is
+true, we ought now to be believers in that first religion. In other
+words, we would all be barbarians. You cannot show real respect to your
+parents by perpetuating their errors. Good fathers and mothers wish
+their children to advance, to overcome obstacles which baffled them, and
+to correct the errors of their education. If you wish to reflect credit
+upon your parents, accomplish more than they did, solve problems that
+they could not understand, and build better than they knew. To sacrifice
+your manhood upon the grave of your father is an honor to neither. Why
+should a son who has examined a subject, throw away his reason and adopt
+the views of his mother? Is not such a course dishonorable to both?
+</p>
+<p>
+We must remember that this "ancestor" argument is as old at least as
+the second generation of men, that it has served no purpose except to
+enslave mankind, and results mostly from the fact that acquiescence
+is easier than investigation. This argument pushed to its logical
+conclusion, would prevent the advance of all people whose parents were
+not Freethinkers.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is hard for many people to give up the religion in which they were
+born; to admit that their fathers were utterly mistaken, and that the
+sacred records of their country are but collections of myths and fables.
+</p>
+<p>
+But when we look for a moment at the world, we find that each nation has
+its "sacred records"&mdash;its religion, and its ideas of worship. Certainly
+all cannot be right; and as it would require a life time to investigate
+the claims of these various systems, it is hardly fair to damn a man
+forever, simply because he happens to believe the wrong one. All these
+religions were produced by barbarians. Civilized nations have contented
+themselves with changing the religions of their barbaric ancestors, but
+they have made none. Nearly all these religions are intensely selfish.
+Each one was made by some contemptible little nation that regarded
+itself as of almost infinite importance, and looked upon the other
+nations as beneath the notice of their god. In all these countries it
+was a crime to deny the sacred records, to laugh at the priests, to
+speak disrespectfully of the gods, to fail to divide your substance
+with the lazy hypocrites who managed your affairs in the next world upon
+condition that you would support them in this. In the olden time
+these theological people who quartered themselves upon the honest
+and industrious, were called soothsayers, seers, charmers, prophets,
+enchanters, sorcerers, wizards, astrologers, and impostors, but now,
+they are known as clergymen.
+</p>
+<p>
+We are no exception to the general rule, and consequently have our
+sacred books as well as the rest. Of course, it is claimed by many of
+our people that our books are the only true ones, the only ones that the
+real God ever wrote, or had anything whatever to do with. They insist
+that all other sacred books were written by hypocrites and impostors;
+that the Jews were the only people that God ever had any personal
+intercourse with, and that all other prophets and seers were inspired
+only by impudence and mendacity. True, it seems somewhat strange that
+God should have chosen a barbarous and unknown people who had little or
+nothing to do with the other nations of the earth, as his messengers to
+the rest of mankind.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is not easy to account for an infinite God making people so low in
+the scale of intellect as to require a revelation. Neither is it easy to
+perceive why, if a revelation was necessary for all, it was made only
+to a few. Of course, I know that it is extremely wicked to suggest these
+thoughts, and that ignorance is the only armor that can effectually
+protect you from the wrath of God. I am aware that investigators with
+all their genius, never find the road to heaven; that those who look
+where they are going are sure to miss it, and that only those who
+voluntarily put out their eyes and implicitly depend upon blindness can
+surely keep the narrow path.
+</p>
+<p>
+Whoever reads our sacred book is compelled to believe it or suffer
+forever the torments of the lost. We are told that we have the privilege
+of examining it for ourselves; but this privilege is only extended to
+us on the condition that we believe it whether it appears reasonable or
+not. We may disagree with others as much as we please upon the meaning
+of all passages in the Bible, but we must not deny the truth of a single
+word. We must believe that the book is inspired. If we obey its every
+precept without believing in its inspiration we will be damned just as
+certainly as though we disobeyed its every word. We have no right to
+weigh it in the scales of reason&mdash;to test it by the laws of nature, or
+the facts of observation and experience. To do this, we are told, is to
+put ourselves above the word of God, and sit in judgment on the works of
+our creator.
+</p>
+<p>
+For my part, I cannot admit that belief is a voluntary thing. It seems
+to me that evidence, even in spite of ourselves, will have its weight,
+and that whatever our wish may be, we are compelled to stand with
+fairness by the scales, and give the exact result. It will not do to say
+that we reject the Bible because we are wicked. Our wickedness must be
+ascertained not from our belief but from our acts.
+</p>
+<p>
+I am told by the clergy that I ought not to attack the Bible; that I am
+leading thousands to perdition and rendering certain the damnation of my
+own soul. They have had the kindness to advise me that, if my object is
+to make converts, I am pursuing the wrong course. They tell me to use
+gentler expressions, and more cunning words. Do they really wish me
+to make more converts? If their advice is honest, they are traitors to
+their trust. If their advice is not honest, then they are unfair with
+me. Certainly they should wish me to pursue the course that will make
+the fewest converts, and yet they pretend to tell me how my influence
+could be increased. It may be, that upon this principle John Bright
+advises America to adopt free trade, so that our country can become a
+successful rival of Great Britain. Sometimes I think that even ministers
+are not entirely candid.
+</p>
+<p>
+Notwithstanding the advice of the clergy, I have concluded to pursue my
+own course, to tell my honest thoughts, and to have my freedom in this
+world whatever my fate may be in the next.
+</p>
+<p>
+The real oppressor, enslaver and corrupter of the people is the Bible.
+That book is the chain that binds, the dungeon that holds the clergy.
+That book spreads the pall of superstition over the colleges and
+schools. That book puts out the eyes of science, and makes honest
+investigation a crime. That book unmans the politician and degrades the
+people. That book fills the world with bigotry, hypocrisy and fear.
+It plays the same part in our country that has been played by "sacred
+records" in all the nations of the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+A little while ago I saw one of the Bibles of the Middle Ages. It was
+about two feet in length, and one and a half in width. It had immense
+oaken covers, with hasps, and clasps, and hinges large enough almost
+for the doors of a penitentiary. It was covered with pictures of winged
+angels and aureoled saints. In my imagination I saw this book carried
+to the cathedral altar in solemn pomp&mdash;heard the chant of robed and
+kneeling priests, felt the strange tremor of the organ's peal; saw the
+colored light streaming through windows stained and touched by blood
+and flame&mdash;the swinging censer with its perfumed incense rising to the
+mighty roof, dim with height and rich with legend carved in stone, while
+on the walls was hung, written in light, and shade, and all the colors
+that can tell of joy and tears, the pictured history of the martyred
+Christ. The people fell upon their knees. The book was opened, and the
+priest read the messages from God to man. To the multitude, the book
+itself was evidence enough that it was not the work of human hands. How
+could those little marks and lines and dots contain, like tombs, the
+thoughts of men, and how could they, touched by a ray of light from
+human eyes, give up their dead? How could these characters span the vast
+chasm dividing the present from the past, and make it possible for the
+living still to hear the voices of the dead?
+</p>
+<center>
+V. THE PENTATEUCH
+</center>
+<p>
+The first five books in our Bible are known as the Pentateuch. For a
+long time it was supposed that Moses was the author, and among the
+ignorant the supposition still prevails. As a matter of fact, it seems
+to be well settled that Moses had nothing to do with these books, and
+that they were not written until he had been dust and ashes for hundreds
+of years. But, as all the churches still insist that he was the author,
+that he wrote even an account of his own death and burial, let us speak
+of him as though these books were in fact written by him. As the
+Christians maintain that God was the real author, it makes but little
+difference whom he employed as his pen.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nearly all authors of sacred books have given an account of the creation
+of the universe, the origin of matter, and the destiny of the human
+race, all have pointed out the obligation that man is under to his
+creator for having placed him upon the earth, and allowed him to live
+and suffer, and have taught that nothing short of the most abject
+worship could possibly compensate God for his trouble and labor suffered
+and done for the good of man. They have nearly all insisted that we
+should thank God for all that is good in life; but they have not all
+informed us as to whom we should hold responsible for the evils we
+endure.
+</p>
+<p>
+Moses differed from most of the makers of sacred books by his failure
+to say anything of a future life, by failing to promise heaven, and to
+threaten hell. Upon the subject of a future state, there is not one
+word in the Pentateuch. Probably at that early day God did not deem
+it important to make a revelation as to the eternal destiny of man.
+He seems to have thought that he could control the Jews, at least, by
+rewards and punishments in this world, and so he kept the frightful
+realities of eternal joy and torment a profound secret from the people
+of his choice. He thought it far more important to tell the Jews their
+origin than to enlighten them as to their destiny.
+</p>
+<p>
+We must remember that every tribe and nation has some way in which, the
+more striking phenomena of nature are accounted for. These accounts
+are handed down by tradition, changed by numberless narrators as
+intelligence increases, or to account for newly discovered facts, or for
+the purpose of satisfying the appetite for the marvelous.
+</p>
+<p>
+The way in which a tribe or nation accounts for day and night, the
+change of seasons, the fall of snow and rain, the flight of birds,
+the origin of the rainbow, the peculiarities of animals, the dreams
+of sleep, the visions of the insane, the existence of earthquakes,
+volcanoes, storms, lightning and the thousand things that attract the
+attention and excite the wonder, fear or admiration of mankind, may be
+called the philosophy of that tribe or nation. And as all phenomena are,
+by savage and barbaric man accounted for as the action of intelligent
+beings for the accomplishment of certain objects, and as these beings
+were supposed to have the power to assist or injure man, certain things
+were supposed necessary for man to do in order to gain the assistance,
+and avoid the anger of these gods. Out of this belief grew certain
+ceremonies, and these ceremonies united with the belief, formed
+religion; and consequently every religion has for its foundation a
+misconception of the cause of phenomena.
+</p>
+<p>
+All worship is necessarily based upon the belief that some being exists
+who can, if he will, change the natural order of events. The savage
+prays to a stone that he calls a god, while the Christian prays to a god
+that he calls a spirit, and the prayers of both are equally useful. The
+savage and the Christian put behind the Universe an intelligent cause,
+and this cause whether represented by one god or many, has been, in all
+ages, the object of all worship. To carry a fetich, to utter a prayer,
+to count beads, to abstain from food, to sacrifice a lamb, a child or an
+enemy, are simply different ways by which the accomplishment of the same
+object is sought, and are all the offspring of the same error.
+</p>
+<p>
+Many systems of religion must have existed many ages before the art of
+writing was discovered, and must have passed through many changes before
+the stories, miracles, histories, prophecies and mistakes became fixed
+and petrified in written words. After that, change was possible only by
+giving new meanings to old words, a process rendered necessary by the
+continual acquisition of facts somewhat inconsistent with a literal
+interpretation of the "sacred records." In this way an honest faith
+often prolongs its life by dishonest methods; and in this way the
+Christians of to-day are trying to harmonize the Mosaic account of
+creation with the theories and discoveries of modern science.
+</p>
+<p>
+Admitting that Moses was the author of the Pentateuch, or that he gave
+to the Jews a religion, the question arises as to where he obtained
+his information. We are told by the theologians that he received his
+knowledge from God, and that every word he wrote was and is the exact
+truth. It is admitted at the same time that he was an adopted son of
+Pharaoh's daughter, and enjoyed the rank and privilege of a prince.
+Under such circumstances, he must have been well acquainted with the
+literature, philosophy and religion of the Egyptians, and must have
+known what they believed and taught as to the creation of the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, if the account of the origin of this earth as given by Moses is
+substantially like that given by the Egyptians, then we must conclude
+that he learned it from them. Should we imagine that he was divinely
+inspired because he gave to the Jews what the Egyptians had given him?
+</p>
+<p>
+The Egyptian priests taught <i>first</i>, that a god created the original
+matter, leaving it in a state of chaos; <i>second</i>, that a god moulded it
+into form; <i>third</i>, that the breath of a god moved upon the face of
+the deep; <i>fourth</i>, that a god created simply by saying "Let it be;"
+<i>fifth</i>, that a god created light before the sun existed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing can be clearer than that Moses received from the Egyptians the
+principal parts of his narrative, making such changes and additions as
+were necessary to satisfy the peculiar superstitions of his own people.
+</p>
+<p>
+If some man at the present day should assert that he had received from
+God the theories of evolution, the survival of the fittest, and the
+law of heredity, and we should afterwards find that he was not only an
+Englishman, but had lived in the family of Charles Darwin, we certainly
+would account for his having these theories in a natural way, So, if
+Darwin himself should pretend that he was inspired, and had obtained
+his peculiar theories from God, we should probably reply that his
+grandfather suggested the same ideas, and that Lamarck published
+substantially the same theories the same year that Mr. Darwin was born.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, if we have sufficient courage, we will, by the same course of
+reasoning, account for the story of creation found in the Bible. We
+will say that it contains the belief of Moses, and that he received his
+information from the Egyptians, and not from God. If we take the account
+as the absolute truth and use it for the purpose of determining the
+value of modern thought, scientific advancement becomes impossible. And
+even if the account of the creation as given by Moses should turn out
+to be true, and should be so admitted by all the scientific world, the
+claim that he was inspired would still be without the least particle
+of proof. We would be forced to admit that he knew more than we had
+supposed. It certainly is no proof that a man is inspired simply because
+he is right.
+</p>
+<p>
+No one pretends that Shakespeare was inspired, and yet all the writers
+of the books of the Old Testament put together, could not have produced
+Hamlet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why should we, looking upon some rough and awkward thing, or god in
+stone, say that it must have been produced by some inspired sculptor,
+and with the same breath pronounce the <i>Venus de Milo</i> to be the work
+of man? Why should we, looking at some ancient daub of angel, saint or
+virgin, say its painter must have been assisted by a god?
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us account for all we see by the facts we know. If there are things
+for which we cannot account, let us wait for light. To account for
+anything by supernatural agencies is, in fact to say that we do not
+know. Theology is not what we know about God, but what we do not know
+about Nature. In order to increase our respect for the Bible, it became
+necessary for the priests to exalt and extol that book, and at the same
+time to decry and belittle the reasoning powers of man. The whole
+power of the pulpit has been used for hundreds of years to destroy the
+confidence of man in himself&mdash;to induce him to distrust his own powers
+of thought, to believe that he was wholly unable to decide any question
+for himself, and that all human virtue consists in faith and obedience.
+The church has said, "Believe, and obey! If you reason, you will become
+an unbeliever, and unbelievers will be lost. If you disobey, you will
+do so through vain pride and curiosity, and will, like Adam and Eve, be
+thrust from Paradise forever!"
+</p>
+<p>
+For my part, I care nothing for what the church says, except in so far
+as it accords with my reason; and the Bible is nothing to me, only in so
+far as it agrees with what I think or know.
+</p>
+<p>
+All books should be examined in the same spirit, and truth should be
+welcomed and falsehood exposed, no matter in what volume they may be
+found.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us in this spirit examine the Pentateuch; and if anything appears
+unreasonable, contradictory or absurd, let us have the honesty and
+courage to admit it. Certainly no good can result either from deceiving
+ourselves or others. Many millions have implicitly believed this book,
+and have just as implicitly believed that polygamy was sanctioned by
+God. Millions have regarded this book as the foundation of all
+human progress, and at the same time looked upon slavery as a divine
+institution. Millions have declared this book to have been infinitely
+holy, and to prove that they were right, have imprisoned, robbed
+and burned their fellow-men. The inspiration of this book has been
+established by famine, sword and fire, by dungeon, chain and whip, by
+dagger and by rack, by force and fear and fraud, and generations have
+been frightened by threats of hell, and bribed with promises of heaven.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us examine a portion of this book, not in the darkness of our fear,
+but in the light of reason.
+</p>
+<p>
+And first, let us examine the account given of the creation of this
+world, commenced, according to the Bible, on Monday morning about five
+thousand eight hundred and eighty-three years ago.
+</p>
+<center>
+VI. MONDAY.
+</center>
+<p>
+Moses commences his story by telling us that in the beginning God
+created the heaven and the earth.
+</p>
+<p>
+If this means anything, it means that God produced, caused to exist,
+called into being, the heaven and the earth. It will not do to say that
+he formed the heaven and the earth of previously existing matter. Moses
+conveys, and intended to convey the idea that the matter of which the
+heaven and the earth are composed, was created.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is impossible for me to conceive of something being created from
+nothing. Nothing, regarded in the light of a raw material, is a decided
+failure. I cannot conceive of matter apart from force. Neither is it
+possible to think of force disconnected with matter. You cannot imagine
+matter going back to absolute nothing. Neither can you imagine nothing
+being changed into something. You may be eternally damned if you do not
+say that you can conceive these things, but you cannot conceive them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Such is the constitution of the human mind that it cannot even think of
+a commencement or an end of matter, or force.
+</p>
+<p>
+If God created the universe, there was a time when he commenced to
+create. Back of that commencement there must have been an eternity. In
+that eternity what was this God doing? He certainly did not think.
+There was nothing to think about. He did not remember. Nothing had ever
+happened. What did he do? Can you imagine anything more absurd than an
+infinite intelligence in infinite nothing wasting an eternity?
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not pretend to tell how all these things really are; but I do
+insist that a statement that cannot possibly be comprehended by any
+human being, and that appears utterly impossible, repugnant to every
+fact of experience, and contrary to everything that we really know, must
+be rejected by every honest man.
+</p>
+<p>
+We can conceive of eternity, because we cannot conceive of a cessation
+of time. We can conceive of infinite space because we cannot conceive
+of so much matter that our imagination will not stand upon the farthest
+star, and see infinite space beyond. In other words, we cannot conceive
+of a cessation of time; therefore eternity is a necessity of the mind.
+Eternity sustains the same relation to time that space does to matter.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the time of Moses, it was perfectly safe for him to write an account
+of the creation of the world. He had simply to put in form the crude
+notions of the people. At that time, no other Jew could have written
+a better account. Upon that subject he felt at liberty to give his
+imagination full play. There was no one who could authoritatively
+contradict anything he might say. It was substantially the same story
+that had been imprinted in curious characters upon the clay records
+of Babylon, the gigantic monuments of Egypt, and the gloomy temples of
+India. In those days there was an almost infinite difference between
+the educated and ignorant. The people were controlled almost entirely
+by signs and wonders. By the lever of fear, priests moved the world. The
+sacred records were made and kept, and altered by them. The people could
+not read, and looked upon one who could, as almost a god. In our day it
+is hard to conceive of the influence of an educated class in a barbarous
+age. It was only necessary to produce the "sacred record," and ignorance
+fell upon its face. The people were taught that the record was inspired,
+and therefore true. They were not taught that it was true, and therefore
+inspired.
+</p>
+<p>
+After all, the real question is not whether the Bible is inspired, but
+whether it is true. If it is true, it does not need to be inspired. If
+it is true, it makes no difference whether it was written by a man or a
+god. The multiplication table is just as useful, just as true as though
+God had arranged the figures himself. If the Bible is really true,
+the claim of inspiration need not be urged; and if it is not true, its
+inspiration can hardly be established. As a matter of fact, the truth
+does not need to be inspired. Nothing needs inspiration except a
+falsehood or a mistake. Where truth ends, where probability stops,
+inspiration begins. A fact never went into partnership with a miracle.
+Truth does not need the assistance of miracle. A fact will fit every
+other fact in the Universe, because it is the product of all other
+facts. A lie will fit nothing except another lie made for the express
+purpose of fitting it. After a while the man gets tired of lying, and
+then the last lie will not fit the next fact, and then there is an
+opportunity to use a miracle. Just at that point, it is necessary to
+have a little inspiration.
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems to me that reason is the highest attribute of man, and that if
+there can be any communication from God to man, it must be addressed
+to his reason. It does not seem possible that in order to understand a
+message from God it is absolutely essential to throw our reason away.
+How could God make known his will to any being destitute of reason? How
+can any man accept as a revelation from God that which is unreasonable
+to him? God cannot make a revelation to another man for me. He must make
+it to me, and until he convinces my reason that it is true, I cannot
+receive it.
+</p>
+<p>
+The statement that in the beginning God created the heaven and the
+earth, I cannot accept. It is contrary to my reason, and I cannot
+believe it. It appears reasonable to me that force has existed from
+eternity. Force cannot, as it appears to me, exist apart from matter.
+Force, in its nature, is forever active, and without matter it could
+not act; and so I think matter must have existed forever. To conceive
+of matter without force, or of force without matter, or of a time when
+neither existed, or of a being who existed for an eternity without
+either, and who out of nothing created both, is to me utterly
+impossible. I may be damned on this account, but I cannot help it. In my
+judgment, Moses was mistaken.
+</p>
+<p>
+It will not do to say that Moses merely intended to tell what God did,
+in making the heavens and the earth out of matter then in existence.
+He distinctly states that in the <i>beginning</i> God created them. If this
+account is true, we must believe that God, existing in infinite space
+surrounded by eternal nothing, naught and void, created, produced,
+called into being, willed into existence this universe of countless
+stars.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next thing we are told by this inspired gentleman is, that God
+created light, and proceeded to divide it from the darkness.
+</p>
+<p>
+Certainly, the person who wrote this believed that darkness was a thing,
+an entity, a material that could get mixed and tangled up with light,
+and that these entities, light and darkness, had to be separated. In his
+imagination he probably saw God throwing pieces and chunks of darkness
+on one side, and rays and beams of light on the other. It is hard for a
+man who has been born but once to understand these things. For my part,
+I cannot understand how light can be separated from darkness. I had
+always supposed that darkness was simply the absence of light, and that
+under no circumstances could it be necessary to take the darkness away
+from the light. It is certain, however, that Moses believed darkness to
+be a form of matter, because I find that in another place he speaks of
+a darkness that could be felt. They used to have on exhibition at Rome a
+bottle of the darkness that overspread Egypt.
+</p>
+<p>
+You cannot divide light from darkness any more than you can divide heat
+from cold. Cold is an absence of heat, and darkness is an absence of
+light. I suppose that we have no conception of absolute cold. We know
+only degrees of heat. Twenty degrees below zero is just twenty degrees
+warmer than forty degrees below zero. Neither cold nor darkness are
+entities, and these words express simply either the absolute or partial
+absence of heat or light. I cannot conceive how light can be divided
+from darkness, but I can conceive how a barbarian several thousand years
+ago, writing upon a subject about which he knew nothing, could make a
+mistake. The creator of light could not have written in this way. If
+such a being exists, he must have known the nature of that "mode of
+motion" that paints the earth on every eye, and clothes in garments
+seven-hued this universe of worlds.
+</p>
+<center>
+VII. TUESDAY.
+</center>
+<p>
+We are next informed by Moses that "God of the waters, and let it divide
+the waters from the waters;" and that "God made the firmament, and
+divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters
+which were above the firmament." What did the writer mean by the word
+firmament? Theologians now tell us that he meant an "expanse." This will
+not do. How could an expanse divide the waters from the waters, so that
+the waters above the expanse would not fall into and mingle with the
+waters below the expanse? The truth is that Moses regarded the firmament
+as a solid affair. It was where God lived, and where water was kept. It
+was for this reason that they used to pray for rain. They supposed that
+some angel could with a lever raise a gate and let out the quantity of
+moisture desired. It was with the water from this firmament that the
+world was drowned when the windows of heaven were opened. It was in this
+said Let there be a firmament in the midst firmament that the sons of
+God lived&mdash;the sons who "saw the daughters of men that they were
+fair and took them wives of all which they chose." The issue of such
+marriages were giants, and "the same became mighty men which were of
+old, men of renown."
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing is clearer than that Moses regarded the firmament as a vast
+material division that separated the waters of the world, and upon
+whose floor God lived, surrounded by his sons. In no other way could he
+account for rain. Where did the water come from? He knew nothing about
+the laws of evaporation. He did not know that the sun wooed with amorous
+kisses the waves of the sea, and that they, clad in glorified mist
+rising to meet their lover, were, by disappointment, changed to tears
+and fell as rain.
+</p>
+<p>
+The idea that the firmament was the abode of the Deity must have been in
+the mind of Moses when he related the dream of Jacob. "And he dreamed,
+and behold, a ladder set upon the earth and the top of it reached to
+heaven; and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it; and
+behold the Lord stood above it and said, I am the Lord God."
+</p>
+<p>
+So, when the people were building the tower of Babel "the Lord came down
+to see the city, and the tower which the children of men builded. And
+the Lord said, Behold the people is one, and they have all one language:
+and this they begin to do; and nothing will be restrained from them
+which they imagined to do. Go to, let us go down and confound their
+language that they may not understand one another's speech."
+</p>
+<p>
+The man who wrote that absurd account must have believed that God lived
+above the earth, in the firmament. The same idea was in the mind of the
+Psalmist when he said that God "bowed the heavens and came down."
+</p>
+<p>
+Of course, God could easily remove any person bodily to heaven, as it
+was but a little way above the earth. "Enoch walked with God, and he was
+not, for God took him." The accounts in the Bible of the ascension of
+Elijah, Christ and St. Paul were born of the belief that the firmament
+was the dwelling-place of God. It probably never occurred to these
+writers that if the firmament was seven or eight miles away, Enoch and
+the rest would have been frozen perfectly stiff long before the journey
+could have been completed. Possibly Elijah might have made the voyage,
+as he was carried to heaven in a chariot of fire "by a whirlwind."
+</p>
+<p>
+The truth is, that Moses was mistaken, and upon that mistake the
+Christians located their heaven and their hell. The telescope destroyed
+the firmament, did away with the heaven of the New Testament, rendered
+the ascension of our Lord and the assumption of his Mother infinitely
+absurd, crumbled to chaos the gates and palaces of the New Jerusalem,
+and in their places gave to man a wilderness of worlds.
+</p>
+<center>
+VIII. WEDNESDAY.
+</center>
+<p>
+We are next informed by the historian of creation, that after God had
+finished making the firmament and had succeeded in dividing the waters
+by means of an "expanse," he proceeded "to gather the waters on the
+earth together in seas, so that the dry land might appear."
+</p>
+<p>
+Certainly the writer of this did not have any conception of the real
+form of the earth. He could not have known anything of the attraction of
+gravitation. He must have regarded the earth as flat and supposed that
+it required considerable force and power to induce the water to leave
+the mountains and collect in the valleys. Just as soon as the water was
+forced to run down hill, the dry land appeared, and the grass began to
+grow, and the mantles of green were thrown over the shoulders of the
+hills, and the trees laughed into bud and blossom, and the branches were
+laden with fruit. And all this happened before a ray had left the quiver
+of the sun, before a glittering beam had thrilled the bosom of a flower,
+and before the Dawn with trembling hands had drawn aside the curtains of
+the East and welcomed to her arms the eager god of Day.
+</p>
+<p>
+It does not seem to me that grass and trees could grow and ripen into
+seed and fruit without the sun. According to the account, this all
+happened on the third day. Now, if, as the Christians say, Moses did not
+mean by the word day a period of twenty-four hours, but an immense and
+almost measureless space of time, and as God did not, according to this
+view make any animals until the fifth day, that is, not for millions of
+years after he made the grass and trees, for what purpose did he cause
+the trees to bear fruit?
+</p>
+<p>
+Moses says that God said on the third day, "Let the earth bring forth
+grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after
+his kind, whose seed is in itself upon the earth; and it was so. And the
+earth brought forth grass and herb yielding seed after his kind, and the
+tree yielding fruit whose seed was in itself after his kind; and God saw
+that it was good, and the evening and the morning were the third day."
+</p>
+<p>
+There was nothing to eat this fruit; not an insect with painted wings
+sought the honey of the flowers; not a single living, breathing thing
+upon the earth. Plenty of grass, a great variety of herbs, an abundance
+of fruit, but not a mouth in all the world. If Moses is right, this
+state of things lasted only two days; but if the modern theologians are
+correct, it continued for millions of ages.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is now well known that the organic history of the earth can be
+properly divided into five epochs&mdash;the Primordial, Primary, Secondary,
+Tertiary, and Quaternary. Each of these epochs is characterized by
+animal and vegetable life peculiar to itself. In the First will be found
+Algæ and Skulless Vertebrates, in the Second, Ferns and Fishes, in the
+Third, Pine Forests and Reptiles, in the Fourth, Foliaceous Forests and
+Mammals, and in the Fifth, Man."
+</p>
+<p>
+How much more reasonable this is than the idea that the earth was
+covered with grass, and herbs, and trees loaded with fruit for millions
+of years before an animal existed.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is, in Nature, an even balance forever kept between the total
+amounts of animal and vegetable life. "In her wonderful economy she must
+form and bountifully nourish her vegetable progeny&mdash;twin-brother life to
+her, with that of animals. The perfect balance between plant existences
+and animal existences must always be maintained, while matter courses
+through the eternal circle, becoming each in turn. If an animal be
+resolved into its ultimate constituents in a period according to the
+surrounding circumstances, say, of four hours, of four months, of four
+years, or even of four thousand years,&mdash;for it is impossible to deny
+that there may be instances of all these periods during which the
+process has continued&mdash;those elements which assume the gaseous form
+mingle at once with the atmosphere and are taken up from it without
+delay by the ever-open mouths of vegetable life. By a thousand pores
+in every leaf the carbonic acid which renders the atmosphere unfit for
+animal life is absorbed, the carbon being separated, and assimilated to
+form the vegetable fibre, which, as wood, makes and furnishes our houses
+and ships, is burned for our warmth, or is stored up under pressure for
+coal. All this carbon has played its part, and many parts in its time,
+as animal existences from monad up to man. Our mahogany of to-day has
+been many negroes in its turn, and before the African existed, was
+integral portions of many a generation of extinct species."
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems reasonable to suppose that certain kinds of vegetation-and
+certain kinds of animals should exist together, and that as the
+character of the vegetation changed, a corresponding change would take
+place in the animal world. It may be that I am led to these conclusions
+by "total depravity," or that I lack the necessary humility of spirit to
+satisfactorily harmonize Haeckel and Moses; or that I am carried away by
+pride, blinded by reason, given over to hardness of heart that I might
+be damned, but I never can believe that the earth was covered with
+leaves, and buds, and flowers, and fruits before the sun with glittering
+spear had driven back the hosts of Night.
+</p>
+<center>
+IX. THURSDAY.
+</center>
+<p>
+After the world was covered with vegetation, it occurred to Moses that
+it was about time to make a sun and moon; and so we are told that on the
+fourth day God said, "Let there be light in the firmament of the heaven
+to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs and for
+seasons, and for days and years; and let them be for lights in the
+firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth; and it was so. And
+God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the
+lesser light to rule the night; he made the stars also."
+</p>
+<p>
+Can we believe that the inspired writer had any idea of the size of the
+sun? Draw a circle five inches in diameter, and by its side thrust a pin
+through the paper. The hole made by the pin will sustain about the same
+relation to the circle that the earth does to the sun. Did he know that
+the sun was eight hundred and sixty thousand miles in diameter; that it
+was enveloped in an ocean of fire thousands of miles in depth, hotter
+even than the Christian's hell, over which sweep tempests of flame
+moving at the rate of one hundred miles a second, compared with which
+the wildest storm that ever wrecked the forests of this world was but a
+calm? Did he know that the sun every moment of time throws out as much
+heat as could be generated by the combustion of millions upon millions
+of tons of coal? Did he know that the volume of the earth is less than
+one-millionth of that of the sun? Did he know of the one hundred and
+four planets belonging to our solar system, all children of the sun? Did
+he know of Jupiter eighty-five thousand miles in diameter, hundreds
+of times as large as our earth, turning on his axis at the rate of
+twenty-five thousand miles an hour accompanied by four moons, making the
+tour of his orbit in fifty years, a distance of three thousand million
+miles? Did he know anything about Saturn, his rings and his eight moons?
+Did he have the faintest idea that all these planets were once a part of
+the sun; that the vast luminary was once thousands of millions of miles
+in diameter; that Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars were all
+born before our earth, and that by no possibility could this world have
+existed three days, nor three periods, nor three "good whiles" before
+its source, the sun?
+</p>
+<p>
+Moses supposed the sun to be about three or four feet in diameter and
+the moon about half that size. Compared with the earth they were but
+simple specks. This idea seems to have been shared by all the "inspired"
+men. We find in the book of Joshua that the sun stood still, and the
+moon stayed until the people had avenged themselves upon their enemies.
+"So the sun stood still in the midst of heaven, and hasted not to go
+down about a whole day."
+</p>
+<p>
+We are told that the sacred writer wrote in common speech as we do
+when we talk about the rising and setting of the sun, and that all he
+intended to say was that the earth ceased to turn on its axis "for about
+a whole day."
+</p>
+<p>
+My own opinion is that General Joshua knew no more about the motions of
+the earth than he did about mercy and justice. If he had known that the
+earth turned upon its axis at the rate of a thousand miles an hour, and
+swept in its course about the sun at the rate of sixty-eight thousand
+miles an hour, he would have doubled the hailstones, spoken of in the
+same chapter, that the Lord cast down from heaven, and allowed the sun
+and moon to rise and set in the usual way.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is impossible to conceive of a more absurd story than this about the
+stopping of the sun and moon, and yet nothing so excites the malice of
+the orthodox preacher as to call its truth in question. Some endeavor
+to account for the phenomenon by natural causes, while others attempt
+to show that God could, by the refraction of light have made the sun
+visible although actually shining on the opposite side of the earth. The
+last hypothesis has been seriously urged by ministers within the last
+few months. The Rev. Henry M. Morey of South Bend, Indiana, says "that
+the phenomenon was simply optical. The rotary motion of the earth was
+not disturbed, but the light of the sun was prolonged by the same laws
+of refraction and reflection by which the sun now appears to be above
+the horizon when it is really below. The medium through which the sun's
+rays passed may have been miraculously influenced so as to have caused
+the sun to linger above the horizon long after its usual time for
+disappearance."
+</p>
+<p>
+This is the latest and ripest product of Christian scholarship upon
+this question no doubt, but still it is not entirely satisfactory to me.
+According to the sacred account the sun did not linger, merely, above
+the horizon, but stood still "in the midst of heaven for about a
+whole day," that is to say, for about twelve hours. If the air was
+miraculously changed, so that it would refract the rays of the sun while
+the earth turned over as usual for "about a whole day," then, at the
+end of that time the sun must have been visible in the east, that is,
+it must by that time have been the next morning. According to this, that
+most wonderful day must have been at least thirty-six hours in length.
+We have first, the twelve hours of natural light, then twelve hours of
+"refracted and reflected" light. By that time it would again be morning,
+and the sun would shine for twelve hours more in the natural way, making
+thirty-six hours in all.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the Rev. Morey would depend a little less on "refraction" and a
+little more on "reflection," he would conclude that the whole story is
+simply a barbaric myth and fable.
+</p>
+<p>
+It hardly seems reasonable that God, if there is one, would either stop
+the globe, change the constitution of the atmosphere or the nature of
+light simply to afford Joshua an opportunity to kill people on that
+day when he could just as easily have waited until the next morning.
+It certainly cannot be very gratifying to God for us to believe such
+childish things.
+</p>
+<p>
+It has been demonstrated that force is eternal; that it is forever
+active, and eludes destruction by change of form. Motion is a form of
+force, and all arrested motion changes instantly to heat. The earth
+turns upon its axis at about one thousand miles an hour. Let it be
+stopped and a force beyond our imagination is changed to heat. It has
+been calculated that to stop the world would produce as much heat as the
+burning of a solid piece of coal three times the size of the earth.
+And yet we are asked to believe that this was done in order that one
+barbarian might defeat another. Such stories never would have been
+written, had not the belief been general that the heavenly bodies were
+as nothing compared with the earth.
+</p>
+<p>
+The view of Moses was acquiesced in by the Jewish people and by the
+Christian world for thousands of years. It is supposed that Moses
+lived about fifteen hundred years before Christ, and although he was
+"inspired," and obtained his information directly from God, he did not
+know as much about our solar system as the Chinese did a thousand
+years before he was born. "The Emperor Chwenhio adopted as an epoch, a
+conjunction of the planets Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, which has
+been shown by M. Bailly to have occurred no less than 2449 years before
+Christ." The ancient Chinese knew not only the motions of the planets,
+but they could calculate eclipses. "In the reign of the Emperor
+Chow-Kang, the chief astronomers, Ho and Hi were condemned to death for
+neglecting to announce a solar eclipse which took place 2169 B. C., a
+clear proof that the prediction of eclipses was a part of the duty of
+the imperial astronomers."
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it not strange that a Chinaman should find out by his own exertions
+more about the material universe than Moses could when assisted by its
+Creator?
+</p>
+<p>
+About eight hundred years after God gave Moses the principal facts about
+the creation of the "heaven and the earth" he performed another miracle
+far more wonderful than stopping the world. On this occasion he not
+only stopped the earth, but actually caused it to turn the other way.
+A Jewish king was sick, and God, in order to convince him that he would
+ultimately recover, offered to make the shadow on the dial go forward,
+or backward ten degrees. The king thought it was too easy a thing to
+make the shadow go forward, and asked that it be turned back. Thereupon,
+"Isaiah the prophet cried unto the Lord, and he brought the shadow
+ten degrees backward by which it had gone down in the dial of Ahaz." I
+hardly see how this miracle could be accounted for even by "refraction"
+and "reflection."
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems, from the account, that this stupendous miracle was performed
+after the king had been cured. The account of the shadow going backward
+is given in the eleventh verse of the twentieth chapter of Second Kings,
+while the cure is given in the seventh verse of the same chapter. "And
+Isaiah said, Take a lump of figs. And they took and laid it on the boil,
+and he recovered."
+</p>
+<p>
+Stopping the world and causing it to turn back ten degrees after that,
+seems to have been, as the boil was already cured by the figs, a useless
+display of power.
+</p>
+<p>
+The easiest way to account for all these wonders is to say that the
+"inspired" writers were mistaken. In this way a fearful burden is lifted
+from the credulity of man, and he is left free to believe the evidences
+of his own senses, and the demonstrations of science. In this way he can
+emancipate himself from the slavery of superstition, the control of the
+barbaric dead, and the despotism of the church.
+</p>
+<p>
+Only about a hundred years ago, Buffon, the naturalist, was compelled by
+the faculty of theology at Paris to publicly renounce fourteen "errors"
+in his work on Natural History because they were at variance with the
+Mosaic account of creation. The Pentateuch is still the scientific
+standard of the church, and ignorant priests, armed with that, pronounce
+sentence upon the vast accomplishments of modern thought.
+</p>
+<center>
+X. "HE MADE THE STARS ALSO."
+</center>
+<p>
+Moses came very near forgetting about the stars, and only gave five
+words to all the hosts of heaven. Can it be possible that he knew
+anything about the stars beyond the mere fact that he saw them shining
+above him?
+</p>
+<p>
+Did he know that the nearest star, the one we ought to be the best
+acquainted with, is twenty-one billion of miles away, and that it is
+a sun shining by its own light? Did he know of the next, that is
+thirty-seven billion miles distant? Is it possible that he was
+acquainted with Sirius, a sun two thousand six hundred and eighty-eight
+times larger than our own, surrounded by a system of heavenly bodies,
+several of which are already known, and distant from us eighty-two
+billion miles? Did he know that the Polar star that tells the mariner
+his course and guided slaves to liberty and joy, is distant from this
+little world two hundred and ninety-two billion miles, and that Capella
+wheels and shines one hundred and thirty-three billion miles beyond? Did
+he know that it would require about seventy-two years for light to reach
+us from this star? Did he know that light travels one hundred and
+eighty-five thousand miles a second? Did he know that some stars are so
+far away in the infinite abysses that five millions of years are
+required for their light to reach this globe?
+</p>
+<p>
+If this is true, and if as the Bible tells us, the stars were made after
+the earth, then this world has been wheeling in its orbit for at least
+five million years.
+</p>
+<p>
+It may be replied that it was not the intention of God to teach geology
+and astronomy. Then why did he say anything upon these subjects? and if
+he did say anything, why did he not give the facts?
+</p>
+<p>
+According to the sacred records God created, on the first day, the
+heaven and the earth, "moved upon the face of the waters," and made
+the light. On the second day he made the firmament or the "expanse" and
+divided the waters. On the third day he gathered the waters into seas,
+let the dry land appear and caused the earth to bring forth grass, herbs
+and fruit trees, and on the fourth day he made the sun, moon and stars
+and set them in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the earth.
+This division of labor is very striking. The work of the other days is
+as nothing when compared with that of the fourth. Is it possible that
+it required the same time and labor to make the grass, herbs and fruit
+trees, that it did to fill with countless constellations the infinite
+expanse of space?
+</p>
+<center>
+XI. FRIDAY.
+</center>
+<p>
+We are then told that on the next day "God the moving creatures that hath
+life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of
+heaven. And God created great whales and every living creature which the
+waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged
+fowl after his kind, and God saw that it was good. And God blessed them,
+saying, Be fruitful and multiply and fill the waters in the seas, and
+let fowl multiply in the earth."
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it true that while the dry land was covered with grass, and herbs,
+and trees bearing fruit, the ocean was absolutely devoid of life, and so
+remained for millions of years?
+</p>
+<p>
+If Moses meant twenty-four hours by the word day, then it would make but
+little difference on which of the six days animals were made; but if the
+word said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly day was used to express
+millions of ages, during which life was slowly evolved from monad up to
+man, then the account becomes infinitely absurd, puerile and foolish.
+There is not a scientist of high standing who will say that in his
+judgment the earth was covered with fruit-bearing trees before the
+moners, the ancestors it may be of the human race, felt in Laurentian
+seas the first faint throb of life. Nor is there one who will declare
+that there was a single spire of grass before the sun had poured upon
+the world his flood of gold.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why should men in the name of religion try to harmonize the
+contradictions that exist between Nature and a book? Why should
+philosophers be denounced for placing more reliance upon what they know
+than upon what they have been told? If there is a God, it is reasonably
+certain that he made the world, but it is by no means certain that he is
+the author of the Bible. Why then should we not place greater confidence
+in Nature than in a book? And even if this God made not only the world
+but the book besides, it does not follow that the book is the best part
+of creation, and the only part that we will be eternally punished for
+denying. It seems to me that it is quite as important to know something
+of the solar system, something of the physical history of this globe,
+as it is to know the adventures of Jonah or the diet of Ezekiel. For my
+part, I would infinitely prefer to know all the results of scientific
+investigation, than to be inspired as Moses was. Supposing the Bible to
+be true; why is it any worse or more wicked for Freethinkers to deny
+it, than for priests to deny the doctrine of evolution, or the dynamic
+theory of heat? Why should we be damned for laughing at Samson and his
+foxes, while others, holding the Nebular Hypothesis in utter contempt,
+go straight to heaven? It seems to me that a belief in the great truths
+of science are fully as essential to salvation, as the creed of any
+church. We are taught that a man may be perfectly acceptable to God
+even if he denies the rotundity of the earth, the Copernican system, the
+three laws of Kepler, the indestructibility of matter and the attraction
+of gravitation. And we are also taught that a man may be right upon
+all these questions, and yet, for failing to believe in the "scheme of
+salvation," be eternally lost.
+</p>
+<center>
+XII. SATURDAY.
+</center>
+<p>
+On this, the last day of creation, God said;&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle
+and creeping thing and beast of the earth after his kind; and it was
+so. And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after
+their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind;
+and God saw that it was good."
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, is it true that the seas were filled with fish, the sky with fowls,
+and the earth covered with grass, and herbs, and fruit bearing trees,
+millions of ages before there was a creeping thing in existence? Must
+we admit that plants and animals were the result of the fiat of some
+incomprehensible intelligence independent of the operation of what are
+known as natural causes? Why is a miracle any more necessary to account
+for yesterday than for to-day or for to-morrow?
+</p>
+<p>
+If there is an infinite Power, nothing can be more certain than that
+this Power works in accordance with what we call law, that is, by and
+through natural causes. If anything can be found without a pedigree of
+natural antecedents, it will then be time enough to talk about the fiat
+of creation. There must have been a time when plants and animals did not
+exist upon this globe. The question, and the only question is, whether
+they were naturally produced. If the account given by Moses is true,
+then the vegetable and animal existences are the result of certain
+special fiats of creation entirely independent of the operation of
+natural causes. This is so grossly improbable, so at variance with the
+experience and observation of mankind, that it cannot be adopted without
+abandoning forever the basis of scientific thought and action.
+</p>
+<p>
+It may be urged that we do not understand the sacred record correctly.
+To this it may be replied that for thousands of years the account of
+the creation has, by the Jewish and Christian world, been regarded as
+literally true. If it was inspired, of course God must have known just
+how it would be understood, and consequently must have intended that
+it should be understood just as he knew it would be. One man writing to
+another, may mean one thing, and yet be understood as meaning something
+else. Now, if the writer knew that he would be misunderstood, and also
+knew that he could use other words that would convey his real meaning,
+but did not, we would say that he used words on purpose to mislead, and
+was not an honest man.
+</p>
+<p>
+If a being of infinite wisdom wrote the Bible, or caused it to be
+written, he must have known exactly how his words would be interpreted
+by all the world, and he must have intended to convey the very meaning
+that was conveyed. He must have known that by reading that book, man
+would form erroneous views as to the shape, antiquity, and size of this
+world; that he would be misled as to the time and order of creation;
+that he would have the most childish and contemptible views of the
+creator; that the "sacred word" would be used to support slavery and
+polygamy; that it would build dungeons for the good, and light fagots
+to consume the brave, and therefore he must have intended that these
+results should follow. He also must have known that thousands and
+millions of men and women never could believe his Bible, and that the
+number of unbelievers would increase in the exact ratio of civilization,
+and therefore, he must have intended that result.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us understand this. An honest finite being uses the best words, in
+his judgment, to convey his meaning. This is the best he can do, because
+he cannot certainly know the exact effect of his words on others. But an
+infinite being must know not only the real meaning of the words, but the
+exact meaning they will convey to every reader and hearer. He must know
+every meaning that they are capable of conveying to every mind. He must
+also know what explanations must be made to prevent misconception. If
+an infinite being cannot, in making a revelation to man, use such words
+that every person to whom a revelation is essential will understand
+distinctly what that revelation is, then a revelation from God through
+the instrumentality of language is impossible, or it is not essential
+that all should understand it correctly. It may be urged that millions
+have not the capacity to understand a revelation, although expressed in
+the plainest words. To this it seems a sufficient reply to ask, why a
+being of infinite power should create men so devoid of intelligence,
+that he cannot by any means make known to them his will? We are told
+that it is exceedingly plain, and that a wayfaring man, though a fool,
+need not err therein. This statement is refuted by the religious history
+of the Christian world. Every sect is a certificate that God has not
+plainly revealed his will to man. To each reader the Bible conveys a
+different meaning. About the meaning of this book, called a revelation,
+there have been ages of war, and centuries of sword and flame. If
+written by an infinite God, he must have known that these results must
+follow; and thus knowing, he must be responsible for all.
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it not infinitely more reasonable to say that this book is the work
+of man, that it is filled with mingled truth and error, with mistakes
+and facts, and reflects, too faithfully perhaps, the "very form and
+pressure of its time"?
+</p>
+<p>
+If there are mistakes in the Bible, certainly they were made by man. If
+there is anything contrary to nature, it was written by man. If there is
+anything immoral, cruel, heartless or infamous, it certainly was never
+written by a being worthy of the adoration of mankind.
+</p>
+<center>
+XIII. LET US MAKE MAN.
+</center>
+<p>
+We are next informed by the author of the Pentateuch that God said "Let
+us make man in our image, after our likeness," and that "God created man
+in his own image, in the image of God created he him&mdash;male and female
+created he them."
+</p>
+<p>
+If this account means anything, it means that man was created in the
+physical image and likeness of God. Moses while he speaks of man as
+having been made in the image of God, never speaks of God except as
+having the form of a man. He speaks of God as "walking in the garden
+in the cool of the day;" and that Adam and Eve "heard his voice." He is
+constantly telling what God said, and in a thousand passages he refers
+to him as not only having the human form, but as performing actions,
+such as man performs. The God of Moses was a God with hands, with feet,
+with the organs of speech.
+</p>
+<p>
+A God of passion, of hatred, of revenge, of affection, of repentance; a
+God who made mistakes:&mdash;in other words, an immense and powerful man.
+</p>
+<p>
+It will not do to say that Moses meant to convey the idea that God made
+man in his mental or moral image. Some have insisted that man was made
+in the moral image of God because he was made pure. Purity cannot be
+manufactured. A moral character cannot be made for man by a god.
+Every man must make his own moral character. Consequently, if God
+is infinitely pure, Adam and Eve were not made in his image in that
+respect. Others say that Adam and Eve were made in the mental image
+of God. If it is meant by that, that they were created with reasoning
+powers like, but not to the extent of those possessed by a god, then
+this may be admitted. But certainly this idea was not in the mind of
+Moses. He regarded the human form as being in the image of God, and for
+that reason always spoke of God as having that form. No one can read
+the Pentateuch without coming to the conclusion that the author supposed
+that man was created in the physical likeness of Deity. God said "Go to,
+let us go down." "God smelled a sweet savor;" "God repented him that he
+had made man;" "and God said;" and "walked;" and "talked;" and "rested."
+All these expressions are inconsistent with any other idea than that the
+person using them regarded God as having the form of man.
+</p>
+<p>
+As a matter of fact, it is impossible for a man to conceive of a
+personal God, other than as a being having the human form. No one can
+think of an infinite being having the form of a horse, or of a bird, or
+of any animal beneath man. It is one of the necessities of the mind to
+associate forms with intellectual capacities. The highest form of which
+we have any conception is man's, and consequently, his is the only form
+that we can find in imagination to give to a personal God, because all
+other forms are, in our minds, connected with lower intelligences.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is impossible to think of a personal God as a spirit without form.
+We can use these words, but they do not convey to the mind any real and
+tangible meaning. Every one who thinks of a personal God at all, thinks
+of him as having the human form. Take from God the idea of form; speak
+of him simply as an all pervading spirit&mdash;which means an all pervading
+something about which we know nothing&mdash;and Pantheism is the result.
+</p>
+<p>
+We are told that God made man; and the question naturally arises, how
+was this done? Was it by a process of "evolution," "development;" the
+"transmission of acquired habits;" the "survival of the fittest," or was
+the necessary amount of clay kneaded to the proper consistency, and then
+by the hands of God moulded into form? Modern science tells that man has
+been evolved, through countless epochs, from the lower forms; that he
+is the result of almost an infinite number of actions, reactions,
+experiences, states, forms, wants and adaptations. Did Moses intend
+to convey such a meaning, or did he believe that God took a sufficient
+amount of dust, made it the proper shape, and breathed into it the
+breath of life? Can any believer in the Bible give any reasonable
+account of this process of creation? Is it possible to imagine what
+was really done? Is there any theologian who will contend that man
+was created directly from the earth? Will he say that man was made
+substantially as he now is, with all his muscles properly developed for
+walking and speaking, and performing every variety of human action?
+That all his bones were formed as they now are, and all the relations of
+nerve, ligament, brain and motion as they are to-day?
+</p>
+<p>
+Looking back over the history of animal life from the lowest to
+the highest forms, we find that there has been a slow and gradual
+development; a certain but constant relation between want and
+production; between use and form. The Moner is said to be the simplest
+form of animal life that has yet been found. It has been described as
+"an organism without organs." It is a kind of structureless structure;
+a little mass of transparent jelly that can flatten itself out, and can
+expand and contract around its food. It can feed without a mouth, digest
+without a stomach, walk without feet, and reproduce itself by simple
+division. By taking this Moner as the commencement of animal life, or
+rather as the first animal, it is easy to follow the development of the
+organic structure through all the forms of life to man himself. In this
+way finally every muscle, bone and joint, every organ, form and function
+may be accounted for. In this way, and in this way only, can the
+existence of rudimentary organs be explained. Blot from the human mind
+the ideas of evolution, heredity, adaptation, and "the survival of
+the fittest," with which it has been enriched by Lamarck, Goethe,
+Darwin, Haeckel and Spencer, and all the facts in the history of animal
+life become utterly disconnected and meaningless.
+</p>
+<p>
+Shall we throw away all that has been discovered with regard to organic
+life, and in its place take the statements of one who lived in the
+rude morning of a barbaric day? Will anybody now contend that man was a
+direct and independent creation, and sustains and bears no relation to
+the animals below him? Belief upon this subject must be governed at
+last by evidence. Man cannot believe as he pleases. He can control his
+speech, and can say that he believes or disbelieves; but after all, his
+will cannot depress or raise the scales with which his reason finds the
+worth and weight of facts. If this is not so, investigation, evidence,
+judgment and reason are but empty words.
+</p>
+<p>
+I ask again, how were Adam and Eve created? In one account they are
+created male and female, and apparently at the same time. In the next
+account, Adam is made first, and Eve a long time afterwards, and from a
+part of the man. Did God simply by his creative fiat cause a rib slowly
+to expand, grow and divide into nerve, ligament, cartilage and flesh?
+How was the woman created from a rib? How was man created simply from
+dust? For my part, I cannot believe this statement.
+</p>
+<p>
+I may suffer for this in the world to come; and may, millions of years
+hence, sincerely wish that I had never investigated the subject, but had
+been content to take the ideas of the dead. I do not believe that any
+deity works in that way. So far as my experience goes, there is an
+unbroken procession of cause and effect. Each thing is a necessary link
+in an infinite chain; and I cannot conceive of this chain being broken
+even for one instant. Back of the simplest moner there is a cause,
+and back of that another, and so on, it seems to me, forever. In my
+philosophy I postulate neither beginning nor ending.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the Mosaic account is true, we know how long man has been upon this
+earth. If that account can be relied on, the first man was made about
+five thousand eight hundred and eighty-three years ago. Sixteen hundred
+and fifty-six years after the making of the first man, the inhabitants
+of the world, with the exception of eight people, were destroyed by
+a flood. This flood occurred only about four thousand two hundred and
+twenty-seven years ago. If this account is correct, at that time, only
+one kind of men existed. Noah and his family were certainly of the same
+blood. It therefore follows that all the differences we see between the
+various races of men have been caused in about four thousand years. If
+the account of the deluge is true, then since that event all the ancient
+kingdoms of the earth were founded, and their inhabitants passed through
+all the stages of savage, nomadic, barbaric and semi-civilized life;
+through the epochs of Stone, Bronze and Iron; established commerce,
+cultivated the arts, built cities, filled them with palaces and temples,
+invented writing, produced a literature and slowly fell to shapeless
+ruin. We must believe that all this has happened within a period of four
+thousand years.
+</p>
+<p>
+From representations found upon Egyptian granite made more than three
+thousand years ago, we know that the negro was as black, his lips as
+full, and his hair as closely curled then as now. If we know anything,
+we know that there was at that time substantially the same difference
+between the Egyptian and the Negro as now. If we know anything, we know
+that magnificent statues were made in Egypt four thousand years before
+our era&mdash;that is to say, about six thousand years ago. There was at
+the World's Exposition, in the Egyptian department, a statue of king
+Cephren, known to have been chiseled more than six thousand years ago.
+In other words, if the Mosaic account must be believed, this statue was
+made before the world. We also know, if we know anything, that men lived
+in v Europe with the hairy mammoth, the cave bear, the rhinoceros, and
+the hyena. Among the bones of these animals have been found the stone
+hatchets and flint arrows of our ancestors. In the caves where they
+lived have been discovered the remains of these animals that had been
+conquered, killed and devoured as food, hundreds of thousands of years
+ago.
+</p>
+<p>
+If these facts are true, Moses was mistaken. For my part, I have
+infinitely more confidence in the discoveries of to-day, than in the
+records of a barbarous people. It will not now do to say that man has
+existed upon this earth for only about six thousand years. One can
+hardly compute in his imagination the time necessary for man to emerge
+from the barbarous state, naked and helpless, surrounded by animals far
+more powerful than he, to progress and finally create the civilizations
+of India, Egypt and Athens. The distance from savagery to Shakespeare
+must be measured not by hundreds, but by millions of years.
+</p>
+<center>
+XIV. SUNDAY.
+</center>
+<p>
+"And on the seventh day God ended his work which he had made, and he
+rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had made. And God
+blessed the seventh day and sanctified it; because that in it he had
+rested from all his work which God created and made."
+</p>
+<p>
+The great work had been accomplished, the world, the sun, and moon, and
+all the hosts of heaven were finished; the earth was clothed in
+green, the seas were filled with life, the cattle wandered by the
+brooks&mdash;insects with painted wings were in the happy air, Adam and Eve
+were making each others acquaintance, and God was resting from his work.
+He was contemplating the accomplishments of a week.
+</p>
+<p>
+Because he rested on that day he sanctified it, and for that reason and
+for that alone, it was by the Jews considered a holy day. If he only
+rested on that day, there ought to be some account of what he did the
+following Monday. Did he rest on that day? What did he do after he
+got rested? Has he done anything in the way of creation since Saturday
+evening of the first week?
+</p>
+<p>
+It is now claimed by the "scientific" Christians that the "days" of
+creation were not ordinary days of twenty-four hours each, but immensely
+long periods of time. If they are right, then how long was the seventh
+day? Was that, too, a geologic period covering thousands of ages?
+That cannot be, because Adam and Eve were created the Saturday evening
+before, and according to the Bible that was about five thousand eight
+hundred and eighty-three years ago. I cannot state the time exactly,
+because there have been as many as one hundred and forty different
+opinions given by learned Biblical students as to the time between the
+creation of the world and the birth of Christ. We are quite certain,
+however, that, according to the Bible, it is not more than six thousand
+years since the creation of Adam. From this it would appear that the
+seventh day was not a geologic epoch, but was in fact a period of less
+than six thousand years, and probably of only twenty-four hours.
+</p>
+<p>
+The theologians who "answer" these things may take their choice. If they
+take the ground that the "days" were periods of twenty-four hours, then
+geology will force them to throw away the whole account. If, on the
+other hand, they admit that the days were vast "periods," then the
+sacredness of the Sabbath must be given up.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is found in the Bible no intimation that there was the least
+difference in the days. They are all spoken of in the same way. It may
+be replied that our translation is incorrect. If this is so, then only
+those who understand Hebrew, have had a revelation from God, and all the
+rest have been deceived.
+</p>
+<p>
+How is it possible to sanctify a space of time? Is rest holier than
+labor? If there is any difference between days, ought not that to be
+considered best in which the most useful labor has been performed?
+</p>
+<p>
+Of all the superstitions of mankind, this insanity about the "sacred
+Sabbath" is the most absurd. The idea of feeling it a duty to be solemn
+and sad one-seventh of the time! To think that we can please an infinite
+being by staying in some dark and sombre room, instead of walking in the
+perfumed fields! Why should God hate to see a man happy? Why should it
+excite his wrath to see a family in the woods, by some babbling stream,
+talking, laughing and loving? Nature works on that "sacred" day. The
+earth turns, the rivers run, the trees grow, buds burst into flower, and
+birds fill the air with song. Why should we look sad, and think about
+death, and hear about hell? Why should that day be filled with gloom
+instead of joy?
+</p>
+<p>
+A poor mechanic, working all the week in dust and noise, needs a day of
+rest and joy, a day to visit stream and wood&mdash;a day to live with wife
+and child; a day in which to laugh at care, and gather hope and strength
+for toils to come. And his weary wife needs a breath of sunny air, away
+from street and wall, amid the hills or by the margin of the sea, where
+she can sit and prattle with her babe, and fill with happy dreams the
+long, glad day.
+</p>
+<p>
+The "Sabbath" was born of asceticism, hatred of human joy, fanaticism,
+ignorance, egotism of priests and the cowardice of the people. This
+day, for thousands of years, has been dedicated to superstition, to the
+dissemination of mistakes, and the establishment of falsehoods. Every
+Freethinker, as a matter of duty, should violate this day. He should
+assert his independence, and do all within his power to wrest the
+Sabbath from the gloomy church and give it back to liberty and joy.
+Freethinkers should make the Sabbath a day of mirth and music; a day to
+spend with wife and child&mdash;a day of games, and books, and dreams&mdash;a day
+to put fresh flowers above our sleeping dead&mdash;a day of memory and hope,
+of love and rest.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why should we in this age of the world be dominated by the dead? Why
+should barbarian Jews who went down to death and dust three thousand
+years ago, control the living world? Why should we care for the
+superstition of men who began the Sabbath by paring their nails,
+"beginning at the fourth finger, then going to the second, then to the
+fifth, then to the third, and ending with the thumb?" How pleasing
+to God this must have been. The Jews were very careful of these nail
+parings. They who threw them upon the ground were wicked, because Satan
+used them to work evil upon the earth. They believed that upon the
+Sabbath, souls were allowed to leave purgatory and cool their
+burning souls in water. Fires were neither allowed to be kindled nor
+extinguished, and upon that day it was a sin to bind up wounds. "The
+lame might use a staff, but the blind could not." So strict was the
+Sabbath kept, that at one time "if a Jew on a journey was overtaken
+by the 'sacred day' in a wood, or on the highway, no matter where, nor
+under what circumstances, he must sit down," and there remain until the
+day was gone. "If he fell down in the dirt, there he was compelled to
+stay until the day was done." For violating the Sabbath, the punishment
+was death, for nothing short of the offender's blood could satisfy the
+wrath of God. There are, in the Old Testament, two reasons given for
+abstaining from labor on the Sabbath:&mdash;the resting of God, and the
+redemption of the Jews from the bondage of Egypt.
+</p>
+<p>
+Since the establishment of the Christian religion, the day has been
+changed, and Christians do not regard the day as holy upon which God
+actually rested, and which he sanctified. The Christian Sabbath, or
+the "Lord's day" was legally established by the murderer Constantine,
+because upon that day Christ was supposed to have risen from the dead.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is not easy to see where Christians got the right to disregard the
+direct command of God, to labor on the day he sanctified, and keep as
+sacred, a day upon which he commanded men to labor. The Sabbath of God
+is Saturday, and if any day is to be kept holy, that is the one, and not
+the Sunday of the Christian.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us throw away these superstitions and take the higher, nobler
+ground, that every day should be rendered sacred by some loving act,
+by increasing the happinesss of man, giving birth to noble thoughts,
+putting in the path of toil some flower of joy, helping the unfortunate,
+lifting the fallen, dispelling gloom, destroying prejudice, defending
+the helpless and filling homes with light and love.
+</p>
+<center>
+XV. THE NECESSITY FOR A GOOD MEMORY.
+</center>
+<p>
+It must not be forgotten that there are two accounts of the creation
+in Genesis. The first account stops with the third verse of the second
+chapter. The chapters have been improperly divided. In the original
+Hebrew the Pentateuch was neither divided into chapters nor verses.
+There was not even any system of punctuation. It was written wholly with
+consonants, without vowels, and without any marks, dots, or lines to
+indicate them.
+</p>
+<p>
+These accounts are materially different, and both cannot be true. Let us
+see wherein they differ.
+</p>
+<p>
+The second account of the creation begins with the fourth verse of the
+second chapter, and is as follows:
+</p>
+<p>
+"These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they
+were created, in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the
+heavens.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And every plant of the field before it was in the earth, and every herb
+of the field before it grew; for the Lord God had not caused it to rain
+upon the earth, and there was not a man to till the ground.
+</p>
+<p>
+"But there went up a mist from the earth and watered the whole face of
+the ground.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed
+into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden; and there he put
+the man whom he had formed.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And out of the ground made the Lord God to grow every tree that is
+pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the
+midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And a river went out of Eden to water the garden; and from thence it
+was parted and became into four heads.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The name of the first is Pison; that is it which compasseth the whole
+land of Havilah, where there is gold.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the gold of that land is good: there is bdellium and the onyx
+stone.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the name of the second river is Gihon: the same is it that
+compasseth the whole land of Ethiopia.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the name of the third river is Hiddekel; that is it which goeth
+toward the east of Assyria. And the fourth river is Euphrates.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the Lord God took the man, and put him into the Garden of Eden to
+dress it and to keep it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden
+thou mayest freely eat; But of the tree of the knowledge of good and
+evil, thou shalt not eat of it; for in the day that thou eatest thereof
+thou shalt surely die.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I
+will make him an helpmeet for him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and
+every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would
+call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was
+the name thereof.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to
+every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found a helpmeet
+for him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept;
+and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof;
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman and
+brought her unto the man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh; she
+shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave
+unto his wife; and they shall be one flesh.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed."
+</p>
+<p>
+Order of creation in the first account:
+</p>
+<p>
+1. The heaven and the earth, and light were made.
+</p>
+<p>
+2. The firmament was constructed and the waters divided.
+</p>
+<p>
+3. The waters gathered into seas&mdash;and then came dry land, grass, herbs
+and fruit trees.
+</p>
+<p>
+4. The sun and moon. He made the stars also.
+</p>
+<p>
+5. Fishes, fowls, and great whales.
+</p>
+<p>
+6. Beasts, cattle, every creeping thing, man and woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+Order of creation in the second account:
+</p>
+<p>
+1. The heavens and the earth.
+</p>
+<p>
+2. A mist went up from the earth, and watered the whole face of the
+ground.
+</p>
+<p>
+3. Created a man out of dust, by the name of Adam.
+</p>
+<p>
+4. Planted a garden eastward in Eden, and put the man in it.
+</p>
+<p>
+5. Created the beasts and fowls.
+</p>
+<p>
+6. Created a woman out of one of the man's ribs.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the second account, man was made <i>before</i> the beasts and fowls. If
+this is true, the first account is false. And if the theologians of our
+time are correct in their view that the Mosaic day means thousands of
+ages, then, according to the second account, Adam existed millions of
+years before Eve was formed. He must have lived one Mosaic day before
+there were any trees, and another Mosaic day before the beasts and fowls
+were created. Will some kind clergymen tell us upon what kind of food
+Adam subsisted during these immense periods?
+</p>
+<p>
+In the second account a man is made, and the fact that he was without a
+helpmeet did not occur to the Lord God until a couple "of vast periods"
+afterwards. The Lord God suddenly coming to an appreciation of the
+situation said, "It is not good that the man should be alone. I will
+make him an helpmeet for him."
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, after concluding to make "an helpmeet" for Adam, what did the Lord
+God do? Did he at once proceed to make a woman? No. What did he do? He
+made the beasts, and tried to induce Adam to take one of them for "an
+helpmeet." If I am incorrect, read the following account, and tell me
+what it means:
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I
+will make him an helpmeet for him.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and
+every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would
+call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was
+the name thereof.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to
+every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an helpmeet
+for him."
+</p>
+<p>
+Unless the Lord God was looking for an helpmeet for Adam, why did
+he cause the animals to pass before him? And why did he, after the
+menagerie had passed by, pathetically exclaim, "But for Adam there was
+not found an helpmeet for him"?
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems that Adam saw nothing that struck his fancy. The fairest ape,
+the sprightliest chimpanzee, the loveliest baboon, the most bewitching
+orangoutang, the most fascinating gorilla failed to touch with love's
+sweet pain, poor Adam's lonely heart. Let us rejoice that this was so.
+Had he fallen in love then, there never would have been a Freethinker in
+this world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dr. Adam Clarke, speaking of this remarkable proceeding says:&mdash;"God
+caused the animals to pass before Adam to show him that no creature yet
+formed could make him a suitable companion; that Adam was convinced that
+none of these animals could be a suitable companion for him, and that
+therefore he must continue in a state that was not good (celibacy)
+unless he became a further debtor to the bounty of his maker, for among
+all the animals which he had formed, there was not a helpmeet for Adam."
+</p>
+<p>
+Upon this same subject, Dr. Scott informs us "that it was not conducive
+to the happiness of the man to remain without the consoling society,
+and endearment of tender friendship, nor consistent with the end of his
+creation to be without marriage by which the earth might be replenished
+and worshipers and servants raised up to render him praise and glory.
+Adam seems to have been vastly better acquainted by intuition or
+revelation with the distinct properties of every creature than the most
+sagacious observer since the fall of man.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Upon this review of the animals, not one was found in outward form his
+counterpart, nor one suited to engage his affections, participate in his
+enjoyments, or associate with him in the worship of God."
+</p>
+<p>
+Dr. Matthew Henry admits that "God brought all the animals together
+to see if there was a suitable match for Adam in any of the numerous
+families of the inferior creatures, but there was none. They were all
+looked over, but Adam could not be matched among them all. Therefore God
+created a new thing to be a helpmeet for him."
+</p>
+<p>
+Failing to satisfy Adam with any of the inferior animals, the Lord God
+caused a deep sleep to fall upon him, and while in this sleep took out
+one of Adam's ribs and "closed up the flesh instead thereof." And out of
+this rib, the Lord God made a woman, and brought her to the man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Was the Lord God compelled to take a part of the man because he had used
+up all the original "nothing" out of which the universe was made? Is it
+possible for any sane and intelligent man to believe this story? Must a
+man be born a second time before this account seems reasonable?
+</p>
+<p>
+Imagine the Lord God with a bone in his hand with which to start
+a woman, trying to make up his mind whether to make a blonde or a
+brunette!
+</p>
+<p>
+Just at this point it may be proper for me to warn all persons from
+laughing at or making light of, any stories found in the "Holy Bible."
+When you come to die, every laugh will be a thorn in your pillow. At
+that solemn moment, as you look back upon the records of your life, no
+matter how many men you may have wrecked and ruined; no matter how many
+women you have deceived and deserted, all that can be forgiven; but
+if you remember then that you have laughed at even one story in God's
+"sacred book" you will see through the gathering shadows of death the
+forked tongues of devils, and the leering eyes of fiends.
+</p>
+<p>
+These stories must be believed, or the work of regeneration can never be
+commenced. No matter how well you act your part, live as honestly as you
+may, clothe the naked, feed the hungry, divide your last farthing
+with the poor, and you are simply traveling the broad road that leads
+inevitably to eternal death, unless at the same time you implicitly
+believe the Bible to be the inspired word of God.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let me show you the result of unbelief. Let us suppose, for a moment,
+that we are at the Day of Judgment, listening to the trial of souls
+as they arrive. The Recording Secretary, or whoever does the
+cross-examining, says to a soul:
+</p>
+<p>
+Where are you from?
+</p>
+<p>
+I am from the Earth.
+</p>
+<p>
+What kind of a man were you?
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, I don't like to talk about myself. I suppose you can tell by
+looking at your books.
+</p>
+<p>
+No, sir. You must tell what kind of a man you were.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, I was what you might call a first-rate fellow. I loved my wife and
+children. My home was my heaven. My fireside was a paradise to me. To
+sit there and see the lights and shadows fall upon the faces of those I
+loved, was to me a perfect joy.
+</p>
+<p>
+How did you treat your family?
+</p>
+<p>
+I never said an unkind word. I never caused my wife, nor one of my
+children, a moments pain.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did you pay your debts?
+</p>
+<p>
+I did not owe a dollar when I died, and left enough to pay my funeral
+expenses, and to keep the fierce wolf of want from the door of those I
+loved.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did you belong to any church?
+</p>
+<p>
+No, sir. They were too narrow, pinched and bigoted for me, I never
+thought that I could be very happy if other folks were damned.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did you believe in eternal punishment?
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, no. I always thought that God could get his revenge in far less
+time.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did you believe the rib story?
+</p>
+<p>
+Do you mean the Adam and Eve business?
+</p>
+<p>
+Yes! Did you believe that?
+</p>
+<p>
+To tell you the God's truth, that was just a little more than I could
+swallow.
+</p>
+<p>
+Away with him to hell!
+</p>
+<p>
+Next!
+</p>
+<p>
+Where are you from?
+</p>
+<p>
+I am from the world too.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did you belong to any church?
+</p>
+<p>
+Yes, sir, and to the Young Men's Christian Association besides.
+</p>
+<p>
+What was your business?
+</p>
+<p>
+Cashier in a Savings Bank.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did you ever run away with any money?
+</p>
+<p>
+Where I came from, a witness could not be compelled to criminate
+himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+The law is different here. Answer the question. Did you run away with
+any money?
+</p>
+<p>
+Yes, sir.
+</p>
+<p>
+How much?
+</p>
+<p>
+One hundred thousand dollars.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did you take anything else with you?
+</p>
+<p>
+Yes, sir.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, what else?
+</p>
+<p>
+I took my neighbor's wife&mdash;we sang together in the choir.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did you have a wife and children of your own? Yes, sir.
+</p>
+<p>
+And you deserted them?
+</p>
+<p>
+Yes, sir, but such was my confidence in God that I believed he would
+take care of them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Have you heard of them since?
+</p>
+<p>
+No, sir.
+</p>
+<p>
+Did you believe in the rib story?
+</p>
+<p>
+Bless your soul, of course I did. A thousand times I regretted that
+there were no harder stories in the Bible, so that I could have shown my
+wealth of faith.
+</p>
+<p>
+Do you believe the rib story yet?
+</p>
+<p>
+Yes, with all my heart.
+</p>
+<p>
+Give him a harp!
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, as I was saying, God made a woman from Adam's rib. Of course, I do
+not know exactly how this was done, but when he got the woman finished,
+he presented her to Adam. He liked her, and they commenced house-keeping
+in the celebrated Garden of Eden.
+</p>
+<p>
+Must we, in order to be good, gentle and loving in our lives, believe
+that the creation of woman was a second thought? That Jehovah really
+endeavored to induce Adam to take one of the lower animals as an
+helpmeet for him? After all, is it not possible to live honest and
+courageous lives without believing these fables? It is said that from
+Mount Sinai God gave, amid thunderings and lightnings, ten commandments
+for the guidance of mankind; and yet among them is not found&mdash;"Thou
+shalt believe the Bible."
+</p>
+<center>
+XVI. THE GARDEN.
+</center>
+<p>
+In the first account we are told that God made man, male and female,
+and said to them "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth and
+subdue it."
+</p>
+<p>
+In the second account only the man is made, and he is put in a garden
+"to dress it and to keep it." He is not told to subdue the earth, but to
+dress and keep a garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the first account man is given every herb bearing seed upon the face
+of the earth and the fruit of every tree for food, and in the second,
+he is given only the fruit of all the trees in the garden with the
+exception "of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil" which was a
+deadly poison.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was issuing from this garden a river that was parted into four
+heads. The first of these, Pison, compassed the whole land of Havilah,
+the second, Gihon, that compassed the whole land of Ethiopia.
+</p>
+<p>
+The third, Heddekel, that flowed toward the east of Assyria, and the
+fourth, the Euphrates. Where are these four rivers now? The brave prow
+of discovery has visited every sea; the traveler has pressed with weary
+feet the soil of every clime; and yet there has been found no place from
+which four rivers sprang. The Euphrates still journeys to the gulf, but
+where are Pison, Gihon and the mighty Heddekel? Surely by going to the
+source of the Euphrates we ought to find either these three rivers or
+their ancient beds. Will some minister when he answers the "Mistakes of
+Moses" tell us where these rivers are or were? The maps of the world are
+incomplete without these mighty streams. We have discovered the sources
+of the Nile; the North Pole will soon be touched by an American; but
+these three rivers still rise in unknown hills, still flow through
+unknown lands, and empty still in unknown seas.
+</p>
+<p>
+The account of these four rivers is what the Rev. David Swing would call
+"a geographical poem." The orthodox clergy cover the whole affair with
+the blanket of allegory, while the "scientific" Christian folks talk
+about cataclysms, upheavals, earthquakes, and vast displacements of the
+earth's crust.
+</p>
+<p>
+The question, then arises, whether within the last six thousand years
+there have been such upheavals and displacements? Talk as you will about
+the vast "creative periods" that preceded the appearance of man; it
+is, according to the Bible, only about six thousand years since man was
+created. Moses gives us the generations of men from Adam until his day,
+and this account cannot be explained away by calling centuries, days.
+</p>
+<p>
+According to the second account of creation, these four rivers were
+made after the creation of man, and consequently they must have been
+obliterated by convulsions of Nature within six thousand years.
+</p>
+<p>
+Can we not account for these contradictions, absurdities, and falsehoods
+by simply saying that although the writer may have done his level best,
+he failed because he was limited in knowledge, led away by tradition,
+and depended too implicitly upon the correctness of his imagination?
+Is not such a course far more reasonable than to insist that all these
+things are true and must stand though every science shall fall to mental
+dust?
+</p>
+<p>
+Can any reason be given for not allowing man to eat of the fruit of the
+tree of knowledge? What kind of tree was that? If it is all an allegory,
+what truth is sought to be conveyed? Why should God object to that fruit
+being eaten by man? Why did he put it in the midst of the garden? There
+was certainly plenty of room outside. If he wished to keep man and this
+tree apart, why did he put them together? And why, after he had eaten,
+was he thrust out? The only answer that we have a right to give, is
+the one given in the Bible. "And the Lord God said, Behold the man has
+become as one of us to know good and evil; and now, lest he put forth
+his hand and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever:
+Therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the Garden of Eden, to till
+the ground from whence he was taken."
+</p>
+<p>
+Will some minister, some graduate of Andover, tell us what this means?
+Are we bound to believe it without knowing what the meaning is? If it is
+a revelation, what does it reveal? Did God object to education then, and
+does that account for the hostile attitude still assumed by theologians
+toward all scientific truth? Was there in the garden a tree of life, the
+eating of which would have rendered Adam and Eve immortal? Is it true,
+that after the Lord God drove them from the garden that he placed upon
+its Eastern side "Cherubim and a flaming sword which turned every way
+to keep the way of the tree of life?" Are the Cherubim and the flaming
+sword guarding that tree still, or was it destroyed, or did its rotting
+trunk, as the Rev. Robert Collyer suggests, "nourish a bank of violets"?
+</p>
+<p>
+What objection could God have had to the immortality of man? You
+see that after all, this sacred record, instead of assuring us of
+immortality, shows us only how we lost it. In this there is assuredly
+but little consolation.
+</p>
+<p>
+According to this story we have lost one Eden, but nowhere in the Mosaic
+books are we told how we may gain another. I know that the Christians
+tell us there is another, in which all true believers will finally be
+gathered, and enjoy the unspeakable happiness of seeing the unbelievers
+in hell; but they do not tell us where it is.
+</p>
+<p>
+Some commentators say that the Garden of Eden was in the third
+heaven&mdash;some in the fourth, others have located it in the moon, some
+in the air beyond the attraction of the earth, some on the earth, some
+under the earth, some inside the earth, some at the North Pole, others
+at the South, some in Tartary, some in China, some on the borders of the
+Ganges, some in the island of Ceylon, some in Armenia, some in Africa,
+some under the Equator, others in Mesopotamia, in Syria, Persia, Arabia,
+Babylon, Assyria, Palestine and Europe. Others have contended that
+it was invisible, that it was an allegory, and must be spiritually
+understood.
+</p>
+<p>
+But whether you understand these things or not, you must believe them.
+You may be laughed at in this world for insisting that God put Adam into
+a deep sleep and made a woman out of one of his ribs, but you will be
+crowned and glorified in the next. You will also have the pleasure of
+hearing the gentlemen howl there, who laughed at you here. While you
+will not be permitted to take any revenge, you will be allowed to
+smilingly express your entire acquiescence in the will of God. But where
+is the new Eden? No one knows. The one was lost, and the other has not
+been found.
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it true that man was once perfectly pure and innocent, and that
+he became degenerate by disobedience? No. The real truth is, and the
+history of man shows, that he has advanced. Events, like the pendulum of
+a clock have swung forward and back ward, but after all, man, like
+the hands, has gone steadily on. Man is growing grander. He is not
+degenerating. Nations and individuals fail and die, and make room
+for higher forms. The intellectual horizon of the world widens as the
+centuries pass. Ideals grow grander and purer; the difference between
+justice and mercy becomes less and less; liberty enlarges, and love
+intensifies as the years sweep on. The ages of force and fear, of
+cruelty and wrong, are behind us and the real Eden is beyond. It is said
+that a desire for knowledge lost us the Eden of the past; but whether
+that is true or not, it will certainly give us the Eden of the future.
+</p>
+<center>
+XVII. THE FALL.
+</center>
+<p>
+We are told that the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field,
+that he had a conversation with Eve, in which he gave his opinion about
+the effect of eating certain fruit; that he assured her it was good to
+eat, that it was pleasant to the eye, that it would make her wise; that
+she was induced to take some; that she persuaded her husband to try it;
+that God found it out, that he then cursed the snake; condemning it to
+crawl and eat the dust; that he multiplied the sorrows of Eve, cursed
+the ground for Adam's sake, started thistles and thorns, condemned man
+to eat the herb of the field in the sweat of his face, pronounced the
+curse of death, "Dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou return," made
+coats of skins for Adam and Eve, and drove them out of Eden.
+</p>
+<p>
+Who, and what was this serpent? Dr. Adam Clarke says:&mdash;"The serpent must
+have walked erect, for this is necessarily implied in his punishment.
+That he was endued with the gift of speech, also with reason. That these
+things were given to this creature. The woman no doubt having often seen
+him walking erect, and talking and reasoning, therefore she testifies
+no sort of surprise when he accosts her in the language related in
+the text. It therefore appears to me that a creature of the ape or
+orangoutang kind is here intended, and that Satan made use of this
+creature as the most proper instrument for the accomplishment of his
+murderous purposes against the life of the soul of man. Under this
+creature he lay hid, and by this creature he seduced our first parents.
+Such a creature answers to every part of the description in the text. It
+is evident from the structure of its limbs and its muscles that it might
+have been originally designed to walk erect, and that nothing else than
+the sovereign controlling power could induce it to put down hands&mdash;in
+every respect formed like those of man&mdash;and walk like those creatures
+whose claw-armed parts prove them to have been designed to walk on
+all fours. The stealthy cunning, and endless variety of the pranks
+and tricks of these creatures show them even now to be wiser and more
+intelligent than any other creature, man alone excepted. Being obliged
+to walk on all fours and gather their food from the ground, they are
+literally obliged to eat the dust; and though exceeding cunning,
+and careful in a variety of instances to separate that part which is
+wholesome and proper for food from that which is not so, in the article
+of cleanliness they are lost to all sense of propriety. Add to this
+their utter aversion to walk upright; it requires the utmost discipline
+to bring them to it, and scarcely anything offends or irritates them
+more than to be obliged to do it. Long observation of these animals
+enables me to state these facts. For earnest, attentive watching, and
+for chattering and babbling they (the ape) have no fellows in the animal
+world. Indeed, the ability and propensity to chatter, is all they have
+left of their original gift of speech, of which they appear to have been
+deprived at the fall as a part of their punishment."
+</p>
+<p>
+Here then is the "connecting link" between man and the lower creation.
+The serpent was simply an orang-outang that spoke Hebrew with the
+greatest ease, and had the outward appearance of a perfect gentleman,
+seductive in manner, plausible, polite, and most admirably calculated to
+deceive.
+</p>
+<p>
+It never did seem reasonable' to me that a long, cold and disgusting
+snake with an apple in his mouth, could deceive anybody; and I am glad,
+even at this late date to know that the something that persuaded Eve to
+taste the forbidden fruit was, at least, in the shape of a man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dr. Henry does not agree with the zoological explanation of Mr. Clark,
+but insists that "it is certain that the devil that beguiled Eve is the
+old serpent, a malignant by creation, an angel of light, an immediate
+attendant upon God's throne, but by sin an apostate from his first
+state, and a rebel against God's crown and dignity. He who attacked
+our first parents was surely the prince of devils, the ring leader in
+rebellion. The devil chose to act his part in a serpent, because it is
+a specious creature, has a spotted, dappled skin, and then, went erect.
+Perhaps it was a flying serpent which seemed to come from on high, as a
+messenger from the upper world, one of the seraphim; because the serpent
+is a subtile creature. What Eve thought of this serpent speaking to her,
+we are not likely to tell, and, I believe, she herself did not know
+what to think of it. At first, perhaps, she supposed it might be a good
+angel, and yet afterwards might suspect something amiss. The person
+tempted was a woman, now alone, and at a distance from her husband,
+but near the forbidden tree. It was the devil's subtlety to assault the
+weaker vessel with his temptations, as we may suppose her inferior to
+Adam in knowledge, strength and presence of mind. Some think that Eve
+received the command not immediately from God, but at second hand from
+her husband, and might, therefore, be the more easily persuaded to
+discredit it. It was the policy of the devil to enter into discussion
+with her when she was alone. He took advantage by finding her near the
+forbidden tree. God permitted Satan to prevail over Eve, for wise and
+holy ends. Satan teaches men first to doubt, and then to deny. He makes
+skeptics first, and by degrees makes them atheists."
+</p>
+<p>
+We are compelled to admit that nothing could be more attractive to a
+woman than a snake walking erect, with a "spotted, dappled skin," unless
+it were a serpent with wings. Is it not humiliating to know that our
+ancestors believed these things? Why should we object to the Darwinian
+doctrine of descent after this?
+</p>
+<p>
+Our fathers thought it their duty to believe, thought it a sin to
+entertain the slightest doubt, and really supposed that their credulity
+was exceedingly, gratifying to God. To them, the story was entirely
+real. They could see the garden, hear the babble of waters, smell the
+perfume of flowers. They believed there was a tree where knowledge grew
+like plums or pears; and they could plainly see the serpent coiled amid
+its rustling leaves, coaxing Eve to violate the laws of God.
+</p>
+<p>
+Where did the serpent come from? On which of the six days was he
+created? Who made him? Is it possible that God would make a successful
+rival? He must have known that Adam and Eve would fall. He knew what
+a snake with a "spotted, dappled skin" could do with an inexperienced
+woman. Why did he not defend his children? He knew that if the serpent
+got into the garden, Adam and Eve would sin, that he would have to drive
+them out, that afterwards the world would be destroyed, and that he
+himself would die upon the cross.
+</p>
+<p>
+Again, I ask what and who was this serpent? He was not a man, for only
+one man had been made. He was not a woman. He was not a beast of the
+field, because "he was more subtile than any beast of the field which
+the Lord God had made." He was neither fish nor fowl, nor snake, because
+he had the power of speech, and did not crawl upon his belly until after
+he was cursed. Where did this serpent come from? Why was he not kept out
+of the garden? Why did not the Lord God take him by the tail and snap
+his head off? Why did he not put Adam and Eve on their guard about this
+serpent? They, of course, were not acquainted in the neighborhood, and
+knew nothing about the serpent's reputation for truth and veracity
+among his neighbors. Probably Adam saw him when he was looking for "an
+helpmeet" and gave him a name, but Eve had never met him before. She was
+not surprised to hear a serpent talk, as that was the first one she had
+ever met. Every thing being new to her, and her husband not being with
+her just at that moment, it need hardly excite our wonder that she
+tasted the fruit by way of experiment. Neither should we be surprised
+that when she saw it was good and pleasant to the eye, and a fruit to
+be desired to make one wise, she had the generosity to divide with her
+husband.
+</p>
+<p>
+Theologians have filled thousands of volumes with abuse of this serpent,
+but it seems that he told the exact truth. We are told that this serpent
+was, in fact, Satan, the greatest enemy of mankind, and that he entered
+the serpent, appearing to our first parents in its body. If this is
+so, why should the serpent have been cursed? Why should God curse the
+serpent for what had really been done by the devil? Did Satan remain
+in the body of the serpent, and in some mysterious manner share his
+punishment? Is it true that when we kill a snake we also destroy an evil
+spirit, or is there but one devil, and did he perish at the death of
+the first serpent? Is it on account of that transaction in the Garden
+of Eden, that all the descendants of Adam and Eve known as Jews and
+Christians hate serpents?
+</p>
+<p>
+Do you account for the snake-worship in Mexico, Africa and India in the
+same way?
+</p>
+<p>
+What was the form of the serpent when he entered the garden, and in what
+way did he move from place to place? Did he walk or fly? Certainly he
+did not crawl, because that mode of locomotion was pronounced upon him
+as a curse. Upon what food did he subsist before his conversation with
+Eve? We know that after that he lived upon dust, but what did he eat
+before? It may be that this is all poetic; and the truest poetry is,
+according to Touchstone, "the most feigning."
+</p>
+<p>
+In this same chapter we are informed that "unto Adam also and to his
+wife did the Lord God make coats of skins and clothed them." Where did
+the Lord God get those skins? He must have taken them from the animals;
+he was a butcher. Then he had to prepare them; he was a tanner. Then
+he made them into coats; he was a tailor. How did it happen that they
+needed coats of skins, when they had been perfectly comfortable in a
+nude condition? Did the "fall" produce a change in the climate?
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it really necessary to believe this account in order to be happy
+here, or hereafter? Does it tend to the elevation of the human race to
+speak of "God" as a butcher, tanner and tailor?
+</p>
+<p>
+And here, let me say once for all, that when I speak of God, I mean
+the being described by Moses; the Jehovah of the Jews. There may be for
+aught I know, somewhere in the unknown shoreless vast, some being whose
+dreams are constellations and within whose thought the infinite exists.
+About this being, if such an one exists, I have nothing to say. He has
+written no books, inspired no barbarians, required no worship, and has
+prepared no hell in which to burn the honest seeker after truth.
+</p>
+<p>
+When I speak of God, I mean that god who prevented man from putting
+forth his hand and taking also of the fruit of the tree of life that
+he might live forever; of that god who multiplied the agonies of woman,
+increased the weary toil of man, and in his anger drowned a world&mdash;of
+that god whose altars reeked with human blood, who butchered babes,
+violated maidens, enslaved men and filled the earth with cruelty and
+crime; of that god who made heaven for the few, hell for the many,
+and who will gloat forever and ever upon the writhings of the lost and
+damned.
+</p>
+<center>
+XVIII. DAMPNESS.
+</center>
+<p>
+"And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the
+earth, and daughters were born unto them.
+</p>
+<p>
+"That the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and
+they took them wives of all which they chose.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the Lord said, My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that
+he also is flesh; yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years.
+</p>
+<p>
+"There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that
+when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare
+children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of
+renown.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and
+that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil
+continually.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth, and it
+grieved him at his heart.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And the Lord said, I will destroy man whom I have created from the face
+of the earth; both man, and beast, and the creeping thing, and the fowls
+of the air; for it repenteth me that I have made them."
+</p>
+<p>
+From this account it seems that driving Adam and Eve out of Eden did not
+have the effect to improve them or their children. On the contrary, the
+world grew worse and worse. They were under the immediate control and
+government of God, and he from time to time made known his will; but in
+spite of this, man continued to increase in crime.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing in particular seems to have been done. Not a school was
+established. There was no written language. There was not a Bible in the
+world. The "scheme of salvation" was kept a profound secret. The five
+points of Calvinism had not been taught. Sunday schools had not been
+opened. In short, nothing had been done for the reformation of the
+world. God did not even keep his own sons at home, but allowed them to
+leave their abode in the firmament, and make love to the daughters
+of men. As a result of this, the world was filled with wickedness and
+giants to such an extent that God regretted "that he had made man on the
+earth, and it grieved him at his heart."
+</p>
+<p>
+Of course God knew when he made man, that he would afterwards regret
+it. He knew that the people would grow worse and worse until destruction
+would be the only remedy. He knew that he would have to kill all except
+Noah and his family, and it is hard to see why he did not make Noah and
+his family in the first place, and leave Adam and Eve in the original
+dust. He knew that they would be tempted, that he would have to drive
+them out of the garden to keep them from eating of the tree of life;
+that the whole thing would be a failure; that Satan would defeat his
+plan; that he could not reform the people; that his own sons would
+corrupt them, and that at last he would have to drown them all except
+Noah and his family. Why was the Garden of Eden planted? Why was the
+experiment made? Why were Adam and Eve exposed to the seductive arts of
+the serpent? Why did God wait until the cool of the day before looking
+after his children? Why was he not on hand in the morning?
+</p>
+<p>
+Why did he fill the world with his own children, knowing that he would
+have to destroy them? And why does this same God tell me how to raise my
+children when he had to drown his?
+</p>
+<p>
+It is a little curious that when God wished to reform the ante-diluvian
+world he said nothing about hell; that he had no revivals, no
+camp-meetings, no tracts, no outpourings of the Holy Ghost, no baptisms,
+no noon prayer meetings, and never mentioned the great doctrine of
+salvation by faith. If the orthodox creeds of the world are true, all
+those people went to hell without ever having heard that such a place
+existed. If eternal torment is a fact, surely these miserable wretches
+ought to have been warned. They were threatened only with water when
+they were in fact doomed to eternal fire!
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it not strange that God said nothing to Adam and Eve about a future
+life; that he should have kept these "infinite verities" to himself and
+allowed millions to live and die without the hope of heaven, or the fear
+of hell?
+</p>
+<p>
+It may be that hell was not made at that time. In the six days of
+creation nothing is said about the construction of a bottomless pit, and
+the serpent himself did not make his appearance until after the creation
+of man and woman. Perhaps he was made on the first Sunday, and from that
+fact came, it may be, the old couplet,
+</p>
+<pre>
+ "And Satan still some mischief finds
+ For idle hands to do."
+</pre>
+<p>
+The sacred historian failed also to tell us when the cherubim and the
+flaming sword were made, and said nothing about two of the persons
+composing the Trinity. It certainly would have been an easy thing to
+enlighten Adam and his immediate descendants. The world was then only
+about fifteen hundred and thirty-six years old, and only about three
+or four generations of men had lived. Adam had been dead only about six
+hundred and six years, and some of his grandchildren must, at that time,
+have been alive and well.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is hard to see why God did not civilize these people. He certainly
+had the power to use, and the wisdom to devise the proper means. What
+right has a god to fill a world with fiends? Can there be goodness in
+this? Why should he make experiments that he knows must fail? Is there
+wisdom in this? And what right has a man to charge an infinite being
+with wickedness and folly?
+</p>
+<p>
+According to Moses, God made up his mind not only to destroy the people,
+but the beasts and the creeping things, and the fowls of the air. What
+had the beasts, and the creeping things, and the birds done to excite
+the anger of God? Why did he repent having made them? Will some
+Christian give us an explanation of this matter? No good man will
+inflict unnecessary pain upon a beast; how then can we worship a god who
+cares nothing for the agonies of the dumb creatures that he made?
+</p>
+<p>
+Why did he make animals that he knew he would destroy? Does God delight
+in causing pain? He had the power to make the beasts, and fowls, and
+creeping things in his own good time and way, and it is to be presumed
+that he made them according to his wish. Why should he destroy them?
+They had committed no sin. They had eaten no forbidden fruit, made no
+aprons, nor tried to reach the tree of life. Yet this god, in blind
+unreasoning wrath destroyed "all flesh wherein was the breath of life,
+and every living thing beneath the sky, and every substance wherein was
+life that he had made."
+</p>
+<p>
+Jehovah having made up his mind to drown the world, told Noah to make
+an Ark of gopher wood three hundred cubits long, fifty cubits wide and
+thirty cubits high. A cubit is twenty-two inches; so that the ark was
+five hundred and fifty feet long, ninety-one feet and eight inches wide
+and fifty-five feet high. This ark was divided into three stories, and
+had on top, one window twenty-two inches square. Ventilation must have
+been one of Jehovah's hobbies. Think of a ship larger than the Great
+Eastern with only one window, and that but twenty-two inches square!
+</p>
+<p>
+The ark also had one door set in the side thereof that shut from the
+outside. As soon as this ship was finished, and properly victualed, Noah
+received seven days notice to get the animals in the ark.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is claimed by some of the scientific theologians that the flood was
+partial, that the waters covered only a small portion of the world, and
+that consequently only a few animals were in the ark. It is impossible
+to conceive of language that can more clearly convey the idea of a
+universal flood than that found in the inspired account. If the flood
+was only partial, why did God say he would "destroy all flesh wherein
+is the breath of life from under heaven, and that every thing that is
+in the earth shall die"? Why did he say "I will destroy man whom I have
+created from the face of the earth, both man and beast, and the creeping
+thing and the fowls of the air"? Why did he say "And every living
+substance that I have made will I destroy from off the face of the
+earth"? Would a partial, local flood have fulfilled these threats?
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing can be clearer than that the writer of this account intended to
+convey, and did convey the idea that the flood was universal. Why should
+Christians try to deprive God of the glory of having wrought the most
+stupendous of miracles? Is it possible that the Infinite could not
+overwhelm with waves this atom called the earth? Do you doubt his power,
+his wisdom or his justice?
+</p>
+<p>
+Believers in miracles should not endeavor to explain them. There is but
+one way to explain anything, and that is to account for it by natural
+agencies. The moment you explain a miracle, it disappears. You should
+depend not upon explanation, but assertion. You should not be driven
+from the field because the miracle is shown to be unreasonable. You
+should reply that all miracles are unreasonable. Neither should you be
+in the least disheartened if it is shown to be impossible. The possible
+is not miraculous. You should take the ground that if miracles were
+reasonable, and possible, there would be no reward paid for believing
+them. The Christian has the goodness to believe, while the sinner asks
+for evidence. It is enough for God to work miracles without being called
+upon to substantiate them for the benefit of unbelievers.
+</p>
+<p>
+Only a few years ago, the Christians believed implicitly in the literal
+truth of every miracle recorded in the Bible. Whoever tried to explain
+them in some natural way, was looked upon as an infidel in disguise,
+but now he is regarded as a benefactor. The credulity of the church is
+decreasing, and the most marvelous miracles are now either "explained,"
+or allowed to take refuge behind the mistakes of the translators, or
+hide in the drapery of allegory.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the sixth chapter, Noah is ordered to take "of every living thing
+of all flesh, two of every sort into the ark&mdash;male and female." In the
+seventh chapter the order is changed, and Noah is commanded, according
+to the Protestant Bible, as follows: "Of every clean beast thou shalt
+take to thee by sevens, the male and his female, and of beasts that are
+not clean, by two, the male and his female. Of fowls also of the air by
+sevens, the male and the female."
+</p>
+<p>
+According to the Catholic Bible, Noah was commanded&mdash;-"Of all clean
+beasts take seven and seven, the male and the female. But of the beasts
+that are unclean two and two, the male and the female. Of the fowls also
+of the air seven and seven, the male and the female."
+</p>
+<p>
+For the purpose of belittling this miracle, many commentators have
+taken the ground that Noah was not ordered to take seven males and seven
+females of each kind of clean beasts, but seven in all. Many Christians
+contend that only seven clean beasts of each kind were taken into the
+ark&mdash;three and a half of each sex.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the account in the seventh chapter means anything, it means <i>first</i>,
+that of each kind of clean beasts, fourteen were to be taken, seven
+males, and seven females; <i>second</i>, that of unclean beasts should be
+taken, two of each kind, one of each sex, and <i>third</i>, that he should
+take of every kind of fowls, seven of each sex.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is equally clear that the command in the 19th and 20th verses of the
+6th chapter, is to take two of each sort, one male and one female. And
+this agrees exactly with the account in the 7th, 8th, 9th, 14th, 15th,
+and 16th verses of the 7th chapter.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next question is, how many beasts, fowls and creeping things did
+Noah take into the ark?
+</p>
+<p>
+There are now known and classified at least twelve thousand five hundred
+species of birds. There are still vast territories in China, South
+America, and Africa unknown to the ornithologist.
+</p>
+<p>
+Of the birds, Noah took fourteen of each species, according to the 3d
+verse of the 7th chapter, "Of fowls also of the air by sevens, the male
+and the female," making a total of 175,000 birds.
+</p>
+<p>
+And right here allow me to ask a question. If the flood was simply a
+partial flood, why were birds taken into the ark? It seems to me that
+most birds, attending strictly to business, might avoid a partial flood.
+</p>
+<p>
+There are at least sixteen hundred and fifty-eight kinds of beasts. Let
+us suppose that twenty-five of these are clean. Of the clean, fourteen
+of each kind&mdash;seven of each sex&mdash;were taken. These amount to 350. Of
+the unclean&mdash;two of each kind, amounting to 3,266. There are some six
+hundred and fifty species of reptiles. Two of each kind amount to 1,300.
+And lastly, there are of insects including the creeping things, at least
+one million species, so that Noah and his folks had to get of these into
+the ark about 2,000,000.
+</p>
+<p>
+Animalculæ have not been taken into consideration. There are probably
+many hundreds of thousands of species; many of them invisible; and
+yet Noah had to pick them out by pairs. Very few people have any just
+conception of the trouble Noah had.
+</p>
+<p>
+We know that there are many animals on this continent not found in the
+Old World. These must have been carried from here to the ark, and then
+brought back afterwards. Were the peccary, armadillo, ant-eater, sloth,
+agouti, vampire-bat, marmoset, howling and prehensile-tailed monkey, the
+raccoon and muskrat carried by the angels from America to Asia? How did
+they get there? Did the polar bear leave his field of ice and journey
+toward the tropics? How did he know where the ark was? Did the kangaroo
+swim or jump from Australia to Asia? Did the giraffe, hippopotamus,
+antelope and orang-outang journey from Africa in search of the ark? Can
+absurdities go farther than this?
+</p>
+<p>
+What had these animals to eat while on the journey? What did they eat
+while in the ark? What did they drink? When the rain came, of course
+the rivers ran to the seas, and these seas rose and finally covered the
+world. The waters of the seas, mingled with those of the flood, would
+make all salt. It has been calculated that it required, to drown the
+world, about eight times as much water as was in all the seas. To find
+how salt the waters of the flood must have been, take eight quarts of
+fresh water, and add one quart from the sea. Such water would create
+instead of allaying thirst. Noah had to take in his ark fresh water for
+all his beasts, birds and living things. He had to take the proper food
+for all. How long was he in the ark? Three hundred and seventy-seven
+days! Think of the food necessary for the monsters of the ante-diluvian
+world!
+</p>
+<p>
+Eight persons did all the work. They attended to the wants of 175,000
+birds, 3,616 beasts, 1,300 reptiles, and 2,000,000 insects, saying
+nothing of countless animalculæ.
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, after they all got in, Noah pulled down the window, God shut the
+door, and the rain commenced.
+</p>
+<p>
+How long did it rain?
+</p>
+<p>
+Forty days.
+</p>
+<p>
+How deep did the water get?
+</p>
+<p>
+About five miles and a half.
+</p>
+<p>
+How much did it rain a day?
+</p>
+<p>
+Enough to cover the whole world to a depth of about seven hundred and
+forty-two feet.
+</p>
+<p>
+Some Christians say that the fountains of the great deep were broken up.
+Will they be kind enough to tell us what the fountains of the great deep
+are? Others say that God had vast stores of water in the center of the
+earth that he used on that occasion. How did these waters happen to run
+up hill?
+</p>
+<p>
+Gentlemen, allow me to tell you once more that you must not try to
+explain these things. Your efforts in that direction do no good, because
+your explanations are harder to believe than the miracle itself. Take my
+advice, stick to assertion, and let explanation alone.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then, as now, Dhawalagiri lifted its crown of snow twenty-nine thousand
+feet above the level of the sea, and on the cloudless cliffs of
+Chimborazo then, as now, sat the condor; and yet the waters rising seven
+hundred and twenty-six feet a day&mdash;thirty feet an hour, six inches
+a minute,&mdash;rose over the hills, over the volcanoes, filled the vast
+craters, extinguished all the fires, rose above every mountain peak
+until the vast world was but one shoreless sea covered with the
+innumerable dead.
+</p>
+<p>
+Was this the work of the most merciful God, the father of us all? If
+there is a God, can there be the slightest danger of incurring his
+displeasure by doubting even in a reverential way, the truth of such a
+cruel lie? If we think that God is kinder than he really is, will our
+poor souls be burned for that?
+</p>
+<p>
+How many trees can live under miles of water for a year? What became of
+the soil washed, scattered, dissolved, and covered with the <i>debris</i> of
+a world? How were the tender plants and herbs preserved? How were the
+animals preserved after leaving the ark? There was no grass except such
+as had been submerged for a year. There were no animals to be devoured
+by the carnivorous beasts. What became of the birds that fed on worms
+and insects? What became of the birds that devoured other birds?
+</p>
+<p>
+It must be remembered that the pressure of the water when at the highest
+point&mdash;say twenty-nine thousand feet, would have been about eight
+hundred tons on each square foot. Such a pressure certainly would have
+destroyed nearly every vestige of vegetable life, so that when the
+animals came out of the ark, there was not a mouthful of food in the
+wide world. How were they supported until the world was again clothed
+with grass? How were those animals taken care of that subsisted on
+others? Where did the bees get honey, and the ants seeds? There was not
+a creeping thing upon the whole earth; not a breathing creature beneath
+the whole heavens; not a living substance. Where did the tenants of the
+ark get food?
+</p>
+<p>
+There is but one answer, if the story is true. The food necessary
+not only during the year of the flood, but sufficient for many months
+afterwards, must have been stored in the ark.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is probably not an animal in the world that will not, in a year,
+eat and drink ten times its weight. Noah must have provided food and
+water for a year while in the ark, and food for at least six months
+after they got ashore. It must have required for a pair of elephants,
+about one hundred and fifty tons of food and water. A couple of mammoths
+would have required about twice that amount. Of course there were other
+monsters that lived on trees; and in a year would have devoured quite a
+forest.
+</p>
+<p>
+How could eight persons have distributed this food, even if the ark had
+been large enough to hold it? How was the ark kept clean? We know how it
+was ventilated; but what was done with the filth? How were the animals
+watered? How were some portions of the ark heated for animals from the
+tropics, and others kept cool for the polar bears? How did the animals
+get back to their respective countries? Some had to creep back about
+six thousand miles, and they could only go a few feet a day. Some of the
+creeping things must have started for the ark just as soon as they were
+made, and kept up a steady jog for sixteen hundred years. Think of
+a couple of the slowest snails leaving a point opposite the ark and
+starting for the plains of Shinar, a distance of twelve thousand miles.
+Going at the rate of a mile a month, it would take them a thousand
+years. How did they get there? Polar bears must have gone several
+thousand miles, and so sudden a change in climate must have been
+exceedingly trying upon their health. How did they know the way to go?
+Of course, all the polar bears did not go. Only two were required. Who
+selected these?
+</p>
+<p>
+Two sloths had to make the journey from South America. These creatures
+cannot travel to exceed three rods a day. At this rate, they would make
+a mile in about a hundred days. They must have gone about six thousand
+five hundred miles, to reach the ark. Supposing them to have traveled by
+a reasonably direct route, in order to complete the journey before Noah
+hauled in the plank, they must have started several years before the
+world was created. We must also consider that these sloths had to board
+themselves on the way, and that most of their time had to be taken up
+getting food and water. It is exceedingly doubtful whether a sloth could
+travel six thousand miles and board himself in less than three thousand
+years.
+</p>
+<p>
+Volumes might be written upon the infinite absurdity of this most
+incredible, wicked and foolish of all the fables contained in that
+repository of the impossible, called the Bible. To me it is a matter
+of amazement, that it ever was for a moment believed by any intelligent
+human being.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dr. Adam Clarke says that "the animals were brought to the ark by the
+power of God, and their enmities were so removed or suspended, that the
+lion could dwell peaceably with the lamb, and the wolf sleep happily by
+the side of the kid. There is no positive evidence that animal food was
+ever used before the flood. Noah had the first grant of this kind."
+</p>
+<p>
+Dr. Scott remarks, "There seems to have been a very extraordinary
+miracle, perhaps by the ministration of angels, in bringing two of every
+species to Noah, and rendering them submissive, and peaceful with each
+other. Yet it seems not to have made any impression upon the hardened
+spectators. The suspension of the ferocity of the savage beasts during
+their continuance in the ark, is generally considered as an apt figure
+of the change that takes place in the disposition of sinners when they
+enter the true church of Christ."
+</p>
+<p>
+He believed the deluge to have been universal. In his day science had
+not demonstrated the absurdity of this belief, and he was not compelled
+to resort to some theory not found in the Bible. He insisted that "by
+some vast convulsion, the very bowels of the earth were forced upwards,
+and rain poured down in cataracts and water-spouts, with no intermission
+for forty days and nights, and until in every place a universal deluge
+was effected.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The presence of God was the only comfort of Noah in his dreary
+confinement, and in witnessing the dire devastation of the earth and its
+inhabitants, and especially of the human species&mdash;of his companions, his
+neighbors, his relatives&mdash;all those to whom he had preached, for whom he
+had prayed and over whom he had wept, and even of many who had helped to
+build the ark.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It seems that by a peculiar providential interposition, no animal of
+any sort died, although they had been shut up in the ark above a year;
+and it does not appear that there had been any increase of them during
+that time.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The Ark was flat-bottomed&mdash;square at each end&mdash;roofed like a house so
+that it terminated at the top in the breadth of a cubit. It was divided
+into many little cabins for its intended inhabitants. Pitched within and
+without to keep it tight and sweet, and lighted from the upper part.
+But it must, at first sight, be evident that so large a vessel, thus
+constructed, with so few persons on board, was utterly unfitted to
+weather out the deluge, except it was under the immediate guidance and
+protection of the Almighty."
+</p>
+<p>
+Dr. Henry furnished the Christian world with the following:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"As our bodies have in them the humors which, when God pleases, become
+the springs and seeds of mortal disease, so the earth had, in its
+bowels, those waters which, at God's command, sprung up and flooded it.
+</p>
+<p>
+"God made the world in six days, but he was forty days in destroying it,
+because he is slow to anger.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The hostilities between the animals in the ark ceased, and ravenous
+creatures became mild and manageable, so that the wolf lay down with the
+lamb, and the lion ate straw like an ox.
+</p>
+<p>
+"God shut the door of the ark to secure Noah and to keep him safe, and
+because it was necessary that the door should be shut very close lest
+the water should break in and sink the ark, and very fast lest others
+might break it down.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The waters rose so high that not only the low flat countries were
+deluged, but to make sure work and that none might escape, the tops of
+the highest mountains were overflowed fifteen cubits. That is, seven
+and a half yards, so that salvation was not hoped for from hills or
+mountains.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Perhaps some of the people got to the top of the ark, and hoped to
+shift for themselves there. But either they perished there for want of
+food, or the dashing rain washed them off the top. Others, it may be,
+hoped to prevail with Noah for admission into the ark, and plead old
+acquaintance.
+</p>
+<p>
+"'Have we not eaten and drank in thy presence? Hast thou not preached in
+our streets?' 'Yea,' said Noah, 'many a time, but to little purpose. I
+called but ye refused; and now it is not in my power to help you. God
+has shut the door and I cannot open it.'
+</p>
+<p>
+"We may suppose that some of those who perished in the deluge had
+themselves assisted Noah, or were employed by him in building the ark.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Hitherto, man had been confined to feed only upon the products of the
+earth. Fruits, herbs and roots, and all sorts of greens, and milk, which
+was the first grant; but the flood having perhaps washed away much
+of the fruits of the earth, and rendered them much less pleasant and
+nourishing, God enlarged the grant and allowed him to eat flesh, which
+perhaps man never thought of until now, that God directed him to it. Nor
+had he any more desire to it than the sheep has to suck blood like the
+wolf. But now, man is allowed to feed upon flesh as freely and safely as
+upon the green herb."
+</p>
+<p>
+Such was the debasing influence of a belief in the literal truth of the
+Bible upon these men, that their commentaries are filled with passages
+utterly devoid of common sense.
+</p>
+<p>
+Dr. Clarke speaking of the mammoth says:
+</p>
+<p>
+"This animal, an astonishing proof of God's power, he seems to have
+produced merely to show what he could do. And after suffering a few of
+them to propagate, he extinguished the race by a merciful providence,
+that they might not destroy both man and beast.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We are told that it would have been much easier for God to destroy all
+the people and make new ones, but he would not want to waste anything
+and no power or skill should be lavished where no necessity exists.
+</p>
+<p>
+"The animals were brought to the ark by the power of God."
+</p>
+<p>
+Again gentlemen, let me warn you of the danger of trying to explain a
+miracle. Let it alone. Say that you do not understand it, and do not
+expect to until taught in the schools of the New Jerusalem. The more
+reasons you give, the more unreasonable the miracle will appear. Through
+what you say in defence, people are led to think, and as soon as they
+really think, the miracle is thrown away.
+</p>
+<p>
+Among the most ignorant nations you will find the most wonders, among
+the most enlightened, the least. It is with individuals, the same as
+with nations. Ignorance believes, Intelligence examines and explains.
+</p>
+<p>
+For about seven months the ark, with its cargo of men, animals and
+insects, tossed and wandered without rudder or sail upon a boundless
+sea. At last it grounded on the mountains of Ararat; and about three
+months afterward the tops of the mountains became visible. It must not
+be forgotten that the mountain where the ark is supposed to have first
+touched bottom, was about seventeen thousand feet high. How were the
+animals from the tropics kept warm? When the waters were abated it would
+be intensely cold at a point seventeen thousand feet above the level of
+the sea. May be there were stoves, furnaces, fire places and steam coils
+in the ark, but they are not mentioned in the inspired narrative. How
+were the animals kept from freezing? It will not do to say that Ararat
+was not very high after all.
+</p>
+<p>
+If you will read the fourth and fifth verses of the eight chapter you
+will see that although "the ark rested in the seventh month, on the
+seventeenth day of the month, upon the mountains of Ararat, it was not
+until the first day of the tenth month that the tops of the mountains
+could be seen." From this it would seem that the ark must have rested
+upon about the highest peak in that country. Noah waited forty days
+more, and then for the first time opened the window and took a breath
+of fresh air. He then sent out a raven that did not return, then a dove
+that returned. He then waited seven days and sent forth a dove that
+returned not. From this he knew that the waters were abated. Is it
+possible that he could not see whether the waters had gone? Is it
+possible to conceive of a more perfectly childish way of ascertaining
+whether the earth was dry?
+</p>
+<p>
+At last Noah "removed the covering of the ark, and looked and behold the
+face of the ground was dry," and thereupon God told him to disembark. In
+his gratitude Noah built an altar and took of every clean beast and of
+every clean fowl, and offered burnt offerings. And the Lord smelled a
+sweet savor and said in his heart that he would not any more curse the
+ground for man's sake. For saying this in his heart the Lord gives as a
+reason, not that man is, or will be good, but because "the imagination
+of man's heart is evil from his youth." God destroyed man because "the
+wickedness of man was great in the earth, and <i>because every imagination
+of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually</i>." And he
+promised for the same reason not to destroy him again. Will some
+gentleman skilled in theology give us an explanation?
+</p>
+<p>
+After God had smelled the sweet savor of sacrifice, he seems to have
+changed his idea as to the proper diet for man. When Adam and Eve were
+created they were allowed to eat herbs bearing seed, and the fruit of
+trees. When they were turned out of Eden, God said to them "Thou shalt
+eat the herb of the field." In the first chapter of Genesis the "green
+herb" was given for food to the beasts, fowls and creeping things. Upon
+being expelled from the garden, Adam and Eve, as to their food, were
+put upon an equality with the lower animals. According to this, the
+ante-diluvians were vegetarians. This may account for their wickedness
+and longevity.
+</p>
+<p>
+After Noah sacrificed, and God smelled the sweet savor; he said&mdash;"Every
+moving thing that liveth shall be meat for you, even as the green herb
+have I given you all things." Afterward this same God changed his mind
+again, and divided the beasts and birds into clean and unclean, and made
+it a crime for man to eat the unclean. Probably food was so scarce when
+Noah was let out of the ark that Jehovah generously allowed him to eat
+anything and everything he could find.
+</p>
+<p>
+According to the account, God then made a covenant with Noah to the
+effect that he would not again destroy the world with a flood, and as
+the attesting witness of this contract, a rainbow was set in the cloud.
+This bow was placed in the sky so that it might perpetually remind God
+of his promise and covenant. Without this visible witness and reminder,
+it would seem that Jehovah was liable to forget the contract, and drown
+the world again. Did the rainbow originate in this way? Did God put it
+in the cloud simply to keep his agreement in his memory?
+</p>
+<p>
+For me it is impossible to believe the story of the deluge. It seems so
+cruel, so barbaric, so crude in detail, so absurd in all its parts,
+and so contrary to all we know of law, that even credulity itself is
+shocked.
+</p>
+<p>
+Many nations have preserved accounts of a deluge in which all people,
+except a family or two, were destroyed. Babylon was certainly a city
+before Jerusalem was founded. Egypt was in the height of her power when
+there were only seventy Jews in the world, and India had a literature
+before the name of Jehovah had passed the lips of superstition. An
+account of a general deluge "was discovered by George Smith, translated
+from another account that was written about two thousand years before
+Christ." Of course it is impossible to tell how long the story had
+lived in the memory of tradition before it was reduced to writing by the
+Babylonians. According to this account, which is, without doubt, much
+older than the one given by Moses, Tamzi built a ship at the command of
+the god Hea, and put in it his family and the beasts of the field. He
+pitched the ship inside and outside with bitumen, and as soon as it was
+finished, there came a flood of rain and "destroyed all life from the
+face of the whole earth. On the seventh day there was a calm, and the
+ship stranded on the mountain Nizir." Tamzi waited for seven days more,
+and then let out a dove. Afterwards, he let out a swallow, and that, as
+well as the dove returned. Then he let out a raven, and as that did not
+return, he concluded that the water had dried away, and thereupon
+left the ship. Then he made an offering to god, or the gods, and "Hea
+interceded with Bel," so that the earth might never again be drowned.
+</p>
+<p>
+This is the Babylonian story, told without the contradictions of the
+original. For in that, it seems, there are two accounts, as well as
+in the Bible. Is it not a strange coincidence that there should be
+contradictory accounts mingled in both the Babylonian and Jewish
+stories?
+</p>
+<p>
+In the Bible there are two accounts. In one account, Noah was to take
+two of all beasts, birds, and creeping things into the ark, while in the
+other, he was commanded to take of clean beasts, and all birds by
+sevens of each kind. According to one account, the flood only lasted
+one hundred and fifty days&mdash;as related in the third verse of the eighth
+chapter; while the other account fixes the time at three hundred and
+seventy-seven days. Both of these accounts cannot be true. Yet in order
+to be saved, it is not sufficient to believe one of them&mdash;you must
+believe both.
+</p>
+<p>
+Among the Egyptians there was a story to the effect that the great god
+Ra became utterly maddened with the people, and deliberately made up his
+mind that he would exterminate mankind. Thereupon he began to destroy,
+and continued in the terrible work until blood flowed in streams, when
+suddenly he ceased, and took an oath that he would not again destroy the
+human race. This myth was probably thousands of years old when Moses was
+born.
+</p>
+<p>
+So, in India, there was a fable about the flood. A fish warned Manu
+that a flood was coming. Manu built a "box" and the fish towed it to a
+mountain and saved all hands.
+</p>
+<p>
+The same kind of stories were told in Greece, and among our own Indian
+tribes. At one time the Christian pointed to the fact that many nations
+told of a flood, as evidence of the truth of the Mosaic account; but
+now, it having been shown that other accounts are much older, and
+equally reasonable, that argument has ceased to be of any great value.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is probable that all these accounts had a common origin. They were
+likely born of something in nature visible to all nations. The idea of a
+universal flood, produced by a god to drown the world on account of
+the sins of the people, is infinitely absurd. The solution of all these
+stories has been supposed to be, the existence of partial floods in most
+countries; and for a long time this solution was satisfactory. But the
+fact that these stories are greatly alike, that only one man is warned,
+that only one family is saved, that a boat is built, that birds are sent
+out to find if the water had abated, tend to show that they had a common
+origin. Admitting that there were severe floods in all countries; it
+certainly cannot follow that in each instance only one family would be
+saved, or that the same story would in each instance be told. It may be
+urged that the natural tendency of man to exaggerate calamities, might
+account for this agreement in all the accounts, and it must be admitted
+that there is some force in the suggestion. I believe, though, that the
+real origin of all these myths is the same, and that it was originally
+an effort to account for the sun, moon and stars. The sun and moon
+were the man and wife, or the god and goddess, and the stars were their
+children. From a celestial myth, it became a terrestrial one; the air,
+or ether-ocean became a flood, produced by rain, and the sun moon and
+stars became man, woman and children.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the original story, the mountain was the place where in the far east
+the sky was supposed to touch the earth, and it was there that the ship
+containing the celestial passengers finally rested from its voyage. But
+whatever may be the origin of the stories of the flood, whether told
+first by Hindu, Babylonian or Hebrew, we may rest perfectly assured that
+they are all equally false.
+</p>
+<center>
+XIX. BACCHUS AND BABEL.
+</center>
+<p>
+As soon as Noah had disembarked, he proceeded to plant a vineyard, and
+began to be a husbandman; and when the grapes were ripe he made wine and
+drank of it to excess; cursed his grandson, blessed Shem and Japheth, and
+after that lived for three hundred and fifty years. What he did during
+these three hundred and fifty years, we are not told. We never hear of
+him again. For three hundred and fifty years he lived among his sons,
+and daughters, and their descendants. He must have been a venerable man.
+He was the man to whom God had made known his intention of drowning the
+world. By his efforts, the human race had been saved. He must have been
+acquainted with Methuselah for six hundred years, and Methuselah was
+about two hundred and forty years old, when Adam died. Noah must himself
+have known the history of mankind, and must have been an object of
+almost infinite interest; and yet for three hundred and fifty years he
+is neither directly nor indirectly mentioned. When Noah died, Abraham
+must have been more than fifty years old; and Shem, the son of Noah,
+lived for several hundred years after the death of Abraham; and yet he
+is never mentioned. Noah when he died, was the oldest man in the whole
+world by about five hundred years; and everybody living at the time of
+his death knew that they were indebted to him, and yet no account is
+given of his burial. No monument was raised to mark the spot. This,
+however, is no more wonderful than the fact that no account is given of
+the death of Adam or of Eve, nor of the place of their burial. This may
+all be accounted for by the fact that the language of man was confounded
+at the building of the tower of Babel, whereby all tradition may have
+been lost, so that even the sons of Noah could not give an account of
+their voyage in the ark; and, consequently, some one had to be directly
+inspired to tell the story, after new languages had been formed.
+</p>
+<p>
+It has always been a mystery to me how Adam, Eve, and the serpent were
+taught the same language. Where did they get it? We know now, that
+it requires a great number of years to form a language; that it is of
+exceedingly slow growth. We also know that by language, man conveys to
+his fellows the impressions made upon him by what he sees, hears, smells
+and touches. We know that the language of the savage consists of a few
+sounds, capable of expressing only a few ideas or states of the
+mind, such as love, desire, fear, hatred, aversion and contempt. Many
+centuries are required to produce a language capable of expressing
+complex ideas. It does not seem to me that ideas can be manufactured by
+a deity and put in the brain of man. These ideas must be the result of
+observation and experience.
+</p>
+<p>
+Does anybody believe that God directly taught a language to Adam and
+Eve, or that he so made them that they, by intuition spoke Hebrew, or
+some language capable of conveying to each other their thoughts? How did
+the serpent learn the same language? Did God teach it to him, or did he
+happen to overhear God, when he was teaching Adam and Eve? We are told
+in the second chapter of Genesis that God caused all the animals to pass
+before Adam to see what he would call them. We cannot infer from this
+that God named the animals and informed Adam what to call them. Adam
+named them himself. Where did he get his words? We cannot imagine a man
+just made out of dust, without the experience of a moment, having the
+power to put his thoughts in language. In the first place, we cannot
+conceive of his having any thoughts until he has combined, through
+experience and observation, the impressions that nature had made upon
+him through the medium of his senses. We cannot imagine of his knowing
+anything, in the first instance, about different degrees of heat, nor
+about darkness, if he was made in the day-time, nor about light, if
+created at night, until the next morning. Before a man can have what we
+call thoughts, he must have had a little experience. Something must have
+happened to him before he can have a thought, and before he can express
+himself in language. Language is a growth, not a gift. We account now
+for the diversity of language by the fact that tribes and nations have
+had different experiences, different wants, different surroundings, and,
+one result of all these differences is, among other things, a difference
+in language. Nothing can be more absurd than to account for the
+different languages of the world by saying that the original language
+was confounded at the tower of Babel.
+</p>
+<p>
+According to the Bible, up to the time of the building of that tower,
+the whole earth was of one language and of one speech, and would have so
+remained until the present time had not an effort been made to build
+a tower whose top should reach into heaven. Can any one imagine what
+objection God would have to the building of such a tower? And how could
+the confusion of tongues prevent its construction? How could language
+be confounded? It could be confounded only by the destruction of memory.
+Did God destroy the memory of mankind at that time, and if so, how?
+Did he paralyze that portion of the brain presiding over the organs
+of articulation, so that they could not speak the words, although they
+remembered them clearly, or did he so touch the brain that they
+could not hear? Will some theologian, versed in the machinery of the
+miraculous, tell us in what way God confounded the language of mankind?
+</p>
+<p>
+Why would the confounding of the language make them separate? Why would
+they not stay together until they could understand each other? People
+will not separate, from weakness. When in trouble they come together
+and desire the assistance of each other. Why, in this instance, did they
+separate? What particular ones would naturally come together if nobody
+understood the language of any other person? Would it not have been just
+as hard to agree when and where to go, without any language to express
+the agreement, as to go on with the building of the tower?
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it possible that any one now believes that the whole world would be
+of one speech had the language not been confounded at Babel? Do we not
+know that every word was suggested in some way by the experience of men?
+Do we not know that words are continually dying, and continually being
+born; that every language has its cradle and its cemetery&mdash;its buds, its
+blossoms, its fruits and its withered leaves? Man has loved, enjoyed,
+hated, suffered and hoped, and all words have been born of these
+experiences.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why did "the Lord come down to see the city and the tower"? Could he
+not see them from where he lived or from where he was? Where did he come
+down from? Did he come in the daytime, or in the night? We are taught
+now that God is everywhere; that he inhabits immensity; that he is in
+every atom, and in every star. If this is true, why did he "come down to
+see the city and the tower?" Will some theologian explain this?
+</p>
+<p>
+After all, is it not much easier and altogether more reasonable to say
+that Moses was mistaken, that he knew little of the science of language,
+and that he guessed a great deal more than he investigated?
+</p>
+<center>
+XX. FAITH IN FILTH.
+</center>
+<p>
+No light whatever is shed upon what passed in the world after the
+confounding of language at Babel, until the birth of Abraham. But,
+before speaking of the history of the Jewish people, it may be proper
+for me to say that many things are recounted in Genesis, and other books
+attributed to Moses, of which I do not wish to speak. There are many
+pages of these books unfit to read, many stories not calculated, in my
+judgment, to improve the morals of mankind. I do not wish even to call
+the attention of my readers to these things, except in a general way. It
+is to be hoped that the time will come when such chapters and passages
+as cannot be read without leaving the blush of shame upon the cheek of
+modesty, will be left out, and not published as a part of the Bible. If
+there is a God, it certainly is blasphemous to attribute to him the
+authorship of pages too obscene, beastly and vulgar to be read in the
+presence of men and women.
+</p>
+<p>
+The believers in the Bible are loud in their denunciation of what they
+are pleased to call the immoral literature of the world; and yet few
+books have been published containing more moral filth than this inspired
+word of God. These stories are not redeemed by a single flash of wit or
+humor. They never rise above the dull details of stupid vice. For one,
+I cannot afford to soil my pages with extracts from them; and all such
+portions of the Scriptures I leave to be examined, written upon, and
+explained by the clergy. Clergymen may know some way by which they can
+extract honey from these flowers. Until these passages are expunged
+from the Old Testament, it is not a fit book to be read by either old
+or young. It contains pages that no minister in the United States would
+read to his congregation for any reward whatever. There are chapters
+that no gentleman would read in the presence of a lady. There are
+chapters that no father would read to his child. There are narratives
+utterly unfit to be told; and the time will come when mankind will
+wonder that such a book was ever called inspired.
+</p>
+<p>
+I know that in many books besides the Bible, there are immodest lines.
+Some of the greatest writers have soiled their pages with indecent
+words. We account for this by saying that the authors were human; that
+they catered to the taste and spirit of their times. We make excuses,
+but at the same time regret that in their works they left an impure
+word. But what shall we say of God? Is it possible that a being of
+infinite purity&mdash;the author of modesty, would smirch the pages of his
+book with stories lewd, licentious and obscene? If God is the author of
+the Bible, it is, of course, the standard by which all other books can,
+and should be measured. If the Bible is not obscene, what book is? Why
+should men be imprisoned simply for imitating God? The Christian world
+should never say another word against immoral books until it makes the
+inspired volume clean. These vile and filthy things were not written
+for the purpose of conveying and enforcing moral truth, but seem to
+have been written because the author loved an unclean thing. There is
+no moral depth below that occupied by the writer or publisher of obscene
+books, that stain with lust, the loving heart of youth. Such men should
+be imprisoned and their books destroyed. The literature of the world
+should be rendered decent, and no book should be published that cannot
+be read by, and in the hearing of the best and purest people. But as
+long as the Bible is considered as the work of God, it will be hard
+to make all men too good and pure to imitate it; and as long as it is
+imitated there will be vile and filthy books. The literature of our
+country will not be sweet and clean until the Bible ceases to be
+regarded as the production of a god.
+</p>
+<p>
+We are continually told that the Bible is the very foundation of modesty
+and morality; while many of its pages are so immodest and immoral that
+a minister, for reading them in the pulpit, would be instantly denounced
+as an unclean wretch. Every woman would leave the church, and if the men
+stayed, it would be for the purpose of chastising the minister.
+</p>
+<p>
+Is there any saving grace in hypocrisy? Will men become clean in speech
+by believing that God is unclean? Would it not be far better to admit
+that the Bible was written by barbarians in a barbarous, coarse and
+vulgar age? Would it not be safer to charge Moses with vulgarity,
+instead of God? Is it not altogether more probable that some ignorant
+Hebrew would write the vulgar words? The Christians tell me that God is
+the author of these vile and stupid things? I have examined the question
+to the best of my ability, and as to God my verdict is:&mdash;Not guilty.
+Faith should not rest in filth.
+</p>
+<p>
+Every foolish and immodest thing should be expunged from the Bible.
+Let us keep the good. Let us preserve every great and splendid thought,
+every wise and prudent maxim, every just law, every elevated idea, and
+every word calculated to make man nobler and purer, and let us have the
+courage to throw the rest away. The souls of children should not
+be stained and soiled. The charming instincts of youth should not be
+corrupted and defiled. The girls and boys should not be taught that
+unclean words were uttered by "inspired" lips. Teach them that these
+words were born of savagery and lust. Teach them that the unclean is the
+unholy, and that only the pure is sacred.
+</p>
+<center>
+XXI. THE HEBREWS.
+</center>
+<p>
+After language had been confounded and the people scattered, there
+appeared in the land of Canaan a tribe of Hebrews ruled by a chief or
+sheik called Abraham. They had a few cattle, lived in tents, practiced
+polygamy, wandered from place to place, and were the only folks in the
+whole world to whom God paid the slightest attention. At this time
+there were hundreds of cities in India filled with temples and palaces;
+millions of Egyptians worshiped Isis and Osiris, and had covered their
+land with marvelous monuments of industry, power and skill. But these
+civilizations were entirely neglected by the Deity, his whole attention
+being taken up with Abraham and his family.
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems, from the account, that God and Abraham were intimately
+acquainted, and conversed frequently upon a great variety of subjects.
+By the twelfth chapter of Genesis it appears that he made the following
+promises to Abraham. "I will make of thee a great nation, and I will
+bless thee, and make thy name great: and thou shalt be a blessing. And I
+will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee."
+</p>
+<p>
+After receiving this communication from the Almighty, Abraham went into
+the land of Canaan, and again God appeared to him and told him to take
+a heifer three years old, a goat of the same age, a sheep of equal
+antiquity, a turtle dove and a young pigeon. Whereupon Abraham killed
+the animals "and divided them in the midst, and laid each piece one
+against another." And it came to pass that when the sun went down and
+it was dark, behold a smoking furnace and a burning lamp that passed
+between the raw and bleeding meat. The killing of these animals was
+a preparation for receiving a visit from God. Should an American
+missionary in Central Africa find a negro chief surrounded by
+a butchered heifer, a goat and a sheep, with which to receive a
+communication from the infinite God, my opinion is, that the missionary
+would regard the proceeding as the direct result of savagery. And if
+the chief insisted that he had seen a smoking furnace and a burning
+lamp going up and down between the pieces of meat, the missionary would
+certainly conclude that the chief was not altogether right in his mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the Bible is true, this same God told Abraham to take and sacrifice
+his only son, or rather the only son of his wife, and a murder would
+have been committed had not God, just at the right moment, directed him
+to stay his hand and take a sheep instead.
+</p>
+<p>
+God made a great number of promises to Abraham, but few of them were
+ever kept. He agreed to make him the father of a great nation, but he
+did not. He solemnly promised to give him a great country, including all
+the land between the river of Egypt and the Euphrates, but he did not.
+</p>
+<p>
+In due time Abraham passed away, and his son Isaac took his place at
+the head of the tribe. Then came Jacob, who "watered stock" and enriched
+himself with the spoil of Laban. Joseph was sold into Egypt by his
+jealous brethren, where he became one of the chief men of the kingdom,
+and in a few years his father and brothers left their own country and
+settled in Egypt. At this time there were seventy Hebrews in the world,
+counting Joseph and his children. They remained in Egypt two hundred and
+fifteen years. It is claimed by some that they were in that country for
+four hundred and thirty years. This is a mistake. Josephus says they
+were in Egypt two hundred and fifteen years, and this statement is
+sustained by the best biblical scholars of all denominations. According
+to the 17th verse of the 3rd chapter of Galatians, it was four hundred
+and thirty years from the time the promise was made to Abraham to
+the giving of the law, and as the Hebrews did not go to Egypt for two
+hundred and fifteen years after the making of the promise to Abraham,
+they could in no event have been in Egypt more than two hundred and
+fifteen years. In our Bible the 40th verse of the 12th chapter of
+Exodus, is as follows:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now the sojourning of the children of Israel, who dwelt in Egypt, was
+four hundred and thirty years."
+</p>
+<p>
+This passage does not say that the sojourning was all done in Egypt;
+neither does it say that the children of Israel dwelt in Egypt four
+hundred and thirty years; but it does say that the sojourning of the
+children of Israel who dwelt in Egypt was four hundred and thirty
+years. The Vatican copy of the Septuagint renders the same passage as
+follows:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"The sojourning of the children of Israel which they sojourned in Egypt,
+and in the land of Canaan, was four hundred and thirty years."
+</p>
+<p>
+The Alexandrian version says:&mdash;"The sojourning of the children of Israel
+which they and their fathers sojourned in Egypt, and in the land of
+Canaan, was four hundred and thirty years."
+</p>
+<p>
+And in the Samaritan Bible we have:&mdash;"The sojourning of the children of
+Israel and of their fathers which they sojourned in the land of Canaan,
+and in the land of Egypt, was four hundred and thirty years."
+</p>
+<p>
+There were seventy souls when they went down into Egypt, and they
+remained two hundred and fifteen years, and at the end of that time they
+had increased to about three million. How do we know that there were
+three million at the end of two hundred and fifteen years? We know it
+because we are informed by Moses that "there were six hundred thousand
+men of war." Now, to each man of war, there must have been at least five
+other people. In every State in this Union there will be to each voter,
+five other persons at least, and we all know that there are always more
+voters than men of war. If there were six hundred thousand men of war,
+there must have been a population of at least three million. Is it
+possible that seventy people could increase to that extent in two
+hundred and fifteen years? You may say that it was a miracle; but
+what need was there of working a miracle? Why should God miraculously
+increase the number of slaves? If he wished miraculously to increase the
+population, why did he not wait until the people were free?
+</p>
+<p>
+In 1776, we had in the American Colonies about three millions of people.
+In one hundred years we doubled four times: that is to say, six, twelve,
+twenty-four, forty-eight million,&mdash;our present population.
+</p>
+<p>
+We must not forget that during all these years there has been pouring
+into our country a vast stream of emigration, and that this, taken
+in connection with the fact that our country is productive beyond all
+others, gave us only four doubles in one hundred years. Admitting that
+the Hebrews increased as rapidly without emigration as we, in this
+country, have with it, we will give to them four doubles each century,
+commencing with seventy people, and they would have, at the end of
+two hundred years, a population of seventeen thousand nine hundred and
+twenty. Giving them another double for the odd fifteen years and there
+would be, provided no deaths had occurred, thirty-five thousand eight
+hundred and forty people. And yet we are told that instead of having
+this number, they had increased to such an extent that they had six
+hundred thousand men of war; that is to say, a population of more than
+three millions?
+</p>
+<p>
+Every sensible man knows that this account is not, and cannot be true.
+We know that seventy people could not increase to three million in two
+hundred and fifteen years.
+</p>
+<p>
+About this time the Hebrews took a census, and found that there were
+twenty-two thousand two hundred and seventy-three first-born males.
+It is reasonable to suppose that there were about as many first-born
+females. This would make forty-four thousand five hundred and forty-six
+first-born children. Now, there must have been about as many mothers
+as there were first-born children. If there were only about forty-five
+thousand mothers and three millions of people, the mothers must have had
+on an average about sixty-six children apiece.
+</p>
+<p>
+At this time, the Hebrews were slaves, and had been for two hundred and
+fifteen years. A little while before, an order had been made by the
+Egyptians that all the male children of the Hebrews should be killed.
+One, contrary to this order, was saved in an ark made of bullrushes
+daubed with slime. This child was found by the daughter of Pharaoh, and
+was adopted, it seems, as her own, and, may be, was. He grew to be
+a man, sided with the Hebrews, killed an Egyptian that was smiting a
+slave, hid the body in the sand, and fled from Egypt to the land of
+Midian, became acquainted with a priest who had seven daughters, took
+the side of the daughters against the ill-mannered shepherds of that
+country, and married Zipporah, one of the girls, and became a shepherd
+for her father. Afterward, while tending his flock, the Lord appeared to
+him in a burning bush, and commanded him to go to the king of Egypt and
+demand from him the liberation of the Hebrews. In order to convince him
+that the something burning in the bush was actually God, the rod in his
+hand was changed into a serpent, which, upon being caught by the tail,
+became again a rod. Moses was also told to put his hand in his bosom,
+and when he took it out it was as leprous as snow. Quite a number of
+strange things were performed, and others promised. Moses then agreed to
+go back to Egypt provided his brother could go with him. Whereupon
+the Lord appeared to Aaron, and directed him to meet Moses in the
+wilderness. They met at the mount of God, went to Egypt, gathered
+together all the elders of the children of Israel, spake all the words
+which God had spoken unto Moses, and did all the signs in the sight of
+the people. The Israelites believed, bowed their heads and worshiped;
+and Moses and Aaron went in and told their message to Pharaoh the king.
+</p>
+<center>
+XXII. THE PLAGUES.
+</center>
+<p>
+Three millions of people were in slavery. They were treated with the
+utmost rigor, and so fearful were their masters that they might, in
+time, increase in numbers sufficient to avenge themselves, that they
+took from the arms of mothers all the male children and destroyed
+them. If the account given is true, the Egyptians were the most cruel,
+heartless and infamous people of which history gives any record. God
+finally made up his mind to free the Hebrews; and for the accomplishment
+of this purpose he sent, as his agents, Moses and Aaron, to the king
+of Egypt. In order that the king might know that these men had a divine
+mission, God gave Moses the power of changing a stick into a serpent,
+and water into blood. Moses and Aaron went before the king, stating that
+the Lord God of Israel ordered the king of Egypt to let the Hebrews
+go that they might hold a feast with God in the wilderness. Thereupon
+Pharaoh, the king, enquired who the Lord was, at the same time stating
+that he had never made his acquaintance, and knew nothing about him.
+To this they replied that the God of the Hebrews had met with them, and
+they asked to go a three days journey into the desert and sacrifice
+unto this God, fearing that if they did not he would fall upon them with
+pestilence or the sword. This interview seems to have hardened Pharaoh,
+for he ordered the tasks of the children of Israel to be increased; so
+that the only effect of the first appeal was to render still worse the
+condition of the Hebrews. Thereupon, Moses returned unto the Lord and
+said, "Lord, wherefore hast thou so evil entreated this people? Why is
+it that thou hast sent me? For since I came to Pharaoh to speak in thy
+name he hath done evil to this people; neither hast thou delivered thy
+people at all."
+</p>
+<p>
+Apparently stung by this reproach, God answered:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Now shalt thou see what I will do to Pharoah; for with a strong hand
+shall he let them go; and with a strong hand shall he drive them out of
+his land."
+</p>
+<p>
+God then recounts the fact that he had appeared unto Abraham, Isaac and
+Jacob, that he had established a covenant with them to give them the
+land of Canaan, that he had heard the groanings of the children of
+Israel in Egyptian bondage; that their groanings had put him in mind of
+his covenant, and that he had made up his mind to redeem the children
+of Israel with a stretched-out arm and with great judgments. Moses then
+spoke to the children of Israel again, but they would listen to him no
+more. His first effort in their behalf had simply doubled their trouble
+and they seemed to have lost confidence in his power. Thereupon Jehovah
+promised Moses that he would make him a god unto Pharaoh, and that
+Aaron should be his prophet, but at the same time informed him that his
+message would be of no avail; that he would harden the heart of Pharaoh
+so that he would not listen; that he would so harden his heart that he
+might have an excuse for destroying the Egyptians. Accordingly, Moses
+and Aaron again went before Pharaoh. Moses said to Aaron;&mdash;"Cast down
+your rod before Pharaoh," which he did, and it became a serpent. Then
+Pharaoh not in the least surprised, called for his wise men and
+his sorcerers, and they threw down their rods and changed them into
+serpents. The serpent that had been changed from Aaron's rod was, at
+this time crawling upon the floor, and it proceeded to swallow the
+serpents that had been produced by the magicians of Egypt. What became
+of these serpents that were swallowed, whether they turned back into
+sticks again, is not stated. Can we believe that the stick was changed
+into a real living serpent, or did it assume simply the appearance of a
+serpent? If it bore only the appearance of a serpent it was a deception,
+and could not rise above the dignity of legerdemain. Is it necessary to
+believe that God is a kind of prestigiator&mdash;a sleight-of-hand performer,
+a magician or sorcerer? Can it be possible that an infinite being would
+endeavor to secure the liberation of a race by performing a miracle that
+could be equally performed by the sorcerers and magicians of a barbarian
+king?
+</p>
+<p>
+Not one word was said by Moses or Aaron as to the wickedness of
+depriving a human being of his liberty. Not a word was said in favor
+of liberty. Not the slightest intimation that a human being was justly
+entitled to the product of his own labor. Not a word about the cruelty
+of masters who would destroy even the babes of slave mothers. It seems
+to me wonderful that this God did not tell the king of Egypt that no
+nation could enslave another, without also enslaving itself; that it was
+impossible to put a chain around the limbs of a slave, without putting
+manacles upon the brain of the master. Why did he not tell him that a
+nation founded upon slavery could not stand? Instead of declaring these
+things, instead of appealing to justice, to mercy and to liberty, he
+resorted to feats of jugglery. Suppose we wished to make a treaty with
+a barbarous nation, and the President should employ a sleight-of-hand
+performer as envoy extraordinary, and instruct him, that when he came
+into the presence of the savage monarch, he should cast down an umbrella
+or a walking stick, which would change into a lizard or a turtle; what
+would we think? Would we not regard such a performance as beneath the
+dignity even of a President? And what would be our feelings if the
+savage king sent for his sorcerers and had them perform the same feat?
+If such things would appear puerile and foolish in the President of a
+great republic, what shall be said when they were resorted to by the
+creator of all worlds? How small, how contemptible such a God appears!
+Pharaoh, it seems, took about this view of the matter, and he would not
+be persuaded that such tricks were performed by an infinite being.
+</p>
+<p>
+Again, Moses and Aaron came before Pharaoh as he was going to the
+river's bank, and the same rod which had changed to a serpent, and,
+by this time changed back, was taken by Aaron, who, in the presence of
+Pharaoh, smote the water of the river, which was immediately turned to
+blood, as well as all the water in all the streams, ponds, and pools, as
+well as all water in vessels of wood and vessels of stone in the entire
+land of Egypt. As soon as all the waters in Egypt had been turned
+into blood, the magicians of that country did the same with their
+enchantments. We are not informed where they got the water to turn into
+blood, since all the water in Egypt had already been so changed. It
+seems from the account that the fish in the Nile died, and the river
+emitted a stench, and there was not a drop of water in the land of
+Egypt that had not been changed into blood. In consequence of this, the
+Egyptians digged "around about the river" for water to drink. Can we
+believe this story? Is it necessary to salvation to admit that all the
+rivers, pools, ponds and lakes of a country were changed into blood, in
+order that a king might be induced to allow the children of Israel the
+privilege of going a three days journey into the wilderness to make
+sacrifices to their God?
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems from the account that Pharaoh was told that the God of the
+Hebrews would, if he refused to let the Israelites go, change all the
+waters of Egypt into blood, and that, upon his refusal, they were so
+changed. This had, however, no influence upon him, for the reason that
+his own magicians did the same. It does not appear that Moses and Aaron
+expressed the least surprise at the success of the Egyptian sorcerers.
+At that time it was believed that each nation had its own god. The
+only claim that Moses and Aaron made for their God was, that he was the
+greatest and most powerful of all the gods, and that with anything like
+an equal chance he could vanquish the deity of any other nation.
+</p>
+<p>
+After the waters were changed to blood Moses and Aaron waited for seven
+days. At the end of that time God told Moses to again go to Pharaoh and
+demand the release of his people, and to inform him that, if he refused,
+God would strike all the borders of Egypt with frogs. That he would make
+frogs so plentiful that they would go into the houses of Pharaoh, into
+his bedchamber, upon his bed, into the houses of his servants, upon his
+people, into their ovens, and even into their kneading troughs.
+This threat had no effect whatever upon Pharaoh. And thereupon Aaron
+stretched out his hand over the waters of Egypt, and the frogs came
+up and covered the land. The magicians of Egypt did the same, and with
+their enchantments brought more frogs upon the land of Egypt.
+</p>
+<p>
+These magicians do not seem to have been original in their ideas, but
+so far as imitation is concerned, were perfect masters of their art. The
+frogs seem to have made such an impression upon Pharaoh that he sent
+for Moses and asked him to entreat the Lord that he would take away the
+frogs. Moses agreed to remove them from the houses and the land, and
+allow them to remain only in the rivers. Accordingly the frogs died out
+of the houses, and out of the villages, and out of the fields, and the
+people gathered them together in heaps. As soon as the frogs had left
+the houses and fields, the heart of Pharaoh became again hardened, and
+he refused to let the people go.
+</p>
+<p>
+Aaron then, according to the command of God, stretched out his hand,
+holding the rod, and smote the dust of the earth, and it became lice in
+man and in beast, and all the dust became lice throughout the land of
+Egypt. Pharaoh again sent for his magicians, and they sought to do
+the same with their enchantments, but they could not. Whereupon the
+sorcerers said unto Pharaoh: "This is the finger of God."
+</p>
+<p>
+Notwithstanding this, however, Pharaoh refused to let the Hebrews go.
+God then caused a grievous swarm of flies to come into the house of
+Pharaoh and into his servants' houses, and into all the land of Egypt,
+to such an extent that the whole land was corrupted by reason of the
+flies. But into that part of the country occupied by the children of
+Israel there came no flies. Thereupon Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron
+and said to them: "Go, and sacrifice to your God in this land." They
+were not willing to sacrifice in Egypt, and asked permission to go on a
+journey of three days into the wilderness. To this Pharaoh acceded, and
+in consideration of this Moses agreed to use his influence with the Lord
+to induce him to send the flies out of the country. He accordingly told
+the Lord of the bargain he had made with Pharaoh, and the Lord agreed to
+the compromise, and removed the flies from Pharaoh and from his servants
+and from his people, and there remained not a single fly in the land of
+Egypt. As soon as the flies were gone, Pharaoh again changed his mind,
+and concluded not to permit the children of Israel to depart. The Lord
+then directed Moses to go to Pharaoh and tell him that if he did not
+allow the children of Israel to depart, he would destroy his cattle, his
+horses, his camels and his sheep; that these animals would be afflicted
+with a grievous disease, but that the animals belonging to the Hebrews
+should not be so afflicted. Moses did as he was bid. On the next day all
+the cattle of Egypt died; that is to say, all the horses, all the asses,
+all the camels, all the oxen and all the sheep; but of the animals owned
+by the Israelites, not one perished. This disaster had no effect upon
+Pharaoh, and he still refused to let the children of Israel go. The Lord
+then told Moses and Aaron to take some ashes out of a furnace, and
+told Moses to sprinkle them toward the heavens in the sight of Pharaoh;
+saying that the ashes should become small dust in all the land of Egypt,
+and should be a boil breaking forth with blains upon man and upon beast
+throughout all the land.
+</p>
+<p>
+How these boils breaking out with blains, upon cattle that were already
+dead, should affect Pharaoh, is a little hard to understand. It must
+not be forgotten that all the cattle and all beasts had died with the
+murrain before the boils had broken out.
+</p>
+<p>
+This was a most decisive victory for Moses and Aaron. The boils were
+upon the magicians to that extent that they could not stand before
+Moses. But it had no effect upon Pharaoh, who seems to have been a man
+of great firmness. The Lord then instructed Moses to get up early in the
+morning and tell Pharaoh that he would stretch out his hand and smite
+his people with a pestilence, and would, on the morrow, cause it to rain
+a very grievous hail, such as had never been known in the land of Egypt.
+He also told Moses to give notice, so that they might get all the cattle
+that were in the fields under cover. It must be remembered that all
+these cattle had recently died of the murrain, and their dead bodies had
+been covered with boils and blains. This, however, had no effect, and
+Moses stretched forth his hand toward heaven, and the Lord sent thunder,
+and hail and lightning, and fire that ran along the ground, and the hail
+fell upon all the land of Egypt, and all that were in the fields, both
+man and beast, were smitten, and the hail smote every herb of the field,
+and broke every tree of the country except that portion inhabited by the
+children of Israel; there, there was no hail.
+</p>
+<p>
+During this hail storm Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron and admitted
+that he had sinned, that the Lord was righteous, and that the Egyptians
+were wicked, and requested them to ask the Lord that there be no more
+thunderings and hail, and that he would let the Hebrews go. Moses agreed
+that as soon as he got out of the city he would stretch forth his hands
+unto the Lord, and that the thunderings should cease and the hail should
+stop. But, when the rain and the hail and the thundering ceased, Pharaoh
+concluded that he would not let the children of Israel go.
+</p>
+<p>
+Again, God sent Moses and Aaron, instructing them to tell Pharaoh that
+if he refused to let the people go, the face of the earth would be
+covered with locusts, so that man would not be able to see the ground,
+and that these locusts would eat the residue of that which escaped from
+the hail; that they would eat every tree out of the field; that they
+would fill the houses of Pharaoh and the houses of all his servants, and
+the houses of all the Egyptians. Moses delivered the message, and went
+out from Pharaoh. Some of Pharaoh's servants entreated their master
+to let the children of Israel go. Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron and
+asked them, who wished to go into the wilderness to sacrifice. They
+replied that they wished to go with the young and old; with their sons
+and daughters, with flocks and herds. Pharaoh would not consent to this,
+but agreed that the men might go. Thereupon Pharaoh drove Moses and
+Aaron out of his sight. Then God told Moses to stretch forth his hand
+upon the land of Egypt for the locusts, that they might come up and eat
+every herb, even all that the hail had left. "And Moses stretched out
+his rod over the land of Egypt, and the Lord brought an east wind all
+that day and all that night; and when it was morning the east wind
+brought the locusts; and they came up over all the land of Egypt and
+rested upon all the coasts covering the face of the whole earth, so that
+the land was darkened; and they ate every herb and all the fruit of the
+trees which the hail had left, and there remained not any green thing
+on the trees or in the herbs of the field throughout the land of Egypt."
+Pharaoh then called for Moses and Aaron in great haste, admitted that
+he had sinned against the Lord their God and against them, asked their
+forgiveness and requested them to intercede with God that he might take
+away the locusts. They went out from his presence and asked the Lord to
+drive the locusts away, "And the Lord made a strong west wind which took
+away the locusts, and cast them into the Red Sea so that there remained
+not one locust in all the coasts of Egypt."
+</p>
+<p>
+As soon as the locusts were gone, Pharaoh changed his mind, and, in the
+language of the sacred text, "the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart so that
+he would not let the children of Israel go."
+</p>
+<p>
+The Lord then told Moses to stretch out his hand toward heaven that
+there might be darkness over the land of Egypt, "even darkness which
+might be felt." "And Moses stretched forth his hand toward heaven, and
+there was a thick darkness over the land of Egypt for three days during
+which time they saw not each other, neither arose any of the people from
+their places for three days; but the children of Israel had light in
+their dwellings."
+</p>
+<p>
+It strikes me that when the land of Egypt was covered with thick
+darkness&mdash;so thick that it could be felt, and when light was in the
+dwellings of the Israelites, there could have been no better time for
+the Hebrews to have left the country.
+</p>
+<p>
+Pharaoh again called for Moses, and told him that his people could go
+and serve the Lord, provided they would leave their flocks and herds.
+Moses would not agree to this, for the reason that they needed the
+flocks and herds for sacrifices and burnt offerings, and he did not know
+how many of the animals God might require, and for that reason he could
+not leave a single hoof. Upon the question of the cattle, they divided,
+and Pharaoh again refused to let the people go. God then commanded Moses
+to tell the Hebrews to borrow, each of his neighbor, jewels of silver
+and gold. By a miraculous interposition the Hebrews found favor in the
+sight of the Egyptians so that they loaned the articles asked for. After
+this, Moses again went to Pharaoh and told him that all the first-born
+in the land of Egypt, from the first-born of Pharaoh upon the throne,
+unto the first-born of the maid-servant who was behind the mill, as well
+as the first-born of beasts, should die.
+</p>
+<p>
+As all the beasts had been destroyed by disease and hail, it is
+troublesome to understand the meaning of the threat as to their
+first-born.
+</p>
+<p>
+Preparations were accordingly made for carrying this frightful threat
+into execution. Blood was put on the door-posts of all houses inhabited
+by Hebrews, so that God, as he passed through that land, might not be
+mistaken and destroy the first-born of the Jews. "And it came to pass
+that at midnight the Lord smote all the first-born in the land of Egypt,
+the first-born of Pharaoh who sat on the throne, and the first-born of
+the captive who was in the dungeon. And Pharaoh rose up in the night,
+and all his servants, and all the Egyptians, and there was a great cry
+in Egypt, for there was not a house where there was not one dead."
+</p>
+<p>
+What had these children done? Why should the babes in the cradle be
+destroyed on account of the crime of Pharaoh? Why should the cattle be
+destroyed because man had enslaved his brother? In those days women and
+children and cattle were put upon an exact equality, and all considered
+as the property of the men; and when man in some way excited the wrath
+of God, he punished them by destroying all their cattle, their wives,
+and their little ones. Where can words be found bitter enough to
+describe a god who would kill wives and babes because husbands and
+fathers had failed to keep his law? Every good man, and every good
+woman, must hate and despise such a deity.
+</p>
+<p>
+Upon the death of all the first-born Pharaoh sent for Moses and Aaron,
+and not only gave his consent that they might go with the Hebrews into
+the wilderness, but besought them to go at once.
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it possible that an infinite God, creator of all worlds and sustainer
+of all life, said to Pharaoh, "If you do not let my people go, I will
+turn all the water of your country into blood," and that upon the
+refusal of Pharaoh to release the people, God did turn all the waters
+into blood? Do you believe this?
+</p>
+<p>
+Do you believe that Pharaoh even after all the water was turned to
+blood, refused to let the Hebrews go, and that thereupon God told him he
+would cover his land with frogs? Do you believe this?
+</p>
+<p>
+Do you believe that after the land was covered with frogs Pharaoh still
+refused to let the people go, and that God then said to him, "I will
+cover you and all your people with lice?" Do you believe God would make
+this threat?
+</p>
+<p>
+Do you also believe that God told Pharaoh, "It you do not let these
+people go, I will fill all your houses and cover your country with
+flies?" Do you believe God makes such threats as this?
+</p>
+<p>
+Of course God must have known that turning the waters into blood,
+covering the country with frogs, infesting all flesh with lice, and
+filling all houses with flies, would not accomplish his object, and that
+all these plagues would have no effect whatever upon the Egyptian king.
+</p>
+<p>
+Do you believe that, failing to accomplish anything by the flies, God
+told Pharaoh that if he did not let the people go he would kill his
+cattle with murrain? Does such a threat sound God-like?
+</p>
+<p>
+Do you believe that, failing to effect anything by killing the cattle,
+this same God then threatened to afflict all the people with boils,
+including the magicians who had been rivaling him in the matter of
+miracles; and failing to do anything by boils, that he resorted to hail?
+Does this sound reasonable? The hail experiment having accomplished
+nothing, do you believe that God murdered the first-born of animals and
+men? Is it possible to conceive of anything more utterly absurd, stupid,
+revolting, cruel and senseless, than the miracles said to have been
+wrought by the Almighty for the purpose of inducing Pharaoh to liberate
+the children of Israel?
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it not altogether more reasonable to say that the Jewish people,
+being in slavery, accounted for the misfortunes and calamities, suffered
+by the Egyptians, by saying that they were the judgments of God?
+</p>
+<p>
+When the Armada of Spain was wrecked and scattered by the storm, the
+English people believed that God had interposed in their behalf,
+and publicly gave thanks. When the battle of Lepanto was won, it was
+believed by the Catholic world that the victory was given in answer to
+prayer. So, our fore-fathers in their Revolutionary struggle saw, or
+thought they saw, the hand of God, and most firmly believed that they
+achieved their independence by the interposition of the Most High.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, it may be that while the Hebrews were enslaved by the Egyptians,
+there were plagues of locusts and flies. It may be that there were
+some diseases by which many of the cattle perished. It may be that a
+pestilence visited that country so that in nearly every house there
+was some one dead. If so, it was but natural for the enslaved and
+superstitious Jews to account for these calamities by saying that they
+were punishments sent by their God. Such ideas will be found in the
+history of every country.
+</p>
+<p>
+For a long time the Jews held these opinions, and they were handed from
+father to son simply by tradition. By the time a written language had
+been produced, thousands of additions had been made, and numberless
+details invented; so that we have not only an account of the plagues
+suffered by the Egyptians, but the whole woven into a connected story,
+containing the threats made by Moses and Aaron, the miracles wrought by
+them, the promises of Pharaoh, and finally the release of the Hebrews,
+as a result of the marvelous things performed in their behalf by
+Jehovah.
+</p>
+<p>
+In any event it is infinitely more probable that the author was
+misinformed, than that the God of this universe was guilty of these
+childish, heartless and infamous things. The solution of the whole
+matter is this:&mdash;Moses was mistaken.
+</p>
+<center>
+XXIII. THE FLIGHT.
+</center>
+<p>
+Three millions of people, with their flocks and herds, with borrowed
+jewelry and raiment, with unleavened dough in kneading troughs bound in
+their clothes upon their shoulders, in one night commenced their journey
+for the land of promise. We are not told how they were informed of the
+precise time to start. With all the modern appliances, it would require
+months of time to inform three millions of people of any fact.
+</p>
+<p>
+In this vast assemblage there were six hundred thousand men of war, and
+with them were the old, the young, the diseased and helpless. Where were
+those people going? They were going to the desert of Sinai, compared
+with which Sahara is a garden. Imagine an ocean of lava torn by
+storm and vexed by tempest, suddenly gazed at by a Gorgon and changed
+instantly to stone! Such was the desert of Sinai.
+</p>
+<p>
+All of the civilized nations of the world could not feed and support
+three millions of people on the desert of Sinai for forty years. It
+would cost more than one hundred thousand millions of dollars, and would
+bankrupt Christendom. They had with them their flocks and herds, and the
+sheep were so numerous that the Israelites sacrificed, at one time, more
+than one hundred and fifty thousand first-born lambs. How were these
+flocks supported? What did they eat? Where were meadows and pastures for
+them? There was no grass, no forests&mdash;nothing! There is no account
+of its having rained baled hay, nor is it even claimed that they were
+miraculously fed. To support these flocks, millions of acres of pasture
+would have been required. God did not take the Israelites through the
+land of the Philistines, for fear that when they saw the people of that
+country they would return to Egypt, but he took them by the way of
+the wilderness to the Red Sea, going before them by day in a pillar of
+cloud, and by night, in a pillar of fire.
+</p>
+<p>
+When it was told Pharaoh that the people had fled, he made ready
+and took six hundred chosen chariots of Egypt, and pursued after the
+children of Israel, overtaking them by the sea. As all the animals had
+long before that time been destroyed, we are not informed where Pharaoh
+obtained the horses for his chariots. The moment the children of Israel
+saw the hosts of Pharaoh, although they had six hundred thousand men
+of war, they immediately cried unto the Lord for protection. It is
+wonderful to me that a land that had been ravaged by the plagues
+described in the Bible, still had the power to put in the field an army
+that would carry terror to the hearts of six hundred thousand men of
+war. Even with the help of God, it seems, they were not strong enough
+to meet the Egyptians in the open field, but resorted to strategy. Moses
+again stretched forth his wonderful rod over the waters of the Red Sea,
+and they were divided, and the Hebrews passed through on dry land, the
+waters standing up like a wall on either side. The Egyptians pursued
+them; "and in the morning watch the Lord looked into the hosts of the
+Egyptians, through the pillar of fire," and proceeded to take the wheels
+off their chariots. As soon as the wheels were off, God told Moses to
+stretch out his hand over the sea. Moses did so, and immediately "the
+waters returned and covered the chariots and horsemen and all the hosts
+of Pharaoh that came into the sea, and there remained not so much as one
+of them."
+</p>
+<p>
+This account may be true, but still it hardly looks reasonable that God
+would take the wheels off the chariots. How did he do it? Did he pull
+out the linch-pins, or did he just take them off by main force?
+</p>
+<p>
+What a picture this presents to the mind! God the creator of the
+universe, maker of every shining, glittering star, engaged in pulling
+off the wheels of wagons, that he might convince Pharaoh of his
+greatness and power!
+</p>
+<p>
+Where were these people going? They were going to the promised land.
+How large a country was that? About twelve thousand square miles. About
+one-fifth the size of the State of Illinois. It was a frightful country,
+covered with rocks and desolation. How many people were in the promised
+land already? Moses tells us there were seven nations in that country
+mightier than the Jews. As there were at least three millions of Jews,
+there must have been at least twenty-one millions of people already in
+that country. These had to be driven out in order that room might be
+made for the chosen people of God.
+</p>
+<p>
+It seems, however, that God was not willing to take the children of
+Israel into the promised land immediately. They were not fit to inhabit
+the land of Canaan; so he made up his mind to allow them to wander upon
+the desert until all except two, who had left Egypt, should perish. Of
+all the slaves released from Egyptian bondage, only two were allowed to
+reach the promised land!
+</p>
+<p>
+As soon as the Hebrews crossed the Red Sea, they found themselves
+without food, and with water unfit to drink by reason of its bitterness,
+and they began to murmur against Moses, who cried unto the Lord, and
+"the Lord showed him a tree." Moses cast this tree into the waters,
+and they became sweet. "And it came to pass in the morning the dew lay
+around about the camp; and when the dew that lay was gone, behold,
+upon the face of the wilderness lay a small round thing, small as the
+hoar-frost upon the ground. And Moses said unto them, this is the bread
+which the Lord hath given you to eat." This manna was a very peculiar
+thing. It would melt in the sun, and yet they could cook it by seething
+and baking. One would as soon think of frying snow or of broiling
+icicles. But this manna had another remarkable quality. No matter how
+much or little any person gathered, he would have an exact omer; if he
+gathered more, it would shrink to that amount, and if he gathered less,
+it would swell exactly to that amount. What a magnificent substance
+manna would be with which to make a currency&mdash;shrinking and swelling
+according to the great laws of supply and demand!
+</p>
+<p>
+"Upon this manna the children of Israel lived for forty years, until
+they came to a habitable land. With this meat were they fed until
+they reached the borders of the land of Canaan." We are told in the
+twenty-first chapter of Numbers, that the people at last became tired
+of' the manna, complained of God, and asked Moses why he brought
+them out of the land of Egypt to die in the wilderness. And they
+said:&mdash;"There is no bread, nor have we any water. Our soul loatheth this
+light food."
+</p>
+<p>
+We are told by some commentators that the Jews lived on manna for forty
+years; by others that they lived upon it for only a short time. As
+a matter of fact the accounts differ, and this difference is the
+opportunity for commentators. It also allows us to exercise faith in
+believing that both accounts are true. If the accounts agreed, and were
+reasonable, they would be believed by the wicked and unregenerated. But
+as they are different and unreasonable, they are believed only by the
+good. Whenever a statement in the Bible is unreasonable, and you believe
+it, you are considered quite a good Christian. If the statement is
+grossly absurd and infinitely impossible, and you still believe it, you
+are a saint.
+</p>
+<p>
+The children of Israel were in the desert, and they were out of water.
+They had nothing to eat but manna, and this they had had so long that
+the soul of every person abhorred it. Under these circumstances they
+complained to Moses. Now, as God is infinite, he could just as well have
+furnished them with an abundance of the purest and coolest of water, and
+could, without the slightest trouble to himself, have given them three
+excellent meals a day, with a generous variety of meats and vegetables,
+it is very hard to see why he did not do so. It is still harder to
+conceive why he fell into a rage when the people mildly suggested that
+they would like a change of diet. Day after day, week after week, month
+after month, year after year, nothing but manna. No doubt they did
+the best they could by cooking it in different ways, but in spite of
+themselves they began to loathe its sight and taste, and so they asked
+Moses to use his influence to secure a change in the bill of fare.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, I ask, whether it was unreasonable for the Jews to suggest that a
+little meat would be very gratefully received? It seems, however, that
+as soon as the request was made, this God of infinite mercy became
+infinitely enraged, and instead of granting it, went into partnership
+with serpents, for the purpose of punishing the hungry wretches to whom
+he had promised a land flowing with milk and honey.
+</p>
+<p>
+Where did these serpents come from? How did God convey the information
+to the serpents, that he wished them to go to the desert of Sinai and
+bite some Jews? It may be urged that these serpents were created for the
+express purpose of punishing the children of Israel for having had the
+presumption, like Oliver Twist, to ask for more.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is another account in the eleventh chapter of Numbers, of the
+people murmuring because of their food. They remembered the fish, the
+cucumbers, the melons, the leeks, the onions and the garlic of Egypt,
+and they asked for meat. The people went to the tent of Moses and asked
+him for flesh. Moses cried unto the Lord and asked him why he did not
+take care of the multitude. God thereupon agreed that they should have
+meat, not for a day or two, but for a month, until the meat should come
+out of their nostrils and become loathsome to them. He then caused a
+wind to bring quails from beyond the sea, and cast them into the camp,
+on every side of the camp around about for the space of a days journey.
+And the people gathered them, and while the flesh was yet between their
+teeth the wrath of God being provoked against them, struck them with
+an exceeding great plague. Serpents, also, were sent among them, and
+thousands perished for the crime of having been hungry.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Rev. Alexander Cruden commenting upon this account says:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"God caused a wind to rise that drove the quails within and about the
+camp of the Israelites; and it is in this that the miracle consists,
+that they were brought so seasonably to this place, and in so great
+numbers as to suffice above a million of persons above a month. Some
+authors affirm, that in those eastern and southern countries, quails
+are innumerable, so that in one part of Italy within the compass of five
+miles, there were taken about an hundred thousand of them every day for
+a month together; and that sometimes they fly so thick over the sea,
+that being weary they fall into ships, sometimes in such numbers, that
+they sink them with their weight."
+</p>
+<p>
+No wonder Mr. Cruden believed the Mosaic account.
+</p>
+<p>
+Must we believe that God made an arrangement with hornets for the
+purpose af securing their services in driving the Canaanites from
+the land of promise? Is this belief necessary unto salvation? Must we
+believe that God said to the Jews that he would send hornets before them
+to drive out the Canaanites, as related in the twenty-third chapter of
+Exodus, and the second chapter of Deuteronomy? How would the hornets
+know a Canaanite? In what way would God put it in the mind of a hornet
+to attack a Canaanite? Did God create hornets for that especial purpose,
+implanting an instinct to attack a Canaanite, but not a Hebrew? Can
+we conceive of the Almighty granting letters of marque and reprisal to
+hornets? Of course it is admitted that nothing in the world would
+be better calculated to make a man leave his native land than a few
+hornets. Is it possible for us to believe that an infinite being would
+resort to such expedients in order to drive the Canaanites from their
+country? He could just as easily have spoken the Canaanites out of
+existence as to have spoken the hornets in. In this way a vast amount of
+trouble, pain and suffering would have been saved. Is it possible that
+there is, in this country, an intelligent clergyman who will insist that
+these stories are true; that we must believe them in in order to be good
+people in this world, and glorified souls in the next?
+</p>
+<p>
+We are also told that God instructed the Hebrews to kill the Canaanites
+slowly, giving as a reason that the beasts of the field might increase
+upon his chosen people. When we take into consideration the fact that
+the Holy Land contained only about eleven or twelve thousand square
+miles, and was at that time inhabited by at least twenty-one millions of
+people, it does not seem reasonable that the wild beasts could have been
+numerous enough to cause any great alarm. The same ratio of population
+would give to the State of Illinois at least one hundred and twenty
+millions of inhabitants. Can anybody believe that, under such
+circumstances, the danger from wild beasts could be very great? What
+would we think of a general, invading such a State, if he should order
+his soldiers to kill the people slowly, lest the wild beasts might
+increase upon them? Is it possible that a God capable of doing the
+miracles recounted in the Old Testament could not, in some way, have
+disposed of the wild beasts? After the Canaanites were driven out, could
+he not have employed the hornets to drive out the wild beasts? Think of
+a God that could drive twenty-one millions of people out of the promised
+land, could raise up innumerable stinging flies, and could cover
+the earth with fiery serpents, and yet seems to have been perfectly
+powerless against the wild beasts of the land of Canaan!
+</p>
+<p>
+Speaking of these hornets, one of the good old commentators, whose
+views have long been considered of great value by the believers in the
+inspiration of the Bible, uses the following language:&mdash;"Hornets are a
+sort of strong flies, which the Lord used as instruments to plague
+the enemies of his people. They are of themselves very troublesome and
+mischievous, and those the Lord made use of were, it is thought, of an
+extraordinary bigness and perniciousness. It is said they live as the
+wasps, and that they have a king or captain, and pestilent stings
+as bees, and that, if twenty-seven of them sting man or beast, it is
+certain death to either. Nor is it strange that such creatures did drive
+out the Canaanites from their habitations; for many heathen writers give
+instances of some people driven from their seats by frogs, others by
+mice, others by bees and wasps. And it is said that a Christian city,
+being besieged by Sapores, king of Persia, was delivered by hornets; for
+the elephants and beasts being stung by them, waxed unruly, and so the
+whole army fled."
+</p>
+<p>
+Only a few years ago, all such stories were believed by the Christian
+world; and it is a historical fact, that Voltaire was the third man of
+any note in Europe, who took the ground that the mythologies of Greece
+and Rome were without foundation. Until his time, most Christians
+believed as thoroughly in the miracles ascribed to the Greek and Roman
+gods as in those of Christ and Jehovah. The Christian world cultivated
+credulity, not only as one of the virtues, but as the greatest of them
+all. But, when Luther and his followers left the Church of Rome, they
+were compelled to deny the power of the Catholic Church, at that time,
+to suspend the laws of nature, but took the ground that such power
+ceased with the apostolic age. They insisted that all things now
+happened in accordance with the laws of nature, with the exception of a
+few special interferences in favor of the Protestant Church in answer
+to prayer. They taught their children a double philosophy: by one, they
+were to show the impossibility of Catholic miracles, because opposed to
+the laws of nature; by the other, the probability of the miracles of the
+apostolic age, because they were in conformity with the statements of
+the Scriptures. They had two foundations: one, the law of nature, and
+the other, the word of God. The Protestants have endeavored to carry
+on this double process of reasoning, and the result has been a gradual
+increase of confidence in the law of nature, and a gradual decrease of
+confidence in the word of God.
+</p>
+<p>
+We are told, in this inspired account, that the clothing of the Jewish
+people did not wax old, and that their shoes refused to wear out. Some
+commentators have insisted that angels attended to the wardrobes of the
+Hebrews, patched their garments, and mended their shoes. Certain it is,
+however, that the same clothes lasted them for forty years, during the
+entire journey from Egypt to the Holy Land. Little boys starting out
+with their first pantaloons, grew as they traveled, and their clothes
+grew with them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Can it be necessary to believe a story like this? Will men make better
+husbands, fathers, neighbors, and citizens, simply by giving credence
+to these childish and impossible things? Certainly an infinite God could
+have transported the Jews to the Holy Land in a moment, and could, as
+easily, have removed the Canaanites to some other country. Surely there
+was no necessity for doing thousands and thousands of petty miracles,
+day after day for forty years, looking after the clothes of three
+millions of people, changing the nature of wool and linen and leather,
+so that they would not "wax old." Every step, every motion, would wear
+away some part of the clothing, some part of the shoes. Were these
+parts, so worn away, perpetually renewed, or was the nature of things
+so changed that they could not wear away? We know that whenever matter
+comes in contact with matter, certain atoms, by abrasion, are lost. Were
+these atoms gathered up every night by angels, and replaced on the soles
+of the shoes, on the elbows of coats, and on the knees of pantaloons, so
+that the next morning they would be precisely in the condition they were
+on the morning before? There must be a mistake somewhere.
+</p>
+<p>
+Can we believe that the real God, if there is one, ever ordered a man
+to be killed simply for making hair oil, or ointment? We are told in
+the thirtieth chapter of Exodus, that the Lord commanded Moses to take
+myrrh, cinnamon, sweet calamus, cassia, and olive oil, and make a
+holy ointment for the purpose of anointing the tabernacle, tables,
+candlesticks and other utensils, as well as Aaron and his sons; saying,
+at the same time, that whosoever compounded any like it, or whoever put
+any of it on a stranger, should be put to death. In the same chapter,
+the Lord furnishes Moses with a recipe for making a perfume, saying,
+that whoever should make any which smelled like it, should be cut off
+from his people. This, to me, sounds so unreasonable that I cannot
+believe it. Why should an infinite God care whether mankind made
+ointments and perfumes like his or not? Why should the Creator of all
+things threaten to kill a priest who approached his altar without having
+washed his hands and feet? These commandments and these penalties would
+disgrace the vainest tyrant that ever sat, by chance, upon a throne.
+There must be some mistake. I cannot believe that an infinite
+Intelligence appeared to Moses upon Mount Sinai having with him a
+variety of patterns for making a tabernacle, tongs, snuffers and dishes.
+Neither can I believe that God told Moses how to cut and trim a coat for
+a priest. Why should a God care about such things? Why should he insist
+on having buttons sewed in certain rows, and fringes of a certain color?
+Suppose an intelligent civilized man was to overhear, on Mount Sinai,
+the following instructions from God to Moses:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"You must consecrate my priests as follows:&mdash;You must kill a bullock
+for a sin offering, and have Aaron and his sons lay their hands upon the
+head of the bullock. Then you must take the blood and put it upon the
+horns of the altar round about with your finger, and pour some blood at
+the bottom of the altar to make a reconciliation; and of the fat that
+is upon the inwards, the caul above the liver and two kidneys, and
+their fat, and burn them upon the altar. You must get a ram for a burnt
+offering, and Aaron and his sons must lay their hands upon the head of
+the ram. Then you must kill it and sprinkle the blood upon the altar,
+and cut the ram into pieces, and burn the head, and the pieces, and the
+fat, and wash the inwards and the lungs in water and then burn the whole
+ram upon the altar for a sweet savor unto me. Then you must get another
+ram, and have Aaron and his sons lay their hands upon the head of that,
+then kill it and take of its blood, and put it on the top of Aaron's
+right ear, and on the thumb of his right hand, and on the great toe of
+his right foot. And you must also put a little of the blood upon the
+top of the right ears of Aaron's sons, and on the thumbs of their right
+hands and on the great toes of their right feet. And then you must take
+of the fat that is on the inwards, and the caul above the liver and the
+two kidneys, and their fat, and the right shoulder, and out of a basket
+of unleavened bread you must take one unleavened cake and another of oil
+bread, and one wafer, and put them on the fat of the right shoulder. And
+you must take of the anointing oil, and of the blood, and sprinkle it on
+Aaron, and on his garments, and on his sons' garments, and sanctify
+them and all their clothes."&mdash;Do you believe that he would have even
+suspected that the creator of the universe was talking?
+</p>
+<p>
+Can any one now tell why God commanded the Jews, when they were upon the
+desert of Sinai, to plant trees, telling them at the same time that they
+must not eat any of the fruit of such trees until after the fourth year?
+Trees could not have been planted in that desert, and if they had been,
+they could not have lived. Why did God tell Moses, while in the desert,
+to make curtains of fine linen? Where could he have obtained his flax?
+There was no land upon which it could have been produced. Why did he
+tell him to make things of gold, and silver, and precious stones, when
+they could not have been in possession of these things? There is but one
+answer, and that is, the Pentateuch was written hundreds of years after
+the Jews had settled in the Holy Land, and hundreds of years after Moses
+was dust and ashes.
+</p>
+<p>
+When the Jews had a written language, and that must have been long after
+their flight from Egypt, they wrote out their history and their laws.
+Tradition had filled the infancy of the nation with miracles and special
+interpositions in their behalf by Jehovah. Patriotism would not allow
+these wonders to grow small, and priestcraft never denied a miracle.
+There were traditions to the effect that God had spoken face to face
+with Moses; that he had given him the tables of the law, and had, in a
+thousand ways, made known his will; and whenever the priests wished to
+make new laws, or amend old ones, they pretended to have found something
+more that God said to Moses at Sinai. In this way obedience was more
+easily secured. Only a very few of the people could read, and, as a
+consequence, additions, interpolations and erasures had no fear of
+detection. In this way we account for the fact that Moses is made to
+speak of things that did not exist in his day, and were unknown for
+hundreds of years after his death.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the thirtieth chapter of Exodus, we are told that the people, when
+numbered, must give each one a half shekel after the shekel of the
+<i>sanctuary</i>. At that time no such money existed, and consequently the
+account could not, by any possibility, have been written until after
+there was a shekel of the sanctuary, and there was no such thing until
+long after the death of Moses. If we should read that Cæsar paid his
+troops in pounds, shillings and pence, we would certainly know that the
+account was not written by Cæsar, nor in his time, but we would know
+that it was written after the English had given these names to certain
+coins.
+</p>
+<p>
+So, we find, that when the Jews were upon the desert it was commanded
+that every mother should bring, as a sin offering, a couple of doves to
+the priests, and the priests were compelled to eat these doves in the
+most holy place. At the time this law appears to have been given, there
+were three million people, and only three priests, Aaron, Eleazer and
+Ithamar. Among three million people there would be, at least, three
+hundred births a day. Certainly we are not expected to believe that
+these three priests devoured six hundred pigeons every twenty-four
+hours.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why should a woman ask pardon of God for having been a mother? Why
+should that be considered a crime in Exodus, which is commanded as a
+duty in Genesis? Why should a mother be declared unclean? Why should
+giving birth to a daughter be regarded twice as criminal as giving birth
+to a son? Can we believe that such laws and ceremonies were made and
+instituted by a merciful and intelligent God? If there is anything in
+this poor world suggestive of, and standing for, all that is sweet,
+loving and pure, it is a mother holding in her thrilled and happy arms
+her prattling babe. Read the twelfth chapter of Leviticus, and you will
+see that when a woman became the mother of a boy she was so unclean
+that she was not allowed to touch a hallowed thing, nor to enter the
+sanctuary for forty days. If the babe was a girl, then the mother was
+unfit for eighty days, to enter the house of God, or to touch the sacred
+tongs and snuffers. These laws, born of barbarism, are unworthy of our
+day, and should be regarded simply as the mistakes of savages.
+</p>
+<p>
+Just as low in the scale of intelligence are the directions given in the
+fifth chapter of Numbers, for the trial of a wife of whom the husband
+was jealous. This foolish chapter has been the foundation of all appeals
+to God for the ascertainment of facts, such as the corsned, trial by
+battle, by water, and by fire, the last of which is our judicial oath.
+It is very easy to believe that in those days a guilty woman would
+be afraid to drink the water of jealousy and take the oath, and that,
+through fear, she might be made to confess. Admitting that the deception
+tended not only to prevent crime, but to discover it when committed,
+still, we cannot admit that an honest god would, for any purpose, resort
+to dishonest means. In all countries fear is employed as a means of
+getting at the truth, and in this there is nothing dishonest, provided
+falsehood is not resorted to for the purpose of producing the fear.
+Protestants laugh at Catholics because of their belief in the efficacy
+of holy water, and yet they teach their children that a little holy
+water, in which had been thrown some dust from the floor of the
+sanctuary, would, work a miracle in a woman's flesh. For hundreds of
+years our fathers believed that a perjurer could not swallow a piece of
+sacramental bread. Such stories belong to the childhood of our race, and
+are now believed only by mental infants and intellectual babes.
+</p>
+<p>
+I cannot believe that Moses had in his hands a couple of tables of
+stone, upon which God had written the Ten Commandments, and that when he
+saw the golden calf, and the dancing, that he dashed the tables to the
+earth and broke them in pieces. Neither do I believe that Moses took a
+golden calf, burnt it, ground it to powder, and made the people drink it
+with water, as related in the thirty-second chapter of Exodus.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is another account of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses,
+in the nineteenth and twentieth chapters of Exodus. In this account not
+one word is said about the people having made a golden calf, nor about
+the breaking of the tables of stone. In the thirty-fourth chapter of
+Exodus, there is an account of the renewal of the broken tables of
+the law, and the commandments are given, but they are not the same
+commandments mentioned in the twentieth chapter. There are two accounts
+of the same transaction. Both of these stories cannot be true, and yet
+both must be believed. Any one who will take the trouble to read
+the nineteenth and twentieth chapters, and the last verse of the
+thirty-first chapter, the thirty-second, thirty-third, and thirty-fourth
+chapters of Exodus, will be compelled to admit that both accounts cannot
+be true.
+</p>
+<p>
+From the last account it appears that while Moses was upon Mount Sinai
+receiving the commandments from God, the people brought their jewelry
+to Aaron and he cast for them a golden calf. This happened before any
+commandment against idolatry had been given. A god ought, certainly,
+to publish his laws before inflicting penalties for their violation. To
+inflict punishment for breaking unknown and unpublished laws is, in
+the last degree, cruel and unjust. It may be replied that the Jews knew
+better than to worship idols, before the law was given. If this is so,
+why should the law have been given? In all civilized countries, laws are
+made and promulgated, not simply for the purpose of informing the people
+as to what is right and wrong, but to inform them of the penalties to be
+visited upon those who violate the laws. When the Ten Commandments
+were given, no penalties were attached. Not one word was written on
+the tables of stone as to the punishments that would be inflicted for
+breaking any or all of the inspired laws. The people should not have
+been punished for violating a commandment before it was given. And yet,
+in this case, Moses commanded the sons of Levi to take their swords and
+slay every man his brother, his companion, and his neighbor. The brutal
+order was obeyed, and three thousand men were butchered.. The Levites
+consecrated themselves unto the Lord by murdering their sons, and their
+brothers, for having violated a commandment before it had been given.
+</p>
+<p>
+It has been contended for many years that the Ten Commandments are the
+foundation of all ideas of justice and of law. Eminent jurists have
+bowed to popular prejudice, and deformed their works by statements to
+the effect that the Mosaic laws are the fountains from which sprang all
+ideas of right and wrong. Nothing can be more stupidly false than such
+assertions. Thousands of years before Moses was born, the Egyptians
+had a code of laws. They had laws against blasphemy, murder, adultery,
+larceny, perjury, laws for the collection of debts, the enforcement
+of contracts, the ascertainment of damages, the redemption of property
+pawned, and upon nearly every subject of human interest. The Egyptian
+code was far better than the Mosaic.
+</p>
+<p>
+Laws spring from the instinct of self-preservation. Industry objected
+to supporting idleness, and laws were made against theft. Laws were made
+against murder, because a very large majority of the people have always
+objected to being murdered. All fundamental laws were born simply of the
+instinct of self-defence. Long before the Jewish savages assembled at
+the foot of Sinai, laws had been made and enforced, not only in Egypt
+and India, but by every tribe that ever existed.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is impossible for human beings to exist together, without certain
+rules of conduct, certain ideas of the proper and improper, of the right
+and wrong, growing out of the relation. Certain rules must be made,
+and must be enforced. This implies law, trial and punishment. Whoever
+produces anything by weary labor, does not need a revelation from heaven
+to teach him that he has a right to the thing produced. Not one of
+the learned gentlemen who pretend that the Mosaic laws are filled with
+justice and intelligence, would live, for a moment, in any country where
+such laws were in force.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing can be more wonderful than the medical ideas of Jehovah. He
+had the strangest notions about the cause and cure of disease. With
+him everything was miracle and wonder. In the fourteenth chapter of
+Leviticus, we find the law for cleansing a leper:&mdash;"Then shall the
+priest take for him that is to be cleansed, two birds, alive and clean,
+and cedar wood, and scarlet, and hyssop. And the priest shall command
+that one of the birds be killed in an <i>earthen</i> vessel, over <i>running</i>
+water. As for the living bird, he shall take it, and the cedar wood, and
+the scarlet, and the hyssop, and shall dip them, and the living bird,
+in the blood of the bird that was killed over the running water. And he
+shall sprinkle upon him that is to be cleansed from the leprosy, seven
+times, and shall pronounce him clean, and shall let the living bird
+loose into the open field."
+</p>
+<p>
+We are told that God himself gave these directions to Moses. Does
+anybody believe this? Why should the bird be killed in an <i>earthen</i>
+vessel? Would the charm be broken if the vessel was of wood? Why over
+<i>running</i> water? What would be thought of a physician now, who would
+give a prescription like that?
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it not strange that God, although he gave hundreds of directions for
+the purpose of discovering the presence of leprosy, and for cleansing
+the leper after he was healed, forgot to tell how that disease could be
+cured? Is it not wonderful that while God told his people what animals
+were fit for food, he failed to give a list of plants that man might
+eat? Why did he leave his children to find out the hurtful and the
+poisonous by experiment, knowing that experiment, in millions of cases,
+must be death?
+</p>
+<p>
+When reading the history of the Jewish people, of their flight from
+slavery to death, of their exchange of tyrants, I must confess that my
+sympathies are all aroused in their behalf. They were cheated,
+deceived and abused. Their god was quick-tempered, unreasonable, cruel,
+revengeful and dishonest. He was always promising but never performed.
+He wasted time in ceremony and childish detail, and in the exaggeration
+of what he had done. It is impossible for me to conceive of a character
+more utterly detestable than that of the Hebrew god. He had solemnly
+promised the Jews that he would take them from Egypt to a land flowing
+with milk and honey. He had led them to believe that in a little while
+their troubles would be over, and that they would soon in the land of
+Canaan, surrounded by their wives and little ones, forget, the stripes
+and tears of Egypt. After promising the poor wanderers again and again
+that he would lead them in safety to the promised land of joy and
+plenty, this God, forgetting every promise, said to the wretches in his
+power:&mdash;"Your carcasses shall fall in this wilderness and your children
+shall wander until your carcasses be wasted." This curse was the
+conclusion of the whole matter. Into this dust of death and night faded
+all the promises of God. Into this rottenness of wandering despair fell
+all the dreams of liberty and home. Millions of corpses were left to rot
+in the desert, and each one certified to the dishonesty of Jehovah. I
+cannot believe these things. They are so cruel and heartless, that my
+blood is chilled and my sense of justice shocked. A book that is equally
+abhorrent to my head and heart, cannot be accepted as a revelation from
+God.
+</p>
+<p>
+When we think of the poor Jews, destroyed, murdered, bitten by serpents,
+visited by plagues, decimated by famine, butchered by each other,
+swallowed by the earth, frightened, cursed, starved, deceived, robbed
+and outraged, how thankful we should be that we are not the chosen
+people of God. No wonder that they longed for the slavery of Egypt, and
+remembered with sorrow the unhappy day when they exchanged masters.
+Compared with Jehovah, Pharaoh was a benefactor, and the tyranny of
+Egypt was freedom to those who suffered the liberty of God.
+</p>
+<p>
+While reading the Pentateuch, I am filled with indignation, pity and
+horror. Nothing can be sadder than the history of the starved and
+frightened wretches who wandered over the desolate crags and sands of
+wilderness and desert, the prey of famine, sword, and plague. Ignorant
+and superstitious to the last degree, governed by falsehood, plundered
+by hypocrisy, they were the sport of priests, and the food of fear. God
+was their greatest enemy, and death their only friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is impossible to conceive of a more thoroughly despicable, hateful,
+and arrogant being, than the Jewish god. He is without a redeeming
+feature. In the mythology of the world he has no parallel. He, only, is
+never touched by agony and tears. He delights only in blood and pain.
+Human affections are naught to him. He cares neither for love nor music,
+beauty nor joy. A false friend, an unjust judge, a braggart, hypocrite,
+and tyrant, sincere in hatred, jealous, vain, and revengeful, false in
+promise, honest in curse, suspicious, ignorant, and changeable, infamous
+and hideous:&mdash;such is the God of the Pentateuch.
+</p>
+<center>
+XXIV. CONFESS AND AVOID
+</center>
+<p>
+The scientific Christians now admit that the Bible is not inspired in
+its astronomy, geology, botany, zoology, nor in any science. In other
+words, they admit that on these subjects, the Bible cannot be depended
+upon. If all the statements in the Scriptures were true, there would be
+no necessity for admitting that some of them are not inspired. A
+Christian will not admit that a passage in the Bible is uninspired,
+until he is satisfied that it is untrue. Orthodoxy itself has at last
+been compelled to say, that while a passage may be true and uninspired,
+it cannot be inspired if false.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the people of Europe had known as much of astronomy and geology when
+the Bible was introduced among them, as they do now, there never could
+have been one believer in the doctrine of inspiration. If the writers of
+the various parts of the Bible had known as much about the sciences as
+is now known by every intelligent man, the book never could have
+been written. It was produced by ignorance, and has been believed and
+defended by its author. It has lost power in the proportion that man
+has gained knowledge. A few years ago, this book was appealed to in the
+settlement of all scientific questions; but now, even the clergy
+confess that in such matters, it has ceased to speak with the voice
+of authority. For the establishment of facts, the word of man is now
+considered far better than the word of God. In the world of science,
+Jehovah was superseded by Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler. All that God
+told Moses, admitting the entire account to be true, is dust and ashes
+compared to the discoveries of Descartes, Laplace, and Humboldt. In
+matters of fact, the Bible has ceased to be regarded as a standard.
+Science has succeeded in breaking the chains of theology. A few years
+ago, Science endeavored to show that it was not inconsistent with the
+Bible. The tables have been turned, and now, Religion is endeavoring to
+prove that the Bible is not inconsistent with Science. The standard has
+been changed.
+</p>
+<p>
+For many ages, the Christians contended that the Bible, viewed simply as
+a literary performance, was beyond all other books, and that man without
+the assistance of God could not produce its equal. This claim was made
+when but few books existed, and the Bible, being the only book generally
+known, had no rival. But this claim, like the other, has been abandoned
+by many, and soon will be, by all. Com pared with Shakespeare's "book
+and volume of the brain," the "sacred" Bible shrinks and seems as feebly
+impotent and vain, as would a pipe of Fan, when some great organ, voiced
+with every tone, from the hoarse thunder of the sea to the winged warble
+of a mated bird, floods and fills cathedral aisles with all the wealth
+of sound.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is now maintained&mdash;and this appears to be the last fortification
+behind which the doctrine of inspiration skulks and crouches&mdash;that the
+Bible, although false and mistaken in its astronomy, geology, geography,
+history and philosophy, is inspired in its morality. It is now claimed
+that had it not been for this book, the world would have been inhabited
+only by savages, and that had it not been for the Holy Scriptures, man
+never would have even dreamed of the unity of God. A belief in one God
+is claimed to be a dogma of almost infinite importance, that with out
+this belief civilization is impossible, and that this fact is the sun
+around which all the virtues revolve. For my part, I think it infinitely
+more important to believe in man. Theology is a superstition&mdash;Humanity a
+religion.
+</p>
+<center>
+XXV. "INSPIRED" SLAVERY
+</center>
+<p>
+Perhaps the Bible was inspired upon the subject of human slavery. Is
+there, in the civilized world, to-day, a clergyman who believes in the
+divinity of slavery? Does the Bible teach man to enslave his brother? If
+it does, is it not blasphemous to say that it is inspired of God? If
+you find the institution of slavery upheld in a book said to have been
+written by God, what would you expect to find in a book inspired by the
+devil? Would you expect to find that book in favor of liberty? Modern
+Christians, ashamed of the God of the Old Testament, endeavor now to
+show that slavery was neither commanded nor opposed by Jehovah. Nothing
+can be plainer than the following passages from the twenty-fifth chapter
+of Leviticus. "Moreover of the children of the strangers that do sojourn
+among you, of them shall ye buy, and of their families that are with
+you, which they begat in your land: and they shall be your possession.
+And ye shall take them as an inheritance for your children after you, to
+inherit them for a possession, they shall be your bondmen forever. Both
+thy bondmen, and thy bondmaids, which thou shalt have, shall be of the
+heathen that are round about you; of them shall ye buy bondmen, and
+bondmaids."
+</p>
+<p>
+Can we believe in this, the Nineteenth Century, that these infamous
+passages were inspired by God? that God approved not only of human
+slavery, but instructed his chosen people to buy the women, children and
+babes of the heathen round about them? If it was right for the Hebrews
+to buy, it was also right for the heathen to sell. This God, by
+commanding the Hebrews to buy, approved of the selling of sons and
+daughters. The Canaanite who, tempted by gold, lured by avarice, sold
+from the arms of his wife the dimpled babe, simply made it possible for
+the Hebrews to obey the orders of their God. If God is the author of
+the Bible, the reading of these passages ought to cover his cheeks with
+shame. I ask the Christian world to-day, was it right for the heathen
+to sell their children? Was it right for God not only to uphold, but to
+command the infamous traffic in human flesh? Could the most revengeful
+fiend, the most malicious vagrant in the gloom of hell, sink to a lower
+moral depth than this?
+</p>
+<p>
+According to this God, his chosen people were not only commanded to buy
+of the heathen round about them, but were also permitted to buy each
+other for a term of years. The law governing the purchase of Jews is
+laid down in the twenty-first chapter of Exodus. "If thou buy a Hebrew
+servant, six years shall he serve: and in the seventh he shall go out
+free for nothing. If he came in by himself, he shall go out by himself:
+if he were married, then his wife shall go out with him. If his master
+have given him a wife, and she have borne him sons or daughters, the
+wife and her children shall be her master's, and he shall go out by
+himself. And if the servant shall plainly say, I love my master, my
+wife, and my children; I will not go out free: Then his master shall
+bring him unto the judges; he shall also bring him to the door, or unto
+the door-post: and his master shall bore his ear through with an awl:
+and he shall serve him forever."
+</p>
+<p>
+Do you believe that God was the author of this infamous law? Do you
+believe that the loving father of us all, turned the dimpled arms of
+babes into manacles of iron? Do you believe that he baited the dungeon
+of servitude with wife and child? Is it possible to love a God who would
+make such laws? Is it possible not to hate and despise him?
+</p>
+<p>
+The heathen are not spoken of as human beings. Their rights are never
+mentioned. They were the rightful food of the sword, and their bodies
+were made for stripes and chains.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the same chapter of the same inspired book, we are told that, "if a
+man smite his servant, or his maid, with a rod, and he dies under his
+hand, he shall be surely punished. Notwithstanding, if he continue a day
+or two, he shall not be punished, for he is his money."
+</p>
+<p>
+Must we believe that God called some of his children the money of
+others? Can we believe that God made lashes upon the naked back, a
+legal tender for labor performed? Must we regard the auction block as an
+altar? Were blood hounds apostles? Was the slave-pen a temple? Were the
+stealers and whippers of babes and women the justified children of God?
+</p>
+<p>
+It is now contended that while the Old Testament is touched with the
+barbarism of its time, that the New Testament is morally perfect, and
+that on its pages can be found no blot or stain. As a matter of fact,
+the New Testament is more decidedly in favor of human slavery than the
+old.
+</p>
+<p>
+For my part, I never will, I never can, worship a God who upholds the
+institution of slavery. Such a God I hate and defy. I neither want his
+heaven, nor fear his hell.
+</p>
+<center>
+XXXVI. "INSPIRED" MARRIAGE
+</center>
+<p>
+Is there an orthodox clergyman in the world, who will now declare that
+he believes the institution of polygamy to be right? Is there one who
+will publicly declare that, in his judgment, that institution ever was
+right? Was there ever a time in the history of the world when it was
+right to treat woman simply as property? Do not attempt to answer these
+questions by saying, that the Bible is an exceedingly good book, that we
+are indebted for our civilization to the sacred volume, and that without
+it, man would lapse into savagery, and mental night. This is no answer.
+Was there a time when the institution of polygamy was the highest
+expression of human virtue? Is there a Christian woman, civilized,
+intelligent, and free, who believes in the institution of polygamy? Are
+we better, purer, and more intelligent than God was four thousand years
+ago? Why should we imprison Mormons, and worship God? Polygamy is just
+as pure in Utah, as it could have been in the promised land. Love and
+Virtue are the same the whole world round, and Justice is the same in
+every star. All the languages of the world are not sufficient to express
+the filth of polygamy. It makes of man, a beast, of woman, a trembling
+slave. It destroys the fireside, makes virtue an outcast, takes from
+human speech its sweetest words, and leaves the heart a den, where crawl
+and hiss the slimy serpents of most loathsome lust. Civilization rests
+upon the family. The good family is the unit of good government. The
+virtues grow about the holy hearth of home&mdash;they cluster, bloom, and
+shed their perfume round the fireside where the one man loves the one
+woman. Lover&mdash;husband&mdash;wife&mdash;mother&mdash;father&mdash;child&mdash;home!&mdash;? without
+these sacred words, the world is but a lair, and men and women merely
+beasts.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why should the innocent maiden and the loving mother worship the
+heartless Jewish God? Why should they, with pure and stainless lips,
+read the vile record of inspired lust?
+</p>
+<p>
+The marriage of the one man to the one woman is the citadel and fortress
+of civilization. Without this, woman becomes the prey and slave of lust
+and power, and man goes back to savagery and crime. From the bottom of
+my heart I hate, abhor and execrate all theories of life, of which the
+pure and sacred home is not the corner-stone. Take from the world the
+family, the fireside, the children born of wedded love, and there is
+nothing left. The home where virtue dwells with love is like a lily with
+a heart of fire&mdash;the fairest flower in all the world.
+</p>
+<center>
+XXVII. "INSPIRED" WAR
+</center>
+<p>
+If the Bible be true, God commanded his chosen people to destroy men
+simply for the crime of defending their native land. They were not
+allowed to spare trembling and white-haired age, nor dimpled babes
+clasped in the mothers' arms. They were ordered to kill women, and to
+pierce, with the sword of war, the unborn child. "Our heavenly Father"
+commanded the Hebrews to kill the men and women, the fathers, sons and
+brothers, but to preserve the girls alive. Why were not the maidens also
+killed? Why were they spared? Read the thirty-first chapter of Numbers,
+and you will find that the maidens were given to the soldiers and the
+priests. Is there, in all the history of war, a more infamous thing than
+this? Is it possible that God permitted the violets of modesty, that
+grow and shed their perfume in the maiden's heart, to be trampled
+beneath the brutal feet of lust? If this was the order of God, what,
+under the same circumstances, would have been the command of a devil?
+When, in this age of the world, a woman, a wife, a mother, reads this
+record, she should, with scorn and loathing, throw the book away. A
+general, who now should make such an order, giving over to massacre
+and rapine a conquered people, would be held in execration by the whole
+civilized world. Yet, if the Bible be true, the supreme and infinite God
+was once a savage.
+</p>
+<p>
+A little while ago, out upon the western plains, in a little path
+leading to a cabin, were found the bodies of two children and their
+mother. Her breast was filled with wounds received in the defence of her
+darlings. They had been murdered by the savages. Suppose when looking at
+their lifeless forms, some one had said, "This was done by the command
+of God!" In Canaan there were countless scenes like this. There was
+no pity in inspired war. God raised the black flag, and commanded his
+soldiers to kill even the smiling infant in its mother's arms. Who
+is the blasphemer; the man who denies the existence of God, or he who
+covers the robes of the Infinite with innocent blood?
+</p>
+<p>
+We are told in the Pentateuch, that God, the father of us all, gave
+thousands of maidens, after having killed their fathers, their mothers,
+and their brothers, to satisfy the brutal lusts of savage men. If there
+be a God, I pray him to write in his book, opposite my name, that I
+denied this lie for him.
+</p>
+<center>
+XXVIII. "INSPIRED" RELIGIOUS LIBERTY.
+</center>
+<p>
+According to the Bible, God selected the Jewish people through whom to
+make known the great fact, that he was the only true and living God. For
+this purpose, he appeared on several occasions to Moses&mdash;came down to
+Sinai's top clothed in cloud and fire, and wrought a thousand miracles
+for the preservation and education of the Jewish people. In their
+presence he opened the waters of the sea. For them he caused bread to
+rain from heaven. To quench their thirst, water leaped from the dry and
+barren rock. Their enemies were miraculously destroyed; and for forty
+years, at least, this God took upon himself the government of the Jews.
+But, after all this, many of the people had less confidence in him than
+in gods of wood and stone. In moments of trouble, in periods of
+disaster, in the darkness of doubt, in the hunger and thirst of famine,
+instead of asking this God for aid, they turned and sought the help of
+senseless things. This God, with all his power and wisdom, could not
+even convince a few wandering and wretched savages that he was more
+potent than the idols of Egypt. This God was not willing that the Jews
+should think and investigate for themselves. For heresy, the penalty was
+death. Where this God reigned, intellectual liberty was unknown. He
+appealed only to brute force; he collected taxes by threatening plagues;
+he demanded worship on pain of sword and fire; acting as spy,
+inquisitor, judge and executioner.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the thirteenth chapter of Deuteronomy, we have the ideas of God as to
+mental freedom. "If thy brother, the son of thy mother, or thy son, or
+the wife of thy bosom, or thy friend which is as thine own soul, entice
+thee secretly, saying, Let us go and serve other gods, which thou hast
+not known, thou nor thy fathers; namely of the gods of the people which
+are around about you, nigh unto thee, or far off from thee, from the one
+end of the earth even unto the other end of the earth, Thou shalt not
+consent unto him, nor hearken unto him, neither shall thine eye pity
+him, neither shalt thou spare him, neither shalt thou conceal him. But
+thou shalt surely kill him; thine hand shall be first upon him to put
+him to death, and afterward the hand of all the people. And thou shalt
+stone him with stones that he die."
+</p>
+<p>
+This is the religious liberty of God; the toleration of Jehovah. If
+I had lived in Palestine at that time, and my wife, the mother of my
+children, had said to me, "I am tired of Jehovah, he is always asking
+for blood; he is never weary of killing; he is always telling of his
+might and strength; always telling what he has done for the Jews,
+always asking for sacrifices; for doves and lambs&mdash;blood, nothing
+but blood.&mdash;Let us worship the sun. Jehovah is too revengeful, too
+malignant, too exacting. Let us worship the sun. The sun has clothed the
+world in beauty; it has covered the earth with flowers; by its divine
+light I first saw your face, and my beautiful babe."&mdash;If I had obeyed
+the command of God, I would have killed her. My hand would have been
+first upon her, and after that the hands of all the people, and she
+would have been stoned with stones until she died. For my part, I would
+never kill my wife, even if commanded so to do by the real God of this
+universe. Think of taking up some ragged rock and hurling it against the
+white bosom filled with love for you; and when you saw oozing from
+the bruised lips of the death wound, the red current of her sweet
+life&mdash;think of looking up to heaven and receiving the congratulations of
+the infinite fiend whose commandment you had obeyed!
+</p>
+<p>
+Can we believe that any such command was ever given by a merciful and
+intelligent God? Suppose, however, that God did give this law to the
+Jews, and did tell them that whenever a man preached a heresy, or
+proposed to worship any other God that they should kill him; and suppose
+that afterward this same God took upon himself flesh, and came to this
+very chosen people and taught a different religion, and that thereupon
+the Jews crucified him; I ask you, did he not reap exactly what he
+had sown? What right would this God have to complain of a crucifixion
+suffered in accordance with his own command?
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing can be more infamous than intellectual tyranny. To put chains
+upon the body is as nothing compared with putting shackles on the brain.
+No god is entitled to the worship or the respect of man who does not
+give, even to the meanest of his children, every right that he claims
+for himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the Pentateuch be true, religious persecution is a duty. The dungeons
+of the Inquisition were temples, and the clank of every chain upon
+the limbs of heresy was music in the ear of God. If the Pentateuch was
+inspired, every heretic should be destroyed; and every man who advocates
+a fact inconsistent with the sacred book, should be consumed by sword
+and flame.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the Old Testament no one is told to reason with a heretic, and not
+one word is said about relying upon argument, upon education, nor upon
+intellectual development&mdash;nothing except simple brute force. Is there
+to-day a Christian who will say that four thousand years ago, it was
+the duty of a husband to kill his wife if she differed with him upon
+the subject of religion? Is there one who will now say that, under such
+circumstances, the wife ought to have been killed? Why should God be so
+jealous of the wooden idols of the heathen? Could he not compete with
+Baal? Was he envious of the success of the Egyptian magicians? Was it
+not possible for him to make such a convincing display of his power as
+to silence forever the voice of unbelief? Did this God have to resort to
+force to make converts? Was he so ignorant of the structure of the human
+mind as to believe all honest doubt a crime? If he wished to do away
+with the idolatry of the Canaanites, why did he not appear to them? Why
+did he not give them the tables of the law? Why did he only make known
+his will to a few wandering savages in the desert of Sinai? Will some
+theologian have the kindness to answer these questions? Will some
+minister, who now believes in religious liberty, and eloquently
+denounces the intolerance of Catholicism, explain these things; will he
+tell us why he worships an intolerant God? Is a god who will burn a soul
+forever in another world, better than a Christian who burns the body for
+a few hours in this? Is there no intellectual liberty in heaven? Do the
+angels all discuss questions on the same side? Are all the investigators
+in perdition? Will the penitent thief, winged and crowned, laugh at the
+honest folks in hell? Will the agony of the damned increase or decrease
+the happiness of God? Will there be, in the universe, an eternal <i>auto
+da fe?</i>
+</p>
+<center>
+XXIX. CONCLUSION
+</center>
+<p>
+If the Pentateuch is not inspired in its astronomy, geology, geography,
+history or philosophy, if it is not inspired concerning slavery,
+polygamy, war, law, religious or political liberty, or the rights of
+men, women and children, what is it inspired in, or about? The unity
+of God?&mdash;that was believed long before Moses was born. Special
+providence?&mdash;that has been the doctrine of ignorance in all ages.
+The rights of property?&mdash;theft was always a crime. The sacrifice of
+animals?&mdash;that was a custom thousands of years before a Jew existed.
+The sacredness of life?&mdash;there have always been laws against murder.
+The wickedness of perjury?&mdash;truthfulness has always been a virtue.
+The beauty of chastity?&mdash;the Pentateuch does not teach it. Thou shalt
+worship no other God?&mdash;that has been the burden of all religions.
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it possible that the Pentateuch could not have been written by
+uninspired men? that the assistance of God was necessary to produce
+these books? Is it possible that Galileo ascertained the mechanical
+principles of "Virtual Velocity," the laws of falling bodies and of all
+motion; that Copernicus ascertained the true position of the earth and
+accounted for all celestial phenomena; that Kepler discovered his three
+laws&mdash;discoveries of such importance that the 8th of May, 1618, may be
+called the birthday of modern science; that Newton gave to the world
+the Method of Fluxions, the Theory of Universal Gravitation, and the
+Decomposition of Light; that Euclid, Cavalieri, Descartes, and Leibnitz,
+almost completed the science of mathematics; that all the discoveries
+in optics, hydrostatics, pneumatics and chemistry, the experiments,
+discoveries, and inventions of Galvani, Volta, Franklin and Morse, of
+Trevethick, Watt and Fulton and of all the pioneers of progress&mdash;that
+all this was accomplished by uninspired men, while the writer of the
+Pentateuch was directed and inspired by an infinite God? Is it possible
+that the codes of China, India, Egypt, Greece and Rome were made by man,
+and that the laws recorded in the Pentateuch were alone given by
+God? Is it possible that Æschylus and Shakespeare, Burns, and Beranger,
+Goethe and Schiller, and all the poets of the world, and all their
+wondrous tragedies and songs, are but the work of men, while no
+intelligence except the infinite God could be the author of the
+Pentateuch? Is it possible that of all the books that crowd the
+libraries of the world, the books of science, fiction, history and song,
+that all save only one, have been produced by man? Is it possible that
+of all these, the Bible only is the work of God?
+</p>
+<p>
+If the Pentateuch is inspired, the civilization of our day is a mistake
+and crime. There should be no political liberty. Heresy should be
+trodden out beneath the bigot's brutal feet. Husbands should divorce
+their wives at will, and make the mothers of their children houseless
+and weeping wanderers. Polygamy ought to be practiced; women should
+become slaves; we should buy the sons and daughters of the heathen and
+make them bondmen and bondwomen forever. We should sell our own flesh
+and blood, and have the right to kill our slaves. Men and women should
+be stoned to death for laboring on the seventh day. "Mediums," such
+as have familiar spirits, should be burned with fire. Every vestige of
+mental liberty should be destroyed, and reason's holy torch extinguished
+in the martyr's blood.
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it not far better and wiser to say that the Pentateuch while
+containing some good laws, some truths, some wise and useful things is,
+after all, deformed and blackened by the savagery of its time? Is it not
+far better and wiser to take the good and throw the bad away?
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us admit what we know to be true; that Moses was mistaken about a
+thousand things; that the story of creation is not true; that the Garden
+of Eden is a myth; that the serpent and the tree of knowledge, and the
+fall of man are but fragments of old mythologies lost and dead; that
+woman was not made out of a rib; that serpents never had the power of
+speech; that the sons of God did not marry the daughters of men; that
+the story of the flood and ark is not exactly true; that the tower of
+Babel is a mistake; that the confusion of tongues is a childish thing;
+that the origin of the rainbow is a foolish fancy; that Methuselah did
+not live nine hundred and sixty-nine years; that Enoch did not leave
+this world, taking with him his flesh and bones; that the story of Sodom
+and Gomorrah is somewhat improbable; that burning brimstone never fell
+like rain; that Lot's wife was not changed into chloride of sodium; that
+Jacob did not, in fact, put his hip out of joint wrestling with God;
+that the history of Tamar might just as well have been left out; that a
+belief in Pharaoh's dreams is not essential to salvation; that it makes
+but little difference whether the rod of Aaron was changed to a serpent
+or not; that of all the wonders said to have been performed in Egypt,
+the greatest is, that anybody ever believed the absurd account; that
+God did not torment the innocent cattle on account of the sins of their
+owners; that he did not kill the first born of the poor maid behind
+the mill because of Pharaoh's crimes; that flies and frogs were not
+ministers of God's wrath; that lice and locusts were not the executors
+of his will; that seventy people did not, in two hundred and fifteen
+years, increase to three million; that three priests could not eat
+six hundred pigeons in a day; that gazing at a brass serpent could not
+extract poison from the blood; that God did not go in partnership with
+hornets; that he did not murder people simply because they asked for
+something to eat; that he did not declare the making of hair oil
+and ointment an offence to be punished with death; that he did not
+miraculously preserve cloth and leather; that he was not afraid of wild
+beasts; that he did not punish heresy with sword and fire; that he was
+not jealous, revengeful, and unjust; that he knew all about the sun,
+moon, and stars; that he did not threaten to kill people for eating the
+fat of an ox; that he never told Aaron to draw cuts to see which of two
+goats should be killed; that he never objected to clothes made of woolen
+mixed with linen; that if he objected to dwarfs, people with flat noses
+and too many fingers, he ought not to have created such folks; that
+he did not demand human sacrifices as set forth in the last chapter
+of Leviticus; that he did not object to the raising of horses; that he
+never commanded widows to spit in the faces of their brothers-in-law;
+that several contradictory accounts of the same transaction cannot all
+be true; that God did not talk to Abraham as one man talks to another;
+that angels were not in the habit of walking about the earth eating veal
+dressed with milk and butter, and making bargains about the destruction
+of cities; that God never turned himself into a flame of fire, and lived
+in a bush; that he never met Moses in a hotel and tried to kill him;
+that it was absurd to perform miracles to induce a king to act in a
+certain way and then harden his heart so that he would refuse; that God
+was not kept from killing the Jews by the fear that the Egyptians would
+laugh at him; that he did not secretly bury a man and then allow the
+corpse to write an account of the funeral; that he never believed the
+firmament to be solid; that he knew slavery was and always would be a
+frightful crime; that polygamy is but stench and filth; that the brave
+soldier will always spare an unarmed foe; that only cruel cowards
+slay the conquered and the helpless; that no language can describe the
+murderer of a smiling babe; that God did not want the blood of doves and
+lambs; that he did not love the smell of burning flesh; that he did not
+want his altars daubed with blood; that he did not pretend that the sins
+of a people could be transferred to a goat; that he did not believe in
+witches, wizards, spooks, and devils; that he did not test the virtue of
+woman with dirty water; that he did not suppose that rabbits chewed the
+cud; that he never thought there were any four-footed birds; that he did
+not boast for several hundred years that he had vanquished an Egyptian
+king; that a dry stick did not bud, blossom, and bear almonds in one
+night; that manna did not shrink and swell, so that each man could
+gather only just one omer; that it was never wrong to "countenance the
+poor man in his cause;" that God never told a people not to live in
+peace with their neighbors; that he did not spend forty days with Moses
+on Mount Sinai giving him patterns for making clothes, tongs, basins,
+and snuffers; that maternity is not a sin; that physical deformity is
+not a crime; that an atonement cannot be made for the soul by shedding
+innocent blood; that killing a dove over running water will not make its
+blood a medicine; that a god who demands love knows nothing of the human
+heart; that one who frightens savages with loud noises is unworthy the
+love of civilized men; that one who destroys children on account of
+the sins of their fathers is a monster; that an infinite god never
+threatened to give people the itch; that he never sent wild beasts to
+devour babes; that he never ordered the violation of maidens; that
+he never regarded patriotism as a crime; that he never ordered the
+destruction of unborn children; that he never opened the earth and
+swallowed wives and babes because husbands and fathers had displeased
+him; that he never demanded that men should kill their sons and
+brothers, for the purpose of sanctifying themselves; that we cannot
+please God by believing the improbable; that credulity is not a virtue;
+that investigation is not a crime; that every mind should be free;
+that all religious persecution is infamous in God, as well as man; that
+without liberty, virtue is impossible; that without freedom, even love
+cannot exist; that every man should be allowed to think and to express
+his thoughts; that woman is the equal of man; that children should be
+governed by love and reason; that the family relation is sacred; that
+war is a hideous crime; that all intolerance is born of ignorance and
+hate; that the freedom of today is the hope of to-morrow; that the
+enlightened present ought not to fall upon its knees and blindly worship
+the barbaric past; and that every free, brave and enlightened man should
+publicly declare that all the ignorant, infamous, heartless, hideous
+things recorded in the "inspired" Pentateuch are not the words of God,
+but simply "Some Mistakes of Moses."
+</p>
+<a name="link0003"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+<h2>
+ SOME REASONS WHY
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ I.
+</h3>
+<p>
+RELIGION makes enemies instead of friends. That one word, "religion,"
+covers all the horizon of memory with visions of war, of outrage, of
+persecution, of tyranny, and death. That one word brings to the mind
+every instrument with which man has tortured man. In that one word are
+all the fagots and flames and dungeons of the past, and in that word is
+the infinite and eternal hell of the future.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the name of universal benevolence Christians have hated their
+fellow-men. Although they have been preaching universal love, the
+Christian nations are the warlike nations of the world. The most
+destructive weapons of war have been invented by Christians. The
+musket, the revolver, the rifled canon, the bombshell, the torpedo, the
+explosive bullet, have been invented by Christian brains.
+</p>
+<p>
+Above all other arts, the Christian world has placed the art of war.
+</p>
+<p>
+A Christian nation has never had the slightest respect for the rights of
+barbarians; neither has any Christian sect any respect for the rights
+of other sects. Anciently, the sects discussed with fire and sword, and
+even now, something happens almost every day to show that the old spirit
+that was in the Inquisition still slumbers in the Christian breast.
+</p>
+<p>
+Whoever imagines himself a favorite with God, holds other people in
+contempt.
+</p>
+<p>
+Whenever a man believes that he has the exact truth from God, there is
+in that man no spirit of compromise. He has not the modesty born of
+the imperfections of human nature; he has the arrogance of theological
+certainty and the tyranny born of ignorant assurance. Believing himself
+to be the slave of God, he imitates his master, and of all tyrants, the
+worst is a slave in power.
+</p>
+<p>
+When a man really believes that it is necessary to do a certain thing
+to be happy forever, or that a certain belief is necessary to ensure
+eternal joy, there is in that man no spirit of concession. He divides
+the whole world into saints and sinners, into believers and unbelievers,
+into God's sheep and Devil's goats, into people who will be glorified
+and people who will be damned.
+</p>
+<p>
+A Christian nation can make no compromise with one not Christian; it
+will either compel that nation to accept its doctrine, or it will wage
+war. If Christ, in fact, said "I came not to bring peace but a sword,"
+it is the only prophecy in the New Testament that has been literally
+fulfilled.
+</p>
+<center>
+II. DUTIES TO GOD.
+</center>
+<p>
+RELIGION is supposed to consist in a discharge of the duties we owe to
+God. In other words, we are taught that God is exceedingly anxious that
+we should believe a certain thing. For my part, I do not believe that
+there is any infinite being to whom we owe anything. The reason I say
+this is, we can not owe any duty to any being who requires nothing&mdash;to
+any being that we cannot possibly help, to any being whose happiness we
+cannot increase. If God is infinite, we cannot make him happier than
+he is. If God is infinite, we can neither give, nor can he receive,
+anything. Anything that we do or fail to do, cannot, in the slightest
+degree, affect an infinite God; consequently, no relations can exist
+between the finite and the Infinite, if by relations is meant mutual
+duties and obligations.
+</p>
+<p>
+Some tell us that it is the desire of God that we should worship him.
+What for? Why does he desire worship? Others tell us that we should
+sacrifice something to him. What for? Is he in want? Can we assist him?
+Is he unhappy? Is he in trouble? Does he need human sympathy? We cannot
+assist the Infinite, but we can assist our fellow-men. We can feed the
+hungry and clothe the naked, and enlighten the ignorant, and we can
+help, in some degree at least, toward covering this world with the
+mantle of joy.
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not believe there is any being in this universe who gives rain
+for praise, who gives sunshine for prayer, or who blesses a man simply
+because he kneels.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Infinite cannot receive praise or worship.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Infinite can neither hear nor answer prayer.
+</p>
+<p>
+An Infinite personality is an infinite impossibility.
+</p>
+<center>
+III. INSPIRATION.
+</center>
+<p>
+WE are told that we have in our possession the inspired will of God. What
+is meant by the word "inspired" is not exactly known; but whatever else
+it may mean, certainly it means that the "inspired" must be the true. If
+it is true, there is, in fact, no need of its being inspired&mdash;the truth
+will take care of itself.
+</p>
+<p>
+The church is forced to say that the Bible differs from all other books;
+it is forced to say that it contains the actual will of God. Let us then
+see what inspiration really is. A man looks at the sea, and the sea
+says something to him. It makes an impression upon his mind. It awakens
+memory, and this impression depends upon the man's experience&mdash;upon
+his intellectual capacity. Another looks upon the same sea. He has a
+different brain; he has had a different experience. The sea may speak
+to him of joy, to the other of grief and tears. The sea cannot tell the
+same thing to any two human beings, because no two human beings have had
+the same experience.
+</p>
+<p>
+A year ago, while the cars were going from Boston to Gloucester, we
+passed through Manchester. As the cars stopped, a lady sitting opposite,
+speaking to her husband, looking out of the window and catching, for the
+first time, a view of the sea, cried out, "Is it not beautiful!" and the
+husband replied, "I'll bet you could dig clams right here!"
+</p>
+<p>
+Another, standing upon the shore, listening to what the great Greek
+tragedian called "the multitudinous laughter of the sea," may say: Every
+drop has visited all the shores of the earth; every one has been frozen
+in the vast and icy North; every one has fallen in snow, has been
+whirled by storms around mountain peaks; every one has been kissed to
+vapor by the sun; every one has worn the seven-hued garment of light;
+every one has fallen in pleasant rain, gurgled from springs and laughed
+in brooks while lovers wooed upon the banks, and every one has rushed
+with mighty rivers back to the sea's embrace. Everything in nature tells
+a different story to all eyes that see and to all ears that hear.
+</p>
+<p>
+Once in my life, and once only, I heard Horace Greeley deliver a
+lecture. I think its title was, "Across the Continent." At last he
+reached the mammoth trees of California, and I thought "Here is an
+opportunity for the old man to indulge his fancy. Here are trees that
+have outlived a thousand human governments. There are limbs above his
+head older than the pyramids. While man was emerging from barbarism
+to something like civilization, these trees were growing. Older than
+history, every one appeared to be a memory, a witness, and a prophecy.
+The same wind that filled the sails of the Argonauts had swayed these
+trees." But these trees said nothing of this kind to Mr. Greeley. Upon
+these subjects not a word was told to him. Instead, he took his pencil,
+and after figuring awhile, remarked: "One of these trees, sawed into
+inch-boards, would make more than three hundred thousand feet of
+lumber."
+</p>
+<p>
+I was once riding on the cars in Illinois. There had been a violent
+thunder-storm. The rain had ceased, the sun was going down. The
+great clouds had floated toward the west, and there they assumed most
+wonderful architectural shapes. There were temples and palaces domed
+and turreted, and they were touched with silver, with amethyst and gold.
+They looked like the homes of the Titans, or the palaces of the gods.
+A man was sitting near me. I touched him and said, "Did you ever see
+anything so beautiful!" He looked out. He saw nothing of the cloud,
+nothing of the sun, nothing of the color; he saw only the country and
+replied, "Yes, it is beautiful; I always did like rolling land." On
+another occasion I was riding in a stage. There had been a snow, and
+after the snow a sleet, and all the trees were bent, and all the boughs
+were arched. Every fence, every log cabin had been transfigured, touched
+with a glory almost beyond this world. The great fields were a pure and
+perfect white; the forests, drooping beneath their load of gems, made
+wonderful caves, from which one almost expected to see troops of fairies
+come. The whole world looked like a bride, jewelled from head to foot.
+A German on the back seat, hearing our talk, and our exclamations of
+wonder leaned forward, looked out of the stage window and said: "Yes, it
+looks like a clean table cloth!"
+</p>
+<p>
+So, when we look upon a flower, a painting, a statue, a star, or a
+violet, the more we know, the more we have experienced, the more we
+have thought, the more we remember, the more the statue, the star,
+the painting, the violet has to tell. Nature says to me all that I am
+capable of understanding&mdash;gives all that I can receive.
+</p>
+<p>
+As with star, or flower, or sea, so with a book. A man reads
+Shakespeare. What does he get from him? All that he has the mind to
+understand. He gets his little cup full. Let another read him who knows
+nothing of the drama, nothing of the impersonations of passion, and what
+does he get? Almost nothing. Shakespeare has a different story for each
+reader. He is a world in which each recognizes his acquaintances&mdash;he may
+know a few, he may know all.
+</p>
+<p>
+The impression that nature makes upon the mind, the stories told by sea
+and star and flower, must be the natural food of thought. Leaving out
+for the moment the impression gained from ancestors, the hereditary
+fears and drifts and trends&mdash;the natural food of thought must be the
+impression made upon the brain by coming in contact through the medium
+of the five senses with what we call the outward world. The brain is
+natural. Its food is natural. The result, thought, must be natural. The
+supernatural can be constructed with no material except the natural. Of
+the supernatural we can have no conception. Thought may be deformed, and
+the thought of one may be strange to, and denominated as unnatural
+by, another; but it cannot be supernatural. It may be weak, it may be
+insane, but it is not supernatural. Above the natural man cannot rise,
+even with the aid of fancy's wings. There can can be deformed ideas,
+as there are deformed persons. There can be religions monstrous and
+misshapen, but they must be naturally produced. Some people have ideas
+about what they are pleased to call the supernatural; but what they
+call the supernatural is simply the deformed. The world is to each man
+according to each man. It takes the world as it really is and that man
+to make that man's world, and that man's world cannot exist without that
+man.
+</p>
+<p>
+You may ask, and what of all this? I reply, as with everything in
+nature, so with the Bible. It has a different story for each reader. Is
+then the Bible a different book to every human being who reads it? It
+is. Can God then, through the Bible, make the same revelation to two
+persons? He cannot. Why? Because the man who reads it is the man who
+inspires. Inspiration is in the man, as well as in the book. God should
+have inspired readers as well as writers.
+</p>
+<p>
+You may reply: "God knew that his book would be understood differently
+by each one, and that he really intended that it should be understood as
+it is understood by each." If this is so, then my understanding of the
+Bible is the real revelation to me. If this is so, I have no right to
+take the understanding of another. I must take the revelation made to me
+through my understanding, and by that revelation I must stand. Suppose
+then, that I do read this Bible honestly, fairly, and when I get through
+I am compelled to say, "The book is not true." If this is the honest
+result, then you are compelled to say, either that God has made no
+revelation to me, or that the revelation that it is not true, is the
+revelation made to me, and by which I am bound. If the book and my brain
+are both the work of the same Infinite God, whose fault is it that the
+book and the brain do not agree? Either God should have written a book
+to fit my brain, or should have made my brain to fit his book.
+</p>
+<p>
+The inspiration of the Bible depends upon the ignorance of him who
+reads. There was a time when its geology, its astronomy, its natural
+history, were inspired. That time has passed. There was a time when
+its morality satisfied the men who ruled mankind. That time has passed.
+There was a time when the tyrant regarded its laws as good; when the
+master believed in its liberty; when strength gloried in its passages;
+but these laws never satisfied the oppressed, they were never quoted by
+the slave.
+</p>
+<p>
+We have a sacred book, an inspired Bible, and I am told that this book
+was written by the same being who made every star, and who peopled
+infinite space with infinite worlds. I am also told that God created
+man, and that man is totally depraved. It has always seemed to me that
+an infinite being has no right to make imperfect things. I may be
+mistaken; but this is the only planet I have ever been on; I live in
+what might be called one of the rural districts of this universe,
+consequently I may be mistaken; I simply give the best and largest
+thought I have.
+</p>
+<center>
+IV. GOD'S EXPERIMENT WITH THE JEWS
+</center>
+<p>
+THE Bible tells us that men became so bad that God destroyed them all
+with the exception of eight persons; that afterwards he chose Abraham
+and some of his kindred, a wandering tribe, for the purpose of seeing
+whether or no they could be civilized. He had no time to waste with all
+the world. The Egyptians at that time, a vast and splendid nation,
+having a system of laws and free schools, believing in the marriage of
+the one man to the one woman; believing, too, in the rights of woman&mdash;a
+nation that had courts of justice and understood the philosophy of
+damages&mdash;these people had received no revelation from God,&mdash;they were
+left to grope in Nature's night. He had no time to civilize India,
+wherein had grown a civilization that fills the world with wonder
+still&mdash;a people with a language as perfect as ours, a people who had
+produced philosophers, scientists, poets. He had no time to waste on
+them; but he took a few, the tribe of Abraham. He established a perfect
+despotism&mdash;with no schools, with no philosophy, with no art, with no
+music&mdash;nothing but the sacrifices of dumb beasts&mdash;nothing but the abject
+worship of a slave. Not a word upon geology, upon astronomy; nothing,
+even, upon the science of medicine. Thus God spent hours and hours with
+Moses upon the top of Sinai, giving directions for ascertaining the
+presence of leprosy and for preventing its spread, but it never occurred
+to Jehovah to tell Moses how it could be cured. He told them a few
+things about what they might eat&mdash;prohibiting among other things
+four-footed birds, and one thing upon the subject of cooking. From the
+thunders and lightnings of Sinai he proclaimed this vast and wonderful
+fact: "Thou shalt not seethe a kid in its mother's milk." He took these
+people, according to our sacred Scriptures, under his immediate care,
+and for the purpose of controlling them he wrought wonderful miracles in
+their sight.
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it not a little curious that no priest of one religion has ever been
+able to astonish a priest of another religion by telling a miracle? Our
+missionaries tell the Hindoos the miracles of the Bible, and the Hindoo
+priests, without the movement of a muscle, hear them and then recite
+theirs, and theirs do not astonish our missionaries in the least! Is it
+not a little curious that the priests of one religion never believe the
+priests of another? Is it not a little strange that the believers
+in sacred books regard all except their own as having been made by
+hypocrites and fools?
+</p>
+<p>
+I heard the other day a story. A gentleman was telling some wonderful
+things and the listeners, with one exception, were saying, as he
+proceeded with his tale, "Is it possible?" "Did you ever hear anything
+so wonderful?" and when he had concluded, there was a kind of chorus
+of "Is it possible?" and "Can it be?" One man, however, sat perfectly
+quiet, utterly unmoved. Another listener said to him "Did you hear
+that?" and he replied "Yes." "Well," said the other, "You did not
+manifest much astonishment." "Oh, no," was the answer, "I am a liar
+myself."
+</p>
+<p>
+I am told by the sacred Scriptures that, as a matter of fact, God, even
+with the help of miracles, failed to civilize the Jews, and this shows
+of how little real benefit, after all, it is, to have a ruler much above
+the people, or to simply excite the wonder of mankind. Infinite wisdom,
+if the account be true, could not civilize a single tribe. Laws made by
+Jehovah himself were not obeyed, and every effort of Jehovah failed.
+It is claimed that God made known his law and inspired men to write
+and teach his will, and yet, it was found utterly impossible to reform
+mankind.
+</p>
+<center>
+V. CIVILIZED COUNTRIES
+</center>
+<p>
+IN all civilized countries, it is now passionately asserted that slavery
+is a crime; that a war of conquest is murder; that polygamy enslaves
+woman, degrades man and destroys home; that nothing is more infamous
+than the slaughter of decrepit men, of helpless mothers, and of
+prattling babes; that captured maidens should not be given to their
+captors; that wives should not be stoned to death for differing with
+their husbands on the subject of religion. We know that there was
+a time, in the history of most nations, when all these crimes were
+regarded as divine institutions. Nations entertaining this view now are
+regarded as savage, and, with the exception of the South Sea Islanders,
+Feejees, a few tribes in Central Africa, and some citizens of Delaware,
+no human beings are found degraded enough to agree upon these subjects
+with Jehovah.
+</p>
+<p>
+The only evidence we can have that a nation has ceased to be savage, is
+that it has abandoned these doctrines of savagery.
+</p>
+<p>
+To every one except a theologian, it is easy to account for these
+mistakes and crimes by saying that civilization is a painful growth;
+that the moral perceptions are cultivated through ages of tyranny, of
+crime, and of heroism; that it requires centuries for man to put out the
+eyes of self and hold in lofty and in equal poise the golden scales
+of Justice. Conscience is born of suffering. Mercy is the child of
+the imagination. Man advances as he becomes acquainted with his
+surroundings, with the mutual obligations of life, and learns to take
+advantage of the forces of nature.
+</p>
+<p>
+The believer in the inspiration of the Bible is compelled to say, that
+there was a time when slavery was right, when women could sell their
+babes, when polygamy was the highest form of virtue, when wars of
+extermination were waged with the sword of mercy, when religious
+toleration was a crime, and when death was the just penalty for having
+expressed an honest thought. He is compelled to insist that Jehovah is
+as bad now as he was then; that he is as good now as he was then. Once,
+all the crimes that I have mentioned were commanded by God; now they are
+prohibited. Once, God was in favor of them all; now the Devil is their
+defender. In other words, the Devil entertains the same opinion to-day
+that God held four thousand years ago. The Devil is as good now as
+Jehovah was then, and God was as bad then as the Devil is now. Other
+nations besides the Jews had similar laws and ideas&mdash;believed in and
+practiced the same crimes, and yet, it is not claimed that they received
+a revelation. They had no knowledge of the true God, and yet they
+practiced the same crimes, of their own motion, that the Jews did by
+command of Jehovah. From this it would seem that man can do wrong
+without a special revelation.
+</p>
+<p>
+The passages upholding slavery, polygamy, war and religious persecution
+are certainly not evidences of the inspiration of that book. Suppose
+nothing had been in the Old Testament upholding these crimes, would
+the modern Christian suspect that it was not inspired on that account?
+Suppose nothing had been in the Old Testament except laws in favor of
+these crimes, would it still be insisted that it was inspired? If the
+Devil had inspired a book, will some Christian tell us in what respect,
+on the subjects of slavery, polygamy, war and liberty, it would have
+differed from some parts of the Old Testament? Suppose we knew
+that after inspired men had finished the Bible the Devil had gotten
+possession of it and had written a few passages, what part would
+Christians now pick out as being probably his work? Which of the
+following passages would be selected as having been written by the
+Devil: "Love thy neighbor as thyself," or "Kill all the males among the
+little ones, and kill every woman, but all the women children keep alive
+for yourselves"?
+</p>
+<p>
+Is there a believer in the Bible who does not now wish that God, amid
+the thunders and lightnings of Sinai, had said to Moses that man should
+not own his fellow-man; that women should not sell their babes; that all
+men should be allowed to think and investigate for themselves, and that
+the sword never should be unsheathed to shed innocent blood? Is there
+a believer who would not be delighted to find that every one of the
+infamous passages are interpolations, and that the skirts of God were
+never reddened by the blood of maiden, wife, or babe? Is there an honest
+man who does not regret that God commanded a husband to stone his wife
+for suggesting the worship of some other God? Surely we do not need
+an inspired book to teach us that slavery is right, that polygamy is
+virtue, and that intellectual liberty is a crime.
+</p>
+<center>
+VI. A COMPARISON OF BOOKS
+</center>
+<p>
+LET us compare the gems of Jehovah with Pagan paste. It may be that
+the best way to illustrate what I have said, is to compare the supposed
+teachings of Jehovah with those of persons who never wrote an inspired
+line. In all ages of which any record has been preserved, men have given
+their ideas of justice, charity, liberty, love and law. If the Bible is
+the work of God, it should contain the sublimest truths, it should excel
+the works of man, it should contain the loftiest definitions of justice,
+the best conceptions of human liberty, the clearest outlines of duty,
+the tenderest and noblest thoughts. Upon every page should be found the
+luminous evidence of its divine origin. It should contain grander and
+more wonderful things than man has written.
+</p>
+<p>
+It may be said that it is unfair to call attention to bad things in the
+Bible. To this it may be replied that a divine being ought not to put
+bad things in his book. If the Bible now upholds what we call crimes,
+it will not do to say that it is not verbally inspired. If the words are
+not inspired, what is? It may be said, that the thoughts are inspired.
+This would include only thoughts expressed without words. If ideas are
+inspired, they must be expressed by inspired words&mdash;that is to say, by
+an inspired arrangement of words. If a sculptor were inspired of God to
+make a statue, we would not say that the marble was inspired, but
+the statue&mdash;that is to say, the relation of part to part, the married
+harmony of form and function. The language, the words, take the place of
+the marble, and it is the arrangement of the words that Christians claim
+to be inspired. If there is an uninspired word, or a word in the wrong
+place, until that word is known a doubt is cast on every word the book
+contains.
+</p>
+<p>
+If it was worth God's while to make a revelation at all, it was
+certainly worth his while to see that it was correctly made&mdash;that it was
+absolutely preserved.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why should God allow an inspired book to be interpolated? If it was
+worth while to inspire men to write it, it was worth while to
+inspire men to preserve it; and why should he allow another person to
+interpolate in it that which was not inspired? He certainly would not
+have allowed the man he inspired to write contrary to the inspiration.
+He should have preserved his revelation. Neither will it do to say that
+God adapted his revelation to the prejudices of man. It was necessary
+for him to adapt his revelation to the capacity of man, but certainly
+God would not confirm a barbarian in his prejudices. He would not
+fortify a heathen in his crimes....
+</p>
+<p>
+If a revelation is of any importance, it is to eradicate prejudice.
+They tell us now that the Jews were so ignorant, so bad, that God was
+compelled to justify their crimes, in order to have any influence
+with them. They say that if he had declared slavery and polygamy to be
+crimes, the Jews would have refused to receive the Ten Commandments.
+They tell us that God did the best he could; that his real intention was
+to lead them along slowly, so that in a few hundred years they would be
+induced to admit that larceny and murder and polygamy and slavery were
+not virtues. I suppose if we now wished to break a cannibal of the bad
+habit of devouring missionaries, we would first induce him to cook
+them in a certain way, saying: "To eat cooked missionary is one step
+in advance of eating your missionary raw. After a few years, a little
+mutton could be cooked with missionary, and year after year the amount
+of mutton could be increased and the amount of missionary decreased,
+until in the fullness of time the dish could be entirely mutton, and
+after that the missionaries would be absolutely safe."
+</p>
+<p>
+If there is anything of value, it is liberty&mdash;liberty of body, liberty
+of mind. The liberty of body is the reward of labor. Intellectual
+liberty is the air of the soul, the sunshine of the mind, and without
+it, the world is a prison, the universe a dungeon.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the Bible is really inspired, Jehovah commanded the Jewish people to
+buy the children of the strangers that sojourned among them, and ordered
+that the children thus bought should be an inheritance for the children
+of the Jews, and that they should be bondmen and bondwomen forever. Yet
+Epictetus, a man to whom no revelation was ever made, a man whose soul
+followed only the light of nature, and who had never heard of the Jewish
+God, was great enough to say: "Will you not remember that your servants
+are by nature your brothers, the children of God? In saying that you
+have bought them, you look down on the earth, and into the pit, on the
+wretched law of men long since dead, but you see not the laws of the
+gods."
+</p>
+<p>
+We find that Jehovah, speaking to his chosen people, assured them that
+their bondmen and their bondmaids must be "of the heathen that were
+round about them." "Of them," said Jehovah, "shall ye buy bondmen
+and bondmaids." And yet Cicero, a pagan, Cicero, who had never been
+enlightened by reading the Old Testament, had the moral grandeur to
+declare: "They who say that we should love our fellow-citizens but not
+foreigners, destroy the universal brotherhood of mankind, with which
+benevolence and justice would perish forever."
+</p>
+<p>
+If the Bible is inspired, Jehovah, God of all worlds, actually said:
+"And if a man smite his servant or his maid with a rod, and he die under
+his hand, he shall be sorely punished; notwithstanding, if he continue
+a day or two, he shall not be punished, for he is his money." And yet
+Zeno, founder of the Stoics, centuries before Christ was born, insisted
+that no man could be the owner of another, and that the title was bad,
+whether the slave had become so by conquest or by purchase.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jehovah ordered a Jewish general to make war, and gave, among others,
+this command: "When the Lord thy God shall drive them before thee, thou
+shalt smite them and utterly destroy them; thou shalt make no covenant
+with them, nor show mercy unto them." And yet Epictetus, whom we have
+already quoted, gave this marvelous rule for the guidance of human
+conduct: "Live with thy inferiors as thou wouldst have thy superiors
+live with thee."
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it possible, after all, that a being of infinite goodness and wisdom
+said: "I will heap mischief upon them; I will send mine arrows upon
+them; they shall be burned with hunger, and devoured with burning heat,
+and with bitter destruction. I will send the tooth of beasts upon them,
+with the poison of serpents of the dust. The sword without, and terror
+within, shall destroy both the young man and the virgin, the suckling
+also, with the man of gray hairs" while Seneca, an uninspired Roman,
+said: "The wise man will not pardon any crime that ought to be
+punished, but he will accomplish, in a nobler way, all that is sought
+in pardoning. He will spare some and watch over some, because of their
+youth, and others on account of their ignorance. His clemency will not
+fall short of justice, but will fulfill it perfectly."
+</p>
+<p>
+Can we believe that God ever said to any one: "Let his children be
+fatherless and his wife a widow; let his children be continually
+vagabonds, and beg; let them seek their bread also out of their desolate
+places; let the extortioner catch all that he hath, and let the stranger
+spoil his labor; let there be none to extend mercy unto him, neither let
+there be any to favor his fatherless children." If he ever said these
+words, surely he had never heard this line, this strain of music from
+the Hindu: "Sweet is the lute to those who have not heard the prattle of
+their own children."
+</p>
+<p>
+Jehovah, "from the clouds and darkness of Sinai," said to the Jews:
+"Thou shalt have no other gods before me.... Though shalt not bow down
+thyself to them nor serve them; for I, the Lord thy God, am a jealous
+God, visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon the children unto the
+third and fourth generation of them that hate me." Contrast this with
+the words put by the Hindu in the mouth of Brahma: "I am the same to all
+mankind. They who honestly serve other gods involuntarily worship me.
+I am he who partakest of all worship, and I am the reward of all
+worshipers."
+</p>
+<p>
+Compare these passages; the first a dungeon where crawl the things begot
+of jealous slime; the other, great as the domed firmament inlaid with
+suns. Is it possible that the real God ever said:
+</p>
+<p>
+"And if the prophet be deceived when he hath spoken a thing, I, the
+Lord, have deceived that prophet; and I will stretch out my hand upon
+him and will destroy him from the midst of my people." Compare that
+passage with one from a Pagan.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is better to keep silence for the remainder of your life than to
+speak falsely."
+</p>
+<p>
+Can we believe that a being of infinite mercy gave this command:
+</p>
+<p>
+"Put every man his sword by his side, and go in and out from gate to
+gate, throughout the camp, and slay every man his brother, and every man
+his companion, and every man his neighbor; consecrate yourselves to-day
+to the Lord, even every man upon his son and upon his brother, that he
+may bestow a blessing upon you this day."
+</p>
+<p>
+Surely, that God was not animated by so great and magnanimous a spirit
+as was Antoninus, a Roman emperor, who declared that, "he had rather
+keep a single Roman citizen alive than slay a thousand enemies."
+</p>
+<p>
+Compare the laws given to the children of Israel, as it is claimed by
+the Creator of us all, with the following from Marcus Aurelius:
+</p>
+<p>
+"I have formed the ideal of a state, in which there is the same law
+for all, and equal rights, and equal liberty of speech established; an
+empire where nothing is honored so much as the freedom of the citizen."
+</p>
+<p>
+In the Avesta I find this: "I belong to five: to those who think good,
+to those who speak good, to those who do good, to those who hear, and to
+those who are pure."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Which is the one prayer which in greatness, goodness, and beauty is
+worth all that is between heaven and earth and between this earth and
+the stars? And he replied: To renounce all evil thoughts and words and
+works."
+</p>
+<center>
+VII.
+</center>
+<p>
+IT is claimed by the Christian world that one of the great reasons for
+giving an inspired book to the Jews was, that through them the world
+might learn that there is but one God. This piece of information has
+been supposed to be of infinite value. As a matter of fact, long before
+Moses was born, the Egyptians believed and taught that there was but
+one God&mdash;that is to say, that above all intelligences there was the one
+Supreme. They were guilty, too, of the same inconsistencies of modern
+Christians. They taught the doctrine of the Trinity&mdash;God the Father, God
+the Mother, and God the Son. God was frequently represented as father,
+mother and babe. They also taught that the soul had a divine origin;
+that after death it was to be judged according to the deeds done in the
+body; that those who had done well passed into perpetual joy, and those
+who had done evil into endless pain. In this they agreed with the most
+approved divine of the nineteenth century. Women were the equals of
+men, and Egypt was often governed by queens. In this, her government
+was vastly better than the one established by God. The laws were
+administered by courts much like ours. In Egypt there was a system of
+schools that gave the son of poverty a chance of advancement, and
+the highest offices were open to the successful scholar. The Egyptian
+married one wife. The wife was called "the lady of the house." The women
+were not secluded. The people were not divided into castes. There was
+nothing to prevent the rise of able and intelligent Egyptians. But like
+the Jehovah of the Jews, they made slaves of the captives of war.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ancient Persians believed in one God; and women helped to found the
+Parsee religion. Nothing can exceed some of the maxims of Zoroaster. The
+Hindoos taught that above all, and over all, was one eternal Supreme.
+They had a code of laws. They understood the philosophy of evidence and
+of damages. They knew better than to teach the doctrine of an eye for an
+eye, and a tooth for a tooth.
+</p>
+<p>
+They knew that when one man maimed another, it was not to the interest
+of society to have that man maimed, thus burdening the people with two
+cripples, but that it was better to make the man who maimed the other
+work to support him. In India, upon the death of a father, the daughters
+received twice as much from the estate as the sons.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Romans built temples to Truth, Faith, Valor, Concord, Modesty, and
+Charity, in which they offered sacrifices to the highest conceptions of
+human excellence. Women had rights; they presided in the temple; they
+officiated in holy offices; they guarded the sacred fires upon which the
+safety of Rome depended; and when Christ came, the grandest figure in
+the known world was the Roman mother.
+</p>
+<p>
+It will not do to say that some rude statue was made by an inspired
+sculptor, and that the Apollo of Belvidere, Venus de Milo, and the
+Gladiator were made by unaided men; that the daubs of the early ages
+were painted by divine assistance, while the Raphaels, the Angelos, and
+the Rembrandts did what they did without the help of heaven. It will not
+do to say, that the first hut was built by God, and the last palace by
+degraded man; that the hoarse songs of the savage tribes were made by
+the Deity, but that Hamlet and Lear were written by man; that the pipes
+of Pan were invented in heaven, and all other musical instruments on the
+earth.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the Jehovah of the Jews had taken upon himself flesh, and dwelt as a
+man among the people had he endeavored to govern, had he followed his
+own teachings, he would have been a slaveholder, a buyer of babes, and a
+beater of women. He would have waged wars of extermination. He would
+have killed grey-haired and trembling age, and would have sheathed his
+sword, in prattling, dimpled babes. He would have been a polygamist, and
+would have butchered his wife for differing with him on the subject of
+religion.
+</p>
+<center>
+VIII. THE NEW TESTAMENT.
+</center>
+<p>
+NE great objection to the Old Testament is the cruelty said to have been
+commanded by God. All these cruelties ceased with death. The vengeance
+of Jehovah stopped at the tomb. He never threatened to punish the dead;
+and there is not one word, from the first mistake in Genesis to the last
+curse of Malachi, containing the slightest intimation that God will take
+his revenge in another world. It was reserved for the New Testament
+to make known the doctrine of eternal pain. The teacher of universal
+benevolence rent the veil between time and eternity, and fixed the
+horrified gaze of man upon the lurid gulf of hell. Within the breast of
+non-resistance coiled the worm that never dies. Compared with this,
+the doctrine of slavery, the wars of extermination, the curses, the
+punishments of the Old Testament were all merciful and just.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is no time to speak of the conflicting statements in the various
+books composing the New Testament&mdash;no time to give the history of the
+manuscripts, the errors in translation, the interpolations made by the
+fathers and by their successors, the priests, and only time to speak of
+a few objections, including some absurdities and some contradictions.
+</p>
+<p>
+Where several witnesses testify to the same transaction, no matter how
+honest they may be, they will disagree upon minor matters, and such
+testimony is generally considered as evidence that the witnesses
+have not conspired among themselves. The differences in statement are
+accounted for from the facts that all do not see alike, and that all
+have not equally good memories; but when we claim that the witnesses are
+inspired, we must admit that he who inspired them did know exactly what
+occurred, and consequently there should be no disagreement, even in the
+minutest detail. The accounts should not only be substantially, but they
+should be actually, the same. The differences and contradictions can be
+accounted for by the weaknesses of human nature, but these weaknesses
+cannot be predicated of divine wisdom.
+</p>
+<p>
+And here let me ask: Why should there have been more than one correct
+account of what really happened? Why were four gospels necessary? It
+seems to me that one inspired gospel, containing all that happened, was
+enough. Copies of the one correct one could have been furnished to any
+extent. According to Doctor Davidson, Irenæus argues that the gospels
+were four in number, because there are four universal winds, four
+corners of the globe. Others have said, because there are four seasons;
+and these gentlemen might have added, because a donkey has four legs.
+For my part, I cannot even conceive of a reason for more than one
+gospel.
+</p>
+<p>
+According to one of these gospels, and according to the prevalent
+Christian belief, the Christian religion rests upon the doctrine of the
+atonement. If this doctrine is without foundation, the fabric falls; and
+it is without foundation, for it is repugnant to justice and mercy.
+The church tells us that the first man committed a crime for which all
+others are responsible. This absurdity was the father and mother of
+another&mdash;that a man can be rewarded for the good action of another. We
+are told that God made a law, with the penalty of eternal death. All
+men, they tell us, have broken this law. The law had to be vindicated.
+This could be done by damning everybody, but through what is known as
+the atonement the salvation of a few was made possible. They insist that
+the law demands the extreme penalty, that justice calls for its victim,
+that mercy ceases to plead, and that God by allowing the innocent to
+suffer in the place of the guilty settled satisfactory with the law. To
+carry out this scheme God was born as a babe, grew in stature, increased
+in knowledge, and at the age of thirty-three years having lived a life
+filled with kindness, having practiced every virtue, he was sacrificed
+as an atonement for man. It is claimed that he took our place, bore our
+sins, our guilt, and in this way satisfied the justice of God.
+</p>
+<p>
+Under the Mosaic dispensation there was no remission of sin except
+through the shedding of blood. When a man sinned he must bring to the
+priest a lamb, a bullock, a goat, or a pair of turtle-doves.
+</p>
+<p>
+The priest would lay his hand upon the animal and the sin of the man
+would be transferred to the beast. Then the animal would be killed in
+place of the sinner, and the blood thus shed would be sprinkled upon
+the altar. In this way Jehovah was satisfied. The greater the crime, the
+greater the sacrifice. There was a ratio between the value of the animal
+and the enormity of the sin.
+</p>
+<p>
+The most minute directions were given as to the killing of
+these animals. Every priest became a butcher, every synagogue a
+slaughter-house. Nothing could be more utterly shocking to a refined
+soul, nothing better calculated to harden the heart, than the continual
+shedding of innocent blood. This terrible system culminated in the
+sacrifice of Christ. His blood took the place of all other. It is not
+necessary to shed any more. The law at last is satisfied, satiated,
+surfeited.
+</p>
+<p>
+The idea that God wants blood is at the bottom of the atonement, and
+rests upon the most fearful savagery; and yet the Mosaic dispensation
+was better adapted to prevent the commission of sin than the Christian
+system. Under that dispensation, if you committed a sin, you had
+to bring a sacrifice&mdash;dove, sheep, or bullock, now, when a sin is
+committed, the Christian says, "Charge it," "Put it on the slate, If
+I don't pay it the Savior will." In this way, rascality is sold on a
+credit, and the credit system of religion breeds extravagance in sin.
+The Mosaic dispensation was based upon far better business principles.
+The debt had to be paid, and by the man who owed it. We are told that
+the sinner is in debt to God, and that the obligation is discharged by
+the Savior. The best that can be said of such a transaction is that the
+debt is transferred, not paid. As a matter of fact, the sinner is in
+debt to the person he has injured. If you injure a man, it is not enough
+to get the forgiveness of God&mdash;you must get the man's forgiveness, you
+must get your own. If a man puts his hand in the fire and God forgives
+him, his hand will smart just as badly. You must reap what you sow. No
+God can give you wheat when you sow tares, and no Devil can give you
+tares when you sow wheat. We must remember that in nature there are
+neither rewards nor punishments&mdash;there are consequences. The life and
+death of Christ do not constitute an atonement. They are worth the
+example, the moral force, the heroism of benevolence, and in so far as
+the life of Christ produces emulation in the direction of goodness, it
+has been of value to mankind.
+</p>
+<p>
+To make innocence suffer is the greatest sin, and it may be the only
+sin. How, then, is it possible to make the consequences of sin an
+atonement for sin, when the consequences of sin are to be borne by one
+who has not sinned, and the one who has sinned is to reap the reward of
+virtue? No honorable man should be willing that another should suffer
+for him. No good law can accept the sufferings of innocence as an
+atonement for the guilty; and besides, if there was no atonement until
+the crucifixion of Christ, what became of the countless millions who
+died before that time? We must remember that the Jews did not kill
+animals for the Gentiles. Jehovah hated foreigners. There was no way
+provided for the forgiveness of a heathen. What has become of the
+millions who have died since, without having heard of the atonement?
+What becomes of those who hear and do not believe? Can there be a law
+that demands that the guilty be rewarded. And yet, to reward the guilty
+is far nearer justice than to punish the innocent. If the doctrine of
+the atonement is true, there would have been no heaven had no atonement
+been made.
+</p>
+<p>
+If Judas had understood the Christian system, if he knew that Christ
+must be betrayed, and that God was depending on him to betray him, and
+that without the betrayal no human soul could be saved, what should
+Judas have done?
+</p>
+<p>
+Jehovah took special charge of the Jewish people. He did this for the
+purpose of civilizing them. If he had succeeded in civilizing them,
+he would have made the damnation of the entire human race a certainty;
+because if the Jews had been a civilized people when Christ appeared&mdash;a
+people who had not been hardened by the laws of Jehovah&mdash;they would not
+have crucified Christ, and as a consequence, the world would have been
+lost. If the Jews had believed in religious freedom, in the rights of
+thought and speech, if the Christian religion is true, not a human soul
+ever could have been saved. If, when Christ was on his way to Calvary,
+some brave soul had rescued him from the pious mob, he would not only
+have been damned for his pains, but would have rendered impossible the
+salvation of any human being.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Christian world has been trying for nearly two thousand years to
+explain the atonement, and every effort has ended in an admission that
+it cannot be understood, and a declaration that it must be believed. Has
+the promise and hope of forgiveness ever prevented the commission of
+a sin? Can men be made better by being taught that sin gives happiness
+here; that to live a virtuous life is to bear a cross; that men can
+repent between the last sin and the last breath; and that repentance
+washes every stain of the soul away? Is it good to teach that the
+serpent of regret will not hiss in the ear of memory; that the saved
+will not even pity the victims of their crimes; and that sins forgiven
+cease to affect the unhappy wretches sinned against?
+</p>
+<p>
+Another objection is, that a certain belief is necessary to save the
+soul. This doctrine, I admit, is taught in the gospel according to John,
+and in many of the epistles; I deny that it is taught in Matthew, Mark,
+or Luke. It is, however, asserted by the church that to believe is the
+only safe way. To this, I reply: Belief is not a voluntary thing. A man
+believes or disbelieves in spite of himself. They tell us that to
+believe is the safe way; but I say, the safe way is to be honest.
+Nothing can be safer than that. No man in the hour of death ever
+regretted having been honest. No man when the shadows of the last day
+were gathering about the pillow of death, ever regretted that he had
+given to his fellow-man his honest thought. No man, in the presence of
+eternity, ever wished that he had been a hypocrite. No man ever then
+regretted that he did not throw away his reason. It certainly cannot be
+necessary to throw away your reason to save your soul, because after
+that, your soul is not worth saving. The soul has a right to defend
+itself. My brain is my castle; and when I waive the right to defend it,
+I become an intellectual serf and slave.
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not admit that a man by doing me an injury can place me under
+obligations to do him a service. To render benefits for injuries is
+to ignore all distinctions between actions. He who treats friends and
+enemies alike has neither love nor justice. The idea of non-resistance
+never occurred to a man with power to defend himself. The mother of this
+doctrine was weakness. To allow a crime to be committed, even against
+yourself, when you can prevent it, is next to committing the crime
+yourself. The church has preached the doctrine of non-resistance, and
+under that banner has shed the blood of millions. In the folds of
+her sacred vestments have gleamed for centuries the daggers of
+assassination. With her cunning hands she wove the purple for hypocrisy
+and placed the crown upon the brow of crime. For more than a thousand
+years larceny held the scales of justice, hypocrisy wore the mitre and
+tiara, while beggars scorned the royal sons of toil, and ignorant fear
+denounced the liberty of thought.
+</p>
+<center>
+XI. CHRIST'S MISSION.
+</center>
+<p>
+HE came, they tell us, to make a revelation, and what did he reveal?
+"Love thy neighbor as thyself"? That was in the Old Testament. "Love
+God with all thy heart"? That was in the Old Testament. "Return good for
+evil"? That was said by Buddha, seven hundred years before Christ was
+born. "Do unto others as ye would that they should do unto you"? That
+was the doctrine of Lao-tsze. Did he come to give a rule of action?
+Zoroaster had done this long before: "Whenever thou art in doubt as to
+whether an action is good or bad, abstain from it." Did he come to tell
+us of another world? The immortality of the soul had been taught by the
+Hindoos, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans hundreds of years before he was
+born. What argument did he make in favor of immortality? What facts
+did he furnish? What star of hope did he put above the darkness of
+this world? Did he come simply to tell us that we should not revenge
+ourselves upon our enemies? Long before, Socrates had said: "One who
+is injured ought not to return the injury, for on no account can it be
+right to do an injustice; and it is not right to return an injury, or to
+do evil to any man, however much we have suffered from him." And Cicero
+had said: "Let us not listen to those who think we ought to be angry
+with our enemies, and who believe this to be great and manly. Nothing
+is so praiseworthy, nothing so clearly shows a great and noble soul, as
+clemency and readiness to forgive." Is there anything in the literature
+of the world more nearly perfect than this thought?
+</p>
+<p>
+Was it from Christ the world learned the first lesson of forbearance,
+when centuries and centuries before, Chrishna had said, "If a man strike
+thee, and in striking drop his staff, pick it up and hand it to him
+again?" Is it possible that the son of God threatened to say to a vast
+majority, of his children, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting
+fire prepared for the devil and his angels," while the Buddhist was
+great and tender enough to say:
+</p>
+<p>
+"Never will I seek nor receive private individual salvation; never
+enter into final peace alone; but forever and everywhere will I live
+and strive for the universal redemption of every creature throughout
+all worlds. Never will I leave this world of sin and sorrow and struggle
+until all are delivered. Until then, I will remain and suffer where I
+am?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this, from a
+Sufi?&mdash;"Better one moment of silent contemplation and inward love than
+seventy thousand years of outward worship."
+</p>
+<p>
+Is there anything comparable to this?&mdash;"Whoever carelessly treads on
+a worm that crawls on the earth, that heartless one is darkly alienate
+from God."
+</p>
+<p>
+Is there anything in the New Testament more beautiful than the story of
+the Sufi?
+</p>
+<p>
+For seven years a Sufi practised every virtue, and then he mounted the
+three steps that lead to the doors of Paradise. He knocked and a voice
+said: "Who is there?" The Sufi replied: "Thy servant, O God." But the
+doors remained closed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Yet seven other years the Sufi engaged in every good work. He comforted
+the sorrowing and divided his substance with the poor. Again he mounted
+the three steps, again knocked at the doors of Paradise, and again
+the voice asked: "Who is there?" and the Sufi replied: "Thy slave, O
+God."&mdash;But the doors remained closed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Yet seven other years the Sufi spent in works of charity, in visiting
+the imprisoned and the sick. Again he mounted the steps, again knocked
+at the celestial doors. Again he heard the question: "Who is there?" and
+he replied: "Thyself, O God."&mdash;The gates wide open flew.
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it possible that St. Paul was inspired of God, when he said: "Let the
+women learn in silence, with all subjection."&mdash;"Neither was the man
+created for the woman, but the woman for the man?"
+</p>
+<p>
+And is it possible that Epictetus, without the slightest aid from
+heaven, gave to the world this gem of love:
+</p>
+<p>
+"What is more delightful than to be so dear to your wife, as to be on
+that account dearer to yourself?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Did St. Paul express the sentiments of God when he wrote&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"But I would have you know that the head of every man is Christ, and the
+head of every woman is the man, and the head of Christ is God. Wives,
+submit yourselves unto your husbands as unto the Lord?"
+</p>
+<p>
+And was the author of this, a poor despised heathen?&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"In whatever house the husband is contented with the wife, and the wife
+with the husband, in that house will fortune dwell; but upon the house
+where women are not honored, let a curse be pronounced. Where the wife
+is honored, there the gods are truly worshiped."
+</p>
+<p>
+Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this?&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"Shall I tell thee where nature is most blest and fair? It is where
+those we love abide. Though that space be small, it is ample above
+kingdoms; though it be a desert, through it run the rivers of Paradise."
+</p>
+<p>
+After reading the curses pronounced in the Old
+</p>
+<p>
+Testament upon Jew and heathen, the descriptions of slaughter, of
+treachery and of death, the destruction of women and babes; after you
+shall have read all the chapters of horror in the New Testament, the
+threatenings of fire and flame, then read this, from the greatest of
+human beings:
+</p>
+<pre>
+ "The quality of mercy is not strained:
+ It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
+ Upon the place beneath. It is twice blessed;
+ It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.
+ 'Tis mightiest in the mightiest: it becomes
+ The throned monarch better than his crown."
+</pre>
+<center>
+X. ETERNAL PAIN
+</center>
+<p>
+UPON passages in the New Testament rests the doctrine of eternal pain.
+This doctrine subverts every idea of justice. A finite being can neither
+commit an infinite sin, nor a sin against the Infinite. A being of
+infinite goodness and wisdom has no right to create any being whose life
+is not a blessing. Infinite wisdom has no right to create a failure,
+and surely a man destined to everlasting failure is not a conspicuous
+success. The doctrine of eternal punishment is the most infamous of
+all doctrines&mdash;born of ignorance, cruelty and fear. Around the angel of
+immortality, Christianity has coiled this serpent.
+</p>
+<p>
+Upon Love's breast the church has placed the eternal asp. And yet in
+the same book in which is taught this most frightful of dogmas, we are
+assured that "the Lord is good to all, and his tender mercies are over
+all his works."
+</p>
+<p>
+A few days ago upon the wide sea, was found a barque called "The
+Tiger," Captain Kreuger, in command. The vessel had been one hundred and
+twenty-six days upon the sea. For days the crew had been without water,
+without food, and were starving. For nine days not a drop had passed
+their lips. The crew consisted of the captain, a mate, and eleven men.
+At the end of one hundred and eighteen days from Liverpool they killed
+the captain's Newfoundland dog. This lasted them four days. During the
+next five days they had nothing. For weeks they had had no light
+and were unable to see the compass at night. On the one hundred and
+twenty-fifth day Captain Kreuger, a German, took a revolver in his hand,
+stood up before the men, and placing the weapon at his temple said:
+"Boys, we can't stand this much longer, and to save you all, I am
+willing to die." The mate grasped the revolver and begged the captain to
+wait another day. The next day, upon the horizon of their despair, they
+saw the smoke of the steamship Nebo. They were rescued.
+</p>
+<p>
+Suppose that Captain Kreuger was not a Christian, and suppose that he
+had sent the ball crashing through his brain, and had done so simply
+to keep the crew from starvation, do you tell me that a God of infinite
+mercy would forever damn that man?
+</p>
+<p>
+Do not misunderstand me. I insist that every passage in the Bible
+upholding crime was written by savage man. I insist that if there is
+a God, he is not, never was, and never will be in favor of slavery,
+polygamy, wars of extermination, or religious persecution. Does any
+Christian believe that if the real God were to write a book now, he
+would uphold the crimes commanded in the Old Testament? Has Jehovah
+improved? Has infinite mercy become more merciful? Has infinite wisdom
+intellectually advanced?
+</p>
+<p>
+WILL any one claim that the passages upholding slavery have liberated
+mankind? Are we indebted to polygamy for our modern homes? Was religious
+liberty born of that infamous verse in which the husband is commanded to
+kill his wife for worshiping an unknown God?
+</p>
+<p>
+The usual answer to these objections is, that no country has ever been
+civilized without a Bible. The Jews were the only people to whom Jehovah
+made his will directly known. Were they better than other nations? They
+read the Old Testament and one of the effects of such reading was, that
+they crucified a kind, loving, and perfectly innocent man. Certainly
+they could not have done worse, without a Bible. In crucifying Christ
+the Jews followed the teachings of his Father. If Jehovah was in fact
+God, and if that God took upon himself flesh and came among the Jews,
+and preached what the Jews understood to be blasphemy; and if the Jews
+in accordance with the laws given by this same Jehovah to Moses,
+crucified him, then I say, and I say it with infinite reverence, he
+reaped what he had sown. He became the victim of his own injustice.
+</p>
+<p>
+But I insist that these things are not true. I insist that the real God,
+if there is one, never commanded man to enslave his fellow-man, never
+told a mother to sell her babe, never established polygamy, never urged
+one nation to exterminate another, and never told a husband to kill his
+wife because she suggested the worship of another God.
+</p>
+<p>
+From the aspersions of the pulpit, from the slanders of the church,
+I seek to rescue the reputation of the Deity. I insist that the Old
+Testament would be a better book with all these passages left out; and
+whatever may be said of the rest of the Bible, the passages to which I
+have called attention can, with vastly more propriety, be attributed to
+a devil than to a god.
+</p>
+<p>
+Take from the New Testament the idea that belief is necessary to
+salvation; that Christ was offered as an atonement for the sins of
+mankind; that heaven is the reward of faith, and hell the penalty of
+honest investigation, and that the punishment of the human soul will go
+on forever; take from it all miracles and foolish stories, and I most
+cheerfully admit that the good passages are true. If they are true, it
+makes no difference whether they are inspired or not. Inspiration is
+only necessary to give authority to that which is repugnant to human
+reason. Only that which never happened needs to be substantiated by a
+miracle.
+</p>
+<p>
+The universe is natural.
+</p>
+<p>
+The church must cease to insist that passages upholding the institutions
+of savage men were inspired of God. The dogma of atonement must be
+abandoned. Good deeds must take the place of faith. The savagery of
+eternal punishment must be renounced. It must be admitted that credulity
+is not a virtue, and that investigation is not a crime. It must be
+admitted that miracles are the children of mendacity, and that nothing
+can be more wonderful than the majestic, unbroken, sublime, and eternal
+procession of causes and effects. Reason must be the arbiter. Inspired
+books attested by miracles cannot stand against a demonstrated fact. A
+religion that does not command the respect of the greatest minds will,
+in a little while, excite the mockery of all.
+</p>
+<p>
+A man who does not believe in intellectual liberty is a barbarian. Is
+it possible that God is intolerant? Could there be any progress, even
+in heaven, without intellectual liberty? Is the freedom of the future
+to exist only in perdition? Is it not, after all, barely possible that
+a man acting like Christ can be saved? Is a man to be eternally rewarded
+for believing according to evidence, without evidence, or against
+evidence? Are we to be saved because we are good, or because another was
+virtuous? Is credulity to be winged and crowned, whilst honest doubt is
+chained and damned.
+</p>
+<p>
+If Jehovah, was in fact God, he knew the end from the beginning. He
+knew that his Bible would be a breast-work behind which all tyranny
+and hypocrisy would crouch. He knew that his Bible would be the
+auction-block on which women would stand while their babes were sold
+from their arms. He knew that this Bible would be quoted by tyrants;
+that it would be the defence of robbers called kings, and of hypocrites
+called priests. He knew that he had taught the Jewish people nothing of
+importance. He knew that he had found them free and left them slaves. He
+knew that he had never fulfilled a single promise made to them. He knew
+that while other nations had advanced in art and science his chosen
+people were savage still. He promised them the world, and gave them a
+desert. He promised them liberty and he made them slaves. He promised
+them victory and he gave them defeat. He said they should be kings and
+he made them serfs. He promised them universal empire and gave them
+exile. When one finishes the Old Testament he is compelled to say:
+"Nothing can add to the misery of a nation whose king is Jehovah!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The Old Testament filled this world with tyranny and injustice, and the
+New gives us a future filled with pain for nearly all of the sons of
+men.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Old Testament describes the hell of the past, and the New the hell
+of the future.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Old Testament tells us the frightful things that God has done, the
+New the frightful things that he will do.
+</p>
+<p>
+These two books give us the sufferings of the past and the future&mdash;the
+injustice, the agony and the tears of both worlds.
+</p>
+<a name="link0004"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+<h2>
+ ORTHODOXY.
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ A LECTURE.
+</h3>
+<p>
+IT is utterly inconceivable that any man believing in the truth of the
+Christian religion should publicly deny it, because he who believes in
+that religion would believe that, by a public denial, he would peril the
+eternal salvation of his soul. It is conceivable, and without any great
+effort of the mind, that millions who do not believe in the Christian
+religion should openly say that they did. In a country where religion
+is supposed to be in power&mdash;where it has rewards for pretence, where it
+pays a premium upon hypocrisy, where it at least is willing to purchase
+silence&mdash;it is easily conceivable that millions pretend to believe what
+they do not. And yet I believe it has been charged against myself not
+only that I was insincere, but that I took the side I am on for the sake
+of popularity; and the audience to-night goes far toward justifying the
+accusation.
+</p>
+<p>
+Orthodox Religion Dying Out.
+</p>
+<p>
+It gives me immense pleasure to say to this audience that orthodox
+religion is dying out of the civilized world. It is a sick man. It has
+been attacked with two diseases&mdash;softening of the brain and ossification
+of the heart. It is a religion that no longer satisfies the intelligence
+of this country; that no longer satisfies the brain; a religion against
+which the heart of every civilized man and woman protests. It is a
+religion that gives hope only to a few; that puts a shadow upon the
+cradle; that wraps the coffin in darkness and fills the future of
+mankind with flame and fear. It is a religion that I am going to do what
+little I can while I live to destroy. In its place I want humanity,
+I want good fellowship, I want intellectual liberty&mdash;free lips, the
+discoveries and inventions of genius, the demonstrations of science&mdash;the
+religion of art, music and poetry&mdash;of good houses, good clothes, good
+wages&mdash;that is to say, the religion of this world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Religious Deaths and Births.
+</p>
+<p>
+We must remember that this is a world of progress, a world of perpetual
+change&mdash;a succession of coffins and cradles. There is perpetual death,
+and there is perpetual birth. By the grave of the old, forever stand
+youth and joy; and when an old religion dies, a better one is born. When
+we find out that an assertion is a falsehood a shining truth takes its
+place, and we need not fear the destruction of the false. The more false
+we destroy the more room there will be for the true.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a time when the astrologer sought to read in the stars the
+fate of men and nations. The astrologer has faded from the world, but
+the astronomer has taken his place. There was a time when the poor
+alchemist, bent and wrinkled and old, over his crucible endeavored to
+find some secret by which he could change the baser metals into purest
+gold. The alchemist has gone; the chemist took his place; and, although
+he finds nothing to change metals into gold, he finds something that
+covers the earth with wealth. There was a time when the soothsayer and
+augur flourished. After them came the parson and the priest; and the
+parson and the priest must go. The preacher must go, and in his place
+must come the teacher&mdash;the real interpreter of Nature. We are done with
+the supernatural. We are through with the miraculous and the impossible.
+There was once the prophet who pretended to read the book of the future.
+His place has been taken by the philosopher, who reasons from cause to
+effect&mdash;who finds the facts by which we are surrounded and endeavors
+to reason from these premises and to tell what in all probability will
+happen. The prophet has gone, the philosopher is here. There was a time
+when man sought aid from heaven&mdash;when he prayed to the deaf sky. There
+was a time when everything depended on the supernaturalist. That time in
+Christendom is passing away. We now depend upon the naturalist&mdash;not upon
+the believer in ancient falsehoods, but on the discoverer of facts&mdash;on
+the demonstrater of truths. At last we are beginning to build on a
+solid foundation, and as we progress, the supernatural dies. The leaders
+of the intellectual world deny the existence of the supernatural. They
+take from all superstition its foundation.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Religion of Reciprocity.
+</p>
+<p>
+Supernatural religion will fade from this world, and in its place we
+shall have reason. In the place of the worship of something we know
+not of, will be the religion of mutual love and assistance&mdash;the great
+religion of reciprocity. Superstition must go. Science will remain. The
+church dies hard. The brain of the world is not yet developed. There
+are intellectual diseases as well as physical&mdash;there are pestilences and
+plagues of the mind.
+</p>
+<p>
+Whenever the new comes the old protests, and fights for its place as
+long as it has a particle of power. We are now having the same warfare
+between superstition and science that there was between the stage coach
+and the locomotive. But the stage coach had to go. It had its day of
+glory and power, but it is gone. It went West. In a little while it will
+be driven into the Pacific. So we find that there is the same conflict
+between the different sects and different schools not only of philosophy
+but of medicine.
+</p>
+<p>
+Recollect that everything except the demonstrated truth is liable
+to die. That is the order of Nature. Words die. Every language has a
+cemetery. Every now and then a word dies and a tombstone is erected, and
+across it is written "obsolete." New words are continually being born.
+There is a cradle in which a word is rocked. A thought is married to a
+sound, and a child-word is born. And there comes a time when the word
+gets old, and wrinkled, and expressionless, and is carried mournfully
+to the grave. So in the schools of medicine. You can remember, so can I,
+when the old allopathists, the bleeders and blisterers, reigned supreme.
+If there was anything the matter with a man they let out his blood.
+Called to the bedside, they took him on the point of a lancet to the
+edge of eternity, and then practiced all their art to bring him back.
+One can hardly imagine how perfect a constitution it took a few years
+ago to stand the assault of a doctor. And long after the old practice
+was found to be a mistake hundreds and thousands of the ancient
+physicians clung to it, carried around with them, in one pocket a bottle
+of jalap, and in the other a rusty lancet, sorry that they could not
+find some patient with faith enough to allow the experiment to be made
+again.
+</p>
+<p>
+So these schools, and these theories, and these religions die hard. What
+else can they do? Like the paintings of the old masters, they are kept
+alive because so much money has been invested in them. Think of the
+amount of money that has been invested in superstition! Think of the
+schools that have been founded for the more general diffusion of useless
+knowledge! Think of the colleges wherein men are taught that it is
+dangerous to think, and that they must never use their brains except
+in the act of faith! Think of the millions and billions of dollars that
+have been expended in churches, in temples, and in cathedrals! Think of
+the thousands and thousands of men who depend for their living upon the
+ignorance of mankind! Think of those who grow rich on credulity and
+who fatten on faith! Do you suppose they are going to die without a
+struggle? What are they to do? From the bottom of my heart I sympathize
+with the poor clergyman that has had all his common sense educated out
+of him, and is now to be thrown upon the cold and unbelieving world. His
+prayers are not answered; he gets no help from on high, and the pews are
+beginning to criticise the pulpit. What is the man to do? If he suddenly
+changes he is gone. If he preaches what he really believes he will get
+notice to quit. And yet, if he and the congregation would come together
+and be perfectly honest, they would all admit that they believe little
+and know nothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+Only a little while ago a couple of ladies were riding together from a
+revival, late at night, and one said to the other, as they rode along:
+"I am going to say something that will shock you, and I beg of you never
+to tell it to anybody else. I am going to tell it to you." "Well, what
+is it?" Said she: "I do not believe the Bible." The other replied:
+"Neither do I."
+</p>
+<p>
+I have often thought how splendid it would be if the ministers could but
+come together and say: "Now, let us be honest. Let us tell each other,
+honor bright"&mdash;like Dr. Curry, of Chicago, did in the meeting the other
+day&mdash;"just what we believe." They tell a story that in the old time a
+lot of people, about twenty, were in Texas in a little hotel, and one
+fellow got up before the fire, put his hands behind him, and said:
+"Boys, let us all tell our real names." If the ministers and their
+congregations would only tell their real thoughts they would find that
+they are nearly as bad as I am, and that they believe as little.
+</p>
+<p>
+Orthodoxy dies hard, and its defenders tell us that this fact shows that
+it is of divine origin. Judaism dies hard. It has lived several thousand
+years longer than Christianity. The religion of Mohammed dies hard.
+</p>
+<p>
+Buddhism dies hard. Why do all these religions die hard? Because
+intelligence increases slowly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let me whisper in the ear of the Protestant: Catholicism dies hard. What
+does that prove? It proves that the people are ignorant and that the
+priests are cunning.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let me whisper in the ear of the Catholic: Protestantism dies hard. What
+does that prove? It proves that the people are superstitious and the
+preachers stupid.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let me whisper in all your ears: Infidelity is not dying&mdash;it is
+growing&mdash;it increases every day. And what does that prove? It
+proves that the people are learning more and more&mdash;that they are
+advancing&mdash;that the mind is getting free, and that the race is being
+civilized.
+</p>
+<p>
+The clergy know that I know that they know that they do not know.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Blows That Have Shattered the Shield and Shivered the Lance of
+Superstition.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mohammed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mohammed wrested from the disciples of the cross the fairest part of
+Europe. It was known that he was an impostor, and that fact sowed the
+seeds of distrust and infidelity in the Christian world. Christians made
+an effort to rescue from the infidels the empty sepulchre of Christ.
+That commenced in the eleventh century and ended at the close of the
+thirteenth. Europe was almost depopulated. The fields were left waste,
+the villages were deserted, nations were impoverished, every man who
+owed a debt was discharged from payment if he put a cross upon his
+breast and joined the Crusades. No matter what crime he had committed,
+the doors of the prison were open for him to join the hosts of the
+cross. They believed that God would give them victory, and they carried
+in front of the first Crusade a goat and a goose, believing that both
+those animals were blessed by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost. And I
+may say that those same animals are in the lead to-day in the orthodox
+world. Until the year 1291 they endeavored to gain possession of that
+sepulchre, and finally the hosts of Christ were driven back, baffled and
+beaten,&mdash;a poor, miserable, religious rabble. They were driven back, and
+that fact sowed the seeds of distrust in Christendom. You know that at
+that time the world believed in trial by battle&mdash;that God would take
+the side of the right&mdash;and there had been a trial by battle between the
+cross and the crescent, and Mohammed had been victorious. Was God at
+that time governing the world? Was he endeavoring to spread his gospel?
+</p>
+<p>
+The Destruction of Art.
+</p>
+<p>
+You know that when Christianity came into power it destroyed every
+statue it could lay its ignorant hands upon. It defaced and obliterated
+every painting; it destroyed every beautiful building; it burned the
+manuscripts, both Greek and Latin; it destroyed all the history, all
+the poetry, all the philosophy it could find, and reduced to ashes every
+library that it could reach with its torch. And the result was, that the
+night of the Middle Ages fell upon the human race. But by accident,
+by chance, by oversight, a few of the manuscripts escaped the fury of
+religious zeal; and these manuscripts became the seed, the fruit of
+which is our civilization of to-day. A few statues had been buried; a
+few forms of beauty were dug from the earth that had protected them, and
+now the civilized world is filled with art, the walls are covered with
+paintings, and the niches filled with statuary. A few manuscripts were
+found and deciphered. The old languages were learned, and literature
+was again born. A new day dawned upon mankind. Every effort at mental
+improvement had been opposed by the church, and yet, the few things
+saved from the general wreck&mdash;a few poems, a few works of the ancient
+thinkers, a few forms wrought in stone, produced a new civilization
+destined to overthrow and destroy the fabric of superstition.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Discovery of America.
+</p>
+<p>
+What was the next blow that this church received? The discovery of
+America. The Holy Ghost who inspired men to write the Bible did not
+know of the existence of this continent, never dreamed of the Western
+Hemisphere. The Bible left out half the world. The Holy Ghost did not
+know that the earth is round. He did not dream that the earth is round.
+He believed it was flat, although he made it himself. At that time
+heaven was just beyond the clouds. It was there the gods lived, there
+the angels were, and it was against that heaven that Jacob's ladder
+leaned when the angels went up and down. It was to that heaven that
+Christ ascended after his resurrection. It was up there that the New
+Jerusalem was, with its streets of gold, and under this earth was
+perdition. There was where the devils lived; where a pit was dug for
+all unbelievers, and for men who had brains. I say that for this reason:
+Just in proportion that you have brains, your chances for eternal joy
+are lessened, according to this religion. And just in proportion that
+you lack brains your chances are increased. At last they found that the
+earth is round. It was circumnavigated by Magellan. In 1519 that brave
+man set sail. The church told him: "The earth is flat, my friend; don't
+go, you may fall off the edge." Magellan said: "I have seen the shadow
+of the earth upon the moon, and I have more confidence in the shadow
+than I have in the church." The ship went round. The earth was
+circumnavigated. Science passed its hand above it and beneath it, and
+where was the old heaven and where was the hell? Vanished forever! And
+they dwell now only in the religion of superstition. We found there was
+no place there for Jacob's ladder to lean against; no place there for
+the gods and angels to live; no place to hold the waters of the deluge;
+no place to which Christ could have ascended. The foundations of the
+New Jerusalem crumbled. The towers and domes fell, and in their places
+infinite space, sown with an infinite number of stars; not with New
+Jerusalems, but with countless constellations.
+</p>
+<p>
+Copernicus and Kepler.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then man began to grow great, and with that came Astronomy, In 1473
+Copernicus was born. In 1543 his great work appeared. In 1616 the system
+of Copernicus was condemned by the pope, by the infallible Catholic
+Church, and the church was about as near right upon that subject as upon
+any other. The system of Copernicus was denounced. And how long do you
+suppose the church fought that? Let me tell you. It was revoked by Pius
+VII. in the year of grace 1821. For two hundred and seventy-eight years
+after the death of Copernicus the church insisted that his system was
+false, and that the old Bible astronomy was true. Astronomy is the first
+help that we ever received from heaven. Then came Kepler in 1609, and
+you may almost date the birth of science from the night that Kepler
+discovered his first law. That was the break of the day. His first law,
+that the planets do not move in circles but in ellipses; his second law,
+that they describe equal spaces in equal times; his third law, that the
+squares of their periodic times are proportional to the cubes of their
+distances. That man gave us the key to the heavens. He opened the
+infinite book, and in it read three lines.
+</p>
+<p>
+I have not time to speak of Galileo, of Leonardo da Vinci, of Bruno, and
+of hundreds of others who contributed to the intellectual wealth of the
+world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Special Providence.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next thing that gave the church a blow was Statistics. We found by
+taking statistics that we could tell the average length of human life;
+that this human life did not depend upon infinite caprice; that it
+depended upon conditions, circumstances, laws and facts, and that these
+conditions, circumstances, and facts were during long periods of time
+substantially the same. And now, the man who depends entirely upon
+special providence gets his life insured. He has more confidence even
+in one of these companies than he has in the whole Trinity. We found by
+statistics that there were just so many crimes on an average committed;
+just so many crimes of one kind and so many of another; just so many
+suicides, so many deaths by drowning, so many accidents on an average,
+so many men marrying women, for instance, older than themselves; so many
+murders of a particular kind; just the same number of mistakes; and
+I say to-night, statistics utterly demolish the idea of special
+providence.
+</p>
+<p>
+Only the other day a gentleman was telling me of a case of special
+providence. He knew it. He had been the subject of it. A few years ago
+he was about to go on a ship when he was detained. He did not go, and
+the ship was lost with all on board.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Yes!" I said, "Do you think the people who were drowned believed in
+special providence?" Think of the infinite egotism of such a doctrine.
+Here is a man that fails to go upon a ship with five hundred passengers
+and they go down to the bottom of the sea&mdash;fathers, mothers, children,
+and loving husbands and wives waiting upon the chores of expectation.
+Here is one poor little wretch that did not happen to go! And he thinks
+that God, the Infinite Being, interfered in his poor little withered
+behalf and let the rest all go. That is special providence. Why does
+special providence allow all the crimes? Why are the wife-beaters
+protected, and why are the wives and children left defenceless if the
+hand of God is over us all? Who protects the insane? Why does Providence
+permit insanity? But the church cannot give up special providence. If
+there is no such thing, then no prayers, no worship, no churches, no
+priests. What would become of National Thanksgiving?
+</p>
+<p>
+You know we have a custom every year of issuing a proclamation of
+thanksgiving. We say to God, "Although you have afflicted all the other
+countries, although you have sent war, and desolation, and famine on
+everybody else, we have been such good children that you have been
+kind to us, and we hope you will keep on." It does not make a bit of
+difference whether we have good times or not&mdash;the thanksgiving is always
+exactly the same. I remember a few years ago a governor of Iowa got out
+a proclamation of that kind. He went on to tell how thankful the people
+were and how prosperous the State had been. There was a young fellow in
+that State who got out another proclamation, saying that he feared the
+Lord might be misled by official correspondence; that the governor's
+proclamation was entirely false; that the State was not prosperous; that
+the crops had been an almost utter failure; that nearly every farm in
+the State was mortgaged, and that if the Lord did not believe him, all
+he asked was that he would send some angel in whom he had confidence, to
+look the matter over and report.
+</p>
+<p>
+Charles Darwin.
+</p>
+<p>
+This century will be called Darwin's century. He was one of the greatest
+men who ever touched this globe. He has explained more of the phenomena
+of life than all of the religious teachers. Write the name of Charles
+Darwin on the one hand and the name of every theologian who ever lived
+on the other, and from that name has come more light to the world
+than from all of those. His doctrine of evolution, his doctrine of the
+survival of the fittest, his doctrine of the origin of species,
+has removed in every thinking mind the last vestige of orthodox
+Christianity. He has not only stated, but he has demonstrated, that the
+inspired writer knew nothing of this world, nothing of the origin of
+man, nothing of geology, nothing of astronomy, nothing of nature; that
+the Bible is a book written by ignorance&mdash;at the instigation of fear.
+Think of the men who replied to him. Only a few years ago there was no
+person too ignorant to successfully answer Charles Darwin; and the more
+ignorant he was the more cheerfully he undertook the task. He was held
+up to the ridicule, the scorn and contempt of the Christian world, and
+yet when he died, England was proud to put his dust with that of her
+noblest and her grandest. Charles Darwin conquered the intellectual
+world, and his doctrines are now accepted facts. His light has broken
+in on some of the clergy, and the greatest man who to-day occupies
+the pulpit of one of the orthodox: churches, Henry Ward Beecher, is a
+believer in the theories of Charles Darwin&mdash;a man of more genius than
+all the clergy of that entire church put together.
+</p>
+<p>
+And yet we are told in this little creed that orthodox religion is about
+to conquer the world! It will be driven to the wilds of Africa. It must
+go to some savage country; it has lost its hold upon civilization. It is
+unfortunate to have a religion that cannot be accepted by the intellect
+of a nation. It is unfortunate to have a religion against which every
+good and noble heart protests. Let us have a good religion or none. My
+pity has been excited by seeing these ministers endeavor to warp and
+twist the passages of Scripture to fit the demonstrations of science. Of
+course, I have not time to recount all the discoveries and events that
+have assisted in the destruction of superstition. Every fact is an
+enemy of the church. Every fact is a heretic. Every demonstration is
+an infidel. Everything that ever really happened testifies against the
+supernatural.
+</p>
+<p>
+The church teaches that man was created perfect, and that for six
+thousand years he has degenerated. Darwin demonstrated the falsity
+of this dogma. He shows that man has for thousands of ages steadily
+advanced; that the Garden of Eden is an ignorant myth; that the doctrine
+of original sin has no foundation in fact; that the atonement is an
+absurdity; that the serpent did not tempt, and that man did not "fall."
+</p>
+<p>
+Charles Darwin destroyed the foundation of orthodox Christianity. There
+is nothing left but faith in what we know could not and did not happen.
+Religion and science are enemies. One is a superstition; the other is
+a fact. One rests upon the false, the other upon the true. One is the
+result of fear and faith, the other of investigation and reason.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Creeds.
+</p>
+<p>
+I have been talking a great deal about the orthodox religion. Often,
+after having delivered a lecture, I have met some good, religious person
+who has said to me:
+</p>
+<p>
+"You do not tell it as we believe it."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well, but I tell it as you have it written in your creed."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, we don't mind the creed any more."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Then, why do you not change it?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"Oh, well, we understand it as it is, and if we tried to change it,
+maybe we would not agree."
+</p>
+<p>
+Possibly the creeds are in the best condition now. There is a tacit
+understanding that they do not believe them, that there is a way to
+get around them, and that they can read between the lines; that if they
+should meet now to form new creeds they would fail to agree; and that
+now they can say as they please, except in public. Whenever they do so
+in public the church, in self-defence, must try them; and I believe in
+trying every minister that does not preach the doctrine he agrees to.
+I have not the slightest sympathy with a Presbyterian preacher who
+endeavors to preach infidelity from a Presbyterian pulpit and receives
+Presbyterian money. When he changes his views he should step down and
+out like a man, and say, "I do not believe your doctrine, and I will not
+preach it. You must hire some other man." The Latest Creed.
+</p>
+<p>
+But I find that I have correctly interpreted the creeds. There was put
+into my hands the new Congregational creed. I have read it, and I will
+call your attention to it to-night, to find whether that church has made
+any advance; to find whether the sun of science has risen in the heavens
+in vain; whether they are still the children of intellectual darkness;
+whether they still consider it necessary for you to believe something
+that you by no possibility can understand, in order to be a winged angel
+forever. Now, let us see what their creed is. I will read a little of
+it.
+</p>
+<p>
+They commence by saying that they
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>Believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth,
+and of all things visible and invisible</i>."
+</p>
+<p>
+They say, now, that there is the one personal God; that he is the maker
+of the universe and its ruler. I again ask the old question, Of what did
+he make it? If matter has not existed through eternity, then this God
+made it. Of what did he make it? What did he use for the purpose? There
+was nothing in the universe except this God. What had the God been doing
+for the eternity he had been living? He had made nothing&mdash;called nothing
+into existence; never had had an idea, because it is impossible to have
+an idea unless there is something to excite an idea. What had he been
+doing? Why does not the Congregational Church tell us? How do they know
+about this Infinite Being? And if he is infinite how can they comprehend
+him? What good is it to believe in something that you know you do not
+understand, and that you never can understand?
+</p>
+<p>
+In the Episcopalian creed God is described as follows:
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>There is but one living and true God, everlasting, without body, parts
+or passions</i>."
+</p>
+<p>
+Think of that!&mdash;without body, parts, or passions.
+</p>
+<p>
+I defy any man in the world to write a better description of nothing.
+You cannot conceive of a finer word-painting of a vacuum than "without
+body, parts, or passions." And yet this God, without passions, is angry
+at the wicked every day; this God, without passions, is a jealous God,
+whose anger burneth to the lowest hell. This God, without passions,
+loves the whole human race; and this God, without passions, damns a
+large majority of mankind. This God without body, walked in the Garden
+of Eden, in the cool of the day. This God, without body, talked with
+Adam and Eve. This God, without body, or parts met Moses upon Mount
+Sinai, appeared at the door of the tabernacle, and talked with Moses
+face to face as a man speaketh to his friend. This description of God is
+simply an effort of the church to describe a something of which it has
+no conception.
+</p>
+<p>
+God as a Governor.
+</p>
+<p>
+So, too, I find the following:
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>We believe that the Providence of God, by which he executes his
+eternal purposes in the government of the world, is in and over all
+events.</i>"
+</p>
+<p>
+Is God the governor of the world? Is this established by the history of
+nations? What evidence can you find, if you are absolutely honest and
+not frightened, in the history of the world, that this universe is
+presided over by an infinitely wise and good God?
+</p>
+<p>
+How do you account for Russia? How do you account for Siberia? How do
+you account for the fact that whole races of men toiled beneath the
+master's lash for ages without recompense and without reward? How do you
+account for the fact that babes were sold from the arms of mothers&mdash;arms
+that had been reached toward God in supplication? How do you account for
+it? How do you account for the existence of martyrs? How do you account
+for the fact that this God allows people to be burned simply for loving
+him? Is justice always done? Is innocence always acquitted? Do the
+good succeed? Are the honest fed? Are the charitable clothed? Are the
+virtuous shielded? How do you account for the fact that the world has
+been filled with pain, and grief, and tears? How do you account for the
+fact that people have been swallowed by earthquakes, overwhelmned by
+volcanoes, and swept from the earth by storms? Is it easy to account
+for famine, for pestilence and plague if there be above us all a Ruler
+infinitely good, powerful and wise?
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not say there is none. I do not know. As I have said before, this
+is the only planet I was ever on. I live in one of the rural districts
+of the universe, and do not know about these things as much as the
+clergy pretend to, but if they know no more about the other world than
+they do about this, it is not worth mentioning.
+</p>
+<p>
+How do they answer all this? They say that God "permits" it. What would
+you say to me if I stood by and saw a ruffian beat out the brains of a
+child, when I had full and perfect power to prevent it? You would say
+truthfully that I was as bad as the murderer. Is it possible for this
+God to prevent it? Then, if he does not he is a fiend; he is no god.
+But they say he "permits" it. What for? So that we may have freedom of
+choice. What for? So that God may find, I suppose, who are good and who
+are bad. Did he not know that when he made us? Did he not know exactly
+just what he was making? Why should he make those whom he knew would be
+criminals? If I should make a machine that would walk your streets and
+take the lives of people you would hang me. And if God made a man whom
+he knew would commit murder, then God is guilty of that murder. If God
+made a man knowing that he would beat his wife, that he would starve
+his children, that he would strew on either side of his path of life the
+wrecks of ruined homes, then I say the being who knowingly called that
+wretch into existence is directly responsible. And yet we are to find
+the providence of God in the history of nations. What little I have read
+shows me that when man has been helped, man has done it; when the
+chains of slavery have been broken, they have been broken by man; when
+something bad has been done in the government of mankind, it is easy to
+trace it to man, and to fix the responsibility upon human beings. You
+need not look to the sky; you need throw neither praise nor blame upon
+gods; you can find the efficient causes nearer home&mdash;right here.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Love of God.
+</p>
+<p>
+What is the next thing I find in this creed?
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>We believe that man was made in the image of God, that he might know,
+love, and obey God, and enjoy him forever.</i>"
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not believe that anybody ever did love God, because nobody ever
+knew anything about him. We love each other. We love something that we
+know. We love something that our experience tells us is good and great
+and beautiful. We cannot by any possibility love the unknown. We can
+love truth, because truth adds to human happiness. We can love justice,
+because it preserves human joy. We can love charity. We can love every
+form of goodness that we know, or of which we can conceive, but we
+cannot love the infinitely unknown. And how can we be made in the image
+of something that has neither body, parts, nor passions?
+</p>
+<p>
+The Fall of Man.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Congregational Church has not outgrown the doctrine of "original
+sin." We are told that:
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>Our first parents, by disobedience, fell under the condemnation
+of God, and that all men are so alienated from God that there is no
+salvation from the guilt and power of sin except through God's redeeming
+power.</i>"
+</p>
+<p>
+Is there an intelligent man or woman now in the world who believes in
+the Garden of Eden story? If you find any man who believes it, strike
+his forehead and you will hear an echo. Something is for rent. Does any
+intelligent man now believe that God made man of dust, and woman of a
+rib, and put them in a garden, and put a tree in the midst of it? Was
+there not room outside of the garden to put his tree, if he did not want
+people to eat his apples?
+</p>
+<p>
+If I did not want a man to eat my fruit, I would not put him in my
+orchard.
+</p>
+<p>
+Does anybody now believe in the story of the serpent? I pity any man or
+woman who, in this nineteenth century, believes in that childish fable.
+Why did Adam and Eve disobey? Why, they were tempted. By whom? The
+devil. Who made the devil? God. What did God make him for? Why did
+he not tell Adam and Eve about this serpent? Why did he not watch the
+devil, instead of watching Adam and Eve? Instead of turning them out,
+why did he not keep him from getting in? Why did he not have his flood
+first, and drown the devil, before he made a man and woman.
+</p>
+<p>
+And yet, people who call themselves intelligent&mdash;professors in colleges
+and presidents of venerable institutions&mdash;teach children and young men
+that the Garden of Eden story is an absolute historical fact. I defy
+any man to think of a more childish thing. This God, waiting around
+Eden&mdash;knowing all the while what would happen&mdash;having made them on
+purpose so that it would happen, then does what? Holds all of us
+responsible, and we were not there. Here is a representative before the
+constituency had been born. Before I am bound by a representative I want
+a chance to vote for or against him; and if I had been there, and known
+all the circumstances, I should have voted "No!" And yet, I am held
+responsible.
+</p>
+<p>
+We are told by the Bible and by the churches that through this fall of
+man "<i>Sin and death entered the world?</i>"
+</p>
+<p>
+According to this, just as soon as Adam and Eve had partaken of the
+forbidden fruit, God began to contrive ways by which he could destroy
+the lives of his children. He invented all the diseases&mdash;all the fevers
+and coughs and colds&mdash;all the pains and plagues and pestilences&mdash;all the
+aches and agonies, the malaria and spores; so that when we take a breath
+of air we admit into our lungs unseen assassins; and, fearing that some
+might live too long, even under such circumstances, God invented the
+earthquake and volcano, the cyclone and lightning, animalcules to infest
+the heart and brain, so small that no eye can detect&mdash;no instrument
+reach. This was all owing to the disobedience of Adam and Eve!
+</p>
+<p>
+In his infinite goodness, God invented rheumatism and gout and
+dyspepsia, cancers and neuralgia, and is still inventing new diseases.
+Not only this', but he decreed the pangs of mothers, and that by the
+gates of love and life should crouch the dragons of death and pain.
+Fearing that some might, by accident, live too long, he planted
+poisonous vines and herbs that looked like food. He caught the serpents
+he had made and gave them fangs and curious organs, ingeniously devised
+to distill and deposit the deadly drop. He changed the nature of the
+beasts, that they might feed on human flesh. He cursed a world, and
+tainted every spring and source of joy. He poisoned every breath of air;
+corrupted even light, that it might bear disease on every ray; tainted
+every drop of blood in human veins; touched every nerve, that it
+might bear the double fruit of pain and joy; decreed all accidents and
+mistakes that maim and hurt and kill, and set the snares of life-long
+grief, baited with present pleasure,&mdash;with a moment's joy. Then and
+there he foreknew and foreordained all human tears. And yet all this is
+but the prelude, the introduction, to the infinite revenge of the good
+God. Increase and multiply all human griefs until the mind has reached
+imagination's farthest verge, then add eternity to time, and you may
+faintly tell, but never can conceive, the infinite horrors of this
+doctrine called "The Fall of Man." The Atonement.
+</p>
+<p>
+We are further told that:
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>All men are so alienated from God that there is no alleviation from
+the guilt and power of sin except through God's redeeming grace;</i>"
+</p>
+<p>
+And that:
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>We believe that the love of God to sinful man has found its highest
+expression in the redemptive work of his Son, who became man, uniting
+his divine nature with our human nature in one person; who was tempted
+like other men and yet without sin, and by his humiliation, his holy
+obedience, his sufferings, his death on the cross, and his resurrection,
+became a perfect redeemer; whose sacrifice of himself for the sins
+of the world declares the righteousness of God, and is the sole and
+sufficient ground of forgiveness and of reconciliation with him</i>."
+</p>
+<p>
+The absurdity of the doctrine known as "The Fall of Man," gave birth
+to that other absurdity known as "The Atonement." So that now it is
+insisted that, as we are rightfully charged with the sin of somebody
+else, we can rightfully be credited with the virtues of another. Let us
+leave out of our philosophy both these absurdities. Our creed will read
+a great deal better with both of them out, and will make far better
+sense.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, in consequence of Adam's sin, everybody is alienated from God. How?
+Why? Oh, we are all depraved, you know; we all do wrong. Well, why?
+Is that because we are depraved? No. Why do we make so many mistakes?
+Because there is only one right way, and there is an almost infinite
+number of wrong ways; and as long as we are not perfect in our
+intellects we must make mistakes. "There is no darkness but ignorance,"
+and alienation, as they call it, from God, is simply a lack of
+intellect. Why were we not given better brains? That may account for the
+alienation.
+</p>
+<p>
+The church teaches that every soul that finds its way to the shore of
+this world is against God&mdash;naturally hates God; that the little dimpled
+child in the cradle is simply a chunk of depravity. Everybody against
+God! It is a libel upon the human race; it is a libel upon all the men
+who have worked for wife and child; upon all mothers who have suffered
+and labored, wept and worked; upon all the men who have died for their
+country; upon all who have fought for human liberty. Leave out the
+history of religion and there is little left to prove the depravity of
+man.
+</p>
+<p>
+Everybody that comes is against God! Every soul, they think, is like the
+wrecked Irishman, who drifted to an unknown island, and as he climbed
+the shore saw a man and said to him, "Have you a Government here?" The
+man replied "We have." "Well," said he, "I'm forninst it!"
+</p>
+<p>
+The church teaches us that such is the attitude of every soul in the
+universe of God. Ought a god to take any credit to himself for making
+depraved people? A god that cannot make a soul that is not totally
+depraved, I respectfully suggest, should retire from the business. And
+if a god has made us, knowing that we are totally depraved, why should
+we go to the same being to be "born again?"
+</p>
+<p>
+The Second Birth.
+</p>
+<p>
+The church insists that we must be "born again" and that all who are not
+the subjects of this second birth are heirs of everlasting fire. Would
+it not have been much better to have made another Adam and Eve? Would it
+not have been better to change Noah and his people, so that after that a
+second birth would not have been necessary? Why not purify the fountain
+of all human life? Why allow the earth to be peopled with depraved and
+monstrous beings, each one of whom must be re-made, re-formed, and born
+again?
+</p>
+<p>
+And yet, even reformation is not enough. If the man who steals
+becomes perfectly honest, that is not enough; if the man who hates his
+fellow-man, changes and loves his fellow-man, that is not enough; he
+must go through that mysterious thing called the second birth; he must
+be born again. He must have faith; he must believe something that
+he does not understand, and experience what they call "conversion."
+According to the church, nothing so excites the wrath of God&mdash;nothing so
+corrugates the brows of Jehovah with hatred&mdash;as a man relying on his own
+good works. He must admit that he ought to be damned, and that of the
+two he prefers it, before God will consent to save him.
+</p>
+<p>
+I met a man the other day, who said to me, "I am a Unitarian
+Universalist." "What do you mean by that?" I asked. "Well," said he,
+"this is what I mean: the Unitarian thinks he is too good to be damned,
+and the Universalist thinks God is too good to damn him, and I believe
+them both."
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it possible that the sacrifice of a perfect being was acceptable to
+God? Will he accept the agony of innocence for the punishment of guilt?
+Will he release Barabbas and crucify Christ?
+</p>
+<p>
+Inspiration.
+</p>
+<p>
+What is the next thing in this great creed?
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>We believe that the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments are the
+record of God's revelation of Himself, the work of redemption; that
+they were written by men under the special guidance of the holy spirit;
+that they are able to make wise unto salvation; and that they constitute
+an authoritative standard by which religious teaching and human conduct
+are to be regulated and judged.</i>"
+</p>
+<p>
+This is the creed of the Congregational Church; that is, the result
+reached by a high-joint commission appointed to draw up a creed for
+their churches; and there we have the statement that the Bible was
+written "by men under the special guidance of the Holy Spirit."
+</p>
+<p>
+What part of the Bible? All of it? All of it. And yet what is this Old
+Testament that was written by an infinitely good God? The being who
+wrote it did not know the shape of the world he had made; knew nothing
+of human nature. He commands men to love him, as if one could love upon
+command. The same God upheld the institution of human slavery; and the
+church says that the Bible that upholds that institution was written by
+men under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Then I disagree with the Holy
+Spirit.
+</p>
+<p>
+This church tells us that men under the guidance of the Holy Spirit
+upheld the institution of polygamy&mdash;I deny it; that under the
+guidance of the Holy Spirit these men upheld wars of extermination and
+conquest&mdash;I deny it; that under the guidance of the Holy Spirit these
+men wrote that it was right for a man to destroy the life of his wife if
+she happened to differ with him on the subject of religion&mdash;I deny it.
+And yet that is the book now upheld in this creed of the Congregational
+Church.
+</p>
+<p>
+If the devil had written upon the subject of slavery, which side would
+he have taken? Let every minister answer. If you knew the devil had
+written a work on human slavery, in your judgment, would he uphold
+slavery, or denounce it? Would you regard it as any evidence that he
+ever wrote it, if it upheld slavery? And yet, here you have a work
+upholding slavery, and you say that it was written by an infinitely good
+God! If the devil upheld polygamy, would you be surprised? If the devil
+wanted to kill men for differing with him would you be astonished? If
+the devil told a man to kill his wife, would you be shocked? And yet,
+you say, that is exactly what God did. If there be a God, then that
+creed is blasphemy. That creed is a libel upon him who sits on heaven's
+throne. If there be a God, I ask him to write in the book in which my
+account is kept, that I denied these lies for him.
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not believe in a slaveholding God! I do not worship a polygamous
+Holy Ghost, nor a Son who threatens eternal pain; I will not get upon my
+knees before any being who commands a husband to slay his wife because
+she expresses her honest thought. Suppose a book should be found old as
+the Old Testament in which slavery, polygamy and war are all denounced,
+would Christians think that it was written by the devil?
+</p>
+<p>
+Did it ever occur to you that if God wrote the Old Testament, and
+told the Jews to crucify or kill anybody that disagreed with them on
+religion, and that this God afterward took upon himself flesh and came
+to Jerusalem, and taught a different religion, and the Jews killed
+him&mdash;did it ever occur to you that he reaped exactly what he had sown?
+Did it ever occur to you that he fell a victim to his own tyranny, and
+was destroyed by his own hand? Of course I do not believe that any God
+ever was the author of the Bible, or that any God was ever crucified,
+or that any God was ever killed, or ever will be, but I want to ask you
+that question.
+</p>
+<p>
+Take this Old Testament, then, with all its stories of murder and
+massacre; with all its foolish and cruel fables; with all its infamous
+doctrines; with its spirit of caste; with its spirit of hatred, and
+tell me whether it was written by a good God. If you will read the
+maledictions and curses of that book, you will think that God, like
+Lear, had divided heaven among his daughters, and then, in the insanity
+of despair, had launched his curses on the human race.
+</p>
+<p>
+And yet, I must say&mdash;I must admit&mdash;that the Old Testament is better
+than the New. In the Old Testament, when God had a man dead, he let
+him alone. When he saw him quietly in his grave he was satisfied. The
+muscles relaxed, and the frown gave place to a smile. But in the New
+Testament the trouble commences at death. In the New Testament God is
+to wreak his revenge forever and ever. It was reserved for one who said,
+"Love your enemies," to tear asunder the veil between time and eternity
+and fix the horrified gaze of man upon the gulfs of eternal fire. The
+New Testament is just as much worse than the Old, as hell is worse than
+sleep; just as much worse, as infinite cruelty is worse than dreamless
+rest; and yet, the New Testament is claimed to be a gospel of love and
+peace.
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it possible that: "<i>The Scriptures constitute the authoritative
+standard by which religious teaching and human conduct are to be
+regulated and judged"?</i>
+</p>
+<p>
+Are we to judge of conduct by the Old Testament, by the New, or by both?
+According to the Old, the slaveholder was a just and generous man; a
+polygamist was a model of virtue. According to the New, the worst can be
+forgiven and the best can be lost. How can any book be a standard,
+when the standard itself must be measured by human reason? Is there a
+standard of a standard? Must not the reason be convinced? and, if so, is
+not the reason of each man the final arbiter of that man? If he takes a
+book as a standard, does he so take it because it is to him reasonable?
+In what way is the human reason to be ignored? Why should a book take
+its place, unless the reason has been convinced that the book is the
+proper standard? If this is so, the book rests upon the reason of those
+who adopt it. Are they to be saved because they act in accordance with
+their reason, and are others to be damned because they act by the same
+standard&mdash;their reason? No two are alike. Can we demand of all the same
+result? Suppose the compasses were not constant to the pole&mdash;no two
+compasses exactly alike&mdash;would you expect all ships to reach the same
+harbor?
+</p>
+<p>
+The Reign of Truth and Love.
+</p>
+<p>
+I also find in this creed the following:
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>We believe that Jesus Christ came to establish among men the Kingdom
+of God, the reign of truth and love, of righteousness and peace!</i>"
+</p>
+<p>
+Well, that may have been the object of Jesus Christ. I do not deny it.
+But what was the result? The Christian world has caused more war than
+all the rest of the world beside. Most of the cunning instruments of
+death have been devised by Christians. All the wonderful machinery by
+which the life is blown from men, by which nations are conquered and
+enslaved&mdash;all these machines have been born in Christian brains. And yet
+he came to bring peace, they say; but the Testament says otherwise: "I
+came not to bring peace, but a sword." And the sword was brought. What
+are the Christian nations doing to-day in Europe? Is there a solitary
+Christian nation that will trust any other? How many millions of
+Christians are in the uniform of forgiveness, armed with the muskets of
+love?
+</p>
+<p>
+There was an old Spaniard on the bed of death, who sent for a priest,
+and the priest told him that he would have to forgive his enemies before
+he died. He said, "I have none." "What! no enemies?" "Not one," said the
+dying man; "I killed the last one three months ago."
+</p>
+<p>
+How many millions of Christians are now armed and equipped to destroy
+their fellow-Christians? Who are the men in Europe crying against war?
+Who wishes to have the nations disarmed? Is it the church? No; the men
+who do not believe in what they call this religion of peace. When there
+is a war, and when they make a few thousand widows and orphans; when
+they strew the plain with dead patriots, Christians assemble in their
+churches and sing "Te Deum Laudamus." Why? Because he has enabled a
+few of his children to kill some others of his children. This is the
+religion of peace&mdash;the religion that invented the Krupp gun, that will
+hurl a ball weighing two thousand pounds through twenty-four inches
+of solid steel. This is the religion of peace that covers the sea with
+men-of-war, clad in mail, in the name of universal forgiveness. This is
+the religion that drills and uniforms five millions of men to kill their
+fellows.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Wars It Brought.
+</p>
+<p>
+What effect has this religion had upon the nations of the earth? What
+have the nations been fighting about? What was the Thirty Years' War
+in Europe for? What was the war in Holland for? Why was it that England
+persecuted Scotland? Why is it that England persecutes Ireland even to
+this day? At the bottom of every one of these conflicts you will find
+a religious question. The religion of Jesus Christ, as preached by his
+church, causes war, bloodshed, hatred, and all uncharitableness; and
+why? Because, they say, a certain belief is necessary to salvation. They
+do not say, if you behave yourself you will get there; they do not say,
+if you pay your debts and love your wife and love your children, and are
+good to your friends, and your neighbors, and your country, you will
+get there; that will do you no good; you have got to believe a certain
+thing. No matter how bad you are, you can instantly be forgiven; and no
+matter how good you are, if you fail to believe that which you cannot
+understand, the moment you get to the day of judgment nothing is left
+but to damn you, and all the angels will shout "hallelujah."
+</p>
+<p>
+What do they teach to-day? Nearly every murderer goes to heaven; there
+is only one step from the gallows to God, only one jerk between the
+halter and heaven. That is taught by this church.
+</p>
+<p>
+I believe there ought to be a law to prevent the giving of the slightest
+religious consolation to any man who has been found guilty of murder.
+Let a Catholic understand that if he imbrues his hands in his brother's
+blood, he can have no extreme unction. Let it be understood that he
+can have no forgiveness through the church; and let the Protestant
+understand that when he has committed that crime the community will not
+pray him into heaven. Let him go with his victim. The victim, dying in
+his sins, goes to hell, and the murderer has the happiness of seeing him
+there. If heaven grows dull and monotonous, the murderer can again give
+life to the nerve of pleasure by watching the agony of his victim.
+</p>
+<p>
+The truth is, Christianity has not made friends; it has made enemies. It
+is not, as taught, the religion of peace, it is the religion of war.
+Why should a Christian hesitate to kill a man that his God is waiting
+to damn? Why should a Christian not destroy an infidel who is trying to
+assassinate his soul? Why should a Christian pity an unbeliever&mdash;one who
+has rejected the Bible&mdash;when he knows that God will be pitiless forever?
+And yet we are told, in this creed, that "<i>we believe in the ultimate
+prevalence of the Kingdom of Christ over all the earth.</i>"
+</p>
+<p>
+What makes you? Do you judge from the manner in which you are getting
+along now? How many people are being born a year? About fifty millions.
+How many are you converting a year, really, truthfully? Five or six
+thousand. I think I have overstated the number. Is orthodox Christianity
+on the increase? No. There are a hundred times as many unbelievers in
+orthodox Christianity as there were ten years ago. What are you doing in
+the missionary world? How long is it since you converted a Chinaman?
+A fine missionary religion, to send missionaries with their Bibles and
+tracts to China, but if a Chinaman comes here, mob him, simply to show
+him the difference between the practical and theoretical workings of the
+Christian religion. How long since you have had an intelligent convert
+in India? In my judgment, never; there never has been an intelligent
+Hindoo converted from the time the first missionary put his foot on
+that soil; and never, in my judgment, has an intelligent Chinaman been
+converted since the first missionary touched that shore. Where are they?
+We hear nothing of them, except in the reports. They get money from poor
+old ladies, trembling on the edge of the grave, and go and tell them
+stories, how hungry the average Chinaman is for a copy of the New
+Testament, and paint the sad condition of a gentleman in the interior
+of Africa without the works of Dr. McCosh, longing for a copy of <i>The
+Princeton Review</i>,&mdash;in my judgment, a pamphlet that would suit a savage.
+Thus money is scared from the dying, and frightened from the old and
+feeble.
+</p>
+<p>
+About how long is it before this kingdom is to be established? No one
+objects to the establishment of peace and good will. Every good man
+longs for the time when war shall cease. We are all hoping for a day of
+universal justice&mdash;a day of universal freedom&mdash;when man shall control
+himself, when the passions shall become obedient to the intelligent
+will. But the coming of that day will not be hastened by preaching the
+doctrines of total depravity and eternal revenge. That sun will not rise
+the quicker for preaching salvation by faith. The star that shines
+above that dawn, the herald of that day, is Science, not
+superstition,&mdash;Reason, not religion.
+</p>
+<p>
+To show you how little advance has been made, how many intellectual bats
+and mental owls still haunt the temple, still roost above the altar,
+I call your attention to the fact that the Congregational Church,
+according to this creed; still believes in the resurrection of the dead,
+and in their Confession of Faith, attached to the creed, I find that
+they also believe in the literal resurrection of the body.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Resurrection.
+</p>
+<p>
+Does anybody believe that, who has the courage to think for himself?
+Here is a man, for instance, that weighs 200 pounds and gets sick
+and dies weighing 120; how much will he weigh in the morning of the
+resurrection? Here is a cannibal, who eats another man; and we know that
+the atoms you eat go into your body and become a part of you. After
+the cannibal has eaten the missionary, and appropriated his atoms to
+himself, and then dies, to whom will the atoms belong in the morning of
+the resurrection? Could the missionary maintain an action of replevin,
+and if so, what would the cannibal do for a body? It has been
+demonstrated, in so far as logic can demonstrate anything, that there
+is no creation and no destruction in Nature. It has been demonstrated,
+again and again, that the atoms in us have been in millions of other
+beings; have grown in the forests and in the grass, have blossomed in
+flowers, and been in the metals. In other words, there are atoms in each
+one of us that have been in millions of others; and when we die, these
+atoms return to the earth, again appear in grass and trees, are again
+eaten by animals, and again devoured by countless vegetable mouths and
+turned into wood; and yet this church, in the nineteenth century,'in a
+council composed of, and presided over by, professors and presidents
+of colleges and theologians, solemnly tells us that it believes in the
+literal resurrection of the body. This is almost enough to make
+one despair of the future&mdash;almost enough to convince a man of the
+immortality of the absurd. They know better. There is not one so
+ignorant but knows better.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Judgment-Day.
+</p>
+<p>
+And what is the next thing?
+</p>
+<p>
+"<i>We believe in a final judgment, the issues of which are everlasting
+punishment and everlasting life!</i>"
+</p>
+<p>
+At the final judgment all of us will be there. The thousands, and
+millions, and billions, and trillions, and quadrillions that have died
+will be there. The books will be opened, and each case will be called.
+The sheep and the goats will be divided. The unbelievers will be sent to
+the left, while the faithful will proudly walk to the right. The saved,
+without a tear, will bid an eternal farewell to those who loved them
+here&mdash;to those they loved. Nearly all the human race will go away to
+everlasting punishment, and the fortunate few to eternal life. This
+is the consolation of the Congregational Church! This is the hope that
+dispels the gloom of life!
+</p>
+<p>
+Pious Evasions.
+</p>
+<p>
+When the clergy are caught, they give a different meaning to the
+words and say the world was not made in seven days. They say "good
+whiles"&mdash;"epochs."
+</p>
+<p>
+And in this same Confession of Faith and in this creed they say that the
+Lord's day is holy&mdash;every seventh day. Suppose you lived near the North
+Pole where the day is three months long. Then which day would you keep?
+If you could get to the North Pole you could prevent Sunday from ever
+overtaking you. You could walk around the other way faster than the
+world could revolve. How would you keep Sunday then? Suppose we invent
+something that can go one thousand miles an hour? We can chase Sunday
+clear around the globe. Is there anything that can be more perfectly
+absurd than that a space of time can be holy? You might as well talk
+about a virtuous vacuum. We are now told that the Bible is not a
+scientific book, and that after all we cannot depend on what God said
+four thousand years ago&mdash;that his ways are not as our ways&mdash;that we must
+accept without evidence, and believe without understanding.
+</p>
+<p>
+I heard the other night of an old man. He was not very well educated,
+and he got into the notion that he must have reading of the Bible and
+family worship. There was a bad boy in the family, and they were reading
+the Bible by course. In the fifteenth chapter of Corinthians is this
+passage: "Behold, brethren, I show you a mystery; we shall not all
+die, but we shall all be changed." This boy had rubbed out the "c" in
+"changed." So when the old man put on his spectacles, and got down his
+Bible, he read: "Behold, brethren, I show you a mystery, we shall not
+all die, but we shall all be hanged." The old lady said, "Father, I
+don't think it reads that way." He said, "Who is reading this?" "Yes
+mother, it says 'hanged,' and, more than that, I see the sense of it.
+Pride is the besetting sin of the human heart, and if there is anything
+calculated to take the pride out of a man it is hanging." It is in this
+way that ministers avoid and explain the discoveries of Science.
+</p>
+<p>
+People ask me, if I take away the Bible what are we going to do? How can
+we get along without the revelation that no one understands? What are
+we going to do if we have no Bible to quarrel about What are we to do
+without hell? What are we going to do with our enemies? What are we
+going to do with the people we love but don't like?
+</p>
+<p>
+"No Bible, No Civilization."
+</p>
+<p>
+They tell me that there never would have been any civilization if it had
+not been for this Bible. The Jews had a Bible; the Romans had not. Which
+had the greater and the grander government? Let us be honest. Which of
+those nations produced the greatest poets, the greatest soldiers, the
+greatest orators, the greatest statesmen, the greatest sculptors? Rome
+had no Bible. God cared nothing for the Roman Empire. He let the men
+come up by chance. His time was taken up with the Jewish people. And
+yet Rome conquered the world, including the chosen people of God. The
+people who had the Bible were defeated by the people who had not. How
+was it possible for Lucretius to get along without the Bible?&mdash;how did
+the great and glorious of that empire? And what shall we say of Greece?
+No Bible. Compare Athens with Jerusalem. From Athens come the beauty and
+intellectual grace of the world. Compare the mythology of Greece with
+the mythology of Judea; one covering the earth with beauty, and the
+other filling heaven with hatred and injustice. The Hindoos had no
+Bible; they had been forsaken by the Creator, and yet they became the
+greatest metaphysicians of the world. Egypt had no Bible. Compare Egypt
+with Judea. What are we to do without the Bible? What became of the Jews
+who had a Bible? Their temple was destroyed and their city was taken;
+and they never found real prosperity until their God deserted them. The
+Turks attributed all their victories to the Koran. The Koran gave them
+their victories over the believers in the Bible. The priests of each
+nation have accounted for the prosperity of that nation by its religion.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Christians mistake an incident for a cause, and honestly imagine
+that the Bible is the foundation of modern liberty and law. They forget
+physical conditions, make no account of commerce, care nothing for
+inventions and discoveries, and ignorantly give the credit to their
+inspired book.
+</p>
+<p>
+The foundations of our civilization were laid centuries before
+Christianity was known. The intelligence of courage, of self-government,
+of energy, of industry, that uniting made the civilization of this
+century, did not come alone from Judea, but from every nation of the
+ancient world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miracles of the New Testament.
+</p>
+<p>
+There are many things in the New Testament that I cannot accept as true.
+</p>
+<p>
+I cannot believe in the miraculous origin of Jesus Christ. I believe he
+was the son of Joseph and Mary; that Joseph and Mary had been duly and
+legally married; that he was the legitimate offspring of that union.
+Nobody ever believed the contrary until he had been dead at least one
+hundred and fifty years. Neither Matthew, Mark, nor Luke ever dreamed
+that he was of divine origin. He did not say to either Matthew, Mark,
+or Luke, or to any one in their hearing, that he was the Son of God,
+or that he was miraculously conceived. He did not say it. It may be
+asserted that he said it to John, but John did not write the gospel
+that bears his name. The angel Gabriel, who, they say, brought the news,
+never wrote a word upon the subject. The mother of Christ never wrote
+a word upon the subject. His alleged father never wrote a word upon
+the subject, and Joseph never admitted the story. We are lacking in
+the matter of witnesses. I would not believe such a story now. I cannot
+believe that it happened then. I would not believe people I know, much
+less would I believe people I do not know.
+</p>
+<p>
+At that time Matthew and Luke believed that Christ was the son of Joseph
+and Mary. And why? they say he descended from David, and in order to
+show that he was of the blood of David, they gave the genealogy of
+Joseph. And if Joseph was not his father, why did they not give the
+genealogy of Pontius Pilate or of Herod? Could they, by giving the
+genealogy of Joseph, show that he was of the blood of David if Joseph
+was in no way related to Christ? And yet that is the position into which
+the Christian world is driven. In the New Testament we find that in
+giving the genealogy of Christ it says, "who was the son of Joseph?" and
+the church has interpolated the words "as was supposed." Why did they
+give a supposed genealogy? It will not do. And that is a thing that
+cannot in any way, by any human testimony, be established.
+</p>
+<p>
+If it is important for us to know that he was the Son of God, I say,
+then, that it devolves upon God to give us the evidence. Let him write
+it across the face of the heavens, in every language of mankind. If it
+is necessary for us to believe it, let it grow on every leaf next
+year. No man should be damned for not believing, unless the evidence is
+overwhelming. And he ought not to be made to depend upon say so, or upon
+"as was supposed." He should have it directly, for himself. A man says
+that God told him a certain thing, and he tells me, and I have only his
+word. He may have been deceived. If God has a message for me he ought
+to tell it to me, and not to somebody that has been dead four or five
+thousand years, and in another language.
+</p>
+<p>
+Besides, God may have changed his mind on many things; he has on
+slavery, and polygamy at least, according to the church; and yet his
+church now wants to go and destroy polygamy in Utah with the sword. Why
+do they not send missionaries there with copies of the Old Testament?
+By reading the lives of Abraham and Isaac, and Lot, and a few other
+patriarchs who ought to have been in the penitentiary, maybe they can
+soften their hearts.
+</p>
+<p>
+More Miracles.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is another miracle I do not believe,&mdash;the resurrection. I want to
+speak about it as we would about any ordinary transaction. In the first
+place, I do not believe that any miracle was ever performed, and if
+there was, you cannot prove it. Why? Because it is altogether more
+reasonable to believe that the people were mistaken about it than that
+it happened. And why? Because, according to human experience, we know
+that people will not always tell the truth, and we never saw a miracle
+ourselves, and we must be governed by our experience; and if we go by
+our experience, we must say that the miracle never happened&mdash;that the
+witnesses were mistaken.
+</p>
+<p>
+A man comes into Jerusalem, and the first thing he does is to cure the
+blind. He lets the light of day visit the night of blindness. The eyes
+are opened, and the world is again pictured upon the brain. Another man
+is clothed with leprosy. He touches him and the disease falls from
+him, and he stands pure, and clean, and whole. Another man is deformed,
+wrinkled, and bent. He touches him, and throws around him again the
+garment of youth. A man is in his grave, and he says, "Come forth!"
+And the man walks in life, feeling his heart throb and his blood going
+joyously through his veins. They say that actually happened. I do not
+know.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is one wonderful thing about the dead people that were raised&mdash;we
+do not hear of them any more. What became of them? If there was a man
+in this city who had been raised from the dead, I would go to see him
+to-night. I would say, "Where were you when you got the notice to come
+back? What kind of a country is it? What kind of opening there for a
+young man? How did you like it? Did you meet there the friends you had
+lost? Is there a world without death, without pain, without a tear? Is
+there a land without a grave, and where good-bye is never heard?" Nobody
+ever paid the slightest attention to the dead who had been raised. They
+did not even excite interest when they died the second time. Nobody
+said, "Why, that man is not afraid. He has been there once. He has
+walked through the valley of the shadow." Not a word. They pass quietly
+away.
+</p>
+<p>
+I do not believe these miracles. There is something wrong somewhere
+about that business. I may suffer eternal punishment for all this, but I
+cannot, I do not, believe.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a man who did all these things, and thereupon they crucified
+him. Let us be honest. Suppose a man came into this city and should meet
+a funeral procession, and say, "Who is dead?" and they should reply,
+"The son of a widow; her only support." Suppose he should say to the
+procession, "Halt!" and to the undertaker, "Take out that coffin,
+unscrew that lid. Young man, I say unto thee, arise!" and the dead
+should step from the coffin and in a moment afterward hold his mother in
+his arms. Suppose this stranger should go to your cemetery and find some
+woman holding a little child in each hand, while the tears fell upon a
+new-made grave, and he should say to her, "Who lies buried here?"
+and she should reply, "My husband;" and he should cry, "I say unto
+thee, oh grave, give up thy dead!" and the husband should rise, and in a
+moment after have his lips upon his wife's, and the little children with
+their arms around his neck; do you think that the people of this city
+would kill him? Do you think any one would wish to crucify him? Do
+you not rather believe that every one who had a loved one out in that
+cemetery would go to him, even upon their knees, and beg him to give
+back their dead? Do you believe that any man was ever crucified who was
+the master of death?
+</p>
+<p>
+Let me tell you to-night if there shall ever appear upon this earth the
+master, the monarch, of death, all human knees will touch the earth. He
+will not be crucified. All the living who fear death; all the living who
+have lost a loved one, will bow to him. And yet we are told that this
+worker of miracles, this man who could clothe the dead dust in the
+throbbing flesh of life, was crucified. I do not believe that he worked
+the miracles, I do not believe that he raised the dead, I do not believe
+that he claimed to be the Son of God, These things were told long after
+he was dead; told because the ignorant multitude demanded mystery and
+wonder; told, because at that time the miraculous was believed of all
+the illustrious dead. Stories that made Christianity powerful then,
+weaken it now. He who gains a triumph in a conflict with a devil, will
+be defeated by science.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is another thing about these foolish miracles. All could have
+been imitated. Men could pretend to be blind; confederates could feign
+sickness, and even death.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is not very difficult to limp or to hold an arm as though it were
+paralyzed; or to say that one is afflicted with "an issue of blood." It
+is easy to say that the son of a widow was raised from the dead, and
+if you fail to give the name of the son, or his mother, or the time and
+place where the wonder occurred, it is quite difficult to show that it
+did not happen.
+</p>
+<p>
+No one can be called upon to disprove anything that has not apparently
+been established. I say apparently, because there can be no real
+evidence in support of a miracle.
+</p>
+<p>
+How could we prove, for instance, the miracle of the loaves and fishes?
+There were plenty of other loaves and other fishes in the world? Each
+one of the five thousand could have had a loaf and a fish with him. We
+would have to show that there was no other possible way for the people
+to get the bread and fish except by miracle, and then we are only half
+through. We must then show that they did, in fact, get enough to
+feed five thousand people, and that more was left than was had in the
+beginning.
+</p>
+<p>
+Of course this is simply impossible. And let me ask, why was not the
+miracle substantiated by some of the multitude?
+</p>
+<p>
+Would it not have been a greater wonder if Christ had <i>created</i> instead
+of multiplied the loaves and fishes?
+</p>
+<p>
+How can we now prove that a certain person more than eighteen hundred
+years ago was possessed by seven devils?
+</p>
+<p>
+How was it ever possible to prove a thing like that?
+</p>
+<p>
+How can it be established that some evil spirits could talk while others
+were dumb, and that the dumb ones were the hardest to control?
+</p>
+<p>
+If Christ wished to convince his fellow-men by miracles, why did he not
+do something that could not by any means have been a counterfeit?
+</p>
+<p>
+Instead of healing a withered arm, why did he not find some man whose
+arm had been cut off, and make another grow?
+</p>
+<p>
+If he wanted to raise the dead, why did he not raise some man of
+importance, some one known to all?
+</p>
+<p>
+Why did he do his miracles in the obscurity of the village, in the
+darkness of the hovel?
+</p>
+<p>
+Why call back to life people so insignificant that the public did not
+know of their death?
+</p>
+<p>
+Suppose that in May, 1865, a man had pretended to raise some person by
+the name of Smith from the dead, and suppose a religion had been founded
+on that miracle, would it not be natural for people, hundreds of years
+after the pretended miracle, to ask why the founder of that religion
+did not raise from the dead Abraham Lincoln, instead of the unknown and
+obscure Mr. Smith?
+</p>
+<p>
+How could any man now, in any court, by any known rule of evidence,
+substantiate one of the miracles of Christ?
+</p>
+<p>
+Must we believe anything that cannot in any way be substantiated?
+</p>
+<p>
+If miracles were necessary to convince men eighteen centuries ago, are
+they not necessary now?
+</p>
+<p>
+After all, how many men did Christ convince with his miracles? How many
+walked beneath the standard of the master of Nature?
+</p>
+<p>
+How did it happen that so many miracles convinced so few? I will
+tell you. The miracles were never performed. No other explanation is
+possible.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is infinitely absurd to say that a man who cured the sick, the halt
+and blind, raised the dead, cast out devils, controlled the winds and
+waves, created food and held obedient to his will the forces of the
+world, was put to death by men who knew his superhuman power and who
+had seen his wondrous works. If the crucifixion was public, the miracles
+were private. If the miracles had been public, the crucifixion could not
+have been. Do away with the miracles, and the superhuman character of
+Christ is destroyed. He becomes what he really was&mdash;a man. Do away with
+the wonders, and the teachings of Christ cease to be authoritative. They
+are then worth the reason, the truth that is in them, and nothing more.
+Do away with the miracles, and then we can measure the utterances of
+Christ with the standard of our reason. We are no longer intellectual
+serfs, believing what is unreasonable in obedience to the command of a
+supposed god. We no longer take counsel of our fears, of our cowardice,
+but boldly defend what our reason maintains.
+</p>
+<p>
+Christ takes his appropriate place with the other teachers of mankind.
+His life becomes reasonable and admirable. We have a man who hated
+oppression; who despised and denounced superstition and hypocrisy; who
+attacked the heartless church of his time; who excited the hatred of
+bigots and priests, and who rather than be false to his conception of
+truth, met and bravely suffered even death.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Resurrection.
+</p>
+<p>
+The miracle of the resurrection I do not and cannot believe. If it was
+the fact, if the dead Christ rose from the grave, why did he not appear
+to his enemies? Why did he not visit Pontius Pilate? Why did he not call
+upon Caiaphas, the high priest? upon Herod? Why did he not again enter
+the temple and end the old dispute with demonstration? Why did he not
+confront the Roman soldiers who had taken money to falsely swear that
+his body had been stolen by his friends? Why did he not make another
+triumphal entry into Jerusalem? Why did he not say to the multitude:
+"Here are the wounds in my feet, and in my hands, and in my side. I am
+the one you endeavored to kill, but Death is my slave"? Simply because
+the resurrection is a myth. It makes no difference with his teachings.
+They are just as good whether he wrought miracles or not. Twice two are
+four; that needs no miracle. Twice two are five&mdash;a miracle can not help
+that. Christ's teachings are worth their effect upon the human race.
+It makes no difference about miracle or wonder. In that day every
+one believed in the impossible. Nobody had any standing as teacher,
+philosopher, governor, king, general, about whom there was not supposed
+to be something miraculous. The earth was covered with the sons and
+daughters of gods and goddesses.
+</p>
+<p>
+In Greece, in Rome, in Egypt, in India, every great man was supposed to
+have had either a god for his father, or a goddess for his mother. They
+accounted for genius by divine origin. Earth and heaven were at that
+time near together. It was but a step for the gods from the blue arch
+to the green earth. Every lake and valley and mountain top was made rich
+with legends of the loves of gods. How could the early Christians have
+made converts to a man, among a people who believed so thoroughly in
+gods&mdash;in gods that had lived upon the earth; among a people who had
+erected temples to the sons and daughters of gods? Such people could not
+have been induced to worship a man&mdash;a man born among barbarous people,
+citizen of a nation weak and poor and paying tribute to the Roman power.
+The early Christians therefore preached the gospel of a god.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Ascension.
+</p>
+<p>
+I cannot believe in the miracle of the ascension, in the bodily
+ascension of Jesus Christ. Where was he going? In the light shed upon
+this question by the telescope, I again ask, where was he going?
+</p>
+<p>
+The New Jerusalem is not above us. The abode of the gods is not there.
+Where was he going? Which way did he go? Of course that depends upon
+the time of day he left. If he left in the evening, he went exactly
+the opposite way from that he would have gone had he ascended in the
+morning. What did he do with his body? How high did he go? In what way
+did he overcome the intense cold? The nearest station is the moon, two
+hundred and forty thousand miles away. Again I ask, where did he go? He
+must have had a natural body, for it was the same body that died. His
+body must have been material, otherwise he would not as he rose have
+circled with the earth, and he would have passed from the sight of his
+disciples at the rate of more than a thousand miles per hour.
+</p>
+<p>
+It may be said that his body was "spiritual." Then what became of the
+body that died? Just before his ascension we are told that he partook of
+broiled fish with his disciples. Was the fish "spiritual?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Who saw this miracle?
+</p>
+<p>
+They say the disciples saw it. Let us see what they say. Matthew did not
+think it was worth mentioning. He does not speak of it. On the contrary,
+he says that the last words of Christ were:
+</p>
+<p>
+"Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world." Is it
+possible that Matthew saw this, the most miraculous of miracles, and
+yet forgot to put it in his life of Christ? Think of the little miracles
+recorded by this saint, and then determine whether it is probable that
+he witnessed the ascension of Jesus Christ.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mark says: "So, then, after the Lord had spoken unto them he was
+received up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God." This is all
+he says about the most wonderful vision that ever astonished human eyes,
+a miracle great enough to have stuffed credulity to bursting; and yet
+all we have is this one, poor, meagre verse. We know now that most of
+the last chapter of Mark is an interpolation, and as a matter of fact,
+the author of Mark's gospel said nothing about the ascension one way or
+the other.
+</p>
+<p>
+Luke says: "And it came to pass while he blessed them he was parted from
+them and was carried up into Heaven."
+</p>
+<p>
+John does not mention it. He gives as Christ's last words this address
+to Peter: "Follow thou Me." Of course, he did not say that as he
+ascended. It seems to have made very little impression upon him; he
+writes the account as though tired of the story. He concludes with an
+impatient wave of the hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the Acts we have another account. A conversation is given not
+spoken of in any of the others, and we find there two men clad in white
+apparel, who said: "Ye men of Galilee why stand ye here gazing up into
+heaven? This same Jesus that was taken up into heaven shall so come in
+like manner as ye have seen him go up into heaven."
+</p>
+<p>
+Matthew did not see the men in white apparel, did not see the ascension.
+Mark forgot the entire transaction, and Luke did not think the men in
+white apparel worth mentioning. John had not confidence enough in the
+story to repeat it. And yet, upon such evidence, we are bound to believe
+in the bodily ascension, or suffer eternal pain.
+</p>
+<p>
+And here let me ask, why was not the ascension in public?
+</p>
+<p>
+Casting out Devils.
+</p>
+<p>
+Most of the miracles said to have been wrought by Christ were recorded
+to show his power over evil spirits. On many occasions, he is said to
+have "cast out devils"&mdash;devils who could speak, and devils who were
+dumb.
+</p>
+<p>
+For many years belief in the existence of evil spirits has been fading
+from the mind, and as this belief grew thin, ministers endeavored to
+give new meanings to the ancient words. They are inclined now to put
+"disease" in the place of "devils," and most of them say, that the
+poor wretches supposed to have been the homes of fiends, were simply
+suffering from epileptic fits! We must remember that Christ and these
+devils often conversed together. Is it possible that fits can talk?
+These devils often admitted that Christ was God. Can epilepsy certify to
+divinity? On one occasion the fits told their name, and made a contract
+to leave the body of a man provided they would be permitted to take
+possession of a herd of swine. Is it possible that fits carried Christ
+himself to the pinnacle of a temple? Did fits pretend to be the owner
+of the whole earth? Is Christ to be praised for resisting such a
+temptation? Is it conceivable that fits wanted Christ to fall down and
+worship them?
+</p>
+<p>
+The church must not abandon its belief in devils. Orthodoxy cannot
+afford to put out the fires of hell. Throw away a belief in the devil,
+and most of the miracles of the New Testament become impossible, even
+if we admit the supernatural. If there is no devil, who was the original
+tempter in the garden of Eden? If there is no hell, from what are
+we saved; to what purpose is the atonement? Upon the obverse of the
+Christian shield is God, upon the reverse, the devil. No devil, no hell.
+No hell, no atonement. No atonement, no preaching, no gospel.
+</p>
+<p>
+Necessity of Belief.
+</p>
+<p>
+Does belief depend upon evidence? I think it does somewhat in some
+cases. How is it when a jury is sworn to try a case, hearing all the
+evidence, hearing both sides, hearing the charge of the judge, hearing
+the law, are upon their oaths equally divided, six for the plaintiff and
+six for the defendant? Evidence does not have the same effect upon all
+people. Why? Our brains are not alike. They are not the same shape. We
+have not the same intelligence, or the same experience, the same sense.
+And yet I am held accountable for my belief. I must believe in the
+Trinity&mdash;three times one is one, once one is three, and my soul is to be
+eternally damned for failing to guess an arithmetical conundrum. That
+is the poison part of Christianity&mdash;that salvation depends upon
+belief. That is the accursed part, and until that dogma is discarded
+Christianity will be nothing but superstition.
+</p>
+<p>
+No man can control his belief. If I hear certain evidence I will believe
+a certain thing. If I fail to hear it I may never believe it. If it is
+adapted to my mind I may accept it; if it is not, I reject it. And what
+am I to go by? My brain. That is the only light I have from Nature, and
+if there be a God it is the only torch that this God has given me to
+find my way through the darkness and night called life. I do not depend
+upon hearsay for that. I do not have to take the word of any other man
+nor get upon my knees before a book. Here in the temple of the mind I
+consult the God, that is to say my reason, and the oracle speaks to me
+and I obey the oracle. What should I obey? Another man's oracle? Shall
+I take another man's word&mdash;not what he thinks, but what he says some God
+has said to him?
+</p>
+<p>
+I would not know a god if I should see one. I have said before, and I
+say again, the brain thinks in spite of me, and I am not responsible for
+my thoughts. I cannot control the beating of my heart. I cannot stop
+the blood that flows through the rivers of my veins. And yet I am held
+responsible for my belief. Then why does not God give me the evidence?
+They say he has. In what? In an inspired book. But I do not understand
+it as they do. Must I be false to my understanding? They say: "When you
+come to die you will be sorry if you do not." Will I be sorry when I
+come to die that I did not live a hypocrite? Will I be sorry that I
+did not say I was a Christian when I was not? Will the fact that I was
+honest put a thorn in the pillow of death? Cannot God forgive me for
+being honest? They say that when he was in Jerusalem he forgave his
+murderers, but now he will not forgive an honest man for differing from
+him on the subject of the Trinity.
+</p>
+<p>
+They say that God says to me, "Forgive your enemies." I say, "I do;" but
+he says, "I will damn mine." God should be consistent. If he wants me to
+forgive my enemies he should forgive his. I am asked to forgive enemies
+who can hurt me. God is only asked to forgive enemies who cannot hurt
+him. He certainly ought to be as generous as he asks us to be. And I
+want no God to forgive me unless I am willing to forgive others, and
+unless I do forgive others. All I ask, if that be true, is that this God
+should act according to his own doctrine. If I am to forgive my enemies,
+I ask him to forgive his. I do not believe in the religion of faith,
+but of kindness, of good deeds. The idea that man is responsible for his
+belief is at the bottom of religious intolerance and persecution.
+</p>
+<p>
+How inconsistent these Christians are! In St. Louis the other day I read
+an interview with a Christian minister&mdash;one who is now holding a
+revival. They call him the boy preacher&mdash;a name that he has borne for
+fifty or sixty years. The question was whether in these revivals, when
+they were trying to rescue souls from eternal torture, they would allow
+colored people to occupy seats with white people; and that revivalist,
+preaching the unsearchable riches of Christ, said he would not allow the
+colored people to sit with white people; they must go to the back of the
+church. These same Christians tell us that in heaven there will be no
+distinction. That Christ cares nothing for the color of the skin. That
+in Paradise white and black will sit together, swap harps, and cry
+hallelujah in chorus; yet this minister, believing as he says he does,
+that all men who fail to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ will eternally
+perish, was not willing that a colored man should sit by a white man and
+hear the gospel of everlasting peace.
+</p>
+<p>
+According to this revivalist, the ship of the world is going down;
+Christ is the only life-boat; and yet he is not willing that a colored
+man, with a soul to save, shall sit by the side of a white brother,
+and be rescued from eternal death. He admits that the white brother
+is totally depraved; that if the white brother had justice done him he
+would be damned; that it is only through the wonderful mercy of God that
+the white man is not in hell; and yet such a being, totally depraved,
+is too good to sit by a colored man! Total depravity becomes arrogant;
+total depravity draws the color line in religion, and an ambassador of
+Christ says to the black man, "Stand away; let your white brother hear
+first about the love of God."
+</p>
+<p>
+I believe in the religion of humanity. It is far better to love our
+fellow-men than to love God. We can help them. We cannot help him. We
+had better do what we can than to be always pretending to do what we
+cannot.
+</p>
+<p>
+Virtue is of no color; kindness, justice and love, of no complexion.
+</p>
+<p>
+Eternal Punishment.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now I come to the last part of this creed&mdash;the doctrine of eternal
+punishment. I have concluded that I will never deliver a lecture in
+which I will not attack the doctrine of eternal pain. That part of the
+Congregational creed would disgrace the lowest savage that crouches
+and crawls in the jungles of Africa. The man who now, in the nineteenth
+century, preaches the doctrine of eternal punishment, the doctrine of an
+eternal hell, has lived in vain. Think of that doctrine! The eternity of
+punishment! I find in this same creed&mdash;in this latest utterance of
+Congregationalism&mdash;that Christ is finally going to triumph in this world
+and establish his kingdom. This creed declares that "we believe in the
+ultimate prevalence of the kingdom of God over all the earth." If
+their doctrine is true he will never triumph in the other world. The
+Congregational Church does not believe in the ultimate prevalence of the
+kingdom of Christ in the world to come. There he is to meet with eternal
+failure. He will have billions in hell forever.
+</p>
+<p>
+In this world we never will be perfectly civilized as long as a gallows
+casts its shadow upon the earth. As long as there is a penitentiary,
+within the walls of which a human being is immured, we are not a
+perfectly civilized people. We shall never be perfectly civilized until
+we do away with crime. And yet, according to this Christian religion,
+God is to have an eternal penitentiary; he is to be an everlasting
+jailer, an everlasting turnkey, a warden of an infinite dungeon, and
+he is going to keep prisoners there forever, not for the purpose of
+reforming them&mdash;because they are never going to get any better, only
+worse&mdash;but for the purpose of purposeless punishment. And for what?
+For something they failed to believe in this world. Born in ignorance,
+supported by poverty, caught in the snares of temptation, deformed by
+toil, stupefied by want&mdash;and yet held responsible through the countless
+ages of eternity! No man can think of a greater horror; no man can dream
+of a greater absurdity. For the growth of that doctrine ignorance was
+soil and fear was rain. It came from the fanged mouths of serpents, and
+yet it is called "glad tidings of great joy." Some Who are Damned.
+</p>
+<p>
+We are told "God so loved the world" that he is going to damn almost
+everybody. If this orthodox religion be true, some of the greatest, and
+grandest, and best who ever lived are suffering God's torments to-night.
+It does not appear to make much difference with the members of the
+church. They go right on enjoying themselves about as well as ever. If
+this doctrine is true, Benjamin Franklin, one of the wisest and best of
+men, who did so much to give us here a free government, is suffering
+the tyranny of God to-night, although he endeavored to establish freedom
+among men. If the churches were honest, their preachers would tell their
+hearers: "Benjamin Franklin is in hell, and we warn all the youth not to
+imitate Benjamin Franklin. Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration
+of Independence, with its self-evident truths, has been damned these
+many years."
+</p>
+<p>
+That is what all the ministers ought to have the courage to say. Talk
+as you believe. Stand by your creed, or change it. I want to impress it
+upon your minds, because the thing I wish to do in this world is to put
+out the fires of hell. I will keep on as long as there is one little red
+coal left in the bottomless pit. As long as the ashes are warm I shall
+denounce this infamous doctrine.
+</p>
+<p>
+I want you to know that according to this creed the men who founded this
+great and splendid Government are in hell to-night. Most of the men who
+fought in the Revolutionary war, and wrested from the clutch of Great
+Britain this continent, have been rewarded by the eternal wrath of God.
+Thousands of the old Revolutionary soldiers are in torment tonight. Let
+the preachers have the courage to say so. The men who fought in 1812,
+and gave to the United States the freedom of the seas, have nearly all
+been damned. Thousands of heroes who served our country in the Civil
+war, hundreds who starved in prisons, are now in the dungeons of God,
+compared with which, Andersonville was Paradise. The greatest of heroes
+are there; the greatest of poets, the greatest scientists, the men who
+have made the world beautiful&mdash;they are all among the damned if this
+creed is true.
+</p>
+<p>
+Humboldt, who shed light, and who added to the intellectual wealth
+of mankind; Goethe, and Schiller, and Lessing, who almost created the
+German language&mdash;all gone&mdash;all suffering the wrath of God tonight, and
+every time an angel thinks of one of those men he gives his harp an
+extra twang. Laplace, who read the heavens like an open book&mdash;he is
+there. Robert Burns, the poet of human love&mdash;he is there. He wrote
+the "Prayer of Holy Willie." He fastened on the cross the Presbyterian
+creed, and there it is, a lingering crucifixion. Robert Burns increased
+the tenderness of the human heart. Dickens put a shield of pity before
+the flesh of childhood&mdash;God is getting even with him. Our own Ralph
+Waldo Emerson, although he had a thousand opportunities to hear
+Methodist clergymen, scorned the means of grace, lived to his highest
+ideal, gave to his fellow-men his best and truest thought, and yet his
+spirit is the sport and prey of fiends to-night.
+</p>
+<p>
+Longfellow, who has refined thousands of homes, did not believe in the
+miraculous origin of the Savior, doubted the report of Gabriel, loved
+his fellow-men, did what he could to free the slaves, to increase the
+happiness of man, yet God was waiting for his soul&mdash;waiting to cast
+him out and down forever. Thomas Paine, author of the "Rights of Man;"
+offering his life in both hemispheres for the freedom of the human race;
+one of the founders of this Republic, is now among the damned; and yet
+it seems to me that if he could only get God's attention long enough
+to point him to the American flag he would let him out. Auguste Comte,
+author of the "Positive Philosophy," who loved his fellow-men to that
+degree that he made of humanity a god, who wrote his great work in
+poverty, with his face covered with tears&mdash;they are getting their
+revenge on him now.
+</p>
+<p>
+Voltaire, who abolished torture in France; who did more for human
+liberty than any other man, living or dead; who was the assassin
+of superstition, and whose dagger still rusts in the heart of
+Catholicism&mdash;he is with the rest. All the priests who have been
+translated have had their happiness increased by looking at Voltaire.
+</p>
+<p>
+Giordano Bruno, the first star of the morning after the long night;
+Benedict Spinoza, the pantheist, the metaphysician, the pure and
+generous man; Diderot, the encyclopedist, who endeavored to get all
+knowledge in a small compass, so that he could put the peasant on an
+equality intellectually with the prince; Diderot, who wished to sow all
+over the world the seed of knowledge, and loved to labor for mankind,
+while the priests wanted to burn; who did all he could to put out the
+fires&mdash;he was lost, long, long ago. His cry for water has become so
+common that his voice is now recognized through all the realms of
+heaven, and the angels laughing, say to one another, "That is Diderot."
+</p>
+<p>
+David Hume, the Scotch philosopher, is there, with his inquiry about
+the "Human Understanding" and his argument against miracles. Beethoven,
+master of music, and Wagner, the Shakespeare of harmony, who made the
+air of this world rich forever, they are there; and to-night they have
+better music in hell than in heaven!
+</p>
+<p>
+Shelley, whose soul, like his own "Skylark," was a winged joy, has been
+damned for many, many years; and Shakespeare, the greatest of the human
+race, who did more to elevate mankind than all the priests who ever
+lived and died, he is there; but founders of inquisitions, builders
+of dungeons, makers of chains, inventors of instruments of torture,
+tearers, and burners, and branders of human flesh, stealers of babes,
+and sellers of husbands and wives and children, and they who kept the
+horizon lurid with the fagot's flame for a thousand years&mdash;are in heaven
+to-night. I wish heaven joy!
+</p>
+<p>
+That is the doctrine with which we are polluting the souls of children.
+That is the doctrine that puts a fiend by the dying bed and a prophecy
+of hell over every cradle. That is "glad tidings of great joy."
+</p>
+<p>
+Only a little while ago, when the great flood came upon the Ohio, sent
+by him who is ruling the world and paying particular attention to the
+affairs of nations, just in the gray of the morning they saw a house
+floating down and on its top a human being. A few men went out to the
+rescue. They found there a woman, a mother, and they wished to save her
+life. She said: "No, I am going to stay where I am. In this house I
+have three dead babes; I will not desert them." Think of a love so
+limitless&mdash;stronger and deeper than despair and death! And yet, the
+Christian religion says, that if that woman, that mother, did not happen
+to believe in their creed God would send her soul to eternal fire! If
+there is another world, and if in heaven they wear hats, when such a
+woman climbs the opposite bank of the Jordan, Christ should lift his to
+her.
+</p>
+<p>
+The doctrine of eternal pain is my trouble with this Christian religion.
+I reject it on account of its infinite heartlessness. I cannot tell them
+too often, that during our last war Christians, who knew that if they
+were shot they would go right to heaven, went and hired wicked men to
+take their places, perfectly willing that these men should go to hell
+provided they could stay at home. You see they are not honest in it,
+or they do not believe it, or as the people say, "they don't sense it."
+They have not imagination enough to conceive what it is they believe,
+and what a terrific falsehood they assert. And I beg of every one
+who hears me to-night, I beg, I implore, I beseech you, never to give
+another dollar to build a church in which that lie is preached. Never
+give another cent to send a missionary with his mouth stuffed with
+that falsehood to a foreign land. Why, they say, the heathen will go to
+heaven, any way, if you let them alone. What is the use of sending them
+to hell by enlightening them? Let them alone. The idea of going and
+telling a man a thing that if he does not believe, he will be damned,
+when the chances are ten to one that he will not believe it, is
+monstrous. Do not tell him here, and as quick as he gets to the other
+world and finds it is necessary to believe, he can say "Yes." Give him a
+chance.
+</p>
+<p>
+Another Objection.
+</p>
+<p>
+My objection to orthodox religion is that it destroys human love, and
+tells us that the love of this world is not necessary to make a heaven
+in the next.
+</p>
+<p>
+No matter about your wife, your children, your brother, your sister&mdash;no
+matter about all the affections of the human heart&mdash;when you get there,
+you will be with the angels. I do not know whether I would like the
+angels. I do not know whether the angels would like me. I would rather
+stand by the ones who have loved me and whom I know; and I can conceive
+of no heaven without the loved of this earth. That is the trouble with
+this Christian relief-ion. Leave your father, leave your mother, leave
+your wife, leave your children, leave everything and follow Jesus
+Christ. I will not. I will stay with my people. I will not sacrifice on
+the altar of a selfish fear all the grandest and noblest promptings of
+my heart.
+</p>
+<p>
+Do away with human love and what are we? What would we be in another
+world, and what would we be here? Can any one conceive of music without
+human love? Of art, or joy? Human love builds every home. Human love is
+the author of all beauty. Love paints every picture, and chisels every
+statue. Love builds every fireside. What could heaven be without human
+love? And yet that is what we are promised&mdash;a heaven with your wife
+lost, your mother lost, some of your children gone. And you expect to be
+made happy by falling in with some angel! Such a religion is infamous.
+Christianity holds human love for naught; and yet Love is the only bow
+on Life's dark cloud. It is the morning and the evening star. It shines
+upon the babe, and sheds its radiance on the quiet tomb. It is the
+mother of art, inspirer of poet, patriot and philosopher. It is the air
+and light of every heart&mdash;builder of every home, kindler of every fire
+on every hearth. It was the first to dream of immortality. It fills the
+world with melody&mdash;for music is the voice of love. Love is the magician,
+the enchanter, that changes worthless things to joy, and makes right
+royal kings and queens of common clay. It is the perfume of that
+wondrous flower, the heart, and without that sacred passion, that divine
+swoon, we are less than beasts; but with it, earth is heaven, and we are
+gods.
+</p>
+<p>
+And how are you to get to this heaven? On the efforts of another.
+You are to be a perpetual heavenly pauper, and you will have to admit
+through all eternity that you never would have been there if you had not
+been frightened. "I am here," you will say, "I have these wings, I have
+this musical instrument, because I was scared. I am here. The ones who
+loved me are among the damned; the ones I loved are also there&mdash;but I am
+here, that is enough."
+</p>
+<p>
+What a glorious' world heaven must be! No reformation in that world&mdash;not
+the slightest. If you die in Arkansas that is the end of you! Think of
+telling a boy in the next world, who lived and died in Delaware, that he
+had been fairly treated! Can anything be more infamous?
+</p>
+<p>
+All on an equality&mdash;the rich and the poor, those with parents loving
+them, those with every opportunity for education, on an equality with
+the poor, the abject and the ignorant&mdash;and this little day called life,
+this moment with a hope, a shadow and a tear, this little space between
+your mother's arms and the grave, balances eternity.
+</p>
+<p>
+God can do nothing for you when you get there. A Methodist preacher can
+do more for the soul here than its creator can there. The soul goes to
+heaven, where there is nothing but good society; no bad examples; and
+they are all there, Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and yet they can do
+nothing for that poor unfortunate except to damn him. Is there any sense
+in that?
+</p>
+<p>
+Why should this be a period of probation? It says in the Bible, I
+believe, "Now is the accepted time." When does that mean? That means
+whenever the passage is pronounced. "Now is the accepted time." It will
+be the same to-morrow, will it not? And just as appropriate then
+as to-day, and if appropriate at any time, appropriate through all
+eternity.
+</p>
+<p>
+What I say is this: There is no world&mdash;there can be no world&mdash;in which
+every human being will not have the eternal opportunity of doing right.
+</p>
+<p>
+That is my objection to this Christian religion; and if the love
+of earth is not the love of heaven, if those we love here are to be
+separated from us there, then I want eternal sleep. Give me a good cool
+grave rather than the furnace of Jehovah's wrath. I pray the angel of
+the resurrection to let me sleep. Gabriel, do not blow! Let me alone!
+If, when the grave bursts, I am not to meet the faces that have been my
+sunshine in this life, let me sleep. Rather than that this doctrine of
+endless punishment should be true, I would gladly see the fabric of our
+civilization crumbling fall to unmeaning chaos and to formless dust,
+where oblivion broods and even memory forgets. I would rather that the
+blind Samson of some imprisoned force, released by chance, should so
+wreck and strand the mighty world that man in stress and strain of want
+and fear should shudderingly crawl back to savage and barbaric night. I
+would rather that every planet should in its orbit wheel a barren star!
+</p>
+<p>
+What I Believe.
+</p>
+<p>
+I think it is better to love your children than to love God, a thousand
+times better, because you can help them, and I am inclined to think that
+God can get along without you. Certainly we cannot help a being without
+body, parts, or passions!
+</p>
+<p>
+I believe in the religion of the family. I believe that the roof-tree is
+sacred, from the smallest fibre that feels the soft cool clasp of earth,
+to the topmost flower that spreads its bosom to the sun, and like a
+spendthrift gives its perfume to the air. The home where virtue dwells
+with love is like a lily with a heart of fire&mdash;the fairest flower in all
+the world. And I tell you God cannot afford to damn a man in the next
+world who has made a happy family in this. God cannot afford to cast
+over the battlements of heaven the man who has a happy home upon this
+earth. God cannot afford to be unpitying to a human heart capable of
+pity. God cannot clothe with fire the man who has clothed the naked
+here; and God cannot send to eternal pain a man who has done something
+toward improving the condition of his fellow-man. If he can, I had
+rather go to hell than to heaven and keep the company of such a god.
+</p>
+<p>
+Immortality.
+</p>
+<p>
+They tell me that the next terrible thing I do is to take away the hope
+of immortality! I do not, I would not, I could not. Immortality was
+first dreamed of by human love; and yet the church is going to take
+human love out of immortality. We love, therefore we wish to live. A
+loved one dies and we wish to meet again; and from the affection of the
+human heart grew the great oak of the hope of immortality. Around
+that oak has climbed the poisonous vines of superstition. Theologians,
+pretenders, soothsayers, parsons, priests, popes, bishops, have taken
+advantage of that. They have stood by graves and promised heaven. They
+have stood by graves and prophesied a future filled with pain. They have
+erected their toll-gates on the highway of life and have collected money
+from fear.
+</p>
+<p>
+Neither the Bible nor the church gave us the idea of immortality. The
+Old Testament tells us how we lost immortality, and it does not say a
+word about another world, from the first mistake in Genesis to the last
+curse in Malachi. There is not in the Old Testament a burial service.
+</p>
+<p>
+No man in the Old Testament stands by the dead and says, "We shall meet
+again." From the top of Sinai came no hope of another world.
+</p>
+<p>
+And when we get to the New Testament, what do we find? "They that are
+accounted worthy to obtain that world and the resurrection of the dead."
+As though some would be counted unworthy to obtain the resurrection of
+the dead. And in another place. "Seek for honor, glory, immortality."
+If you have it, why seek it? And in another place, "God, who alone hath
+immortality." Yet they tell us that we get our idea of immortality from
+the Bible. I deny it.
+</p>
+<p>
+I would not destroy the faintest ray of human hope, but I deny that
+we got our idea of immortality from the Bible. It existed long before
+Moses. We find it symbolized through all Egypt, through all India.
+Wherever man has lived he has made another world in which to meet the
+lost of this.
+</p>
+<p>
+The history of this belief we find in tombs and temples wrought and
+carved by those who wept and hoped. Above their dead they laid the
+symbols of another life.
+</p>
+<p>
+We do not know. We do not prophesy a life of pain. We leave the dead
+with Nature, the mother of us all. Under the bow of hope, under the
+seven-hued arch, let the dead sleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+If Christ was in fact God, why did he not plainly say there is another
+life? Why did he not tell us something about it? Why did he not turn
+the tear-stained hope of immortality into the glad knowledge of another
+life? Why did he go dumbly to his death and leave the world in darkness
+and in doubt? Why? Because he was a man and did not know.
+</p>
+<p>
+What consolation has the orthodox religion for the widow of the
+unbeliever, the widow of a good, brave, kind man? What can the orthodox
+minister say to relieve the bursting heart of that woman? What can he
+say to relieve the aching hearts of the orphans as they kneel by the
+grave of that father, if that father did not happen to be an orthodox
+Christian? What consolation have they? When a Christian loses a friend
+the tears spring from his eyes as quickly as from the eyes of others.
+Their tears are as bitter as ours. Why? The echoes of the words spoken
+eighteen hundred years ago are so low, and the sounds of the clods upon
+the coffin are so loud; the promises are so far away, and the dead are
+so near.
+</p>
+<p>
+We do not know, we cannot say, whether death is a wall or a door; the
+beginning or end of a day; the spreading of pinions to soar, or the
+folding forever of wings; the rise or the set of a sun, or an endless
+life that brings the rapture of love to everyone. A Fable.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is the fable of Orpheus and Eurydice. Eurydice had been captured
+and taken to the infernal regions, and Orpheus went after her, taking
+with him his harp and playing as he went. When he came to Pluto's realm
+he began to play, and Sysiphus, charmed by the music, sat down upon the
+stone that he had been heaving up the mountain's side for so many years,
+and which continually rolled back upon him; Ixion paused upon his wheel
+of fire; Tantalus ceased his vain efforts for water; the daughters of
+the Danaides left off trying to fill their sieves with water; Pluto
+smiled, and for the first time in the history of hell the cheeks of the
+Furies were wet with tears. The god relented, and said, "Eurydice may
+go with you, but you must not look back." So Orpheus again threaded the
+caverns, playing as he went, and as he reached the light he failed to
+hear the footsteps of Eurydice. He looked back, and in a moment she was
+gone. Again and again Orpheus sought his love. Again and again looked
+back.
+</p>
+<p>
+This fable gives the idea of the perpetual effort made by the human mind
+to rescue truth from the clutch of error.
+</p>
+<p>
+Some time Orpheus will not look back. Some day Eurydice will reach the
+blessed light, and at last there will fade from the memory of men the
+monsters of superstition.
+</p>
+<a name="link0005"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+<h2>
+ MYTH AND MIRACLE.
+</h2>
+<h3>
+ I.
+</h3>
+<p>
+HAPPINESS is the true end and aim of life. It is the task of
+intelligence to ascertain the conditions of happiness, and when found
+the truly wise will live in accordance with them. By happiness is meant
+not simply the joy of eating and drinking&mdash;the gratification of the
+appetite&mdash;but good, wellbeing, in the highest and noblest forms. The joy
+that springs from obligation discharged, from duty done, from generous
+acts, from being true to the ideal, from a perception of the beautiful
+in nature, art and conduct. The happiness that is born of and gives
+birth to poetry and music, that follows the gratification of the highest
+wants.
+</p>
+<p>
+Happiness is the result of all that is really right and sane.
+</p>
+<p>
+But there are many people who regard the desire to be happy as a very
+low and degrading ambition. These people call themselves spiritual. They
+pretend to care nothing for the pleasures of "sense." They hold this
+world, this life, in contempt. They do not want happiness in this
+world&mdash;but in another. Here, happiness degrades&mdash;there, it purifies and
+ennobles.
+</p>
+<p>
+These spiritual people have been known as prophets, apostles, augurs,
+hermits, monks, priests, popes, bishops and parsons. They are devout and
+useless. They do not cultivate the soil. They produce nothing. They
+live on the labor of others. They are pious and parasitic. They pray
+for others, if the others will work for them. They claim to have been
+selected by the Infinite to instruct and govern mankind. They are "meek"
+and arrogant, "long-suffering" and revengeful.
+</p>
+<p>
+They ever have been, now are, and always will be the enemies of liberty,
+of investigation and science. They are believers in the supernatural,
+the miraculous and the absurd. They have filled the world with hatred,
+bigotry and fear. In defence of their creeds they have committed every
+crime and practiced every cruelty.
+</p>
+<p>
+They denounce as worldly and sensual those who are gross enough to love
+wives and children, to build homes, to fell the forests, to navigate the
+seas, to cultivate the earth, to chisel statues, to paint pictures and
+fill the world with love and art.
+</p>
+<p>
+They have denounced and maligned the thinkers, the poets, the
+dramatists, the composers, the actors, the orators, the workers&mdash;those
+who have conquered the world for man.
+</p>
+<p>
+According to them this world is only the vestibule of the next, a kind
+of school, an ordeal, a place of probation. They have always insisted
+that this life should be spent in preparing for the next; that those
+who supported and obeyed the "spiritual guides"&mdash;the shepherds, would
+be rewarded with an eternity of joy, and that all others would suffer
+eternal pain.
+</p>
+<p>
+These spiritual people have always hated labor. They have added nothing
+to the wealth of the world. They have always lived on alms&mdash;on the labor
+of others. They have always been the enemies of innocent pleasure, and
+of human love.
+</p>
+<p>
+These spiritual people have produced a literature. The books they have
+written are called sacred. Our sacred books are called the Bible.
+The Hindoos have the Vedas and many others, the Persians the Zend
+Avesta&mdash;the Egyptians had the Book of the Dead&mdash;the Aztecs the Popol
+Vuh, and the Mohammedans have the Koran.
+</p>
+<p>
+These books, for the most part, treat of the unknowable. They describe
+gods and winged phantoms of the air. They give accounts of the origin
+of the universe, the creation of man and the worlds beyond this. They
+contain nothing of value. Millions and millions of people have wasted
+their lives studying these absurd and ignorant books.
+</p>
+<p>
+The "spiritual people" in each country claimed that their books had been
+written by inspired men&mdash;that God was the real author, and that all men
+and women who denied this would be, after death, tormented forever.
+</p>
+<p>
+And yet, the worldly people, the uninspired, the wicked, have produced a
+far greater literature than the spiritual and the inspired.
+</p>
+<p>
+Not all the sacred books of the world equal Shakespeare's "volume of
+the brain." A purer philosophy, grander, nobler, fell from the lips of
+Shakespeare's clowns than the Old Testament, or the New, contains.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Declaration of Independence is nobler far than all the utterances
+from Sinai's cloud and flame. "A Man's a Man for a' That," by Robert
+Burns, is better than anything the sacred books contain. For my part, I
+would rather hear Beethoven's Sixth Symphony than to read the five books
+of Moses. Give me the Sixth Symphony&mdash;this sound-wrought picture of
+the fields and woods, of flowering hedge and happy home, where thrushes
+build and swallows fly, and mothers sing to babes; this echo of the
+babbled lullaby of brooks that, dallying, wind and fall where meadows
+bare their daisied bosoms to the sun; this joyous mimicry of summer
+rain, the laugh of children, and the rhythmic rustle of the whispering
+leaves; this strophe of peasant life; this perfect poem of content and
+love.
+</p>
+<p>
+I would rather listen to Tristan and Isolde&mdash;that Mississippi of
+melody&mdash;where the great notes, winged like eagles, lift the soul above
+the cares and griefs of this weary world&mdash;than to all the orthodox
+sermons ever preached. I would rather look at the Venus de Milo than to
+read the Presbyterian creed.
+</p>
+<p>
+The spiritual have endeavored to civilize the world through fear and
+faith&mdash;by the promise of reward and the threat of pain in other worlds.
+They taught men to hate and persecute their fellow-men. In all ages they
+have appealed to force. During all the years they have practiced fraud.
+They have pretended to have influence with the gods&mdash;that their prayers
+gave rain, sunshine and harvest&mdash;that their curses brought pestilence
+and famine, and that their blessings filled the world with plenty. They
+have subsisted on the fears their falsehoods created. Like poisonous
+vines, they have lived on the oak of labor. They have praised charity,
+but they never gave. They have denounced revenge, but they never
+forgave.
+</p>
+<p>
+Whenever the spiritual have had power, art has died, learning has
+languished, science has been despised, liberty destroyed, the thinkers
+have been imprisoned, the intelligent and honest have been outcasts, and
+the brave have been murdered.
+</p>
+<p>
+The "spiritual" have been, are, and always will be the enemies of the
+human race.
+</p>
+<p>
+For all the blessings that we now enjoy&mdash;for progress in every form, for
+science and art&mdash;for all that has lengthened life, that has conquered
+disease, that has lessened pain, for raiment, roof and food, for music
+in its highest forms&mdash;for the poetry that has ennobled and enriched our
+lives&mdash;for the marvellous machines now working for the world&mdash;for all
+this we are indebted to the worldly&mdash;to those who turned their attention
+to the affairs of this life. They have been the only benefactors of our
+race.
+</p>
+<center>
+II.
+</center>
+<p>
+AND yet all of these religions&mdash;these "sacred books," these priests,
+have been naturally produced. From the dens and caves of savagery to
+the palaces of civilization men have traveled by the necessary paths and
+roads. Back of every step has been the efficient cause. In the history
+of the world there has been no chance, no interference from without,
+nothing miraculous. Everything in accordance with and produced by the
+facts in nature.
+</p>
+<p>
+We need not blame the hypocritical and cruel. They thought and acted as
+they were compelled to think and act.
+</p>
+<p>
+In all ages man has tried to account for himself and his surroundings.
+He did the best he could. He wondered why the water ran, why the trees
+grew, why the clouds floated, why the stars shone, why the sun and moon
+journeyed through the heavens. He was troubled about life and death,
+about darkness and dreams. The seas, the volcanoes, the lightning and
+thunder, the earthquake and cyclone, filled him with fear. Behind all
+life and growth and motion, and even inanimate things, he placed
+a spirit&mdash;an intelligent being&mdash;a fetich, a person, something like
+himself&mdash;a god, controlled by love and hate. To him causes and effects
+became gods&mdash;supernatural beings. The Dawn was a maiden, wondrously
+fair, the Sun, a warrior and lover; the Night, a serpent, a wolf&mdash;the
+Wind, a musician; Winter, a wild beast; Autumn, Proserpine gathering
+flowers.
+</p>
+<p>
+Poets were the makers of these myths. They were the first to account for
+what they saw and felt. The great multitude mistook these fancies
+for facts. Myths strangely alike, were produced by most nations, and
+gradually took possession of the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Sleeping Beauty, a myth of the year, has been found among most
+peoples. In this myth, the Earth was a maiden&mdash;the Sun was her lover,
+She had fallen asleep in winter. Her blood was still and her breath had
+gone. In the Spring the lover came, clasped her in his arms, covered her
+lips and cheeks with kisses. She was thrilled, her heart began to beat,
+she breathed, her blood flowed, and she awoke to love and joy. This myth
+has made the circuit of the globe.
+</p>
+<p>
+So, Red Riding-Hood is the history of a day. Little Red Riding-Hood&mdash;the
+morning, touched with red, goes to visit her kindred, a day that is
+past. She is attacked by the wolf of night and is rescued by the hunter,
+Apollo, who pierces the heart of the beast with an arrow of light.
+</p>
+<p>
+The beautiful myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is the story of the year.
+Eurydice has been captured and carried to the infernal world. Orpheus,
+playing upon his harp, goes after her. Such is the effect of his music
+when he reaches the realm of Pluto, the laughterless, that Tantalus
+ceases his efforts to slake his thirst. He listens and forgets his
+withered lips, the daughters of the Danaides cease their vain efforts
+to fill the sieve with water, Sisyphus sits down on the stone that he
+so often had heaved against the mountain's misty side, Ixion pauses
+upon his wheel of fire, even Pluto smiles, and for the first time in the
+history of hell the cheeks of the Furies are wet with tears.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Give me back Eurydice," cried Orpheus, and Pluto said: "Take her, but
+look not back." Orpheus led the way and Eurydice followed. Just as he
+reached the upper world, he missed her footsteps, turned, looked, and
+she vanished.
+</p>
+<p>
+And thus the summer comes, is lost, and comes again through all the
+years.
+</p>
+<p>
+So, our ancestors believed in the Garden of Eden, in the Golden Age, in
+the blessed time when all were good and pure&mdash;when nature satisfied the
+wants of all. The race, like the old man, has golden dreams of youth.
+The morning was filled with light and life and joy, and the evening is
+always sad. When the old man was young, girls were beautiful and men
+were honest. He remembers his Eden. And so the whole world has had its
+age of gold.
+</p>
+<p>
+Our fathers were believers in the Elysian Fields. They were in the far,
+far West. They saw them at the setting of the sun. They saw the floating
+isles of gold in sapphire seas; the templed mist with spires and domes
+of emerald and amethyst; the magic caverns of the clouds, resplendent
+with the rays of every gem. And as they looked, they thought the curtain
+had been drawn aside and that their eyes had for a moment feasted on the
+glories of another world.
+</p>
+<p>
+The myth of the Flood has also been universal. Finding shells of the
+seas on plain and mountain, and everywhere some traces of the waves,
+they thought the world had been submerged&mdash;that God in wrath had drowned
+the race, except a few his mercy saved.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Hindus say that Menu, a holy man, dipped from the Ganges some water,
+and in the basin saw a little fish. The fish begged him to throw him
+back into the river, and Menu, having pity, cast him back. The fish then
+told Menu that there was to be a flood&mdash;told him to build an ark, to
+take on board, people, animals and food, and that when the flood came,
+he, the fish, would save him. The saint did as he was told, the flood
+came, the fish returned. By that time he had grown to be a whale with
+a horn in his head. About this horn Menu fastened a rope, attached the
+other end to the ark, and the fish towed the boat across the raging
+waves to a mountain's top, where it rested until the waters subsided.
+The name of this wonderful fish was Matsaya.
+</p>
+<p>
+Many other nations told similar stories of floods and arks and the
+sending forth of doves.
+</p>
+<p>
+In all these myths and legends of the past we find philosophies and
+dreams and efforts, stained with tears, of great and tender souls who
+tried to pierce the mysteries of life and death, to answer the questions
+of the whence and whither, and who vainly sought with bits of shattered
+glass to make a mirror that would in very truth reflect the face and
+form of Nature's perfect self. These myths were born of hopes and fears,
+of tears and smiles, and they were touched and colored by all there is
+of joy and grief between the rosy dawn of birth and death's sad night.
+They clothed even the stars with passion, and gave to gods the faults
+and frailties of the sons of men. In them the winds and waves were
+music, and all the springs, the mountains, woods and perfumed dells were
+haunted by a thousand fairy forms. They thrilled the veins of Spring
+with tremulous desire, made tawny Summer's billowy breast the throne and
+home of love, filled Autumn's arms with sun-kissed grapes and gathered
+sheaves, and pictured Winter as a weak old king, who felt, like Lear,
+upon his withered face, Cordelia's tears.
+</p>
+<p>
+These myths, though false in fact, are beautiful and true in thought,
+and have for many ages and in countless ways enriched the heart and
+kindled thought.
+</p>
+<center>
+III.
+</center>
+<p>
+IN all probability the first religion was Sun-worship. Nothing could
+have been more natural. Light was life and warmth and love. The sun
+was the fireside of the world. The sun was the "all-seeing"&mdash;the "Sky
+Father." Darkness was grief and death, and in the shadows crawled the
+serpents of despair and fear.
+</p>
+<p>
+The sun was a great warrior, fighting the hosts of Night. Apollo was
+the sun, and he fought and conquered the serpent of Night. Agni, the
+generous, who loved the lowliest and visited the humblest, was the sun.
+He was the god of fire, and the crossed sticks that by friction leaped
+into flame were his emblem. It was said that, in spite of his goodness,
+he devoured his father and mother, the two pieces of wood being his
+parents. Baldur was the sun. He was in love with the Dawn&mdash;a maiden&mdash;he
+deserted her and traveled through the heavens alone. At the twilight
+they met, were reconciled, and the drops of dew were the tears of joy
+they shed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Chrishna was the sun. At his birth the Ganges thrilled from its source
+to the sea. All the trees, the dead as well as the living, burst into
+leaf and bud and flower.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hercules was a sun-god.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jonah the same, rescued from the fiends of Night and carried by the fish
+through the under world. Samson was a sun-god. His strength was in
+his hair&mdash;in his beams. He was shorn of his strength by Delilah, the
+shadow&mdash;the darkness. So, Osiris, Bacchus, Mithra, Hermes, Buddha,
+Quelzalcoatle, Prometheus, Zoroaster, Perseus, Codom Lao-tsze Fo-hi,
+Horus and Rameses were all sun-gods.
+</p>
+<p>
+All these gods had gods for fathers and all their mothers were virgins.
+</p>
+<p>
+The births of nearly all were announced by stars.
+</p>
+<p>
+When they were born there was celestial music&mdash;voices declared that a
+blessing had come upon the earth.
+</p>
+<p>
+When Buddha was born, the celestial choir sang: "This day is born
+for the good of men Buddha, and to dispel the darkness of their
+ignorance&mdash;to give joy and peace to the world."
+</p>
+<p>
+Chrishna was born in a cave, and protected by shepherds. Bacchus,
+Apollo, Mithra and Hermes were all born in caves. Buddha was born in an
+inn&mdash;according to some, under a tree.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tyrants sought to kill all of these gods when they were babes.
+</p>
+<p>
+When Chrishna was born, a tyrant killed the babes of the neighborhood.
+</p>
+<p>
+Buddha was the child of Maya, a virgin, in the kingdom of Madura. The
+king arrested Maya before the child was born, imprisoned her in a tower.
+During the night when the child was born, a great wind wrecked the
+tower, and carried mother and child to a place of safety. The next
+morning the king sent his soldiers to kill the babes, and when they came
+to Buddha and his mother, the babe appeared to be about twelve years of
+age, and the soldiers passed on.
+</p>
+<p>
+So Typhon sought in many ways to destroy the babe Horus. The king
+pursued the infant Zoroaster. Cadmus tried to kill the infant Bacchus.
+</p>
+<p>
+All of these gods were born on the 25th of December.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nearly all were worshiped by "wise men."
+</p>
+<p>
+All of them fasted for forty days.
+</p>
+<p>
+All met with a violent death.
+</p>
+<p>
+All rose from the dead.
+</p>
+<p>
+The history of these gods is the history of our Christ. He had a god for
+a father, a virgin for a mother. He was born in a manger, or a cave&mdash;on
+the 2 5th of December. His birth was announced by angels. He was
+worshiped by wise men, guided by a star. Herod, seeking his life, caused
+the death of many babes. Christ fasted for forty days. So, it rained for
+forty days before the flood&mdash;Moses was on Mt. Sinai for forty days. The
+temple had forty pillars and the Jews wandered in the wilderness for
+forty years. Christ met with a violent death, and rose from the dead.
+</p>
+<p>
+These things are not accidents&mdash;not coincidences. Christ was a sun-god.
+All religions have been born of sun-worship. To-day, when priests
+pray, they shut their eyes. This is a survival of sun-worship. When men
+worshiped the sun, they had to shut their eyes. Afterwards, to flatter
+idols, they pretended that the glory of their faces was more than the
+eyes could bear.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the religion of our day there is nothing original. All of its
+doctrines, its symbols and ceremonies are but the survivals of creeds
+that perished long ago. Baptism is far older than Christianity&mdash;than
+Judaism. The Hindus, the Egyptians, the Greeks and Romans had holy
+water. The eucharist was borrowed from the Pagans. Ceres was the goddess
+of the fields, Bacchus the god of the vine. At the harvest festival they
+made cakes of wheat and said: "These are the flesh of the goddess." They
+drank wine and cried: "This is the blood of our god."
+</p>
+<p>
+The cross has been a symbol for many thousands of years. It was a symbol
+of immortality&mdash;of life, of the god Agni, the form of the grave of a
+man. An ancient people of Italy, who lived long before the Romans, long
+before the Etruscans, so long that not one word of their language is
+known, used the cross, and beneath that emblem, carved on stone, their
+dead still rest. In the forests of Central America, ruined temples have
+been found, and on the walls the cross with the bleeding victim. On
+Babylonian cylinders is the impression of the cross. The Trinity came
+from Egypt. Osiris, Isis and Horus were worshiped thousands of years
+before our Father, Son and Holy Ghost were thought of. So the Tree of
+Life grew in India, China and among the Aztecs long before the Garden
+of Eden was planted. Long before our Bible was known, other nations
+had their sacred books, temples and altars, sacrifices, ceremonies and
+priests. The "Fall of Man" is far older than our religion, and so are
+the "Atonement" and the Scheme of Redemption.
+</p>
+<p>
+In our blessed religion there is nothing new, nothing original.
+</p>
+<p>
+Among the Egyptians the cross was a symbol of the life to come. And
+yet the first religion was, and all religions growing out of that, were
+naturally produced. Every brain was a field in which Nature sowed the
+seeds of thought. The rise and set of sun, the birth and death of day,
+the dawns of silver and the dusks of gold, the wonders of the rain and
+snow, the shroud of Winter and the many colored robe of Spring, the
+lonely moon with nightly loss or gain, the serpent lightning and the
+thunder's voice, the tempest's fury and the zephyr's sigh, the threat
+of storm and promise of the bow, cathedral clouds with dome and spire,
+earthquake and strange eclipse, frost and fire, the snow-crowned
+mountains with their tongues of flame, the fields of space sown thick
+with stars, the wandering comets hurrying past the fixed and sleepless
+sentinels of night, the marvels of the earth and air, the perfumed
+flower, the painted wing, the waveless pool that held within its magic
+breast the image of the startled face, the mimic echo that made a record
+in the viewless air, the pathless forests and the boundless seas,
+the ebb and flow of tides&mdash;the slow, deep breathing of some vague and
+monstrous life&mdash;the miracle of birth, the mystery of dream and death,
+and over all the silent and immeasurable dome. These were the warp and
+woof, and at the loom sat Love and Fancy, Hope and Fear, and wove the
+wondrous tapestries whereon we find pictures of gods and fairy lands
+and all the legends that were told when Nature rocked the cradle of the
+infant world.
+</p>
+<center>
+IV.
+</center>
+<p>
+WE must remember that there is a great difference. Myth is the
+idealization of a fact. A miracle is the counterfeit of a fact. There is
+the same difference between a myth and a miracle that there is between
+fiction and falsehood&mdash;between poetry and perjury. Miracles belong to
+the far past and the far future. The little line of sand, called the
+present, between the seas, belongs to common sense, to the natural.
+</p>
+<p>
+If you should tell a man that the dead were raised two thousand years
+ago, he would probably say: "Yes, I know that." If you should say that
+a hundred thousand years from now all the dead will be raised, he might
+say: "Probably they will." But if you should tell him that you saw a
+dead man raised and given life that day, he would likely ask the name of
+the insane asylum from which you had escaped.
+</p>
+<p>
+Our Bible is filled with accounts of miracles and yet they always fail
+to convince.
+</p>
+<p>
+Jehovah, according to the Scriptures, wrought hundreds of miracles for
+the benefit of the Jews. With many miracles he rescued them from
+slavery, guided them on their journey with a miraculous cloud by day and
+a miraculous pillar of fire by night&mdash;divided the sea that they might
+escape from the Egyptians, fed them with miraculous manna and
+supernatural quails, raised up hornets to attack their enemies, caused
+water to follow them wherever they wandered and in countless ways
+manifested his power, and yet the Jews cared nothing for these wonders.
+Not one of them seems to have been convinced that Jehovah had done
+anything for the people.
+</p>
+<p>
+In spite of all these miracles, the Jews had more confidence in a golden
+calf, made by themselves, than in Jehovah. The reason of this is, that
+the miracles were never performed, and never invented until hundreds of
+years after those, who had wandered over the desert of Sinai, were dust.
+</p>
+<p>
+The miracles attributed to Christ had no effect. No human being seems to
+have been convinced by them. Those whom he raised from the dead, cured
+of leprosy, or blindness, failed to become his followers. Not one of
+them appeared at his trial. Not one offered to bear witness of his
+miraculous power.
+</p>
+<p>
+To this there is but one explanation: The miracles were never performed.
+These stories were the growth of centuries. The casting out of devils,
+the changing of water into wine, feeding the multitude with a few loaves
+and fishes, resisting the devil, using a fish for a pocketbook, curing
+the blind with clay and saliva, stilling the tempest, walking on the
+water, the resurrection and ascension, happened and only happened, in
+the imaginations of men, who were not born until several generations
+after Christ was dead.
+</p>
+<p>
+In those days the world was filled with ignorance and fear. Miracles
+happened every day. The supernatural was expected. Gods were continually
+interfering with the affairs of this world. Everything was told
+except the truth, everything believed except the facts. History was a
+circumstantial account of occurrences that never occurred. Devils and
+goblins and ghosts were as plentiful as saints. The bones of the dead
+were used to cure the living. Cemeteries were hospitals and corpses were
+physicians. The saints practiced magic, the pious communed with God in
+dreams, and the course of events was changed by prayer. The credulous
+demanded the marvelous, the miraculous, and the priests supplied the
+demand. The sky was full of signs, omens of death and disaster, and the
+darkness thick with devils endeavoring to mislead and enslave the souls
+of men.
+</p>
+<p>
+Our fathers thought that everything had been made for man, and that
+demons and gods gave their entire attention to this world. The people
+believed that they were the sport and prey, the favorites or victims, of
+these phantoms. And they also believed that the Creator, the God, could
+be influenced by sacrifice, by prayers and ceremonies.
+</p>
+<p>
+This has been the mistake of the world. All the temples have been
+reared, all the altars erected, all the sacrifices offered, all the
+prayers uttered in vain. No god has interfered, no prayer has been
+answered, no help received from heaven. Nothing was created, nothing has
+happened for, or with reference to man. If not a human being lived,&mdash;if
+all Were in' their graves, the sun would continue to shine, the wheeling
+world would still pursue its flight, violets would spread their velvet
+bosoms to the day, the spendthrift roses give their perfume to the air,
+the climbing vines would hide with leaf and flower the fallen and the
+dead, the changing seasons would come-and go,-time would repeat the poem
+of the year, storms would wreck and whispering rains repair, Spring
+with deft and unseen hands would weave her robes of green, life with
+countless lips would seek fair Summer's swelling breasts, Autumn would
+reap the wealth of leaf and fruit and seed, Winter, the artist, would
+etch in frost the pines and ferns, while Wind and Wave and Fire, old
+architects, with ceaseless toil would still destroy and build, still
+wreck and change, and from the dust of death produce again the throb and
+breath of life.
+</p>
+<center>
+V.
+</center>
+<p>
+A FEW years ago a few men began to think, to investigate, to reason.
+They began to doubt the legends of the church, the miracles of the past.
+They began to notice what happened. They found that eclipses came at
+certain intervals and that their coming could be foretold. They became
+satisfied that the conduct of men had nothing to do with eclipses&mdash;and
+that the stars moved in their orbits unconscious of the sons of men.
+Galileo, Copernicus, and Kepler' destroyed the astronomy of the Bible,
+and demonstrated that the "inspired" story of creation could not be
+true, and that the church was as ignorant as the priests were dishonest.
+</p>
+<p>
+They found that the myth-makers were mistaken, that the sun and stars
+did not revolve about the earth, that the firmament was not solid,
+that the earth was not flat, and that the so-called philosophy of the
+theologians was absurd and idiotic.
+</p>
+<p>
+The stars became witnesses against the creeds of superstition.
+</p>
+<p>
+With the telescope the heavens were explored. The New Jerusalem could
+not be found.
+</p>
+<p>
+It had faded away.
+</p>
+<p>
+The church persecuted the astronomers and denied the facts. In
+February, in the year of grace sixteen hundred, the Catholic Church, the
+"Triumphant Beast," having in her hands, her paws, the keys of heaven
+and hell, accused Giordano Bruno of having declared that there were
+other worlds than this. He was tried, convicted, imprisoned in a dungeon
+for seven years. He was offered his liberty if he would recant. Bruno,
+the atheist, the philosopher, refused to stain his soul by denying what
+he believed to be true. He was taken from his cell by the priests, by
+those who loved their enemies, led to the place of execution. He was
+clad in a robe on which representations of devils had been painted&mdash;the
+devils that were soon to claim his soul. He was chained to a stake and
+about his body the wood was piled. Then priests, followers of Christ,
+lighted the fagots and flames consumed the greatest, the most perfect
+martyr, that ever suffered death.
+</p>
+<p>
+And yet the Italian agent of God, the infallible Leo XIII., only a few
+years ago, denounced Bruno, the "bravest of the brave," as a coward.
+</p>
+<p>
+The church murdered him, and the pope maligned his memory. Fagot and
+falsehood&mdash;two weapons of the church.
+</p>
+<p>
+A little while ago a few men began to examine rocks and soils,
+mountains, islands, reefs and seas. They noticed the valleys and deltas
+that had been formed by rivers, the many strata of lava that had been
+changed to soil, the vast deposits of metals and coal, the immense reefs
+that the coral had formed, the work of glaciers in the far past, the
+production of soil by the disintegration of rock, by the growth and
+decay of vegetation and the countless evidences of the countless ages
+through which the Earth has passed. The geologists read the history
+of the world written by wave and flame, attested by fossils, by the
+formation of rocks, by mountain ranges, by volcanoes, by rivers,
+islands, continents and seas.
+</p>
+<p>
+The geology of the Bible&mdash;of the "divinely inspired" church, of the
+"infallible" pope, was found to be utterly false and foolish.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Earth became a witness against the creeds of superstition.
+</p>
+<p>
+Then came Watt and Galvani with the miracles of steam and electricity,
+while countless inventors created the wonderful machines that do the
+work of the world. Investigation took the place of credulity. Men became
+dissatisfied with huts and rags, with crusts and creeds. They longed for
+the comforts, the luxuries of life. The intellectual horizon enlarged,
+new truths were discovered, old ideas were thrown aside, the brain was
+developed, the heart civilized and science was born. Humboldt, Laplace
+and hundreds of others explained the phenomena of nature, called
+attention to the ancient and venerable mistakes of sanctified ignorance
+and added to the sum of knowledge. Darwin and Haeckel gave their
+conclusions to the world. Men began to really think, the myths began
+to fade, the miracles to grow mean and small, and the great structure,
+known as theology, fell with a crash.
+</p>
+<p>
+Science denies the truth of myth and miracle, denies that human
+testimony can substantiate the miraculous, denies the existence of the
+supernatural. Science asserts the absolute, the unvarying uniformity
+of nature. Science insists that the present is the child of all the
+past,&mdash;that no power can change the past, and that nature is forever the
+same.
+</p>
+<p>
+The chemist has found that just so many atoms of one kind unite with
+just so many of another&mdash;no more, no less, always the same. No caprice
+in chemistry; no interference from without.
+</p>
+<p>
+The astronomers know that the planets remain in their orbits&mdash;that their
+forces are constant. They know that light is forever the same,
+always obeying the angle of incidence, traveling with the same
+rapidity,&mdash;casting the same shadow, under the same circumstances in
+all worlds. They know that the eclipses will occur at the times
+foretold&mdash;neither hastening nor delaying. They know that the attraction
+of gravitation is always the same, always in perfect proportion to mass
+and distance, neither weaker nor stronger, unvarying forever. They know
+that the facts in nature cannot be changed or destroyed, and that the
+qualities of all things are eternal.
+</p>
+<p>
+The men of science know that the atomic integrity of the metals is
+always the same, that each metal is true to its nature and that the
+particles cling to each other with the same tenacity,&mdash;the same force.
+They have demonstrated the persistence of force, that it is forever
+active, forever the same, and that it cannot be destroyed.
+</p>
+<p>
+These great truths have revolutionized the thought of the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Every art, every employment, all study, all experiment, the value of
+experience, of judgment, of hope, all rest on a belief in the uniformity
+of nature, on the eternal persistence and indestructibility of force.
+</p>
+<p>
+Break one link in the infinite chain of cause and effect, and the Master
+of Nature appears. The broken link would become the throne of a god.
+</p>
+<p>
+The uniformity of Nature denies the supernatural and demonstrates that
+there is no interference from without. There is no place, no office left
+for gods. Ghosts fade from the brain and the shrivelled deities fall
+palsied from their thrones.
+</p>
+<p>
+The uniformity of Nature renders a belief in "special providence"
+impossible. Prayer becomes a useless agitation of the air, and religious
+ceremonies are but motions, pantomimes, mindless and meaningless.
+</p>
+<p>
+The naked savage, worshiping a wooden god, is the religious equal of the
+robed pope kneeling before an image of the Virgin. The poor African who
+carries roots and bark to protect himself from evil spirits is on the
+same intellectual plane of one who sprinkles his body with "holy water."
+</p>
+<p>
+All the creeds of Christendom, all the religions of the heathen world
+are equally absurd. The cathedral, the mosque and the joss house have
+the same foundation. Their builders do not believe in the uniformity
+of Nature, and the business of all priests is to induce a so-called
+infinite being to change the order of events, to make causes barren of
+effects and to produce effects without, and in spite of, natural causes.
+They all believe in the unthinkable and pray for the impossible.
+</p>
+<p>
+Science teaches us that there was no creation and that there can be no
+destruction. The infinite denies creation and defies destruction. An
+infinite person, an "infinite being" is an infinite impossibility.
+To conceive of such a being is beyond the power of the mind. Yet all
+religions rest upon the supposed existence of the unthinkable, the
+inconceivable. And the priests of these religions pretend to be
+perfectly familiar with the designs, will, and wishes of this
+unthinkable, this inconceivable.
+</p>
+<p>
+Science teaches that that which really is has always been, that behind
+every effect is the efficient and necessary cause, that there is in the
+universe neither chance nor interference, and that energy is eternal.
+Day by day the authority of the theologian grows weaker and weaker. As
+the people become intelligent they care less for preachers and more for
+teachers. Their confidence in knowledge, in thought and investigation
+increases. They are eager to know the discoveries, the useful truths,
+the important facts made, ascertained and demonstrated by the explorers
+in the domain of the natural. They are no longer satisfied with the
+platitudes of the pulpit, and the assertions of theologians. They are
+losing confidence in the "sacred Scriptures" and in the protecting power
+and goodness of the supernatural. They are satisfied that credulity is
+not a virtue and that investigation is not a crime.
+</p>
+<p>
+Science is the providence of man, the worker of true miracles, of
+real wonders. Science has "read a little in Nature's infinite book of
+secrecy." Science knows the circuits of the winds, the courses of the
+stars. Fire is his servant, and lightning his messenger. Science freed
+the slaves and gave liberty to their masters. Science taught man to
+enchain, not his fellows, but the forces of nature, forces that have no
+backs to be scarred, no limbs for chains to chill and eat, forces that
+have no hearts to break, forces that never know fatigue, forces that
+shed no tears. Science is the great physician. His touch has given
+sight. He has made the lame to leap, the deaf to hear, the dumb to
+speak, and in the pallid face his hand has set the rose of health.
+Science has given his beloved sleep and wrapped in happy dreams the
+throbbing nerves of pain. Science is the destroyer of disease, builder
+of happy homes, the preserver of life and love. Science is the teacher
+of every virtue, the enemy of every vice. Science has given the true
+basis of morals, the origin and office of conscience, revealed the
+nature of obligation, of duty, of virtue in its highest, noblest forms,
+and has demonstrated that true happiness is the only possible good.
+Science has slain the monsters of superstition, and destroyed the
+authority of inspired books. Science has read the records of the rocks,
+records that priestcraft cannot change, and on his wondrous scales has
+weighed the atom and the star.
+</p>
+<p>
+Science has founded the only true religion. Science is the only Savior
+of this world.
+</p>
+<center>
+VI.
+</center>
+<p>
+FOR many ages religion has been tried. For countless centuries man
+has sought for help from heaven. To soften the heart of God, mothers
+sacrificed their babes! but the God did not hear, did not see, and did
+not help. Naked savages were devoured by beasts, bitten by serpents,
+killed by flood and frost. They prayed for help, but their God was
+deaf. They built temples and altars, employed priests and gave of their
+substance, but the volcano destroyed and the famine came. For the sake
+of God millions murdered their fellow-men, but the God was silent.
+Millions of martyrs died for the honor of God, but the God was blind. He
+did not see the flames, the scaffolds. He did not hear the prayers,
+the groans. Thousands of priests in the name of God tortured their
+fellow-men, stretched them on racks, crushed their feet in iron boots,
+tore out their tongues, extinguished their eyes. The victims implored
+the protection of God, but their god did not hear, did not see. He
+was deaf and blind. He was willing that his enemies should torture his
+friends.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nations tried to destroy each other for the sake of God, and the banner
+of the cross dripping with blood floated over a thousand fields&mdash;but the
+god was silent. He neither knew nor cared. Pestilence covered the earth
+with dead, the priests prayed, the altars were heaped with sacrifices,
+but the god did not see, did not hear. The miseries of the world did
+not lessen the joys of heaven. The clouds gave no rain, the famine came,
+withered babes with pallid lips sought the breasts of dead mothers,
+while starving fathers knelt and prayed, but the god did not hear.
+Through many centuries millions were enslaved, babes were sold from
+mothers, husbands from wives, backs were scarred with the lash. The
+poor wretches lifted their clasped hands toward heaven and prayed for
+justice, for liberty&mdash;but their god did not hear. He cared nothing for
+the sufferings of slaves, nothing for the tears of wives and mothers,
+nothing for the agony of men. He answered no prayers. He broke no
+chains. He freed no slaves.
+</p>
+<p>
+The miserable wretches appealed to the priests of God, but they were on
+the other side. They defended the masters. The slaves had nothing to
+give.
+</p>
+<p>
+During all these years it was claimed by the theologians that their
+God was governing the world, that he was infinitely powerful, wise and
+good&mdash;and that the "powers" of the earth were "ordained" by him. During
+all these years the church was the enemy of progress. It hated all
+physicians and told the people to rely on prayer, amulets and relics.
+It persecuted the astronomers and geologists, denounced them as infidels
+and atheists, as enemies of the human race. It poisoned the fountains of
+learning and insisted that teachers should distort the facts in nature
+to the end that they might harmonize with the "inspired" book. During
+all these years the church misdirected the energies of man, and when it
+reached the zenith of its power, darkness fell upon the world.
+</p>
+<p>
+In all nations and in all ages, religion has failed. The gods have never
+interfered. Nature has produced and destroyed without mercy and without
+hatred. She has cared no more for man than for the leaves of the forest,
+no more for nations than for hills of ants, nothing for right or wrong,
+for life or death, for pain or joy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Man through his intelligence must protect himself. He gets no help from
+any other world. The church has always claimed and still claims that
+it is the only reforming power, that it makes men honest, virtuous
+and merciful, that it prevents violence and war, and that without its
+influence the race would return to barbarism.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing can exceed the absurdity of these claims.
+</p>
+<p>
+If we wish to improve the condition of mankind&mdash;if we wish for nobler
+men and women we must develop the brain, we must encourage thought
+and investigation. We must convince the world that credulity is
+a vice,&mdash;that there is no virtue in believing without, or against
+evidence, and that the really honest man is true to himself. We must
+fill the world with intellectual light. We must applaud mental courage.
+We must educate the children, rescue them from ignorance and crime.
+School-houses are the real temples, and teachers are the true priests.
+We must supply the wants of the mind, satisfy the hunger of the brain.
+The people should be familiar with the great poets, with the tragedies
+of Æschylus, the dramas of Shakespeare, with the poetry of Homer and
+Virgil. Shakespeare should be taught in every school, found in every
+house.
+</p>
+<p>
+Through photography the whole world may become acquainted with the great
+statues, the great paintings, the victories of art. In this way the mind
+is enlarged, the sympathies quickened, the appreciation of the beautiful
+intensified, the taste refined and the character ennobled.
+</p>
+<p>
+The great novels should be read by all. All should be acquainted with
+the men and women of fiction, with the ideal world. The imagination
+should be developed, trained and strengthened. Superstition has degraded
+art and literature. It gave us winged monsters, scenes from heaven and
+hell, representations of gods and devils, sculptured the absurd and
+painted the impossible in the name of Art. It gave us the dreams of the
+insane, the lives of fanatical saints, accounts of miracles and wonders,
+of cures wrought by the bones of the dead, descriptions of Paradise,
+purgatory and the eternal dungeon, discourses on baptism, on changing
+wine and wafers into the the blood and flesh of God, on the
+forgiveness of sins by priests, on fore-ordination and accountability,
+predestination and free will, on devils, ghosts and goblins, the
+ministrations of guardian angels, the virtue of belief and the
+wickedness of doubt. And this was called "sacred literature."
+</p>
+<p>
+The church taught that those who believed, counted beads, mumbled
+prayers, and gave their time or property for the support of the gospel
+were the good and that all others were traveling the "broad road" to
+eternal pain. According to the theologians, the best people, the
+saints, were dead, and real beauty was to be found only in heaven. They
+denounced the joys of life as husks and filthy rags, declared that the
+world had been cursed, and that it brought forth thistles and thorns
+because of the sins of man. They regarded the earth as a kind of dock,
+running out into the sea of eternity,&mdash;on which the pious waited for the
+ship on which they were to be transported to another world.
+</p>
+<p>
+But the real poets and the real artists clung to this world, to this
+life. They described and represented things that exist. They expressed
+thoughts of the brain, emotions of the heart, the griefs and joys, the
+hope and despair of men and women. They found strength and beauty
+on every hand. They found their angels here. They were true to human
+experience and they touched the brain and heart of the world. In
+the tragedies and comedies of life, in the smiles and tears, in the
+ecstasies of love, in the darkness of death, in the dawn of hope, they
+found their materials for statue and song, for poem and painting. Poetry
+and art are the children of this world, born and nourished here. They
+are human. They have left the winged monsters of heaven, the malicious
+deformities of hell, and have turned their attention to men and women,
+to the things of this life.
+</p>
+<p>
+There is a poem called "The Skylark," by Shelley, graceful as the
+motions of flames. Another by Robert Burns, called "The Daisy,"
+exquisite, perfect as the pearl of virtue in the beautiful breast of a
+loving girl. Between this lark and this daisy, neither above nor below,
+you will find all the poetry of the world. Eloquence, sublimity, poetry
+and art must have the foundation of fact, of reality. Imaginary worlds
+and beings are nothing to us.
+</p>
+<p>
+At last the old creeds are becoming cruel and vulgar. We now have
+imagination enough to put ourselves in the place of others. Believers
+in hell, in eternal pain, like murderers, lack imagination. The murderer
+has not imagination enough to see his victim dead. He does not see the
+sightless and pathetic eyes. He does not see the widow's arms about the
+corpse, her lips upon the dead. He does not hear the sobs of children.
+He does not see the funeral. He does not hear the clods as they fall on
+the coffin. He does not feel the hand of arrest, the scene of the trial
+is not before him. He does not hear the awful verdict, the sentence of
+the court, the last words. He does not see the scaffold, nor feel about
+his throat the deadly noose.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us develop the brain, civilize the heart, and give wings to the
+imagination.
+</p>
+<center>
+VII.
+</center>
+<p>
+IF we abandon myth and miracle, if we discard the supernatural and the
+scheme of redemption, how are we to civilize the world?
+</p>
+<p>
+Is falsehood a reforming power? Is credulity the mother of virtue? Is
+there any saving grace in the impossible and absurd? Did wisdom perish
+with the dead? Must the civilized accept the religion of savages?
+</p>
+<p>
+If we wish to reform the world we must rely on truth, on fact, on
+reason. We must teach men that they are good or bad for themselves, that
+others cannot be good or bad for them, that they cannot be charged with
+the crimes, or credited with the virtues of others. We must discard the
+doctrine of the atonement, because it is absurd and immoral. We are not
+accountable for the sins of "Adam" and the virtues of Christ cannot be
+transferred to us. There can be no vicarious virtue, no vicarious vice.
+Why should the sufferings of the innocent atone for the crimes of the
+guilty. According to the doctrine of the atonement right and wrong do
+not exist in the nature of things, but in the arbitrary will of the
+Infinite. This is a subversion of all ideas of justice and mercy.
+</p>
+<p>
+An act is good, bad, or indifferent, according to its consequences. No
+power can step between an act and its natural consequences. A governor
+may pardon the criminal, but the natural consequences of the crime
+remain untouched. A god may forgive, but the consequences of the
+act forgiven, are still the same. We must teach the world that the
+consequences of a bad action cannot be avoided, that they are the
+invisible police, the unseen avengers, that accept no gifts, that hear
+no prayers, that no cunning can deceive.
+</p>
+<p>
+We do not need the forgiveness of gods, but of ourselves and the ones
+we injure. Restitution without repentance is far better than repentance
+without restitution.
+</p>
+<p>
+We know nothing of any god who rewards, punishes or forgives.
+</p>
+<p>
+We must teach our fellow-men that honor comes from within, not from
+without, that honor must be earned, that it is not alms, that even an
+infinite God could not enrich the beggar's palm with the gem of honor.
+</p>
+<p>
+Teach them also that happiness is the bud, the blossom and the fruit of
+good and noble actions, that it is not the gift of any god; that it must
+be earned by man&mdash;must be deserved.
+</p>
+<p>
+In this world of ours there is no magic, no sleight-of-hand, by which
+consequences can be made to punish the good and reward the bad.
+</p>
+<p>
+Teach men not to sacrifice this world for some other, but to turn their
+attention to the natural, to the affairs of this life. Teach them that
+theology has no known foundation, that it was born of ignorance and
+fear, that it has hardened the heart, polluted the imagination and made
+fiends of men.
+</p>
+<p>
+Theology is not for this world. It is no part of real religion. It has
+nothing to do with goodness or virtue. Religion does not consist in
+worshiping gods, but in adding to the well-being, the happiness of man.
+No human being knows whether any god exists or not, and all that has
+been said and written about "our god," or the gods of other people, has
+no known fact for a foundation. Words without thoughts, clouds without
+rain.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us put theology out of religion.
+</p>
+<p>
+Church and state should be absolutely divorced. Priests pretend that
+they have been selected by, and that they get their power from God.
+Kings occupy their thrones in accordance with the will of God. The pope
+declares that he is the agent, the deputy of God and that by right
+he should rule the world. All these pretentions and assertions are
+perfectly absurd and yet they are acknowledged and believed by millions.
+Get theology out of government and kings will descend from their
+thrones. All will admit that governments get their powers from the
+consent of the governed, and that all persons in office are the servants
+of the people. Get theology out of government and chaplains will be
+dismissed from Legislatures, from Congress, from the army and navy. Get
+theology out of government and people will be allowed to express their
+honest thoughts about "inspired books" and superstitious creeds. Get
+theology out of government and priests will no longer steal a seventh of
+our time. Get theology out of government and the clergy will soon
+take their places with augurs and soothsayers, with necromancers and
+medicine-men.
+</p>
+<p>
+Get theology out of education. Nothing should be taught in a school that
+somebody does not know.
+</p>
+<p>
+There are plenty of things to be learned about this world, about this
+life. Every child should be taught to think, and that it is dangerous
+not to think. Children should not be taught the absurdities, the
+cruelties and imbecilities of superstition. No church should be allowed
+to control the common school, and public money should not be divided
+between the hateful and warring sects. The public school should be
+secular, and only the useful should be taught. Many of our colleges
+are under the control of churches. Presidents and professors are mostly
+ministers of the gospel and the result is that all facts inconsistent
+with the creeds are either suppressed or denied. Only those professors
+who are naturally stupid or mentally dishonest can retain their places.
+Those who tell the truth, who teach the facts, are discharged.
+</p>
+<p>
+In every college truth should be a welcome guest. Every professor
+should be a finder, and every student a learner, of facts. Theology and
+intellectual dishonesty go together. The teacher of children should be
+intelligent and perfectly sincere.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us get theology out of education.
+</p>
+<p>
+The pious denounce the secular schools as godless. They should be. The
+sciences are all secular, all godless. Theology bears the same relation
+to science that the black art does to chemistry, that magic does to
+mathematics. It is something that cannot be taught, because it cannot
+be known. It has no foundation in fact. It neither produces, nor accords
+with, any image in the mind. It is not only unknowable but unthinkable.
+Through hundreds and thousands of generations men have been discussing,
+wrangling and fighting about theology. No advance has been made. The
+robed priest has only reached the point from which the savage tried to
+start.
+</p>
+<p>
+We know that theology always has and always will make enemies. It sows
+the seeds of hatred in families and nations. It is selfish, cruel,
+revengeful and malicious. It has heaven for the few and perdition
+for the many. We now know that credulity is not a virtue and that
+intellectual courage is. We must stop rewarding hypocrisy and bigotry.
+We must stop persecuting the thinkers, the investigators, the creators
+of light, the civilizers of the world.
+</p>
+<center>
+VIII.
+</center>
+<p>
+WILL the unknown, the mysteries of life and itiations of the mind,
+forever furnish food for superstition? Will the gods and ghosts perish
+or simply retreat before the advancing hosts of science, and continue to
+crouch and lurk just beyond the horizon of the known? Will darkness
+forever be the womb and mother of the supernatural?
+</p>
+<p>
+A little while ago priests told peasants that the New Jerusalem, the
+celestial city was just above the clouds. They said that its walls
+and domes and spires were just beyond the reach of human sight. The
+telescope was invented and those who looked at the wilderness of stars,
+saw no city, no throne. They said to the priests: "Where is your New
+Jerusalem?" The priests cheerfully and confidently replied. "It is just
+beyond where you see."
+</p>
+<p>
+At one time it was believed that a race of men existed "with their heads
+beneath their shoulders." Returning travelers from distant lands were
+asked about these wonderful people and all replied that they had not
+seen them. "Oh," said the believers in the monsters, "the men with heads
+beneath their shoulders live in a country that you did not visit." And
+so the monsters lived and flourished until all the world was known. We
+cannot know the universe. We cannot travel infinite distances, and so,
+somewhere in shoreless space there will always be room for gods and
+ghosts, for heavens and hells. And so it may be that superstition will
+live and linger until the world becomes intelligent enough to build upon
+the foundation of the known, to keep the imagination within the domain
+of the probable, and to believe in the natural&mdash;<i>until the supernatural
+shall have been demonstrated</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+Savages knew all about gods, about heavens and hells before they knew
+anything about the world in which they lived. They were perfectly
+familiar with evil spirits, with the invisible phantoms of the air, long
+before they had any true conception of themselves. So, they knew all
+about the origin and destiny of the human race. They were absolutely
+certain about the problems, the solution of which, philosophers know, is
+beyond the limitations of the mind. They understood astrology, but not
+astronomy, knew something of magic, but nothing about chemistry. They
+were wise only as to those things about which nothing can be known.
+</p>
+<p>
+The poor Indian believed in the "Great Spirit" and saw "design" on every
+hand.&mdash;Trees were made that he might have bows and arrows, wood for his
+fire and bark for his wigwam&mdash;rivers and lakes to give him fish, wild
+beasts and corn that he might have food, and the animals had skins that
+he might have clothes.
+</p>
+<p>
+Primitive peoples all reasoned in the same way, and modern Christians
+follow their example. They knew but little of the world and thought that
+it had been made expressly for the use of man. They did not know that it
+was mostly water, that vast regions were locked in eternal ice and that
+in most countries the conditions were unfavorable to human life. They
+knew nothing of the countless enemies of man that live unseen in water,
+food and air. Back of the little good they knew they put gods and back
+of the evil, devils. They thought it of the greatest importance to gain
+the good will of the gods, who alone could protect them from the devils.
+Those who worshiped these gods, offered sacrifices, and obeyed priests,
+were considered loyal members of the tribe or community, and those who
+refused to worship were regarded as enemies and traitors. The believers,
+in order to protect themselves from the anger of the gods, exiled or
+destroyed the infidels.
+</p>
+<p>
+Believing as they did, the course they pursued was natural. They
+not only wished to protect themselves from disease and death, from
+pestilence and famine in this world but the souls of their children from
+eternal pain in the next. Their gods were savages who demanded flattery
+and worship not only, but the acceptance of a certain creed. As long
+as Christians believe in eternal punishment they will be the enemies of
+those who investigate and contend for the authority of reason, of those
+who demand evidence, who care nothing for the unsupported assertions of
+the dead or the illogical inferences of the living.
+</p>
+<p>
+Science always has been, is, and always will be modest, thoughtful,
+truthful. It has but one object: The ascertainment of truth. It has no
+prejudice, no hatred. It is in the realm of the intellect and cannot
+be swayed or changed by passion. It does not try to please God, to gain
+heaven or avoid hell. It is for this world, for the use of man. It is
+perfectly candid. It does not try to conceal, but to reveal. It is the
+enemy of mystery, of pretence and canc. It does not ask people to be
+solemn, but sensible. It calls for and insists on the use of all the
+senses, of all the faculties of the mind. It does not pretend to be
+"holy" or "inspired." It courts investigation, criticism and even
+denial. It asks for the application of every test, for trial by every
+standard. It knows nothing of blasphemy and does not ask for the
+imprisonment of those who ignorantly or knowingly deny the truth. The
+good that springs from a knowledge of the truth is the only reward it
+offers, and the evil resulting from ignorance is the only punishment it
+threatens. Its effort is to reform the world through intelligence.
+</p>
+<p>
+On the other hand theology is, always has been, and always will be,
+ignorant, arrogant, puerile and cruel. When the church had power,
+hypocrisy was crowned and honesty imprisoned. Fraud wore the tiara and
+truth was a convict, Liberty was in chains, Theology has always sent the
+worst to heaven, the best to hell.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let me give you a scene from the day of judgment. Christ is upon
+his throne, his secretary by his side. A soul appears. This is what
+happens&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+"What is your name?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Torquemada.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Were you a Christian?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I was.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you endeavor to convert your fellow-men?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I did. I tried to convert them by persuasion, by preaching and praying
+and even by force.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What did you do?"
+</p>
+<p>
+I put the heretics in prison, in chains. I tore out their tongues, put
+out their eyes, crushed their bones, stretched them upon racks, roasted
+their feet, and if they remained obdurate I flayed them alive or burned
+them at the stake.
+</p>
+<p>
+"And did you do all this for my glory?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Yes, all for you. I wanted to save some, I wanted to protect the young
+and the weak minded.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you believe the Bible, the miracles&mdash;that I was God, that I was
+born of a virgin and kept money in the mouth of a fish?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Yes, I believed it all. My reason was the slave of faith.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joys of thy
+Lord. I was hungry and you gave me meat, naked and you clothed me.."
+Another soul arises.
+</p>
+<p>
+"What is your name?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Giordano Bruno.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Were you a Christian?"
+</p>
+<p>
+At one time I was, but for many years I was a philosopher, a seeker
+after truth.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you seek to convert your fellow-men?"
+</p>
+<p>
+Not to Christianity, but to the religion of reason. I tried to
+develop their minds, to free them from the slavery of ignorance and
+superstition. In my day the church taught the holiness of credulity&mdash;the
+virtue of unquestioning obedience, and in your name tortured and
+destroyed the intelligent and courageous. I did what I could to civilize
+the world, to make men tolerant and merciful, to soften the hearts
+of priests, and banish torture from the world. I expressed my honest
+thoughts and walked in the light of reason.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Did you believe the Bible, the miracles? Did you believe that I was
+God, that I was born of a virgin and that I suffered myself to be killed
+by the Jews to appease the wrath of God&mdash;that is, of myself&mdash;so that God
+could save the souls of a few?"
+</p>
+<p>
+"No, I did not. I did not believe that God was ever born into my world,
+or that God learned the trade of a carpenter, or that he 'increased
+in knowledge,' or that he cast devils out of men, or that his garments
+could cure diseases, or that he allowed himself to be murdered, and in
+the hour of death "forsook" himself. These things I did not and could
+not believe. But I did all the good I could. I enlightened the ignorant,
+comforted the afflicted, defended the innocent, divided even my poverty
+with the poor, and did the best I could to increase the happiness of my
+fellow-men. I was a soldier in the army of progress.&mdash;I was arrested,
+imprisoned, tried and convicted by the church&mdash;by the 'Triumphant
+Beast.' I was burned at the stake by ignorant and heartless priests and
+my ashes given to the winds."
+</p>
+<p>
+Then Christ, his face growing dark, his brows contracted with wrath,
+with uplifted hands, with half averted face, cries or rather shrieks:
+"Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devil
+and his angels."
+</p>
+<p>
+This is the justice of God&mdash;the mercy of the compassionate Christ.
+This is the belief, the dream and hope of the orthodox theologian&mdash;"the
+consummation devoutly to be wished."
+</p>
+<p>
+Theology makes God a monster, a tyrant, a savage; makes man a servant,
+a serf, a slave; promises heaven to the obedient, the meek, the
+frightened, and threatens the self-reliant with the tortures of hell.
+</p>
+<p>
+It denounces reason and appeals to the passions&mdash;to hope and fear.
+It does not answer the arguments of those who attack, but resorts to
+sophistry, falsehood and slander. It is incapable of advancement. It
+keeps its back to the sunrise, lives on myth and miracle, and guards
+with a misers care the "sacred" superstitions of the past.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the great struggle between the supernatural and the natural, between
+gods and men, we have passed midnight. All the forces of civilization,
+all the facts that have been found, all the truths that have been
+discovered are the allies of science&mdash;the enemies of the supernatural.
+</p>
+<p>
+We need no myths, no miracles, no gods, no devils.
+</p>
+<center>
+IX.
+</center>
+<p>
+FOR thousands of generations the myths have been taught and the miracles
+believed. Every mother was a missionary and told with loving care the
+falsehoods of "faith" to her babe. The poison of superstition was in the
+mother's milk. She was honest and affectionate and her character, her
+goodness, her smiles and kisses, entered into, mingled with, and became
+a part of the superstition that she taught. Fathers, friends and priests
+united with the mothers, and the children thus taught, became the
+teachers of their children and so the creeds were kept alive.
+</p>
+<p>
+Childhood loves the romantic, the mysterious, the monstrous. It lives in
+a world where cause has nothing to do with effect, where the fairy waves
+her hand and the prince appears. Where wish creates the thing desired
+and facts become the slaves of amulet and charm. The individual lives
+the life of the race, and the child is charmed with what the race in its
+infancy produced.
+</p>
+<p>
+There seems to be the same difference between mistakes and facts
+that there is between weeds and corn. Mistakes seem to take care of
+themselves, while the facts have to be guarded with all possible care.
+Falsehoods like weeds flourish without care. Weeds care nothing for soil
+or rain. They not only ask no help but they almost defy destruction. In
+the minds of children, superstitions, legends, myths and miracles find a
+natural, and in most instances a lasting home. Thrown aside in manhood,
+forgotten or denied, in old age they oft return and linger to the end.
+</p>
+<p>
+This in part accounts for the longevity of religious lies. Ministers
+with clasped hands and uplifted eyes ask the man who is thinking for
+himself how he can be wicked and heartless enough to attack the religion
+of his mother. This question is regarded by the clergy as unanswerable.
+Of course it is not to be asked by the missionaries, of the Hindus and
+the Chinese. The heathen are expected to desert the religion of their
+mothers as Christ and his apostles deserted the religion of their
+mothers. It is right for Jews and heathen, but not for thinkers and
+philosophers.
+</p>
+<p>
+A cannibal was about to kill a missionary for food.
+</p>
+<p>
+The missionary objected and asked the cannibal how he could be so cruel
+and wicked.
+</p>
+<p>
+The cannibal replied that he followed the example of his mother. "My
+mother," said he, "was good enough for me. Her religion is my religion.
+The last time I saw her she was sitting, propped up against a tree,
+eating cold missionary."
+</p>
+<p>
+But now the mother argument has mostly lost its force, and men of mind
+are satisfied with nothing less than truth.
+</p>
+<p>
+The phenomena of nature have been investigated and the supernatural has
+not been found. The myths have faded from the imagination, and of them
+nothing remains but the poetic. The miraculous has become the absurd,
+the impossible. Gods and phantoms have been driven from the earth and
+sky. We are living in a natural world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Our fathers, some of them, demanded the freedom of religion. We have
+taken another step. We demand the Religion of Freedom.
+</p>
+<p>
+O Liberty, thou art the god of my idolatry! Thou art the only deity
+that hateth bended knees. In thy vast and unwalled temple, beneath the
+roofless dome, star-gemmed and luminous with suns, thy worshipers stand
+erect! They do not cringe, or crawl, or bend their foreheads to the
+earth. The dust has never borne the impress of their lips. Upon thy
+altars mothers do not sacrifice their babes, nor men their rights. Thou
+askest naught from man except the things that good men hate&mdash;the whip,
+the chain, the dungeon key. Thou hast no popes, no priests, who stand
+between their fellow-men and thee. Thou carest not for foolish forms,
+or selfish prayers. At thy sacred shrine hypocrisy does not bow, virtue
+does not tremble, superstition's feeble tapers do not burn, but Reason
+holds aloft her inextinguishable torch whose holy light will one day
+flood the world.
+</p>
+
+
+<div style="height: 6em;"><br><br><br>
+
+
+<br />
+<table summary="" border="3" cellpadding="4">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td><big><big><a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38813/38813-h/38813-h.htm">
+TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR ALL 12 EBOOKS IN THIS SET</a></big></big></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+<br />
+
+<br><br><br></div>
+
+</body>
+</html>