Bible Myths and Their Parallels in Other Religions Being A Comparison of The Old and New Testament M
Bible Myths and Their Parallels in Other Religions Being A Comparison of The Old and New Testament M
Bible Myths and Their Parallels in Other Religions Being A Comparison of The Old and New Testament M
Religions, by T. W. Doane
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Author: T. W. Doane
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BIBLE MYTHS
AND THEIR
PARALLELS IN OTHER
RELIGIONS
BEING A COMPARISON OF THE
Old and New Testament Myths and Miracles
WITH
THOSE OF HEATHEN NATIONS OF ANTIQUITY
CONSIDERING ALSO
THEIR ORIGIN AND MEANING
BY T. W. DOANE
SEVENTH EDITION
"He who knows only one religion knows none."—PROF. MAX MULLER.
"The same thing which is now called CHRISTIAN RELIGION existed among the
Ancients. They have begun to call Christian the true religion which existed
before."—ST. AUGUSTINE.
"Our love for what is old, our reverence for what our fathers used, makes us
keep still in the church, and on the very altar cloths, symbols which would
excite the smile of an Oriental, and lead him to wonder why we send
missionaries to his land, while cherishing his faith in ours."—JAMES
BONWICK.
COPYRIGHT,
1882.
COPYRIGHT RENEWED,
1910
Printed in U.S.A.
INTRODUCTION.
The idea of publishing the work here presented did not suggest itself until a
large portion of the material it contains had been accumulated for the
private use and personal gratification of the author. In pursuing the study of
the Bible Myths, facts pertaining thereto, in a condensed form, seemed to be
greatly needed, and nowhere to be found. Widely scattered through
hundreds of ancient and modern volumes, most of the contents of this book
may indeed be found; but any previous attempt to trace exclusively the
myths and legends of the Old and New Testament to their origin, published
as a separate work, is not known to the writer of this. Many able writers
have shown our so-called Sacred Scriptures to be unhistorical, and have
pronounced them largely legendary, but have there left the matter, evidently
aware of the great extent of the subject lying beyond. As Thomas Scott
remarks, in his English Life of Jesus: "How these narratives (i. e., the New
Testament narratives), unhistorical as they have been shown to be, came
into existence, it is not our business to explain; and once again, at the end of
the task, as at the beginning and throughout, we must emphatically disclaim
the obligation." To pursue the subject from the point at which it is
abandoned by this and many other distinguished writers, has been the labor
of the author of this volume for a number of years. The result of this labor is
herewith submitted to the reader, but not without a painful consciousness of
its many imperfections.
The work naturally begins with the Eden myth, and is followed by a
consideration of the principal Old Testament legends, showing their
universality, origin and meaning. Next will be found the account of the birth
of Christ Jesus, with his history until the close of his life upon earth,
showing, in connection therewith, the universality of the myth of the
Virgin-born, Crucified and Resurrected Saviour.
Before showing the origin and meaning of the myth (which is done in
Chapter XXXIX.), we have considered the Miracles of Christ Jesus, the
Eucharist, Baptism, the Worship of the Virgin, Christian Symbols, the
Birthday of Christ Jesus, the Doctrine of the Trinity, Why Christianity
Prospered, and the Antiquity of Pagan Religions, besides making a
comparison of the legendary histories of Crishna and Jesus, and Buddha
and Jesus. The concluding chapter relates to the question, What do we
really know about Jesus?
In the words of Prof. Max Müller (The Science of Religion, p. 11): "A
comparison of all the religions of the world, in which none can claim a
privileged position, will no doubt seem to many dangerous and
reprehensible, because ignoring that peculiar reverence which everybody,
down to the mere fetish worshiper, feels for his own religion, and for his
own god. Let me say, then, at once, that I myself have shared these
misgivings, but that I have tried to overcome them, because I would not and
could not allow myself to surrender either what I hold to be the truth, or
what I hold still dearer than truth, the right of testing truth. Nor do I regret
it. I do not say that the Science of Religion is all gain. No, it entails losses,
and losses of many things which we hold dear. But this I will say, that, as
far as my humble judgment goes, it does not entail the loss of anything that
is essential to true religion, and that, if we strike the balance honestly, the
gain is immeasurably greater than the loss."
"All truth is safe, and nothing else is safe; and he who keeps back the truth,
or withholds it from men, from motives of expediency, is either a coward or
a criminal, or both."
But little beyond the arrangement of this work is claimed as original. Ideas,
phrases, and even whole paragraphs have been taken from the writings of
others, and in most, if not in all cases, acknowledged; but with the thought
in mind of the many hours of research this book may save the student in this
particular line of study; with the consciousness of having done for others
that which I would have been thankful to have found done for myself; and
more than all, with the hope that it may in some way help to hasten the day
when the mist of superstition shall be dispelled by the light of reason; with
all its defects, it is most cheerfully committed to its fate by the author.
BOSTON, MASS., November, 1882.
CONTENTS.
PART I.
PAGE
INTRODUCTION iii
LIST OF AUTHORITIES, AND BOOKS QUOTED FROM xi
CHAPTER I.
THE CREATION AND FALL OF MAN 1
CHAPTER II.
THE DELUGE 19
CHAPTER III.
THE TOWER OF BABEL 33
CHAPTER IV.
THE TRIAL OF ABRAHAM'S FAITH 36
CHAPTER V.
JACOB'S VISION OF THE LADDER 42
CHAPTER VI.
THE EXODUS FROM EGYPT 48
CHAPTER VII.
RECEIVING THE TEN COMMANDMENTS 58
CHAPTER VIII.
SAMSON AND HIS EXPLOITS 62
CHAPTER IX.
JONAH SWALLOWED BY A BIG FISH 77
CHAPTER X.
CIRCUMCISION 85
CHAPTER XI.
CONCLUSION OF PART FIRST 88
PART II.
CHAPTER XII.
THE MIRACULOUS BIRTH OF CHRIST JESUS 111
CHAPTER XIII.
THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM 140
CHAPTER XIV.
THE SONG OF THE HEAVENLY HOST 147
CHAPTER XV.
THE DIVINE CHILD RECOGNIZED, AND PRESENTED WITH GIFTS 150
CHAPTER XVI.
THE BIRTH-PLACE OF CHRIST JESUS 154
CHAPTER XVII.
THE GENEALOGY OF CHRIST JESUS 160
CHAPTER XVIII.
THE SLAUGHTER OF THE INNOCENTS 165
CHAPTER XIX.
THE TEMPTATION, AND FAST OF FORTY DAYS 175
CHAPTER XX.
THE CRUCIFIXION OF CHRIST JESUS 181
CHAPTER XXI.
THE DARKNESS AT THE CRUCIFIXION 206
CHAPTER XXII.
"HE DESCENDED INTO HELL." 211
CHAPTER XXIII.
THE RESURRECTION AND ASCENSION OF CHRIST JESUS 215
CHAPTER XXIV.
THE SECOND COMING OF CHRIST JESUS, AND THE MILLENNIUM 233
CHAPTER XXV.
CHRIST JESUS AS JUDGE OF THE DEAD 244
CHAPTER XXVI.
CHRIST JESUS AS CREATOR, AND ALPHA AND OMEGA 247
CHAPTER XXVII.
THE MIRACLES OF CHRIST JESUS, AND THE PRIMITIVE
252
CHRISTIANS
CHAPTER XXVIII.
CHRIST CRISHNA AND CHRIST JESUS 278
CHAPTER XXIX.
CHRIST BUDDHA AND CHRIST JESUS 289
CHAPTER XXX.
THE EUCHARIST OR LORD'S SUPPER 305
CHAPTER XXXI.
BAPTISM 316
CHAPTER XXXII.
THE WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN MOTHER 326
CHAPTER XXXIII.
CHRISTIAN SYMBOLS 339
CHAPTER XXXIV.
THE BIRTH-DAY OF CHRIST JESUS 359
CHAPTER XXXV.
THE TRINITY 368
CHAPTER XXXVI.
PAGANISM IN CHRISTIANITY 384
CHAPTER XXXVII.
WHY CHRISTIANITY PROSPERED 419
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
THE ANTIQUITY OF PAGAN RELIGIONS 450
CHAPTER XXXIX.
EXPLANATION 466
CHAPTER XL.
CONCLUSION 508
APPENDIX 531
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Fig. 1 Fig. 10 Fig. 19 Fig. 28 Fig. 37
Fig. 2 Fig. 11 Fig. 20 Fig. 29 Fig. 38
Fig. 3 Fig. 12 Fig. 21 Fig. 30 Fig. 39
Fig. 4 Fig. 13 Fig. 22 Fig. 31 Fig. 40
Fig. 5 Fig. 14 Fig. 23 Fig. 32 Fig. 41
Fig. 6 Fig. 15 Fig. 24 Fig. 33 Fig. 42
Fig. 7 Fig. 16 Fig. 25 Fig. 34 Fig. 43
Fig. 8 Fig. 17 Fig. 26 Fig. 35
Fig. 9 Fig. 18 Fig. 27 Fig. 36
LIST
OF
AUTHORS AND BOOKS QUOTED
IN THIS WORK.
The Old Testament commences with one of its most interesting myths, that
of the Creation and Fall of Man. The story is to be found in the first three
chapters of Genesis, the substance of which is as follows:
After God created the "Heavens" and the "Earth," he said: "Let there be
light, and there was light," and after calling the light Day, and the darkness
Night, the first day's work was ended.
God then made the "Firmament," which completed the second day's work.
Then God caused the dry land to appear, which he called "Earth," and the
waters he called "Seas." After this the earth was made to bring forth grass,
trees, &c., which completed the third day's work.
The next things God created were the "Sun,"[1:1] "Moon" and "Stars," and
after he had set them in the Firmament, the fourth day's work was ended.
[2:1]
After these, God created great "whales," and other creatures which inhabit
the water, also "winged fowls." This brought the fifth day to a close.
The work of creation was finally completed on the sixth day,[2:2] when God
made "beasts" of every kind, "cattle," "creeping things," and lastly "man,"
whom he created "male and female," in his own image.[2:3]
"Thus the heavens and the earth were finished, and all the host of them.
And on the seventh[2:4] 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."
After this information, which concludes at the third verse of Genesis ii.,
strange though it may appear, another account of the Creation commences,
which is altogether different from the one we have just related. This account
commences thus:
"These are the generations of the heavens and the earth when they were
created, in the day (not days) that the Lord God made the earth and the
heavens."
It then goes on to say that "the Lord God formed man of the dust of the
ground,"[2:5] which appears to be the first thing he made. After planting a
garden eastward in Eden,[2:6] the Lord God put the man therein, "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,[2:7] 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." These four rivers were called, first Pison, second Gihon, third
Hiddekel, and the fourth Euphrates.[3:1]
After the "Lord God" had made the "Tree of Life," and the "Tree of
Knowledge," he said unto the man:
"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." Then the Lord God, thinking that it
would not be well for man to live alone, formed—out of the ground
—"every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them
unto Adam to see what he would call them, and whatever Adam called
every living creature, that was the name thereof."
After Adam had given names to "all cattle, and to the fowls of the air, and
to every beast of the field," "the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon
Adam, and he slept, and he (the Lord God) took one of his (Adam's) ribs,
and closed up the flesh instead thereof."
"And of the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a
woman, and brought her unto Adam." "And they were both naked, the man
and his wife, and they were not ashamed."
After this everything is supposed to have gone harmoniously, until a serpent
appeared before the woman[3:2]—who was afterwards called Eve—and said
to her:
"Hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?"
The woman, answering the serpent, said:
"We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden: but of the fruit of the tree
which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, lest
ye die."
Whereupon the serpent said to her:
"Ye shall not surely die" (which, according to the narrative, was the truth).
He then told her that, upon eating the fruit, their eyes would be opened, and
that they would be as gods, knowing good from evil.
The woman then looked upon the tree, and as the fruit was tempting, "she
took of the fruit, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband, and he did
eat." The result was not death (as the Lord God had told them), but, as the
serpent had said, "the eyes of both were opened, and they knew they were
naked, and they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons."
Towards evening (i. e., "in the cool of the day"), Adam and his wife "heard
the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden," and being afraid, they hid
themselves among the trees of the garden. The Lord God not finding Adam
and his wife, said: "Where art thou?" Adam answering, said: "I heard thy
voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked, and I hid
myself."
The "Lord God" then told Adam that he had eaten of the tree which he had
commanded him not to eat, whereupon Adam said: "The woman whom
thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree and I did eat."
When the "Lord God" spoke to the woman concerning her transgression,
she blamed the serpent, which she said "beguiled" her. This sealed the
serpent's fate, for the "Lord God" cursed him and said:
"Upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy
life."[4:1]
Unto the woman the "Lord God" said:
"I will greatly multiply thy sorrow, and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt
bring forth children, and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall
rule over thee."
Unto Adam he said:
"Because thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of
the tree, of which I commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it: cursed
is the ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy
life. Thorns also, and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat
the herb of the field. In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou
return unto the ground, for out of it wast thou taken; for dust thou art, and
unto dust shalt thou return."
The "Lord God" then made coats of skin for Adam and his wife, with which
he clothed them, after which he said:
"Behold, the man is become as one of us,[5:1] 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" (he must be sent forth from Eden).
"So he (the Lord God) drove out the man (and the woman); and he placed at
the east of the garden of Eden, Cherubims, and a flaming sword which
turned every way, to keep the way of the Tree of Life."
Thus ends the narrative.
Before proceeding to show from whence this legend, or legends, had their
origin, we will notice a feature which is very prominent in the narrative, and
which cannot escape the eye of an observing reader, i. e., the two different
and contradictory accounts of the creation.
The first of these commences at the first verse of chapter first, and ends at
the third verse of chapter second. The second account commences at the
fourth verse of chapter second, and continues to the end of the chapter.
In speaking of these contradictory accounts of the Creation, Dean Stanley
says:
"It is now clear to diligent students of the Bible, that the first and second
chapters of Genesis contain two narratives of the Creation, side by side,
differing from each other in most every particular of time and place and
order."[5:2]
Bishop Colenso, in his very learned work on the Pentateuch, speaking on
this subject, says:
"The following are the most noticeable points of difference between the two
cosmogonies:
"1. In the first, the earth emerges from the waters and is, therefore,
saturated with moisture.[5:3] In the second, the 'whole face of the ground'
requires to be moistened.[5:4]
"2. In the first, the birds and the beasts are created before man.[6:1] In the
second, man is created before the birds and the beasts.[6:2]
"3. In the first, 'all fowls that fly' are made out of the waters.[6:3] In the
second 'the fowls of the air' are made out of the ground.[6:4]
"4. In the first, man is created in the image of God.[6:5] In the second, man is
made of the dust of the ground, and merely animated with the breath of life;
and it is only after his eating the forbidden fruit that 'the Lord God said,
Behold, the man has become as one of us, to know good and evil.'[6:6]
"5. In the first, man is made lord of the whole earth.[6:7] In the second, he is
merely placed in the garden of Eden, 'to dress it and to keep it.'[6:8]
"6. In the first, the man and the woman are created together, as the closing
and completing work of the whole creation,—created also, as is evidently
implied, in the same kind of way, to be the complement of one another, and,
thus created, they are blessed together.[6:9]
"In the second, the beasts and birds are created between the man and the
woman. First, the man is made of the dust of the ground; he is placed by
himself in the garden, charged with a solemn command, and threatened with
a curse if he breaks it; then the beasts and birds are made, and the man
gives names to them, and, lastly, after all this, the woman is made out of one
of his ribs, but merely as a helpmate for the man.[6:10]
"The fact is, that the second account of the Creation,[6:11] together with the
story of the Fall,[6:12] is manifestly composed by a different writer
altogether from him who wrote the first.[6:13]
"This is suggested at once by the circumstance that, throughout the first
narrative, the Creator is always spoken of by the name Elohim (God),
whereas, throughout the second account, as well as the story of the Fall, he
is always called Jehovah Elohim (Lord God), except when the writer seems
to abstain, for some reason, from placing the name Jehovah in the mouth of
the serpent.[6:14] This accounts naturally for the above contradictions. It
would appear that, for some reason, the productions of two pens have been
here united, without any reference to their inconsistencies."[6:15]
Dr. Kalisch, who does his utmost to maintain—as far as his knowledge of
the truth will allow—the general historical veracity of this narrative, after
speaking of the first account of the Creation, says:
"But now the narrative seems not only to pause, but to go backward. The
grand and powerful climax seems at once broken off, and a languid
repetition appears to follow. Another cosmogony is introduced, which, to
complete the perplexity, is, in many important features, in direct
contradiction to the former.
"It would be dishonesty to conceal these difficulties. It would be
weakmindedness and cowardice. It would be flight instead of combat. It
would be an ignoble retreat, instead of victory. We confess there is an
apparent dissonance."[6:16]
The idea that the Fall of the human race is connected with agriculture is
found to be also often represented in the legends of the East African
negroes, especially in the Calabar legend of the Creation, which presents
many interesting points of comparison with the biblical story of the Fall.
The first human pair are called by a bell at meal-times to Abasi (the Calabar
God), in heaven; and in place of the forbidden tree of Genesis are put
agriculture and propagation, which Abasi strictly denies to the first pair.
The Fall is denoted by the transgression of both these commands, especially
through the use of implements of tillage, to which the woman is tempted by
a female friend who is given to her. From that moment man fell and became
mortal, so that, as the Bible story has it, he can eat bread only in the sweat
of his face. There agriculture is a curse, a fall from a more perfect stage to a
lower and imperfect one.[11:1]
Dr. Kalisch, writing of the Garden of Eden, says:
"The Paradise is no exclusive feature of the early history of the Hebrews.
Most of the ancient nations have similar narratives about a happy abode,
which care does not approach, and which re-echoes with the sounds of the
purest bliss."[11:2]
The Persians supposed that a region of bliss and delight called Heden, more
beautiful than all the rest of the world, traversed by a mighty river, was the
original abode of the first men, before they were tempted by the evil spirit
in the form of a serpent, to partake of the fruit of the forbidden tree Hôm.
[11:3]
The prose Edda, of the ancient Scandinavians, speaks of the "Golden Age"
when all was pure and harmonious. This age lasted until the arrival of
woman out of Jotunheim—the region of the giants, a sort of "land of
Nod"—who corrupted it.[15:4]
In the annals of the Mexicans, the first woman, whose name was translated
by the old Spanish writers, "the woman of our flesh," is always represented
as accompanied by a great male serpent, who seems to be talking to her.
Some writers believe this to be the tempter speaking to the primeval
mother, and others that it is intended to represent the father of the human
race. This Mexican Eve is represented on their monuments as the mother of
twins.[15:5]
Mr. Franklin, in his "Buddhists and Jeynes," says:
"A striking instance is recorded by the very intelligent traveler (Wilson),
regarding a representation of the Fall of our first parents, sculptured in the
magnificent temple of Ipsambul, in Nubia. He says that a very exact
representation of Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden is to be seen in that
cave, and that the serpent climbing round the tree is especially delineated,
and the whole subject of the tempting of our first parents most accurately
exhibited."[16:1]
Nearly the same thing was found by Colonel Coombs in the South of India.
Colonel Tod, in his "Hist. Rajapoutana," says:
"A drawing, brought by Colonel Coombs from a sculptured column in a
cave-temple in the South of India, represents the first pair at the foot of the
ambrosial tree, and a serpent entwined among the heavily-laden boughs,
presenting to them some of the fruit from his mouth. The tempter appears to
be at that part of his discourse, when
FOOTNOTES:
[1:1] The idea that the sun, moon and stars were set in the firmament was entertained by
most nations of antiquity, but, as strange as it may appear, Pythagoras, the Grecian
philosopher, who flourished from 540 to 510 B. C.—as well as other Grecian philosophers
—taught that the sun was placed in the centre of the universe, with the planets roving
round it in a circle, thus making day and night. (See Knight's Ancient Art and Mythology,
p. 59, and note.) The Buddhists anciently taught that the universe is composed of limitless
systems or worlds, called sakwalas.
They are scattered throughout space, and each sakwala has a sun and moon. (See Hardy:
Buddhist Legends, pp. 80 and 87.)
[2:1] Origen, a Christian Father who flourished about A. D. 230, says: "What man of sense
will agree with the statement that the first, second, and third days, in which the evening is
named and the morning, were without sun, moon and stars?" (Quoted in Mysteries of
Adoni, p. 176.)
[2:2] "The geologist reckons not by days or by years; the whole six thousand years, which
were until lately looked on as the sum of the world's age, are to him but as a unit of
measurement in the long succession of past ages." (Sir John Lubbock.)
"It is now certain that the vast epochs of time demanded by scientific observation are
incompatible both with the six thousand years of the Mosaic chronology, and the six days
of the Mosaic creation." (Dean Stanley.)
[2:3] "Let us make man in our own likeness," was said by Ormuzd, the Persian God of
Gods, to his WORD. (See Bunsen's Angel Messiah, p. 104.)
[2:4] The number SEVEN was sacred among almost every nation of antiquity. (See ch. ii.)
[2:5] According to Grecian Mythology, the God Prometheus created men, in the image of
the gods, out of clay (see Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 26; and Goldzhier: Hebrew
Myths, p. 373), and the God Hephaistos was commanded by Zeus to mold of clay the
figure of a maiden, into which Athênê, the dawn-goddess, breathed the breath of life. This
is Pandora—the gift of all the gods—who is presented to Epimetheus. (See Cox: Aryan
Myths, vol. ii., p. 208.)
[2:6] "What man is found such an idiot as to suppose that God planted trees in Paradise, in
Eden, like a husbandman." (Origen: quoted in Mysteries of Adoni, p. 176.) "There is no
way of preserving the literal sense of the first chapter of Genesis, without impiety, and
attributing things to God unworthy of him." (St. Augustine.)
[2:7] "The records about the 'Tree of Life' are the sublimest proofs of the unity and
continuity of tradition, and of its Eastern origin. The earliest records of the most ancient
Oriental tradition refer to a 'Tree of Life,' which was guarded by spirits. The juice of the
fruit of this sacred tree, like the tree itself, was called Sôma in Sanscrit, and Haôma in
Zend; it was revered as the life preserving essence." (Bunsen: Keys of St. Peter, p. 414)
[3:1] "According to the Persian account of Paradise, four great rivers came from Mount
Alborj; two are in the North, and two go towards the South. The river Arduisir nourishes
the Tree of Immortality, the Holy Hom." (Stiefelhagen: quoted in Mysteries of Adoni p.
149.)
"According to the Chinese myth, the waters of the Garden of Paradise issue from the
fountain of immortality, which divides itself into four rivers." (Ibid., p. 150, and Prog.
Relig. Ideas, vol. i., p. 210.) The Hindoos call their Mount Meru the Paradise, out of which
went four rivers. (Anacalypsis, vol. i., p. 357.)
[3:2] According to Persian legend, Arimanes, the Evil Spirit, by eating a certain kind of
fruit, transformed himself into a serpent, and went gliding about on the earth to tempt
human beings. His Devs entered the bodies of men and produced all manner of diseases.
They entered into their minds, and incited them to sensuality, falsehood, slander and
revenge. Into every department of the world they introduced discord and death.
[4:1] Inasmuch as the physical construction of the serpent never could admit of its moving
in any other way, and inasmuch as it does not eat dust, does not the narrator of this myth
reflect unpleasantly upon the wisdom of such a God as Jehovah is claimed to be, as well as
upon the ineffectualness of his first curse?
[5:1] "Our writer unmistakably recognizes the existence of many gods; for he makes
Yahweh say: 'See, the man has become as ONE OF US, knowing good and evil;' and so he
evidently implies the existence of other similar beings, to whom he attributes immortality
and insight into the difference between good and evil. Yahweh, then, was, in his eyes, the
god of gods, indeed, but not the only god." (Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 51.)
[5:2] In his memorial sermon, preached in Westminster Abbey, after the funeral of Sir
Charles Lyell. He further said in this address:—
"It is well known that when the science of geology first arose, it was involved in endless
schemes of attempted reconciliation with the letter of Scripture. There was, there are
perhaps still, two modes of reconciliation of Scripture and science, which have been each
in their day attempted, and each have totally and deservedly failed. One is the endeavor to
wrest the words of the Bible from their natural meaning, and force it to speak the language
of science." After speaking of the earliest known example, which was the interpolation of
the word "not" in Leviticus xi. 6, he continues: "This is the earliest instance of the
falsification of Scripture to meet the demands of science; and it has been followed in later
times by the various efforts which have been made to twist the earlier chapters of the book
of Genesis into apparent agreement with the last results of geology—representing days not
to be days, morning and evening not to be morning and evening, the deluge not to be the
deluge, and the ark not to be the ark."
[5:3] Gen. i. 9, 10.
[5:4] Gen. ii. 6.
[6:1] Gen. i. 20, 24, 26.
[6:2] Gen. ii. 7, 9.
[6:3] Gen. i. 20.
[6:4] Gen. ii. 19.
[6:5] Gen. i. 27.
[6:6] Gen. ii. 7: iii. 22.
[6:7] Gen. i. 28.
[6:8] Gen. ii. 8, 15.
[6:9] Gen. i. 28.
[6:10] Gen. ii. 7, 8, 15, 22.
[6:11] Gen. ii. 4-25.
[6:12] Gen. iii.
[6:13] Gen. i. 1-ii. 8.
[6:14] Gen. iii. 1, 3, 5.
[6:15] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. ii. pp. 171-173.
[6:16] Com. on Old Test. vol. i. p. 59.
[7:1] The Relig. of Israel, p. 186.
[7:2] Von Bohlen: Intro. to Gen. vol. ii. p. 4.
[7:3] Lenormant: Beginning of Hist. vol. i. p. 6.
[7:4] See Ibid. p. 64; and Legends of the Patriarchs, p. 31.
[8:1] "The Etruscans believed in a creation of six thousand years, and in the successive
production of different beings, the last of which was man." (Dunlap: Spirit Hist. p. 357.)
[8:2] Quoted by Bishop Colenso: The Pentateuch Examined, vol. iv. p. 115.
[8:3] Intro. to Genesis, vol. ii. p. 4.
[8:4] Com. on Old Test. vol. i. p. 63.
[8:5] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. iv. p. 158.
[9:1] See Chapter xi.
[9:2] Mr. Smith says, "Whatever the primitive account may have been from which the
earlier part of the Book of Genesis was copied, it is evident that the brief narration given in
the Pentateuch omits a number of incidents and explanations—for instance, as to the origin
of evil, the fall of the angels, the wickedness of the serpent, &c. Such points as these are
included in the cuneiform narrative." (Smith: Chaldean Account of Genesis, pp. 13, 14.)
[9:3] Smith: Chaldean Account of Genesis, p. 88.
[9:4] Ibid. p. 89.
[9:5] Ibid. p. 91.
[10:1] Murray's Mythology, p. 208.
[10:2] Kalisch's Com. vol. i. p. 64.
[11:1] Goldziher: Hebrew Mythology, p. 87.
[11:2] Com. on the Old Test. vol. i. p. 70.
[11:3] Ibid.
[11:4] Ibid. "The fruit, and sap of this 'Tree of Life' begat immortality." (Bonwick: Egyptian
Belief, p. 240.)
[11:5] See Montfaucon: L'Antiquité Expliquée, vol. i. p. 211, and Pl. cxxxiii.
[12:1] Faber: Origin Pagan Idolatry, vol. i. p. 443; in Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 237.
[12:2] Tree and Serpent Worship, p. 13.
[12:3] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 159.
[12:4] See Bunsen's Keys of St. Peter, p. 414.
[12:5] Colenso: The Pentateuch Examined, vol. iv. p. 153.
[12:6] Buckley: Cities of the Ancient World, p. 148.
[12:7] Müller: Hist. Sanskrit Literature, p. 559.
[13:1] See Wake: Phallism in Ancient Religions, pp. 46, 47; and Maurice: Hist. Hindostan,
vol. i. p. 408.
[13:2] Hardwick: Christ and Other Masters, p. 215.
[13:3] See Jacolliot's "Bible in India," which John Fisk calls a "very discreditable
performance," and "a disgraceful piece of charlatanry" (Myths, &c. p. 205). This writer
also states that according to Hindoo legend, the first man and woman were called "Adima
and Heva," which is certainly not the case. The "bridge of Adima" which he speaks of as
connecting the island of Ceylon with the mainland, is called "Rama's bridge;" and the
"Adam's footprints" are called "Buddha's footprints." The Portuguese, who called the
mountain Pico d' Adama (Adam's Peak), evidently invented these other names. (See
Maurice's Hist. Hindostan, vol. i. pp. 301, 362, and vol. ii. p. 242).
[13:4] See Smith's Bible Dic. Art. "Cherubim," and Lenormant's Beginning of History, ch.
iii.
[15:1] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. pp. 206-210, The Pentateuch Examined, vol. iv. pp.
152, 153, and Legends of the Patriarchs, p. 38.
[15:2] Legends of the Patriarchs, p. 31.
[15:3] Quoted by Müller: The Science of Relig., p. 302.
[15:4] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 409.
[15:5] See Baring Gould's Legends of the Patriarchs; Squire's Serpent Symbol, p. 161, and
Wake's Phallism in Ancient Religions, p. 41.
[16:1] Quoted by Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 403.
[16:2] Tod's Hist. Raj., p. 581, quoted by Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 404.
[16:3] L'Antiquité Expliquée, vol. i.
[17:1] Sir William Jones, the first president of the Royal Asiatic Society, saw this when he
said: "Either the first eleven chapters of Genesis, all due allowance being made for a
figurative Eastern style, are true, or the whole fabric of our religion is false." (In Asiatic
Researches, vol. i. p. 225.) And so also did the learned Thomas Maurice, for he says: "If
the Mosaic History be indeed a fable, the whole fabric of the national religion is false,
since the main pillar of Christianity rests upon that important original promise, that the
seed of the woman should bruise the head of the serpent." (Hist. Hindostan, vol. i. p. 20.)
[18:1] The above extracts are quoted by Bishop Colenso, in The Pentateuch Examined, vol.
ii. pp. 10-12, from which we take them.
[18:2] "Cosmogony" is the title of a volume lately written by Prof. Thomas Mitchell, and
published by the American News Co., in which the author attacks all the modern scientists
in regard to the geological antiquity of the world, evolution, atheism, pantheism, &c. He
believes—and rightly too—that, "if the account of Creation in Genesis falls, Christ and the
apostles follow: if the book of Genesis is erroneous, so also are the Gospels."
CHAPTER II.
THE DELUGE.[19:1]
After "man's shameful fall," the earth began to be populated at a very rapid
rate. "The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and
they took them wives of all which they chose. . . . . There were giants in the
earth in those days,[19:2] and also . . . mighty men . . . men of renown."
But these "giants" and "mighty men" were very wicked, "and God saw the
wickedness of man . . . and it repented the Lord that he had made man upon
the earth,[19:3] 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. But Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord (for)
Noah was a just man . . . and walked with God. . . . And God said unto
Noah, The end of all flesh is come before me, for the earth is filled with
violence through them, and, behold, I will destroy them with the earth.
Make thee an ark of gopher wood, rooms shalt thou make in the ark, (and) a
window shalt thou make to the ark; . . . . And behold I, even I, do bring a
flood of waters upon the earth, to destroy all flesh, wherein is the breath of
life, from under heaven, and every thing that is in the earth shall die. But
with thee shall I establish my covenant; and thou shalt come into the ark,
thou, and thy sons, and thy wife, and thy sons' wives, with thee. And of
every living thing of all flesh, two of every sort shalt thou bring into the ark,
to keep them alive with thee; they shall be male and female. Of fowls after
their kind, and of cattle after their kind, of every creeping thing of the earth
after his kind, two of every sort shall come in to thee, to keep them alive.
And take thou unto thee of all food that is eaten, and thou shalt gather it to
thee; and it shall be for food for thee and for them. Thus did Noah,
according to all that God commanded him."[20:1]
When the ark was finished, the Lord said unto Noah:
"Come thou and all thy house into the ark. . . . 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."[20:2]
Here, again, as in the Eden myth, there is a contradiction. We have seen that
the Lord told Noah to bring into the ark "of every living thing, of all flesh,
two of every sort," and now that the ark is finished, we are told that he said
to him: "Of every clean beast thou shalt take to thee by sevens," and, "of
fowls also of the air by sevens." This is owing to the story having been
written by two different writers—the Jehovistic, and the Elohistic—one of
which took from, and added to the narrative of the other.[20:3] The account
goes on to say, that:
"Noah went in, and his sons, and his wife, and his sons' wives with him,
into the ark. . . . Of clean beasts, and of beasts that are not clean, and of
fowls, and of every thing that creepeth upon the earth, there went in two and
two, unto Noah into the ark, the male and the female, as God had
commanded Noah."[20:4]
We see, then, that Noah took into the ark of all kinds of beasts, of fowls, and
of every thing that creepeth, two of every sort, and that this was "as God
had commanded Noah." This clearly shows that the writer of these words
knew nothing of the command to take in clean beasts, and fowls of the air,
by sevens. We are further assured, that, "Noah did according to all that the
Lord commanded him."
After Noah and his family, and every beast after his kind, and all the cattle
after their kind, the fowls of the air, and every creeping thing, had entered
the ark, the Lord shut them in. Then "were all the fountains of the great
deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened. And the rain was
upon the earth forty days and forty nights. . . . . And the waters prevailed
exceedingly upon the earth; and all the hills, that were under the whole
heaven, were covered. Fifteen cubits upwards did the waters prevail; and
the mountains were covered. And all flesh died that moved upon the earth,
both of fowl and of cattle, and of beast, and of every creeping thing that
creepeth upon the earth, and every man. And Noah only remained alive, and
they that were with him in the ark."[21:1] The object of the flood was now
accomplished, "all flesh died that moved upon the earth." The Lord,
therefore, "made a wind to pass over the earth, and the waters assuaged.
The fountains of the deep, and the windows of heaven, were stopped, and
the rain from heaven was restrained. And the waters decreased
continually. . . . . And it came to pass at the end of forty days, that Noah
opened the window of the ark, which he had made. And he sent forth a
raven, which went forth to and fro, until the waters were dried up from off
the earth. He also sent forth a dove, . . . but the dove found no rest for the
sole of her foot, and she returned unto him into the ark." . . .
At the end of seven days he again "sent forth the dove out of the ark, and
the dove came in to him in the evening, and lo, in her mouth was an olive
leaf, plucked off."
At the end of another seven days, he again "sent forth the dove, which
returned not again to him any more."
And the ark rested in the seventh month, on the seventeenth day of the
month, upon the mountains of Ararat. Then Noah and his wife, and his
sons, and his sons' wives, and every living thing that was in the ark, went
forth out of the ark. "And Noah builded an altar unto the Lord, . . . and
offered burnt offerings on the altar. And the Lord smelled a sweet savour,
and the Lord said in his heart, I will not again curse the ground any more
for man's sake."[21:2]
We shall now see that there is scarcely any considerable race of men among
whom there does not exist, in some form, the tradition of a great deluge,
which destroyed all the human race, except their own progenitors.
The first of these which we shall notice, and the one with which the Hebrew
agrees most closely, having been copied from it,[22:1] is the Chaldean, as
given by Berosus, the Chaldean historian.[22:2] It is as follows:
"After the death of Ardates (the ninth king of the Chaldeans), his son
Xisuthrus reigned eighteen sari. In his time happened a great deluge, the
history of which is thus described: The deity Cronos appeared to him
(Xisuthrus) in a vision, and warned him that upon the fifteenth day of the
month Desius there would be a flood, by which mankind would be
destroyed. He therefore enjoined him to write a history of the beginning,
procedure, and conclusion of all things, and to bury it in the City of the Sun
at Sippara; and to build a vessel, and take with him into it his friends and
relations, and to convey on board everything necessary to sustain life,
together with all the different animals, both birds and quadrupeds, and trust
himself fearlessly to the deep. Having asked the deity whither he was to
sail, he was answered: 'To the Gods;' upon which he offered up a prayer for
the good of mankind. He then obeyed the divine admonition, and built a
vessel five stadia in length, and two in breadth. Into this he put everything
which he had prepared, and last of all conveyed into it his wife, his
children, and his friends. After the flood had been upon the earth, and was
in time abated, Xisuthrus sent out birds from the vessel; which not finding
any food, nor any place whereupon they might rest their feet, returned to
him again. After an interval of some days, he sent them forth a second time;
and they now returned with their feet tinged with mud. He made a trial a
third time with these birds; but they returned to him no more: from whence
he judged that the surface of the earth had appeared above the waters. He
therefore made an opening in the vessel, and upon looking out found that it
was stranded upon the side of some mountain; upon which he immediately
quitted it with his wife, his daughter, and the pilot. Xisuthrus then paid his
adoration to the earth, and, having constructed an altar, offered sacrifices to
the gods."[22:3]
This account, given by Berosus, which agrees in almost every particular
with that found in Genesis, and with that found by George Smith of the
British Museum on terra cotta tablets in Assyria, is nevertheless different in
some respects. But, says Mr. Smith:
"When we consider the difference between the two countries of Palestine
and Babylonia, these variations do not appear greater than we should
expect. . . . It was only natural that, in relating the same stories, each nation
should color them in accordance with its own ideas, and stress would
naturally in each case be laid upon points with which they were familiar.
Thus we should expect beforehand that there would be differences in the
narrative such as we actually find, and we may also notice that the
cuneiform account does not always coincide even with the account of the
same events given by Berosus from Chaldean sources."[23:1]
The most important points are the same however, i. e., in both cases the
virtuous man is informed by the Lord that a flood is about to take place,
which would destroy mankind. In both cases they are commanded to build a
vessel or ark, to enter it with their families, and to take in beasts, birds, and
everything that creepeth, also to provide themselves with food. In both
cases they send out a bird from the ark three times—the third time it failed
to return. In both cases they land on a mountain, and upon leaving the ark
they offer up a sacrifice to the gods. Xisuthrus was the tenth king,[23:2] and
Noah the tenth patriarch.[23:3] Xisuthrus had three sons (Zerovanos, Titan
and Japetosthes),[23:4] and Noah had three sons (Shem, Ham and Japhet).
[23:5]
This legend became known to the Jews from Chaldean sources,[23:7] it was
not known in the country (Egypt) out of which they evidently came.[23:8]
Egyptian history, it is said, had gone on uninterrupted for ten thousand
years before the time assigned for the birth of Jesus.[24:1] And it is known as
absolute fact that the land of Egypt was never visited by other than its
annual beneficent overflow of the river Nile.[24:2] The Egyptian Bible,
which is by far the most ancient of all holy books[24:3], knew nothing of the
Deluge.[24:4] The Phra (or Pharaoh) Khoufou-Cheops was building his
pyramid, according to Egyptian chronicle, when the whole world was under
the waters of a universal deluge, according to the Hebrew chronicle.[24:5] A
number of other nations of antiquity are found destitute of any story of a
flood,[24:6] which they certainly would have had if a universal deluge had
ever happened. Whether this legend is of high antiquity in India has even
been doubted by distinguished scholars.[24:7]
The Hindoo legend of the Deluge is as follows:
"Many ages after the creation of the world, Brahma resolved to destroy it
with a deluge, on account of the wickedness of the people. There lived at
that time a pious man named Satyavrata, and as the lord of the universe
loved this pious man, and wished to preserve him from the sea of
destruction which was to appear on account of the depravity of the age, he
appeared before him in the form of Vishnu (the Preserver) and said: In seven
days from the present time . . . the worlds will be plunged in an ocean of
death, but in the midst of the destroying waves, a large vessel, sent by me
for thy use, shall stand before thee. Then shalt thou take all medicinal herbs,
all the variety of feeds, and, accompanied by seven saints, encircled by
pairs of all brute animals, thou shalt enter the spacious ark, and continue in
it, secure from the flood, on one immense ocean without light, except the
radiance of thy holy companions. When the ship shall be agitated by an
impetuous wind, thou shalt fasten it with a large sea-serpent on my horn; for
I will be near thee (in the form of a fish), drawing the vessel, with thee and
thy attendants. I will remain on the ocean, O chief of men, until a night of
Brahma shall be completely ended. Thou shalt then know my true
greatness, rightly named the Supreme Godhead; by my favor, all thy
questions shall be answered, and thy mind abundantly instructed."
Being thus directed, Satyavrata humbly waited for the time which the ruler
of our senses had appointed. It was not long, however, before the sea,
overwhelming its shores, began to deluge the whole earth, and it was soon
perceived to be augmented by showers from immense clouds. He, still
meditating on the commands of the Lord, saw a vessel advancing, and
entered it with the saints, after having carried into effect the instructions
which had been given him.
Vishnu then appeared before them, in the form of a fish, as he had said, and
Satyavrata fastened a cable to his horn.
The deluge in time abated, and Satyavrata, instructed in all divine and
human knowledge, was appointed, by the favor of Vishnu, the Seventh
Menu. After coming forth from the ark he offers up a sacrifice to Brahma.
[25:1]
Dr. Brinton also speaks of the Mexican tradition.[27:5] They had not only the
story of sending out the bird, but related that the ark landed on a mountain.
The tradition of a deluge was also found among the Brazilians, and among
many Indian tribes.[27:6] The mountain upon which the ark is supposed to
have rested, was pointed to by the residents in nearly every quarter of the
globe. The mountain-chain of Ararat was considered to be—by the
Chaldeans and Hebrews—the place where the ark landed. The Greeks
pointed to Mount Parnassus; the Hindoos to the Himalayas; and in Armenia
numberless heights were pointed out with becoming reverence, as those on
which the few survivors of the dreadful scenes of the deluge were
preserved. On the Red River (in America), near the village of the Caddoes,
there was an eminence to which the Indian tribes for a great distance around
paid devout homage. The Cerro Naztarny on the Rio Grande, the peak of
Old Zuni in New Mexico, that of Colhuacan on the Pacific coast, Mount
Apoala in Upper Mixteca, and Mount Neba in the province of Guaymi, are
some of many elevations asserted by the neighboring nations to have been
places of refuge for their ancestors when the fountains of the great deep
broke forth.
The question now may naturally be asked, How could such a story have
originated unless there was some foundation for it?
In answer to this question we will say that we do not think such a story
could have originated without some foundation for it, and that most, if not
all, legends, have a basis of truth underlying the fabulous, although not
always discernible. This story may have an astronomical basis, as some
suppose,[28:1] or it may not. At any rate, it would be very easy to transmit by
memory the fact of the sinking of an island, or that of an earthquake, or a
great flood, caused by overflows of rivers, &c., which, in the course of
time, would be added to, and enlarged upon, and, in this way, made into
quite a lengthy tale. According to one of the most ancient accounts of the
deluge, we are told that at that time "the forest trees were dashed against
each other;" "the mountains were involved with smoke and flame;" that
there was "fire, and smoke, and wind, which ascended in thick clouds
replete with lightning." "The roaring of the ocean, whilst violently agitated
with the whirling of the mountains, was like the bellowing of a mighty
cloud, &c."[28:2]
A violent earthquake, with eruptions from volcanic mountains, and the
sinking of land into the sea, would evidently produce such a scene as this.
We know that at one period in the earth's history, such scenes must have
been of frequent occurrence. The science of geology demonstrates this fact
to us. Local deluges were of frequent occurrence, and that some persons
may have been saved on one, or perhaps many, such occasions, by means of
a raft or boat, and that they may have sought refuge on an eminence, or
mountain, does not seem at all improbable.
During the Champlain period in the history of the world—which came after
the Glacial period—the climate became warmer, the continents sank, and
there were, consequently, continued local floods which must have destroyed
considerable animal life, including man. The foundation of the deluge myth
may have been laid at this time.
Some may suppose that this is dating the history of man too far back,
making his history too remote; but such is not the case. There is every
reason to believe that man existed for ages before the Glacial epoch. It must
not be supposed that we have yet found remains of the earliest human
beings; there is evidence, however, that man existed during the Pliocene, if
not during the Miocene periods, when hoofed quadrupeds, and
Proboscidians abounded, human remains and implements having been
found mingled with remains of these animals.[29:1]
Charles Darwin believed that the animal called man, might have been
properly called by that name at an epoch as remote as the Eocene period.
[29:2] Man had probably lost his hairy covering by that time, and had begun
to look human.
Prof. Draper, speaking of the antiquity of man, says:
"So far as investigations have gone, they indisputably refer the existence of
man to a date remote from us by many hundreds of thousands of years," and
that, "it is difficult to assign a shorter date from the last glaciation of Europe
than a quarter of a million of years, and human existence antedates that."
[29:3]
Again he says:
"Recent researches give reason to believe that, under low and base grades,
the existence of man can be traced back into the Tertiary times. He was
contemporary with the Southern Elephant, the Rhinoceros-leptorhinus, the
great Hippopotamus, perhaps even in the Miocene, contemporary with the
Mastodon."[29:4]
Prof. Huxley closes his "Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature," by saying:
"Where must we look for primeval man? Was the oldest Homo Sapiens
Pliocene or Miocene, or yet more ancient? . . . If any form of the doctrine of
progressive development is correct, we must extend by long epochs the most
liberal estimate that has yet been made of the antiquity of man."[30:1]
Prof. Oscar Paschel, in his work on "Mankind," speaking of the deposits of
human remains which have been discovered in caves, mingled with the
bones of wild animals, says:
"The examination of one of these caves at Brixham, by a geologist as
trustworthy as Dr. Falconer, convinced the specialists of Great Britain, as
early as 1858, that man was a contemporary of the Mammoth, the Woolly
Rhinoceros, the Cave-lion, the Cave-hyena, the Cave-bear, and therefore of
the Mammalia of the Geological period antecedent to our own."[30:2]
The positive evidence of man's existence during the Tertiary period, are
facts which must firmly convince every one—who is willing to be
convinced—of the great antiquity of man. We might multiply our
authorities, but deem it unnecessary.
The observation of shells, corals, and other remains of aquatic animals, in
places above the level of the sea, and even on high mountains, may have
given rise to legends of a great flood.
Fossils found imbedded in high ground have been appealed to, both in
ancient and modern times, both by savage and civilized man, as evidence in
support of their traditions of a flood; and, moreover, the argument,
apparently unconnected with any tradition, is to be found, that because there
are marine fossils in places away from the sea, therefore the sea must once
have been there.
It is only quite recently that the presence of fossil shells, &c., on high
mountains, has been abandoned as evidence of the Noachic flood.
Mr. Tylor tells us that in the ninth edition of "Horne's Introduction to the
Scriptures," published in 1846, the evidence of fossils is confidently held to
prove the universality of the Deluge; but the argument disappears from the
next edition, published ten years later.[30:3]
Besides fossil remains of aquatic animals, boats have been found on tops of
mountains.[30:4] A discovery of this kind may have given rise to the story of
an ark having been made in which to preserve the favored ones from the
waters, and of its landing on a mountain.[30:5]
Before closing this chapter, it may be well to notice a striking incident in
the legend we have been treating, i. e., the frequent occurrence of the
number seven in the narrative. For instance: the Lord commands Noah to
take into the ark clean beasts by sevens, and fowls also by sevens, and tells
him that in seven days he will cause it to rain upon the earth. We are also
told that the ark rested in the seventh month, and the seventeenth day of the
month, upon the mountains of Ararat. After sending the dove out of the ark
the first time, Noah waited seven days before sending it out again. After
sending the dove out the second time, "he stayed yet another seven days"
ere he again sent forth the dove.
This coincidence arises from the mystic power attached to the number
seven, derived from its frequent occurrence in astrology.
We find that in all religions of antiquity the number seven—which applied
to the sun, moon and the five planets known to the ancients—is a sacred
number, represented in all kinds and sorts of forms;[31:1] for instance: The
candlestick with seven branches in the temple of Jerusalem. The seven
inclosures of the temple. The seven doors of the cave of Mithras. The seven
stories of the tower of Babylon.[31:2] The seven gates of Thebes.[31:3] The
flute of seven pipes generally put into the hand of the god Pan. The lyre of
seven strings touched by Apollo. The book of "Fate," composed of seven
books. The seven prophetic rings of the Brahmans.[31:4] The seven stones—
consecrated to the seven planets—in Laconia.[31:5] The division into seven
castes adopted by the Egyptians and Indians. The seven idols of the Bonzes.
The seven altars of the monument of Mithras. The seven great spirits
invoked by the Persians. The seven archangels of the Chaldeans. The seven
archangels of the Jews.[31:6]
The seven days in the week.[32:1] The seven sacraments of the Christians.
The seven wicked spirits of the Babylonians. The sprinkling of blood seven
times upon the altars of the Egyptians. The seven mortal sins of the
Egyptians. The hymn of seven vowels chanted by the Egyptian priests.[32:2]
The seven branches of the Assyrian "Tree of Life." Agni, the Hindoo god, is
represented with seven arms. Sura's[32:3] horse was represented with seven
heads. Seven churches are spoken of in the Apocalypse. Balaam builded
seven altars, and offered seven bullocks and seven rams on each altar.
Pharaoh saw seven kine, &c., in his dream. The "Priest of Midian" had
seven daughters. Jacob served seven years. Before Jericho seven priests bare
seven horns. Samson was bound with seven green withes, and his marriage
feast lasted seven days, &c., &c. We might continue with as much more, but
enough has been shown to verify the statement that, "in all religions of
antiquity, the number SEVEN is a sacred number."
FOOTNOTES:
[19:1] See "The Deluge in the Light of Modern Science," by Prof. Wm. Denton: J. P.
Mendum, Boston.
[19:2] "There were giants in the earth in those days." It is a scientific fact that most races
of men, in former ages, instead of being larger, were smaller than at the present time.
There is hardly a suit of armor in the Tower of London, or in the old castles, that is large
enough for the average Englishman of to-day to put on. Man has grown in stature as well
as intellect, and there is no proof whatever—in fact, the opposite is certain—that there ever
was a race of what might properly be called giants, inhabiting the earth. Fossil remains of
large animals having been found by primitive man, and a legend invented to account for
them, it would naturally be that: "There were giants in the earth in those days." As an
illustration we may mention the story, recorded by the traveller James Orton, we believe
(in "The Andes and the Amazon"), that, near Punin, in South America, was found the
remains of an extinct species of the horse, the mastodon, and other large animals. This
discovery was made, owing to the assurance of the natives that giants at one time had lived
in that country, and that they had seen their remains at this certain place. Many legends
have had a similar origin. But the originals of all the Ogres and Giants to be found in the
mythology of almost all nations of antiquity, are the famous Hindoo demons, the
Rakshasas of our Aryan ancestors. The Rakshasas were very terrible creatures indeed, and
in the minds of many people, in India, are so still. Their natural form, so the stories say, is
that of huge, unshapely giants, like clouds, with hair and beard of the color of the red
lightning. This description explains their origin. They are the dark, wicked and cruel
clouds, personified.
[19:3] "And it repented the Lord that he had made man." (Gen. iv.) "God is not a man that
he should lie, neither the son of man that he should repent." (Numb. xxiii. 19.)
[20:1] Gen. iv.
[20:2] Gen. vi. 1-3.
[20:3] See chapter xi.
[20:4] The image of Osiris of Egypt was by the priests shut up in a sacred ark on the 17th
of Athyr (Nov. 13th), the very day and month on which Noah is said to have entered his
ark, (See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 165, and Bunsen's Angel Messiah, p. 22.)
[21:1] Gen. vi.
[21:2] Gen. viii.
[22:1] See chapter xi.
[22:2] Josephus, the Jewish historian, speaking of the flood of Noah (Antiq. bk. 1, ch. iii.),
says: "All the writers of the Babylonian histories make mention of this flood and this ark."
[22:3] Quoted by George Smith: Chaldean Account of Genesis, pp. 43-44; see also, The
Pentateuch Examined, vol. iv. p. 211; Dunlap's Spirit Hist. p. 138; Cory's Ancient
Fragments, p. 61, et seq. for similar accounts.
[23:1] Chaldean Account of Genesis, pp. 285, 286.
[23:2] Volney: New Researches, p. 119; Chaldean Acct. of Genesis, p. 290; Hist.
Hindostan, vol. i. p. 417, and Dunlap's Spirit Hist. p. 277.
[23:3] Ibid.
[23:4] Legends of the Patriarchs, pp. 109, 110.
[23:5] Gen. vi. 8.
[23:6] The Hindoo ark-preserved Menu had three sons; Sama, Cama, and Pra-Japati.
(Faber: Orig. Pagan Idol.) The Bhattias, who live between Delli and the Panjab, insist that
they are descended from a certain king called Salivahana, who had three sons, Bhat, Maha
and Thamaz. (Col. Wilford, in vol. ix. Asiatic Researches.) The Iranian hero Thraetona had
three sons. The Iranian Sethite Lamech had three sons, and Hellen, the son of Deucalion,
during whose time the flood is said to have happened, had three sons. (Bunsen: The Angel-
Messiah, pp. 70, 71.) All the ancient nations of Europe also describe their origin from the
three sons of some king or patriarch. The Germans said that Mannus (son of the god
Tuisco) had three sons, who were the original ancestors of the three principal nations of
Germany. The Scythians said that Targytagus, the founder of their nation, had three sons,
from whom they were descended. A tradition among the Romans was that the Cyclop
Polyphemus had by Galatea three sons. Saturn had three sons, Jupiter, Neptune, and Pluto;
and Hesiod speaks of the three sons which sprung from the marriage of heaven and earth.
(See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 509.)
[23:7] See chap. xi.
[23:8] "It is of no slight moment that the Egyptians, with whom the Hebrews are
represented as in earliest and closest intercourse, had no traditions of a flood, while the
Babylonian and Hellenic tales bear a strong resemblance in many points to the narrative in
Genesis." (Rev. George W. Cox: Tales of Ancient Greece, p. 340. See also Owen: Man's
Earliest History, p. 28, and ch. xi. this work.)
[24:1] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 198, and Knight's Ancient Art and Mythology, p. 107.
"Plato was told that Egypt had hymns dating back ten thousand years before his time."
(Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 185.) Plato lived 429 B. C. Herodotus relates that the priests
of Egypt informed him that from the first king to the present priest of Vulcan who last
reigned, were three hundred forty and one generations of men, and during these
generations there were the same number of chief priests and kings. "Now (says he) three
hundred generations are equal to ten thousand years, for three generations of men are one
hundred years; and the forty-one remaining generations that were over the three hundred,
make one thousand three hundred and forty years," making eleven thousand three hundred
and forty years. "Conducting me into the interior of an edifice that was spacious, and
showing me wooden colossuses to the number I have mentioned, they reckoned them up;
for every high priest places an image of himself there during his life-time; the priests,
therefore, reckoning them and showing them to me, pointed out that each was the son of
his own father; going through them all, from the image of him who died last until they had
pointed them all out." (Herodotus, book ii. chs. 142, 143.) The discovery of mummies of
royal and priestly personages, made at Deir-el-Bahari (Aug., 1881), near Thebes, in Egypt,
would seem to confirm this statement made by Herodotus. Of the thirty-nine mummies
discovered, one—that of King Raskenen—is about three thousand seven hundred years
old. (See a Cairo [Aug. 8th,] Letter to the London Times.)
[24:2] Owen: Man's Earliest History, p. 28.
[24:3] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 185.
[24:4] Ibid. p. 411.
[24:5] Owen: Man's Earliest History, pp. 27, 28.
[24:6] Goldzhier: Hebrew Mytho. p. 319.
[24:7] Ibid. p. 320.
[25:1] Translated from the Bhagavat by Sir Wm. Jones, and published in the first volume
of the "Asiatic Researches," p. 230, et seq. See also Maurice: Ind. Ant. ii. 277, et seq., and
Prof. Max Müller's Hist. Ancient Sanskrit Literature, p. 425, et seq.
[25:2] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 55.
[25:3] See Thornton's Hist. China, vol. i. p. 30, Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 205, and
Priestley, p. 41.
[25:4] Priestley, p. 42.
[26:1] Bunce: Fairy Tales, Origin and Meaning, p. 18.
[26:2] The oldest Greek mythology, however, has no such idea; it cannot be proved to have
been known to the Greeks earlier than the 6th century B. C. (See Goldzhier: Hebrew
Mytho., p. 319.) This could not have been the case had there ever been a universal deluge.
[26:3] Tales of Ancient Greece, pp. 72-74. "Apollodorus—a Grecian mythologist, born 140
B. C.,—having mentioned Deucalion consigned to the ark, takes notice, upon his quitting
it, of his offering up an immediate sacrifice to God." (Chambers' Encyclo., art, Deluge.)
[26:4] In Lundy's Monumental Christianity (p. 209, Fig. 137) may be seen a representation
of Deucalion and Pyrrha landing from the ark. A dove and olive branch are depicted in the
scene.
[27:1] Chambers' Encyclo., art. Deucalion.
[27:2] Baring-Gould: Legends of the Patriarchs, p. 114. See also Myths of the British
Druids, p. 95.
[27:3] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 99.
[27:4] Mex. Antiq. vol. viii.
[27:5] Myths of the New World, pp. 203, 204.
[27:6] See Squire: Serpent Symbol, pp. 189, 190.
[28:1] Count de Volney says: "The Deluge mentioned by Jews, Chaldeans, Greeks and
Indians, as having destroyed the world, are one and the same physico-astronomical event
which is still repeated every year," and that "all those personages that figure in the Deluge
of Noah and Xisuthrus, are still in the celestial sphere. It was a real picture of the calendar."
(Researches in Ancient Hist., p. 124.) It was on the same day that Noah is said to have shut
himself up in the ark, that the priests of Egypt shut up in their sacred coffer or ark the
image of Osiris, a personification of the Sun. This was on the 17th of the month Athor, in
which the Sun enters the Scorpion. (See Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 410.) The history of
Noah also corresponds, in some respects, with that of Bacchus, another personification of
the Sun.
[28:2] See Maurice's Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 268.
[29:1] "In America, along with the bones of the Mastodon imbedded in the alluvium of the
Bourbense, were found arrow heads and other traces of the savages who had killed this
member of an order no longer represented in that part of the world." (Herbert Spencer:
Principles of Sociology, vol. i. p. 17.)
[29:2] Darwin: Descent of Man, p. 156. We think it may not be out of place to insert here
what might properly be called: "The Drama of Life," which is as follows:
Act i. Azoic: Conflict of Inorganic Forces.
Act ii. Paleozoic: Age of Invertebrates.
We are informed that, at one time, "the whole earth was of one language,
and of one speech. And it came to pass, as they (the inhabitants of the earth)
journeyed from the East, that they found a plain in the land of Shinar, and
they dwelt there.
"And they said one to another, Go to, let us make brick, and burn them
thoroughly. And they had brick for stone, and slime had they for mortar.
"And they said, Go to, let us build us a city, and a tower, whose top may
reach unto heaven, and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad
upon the face of the whole earth. And 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 now nothing will be restrained from them, which they have
imagined to do. Go to, let us go down, and there confound their language,
that they may not understand one another's speech. So the Lord scattered
them abroad from thence upon the face of all the earth: and they left off to
build the city. Therefore is the name of it called Babel, because the Lord did
there confound the language of all the earth; and from thence did the Lord
scatter them abroad upon the face of all the earth."[33:1]
Such is the "Scripture" account of the origin of languages, which differs
somewhat from the ideas of Prof. Max Müller and other philologists.
Bishop Colenso tells us that:
"The story of the dispensation of tongues is connected by the Jehovistic
writer with the famous unfinished temple of Belus, of which probably some
wonderful reports had reached him. . . . The derivation of the name Babel
from the Hebrew word babal (confound) which seems to be the connecting
point between the story and the tower of Babel, is altogether incorrect."
[33:2]
The literal meaning of the word being house, or court, or gate of Bel, or
gate of God.[34:1]
John Fiske confirms this statement by saying:
"The name 'Babel' is really 'Bab-il', or 'The Gate of God'; but the Hebrew
writer erroneously derives the word from the root 'babal'—to confuse—and
hence arises the mystical explanation, that Babel was a place where human
speech became confused."[34:2]
The "wonderful reports" that reached the Jehovistic writer who inserted this
tale into the Hebrew Scriptures, were from the Chaldean account of the
confusion of tongues. It is related by Berosus as follows:
The first inhabitants of the earth, glorying in their strength and size,[34:3]
and despising the gods, undertook to raise a tower whose top should reach
the sky, in the place where Babylon now stands. But when it approached the
heavens, the winds assisted the gods, and overthrew the work of the
contrivers, and also introduced a diversity of tongues among men, who till
that time had all spoken the same language. The ruins of this tower are said
to be still in Babylon.[34:4]
Josephus, the Jewish historian, says that it was Nimrod who built the tower,
that he was a very wicked man, and that the tower was built in case the
Lord should have a mind to drown the world again. He continues his
account by saying that when Nimrod proposed the building of this tower,
the multitude were very ready to follow the proposition, as they could then
avenge themselves on God for destroying their forefathers.
"And they built a tower, neither sparing any pains nor being in any degree
negligent about the work. And by reason of the multitude of hands
employed on it, it grew very high, sooner than any one could expect. . . . . It
was built of burnt brick, cemented together, with mortar made of bitumen,
that it might not be liable to admit water. When God saw that they had acted
so madly, he did not resolve to destroy them utterly, since they were not
grown wiser by the destruction of the former sinners, but he caused a tumult
among them, by producing in them divers languages, and causing, that
through the multitude of those languages they should not be able to
understand one another. The place where they built the tower is now called
Babylon."[34:5]
The tower in Babylonia, which seems to have been a foundation for the
legend of the confusion of tongues to be built upon, was evidently
originally built for astronomical purposes.[35:1] This is clearly seen from the
fact that it was called the "Stages of the Seven Spheres,"[35:2] and that each
one of these stages was consecrated to the Sun, Moon, Saturn, Jupiter,
Mars, Venus, and Mercury.[35:3] Nebuchadnezzar says of it in his cylinders:
"The building named the 'Stages of the Seven Spheres,' which was the
tower of Borsippa (Babel), had been built by a former king. He had
completed forty-two cubits, but he did not finish its head. From the lapse of
time, it had become ruined; they had not taken care of the exits of the
waters, so the rain and wet had penetrated into the brick-work; the casing of
burnt brick had bulged out, and the terraces of crude brick lay scattered in
heaps. Merobach, my great Lord, inclined my heart to repair the building. I
did not change its site, nor did I destroy its foundation, but, in a fortunate
month, and upon an auspicious day, I undertook the rebuilding of the crude
brick terraces and burnt brick casing, &c., &c."[35:4]
There is not a word said here in these cylinders about the confusion of
tongues, nor anything pertaining to it. The ruins of this ancient tower being
there in Babylonia, and a legend of how the gods confused the speech of
mankind also being among them, it was very convenient to point to these
ruins as evidence that the story was true, just as the ancient Mexicans
pointed to the ruins of the tower of Cholula, as evidence of the truth of the
similar story which they had among them, and just as many nations pointed
to the remains of aquatic animals on the tops of mountains, as evidence of
the truth of the deluge story.
The Armenian tradition of the "Confusion of Tongues" was to this effect:
The world was formerly inhabited by men "with strong bodies and huge
size" (giants). These men being full of pride and envy, "they formed a
godless resolve to build a high tower; but whilst they were engaged on the
undertaking, a fearful wind overthrew it, which the wrath of God had sent
against it. Unknown words were at the same time blown about among men,
wherefore arose strife and confusion."[35:5]
The Hindoo legend of the "Confusion of Tongues," is as follows:
There grew in the centre of the earth, the wonderful "World Tree," or the
"Knowledge Tree." It was so tall that it reached almost to heaven. "It said in
its heart: 'I shall hold my head in heaven, and spread my branches over all
the earth, and gather all men together under my shadow, and protect them,
and prevent them from separating.' But Brahma, to punish the pride of the
tree, cut off its branches and cast them down on the earth, when they sprang
up as Wata trees, and made differences of belief, and speech, and customs,
to prevail on the earth, to disperse men over its surface."[36:1]
Traces of a somewhat similar story have also been met with among the
Mongolian Tharus in the north of India, and, according to Dr. Livingston,
among the Africans of Lake Nganu.[36:2] The ancient Esthonians[36:3] had a
similar myth which they called "The Cooking of Languages;" so also had
the ancient inhabitants of the continent of Australia.[36:4] The story was
found among the ancient Mexicans, and was related as follows:
Those, with their descendants, who were saved from the deluge which
destroyed all mankind, excepting the few saved in the ark, resolved to build
a tower which would reach to the skies. The object of this was to see what
was going on in Heaven, and also to have a place of refuge in case of
another deluge.[36:5]
The job was superintended by one of the seven who were saved from the
flood.[36:6] He was a giant called Xelhua, surnamed "the Architect."[36:7]
Xelhua ordered bricks to be made in the province of Tlamanalco, at the foot
of the Sierra of Cocotl, and to be conveyed to Cholula, where the tower was
to be built. For this purpose, he placed a file of men reaching from the
Sierra to Cholula, who passed the bricks from hand to hand.[36:8] The gods
beheld with wrath this edifice,—the top of which was nearing the clouds,—
and were much irritated at the daring attempt of Xelhua. They therefore
hurled fire from Heaven upon the pyramid, which threw it down, and killed
many of the workmen. The work was then discontinued,[36:9] as each family
interested in the building of the tower, received a language of their own,
[36:10] and the builders could not understand each other.
Dr. Delitzsch must have been astonished upon coming across this legend;
for he says:
"Actually the Mexicans had a legend of a tower-building as well as of a
flood. Xelhua, one of the seven giants rescued from the flood, built the great
pyramid of Cholula, in order to reach heaven, until the gods, angry at his
audacity, threw fire upon the building and broke it down, whereupon every
separate family received a language of its own."[37:1]
The ancient Mexicans pointed to the ruins of a tower at Cholula as evidence
of the truth of their story. This tower was seen by Humboldt and Lord
Kingsborough, and described by them.[37:2]
We may say then, with Dr. Kalisch, that:
"Most of the ancient nations possessed myths concerning impious giants
who attempted to storm heaven, either to share it with the immortal gods, or
to expel them from it. In some of these fables the confusion of tongues is
represented as the punishment inflicted by the deities for such wickedness."
[37:3]
FOOTNOTES:
[33:1] Genesis xi. 1-9.
[33:2] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. iv. p. 268.
[34:1] Ibid. p. 268. See also Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 90.
[34:2] Myths and Myth-makers, p. 72. See also Encyclopædia Britannica, art. "Babel."
[34:3] "There were giants in the earth in those days." (Genesis vi. 4.)
[34:4] Quoted by Rev. S. Baring-Gould: Legends of the Patriarchs, p. 147. See also Smith:
Chaldean Account of Genesis, p. 48, and Volney's Researches in Ancient History, pp. 130,
131.
[34:5] Jewish Antiquities, book 1, ch. iv. p. 30.
[35:1] "Diodorus states that the great tower of the temple of Belus was used by the
Chaldeans as an observatory." (Smith's Bible Dictionary, art. "Babel.")
[35:2] The Hindoos had a sacred Mount Meru, the abode of the gods. This mountain was
supposed to consist of seven stages, increasing in sanctity as they ascended. Many of the
Hindoo temples, or rather altars, were "studied transcripts of the sacred Mount Meru;" that
is, they were built, like the tower of Babel, in seven stages. Within the upper dwelt Brahm.
(See Squire's Serpent Symbol, p. 107.) Herodotus tells us that the upper stage of the tower
of Babel was the abode of the god Belus.
[35:3] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. iv. p. 269. See also Bunsen: The Angel Messiah, p.
106.
[35:4] Rawlinson's Herodotus, vol. ii. p. 484.
[35:5] Legends of the Patriarchs, pp. 148, 149.
[36:1] Ibid. p. 148. The ancient Scandinavians had a legend of a somewhat similar tree.
"The Mundane Tree," called Yggdrasill, was in the centre of the earth; its branches covered
over the surface of the earth, and its top reached to the highest heaven. (See Mallet's
Northern Antiquities.)
[36:2] Encyclopædia Britannica, art. "Babel."
[36:3] Esthonia is one of the three Baltic, or so-called, provinces of Russia.
[36:4] Encyclopædia Britannica, art. "Babel."
[36:5] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 27.
[36:6] Brinton: Myths of the New World, p. 204.
[36:7] Humboldt: American Researches, vol. i. p. 96.
[36:8] Ibid.
[36:9] Ibid., and Brinton: Myths of the New World, p. 204.
[36:10] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. iv. p. 272.
[37:1] Quoted by Bishop Colenso: The Pentateuch Examined, vol. iv. p. 272.
[37:2] Humboldt: American Researches, vol. i. p. 97. Lord Kingsborough: Mexican
Antiquities.
[37:3] Com. on Old Test. vol. i. p. 196.
CHAPTER IV.
THE TRIAL OF ABRAHAM'S FAITH.
FOOTNOTES:
[39:1] See Müller's Hist. Sanscrit Literature; and Williams' Indian Wisdom, p. 29.
[39:2] Quoted by Count de Volney; New Researches in Anc't Hist., p. 144.
[39:3] See Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 104.
[39:4] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 302.
[40:1] Ibid.
[40:2] See chapter xi.
[41:1] Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 368.
[41:2] Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 448.
[41:3] See Acosta: Hist. Indies, vol. ii.
CHAPTER V.
JACOB'S VISION OF THE LADDER.
In the 28th chapter of Genesis, we are told that Isaac, after blessing his son
Jacob, sent him to Padan-aram, to take a daughter of Laban's (his mother's
brother) to wife. Jacob, obeying his father, "went out from Beer-sheba
(where he dwelt), and went towards Haran. And he lighted upon a certain
place, and tarried there all night, because the sun was set. And he took of
the stones of the place, and put them for his pillow, and lay down in that
place to sleep. And he dreamed, and behold, a ladder set upon the earth,
and the top of it reached to heaven. And he beheld the angels of God
ascending and descending on it. And, behold, the Lord stood above it, and
said: 'I am the Lord God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac, the
land whereon thou liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy seed.' . . . And
Jacob awoke out of his sleep, and he said: 'Surely the Lord is in this place,
and I know it not.' And he was afraid, and said: 'How dreadful is this place,
this is none other than the house of God, and this is the gate of Heaven.'
And Jacob rose up early in the morning, and took the stone that he had put
for his pillow, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil upon the top of it.
And he called the name of that place Beth-el."
The doctrine of Metempsychosis has evidently something to do with this
legend. It means, in the theological acceptation of the term, the supposed
transition of the soul after death, into another substance or body than that
which it occupied before. The belief in such a transition was common to the
most civilized, and the most uncivilized, nations of the earth.[42:1]
It was believed in, and taught by, the Brahminical Hindoos,[42:2] the
Buddhists,[42:3] the natives of Egypt,[42:4] several philosophers of ancient
Greece,[43:1] the ancient Druids,[43:2] the natives of Madagascar,[43:3]
several tribes of Africa,[43:4] and North America,[43:5] the ancient Mexicans,
[43:4] and by some Jewish and Christian sects.[43:5]
"It deserves notice, that in both of these religions (i. e., Jewish and
Christian), it found adherents as well in ancient as in modern times. Among
the Jews, the doctrine of transmigration—the Gilgul Neshamoth—was
taught in the mystical system of the Kabbala."[43:6]
"All the souls," the spiritual code of this system says, "are subject to the
trials of transmigration; and men do not know which are the ways of the
Most High in their regard." "The principle, in short, of the Kabbala, is the
same as that of Brahmanism."
"On the ground of this doctrine, which was shared in by Rabbis of the
highest renown, it was held, for instance, that the soul of Adam migrated
into David, and will come in the Messiah; that the soul of Japhet is the
same as that of Simeon, and the soul of Terah, migrated into Job."
"Of all these transmigrations, biblical instances are adduced according to
their mode of interpretation—in the writings of Rabbi Manasse ben Israel,
Rabbi Naphtali, Rabbi Meyer ben Gabbai, Rabbi Ruben, in the Jalkut
Khadash, and other works of a similar character."[43:4]
The doctrine is thus described by Ovid, in the language of Dryden:
The learned Dr. Ginsburg, in his "Life of Levita," alludes to the ancient
mode of worship offered to the heathen deity Hermes, or Mercury. A
"Hermes" (i. e., a stone) was frequently set up on the road-side, and each
traveller, as he passed by, paid his homage to the deity by either throwing a
stone on the heap (which was thus collected), or by anointing it. This
"Hermes" was the symbol of Phallus.[46:8]
Now, when we find that this form of worship was very prevalent among the
Israelites,[47:1] that these sacred stones which were "set up," were called (by
the heathen), BÆTY-LI,[47:2] (which is not unlike BETH-EL), and that they were
anointed with oil,[47:3] I think we have reasons for believing that the story of
Jacob's setting up a stone, pouring oil upon it, and calling the place Beth-el,
"has evidently an allusion to Phallic worship."[47:4]
The male and female powers of nature were denoted respectively by an
upright and an oval emblem, and the conjunction of the two furnished at
once the altar and the Ashera, or grove, against which the Hebrew prophets
lifted up their voices in earnest protest. In the kingdoms, both of Judah and
Israel, the rites connected with these emblems assumed their most
corrupting form. Even in the temple itself, stood the Ashera, or the upright
emblem, on the circular altar of Baal-Peor, the Priapos of the Jews, thus
reproducing the Linga, and Yoni of the Hindu.[47:5] For this symbol, the
women wove hangings, as the Athenian maidens embroidered the sacred
peplos for the ship presented to Athênê, at the great Dionysiac festival. This
Ashera, which, in the authorized English version of the Old Testament is
translated "grove," was, in fact, a pole, or stem of a tree. It is reproduced in
our modern "Maypole," around which maidens dance, as maidens did of
yore.[47:6]
FOOTNOTES:
[42:1] See Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Transmigration."
[42:2] Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Transmigration." Prichard's Mythology, p. 213, and Prog.
Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 59.
[42:3] Ibid. Ernest de Bunsen says: "The first traces of the doctrine of Transmigration of
souls is to be found among the Brahmins and Buddhists." (The Angel Messiah, pp. 63, 64.)
[42:4] Prichard's Mythology, pp. 213, 214.
[43:1] Gross: The Heathen Religion. Also Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Transmigration."
[43:2] Ibid. Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 13; and Myths of the British Druids, p. 15.
[43:3] Chambers's Encyclo.
[43:4] Ibid.
[43:5] Ibid. See also Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, pp. 63, 64. Dupuis, p. 357. Josephus:
Jewish Antiquities, book xviii. ch. 13. Dunlap: Son of the Man, p. 94; and Beal: Hist.
Buddha.
[43:6] Chambers, art. "Transmigration."
[44:1] See The Religion of Israel, p. 18.
[44:2] Malachi iv. 5.
[44:3] Matthew xvii. 12, 13.
[44:4] See Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 78.
[44:5] Faber: Orig. Pagan Idol, vol. iii. p. 612; in Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 210.
[45:1] Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 202.
[45:2] Contra Celsus, lib. vi. c. xxii.
[45:3] Tylor: Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 324.
[45:4] Ibid.
[45:5] Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 262.
[45:6] Dupuis: Origin of Religious Beliefs, p. 344.
[45:7] Volney's Ruins, p. 147, note.
[45:8] See Child's Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. pp. 160, 162.
[46:1] Genesis xxviii. 12, 13.
[46:2] Genesis xxviii. 18, 19.
[46:3] "Phallic," from "Phallus," a representation of the male generative organs. For further
information on this subject, see the works of R. Payne Knight, and Dr. Thomas Inman.
[46:4] Bible for Learners, vol. i. pp. 175, 276. See, also, Knight: Ancient Art and
Mythology; and Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. i. and ii.
[46:5] See Myths of the British Druids, p. 300; and Higgins: Celtic Druids.
[46:6] Quoted by R. Payne Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. 114, note.
[46:7] See Illustrations in Dr. Inman's Pagan and Christian Symbolism.
[46:8] See Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. i. pp. 543, 544.
[47:1] Bible for Learners, vol. i. pp. 177, 178, 317, 321, 322.
[47:2] Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 356.
[47:3] Ibid.
[47:4] We read in Bell's "Pantheon of the Gods and Demi-Gods of Antiquity," under the
head of BAELYLION, BAELYLIA or BAETYLOS, that they are "Anointed Stones, worshiped
among the Greeks, Phrygians, and other nations of the East;" that "these Baetylia were
greatly venerated by the ancient Heathen, many of their idols being no other;" and that, "in
reality no sort of idol was more common in the East, than that of oblong stones erected,
and hence termed by the Greeks pillars." The Rev. Geo. W. Cox, in his Aryan Mythology
(vol. ii. p. 113), says: "The erection of these stone columns or pillars, the forms of which in
most cases tell their own story, are common throughout the East, some of the most
elaborate being found near Ghizni." And Mr. Wake (Phallism in Ancient Religions, p. 60),
says: "Kiyun, or Kivan, the name of the deity said by Amos (v. 26), to have been
worshiped in the wilderness by the Hebrews, signifies GOD OF THE PILLAR."
[47:5] We find that there was nothing gross or immoral in the worship of the male and
female generative organs among the ancients, when the subject is properly understood.
Being the most intimately connected with the reproduction of life on earth, the Linga
became the symbol under which the Sun, invoked with a thousand names, has been
worshiped throughout the world as the restorer of the powers of nature after the long sleep
or death of winter. But if the Linga is the Sun-god in his majesty, the Yoni is the earth who
yields her fruit under his fertilizing warmth.
The Phallic tree is introduced into the narrative of the book of Genesis: but it is here called
a tree, not of life, but of the knowledge of good and evil, that knowledge which dawns in
the mind with the first consciousness of difference between man and woman. In contrast
with this tree of carnal indulgence, tending to death, is the tree of life, denoting the higher
existence for which man was designed, and which would bring with it the happiness and
the freedom of the children of God. In the brazen serpent of the Pentateuch, the two
emblems of the cross and serpent, the quiescent and energising Phallos, are united. (See
Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. pp. 113, 116, 118.)
[47:6] See Cox: Aryan Mytho., ii. 112, 113.
CHAPTER VI.
THE EXODUS FROM EGYPT, AND PASSAGE THROUGH
THE RED SEA.
The children of Israel, who were in bondage in Egypt, making bricks, and
working in the field,[48:1] were looked upon with compassion by the Lord.
[48:2] He heard their groaning, and remembered his covenant with Abraham,
[48:3] with Isaac, and with Jacob. He, therefore, chose Moses (an Israelite,
who had murdered an Egyptian,[48:4] and who, therefore, was obliged to flee
from Egypt, as Pharaoh sought to punish him), as his servant, to carry out
his plans.
Moses was at this time keeping the flock of Jeruth, his father-in-law, in the
land of Midian. The angel of the Lord, or the Lord himself, appeared to him
there, and said unto him:
"I am the God of thy Father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the
God of Jacob. . . . I have seen the affliction of my people which are in
Egypt, and have heard their cry by reason of their tormentors; for I know
their sorrows. And I am come down to deliver them out of the hands of the
Egyptians, and to bring them up out of that land into a good land and a
large, unto a land flowing with milk and honey. I will send thee unto
Pharaoh, that thou mayest bring forth my people, the children of Israel, out
of Egypt."
Then Moses said unto the Lord:
"Behold, when I come unto the children of Israel, and shall say unto them,
the God of your fathers hath sent me unto you, and they shall say unto me:
What is his name? What shall I say unto them?"
Then God said unto Moses:
"I AM THAT I AM."[48:5] "Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I AM
hath sent me unto you."[48:6]
And God said, moreover, unto Moses:
"Go and gather the Elders of Israel together, and say unto them: the Lord
God of your fathers . . . appeared unto me, saying: 'I have surely visited
you, and seen that which is done to you in Egypt. And I have said, I will
bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt . . . unto a land flowing with milk
and honey.' And they shall hearken to thy voice, and thou shall come, thou
and the Elders of Israel, unto the king of Egypt, and ye shall say unto him:
'the Lord God of the Hebrews hath met with us, and now let us go, we
beseech thee, three days journey in the wilderness, that we may sacrifice to
the Lord our God.'[49:1]
"I am sure that the king of Egypt will not let you go, no, not by a mighty
hand. And I will stretch out my hand, and smite Egypt with all my wonders,
which I will do in the midst thereof: and after that he will let you go. And I
will give this people (the Hebrews) favor in the sight of the Egyptians, and
it shall come to pass, that when ye go, ye shall not go empty. But every
woman shall borrow of her neighbor, and of her that sojourneth in her
house, jewels of silver and jewels of gold, and raiment. And ye shall put
them upon your sons and upon your daughters, and ye shall spoil the
Egyptians."[49:2]
The Lord again appeared unto Moses, in Midian, and said:
"Go, return into Egypt, for all the men are dead which sought thy life. And
Moses took his wife, and his son, and set them upon an ass, and he returned
to the land of Egypt. And Moses took the rod of God (which the Lord had
given him) in his hand."[49:3]
Upon arriving in Egypt, Moses tells his brother Aaron, "all the words of the
Lord," and Aaron tells all the children of Israel. Moses, who was not
eloquent, but had a slow speech,[49:4] uses Aaron as his spokesman.[49:5]
They then appear unto Pharaoh, and falsify, "according to the commands of
the Lord," saying: "Let us go, we pray thee, three days' journey in the
desert, and sacrifice unto the Lord our God."[49:6]
The Lord hardens Pharaoh's heart, so that he does not let the children of
Israel go to sacrifice unto their God, in the desert.
Moses and Aaron continue interceding with him, however, and, for the
purpose of showing their miraculous powers, they change their rods into
serpents, the river into blood, cause a plague of frogs and lice, and a swarm
of flies, &c., &c., to appear. Most of these feats were imitated by the
magicians of Egypt. Finally, the first-born of Egypt are slain, when
Pharaoh, after having had his heart hardened, by the Lord, over and over
again, consents to let Moses and the children of Israel go to serve their God,
as they had said, that is, for three days.
The Lord having given the people favor in the sight of the Egyptians, they
borrowed of them jewels of silver, jewels of gold, and raiment, "according
to the commands of the Lord." And they journeyed toward Succoth, there
being six hundred thousand, besides children.[50:1]
"And they took their journey from Succoth, and encamped in Etham, in the
edge of the wilderness. And the Lord went before them by day, in a pillar of
a cloud, to lead them the way; and by night in a pillar of fire, to give them
light to go by day and night."[50:2]
"And it was told the king of Egypt, that the people fled. . . . And he made
ready his chariot, and took his people with him. And he took six hundred
chosen chariots, and all the chariots of Egypt, . . . and he pursued after the
children of Israel, and overtook them encamping beside the sea. . . . And
when Pharaoh drew nigh, the children of Israel . . . were sore afraid, and . . .
(they) cried out unto the Lord. . . . And the Lord said unto Moses, . . . speak
unto the children of Israel, that they go forward. But lift thou up thy rod,
and stretch out thine hand over the Red Sea, and divide it, and the children
of Israel shall go on dry ground through the midst of the sea. . . . And
Moses stretched out his hand over the sea,[50:3] and the Lord caused the sea
to go back by a strong east wind that night, and made the sea dry land, and
the waters were divided. And the children of Israel went into the midst of
the sea upon the dry ground; and the waters were a wall unto them upon the
right hand, and on their left. And the Egyptians pursued, and went in after
them to the midst of the sea, even all Pharaoh's horses, and his chariots,
and his horse-men."
After the children of Israel had landed on the other side of the sea, the Lord
said unto Moses:
"Stretch out thine hand over the sea, that the waters may come again upon
the Egyptians, upon their chariots, and upon their horse-men. And Moses
stretched forth his hand over the sea, and the sea returned to his
strength. . . . And the Lord overthrew the Egyptians in the midst of the sea.
And the waters returned, and covered the chariots, and the horse-men, and
all the host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there remained not
so much as one of them. But the children of Israel walked upon dry land in
the midst of the sea, and the waters were a wall unto them on their right
hand, and on their left. . . . And Israel saw the great work which the Lord
did upon the Egyptians, and the people feared the Lord, and believed the
Lord and his servant Moses."[51:1]
The writer of this story, whoever he may have been, was evidently familiar
with the legends related of the Sun-god, Bacchus, as he has given Moses the
credit of performing some of the miracles which were attributed to that god.
It is related in the hymns of Orpheus,[51:2] that Bacchus had a rod with
which he performed miracles, and which he could change into a serpent at
pleasure. He passed the Red Sea, dry shod, at the head of his army. He
divided the waters of the rivers Orontes and Hydaspus, by the touch of his
rod, and passed through them dry-shod.[51:3] By the same mighty wand, he
drew water from the rock,[51:4] and wherever they marched, the land flowed
with wine, milk and honey.[51:5]
Professor Steinthal, speaking of Dionysus (Bacchus), says:
Like Moses, he strikes fountains of wine and water out of the rock. Almost
all the acts of Moses correspond to those of the Sun-gods.[51:6]
Mons. Dupuis says:
"Among the different miracles of Bacchus and his Bacchantes, there are
prodigies very similar to those which are attributed to Moses; for instance,
such as the sources of water which the former caused to sprout from the
innermost of the rocks."[51:7]
In Bell's Pantheon of the Gods and Heroes of Antiquity,[51:8] an account of
the prodigies attributed to Bacchus is given; among these, are mentioned his
striking water from the rock, with his magic wand, his turning a twig of ivy
into a snake, his passing through the Red Sea and the rivers Orontes and
Hydaspus, and of his enjoying the light of the Sun (while marching with his
army in India), when the day was spent, and it was dark to others. All these
are parallels too striking to be accidental.
We might also mention the fact, that Bacchus, as well as Moses was called
the "Law-giver," and that it was said of Bacchus, as well as of Moses, that
his laws were written on two tables of stone.[52:1] Bacchus was represented
horned, and so was Moses.[52:2] Bacchus "was picked up in a box, that
floated on the water,"[52:3] and so was Moses.[52:4] Bacchus had two
mothers, one by nature, and one by adoption,[52:5] and so had Moses.[52:6]
And, as we have already seen, Bacchus and his army enjoyed the light of
the Sun, during the night time, and Moses and his army enjoyed the light of
"a pillar of fire, by night."[52:7]
In regard to the children of Israel going out from the land of Egypt, we have
no doubt that such an occurrence took place, although not in the manner,
and not for such reasons, as is recorded by the sacred historian. We find,
from other sources, what is evidently nearer the truth.
It is related by the historian Choeremon, that, at one time, the land of Egypt
was infested with disease, and through the advice of the sacred scribe
Phritiphantes, the king caused the infected people (who were none other
than the brick-making slaves, known as the children of Israel), to be
collected, and driven out of the country.[52:8]
Lysimachus relates that:
"A filthy disease broke out in Egypt, and the Oracle of Ammon, being
consulted on the occasion, commanded the king to purify the land by
driving out the Jews (who were infected with leprosy, &c.), a race of men
who were hateful to the Gods."[52:9] "The whole multitude of the people
were accordingly collected and driven out into the wilderness."[52:10]
Diodorus Siculus, referring to this event, says:
"In ancient times Egypt was afflicted with a great plague, which was
attributed to the anger of God, on account of the multitude of foreigners in
Egypt: by whom the rites of the native religion were neglected. The
Egyptians accordingly drove them out. The most noble of them went under
Cadmus and Danaus to Greece, but the greater number followed Moses, a
wise and valiant leader, to Palestine."[52:11]
After giving the different opinions concerning the origin of the Jewish
nation, Tacitus, the Roman historian, says:
"In this clash of opinions, one point seems to be universally admitted. A
pestilential disease, disfiguring the race of man, and making the body an
object of loathsome deformity, spread all over Egypt. Bocchoris, at that
time the reigning monarch, consulted the oracle of Jupiter Hammon, and
received for answer, that the kingdom must be purified, by exterminating
the infected multitude, as a race of men detested by the gods. After diligent
search, the wretched sufferers were collected together, and in a wild and
barren desert abandoned to their misery. In that distress, while the vulgar
herd was sunk in deep despair, Moses, one of their number, reminded them,
that, by the wisdom of his councils, they had been already rescued out of
impending danger. Deserted as they were by men and gods, he told them,
that if they did not repose their confidence in him, as their chief by divine
commission, they had no resource left. His offer was accepted. Their march
began, they knew not whither. Want of water was their chief distress. Worn
out with fatigue, they lay stretched on the bare earth, heart broken, ready to
expire, when a troop of wild asses, returning from pasture, went up the
steep ascent of a rock covered with a grove of trees. The verdure of the
herbage round the place suggested the idea of springs near at hand. Moses
traced the steps of the animals, and discovered a plentiful vein of water. By
this relief the fainting multitude was raised from despair. They pursued their
journey for six days without intermission. On the seventh day they made
halt, and, having expelled the natives, took possession of the country, where
they built their city, and dedicated their temple."[53:1]
Other accounts, similar to these, might be added, among which may be
mentioned that given by Manetho, an Egyptian priest, which is referred to
by Josephus, the Jewish historian.
Although the accounts quoted above are not exactly alike, yet the main
points are the same, which are to the effect that Egypt was infected with
disease owing to the foreigners (among whom were those who were
afterwards styled "the children of Israel") that were in the country, and who
were an unclean people, and that they were accordingly driven out into the
wilderness.
When we compare this statement with that recorded in Genesis, it does not
take long to decide which of the two is nearest the truth.
Everything putrid, or that had a tendency to putridity, was carefully avoided
by the ancient Egyptians, and so strict were the Egyptian priests on this
point, that they wore no garments made of any animal substance,
circumcised themselves, and shaved their whole bodies, even to their
eyebrows, lest they should unknowingly harbor any filth, excrement or
vermin, supposed to be bred from putrefaction.[53:2] We know from the laws
set down in Leviticus, that the Hebrews were not a remarkably clean race.
Jewish priests, in making a history for their race, have given us but a
shadow of truth here and there; it is almost wholly mythical. The author of
"The Religion of Israel," speaking on this subject, says:
"The history of the religion of Israel must start from the sojourn of the
Israelites in Egypt. Formerly it was usual to take a much earlier starting-
point, and to begin with a religious discussion of the religious ideas of the
Patriarchs. And this was perfectly right, so long as the accounts of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were considered historical. But now that a strict
investigation has shown us that all these stories are entirely unhistorical, of
course we have to begin the history later on."[54:1]
The author of "The Spirit History of Man," says:
"The Hebrews came out of Egypt and settled among the Canaanites. They
need not be traced beyond the Exodus. That is their historical beginning. It
was very easy to cover up this remote event by the recital of mythical
traditions, and to prefix to it an account of their origin in which the gods
(Patriarchs), should figure as their ancestors."[54:2]
Professor Goldzhier says:
"The residence of the Hebrews in Egypt, and their exodus thence under the
guidance and training of an enthusiast for the freedom of his tribe, form a
series of strictly historical facts, which find confirmation even in the
documents of ancient Egypt (which we have just shown). But the traditional
narratives of these events (were) elaborated by the Hebrew people."[54:3]
Count de Volney also observes that:
"What Exodus says of their (the Israelites) servitude under the king of
Heliopolis, and of the oppression of their hosts, the Egyptians, is extremely
probable. It is here their history begins. All that precedes . . . is nothing but
mythology and cosmogony."[54:4]
In speaking of the sojourn of the Israelites in Egypt, Dr. Knappert says:
"According to the tradition preserved in Genesis, it was the promotion of
Jacob's son, Joseph, to be viceroy of Egypt, that brought about the
migration of the sons of Israel from Canaan to Goshen. The story goes that
this Joseph was sold as a slave by his brothers, and after many changes of
fortune received the vice-regal office at Pharaoh's hands through his skill in
interpreting dreams. Famine drives his brothers—and afterwards his father
—to him, and the Egyptian prince gives them the land of Goshen to live in.
It is by imagining all this that the legend tries to account for the fact that
Israel passed some time in Egypt. But we must look for the real explanation
in a migration of certain tribes which could not establish or maintain
themselves in Canaan, and were forced to move further on.
"We find a passage in Flavius Josephus, from which it appears that in
Egypt, too, a recollection survived of the sojourn of some foreign tribes in
the north-eastern district of the country. For this writer gives us two
fragments out of a lost work by Manetho, a priest, who lived about 250 B. C.
In one of these we have a statement that pretty nearly agrees with the
Israelitish tradition about a sojourn in Goshen. But the Israelites were
looked down on by the Egyptians as foreigners, and they are represented as
lepers and unclean. Moses himself is mentioned by name, and we are told
that he was a priest and joined himself to these lepers and gave them laws."
[55:1]
To return now to the story of the Red Sea being divided to let Moses and his
followers pass through—of which we have already seen one counterpart in
the legend related of Bacchus and his army passing through the same sea
dry-shod—there is another similar story concerning Alexander the Great.
The histories of Alexander relate that the Pamphylian Sea was divided to let
him and his army pass through. Josephus, after speaking of the Red Sea
being divided for the passage of the Israelites, says:
"For the sake of those who accompanied Alexander, king of Macedonia,
who yet lived comparatively but a little while ago, the Pamphylian Sea
retired and offered them a passage through itself, when they had no other
way to go . . . and this is confessed to be true by all who have written about
the actions of Alexander."[55:2]
He seems to consider both legends of the same authority, quoting the latter
to substantiate the former.
"Callisthenes, who himself accompanied Alexander in the expedition,"
"wrote, how the Pamphylian Sea did not only open a passage for Alexander,
but, rising and elevating its waters, did pay him homage as its king."[55:3]
It is related in Egyptian mythology that Isis was at one time on a journey
with the eldest child of the king of Byblos, when coming to the river
Phœdrus, which was in a "rough air," and wishing to cross, she commanded
the stream to be dried up. This being done she crossed without trouble.[56:1]
There is a Hindoo fable to the effect that when the infant Crishna was being
sought by the reigning tyrant of Madura (King Kansa)[56:2] his foster-father
took him and departed out of the country. Coming to the river Yumna, and
wishing to cross, it was divided for them by the Lord, and they passed
through.
The story is related by Thomas Maurice, in his "History of Hindostan," who
has taken it from the Bhagavat Pooraun. It is as follows:
"Yasodha took the child Crishna, and carried him off (from where he was
born), but, coming to the river Yumna, directly opposite to Gokul, Crishna's
father perceiving the current to be very strong, it being in the midst of the
rainy season, and not knowing which way to pass it, Crishna commanded
the water to give way on both sides to his father, who accordingly passed
dry-footed, across the river."[56:3]
This incident is illustrated in Plate 58 of Moore's "Hindu Pantheon."
There is another Hindoo legend, recorded in the Rig Veda, and quoted by
Viscount Amberly, from whose work we take it,[56:4] to the effect that an
Indian sage called Visvimati, having arrived at a river which he wished to
cross, that holy man said to it: "Listen to the Bard who has come to you
from afar with wagon and chariot. Sink down, become fordable, and reach
not up to our chariot axles." The river answers: "I will bow down to thee
like a woman with full breast (suckling her child), as a maid to a man, will I
throw myself open to thee."
This is accordingly done, and the sage passes through.
We have also an Indian legend which relates that a courtesan named
Bindumati, turned back the streams of the river Ganges.[56:5]
We see then, that the idea of seas and rivers being divided for the purpose of
letting some chosen one of God pass through is an old one peculiar to other
peoples beside the Hebrews, and the probability is that many nations had
legends of this kind.
That Pharaoh and his host should have been drowned in the Red Sea, and
the fact not mentioned by any historian, is simply impossible, especially
when they have, as we have seen, noticed the fact of the Israelites being
driven out of Egypt.[56:6] Dr. Inman, speaking of this, says:
"We seek in vain amongst the Egyptian hieroglyphs for scenes which recall
such cruelties as those we read of in the Hebrew records; and in the writings
which have hitherto been translated, we find nothing resembling the
wholesale destructions described and applauded by the Jewish historians, as
perpetrated by their own people."[57:1]
That Pharaoh should have pursued a tribe of diseased slaves, whom he had
driven out of his country, is altogether improbable. In the words of Dr.
Knappert, we may conclude, by saying that:
"This story, which was not written until more than five hundred years after
the exodus itself, can lay no claim to be considered historical."[57:2]
FOOTNOTES:
[48:1] Exodus i. 14.
[48:2] Exodus ii. 24, 25.
[48:3] See chapter x.
[48:4] Exodus ii. 12.
[48:5] The Egyptian name for God was "Nuk-Pa-Nuk," or "I AM THAT I AM." (Bonwick:
Egyptian Belief, p. 395.) This name was found on a temple in Egypt. (Higgins'
Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 17.) "'I AM' was a Divine name understood by all the initiated among
the Egyptians." "The 'I AM' of the Hebrews, and the 'I AM' of the Egyptians are identical."
(Bunsen: Keys of St. Peter, p. 38.) The name "Jehovah," which was adopted by the
Hebrews, was a name esteemed sacred among the Egyptians. They called it Y-HA-HO, or Y-
AH-WEH. (See the Religion of Israel, pp. 42, 43; and Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 329, and vol. ii.
p. 17.) "None dare to enter the temple of Serapis, who did not bear on his breast or
forehead the name of JAO, or J-HA-HO, a name almost equivalent in sound to that of the
Hebrew Jehovah, and probably of identical import; and no name was uttered in Egypt with
more reverence than this IAO." (Trans. from the Ger. of Schiller, in Monthly Repos., vol.
xx.; and Voltaire: Commentary on Exodus; Higgins' Anac., vol. i. p. 329; vol. ii. p. 17.)
"That this divine name was well-known to the Heathen there can be no doubt." (Parkhurst:
Hebrew Lex. in Anac., i. 327.) So also with the name El Shaddai. "The extremely common
Egyptian expression Nutar Nutra exactly corresponds in sense to the Hebrew El Shaddai,
the very title by which God tells Moses he was known to Abraham and Isaac and Jacob."
(Prof. Renouf: Relig. of Anc't Egypt, p. 99.)
[48:6] Exodus iii. 1, 14.
[49:1] Exodus iii. 15-18.
[49:2] Exodus iii. 19-22. Here is a command from the Lord to deceive, and lie, and steal,
which, according to the narrative, was carried out to the letter (Ex. xii. 35, 36); and yet we
are told that this same Lord said: "Thou shalt not steal." (Ex. xx. 15.) Again he says: "That
shalt not defraud thy neighbor, neither rob him." (Leviticus xix. 18.) Surely this is
inconsistency.
[49:3] Exodus iv. 19, 20.
[49:4] Exodus iv. 10.
[49:5] Exodus iv. 16.
[49:6] Exodus v. 3.
[50:1] Exodus vii. 35-37. Bishop Colenso shows, in his Pentateuch Examined, how
ridiculous this statement is.
[50:2] Exodus xiii. 20, 21.
[50:3] "The sea over which Moses stretches out his hand with the staff, and which he
divides, so that the waters stand up on either side like walls while he passes through, must
surely have been originally the Sea of Clouds. . . . A German story presents a perfectly
similar feature. The conception of the cloud as sea, rock and wall, recurs very frequently in
mythology." (Prof. Steinthal: The Legend of Samson, p. 429.)
[51:1] Exodus xiv. 5-13.
[51:2] Orpheus is said to have been the earliest poet of Greece, where he first introduced
the rites of Bacchus, which he brought from Egypt. (See Roman Antiquities, p. 134.)
[51:3] The Hebrew fable writers not wishing to be outdone, have made the waters of the
river Jordan to be divided to let Elijah and Elisha pass through (2 Kings ii. 8), and also the
children of Israel. (Joshua iii. 15-17.)
[51:4] Moses, with his rod, drew water from the rock. (Exodus xvii. 6.)
[51:5] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 191, and Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 19.
[51:6] The Legend of Samson, p. 429.
[51:7] Dupuis: Origin of Religious Beliefs, p. 135.
[51:8] Vol. i. p. 122.
[52:1] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 122; and Higgins: Anacalypsis vol. ii. p. 19.
[52:2] Ibid. and Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 174.
[52:3] Taylor's Diegesis, p. 190; Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. under "Bacchus;" and Higgins:
Anacalypsis ii. 19.
[52:4] Exodus ii. 1-11.
[52:5] Taylor's Diegesis, p. 191; Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. under "Bacchus;" and Higgins: p.
19, vol. ii.
[52:6] Exodus ii. 1-11.
[52:7] Exodus xiii. 20, 21.
[52:8] See Prichard's Historical Records, p. 74; also Dunlap's Spirit Hist., p. 40; and Cory's
Ancient Fragments, pp. 80, 81, for similar accounts.
[52:9] "All persons afflicted with leprosy were considered displeasing in the sight of the
Sun-god, by the Egyptians." (Dunlap: Spirit. Hist. p. 40.)
[52:10] Prichard's Historical Records, p. 75.
[52:11] Ibid. p. 78.
[53:1] Tacitus: Hist. book v. ch. iii.
[53:2] Knight: Anc't Art and Mythology, p. 89, and Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 447. "The
cleanliness of the Egyptian priests was extreme. They shaved their heads, and every three
days shaved their whole bodies. They bathed two or three times a day, often in the night
also. They wore garments of white linen, deeming it more cleanly than cloth made from the
hair of animals. If they had occasion to wear a woolen cloth or mantle, they put it off
before entering a temple; so scrupulous were they that nothing impure should come into
the presence of the gods." (Prog. Relig. Ideas, i. 168.)
"Thinking it better to be clean than handsome, the (Egyptian) priests shave their whole
body every third day, that neither lice nor any other impurity may be found upon them
when engaged in the service of the gods." (Herodotus: book ii. ch. 37.)
[54:1] The Religion of Israel, p. 27.
[54:2] Dunlap: Spirit Hist. of Man, p. 266.
[54:3] Hebrew Mythology, p. 23.
[54:4] Researches in Ancient History, p. 146.
[55:1] The Religion of Israel, pp. 31, 32.
[55:2] Jewish Antiq. bk. ii. ch. xvi.
[55:3] Ibid. note.
"It was said that the waters of the Pamphylian Sea miraculously opened a passage for the
army of Alexander the Great. Admiral Beaufort, however, tells us that, 'though there are no
tides in this part of the Mediterranean, considerable depression of the sea is caused by
long-continued north winds; and Alexander, taking advantage of such a moment, may have
dashed on without impediment;' and we accept the explanation as a matter of course. But
the waters of the Red Sea are said to have miraculously opened a passage for the children
of Israel; and we insist on the literal truth of this story, and reject natural explanations as
monstrous." (Matthew Arnold.)
[56:1] See Prichard's Egyptian Mytho. p. 60.
[56:2] See ch. xviii.
[56:3] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 312.
[56:4] Analysis Relig. Belief, p. 552.
[56:5] See Hardy: Buddhist Legends, p. 140.
[56:6] In a cave discovered at Deir-el-Bahari (Aug., 1881), near Thebes, in Egypt, was
found thirty-nine mummies of royal and priestly personages. Among these was King
Ramses II., the third king of the Nineteenth Dynasty, and the veritable Pharaoh of the
Jewish captivity. It is very strange that he should be here, among a number of other kings,
if he had been lost in the Red Sea. The mummy is wrapped in rose-colored and yellow
linen of a texture finer than the finest Indian muslin, upon which lotus flowers are strewn.
It is in a perfect state of preservation. (See a Cairo [Aug. 8th] letter to the London Times.)
[57:1] Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 58.
[57:2] The Religion of Israel, p. 41.
CHAPTER VII.
RECEIVING THE TEN COMMANDMENTS.
We have already seen, in the last chapter, that Bacchus was called the "Law-
giver," and that his laws were written on two tables of stone.[59:3] This
feature in the Hebrew legend was evidently copied from that related of
Bacchus, but, the idea of his (Moses) receiving the commandments from the
Lord on a mountain was obviously taken from the Persian legend related of
Zoroaster.
Prof. Max Müller says:
"What applies to the religion of Moses applies to that of Zoroaster. It is
placed before us as a complete system from the first, revealed by
Ahuramazda (Ormuzd), proclaimed by Zoroaster."[59:4]
The disciples of Zoroaster, in their profusion of legends of the master, relate
that one day, as he prayed on a high mountain, in the midst of thunders and
lightnings ("fire from heaven"), the Lord himself appeared before him, and
delivered unto him the "Book of the Law." While the King of Persia and the
people were assembled together, Zoroaster came down from the mountain
unharmed, bringing with him the "Book of the Law," which had been
revealed to him by Ormuzd. They call this book the Zend-Avesta, which
signifies the Living Word.[59:5]
According to the religion of the Cretans, Minos, their law-giver, ascended a
mountain (Mount Dicta) and there received from the Supreme Lord (Zeus)
the sacred laws which he brought down with him.[60:1]
Almost all nations of antiquity have legends of their holy men ascending a
mountain to ask counsel of the gods, such places being invested with
peculiar sanctity, and deemed nearer to the deities than other portions of the
earth.[60:2]
According to Egyptian belief, it is Thoth, the Deity itself, that speaks and
reveals to his elect among men the will of God and the arcana of divine
things. Portions of them are expressly stated to have been written by the
very finger of Thoth himself; to have been the work and composition of the
great god.[60:3]
Diodorus, the Grecian historian, says:
The idea promulgated by the ancient Egyptians that their laws were
received direct from the Most High God, has been adopted with success by
many other law-givers, who have thus insured respect for their institutions.
[60:4]
FOOTNOTES:
[58:1] Exodus xix.
[58:2] Exodus xxxi. 18.
[58:3] Exodus xxii. 19.
[58:4] Exodus xxxiv.
[58:5] Ibid.
It was a common belief among ancient Pagan nations that the gods appeared and conversed
with men. As an illustration we may cite the following, related by Herodotus, the Grecian
historian, who, in speaking of Egypt and the Egyptians, says: "There is a large city called
Chemmis, situated in the Thebaic district, near Neapolis, in which is a quadrangular temple
dedicated to (the god) Perseus, son of (the Virgin) Danae; palm-trees grow round it, and the
portico is of stone, very spacious, and over it are placed two large stone statues. In this
inclosure is a temple, and in it is placed a statue of Perseus. The Chemmitæ (or inhabitants
of Chemmis), affirm that Perseus has frequently appeared to them on earth, and frequently
within the temple." (Herodotus, bk. ii. ch. 91.)
[59:1] Buddha, the founder of Buddhism, had TEN commandments. 1. Not to kill. 2. Not
to steal. 3. To be chaste. 4 Not to bear false witness. 5. Not to lie. 6. Not to swear. 7. To
avoid impure words. 8. To be disinterested. 9. Not to avenge one's-self. 10. Not to be
superstitious. (See Huc's Travels, p. 328, vol. i.)
[59:2] Exodus xx. Dr. Oort says: "The original ten commandments probably ran as follows:
I Yahwah am your God. Worship no other gods beside me. Make no image of a god.
Commit no perjury. Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day. Honor your father and your
mother. Commit no murder. Break not the marriage vow. Steal not. Bear no false witness.
Covet not." (Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 18.)
[59:3] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 122. Higgins, vol. ii. p. 19. Cox: Aryan Mytho. vol. ii. p.
295.
[59:4] Müller: Origin of Religion, p. 130.
[59:5] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. pp. 257, 258. This book, the Zend-Avesta, is similar, in
many respects, to the Vedas of the Hindoos. This has led many to believe that Zoroaster
was a Brahman; among these are Rawlinson (See Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 831)
and Thomas Maurice. (See Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 219.)
The Persians themselves had a tradition that he came from some country to the East of
them. That he was a foreigner is indicated by a passage in the Zend-Avesta which
represents Ormuzd as saying to him: "Thou, O Zoroaster, by the promulgation of my law,
shalt restore to me my former glory, which was pure light. Up! haste thee to the land of
Iran, which thirsteth after the law, and say, thus said Ormuzd, &c." (See Prog. Relig. Ideas,
vol. i. p. 263.)
[60:1] The Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 301.
[60:2] "The deities of the Hindoo Pantheon dwell on the sacred Mount Meru; the gods of
Persia ruled from Albordj; the Greek Jove thundered from Olympus, and the Scandinavian
gods made Asgard awful with their presence. . . . Profane history is full of examples
attesting the attachment to high places for purpose of sacrifice." (Squire: Serpent Symbols,
p. 78.)
"The offerings of the Chinese to the deities were generally on the summits of high
mountains, as they seemed to them to be nearer heaven, to the majesty of which they were
to be offered." (Christmas's Mytho. p. 250, in Ibid.) "In the infancy of civilization, high
places were chosen by the people to offer sacrifices to the gods. The first altars, the first
temples, were erected on mountains." (Humboldt: American Researches.) The Himalayas
are the "Heavenly mountains." In Sanscrit Himala, corresponding to the M. Gothic,
Himins; Alem., Himil; Ger., Swed., and Dan., Himmel; Old Norse, Himin; Dutch, Hemel;
Ang.-Sax., Heofon; Eng., Heaven. (See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 42.)
[60:3] Bunsen's Egypt, quoted in Isis Unveiled, vol. ii. p. 367. Mrs. Child says: "The laws
of Egypt were handed down from the earliest times, and regarded with the utmost
veneration as a portion of religion. Their first legislator represented them as dictated by the
gods themselves and framed expressly for the benefit of mankind by their secretary Thoth."
(Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 173.)
[60:4] Quoted in Ibid.
[61:1] See Squire's Serpent Symbol, p. 175.
[61:2] Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 301.
CHAPTER VIII.
SAMSON AND HIS EXPLOITS.
This Israelite hero is said to have been born at a time when the children of
Israel were in the hands of the Philistines. His mother, who had been barren
for a number of years, is entertained by an angel, who informs her that she
shall conceive, and bear a son,[62:1] and that the child shall be a Nazarite
unto God, from the womb, and he shall begin to deliver Israel out of the
hands of the Philistines.
According to the prediction of the angel, "the woman bore a son, and called
his name Samson; and the child grew, and the Lord blessed him."
"And Samson (after he had grown to man's estate), went down to Timnath,
and saw a woman in Timnath of the daughters of the Philistines. And he
came up and told his father and his mother, and said, I have seen a woman
in Timnath of the daughters of the Philistines; now therefore get her for me
to wife."
Samson's father and mother preferred that he should take a woman among
the daughters of their own tribe, but Samson wished for the maid of the
Philistines, "for," said he, "she pleaseth me well."
The parents, after coming to the conclusion that it was the will of the Lord,
that he should marry the maid of the Philistines, consented.
"Then went Samson down, and his father and his mother, to Timnath, and
came to the vineyards of Timnath, and, behold, a young lion roared against
him (Samson). And the spirit of the Lord came mightily upon him, and he
rent him (the lion) as he would have rent a kid, and he had nothing in his
hand."
This was Samson's first exploit, which he told not to any one, not even his
father, or his mother.
He then continued on his way, and went down and talked with the woman,
and she pleased him well.
And, after a time, he returned to take her, and he turned aside to see the
carcass of the lion, and behold, "there was a swarm of bees, and honey, in
the carcass of the lion."
Samson made a feast at his wedding, which lasted for seven days. At this
feast, there were brought thirty companions to be with him, unto whom he
said: "I will now put forth a riddle unto you, if ye can certainly declare it
me, within the seven days of the feast, and find it out, then I will give you
thirty sheets, and thirty changes of garments. But, if ye cannot declare it me,
then shall ye give me thirty sheets, and thirty changes of garments." And
they said unto him, "Put forth thy riddle, that we may hear it." And he
answered them: "Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong
came forth sweetness."
This riddle the thirty companions could not solve.
"And it came to pass, on the seventh day, that they said unto Samson's wife:
'Entice thy husband, that he may declare unto us the riddle.'"
She accordingly went to Samson, and told him that he could not love her; if
it were so, he would tell her the answer to the riddle. After she had wept
and entreated of him, he finally told her, and she gave the answer to the
children of her people. "And the men of the city said unto him, on the
seventh day, before the sun went down, 'What is sweeter than honey, and
what is stronger than a lion?'"
Samson, upon hearing this, suspected how they managed to find out the
answer, whereupon he said unto them: "If ye had not ploughed with my
heifer, ye had not found out my riddle."
Samson was then at a loss to know where to get the thirty sheets, and the
thirty changes of garments; but, "the spirit of the Lord came upon him, and
he went down to Ashkelon, and slew thirty men of them, and took their
spoil, and gave change of garments unto them which expounded the riddle."
This was the hero's second exploit.
His anger being kindled, he went up to his father's house, instead of
returning to his wife.[64:1] But it came to pass, that, after a while, Samson
repented of his actions, and returned to his wife's house, and wished to go in
to his wife in the chamber; but her father would not suffer him to go. And
her father said: "I verily thought that thou hadst utterly hated her, therefore,
I gave her to thy companion. Is not her younger sister fairer than she? Take
her, I pray thee, instead of her."
This did not seem to please Samson, even though the younger was fairer
than the older, for he "went and caught three hundred foxes, and took
firebrands, and turned (the foxes) tail to tail, and put a firebrand in the midst
between two tails. And when he had set the brands on fire, he let them go
into the standing corn of the Philistines, and burned up both the shocks and
also the standing corn, with the vineyards and olives."
This was Samson's third exploit.
When the Philistines found their corn, their vineyards, and their olives
burned, they said: "Who hath done this?"
"And they answered, 'Samson, the son-in-law of the Timnite, because he
had taken his wife, and given her to his companion.' And the Philistines
came up, and burned her and her father with fire. And Samson said unto
them: 'Though ye have done this, yet will I be avenged of you, and after that
I will cease.' And he smote them hip and thigh with a great slaughter, and
he went and dwelt in the top of the rock Etam."
This "great slaughter" was Samson's fourth exploit.
"Then the Philistines went up, and pitched in Judah, and spread themselves
in Lehi. And the men of Judah said: 'Why are ye come up against us?' And
they answered: 'To bind Samson are we come up, and to do to him as he
hath done to us.' Then three thousand men of Judah went up to the top of
the rock Etam, and said to Samson: 'Knowest thou not that the Philistines
are rulers over us? What is this that thou hast done unto us?' And he said
unto them: 'As they did unto me, so have I done unto them.' And they said
unto him: 'We are come down to bind thee, that we may deliver thee into the
hands of the Philistines.' And Samson said unto them: 'Swear unto me that
ye will not fall upon me yourselves.' And they spake unto him, saying, 'No;
but we will bind thee fast, and deliver thee into their hands: but surely we
will not kill thee.' And they bound him with two new cords, and brought
him up from the rock. And when he came unto Lehi, the Philistines shouted
against him; and the spirit of the Lord came mightily upon him, and the
cords that were upon his arms became as flax that was burned with fire, and
his bands loosed from off his hands. And he found a new jaw-bone of an
ass, and put forth his hand and took it, and slew a thousand men with it."
This was Samson's fifth exploit.
After slaying a thousand men he was "sore athirst," and called unto the
Lord. And "God clave a hollow place that was in the jaw, and there came
water thereout, and when he had drunk, his spirit came again, and he
revived."[65:1]
"Then went Samson to Gaza and saw there a harlot, and went in unto her.
And it was told the Gazites, saying, 'Samson is come hither.' And they
compassed him in, and laid wait for him all night in the gate of the city, and
were quiet all the night, saying: 'In the morning, when it is day, we shall kill
him.' And Samson lay (with the harlot) till midnight, and arose at midnight,
and took the doors of the gate of the city, and the two posts, and went away
with them, bar and all, and put them upon his shoulders, and carried them
up to the top of a hill that is in Hebron."
This was Samson's sixth exploit.
"And it came to pass afterward, that he loved a woman in the valley of
Soreck, whose name was Delilah. And the lords of the Philistines came up
unto her, and said unto her: 'Entice him, and see wherein his great strength
lieth, and by what means we may prevail against him.'"
Delilah then began to entice Samson to tell her wherein his strength lay.
"She pressed him daily with her words, and urged him, so that his soul was
vexed unto death. Then he told her all his heart, and said unto her: 'There
hath not come a razor upon mine head, for I have been a Nazarite unto God
from my mother's womb. If I be shaven, then my strength will go from me,
and I shall become weak, and be like any other man.' And when Delilah
saw that he had told her all his heart, she went and called for the lords of the
Philistines, saying: 'Come up this once, for he hath showed me all his heart.'
Then the lords of the Philistines came up unto her, and brought money in
their hands (for her).
"And she made him (Samson) sleep upon her knees; and she called for a
man, and she caused him to shave off the seven locks of his head; and she
began to afflict him, and his strength went from him."
The Philistines then took him, put out his eyes, and put him in prison. And
being gathered together at a great sacrifice in honor of their God, Dagon,
they said: "Call for Samson, that he may make us sport." And they called
for Samson, and he made them sport.
"And Samson said unto the lad that held him by the hand. Suffer me that I
may feel the pillars whereupon the house standeth, that I may lean upon
them.
"Now the house was full of men and women; and all the lords of the
Philistines were there; and there were upon the roof about three thousand
men and women, that beheld while Samson made sport.
"And Samson called unto the Lord, and said: 'O Lord God, remember me, I
pray thee, and strengthen me, I pray thee, only this once, O God, that I may
be at once avenged of the Philistines for my two eyes.'
"And Samson took hold of the two middle pillars upon which the house
stood and on which it was borne up, of the one with his right hand, and of
the other with his left. And Samson said: 'Let me die with the Philistines.'
And he bowed himself with all his might; and (having regained his
strength) the house fell upon the lords, and upon the people that were
therein. So the dead which he slew at his death, were more than they which
he slew in his life."[66:1]
Thus ended the career of the "strong man" of the Hebrews.
That this story is a copy of the legends related of Hercules, or that they have
both been copied from similar legends existing among some other nations,
[66:2] is too evident to be disputed. Many churchmen have noticed the
Fig. No. 3 is a representation of Hercules with the two posts or pillars on his
shoulders, as alluded to by Count de Volney. We have taken it from
Montfaucon's "L'Antiquité Expliquée."[70:6]
J. P. Lundy says of this:
"Hercules carrying his two columns to erect at the Straits of Gibraltar, may
have some reference to the Hebrew story."[71:1]
We think there is no doubt of it. By changing the name Hercules into
Samson, the legend is complete.
Sir William Drummond tells us, in his "Œdipus Judaicus," that:
"Gaza signifies a Goat, and was the type of the Sun in Capricorn. The Gates
of the Sun were feigned by the ancient Astronomers to be in Capricorn and
Cancer (that is, in Gaza), from which signs the tropics are named. Samson
carried away the gates from Gaza to Hebron, the city of conjunction. Now,
Count Gebelin tells us that at Cadiz, where Hercules was anciently
worshiped, there was a representation of him, with a gate on his shoulders."
[71:2]
The stories of the amours of Samson with Delilah and other females, are
simply counterparts of those of Hercules with Omphale and Iole.
Montfaucon, speaking of this, says:
"Nothing is better known in the fables (related of Hercules) than his amours
with Omphale and Iole."[71:3]
Prof. Steinthal says:
"The circumstance that Samson is so addicted to sexual pleasure, has its
origin in the remembrance that the Solar god is the god of fruitfulness and
procreation. We have as examples, the amours of Hercules and Omphale;
Ninyas, in Assyria, with Semiramis; Samson, in Philistia, with Delila,
whilst among the Phenicians, Melkart pursues Dido-Anna."[71:4]
Samson is said to have had long hair. "There hath not come a razor upon my
head," says he, "for I have been a Nazarite unto God from my mother's
womb."
Now, strange as it may appear, Hercules is said to have had long hair also,
and he was often represented that way. In Montfaucon's "L'Antiquité
Expliquée"[71:5] may be seen a representation of Hercules with hair
reaching almost to his waist. Almost all Sun-gods are represented thus.[71:6]
Prof. Goldzhier says:
"Long locks of hair and a long beard are mythological attributes of the Sun.
The Sun's rays are compared with locks of hair on the face or head of the
Sun.
"When the sun sets and leaves his place to the darkness, or when the
powerful Summer Sun is succeeded by the weak rays of the Winter Sun,
then Samson's long locks, in which alone his strength lies, are cut off
through the treachery of his deceitful concubine, Delilah, the 'languishing,
languid,' according to the meaning of the name (Delilah). The Beaming
Apollo, moreover, is called the Unshaven; and Minos cannot conquer the
solar hero Nisos, till the latter loses his golden hair."[72:1]
Through the influence of Delilah, Samson is at last made a prisoner. He tells
her the secret of his strength, the seven locks of hair are shaven off, and his
strength leaves him. The shearing of the locks of the Sun must be followed
by darkness and ruin.
From the shoulders of Phoibos Lykêgênes flow the sacred locks, over which
no razor might pass, and on the head of Nisos they become a palladium,
invested with a mysterious power.[72:2] The long locks of hair which flow
over his shoulders are taken from his head by Skylla, while he is asleep,
and, like another Delilah, she thus delivers him and his people into the
power of Minos.[72:3]
Prof. Steinthal says of Samson:
"His hair is a figure of increase and luxuriant fullness. In Winter, when
nature appears to have lost all strength, the god of growing young life has
lost his hair. In the Spring the hair grows again, and nature returns to life
again. Of this original conception the Bible story still preserves a trace.
Samson's hair, after being cut off, grows again, and his strength comes back
with it."[72:4]
Towards the end of his career, Samson's eyes are put out. Even here, the
Hebrew writes with a singular fidelity to the old mythical speech. The
tender light of evening is blotted out by the dark vapors; the light of the Sun
is quenched in gloom. Samson's eyes are put out.
Œdipus, whose history resembles that of Samson and Hercules in many
respects, tears out his eyes, towards the end of his career. In other words,
the Sun has blinded himself. Clouds and darkness have closed in about him,
and the clear light is blotted out of the heaven.[72:5]
The final act, Samson's death, reminds us clearly and decisively of the
Phenician Hercules, as Sun-god, who died at the Winter Solstice in the
furthest West, where his two pillars are set up to mark the end of his
wanderings.
Samson also died at the two pillars, but in his case they are not the Pillars of
the World, but are only set up in the middle of a great banqueting-hall. A
feast was being held in honor of Dagon, the Fish-god; the Sun was in the
sign of the Waterman, Samson, the Sun-god, died.[73:1]
The ethnology of the name of Samson, as well as his adventures, are very
closely connected with the Solar Hercules. "Samson" was the name of the
Sun.[73:2] In Arabic, "Shams-on" means the Sun.[73:3] Samson had seven
locks of hair, the number of the planetary bodies.[73:4]
The author of "The Religion of Israel," speaking of Samson, says:
"The story of Samson and his deeds originated in a Solar myth, which was
afterwards transformed by the narrator into a saga about a mighty hero and
deliverer of Israel. The very name 'Samson,' is derived from the Hebrew
word, and means 'Sun.' The hero's flowing locks were originally the rays of
the sun, and other traces of the old myth have been preserved."[73:5]
Prof. Oort says:
"The story of Samson is simply a solar myth. In some of the features of the
story the original meaning may be traced quite clearly, but in others the
myth can no longer be recognized. The exploits of some Danite hero, such
as Shamgar, who 'slew six hundred Philistines with an ox-goad' (Judges iii.
31), have been woven into it; the whole has been remodeled after the ideas
of the prophets of later ages, and finally, it has been fitted into the
framework of the period of the Judges, as conceived by the writer of the
book called after them."[73:6]
Again he says:
"The myth that lies at the foundation of this story is a description of the
sun's course during the six winter months. The god is gradually
encompassed by his enemies, mist and darkness. At first he easily maintains
his freedom, and gives glorious proofs of his strength; but the fetters grow
stronger and stronger, until at last he is robbed of his crown of rays, and
loses all his power and glory. Such is the Sun in Winter. But he has not lost
his splendor forever. Gradually his strength returns, at last he reappears; and
though he still seems to allow himself to be mocked, yet the power of
avenging himself has returned, and in the end he triumphs over his enemies
once more."[73:7]
Other nations beside the Hebrews and Greeks had their "mighty men" and
lion-killers. The Hindoos had their Samson. His name was Bala-Rama, the
"Strong Rama." He was considered by some an incarnation of Vishnu.[73:8]
Captain Wilford says, in "Asiatic Researches:"
"The Indian Hercules, according to Cicero, was called Belus. He is the
same as Bala, the brother of Crishna, and both are conjointly worshiped at
Mutra; indeed, they are considered as one Avatar or Incarnation of Vishnou.
Bala is represented as a stout man, with a club in his hand. He is also called
Bala-rama."[74:1]
There is a Hindoo legend which relates that Sevah had an encounter with a
tiger, "whose mouth expanded like a cave, and whose voice resembled
thunder." He slew the monster, and, like Hercules, covered himself with the
skin.[74:2]
The Assyrians and Lydians, both Semitic nations, worshiped a Sun-god
named Sandan or Sandon. He also was believed to be a lion-killer, and
frequently figured struggling with the lion, or standing upon the slain lion.
[74:3]
Ninevah, too, had her mighty hero and king, who slew a lion and other
monsters. Layard, in his excavations, discovered a bas-relief representation
of this hero triumphing over the lion and wild bull.[74:4]
The Ancient Babylonians had a hero lion-slayer, Izdubar by name. The
destruction of the lion, and other monsters, by Izdubar, is often depicted on
the cylinders and engraved gems belonging to the early Babylonian
monarchy.[74:5]
Izdubar is represented as a great or mighty man, who, in the early days after
the flood, destroyed wild animals, and conquered a number of petty kings.
[74:6]
FOOTNOTES:
[62:1] The idea of a woman conceiving, and bearing a son in her old age, seems to have
been a Hebrew peculiarity, as a number of their remarkable personages were born, so it is
said, of parents well advanced in years, or of a woman who was supposed to have been
barren. As illustrations, we may mention this case of Samson, and that of Joseph being
born of Rachel. The beautiful Rachel, who was so much beloved by Jacob, her husband,
was barren, and she bore him no sons. This caused grief and discontent on her part, and
anger on the part of her husband. In her old age, however, she bore the wonderful child
Joseph. (See Genesis, xxx. 1-29.)
Isaac was born of a woman (Sarah) who had been barren many years. An angel appeared
to her when her lord (Abraham) "was ninety years old and nine," and informed her that she
would conceive and bear a son. (See Gen. xvi.)
Samuel, the "holy man," was also born of a woman (Hannah) who had been barren many
years. In grief, she prayed to the Lord for a child, and was finally comforted by receiving
her wish. (See 1 Samuel, i. 1-20.)
John the Baptist was also a miraculously conceived infant. His mother, Elizabeth, bore him
in her old age. An angel also informed her and her husband Zachariah, that this event
would take place. (See Luke, i. 1-25.)
Mary, the mother of Jesus, was born of a woman (Anna) who was "old and stricken in
years," and who had been barren all her life. An angel appeared to Anna and her husband
(Joachim), and told them what was about to take place. (See "The Gospel of Mary," Apoc.)
Thus we see, that the idea of a wonderful child being born of a woman who had passed the
age which nature had destined for her to bear children, and who had been barren all her
life, was a favorite one among the Hebrews. The idea that the ancestors of a race lived to a
fabulous old age, is also a familiar one among the ancients.
Most ancient nations relate in their fables that their ancestors lived to be very old men. For
instance; the Persian patriarch Kaiomaras reigned 560 years; Jemshid reigned 300 years;
Jahmurash reigned 700 years; Dahâk reigned 1000 years; Feridun reigned 120 years;
Manugeher reigned 500 years; Kaikans reigned 150 years; and Bahaman reigned 112
years. (See Dunlap: Son of the Man, p. 155, note.)
[64:1] Judges, xiv.
[65:1] Judges, xv.
[66:1] Judges, xvi.
[66:2] Perhaps that of Izdubar. See chapter xi.
[66:3] Hebrew Mythology, p. 248.
[66:4] Manual of Mythology, p. 248. The Age of Fable, p. 200.
[67:1] Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 200.
[67:2] Murray: Manual of Mythology, p. 249.
[67:3] Roman Antiquities, p. 124; and Montfaucon, vol. i. plate cxxvi.
[67:4] Murray: Manual of Mythology, p. 249.
[67:5] See Ibid. Greek and Italian Mythology, p. 129, and Montfaucon, vol. i. plate cxxv.
and cxxvi.
[67:6] Manual of Mythology, p. 247.
[67:7] "It has many heads, one being immortal, as the storm must constantly supply new
clouds while the vapors are driven off by the Sun into space. Hence the story went that
although Herakles could burn away its mortal heads, as the Sun burns up the clouds, still he
can but hide away the mist or vapor itself, which at its appointed time must again darken
the sky." (Cox: Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. p. 48.)
[67:8] See Manual of Mytho., p. 250.
[68:1] Steinthal: The Legend of Samson, p. 398. See, also, Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p.
240, and Volney: Researches in Anc't History, p. 42.
[68:2] Ibid.
[68:3] Quoted by Count de Volney: Researches in Ancient History, p. 42, note.
[68:4] Volney: Researches in Ancient History, p. 42.
[69:1] See Murray: Manual of Mythology, p. 251.
"The slaughter of the Centaurs by Hercules is the conquest and dispersion of the vapors by
the Sun as he rises in the heaven." (Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 47.)
[69:2] Murray: Manual of Mythology, p. 257.
[69:3] Shamgar also slew six hundred Philistines with an ox goad. (See Judges, iii. 31.)
"It is scarcely necessary to say that these weapons are the heritage of all the Solar heroes,
that they are found in the hands of Phebus and Herakles, of Œdipus, Achilleus, Philoktetes,
of Siguard, Rustem, Indra, Isfendujar, of Telephos, Meleagros, Theseus, Kadmos,
Bellerophon, and all other slayers of noxious and fearful things." (Rev. Geo. Cox: Tales of
Ancient Greece, p. xxvii.)
[69:4] See Volney: Researches in Ancient History, p. 41. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p.
239; Montfaucon: L'Antiquité Expliquée, vol. i. p. 213, and Murray: Manual of Mythology,
pp. 259-262.
It is evident that Herodotus, the Grecian historian, was somewhat of a skeptic, for he says:
"The Grecians say that 'When Hercules arrived in Egypt, the Egyptians, having crowned
him with a garland, led him in procession, as designing to sacrifice him to Jupiter, and that
for some time he remained quiet, but when they began the preparatory ceremonies upon
him at the altar, he set about defending himself and slew every one of them.' Now, since
Hercules was but one, and, besides, a mere man, as they confess, how is it possible that he
should slay many thousands?" (Herodotus, book ii. ch. 45).
[69:5] Murray: Manual of Mythology, p. 263.
[70:1] Volney: Researches in Anc't History, pp. 41, 42.
In Bell's "Pantheon of the Gods and Demi-Gods of Antiquity," we read, under the head of
Ammon or Hammon (the name of the Egyptian Jupiter, worshiped under the figure of a
Ram), that: "Bacchus having subdued Asia, and passing with his army through the deserts
of Africa, was in great want of water; but Jupiter, his father, assuming the shape of a Ram,
led him to a fountain, where he refreshed himself and his army; in requital of which favor,
Bacchus built there a temple to Jupiter, under the title of Ammon."
[70:2] Cadiz (ancient Gades), being situated near the mouth of the Mediterranean. The first
author who mentions the Pillars of Hercules is Pindar, and he places them there.
(Chambers's Encyclo. "Hercules.")
[70:3] Volney's Researches, p. 41. See also Tylor: Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 357.
[70:4] See Chambers's Encyclopædia, Art. "Hercules." Cory's Ancient Fragments, p. 36,
note; and Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 201.
[70:5] Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Hercules."
[70:6] Vol. i. plate cxxvii.
[71:1] Monumental Christianity, p. 399.
[71:2] Œd. Jud. p. 360, in Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 239.
[71:3] "Rien de plus connu dans la fable que ses amours avec Omphale et Iole."—
L'Antiquité Expliquée, vol. i. p. 224.
[71:4] The Legend of Samson, p. 404.
[71:5] Vol. i. plate cxxvii.
[71:6] "Samson was remarkable for his long hair. The meaning of this trait in the original
myth is easy to guess, and appears also from representations of the Sun-god amongst other
peoples. These long hairs are the rays of the Sun." (Bible for Learners, i. 416.)
"The beauty of the sun's rays is signified by the golden locks of Phoibos, over which no
razor has ever passed; by the flowing hair which streams from the head of Kephalos, and
falls over the shoulders of Perseus and Bellerophon." (Cox: Aryan Mytho., vol. i. p. 107.)
[72:1] Hebrew Mytho., pp. 137, 138.
[72:2] Cox: Aryan Myths, vol. i. p. 84.
[72:3] Tales of Ancient Greece, p. xxix.
[72:4] The Legend of Samson, p. 408.
[72:5] Cox: Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. p. 72.
[73:1] The Legend of Samson, p. 406.
[73:2] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 237. Goldzhier: Hebrew Mythology, p. 22. The
Religion of Israel, p. 61. The Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 418. Volney's Ruins, p. 41, and
Stanley: History of the Jewish Church, where he says: "His name, which Josephus
interprets in the sense of 'strong,' was still more characteristic. He was 'the Sunny'—the
bright and beaming, though wayward, likeness of the great luminary."
[73:3] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 237, and Volney's Researches, p. 43, note.
[73:4] See chapter ii.
[73:5] The Religion of Israel, p. 61. "The yellow hair of Apollo was a symbol of the solar
rays." (Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 679.)
[73:6] Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 414.
[73:7] Ibid. p. 422.
[73:8] Williams' Hinduism, pp. 108 and 167.
[74:1] Vol. v. p. 270.
[74:2] Maurice: Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 155.
[74:3] Steinthal: The Legend of Samson, p. 386.
[74:4] Buckley: Cities of the World, 41, 42.
[74:5] Smith: Assyrian Discoveries, p. 167, and Chaldean Account of Genesis, p. 174.
[74:6] Assyrian Discoveries, p. 205, and Chaldean Account of Genesis, p. 174.
[74:7] Chaldean Account of Genesis, p. 310.
[74:8] Ibid. pp. 193, 194, 174.
[75:1] See Tacitus: Annals, book ii. ch. lix.
[75:2] Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 92.
[75:3] See Tales of Ancient Greece, p. 153.
[76:1] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, pp. 94, 417, and 514.
[76:2] See Cox: Aryan Mythology.
[76:3] See vol. i. of Aryan Mythology, by Rev. G. W. Cox.
"Besides the fabulous Hercules, the son of Jupiter and Alcmena, there was, in ancient
times, no warlike nation who did not boast of its own particular Hercules." (Arthur
Murphy, Translator of Tacitus.)
CHAPTER IX.
JONAH SWALLOWED BY A BIG FISH.
In the book of Jonah, containing four chapters, we are told the word of the
Lord came unto Jonah, saying: "Arise, go to Ninevah, that great city, and
cry against it, for their wickedness is come up against me."
Instead of obeying this command Jonah sought to flee "from the presence of
the Lord," by going to Tarshish. For this purpose he went to Joppa, and
there took ship for Tarshish. But the Lord sent a great wind, and there was a
mighty tempest, so that the ship was likely to be broken.
The mariners being afraid, they cried every one unto his God; and casting
lots—that they might know which of them was the cause of the storm—the
lot fell upon Jonah, showing him to be the guilty man.
The mariners then said unto him; "What shall we do unto thee?" Jonah in
reply said, "Take me up and cast me forth into the sea, for I know that for
my sake this great tempest is upon you." So they took up Jonah, and cast
him into the sea, and the sea ceased raging.
And the Lord prepared a great fish to swallow up Jonah, and Jonah was in
the belly of the fish three days and three nights. Then Jonah prayed unto the
Lord out of the fish's belly. And the Lord spake unto the fish, and it vomited
out Jonah upon the dry land.
The Lord again spake unto Jonah and said:
"Go unto Ninevah and preach unto it." So Jonah arose and went unto
Ninevah, according to the command of the Lord, and preached unto it.
There is a Hindoo fable, very much resembling this, to be found in the
Somadeva Bhatta, of a person by the name of Saktideva who was
swallowed by a huge fish, and finally came out unhurt. The story is as
follows:
"There was once a king's daughter who would marry no one but the man
who had seen the Golden City—of legendary fame—and Saktideva was in
love with her; so he went travelling about the world seeking some one who
could tell him where this Golden City was. In the course of his journeys he
embarked on board a ship bound for the Island of Utsthala, where lived the
King of the Fishermen, who, Saktideva hoped, would set him on his way.
On the voyage there arose a great storm and the ship went to pieces, and a
great fish swallowed Saktideva whole. Then, driven by the force of fate, the
fish went to the Island of Utsthala, and there the servants of the King of the
Fishermen caught it, and the king, wondering at its size, had it cut open,
and Saktideva came out unhurt."[78:1]
In Grecian fable, Hercules is said to have been swallowed by a whale, at a
place called Joppa, and to have lain three days in his entrails.
Bernard de Montfaucon, speaking of Jonah being swallowed by a whale,
and describing a piece of Grecian sculpture representing Hercules standing
by a huge sea monster, says:
"Some ancients relate to the effect that Hercules was also swallowed by the
whale that was watching Hesione, that he remained three days in his belly,
and that he came out bald-pated after his sojourn there."[78:2]
Bouchet, in his "Hist. d'Animal," tells us that:
"The great fish which swallowed up Jonah, although it be called a whale
(Matt. xii. 40), yet it was not a whale, properly so called, but a Dog-fish,
called Carcharias. Therefore in the Grecian fable Hercules is said to have
been swallowed up of a Dag, and to have lain three days in his entrails."
[78:3]
FOOTNOTES:
[78:1] Tylor: Early Hist. Mankind, pp. 344, 345.
[78:2] "En effet, quelques anciens disent qu' Hercule fut aussi devorà par la beleine qui
gurdoit Hesione, qu'il demeura trois jours dans son ventre, et qu'il sortit chauve de ce
sejour." (L'Antiquité Expliqueé, vol. i. p. 204.)
[78:3] Bouchet: Hist. d'Animal, in Anac., vol. i. p. 240.
[78:4] Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 638. See also Tylor: Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 306, and
Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Jonah."
[79:1] Tales of Ancient Greece, p. 296.
[79:2] See Hebrew Mythology, p. 203.
[79:3] See Tylor's Early Hist. Mankind, and Primitive Culture, vol. i.
[79:4] Chambers's Encyclo., art. Jonah.
[79:5] See Fiske: Myths and Myth Makers, p. 77, and note; and Tylor: Primitive Culture, i.
302.
[80:1] Goldzhier: Hebrew Mythology, pp. 102, 103.
[80:2] This is seen from the following, taken from Pictet: "Du Culte des Carabi," p. 104,
and quoted by Higgins: Anac., vol. i. p. 650: "Vallancy dit que Ionn étoit le même que
Baal. En Gallois Jon, le Seigneur, Dieu, la cause prémière. En Basque Jawna, Jon, Jona,
&c., Dieu, et Seigneur, Maître. Les Scandinaves appeloient le Soleil John. . . . Une des
inscriptions de Gruter montre ques les Troyens adoroient le même astre sous le nom de
Jona. En Persan le Soleil est appelè Jawnah." Thus we see that the Sun was called Jonah,
by different nations of antiquity.
[80:3] See Goldzhier: Hebrew Mythology, p. 148.
[80:4] See Tylor: Early History of Mankind, p. 845, and Goldzhier: Hebrew Mythology,
pp. 102, 103.
[80:5] See Tylor: Early History of Mankind, p. 345.
[80:6] Fiske: Myths and Myth Makers, p. 77.
[80:7] See Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, pp. 88, 89, and Mallet's Northern
Antiquities.
[80:8] In ancient Scandinavian mythology, the Sun is personified in the form of a beautiful
maiden. (See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 458.)
[80:9] See Fiske: Myths and Myth Makers, p. 77. Bunce: Fairy Tales, 161.
[80:10] Tylor: Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 307.
"The story of Little Red Riding-Hood, as we call her, or Little Red-Cap, came from the
same (i. e., the ancient Aryan) source, and refers to the Sun and the Night."
"One of the fancies of the most ancient Aryan or Hindoo stories was that there was a great
dragon that was trying to devour the Sun, and to prevent him from shining upon the earth
and filling it with brightness and life and beauty, and that Indra, the Sun-god, killed the
dragon. Now, this is the meaning of Little Red Riding-Hood, as it is told in our nursery
tales. Little Red Riding-Hood is the evening Sun, which is always described as red or
golden; the old grandmother is the earth, to whom the rays of the Sun bring warmth and
comfort. The wolf—which is a well-known figure for the clouds and darkness of night—is
the dragon in another form. First he devours the grandmother; that is, he wraps the earth in
thick clouds, which the evening Sun is not strong enough to pierce through. Then, with the
darkness of night, he swallows up the evening Sun itself, and all is dark and desolate.
Then, as in the German tale, the night-thunder and the storm-winds are represented by the
loud snoring of the wolf; and then the huntsman, the morning Sun, comes in all his strength
and majesty, and chases away the night-clouds and kills the wolf, and revives old
Grandmother Earth, and brings Little Red Riding-Hood to life again." (Bunce, Fairy Tales,
their Origin and Meaning, p. 161.)
[81:1] Müller's Chips, vol. ii. p. 260.
[82:1] See Goldzhier's Hebrew Mythology, p. 198, et seq.
[82:2] See Maurice: Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 277.
[82:3] See Isis Unveiled, vol. ii. p. 259. Also, Fig. No. 5, next page.
[82:4] Hist. Hindostan, vol. i. pp. 418-419.
[82:5] See Pilchard's Egyptian Mythology, p. 190. Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 87. Higgins:
Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 646. Cory's Ancient Fragments, p. 57.
[82:6] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 646. Smith: Chaldean Account of Genesis, p. 39,
and Cory's Ancient Fragments, p. 57.
[82:7] Civilizing gods, who diffuse intelligence and instruct barbarians, are also Solar
Deities. Among these Oannes takes his place, as the Sun-god, giving knowledge and
civilization. (Rev. S. Baring-Gould: Curious Myths, p. 367.)
[82:8] Goldzhier: Hebrew Mythology, pp. 214, 215.
[82:9] See Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 111.
[82:10] See Chamber's Encyclo., art "Dagon."
[83:1] See Smith's Dictionary of the Bible, and Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Dagon" in both.
[83:2] See Baring-Gould's Curious Myths.
[83:3] See Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 26.
[83:4] Ibid. p. 38.
[83:5] Curious Myths, p. 372.
[83:6] Since writing the above we find that Mr. Bryant, in his "Analysis of Ancient
Mythology" (vol. ii. p. 291), speaking of the mystical nature of the name John, which is the
same as Jonah, says: "The prophet who was sent upon an embassy to the Ninevites, is
styled Ionas: a title probably bestowed upon him as a messenger of the Deity. The great
Patriarch who preached righteousness to the Antediluvians, is styled Oan and Oannes,
which is the same as Jonah."
[84:1] From Maurice: Hist. Hindostan, vol. i. p. 495.
[84:2] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 634. See also, Calmet's Fragments, 2d Hundred, p.
78.
[84:3] See the chapter on "The Trinity," in part second.
[84:4] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 640.
CHAPTER X.
CIRCUMCISION.
It has been recognized among the Kaffirs and other tribes of Africa.[86:7] It
was practiced among the Fijians and Samoans of Polynesia, and some races
of Australia.[86:8] The Suzees and the Mandingoes circumcise their women.
[86:9] The Assyrians, Colchins, Phenicians, and others, practiced it.[86:10] It
has been from time immemorial a custom among the Abyssinians, though,
at the present time, Christians.[86:11]
The antiquity of the custom may be assured from the fact of the New
Hollanders, (never known to civilized nations until a few years ago) having
practiced it.[86:12]
The Troglodytes on the shore of the Red Sea, the Idumeans, Ammonites,
Moabites and Ishmaelites, had the practice of circumcision.[86:11]
The ancient Mexicans also practiced this rite.[86:13] It was also found among
the Amazon tribes of South America.[87:1] These Indians, as well as some
African tribes, were in the habit of circumcising their women. Among the
Campas, the women circumcised themselves, and a man would not marry a
woman who was not circumcised.[87:2] They performed this singular rite
upon arriving at the age of puberty.[87:3]
Jesus of Nazareth was circumcised,[87:4] and had he been really the founder
of the Christian religion, so-called, it would certainly be incumbent on all
Christians to be circumcised as he was, and to observe that Jewish law
which he observed, and which he was so far from abrogating, that he
declared: "heaven and earth shall pass away" ere "one jot or one tittle" of
that law should be dispensed with.[87:5] But the Christians are not followers
of the religion of Jesus.[87:6] They are followers of the religion of the
Pagans. This, we believe, we shall be able to show in Part Second of this
work.
FOOTNOTES:
[85:1] Giles: Hebrew and Christian Records, vol. i. p. 249.
[85:2] Genesis, xvii. 10.
[85:3] Giles: Hebrew and Christian Records, vol. i. p. 251.
[85:4] Mr. Herbert Spencer shows (Principles of Sociology, pp. 290, 295) that the
sacrificing of a part of the body as a religious offering to their deity, was, and is a common
practice among savage tribes. Circumcision may have originated in this way. And Mr.
Wake, speaking of it, says: "The origin of this custom has not yet, so far as I am aware,
been satisfactorily explained. The idea that, under certain climatic conditions, circumcision
is necessary for cleanliness and comfort, does not appear to be well founded, as the custom
is not universal even within the tropics." (Phallism in Ancient Religs., p. 36.)
[85:5] "Other men leave their private parts as they are formed by nature, except those who
have learned otherwise from them; but the Egyptians are circumcised. . . . They are
circumcised for the sake of cleanliness, thinking it better to be clean than handsome."
(Herodotus, Book ii. ch. 36.)
[86:1] We have it also on the authority of Sir J. G. Wilkinson, that: "this custom was
established long before the arrival of Joseph in Egypt," and that "this is proved by the
ancient monuments."
[86:2] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, pp. 414, 415.
[86:3] Ibid. p. 415.
[86:4] Ibid. and Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. 89.
[86:5] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 415.
[86:6] Herodotus: Book ii. ch. 36.
[86:7] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 114. Amberly: Analysis Religious Belief, p. 67,
and Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 309.
[86:8] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 414, and Amberly's Analysis, pp. 63, 73.
[86:9] Amberly: Analysis of Relig. Belief, p. 73.
[86:10] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 414: Amberly's Analysis, p. 63; Prog. Relig. Ideas,
vol. i. p. 163, and Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. pp. 18, 19.
[86:11] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 414.
[86:12] Kendrick's Egypt, quoted by Dunlap; Mysteries of Adoni, p. 146.
[86:13] Amberly's Analysis, p. 63, Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 309, and Acosta, ii.
369.
[87:1] Orton: The Andes and the Amazon, p. 322.
[87:2] This was done by cutting off the clytoris.
[87:3] Orton: The Andes and the Amazon, p. 322. Gibbon's Rome, vol. iv. p. 563, and
Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 319.
"At the time of the conquest, the Spaniards found circumcised nations in Central America,
and on the Amazon, the Tecuna and Manaos tribes still observe this practice. In the South
Seas it has been met with among three different races, but it is performed in a somewhat
different manner. On the Australian continent, not all, but the majority of tribes, practiced
circumcision. Among the Papuans, the inhabitants of New Caledonia and the New
Hebrides adhere to this custom. In his third voyage, Captain Cook found it among the
inhabitants of the Friendly Islands, in particular at Tongataboo, and the younger Pritchard
bears witness to its practice in the Samoa or Fiji groups." (Oscar Peschel: The Races of
Man, p. 22.)
[87:4] Luke, ii. 21.
[87:5] Matthew, v. 18.
[87:6] In using the words "the religion of Jesus," we mean simply the religion of Israel. We
believe that Jesus of Nazareth was a Jew, in every sense of the word, and that he did not
establish a new religion, or preach a new doctrine, in any way, shape, or form. "The
preacher from the Mount, the prophet of the Beatitudes, does but repeat with persuasive
lips what the law-givers of his race proclaimed in mighty tones of command." (See chap.
xi.)
CHAPTER XI.
CONCLUSION OF PART FIRST.
There are many other legends recorded in the Old Testament which might
be treated at length, but, as we have considered the principal and most
important, and as we have so much to examine in Part Second, which treats
of the New Testament, we shall take but a passing glance at a few others.
In Genesis xli. is to be found the story of
Osiris was also confined in a chest, and thrown into the river Nile.[90:4]
When Osiris was shut into the coffer, and cast into the river, he floated to
Phenicia, and was there received under the name of Adonis. Isis (his
mother, or wife) wandered in quest of him, came to Byblos, and seated
herself by a fountain in silence and tears. She was then taken by the
servants of the royal palace, and made to attend on the young prince of the
land. In like manner, Demeter, after Aidoneus had ravished her daughter,
went in pursuit, reached Eleusis, seated herself by a well, conversed with
the daughters of the queen, and became nurse to her son.[90:5] So likewise,
when Moses was put into the ark made of bulrushes, and cast into the Nile,
he was found by the daughters of Pharaoh, and his own mother became his
nurse.[90:6] This is simply another version of the same myth.
In the second chapter of the second book of Kings, we read of
We shall now endeavor to answer the question which must naturally arise in
the minds of all who see, for the first time, the similarity in the legends of
the Hebrews and those of other nations, namely: have the Hebrews copied
from other nations, or, have other nations copied from the Hebrews? To
answer this question we shall; first, give a brief account or history of the
Pentateuch and other books of the Old Testament from which we have taken
legends, and show about what time they were written; and, second, show
that other nations were possessed of these legends long before that time,
and that the Jews copied from them.
The Pentateuch is ascribed, in our modern translations, to Moses, and he is
generally supposed to be the author. This is altogether erroneous, as Moses
had nothing whatever to do with these five books. Bishop Colenso,
speaking of this, says:
"The books of the Pentateuch are never ascribed to Moses in the
inscriptions of Hebrew manuscripts, or in printed copies of the Hebrew
Bible. Nor are they styled the 'Books of Moses' in the Septuagint[92:1] or
Vulgate,[92:2] but only in our modern translations, after the example of
many eminent Fathers of the Church, who, with the exception of Jerome,
and, perhaps, Origen, were, one and all of them, very little acquainted with
the Hebrew language, and still less with its criticism."[92:3]
The author of "The Religion of Israel," referring to this subject, says:
"The Jews who lived after the Babylonish Captivity, and the Christians
following their examples, ascribed these books (the Pentateuch) to Moses;
and for many centuries the notion was cherished that he had really written
them. But strict and impartial investigation has shown that this opinion
must be given up; and that nothing in the whole Law really comes from
Moses himself except the Ten Commandments. And even these were not
delivered by him in the same form as we find them now. If we still call these
books by his name, it is only because the Israelites always thought of him as
their first and greatest law-giver, and the actual authors grouped all their
narratives and laws around his figure, and associated them with his name."
[92:4]
Babylonians. He also informs us that the notion of the bôrê and yôsêr,
"Creator" (the term used in the cosmogony in Genesis) as an integral part of
the idea of God, are first brought into use by the prophets of the captivity.
"Thus also the story of the Garden of Eden, as a supplement to the history
of the Creation, was written down at Babylon."
Strange as it may appear, after the Genesis account, we may pass through
the whole Pentateuch, and other books of the Old Testament, clear to the
end, and will find that the story of the "Garden of Eden" and "Fall of Man,"
is hardly alluded to, if at all. Lengkerke says: "One single certain trace of
the employment of the story of Adam's fall is entirely wanting in the
Hebrew Canon (after the Genesis account). Adam, Eve, the Serpent, the
woman's seduction of her husband, &c., are all images, to which the
remaining words of the Israelites never again recur."[100:1]
This circumstance can only be explained by the fact that the first chapters of
Genesis were not written until after the other portions had been written.
It is worthy of notice, that this story of the Fall of Man, upon which the
whole orthodox scheme of a divine Saviour or Redeemer is based, was not
considered by the learned Israelites as fact. They simply looked upon it as a
story which satisfied the ignorant, but which should be considered as
allegory by the learned.[100:2]
Rabbi Maimonides (Moses Ben Maimon), one of the most celebrated of the
Rabbis, says on this subject:—
"We must not understand, or take in a literal sense, what is written in the
book on the Creation, nor form of it the same ideas which are participated
by the generality of mankind; otherwise our ancient sages would not have
so much recommended to us, to hide the real meaning of it, and not to lift
the allegorical veil, which covers the truth contained therein. When taken
in its literal sense, the work gives the most absurd and most extravagant
ideas of the Deity. 'Whosoever should divine its true meaning ought to take
great care in not divulging it.' This is a maxim repeated to us by all our
sages, principally concerning the understanding of the work of the six
days."[100:3]
Philo, a Jewish writer contemporary with Jesus, held the same opinion of
the character of the sacred books of the Hebrews. He has made two
particular treatises, bearing the title of "The Allegories," and he traces back
to the allegorical sense the "Tree of Life," the "Rivers of Paradise," and the
other fictions of the Genesis.[100:4]
Many of the early Christian Fathers declared that, in the story of the
Creation and Fall of Man, there was but an allegorical fiction. Among these
may be mentioned St. Augustine, who speaks of it in his "City of God," and
also Origen, who says:
"What man of sense will agree with the statement that the first, second, and
third days, in which the evening is named and the morning, were without
sun, moon and stars? What man is found such an idiot as to suppose that
God planted trees in Paradise like an husbandman? I believe that every man
must hold these things for images under which a hidden sense is
concealed."[100:5]
Origen believed aright, as it is now almost universally admitted, that the
stories of the "Garden of Eden," the "Elysian Fields," the "Garden of the
Blessed," &c., which were the abode of the blessed, where grief and sorrow
could not approach them, where plague and sickness could not touch them,
were founded on allegory. These abodes of delight were far away in the
West, where the sun goes down beyond the bounds of the earth. They were
the "Golden Islands" sailing in a sea of blue—the burnished clouds floating
in the pure ether. In a word, the "Elysian Fields" are the clouds at eventide.
The picture was suggested by the images drawn from the phenomena of
sunset and twilight.[101:1]
Eating of the forbidden fruit was simply a figurative mode of expressing the
performance of the act necessary to the perpetuation of the human race. The
"Tree of Knowledge" was a Phallic tree, and the fruit which grew upon it
was Phallic fruit.[101:2]
In regard to the story of "The Deluge," we have already seen[101:3] that
"Egyptian records tell nothing of a cataclysmal deluge," and that, "the land
was never visited by other than its annual beneficent overflow of the river
Nile." Also, that "the Pharaoh Khoufou-cheops was building his pyramid,
according to Egyptian chronicle, when the whole world was under the
waters of a universal deluge, according to the Hebrew chronicle." This is
sufficient evidence that the Hebrews did not borrow the legend from the
Egyptians.
We have also seen, in the chapter that treated of this legend, that it
corresponded in all the principal features with the Chaldean account. We
shall now show that it was taken from this.
Mr. Smith discovered, on the site of Ninevah, during the years 1873-4,
cylinders belonging to the early Babylonian monarchy, (from 2500 to 1500
B. C.) which contained the legend of the flood,[101:4] and which we gave in
Chapter II. This was the foundation for the Hebrew legend, and they
learned it at the time of the Captivity.[101:5] The myth of Deucalion, the
Grecian hero, was also taken from the same source. The Greeks learned it
from the Chaldeans.
We read in Chambers's Encyclopædia, that:
"It was at one time extensively believed, even by intelligent scholars, that
the myth of Deucalion was a corrupted tradition of the Noachian deluge,
but this untenable opinion is now all but universally abandoned."[102:1]
This idea was abandoned after it was found that the Deucalion myth was
older than the Hebrew.
What was said in regard to the Eden story not being mentioned in other
portions of the Old Testament save in Genesis, also applies to this story of
the Deluge. Nowhere in the other books of the Old Testament is found any
reference to this story, except in Isaiah, where "the waters of Noah" are
mentioned, and in Ezekiel, where simply the name of Noah is mentioned.
We stated in Chapter II. that some persons saw in this story an astronomical
myth. Although not generally admitted, yet there are very strong reasons for
believing this to be the case.
According to the Chaldean account—which is the oldest one known—there
were seven persons saved in the ark.[102:2] There were also seven persons
saved, according to some of the Hindoo accounts.[102:3] That this referred to
the sun, moon, and five planets looks very probable. We have also seen that
Noah was the tenth patriarch, and Xisuthrus (who is the Chaldean hero) was
the tenth king.[102:4] Now, according to the Babylonian table, their Zodiac
contained ten gods called the "Ten Zodiac gods."[102:5] They also believed
that whenever all the planets met in the sign of Capricorn, the whole earth
was overwhelmed with a deluge of water.[102:6] The Hindoos and other
nations had a similar belief.[102:7]
It is well known that the Chaldeans were great astronomers. When
Alexander the Great conquered the city of Babylon, the Chaldean priests
boasted to the Greek philosophers, who followed his army, that they had
continued their astronomical calculations through a period of more than
forty thousand years.[102:8] Although this statement cannot be credited, yet
the great antiquity of Chaldea cannot be doubted, and its immediate
connection with Hindostan, or Egypt, is abundantly proved by the little that
is known concerning its religion, and by the few fragments that remain of
its former grandeur.
In regard to the story of "The Tower of Babel" little need be said. This, as
well as the story of the Creation and Fall of Man, and the Deluge, was
borrowed from the Babylonians.[102:9]
"It seems," says George Smith, "from the indications in the (cuneiform)
inscriptions, that there happened in the interval between 2000 and 1850 B. C.
a general collection of the development of the various traditions of the
Creation, Flood, Tower of Babel, and other similar legends." "These
legends were, however, traditions before they were committed to writing,
and were common in some form to all the country."[103:1]
The Tower of Babel, or the confusion of tongues, is nowhere alluded to in
the Old Testament outside of Genesis, where the story is related.
The next story in order is "The Trial of Abraham's Faith."
In this connection we have shown similar legends taken from Grecian
mythology, which legends may have given the idea to the writer of the
Hebrew story.
It may appear strange that the Hebrews should have been acquainted with
Grecian mythology, yet we know this was the case. The fact is accounted
for in the following manner:
Many of the Jews taken captive at the Edomite sack of Jerusalem were sold
to the Grecians,[103:2] who took them to their country. While there, they
became acquainted with Grecian legends, and when they returned from "the
Islands of the Sea"—as they called the Western countries—they brought
them to Jerusalem.[103:3]
This legend, as we stated in the chapter which treated of it, was written at
the time when the Mosaic party in Israel were endeavoring to abolish
human sacrifices and other "abominations," and the author of the story
invented it to make it appear that the Lord had abolished them in the time of
Abraham. The earliest Targum[103:4] knows nothing about the legend,
showing that the story was not in the Pentateuch at the time this Targum
was written.
We have also seen that a story written by Sanchoniathon (about B. C. 1300)
of one Saturn, whom the Phenicians called Israel, bore a resemblance to the
Hebrew legend of Abraham. Now, Count de Volney tells us that "a similar
tradition prevailed among the Chaldeans," and that they had the history of
one Zerban—which means "rich-in-gold"[103:5]—that corresponded in many
respects with the history of Abraham.[103:6] It may, then, have been from the
Chaldean story that the Hebrew fable writer got his idea.
The next legend which we examined was that of "Jacob's Vision of the
Ladder." We claimed that it probably referred to the doctrine of the
transmigration of souls from one body into another, and also gave the
apparent reason for the invention of the story.
The next story was "The Exodus from Egypt, and Passage through the Red
Sea," in which we showed, from Egyptian history, that the Israelites were
turned out of the country on account of their uncleanness, and that the
wonderful exploits recorded of Moses were simply copies of legends
related of the sun-god Bacchus. These legends came from "the Islands of
the Sea," and came in very handy for the Hebrew fable writers; they saved
them the trouble of inventing.
We now come to the story relating to "The Receiving of the Ten
Commandments" by Moses from the Lord, on the top of a mountain, 'mid
thunders and lightnings.
All that is likely to be historical in this account, is that Moses assembled,
not, indeed, the whole of the people, but the heads of the tribes, and gave
them the code which he had prepared.[104:1] The marvellous portion of the
story was evidently copied from that related of the law-giver Zoroaster, by
the Persians, and the idea that there were two tables of stone with the Law
written thereon was evidently taken from the story of Bacchus, the Law-
giver, who had his laws written on two tables of stone.[104:2]
The next legend treated was that of "Samson and his Exploits."
Those who, like the learned of the last century, maintain that the Pagans
copied from the Hebrews, may say that Samson was the model of all their
similar stories, but now that our ideas concerning antiquity are enlarged,
and when we know that Hercules is well known to have been the God Sol,
whose allegorical history was spread among many nations long before the
Hebrews were ever heard of, we are authorized to believe and to say that
some Jewish mythologist—for what else are their so-called historians—
composed the anecdote of Samson, by partly disfiguring the popular
traditions of the Greeks, Phenicians and Chaldeans, and claiming that hero
for his own nation.[104:3]
The Babylonian story of Izdubar, the lion-killer, who wandered to the
regions of the blessed (the Grecian Elysium), who crossed a great waste of
land (the desert of Lybia, according to the Grecian mythos), and arrived at a
region where splendid trees were laden with jewels (the Grecian Garden of
the Hesperides), is probably the foundation for the Hercules and other
corresponding myths. This conclusion is drawn from the fact that, although
the story of Hercules was known in the island of Thasus, by the Phenician
colony settled there, five centuries before he was known in Greece,[105:1] yet
its antiquity among the Babylonians antedates that.
The age of the legends of Izdubar among the Babylonians cannot be placed
with certainty, yet, the cuneiform inscriptions relating to this hero, which
have been found, may be placed at about 2000 years B. C.[105:2] "As these
stories were traditions," says Mr. Smith, the discoverer of the cylinders,
"before they were committed to writing, their antiquity as tradition is
probably much greater than that."[105:3]
With these legends before them, the Jewish priests in Babylon had no
difficulty in arranging the story of Samson, and adding it to their already
fabulous history.
As the Rev. Dr. Isaac M. Wise remarks, in speaking of the ancient Hebrews:
"They adopted forms, terms, ideas and myths of all nations with whom they
came in contact, and, like the Greeks, in their way, cast them all in a
peculiar Jewish religious mold."
We have seen, in the chapter which treats of this legend, that it is recorded
in the book of Judges. This book was not written till after the first set of
Israelites had been carried into captivity, and perhaps still later.[105:4]
After this we have "Jonah swallowed by a Big Fish," which is the last
legend treated.
We saw that it was a solar myth, known to many nations of antiquity. The
writer of the book—whoever he may have been—lived in the fifth century
before Christ—after the Jews had become acquainted and had mixed with
other nations. The writer of this wholly fictitious story, taking the prophet
Jonah—who was evidently an historical personage—for his hero, was
perhaps intending to show the loving-kindness of Jehovah.[105:5]
We have now examined all the principal Old Testament legends, and, after
what has been seen, we think that no impartial person can still consider
them historical facts. That so great a number of educated persons still do so
seems astonishing, in our way of thinking. They have repudiated Greek and
Roman mythology with disdain; why then admit with respect the
mythology of the Jews? Ought the miracles of Jehovah to impress us more
than those of Jupiter? We think not; they should all be looked upon as relics
of the past.
That Christian writers are beginning to be aroused to the idea that another
tack should be taken, differing from the old, is very evident. This is clearly
seen by the words of Prof. Richard A. Armstrong, the translator of Dr.
Knappert's "Religion of Israel" into English. In the Preface of this work, he
says:
"It appears to me to be profoundly important that the youthful English mind
should be faithfully and accurately informed of the results of modern
research into the early development of the Israelitish religion. Deplorable
and irreparable mischief will be done to the generation, now passing into
manhood and womanhood, if their educators leave them ignorant or loosely
informed on these topics; for they will then be rudely awakened by the
enemies of Christianity from a blind and unreasoning faith in the
supernatural inspiration of the Scriptures; and being suddenly and bluntly
made aware that Abraham, Moses, David, and the rest did not say, do, or
write what has been ascribed to them, they will fling away all care for the
venerable religion of Israel and all hope that it can nourish their own
religious life. How much happier will those of our children and young
people be who learn what is now known of the actual origin of the
Pentateuch and the Writings, from the same lips which have taught them
that the Prophets indeed prepared the way for Jesus, and that God is indeed
our Heavenly Father. For these will, without difficulty, perceive that God's
love is none the feebler and that the Bible is no less precious, because
Moses knew nothing of the Levitical legislation, or because it was not the
warrior monarch on his semi-barbaric throne, but some far later son of
Israel, who breathed forth the immortal hymn of faith, 'The Lord is my
Shepherd; I shall not want.'"
For the benefit of those who may think that the evidence of plagiarism on
the part of the Hebrew writers has not been sufficiently substantiated, we
will quote a few words from Prof. Max Müller, who is one of the best
English authorities on this subject that can be produced. In speaking of this
he says:
"The opinion that the Pagan religions were mere corruptions of the religion
of the Old Testament, once supported by men of high authority and great
learning, is now as completely surrendered as the attempts of explaining
Greek and Latin as the corruptions of Hebrew."[106:1]
Again he says:
"As soon as the ancient language and religion of India became known in
Europe it was asserted that Sanskrit, like all other languages, was to be
derived from Hebrew, and the ancient religion of the Brahmans from the
Old Testament. There was at that time an enthusiasm among Oriental
scholars, particularly at Calcutta, and an interest for Oriental antiquities in
the public at large, of which we, in these days of apathy for Eastern
literature, can hardly form an adequate idea. Everybody wished to be first in
the field, and to bring to light some of the treasures which were supposed to
be hidden in the sacred literature of the Brahmans. . . . No doubt the
temptation was great. No one could look down for a moment into the rich
mine of religious and mythological lore that was suddenly opened before
the eyes of scholars and theologians, without being struck by a host of
similarities, not only in the languages, but also in the ancient traditions of
the Hindoos, the Greeks, and the Romans; and if at that time the Greeks and
Romans were still supposed to have borrowed their language and their
religion from Jewish quarters, the same conclusion could hardly be avoided
with regard to the language and the religion of the Brahmans of India. . . .
"The student of Pagan religion as well as Christian missionaries were bent
on discovering more striking and more startling coincidences, in order to
use them in confirmation of their favorite theory that some rays of a
primeval revelation, or some reflection of the Jewish religion, had reached
the uttermost ends of the world."[107:1]
The result of all this is summed up by Prof. Müller as follows:
"It was the fate of all (these) pioneers, not only to be left behind in the
assault which they had planned, but to find that many of their approaches
were made in a false direction, and had to be abandoned."[107:2]
Before closing this chapter, we shall say a few words on the religion of
Israel. It is supposed by many—in fact, we have heard it asserted by those
who should know better—that the Israelites were always monotheists, that
they worshiped One God only—Jehovah.[107:3] This is altogether erroneous;
they were not different from their neighbors—the Heathen, so-called—in
regard to their religion.
In the first place, we know that they revered and worshiped a Bull, called
Apis,[107:4] just as the ancient Egyptians did. They worshiped the sun,[108:1]
the moon,[108:2] the stars and all the host of heaven.[108:3]
They worshiped fire, and kept it burning on an altar, just as the Persians and
other nations.[108:4] They worshiped stones,[108:5] revered an oak tree,[108:6]
and "bowed down" to images.[108:7] They worshiped a "Queen of Heaven"
called the goddess Astarte or Mylitta, and "burned incense" to her.[108:8]
They worshiped Baal,[108:9] Moloch,[108:10] and Chemosh,[108:11] and offered
up human sacrifices to them,[108:12] after which in some instances, they ate
the victim.[108:13]
It was during the Captivity that idolatry ceased among the Israelites.[108:14]
The Babylonian Captivity is clearly referred to in the book of Deuteronomy,
as the close of Israel's idolatry.[108:15]
There is reason to believe that the real genius of the people was first called
into full exercise, and put on its career of development at this time; that
Babylon was a forcing nursery, not a prison cell; creating instead of stifling
a nation. The astonishing outburst of intellectual and moral energy that
accompanied the return from the Babylonish Captivity, attests the spiritual
activity of that "mysterious and momentous" time. As Prof. Goldziher says:
"The intellect of Babylon and Assyria exerted a more than passing influence
on that of the Hebrews, not merely touching it, but entering deep into it, and
leaving its own impression upon it."[108:16]
This impression we have already partly seen in the legends which they
borrowed, and it may also be seen in the religious ideas which they
imbibed.
The Assyrian colonies which came and occupied the land of the tribes of
Israel filled the kingdom of Samaria with the dogma of the Magi, which
very soon penetrated into the kingdom of Judah. Afterward, Jerusalem
being subjugated, the defenseless country was entered by persons of
different nationalities, who introduced their opinions, and in this way, the
religion of Israel was doubly mutilated. Besides, the priests and great men,
who were transported to Babylon, were educated in the sciences of the
Chaldeans, and imbibed, during a residence of fifty years, nearly the whole
of their theology. It was not until this time that the dogmas of the hostile
genius (Satan), the angels Michael, Uriel, Yar, Nisan, &c., the rebel angels,
the battle in heaven, the immortality of the soul, and the resurrection, were
introduced and naturalized among the Jews.[109:1]
NOTE.—It is not generally known that the Jews were removed from their
own land until the time of the Babylonian Nebuchadnezzar, but there is
evidence that Jerusalem was plundered by the Edomites about 800 B. C.,
who sold some of the captive Jews to the Greeks (Joel, iii. 6). When the
captives returned to their country from "the Islands which are beyond the
sea" (Jer. xxv. 18, 22), they would naturally bring back with them much of
the Hellenic lore of their conquerors. In Isaiah (xi. 11), we find a reference
to this first captivity in the following words: "In that day the Lord shall set
his hand again the second time to recover the remnant of his people, which
shall be left, from Assyria, and from Egypt, and from Pathros, and from
Cush, and from Elam, and from Shinar, and from Hamath, and from the
Islands of the sea;" i. e., GREECE.
FOOTNOTES:
[89:1] See Beal: Hist. Buddha, p. 111, et seq.
[89:2] Bell's Pantheon, under "Perseus;" Knight: Ancient Art and Mytho., p. 178, and
Bulfinch: Age of Fables, p. 161.
[90:1] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 118. Taylor's Diegesis, p. 190. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol.
ii. p. 19.
[90:2] Ibid.
[90:3] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 122. Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 174. Goldziher:
Hebrew Mythology, p. 179. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 19.
[90:4] Bell's Pantheon, art. "Osiris;" and Bulfinch: Age of Fable, p. 391
[90:5] Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, i. 159.
[90:6] Exodus, ii.
[90:7] See Child: Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 6, and most any work on Buddhism.
[90:8] See Smith: Chaldean Account of Genesis.
[90:9] See Goldziher: Hebrew Mythology, p. 128, note.
[90:10] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. pp. 213, 214.
[90:11] I. Samuel, xvii.
[91:1] See Goldzhier: Hebrew Mythology, p. 430, and Bulfinch: Age of Fable, 440.
[91:2] Chapter xxii.
[91:3] See Smith's Chaldean Account of Genesis, p. 188, et seq.
[91:4] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 323.
[91:5] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 19.
[91:6] Ibid. i. 191, and ii. 241; Franklin: Bud. & Jeynes, 174.
[91:7] Hardy: Buddhist Legends, pp. 50, 53, and 140.
[91:8] See Ibid.
[91:9] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 191.
[91:10] Ibid. p. 39.
[92:1] "Septuagint."—The Old Greek version of the Old Testament.
[92:2] "Vulgate."—The Latin version of the Old Testament.
[92:3] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. ii. pp. 186, 187.
[92:4] The Religion of Israel, p. 9.
[92:5] Besides the many other facts which show that the Pentateuch was not composed
until long after the time of Moses and Joshua, the following may be mentioned as
examples: Gilgal, mentioned in Deut. xi. 30, was not given as the name of that place till
after the entrance into Canaan. Dan, mentioned in Genesis xiv. 14, was not so called till
long after the time of Moses. In Gen. xxxvi. 31, the beginning of the reign of the kings
over Israel is spoken of historically, an event which did not occur before the time of
Samuel. (See, for further information, Bishop Colenso's Pentateuch Examined, vol. ii. ch.
v. and vi.)
[93:1] The Religion of Israel, p. 9.
[93:2] Ibid. p. 10.
[93:3] Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Jews."
[93:4] The Religion of Israel, pp. 10, 11.
[94:1] The Religion of Israel, p. 11.
[94:2] See Ibid. pp. 120, 122.
[94:3] See Ibid. p. 122.
[94:4] The account of the finding of this book by Hilkiah is to be found in II. Chronicles,
ch. xxxiv.
[94:5] See Religion of Israel, pp. 124, 125.
[94:6] Ibid. p. 11.
[95:1] The Religion of Israel, pp. 186, 187.
[95:2] "Talmud."—The books containing the Jewish traditions.
[95:3] See Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Bible."
[95:4] The Religion of Israel, pp. 240, 241.
[96:1] The Religion of Israel, p. 11.
[96:2] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. ii. p. 178.
[96:3] The Religion of Israel, p. 241.
[96:4] On the strength of II. Maccabees, ii. 12.
[96:5] The Religion of Israel, p. 242.
[96:6] Ibid. p. 243.
[97:1] Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Bible."
[97:2] Ibid.
[97:3] Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Akiba."
[97:4] The Religion of Israel, pp. 19, 23.
[98:1] "What is the Bible," by J. T. Sunderland. "The Bible of To-day," by J. W. Chadwick.
"Hebrew and Christian Records," by the Rev. Dr. Giles, 2 vols. Prof. W. R. Smith's article
on "The Bible," in the last edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica. "Introduction to the Old
Testament," by Davidson. "The Pentateuch and the Book of Joshua Examined," by Bishop
Colenso. Prof. F. W. Newman's "Hebrew Monarchy." "The Bible for Learners" (vols. i. and
ii.), by Prof. Oort and others. "The Old Testament in the Jewish Church," by Prof.
Robertson Smith, and Kuenen's "Religion of Israel."
[98:2] Smith: Chaldean Account of Genesis, pp. 22, 29.
[99:1] Ibid. pp. 29, 100. Also, Assyrian Discoveries, p. 397.
[99:2] Tree and Serpent Worship, pp. 6, 7.
[99:3] Myths and Myth-Makers, p. 112.
[99:4] Draper: Religion and Science, p. 62.
[99:5] Goldziher: Hebrew Mythology, p. 328, et seq.
[100:1] Quoted by Bishop Colenso: The Pentateuch Examined, iv. 283.
[100:2] "Much of the Old Testament which Christian divines, in their ignorance of Jewish
lore, have insisted on receiving and interpreting literally, the informed Rabbis never
dreamed of regarding as anything but allegorical. The 'literalists' they called fools. The
account of the Creation was one of the portions which the unlearned were specially
forbidden to meddle with." (Greg: The Creed of Christendom, p. 80.)
[100:3] Quoted by Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 226.
[100:4] See Ibid. p. 227.
[100:5] Quoted by Dunlap: Mysteries of Adoni, p. 176. See also, Bunsen: Keys of St.
Peter, p. 406.
[101:1] See Appendix, c.
[101:2] See Westropp & Wakes, "Phallic Worship."
[101:3] In chap. ii.
[101:4] See Assyrian Discoveries, pp. 167, 168, and Chaldean Account of Genesis.
[101:5] "Upon the carrying away of the Jews to Babylon, they were brought into contact
with a flood of Iranian as well as Chaldean myths, and adopted them without hesitation."
(S. Baring-Gould; Curious Myths, p. 316.)
[102:1] Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Deucalion."
[102:2] See chapter ii.
[102:3] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 185, and Maurice: Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 277.
[102:4] Chapter ii.
[102:5] See Dunlap's Son of the Man, p. 153, note.
[102:6] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 254.
[102:7] See Ibid. p. 367.
[102:8] See Ibid. p. 252.
[102:9] Goldzhier: Hebrew Mythology, pp. 130-135, and Smith's Chaldean Account of
Genesis.
[103:1] Chaldean Account of Genesis, pp. 27, 28.
[103:2] See Note, p. 109.
[103:3] See Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 685.
[103:4] "Targum."—The general term for the Aramaic versions of the Old Testament.
[103:5] In Genesis xxiii. 2, Abraham is called rich in gold and in silver.
[103:6] See Volney's Researches in Ancient History, pp. 144-147.
[104:1] The Religion of Israel, p. 49.
[104:2] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 122. Higgins: vol. ii. p. 19.
[104:3] In claiming the "mighty man" and "lion-killer" as one of their own race, the Jews
were simply doing what other nations had done before them. The Greeks claimed Hercules
as their countryman; stated where he was born, and showed his tomb. The Egyptians
affirmed that he was born in their country (see Tacitus, Annals, b. ii. ch. lix.), and so did
many other nations.
[105:1] See Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, pp. 92, 93.
[105:2] Chaldean Account of Genesis, pp. 168 and 174; and Assyrian Discoveries, p. 167.
[105:3] Chaldean Account of Genesis, p. 168.
[105:4] See The Religion of Israel, p. 12; and Chadwick's Bible of To-Day, p. 55.
[105:5] See The Religion of Israel, p. 41, and Chadwick's Bible of To-Day, p. 24.
[106:1] The Science of Religion, p. 48.
[107:1] They even claimed that one of the "lost tribes of Israel" had found their way to
America, and had taught the natives Hebrew.
[107:2] The Science of Religion, pp. 285, 292.
[107:3] "It is an assumption of the popular theology, and an almost universal belief in the
popular mind, that the Jewish nation was selected by the Almighty to preserve and carry
down to later ages a knowledge of the One and true God—that the Patriarchs possessed
this knowledge—that Moses delivered and enforced this doctrine as the fundamental tenet
of the national creed; and that it was, in fact, the received and distinctive dogma of the
Hebrew people. This alleged possession of the true faith by one only people, while all
surrounding tribes were lost in Polytheism, or something worse, has been adduced by
divines in general as a proof of the truth of the sacred history, and of the divine origin of
the Mosaic dispensation." (Greg: The Creed of Christendom, p. 145.)
Even such authorities as Paley and Milman have written in this strain. (See quotations from
Paley's "Evidences of Christianity," and Dean Milman's "History of the Jews," made by Mr.
Greg in his "Creed of Christendom," p. 145.)
[107:4] See the Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 321, vol. ii. p. 102; and Dunlap: Mysteries of
Adoni, p. 108.
[108:1] See the Bible for Learners, vol. i. pp. 317, 418; vol. ii. p. 301. Dunlap's Son of the
Man, p. 3, and his Spirit Hist., pp. 68 and 182. Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. pp. 782, 783;
and Goldziher: Hebrew Mythol., pp. 227, 240, 242.
[108:2] The Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 317. Dunlap's Son of the Man, p. 3; and Spirit
Hist., p. 68. Also, Goldziher: Hebrew Mythol., p. 159.
[108:3] The Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 26, and 317; vol. ii. p. 301 and 328. Dunlap's Son
of the Man, p. 3. Dunlap's Spirit Hist., 68; Mysteries of Adoni, pp. xvii. and 108; and The
Religion of Israel, p. 38.
[108:4] Bunsen: Keys of St. Peter, pp. 101, 102.
[108:5] The Bible for Learners, vol. i. pp. 175-178, 317, 322, 448.
[108:6] Ibid. 115.
[108:7] Ibid. i. 23, 321; ii. 102, 103, 109, 264, 274. Dunlap's Spirit Hist., p. 108. Inman:
Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 438; vol. ii. p. 30.
[108:8] The Bible for Learners, vol. i. pp. 88, 318; vol. ii. pp. 102, 113, 300. Dunlap: Son
of the Man, p. 3; and Mysteries of Adoni, p. xvii. Müller: The Science of Religion, p. 261.
[108:9] The Bible for Learners, vol. i. pp. 21-25, 105, 391; vol. ii. pp. 102, 136-138.
Dunlap: Son of the Man, p. 3. Mysteries of Adoni, pp. 106, 177. Inman: Ancient Faiths,
vol. ii. pp. 782, 783. Bunsen: The Keys of St. Peter, p. 91. Müller: The Science of Religion,
p. 181. Bal, Bel or Belus was an idol of the Chaldeans and Phenicians or Canaanites. The
word Bal, in the Punic language, signifies Lord or Master. The name Bal is often joined
with some other, as Bal-berith, Bal-peor, Bal-zephon, &c. "The Israelites made him their
god, and erected altars to him on which they offered human sacrifices," and "what is still
more unnatural, they ate of the victims they offered." (Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. pp. 113, 114.)
[108:10] The Bible for Learners, vol. i. pp. 17, 26; vol. ii. pp. 102, 299, 300. Bunsen: Keys
of St. Peter, p. 110. Müller: The Science of Religion, p. 285. Moloch was a god of the
Ammonites, also worshiped among the Israelites. Solomon built a temple to him, on the
Mount of Olives, and human sacrifices were offered to him. (Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. pp.
84, 85.)
[108:11] The Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 153; vol. ii. pp. 71, 83, 125. Smith's Bible
Dictionary art. "Chemosh."
[108:12] The Bible for Learners, vol. i. pp. 26, 117, 148, 319, 320; vol. ii. pp. 16, 17, 299,
300. Dunlap's Spirit Hist., pp. 108, 222. Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. pp. 100, 101.
Müller: Science of Religion, p. 261. Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. 113, 114; vol. ii. 84, 85.
[108:13] See note 9 above.
[108:14] See Bunsen: Keys of St. Peter, 291.
[108:15] Ibid. p. 27.
[108:16] Goldziher: Hebrew Mythology, p. 319
[109:1] The Talmud of Jerusalem expressly states that the names of the angels and the
months, such as Gabriel, Michael, Yar, Nisan, &c., came from Babylon with the Jews.
(Goldziher, p. 319.) "There is no trace of the doctrine of Angels in the Hebrew Scriptures
composed or written before the exile." (Bunsen: The Angel Messiah, p. 285) "The Jews
adopted, during the Captivity, the idea of angels, Michael, Raphael, Uriel, Gabriel," &c.
(Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. 54.) See, for further information on this subject,
Dr. Knappert's "Religion of Israel," or Prof. Kuenen's "Religion of Israel."
PART II.
THE NEW TESTAMENT.
CHAPTER XII.
THE MIRACULOUS BIRTH OF CHRIST JESUS.
According to the dogma of the deity of Jesus, he who is said to have lived
on earth some eighteen centuries ago, as Jesus of Nazareth, is second of the
three persons in the Trinity, the SON, God as absolutely as the Father and the
Holy Spirit, except as eternally deriving his existence from the Father.
What, however, especially characterizes the Son, and distinguishes him
from the two other persons united with him in the unity of the Deity, is this,
that the Son, at a given moment of time, became incarnate, and that, without
losing anything of his divine nature, he thus became possessed of a
complete human nature; so that he is at the same time, without injury to the
unity of his person, "truly man and truly God."
The story of the miraculous birth of Jesus is told by the Matthew narrator as
follows:[111:1]
"Now the birth of Jesus Christ was on this wise: When as his mother Mary
was espoused to Joseph, before they came together, she was found with
child of the Holy Ghost. Then Joseph, her husband, being a just man, and
not willing to make her a public example, was minded to put her away
privily. But while he thought on these things, behold, the angel of the Lord
appeared unto him in a dream, saying, Joseph, thou son of David, fear not
to take unto thee Mary thy wife: for that which is conceived in her is of the
Holy Ghost. And she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt call his name
Jesus, for he shall save his people from their sins. Now all this was done,
that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet,
saying: Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and
they shall call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with
us."[111:2]
A Deliverer was hoped for, expected, prophesied, in the time of Jewish
misery[112:1] (and Cyrus was perhaps the first referred to); but as no one
appeared who did what the Messiah, according to prophecy, should do, they
went on degrading each successive conqueror and hero from the Messianic
dignity, and are still expecting the true Deliverer. Hebrew and Christian
divines both start from the same assumed unproven premises, viz.: that a
Messiah, having been foretold, must appear; but there they diverge, and the
Jews show themselves to be the sounder logicians of the two: the Christians
assuming that Jesus was the Messiah intended (though not the one
expected), wrest the obvious meaning of the prophecies to show that they
were fulfilled in him; while the Jews, assuming the obvious meaning of the
prophecies to be their real meaning, argue that they were not fulfilled in
Christ Jesus, and therefore that the Messiah is yet to come.
We shall now see, in the words of Bishop Hawes: "that God should, in some
extraordinary manner, visit and dwell with man, is an idea which, as we
read the writings of the ancient Heathens, meets us in a thousand different
forms."
Immaculate conceptions and celestial descents were so currently received
among the ancients, that whoever had greatly distinguished himself in the
affairs of men was thought to be of supernatural lineage. Gods descended
from heaven and were made incarnate in men, and men ascended from
earth, and took their seat among the gods, so that these incarnations and
apotheosises were fast filling Olympus with divinities.
In our inquiries on this subject we shall turn first to Asia, where, as the
learned Thomas Maurice remarks in his Indian Antiquities, "in every age,
and in almost every region of the Asiatic world, there seems uniformly to
have flourished an immemorial tradition that one god had, from all eternity,
begotten another god."[112:2]
Again:
In Prof. Fergusson's "Tree and Serpent Worship" may be seen (Plate xxxiii.)
a representation of Maya, the mother of Buddha, asleep, and dreaming that
a white elephant appeared to her, and entered her womb.
This dream being interpreted by the Brahmans learned in the Rig Veda, was
considered as announcing the incarnation of him who was to be in future
the deliverer of mankind from pain and sorrow. It is, in fact, the form which
the Annunciation took in Buddhist legends.[117:4]
"——Awaked,
Bliss beyond mortal mother's filled her breast,
And over half the earth a lovely light
Forewent the morn. The strong hills shook; the waves
Sank lulled; all flowers that blow by day came forth
As 'twere high noon; down to the farthest hells
Passed the Queen's joy, as when warm sunshine thrills
Wood-glooms to gold, and into all the deeps
A tender whisper pierced. 'Oh ye,' it said,
'The dead that are to live, the live who die,
Uprise, and hear, and hope! Buddha is come!'
Whereat in Limbos numberless much peace
Spread, and the world's heart throbbed, and a wind blew
With unknown freshness over land and seas.
And when the morning dawned, and this was told,
The grey dream-readers said, 'The dream is good!
The Crab is in conjunction with the Sun;
The Queen shall bear a boy, a holy child
Of wondrous wisdom, profiting all flesh,
Who shall deliver men from ignorance,
Or rule the world, if he will deign to rule.'
In this wise was the holy Buddha born."
In Fig. 4, Plate xci., the same subject is also illustrated. Prof. Fergusson,
referring to it, says:
"Fig. 4 is another edition of a legend more frequently repeated than almost
any other in Buddhist Scriptures. It was, with their artists, as great a favorite
as the Annunciation and Nativity were with Christian painters."[118:1]
When Buddha avatar descended from the regions of the souls, and entered
the body of the Virgin Maya, her womb suddenly assumed the appearance
of clear, transparent crystal, in which Buddha appeared, beautiful as a
flower, kneeling and reclining on his hands.[118:2]
Buddha's representative on earth is the Dalai Lama, or Grand Lama, the
High Priest of the Tartars. He is regarded as the vicegerent of God, with
power to dispense divine blessings on whomsoever he will, and is
considered among the Buddhists to be a sort of divine being. He is the Pope
of Buddhism.[118:3]
The Siamese had a Virgin-born God and Saviour whom they called Codom.
His mother, a beautiful young virgin, being inspired from heaven, quitted
the society of men and wandered into the most unfrequented parts of a great
forest, there to await the coming of a god which had long been announced
to mankind. While she was one day prostrate in prayer, she was
impregnated by the sunbeams. She thereupon retired to the borders of a
lake, between Siam and Cambodia, where she was delivered of a "heavenly
boy," which she placed within the folds of a lotus, that opened to receive
him. When the boy grew up, he became a prodigy of wisdom, performed
miracles, &c.[118:4]
The first Europeans who visited Cape Comorin, the most southerly
extremity of the peninsula of Hindostan, were surprised to find the
inhabitants worshiping a Lord and Saviour whom they called Salivahana.
They related that his father's name was Taishaca, but that he was a divine
child horn of a Virgin, in fact, an incarnation of the Supreme Vishnu.[119:1]
The belief in a virgin-born god-man is found in the religions of China. As
Sir John Francis Davis remarks,[119:2] "China has her mythology in common
with all other nations, and under this head we must range the persons styled
Fo-hi (or Fuh-he), Shin-noong, Hoang-ty and their immediate successors,
who, like the demi gods and heroes of Grecian fable, rescued mankind by
their ability or enterprise from the most primitive barbarism, and have since
been invested with superhuman attributes. The most extravagant prodigies
are related of these persons, and the most incongruous qualities attributed to
them."
Dean Milman, in his "History of Christianity" (Vol. i. p. 97), refers to the
tradition, found among the Chinese, that Fo-hi was born of a virgin; and
remarks that, the first Jesuit missionaries who went to China were appalled
at finding, in the mythology of that country, a counterpart of the story of the
virgin of Judea.
Fo-hi is said to have been born 3463 years B. C., and, according to some
Chinese writers, with him begins the historical era and the foundation of the
empire. When his mother conceived him in her womb, a rainbow was seen
to surround her.[119:3]
The Chinese traditions concerning the birth of Fo-hi are, some of them,
highly poetical. That which has received the widest acceptance is as
follows:
"Three nymphs came down from heaven to wash themselves in a river; but
scarce had they got there before the herb lotus appeared on one of their
garments, with its coral fruit upon it. They could not imagine whence it
proceeded, and one was tempted to taste it, whereby she became pregnant
and was delivered of a boy, who afterwards became a great man, a founder
of religion, a conqueror, and legislator."[119:4]
The sect of Xaca, which is evidently a corruption of Buddhism, claim that
their master was also of supernatural origin. Alvarez Semedo, speaking of
them, says:
"The third religious sect among the Chinese is from India, from the parts of
Hindostan, which sect they call Xaca, from the founder of it, concerning
whom they fable—that he was conceived by his mother Maya, from a white
elephant, which she saw in her sleep, and for more purity she brought him
from one of her sides."[120:1]
Lao-kiun, sometimes celled Lao-tsze, who is said to have been born in the
third year of the emperor Ting-wang, of the Chow dynasty (604 B. C.), was
another miraculously-born man. He acquired great reputation for sanctity,
and marvelous stories were told of his birth. It was said that he had existed
from all eternity; that he had descended on earth and was born of a virgin,
black in complexion, described "marvelous and beautiful as jasper."
Splendid temples were erected to him, and he was worshiped as a god. His
disciples were called "Heavenly Teachers." They inculcated great
tenderness toward animals, and considered strict celibacy necessary for the
attainment of perfect holiness. Lao-kiun believed in One God whom he
called Tao, and the sect which he formed is called Tao-tse, or "Sect of
Reason." Sir Thomas Thornton, speaking of him, says:
"The mythological history of this 'prince of the doctrine of the Taou,' which
is current amongst his followers, represents him as a divine emanation
incarnate in a human form. They term him the 'most high and venerable
prince of the portals of gold of the palace of the genii,' and say that he
condescended to a contact with humanity when he became incorporated
with the 'miraculous and excellent Virgin of jasper.' Like Buddha, he came
out of his mother's side, and was born under a tree.
"The legends of the Taou-tse declare their founder to have existed
antecedent to the birth of the elements, in the Great Absolute; that he is the
'pure essence of the tëen;' that he is the 'original ancestor of the prime breath
of life;' and that he gave form to the heavens and the earth."[120:2]
M. Le Compte says:
"Those who have made this (the religion of Taou-tsze) their professed
business, are called Tien-se, that is, 'Heavenly Doctors;' they have houses
(Monasteries) given them to live together in society; they erect, in divers
parts, temples to their master, and king and people honor him with divine
worship."
Yu was another virgin-born Chinese sage, who is said to have lived upon
earth many ages ago. Confucius—as though he had been questioned about
him—says: "I see no defect in the character of Yu. He was sober in eating
and drinking, and eminently pious toward spirits and ancestors."[120:3]
Hâu-ki, the Chinese hero, was of supernatural origin.
The following is the history of his birth, according to the "Shih-King:"
"His mother, who was childless, had presented a pure offering and
sacrificed, that her childlessness might be taken away. She then trod on a
toe-print made by God, and was moved,[121:1] in the large place where she
rested. She became pregnant; she dwelt retired; she gave birth to and
nourished a son, who was Hâu-ki. When she had fulfilled her months, her
first-born son came forth like a lamb. There was no bursting, no rending, no
injury, no hurt; showing how wonderful he would be. Did not God give her
comfort? Had he not accepted her pure offering and sacrifice, so that thus
easily she brought forth her son?"[121:2]
Even the sober Confucius (born B. C. 501) was of supernatural origin. The
most important event in Chinese literary and ethical history is the birth of
Kung-foo-tsze (Confucius), both in its effects on the moral organization of
this great empire, and the study of Chinese philosophy in Europe.
Kung-foo-tsze (meaning "the sage Kung" or "the wise excellence") was of
royal descent; and his family the most ancient in the empire, as his
genealogy was traceable directly up to Hwang-te, the reputed organizer of
the state, the first emperor of the semi-historical period (beginning 2696 B.
C.).
Amphion was the son of Jupiter and a mortal mother, Antiope, daughter of
Nicetus, King of Bœotia.[124:6]
Prometheus, whose name is derived from a Greek word signifying foresight
and providence, was a deity who united the divine and human nature in one
person, and was confessedly both man and god.[124:7]
Perseus was the son of Jupiter by the virgin Danae, daughter of Acrisius,
King of Argos.[124:8] Divine honors were paid him, and a temple was
erected to him in Athens.[124:9]
Justin Martyr (A. D. 140), in his Apology to the Emperor Adrian, says:
"By declaring the Logos, the first-begotten of God, our Master, Jesus
Christ, to be born of a virgin, without any human mixture, we (Christians)
say no more in this than what you (Pagans) say of those whom you style the
Sons of Jove. For you need not be told what a parcel of sons the writers
most in vogue among you assign to Jove. . . .
"As to the Son of God, called Jesus, should we allow him to be nothing
more than man, yet the title of 'the Son of God' is very justifiable, upon the
account of his wisdom, considering that you (Pagans) have your Mercury in
worship under the title of the Word, a messenger of God. . . .
"As to his (Jesus Christ's) being born of a virgin, you have your Perseus to
balance that."[125:1]
Mercury was the son of Jupiter and a mortal mother, Maia, daughter of
Atlas. Cyllene, in Arcadia, is said to have been the scene of his birth and
education, and a magnificent temple was erected to him there.[125:2]
Æolus, king of the Lipari Islands, near Sicily, was the son of Jupiter and a
mortal mother, Acasta.[125:3]
Apollo was the son of Jupiter and a mortal mother, Latona.[125:4] Like
Buddha and Lao-Kiun, Apollo, so the Ephesians said, was born under a
tree; Latona, taking shelter under an olive-tree, was delivered there.[125:5]
Then there was joy among the undying gods in Olympus, and the Earth
laughed beneath the smile of Heaven.[125:6]
Aethlius, who is said to have been one of the institutors of the Orphic
games, was the son of Jupiter by a mortal mother, Protogenia.[125:7]
The ancient Romans were in the habit of deifying their living and departed
emperors, and gave to them the title of DIVUS, or the Divine One. It was
required throughout the whole empire that divine honors should be paid to
the emperors.[125:12] They had a ceremony called Apotheosis, or deification.
After this ceremony, temples, altars, and images, with attributes of divinity,
were erected to the new deity. It is related by Eusebius, Tertullian, and
Chrysostom, that Tiberius proposed to the Roman Senate the Apotheosis or
deification of Jesus Christ.[126:1] Ælius Lampridius, in his Life of Alexander
Severus (who reigned A. D. 222-235), says:
"This emperor had two private chapels, one more honorable than the other;
and in the former were placed the deified emperors, and also some eminent
good men, among them Abraham, Christ, and Orpheus."[126:2]
Romulus, who is said to have been the founder of Rome, was believed to
have been the son of God by a pure virgin, Rhea-Sylvia.[126:3] One Julius
Proculus took a solemn oath, that Romulus himself appeared to him and
ordered him to inform the Senate of his being called up to the assembly of
the gods, under the name of Quirinus.[126:4]
"The honors due to the gods," says Tacitus, "were no longer sacred:
Augustus claimed equal worship. Temples were built, and statues were
erected, to him; a mortal man was adored, and priests and pontiffs were
appointed to pay him impious homage."[126:8]
Divine honors were declared to the memory of Claudius, after his death,
and he was added to the number of the gods. The titles "Our Lord," "Our
Master," and "Our God," were given to the Emperors of Rome, even while
living.[126:9]
In the deification of the Cæsars, a testimony upon oath, of an eagle's flying
out of the funeral pile, toward heaven, which was supposed to convey the
soul of the deceased, was the established proof of their divinity.[127:1]
Alexander the Great, King of Macedonia (born 356 B. C.), whom genius and
uncommon success had raised above ordinary men, was believed to have
been a god upon earth.[127:2] He was believed to have been the son of
Jupiter by a mortal mother, Olympias.
Alexander at one time visited the temple of Jupiter Ammon, which was
situated in an oasis in the Libyan desert, and the Oracle there declared him
to be a son of the god. He afterwards issued his orders, letters, decrees, &c.,
styling himself "Alexander, son of Jupiter Ammon."[127:3]
The words of the oracle which declared him to be divine were as follows,
says Socrates:
"Let altars burn and incense pour, please Jove Minerva eke;
The potent Prince though nature frail, his favor you must
seek,
For Jove from heaven to earth him sent, lo! Alexander king,
As God he comes the earth to rule, and just laws for to
bring."[127:4]
Ptolemy, who was one of Alexander's generals in his Eastern campaigns,
and into whose hands Egypt fell at the death of Alexander, was also
believed to have been of divine origin. At the siege of Rhodes, Ptolemy had
been of such signal service to its citizens that in gratitude they paid divine
honors to him, and saluted him with the title of Soter, i. e., Saviour. By that
designation, "Ptolemy Soter," he is distinguished from the succeeding kings
of the Macedonian dynasty in Egypt.[127:5]
Cyrus, King of Persia, was believed to have been of divine origin; he was
called the "Christ," or the "Anointed of God," and God's messenger.[127:6]
Plato, born at Athens 429 B. C., was believed to have been the son of God by
a pure virgin, called Perictione.[127:7]
The reputed father of Plato (Aris) was admonished in a dream to respect the
person of his wife until after the birth of the child of which she was then
pregnant by a god.[127:8]
Prof. Draper, speaking of Plato, says:
"The Egyptian disciples of Plato would have looked with anger on those
who rejected the legend that Perictione, the mother of that great
philosopher, a pure virgin, had suffered an immaculate conception through
the influences of (the god) Apollo, and that the god had declared to Aris, to
whom she was betrothed, the parentage of the child."[128:1]
Here we have the legend of the angel appearing to Joseph—to whom Mary
was betrothed—believed in by the disciples of Plato for centuries before the
time of Christ Jesus, the only difference being that the virgin's name was
Perictione instead of Mary, and the confiding husband's name Aris instead
of Joseph. We have another similar case.
The mother of Apollonius (B. C. 41) was informed by a god, who appeared
to her, that he himself should be born of her.[128:2] In the course of time she
gave birth to Apollonius, who became a great religious teacher, and
performer of miracles.[128:3]
Pythagoras, born about 570 B. C., had divine honors paid him. His mother is
said to have become impregnated through a spectre, or Holy Ghost. His
father—or foster-father—was also informed that his wife should bring forth
a son, who should be a benefactor to mankind.[128:4]
So, too, of the stories of the Presentation in the Temple,[133:2] and of the
child Jesus at Jerusalem,[133:3] Joseph is called his father. Jesus is
repeatedly described as the son of the carpenter,[133:4] or the son of Joseph,
without the least indication that the expression is not strictly in accordance
with the fact.[133:5]
If his parents fail to understand him when he says, at twelve years old, that
he must be about his Father's business;[133:6] if he afterwards declares that
he finds no faith among his nearest relations;[133:7] if he exalts his faithful
disciples above his unbelieving mother and brothers;[133:8] above all, if
Mary and her other sons put down his prophetic enthusiasm to insanity;
[133:9]—then the untrustworthy nature of these stories of his birth is
absolutely certain. If even a little of what they tell us had been true, then
Mary at least would have believed in Jesus, and would not have failed so
utterly to understand him.[133:10]
The Gospel of Mark—which, in this respect, at least, abides most faithfully
by the old apostolic tradition—says not a word about Bethlehem or the
miraculous birth. The congregation of Jerusalem to which Mary and the
brothers of Jesus belonged,[133:11] and over which the eldest of them, James,
presided,[133:12] can have known nothing of it; for the later Jewish-Christian
communities, the so-called Ebionites, who were descended from the
congregation at Jerusalem, called Jesus the son of Joseph. Nay, the story
that the Holy Spirit was the father of Jesus, must have risen among the
Greeks, or elsewhere, and not among the first believers, who were Jews, for
the Hebrew word for spirit is of the feminine gender.[134:1]
The immediate successors of the "congregation at Jerusalem"—to which
Mary, the mother of Jesus, and his brothers belonged—were, as we have
seen, the Ebionites. Eusebius, the first ecclesiastical historian (born A. D.
264), speaking of the Ebionites (i. e. "poor men"), tell us that they believed
Jesus to be "a simple and common man," born as other men, "of Mary and
her husband."[134:2]
The views held by the Ebionites of Jesus were, it is said, derived from the
Gospel of Matthew, and what they learned direct from the Apostles.
Matthew had been a hearer of Jesus, a companion of the Apostles, and had
seen and no doubt conversed with Mary. When he wrote his Gospel
everything was fresh in his mind, and there could be no object, on his part,
in writing the life of Jesus, to state falsehoods or omit important truths in
order to deceive his countrymen. If what is stated in the interpolated first
two chapters, concerning the miraculous birth of Jesus, were true, Matthew
would have known of it; and, knowing it, why should he omit it in giving an
account of the life of Jesus?[134:3]
The Ebionites, or Nazarenes, as they were previously called were rejected
by the Jews as apostates, and by the Egyptian and Roman Christians as
heretics, therefore, until they completely disappear, their history is one of
tyrannical persecution. Although some traces of that obsolete sect may be
discovered as late as the fourth century, they insensibly melted away, either
into the Roman Christian Church, or into the Jewish Synagogue,[134:4] and
with them perished the original Gospel of Matthew, the only Gospel written
by an apostle.
"Who, where masses of men are burning to burst the bonds of time and
sense, to deify and to adore, wants what seems earth-born, prosaic fact?
Woe to the man that dares to interpose it! Woe to the sect of faithful
Ebionites even, and on the very soil of Palestine, that dare to maintain the
earlier, humbler tradition! Swiftly do they become heretics, revilers,
blasphemers, though sanctioned by a James, brother of the Lord."
Edward Gibbon, speaking of this most unfortunate sect, says:
"A laudable regard for the honor of the first proselytes has countenanced
the belief, the hope, the wish, that the Ebionites, or at least the Nazarenes,
were distinguished only by their obstinate perseverance in the practice of
the Mosaic rites. Their churches have disappeared, their books are
obliterated, their obscure freedom might allow a latitude of faith, and the
softness of their infant creed would be variously moulded by the zeal of
prejudice of three hundred years. Yet the most charitable criticism must
refuse these sectaries any knowledge of the pure and proper divinity of
Christ. Educated in the school of Jewish prophecy and prejudice, they had
never been taught to elevate their hope above a human and temporal
Messiah. If they had courage to hail their king when he appeared in a
plebeian garb, their grosser apprehensions were incapable of discerning
their God, who had studiously disguised his celestial character under the
name and person of a mortal.
"The familiar companions of Jesus of Nazareth conversed with their friend
and countryman, who, in all the actions of rational and human life, appeared
of the same species with themselves. His progress from infancy to youth
and manhood was marked by a regular increase in stature and wisdom; and
after a painful agony of mind and body, he expired on the cross."[135:1]
The Jewish Christians then—the congregation of Jerusalem, and their
immediate successors, the Ebionites or Nazarenes—saw in their master
nothing more than a man. From this, and the other facts which we have
seen in this chapter, it is evident that the man Jesus of Nazareth was deified
long after his death, just as many other men had been deified centuries
before his time, and even after. Until it had been settled by a council of
bishops that Jesus was not only a God, but "God himself in human form,"
who appeared on earth, as did Crishna of old, to redeem and save mankind,
there were many theories concerning his nature.
Among the early Christians there were a certain class called by the later
Christians Heretics. Among these may be mentioned the "Carpocratians,"
named after one Carpocrates. They maintained that Jesus was a mere man,
born of Joseph and Mary, like other men, but that he was good and virtuous.
"Some of them have the vanity," says Irenæus, "to think that they may
equal, or in some respects exceed, Jesus himself."[135:2]
These are called by the general name of Gnostics, and comprehend almost
all the sects of the first two ages.[135:3] They said that "all the ancients, and
even the Apostles themselves, received and taught the same things which
they held; and that the truth of the Gospel had been preserved till the time
of Victor, the thirteenth Bishop of Rome, but by his successor, Zephyrinus,
the truth had been corrupted."[135:4]
Eusebius, speaking of Artemon and his followers, who denied the divinity
of Christ, says:
"They affirm that all our ancestors, yea, and the Apostles themselves, were
of the same opinion, and taught the same with them, and that this their true
doctrine (for so they call it) was preached and embraced unto the time of
Victor, the thirteenth Bishop of Rome after Peter, and corrupted by his
successor Zephyrinus."[136:1]
There were also the "Cerinthians," named after one Cerinthus, who
maintained that Jesus was not born of a virgin, which to them appeared
impossible, but that he was the son of Joseph and Mary, born altogether as
other men are; but he excelled all men in virtue, knowledge and wisdom. At
the time of his baptism, "the Christ" came down upon him in the shape of a
dove, and left him at the time of his crucifixion.[136:2]
Irenæus, speaking of Cerinthus and his doctrines, says:
"He represents Jesus as the son of Joseph and Mary, according to the
ordinary course of human generation, and not as having been born of a
virgin. He believed nevertheless that he was more righteous, prudent and
wise than most men, and that the Christ descended upon, and entered into
him, at the time of his baptism."[136:3]
The Docetes were a numerous and learned sect of Asiatic Christians who
invented the Phantastic system, which was afterwards promulgated by the
Marcionites, the Manicheans, and various other sects.
They denied the truth and authenticity of the Gospels, as far as they related
to the conception of Mary, the birth of Jesus, and the thirty years that
preceded the exercise of his ministry.
Bordering upon the Jewish and Gentile world, the Cerinthians labored to
reconcile the Gnostic and the Ebionite, by confessing in the same Messiah
the supernatural union of a man and a god; and this mystic doctrine was
adopted, with many fanciful improvements, by many sects. The hypothesis
was this: that Jesus of Nazareth was a mere mortal, the legitimate son of
Joseph and Mary, but he was the best and wisest of the human race, selected
as the worthy instrument to restore upon earth the worship of the true and
supreme Deity. When he was baptized in the Jordan, and not till then, he
became more than man. At that time, the Christ, the first of the Æons, the
Son of God himself, descended on Jesus in the form of a dove, to inhabit
his mind, and direct his actions during the allotted period of his ministry.
When he was delivered into the hands of the Jews, the Christ forsook him,
flew back to the world of spirits, and left the solitary Jesus to suffer, to
complain, and to die. This is why he said, while hanging on the cross: "My
God! My God! why hast thou forsaken me?"[137:1]
Here, then, we see the first budding out of—what was termed by the true
followers of Jesus—heretical doctrines. The time had not yet come to make
Jesus a god, to claim that he had been born of a virgin. As he must,
however, have been different from other mortals—throughout the period of
his ministry, at least—the Christ must have entered into him at the time of
his baptism, and as mysteriously disappeared when he was delivered into
the hands of the Jews.
In the course of time, the seeds of the faith, which had slowly arisen in the
rocky and ungrateful soil of Judea, were transplanted, in full maturity, to the
happier climes of the Gentiles; and the strangers of Rome and Alexandria,
who had never beheld the manhood, were more ready to embrace the
divinity of Jesus.
The polytheist and the philosopher, the Greek and the barbarian, were alike
accustomed to receive—as we have seen in this chapter—a long succession
and infinite chain of angels, or deities, or æons, or emanations, issuing from
the throne of light. Nor could it seem strange and incredible to them, that
the first of the æons, the Logos, or Word of God, of the same substance with
the Father, should descend upon earth, to deliver the human race from vice
and error. The histories of their countries, their odes, and their religions
were teeming with such ideas, as happening in the past, and they were also
looking for and expecting an Angel-Messiah.[137:2]
Centuries rolled by, however, before the doctrine of Christ Jesus, the Angel-
Messiah, became a settled question, an established tenet in the Christian
faith. The dignity of Christ Jesus was measured by private judgment,
according to the indefinite rule of Scripture, or tradition or reason. But
when his pure and proper divinity had been established on the ruins of
Arianism, the faith of the Catholics trembled on the edge of a precipice
where it was impossible to recede, dangerous to stand, dreadful to fall; and
the manifold inconveniences of their creed were aggravated by the sublime
character of their theology. They hesitated to pronounce that God himself,
the second person of an equal and consubstantial Trinity, was manifested in
the flesh,[137:3] that the Being who pervades the universe had been confined
in the womb of Mary; that his eternal duration had been marked by the days,
and months, and years of human existence; that the Almighty God had been
scourged and crucified; that his impassible essence had felt pain and
anguish; that his omniscience was not exempt from ignorance; and that the
source of life and immortality expired on Mount Calvary.
These alarming consequences were affirmed with unblushing simplicity by
Apollinaris, Bishop of Laodicea, and one of the luminaries of the Church.
The son of a learned grammarian, he was skilled in all the sciences of
Greece; eloquence, erudition, and philosophy, conspicuous in the volumes
of Apollinaris, were humbly devoted to the service of religion.
The worthy friend of Athanasius, the worthy antagonist of Julian, he
bravely wrestled with the Arians and polytheists, and though he affected the
rigor of geometrical demonstration, his commentaries revealed the literal
and allegorical sense of the Scriptures.
A mystery, which had long floated in the looseness of popular belief, was
defined by his perverse diligence in a technical form, and he first
proclaimed the memorable words, "One incarnate nature of Christ."[138:1]
This was about A. D. 362, he being Bishop of Laodicea, in Syria, at that
time.[138:2]
The recent zeal against the errors of Apollinaris reduced the Catholics to a
seeming agreement with the double-nature of Cerinthus. But instead of a
temporary and occasional alliance, they established, and Christians still
embrace, the substantial, indissoluble, and everlasting union of a perfect
God with a perfect man, of the second person of the Trinity with a
reasonable soul and human flesh. In the beginning of the fifth century, the
unity of the two natures was the prevailing doctrine of the church.[138:3]
From that time, until a comparatively recent period, the cry was: "May
those who divide Christ[138:4] be divided with the sword; may they be hewn
in pieces, may they be burned alive!" These were actually the words of a
Christian synod.[139:1] Is it any wonder that after this came the dark ages?
How appropriate is the name which has been applied to the centuries which
followed! Dark indeed they were. Now and then, however, a ray of light
was seen, which gave evidence of the coming morn, whose glorious light
we now enjoy. But what a grand light is yet to come from the noon-day sun,
which must shed its glorious rays over the whole earth, ere it sets.
FOOTNOTES:
[111:1] Matthew, i. 18-25.
[111:2] The Luke narrator tells the story in a different manner. His account is more like that
recorded in the KORAN, which says that Gabriel appeared unto Mary in the shape of a
perfect man, that Mary, upon seeing him, and seeming to understand his intentions, said:
"If thou fearest God, thou wilt not approach me." Gabriel answering said: "Verily, I am the
messenger of the Lord, and am sent to give thee a holy son." (Koran, ch. xix.)
[112:1] Instead, however, of the benevolent Jesus, the "Prince of Peace"—as Christian
writers make him out to be—the Jews were expecting a daring and irresistible warrior and
conqueror, who, armed with greater power than Cæsar, was to come upon earth to rend the
fetters in which their hapless nation had so long groaned, to avenge them upon their
haughty oppressors, and to re-establish the kingdom of Judah.
[112:2] Vol. v. p. 294.
[112:3] Moor, in his "Pantheon," tells us that a learned Pandit once observed to him that
the English were a new people, and had only the record of one Avatara, but the Hindoos
were an ancient people, and had accounts of a great many.
[112:4] This name has been spelled in many different ways, such as Krishna, Khrishna,
Krishnu, Chrisna, Cristna, Christna, &c. We have followed Sir Wm. Jones's way of
spelling it, and shall do so throughout.
[113:1] See Asiatic Researches, vol. i. pp. 259-275.
[113:2] Ibid. p. 260. We may say that, "In him dwelt the fulness of the Godhead bodily."
(Colossians, ii. 9.)
[113:3] Allen's India, p. 397.
[113:4] Indian Antiquities, vol. iii. p. 45.
[113:5] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 270.
[113:6] Like Mary, the mother of Jesus, Devaki is called the "Virgin Mother," although she,
as well as Mary, is said to have had other children.
[114:1] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 327.
[114:2] Ibid. p. 329.
[114:3] Vishnu Purana, p. 502.
[114:4] Ibid. p. 440.
[114:5] "Now to him that is of power to establish you according to my gospel, and the
preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret
since the world began." (Romans, xvi. 15.) "And without controversy, great is the mystery
of godliness: God was manifest in the flesh, justified in the spirit, seen of angels, preached
unto the Gentiles, believed on in the world, received up into glory." (1 Timothy, iii. 16.)
[114:6] Vishnu Purana, p. 492, note 3.
[114:7] Geeta, ch. iv.
[115:1] Bhagavat Geeta, Lecture iv. p. 52.
[115:2] Ibid., Lecture iv. p. 79.
[115:3] It is said that there have been several Buddhas (see ch. xxix). We speak of
Gautama. Buddha is variously pronounced and expressed Boudh, Bod, Bot, But, Bud,
Budd, Buddou, Bouttu, Bota, Budso, Pot, Pout, Pota, Poti, and Pouti. The Siamese make
the final t or d quiescent, and sound the word Po; whence the Chinese still further vary it to
Pho or Fo. BUDDHA—which means awakened or enlightened (see Müller: Sci. of Relig., p.
308)—is the proper way in which to spell the name. We have adopted this throughout this
work, regardless of the manner in which the writer from which we quote spells it.
[115:4] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 86.
[115:5] FO-PEN-HING is the life of Gautama Buddha, translated from the Chinese Sanskrit
by Prof. Samuel Beal.
[115:6] Beal: Hist. Buddha, p. 25.
[115:7] Hardy: Manual of Buddhism, p. 141.
[115:8] A Christian sect called Collyridians believed that Mary was born of a virgin, as
Christ is related to have been born of her (See note to the "Gospel of the Birth of Mary"
[Apocryphal]; also King: The Gnostics and their Remains, p. 91, and Gibbon's Hist. of
Rome, vol. v. p. 108, note). This idea has been recently adopted by the Roman Catholic
Church. They now claim that Mary was born as immaculate as her son. (See Inman's
Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 75, and The Lily of Israel, pp. 6-15; also fig. 17, ch. xxxii.)
"The gradual deification of Mary, though slower in its progress, follows, in the Romish
Church, a course analogous to that which the Church of the first centuries followed, in
elaborating the deity of Jesus. With almost all the Catholic writers of our day, Mary is the
universal mediatrix; all power has been given to her in heaven and upon earth. Indeed,
more than one serious attempt has been already made in the Ultramontane camp to unite
Mary in some way to the Trinity; and if Mariolatry lasts much longer, this will probably be
accomplished in the end." (Albert Réville.)
[116:1] Huc's Travels, vol. i. pp. 326, 327.
[116:2] Ibid. p. 327.
[116:3] Oriental Religions, p. 604.
[116:4] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah.
[116:5] Asiatic Researches, vol. ii. p. 309, and King's Gnostics, p. 167.
[116:6] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, pp. 10, 25 and 44.
[117:1] See Beal: Hist. Buddha, p. 36, note. Ganesa, the Indian God of Wisdom, is either
represented as an elephant or a man with an elephant's head. (See Moore's Hindu Pantheon,
and vol. i. of Asiatic Researches.)
[117:2] Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, p. 83.
[117:3] Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 38, 39.
[117:4] Tree and Serpent Worship, p. 131.
[118:1] Tree and Serpent Worship, p. 212.
[118:2] King: The Gnostics and their Remains, p. 168, and Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 485.
R. Spence Hardy says: "The body of the Queen was transparent, and the child could be
distinctly seen, like a priest seated upon a throne in the act of saying bana, or like a golden
image enclosed in a vase of crystal; so that it could be known how much he grew every
succeeding day." (Hardy: Manual of Buddhism, p. 144.) The same thing was said of Mary,
the mother of Jesus. Early art represented the infant distinctly visible in her womb. (See
Inman's Ancient Pagan and Modern Christian Symbolism, and chap. xxix. this work.)
[118:3] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 34.
[118:4] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 185. See also Anacalypsis, vol. i. pp. 162 and 308.
[119:1] See Asiatic Res., vol. x., and Anac., vol. i. p. 662.
[119:2] Davis: Hist. China, vol. i. p. 161.
[119:3] Thornton: Hist. China, vol. i. pp. 21, 22.
[119:4] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 184.
[120:1] Semedo: Hist. China, p. 89, in Anac., vol. ii. p. 227.
[120:2] Thornton: Hist. China, vol. i. pp. 134-137. See also Chambers's Encyclo., art. Lao-
tsze.
[120:3] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. pp. 204, 205.
[121:1] "The 'toe-print made by God' has occasioned much speculation of the critics. We
may simply draw the conclusion that the poet meant to have his readers believe with him
that the conception of his hero was SUPERNATURAL." (James Legge.)
[121:2] The Shih-King, Decade ii. Ode 1.
[121:3] See Thornton's Hist. China, vol. i. pp. 199, 200, and Buckley's Cities of the
Ancient World, pp. 168-170.
[121:4] "Le Dieu LA des LAMAS est né d'une Vierge: plusieurs princes de l'Asie, entr'autres
l'Empereur Kienlong, aujourd'hui regnant à la Chine, et qui est de la race de ces Tartares
Mandhuis, qui conquirent cet empire en 1644, croit, et assure lui-même, être descendu
d'une Vierge." (D'Hancarville: Res. Sur l'Orig., p. 186, in Anac., vol. ii. p. 97.)
[122:1] See Mahaffy: Proleg. to Anct. Hist., p. 416, and Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 406.
[122:2] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 157.
[122:3] Renouf: Relig. Anct. Egypt, p. 162.
[122:4] See the chapter on "The Worship of the Virgin Mother."
[122:5] "O toi vengeur, Dieu fils d'un Dieu; O toi vengeur, Horus, manifesté par Osiris,
engendré d'Isis déesee." (Champollion, p. 190.)
[122:6] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 406.
[122:7] Ibid. p. 247.
[122:8] Renouf: Religion of Ancient Egypt, p. 161.
[122:9] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. pp. 67 and 147.
[122:10] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 248.
[123:1] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 407.
[123:2] Renouf: Relig. of Anct. Egypt, p. 163.
[123:3] See Herbert Spencer's Principles of Sociology, vol. i. p. 420.
[123:4] Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 431.
[123:5] Spencer's Principles of Sociology, vol. i. p. 421.
[123:6] Malcolm: Hist. Persia, vol. i. p. 494.
[123:7] Anac. vol. i. p. 117.
[124:1] Roman Antiq., p. 124. Bell's Panth., i. 128. Dupuis, p. 258.
[124:2] Tales of Anct. Greece, p. 55.
[124:3] Greek and Italian Mytho., p. 81. Bell's Panth., i. 117. Roman Antiq., p. 71, and
Murray's Manual Mytho., p. 118.
[124:4] L'Antiquité Expliquée, vol. i. p. 229.
[124:5] Euripides: Bacchae. Quoted by Dunlap: Spirit Hist. of Man, p. 200.
[124:6] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 58. Roman Antiquities, p. 133.
[124:7] See the chapter on "The Crucifixion of Jesus," and Bell's Pantheon, ii. 195.
[124:8] Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 170. Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 161.
[124:9] Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 171.
[125:1] Apol. 1, ch. xxii.
[125:2] Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 67. Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 19.
[125:3] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 25.
[125:4] Ibid. p. 74, and Bulfinch: p. 248.
[125:5] Tacitus: Annals, iii. lxi.
[125:6] Tales of Anct. Greece, p. 4.
[125:7] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 31.
[125:8] Ibid. p. 81.
[125:9] Ibid. p. 16.
[125:10] Bell's Pantheon, ii. p. 30.
[125:11] Cox: Aryan Mythology, ii. 45.
[125:12] The Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 3.
[126:1] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 78.
[126:2] Quoted by Lardner, vol. iii. p. 157.
[126:3] Draper: Religion and Science, p. 8.
[126:4] Middleton's Letters from Rome, p. 37. In the case of Jesus, one Saul of Tarsus, said
to be of a worthy and upright character, declared most solemnly, that Jesus himself
appeared to him while on his way to Damascus, and again while praying in the temple at
Jerusalem. (Acts xxii.)
[126:5] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 345. Gibbon's Rome, vol. i. pp. 84, 85.
[126:6] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 611.
[126:7] Æneid, lib. iv.
[126:8] Tacitus: Annals, bk. i. ch. x.
[126:9] Ibid. bk. ii, ch. lxxxii. and bk. xiii. ch. ii.
[127:1] See Middleton's Letters from Rome, pp. 37, 38.
[127:2] See Religion of the Ancient Greeks, p. 81, and Gibbon's Rome, vol. i. pp. 84, 85.
[127:3] Draper: Religion and Science, p. 8.
[127:4] Socrates: Eccl. Hist. Lib. 3, ch. xix.
[127:5] Draper: Religion and Science, p. 17.
[127:6] See Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 418. Bunsen: Bible Chronology, p. 5, and The
Angel-Messiah, pp. 80 and 298.
[127:7] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 113, and Draper: Religion and Science, p. 8.
[127:8] Hardy: Manual Budd., p. 141. Higgins: Anac., i. 618.
[128:1] Draper: Religion and Science, p. 8. Compare Luke i. 26-35.
[128:2] Philostratus, p. 5.
[128:3] See the chapter on Miracles.
[128:4] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 151.
[128:5] See the chapter on Miracles.
[128:6] Bell's Pantheon, i. 27. Roman Ant., 136. Taylor's Diegesis, p. 150.
[128:7] Ibid.
[129:1] Eusebius: Eccl. Hist., lib. 2, ch. xiii.
[129:2] Ibid. ch. xiii.
[129:3] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities.
[129:4] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 32, Kingsborough: Mexican Antiquities, vol.
vi. 166 and 175-6.
[129:5] Ibid.
[129:6] See Kingsborough: Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 176.
[129:7] Ibid. p. 175.
[130:1] See Kingsborough: Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 176.
[130:2] Ibid. p. 166.
[130:3] Brinton: Myths of the New World, pp. 180, 181.
[130:4] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 187.
[130:5] Ibid. p. 188.
[130:6] Ibid.
[130:7] Ibid.
[130:8] Ibid. p. 190.
[131:1] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 191.
[131:2] Ibid.
[131:3] Ibid.
[131:4] Ibid. p. 192.
[131:5] "If we seek, in the first three Gospels, to know what his biographers thought of
Jesus, we find his true humanity plainly stated, and if we possessed only the Gospel of
Mark and the discourses of the Apostles in the Acts, the whole Christology of the New
Testament would be reduced to this: that Jesus of Nazareth was 'a prophet mighty in deeds
and in words, made by God Christ and Lord.'" (Albert Réville.)
[132:1] Mark, xiii. 32.
[132:2] Mark, x. 40.
[132:3] Mark, x. 18.
[132:4] Mark, xiv. 36.
[132:5] Mark, xv. 34.
[133:1] Matt. and Luke.
"The passages which appear most confirmatory of Christ's Deity, or Divine nature, are, in
the first place, the narratives of the Incarnation and of the Miraculous Conception, as given
by Matthew and Luke. Now, the two narratives do not harmonize with each other; they
neutralize and negative the genealogies on which depend so large a portion of the proof of
Jesus being the Messiah—the marvellous statement they contain is not referred to in any
subsequent portion of the two Gospels, and is tacitly but positively negatived by several
passages—it is never mentioned in the Acts or in the Epistles, and was evidently unknown
to all the Apostles—and, finally, the tone of the narrative, especially in Luke, is poetical
and legendary, and bears a marked similarity to the stories contained in the Apocryphal
Gospels." (W. R. Greg: The Creed of Christendom, p. 229.)
[133:2] Luke, ii. 27.
[133:3] Luke, ii. 41-48.
[133:4] Matt. xiii. 55.
[133:5] Luke, iv. 22. John, i. 46; vi. 42. Luke, iii. 23.
[133:6] Luke, ii. 50.
[133:7] Matt. xiii. 57. Mark, vi. 4.
[133:8] Matt. xii. 48-50. Mark, iii. 33-35.
[133:9] Mark, iii. 21.
[133:10] Dr. Hooykaas.
[133:11] Acts, i. 14.
[133:12] Acts, xxi. 18. Gal. ii. 19-21.
[134:1] See The Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 57.
[134:2] Eusebius: Eccl. Hist., lib. 3, ch. xxiv.
[134:3] Mr. George Reber has thoroughly investigated this subject in his "Christ of Paul,"
to which the reader is referred.
[134:4] See Gibbon's Rome, vol. i. pp. 515-517.
[135:1] Gibbon's Rome, vol. iv. pp. 488, 489.
[135:2] See Lardner's Works, vol. viii. pp. 395, 396.
[135:3] Ibid. p. 306.
[135:4] Ibid. p. 571.
[136:1] Eusebius: Eccl. Hist., lib. 5, ch. xxv.
[136:2] Lardner: vol. viii. p. 404.
[136:3] Irenæus: Against Heresies, bk. i. c. xxiv.
[137:1] See Gibbon's Rome, vol. iv. pp. 492-495.
[137:2] Not a worldly Messiah, as the Jews looked for, but an Angel-Messiah, such an one
as always came at the end of a cycle. We shall treat of this subject anon, when we answer
the question why Jesus was believed to be an Avatar, by the Gentiles, and not by the Jews;
why, in fact, the doctrine of Christ incarnate in Jesus succeeded and prospered.
[137:3] "This strong expression might be justified by the language of St. Paul (God was
manifest in the flesh, justified in the spirit, seen of angels, &c. I. Timothy, iii. 16), but we
are deceived by our modern Bibles. The word which was altered to God at Constantinople
in the beginning of the sixth century: the true meaning, which is visible in the Latin and
Syriac versions, still exists in the reasoning of the Greek, as well as of the Latin fathers;
and this fraud, with that of the three witnesses of St. John (I. John, v. 7), is admirably
detected by Sir Isaac Newton." (Gibbon's Rome, iv. 496, note.) Dean Milman says: "The
weight of authority is so much against the common reading of both these points (i. e., I.
Tim. iii. 16, and I. John, v. 7), that they are no longer urged by prudent controversialists."
(Note in Ibid.)
[138:1] Gibbon's Rome, vol. iv. pp. 492-497.
[138:2] See Chambers's Encyclopædia, art. "Apollinaris."
[138:3] Gibbon's Rome, vol. iv. p. 498.
[138:4] That is, separate him from God the Father, by saying that he, Jesus of Nazareth,
was not really and truly God Almighty himself in human form.
[139:1] See Gibbon's Rome, vol. iv. p. 516.
CHAPTER XIII.
THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM.
FOOTNOTES:
[140:1] Matthew, ch. ii.
[141:1] Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 72.
[141:2] Vol. i. p. 145.
[141:3] See Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. 52.
[142:1] Allen's India, p. 456.
[142:2] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 221.
[142:3] Ibid. p. 261.
[142:4] See Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 456.
[143:1] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, pp. 22, 23, 38.
[143:2] See Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 23, 33, 35.
[143:3] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 36.
[143:4] Williams's Indian Wisdom, p. 347.
[143:5] See Hist. Hindostan, ii. 336.
[143:6] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 561. For that of Crishna, see Vishnu Purana,
book v. ch. iii.
[143:7] See Ibid. p. 618.
[143:8] Thornton: Hist. China, vol. i. p. 137.
[143:9] See Anac., i. p. 560, and Geikie's Life of Christ, i. 559.
[143:10] See Ibid., and The Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 72, and Calmet's Fragments, art.
"Abraham."
[144:1] Baring-Gould: Legends of the Patriarchs, p. 149.
[144:2] Calmet's Fragments, art. "Abraham."
[144:3] Farrar's Life of Christ, p. 52.
[144:4] Tacitus: Annals, bk. xiv. ch. xxii.
[144:5] Amberly's Analysis of Religious Belief, p. 227.
[144:6] Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 73.
[144:7] Brinton: Myths of the New World, pp. 180, 181, and Squire: Serpent Symbol.
[145:1] Life of Christ, vol. i. p. 144.
[145:2] Matthew ii. 2.
[145:3] See Thomas Scott's English Life of Jesus for a full investigation of this subject.
CHAPTER XIV.
THE SONG OF THE HEAVENLY HOST.
The story of the Song of the Heavenly Host belongs exclusively to the Luke
narrator, and, in substance, is as follows:
At the time of the birth of Christ Jesus, there were shepherds abiding in the
fields, keeping watch over their flock by night. And the angel of the Lord
appeared among them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them,
and the angel said: "I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to
all people; for unto you is born this day in the city of David, a Saviour,
which is Christ the Lord."
And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the Heavenly Host,
praising God in song, saying: "Glory to God in the highest; and on earth
peace, good will towards men." After this the angels went into heaven.[147:1]
It is recorded in the Vishnu Purana[147:2] that while the virgin Devaki bore
Crishna, "the protector of the world," in her womb, she was eulogized by
the gods, and on the day of Crishna's birth, "the quarters of the horizon were
irradiate with joy, as if moonlight was diffused over the whole earth." "The
spirits and the nymphs of heaven danced and sang," and, "at midnight,[147:3]
when the support of all was born, the clouds emitted low pleasing sounds,
and poured down rain of flowers."[147:4]
Similar demonstrations of celestial delight were not wanting at the birth of
Buddha. All beings everywhere were full of joy. Music was to be heard all
over the land, and, as in the case of Crishna, there fell from the skies a
gentle shower of flowers and perfumes. Caressing breezes blew, and a
marvellous light was produced.[147:5]
The Fo-pen-hing relates that:
"The attending spirits, who surrounded the Virgin Maya and the infant
Saviour, singing praises of 'the Blessed One,' said: 'All joy be to you, Queen
Maya, rejoice and be glad, for the child you have borne is holy.' Then the
Rishis and Devas who dwelt on earth exclaimed with great joy: 'This day
Buddha is born for the good of men, to dispel the darkness of their
ignorance.' Then the four heavenly kings took up the strain and said: 'Now
because Bôdhisatwa is born, to give joy and bring peace to the world,
therefore is there this brightness.' Then the gods of the thirty-three heavens
took up the burden of the strain, and the Yama Devas and the Tûsita Devas,
and so forth, through all the heavens of the Kama, Rupa, and Arupa worlds,
even up to the Akanishta heavens, all the Devas joined in this song, and
said: 'To-day Bôdhisatwa is born on earth, to give joy and peace to men and
Devas, to shed light in the dark places, and to give sight to the blind."[148:1]
Even the sober philosopher Confucius did not enter the world, if we may
believe Chinese tradition, without premonitory symptoms of his greatness.
[148:2]
FOOTNOTES:
[147:1] Luke, ii. 8-15.
[147:2] Translated from the original Sanscrit by H. H. Wilson, M. D., F. R. S.
[147:3] All the virgin-born Saviours are born at midnight or early dawn.
[147:4] Vishnu Purana, book v. ch. iii. p. 502.
[147:5] See Amberly's Analysis, p. 226. Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 45, 46, 47, and Bunsen's
Angel-Messiah, p. 35.
[148:1] See Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 43, 55, 56, and Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 35.
[148:2] See Amberly: Analysis of Religious Belief, p. 84.
[148:3] Davis: History of China, vol. ii. p. 48. See also Thornton: Hist. China, i. 152.
[148:4] See Prichard's Egyptian Mythology, p. 56, and Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 408.
[148:5] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 424, and Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 408.
[148:6] See Tales of Ancient Greece, p. 4.
[149:1] See Tales of Ancient Greece, p. 55.
[149:2] Ibid. p. 45.
CHAPTER XV.
THE DIVINE CHILD RECOGNIZED AND PRESENTED
WITH GIFTS.
The next in order of the wonderful events which are related to have
happened at the birth of Christ Jesus, is the recognition of the divine child,
and the presentation of gifts.
We are informed by the Matthew narrator, that being guided by a star, the
Magi[150:1] from the east came to where the young child was.
"And when they were come into the house (not stable) they saw the young
child, with Mary his mother, and fell down and worshiped him. And when
they had opened their treasures, they presented unto him gifts, gold,
frankincense, and myrrh."[150:2]
The Luke narrator—who seems to know nothing about the Magi from the
east—informs us that shepherds came and worshiped the young child. They
were keeping their flocks by night when the angel of the Lord appeared
before them, saying:
"Behold, I bring you good tidings—for unto you is born this day in the city
of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord."
After the angel had left them, they said one to another:
"Let us go unto Bethlehem and see this thing which is come to pass, which
the Lord hath made known to us. And they came with haste, and found
Mary and Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger."[150:3]
The Luke narrator evidently borrowed this story of the shepherds from the
"Gospel of the Egyptians" (of which we shall speak in another chapter), or
from other sacred records of the biographies of Crishna or Buddha.
It is related in the legends of Crishna that the divine child was cradled
among shepherds, to whom were first made known the stupendous feats
which stamped his character with marks of the divinity. He was recognized
as the promised Saviour by Nanda, a shepherd, or cowherd, and his
companions, who prostrated themselves before the heaven-born child. After
the birth of Crishna, the Indian prophet Nared, having heard of his fame,
visited his father and mother at Gokool, examined the stars, &c., and
declared him to be of celestial descent.[151:1]
Not only was Crishna adored by the shepherds and Magi, and received with
divine honors, but he was also presented with gifts. These gifts were "sandal
wood and perfumes."[151:2] (Why not "frankincense and myrrh?")
Similar stories are related of the infant Buddha. He was visited, at the time
of his birth, by wise men, who at once recognized in the marvellous infant
all the characters of the divinity, and he had scarcely seen the day before he
was hailed god of gods.[151:3]
When born, the sheep and oxen protected him with loving care.[152:6]
The birth of Confucius (B. C. 551), like that of all the demi-gods and saints
of antiquity, is fabled to have been attended with allegorical prodigies,
amongst which was the appearance of the Ke-lin, a miraculous quadruped,
prophetic of happiness and virtue, which announced that the child would be
"a king without a throne or territory." Five celestial sages, or "wise men"
entered the house at the time of the child's birth, whilst vocal and
instrumental music filed the air.[152:7]
Mithras, the Persian Saviour, and mediator between God and man, was also
visited by "wise men" called Magi, at the time of his birth.[152:8] He was
presented with gifts consisting of gold, frankincense and myrrh.'[152:9]
According to Plato, at the birth of Socrates (469 B. C.) there came three
Magi from the east to worship him, bringing gifts of gold, frankincense and
myrrh.[152:10]
Æsculapius, the virgin-born Saviour, was protected by goatherds (why not
shepherds?), who, upon seeing the child, knew at once that he was divine.
The voice of fame soon published the birth of this miraculous infant, upon
which people flocked from all quarters to behold and worship this heaven-
born child.[153:1]
Many of the Grecian and Roman demi-gods and heroes were either fostered
by or worshiped by shepherds. Amongst these may be mentioned Bacchus,
who was educated among shepherds,[153:2] and Romulus, who was found on
the banks of the Tiber, and educated by shepherds.[153:3] Paris, son of
Priam, was educated among shepherds,[153:4] and Ægisthus was exposed,
like Æsculapius, by his mother, found by shepherds and educated among
them.[153:5]
Viscount Amberly has well said that: "Prognostications of greatness in
infancy are, indeed, among the stock incidents in the mythical or semi-
mythical lives of eminent persons."
We have seen that the Matthew narrator speaks of the infant Jesus, and
Mary, his mother, being in a "house"—implying that he had been born
there; and that the Luke narrator speaks of the infant "lying in a manger"—
implying that he was born in a stable. We will now show that there is still
another story related of the place in which he was born.
FOOTNOTES:
[150:1] "The original word here is 'Magoi,' from which comes our word 'Magician.' . . .
The persons here denoted were philosophers, priests, or astronomers. They dwelt chiefly in
Persia and Arabia. They were the learned men of the Eastern nations, devoted to
astronomy, to religion, and to medicine. They were held in high esteem by the Persian
court; were admitted as councilors, and followed the camps in war to give advice."
(Barnes's Notes, vol. i. p. 25.)
[150:2] Matthew, ii. 2.
[150:3] Luke, ii. 8-16.
[151:1] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. pp. 129, 130, and Maurice: Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii.
pp. 256, 257 and 317. Also, The Vishnu Purana.
[151:2] Oriental Religions, pp. 500, 501. See also, Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 353.
[151:3] Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 157.
[151:4] Amberly's Analysis, p. 177. See also, Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 36.
[151:5] Lillie: Buddha and Early Buddhism, p. 76.
[151:6] Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 6, and Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 58, 60.
[152:1] Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 36.
[152:2] See Amberly's Analysis p. 231, and Bunsen's Angel Messiah, p. 36.
[152:3] Beal: Hist. Buddha, p. 58.
[152:4] Oriental Religions, p. 491.
[152:5] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 200.
[152:6] See Amberly's Analysis of Religious Belief, p. 226.
[152:7] See Thornton's Hist. China, vol. i. p. 152.
[152:8] King: The Gnostics and their Remains, pp. 134 and 149.
[152:9] Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 353.
[152:10] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 96.
[153:1] Taylor's Diegesis, p. 150. Roman Antiquities, p. 136, and Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p.
27.
[153:2] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 322.
[153:3] Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 213.
[153:4] Ibid. vol. i. p. 47.
[153:5] Ibid. p. 20.
CHAPTER XVI.
THE BIRTH-PLACE OF CHRIST JESUS.
The writer of that portion of the Gospel according to Matthew which treats
of the place in which Jesus was born, implies, as we stated in our last
chapter, that he was born in a house. His words are these:
"Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of Herod the
king, behold, there came wise men from the east" to worship him. "And
when they were come into the house, they saw the young child with Mary
his mother."[154:1]
The writer of the Luke version implies that he was born in a stable, as the
following statement will show:
"The days being accomplished that she (Mary) should be delivered . . . she
brought forth her first-born son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and
laid him in a manger, there being no room for him in the inn."[154:2]
If these accounts were contained in these Gospels in the time of Eusebius,
the first ecclesiastical historian, who flourished during the Council of Nice
(A. D. 327), it is very strange that, in speaking of the birth of Jesus, he should
have omitted even mentioning them, and should have given an altogether
different version. He tells us that Jesus was neither born in a house, nor in a
stable, but in a cave, and that at the time of Constantine a magnificent
temple was erected on the spot, so that the Christians might worship in the
place where their Saviour's feet had stood.[154:3]
In the apocryphal Gospel called "Protevangelion," attributed to James, the
brother of Jesus, we are informed that Mary and her husband, being away
from their home in Nazareth, and when within three miles of Bethlehem, to
which city they were going, Mary said to Joseph:
"Take me down from the ass, for that which is in me presses to come forth."
Joseph, replying, said:
"Whither shall I take thee, for the place is desert?"
Then said Mary again to Joseph:
"Take me down, for that which is within me mightily presses me."
Joseph then took her down from off the ass, and he found there a cave and
put her into it.
Joseph then left Mary in the cave, and started toward Bethlehem for a
midwife, whom he found and brought back with him. When they neared the
spot a bright cloud overshadowed the cave.
"But on a sudden the cloud became a great light in the cave, so their eyes
could not bear it. But the light gradually decreased, until the infant appeared
and sucked the breast of his mother."[155:1]
Tertullian (A. D. 200), Jerome (A. D. 375) and other Fathers of the Church,
also state that Jesus was born in a cave, and that the heathen celebrated, in
their day, the birth and Mysteries of their Lord and Saviour Adonis in this
very cave near Bethlehem.[155:2]
Canon Farrar says:
"That the actual place of Christ's birth was a cave, is a very ancient
tradition, and this cave used to be shown as the scene of the event even so
early as the time of Justin Martyr (A. D. 150)."[155:3]
Mr. King says:
"The place yet shown as the scene of their (the Magi's) adoration at
Bethlehem is a cave."[155:4]
The Christian ceremonies in the Church of the Nativity at Bethlehem are
celebrated to this day in a cave,[155:5] and are undoubtedly nearly the same
as were celebrated, in the same place, in honor of Adonis, in the time of
Tertullian and Jerome; and as are yet celebrated in Rome every Christmas-
day, very early in the morning.
We see, then, that there are three different accounts concerning the place in
which Jesus was born. The first, and evidently true one, was that which is
recorded by the Matthew narrator, namely, that he was born in a house. The
stories about his being born in a stable or in a cave[155:6] were later
inventions, caused from the desire to place him in as humble a position as
possible in his infancy, and from the fact that the virgin-born Saviours who
had preceded him had almost all been born in a position the most
humiliating—such as a cave, a cow-shed, a sheep-fold, &c.—or had been
placed there after birth. This was a part of the universal mythos. As
illustrations we may mention the following:
FOOTNOTES:
[154:1] Matthew, ii.
[154:2] Luke, ii.
[154:3] Eusebius's Life of Constantine, lib. 3, chs. xl., xli. and xlii.
[155:1] Protevangelion. Apoc. chs. xii., xiii., and xiv., and Lily of Israel, p. 95.
[155:2] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. pp. 98, 99.
[155:3] Farrar's Life of Christ, p. 38, and note. See also, Hist. Hindostan, ii. 311.
[155:4] King: The Gnostics and their Remains, p. 134.
[155:5] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 95.
[155:6] Some writers have tried to connect these by saying that it was a cave-stable, but
why should a stable be in a desert place, as the narrative states?
[156:1] Aryan Myths, vol. ii. p. 107.
[156:2] See Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 259.
[156:3] See Amberly's Analysis, p. 226.
[156:4] See Calmet's Fragments, art. "Abraham."
[156:5] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 321. Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 118, and Dupuis,
p. 284.
[156:6] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 150, and Bell's Pantheon under "Æsculapius."
[156:7] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 218.
[156:8] See Ibid. vol. i. p. 12.
[156:9] Aryan Mythology, vol. i. pp. 72, 158.
[156:10] See Dunlap's Mysteries of Adoni, p. 124, and Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 134.
[156:11] Ibid.
[156:12] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Beliefs, p. 255.
[156:13] See Dunlap's Mysteries of Adoni, p. 124.
[157:1] Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 460.
[157:2] Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 133. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 130. See
also, Vishnu Purana, p. 502, where it says:
"No person could bear to gaze upon Devaki from the light that invested her."
[157:3] See Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 43, 46, or Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, pp. 34, 35.
[157:4] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 322, and Dupuis: Origin of Relig. Belief, p.
119.
[157:5] Tales of Anct. Greece, p. xviii.
[157:6] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 27. Roman Antiquities, p. 136.
[157:7] Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 460. Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 649.
[157:8] See Hardy: Manual of Buddhism, p. 145.
[158:1] See the chapter on "Christmas."
[158:2] It may be that this verse was added by another hand some time after the narrative
was written. We have seen it stated somewhere that, in the manuscript, this verse is in
brackets.
[158:3] See Vishnu Purana, book v. chap. iii.
[158:4] Here is an exact counterpart to the story of Joseph—the foster-father, so-called—of
Jesus. He too, had a son in his old age.
[158:5] Vishnu Purana, book v. chap. v.
[159:1] Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, p. 34. See also, Beal: Hist. Buddha, p. 32, and Lillie:
Buddha and Early Buddhism, p. 73.
[159:2] Thornton: Hist. China, i. 138.
[159:3] As we saw in Chapter XII.
[159:4] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 150.
[159:5] See Rhys David's Buddhism, p. 25.
[159:6] See Cox: Aryan Myths, vol. ii. p. 31.
CHAPTER XVII.
THE GENEALOGY OF CHRIST JESUS.
The biographers of Jesus, although they have placed him in a position the
most humiliating in his infancy, and although they have given him poor and
humble parents, have notwithstanding made him to be of royal descent. The
reasons for doing this were twofold. First, because, according to the Old
Testament, the expected Messiah was to be of the seed of Abraham,[160:1]
and second, because the Angel-Messiahs who had previously been on earth
to redeem and save mankind had been of royal descent, therefore Christ
Jesus must be so.
FOOTNOTES:
[160:1] That is, a passage in the Old Testament was construed to mean this, although
another and more plausible meaning might be inferred. It is when Abraham is blessed by
the Lord, who is made to say: "In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed,
because thou hast obeyed my voice." (Genesis, xxii. 18.)
[160:2] Vol. ii. p. 214.
[161:1] Matthew, i. 17.
[161:2] Scott's English Life of Jesus.
[162:1] Matthew, xiii. 54; Luke, iv. 24.
[162:2] Mark, ii. 35.
[162:3] "There is no doubt that the authors of the genealogies regarded him (Jesus), as did
his countrymen and contemporaries generally, as the eldest son of Joseph, Mary's husband,
and that they had no idea of anything miraculous connected with his birth. All the attempts
of the old commentators to reconcile the inconsistencies of the evangelical narratives are of
no avail." (Albert Réville: Hist. Dogma, Deity, Jesus, p. 15.)
[162:4] The reader is referred to Thomas Scott's English Life of Jesus, Strauss's Life of
Jesus, The Genealogies of Our Lord, by Lord Arthur Hervey, Kitto's Biblical
Encyclopædia, and Barnes' Notes.
[163:1] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 130. Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 259, and
Allen's India, p. 379.
[163:2] Hist. Hindostan, ii. p. 310.
[163:3] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 157. Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah. Davis: Hist.
of China, vol. ii. p. 80, and Huc's Travels, vol. i. p. 327.
[163:4] Allen's India, p. 379.
[163:5] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 200, and Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Fuh-he."
[163:6] Davis: History of China, vol. ii. p. 48, and Thornton: Hist. China, vol. i. p. 151.
[163:7] See almost any work on Egyptian history or the religions of Egypt.
[163:8] See Lundy: Monumental Christianity, p. 403.
[163:9] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 152. Roman Antiquities, p. 124, and Bell's Pantheon, i.
382.
[164:1] See Greek and Italian Mythology, p. 81. Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 117. Murray:
Manual of Mythology, p. 118, and Roman Antiquities, p. 71.
[164:2] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 170, and Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 161.
[164:3] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 27. Roman Antiquities, p. 136, and Taylor's Diegesis,
p. 150.
CHAPTER XVIII.
THE SLAUGHTER OF THE INNOCENTS.
Interwoven with the miraculous conception and birth of Jesus, the star, the
visit of the Magi, &c., we have a myth which belongs to a common form,
and which, in this instance, is merely adapted to the special circumstances
of the age and place. This has been termed "the myth of the dangerous
child." Its general outline is this: A child is born concerning whose future
greatness some prophetic indications have been given. But the life of the
child is fraught with danger to some powerful individual, generally a
monarch. In alarm at his threatened fate, this person endeavors to take the
child's life, but it is preserved by divine care.
Escaping the measures directed against it, and generally remaining long
unknown, it at length fulfills the prophecies concerning its career, while the
fate which he has vainly sought to shun falls upon him who had desired to
slay it. There is a departure from the ordinary type, in the case of Jesus,
inasmuch as Herod does not actually die or suffer any calamity through his
agency. But this failure is due to the fact that Jesus did not fulfill the
conditions of the Messiahship, according to the Jewish conception which
Matthew has here in mind. Had he—as was expected of the Messiah—
become the actual sovereign of the Jews, he must have dethroned the
reigning dynasty, whether represented by Herod or his successors. But as
his subsequent career belied the expectations, the evangelist was obliged to
postpone to a future time his accession to that throne of temporal dominion
which the incredulity of his countrymen had withheld from him during his
earthly life.
The story of the slaughter of the infants which is said to have taken place in
Judea about the time of the birth of Jesus, is to be found in the second
chapter of Matthew, and is as follows:
"When Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea, in the days of Herod the
king, there came wise men from the East to Jerusalem, saying: 'Where is he
that is born king of the Jews? for we have seen his star in the East and have
come to worship him.' When Herod the king had heard these things, he was
troubled and all Jerusalem with him. Then Herod, when he had privately
called the wise men, enquired of them diligently what time the star
appeared. And he sent them to Bethlehem, and said: 'Go and search
diligently for the young child; and when ye have found him, bring me
word.'"
The wise men went to Bethlehem and found the young child, but instead of
returning to Herod as he had told them, they departed into their own
country another way, having been warned of God in a dream, that they
should not return to Herod.
"Then Herod, when he saw that he was mocked of the wise men, was
exceeding wroth, and sent forth, and slew all the children that were in
Bethlehem, and in all the coasts thereof, from two years old and under."
We have in this story, told by the Matthew narrator—which the writers of
the other gospels seem to know nothing about,—almost a counterpart, if not
an exact one, to that related of Crishna of India, which shows how closely
the mythological history of Jesus has been copied from that of the Hindoo
Saviour.
Joguth Chunder Gangooly, a "Hindoo convert to Christ," tells us, in his
"Life and Religion of the Hindoos," that:
"A heavenly voice whispered to the foster father of Crishna and told him to
fly with the child across the river Jumna, which was immediately done.
[166:1] This was owing to the fact that the reigning monarch, King Kansa,
sought the life of the infant Saviour, and to accomplish his purpose, he sent
messengers 'to kill all the infants in the neighboring places.'"[166:2]
Mr. Higgins says:
"Soon after Crishna's birth he was carried away by night and concealed in a
region remote from his natal place, for fear of a tyrant whose destroyer it
was foretold he would become; and who had, for that reason, ordered all the
male children born at that period to be slain."[166:3]
Sir William Jones says of Crishna:
"He passed a life, according to the Indians, of a most extraordinary and
incomprehensible nature. His birth was concealed through fear of the
reigning tyrant Kansa, who, at the time of his birth, ordered all new-born
males to be slain, yet this wonderful babe was preserved."[166:4]
In the Epic poem Mahabarata, composed more than two thousand years
ago, we have the whole story of this incarnate deity, born of a virgin, and
miraculously escaping in his infancy from the reigning tyrant of his country,
related in its original form.
Representations of this flight with the babe at midnight are sculptured on
the walls of ancient Hindoo temples.[167:1]
This story is also the subject of an immense sculpture in the cave-temple at
Elephanta, where the children are represented as being slain. The date of
this sculpture is lost in the most remote antiquity. It represents a person
holding a drawn sword, surrounded by slaughtered infant boys. Figures of
men and women are also represented who are supposed to be supplicating
for their children.[167:2]
Thomas Maurice, speaking of this sculpture, says:
"The event of Crishna's birth, and the attempt to destroy him, took place by
night, and therefore the shadowy mantle of darkness, upon which mutilated
figures of infants are engraved, darkness (at once congenial with his crime
and the season of its perpetration), involves the tyrant's bust; the string of
death heads marks the multitude of infants slain by his savage mandate; and
every object in the sculpture illustrates the events of that Avatar."[167:3]
Another feature which connects these stories is the following:
Sir Wm. Jones tells us that when Crishna was taken out of reach of the
tyrant Kansa who sought to slay him, he was fostered at Mathura by Nanda,
the herdsman;[167:4] and Canon Farrar, speaking of the sojourn of the Holy
Family in Egypt, says:
"St. Matthew neither tells us where the Holy Family abode in Egypt, nor
how long their exile continued; but ancient legends say that they remained
two years absent from Palestine, and lived at Mataréëh, a few miles north-
east of Cairo."[167:5]
Chemnitius, out of Stipulensis, who had it from Peter Martyr, Bishop of
Alexandria, in the third century, says, that the place in Egypt where Jesus
was banished, is now called Matarea, about ten miles beyond Cairo, that the
inhabitants constantly burn a lamp in remembrance of it, and that there is a
garden of trees yielding a balsam, which was planted by Jesus when a boy.
[167:6]
His mother had alarming dreams of evil spirits seeking to destroy the child
to whom she was about to give birth. But a good spirit came to comfort her
and said: "Fear nothing! Ormuzd will protect this infant. He has sent him as
a prophet to the people. The world is waiting for him."[169:4]
Perseus, son of the Virgin Danae, was also a "dangerous child." Acrisius,
king of Argos, being told by the oracle that a son born of his virgin daughter
would destroy him, immured his daughter Danae in a tower, where no man
could approach her, and by this means hoped to keep his daughter from
becoming enceinte. The god Jupiter, however, visited her there, as it is
related of the Angel Gabriel visiting the Virgin Mary,[170:1] the result of
which was that she bore a son—Perseus. Acrisius, on hearing of his
daughter's disgrace, caused both her and the infant to be shut up in a chest
and cast into the sea. They were discovered by one Dictys, and liberated
from what must have been anything but a pleasant position.[170:2]
Æsculapius, when an infant, was exposed on the Mount of Myrtles, and left
there to die, but escaped the death which was intended for him, having been
found and cared for by shepherds.[170:3]
Hercules, son of the virgin Leto, was left to die on a plain, but was found
and rescued by a maiden.[170:4]
Œdipous was a "dangerous child." Laios, King of Thebes, having been told
by the Delphic Oracle that Œdipous would be his destroyer, no sooner is
Œdipous born than the decree goes forth that the child must be slain: but the
servant to whom he is intrusted contents himself with exposing the babe on
the slopes of Mount Kithairon, where a shepherd finds him, and carries
him, like Cyrus or Romulus, to his wife, who cherishes the child with a
mother's care.[170:5]
The Theban myth of Œdipous is repeated substantially in the Arcadian
tradition of Telephos. He is exposed, when a babe, on Mount Parthenon, and
is suckled by a doe, which represents the wolf in the myth of Romulus, and
the dog of the Persian story of Cyrus. Like Moses, he is brought up in the
palace of a king.[170:6]
As we read the story of Telephos, we can scarcely fail to think of the story
of the Trojan Paris, for, like Telephos, Paris is exposed as a babe on the
mountain-side.[170:7] Before he is born, there are portents of the ruin which
he is to bring upon his house and people. Priam, the ruling monarch,
therefore decrees that the child shall be left to die on the hill-side. But the
babe lies on the slopes of Ida and is nourished by a she-bear. He is fostered,
like Crishna and others, by shepherds, among whom he grows up.[170:8]
Iamos was left to die among the bushes and violets. Aipytos, the chieftain
of Phaisana, had learned at Delphi that a child had been born who should
become the greatest of all the seers and prophets of the earth, and he asked
all his people where the babe was: but none had heard or seen him, for he
lay away amid the thick bushes, with his soft body bathed in the golden and
pure rays of the violets. So when he was found, they called him Iamos, the
"violet child;" and as he grew in years and strength, he went down into the
Alpheian stream, and prayed to his father that he would glorify his son.
Then the voice of Zeus was heard, bidding him come to the heights of
Olympus, where he should receive the gift of prophecy.[171:1]
Chandragupta was also a "dangerous child." He is exposed to great dangers
in his infancy at the hands of a tributary chief who has defeated and slain
his suzerain. His mother, "relinquishing him to the protection of the Devas,
places him in a vase, and deposits him at the door of a cattle pen." A
herdsman takes the child and rears it as his own.[171:2]
Jason is another hero of the same kind. Pelias, the chief of Iolkos, had been
told that one of the children of Aiolos would be his destroyer, and decreed,
therefore, that all should be slain. Jason only is preserved, and brought up
by Cheiron.[171:3]
Bacchus, son of the virgin Semele, was destined to bring ruin upon
Cadmus, King of Thebes, who therefore orders the infant to be put into a
chest and thrown into a river. He is found, and taken from the water by
loving hands, and lives to fulfill his mission.[171:4]
Herodotus relates a similar story, which is as follows:
"The constitution of the Corinthians was formerly of this kind; it was an
oligarchy, (a government in the hands of a selected few), and those who
were called Bacchiadæ governed the city. About this time one Eetion, who
had been married to a maiden called Labda, and having no children by her,
went to Delphi to inquire of the oracle about having offspring. Upon
entering the temple he was immediately saluted as follows; 'Eetion, no one
honors thee, though worthy of much honor. Labda is pregnant and will
bring forth a round stone; it will fall on monarchs, and vindicate Corinth.'
This oracle, pronounced to Eetion, was by chance reported to the
Bacchiadæ, who well knew that it prophesied the birth of a son to Eetion
who would overthrow them, and reign in their stead; and though they
comprehended, they kept it secret, purposing to destroy the offspring that
should be born to Eetion. As soon as the woman brought forth, they sent ten
persons to the district where Eetion lived, to put the child to death; but, the
child, by a divine providence, was saved. His mother hid him in a chest, and
as they could not find the child they resolved to depart, and tell those who
sent them that they had done all that they had commanded. After this,
Eetion's son grew up, and having escaped this danger, the name of Cypselus
was given him, from the chest. When Cypselus reached man's estate, and
consulted the oracle, an ambiguous answer was given him at Delphi;
relying on which he attacked and got possession of Corinth."[171:5]
Romulus and Remus, the founders of Rome, were exposed on the banks of
the Tiber, when infants, and left there to die, but escaped the death intended
for them.
The story of the "dangerous child" was well known in ancient Rome, and
several of their emperors, so it is said, were threatened with death at their
birth, or when mere infants. Julius Marathus, in his life of the Emperor
Augustus Cæsar, says that before his birth there was a prophecy in Rome
that a king over the Roman people would soon be born. To obviate this
danger to the republic, the Senate ordered that all the male children born in
that year should be abandoned or exposed.[172:1]
The flight of the virgin-mother with her babe is also illustrated in the story
of Astrea when beset by Orion, and of Latona, the mother of Apollo, when
pursued by the monster.[172:2] It is simply the same old story, over and over
again. Someone has predicted that a child born at a certain time shall be
great, he is therefore a "dangerous child," and the reigning monarch, or
some other interested party, attempts to have the child destroyed, but he
invariably escapes and grows to manhood, and generally accomplishes the
purpose for which he was intended. This almost universal mythos was
added to the fictitious history of Jesus by its fictitious authors, who have
made him escape in his infancy from the reigning tyrant with the usual good
fortune.
When a marvellous occurrence is said to have happened everywhere, we
may feel sure that it never happened anywhere. Popular fancies propagate
themselves indefinitely, but historical events, especially the striking and
dramatic ones, are rarely repeated. That this is a fictitious story is seen from
the narratives of the birth of Jesus, which are recorded by the first and third
Gospel writers, without any other evidence. In the one—that related by the
Matthew narrator—we have a birth at Bethlehem—implying the ordinary
residence of the parents there—and a hurried flight—almost immediately
after the birth—from that place into Egypt,[172:3] the slaughter of the
infants, and a journey, after many months, from Egypt to Nazareth in
Galilee. In the other story—that told by the Luke narrator—the parents, who
have lived in Nazareth, came to Bethlehem only for business of the State,
and the casual birth in the cave or stable is followed by a quiet sojourn,
during which the child is circumcised, and by a leisurely journey to
Jerusalem; whence, everything having gone off peaceably and happily, they
return naturally to their own former place of abode, full, it is said over and
over again, of wonder at the things that had happened, and deeply
impressed with the conviction that their child had a special work to do, and
was specially gifted for it. There is no fear of Herod, who seems never to
trouble himself about the child, or even to have any knowledge of him.
There is no trouble or misery at Bethlehem, and certainly no mourning for
children slain. Far from flying hurriedly away by night, his parents
celebrate openly, and at the usual time, the circumcision of the child; and
when he is presented in the temple, there is not only no sign that enemies
seek his life, but the devout saints give public thanks for the manifestation
of the Saviour.
Dr. Hooykaas, speaking of the slaughter of the innocents, says:
"Antiquity in general delighted in representing great men, such as Romulus,
Cyrus, and many more, as having been threatened in their childhood by
fearful dangers. This served to bring into clear relief both the lofty
significance of their future lives, and the special protection of the deity who
watched over them.
"The brow of many a theologian has been bent over this (Matthew)
narrative! For, as long as people believed in the miraculous inspiration of
the Holy Scriptures, of course they accepted every page as literally true, and
thought that there could not be any contradiction between the different
accounts or representations of Scripture. The worst of all such pre-
conceived ideas is, that they compel those who hold them to do violence to
their own sense of truth. For when these so-called religious prejudices come
into play, people are afraid to call things by their right names, and, without
knowing it themselves, become guilty of all kinds of evasive and arbitrary
practices; for what would be thought quite unjustifiable in any other case is
here considered a duty, inasmuch as it is supposed to tend toward the
maintenance of faith and the glory of God!"[173:1]
As we stated above, this story is to be found in the fictitious gospel
according to Matthew only; contemporary history has nowhere recorded
this audacious crime. It is mentioned neither by Jewish nor Roman
historians. Tacitus, who has stamped forever the crimes of despots with the
brand of reprobation, it would seem then, did not think such infamies
worthy of his condemnation. Josephus also, who gives us a minute account
of the atrocities perpetrated by Herod up to even the very last moment of
his life, does not say a single word about this unheard-of crime, which must
have been so notorious. Surely he must have known of it, and must have
mentioned it, had it ever been committed. "We can readily imagine the
Pagans," says Mr. Reber, "who composed the learned and intelligent men of
their day, at work in exposing the story of Herod's cruelty, by showing that,
considering the extent of territory embraced in the order, and the population
within it, the assumed destruction of life stamped the story false and
ridiculous. A governor of a Roman province who dared make such an order
would be so speedily overtaken by the vengeance of the Roman people, that
his head would fall from his body before the blood of his victims had time
to dry. Archelaus, his son, was deposed for offenses not to be spoken of
when compared with this massacre of the infants."
No wonder that there is no trace at all in the Roman catacombs, nor in
Christian art, of this fictitious story, until about the beginning of the fifth
century.[174:1] Never would Herod dared to have taken upon himself the
odium and responsibility of such a sacrifice. Such a crime could never have
happened at the epoch of its professed perpetration. To such lengths were
the early Fathers led, by the servile adaptation of the ancient traditions of
the East, they required a second edition of the tyrant Kansa, and their holy
wrath fell upon Herod. The Apostles of Jesus counted too much upon
human credulity, they trusted too much that the future might not unravel
their maneuvers, the sanctity of their object made them too reckless. They
destroyed all the evidence against themselves which they could lay their
hands upon, but they did not destroy it all.
FOOTNOTES:
[166:1] A heavenly voice whispered to the foster-father of Jesus, and told him to fly with
the child into Egypt, which was immediately done. (See Matthew, ii. 13.)
[166:2] Life and Relig. of the Hindoos, p. 134.
[166:3] Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 129. See also, Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 134, and
Maurice: Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 331.
[166:4] Asiatic Researches, vol. i. pp. 273 and 259.
[167:1] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 61.
[167:2] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. 130, 13-, and Maurice: Indian Antiquities, vol. i.
pp. 112, 113, and vol. iii. pp. 45, 95.
[167:3] Indian Antiquities, vol. i. pp. 112, 113.
[167:4] Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 259.
[167:5] Farrar's Life of Christ, p. 58.
[167:6] See Introduction to Gospel of Infancy, Apoc.
[167:7] See vol. x. Asiatic Researches.
[168:1] Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 103, 104.
[168:2] Amberly's Analysis, p. 229.
[168:3] The Shih-king. Decade ii, ode 1.
[168:4] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, pp. 158 and 186.
[169:1] Herodotus, bk. 1, ch. 110.
[169:2] Calmet's Fragments, art. "Abraham."
[169:3] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 240.
[169:4] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. "Religions of Persia."
[170:1] In the Apocryphal Gospel of the Birth of Mary and "Protevangelion."
[170:2] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 9. Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 58, and
Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 161.
[170:3] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 27. Cox: Aryan Mytho. vol. ii. p. 34.
[170:4] Cox: Aryan Mytho. vol. ii. p. 44.
[170:5] Ibid. p. 69, and Tales of Ancient Greece, p. xlii.
[170:6] Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 14.
[170:7] Ibid. p. 75.
[170:8] Ibid. p. 78.
[171:1] Cox: Aryan Mytho. ii. p. 81.
[171:2] Ibid. p. 84.
[171:3] Ibid. p. 150.
[171:4] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 188. Cox: Aryan Mytho. vol. ii. p. 296.
[171:5] Herodotus: bk. v. ch. 92.
[172:1] See Farrar's Life of Christ, p. 60.
[172:2] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 168.
[172:3] There are no very early examples in Christian art of the flight of the Holy Family
into Egypt. (See Monumental Christianity, p. 289.)
[173:1] Bible for Learners, vol. iii. pp. 71-74.
[174:1] See Monumental Christianity, p. 238.
CHAPTER XIX.
THE TEMPTATION, AND FAST OF FORTY DAYS.
We are informed by the Matthew narrator that, after being baptized by John
in the river Jordan, Jesus was led by the spirit into the wilderness "to be
tempted of the devil."
"And when he had fasted forty days and forty nights, he was afterward an
hungered. And when the tempter came to him he said: 'If thou be the Son of
God, command that these stones be made bread.' . . . Then the devil taketh
him up into the holy city, and setteth him on a pinnacle of the temple, and
saith unto him: 'If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down.' . . . Again, the
devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and showeth him all
the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them, and saith unto him:' All
these things will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and worship me.' Then
saith Jesus unto him, 'Get thee hence, Satan: for it is written, Thou shalt
worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve.' Then the devil
leaveth him, and, behold, angels came and ministered unto him."[175:1]
This is really a very peculiar story; it is therefore not to be wondered at that
many of the early Christian Fathers rejected it as being fabulous,[175:2] but
this, according to orthodox teaching, cannot be done; because, in all
consistent reason, "we must accept the whole of the inspired autographs or
reject the whole,"[175:3] and, because, "the very foundations of our faith, the
very basis of our hopes, the very nearest and dearest of our consolations, are
taken from us, when one line of that sacred volume, on which we base
everything, is declared to be untruthful and untrustworthy."[175:4]
The reason why we have this story in the New Testament is because the
writer wished to show that Christ Jesus was proof against all temptations,
that he too, as well as Buddha and others, could resist the powers of the
prince of evil. This Angel-Messiah was tempted by the devil, and he fasted
for forty-seven days and nights, without taking an atom of food.[175:5]
The story of Buddha's temptation, presented below, is taken from the
"Siamese Life of Buddha," by Moncure D. Conway, and published in his
"Sacred Anthology," from which we take it.[176:1] It is also to be found in
the Fo-pen-hing,[176:2] and other works on Buddha and Buddhism. Buddha
went through a more lengthy and severe trial than did Jesus, having been
tempted in many different ways. The portion which most resembles that
recorded by the Matthew narrator is the following:
"The Grand Being (Buddha) applied himself to practice asceticism of the
extremest nature. He ceased to eat (that is, he fasted) and held his
breath. . . . Then it was that the royal Mara (the Prince of Evil) sought
occasion to tempt him. Pretending compassion, he said: 'Beware, O Grand
Being, your state is pitiable to look on; you are attenuated beyond measure,
. . . you are practicing this mortification in vain; I can see that you will not
live through it. . . . Lord, that art capable of such vast endurance, go not
forth to adopt a religious life, but return to thy kingdom, and in seven days
thou shalt become the Emperor of the World, riding over the four great
continents.'"
To this the Grand Being, Buddha, replied:
"'Take heed, O Mara; I also know that in seven days I might gain universal
empire, but I desire not such possessions. I know that the pursuit of religion
is better than the empire of the world. You, thinking only of evil lusts,
would force me to leave all beings without guidance into your power.
Avaunt! Get thou away from me!'
"The Lord (then) rode onwards, intent on his purpose. The skies rained
flowers, and delicious odors pervaded the air."[176:3]
Now, mark the similarity between these two legends.
Was Jesus about "beginning to preach" when he was tempted by the evil
spirit? So was Buddha about to go forth "to adopt a religious life," when he
was tempted by the evil spirit.
Did Jesus fast, and was he "afterwards an hungered"? So did Buddha "cease
to eat," and was "attenuated beyond measure."
Did the evil spirit take Jesus and show him "all the kingdoms of the world,"
which he promised to give him, provided he did not lead the life he
contemplated, but follow him?
So did the evil spirit say to Buddha: "Go not forth to adopt a religious life,
and in seven days thou shalt become an emperor of the world."
Did not Jesus resist these temptations, and say unto the evil one, "Get thee
behind me, Satan"?
So did Buddha resist the temptations, and said unto the evil one, "Get thee
away from me."
After the evil spirit left Jesus did not "angels come and minister unto him"?
So with Buddha. After the evil one had left him "the skies rained flowers,
and delicious odors pervaded the air."
These parallels are too striking to be accidental.
Zoroaster, the founder of the religion of the Persians, was tempted by the
devil, who made him magnificent promises, in order to induce him to
become his servant and to be dependent on him, but the temptations were in
vain.[177:1] "His temptation by the devil, forms the subject of many
traditional reports and legends."[177:2]
Quetzalcoatle, the virgin-born Mexican Saviour, was also tempted by the
devil, and the forty days' fast was found among them.[177:3]
Fasting and self-denial were observances practiced by all nations of
antiquity. The Hindoos have days set apart for fasting on many different
occasions throughout the year, one of which is when the birth-day of their
Lord and Saviour Crishna is celebrated. On this occasion, the day is spent in
fasting and worship. They abstain entirely from food and drink for more
than thirty hours, at the end of which Crishna's image is worshiped, and the
story of his miraculous birth is read to his hungry worshipers.[177:4]
Among the ancient Egyptians, there were times when the priests submitted
to abstinence of the most severe description, being forbidden to eat even
bread, and at other times they only ate it mingled with hyssop. "The priests
in Heliopolis," says Plutarch, "have many fasts, during which they meditate
on divine things."[177:5]
Among the Sabians, fasting was insisted on as an essential act of religion.
During the month Tammuz, they were in the habit of fasting from sunrise to
sunset, without allowing a morsel of food or drop of liquid to pass their lips.
[177:6]
The Jews also had their fasts, and on special occasions they gave
themselves up to prolonged fasts and mortifications.
Fasting and self-denial were observances required of the Greeks who
desired initiation into the Mysteries. Abstinence from food, chastity and
hard couches prepared the neophyte, who broke his fast on the third and
fourth day only, on consecrated food.[177:7]
The same practice was found among the ancient Mexicans and Peruvians.
Acosta, speaking of them, says:
"These priests and religious men used great fastings, of five and ten days
together, before any of their great feasts, and they were unto them as our
four ember weeks. . . .
"They drank no wine, and slept little, for the greatest part of their exercises
(of penance) were at night, committing great cruelties and martyring
themselves for the devil, and all to be reputed great fasters and penitents."
[178:1]
In regard to the number of days which Jesus is said to have fasted being
specified as forty, this is simply owing to the fact that the number forty as
well as seven was a sacred one among most nations of antiquity, particularly
among the Jews, and because others had fasted that number of days. For
instance; it is related[178:2] that Moses went up into a mountain, "and he was
there with the Lord forty days and forty nights, and he did neither eat
bread, nor drink water," which is to say that he fasted.
In Deuteronomy[178:3] Moses is made to say—for he did not write it, "When
I was gone up into the mount to receive the tables of stone, . . . then I abode
in the mount forty days and forty nights, I neither did eat bread nor drink
water."
Elijah also had a long fast, which, of course, was continued for a period of
forty days and forty nights.[178:4]
St. Joachim, father of the "ever-blessed Virgin Mary," had a long fast, which
was also continued for a period of forty days and forty nights. The story is
to be found in the apocryphal gospel Protevangelion.[178:5]
The ancient Persians had a religious festival which they annually
celebrated, and which they called the "Salutation of Mithras." During this
festival, forty days were set apart for thanksgiving and sacrifice.[178:6]
The forty days' fast was found in the New World.
Godfrey Higgins tells us that:
"The ancient Mexicans had a forty days' fast, in memory of one of their
sacred persons (Quetzalcoatle) who was tempted (and fasted) forty days on
a mountain."[178:7]
Lord Kingsborough says:
"The temptation of Quetzalcoatle, and the fast of forty days, . . . are very
curious and mysterious."[178:8]
The ancient Mexicans were also in the habit of making their prisoners of
war fast for a term of forty days before they were put to death.[179:1]
Mr. Bonwick says:
"The Spaniards were surprised to see the Mexicans keep the vernal forty
days' fast. The Tammuz month of Syria was in the spring. The forty days
were kept for Proserpine. Thus does history repeat itself."[179:2]
The Spanish monks accounted for what Lord Kingsborough calls "very
curious and mysterious" circumstances, by the agency of the devil, and
burned all the books containing them, whenever it was in their power.
The forty days' fast was also found among some of the Indian tribes in the
New World. Dr. Daniel Brinton tells us that "the females of the Orinoco
tribes fasted forty days before marriage,"[179:3] and Prof. Max Müller
informs us that it was customary for some of the females of the South
American tribes of Indians "to fast before and after the birth of a child," and
that, among the Carib-Coudave tribe, in the West Indies, "when a child is
born the mother goes presently to work, but the father begins to complain,
and takes to his hammock, and there he is visited as though he were sick.
He then fasts for forty days."[179:4]
The females belonging to the tribes of the Upper Mississippi, were held
unclean for forty days after childbirth.[179:5] The prince of the Tezcuca tribes
fasted forty days when he wished an heir to his throne, and the Mandanas
supposed it required forty days and forty nights to wash clean the earth at
the deluge.[179:6]
The number forty is to be found in a great many instances in the Old
Testament; for instance, at the end of forty days Noah sent out a raven from
the ark.[179:7] Isaac and Esau were each forty years old when they married.
[179:8] Forty days were fulfilled for the embalming of Jacob.[179:9] The spies
FOOTNOTES:
[175:1] Matthew, iv. 1-11.
[175:2] See Lardner's Works, vol. viii. p. 491.
[175:3] Words of the Rev. E. Garbett, M. A., in a sermon preached before the University of
Oxford, England.
[175:4] The Bishop of Manchester (England), in the "Manchester Examiner and Times."
[175:5] See Lillie's Buddhism, p. 100.
[176:1] Pp. 44 and 172, 173.
[176:2] Translated by Prof. Samuel Beal.
[176:3] See also Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, pp. 38, 39. Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. xxviii.,
xxix., and 190, and Hardy: Buddhist Legends, p. xvii.
[177:1] Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 240.
[177:2] Chambers's Encyclo. art. "Zoroaster."
[177:3] See Kingsborough: Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 200.
[177:4] Life and Relig. of the Hindoos, p. 134.
[177:5] Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 341.
[177:6] Ibid.
[177:7] Ibid. p. 340.
[178:1] Acosta: Hist. Indies, vol. ii. p. 339.
[178:2] Exodus, xxiv. 28.
[178:3] Deut. ix. 18.
[178:4] 1 Kings, xix. 8.
[178:5] Chapter i.
[178:6] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 272.
[178:7] Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 19.
[178:8] Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. pp. 197-200.
[179:1] See Kingsborough's Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 223.
[179:2] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 370.
[179:3] Brinton: Myths of the New World, p. 94.
[179:4] Max Müller's Chips, vol. ii. p. 279.
[179:5] Brinton: Myths of the New World, p. 94.
[179:6] Ibid. According to Genesis, vii. 12, "the rain was upon the earth forty days and
forty nights" at the time of the flood.
[179:7] Genesis, viii. 6.
[179:8] Gen. xxv. 20-xxvi. 34.
[179:9] Gen. i. 3.
[179:10] Numbers, xiii. 25.
[179:11] Numbers, xiii. 13.
[179:12] Jud. iii. 11; v. 31; viii. 28.
[179:13] Jud. xiii. 1.
[179:14] I. Samuel, iv. 18.
[179:15] I. Kings, ii. 11.
[180:1] I. Kings, xi. 42.
[180:2] I. Samuel, xvii. 16.
[180:3] Gen. vii. 12.
[180:4] Exodus, xxiv. 18-xxxiv. 28.
[180:5] See Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 798; vol. ii. p. 402.
[180:6] See Ibid. vol. ii. p. 708.
CHAPTER XX.
THE CRUCIFIXION OF CHRIST JESUS.
The Vishnu Purana[184:7] speaks of Crishna being shot in the foot with an
arrow, and states that this was the cause of his death. Other accounts,
however, state that he was suspended on a tree, or in other words, crucified.
Mons. Guigniaut, in his "Religion de l'Antiquité" says:
"The death of Crishna is very differently related. One remarkable and
convincing tradition makes him perish on a tree, to which he was nailed by
the stroke of an arrow."[184:8]
Rev. J. P. Lundy alludes to this passage of Guigniaut's in his "Monumental
Christianity," and translates the passage "un bois fatal" (see note below) "a
cross." Although we do not think he is justified in doing this, as M.
Guigniaut has distinctly stated that this "bois fatal" (which is applied to a
gibbet, a cross, a scaffold, etc.) was "un arbre" (a tree), yet, he is justified in
doing so on other accounts, for we find that Crishna is represented hanging
on a cross, and we know that a cross was frequently called the "accursed
tree." It was an ancient custom to use trees as gibbets for crucifixion, or, if
artificial, to call the cross a tree.[185:1]
can speak more positively of, it is surely Crishna crucified. It is unlike any
Christian crucifix ever made, and, with that described above with the Yoni-
Linga attached to the head, would probably not be claimed as such. Instead
of the crown of thorns usually put on the head of the Christian Saviour, it
has the turreted coronet of the Ephesian Diana, the ankles are tied together
by a cord, and the dress about the loins is exactly the style with which
Crishna is almost always represented.[185:6]
Rev. J. P. Lundy, speaking of the Christian crucifix, says:
"I object to the crucifix because it is an image, and liable to gross abuse,
just as the old Hindoo crucifix was an idol."[186:1]
And Dr. Inman says:
"Crishna, whose history so closely resembles our Lord's, was also like him
in his being crucified."[186:2]
The Evangelist[186:3] relates that when Jesus was crucified two others
(malefactors) were crucified with him, one of whom, through his favor,
went to heaven. One of the malefactors reviled him, but the other said to
Jesus: "Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom." And
Jesus said unto him: "Verily I say unto thee, to-day shalt thou be with me in
paradise." According to the Vishnu Purana, the hunter who shot the arrow
at Crishna afterwards said unto him: "Have pity upon me, who am
consumed by my crime, for thou art able to consume me!" Crishna replied:
"Fear not thou in the least. Go, hunter, through my favor, to heaven, the
abode of the gods." As soon as he had thus spoken, a celestial car appeared,
and the hunter, ascending it, forthwith proceeded to heaven. Then the
illustrious Crishna, having united himself with his own pure, spiritual,
inexhaustible, inconceivable, unborn, undecaying, imperishable and
universal spirit, which is one with Vasudeva (God),[186:4] abandoned his
mortal body, and the condition of the threefold equalities.[186:5] One of the
titles of Crishna is "Pardoner of sins," another is "Liberator from the
Serpent of death."[187:1]
The monk Georgius, in his Tibetinum Alphabetum (p. 203), has given plates
of a crucified god who was worshiped in Nepal. These crucifixes were to be
seen at the corners of roads and on eminences. He calls it the god Indra.
Figures No. 9 and No. 10 are taken from this work. They are also different
from any Christian crucifix yet produced. Georgius says:
"If the matter stands as Beausobre thinks, then the inhabitants of India, and
the Buddhists, whose religion is the same as that of the inhabitants of
Thibet, have received these new portents of fanatics nowhere else than from
the Manicheans. For those nations, especially in the city of Nepal, in the
month of August, being about to celebrate the festival days of the god
Indra, erect crosses, wreathed with Abrotono, to his memory, everywhere.
You have the description of these in letter B, the picture following after; for
A is the representation of Indra himself crucified, bearing on his forehead,
hands and feet the signs Telech."[187:2]
P. Andrada la Crozius, one of the first Europeans who went to Nepal and
Thibet, in speaking of the god whom they worshiped there—Indra—tells us
that they said he spilt his blood for the salvation of the human race, and that
he was pierced through the body with nails. He further says that, although
they do not say he suffered the penalty of the cross, yet they find,
nevertheless, figures of it in their books.[188:1]
In regard to Beausobre's ideas that the religion of India is corrupted
Christianity, obtained from the Manicheans, little need be said, as all
scholars of the present day know that the religion of India is many centuries
older than Mani or the Manicheans.[188:2]
In the promontory of India, in the South, at Tanjore, and in the North, at
Oude or Ayoudia, was found the worship of the crucified god Bal-li. This
god, who was believed to have been an incarnation of Vishnu, was
represented with holes in his hands and side.[188:3]
The incarnate god Buddha, although said to have expired peacefully at the
foot of a tree, is nevertheless described as a suffering Saviour, who, "when
his mind was moved by pity (for the human race) gave his life like grass for
the sake of others."[188:4]
A hymn, addressed to Buddha, says:
Osiris and Horus, the Egyptian virgin-born gods, suffered death.[190:3] Mr.
Bonwick, speaking of Osiris, says:
"He is one of the Saviours or deliverers of humanity, to be found in almost
all lands." "In his efforts to do good, he encounters evil; in struggling with
that he is overcome; he is killed."[190:4]
Alexander Murray says:
"The Egyptian Saviour Osiris was gratefully regarded as the great exemplar
of self-sacrifice, in giving his life for others."[190:5]
Sir J. G. Wilkinson says of him:
"The sufferings and death of Osiris were the great Mystery of the Egyptian
religion, and some traces of it are perceptible among other peoples of
antiquity. His being the Divine Goodness, and the abstract idea of 'good,' his
manifestation upon earth (like a Hindoo god), his death and resurrection,
and his office as judge of the dead in a future state, look like the early
revelation of a future manifestation of the deity converted into a
mythological fable."[190:6]
Horus was also called "The Saviour." "As Horus Sneb, he is the Redeemer.
He is the Lord of Life and the Eternal One."[190:7] He is also called "The
Only-Begotten."[190:8]
Attys, who was called the "Only Begotten Son"[190:9] and "Saviour," was
worshiped by the Phrygians (who were regarded as one of the oldest races
of Asia Minor). He was represented by them as a man tied to a tree, at the
foot of which was a lamb,[191:1] and, without doubt, also as a man nailed to
the tree, or stake, for we find Lactantius making this Apollo of Miletus
(anciently, the greatest and most flourishing city of Ionia, in Asia Minor)
say that:
"He was a mortal according to the flesh; wise in miraculous works; but,
being arrested by an armed force by command of the Chaldean judges, he
suffered a death made bitter with nails and stakes."[191:2]
In this god of the Phrygians, we again have the myth of the crucified
Saviour of Paganism.
By referring to Mrs. Jameson's "History of Our Lord in Art,"[191:3] or to
illustrations in chapter xl. this work, it will be seen that a common mode of
representing a crucifixion was that of a man, tied with cords by the hands
and feet, to an upright beam or stake. The lamb, spoken of above, which
signifies considerable, we shall speak of in its proper place.
Tammuz, or Adonis, the Syrian and Jewish Adonai (in Hebrew "Our Lord"),
was another virgin-born god, who suffered for mankind, and who had the
title of Saviour. The accounts of his death are conflicting, just as it is with
almost all of the so-called Saviours of mankind (including the Christian
Saviour, as we shall hereafter see) one account, however, makes him a
crucified Saviour.[191:4]
It is certain, however, that the ancients who honored him as their Lord and
Saviour, celebrated, annually, a feast in commemoration of his death. An
image, intended as a representation of their Lord, was laid on a bed or bier,
and bewailed in mournful ditties—just as the Roman Catholics do at the
present day in their "Good Friday" mass.
During this ceremony the priest murmured:
"Trust ye in your Lord, for the pains which he endured, our salvation have
procured."[191:5]
The Rev. Dr. Parkhurst, in his "Hebrew Lexicon," after referring to what we
have just stated above, says:
"I find myself obliged to refer Tammuz to that class of idols which were
originally designed to represent the promised Saviour, the Desire of all
Nations. His other name, Adonis, is almost the very Hebrew Adoni or Lord,
a well-known title of Christ."[191:6]
Prometheus was a crucified Saviour. He was "an immortal god, a friend of
the human race, who does not shrink even from sacrificing himself for their
salvation."[192:1]
The tragedy of the crucifixion of Prometheus, written by Æschylus, was
acted in Athens five hundred years before the Christian Era, and is by many
considered to be the most ancient dramatic poem now in existence. The plot
was derived from materials even at that time of an infinitely remote
antiquity. Nothing was ever so exquisitely calculated to work upon the
feelings of the spectators. No author ever displayed greater powers of
poetry, with equal strength of judgment, in supporting through the piece the
august character of the Divine Sufferer. The spectators themselves were
unconsciously made a party to the interest of the scene: its hero was their
friend, their benefactor, their creator, and their Saviour; his wrongs were
incurred in their quarrel—his sorrows were endured for their salvation; "he
was wounded for their transgressions, and bruised for their iniquities; the
chastisement of their peace was upon him, and by his stripes they were
healed;" "he was oppressed and afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth." The
majesty of his silence, whilst the ministers of an offended god were nailing
him by the hands and feet to Mount Caucasus,[192:2] could be only equaled
by the modesty with which he relates, while hanging with arms extended in
the form of a cross, his services to the human race, which had brought on
him that horrible crucifixion.[192:3] "None, save myself," says he, "opposed
his (Jove's) will,"
"I dared;
And boldly pleading saved them from destruction,
Saved them from sinking to the realms of night.
For this offense I bend beneath these pains,
Dreadful to suffer, piteous to behold:
For mercy to mankind I am not deem'd
Worthy of mercy; but with ruthless hate
In this uncouth appointment am fix'd here
A spectacle dishonorable to Jove."[192:4]
In the catastrophe of the plot, his especially professed friend, Oceanus, the
Fisherman—as his name Petræus indicates,[193:1]—being unable to prevail
on him to make his peace with Jupiter, by throwing the cause of human
redemption out of his hands,[193:2] forsook him and fled. None remained to
be witness of his dying agonies but the chorus of ever-amiable and ever-
faithful which also bewailed and lamented him,[193:3] but were unable to
subdue his inflexible philanthropy.[193:4]
In the words of Justin Martyr: "Suffering was common to all the sons of
Jove." They were called the "Slain Ones," "Saviours," "Redeemers," &c.
Bacchus, the offspring of Jupiter and Semele,[193:5] was called the
"Saviour."[193:6] He was called the "Only Begotten Son,"[193:7] the "Slain
One,"[193:8] the "Sin Bearer,"[193:9] the "Redeemer,"[193:10] &c. Evil having
spread itself over the earth, through the inquisitiveness of Pandora, the Lord
of the gods is begged to come to the relief of mankind. Jupiter lends a
willing ear to the entreaties, "and wishes that his son should be the
redeemer of the misfortunes of the world; The Bacchus Saviour. He
promises to the earth a Liberator . . The universe shall worship him, and
shall praise in songs his blessings." In order to execute his purpose, Jupiter
overshadows the beautiful young maiden—the virgin Semele—who
becomes the mother of the Redeemer.[193:11]
"It is I (says the lord Bacchus to mankind), who guides you; it is I who
protects you, and who saves you; I who am Alpha and Omega."[193:12]
Hercules, the son of Zeus, was called "The Saviour."[193:13] The words
"Hercules the Saviour" were engraven on ancient coins and monuments.
[193:14] He was also called "The Only Begotten," and the "Universal Word."
He was re-absorbed into God. He was said by Ovid to be the "Self-
produced," the Generator and Ruler of all things, and the Father of time.
[193:15]
Mithras was called the "Anointed" or the "Christ;"[196:5] and Horus, Mano,
Mithras, Bel-Minor, Iao, Adoni, &c., were each of them "God of Light,"
"Light of the World," the "Anointed," or the "Christ."[196:6]
It is said that Peter called his Master the Christ, whereupon "he straightway
charged them (the disciples), and commanded them to tell no man that
thing."[196:7]
The title of "Christ" or "The Anointed," was held by the kings of Israel.
"Touch not my Christ and do my prophets no harm," says the Psalmist.
[196:8]
Castles, with the Colidei, the island of Iona, and Ii, . . . I am induced to
doubt my former conclusions. The Elephant, the Ganesa of India, is a very
stubborn fellow to be found here. The Ring, too, when joined with other
matters, I cannot get over. All these superstitions must have come from
India."[199:6]
On one of the Irish "round towers" is to be seen a crucifix of unmistakable
Asiatic origin.[199:7]
If we turn to the New World, we shall find strange though it may appear,
that the ancient Mexicans and Peruvians worshiped a crucified Saviour.
This was the virgin-born Quetzalcoatle whose crucifixion is represented in
the paintings of the "Codex Borgianus," and the "Codex Vaticanus."
These paintings illustrate the religious opinions of the ancient Mexicans,
and were copied from the hieroglyphics found in Mexico. The Spaniards
destroyed nearly all the books, ancient monuments and paintings which
they could find; had it not been for this, much more regarding the religion
of the ancient Mexicans would have been handed down to us. Many
chapters were also taken—by the Spanish authorities—from the writings of
the first historians who wrote on ancient Mexico. All manuscripts had to be
inspected previous to being published. Anything found among these
heathens resembling the religion of the Christians, was destroyed when
possible.[199:8]
The first Spanish monks who went to Mexico were surprised to find the
crucifix among the heathen inhabitants, and upon inquiring what it meant,
were told that it was a representation of Bacob (Quetzalcoatle), the Son of
God, who was put to death by Eopuco. They said that he was placed on a
beam of wood, with his arms stretched out, and that he died there.[200:1]
Lord Kingsborough, from whose very learned and elaborate work we have
taken the above, says:
"Being questioned as to the manner in which they became acquainted with
these things, they replied that the lords instructed their sons in them, and
that thus this doctrine descended from one to another."[200:2]
Sometimes Quetzalcoatle or Bacob is represented as tied to the cross—just
as we have seen that Attys was represented by the Phrygians—and at other
times he is represented "in the attitude of a person crucified, with
impressions of nail-holes in his hands and feet, but not actually upon a
cross"—just as we have found the Hindoo Crishna, and as he is represented
in Fig. No. 8. Beneath this representation of Quetzalcoatle crucified, is an
image of Death, which an angry serpent seems threatening to devour.[200:3]
On the 73d page of the Borgian MS., he is represented crucified on a cross
of the Greek form. In this print there are also impressions of nails to be seen
on the feet and hands, and his body is strangely covered with suns.[200:4]
In vol. ii. plate 75, the god is crucified in a circle of nineteen figures, and a
serpent is depriving him of the organs of generation.
Lord Kingsborough, commenting on these paintings, says:
"It is remarkable that in these Mexican paintings the faces of many of the
figures are black, and that the visage of Quetzalcoatle is frequently painted
in a very deformed manner."[200:5]
His lordship further tells us that (according to the belief of the ancient
Mexicans), "the death of Quetzalcoatle upon the cross" was "an atonement
for the sins of mankind."[200:6]
Dr. Daniel Brinton, in his "Myths of the New World," tells us that the Aztecs
had a feast which they celebrated "in the early spring," when "victims were
nailed to a cross and shot with an arrow."[200:7]
Alexander Von Humboldt, in his "American Researches," also speaks of this
feast, when the Mexicans crucified a man, and pierced him with an arrow.
[200:8]
The Egyptian Saviour Horus was called the "Shepherd of the People."[203:4]
The Hindoo Saviour Crishna was called the "Royal Good Shepherd."[203:5]
We have seen, then, on the authority of a Christian writer who has made the
subject a special study, that, "there seems no just grounds at present for
assigning an earlier date," for the "earliest instances of the crucifixion" of
Christ Jesus, represented in art, than the eighth or ninth century. Now, a few
words in regard to what these crucifixes looked like. If the reader imagines
that the crucifixes which are familiar to us at the present day are similar to
those early ones, we would inform him that such is not the case. The
earliest artists of the crucifixion represent the Christian Saviour as young
and beardless, always without the crown of thorns, alive, and erect,
apparently elate; no signs of bodily suffering are there.[203:6]
On page 151, plate 181, of Jameson's "History of Our Lord in Art" (vol. ii.),
he is represented standing on a foot-rest on the cross, alive, and eyes open.
Again, on page 330, plate 253, he is represented standing "with body
upright and arms extended straight, with no nails, no wounds, no crown of
thorns—frequently clothed, and with a regal crown—a God, young and
beautiful, hanging, as it were, without compulsion or pain."
On page 167, plate 188, are to be seen "the thieves bound to their cross
(which is simply an upright beam, without cross-bars), with the figure of
the Lord standing between them." He is not bound nor nailed to a cross; no
cross is there. He is simply standing erect in the form of a cross. This is a
representation of what is styled, "Early crucifixion with thieves." On page
173, plate 190, we have a representation of the crucifixion, in which Jesus
and the thieves are represented crucified on the Egyptian tau (see Fig. No.
12). The thieves are tied, but the man-god is nailed to the cross. A similar
representation may be seen on page 189, plate 198.
On page 155, plate 183, there is a representation of what is called "Virgin
and St. John at foot of cross," but this cross is simply an upright beam (as
Fig. No. 13). There are no cross-bars attached. On page 167, plate 188, the
thieves are tied to an upright beam (as Fig. 13), and Jesus stands between
them, with arms extended in the form of a cross, as the Hindoo Crishna is to
be seen in Fig. No. 8. On page 157, plate 185, Jesus is represented crucified
on the Egyptian cross (as No. 12).
Some ancient crucifixes represent the Christian Saviour crucified on a cross
similar in form to the Roman figure which stands for the number ten (see
Fig. No. 14). Thus we see that there was no uniformity in representing the
"cross of Christ," among the early Christians; even the cross which
Constantine put on his "Labarum," or sacred banner, was nothing more than
the monogram of the Pagan god Osiris (Fig. No. 15),[204:1] as we shall see
in a subsequent chapter.
The dogma of the vicarious atonement has met with no success whatever
among the Jews. The reason for this is very evident. The idea of vicarious
atonement, in any form, is contrary to Jewish ethics, but it is in full accord
with the Gentile. The law ordains that[205:1] "every man shall be put to death
for his own sin," and not for the sin or crime committed by any other
person. No ransom should protect the murderer against the arm of justice.
[205:2] The principle of equal rights and equal responsibilities is fundamental
FOOTNOTES:
[181:1] Monier Williams: Hinduism, pp. 36-40.
[182:1] Monier Williams: Hinduism, p. 36.
[182:2] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 303.
[182:3] Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 443.
[183:1] Herodotus: bk. ii. ch. 39.
[183:2] In the trial of Dr. Thomas (at Chicago) for "doctrinal heresy," one of the charges
made against him (Sept. 8, 1881) was that he had said "the BLOOD of the Lamb had nothing
to do with salvation." And in a sermon preached in Boston, Sept. 2, 1881, at the Columbus
Avenue Presbyterian Church, by the Rev. Andrew A. Bonar. D. D., the preacher said: "No
sinner dares to meet the holy God until his sin has been forgiven, or until he has received
remission. The penalty of sin is death, and this penalty is not remitted by anything the
sinner can do for himself, but only through the BLOOD of Jesus. If you have accepted Jesus
as your Saviour, you can take the blood of Jesus, and with boldness present it to the Father
as payment in full of the penalties of all your sins. Sinful man has no right to the benefits
and the beauties and glories of nature. These were all lost to him through Adam's sin, but to
the blood of Christ's sacrifice he has a right; it was shed for him. It is Christ's death that
does the blessed work of salvation for us. It was not his life nor his Incarnation. His
Incarnation could not pay a farthing of our debt, but his blood shed in redeeming love, pays
it all." (See Boston Advertiser, Sept. 3, 1881.)
[183:3] Habet ergo Diabolus Christos suos.
[183:4] Huc's Travels, vol. i. pp. 326 and 327.
[184:1] Hinduism, p. 214.
[184:2] Ibid. p. 115.
[184:3] Vishnu Purana, p. 440.
[184:4] Ibid.
[184:5] Ibid.
[184:6] Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 132.
[184:7] Pages 274 and 612.
[184:8] "On reconte fort diversement la mort de Crishna. Une tradition remarquable et
avérée le fait périr sur un bois fatal (un arbre), ou il fut cloué d'un coup de flèche." (Quoted
by Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 144.)
[185:1] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 499, and Mrs. Jameson's "History of Our Lord
in Art," ii. 317, where the cross is called the "accursed tree."
[185:2] Chap. xxi. 22, 23: "If a man have committed a sin worthy of death, and he be to be
put to death, and thou hang him on a tree: his body shall not remain all night upon the tree,
but thou shalt in any wise bury him that day; (for he that is hanged is accursed of God;)
that thy land be not defiled, which the Lord thy God giveth thee for an inheritance."
[185:3] Galatians, iii. 13.
[185:4] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 146, and Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 402.
"The crucified god Wittoba is also called Balü. He is worshiped in a marked manner at
Pander-poor or Bunder-poor, near Poonah." (Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 750, note 1.)
"A form of Vishnu (Crishna), called Viththal or Vithobā, is the popular god at Pandharpur
in Mahā-ráshtrá, the favorite of the celebrated Marāthi poet Tukārāma." (Prof. Monier
Williams: Indian Wisdom, p. xlviii.)
[185:5] See Lundy: Monumental Christianity, p. 160.
[185:6] This can be seen by referring to Calmet, Sonnerat, or Higgins, vol. ii., which
contain plates representing Crishna.
[186:1] Monumental Christianity, p. 128.
[186:2] Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 411.
[186:3] Luke, xxiii. 39-43.
[186:4] Vasudeva means God. See Vishnu Purana, p. 274.
[186:5] Vishnu Purana, p. 612.
[187:1] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 72.
[187:2] "Si ita se res habet, ut existimat Beausobrius, Indi, et Budistæ quorum religio,
eadem est ac Tibetana, nonnisi a Manichæis nova hæc deliriorum portenta acceperunt.
Hænamque gentes præsertim in urbe Nepal, Luna XII. Badr seu Bhadon Augusti mensis,
dies festos auspicaturæ Dei Indræ, erigunt ad illius memoriam ubique locorum cruces
amictas Abrotono. Earum figuram descriptam habes ad lit. B, Tabula pone sequenti. Nam A
effigies est ipsius Indræ crucifixi signa Telech in fronte manibus pedibusque gerentis."
(Alph Tibet, p. 203. Quoted in Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 130.)
[188:1] "Ils conviennent qu'il a répandu son sang pour le salut du genre humain, ayant été
percé de clous par tout son corps. Quoiqu'ils ne disent pas qu'il a souffert le supplice de la
croix, ou en trouve pourtant la figure dans leurs livres." (Quoted in Higgins' Anacalypsis,
vol. ii. p. 118.)
[188:2] "Although the nations of Europe have changed their religions during the past
eighteen centuries, the Hindoo has not done so, except very partially. . . . The religious
creeds, rites, customs, and habits of thought of the Hindoos generally, have altered little
since the days of Manu, 500 years B. C." (Prof. Monier Williams: Indian Wisdom, p. iv.)
[188:3] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. pp. 147, 572, 667 and 750; vol. ii. p. 122, and
note 4, p. 185, this chapter.
[188:4] See Max Müller's Science of Religion, p. 224.
[188:5] Quoted in Lillie's Buddhism, p. 93.
[188:6] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 20.
[188:7] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, pp. 20, 25, 85. Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 247.
Huc's Travels, vol. i. pp. 326, 327, and almost any work on Buddhism.
[188:8] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 20.
[188:9] Ibid. Johnson's Oriental Religions, p. 604. See also Asiatic Researches, vol. iii., or
chapter xii. of this work.
[188:10] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 18.
[188:11] Ibid.
[188:12] Ibid.
[188:13] Vol. i. p. 118.
[189:1] Quoted in Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 118.
[189:2] Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 20.
[189:3] Beal: Hist. Buddha, p. 33.
[189:4] Huc's Travels, vol. i. pp. 326, 337.
[189:5] Müller: Hist. Sanscrit Literature, p. 80.
[189:6] See Maurice: Indian Antiquities, vol. v. p. 95, and Williams: Hinduism, p. 214.
[189:7] "He in mercy left paradise, and came down to earth, because he was filled with
compassion for the sins and miseries of mankind. He sought to lead them into better paths,
and took their sufferings upon himself, that he might expiate their crimes, and mitigate the
punishment they must otherwise inevitably undergo." (Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. ii. p. 86.)
"The object of his mission on earth was to instruct those who were straying from the right
path, expiate the sins of mortals by his own sufferings, and produce for them a happy
entrance into another existence by obedience to his precepts and prayers in his name. They
always speak of him as one with God from all eternity. His most common title is 'The
Saviour of the World.'" (Ibid. vol. i. p. 247.)
[190:1] Quoted in Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 211.
[190:2] Ibid.
[190:3] See Renouf: Religions of Ancient Egypt, p. 178.
[190:4] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 155.
[190:5] Murray: Manual of Mythology, p. 848.
[190:6] In Rawlinson's Herodotus, vol. ii. p. 171. Quoted in Knight's Art and Mythology, p.
71.
[190:7] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 185.
[190:8] See Mysteries of Adoni, p. 88.
[190:9] See Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. xxii. note.
[191:1] Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 255.
[191:2] Vol. ii.
[191:3] Lactant. Inst., div. iv. chap. xiii. In Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 544.
[191:4] See chapter xxxix. this work.
[191:5] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 114, and Taylor's Diegesis, p. 163.
[191:6] See the chapter on "The Resurrection of Jesus."
[192:1] Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Prometheus."
[192:2] "Prometheus has been a favorite subject with the poets. He is represented as the
friend of mankind, who interposed in their behalf when Jove was incensed against them."
(Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 32.)
"In the mythos relating to Prometheus, he always appears as the friend of the human race,
suffering in its behalf the most fearful tortures." (John Fiske: Myths and Myth-makers, pp.
64, 65.) "Prometheus was nailed to the rocks on Mount Caucasus, with arms extended."
(Alexander Murray: Manual of Mythology, p. 82.) "Prometheus is said to have been nailed
up with arms extended, near the Caspian Straits, on Mount Caucasus. The history of
Prometheus on the Cathedral at Bordeaux (France) here receives its explanation." (Higgins:
Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 113.)
[192:3] See Æschylus' "Prometheus Chained." Translated by the Rev. R. Potter: Harper &
Bros., N. Y.
[192:4] Ibid. p. 82.
[193:1] Petræus was an interchangeable synonym of the name Oceanus.
[193:2] "Then Peter took him, and began to rebuke him, saying: Be it far from thee, Lord;
this shall not be unto thee." (Matt. xvi. 22.)
[193:3] "And there followed him a great company of people, and of women, which also
bewailed and lamented him." (Luke, xxiii. 27.)
[193:4] See Taylor's Diegesis, pp. 193, 194, or Potter's Æschylus.
[193:5] "They say that the god (Bacchus), the offspring of Zeus and Demeter, was torn to
pieces." (Diodorus Siculus, in Knight, p. 156, note.)
[193:6] See Knight: Anct. Art and Mythology, p. 98, note. Dupuis: Origin of Religious
Belief, 258. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 102.
[193:7] Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. xxii. note.
[193:8] Ibid.
[193:9] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 169.
[193:10] Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 135.
[193:11] Ibid.
[193:12] Beausobre quotes the inscription on a monument of Bacchus, thus: "C'est moi, dit
il, qui vous conduis, C'est moi, qui vous conserve, ou qui vous sauve; Je sui Alpha et
Omega, &c." (See chap. xxxix this work.)
[193:13] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 322. Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p.
195. Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 152. Dunlap: Mysteries of Adoni, p. 94.
[193:14] See Celtic Druids, Taylor's Diegesis, p. 153, and Montfaucon, vol. i.
[193:15] See Mysteries of Adoni, p. 91, and Higgins: Anac., vol. i. p. 322.
[194:1] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 153.
[194:2] See the chapter on "Miracles of Jesus."
[194:3] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 254.
[194:4] See Monumental Christianity, p. 186.
[194:5] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 15.
[194:6] See Giles: Hebrew and Christian Records, vol. ii. p. 86.
[194:7] See Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 15, and our chapter on Christian Symbols.
[194:8] This subject will be referred to again in chapter xxxix.
[194:9] See Dunlap's Spirit Hist., pp. 237, 241, 242, and Mysteries of Adoni, p. 123, note.
[194:10] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 99.
[194:11] See Dunlap's Son of the Man, p. 20.
"According to the most ancient tradition of the East-Iranians recorded in the Zend-Avesta,
the God of Light (Ormuzd) communicated his mysteries to some men through his Word."
(Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 75.)
[194:12] Wake: Phallism, &c., p. 47.
[195:1] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. pp. 258, 259.
[195:2] Malcolm: Hist. Persia, vol. i. Ap. p. 494; Nimrod, vol. ii. p. 31. Anacalypsis, vol. i.
p. 649.
[195:3] Col. i. 26.
[195:4] See Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 102.
[195:5] See Dunlap's Son of the Man, p. 89, marginal note.
[195:6] "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was
God." (John, i. 1.)
[195:7] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. 69 and 71.
[195:8] Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 652.
[195:9] Ibid. vol. i. p. 537.
[195:10] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 119. Knight's Ancient Art and Mythology, pp.
xxii. and 98. Dunlap's Son of the Man, p. 71, and Spirit History, pp. 183, 205, 206, 249.
Bible for Learners, vol. ii. p. 25. Isis Unveiled, vol. ii. pp. 195, 237, 516, besides the
authorities already cited.
[196:1] See Bunsen's Bible Chronology, p. 5. Keys of St. Peter, 135. Volney's Ruins, p.
168.
[196:2] Giles: Hebrew and Christian Records, p. 64, vol. ii.
[196:3] Ibid. p. 86, and Taylor's Diegesis, pp. 202, 206, 407. Dupuis: p. 267.
[196:4] Eusebius: Eccl. Hist., lib. 1, ch. iv.
[196:5] See Dunlap's Son of the Man, p. 78.
[196:6] See Ibid. p. 39.
[196:7] Luke, iv. 21.
[196:8] Psalm, cv. 15. The term "an Anointed One," which we use in English, is Christos in
Greek, and Messiah in Hebrew. (See Bible for Learners, and Religion of Israel, p. 147.)
[196:9] Matthew, xxiv. 24.
[196:10] Acts, vii. 45; Hebrews, iv. 8; compare Nehemiah, viii. 17.
[197:1] He who, it is said, was liberated at the time of the crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth.
[197:2] See Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 60.
[197:3] Octavius, c. xxix.
[197:4] See Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 116.
[198:1] In his History of the Campaigns of Alexander.
[198:2] See Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 118.
[198:3] Ibid.
[198:4] Apol. c. 16; Ad Nationes, c. xii.
[198:5] See the chapter on "The Worship of the Virgin."
[199:1] Ganesa is the Indian God of Wisdom. (See Asiatic Researches, vol. i.)
[199:2] The Ring and circle was an emblem of god, or eternity, among the Hindoos. (See
Lundy: Monumental Christianity, p. 87.)
[199:3] The Cobra, or hooded snake, is a native of the East Indies, where it is held as
sacred. (See Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 16, and Fergusson's Tree and Serpent
Worship.)
[199:4] Linga denotes, in the sectarian worship of the Hindoos, the Phallus, an emblem of
the male or generative power of nature.
[199:5] Iona, or Yoni, is the counterpart of Linga, i. e., an emblem of the female generative
power. We have seen that these were attached to the effigies of the Hindoo crucified
Saviour, Crishna.
[199:6] Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 130.
[199:7] See Lundy: Monumental Christianity, pp. 253, 254, 255.
[199:8] See Kingsborough: Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. pp. 165 and 179.
[200:1] See Kingsborough: Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 166.
[200:2] Ibid. p. 162.
[200:3] Ibid. p. 161.
[200:4] Ibid. p. 167.
[200:5] Ibid. p. 167.
[200:6] Ibid. p. 166.
[200:7] Brinton: Myths of the New World, p. 95.
[200:8] See, also, Monumental Christianity, p. 393.
"Once a year the ancient Mexicans made an image of one of their gods, which was pierced
by an arrow, shot by a priest of Quetzalcoatle." (Dunlap's Spirit Hist., 207.)
[201:1] Monumental Christianity, p. 393.
[201:2] See Appendix A.
[201:3] See Monumental Christianity, p. 390, and Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 169.
[201:4] Quoted by Lord Kingsborough: Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 172.
[202:1] Monumental Christianity, p. 246.
[202:2] History of Our Lord in Art, vol. ii. p. 137.
[202:3] Ibid. p. 317.
[202:4] See Illustrations in Ibid. vol. i.
[202:5] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 252. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. 111,
and Monumental Christianity, p. 246, et seq.
[202:6] The paschal lamb was roasted on a cross, by ancient Israel, and is still so done by
the Samaritans at Nablous. (See Lundy's Monumental Christianity, pp. 19 and 247.)
"The lamb slain (at the feast of the passover) was roasted whole, with two spits thrust
through it—one lengthwise, and one transversely—crossing each other near the fore legs;
so that the animal was, in a manner, crucified. Not a bone of it might be broken—a
circumstance strongly representing the sufferings of our Lord Jesus, the passover slain for
us." (Barnes's Notes, vol. i. p. 292.)
[202:7] See King: The Gnostics and their Remains, p. 138. Also, Monumental Christianity,
and Jameson's History of Our Lord in Art, for illustrations.
[203:1] See King's Gnostics, p. 178. Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. xxii., and
Jameson's History of Our Lord in Art, ii. 340.
[203:2] Jameson: Hist. of Our Lord in Art, p. 340, vol. ii.
[203:3] Quoted in Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. xxii. note.
[203:4] Dunlap: Spirit Hist., p. 185.
[203:5] See chapter xvii. and vol. ii. Hist. Hindostan.
[203:6] See Jameson's Hist. of Our Lord in Art, vol. ii. p. 142.
[204:1] "It would be difficult to prove that the cross of Constantine was of the simple
construction as now understood. . . . As regards the Labarum, the coins of the time, in
which it is especially set forth, prove that the so-called cross upon it was nothing else than
the same ever-recurring monogram of Christ" (that is, the XP). (History of Our Lord in Art,
vol. ii. p. 310. See also, Smith's Bible Dictionary, art. "Labarum.")
[205:1] Deut. xxiv. 16.
[205:2] Num. xxv. 31-34.
[205:3] Matt. v. 17, 18.
CHAPTER XXI.
THE DARKNESS AT THE CRUCIFIXION.
The Luke narrator informs us that at the time of the death of Christ Jesus,
the sun was darkened, and there was darkness over the earth from the sixth
until the ninth hour; also the veil of the temple was rent in the midst.[206:1]
The Matthew narrator, in addition to this, tells us that:
"The earth did quake, and the rocks were rent, and the graves were opened,
and many bodies of the saints which slept arose, and came out of their
graves . . . and went into the holy city and appeared unto many."[206:2]
"His star" having shone at the time of his birth, and his having been born in
a miraculous manner, it was necessary that at the death of Christ Jesus,
something miraculous should happen. Something of an unusual nature had
happened at the time of the death of other supernatural beings, therefore
something must happen at his death; the myth would not have been
complete without it. In the words of Viscount Amberly: "The darkness from
the sixth to the ninth hour, the rending of the temple veil, the earthquake,
the rending of the rocks, are altogether like the prodigies attending the
decease of other great men."[206:3]
The Rev. Dr. Geikie, one of the most orthodox writers, says:[206:4]
"It is impossible to explain the origin of this darkness. The passover moon
was then at the full, so that it could not have been an eclipse. The early
Fathers, relying on a notice of an eclipse that seemed to coincide in time,
though it really did not, fancied that the darkness was caused by it, but
incorrectly."
Perhaps "the origin of this darkness" may be explained from what we shall
now see.
At the time of the death of the Hindoo Saviour Crishna, there came
calamities and bad omens of every kind. A black circle surrounded the
moon, and the sun was darkened at noon-day; the sky rained fire and ashes;
flames burned dusky and livid; demons committed depredations on earth; at
sunrise and sunset, thousands of figures were seen skirmishing in the air;
spirits were to be seen on all sides.[207:1]
When the conflict began between Buddha, the Saviour of the World, and the
Prince of Evil, a thousand appalling meteors fell; clouds and darkness
prevailed. Even this earth, with the oceans and mountains it contains,
though it is unconscious, quaked like a conscious being—like a fond bride
when forcibly torn from her bridegroom—like the festoons of a vine shaken
under the blast of a whirlwind. The ocean rose under the vibration of this
earthquake; rivers flowed back toward their sources; peaks of lofty
mountains, where countless trees had grown for ages, rolled crumbling to
the earth; a fierce storm howled all around; the roar of the concussion
became terrific; the very sun enveloped itself in awful darkness, and a host
of headless spirits filled the air.[207:2]
When Prometheus was crucified on Mount Caucasus, the whole frame of
nature became convulsed. The earth did quake, thunder roared, lightning
flashed, the wild winds rent the vexed air, the boisterous billows rose, and
the dissolution of the universe seemed to be threatened.[207:3]
The ancient Greeks and Romans, says Canon Farrar,[207:4] had always
considered that the births and deaths of great men were announced by
celestial signs. We therefore find that at the death of Romulus, the founder
of Rome, the sun was darkened, and there was darkness over the face of the
earth for the space of six hours.[207:5]
When Julius Cæsar, who was the son of a god, was murdered, there was a
darkness over the earth, the sun being eclipsed for the space of six hours.
[207:6]
Belief in the influence of the stars over life and death, and in special
portents at the death of great men, survived, indeed, to recent times.
Chaucer abounds in allusions to it, and still later Shakespeare tells us:
It would seem that this superstition survives even to the present day, for it is
well known that the dark and yellow atmosphere which settled over so
much of the country, on the day of the removal of President Garfield from
Washington to Long Branch, was sincerely held by hundreds of persons to
be a death-warning sent from heaven, and there were numerous predictions
that dissolution would take place before the train arrived at its destination.
As Mr. Greg remarks, there can, we think, remain little doubt in
unprepossessed minds, that the whole legend in question was one of those
intended to magnify Christ Jesus, which were current in great numbers at
the time the Matthew narrator wrote, and which he, with the usual want of
discrimination and somewhat omnivorous tendency, which distinguished
him as a compiler, admitted into his Gospel.
FOOTNOTES:
[206:1] Luke, xxiii. 44, 45.
[206:2] Matthew, xxvii. 51-53.
[206:3] Amberly: Analysis of Religious Belief, p. 268.
[206:4] Life of Christ, vol. ii. p. 643.
[207:1] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 71.
[207:2] Rhys David's Buddhism, pp. 36, 37.
[207:3] See Potter's Æschylus, "Prometheus Chained," last stanza.
[207:4] Farrar's Life of Christ, p. 52.
[207:5] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. pp. 616, 617.
[207:6] See Ibid. and Gibbon's Rome, vol. i. pp. 159 and 590, also Josephus: Jewish
Antiquities, book xiv. ch. xii. and note.
[207:7]
The doctrine of Christ Jesus' descent into hell is emphatically part of the
Christian belief, although not alluded to by Christian divines excepting
when unavoidable.
In the first place, it is taught in the Creed of the Christians, wherein it says:
"He descended into hell, and on the third day he rose again from the dead."
The doctrine was also taught by the Fathers of the Church. St. Chrysostom
(born 347 A. D.) asks:
FOOTNOTES:
[211:1] Quoted by Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 46.
[211:2] Strom, vi. c. 6.
[211:3] Contra Celsus, bk. ii. c. 43.
[211:4] See Jameson's Hist. of Our Lord in Art, vol. ii. pp. 354, 355.
[212:1] See Jameson's Hist. of Our Lord in Art, vol. ii. pp. 250, 251.
[212:2] Nicodemus: Apoc. ch. xvi. and xix.
[213:1] Nicodemus: Apoc. ch. xx.
[213:2] I. Peter, iii. 17-19.
[213:3] Acts, ii. 31.
[213:4] See Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 237. Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 168, and
Maurice: Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 85.
[213:5] See Monumental Christianity, p. 286.
[213:6] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 256, Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, and
Dunlap's Mysteries of Adoni, pp. 125, 152.
[213:7] See Chap. XXXIX.
[213:8] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 12.
[213:9] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 322. Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p.
257, and Dunlap's Mysteries of Adoni, p. 33.
[213:10] See Taylor's Mysteries, p. 40, and Mysteries of Adoni, pp. 94-96.
[213:11] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 72. Our Christian writers discover considerable
apprehension, and a jealous caution in their language, when the resemblance between
Paganism and Christianity might be apt to strike the mind too cogently. In quoting
Horace's account of Mercury's descent into hell, and his causing a cessation of the
sufferings there, Mr. Spence, in "Bell's Pantheon," says: "As this, perhaps, may be a
mythical part of his character, we had better let it alone."
[214:1] See Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 169, and Mallet, p. 448.
[214:2] See Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 166.
[214:3] See the chapter on Explanation.
CHAPTER XXIII.
THE RESURRECTION AND ASCENSION OF CHRIST
JESUS.
The story of the resurrection of Christ Jesus is related by the four Gospel
narrators, and is to the effect that, after being crucified, his body was
wrapped in a linen cloth, laid in a tomb, and a "great stone" rolled to the
door. The sepulchre was then made sure by "sealing the stone" and "setting
a watch."
On the first day of the week some of Jesus' followers came to see the
sepulchre, when they found that, in spite of the "sealing" and the "watch,"
the angel of the Lord had descended from heaven, had rolled back the stone
from the door, and that "Jesus had risen from the dead."[215:1]
The story of his ascension is told by the Mark[215:2] narrator, who says "he
was received up into heaven, and sat on the right hand of God;" by Luke,
[215:3] who says "he was carried up into heaven;" and by the writer of the
Acts,[215:4] who says "he was taken up (to heaven) and a cloud received him
out of sight."
We will find, in stripping Christianity of its robes of Paganism, that these
miraculous events must be put on the same level with those we have already
examined.
Crishna, the crucified Hindoo Saviour, rose from the dead,[215:5] and
ascended bodily into heaven.[215:6] At that time a great light enveloped the
earth and illuminated the whole expanse of heaven. Attended by celestial
spirits, and luminous as on that night when he was born in the house of
Vasudeva, Crishna pursued, by his own light, the journey between earth and
heaven, to the bright paradise from whence he had descended. All men saw
him, and exclaimed, "Lo, Crishna's soul ascends its native skies!"[215:7]
Samuel Johnson, in his "Oriental Religions," tells us that Râma—an
incarnation of Vishnu—after his manifestations on earth, "at last ascended
to heaven," "resuming his divine essence."
"By the blessings of Râma's name, and through previous faith in him, all
sins are remitted, and every one who shall at death pronounce his name
with sincere worship shall be forgiven."[216:1]
The mythological account of Buddha, the son of the Virgin Maya, who, as
the God of Love, is named Cam-deo, Cam, and Cama, is of the same
character as that of other virgin-born gods. When he died there were tears
and lamentations. Heaven and earth are said equally to have lamented the
loss of "Divine Love," insomuch that Maha-deo (the supreme god) was
moved to pity, and exclaimed, "Rise, holy love!" on which Cama was
restored and the lamentations changed into the most enthusiastic joy. The
heavens are said to have echoed back the exulting sound; then the deity,
supposed to be lost (dead), was restored, "hell's great dread and heaven's
eternal admiration."[216:2]
The coverings of the body unrolled themselves, and the lid of his coffin was
opened by supernatural powers.[216:3]
Buddha also ascended bodily to the celestial regions when his mission on
earth was fulfilled, and marks on the rocks of a high mountain are shown,
and believed to be the last impression of his footsteps on this earth. By
prayers in his name his followers expect to receive the rewards of paradise,
and finally to become one with him, as he became one with the Source of
Life.[216:4]
Lao-Kiun, the virgin-born, he who had existed from all eternity, when his
mission of benevolence was completed on earth, ascended bodily into the
paradise above. Since this time he has been worshiped as a god, and
splendid temples erected to his memory.[216:5]
Zoroaster, the founder of the religion of the ancient Persians, who was
considered "a divine messenger sent to redeem men from their evil ways,"
ascended to heaven at the end of his earthly career. To this day his followers
mention him with the greatest reverence, calling him "The Immortal
Zoroaster," "The Blessed Zoroaster," "The Living Star," &c.[216:6]
Æsculapius, the Son of God, the Saviour, after being put to death, rose from
the dead. His history is portrayed in the following lines of Ovid's, which are
prophecies foretelling his life and actions:
"Once, as the sacred infant she surveyed,
The god was kindled in the raving maid;
And thus she uttered her prophetic tale:
Hail, great Physician of the world! all hail!
Hail, mighty infant, who in years to come
Shalt heal the nations, and defraud the tomb!
Swift be thy growth, thy triumphs unconfined,
Make kingdoms thicker, and increase mankind.
Thy daring art shall animate the dead,
And draw the thunder on thy guilty head;
Then shalt thou die, but from the dark abode
Shalt rise victorious, and be twice a god."[217:1]
The Saviour Adonis or Tammuz, after being put to death, rose from the
dead. The following is an account given of the rites of Tammuz or of
Adonis by Julius Firmicius (who lived during the reign of Constantine):
"On a certain night (while the ceremony of the Adonia, or religious rites in
honor of Adonis, lasted), an image was laid upon a bed (or bier) and
bewailed in doleful ditties. After they had satiated themselves with fictitious
lamentations, light was brought in: then the mouths of all the mourners
were anointed by the priests (with oil), upon which he, with a gentle
murmur, whispered:
"Literally, 'Trust, ye communicants: the God having been saved, there shall
be to us out of pain, Salvation.'"[217:2]
Upon which their sorrow was turned into joy.
Godwyn renders it:
Osiris, the Egyptian Saviour, after being put to death, rose from the dead,
[221:2] and bore the title of "The Resurrected One."[221:3]
Prof. Mahaffy, lecturer on ancient history in the University of Dublin,
observes that:
"The Resurrection and reign over an eternal kingdom, by an incarnate
mediating deity born of a virgin, was a theological conception which
pervaded the oldest religion of Egypt."[221:4]
The ancient Egyptians celebrated annually, in early spring, about the time
known in Christian countries as Easter, the resurrection and ascension of
Osiris. During these mysteries the misfortunes and tragical death of the
"Saviour" were celebrated in a species of drama, in which all the particulars
were exhibited, accompanied with loud lamentations and every mark of
sorrow. At this time his image was carried in a procession, covered—as
were those in the temples—with black veils. On the 25th of March his
resurrection from the dead was celebrated with great festivity and
rejoicings.[221:5]
Alexander Murray says:
"The worship of Osiris was universal throughout Egypt, where he was
gratefully regarded as the great exemplar of self-sacrifice—in giving his life
for others—as the manifestor of good, as the opener of truth, and as being
full of goodness and truth. After being dead, he was restored to life."[221:6]
Mons. Dupuis says on this subject:
"The Fathers of the Church, and the writers of the Christian sect, speak
frequently of these feasts, celebrated in honor of Osiris, who died and arose
from the dead, and they draw a parallel with the adventurers of their Christ.
Athanasius, Augustin, Theophilus, Athenagoras, Minucius Felix,
Lactantius, Firmicius, as also the ancient authors who have spoken of Osiris
. . . all agree in the description of the universal mourning of the Egyptians at
the festival, when the commemoration of that death took place. They
describe the ceremonies which were practiced at his sepulchre, the tears,
which were there shed during several days, and the festivities and
rejoicings, which followed after that mourning, at the moment when his
resurrection was announced."[222:1]
Mr. Bonwick remarks, in his "Egyptian Belief," that:
"It is astonishing to find that, at least, five thousand years ago, men trusted
an Osiris as the 'Risen Saviour,' and confidently hoped to rise, as he arose,
from the grave."[222:2]
Again he says:
"Osiris was, unquestionably, the popular god of Egypt. . . . Osiris was dear
to the hearts of the people. He was pre-eminently 'good.' He was in life and
death their friend. His birth, death, burial, resurrection and ascension,
embraced the leading points of Egyptian theology." "In his efforts to do
good, he encounters evil. In struggling with that, he is overcome. He is
killed. The story, entered into in the account of the Osiris myth, is a
circumstantial one. Osiris is buried. His tomb was the object of pilgrimage
for thousands of years. But he did not rest in his grave. At the end of three
days, or forty, he arose again, and ascended to heaven. This is the story of
his humanity." "As the invictus Osiris, his tomb was illuminated, as is the
holy sepulchre of Jerusalem now. The mourning song, whose plaintive
tones were noted by Herodotus, and has been compared to the 'miserere' of
Rome, was followed, in three days, by the language of triumph."[222:3]
Herodotus, who had been initiated into the Egyptian and Grecian
"Mysteries," speaks thus of them:
"At Sais (in Egypt), in the sacred precinct of Minerva; behind the chapel
and joining the wall, is the tomb of one whose name I consider it impious to
divulge on such an occasion; and in the inclosure stand large stone obelisks,
and there is a lake near, ornamented with a stone margin, formed in a circle,
and in size, as appeared to me, much the same as that in Delos, which is
called the circular. In this lake they perform by night the representation of
that person's adventures, which they call mysteries. On these matters,
however, though accurately acquainted with the particulars of them, I must
observe a discreet silence; and respecting the sacred rites of Ceres, which
the Greeks call Thesmyphoria, although I am acquainted with them, I must
observe silence except so far as is lawful for me to speak of them."[222:4]
Horus, son of the virgin Isis, experienced similar misfortunes. The principal
features of this sacred romance are to be found in the writings of the
Christian Fathers. They give us a description of the grief which was
manifested at his death, and of the rejoicings at his resurrection, which are
similar to those spoken of above.[222:5]
Atys, the Phrygian Saviour, was put to death, and rose again from the dead.
Various histories were given of him in various places, but all accounts
terminated in the usual manner. He was one of the "Slain Ones" who rose to
life again on the 25th of March, or the "Hilaria" or primitive Easter.[223:1]
Mithras, the Persian Saviour, and mediator between God and man, was
believed by the inhabitants of Persia, Asia Minor and Armenia, to have
been put to death, and to have risen again from the dead. In their mysteries,
the body of a young man, apparently dead, was exhibited, which was
feigned to be restored to life. By his sufferings he was believed to have
worked their salvation, and on this account he was called their "Saviour."
His priests watched his tomb to the midnight of the veil of the 25th of
March, with loud cries, and in darkness; when all at once the lights burst
forth from all parts, and the priest cried:
"Rejoice, Oh sacred Initiated, your god is risen. His death, his pains, his
sufferings, have worked our salvation."[223:2]
Mons. Dupuis, speaking of the resurrection of this god, says:
"It is chiefly in the religion of Mithras. . . . that we find mostly these
features of analogy with the death and resurrection of Christ, and with the
mysteries of the Christians. Mithras, who was also born on the 25th of
December, like Christ, died as he did; and he had his sepulchre, over which
his disciples came to shed tears. During the night, the priests carried his
image to a tomb, expressly prepared for him; he was laid out on a litter, like
the Phœnician Adonis.
"These funeral ceremonies, like those on Good Friday (in Roman Catholic
churches), were accompanied with funeral dirges and groans of the priests;
after having spent some time with these expressions of feigned grief; after
having lighted the sacred flambeau, or their paschal candle, and anointed
the image with chrism or perfumes, one of them came forward and
pronounced with the gravest mien these words: 'Be of good cheer, sacred
band of Initiates, your god has risen from the dead. His pains and his
sufferings shall be your salvation.'"[223:3]
In King's "Gnostics and their Remains" (Plate XI.), may be seen the
representation of a bronze medal, or rather disk, engraved in the coarsest
manner, on which is to be seen a female figure, standing in the attitude of
adoration, the object of which is expressed by the inscription—ORTVS
SALVAT, "The Rising of the Saviour"—i. e., of Mithras.[224:1]
"This medal" (says Mr. King), "doubtless had accompanied the interment of
some individual initiated into the Mithraic mysteries; and is certainly the
most curious relic of that faith that has come under my notice."[224:2]
Bacchus, the Saviour, son of the virgin Semele, after being put to death,
also arose from the dead. During the commemoration of the ceremonies of
this event the dead body of a young man was exhibited with great
lamentations, in the same manner as the cases cited above, and at dawn on
the 25th of March his resurrection from the dead was celebrated with great
rejoicings.[224:3] After having brought solace to the misfortunes of mankind,
he, after his resurrection, ascended into heaven.[224:4]
Hercules, the Saviour, the son of Zeus by a mortal mother, was put to death,
but arose from the funeral pile, and ascended into heaven in a cloud, 'mid
peals of thunder. His followers manifested gratitude to his memory by
erecting an altar on the spot from whence be ascended.[224:5]
Memnon is put to death, but rises again to life and immortality. His mother
Eos weeps tears at the death of her son—as Mary does for Christ Jesus—
but her prayers avail to bring him back, like Adonis or Tammuz, and Jesus,
from the shadowy region, to dwell always in Olympus.[224:6]
The ancient Greeks also believed that Amphiaraus—one of their most
celebrated prophets and demi-gods—rose from the dead. They even pointed
to the place of his resurrection.[224:7]
Baldur, the Scandinavian Lord and Saviour, is put to death, but does not
rest in his grave. He too rises again to life and immortality.[224:8]
When "Baldur the Good," the beneficent god, descended into hell, Hela
(Death) said to Hermod (who mourned for Baldur): "If all things in the
world, both living and lifeless, weep for him, then shall he return to the
Æsir (the gods)." Upon hearing this, messengers were dispatched
throughout the world to beg everything to weep in order that Baldur might
be delivered from hell. All things everywhere willingly complied with this
request, both men and every other living being, so that wailing was heard in
all quarters.[225:1]
Thus we see the same myth among the northern nations. As Bunsen says:
"The tragedy of the murdered and risen god is familiar to us from the days
of ancient Egypt: must it not be of equally primeval origin here?" [In
Teutonic tradition.]
The ancient Scandinavians also worshiped a god called Frey, who was put
to death, and rose again from the dead.[225:2]
The ancient Druids celebrated, in the British Isles, in heathen times, the
rites of the resurrected Bacchus, and other ceremonies, similar to the Greeks
and Romans.[225:3]
Quetzalcoatle, the Mexican crucified Saviour, after being put to death, rose
from the dead. His resurrection was represented in Mexican hieroglyphics,
and may be seen in the Codex Borgianus.[225:4]
The Jews in Palestine celebrated their Passover on the same day that the
Pagans celebrated the resurrection of their gods.
Besides the resurrected gods mentioned in this chapter, who were believed
in for centuries before the time assigned for the birth of Christ Jesus, many
others might be named, as we shall see in our chapter on "Explanation." In
the words of Dunbar T. Heath:
"We find men taught everywhere, from Southern Arabia to Greece, by
hundreds of symbolisms, the birth, death, and resurrection of deities, and a
resurrection too, apparently after the second day, i. e., on the third."[225:5]
And now, to conclude all, another god is said to have been born on the
same day[225:6] as these Pagan deities; he is crucified and buried, and on the
same day[225:7] rises again from the dead. Christians of Europe and America
celebrate annually the resurrection of their Saviour in almost the identical
manner in which the Pagans celebrated the resurrection of their Saviours,
centuries before the God of the Christians is said to have been born. In
Roman Catholic churches, in Catholic countries, the body of a young man
is laid on a bier, and placed before the altar; the wound in his side is to be
seen, and his death is bewailed in mournful dirges, and the verse, Gloria
Patri, is discontinued in the mass. All the images in the churches and the
altar are covered with black, and the priest and attendants are robed in
black; nearly all lights are put out, and the windows are darkened. This is
the "Agonie," the "Miserere," the "Good Friday" mass. On Easter
Sunday[226:1] all the drapery has disappeared; the church is illuminated, and
rejoicing, in place of sorrow, is manifest. The Easter hymns partake of the
following expression:
"Rejoice, Oh sacred Initiated, your God is risen. His death, his pains, his
sufferings, have worked our salvation."
Cedrenus (a celebrated Byzantine writer), speaking of the 25th of March,
says:
"The first day of the first month, is the first of the month Nisan; it
corresponds to the 25th of March of the Romans, and the Phamenot of the
Egyptians. On that day Gabriel saluted Mary, in order to make her conceive
the Saviour. I observe that it is the same month, Phamenot, that Osiris gave
fecundity to Isis, according to the Egyptian theology. On the very same day,
our God Saviour (Christ Jesus), after the termination of his career, arose
from the dead; that is, what our forefathers called the Pass-over, or the
passage of the Lord. It is also on the same day, that our ancient theologians
have fixed his return, or his second advent."[226:2]
We have seen, then, that a festival celebrating the resurrection of their
several gods was annually held among the Pagans, before the time of Christ
Jesus, and that it was almost universal. That it dates to a period of great
antiquity is very certain. The adventures of these incarnate gods, exposed in
their infancy, put to death, and rising again from the grave to life and
immortality, were acted on the Deisuls and in the sacred theatres of the
ancient Pagans,[226:3] just as the "Passion Play" is acted to-day.
Eusebius relates a tale to the effect that, at one time, the Christians were
about to celebrate "the solemn vigils of Easter," when, to their dismay, they
found that oil was wanted. Narcissus, Bishop of Jerusalem, who was among
the number, "commanded that such as had charge of the lights, speedily to
bring unto him water, drawn up out of the next well." This water Narcissus,
"by the wonderful power of God," changed into oil, and the celebration was
continued.[227:1]
This tells the whole story. Here we see the oil—which the Pagans had in
their ceremonies, and with which the priests anointed the lips of the Initiates
—and the lights, which were suddenly lighted when the god was feigned to
have risen from the dead.
With her usual policy, the Christian Church endeavored to give a Christian
significance to the rites borrowed from Paganism, and in this case, as in
many others, the conversion was particularly easy.
In the earliest times, the Christians did not celebrate the resurrection of their
Lord from the grave. They made the Jewish Passover their chief festival,
celebrating it on the same day as the Jews, the 14th of Nisan, no matter in
what part of the week that day might fall. Believing, according to the
tradition, that Jesus on the eve of his death had eaten the Passover with his
disciples, they regarded such a solemnity as a commemoration of the
Supper and not as a memorial of the Resurrection. But in proportion as
Christianity more and more separated itself from Judaism and imbibed
paganism, this way of looking at the matter became less easy. A new
tradition gained currency among the Roman Christians to the effect that
Jesus before his death had not eaten the Passover, but had died on the very
day of the Passover, thus substituting himself for the Paschal Lamb. The
great Christian festival was then made the Resurrection of Jesus, and was
celebrated on the first pagan holiday—Sun-day—after the Passover.
This Easter celebration was observed in China, and called a "Festival of
Gratitude to Tien." From there it extended over the then known world to the
extreme West.
The ancient Pagan inhabitants of Europe celebrated annually this same
feast, which is yet continued over all the Christian world. This festival
began with a week's indulgence in all kinds of sports, called the carne-vale,
or the taking a farewell to animal food, because it was followed by a fast of
forty days. This was in honor of the Saxon goddess Ostrt or Eostre of the
Germans, whence our Easter.[227:2]
The most characteristic Easter rite, and the one most widely diffused, is the
use of Easter eggs. They are usually stained of various colors with dye-
woods or herbs, and people mutually make presents of them; sometimes
they are kept as amulets, sometimes eaten. Now, "dyed eggs were sacred
Easter offerings in Egypt;"[228:1] the ancient Persians, "when they kept the
festival of the solar new year (in March), mutually presented each other
with colored eggs;"[228:2] "the Jews used eggs in the feast of the Passover;"
and the custom prevailed in Western countries.[228:3]
The stories of the resurrection written by the Gospel narrators are altogether
different. This is owing to the fact that the story, as related by one, was
written to correct the mistakes and to endeavor to reconcile with common
sense the absurdities of the other. For instance, the "Matthew" narrator says:
"And when they saw him (after he had risen from the dead) they worshiped
him; but some doubted."[228:4]
To leave the question where this writer leaves it would be fatal. In such a
case there must be no doubt. Therefore, the "Mark" narrator makes Jesus
appear three times, under such circumstances as to render a mistake next to
impossible, and to silence the most obstinate skepticism. He is first made to
appear to Mary Magdalene, who was convinced that it was Jesus, because
she went and told the disciples that he had risen, and that she had seen him.
They—notwithstanding that Jesus had foretold them of his
resurrection[228:5]—disbelieved, nor could they be convinced until he
appeared to them. They in turn told it to the other disciples, who were also
skeptical; and, that they might be convinced, Jesus also appeared to them as
they sat at meat, when he upbraided them for their unbelief.
This story is much improved in the hands of the "Mark" narrator, but, in the
anxiety to make a clear case, it is overdone, as often happens when the
object is to remedy or correct an oversight or mistake previously made. In
relating that the disciples doubted the words of Mary Magdalene, he had
probably forgotten Jesus had promised them that he should rise, for, if he
had told them this, why did they doubt?
Neither the "Matthew" nor the "Mark" narrator says in what way Jesus
made his appearance—whether it was in the body or only in the spirit. If in
the latter, it would be fatal to the whole theory of the resurrection, as it is a
material resurrection that Christianity taught—just like their neighbors the
Persians—and not a spiritual.[229:1]
To put this disputed question in its true light, and to silence the objections
which must naturally have arisen against it, was the object which the "Luke"
narrator had in view. He says that when Jesus appeared and spoke to the
disciples they were afraid: "But they were terrified and affrighted, and
supposed they had seen a spirit."[229:2] Jesus then—to show that he was not
a spirit—showed the wounds in his hands and feet. "And they gave him a
piece of a broiled fish, and of a honeycomb. And he took it, and did eat
before them."[229:3] After this, who is there that can doubt? but, if the fish
and honeycomb story was true, why did the "Matthew" and "Mark"
narrators fail to mention it?
The "Luke" narrator, like his predecessors, had also overdone the matter,
and instead of convincing the skeptical, he only excited their ridicule.
The "John" narrator now comes, and endeavors to set matters right. He does
not omit entirely the story of Jesus eating fish, for that would not do, after
there had been so much said about it. He might leave it to be inferred that
the "Luke" narrator made a mistake, so he modifies the story and omits the
ridiculous part. The scene is laid on the shores of the Sea of Tiberias. Under
the direction of Jesus, Peter drew his net to land, full of fish. "Jesus said
unto them: Come and dine. And none of the disciples durst ask him, Who
art thou? knowing that it was the Lord. Jesus then cometh, and taketh bread,
and giveth them, and fish likewise."[229:4]
It does not appear from this account that Jesus ate the fish at all. He took the
fish and gave to the disciples; the inference is that they were the ones that
ate. In the "Luke" narrator's account the statement is reversed; the disciples
gave the fish to Jesus, and he ate. The "John" narrator has taken out of the
story that which was absurd, but he leaves us to infer that the "Luke"
narrator was careless in stating the account of what took place. If we leave
out of the "Luke" narrator's account the part that relates to the fish and
honeycomb, he fails to prove what it really was which appeared to the
disciples, as it seems from this that the disciples could not be convinced that
Jesus was not a spirit until he had actually eaten something.
Now, if the eating part is struck out—which the "John" narrator does, and
which, no doubt, the ridicule cast upon it drove him to do—the "Luke"
narrator leaves the question just where he found it. It was the business of the
"John" narrator to attempt to leave it clean, and put an end to all cavil.
Jesus appeared to the disciples when they assembled at Jerusalem. "And
when he had so said, he shewed unto them his hands and his side."[230:1]
They were satisfied, and no doubts were expressed. But Thomas was not
present, and when he was told by the brethren that Jesus had appeared to
them, he refused to believe; nor would he, "Except I shall see in his hands
the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust
my hand into his side, I will not believe."[230:2] Now, if Thomas could be
convinced, with all his doubts, it would be foolish after that to deny that
Jesus was not in the body when he appeared to his disciples.
After eight days Jesus again appears, for no other purpose—as it would
seem—but to convince the doubting disciple Thomas. Then said he to
Thomas: "Reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands; and reach hither
thy hand, and thrust it into my side; and be not faithless, but believing."
[230:3] This convinced Thomas, and he exclaimed: "My Lord and my God."
After this evidence, if there were still unbelievers, they were even more
skeptical than Thomas himself. We should be at a loss to understand why
the writers of the first three Gospels entirely omitted the story of Thomas, if
we were not aware that when the "John" narrator wrote the state of the
public mind was such that proof of the most unquestionable character was
demanded that Christ Jesus had risen in the body. The "John" narrator
selected a person who claimed he was hard to convince, and if the evidence
was such as to satisfy him, it ought to satisfy the balance of the world.[230:4]
The first that we knew of the fourth Gospel—attributed to John—is from
the writings of Irenæus (A. D. 177-202), and the evidence is that he is the
author of it.[230:5] That controversies were rife in his day concerning the
resurrection of Jesus, is very evident from other sources. We find that at this
time the resurrection of the dead (according to the accounts of the Christian
forgers) was very far from being esteemed an uncommon event; that the
miracle was frequently performed on necessary occasions by great fasting
and the joint supplication of the church of the place, and that the persons
thus restored by their prayers had lived afterwards among them many years.
At such a period, when faith could boast of so many wonderful victories
over death, it seems difficult to account for the skepticism of those
philosophers, who still rejected and derided the doctrine of the resurrection.
A noble Grecian had rested on this important ground the whole controversy,
and promised Theophilus, bishop of Antioch, that if he could be gratified by
the sight of a single person who had been actually raised from the dead, he
would immediately embrace the Christian religion.
"It is somewhat remarkable," says Gibbon, the historian, from whom we
take the above, "that the prelate of the first Eastern Church, however
anxious for the conversion of his friend, thought proper to decline this fair
and reasonable challenge."[231:1]
This Christian saint, Irenæus, had invented many stories of others being
raised from the dead, for the purpose of attempting to strengthen the belief
in the resurrection of Jesus. In the words of the Rev. Jeremiah Jones:
"Such pious frauds were very common among Christians even in the first
three centuries; and a forgery of this nature, with the view above-
mentioned, seems natural and probable."
One of these "pious frauds" is the "Gospel of Nicodemus the Disciple,
concerning the Sufferings and Resurrection of our Master and Saviour
Jesus Christ." Although attributed to Nicodemus, a disciple of Jesus, it has
been shown to be a forgery, written towards the close of the second century
—during the time of Irenæus, the well-known pious forger. In this book we
find the following:
"And now hear me a little. We all know the blessed Simeon, the high-priest,
who took Jesus when an infant into his arms in the temple. This same
Simeon had two sons of his own, and we were all present at their death and
funeral. Go therefore and see their tombs, for these are open, and they are
risen; and behold, they are in the city of Arimathæa, spending their time
together in offices of devotion."[231:2]
The purpose of this story is very evident. Some "zealous believer,"
observing the appeals for proof of the resurrection, wishing to make it
appear that resurrections from the dead were common occurrences,
invented this story towards the close of the second century, and fathered it
upon Nicodemus.
We shall speak, anon, more fully on the subject of the frauds of the early
Christians, the "lying and deceiving for the cause of Christ," which is
carried on even to the present day.
As President Cheney of Bates College has lately remarked, "The
resurrection is the doctrine of Christianity and the foundation of the entire
system,"[232:1] but outside of the four spurious gospels this greatest of all
recorded miracles is hardly mentioned. "We have epistles from Peter,
James, John, and Jude—all of whom are said by the evangelists to have
seen Jesus after he rose from the dead, in none of which epistles is the fact
of the resurrection even stated, much less that Jesus was seen by the writer
after his resurrection."[232:2]
Many of the early Christian sects denied the resurrection of Christ Jesus,
but taught that he will rise, when there shall be a general resurrection.
No actual representation of the resurrection of the Christian's Saviour has
yet been found among the monuments of early Christianity. The earliest
representation of this event that has been found is an ivory carving, and
belongs to the fifth or sixth century.[232:3]
FOOTNOTES:
[215:1] See Matthew, xxviii. Mark, xvi. Luke, xxiv. and John, xx.
[215:2] Mark, xvi. 19.
[215:3] Luke, xxiv. 51.
[215:4] Acts, i. 9.
[215:5] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 240. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. pp.
142 and 145.
[215:6] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 131. Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 168. Asiatic
Researches, vol. i. pp. 259 and 261.
[215:7] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 72. Hist. Hindostan, ii. pp. 466 and 473.
"In Hindu pictures, Vishnu, who is identified with Crishna, is often seen mounted on the
Eagle Garuda." (Moore: Hindu Panth. p. 214.) And M. Sonnerat noticed "two basso-
relievos placed at the entrance of the choir of Bordeaux Cathedral, one of which represents
the ascension of our Saviour to heaven on an Eagle." (Higgins: Anac., vol. i. p. 273.)
[216:1] Oriental Religions, pp. 494, 495.
[216:2] Asiatic Res., vol. x. p. 129. Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 103.
[216:3] Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, p. 49.
[216:4] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 86. See also, Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 159.
[216:5] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 214.
[216:6] Ibid. p. 258.
[217:1] Ovid's Metamorphoses, as rendered by Addison. Quoted in Taylor's Diegesis, p.
148.
[217:2] Quoted by Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 114. See also, Taylor's Diegesis, pp.
163, 164.
[217:3] Taylor's Diegesis, p. 164.
[217:4] Prichard's Egyptian Mythology, pp. 66, 67.
[218:1] Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 161. See also, Dunlap's Mysteries of Adoni,
p. 23, and Spirit Hist. of Man, p. 216.
[218:2] Calmet's Fragments, vol. ii. p. 21.
[218:3] Murray: Manual of Mythology, p. 86.
[218:4] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Beliefs, p. 261.
[219:1] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Beliefs, p. 247, and Taylor's Diegesis, p. 164.
[219:2] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 164. We shall speak of Christian forgeries anon.
[219:3] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 2.
[220:1] Quoted in Dunlap's Son of the Man, p. vii. See also, Knight: Ancient Art and
Mythology, p. xxvii.
"From the days of the prophet Daniel, down to the time when the red cross knights gave no
quarter (fighting for the Christ) in the streets of Jerusalem, the Anointed was worshiped in
Babylon, Basan, Galilee and Palestine." (Son of the Man, p. 38.)
[220:2] Ezekiel, viii. 14.
[220:3] Quoted in Taylor's Diegesis, p. 162, and Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 114.
[221:1] See Justin: Cum. Typho, and Tertullian: De Bap.
[221:2] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 16, and vol. i. p. 519. Also, Prichard's
Egyptian Mythology, p. 66, and Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 163.
[221:3] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 166, and Dunlap's Mysteries of Adoni, pp. 124,
125.
[221:4] Prolegomena to Ancient History.
[221:5] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 102.
[221:6] Murray: Manual of Mythology, pp. 347, 348.
[222:1] Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 256.
[222:2] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. vi.
[222:3] Ibid. pp. 150-155, 178.
[222:4] Herodotus, bk. ii. chs. 170, 171.
[222:5] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 263, and Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii.
108.
[223:1] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 169. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 104.
Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 255. Dunlap's Mysteries of Adoni, p. 110, and
Knight: Anct. Art and Mythology, p. 86.
[223:2] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 99. Mithras remained in the grave a period of three
days, as did Christ Jesus, and the other Christs. "The Persians believed that the soul of man
remained yet three days in the world after its separation from the body." (Dunlap:
Mysteries of Adoni, p. 63.)
"In the Zoroastrian religion, after soul and body have separated, the souls, in the third night
after death—as soon as the shining sun ascends—come over the Mount Berezaiti upon the
bridge Tshinavat which leads to Garonmana, the dwelling of the good gods." (Dunlap's
Spirit Hist., p. 216, and Mysteries of Adoni, 60.)
The Ghost of Polydore says:
The second coming of Christ Jesus is clearly taught in the canonical, as well
as in the apocryphal, books of the New Testament. Paul teaches, or is made
to teach it,[233:1] in the following words:
"If we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep
in Jesus will God bring with him. For this we say unto you by the word of
the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord,
shall not prevent them which are asleep. For the Lord himself shall descend
from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the
trump of God, and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are
alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to
meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord."[233:2]
He further tells the Thessalonians to "abstain from all appearance of evil,"
and to "be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ."
[233:3]
James,[233:4] in his epistle to the brethren, tells them not to be in too great a
hurry for the coming of their Lord, but to "be patient" and wait for the
"coming of the Lord," as the "husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of
the earth." But still he assures them that "the coming of the Lord draweth
nigh."[233:5]
Peter, in his first epistle, tells his brethren that "the end of all things is at
hand,"[233:6] and that when the "chief shepherd" does appear, they "shall
receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away."[233:7]
John, in his first epistle, tells the Christian community to "abide in him"
(Christ), so that, "when he shall appear, we may have confidence, and not
be ashamed before him."[234:1]
He further says:
"Behold, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we
shall be, but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him, for
we shall see him as he is."[234:2]
According to the writer of the book of "The Acts," when Jesus ascended
into heaven, the Apostles stood looking up towards heaven, where he had
gone, and while thus engaged: "behold, two men stood by them (dressed) in
white apparel," who said unto them:
"Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? This same Jesus
which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye
have seen him go (up) into heaven."[234:3]
The one great object which the writer of the book of Revelations wished to
present to view, was "the second coming of Christ." This writer, who seems
to have been anxious for that time, which was "surely" to come "quickly;"
ends his book by saying: "Even so, come Lord Jesus."[234:4]
The two men, dressed in white apparel, who had told the Apostles that Jesus
should "come again," were not the only persons whom they looked to for
authority. He himself (according to the Gospel) had told them so:
"The Son of man shall come (again) in the glory of his Father with his
angels."
And, as if to impress upon their minds that his second coming should not be
at a distant day, he further said:
"Verily I say unto you, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of
death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom."[234:5]
This, surely, is very explicit, but it is not the only time he speaks of his
second advent. When foretelling the destruction of the temple, his disciples
came unto him, saying:
"Tell us when shall these things be, and what shall be the sign of thy
coming?"[234:6]
His answer to this is very plain:
"Verily I say unto you, this generation shall not pass till all these things be
fulfilled (i. e, the destruction of the temple and his second coming), but of
that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my
Father only."[234:7]
In the second Epistle attributed to Peter, which was written after that
generation had passed away,[235:1] there had begun to be some impatience
manifest among the believers, on account of the long delay of Christ Jesus'
second coming. "Where is the promise of his coming?" say they, "for since
the fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were from the beginning of
the creation."[235:2] In attempting to smoothe over matters, this writer says:
"There shall come in the last days scoffers, saying: 'Where is the promise of
his coming?'" to which he replies by telling them that they were ignorant of
all the ways of the Lord, and that: "One day is with the Lord as a thousand
years, and a thousand years as one day." He further says: "The Lord is not
slack concerning his promise;" and that "the day of the Lord will come."
This coming is to be "as a thief in the night," that is, when they least expect
it.[235:3]
No wonder there should have been scoffers—as this writer calls them—the
generation which was not to have passed away before his coming, had
passed away; all those who stood there had been dead many years; the sun
had not yet been darkened; the stars were still in the heavens, and the moon
still continued to reflect light. None of the predictions had yet been
fulfilled.
Some of the early Christian Fathers have tried to account for the words of
Jesus, where he says: "Verily I say unto you, there be some standing here
which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his
kingdom," by saying that he referred to John only, and that that Apostle was
not dead, but sleeping. This fictitious story is related by Saint Augustin,
"from the report," as he says, "of credible persons," and is to the effect that:
"At Ephesus, where St. John the Apostle lay buried, he was not believed to
be dead, but to be sleeping only in the grave, which he had provided for
himself till our Saviour's second coming: in proof of which, they affirm,
that the earth, under which he lay, was seen to heave up and down
perpetually, in conformity to the motion of his body, in the act of
breathing."[235:4]
This story clearly illustrates the stupid credulity and superstition of the
primitive age of the church, and the faculty of imposing any fictions upon
the people, which their leaders saw fit to inculcate.
The doctrine of the millennium designates a certain period in the history of
the world, lasting for a long, indefinite space (vaguely a thousand years, as
the word "millennium" implies) during which the kingdom of Christ Jesus
will be visibly established on the earth. The idea undoubtedly originated
proximately in the Messianic expectation of the Jews (as Jesus did not sit on
the throne of David and become an earthly ruler, it must be that he is
coming again for this purpose), but more remotely in the Pagan doctrine of
the final triumph of the several "Christs" over their adversaries.
In the first century of the Church, millenarianism was a whispered belief, to
which the book of Daniel, and more particularly the predictions of the
Apocalypse[236:1] gave an apostolical authority, but, when the church
imbibed Paganism, their belief on this subject lent it a more vivid coloring
and imagery.
The unanimity which the early Christian teachers exhibit in regard to
millenarianism, proves how strongly it had laid hold of the imagination of
the Church, to which, in this early stage, immortality and future rewards
were to a great extent things of this world as yet. Not only did Cerinthus,
but even the orthodox doctors—such as Papias (Bishop of Hierapolis),
Irenæus, Justin Martyr and others—delighted themselves with dreams of
the glory and magnificence of the millennial kingdom. Papias, in his
collection of traditional sayings of Christ Jesus, indulges in the most
monstrous representations of the re-building of Jerusalem, and the colossal
vines and grapes of the millennial reign.
According to the general opinion, the millennium was to be preceded by
great calamities, after which the Messiah, Christ Jesus, would appear, and
would bind Satan for a thousand years, annihilate the godless heathen, or
make them slaves of the believers, overturn the Roman empire, from the
ruins of which a new order of things would spring forth, in which "the dead
in Christ" would rise, and along with the surviving saints enjoy an
incomparable felicity in the city of the "New Jerusalem." Finally, all nations
would bend their knee to him, and acknowledge him only to be the Christ—
his religion would reign supreme. This is the "Golden Age" of the future,
which all nations of antiquity believed in and looked forward to.
We will first turn to India, and shall there find that the Hindoos believed
their "Saviour," or "Preserver" Vishnu, who appeared in mortal form as
Crishna, is to come again in the latter days. Their sacred books declare that
in the last days, when the fixed stars have all apparently returned to the
point whence they started, at the beginning of all things, in the month
Scorpio, Vishnu will appear among mortals, in the form of an armed
warrior, riding a winged white horse.[236:2] In one hand he will carry a
scimitar, "blazing like a comet," to destroy all the impure who shall then
dwell on the face of the earth. In the other hand he will carry a large shining
ring, to signify that the great circle of Yugas (ages) is completed, and that
the end has come. At his approach the sun and moon will be darkened, the
earth will tremble, and the stars fall from the firmament.[237:1]
The Buddhists believe that Buddha has repeatedly assumed a human form
to facilitate the reunion of men with his own universal soul, so they believe
that "in the latter days" he will come again. Their sacred books predict this
coming, and relate that his mission will be to restore the world to order and
happiness.[237:2] This is exactly the Christian idea of the millennium.
The Chinese also believe that "in the latter days" there is to be a millennium
upon earth. Their five sacred volumes are full of prophesies concerning this
"Golden Age of the Future." It is the universal belief among them that a
"Divine Man" will establish himself on earth, and everywhere restore peace
and happiness.[237:3]
The ancient Persians believed that in the last days, there would be a
millennium on earth, when the religion of Zoroaster would be accepted by
all mankind. The Parsees of to-day, who are the remnants of the once
mighty Persians, have a tradition that a holy personage is waiting in a
region called Kanguedez, for a summons from the Ized Serosch, who in the
last days will bring him to Persia, to restore the ancient dominion of that
country, and spread the religion of Zoroaster over the whole earth.[237:4]
The Rev. Joseph B. Gross, in his "Heathen Religion,"[237:5] speaking of the
belief of the ancient Persians in the millennium, says:
"The dead would be raised,[237:6] and he who has made all things, cause the
earth and the sea to return again the remains of the departed.[237:7] Then
Ormuzd shall clothe them with flesh and blood, while they that live at the
time of the resurrection, must die in order to likewise participate in its
advantage.
"Before this momentous event takes place, three illustrious prophets shall
appear, who will announce their presence by the performance of miracles.
"During this period of its existence, and till its final removal, the earth will
be afflicted with pestilence, tempests, war, famine, and various other
baneful calamities."[237:8]
"After the resurrection, every one will be apprised of the good or evil which
he may have done, and the righteous and the wicked will be separated from
each other.[238:1] Those of the latter whose offenses have not yet been
expiated, will be cast into hell during the term of three days and three
nights,[238:2] in the presence of an assembled world, in order to be purified
in the burning stream of liquid ore.[238:3] After this, they enjoy endless
felicity in the society of the blessed, and the pernicious empire of Ahriman
(the devil), is fairly exterminated.[238:4] Even this lying spirit will be under
the necessity to avail himself of this fiery ordeal, and made to rejoice in its
expurgating and cleansing efficacy. Nay, hell itself is purged of its mephitic
impurities, and washed clean in the flames of a universal regeneration.[238:5]
"The earth is now the habitation of bliss, all nature glows in light; and the
equitable and benignant laws of Ormuzd reign supremely through the
illimitable universe.[238:6] Finally, after the resurrection, mankind will
recognize each other again; wants, cares, and passions will cease;[238:7] and
everything in the paradisian and all-embracing empire of light, shall
rebound to the praise of the benificent God."[238:8]
The disciples of Bacchus expected his second advent. They hoped he would
assume at some future day the government of the universe, and that he
would restore to man his primary felicity.[238:9]
The Esthonian from the time of the German invasion lived a life of bondage
under a foreign yoke, and the iron of his slavery entered into his soul. He
told how the ancient hero Kalewipoeg sits in the realms of shadows, waiting
until his country is in its extremity of distress, when he will return to earth
to avenge the injuries of the Esths, and elevate the poor crushed people into
a mighty power.[238:10]
The suffering Celt has his Brian Boroihme, or Arthur, who will come again,
the first to inaugurate a Fenian millennium, the second to regenerate Wales.
Olger Dansk waits till the time arrives when he is to start from sleep to the
assistance of the Dane against the hated Prussian. The Messiah is to come
and restore the kingdom of the Jews. Charlemagne was the Messiah of
mediæval Teutondom. He it was who founded the great German empire,
and shed over it the blaze of Christian truth, and now he sleeps in the
Kyffhauserberg, waiting till German heresy has reached its climax and
Germany is wasted through internal conflicts, to rush to earth once more,
and revive the great empire and restore the Catholic faith.[239:1]
The ancient Scandinavians believed that in the "latter days" great calamities
would befall mankind. The earth would tremble, and the stars fall from
heaven. After which, the great serpent would be chained, and the religion of
Odin would reign supreme.[239:2]
The disciples of Quetzalcoatle, the Mexican Saviour, expected his second
advent. Before he departed this life, he told the inhabitants of Cholula that
he would return again to govern them.[239:3] This remarkable tradition was
so deeply cherished in their hearts, says Mr. Prescott in his "Conquest of
Mexico," that "the Mexicans looked confidently to the return of their
benevolent deity."[239:4]
So implicitly was this believed by the subjects, that when the Spaniards
appeared on the coast, they were joyfully hailed as the returning god and his
companions. Montezuma's messengers reported to the Inca that "it was
Quetzalcoatle who was coming, bringing his temples (ships) with him." All
throughout New Spain they expected the reappearance of this "Son of the
Great God" into the world, who would renew all things.[239:5]
Acosta alludes to this, in his "History of the Indies," as follows:
"In the beginning of the year 1518, they (the Mexicans), discovered a fleet
at sea, in the which was the Marques del Valle, Don Fernando Cortez, with
his companions, a news which much troubled Montezuma, and conferring
with his council, they all said, that without doubt, their great and ancient
lord Quetzalcoatle was come, who had said that he would return from the
East, whither he had gone."[239:6]
The doctrine of the millennium and the second advent of Christ Jesus, has
been a very important one in the Christian church. The ancient Christians
were animated by a contempt for their present existence, and by a just
confidence of immortality, of which the doubtful and imperfect faith of
modern ages cannot give us any adequate notion. In the primitive church,
the influence of truth was powerfully strengthened by an opinion, which,
however much it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity, has
not been found agreeable to experience. It was universally believed, that the
end of the world and the kingdom of heaven were at hand.[240:1] The near
approach of this wonderful event had been predicted, as we have seen, by
the Apostles; the tradition of it was preserved by their earliest disciples, and
those who believed that the discourses attributed to Jesus were really
uttered by him, were obliged to expect the second and glorious coming of
the "Son of Man" in the clouds, before that generation was totally
extinguished which had beheld his humble condition upon earth, and which
might still witness the calamities of the Jews under Vespasian or Hadrian.
The revolution of seventeen centuries has instructed us not to press too
closely the mysterious language of prophecy and revelation; but as long as
this error was permitted to subsist in the church, it was productive of the
most salutary effects on the faith and practice of Christians, who lived in the
awful expectation of that moment when the globe itself and all the various
races of mankind, should tremble at the appearance of their divine judge.
This expectation was countenanced—as we have seen—by the twenty-
fourth chapter of St. Matthew, and by the first epistle of Paul to the
Thessalonians. Erasmus (one of the most vigorous promoters of the
Reformation) removes the difficulty by the help of allegory and metaphor;
and the learned Grotius (a learned theologian of the 16th century) ventures
to insinuate, that, for wise purposes, the pious deception was permitted to
take place.
The ancient and popular doctrine of the millennium was intimately
connected with the second coming of Christ Jesus. As the works of the
creation had been fixed in six days, their duration in the present state,
according to a tradition which was attributed to the prophet Elijah, was
fixed to six thousand years.[240:2] By the same analogy it was inferred, that
this long period of labor and contention, which had now almost elapsed,
would be succeeded by a joyful Sabbath of a thousand years, and that
Christ Jesus, with the triumphant band of the saints and the elect who had
escaped death, or who had been miraculously revived, would reign upon
earth until the time appointed for the last and general resurrection. So
pleasing was this hope to the mind of the believers, that the "New
Jerusalem," the seat of this blissful kingdom, was quickly adorned with all
the gayest colors of the imagination. A felicity consisting only of pure and
spiritual pleasure would have been too refined for its inhabitants, who were
still supposed to possess their human nature and senses. A "Garden of
Eden," with the amusements of the pastoral life, was no longer suited to the
advanced state of society which prevailed under the Roman empire. A city
was therefore erected of gold and precious stones, and a supernatural plenty
of corn and wine was bestowed on the adjacent territory; in the free
enjoyment of whose spontaneous productions, the happy and benevolent
people were never to be restrained by any jealous laws of exclusive
property. Most of these pictures were borrowed from a misrepresentation of
Isaiah, Daniel, and the Apocalypse. One of the grossest images may be
found in Irenæus (l. v.) the disciple of Papias, who had seen the Apostle St.
John. Though it might not be universally received, it appears to have been
the reigning sentiment of the orthodox believers; and it seems so well
adapted to the desires and apprehensions of mankind, that it must have
contributed in a very considerable degree to the progress of the Christian
faith. But when the edifice of the church was almost completed, the
temporary support was laid aside. The doctrine of Christ Jesus' reign upon
earth was at first treated as a profound allegory, was considered by degrees
as a doubtful and useless opinion, and was at length rejected as the absurd
invention of heresy and fanaticism. But although this doctrine had been
"laid aside," and "rejected," it was again resurrected, and is alive and rife at
the present day, even among those who stand as the leaders of the orthodox
faith.
The expectation of the "last day" in the year 1000 A. D., reinvested the
doctrine with a transitory importance; but it lost all credit again when the
hopes so keenly excited by the crusades faded away before the stern reality
of Saracenic success, and the predictions of the "Everlasting Gospel," a
work of Joachim de Floris, a Franciscan abbot, remained unfulfilled.[241:1]
At the period of the Reformation, millenarianism once more experienced a
partial revival, because it was not a difficult matter to apply some of its
symbolism to the papacy. The Pope, for example, was Antichrist—a belief
still adhered to by some extreme Protestants. Yet the doctrine was not
adopted by the great body of the reformers, but by some fanatical sects,
such as the Anabaptists, and by the Theosophists of the seventeenth century.
During the civil and religious wars in France and England, when great
excitement prevailed, it was also prominent. The "Fifth Monarchy Men" of
Cromwell's time were millenarians of the most exaggerated and dangerous
sort. Their peculiar tenet was that the millennium had come, and that they
were the saints who were to inherit the earth. The excesses of the French
Roman Catholic Mystics and Quietists terminated in chiliastic[242:1] views.
Among the Protestants it was during the "Thirty Years' War" that the most
enthusiastic and learned chiliasts flourished. The awful suffering and wide-
spread desolation of that time led pious hearts to solace themselves with the
hope of a peaceful and glorious future. Since then the penchant which has
sprung up for expounding the prophetical books of the Bible, and
particularly the Apocalypse, with a view to present events, has given the
doctrine a faint semi-theological life, very different, however, from the
earnest faith of the first Christians.
Among the foremost chiliastic teachers of modern centuries are to be
mentioned Ezechiel Meth, Paul Felgenhauer, Bishop Comenius, Professor
Jurien, Seraris, Poiret, J. Mede; while Thomas Burnet and William Whiston
endeavored to give chiliasm a geological foundation, but without finding
much favor. Latterly, especially since the rise and extension of missionary
enterprise, the opinion has obtained a wide currency, that after the
conversion of the whole world to Christianity, a blissful and glorious era
will ensue; but not much stress—except by extreme literalists—is now laid
on the nature or duration of this far-off felicity.
Great eagerness, and not a little ingenuity have been exhibited by many
persons in fixing a date for the commencement of the millennium. The
celebrated theologian, Johann Albrecht Bengel, who, in the eighteenth
century, revived an earnest interest in the subject amongst orthodox
Protestants, asserted from a study of the prophecies that the millennium
would begin in 1836. This date was long popular. Swedenborg held that the
last judgment took place in 1757, and that the new church, or "Church of
the New Jerusalem," as his followers designate themselves—in other
words, the millennial era—then began.
In America, considerable agitation was excited by the preaching of one
William Miller, who fixed the second advent of Christ Jesus about 1843. Of
late years, the most noted English millenarian was Dr. John Cumming, who
placed the end of the present dispensation in 1866 or 1867; but as that time
passed without any millennial symptoms, he modified his original views
considerably, before he died, and conjectured that the beginning of the
millennium would not differ so much after all from the years immediately
preceding it, as people commonly suppose.
FOOTNOTES:
[233:1] We say "is made to teach it," for the probability is that Paul never wrote this
passage. The authority of both the Letters to the Thessalonians, attributed to Paul, is
undoubtedly spurious. (See The Bible of To-Day, pp. 211, 212.)
[233:2] I. Thessalonians, iv. 14-17.
[233:3] Ibid. v. 22, 23.
[233:4] We say "James," but, it is probable that we have, in this epistle of James, another
pseudonymous writing which appeared after the time that James must have lived. (See The
Bible of To-Day, p. 225.)
[233:5] James, v. 7, 8.
[233:6] I. Peter, iv. 7.
[233:7] I. Peter, v. 7. This Epistle is not authentic. (See The Bible of To-Day, pp. 226, 227,
228.)
[234:1] I. John, ii. 26. This epistle is not authentic. (See Ibid. p. 231.)
[234:2] I. John, v. 2.
[234:3] Acts, i. 10, 11.
[234:4] Rev. xxii. 20.
[234:5] Matt. xvi. 27, 28.
[234:6] Ibid. xxiv. 3.
[234:7] Ibid. xxiv. 34-36.
[235:1] Towards the close of the second century. (See Bible of To-Day.)
[235:2] II. Peter, iii. 4.
[235:3] II. Peter, iii. 8-10.
[235:4] See Middleton's Works, vol. i. p. 188.
[236:1] Chapters xx. and xxi. in particular.
[236:2] The Christian Saviour, as well as the Hindoo Saviour, will appear "in the latter
days" among mortals "in the form of an armed warrior, riding a white horse." St. John sees
this in his vision, and prophecies it in his "Revelation" thus: "And I saw, and behold a white
horse: and he that sat on him had a bow; and a crown was given unto him: and he went
forth conquering, and to conquer." (Rev. vi. 2.)
[237:1] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 75. Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. pp. 497-503. See also,
Williams: Hinduism, p. 108.
[237:2] Prog. Relig. Ideas, i. 247, and Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 48.
[237:3] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 209.
[237:4] See Ibid. p. 279. The Angel-Messiah, p. 287, and chap. xiii. this work.
[237:5] Pp. 122, 123.
[237:6] "And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God." (Rev. xx. 12.)
[237:7] "And the sea gave up the dead which were in it." (Rev. xx. 13.)
[237:8] "And ye shall hear of wars, and rumors of wars." "Nation shall rise against nation,
and kingdom against kingdom, and there shall be famines, pestilences, and earthquakes in
divers places." (Matt. xxiv. 6, 7.)
[238:1] "And before him shall be gathered all nations: and he shall separate them one from
another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats." (Matt. xxv. 32, 33.)
[238:2] "He descended into hell, the third day he rose (again) from the dead." (Apostles'
Creed.)
[238:3] Purgatory—a place in which souls are supposed by the papists to be purged by fire
from carnal impurities, before they are received into heaven.
[238:4] "And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan,
and bound him a thousand years." (Rev. xx. 2.)
[238:5] "And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire." (Rev. xx. 14.)
[238:6] "And I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first earth, and the first heaven
were passed away." (Rev. xxi. 1.)
[238:7] "And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more
death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former
things are passed away." (Rev. xxi. 1.)
[238:8] "And after these things I heard a great voice of much people in heaven, saying,
'Alleluia; salvation, and glory, and honor, and power, unto the Lord, our God.'" (Rev. xix.
1.) "For the Lord God omnipotent reigneth." (Rev. xix. 6.)
[238:9] Dupuis: Orig. Relig. Belief.
[238:10] Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 407.
[239:1] Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 407.
[239:2] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities.
[239:3] Humboldt: Amer. Res., vol. i. p. 91.
[239:4] Prescott: Con. of Mexico, vol. i. p. 60.
[239:5] Fergusson: Tree and Serpent Worship, p. 87. Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 187.
[239:6] Acosta: Hist. Indies, vol. ii. p. 513.
[240:1] Over all the Higher Asia there seems to have been diffused an immemorial
tradition relative to a second grand convulsion of nature, and the final dissolution of the
earth by the terrible agency of FIRE, as the first is said to have been by that of WATER. It
was taught by the Hindoos, the Egyptians, Plato, Pythagoras, Zoroaster, the Stoics, and
others, and was afterwards adopted by the Christians. (II. Peter, iii. 9. Hist. Hindostan, vol.
ii. pp. 498-500.)
[240:2] "And God made, in six days, the works of his hands, . . . the meaning of it is this;
that in six thousand years the Lord will bring all things to an end." (Barnabas. Apoc. c.
xiii.)
[241:1] After the devotees and followers of the new gospel had in vain expected the Holy
One who was to come, they at last pitched upon St. Francis as having been the expected
one, and, of course, the most surprising and absurd miracles were said to have been
performed by him. Some of the fanatics who believed in this man, maintained that St.
Francis was "wholly and entirely transformed into the person of Christ"—Totum Christo
configuratum. Some of them maintained that the gospel of Joachim was expressly
preferred to the gospel of Christ. (Mosheim: Hist. Cent., xiii. pt. ii. sects. xxxiv. and xxxvi.
Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 695.)
[242:1] Chiliasm—the thousand years when Satan is bound.
CHAPTER XXV.
CHRIST JESUS AS JUDGE OF THE DEAD.
According to Christian dogma, "God the Father" is not to be the judge at the
last day, but this very important office is to be held by "God the Son." This
is taught by the writer of "The Gospel according to St. John"—whoever he
may have been—when he says:
"For the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the
Son."[244:1]
Paul also, in his "Epistle to the Romans" (or some other person who has
interpolated the passage), tells us that:
"In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men," this judgment shall
be done "by Jesus Christ," his son.[244:2]
Again, in his "Epistle to Timothy,"[244:3] he says:
"The Lord Jesus Christ shall judge the quick and the dead, at his appearing
and his kingdom."[244:4]
The writer of the "Gospel according to St. Matthew," also describes Christ
Jesus as judge at the last day.[244:5]
Now, the question arises, is this doctrine original with Christianity? To this
we must answer no. It was taught, for ages before the time of Christ Jesus
or Christianity, that the Supreme Being—whether "Brahmá," "Zeruâné
Akeréné," "Jupiter," or "Yahweh,"[244:6]—was not to be the judge at the last
day, but that their sons were to hold this position.
The sectarians of Buddha taught that he (who was the Son of God (Brahmá)
and the Holy Virgin Maya), is to be the judge of the dead.[244:7]
According to the religion of the Hindoos, Crishna (who was the Son of
God, and the Holy Virgin Devaki), is to be the judge at the last day.[245:1]
And Yama is the god of the departed spirits, and the judge of the dead,
according to the Vedas.[245:2]
Osiris, the Egyptian "Saviour" and son of the "Immaculate Virgin" Neith or
Nout, was believed by the ancient Egyptians to be the judge of the dead.
[245:3] He is represented on Egyptian monuments, seated on his throne of
judgment, bearing a staff, and carrying the crux ansata, or cross with a
handle.[245:4] St. Andrew's cross is upon his breast. His throne is in checkers,
to denote the good and evil over which he presides, or to indicate the good
and evil who appear before him as the judge.[245:5]
Among the many hieroglyphic titles which accompany his figure in these
sculptures, and in many other places on the walls of temples and tombs, are
"Lord of Life," "The Eternal Ruler," "Manifester of Good," "Revealer of
Truth," "Full of Goodness and Truth," &c.[245:6]
Mr. Bonwick, speaking of the Egyptian belief in the last judgment, says:
"A perusal of the twenty-fifth chapter of Matthew will prepare the reader
for the investigation of the Egyptian notion of the last judgment."[245:7]
Prof. Carpenter, referring to the Egyptian Bible—which is by far the most
ancient of all holy books[245:8]—says:
"In the 'Book of the Dead,' there are used the very phrases we find in the
New Testament, in connection with the day of judgment."[245:9]
According to the religion of the Persians, it is Ormuzd, "The First Born of
the Eternal One," who is judge of the dead. He had the title of "The All-
Seeing," and "The Just Judge."[245:10]
Zeruâné Akeréné is the name of him who corresponds to "God the Father"
among other nations. He was the "One Supreme essence," the "Invisible and
Incomprehensible."[245:11]
Among the ancient Greeks, it was Aeacus—Son of the Most High God—
who was to be judge of the dead.[245:12]
The Christian Emperor Constantine, in his oration to the clergy, speaking of
the ancient poets of Greece, says:
"They affirm that men who are the sons of the gods, do judge departed
souls."[246:1]
Strange as it may seem, "there are no examples of Christ Jesus conceived as
judge, or the last judgment, in the early art of Christianity."[246:2]
The author from whom we quote the above, says, "It would be difficult to
define the cause of this, though many may be conjectured."[246:3]
Would it be unreasonable to "conjecture" that the early Christians did not
teach this doctrine, but that it was imbibed, in after years, with many other
heathen ideas?
FOOTNOTES:
[244:1] John, v. 22.
[244:2] Romans, ii. 16.
[244:3] Not authentic. (See The Bible of To-Day, p. 212.)
[244:4] II. Timothy, iv. 1.
[244:5] Matt. xxv. 31-46.
[244:6] Through an error we pronounce this name Jehovah.
[244:7] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 366.
[245:1] See Samuel Johnson's Oriental Religions, p. 504.
[245:2] See Williams' Hinduism, p. 25.
[245:3] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 120. Renouf: Religions of the Ancient
Egyptians, p. 110, and Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 152.
[245:4] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 151, and Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 152.
[245:5] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 151.
[245:6] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 154.
[245:7] Egyptian Belief, p. 419.
[245:8] See Ibid. p. 185.
[245:9] Quoted in Ibid. p. 419.
[245:10] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 259.
[245:11] Ibid. p. 258.
[245:12] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 16.
[246:1] Constantine's Oration to the Clergy, ch. x.
[246:2] Jameson: History of Our Lord in Art, vol. ii. p. 392.
[246:3] Ibid.
CHAPTER XXVI.
CHRIST JESUS AS CREATOR, AND ALPHA AND OMEGA.
Christian dogma also teaches that it was not "God the Father," but "God the
Son" who created the heavens, the earth, and all that therein is.
The writer of the fourth Gospel says:
"All things were made by him, and without him was not anything made that
was made."[247:1]
Again:
"He was in the world and the world was made by him, and the world knew
him not."[247:2]
In the "Epistle to the Colossians," we read that:
"By him were all things created that are in heaven and that are in earth,
visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or
principalities, or powers; all things were created by him."[247:3]
Again, in the "Epistle to the Hebrews," we are told that:
"God hath spoken unto us by his son, whom he hath appointed heir of all
things, by whom also he made the world."[247:4]
Samuel Johnson, D. O. Allen,[247:5] and Thomas Maurice,[247:6] tell us that,
according to the religion of the Hindoos, it is Crishna, the Son, and the
second person in the ever blessed Trinity,[247:7] "who is the origin and end
of all the worlds; all this universe, came into being through him, the eternal
maker."[247:8]
In the holy book of the Hindoos, called the "Bhagvat Geeta," may be found
the following words of Crishna, addressed to his "beloved disciple" Ar-
jouan:
"I am the Lord of all created beings."[247:9] "Mankind was created by me of
four kinds, distinct in their principles and in their duties; know me then to be
the Creator of mankind, uncreated, and without decay."[247:10]
In Lecture VII., entitled: "Of the Principles of Nature, and the Vital Spirit,"
he also says:
"I am the creation and the dissolution of the whole universe. There is not
anything greater than I, and all things hang on me."
Again, in Lecture IX., entitled, "Of the Chief of Secrets and Prince of
Science," Crishna says:
"The whole world was spread abroad by me in my invisible form. All things
are dependent on me." "I am the Father and the Mother of this world, the
Grandsire and the Preserver. I am the Holy One worthy to be known; the
mystic figure OM.[248:1] . . . I am the journey of the good; the Comforter;
the Creator; the Witness; the Resting-place; the Asylum and the Friend."
[248:2]
In Lecture X., entitled, "Of the diversity of the Divine Nature," he says:
"I am the Creator of all things, and all things proceed from me. Those who
are endued with spiritual wisdom, believe this and worship me; their very
hearts and minds are in me; they rejoice amongst themselves, and delight in
speaking of my name, and teaching one another my doctrine."[248:3]
Innumerable texts, similar to these, might be produced from the Hindoo
Scriptures, but these we deem sufficient to show, in the words of Samuel
Johnson quoted above, that, "According to the religion of the Hindoos, it is
Crishna who is the origin and the end of all the worlds;" and that "all this
universe came into being through him, the Eternal Maker." The Chinese
believed in One Supreme God, to whose honor they burnt incense, but of
whom they had no image. This "God the Father" was not the Creator,
according to their theology or mythology; but they had another god, of
whom they had statues or idols, called Natigai, who was the god of all
terrestrial things; in fact, God, the Creator of this world—inferior or
subordinate to the Supreme Being—from whom they petition for fine
weather, or whatever else they want—a sort of mediator.[248:4]
Lanthu, who was born of a "pure, spotless virgin," is believed by his
followers or disciples to be the Creator of all things;[248:5] and Taou, a
deified hero, who is mentioned about 560 B. C., is believed by some sects
and affirmed by their books, to be "the original source and first productive
cause of all things."[248:6]
In the Chaldean oracles, the doctrine of the "Only Begotten Son," I A O, as
Creator, is plainly taught.
According to ancient Persian mythology, there is one supreme essence,
invisible and incomprehensible, named "Zeruâné Akeréné" which signifies
"unlimited time," or "the eternal." From him emanated Ormuzd, the "King
of Light," the "First-born of the Eternal One," &c. Now, this "First-born of
the Eternal One" is he by whom all things were made, all things came into
being through him; he is the Creator.[249:1]
A large portion of the Zend-Avesta—the Persian Sacred Book or Bible—is
filled with prayers to Ormuzd, God's First-Born. The following are samples:
"I address my prayer to Ormuzd, Creator of all things; who always has
been, who is, and who will be forever; who is wise and powerful; who
made the great arch of heaven, the sun, the moon, stars, winds, clouds,
waters, earth, fire, trees, animals and men, whom Zoroaster adored.
Zoroaster, who brought to the world knowledge of the law, who knew by
natural intelligence, and by the ear, what ought to be done, all that has been,
all that is, and all that will be; the science of sciences, the excellent word, by
which souls pass the luminous and radiant bridge, separate themselves from
the evil regions, and go to light and holy dwellings, full of fragrance. O
Creator, I obey thy laws, I think, act, speak, according to thy orders. I
separate myself from all sin. I do good works according to my power. I
adore thee with purity of thought, word, and action. I pray to Ormuzd, who
recompenses good works, who delivers unto the end all those who obey his
laws. Grant that I may arrive at paradise, where all is fragrance, light, and
happiness."[249:2]
According to the religion of the ancient Assyrians, it was Narduk, the
Logos, the WORD, "the eldest son of Hea," "the Merciful One," "the Life-
giver," &c., who created the heavens, the earth, and all that therein is.[249:3]
Adonis, the Lord and Saviour, was believed to be the Creator of men, and
god of the resurrection of the dead.[249:4]
Prometheus, the Crucified Saviour, is the divine forethought, existing
before the souls of men, and the creator Hominium.[249:5]
The writer of "The Gospel according to St. John," has made Christ Jesus co-
eternal with God, as well as Creator, in these words:
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God." "The same
was in the beginning with God."[249:6]
Again, in praying to his Father, he makes Jesus say:
"And now, O Father, glorify thou me with thine own self with the glory
which I had with thee before the world was."[249:7]
Paul is made to say:
Hindoo scripture also makes Crishna "the first and the last," "the beginning
and the end." We read in the "Geeta," where Crishna is reported to have
said:
"I myself never was not."[250:5] "Learn that he by whom all things were
formed" (meaning himself) "is incorruptible."[250:6] "I am eternity and non-
eternity."[250:7] "I am before all things, and the mighty ruler of the
universe."[250:8] "I am the beginning, the middle and the end of all things."
[250:9]
Buddha established."
R. Spence Hardy says of Buddha:
"All the principal events of his life are represented as being attended by
incredible prodigies. He could pass through the air at will, and know the
thoughts of all beings."[254:5]
Prof. Max Müller says:
"The Buddhist legends teem with miracles attributed to Buddha and his
disciples—miracles which in wonderfulness certainly surpass the miracles
of any other religion."[254:6]
Buddha was at one time going from the city of Rohita-vastu to the city of
Benares, when, coming to the banks of the river Ganges, and wishing to go
across, he addressed himself to the owner of a ferry-boat, thus; "Hail!
respectable sir! I pray you take me across the river in your boat!" To this the
boatman replied, "If you can pay me the fare, I will willingly take you
across the river." Buddha said, "Whence shall I procure money to pay you
your fare, I, who have given up all worldly wealth and riches, &c." The
boatman still refusing to take him across, Buddha, pointing to a flock of
geese flying from the south to the north banks of the Ganges, said:
Osiris of Egypt also performed great miracles;[256:9] and so did the virgin
goddess Isis.
Pilgrimages were made to the temples of Isis, in Egypt, by the sick.
Diodorus, the Grecian historian, says that:
"Those who go to consult in dreams the goddess Isis recover perfect health.
Many whose cure has been despaired of by physicians have by this means
been saved, and others who have long been deprived of sight, or of some
other part of the body, by taking refuge, so to speak, in the arms of the
goddess, have been restored to the enjoyment of their faculties."[257:1]
Serapis, the Egyptian Saviour, performed great miracles, principally those
of healing the sick. He was called "The Healer of the World."[257:2]
Marduk, the Assyrian God, the "Logos," the "Eldest Son of Hea;" "He who
made Heaven and Earth;" the "Merciful One;" the "Life-Giver," &c.,
performed great miracles, among which was that of raising the dead to life.
[257:3]
"In his gentler aspects he is the giver of joy, the healer of sicknesses, the
guardian against plagues. As such he is even a law-giver and a promoter of
peace and concord. As kindling new or strange thoughts in the mind, he is a
giver of wisdom and the revealer of hidden secrets of the future."[257:5]
The legends related of this god state that on one occasion Pantheus, King of
Thebes, sent his attendants to seize Bacchus, the "vagabond leader of a
faction"—as he called him. This they were unable to do, as the multitude
who followed him were too numerous. They succeeded, however, in
capturing one of his disciples, Acetes, who was led away and shut up fast in
prison; but while they were getting ready the instruments of execution, the
prison doors came open of their own accord, and the chains fell from his
limbs, and when they looked for him he was nowhere to be found.[257:6]
Here is still another edition of "Peter in prison."
Æsculapius was another great performer of miracles. The ancient Greeks
said of him that he not only cured the sick of the most malignant diseases,
but even raised the dead.
A writer in Bell's Pantheon says:
"As the Greeks always carried the encomiums of their great men beyond the
truth, so they feigned that Æsculapius was so expert in medicine as not only
to cure the sick, but even to raise the dead."[258:1]
Eusebius, the ecclesiastical historian, speaking of Æsculapius, says:
"He sometimes appeared unto them (the Cilicians) in dreams and visions,
and sometimes restored the sick to health."
He claims, however, that this was the work of the DEVIL, "who by this
means did withdraw the minds of men from the knowledge of the true
SAVIOUR."[258:2]
For many years after the death of Æsculapius, miracles continued to be
performed by the efficacy of faith in his name. Patients were conveyed to
the temple of Æsculapius, and there cured of their disease. A short
statement of the symptoms of each case, and the remedy employed, were
inscribed on tablets and hung up in the temples.[258:3] There were also a
multitude of eyes, ears, hands, feet, and other members of the human body,
made of wax, silver, or gold, and presented by those whom the god had
cured of blindness, deafness, and other diseases.[258:4]
Marinus, a scholar of the philosopher Proclus, relates one of these
remarkable cures, in the life of his master. He says:
"Asclipigenia, a young maiden who had lived with her parents, was seized
with a grievous distemper, incurable by the physicians. All help from the
physicians failing, the father applied to the philosopher, earnestly entreating
him to pray for his daughter. Proclus, full of faith, went to the temple of
Æsculapius, intending to pray for the sick young woman to the god—for the
city (Athens) was at that time blessed in him, and still enjoyed the
undemolished temple of THE SAVIOUR—but while he was praying, a sudden
change appeared in the damsel, and she immediately became convalescent,
for the Saviour, Æsculapius, as being God, easily healed her."[258:5]
Dr. Conyers Middleton says:
"Whatever proof the primitive (Christian) Church might have among
themselves, of the miraculous gift, yet it could have but little effect towards
making proselytes among those who pretended to the same gift—possessed
more largely and exerted more openly, than in the private assemblies of the
Christians. For in the temples of Æsculapius, all kinds of diseases were
believed to be publicly cured, by the pretended help of that deity, in proof
of which there were erected in each temple, columns or tables of brass or
marble, on which a distinct narrative of each particular cure was inscribed.
Pausanias[258:6] writes that in the temple at Epidaurus there were many
columns anciently of this kind, and six of them remaining to his time,
inscribed with the names of men and women who had been cured by the
god, with an account of their several cases, and the method of their cure;
and that there was an old pillar besides, which stood apart, dedicated to the
memory of Hippolytus, who had been raised from the dead. Strabo, also,
another grave writer, informs us that these temples were constantly filled
with the sick, imploring the help of the god, and that they had tables
hanging around them, in which all the miraculous cures were described.
There is a remarkable fragment of one of these tables still extant, and
exhibited by Gruter in his collection, as it was found in the ruins of
Æsculapius's temple in the Island of the Tiber, in Rome, which gives an
account of two blind men restored to sight by Æsculapius, in the open view,
[259:1] and with the loud acclamation of the people, acknowledging the
He at one time went to Ephesus, but as the inhabitants did not hearken to
his preaching, he left there and went to Smyrna, where he was well received
by the inhabitants. While there, ambassadors came from Ephesus, begging
him to return to that city, where a terrible plague was raging, as he had
prophesied. He went immediately, and as soon as he arrived, he said to the
Ephesians: "Be not dejected, I will this day put a stop to the disease."
According to his words, the pestilence was stayed, and the people erected a
statue to him, in token of their gratitude.[262:1]
In the city of Athens, there was one of the dissipated young citizens, who
laughed and cried by turns, and talked and sang to himself, without
apparent cause. His friends supposed these habits were the effects of early
intemperance, but Apollonius, who happened to meet the young man, told
him he was possessed of a demon; and, as soon as he fixed his eyes upon
him, the demon broke out into all those horrid, violent expressions used by
people on the rack, and then swore he would depart out of the youth, and
never enter another.[262:2] The young man had not been aware that he was
possessed by a devil, but from that moment, his wild, disturbed looks
changed, he became very temperate, and assumed the garb of a Pythagorean
philosopher.
Apollonius went to Rome, and arrived there after the emperor Nero had
passed very severe laws against magicians. He was met on the way by a
person who advised him to turn back and not enter the city, saying that all
who wore the philosopher's garb were in danger of being arrested as
magicians. He heeded not these words of warning, but proceeded on his
way, and entered the city. It was not long before he became an object of
suspicion, was closely watched, and finally arrested, but when his accusers
appeared before the tribunal and unrolled the parchment on which the
charges against him had been written, they found that all the characters had
disappeared. Apollonius made such an impression on the magistrates by the
bold tone he assumed, that he was allowed to go where he pleased.[262:3]
Many miracles were performed by him while in Rome, among others may
be mentioned his restoring a dead maiden to life.
She belonged to a family of rank, and was just about to be married, when
she died suddenly. Apollonius met the funeral procession that was
conveying her body to the tomb. He asked them to set down the bier, saying
to her betrothed: "I will dry up the tears you are shedding for this maiden."
They supposed he was going to pronounce a funeral oration, but he merely
took her hand, bent over her, and uttered a few words in a low tone. She
opened her eyes, and began to speak, and was carried back alive and well to
her father's house.[263:1]
Passing through Tarsus, in his travels, a young man was pointed out to him
who had been bitten thirty days before by a mad dog, and who was then
running on all fours, barking and howling. Apollonius took his case in hand,
and it was not long before the young man was restored to his right mind.
[263:2]
Jesus. His followers had a gospel called "The Four Corners of the World,"
which reminds us of the reason given by Irenæus, for there being four
Gospels among the Christians. He says:
"It is impossible that there could be more or less than four. For there are
four climates, and four cardinal winds; but the Gospel is the pillar and
foundation of the Church, and its breath of life. The Church, therefore, was
to have four pillars, blowing immortality from every quarter, and giving life
to men."[265:2]
Simon also composed some works, of which but slight fragments remain,
Christian authority having evidently destroyed them. That he made a lively
impression on his contemporaries is indicated by the subsequent extension
of his doctrines, under varied forms, by the wonderful stories which the
Christian Fathers relate of him, and by the strong dislike they manifested
toward him.
Eusebius, the ecclesiastical historian, says of him:
"The malicious power of Satan, enemy to all honesty, and foe to all human
salvation, brought forth at that time this monster Simon, a father and worker
of all such mischiefs, as a great adversary unto the mighty and holy
Apostles.
"Coming into the city of Rome, he was so aided by that power which
prevaileth in this world, that in short time he brought his purpose to such a
pass, that his picture was there placed with others, and he honored as a
god."[265:3]
Justin Martyr says of him:
"After the ascension of our Savior into heaven, the DEVIL brought forth
certain men which called themselves gods, who not only suffered no
vexation of you (Romans), but attained unto honor amongst you, by name
one Simon, a Samaritan, born in the village of Gitton, who (under Claudius
Cæsar) by the art of devils, through whom he dealt, wrought devilish
enchantments, was esteemed and counted in your regal city of Rome for a
god, and honored by you as a god, with a picture between two bridges upon
the river Tibris, having this Roman inscription: 'Simoni deo Sancto' (To
Simon the Holy God). And in manner all the Samaritans, and certain also of
other nations, do worship him, acknowledging him for their chief god."
[265:4]
FOOTNOTES:
[252:1] Dr. Conyers Middleton: Free Enquiry, p. 177.
[252:2] Indian Antiquities, vol. iii. p. 46.
[253:1] Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 237.
[253:2] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 331.
[253:3] Ibid. p. 319.
[254:1] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 320. Vishnu Parana, bk. v. ch. xx.
[254:2] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 68.
[254:3] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 269.
[254:4] See Hardy's Buddhist Legends, and Eastern Monachism. Beal's Romantic Hist.
Buddha. Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, and Huc's Travels, &c.
[254:5] Hardy: Buddhist Legends, pp. xxi. xxii.
[254:6] The Science of Religion, p. 27.
[255:1] Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 246, 247.
[255:2] Dhammapada, pp. 47, 50 and 90. Bigandet, pp. 186 and 192. Bournouf: Intro. p.
156. In Lillie's Buddhism, pp. 139, 140.
[256:1] Hardy: Manual of Buddhism.
[256:2] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 229.
[256:3] See Tylor: Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 135, and Hardy: Buddhist Legends, pp. 98,
126, 137.
[256:4] See Tylor: Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 135.
[256:5] Thornton: Hist. China, vol. i. p. 341.
[256:6] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 240, and Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii.
p. 460.
[256:7] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 34.
[256:8] See Lundy: Monumental Christianity, pp. 303-405.
[256:9] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief.
[257:1] Quoted by Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 397.
[257:2] See Prichard's Mythology, p. 347.
[257:3] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 404.
[257:4] See Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, 258, and Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 102.
Compare John, ii. 7.
A Grecian festival called THYIA was observed by the Eleans in honor of Bacchus. The
priests conveyed three empty vessels into a chapel, in the presence of a large assembly,
after which the doors were shut and sealed. "On the morrow the company returned, and
after every man had looked upon his own seal, and seen that it was unbroken, the doors
being opened, the vessels were found full of wine." The god himself is said to have
appeared in person and filled the vessels. (Bell's Pantheon.)
[257:5] Cox: Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. p. 295.
[257:6] Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 225. "And they laid their hands on the apostles, and
put them in the common prison; but the angel of the Lord by night opened the prison doors,
and brought them forth." (Acts, v. 18, 19.)
[258:1] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 28.
[258:2] Eusebius: Life of Constantine, lib. 3, ch. liv.
"Æsculapius, the son of Apollo, was endowed by his father with such skill in the healing
art that he even restored the dead to life." (Bulfinch: The Age of Fable, p. 246.)
[258:3] Murray: Manual of Mythology, pp. 179, 180.
[258:4] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 304.
[258:5] Marinus: Quoted in Taylor's Diegesis, p. 151.
[258:6] Pausanias was one of the most eminent Greek geographers and historians.
[259:1] "And when Jesus departed thence, two blind men followed him, crying and saying:
thou son of David, have mercy on us. . . . And Jesus said unto them: Believe ye that I am
able to do this? They said unto him, Yea, Lord. Then touched he their eyes, saying:
According to your faith be it unto you, and their eyes were opened." (Matt. ix. 27-30.)
[259:2] Middleton's Works, vol. i. pp. 63, 64.
[259:3] Ibid. p. 48.
[259:4] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 62.
[259:5] See Middleton's Letters from Rome, p. 76.
[260:1] See Middleton's Letters from Rome, p. 76.
[260:2]
26. Crishna said to the hunter who 26. Jesus said to one of the
shot him: "Go, hunter, through my malefactors who was crucified with
favor, to heaven, the abode of the him: "Verily I say unto thee, this
gods."[282:5] day shalt thou be with me in
paradise."[282:6]
27. Crishna descended into hell. 27. Jesus descended into hell.[282:8]
[282:7]
28. Crishna, after being put to 28. Jesus, after being put to death,
death, rose again from the dead. rose again from the dead.[282:10]
[282:9]
29. Crishna ascended bodily into 29. Jesus ascended bodily into
heaven, and many persons heaven, and many persons
witnessed his ascent.[282:11] witnessed his ascent.[282:12]
30. Crishna is to come again on 30. Jesus is to come again on earth
earth in the latter days. He will in the latter days. He will appear
appear among mortals as an armed among mortals as an armed warrior,
warrior, riding a white horse. At his riding a white horse. At his
approach the sun and moon will be approach, the sun and moon will be
darkened, the earth will tremble, darkened, the earth will tremble,
and the stars fall from the and the stars fall from the
firmament.[282:13] firmament.[282:14]
31. Crishna is to be judge of the 31. Jesus is to be judge of the dead
dead at the last day.[282:15] at the last day.[282:16]
32. Crishna is the creator of all 32. Jesus is the creator of all things
things visible and invisible; "all visible and invisible; "all this
this universe came into being universe came into being through
through him, the eternal maker." him, the eternal maker."[282:18]
[282:17]
33. Crishna is Alpha and Omega, 33. Jesus is Alpha and Omega, the
"the beginning, the middle, and the beginning, the middle, and the end
end of all things."[282:19] of all things.[282:20]
34. Crishna, when on earth, was in 34. Jesus, when on earth, was in
constant strife against the evil constant strife against the evil
spirit.[282:21] He surmounts spirit.[282:22] He surmounts
extraordinary dangers, strews his extraordinary dangers, strews his
way with miracles, raising the way with miracles, raising the
dead, healing the sick, restoring the dead, healing the sick, restoring the
maimed, the deaf and the blind, maimed, the deaf and the blind,
everywhere supporting the weak everywhere supporting the weak
against the strong, the oppressed against the strong, the oppressed
against the powerful. The people against the powerful. The people
crowded his way, and adored him crowded his way and adored him as
as a God.[283:1] a God.[283:2]
35. Crishna had a beloved disciple 35. Jesus had a beloved disciple—
—Arjuna.[283:3] John.[283:4]
36. Crishna was transfigured before 36. "And after six days, Jesus
his disciple Arjuna. "All in an taketh Peter, James, and John his
instant, with a thousand suns, brother, and bringeth them up into a
blazing with dazzling luster, so high mountain apart, and was
beheld he the glories of the transfigured before them. And his
universe collected in the one face did shine as the sun, and his
person of the God of Gods."[283:5] raiment was white as the light. . .
While he yet spake, behold, a
Arjuna bows his head at this bright cloud overshadowed them,
vision, and folding his hands in and behold, a voice out of the
reverence, says: cloud, which said: &c." "And when
the disciples heard it, they fell on
"Now that I see thee as thou really their faces, and were sore afraid."
art, I thrill with terror! Mercy! Lord [283:7]
FOOTNOTES:
[278:1] It is also very evident that the history of Crishna—or that part of it at least which
has a religious aspect—is taken from that of Buddha. Crishna, in the ancient epic poems, is
simply a great hero, and it is not until about the fourth century B. C., that he is deified and
declared to be an incarnation of Vishnu, or Vishnu himself in human form. (See Monier
Williams' Hinduism, pp. 102, 103.)
"If it be urged that the attribution to Crishna of qualities or powers belonging to the other
deities is a mere device by which his devotees sought to supersede the more ancient gods,
the answer must be that nothing is done in his case which has not been done in the case of
almost every other member of the great company of the gods, and that the systematic
adoption of this method is itself conclusive proof of the looseness and flexibility of the
materials of which the cumbrous mythology of the Hindu epic poems is composed." (Cox:
Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 130.) These words apply very forcibly to the history of Christ
Jesus. He being attributed with qualities and powers belonging to the deities of the heathen
is a mere device by which his devotees sought to supersede the more ancient gods.
[278:2] See ch. xii.
[278:3] See The Gospel of Mary, Apoc., ch. vii.
[278:4] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 329.
[278:5] Mary, Apoc., vii. Luke, i. 28-30.
[278:6] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. pp. 317 and 336.
[278:7] Matt. ii. 2.
[279:1] Vishnu Purana, p. 502.
[279:2] Luke, ii. 13.
[279:3] See ch. xvi.
[279:4] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 311. See also, chap. xvi.
[279:5] See ch. xvi.
[279:6] Protevangelion, Apoc., chs. xii. and xiii.
[279:7] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. 311.
[279:8] Infancy, Apoc., ch. i. 2, 3.
[279:9] See ch. xv.
[279:10] Luke, ii. 8-10.
[279:11] See Oriental Religions, p. 500, and Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 353.
[279:12] Matt. ii. 2.
[279:13] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 317.
[279:14] Matt., ii. 1, 2.
[279:15] Vishnu Purana, bk. v. ch. iii.
[279:16] Luke, ii. 1-17.
[280:1] Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 259. Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 310.
[280:2] See the Genealogies in Matt. and Luke.
[280:3] See ch. xviii.
[280:4] Matt. ii. 13.
[280:5] See ch. xviii.
[280:6] Matt. ii. 16.
[280:7] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 317. Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 259.
[280:8] Introduc. to Infancy, Apoc. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 130. Savary: Travels in
Egypt, vol. i. p. 126, in Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 318.
[280:9] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 316.
[280:10] "Elizabeth, hearing that her son John was about to be searched for (by Herod),
took him and went up into the mountains, and looked around for a place to hide him. . . .
But Herod made search after John, and sent servants to Zacharias," &c. (Protevangelion,
Apoc. ch. xvi.)
[280:11] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 321.
[281:1] Infancy, Apoc., ch. xx. 1-8.
[281:2] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 321.
[281:3] Infancy, Apoc., ch. xviii. 1-3.
[281:4] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 343.
[281:5] Infancy, Apoc., ch. xviii.
[281:6] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 340. Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. p. 136.
[281:7] Infancy, Apoc., ch. xvii.
[281:8] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 319, and ch. xxvii. this work.
[281:9] Matthew, viii. 2.
[281:10] Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 320.
[281:11] Matt. xxvi. 6-7.
[281:12] See ch. xx.
[282:1] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 71.
[282:2] Matt. xxii. Luke, xxviii.
[282:3] See ch. xx.
[282:4] John, xix. 34.
[282:5] See Vishnu Purana, p. 612.
[282:6] Luke, xxiii. 43.
[282:7] See ch. xxii.
[282:8] See Ibid.
[282:9] See ch. xxiii.
[282:10] Matt. xxviii.
[282:11] See ch. xxiii.
[282:12] See Acts, i. 9-11.
[282:13] See ch. xxiv.
[282:14] See passages quoted in ch. xxiv.
[282:15] See Oriental Religions, p. 504.
[282:16] Matt. xxiv. 31. Rom. xiv. 10.
[282:17] See ch. xxvi.
[282:18] John, i. 3. I. Cor. viii. 6. Eph. iii. 9.
[282:19] See Geeta, lec. x. p. 85.
[282:20] Rev. i. 8, 11; xxii. 13; xxi. 6.
[282:21] He is described as a superhuman organ of light, to whom the superhuman organ
of darkness, the evil serpent, was opposed. He is represented "bruising the head of the
serpent," and standing upon him. (See illustrations in vol. i. Asiatic Researches; vol. ii.
Higgins' Anacalypsis; Calmet's Fragments, and other works illustrating Hindoo
Mythology.)
[282:22] Jesus, "the Sun of Righteousness," is also described as a superhuman organ of
light, opposed by Satan, "the old serpent." He is claimed to have been the seed of the
woman who should "bruise the head of the serpent." (Genesis, iii. 15.)
[283:1] See ch. xxvii.
[283:2] According to the New Testament.
[283:3] See Bhagavat Geeta.
[283:4] John, xiii. 23.
[283:5] Williams' Hinduism, p. 215.
[283:6] Ibid. p. 216.
[283:7] Matt. xvii. 1-6.
[283:8] "He was pure and chaste in reality," although represented as sporting amorously,
when a youth, with cowherdesses. According to the pure Vaishnava faith, however,
Crishna's love for the Gopis, and especially for his favorite Rādhā, is to be explained
allegorically, as symbolizing the longing of the human soul for the Supreme. (Prof. Monier
Williams: Hinduism, p. 144.) Just as the amorous "Song of Solomon" is said to be
allegorical, and to mean "Christ's love for his church."
[283:9] See Indian Antiquities, iii. 46, and Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 273.
[283:10] John, xiii.
[283:11] Vishnu Purana, p. 492, note 3.
[283:12] I. Timothy, iii. 16.
[283:13] Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva. Crishna is Vishnu in human form. "A more personal,
and, so to speak, human god than Siva was needed for the mass of the people—a god who
could satisfy the yearnings of the human heart for religion of faith (bhakti)—a god who
could sympathize with, and condescend to human wants and necessities. Such a god was
found in the second member of the Tri-mūrti. It was as Vishnu that the Supreme Being was
supposed to exhibit his sympathy with human trials, and his love for the human race.
"If Siva is the great god of the Hindu Pantheon, to whom adoration is due from all
indiscriminately, Vishnu is certainly its most popular deity. He is the god selected by far the
greater number of individuals as their Saviour, protector and friend, who rescues them from
the power of evil, interests himself in their welfare, and finally admits them to his heaven.
But it is not so much Vishnu in his own person as Vishnu in his incarnations, that effects all
this for his votaries." (Prof. Monier Williams: Hinduism, p. 100.)
[283:14] Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Jesus is the Son in human form.
[284:1] Williams' Hinduism, p. 211.
[284:2] Matt. vi. 6.
[284:3] Williams' Hinduism, p. 212.
[284:4] I. Cor. x. 31.
[284:5] Williams' Hinduism, p. 213.
[284:6] John, i. 3.
[284:7] Williams' Hinduism, p. 213.
[284:8] John, viii. 12.
[284:9] Williams' Hinduism, p. 213.
[284:10] John, xiv. 6.
[284:11] Williams' Hinduism, p. 213.
[284:12] Rev. i. 17, 18.
[284:13] Williams' Hinduism, p. 214.
[284:14] Matt. ix. 2.
[284:15] Prov. xxiii. 26.
[284:16] Rev. xxi. 23.
[284:17] Quoted from Williams' Hinduism, pp. 217-219.
[285:1] It is said in the Hindoo sacred books that Crishna was a religious teacher, but, as
we have previously remarked, this is a later addition to his legendary history. In the ancient
epic poems he is simply a great hero and warrior. The portion pertaining to his religious
career, is evidently a copy of the history of Buddha.
[285:2] "Est Crishna (quod ut mihi pridem indicaverat P. Cassianus Maceratentis, sic nunc
uberius in Galliis observatum intelligo avivo litteratissimo De Guignes) nomen ipsum
corruptum Christi Servatoris."
[285:3] See Williams' Hinduism, and Maurice: Hist. Hindostan, vol. ii. p. 269.
[285:4] See Celtic Druids, pp. 256, 257.
[286:1] "Alexander the Great made his expedition to the banks of the Indus about 327 B.
C., and to this invasion is due the first trustworthy information obtained by Europeans
concerning the north-westerly portion of India and the region of the five rivers, down
which the Grecian troops were conducted in ships by Nearchus. Megasthenes, who was the
ambassador of Seleukos Nikator (Alexander's successor, and ruler over the whole region
between the Euphrates and India, B. C. 312), at the court of Candra-gupa (Sandrokottus),
in Pataliputra (Patna), during a long sojourn in that city collected further information, of
which Strabo, Pliny, Arrian, and others availed themselves." (Williams' Hinduism, p. 4.)
[286:2] Monumental Christianity, p. 151. See also, Asiatic Researches, i. 273.
[286:3] See Asiatic Researches, vol. i. pp. 259-273.
[286:4] Quoted in Monumental Christianity, pp. 151, 152.
[286:5] See chapter xviii.
[286:6] See Prichard's Egyptian Mythology, p. 112.
[287:1] In speaking of the antiquity of the Bhagavad-gita, Prof. Monier Williams says:
"The author was probably a Brahman and nominally a Vishnava, but really a philosopher
whose mind was cast in a broad and comprehensive mould. He is supposed to have lived in
India during the first and second century of our era. Some consider that he lived as late as
the third century, and some place him even later, but with these I cannot agree." (Indian
Wisdom, p. 137.)
[287:2] In order that the resemblances to Christian Scripture in the writings of Roman
philosophers may be compared, Prof. Williams refers the reader to "Seekers after God," by
the Rev. F. W. Farrar, and Dr. Ramage's "Beautiful Thoughts." The same sentiments are to
be found in Mann, which, says Prof. Williams, "few will place later than the fifth century
B. C." The Mahabhrata, written many centuries B. C., contains numerous parallels to New
Testament sayings. (See our chapter on "Paganism in Christianity.")
[287:3] Seneca, the celebrated Roman philosopher, was born at Cordoba, in Spain, a few
years B. C. When a child, he was brought by his father to Rome, where he was initiated in
the study of eloquence.
[288:1] Indian Wisdom, pp. 153, 154. Similar sentiments are expressed in his Hinduism,
pp. 218-220.
[288:2] Indian Wisdom, p. iv.
[288:3] Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. pp. 137, 138.
[288:4] Ibid. p. 131.
[288:5] Williams' Hinduism, pp. 119-110. It was from these sources that the doctrine of
incarnation was first evolved by the Brahman. They were written many centuries B. C.
(See Ibid.)
CHAPTER XXIX.
CHRIST BUDDHA AND CHRIST JESUS COMPARED.
"The more I learn to know Buddha the more I admire him, and the sooner
all mankind shall have been made acquainted with his doctrines the better it
will be, for he is certainly one of the heroes of humanity."
Fausböll.
The mythological portions of the histories of Buddha and Jesus are, without
doubt, nearer in resemblance than that of any two characters of antiquity.
The cause of this we shall speak of in our chapter on "Why Christianity
Prospered," and shall content ourselves for the present by comparing the
following analogies:
1. Buddha was born of the Virgin 1. Jesus was born of the Virgin
Mary,[289:1] who conceived him Mary, who conceived him without
without carnal intercourse.[289:2] carnal intercourse.[289:3]
2. The incarnation of Buddha is 2. The incarnation of Jesus is
recorded to have been brought recorded to have been brought
about by the descent of the divine about by the descent of the divine
power called the "Holy Ghost," power called the "Holy Ghost,"
upon the Virgin Maya.[289:4] upon the Virgin Mary.[289-3]
3. When Buddha descended from 3. When Jesus descended from his
the regions of the souls,[290:1] and heavenly seat, and entered the body
entered the body of the Virgin of the Virgin Mary, her womb
Maya, her womb assumed the assumed the appearance of clear
appearance of clear transparent transparent crystal, in which Jesus
crystal, in which Buddha appeared, appeared beautiful as a flower.
[290:3]
beautiful as a flower.[290:2]
4. The birth of Buddha was 4. The birth of Jesus was
announced in the heavens by an announced in the heavens by "his
asterism which was seen rising on star," which was seen rising on the
the horizon. It is called the horizon.[290:5] It might properly be
"Messianic Star."[290:4] called the "Messianic Star."
5. "The son of the Virgin Maya, on 5. The Son of the Virgin Mary, on
whom, according to the tradition, whom, according to the tradition,
the 'Holy Ghost' had descended, the 'Holy Ghost' had descended,
was said to have been born on was said to have been born on
Christmas day."[290:6] Christmas day.[290:7]
6. Demonstrations of celestial 6. Demonstrations of celestial
delight were manifest at the birth delight were manifest at the birth of
of Buddha. The Devas[290:8] in Jesus. The angels in heaven and
heaven and earth sang praises to earth sang praises to the "Blessed
the "Blessed One," and said: "To One," saying: "Glory to God in the
day, Bodhisatwa is born on earth, highest, and on earth peace, good
to give joy and peace to men and will toward men."[290:10]
Devas, to shed light in the dark
places, and to give sight to the
blind."[290:9]
7. "Buddha was visited by wise 7. Jesus was visited by wise men
men who recognized in this who recognized in this marvelous
marvelous infant all the characters infant all the characters of the
of the divinity, and he had scarcely divinity, and he had scarcely seen
seen the day before he was hailed the day before he was hailed God
God of Gods."[290:11] of Gods.[290:12]
8. The infant Buddha was 8. The infant Jesus was presented
presented with "costly jewels and with gifts of gold, frankincense,
precious substances."[290:13] and myrrh.[290:14]
9. When Buddha was an infant, just 9. When Jesus was an infant in his
born, he spoke to his mother, and cradle, he spoke to his mother, and
said: "I am the greatest among said: "I am Jesus, the Son of God."
men."[290:15] [290:16]
28. Buddha is Alpha and Omega, 28. Jesus is Alpha and Omega,
without beginning or end, "the without beginning or end,[293:15]
Supreme Being, the Eternal One." "the Supreme Being, the Eternal
[293:14]
One."[293:16]
29. Buddha is represented as 29. Jesus is represented as the
saying: "Let all the sins that were Saviour of mankind, and all the
committed in this world fall on me, sins that are committed in this
that the world may be delivered." world may fall on him, that the
[293:17] world may be delivered.[293:18]
30. Buddha said: "Hide your good 30. Jesus taught men to hide their
deeds, and confess before the good deeds,[293:20] and confess
world the sins you have before the world the sins they had
committed."[293:19] committed.[293:21]
31. "Buddha was described as a 31. Jesus was described as a
superhuman organ of light, to superhuman organ of light—"the
whom a superhuman organ of Sun of Righteousness"[294:2]—
darkness, Mara or Naga, the Evil opposed by "the old Serpent," the
Serpent, was opposed."[294:1] Satan, hinderer, or adversary.[294:3]
32. Buddha came, not to destroy, 32. Jesus said: "Think not that I am
but to fulfill, the law. He delighted come to destroy the law, or the
in "representing himself as a mere prophets: I am not come to destroy,
link in a long chain of enlightened but to fulfill."[294:5]
teachers."[294:4]
33. "One day Ananda, the disciple 33. One day Jesus, after a long
of Buddha, after a long walk in the walk, cometh to the city of
country, meets with Mâtangî, a Samaria, and being wearied with
woman of the low caste of the his journey, sat on a well. While
Kândâlas, near a well, and asks her there, a woman of Samaria came to
for some water. She tells him what draw water, and Jesus said unto
she is, and that she must not come her: "give me to drink." "Then said
near him. But he replies, 'My sister, the woman unto him: How is it that
I ask not for thy caste or thy family, thou, being a Jew, asketh drink of
I ask only for a draught of water.' me, which am a woman of
She afterwards became a disciple Samaria? For the Jews have no
of Buddha."[294:6] dealings with the Samaritans."[294:7]
34. "According to Buddha, the 34. "Love your enemies, bless them
motive of all our actions should be that curse you, do good to them that
pity or love for our neighbor."[294:8] hate you."[294:9]
35. During the early part of his 35. During the early part of his
career as a teacher, "Buddha went career as a teacher, Jesus went to
to the city of Benares, and there the city of Capernaum, and there
delivered a discourse, by which delivered a discourse. It was at this
Kondanya, and afterwards four time that four fishermen were
others, were induced to become his induced to become his disciples.
disciples. From that period, [294:11] From that period, whenever
whenever he preached, multitudes he preached, multitudes of men and
of men and women embraced his women embraced his doctrines.
doctrines."[294:10] [294:12]
36. Those who became disciples of 36. Those who became disciples of
Buddha were told that they must Jesus were told that they must
"renounce the world," give up all renounce the world, give up all
their riches, and avow poverty. their riches, and avow poverty.
[294:13] [294:14]
37. It is recorded in the "Sacred 37. It is recorded in the "Sacred
Canon" of the Buddhists that the Canon" of the Christians that the
multitudes "required a sign" from multitudes required a sign from
Buddha "that they might believe." Jesus that they might believe.[295:2]
[295:1]
38. When Buddha's time on earth 38. When Jesus' time on earth was
was about coming to a close, he, about coming to a close, he told of
"foreseeing the things that would the things that would happen in
happen in future times," said to his future times,[295:4] and said unto his
disciple Ananda: "Ananda, when I disciples: "Go ye therefore, and
am gone, you must not think there teach all nations, teaching them to
is no Buddha; the discourses I have observe all things whatsoever I
delivered, and the precepts I have have commanded you; and, lo, I am
enjoined, must be my successors,
or representatives, and be to you as with you alway, even unto the end
Buddha."[295:3] of the world."[295:5]
39. In the Buddhist Somadeva, is to 39. "And behold, one came and
be found the following: "To give said unto him, Good Master, what
away our riches is considered the good thing shall I do, that I may
most difficult virtue in the world; have eternal life? . . . Jesus said
he who gives away his riches is unto him, If thou wilt be perfect, go
like a man who gives away his life: and sell that thou hast, and give to
for our very life seems to cling to the poor, and thou shalt have
our riches. But Buddha, when his treasure in heaven: and come and
mind was moved by pity, gave his follow me."[295:7] "Lay not up for
life like grass, for the sake of yourselves treasures upon earth,
others; why should we think of where moth and rust doth corrupt,
miserable riches! By this exalted and where thieves break through
virtue, Buddha, when he was freed and steal: But lay up for yourselves
from all desires, and had obtained treasures in heaven, where neither
divine knowledge, attained unto moth nor rust doth corrupt, and
Buddhahood. Therefore let a wise where thieves do not break through
man, after he has turned away his nor steal."[295:8]
desires from all pleasures, do good
to all beings, even unto sacrificing
his own life, that thus he may attain
to true knowledge."[295:6]
40. Buddha's aim was to establish a 40. "From that time Jesus began to
"Religious Kingdom," a "Kingdom preach, and to say, Repent: for the
of Heaven."[296:1] Kingdom of Heaven is at hand."
[296:2]
41. Buddha said: "I now desire to 41. Jesus, after his temptation by
turn the wheel of the excellent law. the devil, began to establish the
[296:3] For this purpose am I going dominion of his religion, and he
to the city of Benares,[296:4] to give went for this purpose to the city of
light to those enshrouded in Capernaum. "The people which sat
darkness, and to open the gate of in darkness saw great light, and to
Immortality to man."[296:5] them which sat in the region and
shadow of death, light is sprung
up."[296:6]
42. Buddha said: "Though the 42. "The law was given by Moses,
heavens were to fall to earth, and but grace and truth came by Jesus
the great world be swallowed up Christ."[296:8]
and pass away: Though Mount
Sumera were to crack to pieces, "Verily I say unto you . . . heaven
and the great ocean be dried up, and earth shall pass away, but my
yet, Ananda, be assured, the words words shall not pass away."[296:9]
of Buddha are true."[296:7]
43. Buddha said: "There is no 43. Jesus said: "Ye have heard that
passion more violent than it was said by them of old time.
voluptuousness. Happily there is Thou shalt not commit adultery:
but one such passion. If there were But I say unto you, that whosoever
two, not a man in the whole looketh on a woman to lust after
universe could follow the truth." her, hath committed adultery with
"Beware of fixing your eyes upon her already in his heart."[296:11]
women. If you find yourself in
their company, let it be as though
you were not present. If you speak
with them, guard well your hearts."
[296:10]
44. Buddha said: "A wise man 44. "It is good for a man not to
should avoid married life as if it touch a woman," "but if they
were a burning pit of live coals. cannot contain let them marry, for
One who is not able to live in a it is better to marry than to burn."
state of celibacy should not commit "To avoid fornication, let every
adultery."[297:1] man have his own wife and let
every woman have her own
husband."[297:2]
45. "Buddhism is convinced that if 45. "And as Jesus passed by, he
a man reaps sorrow, saw a man which was blind from
disappointment, pain, he himself, his birth. And his disciples asked
and no other, must at some time him, saying, Master, who did sin,
have sown folly, error, sin; and if this man, or his parents, that he was
not in this life then in some former born blind."[297:4]
birth."[297:3]
46. Buddha knew the thoughts of 46. Jesus knew the thoughts of
others: "By directing his mind to others. By directing his mind to the
the thoughts of others, he can know thoughts of others, he knew the
the thoughts of all beings."[297:5] thoughts of all beings.[297:6]
47. In the Somadeva a story is 47. It is related in the New
related of a Buddhist ascetic whose Testament that Jesus said: "If thy
eye offended him, he therefore right eye offend thee, pluck it out,
plucked it out, and cast it away. and cast it from thee."[297:8]
[297:7]
48. When Buddha was about to 48. When Jesus was entering
become an ascetic, and when riding Jerusalem, riding on an ass, his
on the horse "Kantako," his path path was strewn with palm
was strewn with flowers, thrown branches, thrown there by the
there by Devas.[297:9] multitude.[297:10]
Never were devotees of any creed or faith as fast bound in its thraldom as
are the disciples of Gautama Buddha. For nearly two thousand four hundred
years it has been the established religion of Burmah, Siam, Laos, Pega,
Cambodia, Thibet, Japan, Tartary, Ceylon and Loo-Choo, and many
neighboring islands, beside about two-thirds of China and a large portion of
Siberia; and at the present day no inconsiderable number of the simple
peasantry of Swedish Lapland are found among its firm adherents.[297:11]
Well authenticated records establish indisputably the facts, that together
with a noble physique, superior mental endowments, and high moral
excellence, there were found in Buddha a purity of life, sanctity of
character, and simple integrity of purpose, that commended themselves to
all brought under his influence. Even at this distant day, one cannot listen
with tearless eyes to the touching details of his pure, earnest life, and patient
endurance under contradiction, often fierce persecution for those he sought
to benefit. Altogether he seems to have been one of those remarkable
examples, of genius and virtue occasionally met with, unaccountably
superior to the age and nation that produced them.
There is no reason to believe that he ever arrogated to himself any higher
authority than that of a teacher of religion, but, as in modern factions, there
were readily found among his followers those who carried his peculiar
tenets much further than their founder. These, not content with lauding
during his life-time the noble deeds of their teacher, exalted him, within a
quarter of a century after his death, to a place among their deities—
worshiping as a God one they had known only as a simple-hearted, earnest,
truth-seeking philanthropist.[298:1]
This worship was at first but the natural upgushing of the veneration and
love Gautama had inspired during his noble life, and his sorrowing
disciples, mourning over the desolation his death had occasioned, turned for
consolation to the theory that he still lived.
Those who had known him in life cherished his name as the very synonym
of all that was generous and good, and it required but a step to exalt him to
divine honors; and so it was that Gautama Buddha became a God, and
continues to be worshiped as such.
For more than forty years Gautama thus dwelt among his followers,
instructing them daily in the sacred law, and laying down many rules for
their guidance when he should be no longer with them.[299:1]
He lived in a style the most simple and unostentatious, bore
uncomplainingly the weariness and privations incident to the many long
journeys made for the propagation of the new faith; and performed
countless deeds of love and mercy.
"When the time came for him to be perfected, he directed his followers no
longer to remain together, but to go out in companies, and proclaim the
doctrines he had taught them, found schools and monasteries, build temples,
and perform acts of charity, that they might 'obtain merit,' and gain access to
the blessed shade of Nigban, which he told them he was about to enter, and
where they believe he has now reposed more than two thousand years."
To the pious Buddhist it seems irreverent to speak of Gautama by his mere
ordinary and human name, and he makes use therefore, of one of those
numerous epithets which are used only of the Buddha, "the Enlightened
One." Such are Sakya-sinha, "the Lion of the Tribe of Sakya;" Sakya-muni,
"the Sakya Sage;" Sugata, "the Happy One;" Sattha, "the Teacher;" Jina,
"the Conqueror;" Bhagavad, "the Blessed One;" Loka-natha, "the Lord of
the World;" Sarvajna, "the Omniscient One;" Dharma-raja, "the King of
Righteousness;" he is also called "the Author of Happiness," "the Possessor
of All," "the Supreme Being," "the Eternal One," "the Dispeller of Pain and
Trouble," "the Guardian of the Universe," "the Emblem of Mercy," "the
Saviour of the World," "the Great Physician," "the God among Gods," "the
Anointed" or "the Christ," "the Messiah," "the Only-Begotten," "the
Heaven-Descended Mortal," "the Way of Life, and of Immortality," &c.
[299:2]
At no time did Buddha receive his knowledge from a human source, that is,
from flesh and blood. His source was the power of his divine wisdom, the
spiritual power of Maya, which he already possessed before his incarnation.
It was by this divine power, which is also called the "Holy Ghost," that he
became the Saviour, the Kung-teng, the Anointed or Messiah, to whom
prophecies had pointed. Buddha was regarded as the supernatural light of
the world; and this world to which he came was his own, his possession, for
he is styled: "The Lord of the World."[300:1]
"Gautama Buddha taught that all men are brothers;[300:2] that charity ought
to be extended to all, even to enemies; that men ought to love truth and hate
the lie; that good works ought not be done openly, but rather in secret; that
the dangers of riches are to be avoided; that man's highest aim ought to be
purity in thought, word and deed, since the higher beings are pure, whose
nature is akin to that of man."[300:3]
"Sakya-Muni healed the sick, performed miracles and taught his doctrines
to the poor. He selected his first disciples among laymen, and even two
women, the mother and wife of his first convert, the sick Yasa, became his
followers. He subjected himself to the religious obligations imposed by the
recognized authorities, avoided strife, and illustrated his doctrines by his
life."[300:4]
It is said that eighty thousand followers of Buddha went forth from
Hindostan, as missionaries to other lands; and the traditions of various
countries are full of legends concerning their benevolence, holiness, and
miraculous power. His religion has never been propagated by the sword. It
has been effected entirely by the influence of peaceable and persevering
devotees.[300:5] The era of the Siamese is the death of Buddha. In Ceylon,
they date from the introduction of his religion into their island. It is
supposed to be more extensively adopted than any religion that ever
existed. Its votaries are computed at four hundred millions; more than one-
third of the whole human race.[300:6]
There is much contradiction among writers concerning the date of the
Buddhist religion. This confusion arises from the fact that there are several
Buddhas,[301:1] objects of worship; because the word is not a name, but a
title, signifying an extraordinary degree of holiness. Those who have
examined the subject most deeply have generally agreed that Buddha Sakai,
from whom the religion takes its name, must have been a real, historical
personage, who appeared many centuries before the time assigned for the
birth of Christ Jesus.[301:2] There are many things to confirm this
supposition. In some portions of India, his religion appears to have
flourished for a long time side by side with that of the Brahmans. This is
shown by the existence of many ancient temples, some of them cut in
subterranean rock, with an immensity of labor, which it must have required
a long period to accomplish. In those old temples, his statues represent him
with hair knotted all over his head, which was a very ancient custom with
the anchorites of Hindostan, before the practice of shaving the head was
introduced among their devotees.[301:3] His religion is also mentioned in one
of the very ancient epic poems of India. The severity of the persecution
indicates that their numbers and influence had became formidable to the
Brahmans, who had everything to fear from a sect which abolished
hereditary priesthood, and allowed the holy of all castes to become teachers.
[301:4]
FOOTNOTES:
[289:1] Maya, and Mary, as we have already seen, are one and the same name.
[289:2] See chap. xii. Buddha is considered to be an incarnation of Vishnu, although he
preached against the doctrines of the Brahmans. The adoption of Buddha as an incarnation
of Vishnu was really owning to the desire of the Brahmans to effect a compromise with
Buddhism. (See Williams' Hinduism, pp. 82 and 108.)
"Buddha was brought forth not from the matrix, but from the right side, of a virgin." (De
Guignes: Hist. des Huns, tom. i. p. 224.)
"Some of the (Christian) heretics maintained that Christ was born from the side of his
mother." (Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 157.)
"In the eyes of the Buddhists, this personage is sometimes a man and sometimes a god, or
rather both one and the other, a divine incarnation, a man-god; who came into the world to
enlighten men, to redeem them, and to indicate to them the way of safety. This idea of
redemption by a divine incarnation is so general and popular among the Buddhists, that
during our travels in Upper Asia, we everywhere found it expressed in a neat formula. If
we addressed to a Mongol or Thibetan the question, 'Who is Buddha?' he would
immediately reply, 'The Saviour of Men.'" (M. L'Abbé Huc: Travels, vol. i. p. 326.)
"The miraculous birth of Buddha, his life and instructions, contain a great number of the
moral and dogmatic truths professed in Christianity." (Ibid. p. 327.)
"He in mercy left paradise, and came down to earth because he was filled with compassion
for the sins and misery of mankind. He sought to lead them into better paths, and took their
sufferings upon himself, that he might expiate their crimes, and mitigate the punishment
they must otherwise inevitably undergo." (L. Maria Child.)
[289:3] Matt. ch. i.
[289:4] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, pp. 10, 25 and 44. Also, ch. xiii. this work.
[290:1] "As a spirit in the fourth heaven he resolves to give up all that glory in order to be
born in the world for the purpose of rescuing all men from their misery and every future
consequence of it: he vows to deliver all men who are left as it were without a Saviour."
(Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, p. 20.)
[290:2] See King's Gnostics, p. 168, and Hardy's Manual of Buddhism, p. 144.
[290:3] See chap. xii. note 2, page 117.
"On a painted glass of the sixteenth century, found in the church of Jouy, a little village in
France, the Virgin is represented standing, her hands clasped in prayer, and the naked body
of the child in the same attitude appears upon her stomach, apparently supposed to be seen
through the garments and body of the mother. M. Drydon saw at Lyons a Salutation painted
on shutters, in which the two infants (Jesus and John) likewise depicted on their mothers'
stomachs, were also saluting each other. This precisely corresponds to Buddhist accounts
of the Boddhisattvas ante-natal proceedings." (Viscount Amberly: Analysis of Relig.
Belief, p. 224, note.)
[290:4] See chap. xiii.
[290:5] Matt. ii. 1, 2.
[290:6] Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, p. x.
[290:7] We show, in our chapter on "The Birth-Day of Christ Jesus," that this was not the
case. This day was adopted by his followers long after his death.
[290:8] "Devas," i. e., angels.
[290:9] See chap. xiv.
[290:10] Luke, ii. 13, 14.
[290:11] See chap. xv.
[290:12] Matt. ii. 1-11.
[290:13] See chap. xi.
[290:14] Matt. ii. 11.
[290:15] See Hardy's Manual of Buddhism, pp. 145, 146.
[290:16] Gospel of Infancy, Apoc., i. 3. No sooner was Apollo born than he spoke to his
virgin-mother, declaring that he should teach to men the councils of his heavenly father
Zeus. (See Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 22.) Hermes spoke to his mother as soon as
he was born, and, according to Jewish tradition, so did Moses. (See Hardy's Manual of
Buddhism, p. 145.)
[291:1] See Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 103, 104.
[291:2] See Matt. ii. 1.
[291:3] That is, provided he was the expected Messiah, who was to be a mighty prince and
warrior, and who was to rule his people Israel.
[291:4] See Hardy's Manual of Buddhism; Bunsen's Angel-Messiah; Beal's Hist. Buddha,
and other works on Buddhism.
This was a common myth. For instance: A Brahman called Dashthaka, a "heaven
descended mortal," after his birth, without any human instruction whatever, was able
thoroughly to explain the four Vedas, the collective body of the sacred writings of the
Hindoos, which were considered as directly revealed by Brahma. (See Beal's Hist. Buddha,
p. 48.)
Confucius, the miraculous-born Chinese sage, was a wonderful child. At the age of seven
he went to a public school, the superior of which was a person of eminent wisdom and
piety. The faculty with which Confucius imbibed the lessons of his master, the ascendency
which he acquired amongst his fellow pupils, and the superiority of his genius and
capacity, raised universal admiration. He appeared to acquire knowledge intuitively, and
his mother found it superfluous to teach him what "heaven had already engraven upon his
heart." (See Thornton's Hist. China, vol. i. p. 153.)
[291:5] See Infancy, Apoc., xx. 11, and Luke, ii. 46, 47.
[291:6] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 37, and Beal: Hist. Buddha, pp. 67-69.
[291:7] See Infancy, Apoc., xxi. 1, 2, and Luke, ii. 41-48.
[291:8] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 37, and Beal: Hist. Bud. 67-69.
[291:9] Nicodemus, Apoc., ch. i. 20.
[292:1] R. Spence Hardy, in Manual of Buddhism.
[292:2] See chap. xvii.
[292:3] "Mara" is the "Author of Evil," the "King of Death," the "God of the World of
Pleasure," &c., i. e., the Devil. (See Beal: Hist. Buddha, p. 36.)
[292:4] See ch. xix.
[292:5] Matt. iv. 1-18.
[292:6] See ch. xix.
[292:7] Matt. iv. 8-19.
[292:8] See ch. xix.
[292:9] Luke, iv. 8.
[292:10] See ch. xix.
[292:11] Matt. iv. 11.
[292:12] See ch. xix.
[292:13] Matt. iv. 2.
[292:14] Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, p. 45.
[292:15] Matt. iii. 13-17.
[292:16] Matt. xvii. 1, 2.
[293:1] This has evidently an allusion to the Trinity. Buddha, as an incarnation of Vishnu,
would be one god and yet three, three gods and yet one. (See the chapter on the Trinity.)
[293:2] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 45, and Beal: Hist. Buddha, p. 177.
Iamblichus, the great Neo-Platonic mystic, was at one time transfigured. According to the
report of his servants, while in prayer to the gods, his body and clothes were changed to a
beautiful gold color, but after he ceased from prayer, his body became as before. He then
returned to the society of his followers. (Primitive Culture, i. 136, 137.)
[293:3] See ch. xxvii.
[293:4] See that recorded in Matt. viii. 28-34.
[293:5] See ch. xxiii.
[293:6] Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 49.
[293:7] See Matt. xxviii. John, xx.
[293:8] See chap. xxiii.
[293:9] See Acts, i. 9-12.
[293:10] See ch. xxiv.
[293:11] See Ibid.
[293:12] See ch. xxv.
[293:13] Matt. xvi. 27; John, v. 22.
[293:14] "Buddha, the Angel-Messiah, was regarded as the divinely chosen and incarnate
messenger, the vicar of God, and God himself on earth." (Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, p.
33. See also, our chap. xxvi.)
[293:15] Rev. i. 8; xxii. 13.
[293:16] John, i. 1. Titus, ii. 13. Romans, ix. 5. Acts, vii. 59, 60.
[293:17] Müller: Hist. Sanscrit Literature, p. 80.
[293:18] This is according to Christian dogma:
We are informed by the Matthew narrator that when Jesus was eating his
last supper with the disciples,
"He took bread and blessed it, and brake it, and gave it to the disciples, and
said, Take, eat, this is my body. And he took the cup, and gave thanks, and
gave it to them, saying, drink ye all of it, for this is my blood of the New
Testament, which is shed for many for the remission of sins."[305:1]
FOOTNOTES:
[305:1] Matt. xxvi. 26. See also, Mark, xiv. 22.
[305:2] At the heading of the chapters named in the above note may be seen the words:
"Jesus keepeth the Passover (and) instituteth the Lord's Supper."
[305:3] According to the Roman Christians, the Eucharist is the natural body and blood of
Christ Jesus verè et realiter, but the Protestant sophistically explains away these two plain
words verily and indeed, and by the grossest abuse of language, makes them to mean
spiritually by grace and efficacy. "In the sacrament of the altar," says the Protestant divine,
"is the natural body and blood of Christ verè et realiter, verily and indeed, if you take
these terms for spiritually by grace and efficacy; but if you mean really and indeed, so that
thereby you would include a lively and movable body under the form of bread and wine,
then in that sense it is not Christ's body in the sacrament really and indeed."
[305:4] See Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 203, and Anacalypsis, i. 232.
[306:1] "Leur grand Lama célèbre une espèce de sacrifice avec du pain et du vin dont il
prend une petite quantité, et distribue le reste aux Lamas presens à cette cérémonie."
(Quoted in Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 118.)
[306:2] Viscount Amberly's Analysis, p. 46.
[306:3] Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 401.
[306:4] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 163.
[306:5] See Ibid. p. 417.
[306:6] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 179.
[306:7] See Bunsen's Keys of St. Peter, p. 199; Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 60, and Lillie's
Buddhism, p. 136.
[306:8] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 60.
[307:1] See Bunsen's Keys of St. Peter, p. 55, and Genesis, xiv. 18, 19.
[307:2] St. Jerome says: "Melchizédek in typo Christi panem et vinum obtulit: et
mysterium Christianum in Salvatoris sanguine et corpore dedicavit."
[307:3] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 227.
[307:4] See King's Gnostics and their Remains, p. xxv., and Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. ii.
pp. 58, 59.
[307:5] Renan's Hibbert Lectures, p. 35.
[308:1] In the words of Mr. King: "This expression shows that the notion of blessing or
consecrating the elements was as yet unknown to the Christians."
[308:2] Apol. 1. ch. lxvi.
[308:3] Ibid.
[308:4] De Præscriptione Hæreticorum, ch. xl. Tertullian explains this conformity between
Christianity and Paganism, by asserting that the devil copied the Christian mysteries.
[308:5] "De Tinctione, de oblatione panis, et de imagine resurrectionis, videatur doctiss, de
la Cerda ad ea Tertulliani loca ubi de hiscerebus agitur. Gentiles citra Christum, talia
celébradant Mithriaca quæ videbantur cum doctrinâ eucharistæ et resurrectionis et aliis
ritibus Christianis convenire, quæ fecerunt ex industria ad imitationem Christianismi: unde
Tertulliani et Patres aiunt eos talia fecisse, duce diabolo, quo vult esse simia Christi, &c.
Volunt itaque eos res suas ita compârasse, ut Mithræ mysteria essent eucharistiæ
Christianæ imago. Sic Just. Martyr (p. 98), et Tertullianus et Chrysostomus. In suis etiam
sacris habebant Mithriaci lavacra (quasi regenerationis) in quibus tingit et ipse (sc.
sacerdos) quosdam utique credentes et fideles suos, et expiatoria delictorum de lavacro
repromittit et sic adhuc initiat Mithræ." (Hyde: De Relig. Vet. Persian, p. 113.)
[308:6] Justin: 1st Apol., ch. lvi.
[309:1] Dr. Grabes' Notes on Irenæus, lib. v. c. 2, in Anac., vol. i. p. 60.
[309:2] Quoted in Monumental Christianity, p. 370.
[309:3] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 369.
"The Divine Presence called his angel of mercy and said unto him: 'Go through the midst
of the city, through the midst of Jerusalem, and set the mark of Tau (Τ, the headless cross)
upon the foreheads of the men that sigh and that cry for all the abominations that are done
in the midst thereof.'" Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, p. 305.
[309:4] They were celebrated every fifth year at Eleusis, a town of Attica, from whence
their name.
[309:5] Taylor's Diegesis, p. 212.
[309:6] Müller: Origin of Religion, p. 181.
[309:7] "In the Bacchic Mysteries a consecrated cup (of wine) was handed around after
supper, called the cup of the Agathodaemon." (Cousin: Lec. on Modn. Phil. Quoted in Isis
Unveiled, ii. 513. See also, Dunlap's Spirit Hist., p. 217.)
[310:1] Eccl. Hist. cent. ii. pt. 2, sec. v.
[310:2] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 282.
[310:3] Episcopal Communion Service.
[310:4] Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 282.
[310:5] Hebrews, x. 22.
[310:6] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 213.
[310:7] See Ibid.
[310:8] Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 471.
[311:1] See Dunlap's Spirit Hist., p. 217, and Isis Unveiled, vol. ii. p. 513.
[311:2] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 214.
[311:3] See Isis Unveiled, vol. ii. p. 139.
[311:4] See Ibid. p. 513.
[311:5] See Myths of the British Druids, p. 89.
[311:6] See Dupuis: Origin of Relig. Belief, p. 238.
[311:7] See Myths of the British Druids, p. 280, and Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 376.
[311:8] Herbert Spencer: Principles of Sociology, vol. i. p. 299.
[311:9] See Monumental Christianity, pp. 390 and 393.
[311:10] Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 220.
[312:1] Quoted In Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 221.
[312:2] Acosta: Hist. Indies, vol. ii. chs. xiii. and xiv.
[312:3] According to the "John" narrator, Jesus ate no Paschal meal, but was captured the
evening before Passover, and was crucified before the feast opened. According to the
Synoptics, Jesus partook of the Paschal supper, was captured the first night of the feast, and
executed on the first day thereof, which was on a Friday. If the John narrator's account is
true, that of the Synoptics is not, or vice versa.
[313:1] Mark, xiv. 13-16.
[313:2] Gen. xxiv.
[313:3] I. Kings, xvii. 8.
[313:4] II. Kings, iv. 8.
[313:5] Matt. xxvi. 18, 19.
[313:6] For further observations on this subject, see Dr. Isaac M. Wise's "Martyrdom of
Jesus of Nazareth," a valuable little work, published at the office of the American Israelite,
Cincinnati, Ohio.
[315:1] See Gibbon's Rome, vol. v. pp. 399, 400. Calvin, after quoting Matt. xxvi. 26, 27,
says: "There is no doubt that as soon as these words are added to the bread and the wine,
the bread and the wine become the true body and the true blood of Christ, so that the
substance of bread and wine is transmuted into the true body and blood of Christ. He who
denies this calls the omnipotence of Christ in question, and charges Christ himself with
foolishness." (Calvin's Tracts, p. 214. Translated by Henry Beveridge, Edinburgh, 1851.) In
other parts of his writings, Calvin seems to contradict this statement, and speaks of the
bread and wine in the Eucharist as being symbolical. Gibbon evidently refers to the passage
quoted above.
CHAPTER XXXI.
BAPTISM.
Baptism, or the application of water, was a rite well known to the Jews
before the time of Christ Jesus, and was practiced by them when they
admitted proselytes to their religion from heathenism. When children were
baptized they received the sign of the cross, were anointed, and fed with
milk and honey.[320:4] "It was not customary, however, among them, to
baptize those who were converted to the Jewish religion, until after the
Babylonish captivity."[320:5] This clearly shows that they learned the rite
from their heathen oppressors.
Baptism was practiced by the ascetics of Buddhist origin, known as the
Essenes.[320:6] John the Baptist was, evidently, nothing more than a member
of this order, with which the deserts of Syria and the Thebais of Egypt
abounded.
The idea that man is restrained from perfect union with God by his
imperfection, uncleanness and sin, was implicitly believed by the ancient
Greeks and Romans. In Thessaly was yearly celebrated a great festival of
cleansing. A work bearing the name of "Museus" was a complete ritual of
purifications. The usual mode of purification was dipping in water
(immersion), or it was performed by aspersion. These sacraments were held
to have virtue independent of the dispositions of the candidates, an opinion
which called forth the sneer of Diogenes, the Grecian historian, when he
saw some one undergoing baptism by aspersion.
"Poor wretch! do you not see that since these sprinklings cannot repair your
grammatical errors, they cannot repair either, the faults of your life."[321:1]
And the belief that water could wash out the stains of original sin, led the
poet Ovid (43 B. C.) to say:
These ancient Pagans had especial gods and goddesses who presided over
the birth of children. The goddess Nundina took her name from the ninth
day, on which all male children were sprinkled with holy water,[321:2] as
females were on the eighth, at the same time receiving their name, of which
addition to the ceremonial of Christian baptism we find no mention in the
Christian Scriptures. When all the forms of the Pagan nundination were
duly complied with, the priest gave a certificate to the parents of the
regenerated infant; it was, therefore, duly recognized as a legitimate
member of the family and of society, and the day was spent in feasting and
hilarity.[321:3]
Adults were also baptized; and those who were initiated in the sacred rites
of the Bacchic mysteries were regenerated and admitted by baptism, just as
they were admitted into the mysteries of Mithra.[321:4] Justin Martyr, like his
brother Tertullian, claimed that this ablution was invented by demons, in
imitation of the true baptism, that their votaries might also have their
pretended purification by water.[321:5]
Infant Baptism was practiced among the ancient inhabitants of northern
Europe—the Danes, Swedes, Norwegians and Icelanders—long before the
first dawn of Christianity had reached those parts. Water was poured on the
head of the new-born child, and a name was given it at the same time.
Baptism is expressly mentioned in the Hava-mal and Rigs-mal, and alluded
to in other epic poems.[322:1]
The ancient Livonians (inhabitants of the three modern Baltic provinces of
Courland, Livonia, and Esthonia), observed the same ceremony; which also
prevailed among the ancient Germans. This is expressly stated in a letter
which the famous Pope Gregory III. sent to their apostle Boniface, directing
him how to act in respect to it.[322:2]
The same ceremony was performed by the ancient Druids of Britain.[322:3]
Among the New Zealanders young children were baptized. After the
ceremony of baptism had taken place, prayers were offered to make the
child sacred, and clean from all impurities.[322:4]
The ancient Mexicans baptized their children shortly after birth. After the
relatives had assembled in the court of the parents' house, the midwife
placed the child's head to the east, and prayed for a blessing from the
Saviour Quetzalcoatle, and the goddess of the water. The breast of the child
was then touched with the fingers dipped in water, and the following prayer
said:
"May it (the water) destroy and separate from thee all the evil that was
beginning in thee before the beginning of the world."
After this the child's body was washed with water, and all things that might
injure him were requested to depart from him, "that now he may live again
and be born again."[322:5]
Mr. Prescott alludes to it as follows, in his "Conquest of Mexico:"[322:6]
"The lips and bosom of the infant were sprinkled with water, and the Lord
was implored to permit the holy drops to wash away that sin that was given
to it before the foundation of the world, so that the child might be born
anew." "This interesting rite, usually solemnized with great formality, in the
presence of assembled friends and relations, is detailed with minuteness by
Sahagun and by Zuazo, both of them eyewitnesses."
Rev. J. P. Lundy says:
"Now, as baptism of some kind has been the universal custom of all
religious nations and peoples for purification and regeneration, it is not to
be wondered at that it had found its way from high Asia, the centre of the
Old World's religion and civilization, into the American continent. . . .
"American priests were found in Mexico, beyond Darien, baptizing boys
and girls a year old in the temples at the cross, pouring the water upon them
from a small pitcher."[323:1]
The water which they used was called the "WATER OF REGENERATION."[323:2]
The Rev. Father Acosta alludes to this baptism by saying:
"The Indians had an infinite number of other ceremonies and customs
which resembled to the ancient law of Moses, and some to those which the
Moores use, and some approaching near to the Law of the Gospel, as the
baths or Opacuna, as they called them; they did wash themselves in water to
cleanse themselves from sin."[323:3]
After speaking of "confession which the Indians used," he says:
"When the Inca had been confessed, he made a certain bath to cleanse
himself, in a running river, saying these words: 'I have told my sins to the
Sun (his god); receive them, O thou River, and carry them to the Sea, where
they may never appear more.'"[323:4]
He tells us that the Mexicans also had a baptism for infants, which they
performed with great ceremony.[323:5]
Baptism was also practiced in Yucatan. They administered it to children
three years old; and called it REGENERATION.[323:6]
The ancient Peruvians also baptized their children.[323:7]
History, then, records the fact that all the principal nations of antiquity
administered the rite of baptism to their children, and to adults who were
initiated into the sacred mysteries. The words "regenerationem et
impunitatem perjuriorum suorum"—used by the heathen in this ceremony
—prove that the doctrines as well as the outward forms were the same. The
giving of a name to the child, the marking of him with the cross as a sign of
his being a soldier of Christ, followed at fifteen years of age by his
admission into the mysteries of the ceremony of confirmation, also prove
that the two institutions are identical. But the most striking feature of all is
the regeneration—and consequent forgiveness of sins—the being "born
again." This shows that the Christian baptism in doctrine as well as in
outward ceremony, was precisely that of the heathen. We have seen that it
was supposed to destroy all the evil in him, and all things that might injure
him were requested to depart from him. So likewise among the Christians;
the priest, looking upon the child, and baptizing him, was formerly
accustomed to say:
"I command thee, unclean spirit, in the name of the Father, of the Son, and
of the Holy Ghost, that thou come out and depart from this infant, whom
our Lord Jesus Christ has vouchsafed to call to this holy baptism, to be
made member of his body and of his holy congregation. And presume not
hereafter to exercise any tyranny towards this infant, whom Christ hath
bought with his precious blood, and by this holy baptism called to be of his
flock."
The ancients also baptized with fire as well as water. This is what is alluded
to many times in the gospels; for instance, Matt. (iii. 11) makes John say, "I,
indeed, baptize you with water; he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost
and with FIRE."
The baptism by fire was in use by the Romans; it was performed by
jumping three times through the flames of a sacred fire. This is still
practiced in India. Even at the present day, in some parts of Scotland, it is a
custom at the baptism of children to swing them in their clothes over a fire
three times, saying, "Now, fire, burn this child, or never." Here is evidently a
relic of the heathen baptism by fire.
Christian baptism was not originally intended to be administered to
unconscious infants, but to persons in full possession of their faculties, and
responsible for their actions. Moreover, it was performed, as is well known,
not merely by sprinkling the forehead, but by causing the candidate to
descend naked into the water, the priest joining him there, and pouring the
water over his head. The catechumen could not receive baptism until after
he understood something of the nature of the faith he was embracing, and
was prepared to assume its obligations. A rite more totally unfitted for
administration to infants could hardly have been found. Yet such was the
need that was felt for a solemn recognition by religion of the entrance of a
child into the world, that this rite, in course of time, completely lost its
original nature, and, as with the heathen, infancy took the place of maturity:
sprinkling of immersion. But while the age and manner of baptism were
altered, the ritual remained under the influence of the primitive idea with
which it had been instituted. The obligations were no longer confined to the
persons baptized, hence they must be undertaken for them. Thus was the
Christian Church landed in the absurdity—unparalleled, we believe, in any
other natal ceremony—of requiring the most solemn promises to be made,
not by those who were thereafter to fulfill them, but by others in their name;
these others having no power to enforce their fulfillment, and neither those
actually assuming the engagement, nor those on whose behalf it was
assumed, being morally responsible in case it should be broken. Yet this
strange incongruity was forced upon the church by an imperious want of
human nature itself, and the insignificant sects who have adopted the
baptism of adults only, have failed, in their zeal for historical consistency, to
recognize a sentiment whose roots lie far deeper than the chronological
foundation of Christian rites, and stretch far wider than the geographical
boundaries of the Christian faith.
The intention of all these forms of baptism is identical. Water, as the natural
means of physical cleansing, is the universal symbol of spiritual
purification. Hence immersion, or washing, or sprinkling, implies the
deliverance of the infant from the stain of original sin.[325:1] The Pagan and
Christian rituals, as we have seen, are perfectly clear on this head. In both,
the avowed intention is to wash away the sinful nature common to
humanity; in both, the infant is declared to be born again by the agency of
water. Among the early Christians, as with the Pagans, the sacrament of
baptism was supposed to contain a full and absolute expiation of sin; and
the soul was instantly restored to its original purity, and entitled to the
promise of eternal salvation. Among the proselytes of Christianity, there
were many who judged it imprudent to precipitate a salutary rite, which
could not be repeated; to throw away an inestimable privilege, which could
never be recovered. By the delay of their baptism, they could venture freely
to indulge their passions in the enjoyments of this world, while they still
retained in their own hands the means of a sure and easy absolution. St.
Constantine was one of these.
FOOTNOTES:
[316:1] The Rev. Dr. Geikie makes the assertion that: "With the call to repent, John united
a significant rite for all who were willing to own their sins, and promise amendment of life.
It was the new and striking requirement of baptism, which John had been sent by divine
appointment to INTRODUCE." (Life of Christ, vol. i. p. 394.)
[316:2] See Galatians, ii. 7-9. Acts, x. and xi.
[316:3] See The Bible for Learners, vol. iii. pp. 658 and 472.
[316:4] See Eusebius: Eccl. Hist., lib. 7, ch. ii.
[316:5] Monumental Christianity, p. 385.
[317:1] "Among all nations, and from the very earliest period, WATER has been used as a
species of religious sacrament. . . . Water was the agent by means of which everything was
regenerated or born again. Hence, in all nations, we find the Dove, or Divine Love,
operating by means of its agent, water, and all nations using the ceremony of plunging, or,
as we call it, baptizing, for the remission of sins, to introduce the candidate to a
regeneration, to a new birth unto righteousness." (Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 529.)
"Baptism is a very ancient rite pertaining to heathen religions, whether of Asia, Africa,
Europe or America." (Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 416.)
"Baptism, or purification by water, was a ceremony common to all religions of antiquity. It
consists in being made clean from some supposed pollution or defilement." (Bell's
Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 201.)
"L'usage de ce Baptéme par immersion, qui subsista dans l'Occident jusqu' au 8e ciècle, se
maintient encore dans l'Eglise Greque: c'est celui que Jean le Précurseur administra, dans
le Jourdain, à Jesus Christ même. Il fut pratiqué chez les Juifs, chez les Grecs, et chez
presque tous les peuples, bien des siècles avant l'existence de la religion Chrétienne."
(D'Ancarville: Res., vol. i. p. 292.)
[317:2] See Amberly's Analysis, p. 61. Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 42. Higgins'
Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 69, and Lillie's Buddhism, pp. 55 and 184.
[317:3] Lillie's Buddhism, p. 134.
[318:1] Life and Religion of the Hindus, p. 94.
[318:2] Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 125.
"Every orthodox Hindu is perfectly persuaded that the dirtiest water, if taken from a sacred
stream and applied to his body, either externally or internally, will purify his soul." (Prof.
Monier Williams: Hinduism, p. 157.) The Egyptians bathed in the water of the Nile; the
Chaldeans and Persians in the Euphrates, and the Hindus, at we have seen, in the Ganges,
all of which were considered as "sacred waters" by the different nations. The Jews looked
upon the Jordan in the same manner.
Herodotus, speaking of the Persians' manners, says:
"They (the Persians) neither make water, nor spit, nor wash their hands in a river, nor defile
the stream with urine, nor do they allow any one else to do so, but they pay extreme
veneration to all rivers." (Hist. lib. i. ch. 138.)
[318:3] Williams' Hinduism, p. 176.
[318:4] Hist. Manichee, lib. ix. ch. vi. sect. xvi. in Anac., vol. ii. p. 65. See also, Dupuis:
Orig. Relig. Belief, p. 249, and Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 392.
[318:5] "Pro infantibus non utuntur circumcisione, sed tantum baptismo seu lotione ad
animæ purificationem internam. Infantem ad sacerdotem in ecclesiam adductum sistunt
coram sole et igne, quâ factâ ceremoniâ, eundem sanctiorem existimant. D. Lord dicit quod
aquam ad hoc afferunt in cortice arboris Holm: ea autem arbor revers est Haum Magorum,
cujus mentionem aliâ occasione supra fecimus. Alias, aliquando fit immergendo in
magnum vas aquæ, ut dicit Tavernier. Post talem lotionem seu baptismum, sacerdos
imponit nomen à parentibus inditum." (Hyde de Rel. Vet. Pers., p. 414.) After this Hyde
goes on to say, that when he comes to be fifteen years of age he is confirmed by receiving
the girdle, and the sudra or cassock.
[319:1] See Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. xxv. Higgins: Anac., vol. i pp. 218 and 222.
Dunlap: Mysteries of Adoni, p. 189. King: The Gnostics and their Remains, p. 51.
[319:2] De Præscrip. ch. xi.
[319:3] Ibid.
[319:4] "Mithra signat illic in frontibus milites suos."
[319:5] "Semper enim cruci baptismus jungitur." (Aug. Temp. Ser. ci.)
[319:6] See Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 69, and Monumental Christianity, p. 385.
[319:7] "Sacerdos, stipatum me religiosa cohorte, deducit ad proximas balucas; et prius
sueto lavraco traditum, prœfatus deûm veniam, purissimē circumrorans abluit." (Apuleius:
Milesi, ii. citat. a Higgins: Anac., vol. ii. p. 69.)
[320:1] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 416. Dunlap: Mysteries Adoni, p. 139.
[320:2] Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 392.
[320:3] See Higgins: Anac., vol. ii. pp. 67-69.
[320:4] Barnes: Notes, vol. i. p. 38. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 65.
[320:5] Barnes: Notes, vol. i. p. 41.
[320:6] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 121, Gainsburgh's Essenes, and Higgins'
Anacalypsis, vol. ii. pp. 66, 67.
[321:1] Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 391.
[321:2] "Holy Water"—water wherein the person is baptized, in the name of the Father, and
the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. (Church of England Catechism.)
[321:3] See Taylor's Diegesis, pp. 333, 334, and Higgins' Anacalypsis, ii. p. 65.
[321:4] See Taylor's Diegesis, pp. 80 and 232, and Baring-Gould's Orig. Relig. Belief, vol.
i. p. 391.
"De-là-vint, que pour devenir capable d'entendre les secrets de la création, révélés dans ces
mêmes mystères, il fallut se faire régénérer par l'initiation. Cette cérémonie, par laquelle,
on apprenoit les vrais principes de la vie, s'opéroit par le moyen de l'eau qui voit été celui
de la régénération du monde. On conduisoit sur les bords de l'Ilissus le candidat qui devoit
être initié; apres l'avoir purifié avec le sel et l'eau de la mer, on repandoit de l'orge sur lui,
on le couronnoit de fleurs, et l'Hydranos ou le Baptisseur le plongeoit dans le fleuve."
(D'Ancarville: Res., vol. i. p. 292. Anac., ii. p. 65.)
[321:5] Taylor's Diegesis, p. 232.
[322:1] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, pp. 306, 313, 320, 366. Baring-Gould's Orig.
Relig. Belief, vol. i. pp. 392, 393, and Dupuis, p. 242.
[322:2] Mallet: Northern Antiquities, p. 206.
[322:3] Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 393. Higgins: Anac., vol. ii. p. 67, and
Davies: Myths of the British Druids.
[322:4] Sir George Grey: Polynesian Mytho., p. 32, in Baring-Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief,
vol. i. p. 392.
[322:5] See Viscount Amberly's Analysis Relig. Belief, p. 59.
[322:6] Vol. i. p. 64.
[323:1] Monumental Christianity, pp. 389, 390.
[323:2] Kingsborough: Mex. Antiq., vol. vi. p. 114.
[323:3] Hist. Indies, vol. ii. p. 369.
[323:4] Ibid. p. 361.
[323:5] Ibid. p. 369.
[323:6] Monumental Christianity, p. 390.
[323:7] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 416.
[325:1] That man is born in original sin seems to have been the belief of all nations of
antiquity, especially the Hindus. This sense of original corruption is expressed in the
following prayer, used by them:
"I am sinful, I commit sin, my nature is sinful, I am conceived in sin. Save me, O thou
lotus-eyed Heri, the remover of Sin." (Williams' Hinduism, p. 214.)
CHAPTER XXXII.
THE WORSHIP OF THE VIRGIN MOTHER.
The worship of the "Virgin," the "Queen of Heaven," the "Great Goddess,"
the "Mother of God," &c., which has become one of the grand features of
the Christian religion—the Council of Ephesus (A. D. 431) having declared
Mary "Mother of God," her assumption being declared in 813, and her
Immaculate Conception by the Pope and Council in 1851[326:1]—was
almost universal, for ages before the birth of Jesus, and "the pure virginity
of the celestial mother was a tenet of faith for two thousand years before the
virgin now adored was born."[326:2]
In India, they have worshiped, for ages, Devi, Maha-Devi—"The One Great
Goddess"[326:3]—and have temples erected in honor of her.[326:4] Gonzales
states that among the Indians he found a temple "Parituræ Virginis"—of the
Virgin about to bring forth.[326:5]
Maya, the mother of Buddha, and Devaki the mother of Crishna, were
worshiped as virgins,[326:6] and represented with the infant Saviours in their
arms, just as the virgin of the Christians is represented at the present day.
Maya was so pure that it was impossible for God, man, or Asura to view her
with carnal desire. Fig. No. 16 is a representation of the Virgin Devaki,
with, the infant Saviour Crishna, taken from Moor's "Hindu Pantheon."
[327:1] "No person could bear to gaze upon Devaki, because of the light that
This crescent moon is the symbol of Isis and Juno, and is the Yoni of the
Hindoos.[328:6]
The priests of Isis yearly dedicated to her a new ship (emblematic of the
YONI), laden with the first fruits of spring. Strange as it may seem, the
carrying in procession of ships, in which the Virgin Mary takes the place of
the heathen goddesses, has not yet wholly gone out of use.[328:7]
Isis is also represented, with the infant Saviour in her arms, enclosed in a
framework of the flowers of the Egyptian bean, or lotus.[328:8] The Virgin
Mary is very often represented in this manner, as those who have studied
mediæval art, well know.
Dr. Inman, describing a painting of the Virgin Mary, which is to be seen in
the South Kensington Museum, and which is enclosed in a framework of
flowers, says:
"It represents the Virgin and Child precisely as she used to be represented in
Egypt, in India, in Assyria, Babylonia, Phœnicia, and Etruria."[329:1]
The lotus and poppy were sacred among all Eastern nations, and were
consecrated to the various virgins worshiped by them. These virgins are
represented holding this plant in their hands, just as the Virgin, adored by
the Christians, is represented at the present day.[329:2] Mr. Squire, speaking
of this plant, says:
"It is well known that the 'Nymphe'—lotus or water-lily—is held sacred
throughout the East, and the various sects of that quarter of the globe
represented their deities either decorated with its flowers, holding it as a
sceptre, or seated on a lotus throne or pedestal. Lacshmi, the beautiful
Hindoo goddess, is associated with the lotus. The Egyptian Isis is often
called the 'Lotus-crowned,' in the ancient invocations. The Mexican goddess
Corieotl, is often represented with a water-plant resembling the lotus in her
hand."[329:3]
In Egyptian and Hindoo mythology, the offspring of the virgin is made to
bruise the head of the serpent, but the Romanists have given this office to
the mother. Mary is often seen represented standing on the serpent. Fig. 17
alludes to this, and to her immaculate conception, which, as we have seen,
was declared by the Pope and council in 1851. The notion of the divinity of
Mary was broached by some at the Council of Nice, and they were thence
named Marianites.
The Christian Father Epiphanius accounts for the fact of the Egyptians
worshiping a virgin and child, by declaring that the prophecy—"Behold, a
virgin shall conceive and bring forth a son"—must have been revealed to
them.[329:4]
In an ancient Christian work, called the "Chronicle of Alexandria," occurs
the following:
"Watch how Egypt has constructed the childbirth of a virgin, and the birth
of her son, who was exposed in a crib to the adoration of the people."[330:1]
We have another Egyptian Virgin Mother in Neith or Nout, mother of
"Osiris the Saviour." She was known as the "Great Mother," and yet
"Immaculate Virgin."[330:2] M. Beauregard speaks of
"The Immaculate Conception of the Virgin (Mary), who can henceforth, as
well as the Egyptian Minerva, the mysterious Neith, boast of having come
from herself, and of having given birth to god."[330:3]
What is known in Christian countries as "Candlemas day," or the
Purification of the Virgin Mary, is of Egyptian origin. The feast of
Candlemas was kept by the ancient Egyptians in honor of the goddess
Neith, and on the very day that is marked on our Christian almanacs as
"Candlemas day."[330:4]
The ancient Chaldees believed in a celestial virgin, who had purity of body,
loveliness of person, and tenderness of affection; and who was one to whom
the erring sinner could appeal with more chance of success than to a stern
father. She was portrayed as a mother, although a virgin, with a child in her
arms.[330:5]
The ancient Babylonians and Assyrians worshiped a goddess mother, and
son, who was represented in pictures and in images as an infant in his
mother's arms (see Fig. No. 18). Her name was Mylitta, the divine son was
Tammuz, the Saviour, whom we have seen rose from the dead. He was
invested with all his father's attributes and glory, and identified with him.
He was worshiped as mediator.[330:6]
There was a temple at Paphos, in Cyprus, dedicated to the Virgin Mylitta,
and was the most celebrated one in Grecian times.[330:7]
The ancient Etruscans worshiped a Virgin Mother and Son, who was
represented in pictures and images in the arms of his mother. This was the
goddess Nutria, to be seen in Fig. No. 19. On the arm of the mother is an
inscription in Etruscan letters. This goddess was also worshiped in Italy.
Long before the Christian era temples and statues were erected in memory
of her. "To the Great Goddess Nutria," is an inscription which has been
found among the ruins of a temple dedicated to her. No doubt the Roman
Church would have claimed her for a Madonna, but most unluckily for
them, she has the name "Nutria," in Etruscan letters on her arm, after the
Etruscan practice.
The Egyptian Isis was also worshiped in Italy, many centuries before the
Christian era, and all images of her, with the infant Horus in her arms, have
been adopted, as we shall presently see, by the Christians, even though they
represent her and her child as black as an Ethiopian, in the same manner as
we have seen that Devaki and Crishna were represented.
The ancient Persians worshiped the Virgin and Child. On the monuments of
Mithra, the Saviour, the Mediating and Redeeming God of the Persians, the
Virgin Mother of this god is to be seen suckling her infant.[332:5]
The ancient Greeks and Romans worshiped the Virgin Mother and Child for
centuries before the Christian era. One of these was Myrrha,[332:6] the
mother of Bacchus, the Saviour, who was represented with the infant in her
arms. She had the title of "Queen of Heaven."[332:7] At many a Christian
shrine the infant Saviour Bacchus may be seen reposing in the arms of his
deified mother. The names are changed—the ideas remain as before.[332:8]
The Rev. Dr. Stuckley writes:
"Diodorus says Bacchus was born of Jupiter, the Supreme God, and Ceres
(Myrrha). Both Ceres and Proserpine were called Virgo (Virgin). The story
of this woman being deserted by a man, and espoused by a god, has
somewhat so exceedingly like that passage, Matt. i. 19, 20, of the blessed
Virgin's history, that we should wonder at it, did we not see the parallelism
infinite between the sacred and the profane history before us.
"There are many similitudes between the Virgin (Mary) and the mother of
Bacchus (also called Mary—see note 6 below)—in all the old fables. Mary,
or Miriam, St. Jerome interprets Myrrha Maris. Orpheus calls the mother of
Bacchus a Sea Goddess (and the mother of Jesus is called 'Mary, Star of the
Sea.'")[332:9]
Thus we see that the reverend and learned Dr. Stuckley has clearly made
out that the story of Mary, the "Queen of Heaven," the "Star of the Sea," the
mother of the Lord, with her translation to heaven, &c., was an old story
long before Jesus of Nazareth was born. After this Stuckley observes that
the Pagan "Queen of Heaven" has upon her head a crown of twelve stars.
This, as we have observed above, is the case of the Christian "Queen of
Heaven" in almost every Romish church on the continent of Europe.
The goddess Cybele was another. She was equally called the "Queen of
Heaven" and the "Mother of God." As devotees now collect alms in the
name of the Virgin Mary, so did they in ancient times in the name of
Cybele. The Galli now used in the churches of Italy, were anciently used in
the worship of Cybele (called Galliambus, and sang by her priests). "Our
Lady Day," or the day of the Blessed Virgin of the Roman Church, was
heretofore dedicated to Cybele.[333:1]
This mother, who had the title of "Virgin," and "Queen of Heaven,"[334:9]
was Chimalman, or Sochiquetzal, and the infant was Quetzalcoatle, the
crucified Saviour. Lord Kingsborough says:
"She who represented 'Our Lady' (among the ancient Mexicans) had her
hair tied up in the manner in which the Indian women tie and fasten their
hair, and in the knot behind was inserted a small cross, by which it was
intended to show that she was the Most Holy."[335:1]
The Mexicans had pictures of this "Heavenly Goddess" on long pieces of
leather, which they rolled up.[335:2]
The annunciation to the Virgin Chimalman, that she should become the
mother of the Saviour Quetzalcoatle, was the subject of a Mexican
hieroglyphic, and is remarkable in more than one respect. She appears to be
receiving a bunch of flowers from the embassador or angel,[335:3] which
brings to mind the lotus, the sacred plant of the East, which is placed in the
hands of the Pagan and Christian virgins.
The 25th of March, which was celebrated throughout the ancient Grecian
and Roman world, in honor of "the Mother of the Gods," was appointed to
the honor of the Christian "Mother of God," and is now celebrated in
Catholic countries, and called "Lady day."[335:4] The festival of the
conception of the "Blessed Virgin Mary" is also held on the very day that
the festival of the miraculous conception of the "Blessed Virgin Juno" was
held among the pagans,[335:5] which, says the author of the "Perennial
Calendar," "is a remarkable coincidence."[335:6] It is not such a very
"remarkable coincidence" after all, when we find that, even as early as the
time of St. Gregory, Bishop of Neo-Cæsarea, who flourished about A. D.
240-250, Pagan festivals were changed into Christian holidays. This saint
was commended by his namesake of Nyssa for changing the Pagan festivals
into Christian holidays, the better to draw the heathens to the religion of
Christ.[335:7]
The month of May, which was dedicated to the heathen Virgin Mothers, is
also the month of Mary, the Christian Virgin.
Now that we have seen that the worship of the Virgin and Child was
universal for ages before the Christian era, we shall say a few words on the
subject of pictures and images of the Madonna—so called.
The most ancient pictures and statues in Italy and other parts of Europe, of
what are supposed to be representations of the Virgin Mary and the infant
Jesus, are black. The infant god, in the arms of his black mother, his eyes
and drapery white, is himself perfectly black.[335:8]
Godfrey Higgins, on whose authority we have stated the above, informs us
that, at the time of his writing—1825-1835—images and paintings of this
kind were to be seen at the cathedral of Moulins; the famous chapel of "the
Virgin" at Loretto; the church of the Annunciation, the church of St. Lazaro,
and the church of St. Stephens, at Genoa; St. Francis, at Pisa; the church at
Brixen, in the Tyrol; the church at Padua; the church of St. Theodore, at
Munich—in the two last of which the white of the eyes and teeth, and the
studied redness of the lips, are very observable.[336:1]
"The Bambino[336:2] at Rome is black," says Dr. Inman, "and so are the
Virgin and Child at Loretto."[336:3] Many more are to be seen in Rome, and
in innumerable other places; in fact, says Mr. Higgins,
"There is scarcely an old church in Italy where some remains of the worship
of the black Virgin, and black child, are not met with;" and that "pictures in
great numbers are to be met with, where the white of the eyes, and of the
teeth, and the lips a little tinged with red, like the black figures in the
museum of the Indian company."[336:4]
Fig. No. 20 is a copy of the image of the Virgin of Loretto. Dr. Conyers
Middleton, speaking of it, says:
"The mention of Loretto puts me in mind of the surprise that I was in at the
first sight of the Holy Image, for its face is as black as a negro's. But I soon
recollected, that this very circumstance of its complexion made it but
resemble the more exactly the old idols of Paganism."[336:5]
The reason assigned by the Christian priests for the images being black, is
that they are made so by smoke and incense, but, we may ask, if they
became black by smoke, why is it that the white drapery, white teeth, and
the white of the eyes have not changed in color? Why are the lips of a bright
red color? Why, we may also ask, are the black images crowned and
adorned with jewels, just as the images of the Hindoo and Egyptian virgins
are represented?
When we find that the Virgin Devaki, and the Virgin Isis were represented
just as these so-called ancient Christian idols represent Mary, we are led to
the conclusion that they are Pagan idols adopted by the Christians.
We may say, in the words of Mr. Lundy, "what jewels are doing on the neck
of this poor and lowly maid, it is not easy to say."[337:1] The crown is also
foreign to early representations of the Madonna and Child, but not so to
Devaki and Crishna,[337:2] and Isis and Horus. The coronation of the Virgin
Mary is unknown to primitive Christian art, but is common in Pagan art.
[337:3]"It may be well," says Mr. Lundy, "to compare some of the oldest
Hindoo representations of the subject with the Romish, and see how
complete the resemblance is;"[337:4] and Dr. Inman says that, "the head-
dress, as put on the head of the Virgin Mary, is of Grecian, Egyptian, and
Indian origin."[337:5]
The whole secret of the fact of these early representations of the Virgin
Mary and Jesus—so-called—being black, crowned, and covered with
jewels, is that they are of pre-Christian origin; they are Isis and Horus, and
perhaps, in some cases, Devaki and Crishna, baptized anew.
The Egyptian "Queen of Heaven" was worshiped in Europe for centuries
before and after the Christian Era.[337:6] Temples and statues were also
erected in honor of Isis, one of which was at Bologna, in Italy.
Mr. King tells us that the Emperor Hadrian zealously strove to reanimate
the forms of that old religion, whose spirit had long since passed away, and
it was under his patronage that the creed of the Pharaohs blazed up for a
moment with a bright but fictitious lustre.[337:7] To this period belongs a
beautiful sard, in Mr. King's collection, representing Serapis[337:8] and Isis,
with the legend: "Immaculate is Our Lady Isis."[337:9]
Mr. King further tells us that:
"The 'Black Virgins' so highly reverenced in certain French cathedrals
during the long night of the middle ages, proved, when at last examined
critically, basalt figures of Isis."[337:10]
And Mr. Bonwick says:
"We may be surprised that, as Europe has Black Madonnas, Egypt had
Black images and pictures of Isis. At the same time it is a little odd that the
Virgin Mary copies most honored should not only be Black, but have a
decided Isis cast of feature."[338:1]
The shrine now known as that of the "Virgin in Amadon," in France, was
formerly an old Black Venus.[338:2]
"To this we may add," (says Dr. Inman), "that at the Abbey of Einsiedelen,
on Lake Zurich, the object of adoration is an old black doll, dressed in gold
brocade, and glittering with jewels. She is called, apparently, the Virgin of
the Swiss Mountains. My friend, Mr. Newton, also tells me that he saw,
over a church door at Ivrea, in Italy, twenty-nine miles from Turin, the
fresco of a Black Virgin and child, the former bearing a triple crown."[338:3]
This triple crown is to be seen on the heads of Pagan gods and goddesses,
especially those of the Hindoos.
Dr. Barlow says:
"The doctrine of the Mother of God was of Egyptian origin. It was brought
in along with the worship of the Madonna by Cyril (Bishop of Alexandria,
and the Cyril of Hypatia) and the monks of Alexandria, in the fifth century.
The earliest representations of the Madonna have quite a Greco-Egyptian
character, and there can be little doubt that Isis nursing Horus was the origin
of them all."[338:4]
And Arthur Murphy tells us that:
"The superstition and religious ceremonies of the Egyptians were diffused
over Asia, Greece, and the rest of Europe. Brotier says, that inscriptions of
Isis and Serapis (Horus?) have been frequently found in Germany. . . . The
missionaries who went in the eighth and ninth centuries to propagate the
Christian religion in those parts, saw many images and statues of these
gods."[338:5]
These "many images and statues of these gods" were evidently baptized
anew, given other names, and allowed to remain where they were.
In many parts of Italy are to be seen pictures of the Virgin with her infant in
her arms, inscribed with the words: "Deo Soli." This betrays their Pagan
origin.
FOOTNOTES:
[326:1] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 115, and Monumental Christianity, pp. 206 and
226.
[326:2] Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 159.
[326:3] See Williams' Hinduism.
[326:4] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 540.
[326:5] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 185.
[326:6] St. Jerome says: "It is handed down as a tradition among the Gymnosophists of
India, that Buddha, the founder of their system was brought forth by a virgin from her
side." (Contra Jovian, bk. i. Quoted in Rhys Davids' Buddhism, p. 183.)
[327:1] Plate 59.
[327:2] Monumental Christianity, p. 218.
Of the Virgin Mary we read: "Her face was shining as snow, and its brightness could hardly
be borne. Her conversation was with the angels, &c." (Nativity of Mary, Apoc.)
[327:3] See Ancient Faiths, i. 401.
[327:4] Davis' China, vol. ii. p. 95.
[327:5] The Heathen Relig., p. 60.
[327:6] Barrows: Travels in China, p. 467.
[327:7] Gutzlaff's Voyages, p. 154.
[328:1] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 141.
[328:2] See The Lily of Israel, p. 14.
[328:3] Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 425.
[328:4] See Draper's Science and Religion, pp. 47, 48, and Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. i. p.
804.
[328:5] Pagan and Christian Symbolism, p. 50.
[328:6] See Monumental Christianity, p. 307, and Dr. Inman's Ancient Faiths.
[328:7] See Cox's Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. p. 119, note.
[328:8] See Pagan and Christian Symbolism, pp. 13, 14.
[329:1] Pagan and Christian Symbolism, pp. 4, 5.
[329:2] See Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, pp. 45, 104, 105.
"We see, in pictures, that the Virgin and Child are associated in modern times with the split
apricot, the pomegranate, rimmon, and the Vine, just as was the ancient Venus." (Dr.
Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 528.)
[329:3] Serpent Symbol, p. 39.
[329:4] Taylor's Diegesis, p. 185.
[330:1] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 143.
[330:2] Ibid. p. 115.
[330:3] Quoted in Ibid. p. 115.
[330:4] Ibid., and Kenrick's Egypt.
[330:5] Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 59.
[330:6] See Monumental Christianity, p. 211, and Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 350.
[330:7] Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 213.
[332:1] Jeremiah, xliv. 16-22.
[332:2] See Colenso's Lectures, p. 297, and Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 148.
[332:3] See the Pentateuch Examined, vol. vi. p. 115, App., and Bonwick's Egyptian
Belief, p. 148.
[332:4] See King's Gnostics, p. 91, and Monumental Christianity, p. 224.
[332:5] See Dupuis: Origin of Relig. Belief, p. 237.
[332:6] It would seem more than chance that so many of the virgin mothers and goddesses
of antiquity should have the same name. The mother of Bacchus was Myrrha: the mother
of Mercury or Hermes was Myrrha or Maia (See Fergusson's Tree and Serpent Worship, p.
186, and Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 233); the mother of the Siamese Saviour—
Sommona Cadom—was called Maya Maria, i. e., "the Great Mary;" the mother of Adonis
was Myrrha (See Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 314, and Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 253);
the mother of Buddha was Maya; now, all these names, whether Myrrha, Maia or Maria,
are the same as Mary, the name of the mother of the Christian Saviour. (See Inman's
Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. pp. 353 and 780. Also, Dunlap's Mysteries of Adoni, p. 124.) The
month of May was sacred to these goddesses, so likewise is it sacred to the Virgin Mary at
the present day. She was also called Myrrha and Maria, as well as Mary. (See Anacalypsis,
vol. i. p. 304, and Son of the Man, p. 26.)
[332:7] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. pp. 303, 304.
[332:8] Prof. Wilder, in "Evolution," June, '77. Isis Unveiled, vol. ii.
[332:9] Stuckley: Pal. Sac. No. 1, p. 34, in Anacalypsis, i. p. 304.
[333:1] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 305.
[333:2] See Bell's Pantheon, and Knight: Ancient Art and Mytho., p. 175.
[333:3] See Roman Antiquities, p. 73. Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 82, and Bell's Pantheon, vol.
ii. p. 160.
[333:4] See Monumental Christianity, p. 308—Fig. 144.
[333:5] See Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., pp. 175, 176.
[333:6] See Montfaucon, vol. i. plate xcii.
[333:7] Knight's Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 147.
[334:1] Anacalypsis, vol. ii. pp. 109, 110.
[334:2] See Knight's Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 21.
[334:3] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 374, and Mallet: Northern Antiquities.
[334:4] Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 147.
[334:5] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities.
[334:6] See Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. pp. 108, 109, 259. Dupuis: Orig. Relig. Belief, p.
257. Celtic Druids, p. 163, and Taylor's Diegesis, p. 184.
[334:7] See Celtic Druids, p. 163, and Dupuis, p. 237.
[334:8] Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 100.
[334:9] See Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 33, and Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 176.
[335:1] Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 176.
[335:2] Ibid.
[335:3] Ibid.
[335:4] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 304.
[335:5] Ibid. vol. ii. p. 82.
[335:6] Quoted in Ibid.
[335:7] See Middleton's Letters from Rome, p. 236.
[335:8] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 138.
[336:1] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 138.
[336:2] Bambino—a term in art, descriptive of the swaddled figure of the infant Saviour.
[336:3] Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 401.
[336:4] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 138.
[336:5] Letters from Rome, p. 84.
[337:1] Monumental Christianity, p. 208.
[337:2] See Ibid. p. 229, and Moore's Hindu Pantheon, Inman's Christian and Pagan
Symbolism, Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. ii., where the figures of Crishna and Devaki may be
seen, crowned, laden with jewels, and a ray of glory surrounding their heads.
[337:3] Monumental Christianity, p. 227.
[337:4] Ibid.
[337:5] Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 767.
[337:6] In King's Gnostics and their Remains, p. 109, the author gives a description of a
procession, given during the second century by Apuleius, in honor of Isis, the "Immaculate
Lady."
[337:7] King's Gnostics, p. 71.
[337:8] "Serapis does not appear to be one of the native gods, or monsters, who sprung
from the fruitful soil of Egypt. The first of the Ptolemies had been commanded, by a
dream, to import the mysterious stranger from the coast of Pontus, where he had been long
adored by the inhabitants of Sinope; but his attributes and his reign were so imperfectly
understood, that it became a subject of dispute, whether he represented the bright orb of
day, or the gloomy monarch of the subterraneous regions." (Gibbon's Rome, vol. iii. p.
143.)
[337:9] Ibid.
[337:10] King's Gnostics, p. 71, note.
[338:1] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 141. "Black is the color of the Egyptian Isis." (The
Rosecrucians, p. 154.)
[338:2] Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 159. In Montfaucon, vol. i. plate xcv., may be seen a
representation of a Black Venus.
[338:3] Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 264.
[338:4] Quoted in Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 142.
[338:5] Notes 3 and 4 to Tacitus' Manners of the Germans.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
CHRISTIAN SYMBOLS.
The cross is adored by the followers of the Lama of Thibet.[340:9] Fig. No.
22 is a representation of the most familiar form of Buddhist cross. The close
resemblance between the ancient religion of Thibet and that of the
Christians has been noticed by many European travellers and missionaries,
among whom may be mentioned Pere Grebillon, Pere Grueber, Horace de la
Paon, D'Orville, and M. L'Abbé Huc. The Buddhists, and indeed all the
sects of India, marked their followers on the head with the sign of the cross.
[341:1] This was undoubtedly practiced by almost all heathen nations, as we
have seen in the chapter on the Eucharist that the initiates into the Heathen
mysteries were marked in that manner.
The ancient Egyptians adored the cross with the profoundest veneration.
This sacred symbol is to be found on many of their ancient monuments,
some of which may be seen at the present day in the British Museum.[341:2]
In the museum of the London University, a cross upon a Calvary is to be
seen upon the breast of one of the Egyptian mummies.[341:3] Many of the
Egyptian images hold a cross in their hand. There is one now extant of the
Egyptian Saviour Horus holding a cross in his hand,[341:4] and he is
represented as an infant sitting on his mother's knee, with a cross on the
back of the seat they occupy.[341:5]
The commonest of all the Egyptian crosses, the CRUX ANSATA (Fig. No. 23)
was adopted by the Christians. Thus, beside one of the Christian
inscriptions at Phile (a celebrated island lying in the midst of the Nile) is
seen both a Maltese cross and a crux ansata.[341:6] In a painting covering
the end of a church in the cemetery of El Khargeh, in the Great Oasis, are
three of these crosses round the principal subject, which seems to have been
a figure of a saint.[341:7] In an inscription in a Christian church to the east of
the Nile, in the desert, these crosses are also to be seen. Beside, or in the
hand of, the Egyptian gods, this symbol is generally to be seen. When the
Saviour Osiris is represented holding out the crux ansata to a mortal, it
signifies that the person to whom he presents it has put off mortality, and
entered on the life to come.[341:8]
The Greek cross, and the cross of St. Anthony, are also found on Egyptian
monuments. A figure of a Shari (Fig. No. 24), from Sir Gardner Wilkinson's
book, has a necklace round his throat, from which depends a pectoral cross.
A third Egyptian cross is that represented in Fig. No. 25, which is
apparently intended for a Latin cross rising out of a heart, like the mediæval
emblem of "Cor in Cruce, Crux in Corde:" it is the hieroglyph of goodness.
[342:1]
Sir Robert also found at this place, sculptures cut in the solid rock, which
are in the form of crosses. These belong to the early race of Persian
monarchs, whose dynasty terminated under the sword of Alexander the
Great.[343:8] At the foot of Mount Nakshi-Rajab, he also found bas-reliefs,
among which were two figures carrying a cross-standard. Fig. No. 26 is a
representation of this.[343:9] It is coeval with the sculptures found at Nashi-
Roustam,[343:10] and therefore belongs to a period before the time of
Alexander's invasion.
The cross is represented frequently and prominently on the coins of Asia
Minor. Several have a ram or lamb on one side, and a cross on the other.
[344:1] On some of the early coins of the Phenicians, the cross is found
The cross was adored by the ancient Greeks and Romans for centuries
before the Augustan era. An ancient inscription in Thessaly is accompanied
by a Calvary cross (Fig. No. 28); and Greek crosses of equal arms adorn the
tomb of Midas (one of the ancient kings), in Phrygia.[344:4]
The adoration of the cross by the Romans is spoken of by the Christian
Father Minucius Felix, when denying the charge of idolatry which was
made against his sect.
"As for the adoration of cross," (says he to the Romans), "which you object
against us, I must tell you that we neither adore crosses nor desire them.
You it is, ye Pagans, who worship wooden gods, who are the most likely
people to adore wooden crosses, as being part of the same substance with
your deities. For what else are your ensigns, flags, and standards, but
crosses, gilt and beautiful. Your victorious trophies not only represent a
cross, but a cross with a man upon it."[345:1]
The principal silver coin among the Romans, called the denarius, had on
one side a personification of Rome as a warrior with a helmet, and on the
reverse, a chariot drawn by four horses. The driver had a cross-standard in
one hand. This is a representation of a denarius of the earliest kind, which
was first coined 296 B. C.[345:2] The cross was used on the roll of the Roman
soldiery as the sign of life.[345:3]
But, long before the Romans, long before the Etruscans, there lived in the
plains of Northern Italy a people to whom the cross was a religious symbol,
the sign beneath which they laid their dead to rest; a people of whom
history tells nothing, knowing not their name; but of whom antiquarian
research has learned this, that they lived in ignorance of the arts of
civilization, that they dwelt in villages built on platforms over lakes, and
that they trusted to the cross to guard, and may be to revive, their loved
ones whom they committed to the dust.
The examination of the tombs of Golasecca proves, in a most convincing,
positive, and precise manner that which the terramares of Emilia had only
indicated, but which had been confirmed by the cemetery of Villanova, that
above a thousand years B. C., the cross was already a religious emblem of
frequent employment.[345:4]
"It is more than a coincidence," (says the Rev. S. Baring-Gould), "that
Osiris by the cross should give life eternal to the spirits of the just; that with
the cross Thor should smite the head of the great Serpent, and bring to life
those who were slain; that beneath the cross the Muysca mothers should lay
their babes, trusting to that sign to secure them from the power of evil
spirits; that with that symbol to protect them, the ancient people of Northern
Italy should lay them down in the dust."[345:5]
The cross was also found among the ruins of Pompeii.[345:6]
It was a sacred emblem among the ancient Scandinavians.
"It occurs" (says Mr. R. Payne Knight), "on many Runic monuments found
in Sweden and Denmark, which are of an age long anterior to the approach
of Christianity to those countries, and, probably, to its appearance in the
world."[346:1]
Their god Thor, son of the Supreme god Odin, and the goddess Freyga, had
the hammer for his symbol. It was with this hammer that Thor crushed the
head of the great Mitgard serpent, that he destroyed the giants, that he
restored the dead goats to life, which drew his car, that he consecrated the
pyre of Baldur. This hammer was a cross.[346:2]
The cross of Thor is still used in Iceland as a magical sign in connection
with storms of wind and rain.
King Olaf, Longfellow tells us, when keeping Christmas at Drontheim:
The cross was also used in the north of Mexico. It occurs among the
Mixtecas and in Queredaro. Siguenza speaks of an Indian cross which was
found in the cave of Mixteca Baja. Among the ruins on the island of
Zaputero, in Lake Nicaragua, were also found old crosses reverenced by the
Indians. White marble crosses were found on the island of St. Ulloa, on its
discovery. In the state of Oaxaca, the Spaniards found that wooden crosses
were erected as sacred symbols, so also in Aguatoleo, and among the
Zapatecas. The cross was venerated as far as Florida on one side, and
Cibola on the other. In South America, the same sign was considered
symbolical and sacred. It was revered in Paraguay. In Peru the Incas
honored a cross made out of a single piece of jasper; it was an emblem
belonging to a former civilization.[348:4]
Among the Muyscas at Cumana the cross was regarded with devotion, and
was believed to be endowed with power to drive away evil spirits;
consequently new-born children were placed under the sign.[348:5]
The Toltecs said that their national deity Quetzalcoatle—whom we have
found to be a virgin-born and crucified Saviour—had introduced the sign
and ritual of the cross, and it was called the "Tree of Nutriment," or "Tree of
Life."[349:1]
Malcom, in his "Antiquities of Britain," says
"Gomara tells that St. Andrew's cross, which is the same with that of
Burgundy, was in great veneration among the Cumas, in South America,
and that they fortified themselves with the cross against the incursions of
evil spirits, and were in use to put them upon new-born infants; which thing
very justly deserves admiration."[349:2]
Felix Cabrara, in his "Description of the Ancient City of Mexico," says:
"The adoration of the cross has been more general in the world, than that of
any other emblem. It is to be found in the ruins of the fine city of Mexico,
near Palenque, where there are many examples of it among the
hieroglyphics on the buildings."[349:3]
In "Chambers's Encyclopædia" we find the following:
"It appears that the sign of the cross was in use as an emblem having
certain religious and mystic meanings attached to it, long before the
Christian era; and the Spanish conquerors were astonished to find it an
object of religious veneration among the nations of Central and South
America."[349:4]
Lord Kingsborough, in his "Antiquities of Mexico," speaks of crosses being
found in Mexico, Peru, and Yucatan.[349:5] He also informs us that the
banner of Montezuma was a cross, and that the historical paintings of the
"Codex Vaticanus" represent him carrying a cross as his banner.[349:6]
A very fine and highly polished marble cross which was taken from the
Incas, was placed in the Roman Catholic cathedral at Cuzco.[349:7]
Few cases have been more powerful in producing mistakes in ancient
history, than the idea, hastily taken by Christians in all ages, that every
monument of antiquity marked with a cross, or with any of those symbols
which they conceived to be monograms of their god, was of Christian
origin. The early Christians did not adopt it as one of their symbols; it was
not until Christianity began to be paganized that it became a Christian
monogram, and even then it was not the cross as we know it to-day. "It is
not until the middle of the fifth century that the pure form of the cross
emerges to light."[349:8] The cross of Constantine was nothing more than the
, the monogram of Osiris, and afterwards of Christ.[349:9] This is seen
from the fact that the "Labarum," or sacred banner of Constantine—on
which was placed the sign by which he was to conquer—was inscribed with
this sacred monogram. Fig. No. 30 is a representation of the Labarum, taken
from Smith's Dictionary of the Bible. The author of "The History of Our
Lord in Art" says:
"It would be difficult to prove that the cross of Constantine was of the
simple construction as now understood. As regards the Labarum, the coins
of the time, in which it is expressly set forth, proves that the so-called cross
upon it was nothing else than the same ever-recurring monogram of Christ."
[350:1]
One of the most conspicuous among the symbols intended to represent the
Trinity, to be seen in Christian churches, is the compound leaf of the trefoil.
Modern story had attributed to St. Patrick the idea of demonstrating a trinity
in unity, by showing the shamrock to his hearers; but, says Dr. Inman, "like
many other things attributed to the moderns, the idea belongs to the
ancients."[352:7]
The Trefoil adorned the head of Osiris, the Egyptian Saviour, and is to be
found among the Pagan symbols or representations of the three-in-one
mystery.[353:1] Fig. No. 32 is a representation of the Trefoil used by the
ancient Hindoos as emblematic of their celestial Triad—Brahma, Vishnu
and Siva—and afterwards adopted by the Christians.[353:2] The leaf of the
Vila, or Bel-tree, is typical of Siva's attributes, because triple in form.[353:3]
The Trefoil was a sacred plant among the ancient Druids of Britain. It was
to them an emblem of the mysterious three in one.[353:4] It is to be seen on
their coins.[353:5]
The Tripod was very generally employed among the ancients as an emblem
of the Trinity, and is found composed in an endless variety of ways. On the
coins of Menecratia, in Phrygia, it is represented between two asterisks,
with a serpent wreathed around a battle-axe, inserted into it, as an accessory
symbol, signifying preservation and destruction. In the ceremonial of
worship, the number three was employed with mystic solemnity.[353:6]
The three lines, or three human legs, springing from a central disk or circle,
which has been called a Trinacria, and supposed to allude to the island of
Sicily, is simply an ancient emblem of the Trinity. "It is of Asiatic origin; its
earliest appearance being upon the very ancient coins of Aspendus in
Pamphylia; sometimes alone in the square incuse, and sometimes upon the
body of an eagle or the back of a lion."[353:7]
We have already seen, in the chapter on the crucifixion, that the earliest
emblems of the Christian Saviour were the "Good Shepherd" and the
"Lamb." Among these may also be mentioned the Fish. "The only
satisfactory explanation why Jesus should be represented as a Fish," says
Mr. King, in his Gnostics and their Remains,[353:8] "seems to be the
circumstance that in the quaint jargon of the Talmud the Messiah is often
designated 'Dag,' or 'The Fish;'" and Mr. Lundy, in his "Monumental
Christianity," says:
"Next to the sacred monogram (the ) the Fish takes its place in
importance as a sign of Christ in his special office of Saviour." "In the
Talmud the Messiah is called 'Dag' or 'Fish.'" "Where did the Jews learn to
apply 'Dag' to their Messiah? And why did the primitive Christians adopt it
as a sign of Christ?" "I cannot disguise facts. Truth demands no
concealment or apology. Paganism has its types and prophecies of Christ as
well as Judaism. What then is the Dag-on of the old Babylonians? The fish-
god or being that taught them all their civilization."[354:1]
As Mr. Lundy says, "truth demands no concealment or apology," therefore,
when the truth is exposed, we find that Vishnu, the Hindoo Messiah,
Preserver, Mediator and Saviour, was represented as a "dag," or fish. The
Fish takes its place in importance as a sign of Vishnu in his special office of
Saviour.
is an old couplet.[355:2]
Prosper Africanus calls Christ,
"The great fish who satisfied for himself the disciples on the shore, and
offered himself as a fish to the whole world."[355:3]
The Serpent was also an emblem of Christ Jesus, or in other words,
represented Christ, among some of the early Christians.
Moses set up a brazen serpent in the wilderness, and Christian divines have
seen in this a type of Christ Jesus. Indeed, the Gospels sanction this; for it is
written:
"As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of man
be lifted up."
From this serpent, Tertullian asserts, the early sect of Christians called
Ophites took their rise. Epiphanius says, that the "Ophites sprung out of the
Nicolaitans and Gnostics, who were so called from the serpent, which they
worshiped." "The Gnostics," he adds, "taught that the ruler of the world
was of a dracontic form." The Ophites preserved live serpents in their
sacred chest, and looked upon them as the mediator between them and God.
Manes, in the third century, taught serpent worship in Asia Minor, under the
name of Christianity, promulgating that
"Christ was an incarnation of the Great Serpent, who glided over the cradle
of the Virgin Mary, when she was asleep, at the age of a year and a half."
[355:4]
"The Gnostics," says Irenaeus, "represented the Mind (the Son, the
Wisdom) in the form of a serpent," and "the Ophites," says Epiphanius,
"have a veneration for the serpent; they esteem him the same as Christ."
"They even quote the Gospels," says Tertullian, "to prove that Christ was an
imitation of the serpent."[356:1]
The question now arises, Why was the Christian Saviour represented as a
serpent? Simply because the heathen Saviours were represented in like
manner.
From the earliest times of which we have any historical notice, the serpent
has been connected with the preserving gods, or Saviours; the gods of
goodness and of wisdom. In Hindoo mythology, the serpent is intimately
associated with Vishnu, the preserving god, the Saviour.[356:2] Serpents are
often associated with the Hindoo gods, as emblems of eternity.[356:3] It was
a very sacred animal among the Hindoos.[356:4]
Worshipers of Buddha venerate serpents. "This animal," says Mr. Wake,
"became equal in importance as Buddha himself." And Mr. Lillie says:
"That God was worshiped at an early date by the Buddhists under the
symbol of the Serpent is proved from the sculptures of oldest topes, where
worshipers are represented so doing."[356:5]
The Egyptians also venerated the serpent. It was the special symbol of
Thoth, a primeval deity of Syro-Egyptian mythology, and of all those gods,
such as Hermes and Seth, who can be connected with him.[356:6] Kneph and
Apap were also represented as serpents.[356:7]
Herodotus, when he visited Egypt, found sacred serpents in the temples.
Speaking of them, he says:
"In the neighborhood of Thebes, there are sacred serpents, not at all hurtful
to men: they are diminutive in size, and carry two horns that grow on the
top of the head. When these serpents die, they bury them in the temple of
Jupiter; for they say they are sacred to that god."[356:8]
The third member of the Chaldean triad, Héa, or Hoa, was represented by a
serpent. According to Sir Henry Rawlinson, the most important titles of this
deity refer "to his functions as the source of all knowledge and science."
Not only is he "The Intelligent Fish," but his name may be read as
signifying both "Life" and a "Serpent," and he may be considered as
"figured by the great serpent which occupies so conspicuous a place among
the symbols of the gods on the black stones recording Babylonian
benefactors."[357:1]
The Phenicians and other eastern nations venerated the serpent as symbols
of their beneficent gods.[357:2]
As god of medicine, Apollo, the central figure in Grecian mythology, was
originally worshiped under the form of a serpent, and men invoked him as
the "Helper." He was the Solar Serpent-god.[357:3]
Æsculapius, the healing god, the Saviour, was also worshiped under the
form of a serpent.[357:4] "Throughout Hellas," says Mr. Cox, "Æsculapius
remained the 'Healer,' and the 'Restorer of Life,' and accordingly the serpent
is everywhere his special emblem."[357:5]
Why the serpent was the symbol of the Saviours and beneficent gods of
antiquity, will be explained in Chap. XXXIX.
The Dove, among the Christians, is the symbol of the Holy Spirit. The
Matthew narrator relates that when Jesus went up out of the water, after
being baptized by John, "the heavens were opened unto him, and he saw the
Spirit of God descending like a dove, and lighting upon him."
Here is another piece of Paganism, as we find that the Dove was the symbol
of the Holy Spirit among all nations of antiquity. Rev. J. P. Lundy, speaking
of this, says:
"It is a remarkable fact that this spirit (i. e., the Holy Spirit) has been
symbolized among all religious and civilized nations by the Dove."[357:6]
And Earnest De Bunsen says:
"The symbol of the Spirit of God was the Dove, in Greek, peleia, and the
Samaritans had a brazen fiery dove, instead of the brazen fiery serpent.
Both referred to fire, the symbol of the Holy Ghost."[357:7]
Buddha is represented, like Christ Jesus, with a dove hovering over his
head.[357:8]
The virgin goddess Juno is often represented with a dove on her head. It is
also seen on the heads of the images of Astarte, Cybele, and Isis; it was
sacred to Venus, and was intended as a symbol of the Holy Spirit.[357:9]
Even in the remote islands of the Pacific Ocean, a bird is believed to be an
emblem of the Holy Spirit.[357:10]
R. Payne Knight, in speaking of the "mystic Dove," says:
"A bird was probably chosen for the emblem of the third person (i. e., the
Holy Ghost) to signify incubation, by which was figuratively expressed the
fructification of inert matter, caused by the vital spirit moving upon the
waters.
"The Dove would naturally be selected in the East in preference to every
other species of bird, on account of its domestic familiarity with man; it
usually lodging under the same roof with him, and being employed as his
messenger from one remote place to another. Birds of this kind were also
remarkable for the care of their offspring, and for a sort of conjugal
attachment and fidelity to each other, as likewise for the peculiar fervency
of their sexual desires, whence they were sacred to Venus, and emblems of
love."[358:1]
Masons' marks are conspicuous among the Christian symbols. On some of
the most ancient Roman Catholic cathedrals are to be found figures of
Christ Jesus with Mason's marks about him.
Many are the so-called Christian symbols which are direct importations
from paganism. To enumerate them would take, as we have previously said,
a volume of itself. For further information on this subject the reader is
referred to Dr. Inman's "Ancient Pagan and Modern Christian Symbolism,"
where he will see how many ancient Indian, Egyptian, Etruscan, Grecian
and Roman symbols have been adopted by Christians, a great number of
which are Phallic emblems.[358:2]
FOOTNOTES:
[339:1] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. vi. p. 113.
[340:1] Monumental Christianity, p. 14.
[340:2] Baring-Gould: Curious Myths, p. 301. Higgins: Anac., vol. i. p. 220.
[340:3] Curious Myths, p. 301.
[340:4] Ibid. p. 302.
[340:5] Maurice: Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. p. 350.
[340:6] Ibid. vol. iii. p. 47.
[340:7] Curious Myths, pp. 280-282. Buddha and Early Buddhism, pp. 7, 9, and 22, and
Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 223.
[340:8] Buddha and Early Buddhism, p. 227.
[340:9] Inman: Ancient Faiths, vol. i. p. 409. Higgins: Anac., vol. i. p. 230.
[341:1] See Ibid.
[341:2] See Celtic Druids, p. 126; Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 217, and Bonwick's Egyptian
Belief, pp. 216, 217 and 219.
[341:3] Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 217.
[341:4] Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 58.
[341:5] See Inman's "Symbolism," and Lundy's Monu. Christianity, Fig. 92.
[341:6] Baring-Gould: Curious Myths, p. 285.
[341:7] Hoskins' Visit to the great Oasis, pl. xii. in Curious Myths, p. 286.
[341:8] Curious Myths, p. 286.
[342:1] Curious Myths, p. 287.
[342:2] Socrates: Eccl. Hist., lib. v. ch. xvii.
[342:3] Quoted by Rev. Dr. Giles: Hebrew and Christian Records, vol. ii. p. 86, and Rev.
Robert Taylor: Diegesis, p. 202.
[342:4] See Colenso's Pentateuch Examined, vol. vi. p. 115.
[342:5] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 12.
[342:6] Ibid. p. 219.
[343:1] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 218, and Smith's Chaldean Account of Genesis, p.
54.
[343:2] Egyptian Belief, p. 218.
[343:3] Bonomi: Ninevah and Its Palaces, in Curious Myths, p. 287.
[343:4] Curious Myths, p. 287.
[343:5] Vol. i. p. 337, pl. xx.
[343:6] Travels in Persia, vol. i. p. 545, pl. xxi.
[343:7] Ibid. p. 529, and pl. xvi
[343:8] Ibid., and pl. xvii.
[343:9] Ibid. pl. xxvii.
[343:10] Ibid. p. 573.
[344:1] Curious Myths, p. 290.
[344:2] Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 31.
[344:3] See Illustration in Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 224.
[344:4] Baring-Gould: Curious Myths, p. 291.
[345:1] Octavius, ch. xxix.
[345:2] See Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Denarius."
[345:3] Curious Myths, p. 291.
[345:4] Ibid. pp. 291, 296.
[345:5] Ibid. p. 311.
[345:6] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. vi. p. 115.
[346:1] Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 30.
[346:2] Curious Myths, pp. 280, 281.
[346:3] Ibid. pp. 281, 282.
[346:4] Knight: Ancient Art and Mytho., p. 30.
[346:5] See Celtic Druids, pp. 126, 130, 131.
[347:1] Cleland, p. 102, in Anac., i. p. 716.
[347:2] Celtic Druids, p. 242, and Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Cross."
[347:3] Ibid.
[347:4] See Maurice: Indian Antiquities, vol. ii. 103.
[347:5] The Pentateuch Examined, vol. vi. p. 114.
[347:6] Brinton: Myths of the New World, p. 95.
[348:1] Stephens: Central America, vol. ii. p. 346, in Curious Myths, p. 298.
[348:2] Curious Myths, p. 298
[348:3] Klemm Kulturgeschichte, v. 142, in Curious Myths, pp. 298, 299.
[348:4] Curious Myths, p. 299.
[348:5] Müller: Geschichte der Amerikanischen Urreligionen, in Ibid.
[349:1] Curious Myths, p. 301.
[349:2] Quoted in Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 30.
[349:3] Quoted in Celtic Druids, p. 131.
[349:4] Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Cross."
[349:5] Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. pp. 165, 180.
[349:6] Ibid. p. 179.
[349:7] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 32.
[349:8] Jameson's Hist. of Our Lord in Art, vol. ii. p. 318.
[349:9] "These two letters in the old Samaritan, as found on coins, stand, the first for 400,
the second for 200-600. This is the staff of Osiris. It is also the monogram of Osiris, and
has been adopted by the Christians, and is to be seen in the churches in Italy in thousands
of places. See Basnage (lib. iii. c. xxxiii.), where several other instances of this kind may
be found. In Addison's 'Travels in Italy' there is an account of a medal, at Rome, of
Constantius, with this inscription; In hoc signo Victor eris ." (Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 222.)
Christmas—December the 25th—is a day which has been set apart by the
Christian church on which to celebrate the birth of their Lord and Saviour,
Christ Jesus, and is considered by the majority of persons to be really the
day on which he was born. This is altogether erroneous, as will be seen
upon examination of the subject.
There was no uniformity in the period of observing the Nativity among the
early Christian churches; some held the festival in the month of May or
April, others in January.[359:1]
The year in which he was born is also as uncertain as the month or day.
"The year in which it happened," says Mosheim, the ecclesiastical historian,
"has not hitherto been fixed with certainty, notwithstanding the deep and
laborious researches of the learned."[359:2]
According to IRENÆUS (A. D. 190), on the authority of "The Gospel," and "all
the elders who were conversant in Asia with John, the disciple of the Lord,"
Christ Jesus lived to be nearly, if not quite, fifty years of age. If this
celebrated Christian father is correct, and who can say he is not, Jesus was
born some twenty years before the time which has been assigned as that of
his birth.[359:3]
The Rev. Dr. Giles says:
"Concerning the time of Christ's birth there are even greater doubts than
about the place; for, though the four Evangelists have noticed several
contemporary facts, which would seem to settle this point, yet on
comparing these dates with the general history of the period, we meet with
serious discrepancies, which involve the subject in the greatest uncertainty."
[359:4]
Again he says:
"Not only do we date our time from the exact year in which Christ is said to
have been born, but our ecclesiastical calendar has determined with
scrupulous minuteness the day and almost the hour at which every
particular of Christ's wonderful life is stated to have happened. All this is
implicitly believed by millions; yet all these things are among the most
uncertain and shadowy that history has recorded. We have no clue to either
the day or the time of year, or even the year itself, in which Christ was
born."[360:1]
Some Christian writers fix the year 4 B. C., as the time when he was born,
others the year 5 B. C., and again others place his time of birth at about 15 B.
C. The Rev. Dr. Geikie, speaking of this, in his Life of Christ, says:
"The whole subject is very uncertain. Ewald appears to fix the date of the
birth at five years earlier than our era. Petavius and Usher fix it on the 25th
of December, five years before our era. Bengel on the 25th of December,
four years before our era; Anger and Winer, four years before our era, in the
Spring; Scaliger, three years before our era, in October; St. Jerome, three
years before our era, on December 25th; Eusebius, two years before our era,
on January 6th; and Idler, seven years before our era, in December."[360:2]
Albert Barnes writes in a manner which implies that he knew all about the
year (although he does not give any authorities), but knew nothing about
the month. He says:
"The birth of Christ took place four years before the common era. That era
began to be used about A. D. 526, being first employed by Dionysius, and is
supposed to have been placed about four years too late. Some make the
difference two, others three, four, five, and even eight years. He was born at
the commencement of the last year of the reign of Herod, or at the close of
the year preceding."[360:3]
"The Jews sent out their flocks into the mountainous and desert regions
during the summer months, and took them up in the latter part of October or
the first of November, when the cold weather commenced. . . . It is clear
from this that our Saviour was born before the 25th of December, or before
what we call Christmas. At that time it is cold, and especially in the high
and mountainous regions about Bethlehem. God has concealed the time of
his birth. There is no way to ascertain it. By different learned men it has
been fixed at each month in the year."[360:4]
Canon Farrar writes with a little more caution, as follows:
"Although the date of Christ's birth cannot be fixed with absolute certainty,
there is at least a large amount of evidence to render it probable that he was
born four years before our present era. It is universally admitted that our
received chronology, which is not older than Dionysius Exiguus, in the
sixth century, is wrong. But all attempts to discover the month and the day
are useless. No data whatever exists to enable us to determine them with
even approximate accuracy."[360:5]
Bunsen attempts to show (on the authority of Irenæus, above quoted), that
Jesus was born some fifteen years before the time assigned, and that he
lived to be nearly, if not quite, fifty years of age.[361:1]
According to Basnage,[361:2] the Jews placed his birth near a century sooner
than the generally assumed epoch. Others have placed it even in the third
century B. C. This belief is founded on a passage in the "Book of Wisdom,"
[361:3] written about 250 B. C., which is supposed to refer to Christ Jesus, and
none other. In speaking of some individual who lived at that time, it says:
"He professeth to have the knowledge of God, and he calleth himself the
child of the Lord. He was made to reprove our thoughts. He is grievous unto
us even to behold; for his life is not like other men's, his ways are of another
fashion. We are esteemed of him as counterfeits; he abstaineth from our
ways as from filthiness; he pronounceth the end of the just to be blessed,
and maketh his boast that God is his father. Let us see if his words be true;
and let us prove what shall happen in the end of him. For if the just man be
the son of God, he (God) will help him, and deliver him from the hand of
his enemies. Let us examine him with despitefulness and torture, that we
may know his meekness, and prove his patience. Let us condemn him with
a shameful death; for by his own saying he shall be respected."
This is a very important passage. Of course, the church claim it to be a
prophecy of what Christ Jesus was to do and suffer, but this does not
explain it.
If the writer of the "Gospel according to Luke" is correct, Jesus was not
born until about A. D. 10, for he explicitly tells us that this event did not
happen until Cyrenius was governor of Syria.[361:4] Now it is well known
that Cyrenius was not appointed to this office until long after the death of
Herod (during whose reign the Matthew narrator informs us Jesus was
born[361:5]), and that the taxing spoken of by the Luke narrator as having
taken place at this time, did not take place until about ten years after the
time at which, according to the Matthew narrator, Jesus was born.[361:6]
Eusebius, the first ecclesiastical historian,[361:7] places his birth at the time
Cyrenius was governor of Syria, and therefore at about A. D. 10. His words
are as follows:
"It was the two and fortieth year after the reign of Augustus the Emperor,
and the eight and twentieth year after the subduing of Egypt, and the death
of Antonius and Cleopatra, when last of all the Ptolemies in Egypt ceased to
bear rule, when our Saviour and Lord Jesus Christ, at the time of the first
taxing—Cyrenius, then President of Syria—was born in Bethlehem, a city
of Judea, according unto the prophecies in that behalf premised."[362:1]
Had the Luke narrator known anything about Jewish history, he never
would have made so gross a blunder as to place the taxing of Cyrenius in
the days of Herod, and would have saved the immense amount of labor that
it has taken in endeavoring to explain away the effects of his ignorance.
One explanation of this mistake is, that there were two assessments, one
about the time Jesus was born, and the other ten years after; but this has
entirely failed. Dr. Hooykaas, speaking of this, says:
"The Evangelist (Luke) falls into the most extraordinary mistakes
throughout. In the first place, history is silent as to a census of the whole
(Roman) world ever having been made at all. In the next place, though
Quirinius certainly did make such a register in Judea and Samaria, it did not
extend to Galilee; so that Joseph's household was not affected by it.
Besides, it did not take place until ten years after the death of Herod, when
his son Archelaus was deposed by the emperor, and the districts of Judea
and Samaria were thrown into a Roman province. Under the reign of Herod,
nothing of the kind took place, nor was there any occasion for it. Finally, at
the time of the birth of Jesus, the Governor of Syria was not Quirinius, but
Quintus Sentius Saturninus."[362:2]
The institution of the festival of the Nativity of Christ Jesus being held on
the 25th of December, among the Christians, is attributed to Telesphorus,
who flourished during the reign of Antonius Pius (A. D. 138-161), but the
first certain traces of it are found about the time of the Emperor Commodus
(A. D. 180-192).[362:3]
For a long time the Christians had been trying to discover upon what
particular day Jesus had possibly or probably come into the world; and
conjectures and traditions that rested upon absolutely no foundation, led one
to the 20th of May, another to the 19th or 20th of April, and a third to the
5th of January. At last the opinion of the community at Rome gained the
upper hand, and the 25th of December was fixed upon.[362:4] It was not until
the fifth century, however, that this day had been generally agreed upon.
[362:5] How it happened that this day finally became fixed as the birthday of
FOOTNOTES:
[359:1] See Bible for Learners vol. iii. p. 66; Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Christmas."
[359:2] Eccl. Hist., vol. i. p. 53. Quoted in Taylor's Diegesis, p. 104.
[359:3] See Chapter XL., this work.
[359:4] Hebrew and Christian Records, vol. ii. p. 189.
[360:1] Hebrew and Christian Records, p. 194.
[360:2] Life of Christ, vol. i. p. 556.
[360:3] Barnes' Notes, vol. ii. p. 402.
[360:4] Ibid. p. 25.
[360:5] Farrar's Life of Christ, App., pp. 673, 4.
[361:1] Bible Chronology, pp. 73, 74.
[361:2] Hist. de Juif.
[361:3] Chap. ii. 13-20.
[361:4] Luke, ii. 1-7.
[361:5] Matt. ii. 1.
[361:6] See Josephus: Antiq., bk. xviii. ch. i. sec. i.
[361:7] Eusebius was Bishop of Cesarea from A. D. 315 to 340, in which he died, in the
70th year of his age, thus playing his great part in life chiefly under the reigns of
Constantine the Great and his son Constantine.
[362:1] Eusebius: Eccl. Hist., lib. 1, ch. vi.
[362:2] Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 56.
[362:3] See Chamber's Encyclo., art. "Christmas."
[362:4] See Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 66.
[362:5] "By the fifth century, however, whether from the influence of some tradition, or
from the desire to supplant Heathen Festivals of that period of the year, such as the
Saturnalia, the 25th of December had been generally agreed upon." (Encyclopædia Brit.,
art. "Christmas.")
[363:1] See Monier Williams: Hinduism, p. 181.
[363:2] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 126.
[363:3] Ibid. 216.
[363:4] See Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, pp. x.-25, and 110, and Lillie: Buddha and
Buddhism, p. 73.
Some writers have asserted that Crishna is said to have been born on December 25th, but
this is not the case. His birthday is held in July-August. (See Williams' Hinduism, p. 183,
and Life and Religion of the Hindoos, p. 134.)
[363:5] Celtic Druids, p. 163. See also, Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 272; Monumental
Christianity, p. 167; Bible for Learners, iii. pp. 66, 67.
[363:6] The Heathen Religion, p. 287. See also, Dupuis: p. 246.
[363:7] Relig. of the Anct. Greeks, p. 214. See also, Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 99.
[364:1] "Adytum"—the interior or sacred part of a heathen temple.
[364:2] "Bambino"—a term used for representations of the infant Saviour, Christ Jesus, in
swaddlings.
[364:3] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 157. See also, Dupuis, p. 237.
[364:4] "Deinceps Egyptii PARITURAM VIRGINEM magno in honore habuerunt; quin soliti
sunt puerum effingere jacentem in præsepe, quali POSTEA in Bethlehemeticâ speluncâ
natus est." (Quoted in Anacalypsis, p. 102, of vol. ii.)
[364:5] Quoted by Bonwick, p. 143.
[364:6] Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 99.
[364:7] Relig. Anct. Greece, p. 215.
[364:8] Ibid.
[364:9] Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 102; Dupuis, p. 237, and Baring Gould: Orig. Relig. Belief,
vol. i. p. 322.
[365:1] Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 99.
[365:2] The Heathen Religion, p. 287; Dupuis, p. 283.
[365:3] Bulfinch, p. 21.
[365:4] See Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 67, and Chambers, art. "Yule."
[365:5] See Chambers's, art. "Yule," and "Celtic Druids," p. 162.
[365:6] Mallet's Northern Antiquities, pp. 110 and 355. Knight: p. 87.
[366:1] Dupuis, 160; Celtic Druids, and Monumental Christianity, p. 167.
[366:2] Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 99.
[366:3] Hist. Indies, vol. ii. p. 354.
[366:4] See Middleton's Works, vol. i. p. 80.
[366:5] Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 82.
[367:1] Gibbon's Rome, vol. ii. p. 383.
[367:2] King's Gnostics, p. 49.
[367:3] Quoted in Ibid.
[367:4] See the chapter on "Paganism in Christianity."
[367:5] Bible for Learners, vol. iii. p. 67.
CHAPTER XXXV.
THE TRINITY.
"Say not there are three Gods, God is but One God."—(Koran.)
The doctrine of the Trinity is the highest and most mysterious doctrine of
the Christian church. It declares that there are three persons in the Godhead
or divine nature—the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost—and that "these
three are one true, eternal God, the same in substance, equal in power and
glory, although distinguished by their personal propensities." The most
celebrated statement of the doctrine is to be found in the Athanasian creed,
[368:1] which asserts that:
"The Catholic[368:2] faith is this: That we worship One God as Trinity, and
Trinity in Unity—neither confounding the persons, nor dividing the
substance—for there is One person of the Father, another of the Son, and
another of the Holy Ghost. But the Godhead of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Ghost is all one; the glory equal, the majesty co-eternal."
As M. Reville remarks:
"The dogma of the Trinity displayed its contradictions with true bravery.
The Deity divided into three divine persons, and yet these three persons
forming only One God; of these three the first only being self-existent, the
two others deriving their existence from the first, and yet these three
persons being considered as perfectly equal; each having his special,
distinct character, his individual qualities, wanting in the other two, and yet
each one of the three being supposed to possess the fullness of perfection—
here, it must be confessed, we have the deification of the contradictory."
[368:3]
We shall now see that this very peculiar doctrine of three in one, and one in
three, is of heathen origin, and that it must fall with all the other dogmas of
the Christian religion.
The number three is sacred in all theories derived from oriental sources.
Deity is always a trinity of some kind, or the successive emanations
proceeded in threes.[369:1]
If we turn to India we shall find that one of the most prominent features in
the Indian theology is the doctrine of a divine triad, governing all things.
This triad is called Tri-murti—from the Sanscrit word tri (three) and murti
(form)—and consists of Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva. It is an inseparable
unity, though three in form.[369:2]
"When the universal and infinite being Brahma—the only really existing
entity, wholly without form, and unbound and unaffected by the three
Gunas or by qualities of any kind—wished to create for his own
entertainment the phenomena of the universe, he assumed the quality of
activity and became a male person, as Brahma the creator. Next, in the
progress of still further self-evolution, he willed to invest himself with the
second quality of goodness, as Vishnu the preserver, and with the third
quality of darkness, as Siva the destroyer. This development of the doctrine
of triple manifestation (tri-murti), which appears first in the Brahmanized
version of the Indian Epics, had already been adumbrated in the Veda in the
triple form of fire, and in the triad of gods, Agni, Sūrya, and Indra; and in
other ways."[369:3]
This divine Tri-murti—says the Brahmans and the sacred books—is
indivisible in essence, and indivisible in action; mystery profound! which is
explained in the following manner:
Brahma represents the creative principle, the unreflected or unevolved
protogoneus state of divinity—the Father.
Vishnu represents the protecting and preserving principle, the evolved or
reflected state of divinity—the Son.[369:4]
Siva is the principle that presides at destruction and re-construction—the
Holy Spirit.[369:5]
The third person was the Destroyer, or, in his good capacity, the
Regenerator. The dove was the emblem of the Regenerator. As the spiritus
was the passive cause (brooding on the face of the waters) by which all
things sprang into life, the dove became the emblem of the Spirit, or Holy
Ghost, the third person.
These three gods are the first and the highest manifestations of the Eternal
Essence, and are typified by the three letters composing the mystic syllable
OM or AUM. They constitute the well known Trimurti or Triad of divine
forms which characterizes Hindooism. It is usual to describe these three
gods as Creator, Preserver and Destroyer, but this gives a very inadequate
idea of their complex characters. Nor does the conception of their
relationship to each other become clearer when it is ascertained that their
functions are constantly interchangeable, and that each may take the place
of the other, according to the sentiment expressed by the greatest of Indian
poets, Kalidasa (Kumara-sambhava, Griffith, vii. 44):
The Buddhists, as well as the Brahmans, have had their Trinity from a very
early period.
Mr. Faber, in his "Origin of Heathen Idolatry," says:
"Among the Hindoos, we have the Triad of Brahmā, Vishnu, and Siva; so,
among the votaries of Buddha, we find the self-triplicated Buddha declared
to be the same as the Hindoo Trimurti. Among the Buddhist sect of the
Jainists, we have the triple Jiva, in whom the Trimurti is similarly declared
to be incarnate."
In this Trinity Vajrapani answers to Brahmā, or Jehovah, the "All-father,"
Manjusri is the "deified teacher," the counterpart of Crishna or Jesus, and
Avalokitesvara is the "Holy Spirit."
Buddha was believed by his followers to be, not only an incarnation of the
deity, but "God himself in human form"—as the followers of Crishna
believed him to be—and therefore "three gods in one." This is clearly
illustrated by the following address delivered to Buddha by a devotee called
Amora:
"Reverence be unto thee, O God, in the form of the God of mercy, the
dispeller of pain and trouble, the Lord of all things, the guardian of the
universe, the emblem of mercy towards those who serve thee—OM! the
possessor of all things in vital form. Thou art Brahmā, Vishnu, and Mahesa;
thou art Lord of all the universe. Thou art under the proper form of all
things, movable and immovable, the possessor of the whole, and thus I
adore thee. I adore thee, who art celebrated by a thousand names, and under
various forms; in the shape of Buddha, the god of mercy."[371:3]
The inhabitants of China and Japan, the majority of whom are Buddhists,
worship God in the form of a Trinity. Their name for him (Buddha) is Fo,
and in speaking of the Trinity they say: "The three pure, precious or
honorable Fo."[372:1] This triad is represented in their temples by images
similar to those found in the pagodas of India, and when they speak of God
they say: "Fo is one person, but has three forms."[372:2]
In a chapel belonging to the monastery of Poo-ta-la, which was found in
Manchow-Tartary, was to be seen representations of Fo, in the form of three
persons.[372:3]
Navarette, in his account of China, says:
"This sect (of Fo) has another idol they call Sanpao. It consists of three,
equal in all respects. This, which has been represented as an image of the
Most Blessed Trinity, is exactly the same with that which is on the high
altar of the monastery of the Trinitarians at Madrid. If any Chinese
whatsoever saw it, he would say that Sanpao of his country was worshiped
in these parts."
And Mr. Faber, in his "Origin of Heathen Idolatry," says:
"Among the Chinese, who worship Buddha under the name of Fo, we find
this God mysteriously multiplied into three persons."
The mystic syllable O. M. or A. U. M. is also reverenced by the Chinese
and Japanese,[372:4] as we have found it reverenced by the inhabitants of
India.
The followers of Laou-tsze, or Laou-keum-tsze—a celebrated philosopher
of China, and deified hero, born 604 B. C.—known as the Taou sect, are also
worshipers of a Trinity.[372:5] It was the leading feature in Laou-keun's
system of philosophical theology, that Taou, the eternal reason, produced
one; one produced two; two produced three; and three produced all things.
[372:6] This was a sentence which Laou-keun continually repeated, and
which Mr. Maurice considers, "a most singular axiom for a heathen
philosopher."[372:7]
The sacred volumes of the Chinese state that:
"The Source and Root of all is One. This self-existent unity necessarily
produced a second. The first and second, by their union, produced a third.
These Three produced all."[372:8]
The ancient emperors of China solemnly sacrificed, every three years, to
"Him who is One and Three."[372:9]
The ancient Egyptians worshiped God in the form of a Trinity, which was
represented in sculptures on the most ancient of their temples. The
celebrated symbol of the wing, the globe, and the serpent, is supposed to
have stood for the different attributes of God.[373:1]
The priests of Memphis, in Egypt, explained this mystery to the novice, by
intimating that the premier (first) monad created the dyad, who engendered
the triad, and that it is this triad which shines through nature.
Thulis, a great monarch, who at one time reigned over all Egypt, and who
was in the habit of consulting the oracle of Serapis, is said to have
addressed the oracle in these words:
"Tell me if ever there was before one greater than I, or will ever be one
greater than me?"
The oracle answered thus:
"First God, afterward the Word, and with them the Holy Spirit, all these are
of the same nature, and make but one whole, of which the power is eternal.
Go away quickly, mortal, thou who hast but an uncertain life."[373:2]
The idea of calling the second person in the Trinity the Logos, or Word[373:3]
is an Egyptian feature, and was engrafted into Christianity many centuries
after the time of Christ Jesus.[373:4] Apollo, who had his tomb at Delphi in
Egypt, was called the Word.[373:5]
Mr. Bonwick, in his "Egyptian Belief and Modern Thought," says:
"Some persons are prepared to admit that the most astonishing development
of the old religion of Egypt was in relation to the Logos or Divine Word, by
whom all things were made, and who, though from God, was God. It had
long been known that Plato, Aristotle, and others before the Christian era,
cherished the idea of this Demiurgus; but it was not known till of late that
Chaldeans and Egyptians recognized this mysterious principle."[373:6]
"The Logos or Word was a great mystery (among the Egyptians), in whose
sacred books the following passages may be seen: 'I know the mystery of
the divine Word;' 'The Word of the Lord of All, which was the maker of it;'
'The Word—this is the first person after himself, uncreated, infinite ruling
over all things that were made by him.'"[374:1]
The Assyrians had Marduk for their Logos;[374:2] one of their sacred
addresses to him reads thus:
"Thou art the powerful one—Thou art the life-giver—Thou also the
prosperer—Merciful one among the gods—Eldest son of Hea, who made
heaven and earth—Lord of heaven and earth, who an equal has not—
Merciful one, who dead to life raises."[374:3]
The Chaldeans had their Memra or "Word of God," corresponding to the
Greek Logos, which designated that being who organized and who still
governs the world, and is inferior to God only.[374:4]
The Logos was with Philoa most interesting subject of discourse, tempting
him to wonderful feats of imagination. There is scarcely a personifying or
exalting epithet that he did not bestow on the Divine Reason. He described
it as a distinct being; called it "a Rock," "The Summit of the Universe,"
"Before all things," "First-begotten Son of God," "Eternal Bread from
Heaven," "Fountain of Wisdom," "Guide to God," "Substitute for God,"
"Image of God," "Priest," "Creator of the Worlds," "Second God,"
"Interpreter of God," "Ambassador of God," "Power of God," "King,"
"Angel," "Man," "Mediator," "Light," "The Beginning," "The East," "The
Name of God," "The Intercessor."[374:5]
This is exactly the Logos of John. It becomes a man, "is made flesh;"
appears as an incarnation; in order that the God whom "no man has seen at
any time," may be manifested.
The worship of God in the form of a Trinity was to be found among the
ancient Greeks. When the priests were about to offer up a sacrifice to the
gods, the altar was three times sprinkled by dipping a laurel branch in holy
water, and the people assembled around it were three times sprinkled also.
Frankincense was taken from the censer with three fingers, and strewed
upon the altar three times. This was done because an oracle had declared
that all sacred things ought to be in threes, therefore, that number was
scrupulously observed in most religious ceremonies.[374:6]
"The Vandals[376:10] had a god called Triglaff. One of these was found at
Hertungerberg, near Brandenburg (in Prussia). He was represented with
three heads. This was apparently the Trinity of Paganism."[377:1]
The ancient Scandinavians worshiped a triple deity who was yet one god. It
consisted of Odin, Thor, and Frey. A triune statue representing this Trinity
in Unity was found at Upsal in Sweden.[377:2] The three principal nations of
Scandinavia (Sweden, Denmark, and Norway) vied with each other in
erecting temples, but none were more famous than the temple at Upsal in
Sweden. It glittered on all sides with gold. It seemed to be particularly
consecrated to the Three Superior Deities, Odin, Thor and Frey. The statues
of these gods were placed in this temple on three thrones, one above the
other. Odin was represented holding a sword in his hand: Thor stood at the
left hand of Odin, with a crown upon his head, and a scepter in his hand;
Frey stood at the left hand of Thor, and was represented of both sexes. Odin
was the supreme God, the Al-fader; Thor was the first-begotten son of this
god, and Frey was the bestower of fertility, peace and riches. King Gylfi of
Sweden is supposed to have gone at one time to Asgard (the abode of the
gods), where he beheld three thrones raised one above another, with a man
sitting on each of them. Upon his asking what the names of these lords
might be, his guide answered: "He who sitteth on the lowest throne is the
Lofty One; the second is the equal to the Lofty One; and he who sitteth on
the highest throne is called the Third."[377:3]
The ancient Druids also worshiped: "Ain Treidhe Dia ainm Taulac, Fan,
Mollac;" which is to say: "Ain triple God, of name Taulac, Fan, Mollac."
[377:4]
of equal authority with the rest, though known and admitted by the learned
on all hands, to be forgeries, willful and wicked interpolations.
The subtle and profound questions concerning the nature, generation, the
distinction, and the quality of the three divine persons of the mysterious
triad, or Trinity, were agitated in the philosophical and in the Christian
schools of Alexandria in Egypt,[380:4] but it was not a part of the established
Christian faith until as late as A. D. 327, when the question was settled at the
Councils of Nice and Constantinople. Up to this time there was no
understood and recognized doctrine on this high subject. The Christians
were for the most part accustomed to use scriptural expressions in speaking
of the Father, and the Son, and the Spirit, without defining articulately their
relation to one another.[380:5]
In these trinitarian controversies, which first broke out in Egypt—Egypt, the
land of Trinities—the chief point in the discussion was to define the
position of "the Son."
There lived in Alexandria a presbyter of the name of Arius, a disappointed
candidate for the office of bishop. He took the ground that there was a time
when, from the very nature of Sonship, the Son did not exist, and a time at
which he commenced to be, asserting that it is the necessary condition of
the filial relation that a father must be older than his son. But this assertion
evidently denied the co-eternity of the three persons of the Trinity, it
suggested a subordination or inequality among them, and indeed implied a
time when the Trinity did not exist. Hereupon, the bishop, who had been the
successful competitor against Arius, displayed his rhetorical powers in
public debates on the question, and, the strife spreading, the Jews and
Pagans, who formed a very large portion of the population of Alexandria,
amused themselves with theatrical representations of the contest on the
stage—the point of their burlesques being the equality of age of the Father
and the Son. Such was the violence the controversy at length assumed, that
the matter had to be referred to the emperor (Constantine).
At first he looked upon the dispute as altogether frivolous, and perhaps in
truth inclined to the assertion of Arius, that in the very nature of the thing a
father must be older than his son. So great, however, was the pressure laid
upon him, that he was eventually compelled to summon the Council of
Nicea, which, to dispose of the conflict, set forth a formulary or creed, and
attached to it this anathema:
"The Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church anathematizes those who say that
there was a time when the Son of God was not, and that, before he was
begotten, he was not, and that, he was made out of nothing, or out of
another substance or essence, and is created, or changeable, or alterable."
Constantine at once enforced the decision of the council by the civil power.
[381:1]
Even after this "subtle and profound question" had been settled at the
Council of Nice, those who settled it did not understand the question they
had settled. Athanasius, who was a member of the first general council, and
who is said to have written the creed which bears his name, which asserts
that the true Catholic faith is this:
"That we worship One God as Trinity, and Trinity in Unity—neither
confounding the persons nor dividing the substance—for there is one
person of the Father, another of the Son, and another of the Holy Ghost, but
the Godhead of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost is all one,
the glory equal, the majesty co-eternal,"
—also confessed that whenever he forced his understanding to meditate on
the divinity of the Logos, his toilsome and unavailing efforts recoiled on
themselves; that the more he thought the less he comprehended; and the
more he wrote the less capable was he of expressing his thoughts.[382:1]
We see, then, that this great question was settled, not by the consent of all
members of the council, but simply because the majority were in favor of it.
Jesus of Nazareth was "God himself in human form;" "one of the persons of
the Ever-Blessed Trinity," who "had no beginning, and will have no end,"
because the majority of the members of this council said so. Hereafter—so
it was decreed—all must believe it; if not, they must not oppose it, but
forever hold their peace.
The Emperor Theodosius declared his resolution of expelling from all the
churches of his dominions, the bishops and their clergy who should
obstinately refuse to believe, or at least to profess, the doctrine of the
Council of Nice. His lieutenant, Sapor, was armed with the ample powers of
a general law, a special commission, and a military force; and this
ecclesiastical resolution was conducted with so much discretion and vigor,
that the religion of the Emperor was established.[382:2]
Here we have the historical fact, that bishops of the Christian church, and
their clergy, were forced to profess their belief in the doctrine of the Trinity.
We also find that:
"This orthodox Emperor (Theodosius) considered every heretic (as he
called those who did not believe as he and his ecclesiastics professed) as a
rebel against the supreme powers of heaven and of earth (he being one of
the supreme powers of earth) and each of the powers might exercise their
peculiar jurisdiction over the soul and body of the guilty.
"The decrees of the Council of Constantinople had ascertained the true
standard of the faith, and the ecclesiastics, who governed the conscience of
Theodosius, suggested the most effectual methods of persecution. In the
space of fifteen years he promulgated at least fifteen severe edicts against
the heretics, more especially against those who rejected the doctrine of the
Trinity."[382:3]
Thus we see one of the many reasons why the "most holy Christian
religion" spread so rapidly.
Arius—who declared that in the nature of things a father must be older than
his son—was excommunicated for his so-called heretical notions
concerning the Trinity. His followers, who were very numerous, were called
Arians. Their writings, if they had been permitted to exist,[383:1] would
undoubtedly contain the lamentable story of the persecution which affected
the church under the reign of the impious Emperor Theodosius.
FOOTNOTES:
[368:1] The celebrated passage (I. John, v. 7) "For there are three that bear record in
heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and these three are one," is now
admitted on all hands to be an interpolation into the epistle many centuries after the time of
Christ Jesus. (See Giles' Hebrew and Christian Records, vol. ii. p. 12. Gibbon's Rome, vol.
iii. p. 556. Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 886. Taylor's Diegesis and Reber's Christ of
Paul.)
[368:2] That is, the true faith.
[368:3] Dogma Deity Jesus Christ, p. 95.
[369:1] "The notion of a Triad of Supreme Powers is indeed common to most ancient
religions." (Prichard's Egyptian Mytho., p. 285.)
"Nearly all the Pagan nations of antiquity, in their various theological systems,
acknowledged a trinity in the divine nature." (Maurice: Indian Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 35.)
"The ancients imagined that their triad of gods or persons, only constituted one god."
(Celtic Druids, p. 197.)
[369:2] The three attributes called Brahmā, Vishnu and Siva, are indicated by letters
corresponding to our A. U. M., generally pronounced OM. This mystic word is never
uttered except in prayer, and the sign which represents it in their temples is an object of
profound adoration.
[369:3] Monier Williams' Indian Wisdom, p. 324.
[369:4] That is, the Lord and Saviour Crishna. The Supreme Spirit, in order to preserve the
world, produced Vishnu. Vishnu came upon earth for this purpose, in the form of Crishna.
He was believed to be an incarnation of the Supreme Being, one of the persons of their
holy and mysterious trinity, to use their language, "The Lord and Savior—three persons
and one god." In the Geita, Crishna is made to say: "I am the Lord of all created beings." "I
am the mystic figure O. M." "I am Brahmā Vishnu, and Siva, three gods in one."
[369:5] See The Heathen Religion, p. 124.
[370:1] Allen's India, pp. 382, 383.
[370:2] Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 272.
[371:1] Indian Antiquities, vol. iv. p. 372.
[371:2] Taken from Moore's "Hindoo Pantheon," plate 81.
[371:3] Asiatic Researches, vol. iii. pp. 285, 286. See also, King's Gnostics, 167.
[372:1] Davis' China, vol. ii. p. 104.
[372:2] Ibid. pp. 103 and 81.
[372:3] Ibid. pp. 105, 106.
[372:4] Ibid. pp. 103, 81.
[372:5] Ibid. 110, 111. Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 36. Dunlap's Spirit Hist., 150.
[372:6] Indian Antiquities, vol. v. p. 41. Dupuis, p. 285. Dunlap's Spirit Hist., 150.
[372:7] Indian Antiquities, vol. v. p. 41.
This Taou sect, according to John Francis Davis, and the Rev. Charles Gutzlaff, both of
whom have resided in China—call their trinity "the three pure ones," or "the three precious
ones in heaven." (See Davis' China, vol. ii. p. 110, and Gutzlaff's Voyages, p. 307.)
[372:8] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 210.
[372:9] Ibid.
[373:1] Indian Antiquities, vol. i. p. 127.
[373:2] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 14.
The following answer is stated by Manetho, an Egyptian priest, to have been given by an
Oracle to Sesostris: "On his return through Africa he entered the sanctuary of the Oracle,
saying: 'Tell me, O thou strong in fire, who before me could subjugate all things? and who
shall after me?' But the Oracle rebuked him, saying, 'First, God; then the Word; and with
them, the Spirit.'" (Nimrod, vol. i. p. 119, in Ibid. vol. i. p. 805.)
Here we have distinctly enumerated God, the Logos, and the Spirit or Holy Ghost, in a
very early period, long previous to the Christian era.
[373:3] I. John, v. 7. John, i. 1.
[373:4] The Alexandrian theology, of which the celebrated Plato was the chief
representative, taught that the Logos was "the second God;" a being of divine essence, but
distinguished from the Supreme God. It is also called "the first-born Son of God."
"The Platonists furnished brilliant recruits to the Christian churches of Asia Minor and
Greece, and brought with them their love for system and their idealism." "It is in the
Platonizing or Alexandrian, branch of Judaism that we must seek for the antecedents of the
Christian doctrine of the Logos." (A. Revillé: Dogma Deity Jesus, p. 29.)
[373:5] Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 102. Mithras, the Mediator, and Saviour of the
Persians, was called the Logos. (See Dunlap's Son of the Man, p. 20. Bunsen's Angel-
Messiah, p. 75.) Hermes was called the Logos. (See Dunlap's Son of the Man, p. 39,
marginal note.)
[373:6] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 402.
[374:1] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 404.
[374:2] Ibid.
[374:3] Ibid.
[374:4] Ibid. p. 28.
[374:5] Frothingham's Cradle of the Christ, p. 112.
[374:6] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 307.
[374:7] Orpheus is said to have been a native of Thracia, the oldest poet of Greece, and to
have written before the time of Homer; but he is evidently a mythological character.
[375:1] See Indian Antiquities, vol. iv. p. 332, and Taylor's Diegesis, p. 189.
[375:2] See Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Orpheus."
[375:3] Ibid., art. "Plato."
[375:4] John, i. 1.
[375:5] The first that we know of this gospel for certain is during the time of Irenæus, the
great Christian forger.
[375:6] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 185.
[375:7] Apol. 1. ch. xx.-xxii.
[376:1] See Fiske: Myths and Myth-makers, p. 205. Celsus charges the Christians with a
recoinage of the misunderstood doctrine of the Logos.
[376:2] See Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 105.
[376:3] See Indian Antiquities, vol. iii. p. 158.
[376:4] See Indian Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 346. Monumental Christianity, p. 65, and Ancient
Faiths, vol. ii. p. 819.
[376:5] Ibid.
[376:6] Indian Antiquities, vol. iv. p. 259.
[376:7] See Monumental Christianity, p. 65, and Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 819.
[376:8] Monumental Christianity, p. 923. See also, Maurice's Indian Antiquities.
[376:9] Idra Suta, Sohar, iii. 288. B. Franck, 138. Son of the Man, p. 78.
[376:10] Vandals—a race of European barbarians, either of Germanic or Slavonic origin.
[377:1] Parkhurst: Hebrew Lexicon, Quoted in Taylor's Diegesis, p. 216.
[377:2] See Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 169. Maurice: Indian Antiq., vol. v. p. 14,
and Gross: The Heathen Religion, p. 210.
[377:3] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities.
[377:4] Celtic Druids, p. 171; Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 123; and Myths of the British Druids,
p. 448.
[377:5] Indian Antiquities, vol. v. pp. 8, 9.
[378:1] Isis Unveiled, vol. ii. p. 48.
[378:2] Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 169.
[378:3] Squire: Serpent Symbol, pp. 179, 180. Mexican Ant., vol. vi. p. 164.
[378:4] Kingsborough: Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 164.
[378:5] Acosta: Hist. Indies, vol. ii. p. 373. See also, Indian Antiq., vol. v. p. 26, and
Squire's Serpent Symbol, p. 181.
[378:6] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 181.
[379:1] The ideas entertained concerning the antiquity of the Geeta, at the time Mr.
Maurice wrote his Indian Antiquities, were erroneous. This work, as we have elsewhere
seen, is not as old as he supposed. The doctrine of the Trimurti in India, however, is to be
found in the Veda, and epic poems, which are of an antiquity long anterior to the rise of
Christianity, preceding it by many centuries. (See Monier Williams' Indian Wisdom, p.
324, and Hinduism, pp. 109, 110-115.)
"The grand cavern pagoda of Elephants, the oldest and most magnificent temple in the
world, is neither more nor less than a superb temple of a Triune God." (Maurice: Indian
Antiquities, vol. iii. p. ix.)
[379:2] Indian Antiquities, vol. i. pp. 125-127.
[380:1] We have already seen that Plato and his followers taught the doctrine of the Trinity
centuries before the time of Christ Jesus.
[380:2] Israel Worsley's Enquiry, p. 54. Quoted in Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 116.
[380:3] "The memorable test (I. John v. 7) which asserts the unity of the three which bear
witness in heaven, is condemned by the universal silence of the orthodox Fathers, ancient
versions, and authentic manuscripts. It was first alleged by the Catholic Bishop whom
Hunneric summoned to the Conference of Carthage (A. D. 254), or, more properly, by the
four bishops who composed and published the profession of faith, in the name of their
brethren." (Gibbon's Rome, vol. iii. p. 556, and note 117.) None of the ancient manuscripts
now extant, above four-score in number, contain this passage. (Ibid. note 116.) In the
eleventh and twelfth centuries, the Bible was corrected. Yet, notwithstanding these
corrections, the passage is still wanting in twenty-five Latin manuscripts. (Ibid. note 116.
See also Dr. Giles' Hebrew and Christian Records, vol. ii. p. 12. Dr. Inman's Ancient
Faiths, vol. ii. p. 886. Rev. Robert Taylor's Diegesis, p. 421, and Reber's Christ of Paul.)
[380:4] See Gibbon's Rome, ii. 309.
[380:5] Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Trinity."
[381:1] Draper: Religion and Science, pp. 53, 54.
[382:1] Athanasius, tom. i. p. 808. Quoted in Gibbon's Rome, vol. ii. p. 310.
Gennadius, Patriarch of Constantinople, was so much amazed by the extraordinary
composition called "Athanasius' Creed," that he frankly pronounced it to be the work of a
drunken man. (Gibbon's Rome, vol. iii. p. 555, note 114.)
[382:2] Gibbon's Rome, vol. iii. p. 87.
[382:3] Ibid. pp. 91, 92.
[383:1] All their writings were ordered to be destroyed, and any one found to have them in
his possession was severely punished.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
PAGANISM IN CHRISTIANITY.
Our assertion that that which is called Christianity is nothing more than the
religion of Paganism, we consider to have been fully verified. We have
found among the heathen, centuries before the time of Christ Jesus, the
belief in an incarnate God born of a virgin; his previous existence in
heaven; the celestial signs at the time of his birth; the rejoicing in heaven;
the adoration by the magi and shepherds; the offerings of precious
substances to the divine child; the slaughter of the innocents; the
presentation at the temple; the temptation by the devil; the performing of
miracles; the crucifixion by enemies; and the death, resurrection, and
ascension into heaven. We have also found the belief that this incarnate God
was from all eternity; that he was the Creator of the world, and that he is to
be Judge of the dead at the last day. We have also seen the practice of
Baptism, and the sacrament of the Lord's Supper or Eucharist, added to the
belief in a Triune God, consisting of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Let us
now compare the Christian creed with ancient Pagan belief.
3. Who was conceived by the Holy 3. Who was conceived by the Holy
Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary.
[384:3]
4. Suffered under Pontius Pilate, 4. Suffered under (whom it might
was crucified, dead and buried. be), was crucified, dead, and
buried.[384:4]
5. He descended into Hell; 5. He descended into Hell;[385:1]
6. The third day he rose again from 6. The third day he rose again from
the dead; the dead;[385:2]
7. He ascended into Heaven, and 7. He ascended into Heaven, and
sitteth on the right hand of God the sitteth on the right hand of God the
Father Almighty; Father Almighty;[385:3]
8. From thence he shall come to 8. From thence he shall come to
judge the quick and the dead. judge the quick and the dead.[385:4]
9. I believe in the Holy Ghost; 9. I believe in the Holy Ghost;[385:5]
10. The Holy Catholic Church, the 10. The Holy Catholic Church,
Communion of Saints; [385:6] the Communion of Saints;
The above is the so-called "Apostles' Creed," as it now stands in the book of
common prayer of the United Church of England and Ireland, as by law
established.
It is affirmed by Ambrose, that:
"The twelve apostles, as skilled artificers, assembled together, and made a
key by their common advice, that is, the Creed, by which the darkness of
the devil is disclosed, that the light of Christ may appear."
Others fable that every Apostle inserted an article, by which the Creed is
divided into twelve articles.
The earliest account of its origin we have from Ruffinus, an historical
compiler and traditionist of the fourth century, but not in the form in which
it is known at present, it having been added to since that time. The most
important addition is that which affirms that Jesus descended into hell,
which has been added since A. D. 600.[385:9]
Beside what we have already seen, the ancient Pagans had many beliefs and
ceremonies which are to be found among the Christians. One of these is the
story of "The War in Heaven."
The New Testament version is as follows:
"There was a war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought against the
dragon, and the dragon fought, and his angels, and prevailed not, neither
was their place found any more in heaven. And the great dragon was cast
out, that old serpent, called the devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole
world, he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with
him."[386:1]
The cause of the revolt, it is said, was that Satan, who was then an angel,
desired to be as great as God. The writer of Isaiah, xiv. 13, 14, is supposed
to refer to it when he says:
"Thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my
throne above the stars of God; I will sit also upon the mount of the
congregation in the sides of the North; I will ascend before the heights of
the clouds; I will be like the Most High."
The Catholic theory of the fall of the angels is as follows:
"In the beginning, before the creation of heaven and earth, God made the
angels, free intelligences, and free wills, out of his love He made them, that
they might be eternally happy. And that their happiness might be complete,
he gave them the perfection of a created nature, that is, he gave them
freedom. But happiness is only attained by the free will agreeing in its
freedom to accord with the will of God. Some of the angels by an act of free
will obeyed the will of God, and in such obedience found perfect happiness.
Other angels, by an act of free will, rebelled against the will of God, and in
such disobedience found misery."[386:2]
They were driven out of heaven, after having a combat with the obedient
angels, and cast into hell. The writer of second Peter alludes to it in saying
that God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them down into hell.
[386:3]
The ancient Egyptians were familiar with the tale of the war in heaven; and
the legend of the revolt against the god Rā, the Heavenly Father, and his
destruction of the revolters, was discovered by M. Naville in one of the
tombs at Biban-el-moluk.[387:3]
The same story is to be found among the ancient Persian legends, and is
related as follows:
"Ahriman, the devil, was not created evil by the eternal one, but he became
evil by revolting against his will. This revolt resulted in a 'war in heaven.' In
this war the Iveds (good angels) fought against the Divs (rebellious ones)
headed by Ahriman, and flung the conquered into Douzahk or hell."[387:4]
An extract from the Persian Zend-avesta reads as follows:
"Ahriman interrupted the order of the universe, raised an army against
Ormuzd, and having maintained a fight against him during ninety days, was
at length vanquished by Honover, the divine Word."[388:1]
The Assyrians had an account of a war in heaven, which was like that
described in the book of Enoch and the Revelation.[388:2]
This legend was also to be found among the ancient Greeks, in the struggle
of the Titans against Jupiter. Titan and all his rebellious host were cast out
of heaven, and imprisoned in the dark abyss.[388:3]
Among the legends of the ancient Mexicans was found this same story of
the war in heaven, and the downfall of the rebellious angels.[388:4]
"The natives of the Caroline Islands (in the North Pacific Ocean), related
that one of the inferior gods, named Merogrog, was driven by the other
gods out of heaven."[388:5]
We see, therefore, that this also was an almost universal legend.
The belief in a future life was almost universal among nations of antiquity.
The Hindoos have believed from time immemorial that man has an invisible
body within the material body; that is, a soul.
Among the ancient Egyptians the same belief was to be found. All the dead,
both men and women, were spoken of as "Osiriana;" by which they
intended to signify "gone to Osiris."
Their belief in One Supreme Being, and the immortality of the soul, must
have been very ancient; for on a monument, which dates ages before
Abraham is said to have lived, is found this epitaph: "May thy soul attain to
the Creator of all mankind." Sculptures and paintings in these grand
receptacles of the dead, as translated by Champollion, represent the
deceased ushered into the world of spirits by funeral deities, who announce,
"A soul arrived in Amenti."[388:6]
The Hindoo idea of a subtile invisible body within the material body,
reappeared in the description of Greek poets. They represented the
constitution of man as consisting of three principles: the soul, the invisible
body, and the material body. The invisible body they called the ghost or
shade, and considered it as the material portion of the soul. At death, the
soul, clothed in this subtile body, went to enjoy paradise for a season, or
suffer in hell till its sins were expiated. This paradise was called the
"Elysian Fields," and the hell was called Tartarus.
The paradise, some supposed to be a part of the lower world, some placed
them in a middle zone in the air, some in the moon, and others in far-off
isles in the ocean. There shone more glorious sun and stars than illuminated
this world. The day was always serene, the air forever pure, and a soft,
celestial light clothed all things in transfigured beauty. Majestic groves,
verdant meadows, and blooming gardens varied the landscape. The river
Eridanus flowed through winding banks fringed with laurel. On its borders
lived heroes who had died for their country, priests who had led a pure life,
artists who had embodied genuine beauty in their work, and poets who had
never degraded their muse with subjects unworthy of Apollo. There each
one renewed the pleasures in which he formerly delighted. Orpheus, in long
white robes, made enrapturing music on his lyre, while others danced and
sang. The husband rejoined his beloved wife; old friendships were renewed,
the poet repeated his verses, and the charioteer managed his horses.
Some souls wandered in vast forests between Tartarus and Elysium, not
good enough for one, or bad enough for the other. Some were purified from
their sins by exposure to searching winds, others by being submerged in
deep waters, others by passing through intense fires. After a long period of
probation and suffering, many of them gained the Elysian Fields. This
belief is handed down to our day in the Roman Catholic idea of Purgatory.
A belief in the existence of the soul after death was indicated in all periods
of history of the world, by the fact that man was always accustomed to
address prayers to the spirits of their ancestors.[389:1]
These heavens and hells where men abode after death, vary, in different
countries, according to the likes and dislikes of each nation.
All the Teutonic nations held to a fixed Elysium and a hell, where the
valiant and the just were rewarded, and where the cowardly and the wicked
suffered punishment. As all nations have made a god, and that god has
resembled the persons who made it, so have all nations made a heaven, and
that heaven corresponds to the fancies of the people who have created it.
In the prose Edda there is a description of the joys of Valhalla (the Hall of
the Chosen), which states that: "All men who have fallen in fight since the
beginning of the world are gone to Odin (the Supreme God), in Valhalla." A
mighty band of men are there, "and every day, as soon as they have dressed
themselves, they ride out into the court (or field), and there fight until they
cut each other into pieces. This is their pastime, but when the meal-tide
approaches, they remount their steeds, and return to drink in Valhalla. As it
is said (in Vafthrudnis-mal):
Heaven was born of the sky,[391:1] and nurtured by cunning priests, who
made man a coward and a slave.
Hell was built by priests, and nurtured by the fears and servile fancies of
man during the ages when dungeons of torture were a recognized part of
every government, and when God was supposed to be an infinite tyrant,
with infinite resources of vengeance.
The devil is an imaginary being, invented by primitive man to account for
the existence of evil, and relieve God of his responsibility. The famous
Hindoo Rakshasas of our Aryan ancestors—the dark and evil clouds
personified—are the originals of all devils. The cloudy shape has assumed a
thousand different forms, horrible or grotesque and ludicrous, to suit the
changing fancies of the ages.
But strange as it may appear, the god of one nation became the devil of
another.
The rock of Behistun, the sculptured chronicle of the glories of Darius, king
of Persia, situated on the western frontier of Media, on the high-road from
Babylon to the eastward, was used as a "holy of holies." It was named
Bagistane—"the place of the Baga"—referring to Ormuzd, chief of the
Bagas. When examined with the lenses of linguistic science, the "Bogie" or
"Bug-a-boo" or "Bugbear" of nursery lore, turns out to be identical with the
Slavonic "Bog" and the "Baga" of the cuneiform inscriptions, both of which
are names of the Supreme Being. It is found also in the old Aryan "Bhaga,"
who is described in a commentary of the Rig-Veda as the lord of life, the
giver of bread, and the bringer of happiness. Thus, the same name which, to
the Vedic poet, to the Persian of the time of Xerxes, and to the modern
Russian, suggests the supreme majesty of deity, is in English associated
with an ugly and ludicrous fiend. Another striking illustration is to be found
in the word devil itself. When traced back to its primitive source, it is found
to be a name of the Supreme Being.[391:2]
The ancients had a great number of festival days, many of which are handed
down to the present time, and are to be found in Christianity.
We have already seen that the 25th of December was almost a universal
festival among the ancients; so it is the same with the spring festivals, when
days of fasting are observed.
The Hindoos hold a festival, called Siva-ratri, in honor of Siva, about the
middle or end of February. A strict fast is observed during the day. They
have also a festival in April, when a strict fast is kept by some.[392:1]
At the spring equinox most nations of antiquity set apart a day to implore
the blessings of their god, or gods, on the fruits of the earth. At the
autumnal equinox, they offered the fruits of the harvest, and returned
thanks. In China, these religious solemnities are called "Festivals of
gratitude to Tien."[392:2] The last named corresponds to our "Thanksgiving"
celebration.
One of the most considerable festivals held by the ancient Scandinavians
was the spring celebration. This was held in honor of Odin, at the beginning
of spring, in order to welcome in that pleasant season, and to obtain of their
god happy success in their projected expeditions.
Another festival was held toward the autumn equinox, when they were
accustomed to kill all their cattle in good condition, and lay in a store of
provision for the winter. This festival was also attended with religious
ceremonies, when Odin, the supreme god, was thanked for what he had
given them, by having his altar loaded with the fruits of their crops, and the
choicest products of the earth.[392:3]
There was a grand celebration in Egypt, called the "Feast of Lamps," held at
Sais, in honor of the goddess Neith. Those who did not attend the
ceremony, as well as those who did, burned lamps before their houses all
night, filled with oil and salt: thus all Egypt was illuminated. It was deemed
a great irreverence to the goddess for any one to omit this ceremony.[392:4]
The Hindoos also held a festival in honor of the goddesses Lakshmi and
Bhavanti, called "The feast of Lamps."[392:5] This festival has been handed
down to the present time in what is called "Candlemas day," or the
purification of the Virgin Mary.
The most celebrated Pagan festival held by modern Christians is that known
as "Sunday," or the "Lord's day."
All the principal nations of antiquity kept the seventh day of the week as a
"holy day," just as the ancient Israelites did. This was owing to the fact that
they consecrated the days of the week to the Sun, the Moon, and the five
planets, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. The seventh day was
sacred to Saturn from time immemorial. Homer and Hesiod call it the "Holy
Day."[393:1] The people generally visited the temples of the gods, on that
day, and offered up their prayers and supplications.[393:2] The Acadians,
thousands of years ago, kept holy the 7th, 14th, 21st, and 28th of each
month as Salum (rest), on which certain works were forbidden.[393:3] The
Arabs anciently worshiped Saturn under the name of Hobal. In his hands he
held seven arrows, symbols of the planets that preside over the seven days
of the week.[393:4] The Egyptians assigned a day of the week to the sun,
moon, and five planets, and the number seven was held there in great
reverence.[393:5]
The planet Saturn very early became the chief deity of Semitic religion.
Moses consecrated the number seven to him.[393:6]
In the old conception, which finds expression in the Decalogue in
Deuteronomy (v. 15), the Sabbath has a purely theocratic significance, and
is intended to remind the Hebrews of their miraculous deliverance from the
land of Egypt and bondage. When the story of Creation was borrowed from
the Babylonians, the celebration of the Sabbath was established on entirely
new grounds (Ex. xx. 11), for we find it is because the "Creator," after his
six days of work, rested on the seventh, that the day should be kept holy.
The Assyrians kept this day holy. Mr. George Smith says:
"In the year 1869, I discovered among other things a curious religious
calendar of the Assyrians, in which every month is divided into four weeks,
and the seventh days or 'Sabbaths,' are marked out as days on which no
work should be undertaken."[393:7]
The ancient Scandinavians consecrated one day in the week to their
Supreme God, Odin or Wodin.[393:8] Even at the present time we call this
day Odin's-day.[393:9]
The question now arises, how was the great festival day changed from the
seventh—Saturn's day—to the first—Sun-day—among the Christians?
"If we go back to the founding of the church, we find that the most marked
feature of that age, so far as the church itself is concerned, is the grand
division between the 'Jewish faction,' as it was called, and the followers of
Paul. This division was so deep, so marked, so characteristic, that it has left
its traces all through the New Testament itself. It was one of the grand
aspects of the time, and the point on which they were divided was simply
this: the followers of Peter, those who adhered to the teachings of the
central church in Jerusalem, held that all Christians, both converted Jews
and Gentiles, were under obligation to keep the Mosaic law, ordinances,
and traditions. That is, a Christian, according to their definition, was first a
Jew; Christianity was something added to that, not something taking the
place of it.
"We find this controversy raging violently all through the early churches,
and splitting them into factions, so that they were the occasion of prayer
and counsel. Paul took the ground distinctly that Christianity, while it might
be spiritually the lineal successor of Judaism, was not Judaism; and that he
who became a Christian, whether a converted Jew or Gentile, was under no
obligation whatever to keep the Jewish law, so far as it was separate from
practical matters of life and character. We find this intimated in the writings
of Paul; for we have to go to the New Testament for the origin of that
which, we find, existed immediately after the New Testament was written.
Paul says: 'One man esteemeth one day above another: another man
esteemeth every day alike' (Rom. xiv. 5-9). He leaves it an open question;
they can do as they please. Then: 'Ye observe days, and months, and times,
and years. I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain'
(Gal. iv. 10, 11). And if you will note this Epistle of Paul to the Galatians,
you will find that the whole purpose of his writing it was to protest against
what he believed to be the viciousness of the Judaizing influences. That is,
he says: 'I have come to preach to you the perfect truth, that Christ hath
made us free; and you are going back and taking upon yourselves this yoke
of bondage. My labor is being thrown away; my efforts have been in vain.'
Then he says, in his celebrated Epistle to the Colossians, that has never yet
been explained away or met: 'Let no man therefore judge you any more in
meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holy day, or of the new moon, or of the
Sabbath days' (Col. ii. 16, 17), distinctly abrogating the binding authority of
the Sabbath on the Christian church. So that, if Paul's word anywhere
means anything—if his authority is to be taken as of binding force on any
point whatever—then Paul is to be regarded as authoritatively and distinctly
abrogating the Sabbath, and declaring that it is no longer binding on the
Christian church."[395:1]
This breach in the early church, this controversy, resulted at last in Paul's
going up to Jerusalem "to meet James and the representatives of the
Jerusalem church, to see if they could find any common platform of
agreement—if they could come together so that they could work with
mutual respect and without any further bickering. What is the platform that
they met upon? It was distinctly understood that those who wished to keep
up the observance of Judaism should do so; and the church at Jerusalem
gave Paul this grand freedom, substantially saying to him: 'Go back to your
missionary work, found churches, and teach them that they are perfectly
free in regard to all Mosaic and Jewish observances, save only these four:
Abstain from pollutions of idols, from fornication, from things strangled,
and from blood."[395:2]
The point to which our attention is forcibly drawn is, that the question of
Sabbath-keeping is one of those that is left out. The point that Paul had been
fighting for was conceded by the central church at Jerusalem, and he was to
go out thenceforth free, so far as that was concerned, in his teaching of the
churches that he should found.
There is no mention of the Sabbath, or the Lord's day, as binding in the New
Testament. What, then, was the actual condition of affairs? What did the
churches do in the first three hundred years of their existence? Why, they
did just what Paul and the Jerusalem church had agreed upon. Those who
wished to keep the Jewish Sabbath did so; and those who did not wish to,
did not do so. This is seen from the fact that Justin Martyr, a Christian
Father who flourished about A. D. 140, did not observe the day. In his
"Dialogue" with Typho, the Jew reproaches the Christians for not keeping
the "Sabbath." Justin admits the charge by saying:
"Do you not see that the Elements keep no Sabbaths and are never idle?
Continue as you were created. If there was no need of circumcision before
Abraham's time, and no need of the Sabbath, of festivals and oblations,
before the time of Moses, neither of them are necessary after the coming of
Christ. If any among you is guilty of perjury, fraud, or other crimes, let him
cease from them and repent, and he will have kept the kind of Sabbath
pleasing to God."
There was no binding authority then, among the Christians, as to whether
they should keep the first or the seventh day of the week holy, or not, until
the time of the first Christian Roman Emperor. "Constantine, a Sun
worshiper, who had, as other Heathen, kept the Sun-day, publicly ordered
this to supplant the Jewish Sabbath."[396:1] He commanded that this day
should be kept holy, throughout the whole Roman empire, and sent an edict
to all governors of provinces to this effect.[396:2] Thus we see how the great
Pagan festival, in honor of Sol the invincible, was transformed into a
Christian holy-day.
Not only were Pagan festival days changed into Christian holy-days, but
Pagan idols were converted into Christian saints, and Pagan temples into
Christian churches.
A Pagan temple at Rome, formerly sacred to the "Bona Dea" (the "Good
Goddess"), was Christianized and dedicated to the Virgin Mary. In a place
formerly sacred to Apollo, there now stands the church of Saint Apollinaris.
Where there anciently stood the temple of Mars, may now be seen the
church of Saint Martine.[396:3] A Pagan temple, originally dedicated to
"Cælestis Dea" (the "Heavenly Goddess"), by one Aurelius, a Pagan high-
priest, was converted into a Christian church by another Aurelius, created
Bishop of Carthage in the year 390 of Christ. He placed his episcopal chair
in the very place where the statue of the Heavenly Goddess had stood.[396:4]
The noblest heathen temple now remaining in the world, is the Pantheon or
Rotunda, which, as the inscription over the portico informs us, having been
impiously dedicated of old by Agrippa to "Jove and all the gods," was
piously reconsecrated by Pope Boniface the Fourth, to "The Mother of God
and all the Saints."[396:5]
The church of Saint Reparatae, at Florence, was formerly a Pagan temple.
An inscription was found in the foundation of this church, of these words:
"To the Great Goddess Nutria."[396:6] The church of St. Stephen, at Bologna,
was formed from heathen temples, one of which was a temple of Isis.[396:7]
At the southern extremity of the present Forum at Rome, and just under the
Palatine hill—where the noble babes, who, miraculously preserved, became
the founders of a state that was to command the world, were exposed—
stands the church of St. Theodore.
This temple was built in honor of Romulus, and the brazen wolf—
commemorating the curious manner in which the founders of Rome were
nurtured—occupied a place here till the sixteenth century. And, as the
Roman matrons of old used to carry their children, when ill, to the temple
of Romulus, so too, the women still carry their children to St. Theodore on
the same occasions.
In Christianizing these Pagan temples, free use was made of the sculptured
and painted stones of heathen monuments. In some cases they evidently
painted over one name, and inserted another. This may be seen from the
following
Jordan. Peter holds the keys of Janus.[399:4] Moses wears the horns of Jove.
Ceres, Cybele, Demeter assume new names, as 'Queen of Heaven,' 'Star of
the Sea,' 'Maria Illuminatrix;' Dionysius is St. Denis; Cosmos is St. Cosmo;
Pluto and Proserpine resign their seats in the hall of final judgment to the
Christ and his mother. The Parcæ depute one of their number, Lachesis, the
disposer of lots, to set the stamp of destiny upon the deaths of Christian
believers. The aura placida of the poets, the gentle breeze, is personified as
Aura and Placida. The perpetua felicitas of the devotee becomes a lovely
presence in the forms of St. Perpetua and St. Felicitas, guardian angels of
the pious soul. No relic of Paganism was permitted to remain in its casket.
The depositories were all ransacked. The shadowy hands of Egyptian
priests placed the urn of holy water at the porch of the basilica, which stood
ready to be converted into a temple. Priests of the most ancient faiths of
Palestine, Assyria, Babylon, Thebes, Persia were permitted to erect the altar
at the point where the transverse beam of the cross meets the main stem.
The hands that constructed the temple in cruciform shape had long become
too attenuated to cast the faintest shadow. There Devaki with the infant
Crishna, Maya with the babe Buddha, Juno with the child Mars, represent
Mary with Jesus in her arms. Coarse emblems are not rejected; the Assyrian
dove is a tender symbol of the Holy Ghost. The rag-bags and toy boxes
were explored. A bauble which the Roman schoolboy had thrown away was
picked up, and called an 'agnus dei.' The musty wardrobes of forgotten
hierarchies furnished costumes for the officers of the new prince. Alb and
chasuble recalled the fashions of Numa's day. The cast-off purple habits and
shoes of Pagan emperors beautified the august persons of Christian popes.
The cardinals must be contented with the robes once worn by senators.
Zoroaster bound about the monks the girdle he invented as a protection
against evil spirits, and clothed them in the frocks he had found convenient
for his ritual. The pope thrust out his foot to be kissed, as Caligula,
Heliogabalus, and Julius Cesar had thrust out theirs. Nothing came amiss to
the faith that was to discharge henceforth the offices of spiritual
impression."[400:1]
The ascetic and monastic life practiced by some Christians of the present
day, is of great antiquity. Among the Buddhists there are priests who are
ordained, tonsured, live in monasteries, and make vows of celibacy. There
are also nuns among them, whose vows and discipline are the same as the
priests.[400:2]
The close resemblance between the ancient religion of Thibet and Nepaul—
where the worship of a crucified God was found—and the Roman Catholic
religion of the present day, is very striking. In Thibet was found the pope, or
head of the religion, whom they called the "Dalai Lama;"[400:3] they use
holy water, they celebrate a sacrifice with bread and wine; they give
extreme unction, pray for the sick; they have monasteries, and convents for
women; they chant in their services, have fasts; they worship one God in a
trinity, believe in a hell, heaven, and a half-way place or purgatory; they
make prayers and sacrifices for the dead, have confession, adore the cross;
have chaplets, or strings of beads to count their prayers, and many other
practices common to the Roman Catholic Church.[400:4]
The resemblance between Buddhism and Christianity has been remarked by
many travelers in the eastern countries. Sir John Francis Davis, in his
"History of China," speaking of Buddhism in that country, says:
"Certain it is—and the observance may be daily made even at Canton—that
they (the Buddhist priests) practice the ordinances of celibacy, fasting, and
prayers for the dead; they have holy water, rosaries of beads, which they
count with their prayers, the worship of relics, and a monastic habit
resembling that of the Franciscans" (an order of Roman Catholic monks).
Père Premere, a Jesuit missionary to China, was driven to conclude that the
devil had practiced a trick to perplex his friends, the Jesuits. To others,
however, it is not so difficult to account for these things as it seemed for the
good Father. Sir John continues his account as follows:
"These priests are associated in monasteries attached to the temples of Fo.
They are in China precisely a society of mendicants, and go about, like
monks of that description in the Romish Church, asking alms for the
support of their establishment. Their tonsure extends to the hair of the
whole head. There is a regular gradation among the priesthood; and
according to his reputation for sanctity, his length of service and other
claims, each priest may rise from the lowest rank of servitor—whose duty it
is to perform the menial offices of the temple—to that of officiating priest
—and ultimately of 'Tae Hoepang,' Abbot or head of the establishment."
The five principal precepts, or rather interdicts, addressed to the Buddhist
priests are:
1. Do not kill.
2. Do not steal.
3. Do not marry.
4. Speak not falsely.
5. Drink no wine.
Baptismal fonts were used by the pagans, as well as the little cisterns which
are to be seen at the entrance of Catholic churches. In the temple of Apollo,
at Delphi, there were two of these; one of silver, and the other of gold.[406:3]
Temples always faced the east, to receive the rays of the rising sun. They
contained an outer court for the public, and an inner sanctuary for the
priests, called the "Adytum." Near the entrance was a large vessel, of stone
or brass, filled with water, made holy by plunging into it a burning torch
from the altar. All who were admitted to the sacrifices were sprinkled with
this water, and none but the unpolluted were allowed to pass beyond it. In
the center of the building stood the statue of the god, on a pedestal raised
above the altar and enclosed by a railing. On festival occasions, the people
brought laurel, olive, or ivy, to decorate the pillars and walls. Before they
entered they always washed their hands, as a type of purification from sin.
[406:4] A story is told of a man who was struck dead by a thunderbolt
The historian remarks that there is no sort of doubt, that by this permission,
Gregory allowed the Christians to dance, sport, and feast at the tombs of the
martyrs, upon their respective festivals, and to do everything which the
Pagans were accustomed to do in their temples, during the feasts celebrated
in honor of their gods.
The learned Christian advocate, M. Turretin, in describing the state of
Christianity in the fourth century, has a well-turned rhetoricism, the point of
which is, that "it was not so much the empire that was brought over to the
faith, as the faith that was brought over to the empire; not the Pagans who
were converted to Christianity, but Christianity that was converted to
Paganism."[410:4]
Edward Gibbon says:
"It must be confessed that the ministers of the Catholic church imitated the
profane model which they were impatient to destroy. The most respectable
bishops had persuaded themselves, that the ignorant rusties would more
cheerfully renounce the superstitions of Paganism, if they found some
resemblance, some compensation, in the bosom of Christianity. The religion
of Constantine achieved, in less than a century, the final conquest of the
Roman empire: but the victors themselves were insensibly subdued by the
arts of their vanquished rivals."[411:1]
Faustus, writing to St. Augustine, says:
"You have substituted your agapæ for the sacrifices of the Pagans; for their
idols your martyrs, whom you serve with the very same honors. You
appease the shades of the dead with wine and feasts; you celebrate the
solemn festivities of the Gentiles, their calends, and their solstices; and, as
to their manners, those you have retained without any alteration. Nothing
distinguishes you from the Pagans, except that you hold your assemblies
apart from them."[411:2]
Ammonius Saccus (a Greek philosopher, founder of the Neo-platonic
school) taught that:
"Christianity and Paganism, when rightly understood, differ in no essential
points, but had a common origin, and are really one and the same thing."
[411:3]
"An evil-minded man is quick to "And why beholdest thou the mote
see his neighbor's faults, though that is in thy brother's eye, but
small as mustard-seed; but when he considerest not the beam that is in
turns his eyes towards his own, thine own eye?" (Matt. vii. 3.)
though large as Bilva fruit, he none
descries." (Maha-bharata.)
"Conquer a man who never gives "Be not overcome of evil, but
by gifts; subdue untruthful men by overcome evil with good."
truthfulness; vanquish an angry (Romans, xii. 21.)
man by gentleness; and overcome
the evil man by goodness." (Ibid.)
"To injure none by thought or word "Love your enemies, and do good,
or deed, to give to others, and be and lend, hoping for nothing again;
kind to all—this is the constant and your reward shall be great, and
duty of the good. High-minded ye shall be the children of the
men delight in doing good, without Highest: for he is kind unto the
a thought of their own interest; unthankful and to the evil." (Luke,
when they confer a benefit on vii. 35.)
others, they reckon not on favors in
return." (Ibid.)
"Two persons will hereafter be "And Jesus sat over against the
exalted above the heavens—the treasury, and beheld how people
man with boundless power, who cast money into the treasury: and
yet forbears to use it indiscreetly, many that were rich cast in much.
and he who is not rich, and yet can And there came a certain poor
give." (Ibid.) widow, and she threw in two mites,
which make a farthing. And he
"Just heaven is not so pleased with called unto him his disciples, and
costly gifts, offered in hope of saith unto them, Verily I say unto
future recompense, as with the you, that this poor widow hath cast
merest trifle set apart from honest more in, than all they which have
gains, and sanctified by faith." cast into the treasury: For all they
(Ibid.) did cast in of their abundance, but
she of her want did cast all that she
had, even all her living." (Mark,
xii. 41-44.)
"To curb the tongue and moderate "But the tongue can no man tame;
the speech, is held to be the hardest it is an unruly evil, full of deadly
of all tasks. The words of him who poison." (James, iii. 8.)
talk too volubly have neither
substance nor variety." (Ibid.)
"Even to foes who visit us as "Therefore, if thine enemy hunger,
guests due hospitality should be feed him; if he thirst, give him
displayed; the tree screens with its drink; for in so doing thou shalt
leaves, the man who fells it." heap coals of fire on his head."
(Ibid.) (Rom. xii. 20.)
"In granting or refusing a request, a "Thou shall love thy neighbor as
man obtains a proper rule of action thyself." (Matt. xxii. 39.)
by looking on his neighbor as
himself." (Ibid.) "And as ye would that men should
do to you, do ye also to them
likewise." (Luke vi. 31.)
"Before infirmities creep o'er thy "Remember now thy creator in the
flesh; before decay impairs thy days of thy youth, while the evil
strength and mars the beauty of thy days come not, nor the years draw
limbs; before the Ender, whose nigh, when thou shalt say: I have
charioteer is sickness, hastes no pleasure in them." (Ecc. xii. 1.)
towards thee, breaks up thy fragile
frame and ends thy life, lay up the "Lay not up for yourselves
only treasure: Do good deeds; treasures upon earth, where moth
practice sobriety and self-control; and rust doth corrupt, and where
amass that wealth which thieves thieves break through and steal:
cannot abstract, nor tyrants seize, But lay up for yourselves treasures
which follows thee at death, which in heaven, where neither moth nor
never wastes away, nor is rust doth corrupt, and where thieves
corrupted." (Ibid.) do not break through and steal."
(Matt. vi. 19-20.)
"This is the sum of all true "Ye have heard that it hath been
righteousness—Treat others as said: Thou shall love thy neighbor,
thou wouldst thyself be treated. Do and hate thine enemy. But I say
nothing to thy neighbor, which unto you, love your enemies, bless
hereafter thou would'st not have them that curse you, do good to
thy neighbor do to thee. In causing them that hate you, and pray for
pleasure, or in giving pain, in doing them which despitefully use you,
good or injury to others, in and persecute you." (Matt. v. 43-
granting or refusing a request, a 44.)
man obtains a proper rule of action
by looking on his neighbor as "A new commandment I give unto
himself." (Ibid.) you, that ye love one another: as I
have loved you, that ye also love
one another." (John, xii. 34.)
(Manu.)
(Ibid.)
(Ibid.)
(Ibid.)
(Ibid.)
(Maha-bharata.)
(Ibid.)
(Ibid.)
(Ibid.)
(Ibid.)
(Manu.)
(Ibid.)
(Ibid.)
(Ibid.)
FOOTNOTES:
[384:1] "Before the separation of the Aryan race, before the existence of Sanscrit, Greek,
or Latin, before the gods of the Veda had been worshiped, ONE SUPREME DEITY had
been found, had been named, and had been invoked by the ancestors of our race." (Prof.
Max Müller: The Science of Religion, p. 67.)
[384:2] See Chap. XII. and Chap. XX., for Only-begotten Sons.
[384:3] See Chap. XII. and Chap. XXXII., where we have shown that many other virgin-
born gods were conceived by the Holy Ghost, and that the name MARY is the same as Maia,
Maya, Myrra, &c.
[384:4] See Chap. XX., for Crucified Saviours.
[385:1] See Chap. XXII.
[385:2] See Chaps. XXII. and XXXIX., for Resurrected Saviours.
[385:3] See Ibid.
[385:4] See Chap. XXIV., and Chap. XXV.
[385:5] See Chap. XII., and Chap. XXXV.
[385:6] That is, the holy true Church. All peoples who have had a religion believe that
theirs was the Catholic faith.
[385:7] There was no nation of antiquity who did not believe in "the forgiveness of sins,"
especially if some innocent creature redeemed them by the shedding of his blood (see
Chap. IV., and Chap. XX.), and as far as confession of sins is concerned, and thereby being
forgiven, this too is almost as old as humanity. Father Acosta found it even among the
Mexicans, and said that "the father of lies (the Devil) counterfeited the sacrament of
confession, so that he might be honored with ceremonies very like the Christians." (See
Acosta, vol. ii. p. 360.)
[385:8] "No doctrine except that of a supreme and subtly-pervading deity, is so extended,
and has retained its primitive form so distinctly, as a belief in immortality, and a future
state of rewards and punishments. Among the most savage races, the idea of a future
existence in a place of delight is found." (Kenneth R. H. Mackenzie.)
"Go back far as we may in the history of the Indo-European race, of which the Greeks and
Italians are branches, and we do not find that this race has ever thought that after this short
life all was finished for man. The most ancient generations, long before there were
philosophers, believed in a second existence after the present. They looked upon death not
as a dissolution of our being, but simply as a change of life." (M. De Coulanges: The
Ancient City, p. 15.)
[385:9] For full information on this subject see Archbishop Wake's Apostolic Fathers, p.
108, Justice Bailey's Common Prayer, Taylor's Diegesis, p. 10, and Chambers's Encyclo.,
art. "Creeds."
[386:1] Rev. xi. 7-9.
[386:2] S. Baring-Gould: Legends of Patriarchs, p. 25.
[386:3] II. Peter, ii. 4.
[386:4] Jude, 6.
[386:5] S. Baring-Gould: Legends of Patriarchs, p. 16.
[387:1] S. Baring-Gould: Legends of Patriarchs, p. 17.
[387:2] Indian Wisdom, p. 39.
[387:3] See Renouf's Hibbert Lectures, p. 165. Dupuis: Origin of Relig. Beliefs, p. 73, and
Baring-Gould's Legends of the Prophets, p. 19.
[387:4] S. Baring-Gould's Legends of Patriarchs, p. 19.
[388:1] Priestley, p. 35.
[388:2] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 411.
[388:3] See Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 819. Taylor's Diegesis, p. 215, and Dupuis:
Origin of Relig. Beliefs, p. 78.
[388:4] See Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 31.
[388:5] S. Baring-Gould's Legends of Patriarchs, p. 20.
[388:6] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 159, and Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i.
[389:1] This subject is most fully entered into by Mr. Herbert Spencer, in vol. i. of
"Principles of Sociology."
[390:1] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 426.
[391:1] See Appendix C.
[391:2] See Fiske, pp. 104-107.
[392:1] Williams' Hinduism, pp. 182, 183.
[392:2] See Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 216.
[392:3] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 111.
[392:4] See Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 466.
[392:5] Williams' Hinduism, p. 184.
[393:1] "The Seventh day was sacred to Saturn throughout the East." (Dunlap's Spirit Hist.,
pp. 35, 36.)
"Saturn's day was made sacred to God, and the planet is now called cochab shabbath, 'The
Sabbath Star.'
"The sanctification of the Sabbath is clearly connected with the word Shabua or Sheba, i.
e., seven." (Inman's Anct. Faiths, vol. ii. p. 504.) "The Babylonians, Egyptians, Chinese,
and the natives of India, were acquainted with the seven days' division of time, as were the
ancient Druids." (Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 412.) "With the Egyptians the Seventh day
was consecrated to God the Father." (Ibid.) "Hesiod, Herodotus, Philostratus, &c., mention
that day. Homer, Callimachus, and other ancient writers call the Seventh day the Holy One.
Eusebius confesses its observance by almost all philosophers and poets." (Ibid.)
[393:2] Ibid.
[393:3] Ibid. p. 413.
[393:4] Pococke Specimen: Hist. Arab., p. 97. Quoted in Dunlap's Spirit Hist., p. 274.
"Some of the families of the Israelites worshiped Saturn under the name of Kiwan, which
may have given rise to the religious observance of the Seventh day." (Bible for Learners,
vol. i, p. 317.)
[393:5] Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 283.
[393:6] Mover's Phönizier, vol. i. p. 313. Quoted in Dunlap's Spirit Hist., p. 36.
[393:7] Assyrian Discoveries.
[393:8] Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 92.
[393:9] Old Norse, Odinsdagr; Swe. and Danish, Onsdag; Ang. Sax., Wodensdeg; Dutch,
Woensdag; Eng., Wednesday.
[395:1] Rev. M. J. Savage.
[395:2] Acts, xv. 20.
[396:1] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 182.
[396:2] See Eusebius' Life of Constantine, lib. iv. chs. xviii. and xxiii.
[396:3] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 237.
[396:4] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 187, and Gibbon's Rome, vol. iii. pp. 142, 143.
[396:5] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 236, and Gibbon's Rome, vol. iii. pp. 142, 143.
[396:6] Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 137.
[396:7] Ibid. p. 307.
[397:1] Gruter's Inscriptions. Quoted in Taylor's Diegesis, p. 237.
[397:2] Boldonius' Epigraphs. Quoted in Ibid.
[397:3] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. p. 237. Taylor's Diegesis, p. 48, and Middleton's
Letters from Rome.
[397:4] Baring-Gould's Curious Myths, p. 428.
[398:1] Mosheim, Cent. ii. p. 202. Quoted in Taylor's Diegesis, p. 48.
[398:2] Draper: Religion and Science, pp. 48, 49.
[398:3] Middleton's Letters from Rome, p. 84.
[399:1] See Higgins' Anacalypsis.
[399:2] Jones on the Canon, vol. i. p. 11. Diegesis, p. 49.
[399:3] Compare "Apollo among the Muses," and "The Vine and its Branches" (that is,
Christ Jesus and his Disciples), in Lundy's Monumental Christianity, pp. 141-143. As Mr.
Lundy says, there is so striking a resemblance between the two, that one looks very much
like a copy of the other. Apollo is also represented as the "Good Shepherd," with a lamb
upon his back, just exactly as Christ Jesus is represented in Christian Art. (See Lundy's
Monumental Christianity, and Jameson's Hist. of Our Lord in Art.)
[399:4] The Roman god Jonas, or Janus, with his keys, was changed into Peter, who was
surnamed Bar-Jonas. Many years ago a statue of the god Janus, in bronze, being found in
Rome, he was perched up in St. Peter's with his keys in his hand: the very identical god, in
all his native ugliness. This statue sits as St. Peter, under the cupola of the church of St.
Peter. It is looked upon with the most profound veneration: the toes are nearly kissed away
by devotees.
[400:1] Frothingham: The Cradle of the Christ, p. 179.
[400:2] See Hardy's Eastern Monachism.
[400:3] The "Grand Lama" is the head of a priestly order in Thibet and Tartar. The office is
not hereditary, but, like the Pope of Rome, he is elected by the priests. (Inman's Ancient
Faiths, vol. ii. p. 203. See also, Bell's Pantheon, vol. ii. pp. 32-34.)
[400:4] See Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 233, Inman's Ancient Faiths, vol. ii. p. 203, and
Isis Unveiled, vol. ii. p. 211.
[401:1] Davis: Hist. China, vol. ii. pp. 105, 106.
[401:2] Gutzlaff's Voyages, p. 309.
[402:1] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 34.
[402:2] See Hallam's Middle Ages.
[403:1] Huc's Travels, vol. i. p. 329.
[403:2] See Hardy's Eastern Monachism, p. 163.
[403:3] Ibid.
[403:4] Ibid.
[403:5] "Vestal Virgins," an order of virgins consecrated to the goddess Vesta.
[403:6] Hardy: Eastern Monachism, p. 163.
[403:7] Ibid. p. 48.
[403:8] See Herodotus, b. ii. ch. 36.
[403:9] Dunlap: Son of the Man, p. x.
[403:10] Acosta, vol. ii. p. 324.
[404:1] Acosta, vol. ii. p. 330.
[404:2] Ibid. p. 336.
[404:3] Ibid. p. 338.
[404:4] Ibid. pp. 332, 333.
[404:5] Ibid. p. 337.
[405:1] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 241.
[405:2] See Lardner's Works, vol. viii. pp. 375, 376.
[405:3] See Chap. XXXIII.
[405:4] Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 127.
[406:1] Renouf: Hibbert Lectures, p. 191.
[406:2] Renan: Hibbert Lectures, p. 32.
[406:3] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 232.
[406:4] "At their entrance, purifying themselves by washing their hands in holy water, they
were at the same time admonished to present themselves with pure minds, without which
the external cleanness of the body would by no means be accepted." (Bell's Pantheon, vol.
ii. p. 282.)
[406:5] See Williams' Hinduism, p. 99.
[406:6] See Renan's Hibbert Lectures, p. 35.
[407:1] Edward Gibbon: Decline and Fall, vol. iii. p. 161.
[408:1] Draper: Science and Religion, pp. 46-49.
[409:1] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 237.
[409:2] Quoted in Taylor's Diegesis, p. 249. See also, Eusebius: Eccl. Hist., book iv. ch.
xxvi. who alludes to it.
[409:3] Baronius' Annals, An. 36.
[409:4] Quoted by Rev. R. Taylor, Diegesis p. 41.
[409:5] Strom. bk. i. ch. xix.
[410:1] "Es est nostris temporibus Christiana religio, quam cognoscere ac sequi
securissima et certissima salus est: secundum hoc nomen dictum est non secundum ipsam
rem cujus hoc nomen est: nam res ipsa quæ nunc Christiana religio nuncupatur erat et apud
antiquos, nec defuit ab initio generis humani, quousque ipse Christus veniret in carne, unde
vera religio quæ jam erat cæpit appellari Christiana. Hæc est nostris temporibus Christiana
religio, non quia prioribus temporibus non fuit, sed quia posterioribus hoc nomen accepit."
(Opera Augustini, vol. i. p. 12. Quoted in Taylor's Diegesis, p. 42.)
[410:2] See Eusebius: Eccl. Hist., lib. 2, ch. v.
[410:3] "Cum animadvertisset Gregorius quod ob corporeas delectationes et voluptates,
simplex et imperitum vulgus in simulacrorum cultus errore permaneret—permisit eis, ut in
memoriam et recordationem sanctorum martyrum sese oblectarent, et in lætitiam
effunderentur, quod successu temporis aliquando futurum esset, ut sua sponte, ad
honestiorem et accuratiorem vitæ rationem, transirent." (Mosheim, vol. i. cent. 2, p. 202.)
[410:4] "Non imperio ad fidem adducto, sed et imperii pompa ecclesiam inficiente. Non
ethnicis ad Christum conversis, sed et Christi religione ad Ethnicæ formam depravata."
(Orat. Academ. De Variis Christ. Rel. fatis.)
[411:1] Gibbon's Rome, vol. iii. p. 163.
[411:2] Quoted by Draper: Science and Religion, p. 48.
[411:3] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 329.
[411:4] Justin: Apol. 1, ch. lix.
[411:5] Octavius, ch. xi.
[411:6] See Origen: Contra Celsus.
[412:1] Apol. 1, ch. xx, xii, xxii.
[412:2] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 323.
[412:3] See Ibid. p. 324.
[412:4] On the Flesh of Christ, ch. v.
[413:1] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 328.
[413:2] Matt. xix. 12.
[413:3] Deut. xxiii. 1.
[413:4] See Taylor's Diegesis, p. 339.
[413:5] See Middleton's Letters from Rome, p. 236; Mosheim, vol. i. cent. 2, pt. 2, ch. 4.
[413:6] Eccl. Hist. vol. 1. p. 199.
[414:1] Prolegomena to Ancient History, pp. 416, 417.
[415:1] Tindal: Christianity as Old as the Creation.
[415:2] Manu's works were written during the sixth century B. C. (see Williams' Indian
Wisdom, p. 215), and the Maha-bharata about the same time.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
WHY CHRISTIANITY PROSPERED.
We now come to the question, Why did Christianity prosper, and why was
Jesus of Nazareth believed to be a divine incarnation and Saviour?
There were many causes for this, but as we can devote but one chapter to
the subject, we must necessarily treat it briefly.
For many centuries before the time of Christ Jesus there lived a sect of
religious monks known as Essenes, or Therapeutæ;[419:1] these entirely
disappeared from history shortly after the time assigned for the crucifixion
of Jesus. There were thousands of them, and their monasteries were to be
counted by the score. Many have asked the question, "What became of
them?" We now propose to show, 1. That they were expecting the advent of
an Angel-Messiah; 2. That they considered Jesus of Nazareth to be the
Messiah; 3. That they came over to Christianity in a body; and, 4. That they
brought the legendary histories of the former Angel-Messiahs with them.
The origin of the sect known as Essenes is enveloped in mist, and will
probably never be revealed. To speak of all the different ideas entertained as
to their origin would make a volume of itself, we can therefore but glance at
the subject. It has been the object of Christian writers up to a comparatively
recent date, to claim that almost everything originated with God's chosen
people, the Jews, and that even all languages can be traced to the Hebrew.
Under these circumstances, then, it is not to be wondered at that we find
they have also traced the Essenes to Hebrew origin.
Theophilus Gale, who wrote a work called "The Court of the Gentiles"
(Oxford, 1671), to demonstrate that "the origin of all human literature, both
philology and philosophy, is from the Scriptures and the Jewish church,"
undoubtedly hits upon the truth when he says:
"Now, the origination or rise of these Essenes (among the Jews) I conceive
by the best conjectures I can make from antiquity, to be in or immediately
after the Babylonian captivity, though some make them later."
Some Christian writers trace them to Moses or some of the prophets, but
that they originated in India, and were a sort of Buddhist sect, we believe is
their true history.
Gfrörer, who wrote concerning them in 1835, and said that "the Essenes and
the Therapeutæ are the same sect, and hold the same views," was
undoubtedly another writer who was touching upon historical ground.
The identity of many of the precepts and practices of Essenism and those of
the New Testament is unquestionable. Essenism urged on its disciples to
seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness.[420:1] The Essenes
forbade the laying up of treasures upon earth.[420:2] The Essenes demanded
of those who wished to join them to sell all their possessions, and to divide
it among the poor brethren.[420:3] The Essenes had all things in common,
and appointed one of the brethren as steward to manage the common bag.
[420:4] Essenism put all its members on the same level, forbidding the
exercise of authority of one over the other, and enjoining mutual service.
[420:5] Essenism commanded its disciples to call no man master upon the
earth.[420:6] Essenism laid the greatest stress upon being meek and lowly in
spirit.[420:7] The Essenes commended the poor in spirit, those who hunger
and thirst after righteousness, the merciful, the pure in heart, and the
peacemaker. They combined the healing of the body with that of the soul.
They declared that the power to cast out evil spirits, to perform miraculous
cures, &c., should be possessed by their disciples as signs of their belief.
[420:8] The Essenes did not swear at all; their answer was yea, yea, and nay,
did not offer animal sacrifices, but strove to present their bodies a living
sacrifice, holy and acceptable unto God, which they regarded as a
reasonable service.[421:3] It was the great aim of the Essenes to live such a
life of purity and holiness as to be the temples of the Holy Spirit, and to be
able to prophesy.[421:4]
Many other comparisons might be made, but these are sufficient to show
that there is a great similarity between the two.[421:5] These similarities have
led many Christian writers to believe that Jesus belonged to this order. Dr.
Ginsburg, an advocate of this theory, says:
"It will hardly be doubted that our Saviour himself belonged to this holy
brotherhood. This will especially be apparent when we remember that the
whole Jewish community, at the advent of Christ, was divided into three
parties, the Pharisees, the Sadducees, and the Essenes, and that every Jew
had to belong to one of these sects. Jesus, who, in all things, conformed to
the Jewish law, and who was holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from
sinners, would therefore naturally associate himself with that order of
Judaism which was most congenial to his holy nature. Moreover, the fact
that Christ, with the exception of once, was not heard of in public until his
thirtieth year, implying that he lived in seclusion with this fraternity, and
that though he frequently rebuked the scribes, Pharisees and Sadducees, he
never denounced the Essenes, strongly confirms this conclusion."[421:6]
The facts—as Dr. Ginsburg calls them—which confirm his conclusions, are
simply no facts at all. Jesus may or may not have been a member of this
order; but when it is stated as a fact that he never rebuked the Essenes, it is
implying too much. We know not whether the words said to have been
uttered by Jesus were ever uttered by him or not, and it is almost certain
that had he rebuked the Essenes, and had his words been written in the
Gospels, they would not remain there long. We hear very little of the
Essenes after A. D. 40,[421:7] therefore, when we read of the "primitive
Christians," we are reading of Essenes, and others.
The statement that, with the exception of once, Jesus was not heard in
public life till his thirtieth year, is also uncertain. One of the early Christian
Fathers (Irenæus) tells us that he did not begin to teach until he was forty
years of age, or thereabout, and that he lived to be nearly fifty years old.
[422:1] "The records of his life are very scanty; and these have been so
M. Daille says:
"This opinion has always been in the world, that to settle a certain and
assured estimation upon that which is good and true, it is necessary to
remove out of the way, whatsoever may be an hinderance to it. Neither
ought we to wonder that even those of the honest, innocent, primitive times
made use of these deceits, seeing for a good end they made no scruple to
forge whole books."[435:3]
Reeves, in his "Apologies of the Fathers," says:
"It was a Catholic opinion among the philosophers, that pious frauds were
good things, and that the people ought to be imposed on in matters of
religion."[435:4]
Mosheim, the ecclesiastical historian, says:
"It was held as a maxim that it was not only lawful but praiseworthy to
deceive, and even to use the expedient of a lie, in order to advance the cause
of truth and piety."[435:5]
Isaac de Casaubon, the great ecclesiastical scholar, says:
"It mightily affects me, to see how many there were in the earliest times of
the church, who considered it as a capital exploit, to lend to heavenly truth
the help of their own inventions, in order that the new doctrine might be
more readily allowed by the wise among the Gentiles. These officious lies,
they were wont to say, were devised for a good end."[435:6]
The Apostolic Father, Hermas, who was the fellow-laborer of St. Paul in the
work of the ministry; who is greeted as such in the New Testament; and
whose writings are expressly quoted as of divine inspiration, by the early
Fathers, ingenuously confesses that lying was the easily-besetting sin of a
Christian. His words are:
"O Lord, I never spake a true word in my life, but I have always lived in
dissimulation, and affirmed a lie for truth to all men, and no man
contradicted me, but all gave credit to my words."
To which the holy angel, whom he addresses, condescendingly admonishes
him, that as the lie was up, now, he had better keep it up, and as in time it
would come to be believed, it would answer as well as truth.[436:1]
Dr. Mosheim admits, that the Platonists and Pythagoreans held it as a
maxim, that it was not only lawful, but praiseworthy, to deceive, and even
to use the expedient of a lie, in order to advance the cause of truth and piety.
The Jews who lived in Egypt, had learned and received this maxim from
them, before the coming of Christ Jesus, as appears incontestably from a
multitude of ancient records, and the Christians were infected from both
these sources, with the same pernicious error.[436:2]
Of the fifteen letters ascribed to Ignatius (Bishop of Antioch after 69 A. D.),
eight have been rejected by Christian writers as being forgeries, having no
authority whatever. "The remaining seven epistles were accounted genuine
by most critics, although disputed by some, previous to the discoveries of
Mr. Cureton, which have shaken, and indeed almost wholly destroyed the
credit and authenticity of all alike."[436:3]
Paul of Tarsus, who was preaching a doctrine which had already been
preached to every nation on earth,[436:4] inculcates and avows the principle
of deceiving the common people, talks of his having been upbraided by his
own converts with being crafty and catching them with guile,[436:5] and of
his known and willful lies, abounding to the glory of God.[436:6]
Even the orthodox Doctor Burnet, an eminent English author, in his treatise
"De Statu Mortuorum," purposely written in Latin, that it might serve for
the instruction of the clergy only, and not come to the knowledge of the
laity, because, as he said, "too much light is hurtful for weak eyes," not only
justified but recommended the practice of the most consummate hypocrisy,
and would have his clergy seriously preach and maintain the reality and
eternity of hell torments, even though they should believe nothing of the
sort themselves.[437:1]
The incredible and very ridiculous stories related by Christian Fathers and
ecclesiastical historians, on whom we are obliged to rely for information on
the most important of subjects, show us how untrustworthy these men were.
We have, for instance, the story related by St. Augustine, who is styled "the
greatest of the Latin Fathers," of his preaching the Gospel to people without
heads. In his 33d Sermon he says:
"I was already Bishop of Hippo, when I went into Ethiopia with some
servants of Christ there to preach the Gospel. In this country we saw many
men and women without heads, who had two great eyes in their breasts; and
in countries still more southly, we saw people who had but one eye in their
foreheads."[437:2]
This same holy Father bears an equally unquestionable testimony to several
resurrections of the dead, of which he himself had been an eye-witness.
In a book written "towards the close of the second century, by some zealous
believer," and fathered upon one Nicodemus, who is said to have been a
disciple of Christ Jesus, we find the following:
"We all know the blessed Simeon, the high priest, who took Jesus when an
infant into his arms in the temple. This same Simeon had two sons of his
own, and we were all present at their death and funeral. Go therefore and
see their tombs, for these are open, and they are risen; and behold, they are
in the city of Arimathæa, spending their time together in offices of
devotion."[438:1]
Eusebius, "the Father of ecclesiastical history," Bishop of Cæsarea, and one
of the most prominent personages at the Council of Nice, relates as truth,
the ridiculous story of King Agbarus writing a letter to Christ Jesus, and of
Jesus' answer to the same.[438:2] And Socrates relates how the Empress
Helen, mother of the Emperor Constantine, went to Jerusalem for the
purpose of finding, if possible, "the cross of Christ." This she succeeded in
doing, also the nails with which he was nailed to the cross.[438:3]
Beside forging, lying, and deceiving for the cause of Christ, the Christian
Fathers destroyed all evidence against themselves and their religion, which
they came across. Christian divines seem to have always been afraid of too
much light. In the very infancy of printing, Cardinal Wolsey foresaw its
effect on Christianity, and in a speech to the clergy, publicly forewarned
them, that, if they did not destroy the Press, the Press would destroy them.
[438:4] There can be no doubt, that had the objections of Porphyry,[438:5]
Born and educated a pagan, Constantine embraced the Christian faith from
the following motives. Having committed horrid crimes, in fact, having
committed murders,[444:3] and,
"When he would have had his (Pagan) priests purge him by sacrifice, of
these horrible murders, and could not have his purpose (for they answered
plainly, it lay not in their power to cleanse him)[444:4] he lighted at last upon
an Egyptian who came out of Iberia, and being persuaded by him that the
Christian faith was of force to wipe away every sin, were it ever so heinous,
he embraced willingly at whatever the Egyptian told him."[444:5]
Mons. Dupuis, speaking of this conversion, says:
"Constantine, soiled with all sorts of crimes, and stained with the blood of
his wife, after repeated perjuries and assassinations, presented himself
before the heathen priests in order to be absolved of so many outrages he
had committed. He was answered, that amongst the various kinds of
expiations, there was none which could expiate so many crimes, and that no
religion whatever could offer efficient protection against the justice of the
gods; and Constantine was emperor. One of the courtiers of the palace, who
witnessed the trouble and agitation of his mind, torn by remorse, which
nothing could appease, informed him, that the evil he was suffering was not
without a remedy; that there existed in the religion of the Christians certain
purifications, which expiated every kind of misdeeds, of whatever nature,
and in whatsoever number they were: that one of the promises of the
religion was, that whoever was converted to it, as impious and as great a
villain as he might be, could hope that his crimes were immediately
forgotten.[445:1] From that moment, Constantine declared himself the
protector of a sect which treats great criminals with so much lenity.[445:2] He
was a great villain, who tried to lull himself with illusions to smother his
remorse."[445:3]
By the delay of baptism, a person who had accepted the true faith could
venture freely to indulge their passions in the enjoyment of this world,
while they still retained in their own hands the means of salvation;
therefore, we find that Constantine, although he accepted the faith, did not
get baptized until he was on his death-bed, as he wished to continue, as long
as possible, the wicked life he was leading. Mr. Gibbon, speaking of him,
says:
"The example and reputation of Constantine seemed to countenance the
delay of baptism. Future tyrants were encouraged to believe, that the
innocent blood which they might shed in a long reign would instantly be
washed away in the waters of regeneration; and the abuse of religion
dangerously undermined the foundations of moral virtue."[445:4]
Eusebius, in his "Life of Constantine," tells us that:
"When he thought that he was near his death, he confessed his sins,
desiring pardon for them of God, and was baptized.
"Before doing so, he assembled the bishops of Nicomedia together, and
spake thus unto them:
"'Brethren, the salvation which I have earnestly desired of God these many
years, I do now this day expect. It is time therefore that we should be sealed
and signed with the badge of immortality. And though I proposed to receive
it in the river Jordan, in which our Saviour for our example was baptized,
yet God, knowing what is fittest for me, hath appointed that I shall receive
it in this place, therefore let me not be delayed.'"
"And so, after the service of baptism was read, they baptized him with all
the ceremonies belonging to this mysterious sacrament. So that Constantine
was the first of all the emperors who was regenerated by the new birth of
baptism, and that was signed with the sign of the cross."[446:1]
When Constantine had heard the good news from the Christian monk from
Egypt, he commenced by conferring many dignities on the Christians, and
those only who were addicted to Christianity, he made governors of his
provinces, &c.[446:2] He then issued edicts against heretics,—i. e., those
who, like Arius, did not believe that Christ was "of one substance with the
Father," and others—calling them "enemies of truth and eternal life,"
"authors and councillors of death," &c.[446:3] He "commanded by law" that
none should dare "to meet at conventicles," and that "all places where they
were wont to keep their meetings should be demolished," or "confiscated to
the Catholic church;"[446:4] and Constantine was emperor. "By this means,"
says Eusebius, "such as maintained doctrines and opinions contrary to the
church, were suppressed."[446:5]
This Constantine, says Eusebius:
"Caused his image to be engraven on his gold coins, in the form of prayer,
with his hands joined together, and looking up towards Heaven." "And over
divers gates of his palace, he was drawn praying, and lifting up his hands
and eyes to heaven."[446:6]
After his death, "effigies of this blessed man" were engraved on the Roman
coins, "sitting in and driving a chariot, and a hand reached down from
heaven to receive and take him up."[446:7]
The hopes of wealth and honors, the example of an emperor, his
exhortations, his irresistible smiles, diffused conviction among the venal
and obsequious crowds which usually fill the apartments of a palace, and as
the lower ranks of society are governed by example, the conversion of those
who possessed any eminence of birth, of power, or of riches, was soon
followed by dependent multitudes. Constantine passed a law which gave
freedom to all the slaves who should embrace Christianity, and to those who
were not slaves, he gave a white garment and twenty pieces of gold, upon
their embracing the Christian faith. The common people were thus
purchased at such an easy rate that, in one year, twelve thousand men were
baptised at Rome, besides a proportionable number of women and children.
[447:1]
A similar decree of the emperor for establishing the doctrine of the Trinity,
concludes with an admonition to all who shall object to it, that,
"Besides the condemnation of divine justice, they must expect to suffer the
severe penalties, which our authority, guided by heavenly wisdom, may
think proper to inflict upon them."[447:4]
This orthodox emperor (Theodosius) considered every heretic (as he called
those who did not believe as he and his ecclesiastics professed) a rebel
against the supreme powers of heaven and of earth (he being one of the
supreme powers of earth), and each of the powers might exercise their
peculiar jurisdiction over the soul and body of the guilty.
The decrees of the Council of Constantinople had ascertained the true
standard of the faith, and the ecclesiastics, who governed the conscience of
Theodosius, suggested the most effectual methods of persecution. In the
space of fifteen years he promulgated at least fifteen severe edicts against
the heretics, more especially against those who rejected the doctrine of the
Trinity.[448:1]
Arius (the presbyter of whom we have spoken in Chapter XXXV., as
declaring that, in the nature of things, a father must be older than his son)
was excommunicated for his so-called heretical notions concerning the
Trinity. His followers, who were very numerous, were called Arians. Their
writings, if they had been permitted to exist,[448:2] would undoubtedly
contain the lamentable story of the persecution which affected the church
under the reign of the impious Emperor Theodosius.
In Asia Minor the people were persecuted by orders of Constantius, and
these orders were more than obeyed by Macedonius. The civil and military
powers were ordered to obey his commands; the consequence was, he
disgraced the reign of Constantius. "The rites of baptism were conferred on
women and children, who, for that purpose, had been torn from the arms of
their friends and parents; the mouths of the communicants were held open
by a wooden engine, while the consecrated bread was forced down their
throats; the breasts of tender virgins were either burned with red-hot egg-
shells, or inhumanly compressed between sharp and heavy boards."[448:3]
The principal assistants of Macedonius—the tool of Constantius—in the
work of persecution, were the two bishops of Nicomedia and Cyzicus, who
were esteemed for their virtues, and especially for their charity.[448:4]
Julian, the successor of Constantius, has described some of the theological
calamities which afflicted the empire, and more especially in the East, in the
reign of a prince who was the slave of his own passions, and of those of his
eunuchs: "Many were imprisoned, and persecuted, and driven into exile.
Whole troops of those who are styled heretics were massacred, particularly
at Cyzicus, and at Samosata. In Paphlagonia, Bithynia, Gallatia, and in
many other provinces, towns and villages were laid waste, and utterly
destroyed."[449:1]
Persecutions in the name of Christ Jesus were inflicted on the heathen in
most every part of the then known world. Even among the Norwegians, the
Christian sword was unsheathed. They clung tenaciously to the worship of
their forefathers, and numbers of them died real martyrs for their faith, after
suffering the most cruel torments from their persecutors. It was by sheer
compulsion that the Norwegians embraced Christianity. The reign of Olaf
Tryggvason, a Christian king of Norway, was in fact entirely devoted to the
propagation of the new faith, by means the most revolting to humanity. His
general practice was to enter a district at the head of a formidable force,
summon a Thing,[449:2] and give the people the alternative of fighting with
him, or of being baptized. Most of them, of course, preferred baptism to the
risk of a battle with an adversary so well prepared for combat; and the
recusants were tortured to death with fiend-like ferocity, and their estates
confiscated.[449:3]
These are some of the reasons "why Christianity prospered."
Dr. Lardner, in speaking of the murders committed by this Christian saint, is constrained to
say that: "The death of Crispus is altogether without any good excuse, so likewise is the
death of the young Licinianus, who could not have been more than a little above eleven
years of age, and appears not to have been charged with any fault, and could hardly be
suspected of any."
[444:4] The Emperor Nero could not be baptized and be initiated into Pagan Mysteries—as
Constantine was initiated into those of the Christians—on account of the murder of his
mother. And he did not dare to compel—which he certainly could have done—the priests
to initiate him.
[444:5] Zosimus, in Socrates, lib. iii. ch. xl.
[445:1] "The sacrament of baptism was supposed to contain a full and absolute expiation of
sin; and the soul was instantly restored to its original purity and entitled to the promise of
eternal salvation. Among the proselytes of Christianity, there were many who judged it
imprudent to precipitate a salutary rite, which could not be repeated. By the delay of their
baptism, they could venture freely to indulge their passions in the enjoyments of this
world, while they still retained in their own hands the means of a sure and speedy
absolution." (Gibbon: ii. pp. 272, 273.)
[445:2] "Constantine, as he was praying about noon-tide, God showed him a vision in the
sky, which was the sign of the cross lively figured in the air, with this inscription on it: 'In
hoc vince;' that is, 'By this overcome.'" This is the story as related by Eusebius (Life of
Constantine, lib. 1, ch. xxii.), but it must be remembered that Eusebius acknowledged that
he told falsehoods. That night Christ appeared unto Constantine in his dream, and
commanded him to make the figure of the cross which he had seen, and to wear it in his
banner when he went to battle with his enemies. (See Eusebius' Life of Constantine, lib. 1,
ch. xxiii. See also, Socrates: Eccl. Hist., lib. 1, ch. ii.)
[445:3] Dupuis, p. 405.
[445:4] Gibbon's Rome, vol. ii. p. 373. The Fathers, who censured this criminal delay,
could not deny the certain and victorious efficacy even of a death-bed baptism. The
ingenious rhetoric of Chrysostom (A. D. 347-407) could find only three arguments against
these prudent Christians. 1. "That we should love and pursue virtue for her own sake, and
not merely for the reward. 2. That we may be surprised by death without an opportunity of
baptism. 3. That although we shall be placed in heaven, we shall only twinkle like little
stars, when compared to the suns of righteousness who have run their appointed course
with labor, with success, and with glory." (Chrysostom in Epist. ad Hebræos. Homil. xiii.
Quoted in Gibbon's "Rome," ii. 272.)
[446:1] Lib. 4, chs. lxi. and lxii., and Socrates: Eccl. Hist., lib. 2, ch. xxvi.
[446:2] Eusebius: Life of Constantine, lib. 2, ch. xliii.
[446:3] Ibid. lib. 3, ch. lxii.
[446:4] Ibid. lib. 3, ch. lxiii.
[446:5] Ibid. lib. 3, ch. lxiv.
[446:6] Ibid. lib. 4, ch. xv.
[446:7] Ibid. ch. lxiii.
Plato places the ferocious tyrants in the Tartarus, such as Ardiacus of Pamphylia, who had
slain his own father, a venerable old man, also an elder brother, and was stained with a
great many other crimes. Constantine, covered with similar crimes, was better treated by
the Christians, who have sent him to heaven, and sainted him besides.
[447:1] Gibbon's Rome, vol. ii. p. 274.
[447:2] "Theodosius, though a professor of the orthodox Christian faith, was not baptized
till 380, and his behavior after that period stamps him as one of the most cruel and
vindictive persecutors who ever wore the purple. His arbitrary establishment of the Nicene
faith over the whole empire, the deprivation of civil rites of all apostates from Christianity
and of the Eunomians, the sentence of death on the Manicheans, and Quarto-decimans all
prove this." (Chambers's Encyclo., art. Theodosius.)
[447:3] Quoted in Taylor's Syntagma, p. 54.
[447:4] Gibbon's Rome, vol. iii. p. 81.
[448:1] Gibbon's Rome, vol. iii. pp. 91, 92.
[448:2] All their writings were ordered to be destroyed.
[448:3] Gibbon's Rome, vol. ii. p. 359.
[448:4] Ibid. note 154.
[449:1] Julian: Epistol. lii. p. 436. Quoted in Gibbon's Rome, vol. ii. p. 360.
[449:2] "Thing"—a general assembly of the freemen, who gave their assent to a measure
by striking their shields with their drawn swords.
[449:3] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, pp. 180, 351, and 470.
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
THE ANTIQUITY OF PAGAN RELIGIONS.
We shall now compare the great antiquity of the sacred books and religions
of Paganism with those of the Christian, so that there may be no doubt as to
which is the original, and which the copy. Allusions to this subject have
already been made throughout this work, we shall therefore devote as little
space to it here as possible.
In speaking of the sacred literature of India, Prof. Monier Williams says:
"Sanskrit literature, embracing as it does nearly every branch of knowledge
is entirely deficient in one department. It is wholly destitute of trustworthy
historical records. Hence, little or nothing is known of the lives of ancient
Indian authors, and the dates of their most celebrated works cannot be fixed
with certainty. A fair conjecture, however, may be arrived at by comparing
the most ancient with the more modern compositions, and estimating the
period of time required to effect the changes of structure and idiom
observable in the language. In this manner we may be justified in assuming
that the hymns of the Veda were probably composed by a succession of
poets at different dates between 1500 and 1000 years B. C."[450:1]
Prof. Wm. D. Whitney shows the great antiquity of the Vedic hymns from
the fact that,
"The language of the Vedas is an older dialect, varying very considerably,
both in its grammatical and lexical character, from the classical Sanscrit."
And M. de Coulanges, in his "Ancient City," says:
"We learn from the hymns of the Vedas, which are certainly very ancient,
and from the laws of Manu," "what the Aryans of the east thought nearly
thirty-five centuries ago."[450:2]
That the Vedas are of very high antiquity is unquestionable; but however
remote we may place the period when they were written, we must
necessarily presuppose that the Hindostanic race had already attained to a
comparatively high degree of civilization, otherwise men capable of
framing such doctrines could not have been found. Now this state of
civilization must necessarily have been preceded by several centuries of
barbarism, during which we cannot possibly admit a more refined faith than
the popular belief in elementary deities.
We shall see in our next chapter that these very ancient Vedic hymns
contain the origin of the legend of the Virgin-born God and Saviour, the
great benefactor of mankind, who is finally put to death, and rises again to
life and immortality on the third day.
The Geetas and Puranas, although of a comparatively modern date, are, as
we have already seen, nevertheless composed of matter to be found in the
two great epic poems, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata, which were
written many centuries before the time assigned as that of the birth of Christ
Jesus.[451:1]
The Pali sacred books, which contain the legend of the virgin-born God and
Saviour—Sommona Cadom—are known to have been in existence 316 B. C.
[451:2]
We have already seen that the religion known as Buddhism, and which
corresponds in such a striking manner with Christianity, has now existed for
upwards of twenty-four hundred years.[451:3]
Prof. Rhys Davids says:
"There is every reason to believe that the Pitakas (the sacred books which
contain the legend of 'The Buddha'), now extant in Ceylon, are substantially
identical with the books of the Southern Canon, as settled at the Council of
Patna about the year 250 B. C.[451:4] As no works would have been received
into the Canon which were not then believed to be very old, the Pitakas
may be approximately placed in the fourth century B. C., and parts of them
possibly reach back very nearly, if not quite, to the time of Gautama
himself."[451:5]
The religion of the ancient Persians, which corresponds in so very many
respects with that of the Christians, was established by Zoroaster—who was
undoubtedly a Brahman[451:6]—and is contained in the Zend-Avesta, their
sacred book or Bible. This book is very ancient. Prof. Max Müller speaks of
"the sacred book of the Zoroastrians" as being "older in its language than
the cuneiform inscriptions of Cyrus (B. C. 560), Darius (B. C. 520), and
Xerxes (B. C. 485) those ancient Kings of Persia, who knew that they were
kings by the grace of Auramazda, and who placed his sacred image high on
the mountain-records of Behistun."[452:1] That ancient book, or its
fragments, at least, have survived many dynasties and kingdoms, and is still
believed in by a small remnant of the Persian race, now settled at Bombay,
and known all over the world by the name of Parsees.[452:2]
"The Babylonian and Phenician sacred books date back to a fabulous
antiquity;"[452:3] and so do the sacred books and religion of Egypt.
Prof. Mahaffy, in his "Prolegomena to Ancient History," says:
"There is indeed hardly a great and fruitful idea in the Jewish or Christian
systems which has not its analogy in the Egyptian faith, and all these
theological conceptions pervade the oldest religion of Egypt."[452:4]
The worship of Osiris, the Lord and Saviour, must have been of extremely
ancient date, for he is represented as "Judge of the Dead," in sculptures
contemporary with the building of the Pyramids, centuries before Abraham
is said to have been born. Among the many hieroglyphic titles which
accompany his figure in those sculptures, and in many other places on the
walls of temples and tombs, are, "Lord of Life," "The Eternal Ruler,"
"Manifester of Good," "Revealer of Truth," "Full of Goodness and Truth,"
etc.
In speaking of the "Myth of Osiris," Mr. Bonwick says:
"This great mystery of the Egyptians demands serious consideration. Its
antiquity—its universal hold upon the people for over five thousand years
—its identification with the very life of the nation—and its marvellous
likeness to the creed of modern date, unite in exciting the greatest interest."
[452:5]
This myth, and that of Isis and Horus, were known before the Pyramid time.
[453:1]
What had been said to have been done in India, was said by these "half-
Jews" to have been done in Palestine; the change of names and places, with
the mixing up of various sketches of the Egyptian, Persian, Phenician,
Greek and Roman mythology, was all that was necessary. They had an
abundance of material, and with it they built. The foundation upon which
they built was undoubtedly the "Scriptures," or Diegesis, of the Essenes in
Alexandria in Egypt, which fact led Eusebius, the ecclesiastical historian
—"without whom," says Tillemont, "we should scarce have had any
knowledge of the history of the first ages of Christianity, or of the authors
who wrote in that time"—to say that the sacred writings used by this sect
were none other than "Our Gospels."
We offer below a few of the many proofs showing the Gospels to have been
written a long time after the events narrated are said to have occurred, and
by persons unacquainted with the country of which they wrote.
"He (Jesus) came unto the sea of Galilee, through the midst of the coasts of
Decapolis," is an assertion made by the Mark narrator (vii. 31), when there
were no coasts of Decapolis, nor was the name so much as known before
the reign of the emperor Nero.
Again, "He (Jesus) departed from Galilee, and came into the coasts of
Judea, beyond Jordan," is an assertion made by the Matthew narrator (xix.
1), when the Jordan itself was the eastern boundary of Judea, and there were
no coasts of Judea beyond it.
Again, "But when he (Joseph) heard that Archelaus did reign in Judea, in
the room of his father Herod, he was afraid to go thither, notwithstanding,
being warned of God in a dream, he turned aside into the parts of Galilee,
and he came and dwelt in a city called Nazareth; that it might be fulfilled,
which was spoken by the prophets, he shall be called a Nazarene," is
another assertion made by the Matthew narrator (ii. 22, 23), when—1. It
was a son of Herod who reigned in Galilee as well as Judea, so that he
could not be more secure in one province than in the other; and when—2. It
was impossible for him to have gone from Egypt to Nazareth, without
traveling through the whole extent of Archelaus's kingdom, or making a
peregrination through the deserts on the north and east of the Lake
Asphaltites, and the country of Moab; and then, either crossing the Jordan
into Samaria or the Lake of Gennesareth into Galilee, and from thence
going to the city of Nazareth, which is no better geography, than if one
should describe a person as turning aside from Cheapside into the parts of
Yorkshire; and when—3. There were no prophets whatever who had
prophesied that Jesus "should be called a Nazarene."
The Matthew narrator (iv. 13) states that "He departed into Galilee, and
leaving Nazareth, came and dwelt in Capernaum," as if he imagined that the
city of Nazareth was not as properly in Galilee as Capernaum was; which is
much such geographical accuracy, as if one should relate the travels of a
hero, who departed into Middlesex, and leaving London, came and dwelt in
Lombard street.[461:1]
There are many other falsehoods in gospel geography beside these, which,
it is needless to mention, plainly show that the writers were not the persons
they are generally supposed to be.
Of gospel statistics there are many falsehoods; among them may be
mentioned the following:
"Annas and Caiaphas being the high priests, the word of God came unto
John the son of Zacharias in the wilderness," is an assertion made by the
Luke narrator (Luke iii. 2); when all Jews, or persons living among them,
must have known that there never was but one high priest at a time, as with
ourselves there is but one mayor of a city.
Again we read (John vii. 52), "Search (the Scriptures) and look, for out of
Galilee ariseth no prophet," when the most distinguished of the Jewish
prophets—Nahum and Jonah—were both Galileans.
See reference in the Epistles to "Saints," a religious order, owing its origin
to the popes. Also, references to the distinct orders of "Bishops," "Priests,"
and "Deacons," and calls to a monastic life; to fasting, etc., when, the titles
of "Bishop," "Priest," and "Deacon" were given to the Essenes—whom
Eusebius calls Christians—and, as is well known, monasteries were the
abode of the Essenes or Therapeuts.
See the words for "legion," "aprons," "handkerchiefs," "centurion," etc., in
the original, not being Greek, but Latin, written in Greek characters, a
practice first to be found in the historian Herodian, in the third century.
In Matt. xvi. 18, and Matt. xviii. 17, the word "Church" is used, and its
papistical and infallible authority referred to as then existing, which is
known not to have existed till ages after. And the passage in Matt. xi. 12:
—"From the days of John the Baptist until now, the kingdom of heaven
suffereth violence," etc., could not have been written till a very late period.
Luke ii. 1, shows that the writer (whoever he may have been) lived long
after the events related. His dates, about the fifteenth year of Tiberius, and
the government of Cyrenius (the only indications of time in the New
Testament), are manifestly false. The general ignorance of the four
Evangelists, not merely of the geography and statistics of Judea, but even of
its language,—their egregious blunders, which no writers who had lived in
that age could be conceived of as making,—prove that they were not only
no such persons as those who have been willing to be deceived have taken
them to be, but that they were not Jews, had never been in Palestine, and
neither lived at, or at anywhere near the times to which their narratives
seem to refer. The ablest divines at the present day, of all denominations,
have yielded as much as this.[463:1]
The Scriptures were in the hands of the clergy only, and they had every
opportunity to insert whatsoever they pleased; thus we find them full of
interpolations. Johann Solomo Semler, one of the most influential
theologians of the eighteenth century, speaking of this, says:
"The Christian doctors never brought their sacred books before the common
people; although people in general have been wont to think otherwise;
during the first ages, they were in the hands of the clergy only."[463:2]
Concerning the time when the canon of the New Testament was settled,
Mosheim says:
"The opinions, or rather the conjectures, of the learned concerning the time
when the books of the New Testament were collected into one volume; as
also about the authors of that collection, are extremely different. This
important question is attended with great and almost insuperable difficulties
to us in these later times."[463:3]
The Rev. B. F. Westcott says:
"It is impossible to point to any period as marking the date at which our
present canon was determined. When it first appears, it is presented not as a
novelty, but as an ancient tradition."[463:4]
Dr. Lardner says:
"Even so late as the middle of the sixth century, the canon of the New
Testament had not been settled by any authority that was decisive and
universally acknowledged, but Christian people were at liberty to judge for
themselves concerning the genuineness of writings proposed to them as
apostolical, and to determine according to evidence."[464:1]
The learned Michaelis says:
"No manuscript of the New Testament now extant is prior to the sixth
century, and what is to be lamented, various readings which, as appears
from the quotations of the Fathers, were in the text of the Greek Testament,
are to be found in none of the manuscripts which are at present remaining."
[464:2]
That which Prof. Müller describes as taking place in the religion of Christ
Buddha, is exactly what took place in the religion of Christ Jesus. That the
miraculous, and many of the non-miraculous, events related in the Gospels
never happened, is demonstrable from the facts which we have seen in this
work, that nearly all of these events, had been previously related of the gods
and goddesses of heathen nations of antiquity, more especially of the
Hindoo Saviour Crishna, and the Buddhist Saviour Buddha, whose religion,
with less alterations than time and translations have made in the Jewish
Scriptures, may be traced in nearly every dogma and every ceremony of the
evangelical mythology.
FOOTNOTES:
[450:1] Williams' Hinduism, p. 19. See also, Prof. Max Müller's Lectures on the Origin of
Religion, pp. 145-158, and p. 67, where he speaks of "the Hindus, who, thousands of years
ago, had reached in Upanishads the loftiest heights of philosophy."
[450:2] The Ancient City, p. 13.
[451:1] See Monier Williams' Hinduism, pp. 109, 110, and Indian Wisdom, p. 493.
[451:2] See Isis Unveiled, vol. ii. p. 576, for the authority of Prof. Max Müller.
[451:3] "The religion known as Buddhism—from the title of 'The Buddha,' meaning 'The
Wise,' 'The Enlightened'—has now existed for 2400 years, and may be said to be the
prevailing religion of the world." (Chambers's Encyclo.)
[451:4] This Council was assembled by Asoka in the eighteenth year of his reign. The
name of this king is honored wherever the teachings of Buddha have spread, and is
reverenced from the Volga to Japan, from Ceylon and Siam to the borders of Mongolia and
Siberia. Like his Christian prototype Constantine, he was converted by a miracle. After his
conversion, which took place in the tenth year of his reign, he became a very zealous
supporter of the new religion. He himself built many monasteries and dagabas, and
provided many monks with the necessaries of life; and he encouraged those about his court
to do the same. He published edicts throughout his empire, enjoining on all his subjects
morality and justice.
[451:5] Rhys Davids' Buddhism, p. 10.
[451:6] See Chapter VII.
[452:1] Müller: Lectures on the Science of Religion, p. 235.
[452:2] This small tribe of Persians were driven from their native land by the
Mohammedan conquerors under the Khalif Omar, in the seventh century of our era.
Adhering to the ancient religion of Persia, which resembles that of the Veda, and bringing
with them the records of their faith, the Zend-Avesta of their prophet Zoroaster, they settled
down in the neighborhood of Surat, about one thousand one hundred years ago, and
became great merchants and shipbuilders. For two or three centuries we know little of their
history. Their religion prevented them from making proselytes, and they never multiplied
within themselves to any extent, nor did they amalgamate with the Hindoo population, so
that even now their number only amounts to about seventy thousand. Nevertheless, from
their busy, enterprising habits, in which they emulate Europeans, they form an important
section of the population of Bombay and Western India.
[452:3] Movers: Quoted in Dunlap's Spirit Hist., p. 261.
[452:4] Prolegomena, p. 417.
[452:5] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 162.
[453:1] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 163.
[453:2] Ibid. p. 142, and King's Gnostics, p. 71.
[453:3] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, pp. 135, 140, and 143.
[453:4] Quoted in Ibid. p. 186.
[453:5] Ibid.
[453:6] Renouf: Religion of Ancient Egypt, p. 81.
[454:1] That is, the Tri-murti Brahmā, Vishnu and Siva, for he tells us that the three gods,
Indra, Agni, and Surya, constitute the Vedic chief triad of Gods. (Hinduism, p. 24.) Again
he tells us that the idea of a Tri-murti was first dimly shadowed forth in the Rig-Veda,
where a triad of principal gods—Agni, Indra and Surya—is recognized. (Ibid. p. 88.) The
worship of the three members of the Tri-murti, Brahmā, Vishnu and Siva, is to be found in
the period of the epic poems, from 500 to 308 B. C. (Ibid. pp. 109, 110, 115.)
[454:2] Williams' Hinduism, p. 25.
[454:3] Monumental Christianity, p. 890.
[454:4] See Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi.
[454:5] See Appendix A.
[455:1] The genealogy which traces him back to Adam (Luke iii.) makes his religion not
only a Jewish, but a Gentile one. According to this Gospel he is not only a Messiah sent to
the Jews, but to all nations, sons of Adam.
[456:1] See The Bible of To-Day, under "Matthew."
[456:2] See Ibid. under "Luke."
[457:1] See the Bible of To-Day, under "Mark."
[457:2] "Synoptics;" the Gospels which contain accounts of the same events—"parallel
passages," as they are called—which can be written side by side, so as to enable us to make
a general view or synopsis of all the three, and at the same time compare them with each
other. Bishop Marsh says: "The most eminent critics are at present decidedly of opinion
that one of the two suppositions must necessarily be adopted, either that the three
Evangelists copied from each other, or that all the three drew from a common source, and
that the notion of an absolute independence, in respect to the composition of the three first
Gospels, is no longer tenable."
[457:3] "On opening the New Testament and comparing the impression produced by the
Gospel of Matthew or Mark with that by the Gospel of John, the observant eye is at once
struck with as salient a contrast as that already indicated on turning from the Macbeth or
Othello of Shakespeare to the Comus of Milton or to Spenser's Faerie Queene." (Francis
Tiffany.)
"To learn how far we may trust them (the Gospels) we must in the first place compare them
with each other. The moment we do so we notice that the fourth stands quite alone, while
the first three form a single group, not only following the same general course, but
sometimes even showing a verbal agreement which cannot possibly be accidental." (The
Bible for Learners, vol. ii. p. 27.)
[458:1] "Irenæus is the first person who mentions the four Gospels by name." (Bunsen:
Keys of St. Peter, p. 328.)
"Irenæus, in the second century, is the first of the fathers who, though he has nowhere
given us a professed catalogue of the books of the New Testament, intimates that he had
received four Gospels, as authentic Scriptures, the authors of which he describes." (Rev. R.
Taylor: Syntagma, p. 109.)
"The authorship of the fourth Gospel has been the subject of much learned and anxious
controversy among theologians. The earliest, and only very important external testimony
we have is that of IRENÆUS (A. D. 179.)" (W. R. Grey: The Creed of Christendom, p. 159.)
[458:2] Against Heresies, bk. ii. ch. xi. sec. 1.
[459:1] Against Heresies, bk. iii. ch. xi. sec. 8.
[459:2] Mosheim: vol. i. p. 109.
[459:3] Middleton's Works, vol. i. p. 59.
[460:1] Genuine Epist. Apost. Fathers, p. 98.
[460:2] See Chadwick's Bible of To-Day, pp. 191, 192.
[460:3] "Nec ab ipso scriptum constat, nec ab ejus apostolis sed longo post tempore a
quibusdam incerti nominis viris, qui ne sibi non haberetur fides scribentibus quæ nescirent,
partim apostolorum, partim eorum qui apostolos secuti viderentur nomina scriptorum
suorum frontibus indiderunt, asseverantes secundum eos, se scripsisse quæ scripserunt."
(Faust, lib. 2. Quoted by Rev. R. Taylor: Diegesis, p. 114.)
[460:4] "Multa enim a majoribus vestris, eloquiis Domini nostri inserta verba sunt; quæ
nomine signata ipsius, cum ejus fide non congruant, præsertim, quia, ut jam sæpe probatum
a nobis est, nec ab ipso hæc sunt, nec ab ejus apostolis scripta, sed multo post eorum
assumptionem, a nescio quibus, et ipsis inter se non concordantibus SEMI-JUDÆIS, per famas
opinionesque comperta sunt; qui tamen omnia eadem in apostolorum Domini conferentes
nomina vel eorum qui secuti apostolos viderentur, errores ac mendacia sua secundum eos
se scripsisse mentiti sunt." (Faust.: lib. 88. Quoted in Ibid. p. 66.)
[461:1] Taylor's Diegesis.
[463:1] Says Prof. Smith upon this point: "All the earliest external evidence points to the
conclusion that the synoptic gospels are non-apostolic digests of spoken and written
apostolic tradition, and that the arrangement of the earlier material in orderly form took
place only gradually and by many essays."
Dr. Hooykaas, speaking of the four "Gospels," and "Acts," says of them: "Not one of these
five books was really written by the person whose name it bears, and they are all of more
recent date than the heading would lead us to suppose."
"We cannot say that the "Gospels" and book of "Acts" are unauthentic, for not one of them
professes to give the name of its author. They appeared anonymously. The titles placed
above them in our Bibles owe their origin to a later ecclesiastical tradition which deserves
no confidence whatever." (Bible for Learners, vol. iii. pp. 24, 25.)
These Gospels "can hardly be said to have had authors at all. They had only editors or
compilers. What I mean is, that those who enriched the old Christian literature with these
Gospels did not go to work as independent writers and compose their own narratives out of
the accounts they had collected, but simply took up the different stories or sets of stories
which they found current in the oral tradition or already reduced to writing, adding here
and expanding there, and so sent out into the world a very artless kind of composition.
These works were then, from time to time, somewhat enriched by introductory matter or
interpolations from the hands of later Christians, and perhaps were modified a little here
and there. Our first two Gospels appear to have passed through more than one such
revision. The third, whose writer says in his preface, that 'many had undertaken to put
together a narrative (Gospel),' before him, appears to proceed from a single collecting,
arranging, and modifying hand." (Ibid. p. 29.)
[463:2] "Christiani doctores non in vulgus prodebant libros sacros, licet soleant plerique
aliteropinari, erant tantum in manibus clericorum, priora per sæcula." (Quoted in Taylor's
Diegesis, p. 48.)
[463:3] Mosheim: vol. i. pt. 2, ch. ii.
[463:4] General Survey of the Canon, p. 459.
[464:1] Credibility of the Gospels.
[464:2] Marsh's Michaelis, vol. ii. p. 160. The Sinaitic MS. is believed by Tischendorf to
belong to the fourth century.
[464:3] Ibid. p. 368.
[464:4] Eusebius: Ecclesiastical Hist. lib. 3, ch. xxii.
[465:1] The Science of Religion, pp. 30, 31.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
EXPLANATION.
broad flushing light of Dawn, or the Earth. From this union the Sun is born
without any carnal intercourse. The mother is yet a virgin. This is illustrated
in Hindoo mythology by the union of Pritrivi, "Mother Earth," with Dyaus,
"Heaven." Various deities were regarded as their progeny.[478:3] In the Vedic
hymns the Sun—the Lord and Saviour, the Redeemer and Preserver of
Mankind—is frequently called the "Son of the Sky."[478:4]
According to Egyptian mythology, Seb (the Earth) is overshadowed by Nut
(Heaven), the result of this union being the beneficent Lord and Saviour,
Osiris.[478:5] The same thing is to be found in ancient Grecian mythology.
Zeus or Jupiter is the Sky,[478:6] and Danae, Leto, Iokaste, Io and others, are
the Dawn, or the violet light of morning.[478:7]
"The Sky appeared to men (says Plutarch), to perform the functions of a
Father, as the Earth those of a Mother. The sky was the father, for it cast
seed into the bosom of the earth, which in receiving them became fruitful,
and brought forth, and was the mother."[479:1]
This union has been sung in the following verses by Virgil:
(Geor. ii.)
The Phenician theology is founded on the same principles. Heaven and
Earth (called Ouranos and Ghè) are at the head of a genealogy of æons,
whose adventures are conceived in the mythological style of these physical
allegorists.[479:2]
In the Samothracian mysteries, which seem to have been the most anciently
established ceremonies of the kind in Europe, the Heaven and the Earth
were worshiped as a male and female divinity, and as the parents of all
things.[479:3]
The Supreme God (the Al-fader), of the ancient Scandinavians was Odin, a
personification of the Heavens. The principal goddess among them was
Frigga, a personification of the Earth. It was the opinion among these
people that this Supreme Being or Celestial God had united with the Earth
(Frigga) to produce "Baldur the Good" (the Sun), who corresponds to the
Apollo of the Greeks and Romans, and the Osiris of the Egyptians.[479:4]
Xiuletl, in the Mexican language, signifies Blue, and hence was a name
which the Mexican gave to Heaven, from which Xiuleticutli is derived, an
epithet signifying "the God of Heaven," which they bestowed upon
Tezcatlipoca, who was the "Lord of All," the "Supreme God." He it was
who overshadowed the Virgin of Tula, Chimelman, who begat the Saviour
Quetzalcoatle (the Sun).
3. His birth was foretold by a star. This is the bright morning star—
which heralds the birth of the god Sol, the beneficent Saviour.
A glance at a geography of the heavens will show the "chaste, pure,
immaculate Virgin, suckling an infant," preceded by a Star, which rises
immediately preceding the Virgin and her child. This can truly be called
"his Star," which informed the "Wise Men," the "Magi"—Astrologers and
Sun-worshipers—and "the shepherds who watched their flocks by night"
that the Saviour of Mankind was about to be born.
4. The Heavenly Host sang praises. All nature smiles at the birth of the
Heavenly Being. "To him all angels cry aloud, the heavens, and all the
powers therein." "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will
towards men." "The quarters of the horizon are irradiate with joy, as if
moonlight was diffused over the whole earth." "The spirits and nymphs of
heaven dance and sing." "Caressing breezes blow, and a marvelous light is
produced." For the Lord and Saviour is born, "to give joy and peace to men
and Devas, to shed light in the dark places, and to give sight to the blind."
[480:1]
5. He was visited by the Magi. This is very natural, for the Magi were Sun-
worshipers, and at early dawn on the 25th of December, the astrologers of
the Arabs, Chaldeans, and other Oriental nations, greeted the infant Saviour
with gold, frankincense and myrrh. They started to salute their God long
before the rising of the Sun, and having ascended a high mountain, they
waited anxiously for his birth, facing the East, and there hailed his first rays
with incense and prayer.[480:2] The shepherds also, who remained in the
open air watching their flocks by night, were in the habit of prostrating
themselves, and paying homage to their god, the Sun. And, like the poet of
the Veda, they said:
And when the Sun rose, they wondered how, just born, he was so mighty.
They greeted him:
And the human eye felt that it could not bear the brilliant majesty of him
whom they called, "The Life, the Breath, the Brilliant Lord and Father."
And they said:
"Let us worship again the Child of Heaven, the Son of Strength, Arusha, the
Bright Light of the Sacrifice." "He rises as a mighty flame, he stretches out
his wide arms, he is even like the wind." "His light is powerful, and his
(virgin) mother, the Dawn, gives him the best share, the first worship
among men."[480:3]
6. He was born in a Cave. In this respect also, the history of Christ Jesus
corresponds with that of other Sun-gods and Saviours, for they are nearly
all represented as being born in a cave or dungeon. This is the dark abode
from which the wandering Sun starts in the morning.[481:1] As the Dawn
springs fully armed from the forehead of the cloven Sky, so the eye first
discerns the blue of heaven, as the first faint arch of light is seen in the East.
This arch is the cave in which the infant is nourished until he reaches his
full strength—in other words, until the day is fully come.
As the hour of his birth drew near, the mother became more beautiful, her
form more brilliant, while the dungeon was filled with a heavenly light as
when Zeus came to Danae in a golden shower.[481:2]
At length the child is born, and a halo of serene light encircles his cradle,
just as the Sun appears at early dawn in the East, in all its splendor. His
presence reveals itself there, in the dark cave, by his first rays, which
brightens the countenances of his mother and others who are present at his
birth.[481:3]
6. He was ordered to be put to death. All the Sun-gods are fated to bring
ruin upon their parents or the reigning monarch.[481:4] For this reason, they
attempt to prevent his birth, and failing in this, seek to destroy him when
born. Who is the dark and wicked Kansa, or his counterpart Herod? He is
Night, who reigns supreme, but who must lose his power when the young
prince of glory, the Invincible, is born.
The Sun scatters the Darkness; and so the phrase went that the child was to
be the destroyer of the reigning monarch, or his parent, Night; and oracles,
and magi, it was said, warned the latter of the doom which would overtake
him. The newly-born babe is therefore ordered to be put to death by the
sword, or exposed on the bare hillside, as the Sun seems to rest on the Earth
(Ida) at its rising.[481:5]
In oriental mythology, the destroying principle is generally represented as a
serpent or dragon.[482:1] Now, the position of the sphere on Christmas-day,
the birthday of the Sun, shows the Serpent all but touching, and certainly
aiming at the woman—that is, the figure of the constellation Virgo—who
suckles the child Iessus in her arms. Thus we have it illustrated in the story
of the snake who was sent to kill Hercules, when an infant in his cradle;
[482:2] also in the story of Typhon, who sought the life of the infant Saviour
Horus. Again, it is illustrated in the story of the virgin mother Astrea, with
her babe beset by Orion, and of Latona, the mother of Apollo, when
pursued by the monster.[482:3] And last, that of the virgin mother Mary, with
her babe beset by Herod. But like Hercules, Horus, Apollo, Theseus,
Romulus, Cyrus and other solar heroes, Christ Jesus has yet a long course
before him. Like them, he grows up both wise and strong, and the "old
Serpent" is discomfited by him, just as the sphynx and the dragon are put to
night by others.
7. He was tempted by the devil. The temptation by, and victory over the evil
one, whether Mara or Satan, is the victory of the Sun over the clouds of
storm and darkness.[482:4] Growing up in obscurity, the day comes when he
makes himself known, tries himself in his first battles with his gloomy foes,
and shines without a rival. He is rife for his destined mission, but is met by
the demon of storm, who runs to dispute with him in the duel of the storm.
In this struggle against darkness the beneficent hero remains the conqueror,
the gloomy army of Mara, or Satan, broken and rent, is scattered; the
Apearas, daughters of the demon, the last light vapors which float in the
heaven, try in vain to clasp and retain the vanquisher; he disengages himself
from their embraces, repulses them; they writhe, lose their form, and
vanish.
Free from every obstacle, and from every adversary, he sets in motion
across space his disk with a thousand rays, having avenged the attempts of
his eternal foe. He appears then in all his glory, and in his sovereign
splendor; the god has attained the summit of his course, it is the moment of
triumph.
8. He was put to death on the cross. The Sun has now reached his extreme
Southern limit, his career is ended, and he is at last overcome by his
enemies. The powers of darkness, and of winter, which had sought in vain
to wound him, have at length won the victory. The bright Sun of summer is
finally slain, crucified in the heavens, and pierced by the arrow, spear or
thorn of winter.[483:1] Before he dies, however, he sees all his disciples—his
retinue of light, and the twelve hours of the day, or the twelve months of the
year—disappear in the sanguinary mêlée of the clouds of the evening.
Throughout the tale, the Sun-god was but fulfilling his doom. These things
must be. The suffering of a violent death was a necessary part of the
mythos; and, when his hour had come, he must meet his doom, as surely as
the Sun, once risen, must go across the sky, and then sink down into his bed
beneath the earth or sea. It was an iron fate from which there was no
escaping.
Crishna, the crucified Saviour of the Hindoos, is a personification of the
Sun crucified in the heavens. One of the names of the Sun in the Vedic
hymns is Vishnu,[483:2] and Crishna is Vishnu in human form.[483:3]
In the hymns of the Rig-Veda the Sun is spoken of as "stretching out his
arms," in the heavens, "to bless the world, and to rescue it from the terror of
darkness."
Indra, the crucified Saviour worshiped in Nepal and Tibet,[484:1] is identical
with Crishna, the Sun.[484:2]
The principal Phenician deity, El, which, says Parkhurst, in his Hebrew
Lexicon, "was the very name the heathens gave to their god SOL, their Lord
or Ruler of the Hosts of Heaven," was called "The Preserver (or Saviour) of
the World," for the benefit of which he offered a mystical sacrifice.[484:3]
The crucified Iao ("Divine Love" personified) is the crucified Adonis, the
Sun. The Lord and Saviour Adonis was called Iao.[484:4]
Osiris, the Egyptian Saviour, was crucified in the heavens. To the Egyptian
the cross was the symbol of immortality, an emblem of the Sun, and the god
himself was crucified to the tree, which denoted his fructifying power.[484:5]
Horus was also crucified in the heavens. He was represented, like Crishna
and Christ Jesus, with outstretched arms in the vault of heaven.[484:6]
The story of the crucifixion of Prometheus was allegorical, for Prometheus
was only a title of the SUN, expressing providence or foresight, wherefore
his being crucified in the extremities of the earth, signified originally no
more than the restriction of the power of the SUN during the winter months.
[484:7]
Who was Ixion, bound on the wheel? He was none other than the god Sol,
crucified in the heavens.[484:8] Whatever be the origin of the name, Ixion is
the "Sun of noonday," crucified in the heavens, whose four-spoked wheel,
in the words of Pindar, is seen whirling in the highest heaven.[484:9]
The wheel upon which Ixion and criminals were said to have been extended
was a cross, although the name of the thing was dissembled among
Christians; it was a St. Andrew's cross, of which two spokes confined the
arms, and two the legs. (See Fig. No. 35.)
The allegorical tales of the triumphs and misfortunes of the Sun-gods of the
ancient Greeks and Romans, signify the alternate exertion of the generative
and destructive attributes.
Hercules is torn limb from limb; and in this catastrophe we see the blood-
red sunset which closes the career of Hercules.[485:1] The Sun-god cannot
rise to the life of the blessed gods until he has been slain. The morning
cannot come until the Eôs who closed the previous day has faded away and
died in the black abyss of night.
Achilleus and Meleagros represent alike the short-lived Sun, whose course
is one of toil for others, ending in an early death, after a series of wonderful
victories alternating with periods of darkness and gloom.[485:2]
In the tales of the Trojan war, it is related of Achilleus that he expires at the
Skaian, or western gates of the evening. He is slain by Paris, who here
appears as the Pani, or dark power, who blots out the light of the Sun from
the heaven.[485:3]
We have also the story of Adonis, born of a virgin, and known in the
countries where he was worshiped as "The Saviour of Mankind," killed by
the wild boar, afterwards "rose from the dead, and ascended into heaven."
This Adonis, Adonai—in Hebrew "My Lord"—is simply the Sun. He is
crucified in the heavens, put to death by the wild boar, i. e., Winter.
"Babylon called Typhon or Winter the boar; they said he killed Adonis or
the fertile Sun."[485:4]
The Crucified Dove worshiped by the ancients, was none other than the
crucified Sun. Adonis was called the Dove. At the ceremonies in honor of
his resurrection from the dead, the devotees said, "Hail to the Dove! the
Restorer of Light."[485:5] Fig. No. 35 is the "Crucified Dove" as described
by Pindar, the great lyric poet of Greece, born about 522 B. C.
"We read in Pindar, (says the author of a learned work entitled "Nimrod,")
of the venerable bird Iynx bound to the wheel, and of the pretended
punishment of Ixion. But this rotation was really no punishment, being, as
Pindar saith, voluntary, and prepared by himself and for himself; or if it was,
it was appointed in derision of his false pretensions, whereby he gave
himself out as the crucified spirit of the world." "The four spokes represent
St. Andrew's cross, adapted to the four limbs extended, and furnish perhaps
the oldest profane allusion to the crucifixion. The same cross of St. Andrew
was the Taw, which Ezekiel commands them to mark upon the foreheads of
the faithful, as appears from all Israelitish coins whereon that letter is
engraved. The same idea was familiar to Lucian, who calls T the letter of
crucifixion. Certainly, the veneration for the cross is very ancient. Iynx, the
bird of Mautic inspiration, bound to the four-legged wheel, gives the notion
of Divine Love crucified. The wheel denotes the world, of which she is the
spirit, and the cross the sacrifice made for that world."[486:1]
This "Divine Love," of whom Nimrod speaks, was "The First-begotten Son"
of the Platonists. The crucifixion of "Divine Love" is often found among the
Greeks. Iönah or Juno, according to the Iliad, was bound with fetters, and
suspended in space, between heaven and earth. Ixion, Prometheus, Apollo
of Miletus, (anciently the greatest and most flourishing city of Ionia, in Asia
Minor), were all crucified.[486:2]
Semi-Ramis was both a queen of unrivaled celebrity, and also a goddess,
worshiped under the form of a Dove. Her name signifies the Supreme Dove.
She is said to have been slain by the last survivor of her sons, while others
say, she flew away as a bird—a Dove. In both Grecian and Hindoo histories
this mystical queen Semiramis is said to have fought a battle on the banks
of the Indus, with a king called Staurobates, in which she was defeated, and
from which she flew away in the form of a Dove. Of this Nimrod says:
"The name Staurobates, the king by whom Semiramis was finally
overpowered, alluded to the cross on which she perished," and that, "the
crucifixion was made into a glorious mystery by her infatuated adorers."
[486:3]
Here again we have the crucified Dove, the Sun, for it is well known that
the ancients personified the Sun female as well as male.
We have also the fable of the Crucified Rose, illustrated in the jewel of the
Rosicrucians. The jewel of the Rosicrucians is formed of a transparent red
stone, with a red cross on one side, and a red rose on the other—thus it is a
crucified rose. "The Rossi, or Rosy-crucians' idea concerning this
emblematic red cross," says Hargrave Jennings, in his History of the
Rosicrucians, "probably came from the fable of Adonis—who was the Sun
whom we have so often seen crucified—being changed into a red rose by
Venus."[487:1]
The emblem of the Templars is a red rose on a cross. "When it can be done,
it is surrounded with a glory, and placed on a calvary (Fig. No. 36). This is
the Naurutz, Natsir, or Rose of Isuren, of Tamul, or Sharon, or the Water
Rose, the Lily Padma, Pena, Lotus, crucified in the heavens for the
salvation of man."[487:2]
Christ Jesus was called the ROSE—the Rose of Sharon—of Isuren. He was
the renewed incarnation of Divine Wisdom. He was the son of Maia or
Maria. He was the Rose of Sharon and the Lily of the Valley, which
bloweth in the month of his mother Maia. Thus, when the angel Gabriel
gives the salutation to the Virgin, he presents her with the lotus or lily; as
may be seen in hundreds of old pictures in Italy. We see therefore that
Adonis, "the Lord," "the Virgin-born," "the Crucified," "the Resurrected
Dove," "the Restorer of Light," is one and the same with the "Rose of
Sharon," the crucified Christ Jesus.
Plato (429 B. C.) in his Pimæus, philosophizing about the Son of God, says:
"The next power to the Supreme God was decussated or figured in the
shape of a cross on the universe."
This brings to recollection the doctrine of certain so-called Christian
heretics, who maintained that Christ Jesus was crucified in the heavens.
The Chrèstos was the Logos, the Sun was the manifestation of the Logos or
Wisdom to men; or, as it was held by some, it was his peculiar habitation.
The Sun being crucified at the time of the winter solstice was represented
by the young man slaying the Bull (an emblem of the Sun) in the Mithraic
ceremonies, and the slain lamb at the foot of the cross in the Christian
ceremonies. The Chrēst was the Logos, or Divine Wisdom, or a portion of
divine wisdom incarnate; in this sense he is really the Sun or the solar
power incarnate, and to him everything applicable to the Sun will apply.
Fig. No. 37, taken from Mr. Lundy's "Monumental Christianity," is
evidently a representation of the Christian Saviour crucified in the heavens.
Mr. Lundy calls it "Crucifixion in Space," and believes that it was intended
for the Hindoo Saviour Crishna, who is also represented crucified in space
(See Fig. No. 8, Ch. XX.). This (Fig. 37) is exactly in the form of a Romish
crucifix, but not fixed to a piece of wood, though the legs and feet are put
together in the usual way. There is a glory over it, coming from above, not
shining from the figure, as is generally seen in a Roman crucifix. It has a
pointed Parthian coronet instead of a crown of thorns. All the avatars, or
incarnations of Vishnu, are painted with Ethiopian or Parthian coronets. For
these reasons the Christian author will not own that it is a representation of
the "True Son of Justice," for he was not crucified in space; but whether it
was intended to represent Crishna, Wittoba, or Jesus,[488:1] it tells a secret: it
shows that some one was represented crucified in the heavens, and
undoubtedly has something to do with "The next power to the Supreme
God," who, according to Plato, "was decussated or figured in the shape of a
cross on the universe."
Who was the crucified god whom the ancient Romans worshiped, and
whom they, according to Justin Martyr, represented as a man on a cross?
Can we doubt, after what we have seen, that he was this same crucified Sol,
whose birthday they annually celebrated on the 25th of December?
In the poetical tales of the ancient Scandinavians, the same legend is found.
Frey, the Deity of the Sun, was fabled to have been killed, at the time of the
winter solstice, by the same boar who put the god Adonis to death, therefore
a boar was annually offered to him at the great feast of Yule.[489:1] "Baldur
the Good," son of the supreme god Odin, and the virgin-goddess Frigga,
was also put to death by the sharp thorn of winter.
The ancient Mexican crucified Saviour, Quetzalcoatle, another
personification of the Sun, was sometimes represented as crucified in space,
in the heavens, in a circle of nineteen figures, the number of the metonic
cycle. A serpent (the emblem of evil, darkness, and winter) is depriving him
of the organs of generation.[489:2]
We have seen in Chapter XXXIII. that Christ Jesus, and many of the
heathen saviours, healers, and preserving gods, were represented in the
form of a Serpent. This is owing to the fact that, in one of its attributes, the
Serpent was an emblem of the Sun. It may, at first, appear strange that the
Serpent should be an emblem of evil, and yet also an emblem of the
beneficent divinity; but, as Prof. Renouf remarks, in his Hibbert Lectures,
"The moment we understand the nature of a myth, all impossibilities,
contradictions, and immoralities disappear." The serpent is an emblem of
evil when represented with his deadly sting; he is the emblem of eternity
when represented casting off his skin;[489:3] and an emblem of the Sun when
represented with his tail in his mouth, thus forming a circle.[489:4] Thus
there came to be, not only good, but also bad, serpents, both of which are
referred to in the narrative of the Hebrew exodus, but still more clearly in
the struggle between the good and the bad serpents of Persian mythology,
which symbolized Ormuzd, or Mithra, and the evil spirit Ahriman.[489:5]
As the Dove and the Rose, emblems of the Sun, were represented on the
cross, so was the Serpent.[489:6] The famous "Brazen Serpent," said to have
been "set up" by Moses in the wilderness, is called in the Targum (the
general term for the Aramaic versions of the Old Testament) the SAVIOUR. It
was probably a serpentine crucifix, as it is called a cross by Justin Martyr.
The crucified serpent (Fig. No. 38) denoted the quiescent Phallos, or the
Sun after it had lost its power. It is the Sun in winter, crucified on the tree,
which denoted its fructifying power.[490:1] As Mr. Wake remarks, "There
can be no doubt that both the Pillar (Phallus) and the Serpent were
associated with many of the Sun-gods of antiquity."[490:2]
This is seen in Fig. No. 39, taken from an ancient medal, which represents
the serpent with rays of glory surrounding his head.
The Ophites, who venerated the serpent as an emblem of Christ Jesus, are
said to have maintained that the serpent of Genesis—who brought wisdom
into the world—was Christ Jesus. The brazen serpent was called the WORD
by the Chaldee paraphrast. The Word, or Logos, was Divine Wisdom, which
was crucified; thus we have the cross, or Linga, or Phallus, with the serpent
upon it. Besides considering the serpent as the emblem of Christ Jesus, or of
the Logos, the Ophites are said to have revered it as the cause of all the arts
of civilized life. In Chapter XII. we saw that several illustrious females
were believed to have been selected and impregnated by the Holy Ghost. In
some cases, a serpent was supposed to be the form which it assumed. This
was the incarnation of the Logos.
The serpent was held in great veneration by the ancients, who, as we have
seen, considered it as the symbol of the beneficent Deity, and an emblem of
eternity. As such it has been variously expressed on ancient sculptures and
medals in various parts of the globe.
Although generally, it did not always, symbolize the god Sun, or the power
of which the Sun is an emblem; but, invested with various meanings, it
entered widely into the primitive mythologies. As Mr. Squire observes:
"It typified wisdom, power, duration, the good and evil principles, life,
reproduction—in short, in Egypt, Syria, Greece, India, China, Scandinavia,
America, everywhere on the globe, it has been a prominent emblem."[491:1]
The serpent was the symbol of Vishnu, the preserving god, the Saviour, the
Sun.[491:2] It was an emblem of the Sun-god Buddha, the Angel-Messiah.
[491:3] The Egyptian Sun-god Osiris, the Saviour, is associated with the
snake.[491:4] The Persian Mithra, the Mediator, Redeemer, and Saviour, was
symbolized by the serpent.[491:5] The Phenicians represented their
beneficent Sun-god Agathodemon, by a serpent.[491:6] The serpent was,
among the Greeks and Romans, the emblem of a beneficent genius.
Antipator of Sidon, calls the god Ammon, the "Renowned Serpent."[491:7]
The Grecian Hercules—the Sun-god—was symbolized as a serpent; and so
was Æsculapius and Apollo. The Hebrews, who, as we have seen in
Chapter XI., worshiped the god Sol, represented him in the form of a
serpent. This is the seraph—spoken of above—as set up by Moses (Num.
xxi. 3) and worshiped by the children of Israel. SE RA PH is the singular of
seraphim, meaning Semilicé—splendor, fire, light—emblematic of the fiery
disk of the Sun, and which, under the name of Nehush-tan, "Serpent-
dragon," was broken up by the reforming Hezekiah.
The principal god of the Aztecs was Tonac-atlcoatl, which means the
Serpent Sun.[491:8]
The Mexican virgin-born Lord and Saviour, Quetzalcoatle, was represented
in the form of a serpent. In fact, his name signifies "Feathered Serpent."
Quetzalcoatle was a personification of the Sun.[491:9]
Under the aspect of the active principle, we may rationally connect the
Serpent and the Sun, as corresponding symbols of the reproductive or
creative power. Figure No. 40 is a symbolical sign, representing the disk of
the Sun encircled by the serpent Uraeus, meaning the "KING SUN," or
"ROYAL SUN," as it often surmounts the persons of Egyptian monarchs,
confirmed by the emblem of LIFE depending from the serpent's neck.[492:1]
The mysteries of Osiris, Isis, and Horus, in Egypt; Atys and Cybele, in
Phrygia; Ceres and Proserpine, at Eleusis; of Venus and Adonis, in
Phenicia; of Bona Dea and Priapus, in Rome, are all susceptible of one
explanation. They all set forth and illustrated, by solemn and impressive
rites, and mystical symbols, the grand phenomenon of nature, especially as
connected with the creation of things and the perpetuation of life. In all, it is
worthy of remark, the SERPENT was more or less conspicuously introduced,
and always as symbolical of the invigorating or active energy of nature, the
SUN.
We have seen (in Chapter XX.) that in early Christian art Christ Jesus also
was represented as a crucified Lamb. This crucified lamb is "the Lamb of
God taking away the sins of the world, and slain from the foundation of the
world."[492:2] In other words, the crucified lamb typifies the crucified Sun,
for the lamb was another symbol of the Sun, as we shall presently see.
We find, then, that the stories of the crucifixions of the different so-called
SAVIOURS of mankind all melt into ONE, and that they are allegorical, for
"Saviour" was only a title of the Sun,[492:3] and his being put to death on the
cross, signifies no more than the restriction of the power of the Sun in the
winter quarter. With Justin Martyr, then, we can say:
"There exists not a people, whether Greek or barbarian, or any other race of
men, by whatsoever appellation or manners they may be distinguished,
however ignorant of arts or agriculture, whether they dwell under the tents,
or wander about in crowded wagons, among whom prayers are not offered
up in the name of A CRUCIFIED SAVIOUR[493:1] to the Father and creator of all
things."[493:2]
9. "And many women were there beholding afar off."[493:3] The tender
mother who had watched over him at his birth, and the fair maidens whom
he has loved, will never forsake him. They yet remain with him, and while
their tears drop on his feet, which they kiss, their voices cheer him in his
last hour. In these we have the Dawn, who bore him, and the fair and
beautiful lights which flush the Eastern sky as the Sun sinks or dies in the
West.[493:4] Their tears are the tears of dew, such as Eôs weeps at the death
of her child.
All the Sun-gods forsake their homes and virgin mothers, and wander
through different countries doing marvellous things. Finally, at the end of
their career, the mother, from whom they were parted long ago, is by their
side to cheer them in their last hours.[493:5]
The ever-faithful women were to be found at the last scene in the life of
Buddha. Kasyapa having found the departed master's feet soiled and wet,
asked Nanda the cause of it. "He was told that a weeping woman had
embraced Gautama's feet shortly before his death, and that her tears had
fallen on his feet and left the marks on them."[493:6]
In his last hours, Œdipous (the Sun) has been cheered by the presence of
Antigone.[493:7]
At the death of Hercules, Iole (the fair-haired Dawn) stands by his side,
cheering him to the last. With her gentle hands she sought to soothe his
pain, and with pitying words to cheer him in his woe. Then once more the
face of Hercules flushed with a deep joy, and he said:
"Ah, Iole, brightest of maidens, thy voice shall cheer me as I sink down in
the sleep of death. I saw and loved thee in the bright morning time, and now
again thou hast come, in the evening, fair as the soft clouds which gather
around the dying Sun."
The black mists were spreading over the sky, but still Hercules sought to
gaze on the fair face of Iole, and to comfort her in her sorrow.
"Weep not, Iole," he said, "my toil is done, and now is the time for rest. I
shall see thee again in the bright land which is never trodden by the feet of
night."
The same story is related in the legend of Apollo. The Dawn, from whom he
parted in the early part of his career, comes to his side at eventide, and again
meets him when his journey on earth has well nigh come to an end.[494:1]
When the Lord Prometheus was crucified on Mt. Caucasus, his especially
professed friend, Oceanus, the fisherman, as his name, Petræus, indicates,
[494:2] being unable to prevail on him to make his peace with Jupiter, by
10. "There was darkness all over the land."[494:5] In the same manner ends
the tale of the long toil and sorrows of other Sun-gods. The last scene
exhibits a manifest return to the spirit of the solar myth. He must not die the
common death of all men, for no disease or corruption can touch the body
of the brilliant Sun. After a long struggle against the dark clouds who are
arrayed against him, he is finally overcome, and dies. Blacker and blacker
grow the evening shades, and finally "there is darkness on the face of the
earth," and the din of its thunder clashes through the air.[494:6]
It is the picture of a sunset in wild confusion, of a sunset more awful, yet
not more sad, than that which is seen in the last hours of many other Sun-
gods.[494:7] It is the picture of the loneliness of the Sun, who sinks slowly
down, with the ghastly hues of death upon his face, while none is nigh to
cheer him save the ever-faithful women.
11. "He descended into hell."[494:8] This is the Sun's descent into the lower
regions. It enters the sign Capricornus, or the Goat, and the astronomical
winter begins. The days have reached their shortest span, and the Sun has
reached his extreme southern limit. The winter solstice reigns, and the Sun
seems to stand still in his southern course. For three days and three nights
he remains in hell—the lower regions.[495:1] In this respect Christ Jesus is
like other Sun-gods.[495:2]
In the ancient sagas of Iceland, the hero who is the Sun personified,
descends into a tomb, where he fights a vampire. After a desperate struggle,
the hero overcomes, and rises to the surface of the earth. "This, too,
represents the Sun in the northern realms, descending into the tomb of
winter, and there overcoming the power of darkness."[495:3]
12. He rose again from the dead, and ascended into heaven. Resurrections
from the dead, and ascensions into heaven, are generally acknowledged to
be solar features, as the history of many solar heroes agree in this particular.
At the winter solstice the ancients wept and mourned for Tammuz, the fair
Adonis, and other Sun-gods, done to death by the boar, or crucified—slain
by the thorn of winter—and on the third day they rejoiced at the
resurrection of their "Lord of Light."[495:4]
With her usual policy, the Church endeavored to give a Christian
significance to the rites which they borrowed from heathenism, and in this
case, the mourning for Tammuz, the fair Adonis, became the mourning for
Christ Jesus, and joy at the rising of the natural Sun became joy at the rising
of the "Sun of Righteousness"—at the resurrection of Christ Jesus from the
grave.
This festival of the Resurrection was generally held by the ancients on the
25th of March, when the awakening of Spring may be said to be the result
of the return of the Sun from the lower or far-off regions to which he had
departed. At the equinox—say, the vernal—at Easter, the Sun has been
below the equator, and suddenly rises above it. It has been, as it were, dead
to us, but now it exhibits a resurrection.[496:1] The Saviour rises triumphant
over the powers of darkness, to life and immortality, on the 25th of March,
when the Sun rises in Aries.
Throughout all the ancient world, the resurrection of the god Sol, under
different names, was celebrated on March 25th, with great rejoicings.[496:2]
In the words of the Rev. Geo. W. Cox:
"The wailing of the Hebrew women at the death of Tammuz, the crucifixion
and resurrection of Osiris, the adoration of the Babylonian Mylitta, the Sacti
ministers of Hindu temples, the cross and crescent of Isis, the rites of the
Jewish altar of Baal-Peor, wholly preclude all doubt of the real nature of the
great festivals and mysteries of Phenicians, Jews, Assyrians, Egyptians, and
Hindus."[496:3]
All this was Sun and Nature worship, symbolized by the Linga and Yoni. As
Mr. Bonwick says:
"The philosophic theist who reflects upon the story, known from the walls
of China, across Asia and Europe, to the plateau of Mexico, cannot resist
the impression that no materialistic theory of it can be satisfactory."[496:4]
Allegory alone explains it.
"The Church, at an early date, selected the heathen festivals of Sun worship
for its own, ordering the birth at Christmas, a fixed time, and the
resurrection at Easter, a varying time, as in all Pagan religions; since,
though the Sun rose directly after the vernal equinox, the festival, to be
correct in a heathen point of view, had to be associated with the new
moon."[496:5]
The Christian, then, may well say:
"When thou hadst overcome the sharpness of winter, thou didst open the
kingdom of heaven (i. e., bring on the reign of summer), to all believers."
13. Christ Jesus is Creator of all things. We have seen (in Chapter XXVI.)
that it was not God the Father, who was supposed by the ancients to have
been the Creator of the world, but God the Son, the Redeemer and Saviour
of Mankind. Now, this Redeemer and Saviour was, as we have seen, the
Sun, and Prof. Max Müller tells us that in the Vedic mythology, the Sun is
not the bright Deva only, "who performs his daily task in the sky, but he is
supposed to perform much greater work. He is looked upon, in fact, as the
Ruler, as the Establisher, as the Creator of the world."[496:6]
Having been invoked as the "Life-bringer," the Sun is also called—in the
Rig-Veda—"the Breath or Life of all that move and rest;" and lastly he
becomes "The Maker of all things," by whom all the worlds have been
brought together.[497:1]
There is a prayer in the Vedas, called Gayatree, which consists of three
measured lines, and is considered the holiest and most efficacious of all
their religious forms. Sir William Jones translates it thus:
"Let us adore the supremacy of that spiritual Sun, the godhead, who
illuminates all, who re-creates all, from whom all proceed, to whom all
must return; whom we invoke to direct our undertakings aright in our
progress toward his holy seat."
With Seneca (a Roman philosopher, born at Cordova, Spain, 61 B. C.) then,
we can say:
"You may call the Creator of all things by different names (Bacchus,
Hercules, Mercury, etc.), but they are only different names of the same
divine being, the Sun."
14. He is to be Judge of the quick and the dead. Who is better able than the
Sun to be the judge of man's deeds, seeing, as he does, from his throne in
heaven, all that is done on earth? The Vedas speak of Sûrya—the pervading,
irresistible luminary—as seeing all things and hearing all things, noting the
good and evil deeds of men.[497:2]
According to Hindoo mythology, says Prof. Max Müller:
"The Sun sees everything, both what is good and what is evil; and how
natural therefore that (in the Indian Veda) both the evil-doer should be told
that the sun sees what no human eye may have seen, and that the innocent,
when all other help fails him, should appeal to the sun to attest his
guiltlessness."
"Frequent allusion is made (in the Rig-Veda), to the sun's power of seeing
everything. The stars flee before the all-seeing sun, like thieves. He sees the
right and the wrong among men. He who looks upon the world knows also
the thoughts in all men. As the sun sees everything and knows everything,
he is asked to forget and forgive what he alone has seen and knows."[497:3]
On the most ancient Egyptian monuments, Osiris, the Sun personified, is
represented as Judge of the dead. The Egyptian "Book of the Dead," the
oldest Bible in the world, speaks of Osiris as "seeing all things, and hearing
all things, noting the good and evil deeds of men."
15. He will come again sitting on a white horse. The "second coming" of
Vishnu (Crishna), Christ Jesus, and other Sun-gods, are also astronomical
allegories. The white horse, which figures so conspicuously in the legend,
was the universal symbol of the Sun among Oriental nations.
Throughout the whole legend, Christ Jesus is the toiling Sun, laboring for
the benefit of others, not his own, and doing hard service for a mean and
cruel generation. Watch his sun-like career of brilliant conquest, checked
with intervals of storm, and declining to a death clouded with sorrow and
derision. He is in constant company with his twelve apostles, the twelve
signs of the zodiac.[498:1] During the course of his life's journey he is called
"The God of Earthly Blessing," "The Saviour through whom a new life
springs," "The Preserver," "The Redeemer," &c. Almost at his birth the
Serpent of darkness attempts to destroy him. Temptations to sloth and
luxury are offered him in vain. He has his work to do, and nothing can stay
him from doing it, as nothing can arrest the Sun in his journey through the
heavens. Like all other solar heroes, he has his faithful women who love
him, and the Marys and Martha here play the part. Of his toils it is scarcely
necessary to speak in detail. They are but a thousand variations on the story
of the great conflict which all the Sun-gods wage against the demon of
darkness. He astonishes his tutor when sent to school. This we might expect
to be the case, when an incomparable and incommunicable wisdom is the
heritage of the Sun. He also represents the wisdom and beneficence of the
bright Being who brings life and light to men. As the Sun wakens the earth
to life when the winter is done, so Crishna, Buddha, Horus, Æsculapius, and
Christ Jesus were raisers of the dead. When the leaves fell and withered on
the approach of winter, the "daughter of the earth" would be spoken of as
dying or dead, and, as no other power than that of the Sun can recall
vegetation to life, this child of the earth would be represented as buried in a
sleep from which the touch of the Sun alone could rouse her.
Christ Jesus, then, is the Sun, in his short career and early death. He is the
child of the Dawn, whose soft, violet hues tint the clouds of early morn; his
father being the Sky, the "Heavenly Father," who has looked down with
love upon the Dawn, and overshadowed her. When his career on earth is
ended, and he expires, the loving mother, who parted from him in the
morning of his life, is at his side, looking on the death of the Son whom she
cannot save from the doom which is on him, while her tears fall on his body
like rain at sundown. From her he is parted at the beginning of his course;
to her he is united at its close. But Christ Jesus, like Crishna, Buddha,
Osiris, Horus, Mithras, Apollo, Atys and others, rises again, and thus the
myth takes us a step beyond the legend of Serpedon and others, which stop
at the end of the eastward journey, when the night is done.
According to the Christian calendar, the birthday of John the Baptist is on
the day of the summer solstice, when the sun begins to decrease. How true
to nature then are the words attributed to him in the fourth Gospel, when he
says that he must decrease, and Jesus increase.
Among the ancient Teutonic nations, fires were lighted, on the tops of hills,
on the 24th of June, in honor of the WENDING SUN. This custom is still kept
up in Southern Germany and the Scotch highlands, and it is the day selected
by the Roman Catholic church to celebrate the nativity of John the Baptist.
[499:1]
"Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, Adonai, and by thy great mercy
defend us from all perils and dangers of this night."—Collect, in Evening
Service.
God of God, light of light, very God of very God."—Nicene Creed.
"Merciful Adonai, we beseech thee to cast thy bright beams of light upon
thy Church."—Collect of St. John.
"To thee all angels cry aloud, the heavens, and all the powers therein."
"Heaven and earth are full of the majesty of thy glory" (or brightness).
"The glorious company of the (twelve months, or) apostles praise thee."
"Thou art the King of Glory, O Christ!"
"When thou tookest upon thee to deliver man, thou passest through the
constellation, or zodiacal sign—the Virgin."
"When thou hadst overcome the sharpness of winter, thou didst open the
kingdom of heaven (i. e., bring on the reign of the summer months) to all
believers."
"All are agreed," says Cicero, "that Apollo is none other than the SUN,
because the attributes which are commonly ascribed to Apollo do so
wonderfully agree thereto."
Just so surely as Apollo is the Sun, so is the Lord Christ Jesus the Sun. That
which is so conclusive respecting the Pagan deities, applies also to the God
of the Christians; but, like the Psalmist of old, they cry, "Touch not MY
Christ, and do my prophets no harm."
Many Christian writers have seen that the history of their Lord and Saviour
is simply the history of the Sun, but they either say nothing, or, like Dr.
Parkhurst and the Rev. J. P. Lundy, claim that the Sun is a type of the true
Sun of Righteousness. Mr. Lundy, in his "Monumental Christianity," says:
"Is there no bright Sun of Righteousness—no personal and loving Son of
God, of whom the material Sun has been the type or symbol, in all ages and
among all nations? What power is it that comes from the Sun to give light
and heat to all created things? If the symbolical Sun leads such a great
earthly and heavenly flock, what must be said to the true and only begotten
Son of God? If Apollo was adopted by early Christian art as a type of the
Good Shepherd of the New Testament, then this interpretation of the Sun-
god among all nations must be the solution of the universal mythos, or what
other solution can it have? To what other historical personage but Christ
can it apply? If this mythos has no spiritual meaning, then all religion
becomes mere idolatry, or the worship of material things."[500:1]
Mr. Lundy, who seems to adhere to this once-upon-a-time favorite theory,
illustrates it as follows:
"The young Isaac is his (Christ's) Hebrew type, bending under the wood, as
Christ fainted under the cross; Daniel is his type, stripped of all earthly
fame and greatness, and cast naked into the deepest danger, shame and
humiliation." "Noah is his type, in saving men from utter destruction, and
bringing them across the sea of death to a new world and a new life."
"Orpheus is a type of Christ. Agni and Crishna of India; Mithra of Persia;
Horus and Apollo of Egypt, are all types of Christ." "Samson carrying off
the gates of Gaza and defeating the Philistines by his own death, was
considered as a type of Christ bursting open and carrying away the gates of
Hades, and conquering His and our enemies by his death and resurrection."
[501:1]
According to this theory, the whole Pagan religion was typical of Christ and
Christianity. Why then were not the Pagans the Lord's chosen people
instead of the children of Israel?
The early Christians were charged with being a sect of Sun worshipers.
[501:2] The ancient Egyptians worshiped the god Serapis, and Serapis was
the Sun. Fig. No. 11, page 194, shows the manner in which Serapis was
personified. It might easily pass for a representation of the Sun-god of the
Christians. Mr. King says, in his "Gnostics, and their Remains":
"There can be no doubt that the head of Serapis, marked as the face is by a
grave and pensive majesty, supplied the first idea for the conventional
portraits of the Saviour."[501:3]
The Imperial Russian Collection boasts of a head of Christ Jesus which is
said to be very ancient. It is a fine intaglio on emerald. Mr. King says of it:
"It is in reality a head of Serapis, seen in front and crowned with Persia
boughs, easily mistaken for thorns, though the bushel on the head leaves no
doubt as to the real personage intended."[501:4]
It must not be forgotten, in connection with this, that the worshipers of
Serapis, or the Sun, were called Christians.[501:5]
Mrs. Jameson, speaking on this subject, says:
"We search in vain for the lightest evidence of his (Christ's) human,
individual semblance, in the writing of those disciples who knew him so
well. In this instance the instincts of earthly affection seem to have been
mysteriously overruled. He whom all races of men were to call brother, was
not to be too closely associated with the particular lineaments of any one.
St. John, the beloved disciple, could lie on the breast of Jesus with all the
freedom of fellowship, but not even he has left a word to indicate what
manner of man was the Divine Master after the flesh. . . . Legend has, in
various form, supplied this natural craving, but it is hardly necessary to add,
that all accounts of pictures of our Lord taken from Himself are without
historical foundation. We are therefore left to imagine the expression most
befitting the character of him who took upon himself our likeness, and
looked at the woes and sins of mankind through the eyes of our mortality."
[501:6]
The followers of Mithra always turned towards the East, when they
worshiped; the same was done by the Brahmans of the East, and the
Christians of the West. In the ceremony of baptism, the catechumen was
placed with his face to the West, the symbolical representation of the prince
of darkness, in opposition to the East, and made to spit towards it at the evil
one, and renounce his works.
Tertullian says, that Christians were taken for worshipers of the Sun
because they prayed towards the East, after the manner of those who adored
the Sun. The Essenes—whom Eusebius calls Christians—always turned to
the east to pray. The Essenes met once a week, and spent the night in
singing hymns, &c., which lasted till sun-rising. As soon as dawn appeared,
they retired to their cells, after saluting one another. Pliny says the
Christians of Bithynia met before it was light, and sang hymns to Christ, as
to a God. After their service they saluted one another. Surely the
circumstances of the two classes of people meeting before daylight, is a
very remarkable coincidence. It is just what the Persian Magi, who were
Sun worshipers, were in the habit of doing.
When a Manichæan Christian came over to the orthodox Christians, he was
required to curse his former friends in the following terms:
"I curse Zarades (Zoroaster?) who, Manes said, had appeared as a god
before his time among the Indians and Persians, and whom he calls the Sun.
I curse those who say Christ is the Sun, and who make prayers to the Sun,
and who do not pray to the true God, only towards the East, but who turn
themselves round, following the motions of the Sun with their innumerable
supplications. I curse those person who say that Zarades and Budas and
Christ and the Sun are all one and the same."
There are not many circumstances more striking than that of Christ Jesus
being originally worshiped under the form of a LAMB—the actual "Lamb of
God, which taketh away the sins of the world." As we have already seen (in
Chap. XX.), it was not till the Council of Constantinople, called In Trullo,
held so late as the year 707, that pictures of Christ Jesus were ordered to be
drawn in the form of a man. It was ordained that, in the place of the figure
of a LAMB, the symbol used to that time, the figure of a man nailed to a
cross, should in future be used.[503:1] From this decree, the identity of the
worship of the Celestial Lamb and the Christian Saviour is certified beyond
the possibility of doubt, and the mode by which the ancient superstitions
were propagated is satisfactorily shown. Nothing can more clearly prove the
general practice than the order of a council to regulate it.
The worship of the constellation of Aries was the worship of the Sun in his
passage through that sign. "This constellation was called by the ancients the
Lamb of God. He was also called the Saviour, and was said to save mankind
from their sins. He was always honored with the appellation of Dominus or
Lord. He was called The Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the
world. The devotees addressed him in their litany, constantly repeating the
words, 'O Lamb of God, that taketh away the sins of the world, have mercy
upon us. Grant us thy peace.'"
On an ancient medal of the Phenicians, brought by Dr. Clark from Citium
(and described in his "Travels," vol. ii. ch. xi.) this Lamb of God is
described with the CROSS and the ROSARY, which shows that they were both
used in his worship.
Yearly the SUN-GOD, as the zodiacal horse (Aries) was supposed by the
Vedic Aryans to die to save all flesh. Hence the practice of sacrificing
horses. The "guardian spirits" of the prince Sakya Buddha sing the
following hymn:
We have seen, in Chapter XXXIII., that Christ Jesus was also symbolized as
a Fish, and that it is to be seen on all the ancient Christian monuments. But
what has the Christian Saviour to do with a Fish? Why was he called a
Fish? The answer is, because the fish was another emblem of the SUN.
Abarbanel says:
"The sign of his (Christ's) coming is the junction of Saturn and Jupiter, in
the Sign Pisces."[504:3]
Applying the astronomical emblem of Pisces to Jesus, does not seem more
absurd than applying the astronomical emblem of the Lamb. They applied
to him the monogram of the Sun, IHS, the astronomical and alchemical sign
of Aries, or the ram, or Lamb ; and, in short, what was there that was
Heathenish that they have not applied to him?
The preserving god Vishnu, the Sun, was represented as a fish, and so was
the Syrian Sun-god Dagon, who was also a Preserver or Saviour. The Fish
was sacred among many nations of antiquity, and is to be seen on their
monuments. Thus we see that everything at last centres in the SUN.
Constantine, the first Christian emperor, had on his coins the figure of the
Sun, with the legend: "To the Invincible Sun, my companion and guardian,"
as being a representation, says Mr. King, "either of the ancient Phœbus, or
the new Sun of Righteousness, equally acceptable to both Christian and
Gentile, from the double interpretation of which the type was susceptible."
[505:1]
The worship of the Sun, under the name of Mithra, "long survived in Rome,
under the Christian emperors, and, doubtless, much longer in the remoter
districts of the semi-independent provinces."[505:2]
FOOTNOTES:
[467:1] "In the Vedas, the Sun has twenty different names, not pure equivalents, but each
term descriptive of the Sun in one of its aspects. It is brilliant (Sûrya), the friend (Mitra),
generous (Aryaman), beneficent (Bhaga), that which nourishes (Pûshna), the Creator
(Tvashtar), the master of the sky (Divaspati), and so on." (Rev. S. Baring-Gould: Orig.
Relig. Belief, vol. i. p. 150.)
[467:2] Asiatic Researches, vol. i. p. 267.
[468:1] Preface to "Tales of Anct. Greece."
[468:2] See Appendix B.
[469:1] Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. pp. 51-53.
[473:1] Müller: Origin of Religions, pp. 264-268.
[473:2] John, i. 9.
[473:3] The Christian ceremonies of the Nativity are celebrated in Bethlehem and Rome,
even at the present time, very early in the morning.
[474:1] Quoted by Volney, Ruins, p. 166, and note.
[474:2] See Ibid. and Dupuis: Origin of Religious Belief, p. 236.
[474:3] See Chap. XXXIV.
[474:4] The Dawn was personified by the ancients—a virgin mother, who bore the Sun.
(See Max Müller's Chips, vol. ii. p. 137. Fiske's Myths and Mythmakers, p. 156, and Cox:
Tales of Ancient Greece, and Aryan Mytho.)
[474:5] In Sanscrit "Idâ" is the Earth, the wife of Dyaus (the Sky), and so we have before
us the mythical phrase, "the Sun at its birth rests on the earth." In other words, "the Sun at
birth is nursed in the lap of its mother."
[474:6] "The moment we understand the nature of a myth, all impossibilities,
contradictions and immoralities disappear. If a mythical personage be nothing more than a
name of the Sun, his birth may be derived from ever so many different mothers. He may be
the son of the Sky or of the Dawn or of the Sea or of the Night." (Renouf's Hibbert
Lectures, p. 108.)
[474:7] "The sign of the Celestial Virgin rises above the horizon at the moment in which
we fix the birth of the Lord Jesus Christ." (Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. i. p. 314, and
Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 147.)
"We have in the first decade the Sign of the Virgin, following the most ancient tradition of
the Persians, the Chaldeans, the Egyptians, Hermes and Æsculapius, a young woman called
in the Persian language, Seclinidos de Darzama; in the Arabic, Aderenedesa—that is to
say, a chaste, pure, immaculate virgin, suckling an infant, which some nations call Jesus (i.
e., Saviour), but which we in Greek call Christ." (Abulmazer.)
"In the first decade of the Virgin, rises a maid, called in Arabic, 'Aderenedesa,' that is: 'pure
immaculate virgin,' graceful in person, charming in countenance, modest in habit, with
loosened hair, holding in her hands two ears of wheat, sitting upon an embroidered throne,
nursing a BOY, and rightly feeding him in the place called Hebraea. A boy, I say, names
IESSUS by certain nations, which signifies Issa, whom they also call Christ in Greek."
(Kircher, Œdipus Ægypticus.)
[475:1] Max Müller: Origin of Religions, p. 261.
[475:2] Ibid. p. 230.
[475:3] "With scarcely an exception, all the names by which the Virgin goddess of the
Akropolis was known point to this mythology of the Dawn." (Cox: Aryan Myths, vol. i. p.
228.)
[475:4] We also read in the Vishnu Purana that: "The Sun of Achyuta (God, the
Imperishable) rose in the dawn of Devaki, to cause the lotus petal of the universe (Crishna)
to expand. On the day of his birth the quarters of the horizon were irradiate with joy," &c.
[475:5] Cox: Aryan Myths, vol. iii. pp. 105, and 130, vol. ii.
[475:6] Ibid. p. 133. See Legends in Chap. XVI.
[475:7] Fiske: Myths and Mythmakers, p. 113.
[476:1] Renouf: Hibbert Lectures, p. 111 and 161.
[476:2] Ibid. p. 161 and 179.
[476:3] Ibid. pp. 179.
[476:4] See Tales of Ancient Greece, pp. xxxi. and 82.
[476:5] The Bull symbolized the productive force in nature, and hence it was associated
with the SUN-gods. This animal was venerated by nearly all the peoples of antiquity.
(Wake: Phallism in Anct. Religs., p. 45.)
[476:6] See Aryan Myths, vol. i. p. 229.
[477:1] See Chap. XXXII.
[477:2] See Tales of Ancient Greece, p. xviii.
[477:3] "The idea entertained by the ancients that these god-begotten heroes were
engendered without any carnal intercourse, and that they were the sons of Jupiter, is, in
plain language, the result of the ethereal spirit, i. e., the Holy Spirit, operating on the virgin
mother Earth." (Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. 156.)
[477:4] Cox: Aryan Myths, p. 87.
[477:5] See Williams' Hinduism, p. 24, and Müller's Chips, vol. ii. pp. 277 and 290.
[477:6] See Bulfinch, p. 389.
[477:7] See Renouf's Hibbert Lectures, pp. 110, 111.
[477:8] Manners of the Germans, p. xi.
[478:1] See Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, pp. 81, 99, and 166.
The Moon was called by the ancients, "The Queen;" "The Highest Princess;" "The Queen
of Heaven;" "The Princess and Queen of Heaven;" &c. She was Istar, Ashera, Diana,
Artemis, Isis, Juno, Lucina, Astartê. (Goldzhier, pp. 158. Knight, pp. 99, 100.)
In the beginning of the eleventh book of Apuleius' Metamorphosis, Isis is represented as
addressing him thus: "I am present; I who am Nature, the parent of things, queen of all the
elements, &c., &c. The primitive Phrygians called me Pressinuntica, the mother of the
gods; the native Athenians, Ceropian Minerva; the floating Cyprians, Paphian Venus; the
arrow-bearing Cretans, Dictymian Diana; the three-tongued Sicilians, Stygian Proserpine;
and the inhabitants of Eleusis, the ancient goddess Ceres. Some again have invoked me as
Juno, others as Beliona, others as Hecate, and others as Rhamnusia: and those who are
enlightened by the emerging rays of the rising Sun, the Ethiopians, Ariians and Egyptians,
powerful in ancient learning, who reverence my divinity with ceremonies perfectly proper,
call me by a true appellation, 'Queen Isis.'" (Taylor's Mysteries, p. 76.)
[478:2] The "God the Father" of all nations of antiquity was nothing more than a
personification of the Sky or the Heavens. "The term Heaven (pronounced Thien) is used
everywhere in the Chinese classics for the Supreme Power, ruling and governing all the
affairs of men with an omnipotent and omniscient righteousness and goodness." (James
Legge.)
In one of the Chinese sacred books—the Shu-king—Heaven and Earth are called "Father
and Mother of all things." Heaven being the Father, and Earth the Mother. (Taylor:
Primitive Culture, pp. 294-296.)
The "God the Father" of the Indians is Dyaus, that is, the Sky. (Williams' Hinduism, p. 24.)
Ormuzd, the god of the ancient Persians, was a personification of the sky. Herodotus,
speaking of the Persians, says: "They are accustomed to ascend the highest part of the
mountains, and offer sacrifice to Jupiter (Ormuzd), and they call the whole circle of the
heavens by the name of Jupiter." (Herodotus, book 1, ch. 131.)
In Greek iconography Zeus is the Heaven. As Cicero says: "The refulgent Heaven above is
that which all men call, unanimously, Jove."
The Christian God supreme of the nineteenth century is still Dyaus Pitar, the "Heavenly
Father."
[478:3] Williams' Hinduism, p. 24.
[478:4] Müller: Origin of Religions, pp. 261, 290.
[478:5] Renouf: Hibbert Lectures, pp. 110, 111.
[478:6] See Note 2.
[478:7] See Cox: Tales of Ancient Greece, pp. xxxi. and 82, and Aryan Mythology, vol. i.
p. 229.
[479:1] Quoted by Westropp: Phallic Worship, p. 24.
[479:2] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 66. "In Phenician Mythology Ouranos (Heaven) weds
Ghe (the Earth) and by her becomes father of Oceanus, Hyperon, Iapetus, Cronos, and
other gods." (Phallic Worship, p. 26.)
[479:3] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 64.
[479:4] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, pp. 80, 93, 94, 406, 510, 511.
[480:1] See Chap. XIV.
[480:2] See Dupuis: Orig. Relig. Belief, p. 234. Higgins' Anacalypsis, vol. ii. pp. 96, 97,
and Prog. Relig. Ideas, vol. i. p. 272.
[480:3] Extracts from the Vedas. Müller's Chips, vol. ii. pp. 96 and 187.
[481:1] Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. i. p. 153.
[481:2] Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 133.
[481:3] When Christ Jesus was born, on a sudden there was a great light in the cave, so that
their eyes could not bear it. (Protevangelion, Apoc. ch. xiv.)
[481:4] "Perseus, Oidipous, Romulus and Cyrus are doomed to bring ruin on their parents.
They are exposed in their infancy on the hill-side, and rescued by a shepherd. All the solar
heroes begin life in this way. Whether, like Apollo, born of the dark night (Leto), or like
Oidipous, of the violet dawn (Iokaste), they are alike destined to bring destruction on their
parents, as the Night and the Dawn are both destroyed by the Sun." (Fiske: p. 198.)
[481:5] "The exposure of the child in infancy represents the long rays of the morning sun
resting on the hill-side." (Fiske: Myths and Mythmakers, p. 198.)
The Sun-hero Paris is exposed on the slopes of Ida, Oidipous on the slopes of Kithairon,
and Æsculapius on that of the mountain of Myrtles. This is the rays of the newly-born sun
resting on the mountain-side. (Cox: Aryan Myths, vol. i. pp. 64 and 80.)
In Sanscrit Ida is the Earth, and so we have the mythical phrase, the Sun at its birth is
exposed on Ida—the hill-side. The light of the sun must rest on the hill-side long before it
reaches the dells beneath. (See Cox: vol. i. p. 221, and Fiske: p. 114.)
[482:1] Even as late as the seventeenth century, a German writer would illustrate a thunder-
storm destroying a crop of corn, by a picture of a dragon devouring the produce of the field
with his flaming tongue and iron teeth. (See Fiske: Myths and Mythmakers, p. 17, and
Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii.)
[482:2] The history of the Saviour Hercules is so similar to that of the Saviour Christ Jesus,
that the learned Dr. Parkhurst was forced to say, "The labors of Hercules seem to have been
originally designed as emblematic memorials of what the REAL Son of God, the Saviour
of the world, was to do and suffer for our sakes, bringing a cure for all our ills, as the
Orphic hymn speaks of Hercules."
[482:3] Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, pp. 158, 166, and 168.
[482:4] In ancient mythology, all heroes of light were opposed by the "Old Serpent," the
Devil, symbolized by Serpents, Dragons, Sphinxes and other monsters. The Serpent was,
among the ancient Eastern nations, the symbol of Evil, of Winter, of Darkness and of
Death. It also symbolized the dark cloud, which, by harboring the rays of the Sun,
preventing its shining, and therefore, is apparently attempting to destroy it. The Serpent is
one of the chief mystic personifications of the Rig-Veda, under the names of Ahi, Suchna,
and others. They represent the Cloud, the enemy of the Sun, keeping back the fructifying
rays. Indra struggles victoriously against him, and spreads life on the earth, with the
shining warmth of the Father of Life, the Creator, the Sun.
Buddha, the Lord and Saviour, was described as a superhuman organ of light, to whom a
superhuman organ of darkness, Mara, the Evil Serpent, was opposed. He, like Christ Jesus,
resisted the temptations of this evil one, and is represented sitting on a serpent, as if its
conqueror. (See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, p. 39.)
Crishna also overcame the evil one, and is represented "bruising the head of the serpent,"
and standing upon it. (See vol. i. of Asiatic Researches, and vol. ii. of Higgins'
Anacalypsis.)
In Egyptian Mythology, one of the names of the god-Sun was Râ. He had an adversary who
was called Apap, represented in the form of a serpent. (See Renouf's Hibbert Lectures, p.
109.)
Horus, the Egyptian incarnate god, the Mediator, Redeemer and Saviour, is represented in
Egyptian art as overcoming the Evil Serpent, and standing triumphantly upon him. (See
Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 158, and Monumental Christianity, p. 402.)
Osiris, Ormuzd, Mithras, Apollo, Bacchus, Hercules, Indra, Œdipus, Quetzalcoatle, and
many other Sun-gods, overcame the Evil One, and are represented in the above described
manner. (See Cox's Tales of Ancient Greece, p. xxvii. and Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 129.
Baring-Gould's Curious Myths, p. 256. Bulfinch's Age of Fable, p. 34. Bunsen's Angel-
Messiah, p. x., and Kingsborough's Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 176.)
[483:1] The crucifixion of the Sun-gods is simply the power of Darkness triumphing over
the "Lord of Light," and Winter overpowering the Summer. It was at the Winter solstice
that the ancients wept for Tammuz, the fair Adonis, and other Sun-gods, who were put to
death by the boar, slain by the thorn of winter. (See Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 113.)
Other versions of the same myth tell us of Eurydike stung to death by the hidden serpent,
of Sifrit smitten by Hagene (the Thorn), of Isfendiyar slain by the thorn or arrow of
Rustem, of Achilleus vulnerable only in the heel, of Brynhild enfolded within the dragon's
coils, of Meleagros dying as the torch of doom is burnt out, of Baldur, the brave and pure,
smitten by the fatal mistletoe, and of Crishna and others being crucified.
In Egyptian mythology, Set, the destroyer, triumphs in the West. He is the personification
of Darkness and Winter, and the Sun-god whom he puts to death, is Horus the Saviour.
(See Renouf's Hibbert Lectures, pp. 112-115.)
[483:2] "In the Rig-Veda the god Vishnu is often named as a manifestation of the Solar
energy, or rather as a form of the Sun." (Indian Wisdom, p. 322.)
[483:3] Crishna says: "I am Vishnu, Brahma, Indra, and the source as well as the
destruction of things, the creator and the annihilator of the whole aggregate of existences."
(Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 131.)
[484:1] See Chap. XX.
[484:2] Indra, who was represented as a crucified god, is also the Sun. No sooner is he
born than he speaks to his mother. Like Apollo and all other Sun-gods he has golden locks,
and like them he is possessed of an inscrutable wisdom. He is also born of a virgin—the
Dawn. Crishna and Indra are one. (See Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. i. pp. 88 and 341; vol.
ii. p. 131.)
[484:3] Wake: Phallism, &c., p. 55.
[484:4] See Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 113.
[484:5] Ibid. pp. 115 and 125.
[484:6] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 157.
[484:7] Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology, p. 88.
A great number of the Solar heroes or Sun-gods are forced to endure being bound, which
indicates the tied-up power of the sun in winter. (Goldzhier: Hebrew Mythology, p. 406.)
[484:8] The Sun, as climbing the heights of heaven, is an arrogant being, given to making
exorbitant claims, who must be bound to the fiery cross. "The phrases which described the
Sun as revolving daily on his four-spoked cross, or as doomed to sink in the sky when his
orb had reached the zenith, would give rise to the stories of Ixion on his flaming wheel."
(Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 27.)
[484:9] "So was Ixion bound on the fiery wheel, and the sons of men see the flaming
spokes day by day as it whirls in the high heaven."
[485:1] Cox: Tales of Ancient Greece, p. xxxii.
[485:2] Ibid. p. xxxiii.
[485:3] "That the story of the Trojan war is almost wholly mythical, has been conceded
even by the stoutest champions of Homeric unity." (Rev. G. W. Cox.)
[485:4] See Müller's Science of Religion, p. 186.
[485:5] See Calmet's Fragments, vol. ii. pp. 21, 22.
[486:1] Nimrod: vol. i. p. 278, in Anac., i. p. 503.
[486:2] At Miletus was the crucified Apollo—Apollo, who overcome the Serpent or evil
principle. Thus Callimachus, celebrating this achievement, in his hymn to Apollo, has
these remarkable words:
[486:3] These words apply to Christ Jesus, as well as Semiramis, according to the
Christian Father Ignatius. In his Epistle to the Church at Ephesus, he says: "Now the
virginity of Mary, and he who was born of her, was kept in secret from the prince of this
world, as was also the death of our Lord: three of the mysteries the most spoken of
throughout the world, yet done in secret by God."
[487:1] The Rosicrucians, p. 260.
[487:2] Ibid.
[488:1] The Sun-gods Apollo, Indra, Wittoba or Crishna, and Christ Jesus, are represented
as having their feet pierced with nails (See Cox: Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. p. 23, and Moor's
Hindu Pantheon.)
[489:1] Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., pp. 87, 88.
[489:2] Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 32.
[489:3] "This notion is quite consistent with the ideas entertained by the Phenicians as to
the Serpent, which they supposed to have the quality of putting off its old age, and
assuming a second youth." Sanchoniathon: (Quoted by Wake: Phallism, &c., p. 43.)
[489:4] Une serpent qui tient sa queue dans sa gueule et dans le circle qu'il decrit, ces trois
lettres Greques ΓΞΕ, qui sont le nombre 365. Le Serpent, qui est d'ordinaire un emblème
de l'eternetè est ici celui de Soleil et des ses revolutions. (Beausobre: Hist. de Manich. tom.
ii. p. 55. Quoted by Lardner, vol. viii. p. 379.)
"This idea existed even in America. The great century of the Aztecs was encircled by a
serpent grasping its own tail, and the great calendar stone is entwined by serpents bearing
human heads in their distended jaws."
"The annual passage of the Sun, through the signs of the zodiac, being in an oblique path,
resembles, or at least the ancients thought so, the tortuous movements of the Serpent, and
the facility possessed by this reptile of casting off his skin and producing out of itself a new
covering every year, bore some analogy to the termination of the old year and the
commencement of the new one. Accordingly, all the ancient spheres—the Persian, Indian,
Egyptian, Barbaric, and Mexican—were surrounded by the figure of a serpent holding its
tail in its mouth." (Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 249.)
[489:5] Wake: Phallism, p. 42.
[489:6] See Cox: Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. p. 128.
[490:1] Being the most intimately connected with the reproduction of life on earth, the
Linga became the symbol under which the Sun, invoked with a thousand names, has been
worshiped throughout the world as the restorer of the powers of nature after the long sleep
or death of Winter. In the brazen Serpent of the Pentateuch, the two emblems of the Cross
and Serpent, the quiescent and energizing Phallos, are united. (Cox: Aryan Mytho. vol. ii.
pp. 113-118.)
[490:2] Wake: Phallism, &c., p. 60.
[491:1] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 155.
[491:2] Wake: Phallism in Anct. Religs., p. 72.
[491:3] Ibid. p. 73. Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 195.
[491:4] Faber: Orig. Pagan Idol., in Squire, p. 158.
[491:5] Ibid.
[491:6] Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 375.
[491:7] Ibid.
[491:8] Squire: p. 161.
[491:9] Ibid. p. 185.
[492:1] Squire: p. 169.
[492:2] Lundy: Monumental Christianity, p. 185.
[492:3] "SAVIOUR was a common title of the SUN-gods of antiquity." (Wake: Phallism in
Anct. Religs., p. 55.)
The ancient Greek writers speak of the Sun, as the "Generator and Nourisher of all
Things;" the "Ruler of the World;" the "First of the Gods," and the "Supreme Lord of all
Beings." (Knight: Ancient Art and Mytho., p. 37.)
Pausanias (500 B. C.) speaks of "The Sun having the surname of SAVIOUR." (Ibid. p. 98,
note.)
"There is a very remarkable figure copied in Payne Knight's Work, in which we see on a
man's shoulders a cock's head, whilst on the pediment are placed the words: "THE SAVIOUR
OF THE WORLD." (Inman: Anct. Faiths, vol. i. p. 537.) This refers to the SUN. The cock
being the natural herald of the day, he was therefore sacred, among the ancients, to the
Sun." (See Knight: Anct. Art and Mytho., p. 70, and Lardner: vol. viii. p. 377.)
[493:1] The name Jesus is the same as Joshua, and signifies Saviour.
[493:2] Justin Martyr: Dialog. Cum Typho. Quoted in Gibbon's Rome, vol. i. p. 582.
[493:3] Matt. xxvii. 55.
[493:4] The ever-faithful woman who is always near at the death of the Sun-god is "the fair
and tender light which sheds its soft hue over the Eastern heaven as the Sun sinks in death
beneath the Western waters." (Cox: Aryan Myths, vol. i. p. 223.)
[493:5] See Ibid. vol. i. p. 80.
[493:6] Bunsen: The Angel-Messiah, p. 49.
[493:7] Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. i. p. 223.
[494:1] See Tales of Ancient Greece, p. xxxi.
[494:2] PETRÆUS was an interchangeable synonym of the name Oceanus.
[494:3] "Then Peter took him, and began to rebuke him, saying, Be it far from thee, Lord,
this shall not be unto thee." (Matt. xvi. 22.)
[494:4] See Potter's Æschylus.
[494:5] Matt. xxvii. 45.
[494:6] As the Sun dies, or sinks in the West, blacker and blacker grows the evening
shades, till there is darkness on the face of the earth. Then from the high heavens comes
down the thick clouds, and the din of its thunder crashes through the air. (Description of
the death of Hercules, Tales of Ancient Greece, pp. 61, 62.)
[494:7] It Is the battle of the clouds over the dead or dying Sun, which is to be seen in the
legendary history of many Sun-gods. (Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 91.)
[494:8] This was one of the latest additions of the Sun-myth to the history of Christ Jesus.
This has been proved not only to have been an invention after the Apostles' time, but even
after the time of Eusebius (A. D. 325). The doctrine of the descent into hell was not in the
ancient creeds or rules of faith. It is not to be found in the rules of faith delivered by
Irenæus (A. D. 190), by Origen (A. D. 230), or by Tertullian (A. D. 200-210). It is not
expressed in those creeds which were made by the Councils as larger explications of the
Apostles' Creed; not in the Nicene, or Constantinopolitan; not in those of Ephesus, or
Chalcedon; not in those confessions made at Sardica, Antioch, Selencia, Sirmium, &c.
[495:1] At the end of his career, the Sun enters the lowest regions, the bowels of the earth,
therefore nearly all Sun-gods are made to "descend into hell," and remain there for three
days and three nights, for the reason that from the 22d to the 25th of December, the Sun
apparently remains in the same place. Thus Jonah, a personification of the Sun (see Chap.
IX.), who remains three days and three nights in the bowels of the earth—typified by a fish
—is made to pay: "Out of the belly of hell cried I, and thou heardst my voice."
[495:2] See Chapter XXII.
[495:3] Baring-Gould: Curious Myths, p. 260.
"The mighty Lord appeared in the form of a man, and enlightened those places which had
ever before been in darkness; and broke asunder the fetters which before could not be
broken; and with his invincible power visited those who sat in the deep darkness by
iniquity, and the shadow of death by sin. Then the King of Glory trampled upon Death,
seized the Prince of Hell, and deprived him of all his power." (Description of Christ's
Descent into Hell. Nicodemus: Apoc.)
[495:4] "The women weeping for Tammuz was no more than expressive of the Sun's loss
of power in the winter quarter." (King's Gnostics, p. 102. See also, Cox: Aryan Mytho.,
vol. ii. p. 113.)
After remaining for three days and three nights in the lowest regions, the Sun begins to
ascend, thus he "rises from the dead," as it were, and "ascends into heaven."
[496:1] Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 174.
[496:2] Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 100.
[496:3] Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 125.
[496:4] Egyptian Belief, p. 182.
[496:5] Ibid.
[496:6] Origin of Religions, p. 264.
[497:1] Origin of Religions, p. 268.
[497:2] Aryan Mythology, vol. i. p. 384.
[497:3] Origin of Religion, pp. 264-268.
[498:1] The number twelve appears in many of the Sun-myths. It refers to the twelve hours
of the day or night, or the twelve moons of the lunar year. (Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. i.
p. 165. Bonwick: Egyptian Belief, p. 175.)
Osiris, the Egyptian Saviour, had twelve apostles. (Bonwick, p. 175.)
In all religions of antiquity the number twelve, which applies to the twelve signs of the
zodiac, are reproduced in all kinds and sorts of forms. For instance: such are the twelve
great gods; the twelve apostles of Osiris; the twelve apostles of Jesus; the twelve sons of
Jacob, or the twelve tribes; the twelve altars of James; the twelve labors of Hercules; the
twelve shields of Mars; the twelve brothers Arvaux; the twelve gods Consents; the twelve
governors in the Manichean System; the adectyas of the East Indies; the twelve asses of the
Scandinavians; the city of the twelve gates in the Apocalypse; the twelve wards of the city;
the twelve sacred cushions, on which the Creator sits in the cosmogony of the Japanese; the
twelve precious stones of the rational, or the ornament worn by the high priest of the Jews,
&c., &c. (See Dupuis, pp. 39, 40.)
[499:1] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 505.
[499:2] Luke, ii. 32.
[499:3] John, xii, 46.
[499:4] John, ix. v.
[499:5] I. John, i. 5.
[500:1] Monumental Christianity, p. 117.
[501:1] See Monumental Christianity, pp. 189, 191, 192, 238, and 296.
[501:2] See Bonwick's Egyptian Belief, p. 283.
[501:3] King's Gnostics, p. 68.
[501:4] Ibid. p. 137.
[501:5] See Chapter XX.
[501:6] Hist. of Our Lord in Art, vol. i. p. 31.
[502:1] Geikie: Life of Christ, vol. i. p. 151.
[502:2] Monumental Christianity, p. 231.
[502:3] King's Gnostics, p. 48.
[502:4] Ibid. p. 68.
[502:5] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 13.
[503:1] Following are the words of the decree now in the Vatican library: "In quibusdam
sanctorum imaginum picturis agnus exprimitur, &c. Nos igitur veteres figuras atque
umbras, et veritatis notas, et signa ecclesiæ tradita, complectentes, gratiam, et veritatem
anteponimus, quam ut plenitudinem legis acceptimus. Itaque id quod perfectum est, in
picturis etiam omnium oculis subjiciamus, agnum illum qui mundi peccatum tollit,
Christum Deum nostrum, loco veteris Ayni, humanâ formâ posthæ exprimendum
decrevimus," &c.
[504:1] "The solar horse, with two serpents upon his head (the Buddhist Aries) is Buddha's
symbol, and Aries is the symbol of Christ." (Arthur Lillie: Buddha and Early Buddhism, p.
110.)
[504:2] Quoted by Lillie: Buddha and Early Buddhism, p. 93.
[504:3] Quoted by King: The Gnostics &c., p. 138.
[505:1] Quoted by King: The Gnostics, &c., p. 49.
[505:2] Ibid. p. 45.
[505:3] Indra, the crucified Sun-god of the Hindoos, was represented with golden locks.
(Cox: Aryan Myths, vol. i. p. 341.)
Mithras, the Persian Saviour, was represented with long flowing locks.
Izdubar, the god and hero of the Chaldeans, was represented with long flowing locks of
hair (Smith: Chaldean Account of Genesis, p. 193), and so was his counterpart, the Hebrew
Samson.
"The Sâkya-prince (Buddha) is described as an Aryan by Buddhistic tradition; his face was
reddish, his hair of light color and curly, his general appearance of great beauty." (Bunsen:
The Angel-Messiah, p. 15.)
"Serapis has, in some instances, long hair formally turned back, and disposed in ringlets
hanging down upon his breast and shoulders like that of a woman. His whole person, too,
is always enveloped in drapery reaching to his feet." (Knight: Ancient Art and Mythology,
p. 104.)
"As for yellow hair, there is no evidence that Greeks have ever commonly possessed it; but
no other color would do for a solar hero, and it accordingly characterizes the entire
company of them, wherever found." (Fiske: Myths and Mythmakers, p. 202.)
Helios (the Sun) is called by the Greeks the "yellow-haired." (Goldzhier: Hebrew Mytho.,
p. 137.)
The Sun's rays is signified by the flowing golden locks which stream from the head of
Kephalos, and fall over the shoulders of Bellerophon. (Cox: Aryan Mytho., vol. i. p. 107.)
Perseus, son of the virgin Danae, was called the "Golden Child." (Ibid. vol. ii. p. 58.) "The
light of early morning is not more pure than was the color on his fair cheeks, and the
golden locks streamed bright over his shoulders, like the rays of the sun when they rest on
the hills at midday." (Tales of Ancient Greece, p. 83.)
The Saviour Dionysus wore a long flowing robe, and had long golden hair, which streamed
from his head over his shoulders. (Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 293.)
Ixion was the "Beautiful and Mighty," with golden hair flashing a glory from his head,
dazzling as the rays which stream from Helios, when he drives his chariot up the heights of
heaven; and his flowing robe glistened as he moved, like the vesture which the Sun-god
gave to the wise maiden Medeia, who dwelt in Kolchis. (Tales of Ancient Greece, p. 47.)
Theseus enters the city of Athens, as Christ Jesus is said to have entered Jerusalem, with a
long flowing robe, and with his golden hair tied gracefully behind his head. His "soft
beauty" excites the mockery of the populace, who pause in their work to jest with him.
(Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 63.)
Thus we see that long locks of golden hair, and a flowing robe, are mythological attributes
of the Sun.
[506:1] Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. i. p. 49.
[506:2] We have already seen (in Chapter XX.) that the word "Christ" signifies the
"Anointed," or the "Messiah," and that many other personages beside Jesus of Nazareth
had this title affixed to their names.
[507:1] The theory which has been set forth in this chapter, is also more fully illustrated in
Appendix C.
[507:2] These three letters, the monogram of the Sun, are the celebrated I. H. S., which are
to be seen in Roman Catholic churches at the present day, and which are now the
monogram of the Sun-god Christ Jesus. (See Chapter XXXVI.)
CHAPTER XL.
CONCLUSION.
We now come to the last, but certainly not least, question to be answered;
which is, what do we really know of the man Jesus of Nazareth? How much
of the Gospel narratives can we rely upon as fact?
Jesus of Nazareth is so enveloped in the mists of the past, and his history so
obscured by legend, that it may be compared to footprints in the sand. We
know some one has been there, but as to what manner of man he may have
been, we certainly know little as fact. The Gospels, the only records we
have of him,[508:1] have been proven, over and over again, unhistorical and
legendary; to state anything as positive about the man is nothing more nor
less than assumption; we can therefore conjecture only. Liberal writers
philosophize and wax eloquent to little purpose, when, after demolishing
the historical accuracy of the New Testament, they end their task by
eulogizing the man Jesus, claiming for him the highest praise, and asserting
that he was the best and grandest of our race;[508:2] but this manner of
reasoning (undoubtedly consoling to many) facts do not warrant. We may
consistently revere his name, and place it in the long list of the great and
noble, the reformers and religious teachers of the past, all of whom have
done their part in bringing about the freedom we now enjoy, but to go
beyond this, is, to our thinking, unwarranted.
If the life of Jesus of Nazareth, as related in the books of the New
Testament, be in part the story of a man who really lived and suffered, that
story has been so interwoven with images borrowed from myths of a
bygone age, as to conceal forever any fragments of history which may lie
beneath them. Gautama Buddha was undoubtedly an historical personage,
yet the Sun-god myth has been added to his history to such an extent that
we really know nothing positive about him. Alexander the Great was an
historical personage, yet his history is one mass of legends. So it is with
Julius Cesar, Cyrus, King of Persia, and scores of others. "The story of
Cyrus' perils in infancy belongs to solar mythology as much as the stories
of the magic slipper, of Charlemagne and Barbarossa. His grandfather,
Astyages, is purely a mythical creation, his name being identical with that
of the night demon, Azidahaka, who appears in the Shah-Nameh as the
biting serpent."
The actual Jesus is inaccessible to scientific research. His image cannot be
recovered. He left no memorial in writing of himself; his followers were
illiterate; the mind of his age was confused. Paul received only traditions of
him, how definite we have no means of knowing, apparently not significant
enough to be treasured, nor consistent enough to oppose a barrier to his own
speculations. As M. Renan says: "The Christ who communicates private
revelations to him is a phantom of his own making;" "it is himself he listens
to, while fancying that he hears Jesus."[509:1]
In studying the writings of the early advocates of Christianity, and Fathers
of the Christian Church, where we would naturally look for the language
that would indicate the real occurrence of the facts of the Gospel—if real
occurrences they had ever been—we not only find no such language, but
everywhere find every sort of sophistical ambages, ramblings from the
subject, and evasions of the very business before them, as if on purpose to
balk our research, and insult our skepticism. If we travel to the very
sepulchre of Christ Jesus, it is only to discover that he was never there:
history seeks evidence of his existence as a man, but finds no more trace of
it than of the shadow that flits across the wall. "The Star of Bethlehem"
shone not upon her path, and the order of the universe was suspended
without her observation.
She asks, with the Magi of the East, "Where is he that is born King of the
Jews?" and, like them, finds no solution of her inquiry, but the guidance that
guides as well to one place as another; descriptions that apply to
Æsculapius, Buddha and Crishna, as well as to Jesus; prophecies, without
evidence that they were ever prophesied; miracles, which those who are
said to have seen, are said also to have denied seeing; narratives without
authorities, facts without dates, and records without names. In vain do the
so-called disciples of Jesus point to the passages in Josephus and Tacitus;
[510:1] in vain do they point to the spot on which he was crucified; to the
fragments of the true cross, or the nails with which he was pierced, and to
the tomb in which he was laid. Others have done as much for scores of
mythological personages who never lived in the flesh. Did not Damus, the
beloved disciple of Apollonius of Tyana, while on his way to India, see, on
Mt. Caucasus, the identical chains with which Prometheus had been bound
to the rocks? Did not the Scythians[510:2] say that Hercules had visited their
country? and did they not show the print of his foot upon a rock to
substantiate their story?[510:3] Was not his tomb to be seen at Cadiz, where
his bones were shown?[510:4] Was not the tomb of Bacchus to be seen in
Greece?[510:5] Was not the tomb of Apollo to be seen at Delphi?[510:6] Was
not the tomb of Achilles to be seen at Dodona, where Alexander the Great
honored it by placing a crown upon it?[510:7] Was not the tomb of
Æsculapius to be seen in Arcadia, in a grove consecrated to him, near the
river Lusius?[510:8] Was not the tomb of Deucalion—he who was saved
from the Deluge—long pointed out near the sanctuary of Olympian Jove, in
Athens?[510:9] Was not the tomb of Osiris to be seen in Egypt, where, at
stated seasons, the priests went in solemn procession, and covered it with
flowers?[510:10] Was not the tomb of Jonah—he who was "swallowed up by
a big fish"—to be seen at Nebi-Yunus, near Mosul?[510:11] Are not the
tombs of Adam, Eve, Cain, Abel, Seth, Abraham, and other Old Testament
characters, to be seen even at the present day?[510:12] And did not the
Emperor Constantine dedicate a beautiful church over the tomb of St.
George, the warrior saint?[510:13] Of what value, then, is such evidence of
the existence of such an individual as Jesus of Nazareth? The fact is, "the
records of his life are so very scanty, and these have been so shaped and
colored and modified by the hands of ignorance and superstition and party
prejudice and ecclesiastical purpose, that it is hard to be sure of the original
outlines."
In the first two centuries the professors of Christianity were divided into
many sects, but these might be all resolved into two divisions—one
consisting of Nazarenes, Ebionites, and orthodox; the other of Gnostics,
under which all the remaining sects arranged themselves. The former are
supposed to have believed in Jesus crucified, in the common, literal
acceptation of the term; the latter—believers in the Christ as an Æon—
though they admitted the crucifixion, considered it to have been in some
mystic way—perhaps what might be called spiritualiter, as it is called in the
Revelation: but notwithstanding the different opinions they held, they all
denied that the Christ did really die, in the literal acceptation of the term, on
the cross.[511:1] The Gnostic, or Oriental, Christians undoubtedly took their
doctrine from the Indian crucifixion[511:2] (of which we have treated in
Chapters XX. and XXXIX.), as well as many other tenets with which we
have found the Christian Church deeply tainted. They held that:
"To deliver the soul, a captive in darkness, the 'Prince of Light,' the 'Genius
of the Sun,' charged with the redemption of the intellectual world, of which
the Sun is the type, manifested itself among men; that the light appeared in
the darkness, but the darkness comprehended it not; that, in fact, light could
not unite with darkness; it put on only the appearance of the human body;
that at the crucifixion Christ Jesus only appeared to suffer. His person
having disappeared, the bystanders saw in his place a cross of light, over
which a celestial voice proclaimed these words; 'The Cross of Light is
called Logos, Christos, the Gate, the Joy.'"
Several of the texts of the Gospel histories were quoted with great
plausibility by the Gnostics in support of their doctrine. The story of Jesus
passing through the midst of the Jews when they were about to cast him
headlong from the brow of a hill (Luke iv. 29, 30), and when they were
going to stone him (John iii. 59; x. 31, 39), were examples not easily
refuted.
The Manichean Christian Bishop Faustus expresses himself in the following
manner:
"Do you receive the gospel? (ask ye). Undoubtedly I do! Why then, you
also admit that Christ was born? Not so; for it by no means follows that in
believing the gospel, I should therefore believe that Christ was born! Do
you then think that he was of the Virgin Mary? Manes hath said, 'Far be it
that I should ever own that Our Lord Jesus Christ . . . . . . .'" etc.[512:1]
Tertullian's manner of reasoning on the evidences of Christianity is also in
the same vein, as we saw in our last chapter.[512:2]
Mr. King, speaking of the Gnostic Christians, says:
"Their chief doctrines had been held for centuries before (their time) in
many of the cities in Asia Minor. There, it is probable, they first came into
existence as Mystæ, upon the establishment of direct intercourse with India,
under the Seleucidæ and Ptolemies. The college of Essenes and Megabyzæ
at Ephesus, the Orphics of Thrace, the Curets of Crete, are all merely
branches of one antique and common religion, and that originally Asiatic."
[512:3]
These early Christian Mystics are alluded to in several instances in the New
Testament. For example:
"Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God;
and every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is
not of God."[512:4] "For many deceivers are entered into the world, who
confess not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh."[512:5]
This is language that could not have been used, if the reality of Christ Jesus'
existence as a man could not have been denied, or, it would certainly seem,
if the apostle himself had been able to give any evidence whatever of the
claim.
The quarrels on this subject lasted for a long time among the early
Christians. Hermas, speaking of this, says to the brethren:
"Take heed, my children, that your dissensions deprive you not of your
lives. How will ye instruct the elect of God, when ye yourselves want
correction? Wherefore admonish one another, and be at peace among
yourselves; that I, standing before your father, may give an account of you
unto the Lord."[512:6]
Ignatius, in his Epistle to the Smyrnæans, says:[512:7]
"Only in the name of Jesus Christ, I undergo all, to suffer together with him;
he who was made a perfect man strengthening me. Whom some, not
knowing, do deny; or rather have been denied by him, being the advocates
of death, rather than of the truth. Whom neither the prophecies, nor the law
of Moses, have persuaded; nor the Gospel itself even to this day, nor the
sufferings of any one of us. For they think also the same thing of us; for
what does a man profit me, if he shall praise me, and blaspheme my Lord;
not confessing that he was truly made man?"
After reading this we can say with the writer of Timothy,[513:4] "Without
controversy, great is the MYSTERY of godliness."
Beside those who denied that Christ Jesus had ever been manifest in the
flesh, there were others who denied that he had been crucified.[513:5] This is
seen from the words of Justin Martyr, in his Apology for the Christian
Religion, written A. D. 141, where he says:
"As to the objection to our Jesus's being crucified, I say, suffering was
common to all the Sons of Jove."[513:6]
This is as much as to say: "You Pagans claim that your incarnate gods and
Saviours suffered and died, then why should not we claim the same for our
Saviour?"
The Koran, referring to the Jews, says:
"They have not believed in Jesus, and have spoken against Mary a grievous
calumny, and have said: 'Verily we have slain Christ Jesus, the son of Mary'
(the apostle of God). Yet they slew him not, neither crucified him, but he
was represented by one in his likeness. And verily they who disagreed
concerning him were in a doubt as to this matter, and had no sure
knowledge thereof, but followed only an uncertain opinion."[514:1]
This passage alone, from the Mohammedan Bible, is sufficient to show, if
other evidence were wanting, that the early Christians "disagreed
concerning him," and that "they had no sure knowledge thereof, but
followed only an uncertain opinion."
In the books which are now called Apocryphal, but which were the most
quoted, and of equal authority with the others, and which were voted not the
word of God—for obvious reasons—and were therefore cast out of the
canon, we find many allusions to the strife among the early Christians. For
instance; in the "First Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians,"[514:2] we read
as follows:
"Wherefore are there strifes, and anger, and divisions, and schisms, and
wars, among us? . . . Why do we rend and tear in pieces the members of
Christ, and raise seditions against our own body? and are come to such a
height of madness, as to forget that we are members one of another."
FOOTNOTES:
[508:1] "For knowledge of the man Jesus, of his idea and his aims, and of the outward
form of his career, the New Testament is our only hope. If this hope fails, the pillared
firmament of his starry fame is rottenness; the base of Christianity, so far as it was personal
and individual, is built on stubble." (John W. Chadwick.)
[508:2] M. Renan, after declaring Jesus to be a "fanatic," and admitting that, "his friends
thought him, at moments, beside himself;" and that, "his enemies declared him possessed
by a devil," says: "The man here delineated merits a place at the summit of human
grandeur." "This is the Supreme man, a sublime personage;" "to call him divine is no
exaggeration." Other liberal writers have written in the same strain.
[509:1] "The Christ of Paul was not a person, but an idea; he took no pains to learn the
facts about the individual Jesus. He actually boasted that the Apostles had taught him
nothing. His Christ was an ideal conception, evolved from his own feeling and
imagination, and taking on new powers and attributes from year to year to suit each new
emergency." (John W. Chadwick.)
[510:1] This subject is considered in Appendix D.
[510:2] Scythia was a name employed in ancient times, to denote a vast, indefinite, and
almost unknown territory north and east of the Black Sea, the Caspian, and the Sea of Aral.
[510:3] See Herodotus, book 4, ch. 82.
[510:4] See Dupuis, p. 264.
[510:5] See Knight's Anct. Art and Mythology, p. 96, and Mysteries of Adoni, p. 90.
[510:6] See Dupuis, p. 264.
[510:7] See Bell's Pantheon, vol. i. p. 7.
[510:8] See Ibid. vol. i. p. 27.
[510:9] Ibid.
[510:10] Ibid. vol. i. p. 2, and Bonwick, p. 155.
[510:11] See Chambers, art. "Jonah."
[510:12] See Bible for Learners, vol. i. p. 152, and Goldzhier, p. 280.
[510:13] See Curious Myths, p. 264.
[511:1] "Whilst, in one part of the Christian world, the chief objects of interest were the
human nature and human life of Jesus, in another part of the Christian world the views
taken of his person because so idealistic, that his humanity was reduced to a phantom
without reality. The various Gnostic systems generally agreed in saying that the Christ was
an Æon, the redeemer of the spirits of men, and that he had little or no contact with their
corporeal nature." (A. Réville: Hist. of the Dogma of the Deity of Jesus.)
[511:2] Epiphanius says that there were TWENTY heresies BEFORE CHRIST, and there can
be no doubt that there is much truth in the observation, for most of the rites and doctrines
of the Christians of all sects existed before the time of Jesus of Nazareth.
[512:1] "Accipis avengelium? et maxime. Proinde ergo et natum accipis Christum. Non ita
est. Neque enim sequitur ut si evangelium accipio, idcirco et natum accipiam Christum.
Ergo non putas cum ex Maria Virgine esse? Manes dixit, Absit ut Dominum nostrum
Jesum Christum per naturalia pudenda mulieris de scendisse confitear." (Lardner's Works,
vol. iv. p. 20.)
[512:2] "I maintain," says he, "that the Son of God was born: why am I not ashamed of
maintaining such a thing? Why! because it is itself a shameful thing—I maintain that the
Son of God died: well, that is wholly credible because it is monstrously absurd. I maintain
that after having been buried, he rose again: and that I take to be absolutely true, because it
was manifestly impossible."
[512:3] King's Gnostics, p. 1.
[512:4] I. John, iv. 2, 3.
[512:5] II. John, 7.
[512:6] 1st Book Hermas: Apoc., ch. iii.
[512:7] Chapter II.
[513:1] Chapter II.
[513:2] Chapter III.
[513:3] Chapter III.
[513:4] I. Timothy, iii. 16.
[513:5] Irenæus, speaking of them, says: "They hold that men ought not to confess him
who was crucified, but him who came in the form of man, and was supposed to be
crucified, and was called Jesus." (See Lardner: vol. viii. p. 353.) They could not conceive
of "the first-begotten Son of God" being put to death on a cross, and suffering like an
ordinary being, so they thought Simon of Cyrene must have been substituted for him, as
the ram was substituted in the place of Isaac. (See Ibid. p. 857.)
[513:6] Apol. 1, ch. xxi.
[514:1] Koran, ch. iv.
[514:2] Chapter XX.
[514:3] Chapter II.
[514:4] Col. i. 23.
[514:5] I. Timothy, iii. 16.
[514:6] The authenticity of these Epistles has been freely questioned, even by the most
conservative critics.
[515:1] See Bunsen's Angel-Messiah, and Chapter XXXVII., this work.
[515:2] Quoted by Max Müller: The Science of Relig., p. 228.
[515:3] Ch. cxvii.
[515:4] Ch. xxii.
[516:1] Ch. iv. 5.
[516:2] Josephus: Antiq., b. xx. ch. v. 2.
[516:3] It is true there was another Annas high-priest at Jerusalem, but this was when
Gratus was procurator of Judea, some twelve or fifteen years before Pontius Pilate held the
same office. (See Josephus: Antiq., book xviii. ch. ii. 3.)
[516:4] See Appendix D.
[516:5] See the Martyrdom of Jesus, p. 100.
[516:6] According to Dio Cassius, Plutarch, Strabo and others, there existed, in the time of
Herod, among the Roman Syrian heathens, a wide-spread and deep sympathy for a
"Crucified King of the Jews." This was the youngest son of Aristobul, the heroic
Maccabee. In the year 43 B. C., we find this young man—Antigonus—in Palestine
claiming the crown, his cause having been declared just by Julius Cæsar. Allied with the
Parthians, he maintained himself in his royal position for six years against Herod and Mark
Antony. At last, after a heroic life and reign, he fell in the hands of this Roman. "Antony
now gave the kingdom to a certain Herod, and, having stretched Antigonus on a cross and
scourged him, a thing never done before to any other king by the Romans, he put him to
death." (Dio Cassius, book xlix. p. 405.)
The fact that all prominent historians of those days mention this extraordinary occurrence,
and the manner they did it, show that it was considered one of Mark Antony's worst
crimes: and that the sympathy with the "Crucified King" was wide-spread and profound.
(See The Martyrdom of Jesus of Nazareth, p. 106.)
Some writers think that there is a connection between this and the Gospel story; that they,
in a certain measure, put Jesus in the place of Antigonus, just as they put Herod in the
place of Kansa. (See Chapter XVIII.)
[517:1] Canon Farrar thinks that Josephus' silence on the subject of Jesus and Christianity,
was as deliberate as it was dishonest. (See his Life of Christ, vol. i. p. 63.)
[518:1] Many examples might be cited to confirm this view, but the case of Joseph Smith,
in our own time and country, will suffice.
The Mormons regard him very much as Christians regard Jesus; as the Mohammedans do
Mohammed; or as the Buddhists do Buddha. A coarse sort of religious feeling and fervor
appears to have been in Smith's nature. He seems, from all accounts, to have been cracked
on theology, as so many zealots have been, and cracked to such an extent that his early
acquaintances regarded him as a downright fanatic.
The common view that he was an impostor is not sustained by what is known of him. He
was, in all probability, of unbalanced mind, a monomaniac, as most prophets have been;
but there is no reason to think that he did not believe in himself, and substantially in what
he taught. He has declared that, when he was about fifteen, he began to reflect on the
importance of being prepared for a future state. He went from one church to another
without finding anything to satisfy the hunger of his soul, consequently, he retired into
himself; he sought solitude; he spent hours and days in meditation and prayer, after the true
manner of all accredited saints, and was soon repaid by the visits of angels. One of these
came to him when he was but eighteen years old, and the house in which he was seemed
filled with consuming fire. The presence—he styles it a personage—had a pace like
lightning, and proclaimed himself to be an angel of the Lord. He vouchsafed to Smith a
vast deal of highly important information of a celestial order. He told him that his (Smith's)
prayers had been heard, and his sins forgiven; that the covenant which the Almighty had
made with the old Jews was to be fulfilled; that the introductory work for the second
coming of Christ was now to begin; that the hour for the preaching of the gospel in its
purity to all peoples was at hand, and that Smith was to be an instrument in the hands of
God, to further the divine purpose in the new dispensation. The celestial stranger also
furnished him with a sketch of the origin, progress, laws and civilization of the American
aboriginals, and declared that the blessing of heaven had finally been withdrawn from
them. To Smith was communicated the momentous circumstance that certain plates
containing an abridgment of the records of the aboriginals and ancient prophets, who had
lived on this continent, were hidden in a hill near Palmyra. The prophet was counseled to
go there and look at them, and did so. Not being holy enough to possess them as yet, he
passed some months in spiritual probation, after which the records were put into his
keeping. These had been prepared, it is claimed, by a prophet called Mormon, who had
been ordained by God for the purpose, and to conceal them until he should produce them
for the benefit of the faithful, and unite them with the Bible for the achievement of his will.
They form the celebrated Book of Mormon—whence the name Mormon—and are
esteemed by the Latter-Day Saints as of equal authority with the Old and New Testaments,
and as an indispensable supplement thereto, because they include God's disclosures to the
Mormon world. These precious records were sealed up and deposited A. D. 420 in the
place where Smith had viewed them by the direction of the angel.
The records were, it is held, in the reformed Egyptian tongue, and Smith translated them
through the inspiration of the angel, and one Oliver Cowdrey wrote down the translation as
reported by the God-possessed Joseph. This translation was published in 1830, and its
divine origin was attested by a dozen persons—all relatives and friends of Smith. Only
these have ever pretended to see the original plates, which have already become traditional.
The plates have been frequently called for by skeptics, but all in vain. Naturally, warm
controversy arose concerning the authenticity of the Book of Mormon, and disbelievers
have asserted that they have indubitable evidence that it is, with the exception of various
unlettered interpolations, principally borrowed from a queer, rhapsodical romance written
by an eccentric ex-clergyman named Solomon Spalding.
Smith and his disciples were ridiculed and socially persecuted; but they seemed to be
ardently earnest, and continued to preach their creed, which was to the effect that the
millennium was at hand; that our aboriginals were to be converted, and that the New
Jerusalem—the last residence and home of the saints—was to be near the centre of this
continent. The Vermont prophet, later on, was repeatedly mobbed, even shot at. His narrow
escapes were construed as interpositions of divine providence, but he displayed perfect
coolness and intrepidity through all his trials. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints was first established in the spring of 1830 at Manchester, N. Y.; but it awoke such
fierce opposition, particularly from the orthodox, many of them preachers, that Smith and
his associates deemed it prudent to move farther west. They established themselves at
Kirtland, O., and won there many converts. Hostility to them still continued, and grew so
fierce that the body transferred itself to Missouri, and next to Illinois, settling in the latter
state near the village of Commerce, which was renamed Nauvoo.
The Governor and Legislature of Illinois favored the Mormons, but the anti-Mormons
made war on them in every way, and the custom of "sealing wives," which is yet
mysterious to the Gentiles, caused serious outbreaks, and resulted in the incarceration of
the prophet and his brother Hiram at Carthage. Fearing that the two might be released by
the authorities, a band of ruffians broke into the jail, in the summer of 1844, and murdered
them in cold blood. This was most fortunate for the memory of Smith and for his doctrines.
It placed him in the light of a holy martyr, and lent to them a dignity and vitality they had
never before enjoyed.
[520:1] When we speak of Jesus being crucified, we do not intend to convey the idea that
he was put to death on a cross of the form adopted by Christians. This cross was the
symbol of life and immortality among our heathen ancestors (see Chapter XXXIII.), and in
adopting Pagan religious symbols, and baptizing them anew, the Christians took this along
with others. The crucifixion was not a symbol of the earliest church; no trace of it can be
found in the Catacombs. Some of the earliest that did appear, however, are similar to
figures No. 42 and No. 43, above, which represent two of the modes in which the Romans
crucified their slaves and criminals. (See Chapter XX., on the Crucifixion of Jesus.)
[520:2] According to the Matthew and Mark narrators, Jesus' head was anointed while
sitting at table in the house of Simon the leper. Now, this practice was common among the
kings of Israel. It was the sign and symbol of royalty. The word "Messiah" signifies the
"Anointed One," and none of the kings of Israel were styled the Messiah unless anointed.
(See The Martyrdom of Jesus of Nazareth, p. 42.)
[521:1] Josephus: Antiquities, book xviii. ch. iv. 1.
[522:1] Josephus: Antiquities, book xviii. chap. iii. 2.
[522:2] "From the death of Herod, 4 B. C., to the death of Bar-Cochba, 132 A. D., no less
than fifty different enthusiasts set up as the Messiah, and obtained more or less following."
(John W. Chadwick.)
[522:3] "There was, at this time, a prevalent expectation that some remarkable personage
was about to appear in Judea. The Jews were anxiously looking for the coming of the
MESSIAH. This personage, they supposed, would be a temporal prince, and they were
expecting that he would deliver them from Roman bondage." (Albert Barnes: Notes, vol. i.
p. 7.)
"The central and dominant characteristic of the teaching of the Rabbis, was the certain
advent of a great national Deliverer—the MESSIAH. . . . The national mind had become so
inflammable, by constant brooding on this one theme, that any bold spirit rising in revolt
against the Roman power, could find an army of fierce disciples who trusted that it should
be he who would redeem Israel." (Geikie: The Life of Christ, vol. i. p. 79.)
[522:4] "The penalty of crucifixion, according to Roman law and custom, was inflicted on
slaves, and in the provinces on rebels only." (The Martyrdom of Jesus, p. 96.)
[522:5] Judas, the Gaulonite or Galilean, as Josephus calls him, declared, when Cyrenius
came to tax the Jewish people, that "this taxation was no better than an introduction to
slavery," and exhorted the nation to assert their liberty. He therefore prevailed upon his
countrymen to revolt. (See Josephus: Antiq., b. xviii. ch. i. 1, and Wars of the Jews, b. ii.
ch. viii. 1.)
[523:1] The Martyrdom of Jesus of Nazareth, p. 30.
[523:2] "That the High Council did accuse Jesus, I suppose no one will doubt; and since
they could neither wish or expect the Roman Governor to make himself judge of their
sacred law, it becomes certain that their accusation was purely political, and took such a
form as this: 'He has accepted tumultuous shouts that he is the legitimate and predicted
King of Israel, and in this character has ridden into Jerusalem with the forms of state
understood to be royal and sacred; with what purpose, we ask, if not to overturn our
institutions, and your dominion?' If Jesus spoke, at the crisis which Matthew represents, the
virulent speech attributed to him (Matt. xxiii.), we may well believe that this gave a new
incentive to the rulers; for it is such as no government in Europe would overlook or
forgive: but they are not likely to have expected Pilate to care for any conduct which might
be called an ecclesiastical broil. The assumption of royalty was clearly the point of their
attack. Even the mildest man among them may have thought his conduct dangerous and
needing repression." (Francis W. Newman, "What is Christianity without Christ?")
According to the Synoptic Gospels, Jesus was completely innocent of the charge which has
sometimes been brought against him, that he wished to be considered as a God come down
to earth. His enemies certainly would not have failed to make such a pretension the basis
and the continual theme of their accusations, if it had been possible to do so. The two
grounds upon which he was brought before the Sanhedrim were, first, the bold words he
was supposed to have spoken about the temple; and, secondly and chiefly, the fact that he
claimed to be the Messiah, i. e., "The King of the Jews." (Albert Réville: "The Doctrine of
the Dogma of the Deity of Jesus," p. 7.)
[523:3] See The Martyrdom of Jesus, p. 30.
[524:1] See note 4, p. 522.
[524:2] See Matt. xx. 19.
[524:3] John xviii. 31, 32.
[524:4] That is, the crucifixion story as related in the Gospels. See note 1, p. 520.
[524:5] Matthew xxvii. 24, 25.
[525:1] Commentators, in endeavoring to get over this difficulty, say that, "it may come
from the look or form of the spot itself, bald, round, and skull-like, and therefore a mound
or hillock," but, if it means "the place of bare skulls," no such construction as the above
can be put to the word.
[526:1] The Martyrdom of Jesus of Nazareth, pp. 109-111.
[527:1] O. B. Frothingham: The Cradle of the Christ, p. 11.
The reader is referred to "Judaism: Its Doctrines and Precepts," by Dr. Isaac M. Wise.
Printed at the office of the "American Israelite," Cincinnati, Ohio.
[527:2] If Jesus, instead of giving himself up quietly, had resisted against being arrested,
there certainly would have been bloodshed, as there was on many other similar occasions.
[528:1] If what is recorded In the Gospels on the subject was true, no historian of that day
could fail to have noticed it, but instead of this there is nothing.
[528:2] See Matthew, xxvii. 51-53.
[529:1] See Matt. xiv. 15-22: Mark, iv. 1-3, and xi. 14; and Luke, vii. 26-37.
[529:2] See Mark, xvi. 16.
[529:3] This fact has at last been admitted by the most orthodox among the Christians. The
Rev. George Matheson, D. D., Minister of the Parish of Innellan, and a member of the
Scotch Kirk, speaking of the precept uttered by Confucius, five hundred years before the
time assigned for the birth of Jesus of Nazareth ("Whatsoever ye would not that others
should do unto you, do not ye unto them"), says: "That Confucius is the author of this
precept is undisputed, and therefore it is indisputable that Christianity has incorporated an
article of Chinese morality. It has appeared to some as if this were to the disparagement of
Christianity—as if the originality of its Divine Founder were impaired by consenting to
borrow a precept from a heathen source. But in what sense does Christianity set up the
claim of moral originality? When we speak of the religion of Christ as having introduced
into the world a purer life and a surer guide to conduct, what do we mean? Do we mean to
suggest that Christianity has, for the first time, revealed to the world the existence of a set
of self-sacrificing precepts—that here, for the first time, man has learned that he ought to
be meek, merciful, humble, forgiving, sorrowful for sin, peaceable, and pure in heart? The
proof of such a statement would destroy Christianity itself, for an absolute original code of
precepts would be equivalent to a foreign language. The glory of Christian morality is that
it is NOT ORIGINAL—that its words appeal to something which already exists within the
human heart, and on that account have a meaning to the human ear: no new revelation can
be made except through the medium of an old one. When we attribute originality to the
ethics of the Gospel, we do so on the ground, not that it has given new precepts, but that it
has given us a new impulse to obey the moral instincts of the soul. Christianity itself claims
on the field of morals this originality, and this alone—'A new commandment give I unto
you, that you love one another." (St. Giles Lectures, Second Series: The Faiths of the
World. Religion of China, by the Rev. George Matheson, D. D., Minister of the Parish of
Innellan. Wm. Blackwood & Sons: Edinburgh, 1882.)
APPENDIX.
APPENDIX A.
Among the ancient Mexicans, Peruvians, and some of the Indian tribes of
North and South America, were found fragments of the Eden Myth. The
Mexicans said that the primeval mother was made out of a man's bone, and
that she was the mother of twins.[533:1]
The Cherokees supposed that heavenly beings came down and made the
world, after which they made a man and woman of clay.[533:2] The intention
of the creators was that men should live always. But the Sun, when he
passed over, told them that there was not land enough, and that people had
better die. At length, the daughter of the Sun was bitten by a Snake, and
died. The Sun, however—whom they worshiped as a god—consented that
human beings might live always. He intrusted to their care a box, charging
them that they should not open it. However, impelled by curiosity, they
opened it, contrary to the injunction of the Sun, and the spirit it contained
escaped, and then the fate of all men was decided, that they must die.[533:3]
The inhabitants of the New World had a legend of a Deluge, which
destroyed the human race, excepting a few who were saved in a boat, which
landed on a mountain.[533:4] They also related that birds were sent out of the
ark, for the purpose of ascertaining if the flood was abating.[533:5]
The ancient Mexicans had the legend of the confusion of tongues, and
related the whole story as to how the gods destroyed the tower which
mankind was building so as to reach unto heaven.[533:6]
The Mexicans, and several of the Indian tribes of North America, believe in
the doctrine of Metempsychosis, or the transmigration of souls from one
body into another.[533:7] This, as we have already seen,[533:8] was
universally believed in the Old World.
The legend of the man being swallowed by a fish, and, after a three days'
sojourn in his belly, coming out safe and sound, was found among the
Mexicans and Peruvians.[534:1]
The ancient Mexicans, and some Indian tribes, practiced Circumcision,
which was common among all Eastern nations of the Old World.[534:2]
They also had a legend to the effect that one of their holy persons
commanded the sun to stand still.[534:3] This, as we have already seen,[534:4]
was a familiar legend among the inhabitants of the Old World.
The ancient Mexicans were fire-worshipers; so were the ancient Peruvians.
They kept a fire continually burning on an altar, just as the fire-worshipers
of the Old World were in the habit of doing.[534:5] They were also Sun-
worshipers, and had "temples of the Sun."[534:6]
The Tortoise-myth was found in the New World.[534:7] Now, in the Old
World, the Tortoise-myth belongs especially to India, and the idea is
developed there in a variety of forms. The tortoise that holds the world is
called in Sanscrit Kura-mraja, "King of the Tortoises," and many Hindoos
believe to this day that the world rests on its back. "The striking analogy
between the Tortoise-myth of North America and India," says Mr. Tyler, "is
by no means a matter of new observation; it was indeed remarked upon by
Father Lafitau nearly a century and a half ago. Three great features of the
Asiatic stories are found among the North American Indians, in the fullest
and clearest development. The earth is supported on the back of a huge
floating tortoise, the tortoise sinks under the water and causes a deluge, and
the tortoise is conceived as being itself the earth, floating upon the face of
the deep."[534:8]
We have also found among them the belief in an Incarnate God born of a
virgin;[534:9] the One God worshiped in the form of a Trinity;[534:10] the
crucified Black god;[534:11] the descent into hell;[534:12] the resurrection and
ascension into heaven,[534:13] all of which is to be found in the oldest
Asiatic religions. We also found monastic habits—friars and nuns.[534:14]
The Mexicans denominated their high-places, sacred houses, or "Houses of
God." The corresponding sacred structures of the Hindoos are called "God's
House."[535:1]
Many nations of the East entertained the notion that there were nine
heavens, and so did the ancient Mexicans.[535:2]
There are few things connected with the ancient mythology of America
more certain than that there existed in that country before its discovery by
Columbus, extreme veneration for the Serpent.[535:3] Now, the Serpent was
venerated and worshiped throughout the East.[535:4]
The ancient Mexicans and Peruvians, and many of the Indian tribes,
believed the Sun and Moon not only to be brother and sister, but man and
wife; so, likewise, among many nations of the Old World was this belief
prevalent.[535:5] The belief in were-wolves, or man-wolves, man-tigers,
man-hyenas, and the like, which was almost universal among the nations of
Europe, Asia and Africa, was also found to be the case among South
American tribes.[535:6] The idea of calling the earth "mother," was common
among the inhabitants of both the Old and New Worlds.[535:7] In the
mythology of Finns, Lapps, and Esths, Earth-Mother is a divinely honored
personage. It appears in China, where Heaven and Earth are called in the
Shuking—one of their sacred books—"Father and Mother of all things."
Among the native races of America the Earth-Mother is one of the great
personages of mythology. The Peruvians worshiped her as Mama-Phacha,
or Earth-Mother. The Caribs, when there was an earthquake, said it was
their mother-earth dancing, and signifying to them to dance and make merry
likewise, which they accordingly did.[535:8]
It is well-known that the natives of Africa, when there is an eclipse of the
sun or moon, believe that it is being devoured by some great monster, and
that they, in order to frighten and drive it away, beat drums and make noises
in other ways. So, too, the rude Moguls make a clamor of rough music to
drive the attacking Arachs (Râhu) from Sun or Moon.[535:9]
The Chinese, when there is an eclipse of the Sun or Moon, proceed to
encounter the ominous monster with gongs and bells.[535:10]
The ancient Romans flung firebrands into the air, and blew trumpets, and
clanged brazen pots and pans.[535:11] Even as late as the seventeenth
century, the Irish or Welsh, during eclipses, ran about beating kettles and
pans.[536:1] Among the native races of America was to be found the same
superstition. The Indians would raise a frightful howl, and shoot arrows into
the sky to drive the monsters off.[536:2] The Caribs, thinking that the demon
Maboya, hater of all light, was seeking to devour the Sun and Moon, would
dance and howl in concert all night long to scare him away. The Peruvians,
imagining such an evil spirit in the shape of a monstrous beast, raised the
like frightful din when the Moon was eclipsed, shouting, sounding musical
instruments, and beating the dogs to join their howl to the hideous chorus.
[536:3]
The starry band that lies like a road across the sky, known as the milky way,
is called by the Basutos (a South African tribe of savages), "The Way of the
Gods;" the Ojis (another African tribe of savages), say it is the "Way of
Spirits," which souls go up to heaven by. North American tribes know it as
"the Path of the Master of Life," the "Path of Spirits," "the Road of Souls,"
where they travel to the land beyond the grave.[536:4]
It is almost a general belief among the inhabitants of Africa, and was so
among the inhabitants of Europe and Asia, that monkeys were once men
and women, and that they can even now really speak, but judiciously hold
their tongues, lest they should be made to work. This idea was found as a
serious matter of belief, in Central and South America.[536:5] "The Bridge of
the Dead," which is one of the marked myths of the Old World, was found
in the New.[536:6]
It is well known that the natives of South America told the Spaniards that
inland there was to be found a fountain, the waters of which turned old men
back into youths, and how Juan Ponce de Leon fitted out two caravels, and
went to seek for this "Fountain of Youth." Now, the "Fountain of Youth" is
known to the mythology of India.[536:7]
The myth of foot-prints stamped into the rocks by gods or mighty men, is to
be found among the inhabitants of Europe, Asia, and Africa. Egyptians,
Greeks, Brahmans, Buddhists, Moslems, and Christians, have adopted it as
relics each from their own point of view, and Mexican eyes could discern in
the solid rock at Tlanepantla the mark of hand and foot left by the mighty
Quetzalcoatle.[536:8]
The Incas, in order to preserve purity of race, married their own sisters, as
did the Kings of Persia, and other Oriental nations.[537:1]
The Peruvian embalming of the royal dead takes us back to Egypt; the
burning of the wives of the deceased Incas reveals India; the singularly
patriarchical character of the whole Peruvian policy is like that of China in
the olden time; while the system of espionage, of tranquillity, of physical
well-being, and the iron-like immovability in which their whole social
frame was cast, bring before us Japan—as it was a very few years ago. In
fact, there is something strangely Japanese in the entire cultus of Peru as
described by all writers.[537:2]
The dress and costume of the Mexicans, and their sandals, resemble the
apparel and sandals worn in early ages in the East.[537:3]
Mexican priests were represented with a Serpent twined around their heads,
so were Oriental kings.[537:4] The Mexicans had the head of a rhinoceros
among their paintings,[537:5] and also the head of an elephant on the body of
a man.[537:6] Now, these animals were unknown in America, but well known
in Asia; and what is more striking still is the fact that the man with the
elephant's head is none other than the Ganesa of India; the God of Wisdom.
Humboldt, who copied a Mexican painting of a man with an elephant's
head, remarks that "it presents some remarkable and apparently not
accidental resemblances with the Hindoo Ganesa."
The horse and the ass, although natives of America,[537:7] became extinct on
the Western Continent in an early period of the earth's history, yet the
Mexicans had, among their hieroglyphics, representations of both these
animals, which show that it must have been seen in the old world by the
author of the hieroglyph. When the Mexicans saw the horses which the
Spaniards brought over, they were greatly astonished, and when they saw
the Spaniards on horseback, they imagined man and horse to be one.
Certain of the temples of India abound with sculptural representations of
the symbols of Phallic Worship. Turning now to the temples of Central
America, which in many respects exhibit a strict correspondence with those
in India, we find precisely the same symbols, separate and in combination.
[537:8]
Fuego islands to the River St. Lawrence and Behring's Straits, we are struck
at the first glance with the general resemblance in the features of the
inhabitants. We think we perceive that they all descended from the same
stock, notwithstanding the enormous diversity of language which separates
them from one another."[538:8]
"This analogy is particularly evident in the color of the skin and hair, in the
defective beard, high cheek-bones, and in the direction of the eyes."[539:1]
Dr. Morton says:
"In reflecting on the aboriginal races of America, we are at once met by the
striking fact, that their physical characters are wholly independent of all
climatic or known physical influences. Notwithstanding their immense
geographical distribution, embracing every variety of climate, it is
acknowledged by all travellers, that there is among this people a prevailing
type, around which all the tribes—north, south, east and west—cluster,
though varying within prescribed limits. With trifling exceptions, all our
American Indians bear to each other some degree of family resemblance,
quite as strong, for example, as that seen at the present day among full-
blooded Jews."[539:2]
James Orton, the traveler, was also struck with the likeness of the American
Indians to the Chinese, including the flatted nose. Speaking of the Zaparos
of the Napo River, he says:
"The Zaparos in physiognomy somewhat resemble the Chinese, having a
middle stature, round face, small eyes set angularly, and a broad, flat nose."
[539:3]
During the Champlain period in the earth's history the climate of the
northern portion of the American continent, instead of being frigid, and the
country covered with sheets of ice, was more like the climate of the Middle
States of the present day. Tropical animals went North, and during the
Terrace period—which followed the Champlain—the climate changed to
frigid, and many of these tropical animals were frozen in the ice, and some
of their remains were discovered centuries after.
It was probably during the time when the climate in those northern regions
was warm, that the aborigines crossed over, and even if they did not do so at
that time, we must not be startled at the idea that Asiatic tribes crossed over
from Asia to America, when the country was covered with ice. There have
been nations who lived in a state of nudity among ice-fields, and, even at
the present day, a naked nation of fishermen still exist in Terra del Fuego,
where the glaciers stretch down to the sea, and even into it.[541:3]
Chas. Darwin, during his voyage round the world in H. M. S. Beagle, was
particularly struck with the hardiness of the Fuegians, who go in a state of
nudity, or almost entirely so. He says:
"Among these central tribes the men generally have an otter-skin, or some
small scrap, about as large as a pocket-handkerchief, to cover their
nakedness, which is barely sufficient to cover their backs as low down as
their loins."[541:4]
One day while going on shore near Wollaston Island, Mr. Darwin's party
pulled alongside a canoe which contained six Fuegians, who were, he says,
"quite naked, and even one full-grown woman was absolutely so. It was
raining heavily, and the fresh water, together with the spray, trickled down
her body. In another harbor not far distant, a woman, who was suckling a
recently-born child, came one day alongside the vessel, and remained there
out of mere curiosity, whilst the sleet fell and thawed on her naked bosom,
and on the skin of her naked baby!"[542:1]
This was during the winter season.
A few pages farther on Mr. Darwin says that on the night of the 22d
December, a small family of Fuegians—who were living in a cove near the
quarters—"soon joined our party round a blazing fire. We were well
clothed, and though sitting close to the fire were far from too warm; yet
these naked savages, though further off, were observed, to our great
surprise, to be streaming with perspiration at undergoing such a scorching.
They seemed, however, very well pleased, and all joined in the chorus of
the seamen's songs; but the manner in which they were invariably a little
behind was quite ludicrous."[542:2]
The Asiatics who first crossed over to the American continent were
evidently in a very barbarous stage, although they may have known how to
produce fire, and use bows and arrows.[542:3] The tribe who inhabited
Mexico at the time it was discovered by the Spaniards was not the first to
settle there; they had driven out a people, and had taken the country from
them.[542:4]
That Mexico was visited by Orientals, who brought and planted their
religion there, in a comparatively recent period, is very probable. Mr. Chas.
G. Leland, who has made this subject a special study, says:
"While the proofs of the existence or residence of Orientals in America are
extremely vague and uncertain, and while they are supported only by
coincidences, the antecedent probability of their having come hither, or
having been able to come, is stronger than the Norse discovery of the New
World, or even than that of Columbus himself would appear to be. Let the
reader take a map of the Northern Pacific; let him ascertain for himself the
fact that from Kamtschatka, which was well known to the old Chinese, to
Alaska the journey is far less arduous than from China proper, and it will be
seen that there was in all probability intercourse of some kind between the
continents. In early times the Chinese were bold and skillful navigators, to
whom the chain of the Aleutian Islands would have been simply like
stepping-stones over a shallow brook to a child. For it is a well ascertained
fact, that a sailor in an open boat might cross from Asia to America by the
Aleutian Islands in summer-time, and hardly ever be out of sight of land,
and this in a part of the sea generally abounding in fish, as is proved by the
fishermen who inhabit many of these islands, on which fresh water is
always to be found."[543:1]
Colonel Barclay Kennon, formerly of the U. S. North Pacific surveying
expedition, says:
"From the result of the most accurate scientific observation, it is evident
that the voyage from China to America can be made without being out of
sight of land more than a few hours at any one time. To a landsman,
unfamiliar with long voyages, the mere idea of being 'alone on the wide,
wide sea,' with nothing but water visible, even for an hour, conveys a
strange sense of desolation, of daring, and of adventure. But in truth it is
regarded as a mere trifle, not only by regular seafaring men, but even by the
rudest races in all parts of the world; and I have no doubt that from the
remotest ages, and on all shores, fishermen in open boats, canoes, or even
coracles, guided simply by the stars and currents, have not hesitated to go
far out of sight of land. At the present day, natives of many of the South
Pacific Islands undertake, without a compass, and successfully, long
voyages which astonish even a regular Jack-tar, who is not often astonished
at anything. If this can be done by savages, it hardly seems possible that the
Asiatic-American voyage was not successfully performed by people of
advanced scientific culture, who had, it is generally believed, the compass,
and who from an early age were proficient in astronomy."[543:2]
Prof. Max Müller, it would seem, entertains similar ideas to our own,
expressed as follows:
"In their (the American Indians') languages, as well as in their religions,
traces may possibly still be found, before it is too late, of pre-historic
migrations of men from the primitive Asiatic to the American Continent,
either across the stepping-stones of the Aleutic bridge in the North, or
lower South, by drifting with favorable winds from island to island, till the
hardy canoe was landed or wrecked on the American coast, never to return
again to the Asiatic home from which it had started."[543:3]
It is very evident then, that the religion and mythology of the Old and New
Worlds, have, in part, at least, a common origin. Lord Kingsborough
informs us that the Spanish historians of the 16th century were not disposed
to admit that America had ever been colonized from the West, "chiefly on
account of the state in which religion was found in the new continent."[543:4]
And Mr. Tylor says:
"Among the mass of Central American traditions . . . there occur certain
passages in the story of an early emigration of the Quiché race, which have
much the appearance of vague and broken stories derived in some way from
high Northern latitudes."[543:5]
Mr. McCulloh, in his "Researches," observes that:
"In analyzing many parts of their (the ancient Americans') institutions,
especially those belonging to their cosmogonal history, their religious
superstitions, and astronomical computations, we have, in these abstract
matters, found abundant proof to assert that there has been formerly a
connection between the people of the two continents. Their
communications, however, have taken place at a very remote period of
time; for those matters in which they more decidedly coincide, are
undoubtedly those which belong to the earliest history of mankind."
It is unquestionably from India that we have derived, partly through the
Persians and other nations, most of our metaphysical and theological
doctrines, as well as our nursery tales. Who then can deny that these same
doctrines and legends have been handed down by oral tradition to the chief
of the Indian tribes, and in this way have been preserved, although perhaps
in an obscure and imperfect manner, in some instances at least, until the
present day? The facts which we have before us, with many others like
them which are to be had, point with the greatest likelihood to a common
fatherland, the cradle of all nations, from which they came, taking these
traditions with them.
FOOTNOTES:
[533:1] Baring-Gould's Legends of the Patriarchs, p. 46.
[533:2] Squire's Serpent Symbol, p. 67.
[533:3] Ibid. Here we see the parallel to the Grecian fable of Epimetheus and Pandora.
[533:4] Brinton: Myths of the New World, p. 203. Higgins: Anacalypsis, vol. ii. p. 27.
[533:5] Ibid.
[533:6] Brinton: Myths of the New World, p. 204.
[533:7] See Chapter V.
[533:8] See Ibid. and Chambers's Encyclo., art. "Transmigration."
[534:1] See Chapter XI.
[534:2] See Chapter X.
[534:3] See Chapter XI.
[534:4] Ibid.
[534:5] See Early Hist. Mankind, p. 252; Squire's Serpent Symbol; and Prescott: Con.
Peru.
[534:6] See Ibid., and the Andes and the Amazon, p. 454.
[534:7] See Early Hist. Mankind, p. 842.
[534:8] Ibid.
[534:9] See Chapter XII.
[534:10] See Chapter XXV.
[534:11] See Chapter XX.
Mr. Prescott, speaking of the Pyramid of Cholula, in his Mexican History, says: "On the
summit stood a sumptuous temple, in which was the image of the mystic deity
(Quetzalcoatle), with ebon features, unlike the fair complexion which he bore upon earth."
And Kenneth R. H. Mackenzie says (in Cities of the Ancient World, p. 180): "From the
woolly texture of the hair, I am inclined to assign to the Buddha of India, the Fuhi of
China, the Sommonacom of the Siamese, the Xaha of the Japanese, and the Quetzalcoatle
of the Mexicans, the same, and indeed an African, or rather Nubian, origin."
[534:12] See Chapter XXII.
[534:13] See Chapter XXIII.
[534:14] See Chapter XXVI.
[535:1] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 77.
[535:2] Ibid. p. 109.
[535:3] See Fergusson's Tree and Serpent Worship, and Squire's Serpent Symbol.
[535:4] See Ibid.
[535:5] See Tylor, Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 361, and Squire's Serpent Symbol.
[535:6] Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 280, and Squire's Serpent Symbol.
[535:7] Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 294, and Squire's Serpent Symbol.
[535:8] Tylor: Primitive Culture, vol. i. pp. 295, 296.
[535:9] Ibid. p. 300.
[535:10] Ibid.
[535:11] Ibid. p. 301.
[536:1] Tylor; Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 101.
[536:2] Ibid. p. 291.
[536:3] Ibid.
[536:4] Ibid. p. 234.
[536:5] Ibid. p. 240 and 243.
[536:6] Early Hist. Mankind, pp. 357 and 361.
[536:7] Ibid. p. 361.
The legend of the "Elixir of Life" of the Western World, was well-known in China.
(Buckley: Cities of the Ancient World, p. 167.)
[536:8] Ibid. p. 118, and Squire's Serpent Symbol.
[537:1] Fusang, p. 56.
[537:2] Ibid. p. 55.
[537:3] Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 181.
[537:4] Ibid., and Squire's Serpent Symbol.
[537:5] Mexican Antiq., vol. vi. p. 180.
[537:6] Early Hist. Mankind, p. 311.
[537:7] The traveler, James Orton, found fossil bones of an extinct species of the horse, the
mastodon, and other animals, near Punin, in South America, all of which had passed away
before the arrival of the human species. This native American horse was succeeded, in
after ages, by the countless herds descended from a few introduced with the Spanish
colonists. (See the Andes and the Amazon, pp. 154, 155.)
[537:8] Serpent Symbol, p. 47.
[538:1] Serpent Symbol, p. 193.
[538:2] The Andes and the Amazon, p. 454.
[538:3] Eastern Monachism, p. 222.
[538:4] Serpent Symbol, p. 43.
[538:5] See Ibid.
[538:6] Travels in Persia, vol. ii. p. 284.
[538:7] New Spain, vol. i. p. 136.
[538:8] Ibid. p. 141.
[539:1] New Spain, vol. i. p. 153.
[539:2] Types of Mankind, p. 275.
[539:3] The Andes and the Amazon, p. 170.
[540:1] Paschel: Races of Man, pp. 402-404.
[540:2] Fusang, p. 7.
[540:3] Ibid. 118.
[540:4] Quoted in Ibid.
[540:5] Quoted In Ibid. p. 94.
[541:1] Paschel: Races of Man, pp. 400, 401.
[541:2] To those who may think that the Old World might have been peopled from the new,
we refer to Oscar Paschel's "Races of Man," p. 32. The author, in speaking on this subject,
says: "There at one time existed a great continent, to which belonged Madagascar and
perhaps portions of Eastern Africa, the Maldives and Laccadives, and also the Island of
Ceylon, which was never attached to India, perhaps even the island of Celebes in the far
East, which possesses a perplexing fauna, with semi-African features." On this continent,
which was situated in the now Indian Ocean, must we look for the cradle of humanity.
[541:3] Paschal: Races of Man, p. 31.
[541:4] Darwin's Journal, p. 213.
[542:1] Darwin's Journal, p. 213.
[542:2] Ibid. pp. 220, 221.
[542:3] This is seen from the fact that they did not know the use of iron. Had they known
the use of this metal, they would surely have gone to work and dug into their mountains,
which are abundantly filled with ore, and made use of it.
[542:4] The Aztecs were preceded by the Toltecs, Chichimecks, and the Nahualtecs.
(Humboldt's New Spain, p. 133, vol. i.)
"The races of barbarians which successively followed each other from the north to the
south always murdered, hunted down, and subdued the previous inhabitants, and formed in
course of time a new social and political life upon the ruins of the old system, to be again
destroyed and renewed in a few centuries, by a new invasion of barbarians. The later native
conquerors in the New World can, of course, no more be considered in the light of original
inhabitants than the present races of men in the Old World."
[543:1] Fusang, p. 56.
[543:2] Quoted in Fusang, p. 71.
[543:3] Science of Religion, p. 121.
[543:4] Mexican Antiq., vol. vi. p. 161.
[543:5] Early Hist. Mankind, p. 307.
APPENDIX B.
Commencing at the farthest East we shall find the ancient religion of China
the same as that which was universal in all quarters of the globe, viz., an
adoration of the Sun, Moon, Stars and elements.[544:1] That the Chinese
religion was in one respect the same as that of India, is seen from the fact
that they named successive days for the same seven planets that the
Hindoos did.[544:2] The ancient books of the Chinese show that astronomy
was not only understood by them at a very early period, but that it formed
an important branch of state policy, and the basis of public ceremonies.
Eclipses are accurately recorded which occurred twenty centuries before
Jesus; and the Confucian books refer continually to observations of the
heavenly bodies and the rectification of the calendar. The ancient Chinese
astronomers seem to have known precisely the excess of the solar year
beyond 365 days. The religion of China, under the emperors who preceded
the first dynasty, is an enigma. The notices in the only authentic works, the
King, are on this point scanty, vague, and obscure. It is difficult to separate
what is spoken with reference to the science of astronomy from that which
may relate to religion, properly so called. The terms of reverence and
respect, with which the heavenly bodies are spoken of in the Shoo-King,
seem to warrant the inference that those terms have more than a mere
astronomical meaning, and that the ancient religion of China partook of
star-worship, one of the oldest heresies in the world.[545:1]
In India the Sun, Moon, Stars and the powers of Nature were worshiped and
personified, and each quality, mental and physical, had its emblem, which
the Brahmans taught the ignorant to regard as realities, till the Pantheon
became crowded.
"Our Aryan ancestors learned to look up to the sky, the Sun, and the dawn,
and there to see the presence of a living power, half-revealed, and half-
hidden from their senses, those senses which were always postulating
something beyond what they could grasp. They went further still. In the
bright sky they perceived an Illuminator, in the all-encircling firmament an
Embracer, in the roar of the thunder or in the voice of the storm they felt
the presence of a Shouter and of furious Strikers, and out of the rain they
created an Indra, or giver of rain."[545:2]
Prof. Monier Williams, speaking of "the hymns of the Veda," says:
"To what deities, it will be asked, were the prayers and hymns of these
collections addressed? The answer is: They worshiped those physical forces
before which all nations, if guided solely by the light of nature, have in the
early period of their life, instinctively bowed down, and before which even
the most civilized and enlightened have always been compelled to bend in
awe and reverence, if not in adoration."[545:3]
The following sublime description of Night is an extract from the Vedas,
made by Sir William Jones:
"Night approaches, illumined with stars and planets, and, looking on all
sides with numberless eyes, overpowers all meaner lights. The immortal
goddess pervades the firmament, covering the low valleys and shrubs, the
lofty mountains and trees, but soon she disturbs the gloom with celestial
effulgence. Advancing with brightness, at length she recalls her sister
Morning; and the nightly shade gradually melts away. May she at this time
be propitious! She, in whose early watch we may calmly recline in our
mansions, as birds repose upon the trees. Mankind now sleep in their towns;
now herds and flocks peacefully slumber, and the winged creatures, swift
falcons, and vultures. O Night! avert from us the she-wolf and the wolf;
and, oh! suffer us to pass thee in soothing rest! Oh, morn! remove in due
time this black, yet visible overwhelming darkness, which at present
enfolds me, as thou enablest me to remove the cloud of their dells.
Daughter of Heaven, I approach thee with praise, as the cow approaches her
milker; accept, O Night! not the hymn only, but the oblation of thy
suppliant, who prays that his foes may be subdued."
Some of the principal gods of the Hindoo Pantheon are, Dyaus (the Sky),
Indra (the Rain-giver), Sûrya (the Sun), the Maruts (Winds), Aditi, (the
Dawn), Parvati (the Earth),[546:1] and Siva, her consort. The worship of the
SUN is expressed in a variety of ways, and by a multitude of fanciful names.
One of the principal of these is Crishna. The following is a prayer
addressed to him:
"Be auspicious to my lay, O Chrishna, thou only God of the seven heavens,
who swayest the universe through the immensity of space and matter. O
universal and resplendent Sun! Thou mighty governor of the heavens; thou
sovereign regulator of the connected whole; thou sole and universal deity of
mankind; thou gracious and Supreme Spirit; my noblest and most happy
inspiration is thy praise and glory. Thy power I will praise, for thou art my
sovereign Lord, whose bright image continually forces itself on my
attention, eager imagination. Thou art the Being to whom heroes pray in
perils of war; nor are their supplications vain, when thus they pray; whether
it be when thou illuminest the eastern region with thy orient light, when in
thy meridian splendor, or when thou majestically descendest in the West."
Crishna is made to say:
"I am the light in the Sun and Moon, far, far beyond the darkness. I am the
brilliancy in flame, the radiance in all that's radiant, and the light of lights."
[546:2]
In the Maha-bharata, Crishna, who having become the son of Aditi (the
Dawn), is called Vishnu, another name for the Sun.[546:3] The demon Putana
assaults the child Crishna, which identifies him with Hercules, the Sun-god
of the Greeks.[546:4] In his Solar character he must again be the slayer of the
Dragon or Black-snake Kulnika, the "Old Serpent" with the thousand heads.
[546:5] Crishna's amours with the maidens makes him like Indra, Phoibus,
Hercules, Samson, Alpheios, Paris and other Sun-gods. This is the hot and
fiery Sun greeting the moon and the dew, or the Sun with his brides the
Stars.[546:6]
Moore, in his Hindu Pantheon, observes:
"Although all the Hindu deities partake more or less remotely of the nature
and character of Surya, or the SUN, and all more or less directly radiate
from, or merge in, him, yet no one is, I think, so intimately identified with
him as Vishnu; whether considered in his own person, or in the character of
his most glorious Avatara of CRISHNA."
The ancient religion of EGYPT, like that of Hindostan, was founded on
astronomy, and eminently metaphysical in its character. The Egyptian
priests were far advanced in the science of astronomy. They made
astronomy their peculiar study. They knew the figure of the earth, and how
to calculate solar and lunar eclipses. From very ancient time, they had
observed the order and movement of the stars, and recorded them with the
utmost care. Ramses the Great, generally called Sesostris, is supposed to
have reigned one thousand five hundred years before the Christian era,
about coeval with Moses, or a century later. In the tomb of this monarch
was found a large massive circle of wrought gold, divided into three
hundred and sixty-five degrees, and each division marked the rising and
setting of the stars for each day.[547:1] This fact proves how early they were
advanced in astronomy. In their great theories of mutual dependence
between all things in the universe was included a belief in some mysterious
relation between the Spirits of the Stars and human souls, so that the destiny
of mortals was regulated by the motions of the heavenly bodies. This was
the origin of the famous system of Astrology. From the conjunction of
planets at the hour of birth, they prophesied what would be the temperament
of an infant, what life he would live, and what death he would die.
Diodorus, who wrote in the century preceding Christ Jesus, says:
"They frequently foretell with the greatest accuracy what is about to happen
to mankind; showing the failure or abundance of crops, and the epidemic
diseases about to befall men or cattle. Earthquakes, deluges, rising of
comets, and all those phenomena, the knowledge of which appears
impossible to common comprehensions, they foresee by means of their long
continued observation."
P. Le Page Renouf, who is probably the best authority on the religion of
ancient Egypt which can be produced, says, in his Hibbert Lectures:[547:2]
"The Lectures on the Science of Language, delivered nearly twenty years
ago by Prof. Max Müller, have, I trust, made us fully understand how,
among the Indo-European races, the names of the Sun, of Sunrise and
Sunset, and of other such phenomena, come to be talked of and considered
as personages, of whom wondrous legends have been told. Egyptian
mythology not merely admits, but imperatively demands, the same
explanation. And this becomes the more evident when we consider the
question how these mythical personages came to be invested with the
attributes of divinity by men who, like the Egyptians, had so lively a sense
of the divine."
Kenrick, in his "History of Egypt," says:
"We have abundant evidence that the Egyptian theology had its origin in the
personification of the powers of nature, under male and female attributes,
and that this conception took a sensible form, such as the mental state of the
people required, by the identification of these powers with the elements and
the heavenly bodies, fire, earth, water, the sun and moon, and the Nile. Such
appears everywhere to be the origin of the objective form of polytheism;
and it is equally evident among the nations most closely allied to the
Egyptians by position and general character—the Phenicians, the
Babylonians, and in remote connection, the Indians on the one side and the
Greeks on the other."
The gods and goddesses of the ancient PERSIANS were also personifications
of the Sun, Moon, Stars, the elements, &c.
Ormuzd, "The King of Light," was god of the Firmament, and the
"Principle of Goodness" and of Truth. He was called "The Eternal Source of
Sunshine and Light," "The Centre of all that exists," "The First-born of the
Eternal One," "The Creator," "The Sovereign Intelligence," "The All-
seeing," "The Just Judge." He was described as "sitting on the throne of the
good and the perfect, in regions of pure light," crowned with rays, and with
a ring on his finger—a circle being an emblem of infinity; sometimes as a
venerable, majestic man, seated on a Bull, their emblem of creation.
"Mithras the Mediator" was the god-Sun. Their most splendid ceremonials
were in honor of Mithras. They kept his birth-day, with many rejoicings, on
the twenty-fifth of December, when the Sun perceptibly begins to return
northward, after his long winter journey; and they had another festival in his
honor, at the vernal equinox. Perhaps no religious festival was ever more
splendid than the "Annual Salutation of Mithras," during which forty days
were set apart for thanksgiving and sacrifice. The procession to salute the
god was formed long before the rising of the Sun. The High Priest was
followed by a long train of the Magi, in spotless white robes, chanting
hymns, and carrying the sacred fire on silver censers. Then came three
hundred and sixty-five youths in scarlet, to represent the days of the year
and the color of fire. These were followed by the Chariot of the Sun, empty,
decorated with garlands, and drawn by superb white horses harnessed with
pure gold. Then came a white horse of magnificent size, his forehead
blazing with gems, in honor of Mithras. Close behind him rode the king, in
a chariot of ivory inlaid with gold, followed by his royal kindred in
embroidered garments, and a long train of nobles riding on camels richly
caparisoned. This gorgeous retinue, facing the East, slowly ascended Mount
Orontes. Arrived at the summit, the High Priest assumed his tiara wreathed
with myrtle, and hailed the first rays of the rising Sun with incense and
prayer. The other Magi gradually joined him in singing hymns to Ormuzd,
the source of all blessing, by whom the radiant Mithras had been sent to
gladden the earth and preserve the principle of life. Finally, they all joined
in one universal chorus of praise, while king, princes and nobles, prostrated
themselves before the orb of day.
The HEBREWS worshiped the Sun, Moon, Stars, and "all the host of heaven."
[549:1] El-Shaddai was one of the names given to the god Sun. Parkhurst, in
his "Hebrew Lexicon," says, "El was the very name the heathens gave to
their god Sol, their Lord or Ruler of the hosts of heaven." El, which means
"the strong one in heaven"—the Sun, was invoked by the ancestors of all
the Semitic nations, before there were Babylonians in Babylon, Phenicians
in Sydon and Tyrus, before there were Jews in Mesopotamia or Jerusalem.
[549:2]
The Sun was worshiped by the Hebrews under the names of Baal, Moloch,
Chemosh, &c.; the Moon was Ashtoreth, the "Queen of Heaven."[549:3]
The gods of the ancient GREEKS and ROMANS were the same as the gods of
the Indian epic poems. We have, for example: Zeupiter (Jupiter),
corresponding to Dyaus-pitar (the Heaven-father), Juno, corresponding to
Parvati (the Mother Goddess), and Apollo, corresponding to Crishna (the
Sun, the Saviour).[549:4] Another name for the Sun among those people was
Bacchus. An Orphic verse, referring to the Sun, says, "he is called Dionysos
(a name of Bacchus) because he is carried with a circular motion through
the immensely extended heavens."[549:5]
Dr. Prichard, in his "Analysis of Egyptian Mythology,"[549:6] speaking of
the ancient Greeks and Romans, says:
"That the worship of the powers of nature, mitigated, indeed, and
embellished, constituted the foundation of the Greek and Roman religion,
will not be disputed by any person who surveys the fables of the Olympian
Gods with a more penetrating eye than that of a mere antiquarian."
M. De Coulanges, speaking of them, says:
"The Sun, which gives fecundity; the Earth, which nourishes; the Clouds,
by turns beneficent and destructive,—such were the different powers of
which they could make gods. But from each one of these elements
thousands of gods were created; because the same physical agent, viewed
under different aspects, received from men different names. The Sun, for
example, was called in one place Hercules (the glorious); in another,
Phœbus (the shining); and still again, Apollo (he who drives away night or
evil); one called him Hyperion (the elevated being); another, Alexicacos
(the beneficent); and in the course of time groups of men, who had given
these various names to the brilliant luminary, no longer saw that they had
the same god."[549:7]
Richard Payne Knight says:
"The primitive religion of the Greeks, like that of all other nations not
enlightened by Revelation, appears to have been elementary, and to have
consisted in an indistinct worship of the SUN, the MOON, the STARS, the
EARTH, and the WATERS, or rather, the spirits supposed to preside over these
bodies, and to direct their motions, and regulate their modes of existence.
Every river, spring or mountain had its local genius, or peculiar deity; and
as men naturally endeavored to obtain the favor of their gods by such means
as they feel best adapted to win their own, the first worship consisted in
offering to them certain portions of whatever they held to be most valuable.
At the same time, the regular motions of the heavenly bodies, the stated
returns of summer and winter, of day and night, with all the admirable order
of the universe, taught them to believe in the existence and agency of such
superior powers; the irregular and destructive efforts of nature, such as
lightnings and tempests, inundations and earthquakes, persuaded them that
these mighty beings had passions and affections similar to their own, and
only differed in possessing greater strength, power, and intelligence."[550:1]
When the Grecian astronomers first declared that the Sun was not a person,
but a huge hot ball, instantly an outcry arose against them. They were called
"blaspheming atheists," and from that time to the present, when any new
discovery is made which seems to take away from man his god, the cry of
"Atheist" is instantly raised.
If we turn from the ancient Greeks and Romans, and take a look still farther
West and North, we shall find that the gods of all the TEUTONIC nations were
the same as we have seen elsewhere. They had Odin or Woden—from
whom we have our Wednesday—the Al-fader (the Sky), Frigga, the Mother
Goddess (the Earth), "Baldur the Good," and Thor—from whom we have
our Thursday (personifications of the Sun), besides innumerable other genii,
among them Freyja—from whom we have our Friday—and as she was the
"Goddess of Love," we eat fish on that day.[550:2]
The gods of the ancient inhabitants of what are now called the "British
Islands" were identically the same. The Sun-god worshiped by the Ancient
Druids was called Hu, Beli, Budd and Buddu-gre.[550:3]
The same worship which we have found in the Old World, from the farthest
East to the remotest West, may also be traced in AMERICA, from its simplest
or least clearly defined form, among the roving hunters and squalid
Esquimaux of the North, through every intermediate stage of development,
to the imposing systems of Mexico and Peru, where it took a form nearly
corresponding that which it at one time sustained on the banks of the
Ganges, and on the plains of Assyria.[550:4]
Father Acosta, speaking of the Mexicans, says:
"Next to Viracocha, or their Supreme God, that which most commonly they
have, and do adore, is the Sun; and after, those things which are most
remarkable in the celestial or elementary nature, as the Moon, Stars, Sea,
and Land.
"Whoso shall merely look into it, shall find this manner which the Devil
hath used to deceive the Indians, to be the same wherewith he hath deceived
the Greeks and Romans, and other ancient Gentiles, giving them to
understand that these notable creatures, the Sun, Moon, Stars, and elements,
had power or authority to do good or harm to men."[551:1]
We see, then, that the gods and heroes of antiquity were originally
personifications of certain elements of Nature, and that the legends of
adventures ascribed to them are merely mythical forms of describing the
phenomena of these elements.
These legends relating to the elements of Nature, whether they had
reference to the Sun, the Moon, the Stars, or a certain natural phenomenon,
became, in the course of time, to be regarded as accounts of men of a high
order, who had once inhabited the earth. Sanctuaries and temples were
erected to these heroes, their bones were searched for, and when found—
which was always the case—were regarded as a great source of strength to
the town that possessed them; all relics of their stay on earth were hallowed,
and a form of worship was specially adapted to them.
The idea that heavenly luminaries were inhabited by spirits, of a nature
intermediate between God and men, first led mortals to address prayers to
the orbs over which they were supposed to preside. In order to supplicate
these deities, when Sun, Moon, and Stars were not visible, they made
images of them, which the priests consecrated with many ceremonies. Then
they pronounced solemn invocations to draw down the spirits into the
statues provided for their reception. By this process it was supposed that a
mysterious connection was established between the spirit and the image, so
that prayers addressed to one were thenceforth heard by the other. This was
probably the origin of image worship everywhere.
The motive of this worship was the same among all nations of antiquity, i.
e., fear. They supposed that these deities were irritated by the sins of men,
but, at the same time, were merciful, and capable of being appeased by
prayer and repentance; for this reason men offered to these deities sacrifices
and prayers. How natural that such should have been the case, for, as Abbé
Dubois observes: "To the rude, untutored eye, the 'Host of Heaven,' clothed
in that calm beauty which distinguishes an Oriental night, might well
appear to be instinct with some divine principle, endowed with
consciousness, and the power to influence, from its throne of unchanging
splendor on high, the fortunes of transitory mortals."
FOOTNOTES:
[544:1] "All Paganism is at bottom a worship of nature in some form or other, and in all
Pagan religions the deepest and most awe-inspiring attribute of nature was its power of
reproduction." (Encyclo. Brit., art. "Christianity.")
[544:2] In Montfaucon's L'Antiquité Expliquée (vol. i.), may be seen a representation of
the seven planets personified. It was by such personifications that the real objects
worshiped became unknown. At first the real Sun, Moon, Stars, &c., would be worshiped,
but as soon as man personified them, other terms would be introduced, and peculiar rites
appropriated to each, so that in time they came to be considered as so many different
deities.
[545:1] Thornton: Hist. China, vol. i. pp. 14, 49 and 50.
[545:2] Max Müller: The Science of Religion, p. 298.
[545:3] Indian Wisdom, p. 10.
[546:1] The emblem of Parvati, the "Mother Goddess," was the YONI, and that of her
consort Siva, the LINGHAM.
[546:2] Williams' Hinduism, p. 213.
[546:3] See Cox: Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. pp. 105 and 130.
[546:4] Ibid. p. 135.
[546:5] Ibid. p. 137.
[546:6] See Ibid. p. 88, and Moor's Hindu Pantheon, p. 63.
[547:1] "According to Champollion, the tomb of Ramses V. at Thebes, contains tables of
the constellations and of their influence (on human beings) for every hour of every month
of the year." (Kenrick's Egypt, vol. i. p. 456.)
[547:2] P. 118.
[549:1] See Chapter XI.
[549:2] Müller: The Science of Relig., p. 190.
[549:3] See Chapter XI.
[549:4] See Indian Wisdom, p. 426.
[549:5] Taylor's Mysteries, p. 163.
[549:6] Page 239.
[549:7] The Ancient City, p. 162.
[550:1] Ancient Art and Mythology, p. 1.
[550:2] See Mallet's Northern Antiquities. Though spoken of in Northern mythology as
distinct, Frigga and Freyja are originally ONE.
[550:3] See Myths of the British Druids, p. 116.
[550:4] See Squire's Serpent Symbol.
[551:1] Acosta: vol. ii. pp. 303-305.
APPENDIX C.
All the chief stories that we know so well are to be found in all times, and
in almost all countries. Cinderella, for one, is told in the language of every
country in Europe, and the same legend is found in the fanciful tales related
by the Greek poets; and still further back, it appears in very ancient Hindoo
legends. So, again, does Beauty and the Beast; so does our familiar tale of
Jack, the Giant-Killer; so also do a great number of other fairy stories, each
being told in different countries and in different periods, with so much
likeness as to show that all the versions came from the same source, and yet
with enough difference to show that none of the versions are directly copied
from each other. "Indeed, when we compare the myths and legends of one
country with another, and of one period with another, we find out how they
have come to be so much alike, and yet in some things so different. We see
that there must have been one origin for all these stories, that they must
have been invented by one people, that this people must have been
afterwards divided, and that each part or division of it must have brought
into its new home the legends once common to them all, and must have
shaped and altered these according to the kind of place in which they came
to live; those of the North being sterner and more terrible, those of the
South softer and fuller of light and color, and adorned with touches of more
delicate fancy." And this, indeed, is really the case. All the chief stories and
legends are alike, because they were first made by one people; and all the
nations in which they are now told in one form or another tell them because
they are all descended from this one common stock, the Aryan.
From researches made by Prof. Max Müller, the Rev. George W. Cox, and
others, in England and Germany, in the science of Comparative Mythology,
we begin to see something of these ancient forefathers of ours; to
understand what kind of people they were, and to find that our fairy stories
are really made out of their religion.
The mind of the Aryan peoples in their ancient home was full of
imagination. They never ceased to wonder at what they saw and heard in
the sky and upon the earth. Their language was highly figurative, and so the
things which struck them with wonder, and which they could not explain,
were described under forms and names which were familiar to them. "Thus,
the thunder was to them the bellowing of a mighty beast, or the rolling of a
great chariot. In the lightning they saw a brilliant serpent, or a spear shot
across the sky, or a great fish darting swiftly through the sea of cloud. The
clouds were heavenly cows, who shed milk upon the earth and refreshed it;
or they were webs woven by heavenly women who drew water from the
fountains on high and poured it down as rain." Analogies which are but
fancy to us, were realities to these men of past ages. They could see in the
waterspout a huge serpent who elevated himself out of the ocean and
reached his head to the skies. They could feel, in the pangs of hunger, a live
creature gnawing within their bodies, and they heard the voices of the hill-
dwarfs answering in the echo. The Sun, the first object which struck them
with wonder, was, to them, the child of Night; the Dawn came before he
was born, and died as he rose in the heavens. He strangled the serpents of
the night; he went forth like a bridegroom out of his chamber, and like a
giant, to run his course.[553:1] He had to do battle with clouds and storms.
[553:2] Sometimes his light grew dim under their gloomy veil, and the
divine strength; sometimes he toiled for others, not for himself, in a hard,
unwilling servitude.[553:7] His light and heat might give light and destroy it.
[553:8] His chariot might scorch the regions over which it passed, his flaming
fire might burn up all who dared to look with prying eyes into his dazzling
treasure-house.[553:9] He might be the child destined to slay his parents, or
to be united at the last in an unspeakable peace, to the bright Dawn who for
a brief space had gladdened his path in the morning.[553:10] He might be the
friend of the children of men, and the remorseless foe of those powers of
darkness who had stolen away his bride.[553:11] He might be a warrior
whose eye strikes terror into his enemies, or a wise chieftain skilled in deep
and hidden knowledge.[554:1] Sometimes he might appear as a glorious
being doomed to an early death, which no power could avert or delay.[554:2]
Sometimes grievous hardships and desperate conflicts might be followed by
a long season of serene repose.[554:3] Wherever he went, men might
welcome him in love, or shrink from him in fear and anguish.[554:4] He
would have many brides in many lands, and his offspring would assume
aspects beautiful, strange or horrible.[554:5] His course might be brilliant and
beneficent; or gloomy, sullen, and capricious.[554:6] As compelled to toil for
others, he would be said to fight in quarrels not his own; or he might for a
time withhold the aid of an arm which no enemy could withstand.[554:7] He
might be the destroyer of all whom he loved, he might slay the Dawn with
his kindling rays, he might scorch the Fruits, who were his children; he
might woo the deep blue sky, the bride of heaven itself, and an inevitable
doom might bind his limbs on the blazing wheel for ever and ever.[554:8]
Nor in this crowd of phrases, all of which have borne their part in the
formation of mythology, is there one which could not be used naturally by
ourselves to describe the phenomena of the outward world, and there is
scarcely one, perhaps, which has not been used by our own poets. There is a
beauty in them, which can never grow old or lose its charm. Poets of all
ages recur to them instinctively in times of the deepest grief or the greatest
joy; but, in the words of Professor Max Müller, "it is impossible to enter
fully into the thoughts and feelings which passed through the minds of the
early poets when they formed names for that far East from whence even the
early Dawn, the Sun, the Day, their own life seemed to spring. A new life
flashed up every morning before their eyes, and the fresh breezes of the
Dawn reached them like greetings wafted across the golden threshold of the
sky from the distant lands beyond the mountains, beyond the clouds,
beyond the dawn, beyond the immortal sea which brought us hither! The
Dawn seemed to them to open golden gates for the Sun to pass in triumph;
and while those gates were open, their eyes and their minds strove, in their
childish way, to pierce beyond the limits of this finite world. That silent
aspect wakened in the human mind the conception of the Infinite, the
Immortal, the Divine; and the names of the Dawn became naturally the
names of higher powers.[554:9]
"This imagery of the Aryans was applied by them to all they saw in the sky.
Sometimes, as we have said, the clouds were cows; they were also dragons,
which sought to slay the Sun; or great ships floating across the sky, and
casting anchor upon earth; or rocks, or mountains, or deep caverns, in
which evil deities hid the golden light. Then, also, they were shaped by
fancy into animals of various kinds—the bear, the wolf, the dog, the ox; and
into giant birds, and into monsters which were both bird and beast.
"The winds, again, in their fancy, were the companions or ministers of
India, the sky-god. The spirits of the winds gathered into their host the souls
of the dead—thus giving birth to the Scandinavian and Teutonic legend of
the Wild Horseman, who rides at midnight through the stormy sky, with his
long train of dead behind him, and his weird hounds before.[555:1] The
Ribhus, or Arbhus, again, were the sunbeams or the lightning, who forged
the armor of the gods, and made their thunderbolts, and turned old people
young, and restored out of the hides alone the slaughtered cow on which the
gods had feasted."[555:2]
Aryan myths, then, were no more than poetic fancies about light and
darkness, cloud and rain, night and day, storm and wind; and when they
moved westward and southward, the Aryan race brought these legends with
it; and out of these were shaped by degrees innumerable gods and demons
of the Hindoos, the devs and jinns of the Persians; the great gods, the minor
deities, and nymphs, and fauns, and satyrs of Greek mythology and poetry;
the stormy divinities, the giants, and trolls of the cold and rugged North; the
dwarfs of the German forests; the elves who dance merrily in the moonlight
of an English summer; and the "good people" who play mischievous tricks
upon stray peasants among the Irish hills. Almost all, indeed, that we have
of a legendary kind comes to us from our Aryan forefathers—sometimes
scarcely changed, sometimes so altered that we have to puzzle out the links
between the old and the new; but all these myths and traditions, and old-
world stories, when we come to know the meaning of them, take us back to
the time when the Aryan race dwelt together in the high lands of central
Asia, and they all mean the same things—that is, the relation between the
Sun and the earth, the succession of night and day, of winter and summer, of
storm and calm, of cloud and tempest, and golden sunshine, and bright blue
sky. And this is the source from which we get our fairy stories, and tales of
gods and heroes; for underneath all of them there are the same fanciful
meanings, only changed and altered in the way of putting them by the lapse
of ages of time, by the circumstances of different countries, and by the
fancy of those who kept the wonderful tales alive without knowing what
they meant.
Thousands of years ago, the Aryan people began their march out of their
old country in mid-Asia. From the remains of their language, and the
likeness of their legends to those among other nations, we know that ages
and ages ago their country grew too small for them, so they were obliged to
move away from it. Some of them turned southward into India and Persia,
and some of them went westward into Europe—the time, perhaps, when the
land of Europe stretched from the borders of Asia to the islands of Great
Britain, and when there was no sea between them and the main land. How
they made their long and toilsome march we know not. But, as Kingsley
writes of such a movement of an ancient tribe, so we may fancy these old
Aryans marching westward—"the tall, bare-limbed men, with stone axes on
their shoulders and horn bows at their backs, with herds of gray cattle,
guarded by huge lap-eared mastiffs, with shaggy white horses, heavy-
horned sheep, and silky goats, moving always westward through the
boundless steppes, whither or why we know not, but that the Al-Father had
sent them forth. And behind us (he makes them say) the rosy snow-peaks
died into ghastly gray, lower and lower, as every evening came; and before
us the plains spread infinite, with gleaming salt-lakes, and ever fresh tribes
of gaudy flowers. Behind us, dark lines of living beings streamed down the
mountain slopes; around us, dark lines crawled along the plains—all
westward, westward ever. Who could stand against us? We met the wild
asses on the steppe, and tamed them, and made them our slaves. We slew
the bison herds, and swam broad rivers on their skins. The python snake lay
across our path; the wolves and wild dogs snarled at us out of their coverts;
we slew them and went on. Strange giant tribes met us, and eagle visaged
hordes, fierce and foolish; we smote them, hip and thigh, and went on,
westward ever."[556:1] And so they went on, straight toward the West, or, as
they turned North and South, and thus overspread new lands, they brought
with them their old ways of thought and forms of belief, and the stories in
which these had taken form; and on these were built up the gods and
heroes, and all wonder-working creatures and things, and the poetical fables
and fancies which have come down to us, and which still linger in our
customs and our fairy tales; bright and sunny and many-colored in the
warm regions of the South, sterner and wilder and rougher in the North,
more homelike in the middle and western countries; but always alike in
their main features, and always having the same meaning when we come to
dig it out, and these forms and their meaning being the same in the lands of
the West Aryans as in those still peopled by the Aryans of the East.
The story of Cinderella is one of the many fairy tales which help us to find
out their meaning, and take us straight back to the far-off land where fairy
legends began, and to the people who made them. This well-known fairy
tale has been found among the myths of our Aryan ancestors, and from this
we know that it is the story of the Sun and the Dawn. Cinderella, gray and
dark and dull, is all neglected when she is away from the Sun, obscured by
the envious clouds, her sisters, and by her step-mother, the Night. So she is
Aurora, the Dawn, and the Fairy Prince is the Morning Sun, ever pursuing
her, to claim her for his bride. This is the legend as it is found in the ancient
Hindoo books; and this explains at once the source and the meaning of the
fairy tale.[557:1]
Another tale which helps us in our task is that of Jack the Giant-Killer, who
is really one of the very oldest and most widely known characters in
wonder-land. Now, who is this wonderful little fellow? He is none other
than the hero who, in all countries and ages, fights with monsters and
overcomes them; like Indra, the ancient Hindoo Sun-god, whose
thunderbolts slew the demons of drought in the far East; or Perseus, who, in
Greek story, delivers the maiden from the sea-monster; or Odysseus, who
tricks the giant Polyphemus, and causes him to throw himself into the sea;
or Thor, whose hammer beats down the frost giants of the North. "The gifts
bestowed upon Jack are found in Tartar stories, Hindoo tales, in German
legends, and in the fables of Scandinavia."
Still another is that of Little Red Riding-Hood. The story of Little Red
Riding Hood, as we call her, or Little Red-Cap, as she is called in the
German tales, also comes from the same source, and (as we have seen in
Chapter IX.), refers to the Sun and Night.
"One of the fancies in the most ancient Aryan or Hindoo stories was that
there was a great dragon that was trying to devour the Sun, to prevent him
from shining upon the earth, and filling it with brightness and life and
beauty, and that Indra, the Sun-god, killed the dragon. Now, this is the
meaning of Little Red Riding-Hood, as it is told in our nursery tales. Little
Red Riding-Hood is the Evening Sun, which is always described as red or
golden; the old grandmother is the Earth, to whom the rays of the Sun bring
warmth and comfort. The wolf—which is a well-known figure for the
Clouds and blackness of Night (in Teutonic mythology)[558:1]—is the
dragon in another form. First, he devours the grandmother; that is, he wraps
the earth in thick clouds, which the Evening Sun is not strong enough to
pierce through. Then, with the darkness of Night, he swallows up the
Evening Sun itself, and all is dark and desolate. Then, as in the German
tale, the night-thunder and the storm winds are represented by the loud
snoring of the wolf; and then the huntsman, the Morning Sun, comes in all
his strength and majesty, and chases away the night clouds and kills the
wolf, and revives old grandmother Earth and Little Red Riding Hood to life
again."
Nor is it in these stories alone that we can trace the ancient Hindoo legends,
and the Sun-myth. There is, as Mr. Bunce observes in his "Fairy Tales, their
Origin and Meaning," scarcely a tale of Greek or Roman mythology, no
legend of Teutonic or Celtic or Scandinavian growth, no great romance of
what we call the middle ages, no fairy story taken down from the lips of
ancient folk, and dressed for us in modern shape and tongue, that we do not
find, in some form or another, in these Eastern poems, which are composed
of allegorical tales of gods and heroes.
When, in the Vedic hymns, Kephalos, Prokris, Hermes, Daphne, Zeus,
Ouranos, stand forth as simple names for the Sun, the Dew, the Wind, the
Dawn, the Heaven and the Sky, each recognized as such, yet each endowed
with the most perfect consciousness, we feel that the great riddle of
mythology is solved, and that we no longer lack the key which shall
disclose its most hidden treasures. When we hear the people saying, "Our
friend the Sun is dead. Will he rise? Will the Dawn come back again?" we
see the death of Hercules, and the weary waiting while Leto struggles with
the birth of Phoibos. When on the return of day we hear the cry—
"Rise! our life, our spirit has come back, the darkness is gone, the light
draws near!"
—we are carried at once to the Homeric hymn, and we hear the joyous
shout of all the gods when Phoibos springs to life and light on Delos.[558:2]
That the peasant folk-lore of modern Europe still displays episodes of
nature-myth, may be seen in the following story of Vassalissa, the
Beautiful.
Vassalissa's stepmother and two sisters, plotting against her life, send her to
get a light at the house of Bàba Yagà, the witch, and her journey contains
the following history of the Day, told, as Mr. Tylor says, in truest mythic
fashion:
"Vassalissa goes and wanders, wanders in the forest. She goes, and she
shudders. Suddenly before her bounds a rider, he himself white, and clad in
white, and the trappings white. And Day began to dawn. She goes farther,
when a second rider bounds forth, himself red, clad in red, and on a red
horse. The Sun began to rise. She goes on all day, and towards evening
arrives at the witch's house. Suddenly there comes again a rider, himself
black, clad in all black, and on a black horse; he bounded to the gates of the
Bàba Yagà, and disappeared as if he had sunk through the earth. Night fell.
After this, when Vassalissa asks the witch, 'Who was the white rider?' she
answered, 'That is my clear Day;' 'Who was the red rider?' 'That is my red
Sun;' 'Who was the black rider?' 'That is my black Night. They are all my
trusty friends.'"[559:1]
We have another illustration of allegorical mythology in the Grecian story
of Hephæstos splitting open with his axe the head of Zeus, and Athene
springing from it, full armed; for we perceive behind this savage imagery
Zeus as the bright Sky, his forehead the East, Hephæstos as the young, not
yet risen Sun, and Athene as the Dawn, the daughter of the Sky, stepping
forth from the fountain-head of light,—with eyes like an owl, pure as a
virgin; the golden; lighting up the tops of the mountains, and her own
glorious Parthenon in her own favorite town of Athens; whirling the shafts
of light; the genial warmth of the morning; the foremost champion in the
battle between night and day; in full armor, in her panoply of light, driving
away the darkness of night, and awakening men to a bright life, to bright
thoughts, to bright endeavors.[559:2]
Another story of the same sort is that of Kronos. Every one is familiar with
the story of Kronos, who devoured his own children. Now, Kronos is a
mere creation from the older and misunderstood epithet Kronides or
Kronion, the ancient of days. When these days or time had come to be
regarded as a person the myth would certainly follow that he devoured his
own children, as Time is the devourer of the Dawns.[559:3] Saturn, who
devours his own children, is the same power whom the Greeks called
Kronos (Time), which may truly be said to destroy whatever it has brought
into existence.
The idea of a Heaven, the "Elysian fields," is also born of the sky.
The "Elysian plain" is far away in the West, where the sun goes down
beyond the bonds of the earth, when Eos gladdens the close of day as she
sheds her violet tints over the sky. The "Abodes of the Blessed" are golden
islands sailing in a sea of blue,—the burnished clouds floating in the pure
ether. Grief and sorrow cannot approach them; plague and sickness cannot
touch them. The blissful company gathered together in that far Western land
inherits a tearless eternity.
Of the other details in the picture the greater number would be suggested
directly by these images drawn from the phenomena of sunset and twilight.
What spot or stain can be seen on the deep blue ocean in which the "Islands
of the Blessed" repose forever? What unseemly forms can mar the beauty of
that golden home, lighted by the radiance of a Sun which can never set?
Who then but the pure in heart, the truthful and the generous, can be
suffered to tread the violet fields? And how shall they be tested save by
judges who can weigh the thoughts and the interests of the heart? Thus
every soul, as it drew near that joyous land, was brought before the august
tribunal of Minos, Rhadamanthys, and Aiakos; and they whose faith was in
truth a quickening power, might draw from the ordeals those golden lessons
which Plato has put into the mouth of Socrates, and some unknown persons
into the mouths of Buddha and Jesus. The belief of earlier ages pictured to
itself the meetings in that blissful land, the forgiveness of old wrongs, and
the reconciliation of deadly feuds,[560:1] just as the belief of the present day
pictures these things to itself.
The story of a War in Heaven, which was known to all nations of antiquity,
is allegorical, and refers to the battle between light and darkness, sunshine
and storm cloud.[560:2]
As examples of the prevalence of the legend relating to the struggle
between the co-ordinate powers of good and evil, light and darkness, the
Sun and the clouds, we have that of Phoibos and Python, Indra and Vritra,
Sigurd and Fafuir, Achilleus and Paris, Oidipous and the Sphinx, Ormuzd
and Ahriman, and from the character of the struggle between Indra and
Vritra, and again between Ormuzd and Ahriman, we infer that a myth,
purely physical, in the land of the Five Streams, assumed a moral and
spiritual meaning in Persia, and the fight between the co-ordinate powers of
good and evil, gave birth to the dualism which from that time to the present
has exercised so mighty an influence through the East and West.
The Apocalypse exhibits Satan with the physical attributes of Ahriman; he
is called the "dragon," the "old serpent," who fights against God and his
angels. The Vedic myth, transformed and exaggerated in the Iranian books,
finds its way through this channel into Christianity. The idea thus
introduced was that of the struggle between Satan and Michael, which
ended in the overthrow of the former, and the casting forth of all his hosts
out of heaven, but it coincides too nearly with a myth spread in countries
held by all the Aryan nations to avoid further modification. Local tradition
substituted St. George or St. Theodore for Jupiter, Apollo, Hercules, or
Perseus. It is under this disguise that the Vedic myth has come down to our
own times, and has still its festivals and its monuments. Art has consecrated
it in a thousand ways. St. Michael, lance in hand, treading on the dragon, is
an image as familiar now as, thirty centuries ago, that of Indra treading
under foot the demon Vritra could possibly have been to the Hindoo.[561:1]
The very ancient doctrine of a TRINITY, three gods in one, can be explained,
rationally, by allegory only. We have seen that the Sun, in early times, was
believed to be the Creator, and became the first object of adoration. After
some time it would be observed that this powerful and beneficent agent, the
solar fire, was the most potent Destroyer, and hence would arise the first
idea of a Creator and Destroyer united in the same person. But much time
would not elapse before it must have been observed, that the destruction
caused by this powerful being was destruction only in appearance, that
destruction was only reproduction in another form—regeneration; that if he
appeared sometimes to destroy, he constantly repaired the injury which he
seemed to occasion—and that, without his light and heat, everything would
dwindle away into a cold, inert, unprolific mass. Thus, at once, in the same
being, became concentrated, the creating, the preserving, and the destroying
powers—the latter of the three being at the same time both the Destroyer
and Regenerator. Hence, by a very natural and obvious train of reasoning,
arose the Creator, the Preserver, and the Destroyer—in India Brahmā,
Vishnu, and Siva; in Persia Oromasdes, Mithra, and Arimanius; in Egypt
Osiris, Horus, and Typhon: in each case THREE PERSONS AND ONE GOD. And
thus undoubtedly arose the TRIMURTI, or the celebrated Trinity.
Traces of a similar refinement may be found in the Greek mythology, in the
Orphic Phanes, Ericapeus and Metis, who were all identified with the Sun,
and yet embraced in the first person, Phanes, or Protogones, the Creator and
Generator.[562:1] The invocation to the Sun, in the Mysteries, according to
Macrobius, was as follows: "O all-ruling Sun! Spirit of the world! Power of
the world! Light of the world!"[562:2]
We have seen in Chap. XXXV, that the Peruvian Triad was represented by
three statues, called, respectively, "Apuinti, Churiinti, and Intihoaoque,"
which is, "Lord and Father Sun; Son Sun; and Air or Spirit, Brother Sun."
[562:3]
FOOTNOTES:
[553:1] This picture would give us the story of Hercules, who strangled the serpent in his
cradle, and who, in after years, in the form of a giant, ran his course.
[553:2] This would give us St. George killing the Dragon.
[553:3] This would give us the story of the monster who attempted to devour the Sun, and
whom the "untutored savage" tried to frighten away by making loud cries.
[553:4] This would give us the story of Samson, whose strength was renewed at the end of
his career, and who slew the Philistines—who had dimmed his brilliance—and bathed his
path with blood.
[553:5] This would give us the story of Oannes or Dagon, who, beneath the clouds of the
evening sky, plunged into the sea.
[553:6] This would give us the story of Hercules and his bride Iôle, or that of Christ Jesus
and his mother Mary, who were at their side at the end of their career.
[553:7] This would give us the story of the labors of Hercules.
[553:8] This is the Sun as Seva.
[553:9] Here again we have the Sun as Siva the Destroyer.
[553:10] Here we have Apollo, Achilleus, Bellerophon and Odysseus.
[553:11] This would give us the story of Samson, who was "the friend of the children of
men, and the remorseless foe of those powers of darkness" (the Philistines), who had stolen
away his bride. (See Judges, ch. xv.)
[554:1] This would give us the stories of Thor, the mighty warrior, the terror of his
enemies, and those of Cadmus, Romulus or Odin, the wise chieftains, who founded
nations, and taught their people knowledge.
[554:2] This would give us the story of Christ Jesus, and other Angel-Messiahs; Saviours
of men.
[554:3] This would give us the stories of spellbound maidens, who sleep for years.
[554:4] This is Hercules and his counterparts.
[554:5] This again is Hercules.
[554:6] This would depend upon whether his light was obscured by clouds, or not.
[554:7] This again is Hercules.
[554:8] This is Apollo, Siva and Ixion.
[554:9] Rev. G. W. Cox.
[555:1] Who has not heard it said that the howling or whining of a dog forebodes death?
[555:2] Bunce: Fairy Tales, Origin and Meaning.
[556:1] Quoted by Bunce: Fairy Tales.
[557:1] See Bunce: Fairy Tales, p. 34.
[558:1] "The Sun," said Gaugler, "speeds at such a rate as if she feared that some one was
pursuing her for her destruction." "And well she may," replied Har, "for he that seeks her is
not far behind, and she has no way to escape but to run before him." "And who is he,"
asked Gaugler, "that causes her this anxiety?" "It is the Wolf Sköll," answered Har, "who
pursues the Sun, and it is he that she fears, for he shall one day overtake and devour her."
(Scandinavian Prose Edda. See Mallet's Northern Antiquities, p. 407). This Wolf is, as we
have said, a personification of Night and Clouds, we therefore have the almost universal
practice among savage nations of making noises at the time of eclipses, to frighten away
the monsters who would otherwise devour the Sun.
[558:2] Aryan Mythology, vol. i. p. 103.
[559:1] Tylor: Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 308.
[559:2] Müller: The Science of Religion, p. 65.
[559:3] Cox: Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 1.
[560:1] As the hand of Hector is clasped in the hand of the hero who slew him. There, as
the story ran, the lovely Helen "pardoned and purified," became the bride of the short-
lived, yet long-suffering Achilleus, even as Iole comforted the dying Hercules on earth, and
Hebe became his solace in Olympus. But what is the meeting of Helen and Achilleus, of
Iole and Hebe and Hercules, but the return of the violet tints to greet the Sun in the West,
which had greeted him in the East in the morning? The idea was purely physical, yet it
suggested the thoughts of trial, atonement, and purification; and it is unnecessary to say
that the human mind, having advanced thus far, must make its way still farther. (Cox:
Aryan Mythology, vol. ii. p. 822.)
[560:2] The black storm-cloud, with the flames of lightning issuing from it, was the
original of the dragon with tongues of fire. Even as late as A. D. 1600, a German writer
would illustrate a thunder-storm destroying a crop of corn by a picture of a dragon
devouring the produce of the field with his flaming tongue and iron teeth. (Baring-Gould:
Curious Myths, p. 342.)
[561:1] M. Bréal, and G. W. Cox.
[562:1] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 59.
[562:2] Ibid.
[562:3] Ibid. p. 181.
[562:4] Book iv. ch. i. in Anac., vol. i. p. 137.
[562:5] P. 6.
[562:6] Squire: Serpent Symbol, p. 33.
[562:7] Aryan Mytho., vol. ii. p. 33.
[562:8] Williams' Hinduism, p. 88.
[563:1] Müller's Chips, vol. ii. p. 260.
APPENDIX D.
We maintain that not so much as one single passage purporting to be
written, as history, within the first hundred years of the Christian era, can
be produced to show the existence at or before that time of such a person as
Jesus of Nazareth, called the Christ, or of such a set of men as could be
accounted his disciples or followers. Those who would be likely to refer to
Jesus or his disciples, but who have not done so, wrote about:
A. D. 40 Philo.[564:1]
40 Josephus.
79 Pausanias.
Geographers.
79 Pompon Mela.
79 Q. Curtius Ruf.
79 Luc. Flor.
110 Cornel Tacitus.
Historians.
123 Appianus.
140 Justinus.
141 Ælianus.
Out of this number it has been claimed that one (Josephus) spoke of Jesus,
and another (Tacitus) of the Christians. Of the former it is almost needless
to speak, as that has been given up by Christian divines many years ago.
However, for the sake of those who still cling to it we shall state the
following:
Dr. Lardner, who wrote about A. D. 1760, says:
1. It was never quoted by any of our Christian ancestors before Eusebius.
2. Josephus has nowhere else mentioned the name or word Christ, in any of
his works, except the testimony above mentioned,[564:3] and the passage
concerning James, the Lord's brother.[564:4]
3. It interrupts the narrative.
4. The language is quite Christian.
5. It is not quoted by Chrysostom,[564:5] though he often refers to Josephus,
and could not have omitted quoting it, had it been then, in the text.
6. It is not quoted by Photius, though he has three articles concerning
Josephus.
7. Under the article Justus of Tiberius, this author (Photius) expressly states
that this historian (Josephus), being a Jew, has not taken the least notice of
Christ.
8. Neither Justin, in his dialogue with Typho the Jew, nor Clemens
Alexandrinus, who made so many extracts from ancient authors, nor Origen
against Celsus, have even mentioned this testimony.
9. But, on the contrary, Origen openly affirms (ch. xxxv., bk. i., against
Celsus), that Josephus, who had mentioned John the Baptist, did not
acknowledge Christ.[565:1]
In the "Bible for Learners," we read as follows:
"Flavius Josephus, the well-known historian of the Jewish people, was born
in A. D. 37, only two years after the death of Jesus; but though his work is of
inestimable value as our chief authority for the circumstances of the times
in which Jesus and his Apostles came forward, yet he does not seem to have
ever mentioned Jesus himself. At any rate, the passage in his 'Jewish
Antiquities' that refers to him is certainly spurious, and was inserted by a
later and a Christian hand. The Talmud compresses the history of Jesus into
a single sentence, and later Jewish writers concoct mere slanderous
anecdotes. The ecclesiastical fathers mention a few sayings or events, the
knowledge of which they drew from oral tradition or from writings that
have since been lost. The Latin and Greek historians just mention his name.
This meager harvest is all we reap from sources outside the Gospels."[565:2]
Canon Farrar, who finds himself compelled to admit that this passage in
Josephus is an interpolation, consoles himself by saying:
"The single passage in which he (Josephus) alludes to Him (Christ) is
interpolated, if not wholly spurious, and no one can doubt that his silence
on the subject of Christianity was as deliberate as it was dishonest."[565:3]
The Rev. Dr. Giles, after commenting on this subject, concludes by saying:
"Eusebius is the first who quotes the passage, and our reliance on the
judgment, or even the honesty, of this writer is not so great as to allow of
our considering everything found in his works as undoubtedly genuine."
[565:4]
12. The word "Christ" is not a name, but a TITLE;[567:2] it being simply the
Greek for the Hebrew word "Messiah." Therefore,
13. When Tacitus is made to speak of Jesus as "Christ," it is equivalent to
my speaking of Tacitus as "Historian," of George Washington as "General,"
or of any individual as "Mister," without adding a name by which either
could be distinguished. And therefore,
14. It has no sense or meaning as he is said to have used it.
15. Tacitus is also made to say that the Christians had their denomination
from Christ, which would apply to any other of the so-called Christs who
were put to death in Judea, as well as to Christ Jesus. And
16. "The disciples were called Christians first at Antioch" (Acts xi. 26), not
because they were followers of a certain Jesus who claimed to be the Christ,
but because "Christian" or "Chrēstian," was a name applied, at that time, to
any good man.[567:3] And,
17. The worshipers of the Sun-god, Serapis, were also called "Christians,"
and his disciples "Bishops of Christ."[568:1]
So much, then, for the celebrated passage in Tacitus.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.
H.
Hair, long, attributes of the sun, 71;
worn by all sun-gods, 71, 72.
Hâu-Ki, Chinese sage, of supernatural origin, 120.
Heathen, the, the religion of, same as Christian, 384.
Heaven, all nations believed in a, 389;
is born of the sky, 391, 559.
Heavenly host, the, sang praises at the birth of Jesus, 146;
parallels to, 146-149.
Hebrew people, the, history of, commences with the Exodus, 52-55.
Hebrews, the gospel of the, 455.
Hell, Christ Jesus descended into, 211;
Crishna descended into, 213;
Zoroaster descended into, 213;
Osiris, Horus, Adonis, Bacchus, Hercules, Mercury, all descended
into, 213;
built by priests, 391.
Hercules, compared with Samson, 66-72;
a personification of the Sun, 73, 485;
all nations had their, 76;
was the son of Jupiter, 124;
was exposed when an infant, 170;
was called the "Saviour," 193;
the "Only begotten," 193;
is put to death, 485;
is comforted by Iole, 493.
Heretics, the first, 134;
denied the crucifixion of "the Christ," 511;
denied that "the Christ" ever came in the flesh, 512.
Heri, means "Saviour," 112;
Crishna so called, 112.
Hermes, or Mercury, the son of Jupiter and a mortal mother, 125;
is born in a cave, 156;
was called the "Saviour," 195;
the "Logos" and "Messenger of God," 195.
Herod, orders all the children in Bethlehem to be slain, 166;
the Hindoo parallel to, 166-167;
a personification of Night, 481.
Herodotus, speaks of Hercules, 69;
speaks of circumcision, 86;
relates a wonderful miracle, 261.
Hesione, rescued from the sea monster, 78.
Hesperides, the apples of, the tree of knowledge, 11-12.
Hieroglyphics, the Mexican, describe the crucifixion of Quetzalcoatle,
199.
Hilkiah, claimed to have found the "Book of the Law," 94.
Himalayas, the, the Hindoo ark rested on, 27.
Hindoos, the, had no legend of the creation similar to the Hebrew, 13;
believe Mount Meru to have been the Paradise, 13;
had a legend of the Deluge, 24;
had a legend of the "Confusion of Tongues," 35;
had their Samson or Strong Man, 73;
worshiped a virgin-born god, 113;
adored a trinity, 371;
have believed in a soul from time immemorial, 388.
Historical theory, the, succeeded by the allegorical, 466.
Histories, the, of the gods are fabulous, 466.
Holy Ghost, the, impregnates the Virgin Mary, 111;
and the Virgin Maya, 117;
is one with the Father and the Son, 368;
is symbolized by the dove among Heathen nations, 357.
Holy One, the, of the Chinese, 190.
Holy Trinity, the, of the Christians, the same as that of the Pagans, 370.
Homa, or Haoma, a god of the Hindoos, called the "Benefactor of the
World," 306.
Horus, the Egyptian Saviour, 122;
born of the Virgin Isis, 122;
is put to death, 190;
descended into hell, 213;
rose from the dead, 222;
performed miracles, 256;
raised the dead to life, 256;
is represented as an infant on the lap of his virgin mother, 327;
is born on December 25th, 363;
a personification of the sun, 476;
crucified in the heavens, 484.
Hydaspus, the river, divided by Bacchus, 51.
Hypatia, put to death by a Christian mob, 440.
I.
J.
K.
L.
M.
N.
O.
P.
R.
Râ, the Egyptian God, born from the side of his mother, 122.
Raam-ses, king of Egypt, 123;
means "Son of the Sun," 123.
Rabbis, the, taught the allegorical interpretation of Scripture, 100;
performed miracles, 267;
taught the mystery of the Trinity, 376.
Rakshasas, the, of our Aryan ancestors, the originals of all giants,
ogres or demons, 19;
are personifications of the dark clouds, 19;
fought desperate battles with Indrea, and his spirits of light, 387.
Ram or Lamb, the, used as a symbol of Christ Jesus, 202;
a symbol of the Sun, 503, 504.
Rama, an incarnation of Vishnu, 143;
a star at his birth, 143;
is hailed by aged saints, 152.
Rayme, a Mexican festival held in the month of, answering to our
Christmas celebration, 366.
Rays of glory, surround the heads of all the Gods, 505.
Real Presence, the, in the Eucharist, borrowed from Paganism, 305-
312.
Red Riding-Hood, the story of, explained, 80.
Red Sea, the, divided by Moses, 50;
divided by Bacchus, 51.
Religion, the, of Paganism, compared with Christianity, 384.
Religions, the, of all nations, formerly a worship of the sun, moon,
stars and elements, 544.
Resurrection, the, of Jesus, 215;
parallels to, 216, 226.
Rhea-Sylvia, the Virgin mother of Romulus, 126.
Rivers, divided by the command of Bacchus, 51.
Rivers (sacred), 318.
Romans, the, deified their emperors, 125.
Rome, the Pantheon of, dedicated to "Jove and all the Gods," and
reconsecrated to "the Mother of God and all the Saints," 396.
Romulus, son of the Virgin Rhea-Sylvia, 126;
called Quirinius, 126;
a dangerous child, 172;
put to death, 308;
the sun darkened at time of his death, 208.
Rosary, the Buddhist priests count their prayers with a, 401;
found on an ancient medal of the Phenicians, 504.
Rose, the, of Sharon, Jesus called, 487.
Rosicrucians, the, jewel of, a crucified rose, 487.
Ruffinus, the "Apostles' creed" first known in the days of, 385.
Russia, adherents of the old religion of, persecuted, 444.
S.
T.
U.
V.
W.
X.
Z.
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