Again, the rise of chieftainship and kingship has much to
do with the growth of a higher conception of godhead; a dead
king of any great power or authority is sure to be thought of in
time as a god of considerable importance. We shall trace out
this idea more fully hereafter in the religion of Egypt; for the
present it must suffice to say that the supposed power of the gods in
each pantheon has regularly increased in proportion to the increased
power of kings or emperors.
When we pass from the first plane of
corpse preservation and mummification to the second plane, where burial
is habitual, it might seem, at a hasty glance, as though continued
worship of the dead, and their elevation into gods, would no longer
be possible. For we saw that burial is prompted by a deadly
fear lest the corpse or ghost should return to plague the
living. Nevertheless, natural affection for parents or friends, and
the desire to insure their goodwill and aid, make these
seemingly contrary ideas reconcilable. As a matter of fact, we find
that even when men bury or burn their dead, they continue to
worship them; while, as we shall show in the sequel, even the
great stones which they roll on top of the grave to prevent the
dead from rising again become, in time, altars on which
sacrifices are offered to the spirit.
Much of the Bible is
evidently legendary. Here we have a jumble of ancient myths, allegories, and
mysteries drawn from many sources and remote ages, and adapted, altered, and
edited so many times that in many instances their original or inner meaning
has become obscure. And it is folly to accept the tangled legends and blurred
or distorted symbols as the literal history of a literal tribe, and the
literal account of the origin of man, and the genesis of religion.
The
real roots of religion lie far deeper: deeper, perhaps, than sun-worship,
ghost-worship, and fear of demons. In _The Real Origin of Religion_ occurs
the following:
Quite recently theories have been advocated
attempting to prove that the minds of early men were chiefly concerned
with the increase of vegetation, and that their fancy played so
much round the mysteries of plant growth that they made them
their holiest arcana. Hence it appears that the savages were far
more modest and refined than our civilised contemporaries, for
almost all our works of imagination, both in literature and art,
make human love their theme in all its aspects, whether healthy
or pathological; whereas the savage, it seems, thought only of
his crops. Nothing can be more astonishing than this discovery,
if it be true, but there are many facts which might lead us to believe
that the romance of love inspired early art and religion as well as
modern thought.
And again:
Religion is a gorgeous
efflorescence of human love. The tender passion has left its footsteps
on the sands of time in magnificent monuments and libraries of
theology.
This may seem startling to many orthodox readers, but it is no
new theory, and is doubtless quite true, for all gods have been made
by man, and all theologies have been evolved by man, and the odour and
the colour of his human passions cling to them always, even after they
are discarded. Under all man's dreams of eternal gods and eternal
heavens lies man's passion for the eternal feminine. But on these
subjects "Moses" spoke in parables, and I shall not speak at all.
Mr.
Robertson, in _Christianity and Mythology_, says of the Bible:
It is
a medley of early metaphysics and early fable--early, that is,
relatively to known Hebrew history. It ties together two creation
stories and two flood stories; it duplicates several sets of mythic
personages--as Cain and Abel, Tubal-Cain and Jabal; it grafts the curse
of Cham on the curse of Cain, making that finally the curse of Canaan;
it tells the same offensive story twice of one patriarch and again of
another; it gives an early "metaphysical" theory of the origin of
death, life, and evil; it adapts the Egyptian story of the "Two
Brothers," or the myth of Adonis, as the history of Joseph; it makes
use of various God-names, pretending that they always stood for
the same deity; it repeats traditions concerning mythic founders of
races--if all this be not "a medley of early fable," what is
it?
I quote next from _The Bible and the Child_, in which Dean Farrar
says:
Some of the books of Scripture are separated from others by
the interspace of a thousand years. They represent the
fragmentary survival of Hebrew literature. They stand on very
different levels of value, and even of morality. Read for centuries
in an otiose, perfunctory, slavish, and superstitious manner,
they have often been so egregiously misunderstood that many
entire systems of interpretation--which were believed in for
generations, and which fill many folios, now consigned to a happy
oblivion-- are clearly proved to have been utterly
baseless. Colossal usurpations of deadly import to the human race have
been built, like inverted pyramids, on the narrow apex of a
single misinterpreted text.
Compare those utterances of the
freethinker and the divine, and then read the following words of Dean
Farrar:
The manner in which the Higher Criticism has slowly and
surely made its victorious progress, in spite of the most
determined and exacerbated opposition, is a strong argument in its
favour. It is exactly analogous to the way in which the truths
of astronomy and of geology have triumphed over universal
opposition. They were once anathematised as "infidel"; they are now
accepted as axiomatic. I cannot name a single student or professor of
any eminence in Great Britain who does not accept, with more or less
modification, the main conclusions of the German school of
critics.
This being the case, I ask, as a mere layman, what right has the
Bible to usurp the title of "the word of God"? What evidence can be sharked
up to show that it is any more a holy or an inspired book than any book
of Thomas Carlyle's, or John Ruskin's, or William Morris'? What
evidence is forthcoming that the Bible is true?
THE
UNIVERSE ACCORDING TO ANCIENT RELIGION AND MODERN SCIENCE
The theory
of the early Christian Church was that the Earth was flat, like a plate, and
the sky was a solid dome above it, like an inverted blue basin.
The
Sun revolved round the Earth to give light by day, the Moon revolved round
the Earth to give light by night. The stars were auxiliary lights, and had
all been specially, and at the same time, created for the good of
man.
God created the Sun, Moon, Stars, and Earth in six days. He created
them by word, and He created them out of nothing.
The centre of the
Universe was the Earth. The Sun was made to give light to the Earth by day,
and the Moon to give light to Earth by night.
Any man who denied that
theory in those days was in danger of being murdered as an
Infidel.
To-day our ideas are very different. Hardly any educated man or
woman in the world believes that the world is flat, or that the Sun
revolves round the Earth, or that what we call the sky is a solid substance,
like a domed ceiling.
Advanced thinkers, even amongst the Christians,
believe that the world is round, that it is one of a series of planets
revolving round the Sun, that the Sun is only one of many millions of other
suns, that these suns were not created simultaneously, but at different
periods, probably separated by millions or billions of years.
We have
all, Christians and Infidels alike, been obliged to acknowledge that the
Earth is not the centre of the whole Universe, but only a minor planet
revolving around, and dependent upon, one of myriads of suns.
God, called
by Christians "Our Heavenly Father," created all things. He created not only
the world, but the whole universe. He is all-wise, He is all-powerful, He is
all-loving, and He is revealed to us in the Scriptures.
Let us see.
Let us try to imagine what kind of a God the creator of this Universe would
be, and let us compare him with the God, or Gods, revealed to us in the
Bible, and in the teachings of the Church.
We have seen the account of
the Universe and its creation, as given in the revealed Scriptures. Let us
now take a hasty view of the Universe and its creation as revealed to us by
science.
What is the Universe like, as far as our limited knowledge
goes?
Our Sun is only one sun amongst many millions. Our planet is only
one of eight which revolve around him.
Our Sun, with his planets and
comets, comprises what is known as the solar system.
There is no
reason to suppose that his is the only Solar System: there may be many
millions of solar systems. For aught we know, there may be millions of
systems, each containing millions of solar systems.
Let us deal first
with the solar system of which we are a part.
The Sun is a globe of
866,200 miles diameter. His diameter is more than 108 times that of the
Earth. His volume is 1,305,000 times the volume of the Earth. All the eight
planets added together only make one-seven-hundredth part of his weight. His
circumference is more than two and a-half millions of miles. He revolves upon
his axis in 25 1/4 days, or at a speed of nearly 4,000 miles an
hour.
This immense and magnificent globe diffuses heat and light to all
the other planets.
Without the light and heat of the Sun no life would
now be, or in the past have been, possible on this Earth, or any other planet
of the solar system.
The eight planets of the solar system are divided
into four inferior and four superior.
The inferior planets are
Mercury, Venus, the Earth, and Mars. The superior are Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus, and Neptune.
The diameters of the smaller planets are as follow:
Mercury, 3,008 miles; Mars, 5,000 miles; Venus, 7,480 miles; the Earth, 7,926
miles.
The diameters of the large planets are: Jupiter, 88,439 miles;
Saturn, 75,036 miles; Neptune, 37,205 miles; Uranus, 30,875 miles.
The
volume of Jupiter is 1,389 times, of Saturn 848 times, of Neptune 103 times,
and of Uranus 59 times the volume of the Earth.
The mean distances from
the Sun are: Mercury, 36 million miles; Venus, 67 million miles; the Earth,
93 million miles; Mars, 141 million miles; Jupiter, 483 million miles;
Saturn, 886 million miles; Uranus, 1,782 million miles; Neptune, 2,792
million miles.
To give an idea of the meaning of these distances, I may
say that a train travelling night and day at 60 miles an hour would take
quite 176 years to come from the Sun to the Earth.
The same train, at
the same speed, would be 5,280 years in travelling from the Sun to
Neptune.
Reckoning that Neptune is the outermost planet of the solar
system, that system would have a diameter of 5,584 millions of
miles.
If we made a chart of the solar system on a scale of 1 inch to a
million miles, we should need a sheet of paper 465 feet 4 inches wide. On
this sheet the Sun would have a diameter of less than 1 inch, and the
Earth would be about the size of a pin-prick.
If an express train,
going at 60 miles an hour, had to travel round the Earth's orbit, it would be
more than 1,000 years on the journey. If the Earth moved no faster, our
winter would last more than 250 years. But in the solar system the speeds are
as wonderful as the sizes. The Earth turns upon its axis at the rate of 1,000
miles an hour, and travels in its orbit round the Sun at the rate of more
than 1,000 miles a minute, or 66,000 miles an hour.
So much for the
size of the solar system. It consists of a Sun and eight planets, and the
outer planet's orbit is one of 5,584 millions of miles in diameter, which it
would take an express train, at 60 miles an hour, 10,560 years to
cross.
But this distance is as nothing when we come to deal with the
distances of the other stars from our Sun.
The distance from our Sun
to the nearest fixed (?) star is more than 20 millions of millions of miles.
Our express train, which crosses the diameter of the solar system in 10,560
years, would take, if it went 60 miles an hour day and night, about 40
million years to reach the nearest fixed star from the Sun.
And if we
had to mark the nearest fixed star on our chart made on a scale of 1 inch to
the million miles, we should find that whereas a sheet of 465 feet would take
in the outermost planet of the solar system, a sheet to take in the nearest
fixed star would have to be about 620 miles wide. On this sheet, as wide as
from London to Inverness, the Sun would be represented by a dot
three-quarters of an inch in diameter, and the Earth by a
pin-prick.
But these immense distances only relate to the _nearest_
stars. Now, the nearest stars are about four "light years" distant from us.
That is to say, that light, travelling at a rate of about 182,000 miles in
_one second_, takes four years to come from the nearest fixed star to
the Earth.
But I have seen the distance from the Earth to the Great
Nebula in Orion given as _a thousand light years_, or 250 times the distance
of the fixed star above alluded to.
To reach that nebula at 60 miles
an hour, an express train would have to travel for 35 millions of years
multiplied by 250--that is to say, for 8,750 million years.
And yet
there are millions of stars whose distances are even greater than the
distance of the Great Nebula in Orion.
How many stars are there? No one
can even guess. But L. Struve estimates the number of those visible to the
great telescopes at 20 millions.
Twenty millions of suns. And as for the
size of these suns, Sir Robert Ball says Sirius is ten times as large as our
Sun; and a well-known astronomer, writing in the _English Mechanic_ about a
week ago, remarks that Alpha Orionis (Betelgeuze) has probably 700 times the
light of our Sun.
Looking through my telescope, which is only 3-inch
aperture, I have seen star clusters of wonderful beauty in the Pleiades and
in Cancer. There is, in the latter constellation, a dim star which, when
viewed through my glass, becomes a constellation larger, more brilliant, and
more beautiful than Orion or the Great Bear. I have looked at these
jewelled sun-clusters many a time, and wondered over them. But I have
never once thought of believing that they were specially created to be
lesser lights to the Earth.
And now let me quote from that grand book
of Richard A. Proctor's, _The Expanse of Heaven_, a fine passage descriptive
of some of the wonders of the "Milky Way":
There are stars in all
orders of brightness, from those which (seen with the telescope)
resemble in lustre the leading glories of the firmament, down to tiny
points of light only caught by momentary twinklings. Every variety of
arrangement is seen. Here the stars are scattered as over the skies at
night; there they cluster in groups, as though drawn together by some
irresistible power; in one region they seem to form sprays of stars
like diamonds sprinkled over fern leaves; elsewhere they lie in
streams and rows, in coronets and loops and festoons, resembling the
star festoon which, in the constellation Perseus, garlands the black
robe of night. Nor are varieties of colour wanting to render the
display more wonderful and more beautiful. Many of the stars which
crowd upon the view are red, orange, and yellow Among them are groups of
two and three and four (multiple stars as they are called), amongst
which blue and green and lilac and purple stars appear, forming the most
charming contrast to the ruddy and yellow orbs near which they are
commonly seen.
Millions and millions--countless millions of suns.
Innumerable galaxies and systems of suns, separated by black gulfs of space
so wide that no man can realise the meaning of the figures which denote their
stretch. Suns of fire and light, whirling through vast oceans of space
like swarms of golden bees. And round them planets whirling at thousands
of miles a minute.
And on Earth there are forms of life so minute that
millions of them exist in a drop of water. There are microscopic creatures
more beautiful and more highly finished than any gem, and more complex and
effective than the costliest machine of human contrivance. In _The Story
of Creation_ Mr. Ed. Clodd tells us that one cubic inch of rotten
stone contains 41 thousand million vegetable skeletons of diatoms.
I
cut the following from a London morning paper:
It was discovered
some few years ago that a peculiar bacillus was present in all persons
suffering from typhoid, and in all foods and drinks which spread the
disease. Experiments were carried out, and it was assumed, not without
good reason, that the bacillus was the primary cause of the malady, and
it was accordingly labelled the typhoid bacillus.
But the
bacteriologists further discovered that the typhoid bacillus was present
in water which was not infectious, and in persons who were not ill, or
had never been ill, with typhoid.
So now a theory is propounded that
a healthy typhoid bacillus does not cause typhoid, but that it is only
when the bacillus is itself sick of a fever, or, in other words, is
itself the prey of some infinitely minuter organisms, which feed on
it alone, that it works harm to mortal men.
The bacillus is so
small that one requires a powerful microscope to see him, and his blood may
be infested with bacilli as small to him as he is to us.
And there are
millions, and more likely billions, of suns!
Talk about Aladdin's palace,
Sinbad's valley of diamonds, Macbeth's witches, or the Irish fairies! How
petty are their exploits, how tawdry are their splendours, how paltry are
their riches, when we compare them to the romance of science.
When did
a poet conceive an idea so vast and so astounding as the theory of evolution?
What are a few paltry, lumps of crystallised carbon compared to a galaxy of a
million million suns? Did any Eastern inventor of marvels ever suggest such a
human feat as that accomplished by the men who have, during the last handful
of centuries, spelt out the mystery of the universe? These scientists have
worked miracles before which those of the ancient priests and magicians are
mere tricks of hanky-panky.
Look at the romance of geology; at the
romance of astronomy; at the romance of chemistry; at the romance of the
telescope, and the microscope, and the prism. More wonderful than all,
consider the story of how flying atoms in space became suns, how suns made
planets, how planets changed from spheres of flame and raging fiery storm to
worlds of land and water. How in the water specks of jelly became
fishes, fishes reptiles, reptiles mammals, mammals monkeys; monkeys
men; until, from the fanged and taloned cannibal, roosting in a forest,
have developed art and music, religion and science; and the children of
the jellyfish can weigh the suns, measure the stellar spaces, ride on the
ocean or in the air, and speak to each other from continent
to continent.
Talk about fairy tales! what is this? You may look
through a telescope, and see the nebula that is to make a sun floating, like
a luminous mist, three hundred million miles away. You may look again, and
see another sun in process of formation. You may look again, and see others
almost completed. You may look again and again, and see millions of suns
and systems spread out across the heavens like rivers of living
gems.
You will say that all this speaks of a Creator. I shall not
contradict you. But what kind of Creator must He be who has created such a
universe as this?
Do you think He is the kind of Creator to make
blunders and commit crimes? Can you, after once thinking of the Milky Way,
with its rivers of suns, and the drop of water teeming with spangled dragons,
and the awful abysses of dark space, through which comets shoot at a
speed a thousand times as fast as an express train--can you, after
seeing Saturn's rings, and Jupiter's moons, and the clustered gems of
Hercules, consent for a moment to the allegation that the creator of all
this power and glory got angry with men, and threatened them with
scabs and sores, and plagues of lice and frogs? Can you suppose that such
a creator would, after thousands of years of effort, have failed even
now to make His repeated revelations comprehensible? Do you believe
that He would be driven across the unimaginable gulfs of space, but of
the transcendent glory of His myriad resplendent suns, to die on a
cross, in order to win back to Him the love of the puny creatures on one
puny planet in the marvellous universe His power had made?
Do you
believe that the God who imagined and created such a universe could be petty,
base, cruel, revengeful, and capable of error? I do not believe
it.
And now let us examine the character and conduct of this God as
depicted for us in the Bible--the book which is alleged to have been
directly revealed by God Himself.
JEHOVAH THE ADOPTED
HEAVENLY FATHER OF CHRISTIANITY
In giving the above brief sketch of
the known universe my object was to suggest that the Creator of a universe of
such scope and grandeur must be a Being of vast power and the loftiest
dignity.
Now, the Christians claim that their God created this
universe--not the universe He is described, in His own inspired word, as
creating, but the universe revealed by science; the universe of twenty
millions of suns.
And the Christians claim that this God is a God of
love, a God omnipotent, omnipresent, and eternal. And the Christians claim
that this great God, the Creator of our wonderful universe, is the God
revealed to us in the Bible.
Let us, then, go to the Bible, and find
out for ourselves whether the God therein revealed is any more like the ideal
Christian God than the universe therein revealed is like the universe since
discovered by man without the aid of divine inspiration.
As for the
biblical God, Jahweh, or Jehovah, I shall try to show from the Bible itself
that He was not all-wise, nor all-powerful, nor omnipresent; that He was not
merciful nor just; but that, on the contrary, He was fickle, jealous,
dishonourable, immoral, vindictive, barbarous, and cruel.
Neither was
He, in any sense of the words, great nor good. But, in fact, He was a tribal
god, an idol, made by man; and, as the idol of a savage and ignorant tribe,
was Himself a savage and ignorant monster.
First then, as to my claim
that Jahweh, or Jehovah, was a tribal god. I shall begin by quoting from
_Shall We Understand the Bible?_ by the Rev. T. Rhondda Williams:
The theology of the Jahwist is very childish and elementary, though it
is not all on the same level. He thinks of God very much as in human
form, holding intercourse with men almost as one of themselves. His
document begins with Genesis ii. 4, and its first portion continues,
without break, to the end of chapter iv. This portion contains the
story of Eden. Here Jahweh _moulds_ dust into human form, and
_breathes_ into it; _plants_ a garden, and puts the man in it. Jahweh
comes to the man in his sleep, and takes part of his body to make a
woman, and so skilfully, apparently, that the man never wakes
under the operation. Jahweh _walks_ in the garden like a man in
the cool of the day. He even _makes coats_ for Adam and Eve.
Further on the Jahwist has a flood story, in which Jahweh _repents_ that
he had made man, and decides to drown him, saving only one family. When
all is over, and Noah sacrifices on his new altar, Jahweh _smells_ a
sweet savour, just as a hungry man smells welcome food. When men build
the Tower of Babel, Jahweh _comes down_ to see it--he cannot see it from
where he is. In Genesis xviii. the Jahwist tells a story of three
men coming to Abraham's tent. Abraham gives them water to wash
their feet, and bread to eat, and Sarah makes cakes for them, and "they
did eat"; altogether, they seemed to have had a nice time. As the story
goes on, he leaves you to infer that one of these was Jahweh
himself. It is J. who describes the story of Jacob _wrestling_ with
some mysterious person, who, by inference, is Jahweh. He tells a very
strange story in Exodus iv. 24, that when Moses was returning into
Egypt, at Jahweh's own request, Jahweh met him at a lodging-place, and
sought to kill him. In Exodus xiv. 15 it is said Jahweh took the wheels
off the chariots of the Egyptians. If we wanted to believe that such
statements were true at all, we should resort to the device of saying
they were figurative. But J. meant them literally. The Jahwist
would have no difficulty in thinking of God in this way. The story of
the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah belongs to this same document, in
which, you remember, Jahweh says: "I will go down now, and see whether
they have done altogether according to the cry of it which is come unto
me; and if not, I will know" (Gen. xviii. 21). That God was omniscient
and omnipresent had never occurred to the Jahwist. Jahweh, like a man,
had to go and see if he wanted to know. There is, however, some
compensation in the fact that he can move about without difficulty--he
can come down and go up. One might say, perhaps, that in J.,
though Jahweh cannot _be_ everywhere, he can go to almost any
place. All this is just like a child's thought. The child, at
Christmas, can believe that, though Santa Claus cannot be everywhere,
he can move about with wonderful facility, and, though he is a
man, he is rather mysterious. The Jahwist's thought of God
represents the childhood stage of the national life.
Later, Mr.
Williams writes:
All this shows that at one time Jahweh was one of
many gods; other gods were real gods. The Israelites themselves
believed, for example, that Chemosh was as truly the god of the
Moabites as Jahweh was theirs, and they speak of Chemosh giving
territory to his people to inherit, just as Jahweh had given them
territory (Judges xi. 24).
Just as a King of Israel would
speak of Jahweh, the King of Moab speaks of Chemosh. His god sends him
to battle. If he is defeated, the god is angry; if he succeeds, the god
is favourable. And we have seen that there was a time when the
Israelite believed Chemosh to be as real for Moab as Jahweh for
himself. You find the same thing everywhere. The old Assyrian kings
said exactly the same thing of the god Assur.
Assur sent them to
battle, gave defeat or victory, as he thought fit. The history,
however, is very obscure up to the time of Samuel, and uncertain for
some time after. Samuel organised a Jahweh party. David worshipped
Jahweh only, though he regards it as possible to be driven out of
Jahweh's inheritance into that of other gods (1 Sam. xxvi. 19). Solomon
was not exclusively devoted to Jahweh, for he built places of
worship for other deities as well.
In the chapter on "Different
Conceptions of Providence in the Bible," Mr. Williams says:
I
have asked you to read Judges iii. 15-30, iv. 17-24, v. 24-31. The first
is the story of Ehud getting at Eglon, Israel's enemy, by deceit, and
killing him--an act followed by a great slaughter of Moabites. The
second is the story of Jael pretending to play the friend to Sisera, and
then murdering him. The third is the eulogy of Jael for doing so, as
"blessed above women," in the so-called Song of Deborah. Here, you see,
Providence is only concerned with the fortunes of Israel; any deceit and
any cruelty is right which brings success to this
people. Providence is not concerned with morality; nor is it concerned
with individuals, except as the individual serves or opposes
Israel.
In these two chapters Mr. Williams shows that the early
conception of God was a very low one, and that it underwent considerable
change. In fact, he says, with great candour and courage, that the early
Bible conception of God is one which we cannot now accept.
With this I
entirely agree. We cannot accept as the God of Creation this savage idol of
an obscure tribe, and we have renounced Him, and are ashamed of Him, not
because of any later divine revelation, but because mankind have become too
enlightened, too humane, and too honourable to tolerate Jehovah.
And
yet the Christian religion adopted Jehovah, and called upon its followers to
worship and believe Him, on pain of torture, or death, or excommunication in
this world, and of hell-fire in the world to come. It is
astounding.
But lest the evidence offered by Mr. Williams should not be
considered sufficient, I shall quote from another very useful book, _The
Evolution of the Idea of God_, by the late Grant Allen. In this book Mr.
Allen clearly traces the origins of the various ideas of God, and we hear
of Jehovah again, as a kind of tribal stone idol, carried about in a box
or ark. I will quote as fully as space permits:
But Jahweh was an
object of portable size, for, omitting for the present the descriptions
in the Pentateuch--which seem likely to be of later date, and not too
trustworthy, through their strenuous Jehovistic editing--he was carried
from Shiloh in his ark to the front during the great battle with
the Philistines at Ebenezer; and the Philistines were afraid,
for they said, "A god is come into the camp." But when the
Philistines captured the ark, the rival god, Dagon, fell down and broke
in pieces--so Hebrew legend declared--before the face of Jahweh.
After the Philistines restored the sacred object, it rested for a time
at Kirjath-jearim till David, on the capture of Jerusalem from the
Jebusites, went down to that place to bring up from thence the ark of
the god; and as it went, on a new cart, they "played before Jahweh on
all manner of instruments," and David himself "danced before Jahweh."...
The children of Israel in early times carried about with them a tribal
god, Jahweh, whose presence in their midst was intimately connected with
a certain ark or chest containing a stone object or objects. This
chest was readily portable, and could be carried to the front in
case of warfare. They did not know the origin of the object in
the ark with certainty; but they regarded it emphatically as
"Jahweh their god, which led them out of the land of
Egypt."...
I do not see, therefore, how we can easily avoid the
obvious inference that Jahweh the god of the Hebrews, who later
became sublimated and etherealised into the God of Christianity,
was, in his origin, nothing more nor less than the ancestral
sacred stone of the people of Israel, however sculptured, and,
perhaps, in the very last resort of all, the unhewn monumental pillar
of some early Semitic sheikh or chieftain.
It was, indeed, as the
Rev. C. E. Beeby says, in his book _Creed and Life_, a sad mistake of St.
Augustine to tack this tribal fetish in his box on to the Christian religion
as the All-Father, and Creator of the Universe. For Jehovah was a savage
war-god, and, as such, was impotent to save the tribe who worshipped
him.
But let us look further into the accounts of this original God
of the Christians, and see how he comported himself, and let us put
our examples under separate heads; thus:
Jehovah's
Anger
Jahweh's bad temper is constantly displayed in the Bible. Jahweh
made a man, whom he supposed to be perfect. When the man turned bad on
his hands, Jahweh was angry, and cursed him and his seed for thousands
of years. This vindictive act is accepted by the Apostle Paul as a
natural thing for a God of Love to do.
Jahweh who had already cursed
all the seed of Adam, was so angry about man's sin, in the time of Noah, that
he decided to drown all the people on the earth except Noah's family, and not
only that, but to drown nearly all the innocent animals as well.
When
the children of Israel, who had eaten nothing but manna for forty years,
asked Jahweh for a change of diet, Jahweh lost his temper again, and sent
amongst them "fiery serpents," so that "much people of Israel died." But
still the desire for other food remained, and the Jews wept for meat. Then
the Lord ordered Moses to speak to the people as follows:
... The Lord
will give you flesh, and ye shall eat. Ye shall not eat one day, nor
two days, nor five days, neither ten days nor twenty days: but even a
whole month, until it come out of your nostrils, and it be loathsome
unto you; because that ye have despised the Lord, which is among you,
and have wept before Him, saying, Why came we forth out of
Egypt?
Then Jahweh sent immense numbers of quails, and the people ate
them, and the anger of their angry god came upon them in the act, and smote
them with "a very great plague."
One more instance out of many. In the
First Book of Samuel we are told that on the return of Jahweh in his ark from
the custody of the Philistines some men of Bethshemesh looked into the ark.
This made Jahweh so angry that he smote the people, and slew more than
fifty thousand of them.
The Injustice of Jehovah
I have
already instanced Jahweh's injustice in cursing the seed of Adam for Adam's
sin, and in destroying the whole animal creation, except a selected few,
because he was angry with mankind. In the Book of Samuel we are told that
Jahweh sent three years' famine upon the whole nation because of the sins of
Saul, and that his wrath was only appeased by the hanging in cold blood of
seven of Saul's sons for the evil committed by their father.
In the
Book of Joshua is the story of how Achan, having stolen some gold, was
ordered to be burnt; and how Joshua and the Israelites took "Achan, and his
sons, and his daughters, and his oxen, and his asses, and his sheep, and his
tent, and all that he had," and stoned them to death, and "burnt them with
fire."
In the First Book of Chronicles the devil persuades David to take
a census of Israel. And again Jahweh acted in blind wrath and
injustice, for he sent a pestilence, which slew seventy thousand of the
people for David's fault. _But David he allowed to live._ In Samuel we learn
how Jahweh, because of an attack upon the Israelites four hundred
years before the time of speaking, ordered Saul to destroy the
Amalekites, "man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and
ass." And Saul did as he was directed; but because he spared King Agag, the
Lord deprived him of the crown and made David king in his
stead.
The Immorality Of Jehovah
In the Second Book of
Chronicles Jehovah gets Ahab, King of Israel, killed by putting lies into the
mouths of the prophets:
And the Lord said, Who shall entice Ahab,
king of Israel, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth-gilead? And one
spake, saying after this manner, and another saying after that
manner.
Then there came out a spirit, and stood before the Lord,
and said, I will entice him. And the Lord said unto him,
Wherewith?
And he said, I will go out, and be a lying spirit in the
mouth of all his prophets. And the Lord said, Thou shalt entice
him, and thou shalt also prevail: go out, and do even so.
In
Deuteronomy are the following orders as to conduct in war:
When thou
goest forth to war against thine enemies, and the Lord thy God hath
delivered them into thine hands, and thou hast taken them
captive.
And seest among the captives a beautiful woman, and hast
a desire unto her, that thou wouldest have her to thy wife; Then
thou shalt bring her home to thine house; and she shall shave her head,
and pare her nails;
And she shall put the raiment of her captivity
from off her, and shall remain in thine house, and bewail her father and
her mother a full month: and after that thou shalt go in unto
her, and be her husband, and she shall be thy wife.
And it
shall be, if thou have no delight in her, then thou shall let her go
whither she will; but thou shalt not sell her at all for money, thou
shalt not make merchandise of her, because thou hast humbled
her.
The children of Israel, having been sent out by Jahweh to punish
the Midianites, "slew all the males." But Moses was wrath, because they
had spared the women, and he ordered them to kill all the married women,
and to take the single women "for themselves." The Lord allowed
this brutal act--which included the murder of all the male children--to
be consummated. There were sixteen thousand females spared, of which we
are told that "the Lord's tribute was thirty and two."
The Cruelty
Of Jehovah
I could find in the Bible more instances of Jahweh's cruelty
and barbarity and lack of mercy than I can find room for.
In
Deuteronomy, the Lord hardens the heart of Sihon, King of Hesbon, to resist
the Jews, and then "utterly destroyed the men, women, and little ones of
every city."
In Leviticus, Jahweh threatens that if the Israelites will
not reform he will "walk contrary to them in fury, _and they shall eat the
flesh of their own sons and daughters_."
In Deuteronomy is an account
of how Bashan was utterly destroyed, men, women, and children being
slain.
In the same book occur the following passages:
When
the Lord thy God shall bring thee into the land whither thou goest to
possess it, and hath cast out many nations before thee, the Hittites,
and the Girgashites, and the Amorites, and the Canaanites, and the
Perizzites, and the Hivites, and the Jebusites, seven nations greater
and mightier than thou;
And when the Lord thy God shall deliver them
before thee; thou shalt smite them, and utterly destroy them; thou
shalt make no covenant with them, or show mercy unto them.
That
is from chapter vii. In chapter xx. there are further instructions of a like
horrible kind:
Thus shalt thou do unto all the cities which are very
far off from thee, which are not of the cities of these
nations.
But of the cities of these people, which the Lord thy God
doth give thee for an inheritance, thou shalt save alive nothing
that breatheth:
But thou shalt utterly destroy them; namely, the
Hittites, and the Amorites, the Canaanites, and the Perizzites, the
Hivites, and the Jebusites, as the Lord thy God hath commanded
thee.
And here, in a long quotation, is an example of the mercy of
Jahweh, and his faculty for cursing:
The Lord shall make the
pestilence cleave unto thee, until he have consumed thee from off the
land, whither thou goest to possess it.
The Lord shall smite
thee with a consumption, and with a fever, and with an inflammation, and
with an extreme burning, and with the sword, and with blasting, and with
mildew; and they shall pursue thee until thou perish.
And
thy heaven that is over thy head shall be brass, and the earth that is
under thee shall be iron.
The Lord shall make the rain of thy land
powder and dust: from heaven shall it come down upon thee, until thou
be destroyed.
The Lord shall cause thee to be smitten before
thine enemies: thou shalt go out one way against them, and flee seven
ways before them: and shalt be removed into all the kingdoms of
the earth.
And thy carcase shall be meat unto all fowls of the air,
and unto the beasts of the earth, and no man shall fray them
away.
The Lord will smite thee with the botch of Egypt, and
with the emerods, and with the scab, and with the itch, whereof
thou canst not be healed.
The Lord shall smite thee with
madness, and blindness, and astonishment of heart:...
And he
shall besiege thee in all thy gates, until thy high and fenced walls
come down, wherein thou trustedst, throughout all thy land: and he shall
besiege thee in all thy gates throughout all thy land, which the Lord
thy God hath given thee.
And thou shalt eat the fruit of thine own
body, the flesh of thy sons and of thy daughters, which the Lord thy God
hath given thee, in the siege, and in the straightness wherewith
thine enemies shall distress thee:
So that the man that is tender
among you, and very delicate, his eyes shall be evil toward his brother,
and toward the wife of his bosom, and toward the remnant of his children
which he shall leave....
For a fire is kindled in mine
anger, and shall burn into the lowest hell, and shall consume the earth with her
increase, and set on fire the foundations of the mountains. |
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