www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Paul Carus - The Pleroma, an essay on the origin of Christianity, 1909

Page 1







THE PLEROMA An

Essay on the

Origin of Christianity

PAUL CARUS

1921

THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING COMPANY CHICAGO

LONDOiN



The

PLEROMA An Essay on

the

Origin of Christianity

By

Dr. Paul Carus

"Res ipsa, quae nunc religio Christiana nuncupatur, erat apud antiques, nee defuit ab initio generis humani, quousque Christus veniret in carnem, unde vera religio, quae iam erat, ccepit appellari Christiana."

St.

Augustine.

CHICAGO THE OPEN CXDURT PUBLISHING COMPANY London Agents Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & 1909

Co., Ltd.


THE NEW YORK

mmf ASTOP^,

LENOX AND

TILDEM FOUNDATIONS R 1932 L

Copyright by

THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING COMPANY. 1900


CONTENTS. CHAPTER. PAGE. CHRISTIANITY PREDETERMINED BY THE NEEDS

OF THE AGE. I.

II.

III.

The Gentile Character The Old Paganism

of Christianity

1

13

Paganism Redivivus

20

PRE-CHRISTIAN GNOSTICISM. THE BLOOM PRECEDING THE FRUITAGE OF CHRISTIANITY. IV.

V.

The Period of Transition The Gnostic Movement

25 35

Zabians and Mandaeans Ophites or Naasaeans Religion of Mani VI. Kindred Sects in Palestine and Egypt

The Simonians The Therapeutes,

43 43

the Essenes, the Nazarenes

and the Ebionites

HOW THE

35 38 41

44

GENTILE SAVIOUR CHANGED INTO THE

CHRIST. VII. The Process

of Idealization VIII. The Persians and the Jews IX. The Christ of the Revelation of St. John X. Christian Sentiment in Pre-Christian ligions

XL Why

49 59 69

Re-

Christianity Conquered

THE ORIGIN OF JUDAISM AND

76 79

ITS SIGNIFICANCE

FOR CHRISTIANITY.

The Paganism of Ancient Israel The Temple Reform of Judaism XIV. The Babylonian Exile XV. The Dispersion

XII. XIII.

XVI. Jew and Gentile

XVIL The Judaism CONCLUSION.

of Jesus

XVIIL Summary XIX. The Future of Christianity XX. Religion Eternal Collateral Reading Index

83 90 95 99 107 112

123 131 137 145 148



PREFACE.

THIS

little

brevity Christianity

thoughtful.

book

it

is

a mere sketch.

treats a great

— which

deserves

The author

theme the

With

—the

concise

origin of

attention

of

the

concentrates his presentation

of the case upon the main features, treating them and

them

only, with a considerable attention to detail

;

but

he hopes by this limitation to the most salient points to bring clearness into a subject fully

which has never been

understood on account of the

side issues that

many

bewildering

surround and often obscure the main

problem.

The

solution here offered contains

some new points

of view which the author has gradually gained through his study of detached portions of this large subject,

yet in

the

all

his several inquiries the results

same conclusion which Christianity

necessity.

is

here summarized.

not the result of accident, but of

There are

Its doctrines, its

is

have led to

definite causes

ceremonies,

and

its ethics

definite effects.

are the product

of given conditions and the result could not be different.

Yet we might say more.

If local conditions

had

been different, some important details in the constitution of Christianity would also be different, but the essential features

same.

would

after all

have remained the


PREFACE.

vi.

As

there are remarkable parallels between Chris-

tianity

and other

even where no historical

religions,

we may be assured that even on other planets where rational beings have develconnections can be traced, so

oped, a religion of universal love will be preached and

up the ideal of a divine Saviour, be he called Buddha, or the Prophet, or the manifestation of God; and he, representing the eternal in the tranwill hold

Christ, or

sient, will

many

be to

the tribulations of

life

millions a source of comfort in

and

in the face of death.

There

are, as in all world-religions, certain features in Chris-

which are rooted in the universal laws of

tianity

cosmic existence.

The

author's

method

is

purely

He

scientific.

does

not enter into controversies as to whether or not the course of history should have been different.

He

has

investigated the origin of Christianity as a botanist

would study the growth of a

tree.

that the tree should be different, it

should be cut

tree

still

tality

of

down.

He

stands today and that its

shade and

live

upon

only

He and

does not say still

knows

many enjoy its fruit.

less that

that

the

the hospi-


CHRISTIANITY PREDETERMINED

BY THE

NEEDS OF THE AGE.



CHAPTER

I.

THE GENTILE CHARACTER OF CHRISTIANITY.

XT rE READ in the Epistle to the Galatians (iv., 4) ^^ that ''When the fuhiess of the time^ was come, God

sent forth his

Ephesians

(i.

10)

Son"; and

we

in the Epistle to the

are told that ''In the dispensation

of the fulness of times^ he might gather together in

one

all

things^ in Christ, both which are in heaven and

Such is the impression which the had of the origin of Christianity, and they were not mistaken in the main point that Christianity was a fulfilment, or, as it was called in Greek, a "pleroma," although we would add that this pleroma was neither mystical nor mysterious as they were in-

which are on earth." early Christians

clined to think;

was not supernatural

it

in a dualistic

sense, but the result of natural conditions.

We

propose to discuss the origin of Christianity and

condensed and brief exposition, the which combined to produce it. Chrismain tianity ushers in a new period, and its conception of life is so absolutely different from the past, that with the date of Christ's birth mankind began a new chronology. Its origin was attributed by many to a personal interwill point out, in a

factors

Tov ypovov.

^

7rXrjp(i)[xa

^

TrXrjpwfia rcuv KaipCjv.

Literally "all things

had come to a head."


THE PLEROMA.

2

ference of God with the affairs of the world, and we wish to explain how the new faith grew naturally from the preceding ages whose converging lines were gath-

ered into a head in the figure of Christ and

all

that

was

thereby represented. Christianity might have borne a different

name and

Christ might have been worshiped under another

title,

and yet the world-religion which originated when the converging lines of the several religious developments in the East as well as in the West were combined into a higher unity, would not and could not have become

from what it actually turned out to be. Its character was in the main predetermined according to the natural law of spiritual conditions, and in this sense we say that Christianity was indeed the fulfilment of the times, the pleroma of the ages. greatly different

* Christianity

is

*

*

commonly regarded

of Judaism, and this view Sunday schools, but also in

deemed an

is

as the daughter

taught

not

only

profane history.

in

It is

established fact that Christianity, the relig-

ion prevailing

all

that have sprung

over Europe and among the races from the European continent, is the

descendant of the religion of Moses, especially of later form, Judaism, and it is treated as a foregone

lineal its

conclusion that this

little

nation of Israel was by divine

dispensation chosen to prepare the

ance of Christianity.

But

correct, or, to say the least,

this it

way

view

for the appear-

is

needs so

by no means

many

qualifica-


THE GENTILE CHARACTER OF CHRISTIANITY. tions that

its

3

restatement would amount to a radical

The traditional view seems we have become accustomed to

reversal of the theory. plausible only because it,

in

and yet we shall be compelled to grant that it is not agreement with the facts of history. A considera-

tion of the actual development of religious thought

upon us conclusions which are very different. Without denying the enormous influence which Judaism exercised on Christianity from its very start, we make bold to say that Judaism did not bear or bring forces

forth Christianity, but that Christianity a grandchild of ancient paganism,

of Judaism

is

by adoption, merely.

birth of Christianity, the

process of formation,

new

is,

so to speak,

and the motherhood

At

was groping

the time of the

while

faith,

for

still

some

in the

religion

under whose guidance and authority

on

its historical career,

for the purpose.

A

it might proceed and Judaism appeared best fitted

world-religion of the character of

would have originated in the same or quite a similar way, with the same or quite similar doctrines, with the same tendencies and the same ethics, the same or quite similar rituals, etc., etc., even if Judaism had not existed or had not been chosen as its mother. The spirit of Christianity was pagan from the start, not Jewish; yea, un-Jewishly pagan, it was Gentile, and it continued to retain a very strongly pronounced hosChristianity

tility

towards everything Jewish. current view of the origin of Christianity would

The

have us look upon Jesus as

its

founder, and that

is

true


THE PLEROMA

4

in a certain sense, but not so unconditionally true as

generally assumed.

Christianity

is

originated during the middle of the

is

a religion which

first

century of the

Christian era through the missionary activity of the

He

founded the Gentile Church upon the ruins of the ancient pagan religions, and he took x\postle Paul.

his building materials, not faith of his

from the storehouse of the

but from the wreckage of the

fathers,

destroyed temples of the Gentiles.

The

old creeds were no longer believed in and a

new

was developing in the minds of the people. The single myths had become discredited and the gods had ceased to be regarded as actual presences but the world-conception which had shaped the pagan myths remained unimpaired yea more, it had become matured by philosophy, and it could still reproduce a new formulation of them in such a shape as would be acceptable religion

;

;

to the

We

new generation. know that in the Augustan

age, shortly before

were several religions and religious Almost every one of them was kin to philosophies. the spirit of Christianity and contributed its share,

and

after, there

large or small, to the constitution of the

new

was forming itself in the Roman empire. There was a great variety of gnostic daeans, Ophites, Therapeutes, Manichaeans,

time.

Egypt. sies,

faith that

sects,

Man-

etc., at this

The main centers were Asia Minor, Syria and The gnostic doctrines are not Christian here-

as

Church historians would have

it,

but,

on the


THE GENTILE CHARACTER OF CHRISTIANITY. contrary, Christianity

is

a branch of the gnostic

5

move-

Gnosticism antedates Christianity, but when

ment.

Christianity finally got the ascendancy,

it

claimed a

monopoly of the beliefs held in common with the gnostic sects, and repudiated all differences as aberrations from Christian truth. The Gnostics, however, were not the only ones in There were the Sethites, worshipers of the the field. Egyptian Seth who was identified by the Jews with the Biblical Seth, the son of

Adam.

Further, there

were the believers in Hermes Trismegistos, a Hellenized form of the Egyptian Ptah, the incarnation of the

Word.

divine stoics

A

purified

paganism was taught by

such as Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius, repre-

which are Hypatia and Emperor Julian Kin to this idealized paganism was the school of neo-Platonism as represented by Philo, Plotinus and Porphyry. Moreover, there were not a few

sentatives of

the Apostate.

who

revered Apollonius of

new

universal religion that

Tyana as the herald of the was dawning on, mankind.

In the second century of the Christian era, other faith to

grew

still

an-

rapidly into prominence and promised

become the established religion of the Roman EmThis was Mithraism, the Romanized form of the

pire.

ancient faith of Persia; but at the

moment when

it

seemed to have attained an unrivaled sway over the Roman army and its leaders, Christianity, the religion of the lowly, of the broad masses, of the people,

came

to the front,

common

and having found a powerful


THE PLEROMA.

6

surnamed the Great, it and permanently established

leader in Constantine, wrongly

dislodged

all

the sole universal religion in the

itself as

We will religions tianity

rivals

its

we

;

Roman

world.

not investigate here the claims of these rival are satisfied to state the fact that Chris-

remained victor and survived alone

gle for existence, because

it

fulfilled best

Whatever may be

of the age.

in the strug-

the

demands

said in favor of one or

another of the conquered creeds, Christianity satisfied the needs of the people better than either Mithraism or

gnosticism, or a reformed paganism of any kind.

There which

is

one point

is

worth

this: the better

these several rival faiths, to grant, that

however,

mentioning,

we become acquainted with the more we are compelled

whatever the outcome of their competition

might have been

if

Christianity

had not carried

off the

palm, the religion that in such a case would have finally

become recognized as the universal all

essential doctrines, in

nies,

its

would in and ceremo-

religion,

institutions

have been the same as the religion of the ChrisNo doubt it w^ould have differed in im-

tian Church.

portant details, but the underlying world-conception, the philosophy of

and above

all

its

its

creed, the theology of its

dogmas,

moral standards together with

ethical principles, would have These essentials were not made not by Jesus, who does not even of them. They are the hoary

been almost

by one man so

much

its

identical. ;

certainly

as hint at

any

ideas and convictions

which had prevailed among nations since times imme-


THE GENTILE CHARACTER OF CHRISTIANITY.

7

morial, remodeled in the shape in which they appealed

The

to the then living generation.

old traditions of

past ages, cherished in the subconscious realms of the folk-soul,

constitute the foundations of Christianity,

and they are pagan, not Jewish.

By "pagans" we mean

here the Gentiles,

nations outside of Judaism, and

we

to attach either a derogatory or eulogistic

the word.

In other connections

i.

the

"pagans'* in the sense of unprogressive people to

to the neglect of the spirit

myths, dogmas,

and

the

meaning

we have used

the superstitions of former ages are

e.,

ask the reader not

still

to

word

whom

clinging,

who,

significance of religious

rituals, etc., cling to the letter of their

symbolical expression, and through a lack of under-

standing seek salvation in such externalities as dogmatism and ceremonialism.

men such as we may very

In this sense

we

well speak of "Christian pagans" to char-

acterize those

who have

not understood the meaning of

Christian dogmas, but accept the letter of thinkingly.

look upon

Socrates and Plato not as pagans, while

dogmas un-

There are not a few Christians who are

ready to agree with us that Christianity Christianized.

In

is

not yet fully

the present usage "pagan"

is

a

synonym of Gentile and means non-Jewish. We have come to the conclusion that the spirit of paganism, which is that of natural mankind, is the same as that of Christianity. The sole difference is that in Chris-


THE PLEROMA.

8

many pagan

traditions are fused together and on the background of Judaism, a summary of the most essential, the noblest and finest traditions tianity

constitute,

of pre-Christian paganism, thus representing the

ma-

tured grain garnered at the time of harvest.

In modern times the word pagan has acquired the

secondary meaning of a faith that

today when

we

speak of pagan

Asiatics, Africans, Australians ers.

The

is

non-European, for

we

think

first

and South Sea Island-

reader must banish this secondary and

ern sense of the

of

word and bear

in

mind

mod-

that at the

time of the beginning of the Christian era only a few of the colored races had been heard

There

is

of.

a tendency at the present time to extol the

Asiatic at the expense of the European, and praise the

savage for the sake of denouncing civilized man. it

has come to pass that paganism in this sense,

Thus viz.,

modern pagan, which means anything or outlandish, is shown up for the purpose of

the view of the exotic

own

These tendencies are foreign to the present discourse and I hope that none of my readers will impute any such intent to me. The paganism to which reference is made in this book, is our intellectual ancestry. The predecessors of Christian thought are men such as Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and in addition, the sages of Egypt as well as Babylon, Zarathushtra with incident echoes from the far East. Further we ought to bear in mind that Christianity, in spreading over Northern Europe, incorporated not reviling our

inheritance.


THE GENTILE CHARACTER OF CHRISTIANITY. a

of the Teutonic world conception,* and some of

little

us would be astonished to find the kinship of the belief in

as

9

Thor with the for

is

it

The

represented

instance,

Saxon

early mediaeval faith in Christ,

Oriental of today

is

in

a good

The Heliand.

man who ought

We owe him consideration and We must not be too proud to learn

not to be underrated.

sometimes respect.

from him.

But there

is

no reason to

baned fakir as the representative of

our

belittle

civilization as materialistic, or to look

up

own

to the tur-

spirituality.

Such

extravagances will not be endorsed by the author of this book,

who, when speaking of pagans, here means whose thoughts have become

the pre-Christian gentiles, the constituent factors of

The

children of

owe

to

Western

civilization.

nations of Europe, and of America, too, are the

it,

pagan

antiquity,

and we claim that they

not only their general culture, but also the

essential tenets of their religion.

It is

often claimed that ancient paganism

while Christianity

is

dualistic; but this

is

is

monistic

an

error.

Paganism appears monistic only to those modern symwho assume its naturalistic naivete to be an indication of the pagan's love of nature and of a repudi-

pathizers

ation of supernaturalism

;

but the ancient Greeks be-

lieved in supernaturalism as

much

*Compare "Religion of Our Ancestors" Volume XI, Page 177.

as in

did the early The Open Court,


THE PLEROMA.

10

Christians,

and neo-Platonism is as dualistic as any There is only this difference,

Christian philosophy. that

pagan dualism

is

not as yet so emphatic, nor

is it

so ascetic as Christian dualism.

Judaism

is less

or Christianity not it

owe

was

its

;

dualistic

and

it is

than either Greek paganism

certain that Christianity does

dualism to the Jews, but adopted

the spirit of the age.

A

it

because

monistic conception of

would have had no chance of success whatever. Dualism in a well-defined form was in the air, so to speak, since Plato, and prevailed absolutely in neoreligion

Platonism, but in the beginning of the Christian era it

spread everywhere.

Read Seneca,

Epictetus,

Marcus

Aurelius or other pagan philosophers, and you cannot help being impressed not only with the dualism, but

even with the Christian character of their thoughts. Students of the history of religion find enough evi-

dence of the pagan origin of Christian ceremonies, sacraments, rites and symbols. Baptism and a eucharist

seem to have been practiced by several religions, and Epictetus quotes the litany of pagan soothsayers to have been Kyrie Eleison, which has been adopted by the Christian Church and is sung even to-day by both Catholics and Protestants. Monks existed in India and in Egypt, and the pagan priests of these same countries shaved their heads or wore the tonsure. The rosary is unquestionably of pagan origin, while none of these institutions are Jewish.


THE GENTILE CHARACTER OF CHRISTIANITY.

11

Among the religious tendencies worked out in the minds of the Greek people since the days of Plato, there was one which was most powerful the idea of monotheism, and here we have the only point of contact. The Jews had become the representatives of monotheism. In acknowledging the God of the Jews as the only true God, the new faith adopted Judaism as its mother, but Judaism refused to recognize Christianity as its child, and we think rightly so. The

—

strangest thing about

it is

The Jews looked with

Jews

the Gentiles held the

statement

is

made

that the aversion

is

mutual.

disdain upon the Gentiles, and in contempt.

repeatedly that

In Esdras the

God

created the

world for the sake of the Jews,* and there are passages in the Talmud referring to the Christians which express the same view in a most severe form, while the innumerable persecutions which the Jews had to suffer from the hands of the Christians are facts of history. It is

true that Judaism exercised an enormous influ-

ence upon Christianity, for from the start

its

ment took place with constant reference

to the

develop-

Old

Testament, but the attitude of the Christian Church

was always opposed to everything that was typically Jewish. The Church selected from the Hebrew Scriptures what appealed to her and interpreted their meaning in a

The

way

to suit her

own

purpose.

Christians worship Jesus as the Christ,

i.

the saviour and as the son of the only true God. *2

Esdras,

vi.

55;

vii.

11.

e.,

as

The


12

THE PLEROMA.

Judaism was the reHgion of Jesus rendered the connection between Judaism and Christianity indissokible. The God of Jesus has become the God of Christianity, and so his reHgion has been regarded as the root from which Christianity has sprung; but we shall see that this is an error. fact that


CHAPTER

11.

THE OLD PAGANISM. T ET us

see

first

what are the main features and

•^^ the mode of growth of ancient paganism. In every Httle state of Greece, in every province of

Egypt, in every

district of Asia,

see, also in Italy,

—

yea even

barbarians of the North,

we

and so

among

far as

we can

the Teutons and

can trace stories of a

w^ho walked on earth unknown.

The

stories of

God

Thor,

who

visits the humble as well as the mighty, the rich and the poor, and watches them in their daily life, leaving behind him punishments for the wicked and

blessings for the good, are paralleled in the tales of

'Thousand and One Nights," where Harun

al

Rashid,

the Sultan or omnipotent ruler, mixes with the people

incognito so as to utilize his experiences for the dispensation of justice

him

when

these

as a judge in court.

same individuals appeal to Similar stories are

known

and among the pagans of almost every land. The same ideas also underlie the legends of mythoIn Egypt, Osiris, the god of the Nile logical religion. and fertility, of agriculture and civilization, lives as a mortal man among his people and bestows his blessings in India

on mankind. He is the inventor of religion, of science and the arts, and of moral instruction, but his enemies conspire against him, they slay him malignantly, and


THE PLEROMA.

14

he has to pass down into the land of death. The powers of evil seem to conquer the powers of good,

He

but Osiris does not stay in the underworld. first

is

the

one to break the bonds of death and to reappear

his

domain of life. His slayers are punished and kingdom is restored in Hor the Avenger, his son

and

his divine reincarnation.

in the

The

Isis, and Horus, constimost temples of Egypt; and we know that the Egyptian puts his hope of im-

three divinities, Osiris,

tute the trinity worshiped in

mortality in his faith in Osiris.

The

transfigured dead

follow Osiris in his passage through the land of death

by identifying themselves with

and this custom of assignhis death and com-

their leader,

identification finds expression in the

ing the bining

name it

man at own name. Like

Osiris to each

with his

Osiris they die and

with Osiris they rise again to renewed

life.

The

which the Egyptians placed in the cofifins of their dead, contain magic incantations for the preservation of the soul. Scholars have combined the several chapters into a book which is commonly called "The Book of the Dead"; but according to the Egyptian conception it ought to bear the title Reu mil pert mem hru, which means "Chapters of Comscrolls of religious writings

ing Forth by Day," implying the soul's resurrection

from death, which

is

accomplished in a similar

the rise of Osiris, symbolized by the It is

morning

way

as

sun.

touching to see in hymns and prayers the simple

faith of the

Egyptians so much

like

our own, and in


THE OLD PAGANISM.

15

spite of their

superstitions,

we

learn

their fervor

and

numerous and gross more and more to appreciate

We

piety.

of

Isis,

will call attention especially to the

Holy Lady,"

worship

"Mother of God/' "our Lady," "the

called

terms which are

etc.,

literally

repeated

afterwards in Christianity with reference to the Virgin

Mary.

We

know

that the religion of Babylon, of Syria, of

We

Phoenicia and of Greece were very similar. that

Marduk was a

saviour god

;

we know

and conquered death; that he came to

know

that he died

life

again and

entered his temple in festive procession; that his marcelebrated; and

we know

that the cyclical repetition of the festivals of

Marduk's

was

riage feast with Ishtar

life is

Phoenicia a kind of

In both ancient Babylon and

Good Friday

day were celebrated, and rection of the

A

god took

similar allusion

distant India.

is

it is

as well as an Easter

noteworthy that the resur-

place three days after his death.

made

It relates

in the

how

Katha Upanishad of

the soul has to remain

three days in "the house of death,"

clude that this notion of the tion

and the same

constituted the Babylonian calendar,

true of other countries.

is

common

hoary antiquity.

oldest

number

to the ancient

We may

three and a fraction

is

and so we may conthree

and a

frac-

world and dates back to

be assured that the number

nothing more nor

less

than the

approximation of a calculation of the

representing any period or cycle.

It is

the

circle,

number

tt,


THE PLEROMA.

16

the importance of which has been recognized even in prehistoric ages.^

In order not to lose ourselves in

details,

we

shall

Tammuz in the Old by the women in the

refer the reader to the mention of

Testament as being wept for

temple, which indicates that even the Israelites cele-

brated a kind of

Good

Friday, a day of lamentation on

which the death of the god was commemorated before the day of his resurrection which changed the

of the ceremony into a joyous holiday. the

god of vegetation who

new

to

life in

dies in winter

gloom

Tammuz

and

is

is

restored

the spring.

Similar customs prevailed in Syria, where the dying god was worshiped under the name of Adonis, in whose honor little gardens of the quickly sprouting pepper-grass or cress were planted in small boxes and carried in processions.

In Tyre an analogous feast was celebrated in the

name

of Melkarth, which means "King,

of the City."

we

Melkarth

can not doubt that in

i.

e..

Patron

the Phoenician Samson,

is

Israel,

and

or rather in the tribe of

Dan, Samson represented the same idea and his death and resurrection were commemorated in religious festivals.^

'See the author's article in in Christian Prophecy,"

XVI,

The Monist, "The Number

ir

415.

^For details see the author's The Story of

Samson (Chicago:

Note especially how it must have happened that the story of Samson's resurrection was omitted from the Biblical report and the story left in the shape in which we now have it, a torso.

Open Court Publishing

Co., 1907).


THE OLD PAGANISM. The

17

various reports of the different countries in

Asia Minor indicate that the same ceremonies prevailed everywhere, even also in the North, for

member that

that the

the

festival

Ostern, the

word Easter

we must

a Teutonic

re-

word and

goddess Ostara

the

of

German

is

(compare

''Easter") has been identified with

many

the Christian-Jewish passover on account of the

resemblances which rendered the two synonymous.

Most conspicuous is the similarity between Mithras and Christ. Although nothing is known of the death and resurrection of Mithras, there are otherwise many striking parallels, for, like Christ, Mithras

ator between

vicegerent of

is

the medi-

God (Ahura Mazda) and mankind, the God on earth he is the judge on the day

of resurrection; he

;

is

born of a virgin and

''Righteousness Incarnate."

He

is

called

is

the saviour of

man-

kind and he leads the good in their battle against the hosts of Ahriman, the evil one. accident that the Mithraists

which Justin Martyr

calls

It is certainly

not an

celebrated a sacrament

"the same" as the Christian

Lord's Supper.

The

Mithraist eucharist

institution,

is

apparently a pre-Christian

and the same or a very similar ceremony

existed in the ancient

Mazdaism of Zoroaster, and we Mazdaism that the holy

are told in the sacred books of drink,

haoma, and the consecrated cake, myazda, were

taken for the purpose of nourishing the resurrection body.

It

seems not unlikely that the Christian "Lord's


THE PLEROMA.

18

Supper" has originated under Persian influence and that the

word

the Persian

''mass" (Latin missa)

is

myazda, which corresponds

the same as

to the

Hebrew

ma^^a, the sacred unleavened bread.^

We will add one further comment upon a doctrine which has become very dear to Christians and is generally

regarded as typical of the Christian

which

is

nevertheless

common

being glaringly absent in Judaism only. the doctrine of the trinity. obliterated in Greece

period,

it

and

that in ancient

was devoted

Rome to

but

We

refer to

Although the idea was

Rome

nevertheless existed.

faith,

to all Gentile religions,

during the

We

know, for

classical

instance,

a temple on the Capitoline Hill

the

trinity

of

Jupiter,

Juno and

Minerva, a triad worshiped everywhere in Etruria under the names of Tinia, Thalna and Menrva.^ Other well-known trinities were taught, as in Egypt, Osiris, Isis and Horus; in Babylon, Anu, Bel and Ea; in India, Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva and in Buddhism in the doctrine of the Triratna, the three gems, the Buddha, the Dharma and the Sangha. Similarities between Christianity and paganism are more frequent than is commonly supposed. Prof. Law;

rence H. Mills, the great authority in

Zend

literature,

"The Food of Life and the Sacrament," Part II, The Monist, X, 343. Myazda originally signifies only the meat of the consecrated cow placed on the wafer ^See the writer's article

(draona) but the name may easily have been extended to the whole offering. 'Compare Encyclop. Brit., Vol. XX, p. 824, s. v. "Rome," where the fate of this temple is related.


THE OLD PAGANISM.

19

"Our Own Religion in Ancient Persia/' but other religions as well contain has written an article entitled

which have always been regarded as typically We will here mention only one more of these because it is not limited to one religion but reideas

Christian.

peats itself almost everywhere.

God

as the

Word

It is

the doctrine of

or the Logos which can be found in

China and India, in Persia, in Greece where it is developed by neo-Platonism, and in ancient Egypt. Plutarch calls Osiris the Word^ and mentions the existence of the books of

Hermes which became the sacred scripHermes Trismegistos, also

tures of the worshipers of called

Poimander, which presumably means "the shep-

herd of men/' and which was a mythological figure very

much

like the Christ ideal of the Christians.^^

'jD^ Isi et Osiri, *^'See

also

the

Open Court, XV,

Chap. LXI.

author's "Anubis, 65.

Seth and Christ" in Th(^


CHAPTER

III.

PAGANISM REDIVIVUS.

A UGUSTINE'S saying that Christianity not a ^^ new-fangled thing but that existed from the is

it

beginning of mankind,

not to be taken in a general

is

sense but must be understood Hterally.

It

reads in

its

original as follows

"Res ipsa, quae nunc religio Christiana nuncupatur, apud antiquos, nee defuit ab initio generis humani, quousque Christus veniret in carnem, unde vera religio, quae iam erat, coepit appellari Christiana." erat

We

translate literally

"The very thing which now is called the Christian religion existed among the ancients, nor was it absent in the beginning of the human race before Christ came into the flesh, since when the true religion which already existed began to be called Christian."

We

must ask the question, What

man

constitutes Chris-

Augustine? Augustine would presumably find no fault with the following answer: tianity in the opinion of a

like St.

St.

Christianity

means the

belief in Christ as the son of

God, the god-man, the sinless man, the saviour, the mediator between God and men, the divine teacher, the king, the hero, the ideal man, the mart}^ of the

great cause of salvation, he

who

struggles for mankind,


PAGANISM REDIVIVUS.

21

yet succumbs to the intrigues of the enemies of justice.

Christ dies on the cross and descends into place of death and the powers of

He

hold him.

opens the

way

evil,

hell, to

the

but hell can not

breaks the gates of hell and thereby

to life for his brother men.

He

is

there-

and he who follow him through death

fore regarded as the leader, the firstling,^^ clings to Christ in faith will to life

and

Christ

is

will partake of his glorification

now enthroned

at

and

the right hand of

bliss.

God

whence he will return to earth as a judge of mankind at the end of the world. What of all this is contained in Judaism ? Judaism know^s nothing of any of these doctrines; on the contrary

it

repudiates them.

The

idea that

God should

have a son would have been an unspeakable blasphemy to a Jewish rabbi of the time of Christ.

The Jews expected a Messiah, not a saviour. CTiristians have identified the two terms, but they are as heterogeneous as, e. g., a henchman is different from a physician. The Messiah was expected to restore the kingdom of David and take revenge upon the Gentiles that still

had oppressed the Jews. An echo of these hopes rings through the Revelation of St. John the

Divine (Revelations xii), which

we

shall

quote fur-

ther on. It is said that

the Jews did not understand the spir-

"The Christian term

aTrapxq "firstling," translated i. e., Cor. xv. 20, sounds like an echo of a more ancient pagan expression. "first fruits" in I


THE PLEROMA.

22

itual

meaning of

their prophecies.

Is

it

not but a

poor makeshift to explain to them that the kingdom of

Judah does not mean

either their country or their

nationahty, but the Church, not even the Jewish Church

Bear in mind that the con-

but the Gentile Church?

gregation of Jewish Christians did not that the Gentile

Church was as

last

long and

Jews as

hostile to the

ever Assyrian, Babylonian, Syrian or

Roman

conquer-

We

might as well say that the prophecies for the restoration of Poland were fulfilled when the bulk of Poland was incorporated into Russia, and when the Czar added to his many other titles that of ors

had been.

Rex Poloniae. The idea of a

saviour

is

purely pagan

;

it

was so

little

Jewish that even the very word was unknown to the Jews. There is no Hebrew word to correspond to the

Greek term shyant, the

soter}'^ the

Latin salvator, the Zend sao-

German Heiland,

the French sauveur, and

the English saviour}^

In the time of Christ the inhabitants of the

Roman

Empire looked for a saviour who would bring back to them the blessings of the Golden Age, and when order was restored after the civil wars, Augustus was hailed "Compare the author's article "Christ and Christians," an inquiry into the original meaning of the terms in The Open Court xvii, pp.

110

ff.

especially p. 115.

The Hebrew words Yehoslma

(deliverer), gocl

(avenger),

rophe (healer or physician), and messiah (the anointed one), are not exact equivalents and are never used in the sense of the Greek sotcr saviour.


PAGANISM REDIVIVUS. in official inscriptions as this saviour.

augustus

not a

is

name but

a

title.

Greek sehastos, which means

It is

23

The very word translated into

"the lofty one," "the

auspicious one," "the venerable one."

It

not merely

possesses a political but also and mainly a religious significance

and may be compared

Tathagata, the Blessed One.

A

to the

remarkable instance of

the hope for the appearance of a saviour

of the Golden

Age which

Buddhist term

and the return

then generally prevailed,

is

Virgil's fourth eclogue, written in the year 40 B. C.,

which has frequently been regarded by Christians as a prophecy of the advent of Christ." There is scarcely any Christian doctrine which can be reconciled with Judaism, either in letter or

The

trinity is

spirit.

certainly incompatible wdth the rigor of

Jewish monotheism, and the Christian sacrament called the Lord's Supper is a horror and an abomination to

any one reared

The

in the spirit of the

Old

Testament.^*^

eating of flesh and the drinking of blood, even

if

(as Calvin and Zwingli would have been a disgusting idea to a Jew to whom a dead body was unclean and who was forbidden to drink blood. And the Church as well as the German reformer, Martin Luther, teaches that

the act

is

interpret

purely symbolical

it

to be),

and wine of the sacrament are the real flesh and blood of Christ; they have been changed by a the bread

"See "The Christ Ideal and the Golden Age" in The Open Court for June 1908, p. 328. "See "Food of Life," etc., Monist, X, p. 376.


THE PLEROMA.

24

mystical act of transubstantiation.

How

is it

possible

that the institution of these ceremonies can have been

derived from the Jews?

We

know that St. Paul celebrated the Lord's Supand there is good reason to believe that he instituted it, and we may grant that St. Paul was a Jew. But he was born in Tarsus. He must have imbibed in his childhood and youth many pagan notions. How un-Jewish he was in his convictions appears from the fact that he regarded the Mosaic law as of mere temporary value. To be sure he believed it to be ordained by God, but having been fulfilled once he deemed it no longer binding. Think of the lack of logic in his argument that a law if but once thoroughly obeyed, may thenceforth be set aside! But his explanation suited his Gentile converts and it has been accepted without the slightest scruple by generation after generation per,

not

among

the

Jews but among the

Gentiles.

Parallels to the Christian conception of the eucharist

can be pointed out in the sacraments of

many pagan

religions, but scarcely in the institutions of the syna-

gogue.

The very

spirit

and the mode of

are absolutely un-Jewish.

its

celebration


PRE-CHRISTIAN GNOSTICISM

THE BLOOM PRECEDING THE FRUITAGE OF CHRISTIANITY.



CHAPTER

IV.

THE PERIOD OF TRANSITION.

WE CALL

Christianity the grandchild of paganism

because there

is

an intermediate Hnk between

Christianity and the ancient polytheistic

paganism of paganism represents a stage in the religious development of mankind which has become typical for all religions characterized These by being limited to w^ell-defined boundaries. boundaries were ver}^ narrow in the beginning. There were state religions in Athens, in Sparta, in Ephesus, Grseco- Roman mythology.

i\ncient

Rome, in the several cities of Egypt, Tyre and Sidon, in the great centers of population in Babylonia, Assyria, Phoenicia, etc., and the mass of people in each district came little in contact with their neighbors. But as trade and commerce expanded, people of different cities became acquainted with each other and with their several religious views. The different legends w^ere retold in foreign countries and persisted there, so far as it was possible, side by side in Syracuse, in in

with the native religion. sion originated in this

We

way;

know

e. g.,

that

much confu-

the genealogies of the

gods w^ere different in different cities, and so were the marriage relations between gods and goddesses. Thus in Greece

when

the different local traditions were com-

bined and systematized, the conflicting traditions were


THE PLEROMA.

26

adjusted as well as could be done in the haphazard

way

which the religious development took place. It is this shape that Greek mythology has been preserved in

poem

Avell-known

the

classic lore are

Hesiod,

of

in

in

and students of

sometimes puzzled by the many contra-

dictions. It

was

frequently happened that the same god or goddess

by different names in different localities. In one country one feature was developed, and in another, called

and the legends told of them were so modified they were retold and compared, the several devotees no longer recognized that these figures had once been the same. So we know that Astarte, Aphroothers

that

;

when

dite or

Venus develops one

divinity, while

feature of the great female

Hera, Athene and Artemis develop oth-

The Babylonian

combined all of them and saw no resemblance between Artemis and Athene. The same is true of such heroines as Danae, Andromeda, lo, and others. This state ers.

Islitar

yet the Greek worshiper

of affairs naturally tended to obscure the issues.

A similar we

state of confusion existed in

Egypt, where

are unable to present a perfectly consistent m3^thol-

ogy of the popular gods. On, or as the Greeks attempt to

The

called

settle all disputes

official priests in it,

Heliopolis,

ancient

made an

and to systematize Egyp-

tian religion, but their creed does not solve all difficulties,

nor does

it

help us to bring order into the chaos

of previous times. It is

obvious that the religious development of man-


THE PERIOD OF TRANSITION.

27

kind could not halt at this stage of a unification of the mythologies of the several nations.

When

the differ-

ences of nationality and language ceased to constitute

dividing itself in

lines,

the problem of adjustment presented

a renewed form, and this happened in the his-

tory of the antique world through the conquest of Asia

by Alexander the Great.

On

the ruins of the Persian

Empire a number of

Greek kingdoms were established. The old barriers that had separated the East and the West had been removed, and a new period originated in which Eastern lore

became known

in the

West, and Western views

superseded and modified the traditions of the hoary

Eastern

This Hellenistic period affected

civilization.

more than is commonly known, and the period from Alexander's overthrow of the Persian Empire to the time of Christ was the preparatory stage for the religion

formation of a new^ religion that was destined to be the religion of the

Roman

Empire.

The exchange of thought that took place between the East and the West discredited the belief in the traditional gods. The old priesthood lost its hold on the people,

and complaints of

infidelity w^ere

where; but the cause was not (as

it

heard every-

was then thought)

a decay, but rather an expanse of the religious

Even before notice a

spirit.

the conquest of Alexander the Great

we

strong influence of Eastern religion upon

ancient Hellas which

philosophy

(e.

g.,

found expression not only

Pythagoreanism) but also

in

in re-


THE PLEROMA.

28

ligious institutions, mainly in the mysteries such as

were celebrated at Eleusis and in other cities. They fascinated the Greek mind, for they taught more plainly than the ancient myths the eternal repetition of the life of nature, deriving therefrom an evidence for the immortality of the soul, the promise of which was held out to the initiates in dramatic performances and suggested through allegories. We know that ears of wheat, phallic symbols, and other emblems of regeneration played an important part in the mysteries. There were ablutions or baptisms, the lighting of torches, the blindfolding of the initiated and the removal of the

veil,

exhibiting a vision of deep significance

;

there

and tribulations finding their climax in a descent into the underworld, and finally a great rejoic-

were

trials

ing at the conquest of

The

life

over death.

mysteries were celebrated in honor of Orpheus

and Eurydice, or of Demeter and Persephone, or of Eros and Psyche, or of Dionysos, the liberator, entering in triumphal procession riding on an ass, and all of them proclaimed the doctrine of immortality. In their later stages of development, the mysteries incorporated for

we

manded

more and more a great moral

find purity of life

earnestness,

and freedom from

guilt de-

most indispensable condition for parthe bliss that was to be gained through

as the

ticipation in initiation.

The beginning scelerisque purus,

of the Horatian ode Integer vitae which means "blameless in life and


THE PERIOD OF TRANSITION. free

from

guilt,"

is

29

probably an echo of the religious

sentiment which pervades

the

mysteries of ancient

Greece.

To what

extent the spirit of the mysteries entered

into the fabric of Christianity appears

that St. Paul uses their

most

from the

fact

significant terms, such as

"mystery, initiate {teletos or teleiothcis), perfection or consecration,

divine presence

The

(paroiisia).

his-

must have been very close, for w^e find representations of Eros and Psyche together with the Good Shepherd, and the oldest pictures of Christ in the Catacombs of Rome show him as Orpheus with

toric connectioii

lyre in hand.

We must remember that in the ancient mysteries the god (Tammuz, Adonis, Osiris, Dionysos, etc.) was the first to acquire salvation through his passion and death, and the partakers of the mysteries were initiated by witnessing the dramatic representation of his

fate.

We

find references to this in the Epistles, as for instance

(Heb. (

ii.

teleiosai)

lo) ^

:

"For

behooved him to be

through suffering."

mony {archegosY

is

Version as "captain." to

it

The

leader in the cere-

here translated in the Authorized

In another passage Christ

have taken the highest degree of

egeneto^ (Heb. v. 9).

initiated

As

is

said

initiation, teleiothcis

purity of

life

was made

the

indispensable condition of the mysteries, so in ChrisVeAciwo-at.

^TcXtL'jiOcL s

dyeVcTO,


THE PLEROMA.

30

"Charity

tianity.

is

the bond of our consecration" (tes

teleiotetos,^ translated,

"of our perfectness).^ (Col.

iii.

14)-

All this infiltration of Oriental customs and relig-

Western countries took place before the It would have continued even if Alexander had not crossed the Helions

into

expedition of Alexander the Great.

lespont, but here, as in

many

other cases, a catastrophe

hastened the historical process that was slowly pre-

paring

The

itself in

the minds of the people.

modern England is we may compare Alexan-

process of the formation of

similar,

and

in this respect

der's expedition to the invasion of

William the Con-

Norman words and Norman

queror into England.

had invaded the Saxon kingdom long beconquest, and might have produced by a slow and peaceful process some kind of modern English, such as we have it now. But the Norman conquest was a catastrophe in which the factors at work gained a free play by an overthrow of the retarding conservatism and thus hastened the .process that was The old Saxon England could not actually going on. have remained isolated and would have modified its institutions as well as its language under the influence civilization

fore the

Norman

With

of continental Europe.

or without the

Norman

was in all main features foreordained and the same law of history holds good in conquest,

V^9

its

destiny

TeAetoTT/Tos.

"^Compare also Heb.

xii.

2;

I

Cor.

ii.

Gff.


THE PERIOD OF TRANSITION.

31

other cases, especially in the formation of the religion of

Europe which we

When

call Christianity.

the barriers of the different countries broke

down in the time of Alexander the Great, a religious movement spread during the Hellenistic period over the Mediterranean countries

name,

which received no

but, in its religio-philosophical form,

definite

may

be characterized as pre-Christian gnosticism.

best

While

generally treated as a phase in the devel-

gnosticism

is

opment of

Christianity,

Christianity.

Its

before Christ and

we

insist that

beginnings it

reached

lie

its

it

existed before

in the first century

maturity before Paul

wrote his Epistles.

have repeatedly called attention to that the Epistles of St. Paul abound in the

Biblical scholars

the fact

most important terms of gnostic philosophy. We will mention here only such gnostic notions as the doctrine of three bodies, the corporeal body, the psychical body body; the ideas of the pleroma, the of ceons and fulfilment or the fulness of the time, there are some others all of which are presupposed as

and the

spiritual

;

known

to the congregations

dresses. ties,

He

and nowhere deems

meaning.

whom

the Apostle ad-

uses these terms freely as it

known

quanti-

necessary to explain their

This proves that his Epistles represent the

conclusion of a prior movement, the development of gnosticism, as

much

the formation of the

as the beginning of a

Church which

is

new

one,

a definite indi-

vidualization of the preceding gnosticism.


THE PLEROMA.

32 It

was a natural consequence

that the gnostic sects

which preserved some of the original and tentative, or we may say cruder types of the movement, were repudiated as heretical, and Church historians, ignorant of

the fact that they represent an older phase than Christianity,

well

regarded them as degenerate

assume

that

Christian heretics,

i.

some of the e.,

rebels.

later

they were unorthodox

of the Church, but assuredly not

all,

We may

gnostics were

members

and we have reason

to believe that not a few of the later gnostics such as

the Manichseans had developed on independent lines religious notions that

were not derived from, but were

parallel to, Christianity.

One

thing

is

sure, that the

appearance of Christianity

So far the movement had developed among Jews and Gentiles around various centers with general tendencies, all verging in the same direction. The world was in a state of fermentation and the idea that the saviour had come acted like a reagent which caused the turbid ingredients to settle. cleared the situation at once.

To

use another allegory

we may

say that pre-Christian

gnosticism was like a liquid ready for crystallization, as for instance a cup of water chilled

freezing point.

The

much below

the

walls of the vessel being smooth,

the water does not crystallize, but as soon as a strav;

dipped into the water a point of attachment is given around which the ice forms and the water of the whole cup freezes with great rapidity. When St. Paul is

preached the Gospel of Jesus Christ, a definite issue


THE PERIOD OF TRANSITION.

33

was raised which could not be ignored, and forced all gnostics to take issue with it. The hazy and vague conception of a Christ appeared here actualized in Jesus as a tangible personality

which had either

to be re-

jected or accepted.

All minds of a religious nature were

ancy and

of expect-

full

in the circles of

Jewish gnostics the expected saviour had already been identified with the Messiah

and was called Christ. The term occurs frequently in the Solomonic psalms which were sung as hymns in the synagogue of Alexandria in the first century B. C. So we see that a vague notion as to the nature of the Christ existed long before Paul had come to the conclusion that Jesus w^as he.

mention

is

made

a gnostic teacher

los,

In

the

New

of an Alexandrian Jew, by

Testament,

name Apol-

who was well versed in expoundknew all about "the Lord," but

ing the scriptures and

he had not yet heard of Jesus.

A

few

lines in the

Acts

of the Apostles (xviii, 24-25) throw a flood of light

on the

situation.

"And dria,

came

a certain

They read thus Jew named Apollos, born

an eloquent man, and mighty in the to Ephesus. This man was instructed

of the

Lord and being fervent ;

at

Alexan-

scriptures, in the

in the spirit,

way

he spake

and taught diligently the things of the Lord, knowing only the baptism of John."

Apollos was converted to the belief of St. Paul, as the

is

"And he began to speak boldly in synagogue whom, when Aquila and Priscilla had 26

stated in verse

:

:


THE PLEROMA.

34

heard, they took

him

the

way

of

him unto them, and expounded unto perfectly." The conversion

God more

of Apollos consisted simply in this, that henceforth

when he expounded "the way of the Lord" he identified the Lord with Jesus, as we read in verse 28 'Tor he :

mightily convinced the Jews, and that publickly, shewing by the scriptures that Jesus was Christ." *

*

*

sects we will mention the Zabians, the and the Simonians, all of which are preChristian, although we know them mainly in later forms of their development, or from the polemical

Of Gnostic

Ophites,

literature of Christian authors.


CHAPTER

V.

THE GNOSTIC MOVEMENT. MAND^ANS AND -^

ZABIANS.

A N OLD form of gnosticism which ^ in Babylon and is still in existence,

of the Mandaeans sonification

of

who worship

the

gnosis

had is

home

its

the religion

as their saviour a per-

Manda

under the name

Remnants of this sect still exist in the swamp districts of Mesopotamia and in Persian Khusistan. They claim to be Zubba, e., Zabians,^ or ''Baptizers," whereby they mean to d'Hajje, the Enlightenment of Life.

i.

establish

an

historical connection

John the Baptist.

Though

with the disciples of

this claim has

been sus-

pected of being invented to gain the respect and toleration of the

Mohammedan

authorities^

it

seems not

improbable that the Zabian or Baptizer sect in Palestine in the first century before the Christian era

regarded as a kindred movement classes of the Jews, for the

among

must be

the poorer

Zabian creed bears

many

resemblances to the gnosticism of the educated people of Asia

The

Minor and Alexandria. great prophet of the Zabians in Palestine was

John, surnamed ^'the Baptizer," or as "the Baptist." 6755

He was

one of

we now

say,

their leaders, perhaps


THE PLEROMA.

36

we need

their chief leader, in the times of Christ, but

not for that reason assume that he was the founder of the sect, for the Zabians counted

many

adherents

outside of Palestine, in Samaria as well as Asia Minor,

when the apostles began to preach the GosThey were called disciples^ and were frequently referred to in the Acts of the Apostles. They celebrated the first day of the week which is dedicated

at the

time

pel of Jesus.

to the sun,

and

is

the

same day which the Mithraists

celebrated as the day of Mithras, the Lord, the Invincible

One, the Sun.

In another passage, the disciples are mentioned as

coming together to break bread

in

common, which,

without doing any violence to the words, preted as a kind of

Agape

is

to be inter-

or love-meal, one of the

forms in which the Eucharist was celebrated.

From

these scattered statements,

we may assume

that

"the disciples of St. John the Baptist" is a New Testament name given to a sect, which existed at the time of Christ and probably long before John the Baptist, and had spread not only over Palestine but also over

Asia Minor, and that the Jews but

The

among

its

original

home was

not

among

the Babylonians.

religion of these disciples

runners of Christianity and

were preserved as Christian

it

was one of the

fore-

contained features which

institutions, the

of them being the sacramait of baptism.

main one


THE GNOSTIC MOVEMENT.

When we

37

read the passages referring to John the

Baptist in the Gospel,

we

are involuntarily under the

impression that they were written to gain converts

among

the Zabians.

No

doubt that many Zabians were

gained for Christianity, but large numbers kept aloof

and

fortified

themselves against further inroads of

Christian proselytism by an intense hatred which shows itself in the

sacred books of the Mandaeans.

In their complicated system,

Manda d'Hajje

is

again

and again incarnated for the sake of salvation, his visible image on earth is called Hibil, and he appeared This Yahya last in John the Baptist, called Yahya. baptized Yishu M'shiha (i. e., Jesus), a false Messiah. To remedy the mistake, Anush 'Uthra, a younger brother of Hibil, came down to earth, and while Yahya

was slain by the Jews, the false prophet was crucified. Then Anush 'Uthra punished the Jews by the destrucand the dispersion of the nation. The Mandsean religion is an extremely complicated system which in its present form bristles with polemics

tion of Jerusalem

against Christianity and

Mohammedanism, but

there

can be no doubt that the nucleus of this queer faith in tenets is derived from ancient Babylonian and many of its points of resemblance to Christianity must be explained as parallel formations.

its

main

sources,

If the religious tenor of a religion is best

known

from the hymns w^hich the devotees sing, we must look upon Mandseism as a Babylonian faith which had broadened by the acquisition of the knowledge of the


THE PLEROMA.

38

age as i.

e.,

it

was imported

Iran and India

into

Mesopotamia from the

east,

the extreme west, Hellas and also

;

Asia Minor and from the southwest, Egypt, Palestine and Syria. The foundation remained the same, the world-conception of ancient Babylon, as modified by ;

now commonly called Mazdaism The prayers of the Mandaeans re-

Persian monotheism, or Zoroastrianism.

tain the ring of the ancient Babylonian

For

all

we know

it is

hymns.

not impossible that the

Man-

daean religion originated under Indian influence and the

word manda, which corresponds

gnosis,

may

i.

e.,

to the

Greek term

cognition, knowledge, or enlightenment,

be a translation of the Buddhist hodhi.

OPHITES OR NAASAEANS.

One

of the strangest gnostic sects are the snake-

worshipers,

called

Naasseans,^ or in Greek Ophites,

whose pre-Christian existence can scarcely be doubted and here, even the old Neander, when referring to the probability that their founder Euphrates^ lived before

the birth of Christ, says

"We

would thus be

led to

assume a pre-Christian

gnosis which afterwards partly received Christian ele-

ments, partly opposed them with hostility."

Like the Zabians, the Ophites are of pagan origin *From the Greek o<^ts or the Hebrew t?n5. The term nakhash

is

the snake of the occultists.

It is also the

name

of the

and the Piel of the verb nakhash means "to practice sorcery, or to consult an oracle; to have forebodings, or receive omens." "0 rig en, c. Cei, vi. 28.

constellation called the great serpent, or the dragon,


THE GNOSTIC MOVEMENT.

39

and incorporated traces of ancient Babylonian, Persian, Egyptian, and perhaps also of Indian notions. The snake is originally the symbol of goodness and of wholesome life, the good demon,^'' as we find him represented on the Abraxas gems. The snake was sacred to Hygeia, the goddess of health, and also to ^sculapius,

god of healing. We can not doubt that the brazen serpent which was erected by Moses for the healing of the people had a similar meaning, and seraphim in the original Hebrew means serpent-spirits.

the

In Christianity the snake of Paradise

is

identified

by and so the Christians were greatly offended at the idea of revering the snake as the symbol of divine wisdom. On the other hand the Ophites as also the Zabians regarded the Jewish God, whom they called with the principle of evil, represented in Parseeism

the dragon

;

laldabaoth, as the prince of this world, the creator of

and they pointed out the boon of the of and evil, which knowledge good of the gnosis, i. e., the jealous laldabaoth tried to withold from man. The Ophites distinguish between a psychical Christ and a material existence and of

evil,

that the snake promised to

spiritual Christ.^^

his birth,

it is

moment

The former was upon Jesus

dove

at

him when the

This, they claim, explains also that

^^dya6oBaLfxo>v,

and

in the shape of a

of baptism, and abandoned

passion began.

^^i}/v)(lk6<;

present in Jesus at

the lower form of mind, but the spiritual

Christ descended the

Adam

TrvevixariKos,


THE PLEROMA.

40

Christ could no longer perform miracles and, therefore,

became a

helpless victim of his enemies.

The Ophites

God

criticize the

of the Jews,

many

they regard as the demiurge, for his

vices

whom which

indicate the low character of his divinity, especially his

wrath and love of vengeance. of love and mercy, he whose the snake, and whose representative is the

pride, jealousy, envy,

The

highest God, the

messenger

is

spiritual Christ,

is

God

absolute benevolence, and he com-

municates himself lovingly to

all

things, even to the

The Ophites

inanimate things of nature.

learn from Epiphanius {contra

Hacres,

say, as

xxvi,

we 9)

c.

:

''When we use the things of nature as food, we draw into us the soul that is scattered in them and lift it up again to

its

original source."

In quoting this passage Neander comments on the Ophites, that ''thus eating and drinking became to

an

Further

we

read in one of their gospels that the

Deity thus addressed those

him "Thou am, and I am

to I

them

act of worship."

:

art I

and

I

who

am

in all things.

consecrate themselves

desire, but

me

up

up, thou gatherest

doctrines

Indian influence.

art

Thou canst gather me up when thou gatherest

wherever thou mayest

The Ophite

Where thou

thou.

thyself."^^

may

also

Bodily existence

contain traces of is

regarded as

evil

and the gnosis or enlightenment, like the Buddhist bodhi, is the means as well as the end of salva-

per se

;

"See Neander, Germ,

ed., p. 246.


THE GNOSTIC MOVEMENT.

We

tion.

know

41

by and must assume that the Ophites

their doctrines only as preserved

their Christian critics

themselves were perhaps only superficially acquainted

with the the

God

Hebrew

scriptures

and

their identifications of

of the Jews with the evil deity and of the snake

Vvdth the principle of ent,

;

wisdom would appear in a differif we could fall back

probably in a better light

upon statements of

their belief as formulated

by them-

selves

TKE RELIGION OF MANI.

How

powerful the non-Christian gnosticism must

have been appears from the fact that Manichseism, a doctrine that in spite of

its

resemblance to Christianity

originated from non-Christian sources, could spread so rapidly over the

Roman

empire in the third century

A. D., and remain a most powerful rival of Christianity down to the time of Pope Leo the Great.

Mani, the founder of

this sect,

was born (according

to Kessler^^) in the year 215-216 A. D., as the son of

He was most and raised in the faith of the Zabians, but being of an intensely religious nature, he devoted himself to religious exercises and speculation and became a reformer. His efforts resulted in a reFutak,^^ a Persian nobleman of Ecbatana. carefully educated

new religion on from which Mani had

vival that gradually developed into a

the basis started,

of the traditions

and

this religion, called

Manichaeism,

^^Genesis des Manichaeischen Religionssystems.

"The Greeks

call

him

IlaTCKtos.

is

dis-


THE PLEROMA.

42

and earnestness but most rigorous asceticism which is but the

tingiiished not only by devotion

also by the

moral

application

What is

of

a

dualistic

interests us here in the

the great similarity

it

world-conception.

Manichsean movement,

bears to the dualistic and

which continued to the time of the Reforma-

ascetic tendencies of Christianity

Church down to Though Manichseism belongs

influence the tion.

era,

it is

not a Christian sect

;

it

to the Christian

has acquired

its

simi-

from other sources; it is a impulses development of which started in ancient Babylon and its relation to Christianity is more an attitude of hostility based mainly upon rivalry and intensified larities

b}^

to

Christianity

competition.

Harnack^^

says,

''Manichseism did not originate

on Christian ground .... It is Kessler's merit to have shown that the ancient Babylonian religion, the original source of all the gnosis of Western Asia, was the basis of the Manichsean system."

had not come in contact with would in all main points have been the same religion, and so we are justified in looking upon the Manichaean movement as a strand of religious tendencies which represents a parallel formation to Christianity and which will therefore help us to understand If

Manichseism

Christianity

it

the general drift of the age. "See Enc. Brit., s. v. "Manichaeism," Vol. XV,

p. 485.


CHAPTER

VI.

KINDRED SECTS IN PALESTINE AND EGYPT. THE SIMONIANS.

SAMARIA seems to have been a hot-bed of religious commotion, for we know that several prophets rd'ose there at the

time of Christ

who

claimed to be

Messiahs of Israel and incarnations of God.

They

are

Cleobolus, and Menander,

Simon Magus, Dositheus,

having been the most successful among them,^^ for the sect which he founded spread beyond the bounthe

first

daries of

Samaria and was

still

flourishing in the second

century.

Simon Magus was a gnostic who, as we learn from came in contact with the disThe very ciples of Jesus, especially Philip and Peter. existence of Simon Magus in the forties of the first

the Acts of the Apostles,

century, his claims and doctrines, prove that gnosti-

cism antedates Christianity, for even before

was a pow^erful Christian Church was still in its infancy.

conversion,

We

it

read in Acts

''But there

St. Paul's

movement while

was a

beforetime in

viii,

the

9-10:

certain

the same

man,

city

called

Simon, which

used sorcery, and be-

witched the people of Samaria, giving out that himTo whom they all gave self was some great one: "Eusebitis.

S. E.

N., 22.


THE PLEROMA.

44

heed, from the least to the greatest, saying,

man

This

power of God." "The great power of God," is a gnostic expression and the original reads literally, "This one is the is

the great

Power

of God, the so-called Great One,"^^ which indi-

we have to deal here with a technical term. know of the Simonians who worshiped Simon Magus as God incarnate, through Justin Martyr,^^

cates that

We

Clement,

Irenseus,

Hyppolytus

and

Origen,

also

through Celsus as preserved by Origen. Their doctrine must have been very the Christian faith and

it

taught a trinity long before the

adopted or even began to discuss

God.

The founder

similar

to

a strange fact that they

is

Church

Christian

this conception of

of the Simonians continued to live

in Christian legend as a kind of Antichrist,

and the

supernatural power with which the faith of his ad-

herents had endowed him, was changed to a charge of sorcery and black magic.

THERAPKUTKS^ ESSENES^ NAZARENES, AND EBIONITES. There are other unquestionably pre-Christian movements which are inspired by the

ious

of gnosticism.

In his

De

vita contemplativa,

^^OvTos co-Ttv^ Awajats rov Oeov ^*Justin

rj

KaXov/Jievr)

religspirit

Philo

Mcy dXrj,

Martyr wrote a book on Simon Magus

entitled

Syn-

tagma, which, unfortunately, is lost, but he refers to him frequently in his other writings, and the main contents of the Syntagma have been preserved by Irenseus.


KINDRED SECTS IN PALESTINE AND EGYPT. tells

us of the Therapeutes in Egypt

holiness, religious contemplation

anticipating so

much

that

is

who

45

led a life of

and divine worship,

commonly regarded

as

and the authority of the book and even the genuineness of his reports have been questioned by Eusebius who discusses the problem at length in his Ecclesiastical History (II, ch. 17), and Christian, that the date

who

by others ficult

accept his arguments.

to discover a

of history, and after

falsification

But

it

is

dif-

motive for such an intentional all

the opinion of

Eusebius rests upon a very weak foundation, namely the assumption that Christian ideas, the aspiration for leading a

life

and with them

of holiness in the

fashion of monks, can not have antedated the Chris-

Yet

tian era.

this

exactly the point which

is

Even

to be conceded.

if

has

the evidence of the existence

of a pre-Christian gnosis which originated in Meso-

potamia and spread to Asia Minor and Egypt and thence over the whole Roman Empire counted for nothing,

we have

still

the Scriptural evidence that

from the Zabian movement, was baptized by the leader of the Zabians In fact Palestine, and that Christ was a Nazarene.

Christianity has developed that Jesus in

the Jerusalemitic

Christians

continued to be called

Nazarenes even after the death of Christ. When St. Paul visits Jerusalem and creates a turbance he these words lent fellow,

is :

dis-

accused before Felix, the governor, in

"For we have found this man a pestiand a mover of sedition among all the


THE PLEROMA.

46

Jews throughout the world, and

a ringleader of the

sect of the Nazarenes." It is absolutely

men born

in

excluded that Nazarenes can mean

Nazareth; the word must be the name

of a sect of which Jesus was a member, a sect which,

had

after the destruction of Jerusalem, ters at Pella

and which

its

headquar-

mentioned by Epiphanius

is

(Pau. XXX, 7) and Jerome {Epistle y2, addressed to

Augustine).

The Essene communities

constitute

another un-

equivocally pre-Christian sect with tendencies similar to the Nazarenes.

that

there

identical,

some reason

is

but

The two

it

sects are so

to

believe

much

that they

alike

are

bring proof for this

will be difficult to

contention.

The Essenes J lid.

ii,

8 and

are

mentioned

by

Josephus (Bell. Philo (in his by 5), by Eusebius (Pr. Ev. viii,

Antiq. xviii.

i,

Quod omnis probiis liber), 11) who quotes from a lost book the second century B.

of Philo's, and by

They date back to C, and Josephus himself joined

Pliny (in his Hist. Nat.

v.

17).

community for a while. The meaning of the name is unknown and need Our main purpose is to point not concern us now. out their kinship to the gnostic movement which is their

indicated by their religious seriousness, the similarity

of their views to Persian and Babylonian doctrines,

and the

ascetic tendency of their

moral teachings.


KINDRED SECTS IN PALESTINE AND EGYPT. The

Ebionites,

i.

e.,

may

the sect of ''the poor,"

have been a name for the Nazarenes, for

it

is

47

proba-

them whenever he spoke of know that the Nazarenes were com-

ble that Jesus referred to ''the

We

poor."

who

munists

dehver

all

required those

In the Acts

the sect.

who

joined their ranks to

their property to the authorized leaders of

we

are told the

grewsome

story

of Ananias and Sapphira who, having kept back part of the

money they had

property,

fell

received for the sale of their

dead before the feet of

the Ebionites are indeed the Nazarenes pret the proposition of Jesus to the "Sell

all

Peter.

St.

we might

young

rich

If

inter-

man,

thou hast and distribute unto the poor," as an

invitation to join the congregation of the Nazarenes.

Wherever we turn, we find that tendencies and movements animated by the spirit of gnosticism existed at the

even the

beginning of the Christian

New

Testament presupposes

in Palestine, for Christianity itself

developed from the local gnostic

Gnosticism

therefore

is

It is a religio-philosophical

older

is

era,

stated to have

sects.

than

Christianity.

movement which

originated

through a fusion of the Eastern and Western tions era.

and that

their existence

civiliza-

century before the Christian

during the first Eastern doctrines were studied in Greece in the

light of

Western conceptions having

as a

background

the religious traditions of the Western nations, espe-


THE PLEROMA.

48 cially the

Greek, together with the impressions which

the dramatic performances of the initiations into the

mysteries had

left

upon the

the product of a fusion of all antiquity,

Our

is

people.

Thus

gnosticism,

pagan religions of

classical

the real mother of Christianity.

proposition

may seem

strange to those into

whose minds the idea that Judaism

is

the mother of

Christianity has been inculcated since the days of child-

hood, but the facts of history speak for themselves.


HOW THE

GENTILE SAVIOUR

CHANGED INTO THE

CHRIST.



CHAPTER

VII.

THE PROCESS OF IDEALIZATION.

HOW much

Christianity has been prepared in Baby-

more matured knowledge

lon appears from our

The

of the cuneiform inscriptions.

subject

is

discussed

by Schrader in Die Keilinschriftcn unci das Alfe Testament/- p. 2)77 ^-y where the points of identification between Marduk, Yahveh and Christ are thus enumerated 1.

:

Christ's pre-existence as a divine being

and

as

creator of the world. 2.

Christ's miraculous birth.

doctrine are not yet

known

Prototypes of this

of Marduk, but rather of

Babylonian heroes such as King Sargon

I,

King

Gil-

gamos^ and Assurbanipal. 3.

Christ as the saviour, as the inaugurator of a

Under this heading mention the fact that in the inscription on an ancient cylinder Cyrus is called ''Saviour-King" just as Isaiah calls him ''the Messiah of Yahveh"

new age, we must

of a time of prosperity.

also

(Is. xlv. i).

What

directly to Jesus 4.

Christ

Isaiah says of Cyrus^

by John the the

as

pleroma,

or

fulfilment

'3d. edition. Berlin: Reuther & Reichard, 1903. ^As related by Aelian, Anim. Hist., XII, 21. ^Verse 2; cf. xl, 3, 4.

'Matt.

iii.

3;

Mark

i.

3;

Luke

iii.

is

referred

Baptist.*

4;

John

i.

23.

of the


THE PLEROMA.

50

which

times,

is

closely connected with the Babylonian

notion of cycles, involving the idea that in the proper

season of a periodic round of ages a certain consum-

mation

is

attained.

In the same

Christ as sent by the Father.

5.

way, God Marduk looks upon the world with compassion whenever lation,

it is

and

in a state of disorder

and sends a saviour

to rescue

tribu-

mankind from

evil.

The

6.

passion of Christ.

It is

noteworthy that in

Babylon the king assumes the part of the penitent for his people

himself.

and takes the guilt and punishment upon [The same idea prevails in China and is

referred to in

The

7. is

Lao Tse's Tao Teh King,

The

death of Christ.

chap. 78.]

Marduk

death of

not directly known, but can be derived from the

name he

bears as "Lord of the lamentation," and the

fact that in the cult of

Marduk,

his

tomb

is

mentioned.

who must be named in this connection Shamash, Nergal, Tammuz, Sin and Ishtar.

Other

8.

deities

Christ's descent to hell.

are

Here the same names

must be mentioned as above. 9.

Christ's resurrection.

sojourn in hell

is

That the time of

said to be three days

is

Christ's

probably

based upon the old Babylonian conception.

Three

moon

which

days in spring, the fact

may be compared

is

said to be invisible,

with the story of Jonah

who


THE PROCESS OF IDEALIZATION. stays in

51

the belly of the fish three days and three

nights.

The ascension of Christ.^ The exaltation of Christ. The parousia of Christ and

10.

11. 12.

his second advent.

Jesus prophesies that great tribulations shall pre-

we

cede his second advent and here also close parallels in

Babylonian inscriptions.

find

some

The time

of tribulation stands in contrast to the time of prosperity

which

is

assured through the appearance of the

The renewal

of the world

preceded by a breakdown of the old order. Men will become wicked and horrible crimes will be perpetrated. We read in saviour.

—Cun. Texts,

one text (K. 7861. will kill

is

xiii,

50),

"A

brother

with weapons his brother, a friend his friend."

In another text (K. B. eclipses of

sun and

vi,

i,

moon and

p.

275

f.)

we

read of

the quarrels between in-

mates of the same house and between neighbors. A third passage (K. 454 Cun. Texts xiii, 49) reads

"Such a prince [who would not obey the commandments of the gods] will experience misery; his thus:

heart will not rejoice; during his rule,

combats will not

cease.

Under such

brother will devour brother

;

people will

ren for money; the countries will the husband will leave his wife

band; a mother °This point treated and so

will bolt the

and the

fall

battles

and

a government, sell their child-

into confusion;

and the wife her hus-

door against her daugh-

following two

we mention them without

are not satisfactorily entering into details.


THE PLEROMA.

52

Babylon will be carried to Syria and Assyria; the king of Babylon will have to surrender the possessions of his palace and his treasury ter; the treasury of

to the princes of Assyria." 13. 14.

bolical

Christ as a judge.

The marriage

of Christ; or rather the sym-

Lamb

marriage of the

allusions to Christ as the

totype in the marriage of

Babylonian

New

in Revelations

and the

bridegroom have their pro-

Marduk

celebrated

on the

Year's day.^

The pagan saviour idea has been gradually transformed into the conception of Christ. We can trace the process in different places and everywhere it follows the is

tles is

same

with the

lion,

Samson of the

man unarmed and ;

but he

is

also brutal

naked, he wres-

and

Dan^ and such

tribe of

the ancient myth.

As

In primitive times the saviour

law.

simply a strong

Such

gross.

is

Heracles in

t

.

civilization -advances,

the

hero

gentler and nobler features which are

acquires

now more

the

high-

than superiority of brawn. Moral stamina becomes an indispensable condition for respect and so

ly respected

it is

unhesitatingly attributed to the national ideal.

this phase,

Heracles

is

In

represented as choosing between

the pleasures of vice and the practice of virtue and he 'See the author's Bride Publishing Company, 1908).

of Christ

(Chicago: Open

Court


THE PROCESS OF IDEALIZATION. prefers the latter, setting a noble example to

53

all

Greek

youths.

The Heracles faults, yet the

of the classical period

still

has his

philosophers claim that the real Heracles

had none, and that the

stories of his frolicking

and

rude exploits are inventions of myth mongers and should be regarded as perversions of the truth. He

was a saviour and he labored

for the best in

without any thought for himself.

So the

mankind

idealizing

process goes on and reaches a climax at the beginning

him with same reverence as a Christian would speak of

of the Christian era, w^hen Seneca speaks of the

Christ.

He

says

"Heracles never gained victories for himself.

wandered through the

circle

conqueror, but as a protector. the

enemy of the wicked,

He

of the earth, not as a

What, indeed, should

the defender of the good,

the peace-bringer, conquer for himself either

on land

or sea!"

This conception was not peculiar to Seneca but

was

at that time

common

to all

pagan

that

no man

is

''He

:

an orphan, but that there

always and constantly for

all

Epictetus

sages.

speaks of his sonship to Zeus and says

of them.

knew

is

a father

He

had not

only heard the words that Zeus was the father of men, but he regarded him as his father and called him such;

and looking up

to

him he did what Zeus

fore he could live happily everywhere."

did.

There-


THE PLEROMA.

64

The

final

conception

Heracles

of

hero, the god-man, the son of Zeus, Schiller's great

the

as is

ideal

presented in

hymn 'The Ideal and Life" in the two And we may be sure that the

concluding stanzas.

German

poet, perhaps the best

modern

representative

of the religious spirit of classical antiquity,

is

not con-

scious of the similarity of the Greek hero to Christ.

Their resemblance, at any rate in tentional.

this

poem,

is

unin-

Schiller says*^:

"Heracles in deep humiliation, Faithful to his destination,

Served the coward in life's footsore path. Labors huge wrought he; Zeus* noble scion; He the hydra slew and hugged the lion, And to free his friends faced Pluto's wrath; Crossed the Styx in Charon's doleful bark; Willingly he suffered Hera's hate, Bore her burdens, grievous care and cark And in all he showed him great, " 'Til his course

was

run,

*til

he in

fire

Stripped the earthly on the pyre, 'Til

a god he breathed Empyreal airs,

now in new got power of flight Upward soars from joyful height to height, And as an ill dream, sink earth's dull cares; Blithe he

Glory of Olympus him enfoldeth; 'Mongst the gods transfigured standeth he. From the nectar cup which Hebe holdeth Drinks he immortality."

we have utilized a translation by the Rev. N. Guthrie, published in The Scwanee Review, April, 1908, p.

^For our version

W. 205.


THE PROCESS OF IDEALIZATION. touches

Schiller

55

on the same topic of Heracles

as the divine saviour in one of the Xenions where

Zeus addresses his hero son "Thou hast

By

in these

words^

divinity, son, not acquired

drinking

my

nectar;

But thy divinity 'tis Conquered the nectar for

thee."

This idea does not quite agree with the accepted view according to which Heracles, being the son of Zeus, was born immortal. In the same way Jesus is born as Christ, but Schiller's idea of Heracles cor-

responds to the doctrine held by a fraction of the early Christians, his saintly

The

which makes Jesus acquire Christhood by life.

belief

was quite

common,

especially

among

became Christ at the moment of his baptism in the Jordan, and this was the original meaning of the descent of the Holy Ghost upon him. The Cambridge Codex of the New Testament (6th century) still preserves the old reading which is a quotation of Psalm ii, 7, and declares most positively that in this very moment Jesus becomes the Christ and is to be considered the son of God. The passage (Luke iii, 22) reads in the Cambridge Codex: "And the Holy Ghost descended into him in a bodily form as a dove; and there was a voice out of the heaven: Thou art my son; this day I have begotten docetic

Christians

that Jesus

thee." ^Goethe and Schiller's Xenions,

p. 34.


THE PLEROMA.

50

When, with

the

growth

mas, this version was

dogma

in a hteral belief in

felt to

of the virgin birth, the words,

begotten thee," were changed

to, *'in

pleased," but in the epistle to the

passage

The

is still

quoted in of

ideas

the

Jesus and the birth of

its

God

where the Bodhi

(i. e.,

by

his virtues

the son

we

I

have

am

well

(i.

5) the

of

Christhood

from

eternity,

by

need

learn from Buddhism,

''enlightenment")

and his wisdom.

sonified as the Eternal

day

thee I

original form.

condition of the world-order, and it

*'this

Hebrews

acquisition

not contradict each other, as

dog-

be in conflict with the

is

an eternal

Gautama acquires The Bodhi is per-

Buddha, corresponding to the

Christ

who

am."

In a later version, this Buddha of Eternal Bliss

lives in the

says of himself, ''Before A.braham was,

Tusita heaven and decides to descend into

the

womb

as,

through Mary, Christ

Buddha

Maya,

of

is

I

for the purpose of salvation, just is

born

as the child Jesus.

not born as Buddha, but as Bodhisattva,

viz.,

destined to develop into a Buddha.

He

a being that

is

possesses the potentiality of acquiring the bodhi and

he

then

bodhi

actually

acquires enlightenment under the

tree.

The same

story of the incarnation of the Saviour

God, of a supernatural fatherhood, of great merits, etc., is told of Krishna, of Horus, of Samson, of Zeus, of Dionysos, and of every other hero and god-man.

These

stories are repeated

everywhere and the figure


THE PROCESS OF IDEALIZATION. of the saviour

is

more and more

and

idealized

57

spiritual-

ized as civilization progresses.

The same

process of idealizing and spiritualizing

the figure of a saviour went on in

all

pagan countries

in the Orient as well as in the Occident.

the several steps in the Heracles myth, so

As we trace we are con-

fronted with the same result in the Orient. the process was indeed faster, or

Brahman

In the ancient

earlier.

may

be

In India

was begun

it

religion

we meet

with the deified Krishna, the rollicking hero, the lover of sport and dance, the saviour from oppression and the bringer of joy; but his type fifth

century B. C. by a

is

supplanted in the

new and a higher

ideal,

sug-

gested by the respect for wisdom, for enlightenment, for bodhi or gnosis.

The

now

people

looked forward

for the incarnation of profound comprehension perfect virtue.

They expected a sage; and

and

the de-

velopment of the thought reaches a climax in the Buddha-conception which justly commands the admiration of Occidental students of Orientalism. life

of

Gautama Siddhartha was shaped under

fluence of

these conditions,

and Professor Fausbol,

"The more

the great Danish Pali scholar, used to say, I

know

of Buddha, the

more

I

love him.''

not ask in this connection whether

—

or no tails

just as

of the

life

which exerted

little

as

we need

Buddha

is

We

need

historical

care whether the deIt is

the ideal

influence in the history of

mankind

of Jesus are historical. its

The

the in-


THE PLEROMA.

58

as a formative presence in the hearts of the people,

and we know that

this living ideal

has been a most

potent factor in history; the transient figure of the

man

in

whom

it

was

either supposedly or truly actu-

Nor do we care we are confronted religious thought. So

alized is of secondary importance.

here to trace historical connections ;

with a law in the history of for instance the

Buddha

(or if you prefer, the Buddha) has been worked

ideal

historical personality of the

out on pagan ground in perfect independence of other ideals,

such as the Christ ideal of the Christians and the

spiritualized figure of a Heracles

Romans.

among

the Grseco-


CHAPTER

VIII.

THE PERSIANS AND THE JEWS.

WE KNOW

little

lonians, but

ligion

of the later period of the Baby-

we have

a rich literature of the re-

of Zarathushtra which originated in ancient

Medes and Persians, the Aryans who resided among the Semites and for some time dominated the Orient with great ability. The religion of these Aryan people is a most remarkable faith which was destined to play a Iran and was embraced by the

great part in the world.

It anticipated

the dualism

of neo-Platonism by two or three centuries, and entered the

Graeco-Roman world

in the shape of Mith-

raism.

We

deem dualism

to be a necessary phase in the

development of religion and think that truth which finds

its

subsequent monism.

solution but not

There

is

its

it

contains a

abolition in a

a duality in the world

which cannot be denied, although it can be resolved into a higher unity and thus be explained as two Existence origisides of one and the same process. nates through the contrast of duality, and thus only can it manifest itself in multiplicity. This truth remains true even when we have succeeded in reducing it

to a monistic conception.

Christianity

world where

it

was prepared was destined

in

those

to prevail

parts

of

the

—among

the


THE PLEROMA.

6d

and

Gentiles

Aryan

especially the

nations.

studies in the history of the several

pagan

All our religions

and the results of comparative religion point the same way and our scholars have frequently been puzzled by the facts. As a remarkable instance I will quote Prof. Lawrence H. Mills, the great Zend scholar of Oxford, a theologian of high standing belonging to

He

the Church of England.

comments

to his

Religion in Ancient Persia"

*'What

here intended

is

says in the introductory

most recent essay

entitled

is

Power

pleased the Divine

fundamental

articles of

Own

to call attention to the

better-known, though long since reported it

"Our

:

to reveal

thai

fact,

some of

our Catholic creed

first to

the

the

Zoroastrians, though these ideas later arose spontane-

among the Jews." Professor Mills insists on the independent origin

ously and independently

of the as

same

we may

ideas

among

well assume,

the

came

Jews of the Exile

w4io,

into close contact with

Persians and gained their confidence to such an ex-

on his accession to power of the Babylonian empire, reestablished the exiled Jews in their old home at Jerusalem. I will neither deny nor insist on an independent development of the same ideas; there are enough intent that Cyrus, the Persian king,

the sovereign

stances it

of parallel formations in history to render

possible in the case of the Jews.

Professor Mills

continues "I wish

to

show

that

the Persian

system must


THE PERSIANS AND THE JEWS.

61

have exercised a very powerful, though supervening and secondary influence upon the growth of these doctrines among the ExiHc and post-Exihc Pharisaic Jews, as well as upon the Christians of the

New

Testa-

ment, and so eventually upon ourselves."

Now more

the truth

is,

that the saviour-idea developed

rapidly to a higher plane

among the Jews. Hebrew language did than

saviour.

We not

among

even

possess

While the Persian Mithras

like the Christian Christ,

the

Gentiles

noted (page 22) that the

is

word very much the

a superpersonal presence of

preeminently moral significance, the Jewish Messiah

remained for a long time on the lower tive paganism,

a national hero

level of primi-

who was

still is

the Messiah of the

Book of Henoch

And

here Gentile influence can be traced.

a ruthless

How crude

conqueror and gory avenger of his people.

!

But even notice-

it is

Jews of the Dispersion developed a nobler Messiah than the Jews of Judea.

able that the ideal of the It

cannot be denied that

word Messiah idea

translated the

imperceptibly changed and incorporated

features Gentiles.

B. C.

when they

into Christ, the very substance of the

of the

idealized

Such was the Christ of the

among

many

saviour-conception of the first

century

the Jews of Alexandria.

Even orthodox

Christian scholars

to a literal belief, not only in the

who

still

adhere

dogmas but

also


THE PLEROMA.

62

in the historicity

and uniqueness of a

special revela-

have to recognize, as soon as they know the

tion,

the similarity of the

Here

Christians.

is

pagan saviours

facts,

to the Christ of the

a remarkable instance of a recog-

nition of this state of things

by a theologian, and

it is

interesting to note the explanation offered for the coin-

Com-

cidences between Christianity and paganism.

menting on Dr.

Hugo

Radau's brochure, Bel the Christ

of Ancient Times, Rev. Alan S. Hawkesworth, the author of De Incarnatione vcrhi Dei, says :^

"The

general conclusion

men

one, that the

man

is

by no means a startling

of ancient Babylon

felt

the very hu-

need for comfort and hope amid the ever-present

grim

and death and thus created for themselves in their own image, as they must needs have done, a redeemer who should conquer death and hell facts of suffering

and bring ''This,

be in

all

weary

souls redemption

say,

both as

it

among

all

to

we

;

is

ages and

and immortality. it must

should be and as races.

The Egyptians

had Osiris, their suffering redeemer. Greece and Rome had the Orphic and Eleusinian mysteries and Mithras. The Aztecs, the Incas, and the primitive American Indians all had quite similar faiths. And were we to hereafter discover a hitherto unknown hyperborean race, we may be confident that whatever philosophy and religion they

age-old

lines.

may have

created, will be along these

For the roots of

this ideal

lie,

inerad-

•For Mr. Hawkesworth's review see the Monist, XIX,

p. 309.


THE PERSIANS AND THE JEWS. icably,

in

63

the fundamental needs and aspirations of

man.

"And

ogy, that

it

commonplace of Catholic theoluniversal desire for and expecta-

a familiar

it is

was

this

Man-God Redeemer,

tion of the

that

imperatively

demanded and necessitated its fulfilment in the Incarnation of Him, who was 'the Light that lighteth every

man

that

nations.'

cometh into the world' and the 'Desire of

So

that here as in lesser cases, prophecy,

whether heathen or

what by therefore,

an

'revealed,'

dire necessity

had

was merely

to be.

And

insight into Christianity,

not, as Puritanism heretically conceived,

is

artificial

all

'scheme of salvation' foisted upon an un-

willing and utterly alien world, but

is,

on the contrary,

the Catholic faith, which summarizes, completes, and

makes secure all the various partial broken insights and wavering desires for good, in the heathen religions and philosophies which heathen faiths are indeed, by their very nature, nothing more than the instinctive gropings of men after truth and God, if 'haply they might find Him.' They had faults and defects unquestionably, many and obvious. But these, in nearly every case, were simply the defects of imperfect insight springing from the unavoidable limitations imposed by racial In short, they were capabilities and environment. ;

'right in their assertions, but

So

wrong

in their negations.'

that Christianity comes, as the Catholic faith, not

to destroy, but to

fuM,

—and

to

fulfil

not merely Juda-


THE PLEROMA.

64

ism, but all the other ethnic beliefs; sedes, because

it

so

and only super-

fulfils.

all the gods of the elder world were in a very real sense the 'Christs' of their

''Hence, not only Bel, but

And, in each and every case, much of their mythology and doctrines can be paralleled by something in Christianity, indeed, must be paralleled, several times.

if

that

is

to be the final truth.

wrong way

*'But to turn this the

seek

to

nothing

do,

about, as

some may

and claim that Christianity is therefore revamped Babylonianism, or

better than a

Buddhism, or Parseeism, as the case may

be, is surely

some one claimed that the events in American history were by no means new, but were word for word, and act for act, not merely similar in some respects to, but identical replicas of the words and events in Babylonia to woefully misread the story!

It is quite as if

8,000 years ago!"

Mr. Hawkesworth copalian;

who

is

a scholarly

as "Broad, Evangelical,

not Latitudinarian

;

High Churchman.

structive as well as interesting to

man

Epis-

Broad, but

Evangelical, but not Platitudina-

and High, yet not Attitudinarian."

rian;

a

High Church

in a private letter characterizes himself

know

It

is

in-

the opinion of

of this type, with special reference to

many

curi-

ous similarities that obtain between ancient paganism

and Christianity. "I

may

He

says in his letter

say, too, that

my

statements, in

my

review

of Dr. Radau's book, concerning the heathen gods and


THE PERSIANS AND THE JEWS. were not

religions,

my

65

individual opinions merely.

they were, they would have but

little

If

value on such a

But they are rather the commonplaces of

subject.

And when

orthodox theologians.

mean what

of course, do not

is

I

say 'orthodox,*

all I,

frequently understood

by the term in America namely, an ;

ill

assorted 'hodge-

podge' of Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist, and Revivalist 'doctrine.'

"Not only

St. Augustine, but St. Athanasius, and all Church 'Fathers/ and later 'Doctors' like St. Thomas Aquinas, and St. John Damascene taught the

— —

the

doctrine

I

mention.

"The Hegelian

pulse of 'sub-lation,' in his logic, by

w^hich each category develops

its

latent contradictions,

and is then restated in a revised, truer, and more ample form thus 'fulfilling,' and by so fulfilling, collapses;

;

thereby abrogating the previous categories, the

way

that

Christianity

fulfils

is

precisely

and abrogates

all

the partial ethnic faiths.

"Thus, 'becoming' possesses onciles

the

contradiction

in

all

the truth

in,

and

'Pure Being,' and

equally valid opposite, 'Pure Nothing.'

But, in

its

recits

two-

and 'ceasing to be,' it unfolds contradictions of its own, which are, in turn, But, you know subsumed and sublated in 'Daseyn' the march of that wonderful dialectic. fold

form of 'coming to

be'

"And

.

furthermore; even as each of the more perfect

categories yet needs the previous incomplete and faulty categories as a prerequisite underpinning (so to speak),


THE PLEROMA.

66

SO also does the Christian CathoHc Faith imperatively need, because

Heathen

Catholic, the preceding Jewish

it is

Faiths.

St.

and

Clemens Alexandrinus and the

other Fathers say that, not merely the Jewish, but

Heathen Faiths were 'schoolmasters'

the

to bring

men

all

(TratSaywyoi')

to Christ.

''Preaching the Christian faith to a people

had had any religious

who

would surely be

ideas,

never

like talk-

ing 'Calculus' to savages ignorant of elementary arithmetic! sin, all

Christianity presupposes the inbred belief in

atonement, and redemption. religions have

it,

more or

It is inbred,

less

cause of the fundamental facts of

"After is

all,

a 'heathen'

;

and

all

because

have

or 'countryman,' pagamts

simply the natural man, and the Christian

ought to ideal

be, the natural

Even

man.

Christian layman the priest

is

;

man

of the 'nth powder,'

as the Christian priest is,

be-

it,

life.

and more

;

is all

and the bishop

is,

or the

that the all

that

and so on.

"I would like to put the argument in a quasi-mathematical form, like this

"Many

Christian doctrines

= Many Babylonian doc-

trines, say.

"Now

this

equation, as

it

stands,

might have the

orthodox interpretation that Christianity 'Babylonianism.' that Christianity

Or is

it

is

perfected

might bear the interpretation

merely a rehashed Babylonianism.

But the same equation holds even more truly for

all


THE PERSIANS AND THE JEWS. the other rehgions, none of which

things in

common

with each other.

Christianity ''

= Parseeism, = Egyptian = Confucianism, = Buddhism, = Judaism,

has,

in

67

general,

For

secret doctrines,

"

"

and so on.

"So we might say

that Christianity

is

the S or

Sum-

mation of the Infinite Series. ''Finally,

butterflies

it is

not the dead showcase of beetles and

(so to speak), like the Eclectic systems of

the neo-Platonist, and modern Eclectics; but is a vital and living organism. All the partial truths in the various faiths being integral and coherent parts in a vital whole, it cannot be the rehash of any one, for it repro-

duces of

all.

all,

for

And it

it

cannot be simply the eclectic rehash

holds their doctrines in living, coherent

unity." I

quote the letter of Mr. Hawkesworth in extenso

sums up the orthodox Christian view in the I have ever seen, and it proves that consciousness of the continuity between Christianity and its pagan predecessors is still alive among many wellinformed theologians. The statement is the more noteworthy as it reached me after the completion of my own essay. I insert it simply as a witness, and it is not astonishing that this testimony comes from an Episcobecause tersest

it

way

palian, for the Episcopalians

have always distinguished


THE PLEROMA.

68

themselves by their love of preserving historical connection. It is true that the

pagan saviours are prototypes of

Christ and the pagan religions are prophecies of Chris-

This is as natural as the experience that the bloom of a tree finds its fulfilment in the matured fruit. We do not mean to philosophize here, but we insist on the necessity of the historical law which is strictly regulated by the broader law of cause and effect, and which renders it necessary that every new phase in the development of mankind should be prepared by its The continuity of the process is nowhere precedents. broken, and when a new era begins which seems to change the entire appearance of mankind, it will be found to have been gradually prepared below the surtianity.

face of events.


CHAPTER

IX.

THE CHRIST OF THE REVELATION OF

A

ST.

JOHN.

MOST important witness of the transitional phase

-^"^

through which the Christ ideal passed before it became the Christ of St. Paul, is found in the Revelation of St. John the Divine, chapters xii and xix, 6-21. Gunkel has pointed out^*^ that the author of this description of the appearance of Christ, though he calls him Jesus,

knows nothing of

Jesus's birth in Bethlehem,

nor of the Sermon on the Mount, nor of his crucifixion,

nor of

The Jesus

his resurrection.

is

not a man, but a god.

a

human

The

of St.

report of his

story but mythology;

it

is

John

life is

not

not enacted on

earth but in the universe, mainly in the heavens; his

antagonist

down

is

the great dragon who, with his

the third part of the stars.

tail,

The mother

draws

of Jesus

is not Mary, the wife of Joseph the carpenter, but a superhuman personality clothed with the sun and having the moon at her feet, and wearing upon her head a crown of twelve stars^ emblems of the twelve constellations of the zodiac. The dragon is dangerous even for the Celestials, and the newly born Saviour has to be hidden from him and protected against his wrath. But he is overcome by the Lamb, or as the Greek text

^°Schdpfung und Chaos.


THE PLEROMA.

70

reads,

by the young ram/^ the

sacrifice in

which the

saviour-god offers himself in the form of the animal sacred to him. quote this remarkable chapter in

We

full

(Rev. xii)

:

''And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a

woman

clothed with the sun, and the moon under her and upon her head a crown of twelve stars, and she being with child cried, travailing in birth, and pained

feet,

to be delivered.

"And

there appeared another

wonder

in

heaven and ;

behold a great red dragon, having seven heads and

crowns upon his heads. drew the third part of the stars of heaven, and did cast them to the earth and the dragon stood before the woman which was ready to be delivered, for to devour her child as soon as it was born. "And she brought forth a man child, who was to rule all nations with a rod of iron and her child was caught up unto God, and to his throne. "And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she ten horns, and seven

"And

his tail

:

;

hath a place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days.

"And

there

was 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

"And

found any more

the great dragon

pent, called the Devil,

in heaven.

was

cast out, that old ser-

and Satan, which deceiveth the


THE CHRIST OF THE REVELATION OF whole world: he was

JOHN.

ST.

cast out into the earth,

and

71

his

angels were cast out with him.

"And come

I

heard a loud voice saying

is

cast

:

for the accuser of our

down, which accused them before our

God day and night. "And they overcame him by and by the word of their lives

is

and strength, and the kingdom of our

salvation,

God, and the power of Christ brethren

Now

in heaven,

the blood of the

their testimony

;

Lamb,

and they loved not

unto the death.

"Therefore

Woe

rejoice,

ye heavens, and ye that dwell in

and of the sea for the devil is come down unto you, having great wrath, because he knoweth that he hath but a short them.

to the inhabiters of the earth

!

time.

"And when

the dragon saw that he

the earth, he persecuted the forth the

"And

man

was

cast unto

woman which

brought

child.

to the

eagle, that she

woman were given two wings might

fly

of a great

into the wilderness, into her

where she is nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent.

place,

"And

the serpent cast out of his

flood after the

woman,

that he

away of the flood. "And the earth helped

mouth water

might cause her

as a to be

carried

the

woman, and

the earth

opened her mouth, and swallowed up the flood which the dragon cast out of his mouth.


THE PLEROMA.

72

was wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the testi-

"And

the dragon

mony of Jesus The woman

Christ."

Hves in the desert 1,260 days, which

is

three years and a half, counting the year as a round

number of 360 half 1

-\-

is

2

on

later

-\-

we now number

tion of the

three and a

in the mystic

expressed

In both cases

y2.

cycle, or as

The same number

days.

it

is

formula

number of

the

tt.*

The subject of the saviour-god who dies of a ram is continued in chapter xix, verse

in the 6,

from the underworld to

brate his marriage and

is

"And tude,

I

We

heard as

cele-

greeted by a great multitude

quote again in it

shape

where he

victoriously reappears

of worshipers.

the

would say, a primitive approxima-

full

:

(Rev. xix, 6).

were the voice of a great multi-

and as the voice of many waters, and as the voice

of mighty thunderings, saying. Alleluia

God omnipotent

:

for the

Lord

reigneth.

"Let us be glad and

rejoice,

for the marriage of the

and give honour to him is come, and his wife :

Lamb

made herself ready. "And to her it was granted

hath

rayed in is

fine linen, clean

that she should be ar-

and white

:

for the fine linen

the righteousness of saints.

"And he

said unto me. Write, Blessed are they

*See note

5,

page

16.

which


THE CHRIST OF THE REVELATION OF

ST.

JOHN.

73

Lamb. And

are called unto the marriage supper of the

he saith unto me, These are the true sayings of God. ''And

I fell at his feet to

unto me, See thou do

it

And

worship him.

not

:

I

am

he said

thy fellowservant,

and of thy brethren that have the testimony of Jesus worship God for the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of :

prophecy.

saw heaven opened, and behold a white him was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness he doth judge and make ''And

I

horse; and he that sat upon

war.

"His eyes were as a flame of fire, and on his head were many crowns and he had a name written, that no man knew, but he himself. "And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood and his name is called The Word of God. "And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses, clothed in fine linen, white and ;

clean.

"And

out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that

and he shall rule them with a rod of iron and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God. "And he has on his vesture and on his thigh a name written, King of Kings and Lord of Lords. "And I saw an angel standing in the sun; and he with

it

he should smite the nations

:

:

cried with a loud voice, saying to in the

midst of heaven.

all

Come and

together unto the supper of the great

the fowls that fly

gather yourselves

God

;

that ye

may


THE PLEROMA.

74

eat the flesh of kings,

and the

the flesh of mighty men, and

flesh of captains,

the flesh of horses,

and

and of

them that sit on them, and flesh of all men, both free and bond, both small and great. "And I saw the beast, and the kings of the earth, and their armies, gathered together to make war on the horse, and against his army. "And the beast was taken, and with him the false prophet that wrought miracles before him, with which he deceived them that had received the mark of the

him

against

beast,

that sat

and them that worshipped

both were

These

his image.

cast alive into a lake of fire

burning with

brimstone.

"And

sword of him upon the horse, which sword proceeded out mouth and all the fowls were filled with their the remnant were slain with the

that sat

of his

:

flesh."

This

is

not the

meek Jesus;

hero, a king of kings,

who

this is the

joices at the horrors of the battlefield.

of the story

is

Babylonian

crushes his enemies and re-

The

redactor

a Jewish Christian but the body of the

legend has remained pagan and

still

bears

all

the

symp-

toms of mythology. Obviously this fragment is the echo of a Christianity which was quite different from that of the Gospel as we know it and it is scarcely probable that the author of these passages had ever seen any of the three synoptic Gospels, or even their prototypes.


THE CHRIST OF THE REVELATION OF

ST.

JOHN.

7o

had not by some good chance found book would most likely have and with it would have perished this valuable

If Revelations its

way

been

into the canon, the

lost

evidence of the existence of several rival Christianities, for

we may assume

that there

such tentative formations of

were quite a number of old

traditions

structed in the spirit of the several authors.

recon-


CHAPTER

X.

CHRISTIAN SENTIMENT IN PRE-CHRISTIAN RELIGIONS.

ALL THE

distinctions attributed to Christ

made

strongest claims

asserted of his predecessors,

times

;

and the lofty

ethics

and the

for his divinity have been

the

Christs

which we are

of ancient in the habit

of calling pre-eminently Christian are equally characteristic of the teachers of all nations.

Not only Bud-

dha but also the Greek philosophers have preached peace on earth and good will to men, even including our very enemies. In the 49th chapter of Crito, Plato says, ''We must neither return evil nor do any

not even

if

we have

ill

to any one

to suffer

among men,

from them."

When

Socrates was condemned to drink the hemlock, he 'T do not bear the least grudge toward those

my

death."

giveness

is

And better

culture, the latter

The Buddhist

voted

maxim, "Forthan vengeance; the former shows Pittacus taught this

is

brutish."^^

sacred books are

of love and universal good will.

"A number of

who

said,

similar quotations

full

We

of injunctions

quote only one

from Greek sages who

incul-

cated the ethics of returning good for evil are collected in an article on Greek religion, published in The Open Court, Vol.

XV,

Off.


CHRISTIAN SENTIMENT, PRE-CHRISTIAN.

many and

out of

Sutta Nipata

"Do

well-known

lines

from the

'}^

not deceive, do not despise

Each

Do

select the

77

other, anywhere.

not be angry, nor should ye

Secret resentment bear;

For as a mother

risks her Hfe watches o'er her child So boundless be your love to all, So tender, kind and mild.

And

"Yea, cherish good-will

right

and

left,

All round, early and late.

And without hindrance, without From envy free and hate.

stint,

While standing, walking, sitting down, What e'er you have in mind.

The Is to

rule of life that's always best

be loving-kind."

Bel Merodach, the Christ of ancient Babylon, de-

scended into the underworld, broke the gates thereof,

subdued death and returned to the domain of the living, having released the dead from captivity. In a hymn translated by Theophilus G. Pinches, he

is

called

"The Lord of the Holy Incantation, bringing the dead on the gods who were imprisoned

to life;

He who had mercy

Took off the yoke laid on the gods who had been To redeem them he created mankind." In the same text, Merodach

is

invoked in these words

"Quoted from The Dharma, pp. The Sacred Books of

translation see

page

25.

his enemies.

14-15.

For an unversified

the East, Vol. X, part II,


THE PLEROMA.

78

"The merciful one, with whom is the giving of life, May his word be established, and not forgotten, In the mouth of the black-headed ones" whom his hands have made."

In

his

Legend of Merodaeh, Pinches

says, *'He

is

described as the creator of vegetation, the Hght of the father his begetter, the hfe of the people,

the pure

being, the pure or holy crown, the pure incantation,

he

who knoweth The Chinese

the heart,

sage,

Lao

etc., etc."

Tse, one of the world's great

who lived one hundred years before Buddha, said in his wonderful little book, The Canon of Reason and Virtue, ^'Requite hatred with goodness" (chapter 63) and in another chapter (49) he moral teachers,

;

reasons thus

bad

I

less I also

''The good,

I

meet with goodness

meet with goodness; for thus

also

goodness.

:

The

faithful I

meet with

meet with

faith

I ;

;

the

actualize

the faith-

faith, for thus I actualize faith.

"^^

is a common term denoting manProceedings of the Society of Archaeology, Feb., 1908. "See also O. C. XX, 200 ''Harmony of the Spheres."

""The black-headed ones" kind.


CHAPTER XL WHY TT '

T'E

^

CHRISTIANITY CONQUERED.

HAVE

seen that

Christianity

only rehgion which

claimed

to

was not the be a world-

and struggled for supremacy.

There were several others, viz., neo-Platonism, Reformed Paganism, Mithraism, Mandaeanism, Manichseism, Simonism, and a few others. We know that it had much in common with all of them, including those features which we now would point out as typically Christian, especially the saviour idea and a belief in the immortality of the soul. We shall have to ask now what distinguishes Christianity from its rivals and we may point out a number of features that helped to advance its cause. religion

Of

the several reasons which insured the final success

of Christianity

we

will here

enumerate the most im-

portant ones. 1.

First in order in our opinion stands the

human

character of the Christian saviour which rendered the story of salvation realistic and 2.

Jesus

Another point

was

his

made

it

credible.

in favor of the personality of

passion and martyr death.

much

Nothing

Compassion and symmake zealous conand emotions pathy are powerful sanctifies so

verts.

as suffering.


THE PLEROMA.

80

Jesus was perhaps the only saviour who was not 3. compromised by any relation to the old pagan gods. 4.

It

appears that the narrative of Christ's

life,

form of the Fourth Gospel, is more sober than the story of any other saviour. Christianity was less dualistic and less ascetic 5. than any of its rival creeds. We know that most of them, especially neo-Platonism and Manichaeism, were very stern in their psychology and ethics. Another reason was the democratic, we might 6. almost say the plebeian spirit of the primitive Church and the simplicity of its ritual, which made religion especially in the

immediately accessible to the masses of the people.

The

ancient mysteries communicated the revelation of

their religious truths to a select class of initiates,

Mithraism has preserved

this feature

which made

and its

congregations resemble Masonic lodges with their several degrees. 7.

We believe also that the cross of Jesus appealed to

the mystic in

whose mind

still

lingered the significance

of crucifixion as an ancient offering to the sun, and

who

contemplated with satisfaction the contrast of the

deepest humiliation of a shameful death to the highest glorification of the risen Christ.

remembered that slaves and so the of their

own

class

It

will

further be

crucifixion

was the death penalty of

saw

in Christ a representative

slaves ;

but slaves and freedmen constituted

an enormous part of the population of Rome and must The have been a formidable power in the capital.


WHY Crucified

CHRISTIANITY CONQUERED.

One was an abomination

to the

81

Jew, an object

of contempt for the few aristocrats, but he

was

the

brother of the lowly, the downtrodden, the slave.

There may be many other reasons for the supremacy we will mention only one more, which may appear to be quite indifferent, but has, in of Christianity, but

our opinion, been extremely

effective.

This

is

the con-

nection of Christianity with Judaism.

The Jews

of the dispersion were ever present before

the eyes of the Gentile world, and their very existence

served to its

call

attention to Christianity and to support

claims.

The

theories

and doctrines of the

rival religions of

Christianity appealed to things distant, to abstract ideas

and seemed to hang

in the air, wdiile Christianity could

produce living witnesses in the shape of the Jews.

The

Jews contested the conclusions which the Christians drew from their literature, but they did not deny the main facts in question and supported the proposition that the

God

of Israel was the only true

God who had

chosen the Jews as the vehicle of his revelation.

The

history of Israel

was appropriated by

the Chris-

tians, and at the very start the Jewish canon furnished

them with a respectable literature which was both venerable by its antiquity, and imposing by the bewildering wealth of

its

contents.

It

took a

scholarship to understand the

man

Hebrew

of

uncommon,

scriptures,

alone to refute the arguments based upon them.

let


THE PLEROMA.

82

seems strange that Judaism which had originated paganism and consisted in a denial of

It

in contrast to its

saHent doctrines, should be deemed the proper au-

thority

the

from which a paganism redivivus, which under Christianity was destined to become the

name of

state religion of the

Roman

empire, should claim to

have descended after the extinction of the old paganism. But the very contrast in which Judaism stood to

paganism rendered it fit to serve as a medium of purification. Judaism repudiated the polytheistic mythology of ancient paganism, which had become efTete among all classes of the Grseco-Roman world. But a new religion, the ancient

a monotheistic paganism, a purified religion of the Gentiles,

when

rose from the ruins of the old paganism, and it

sought for an authority that could worthily

father the

new movement and

justify

of the objectionable features of

seemed

its

its

condemnation

own

for the very reason of

its

hostility to the old

none Judaism

past,

better adapted to this purpose than

paganism.


THE ORIGIN OF JUDAISM AND

ITS SIGNIFICANCE

FOR CHRISTIANITY.



CHAPTER

XII.

THE PAGANISM OF ANCIENT "X

X 7E HAVE

ISRAEL.

SO far spoken of Judaism as a

known

^^

quantity and have used the terms ''J^ws" and "Gentiles" in their traditional meaning to express a contrast which

was well established

at the

beginning

of the Christian era; but Judaism has a history. the sake of understanding it

had

ing

how

the

new

to be Gentile in character, could profit

affiliated

with the Jews,

we must

For

though by becom-

faith,

first

acquaint

ourselves with the nature of this remarkable people.

Judaism

is

a unique phenomenon in history.

It is

the product of contradictory tendencies which have

been hardened in the furnace of national misfortune.

The

religion of the

Jews combines the universalism of

a monotheistic faith with the narrowness of a national-

ism which localizes God and regards the Jews as the elect, the chosen people. Judaism is therefore characterized by a certain precocious maturity.

when monotheism was an

At a time

esoteric doctrine in countries

such as Egypt and Babylonia, a kind of philosophy of the educated classes, the Jews had adopted

it

as their

Yet the revelations of this one and sole God, of the creator and ruler of the universe, were thought to have taken place in a very human way, and bloody sacrifices were still offered in the old pagan national religion.


THE PLEROMA.

84

fashion at the altar of Jerusalem, which alone was declared to be the legitimate spot to approach God.

Some

antiquated and barbarous institutions, such as

circumcision and other requirements of the so-called

Mosaic law were enforced, and the purity of Jewish was

blood, to the exclusion of the Gentiles as impure,

vigorously insisted on.

The

history of Judaism

is

a long story which

is

of

great importance for the development of Christianity.

We have reason to believe that the religion of ancient and moral principles the religions of the surrounding Gentiles. Yahveh,

Israel

to

was

or, as the

quite similar in belief

name

is

now

erroneously pronounced, Je-

hovah, was worshiped by other nations before the

began

Israelites

to

adopted the Yahveh

Abraham

not from

pray to him; cult,

it

was Moses who

not from his

own

ancestors,

or Jacob, the patriarchs of Israel,

but from Jethro, his Gentile father-in-law, a Kenite priest in the

district

of

Mount Horeb

in

the Sinai

peninsula.

God Yahveh was

Israel's

other gods.

not very different from

He demanded human

sacrifices as

did and was originally the protector of his

own

they

people,

a tribal deity.

Bible, the Children

of Israel

According to the despoiled the Egyptians

at the express

mand

Yahveh and slaughtered

of

com-

the inhabitants of

honor just as did the Moabites According to the in honor of their god Khemosh. word (i. e., the command) of Yahveh, did Hiel lay the

conquered

cities in his


THE PAGANISM OF ANCIENT

ISRAEL.

85

foundations of Jericho in Abiram, his firstborn, and set

up the gates thereof in Segub, his youngest son (i Kings xvi, 34), while Jephthah sacrificed his daughter because he beHeved that Yahveh, the God of Israel, demanded it.

We know phim,^ for

also that the patriarchs

we

had

idols,

images of her father (Gen. xxxi, 34).

Even David,

own

the hero of Israel, had such statues in his for

we

or tera-

learn incidentally that Rachel stole the

read that

when Saul

house,

sent messengers to slay

David, his wife Michal helped him to escape by placing the figure of their house god^ in his bed to mislead the

King's messengers (i Sam. xix, 12-17).

Hosea

The prophet

4) mentions the use of these idols, the teraphim, together with the Urim and Thummim, the (iii,

Ephod and

the Stone Pillar,^ as an indispensable part

of the religion of Israel.

Ancient Israel was not monotheistic. originally one

Yahveh was god among other gods, but the patriotic

was required

Israelite

to

worship him alone.

When

from the power of Egypt, Yahveh in a hymn in which he ex-

the Israelites were saved

Moses claimed

glorified :

''Who

is like

unto

thee,

O

Lord,

among

the

gods?" 'The definite article is used D''S'iriri which proves that it was a definite piece of furniture in their house, not an idol that by accident happened to be there.


THE PLEROMA.

86

There are many passages which imply that

deemed

it is

books

in the historical

quite proper for Gentiles

to worship their gods, but the Israelite

is

expected to

worship Yahveh alone, the national god of the people.

Yahveh was worshiped bull is

in Israel

under the form of a

even in the days of the prophet Elijah.

incidentally

mentioned

of the People of Israel,

connection the fact

is

in

p.

subject

127,

where he says

:

'Tn

highly noteworthy, and yet

generally given a clear explanation, that

a single word of

The

Professor Cornill's History

we do

not hear

When

and

Israel,

simply advocating the 'calves of

and

Bethel,' the only

is

not

rebuke on this subject from the

prophet Elijah.

he

this

is

he denounces Baal in Samaria

Dan

customary form of worship in

kingdom of Israel, and he himself did not attack The view that this whole species of worship was pure heathenism and the worship of God in an image folly and absurdity, is first found in the prophet Hosea and is an outgrowth of prophetic literature.'' The temple of Solomon was built according to the the it.

plan of the Phoenician temples by Hiram, a Phoenician architect,

and no objection was raised because a pagan

built the temple of the

God

cates that in the times of

of Israel.

This fact indi-

Solomon, the Phoenicians

were not regarded as idolaters by the Israelites. Even in the days of Manasseh, in the seventh century B. C, the temple of Jerusalem was still in possession of all the paraphernalia of solar worship (2 Kings xxiii, 11).


THE PAGANISM OF ANCIENT

ISRAEL.

87

In pre-Exilic times, no objection was ever raised to

intermarriage with foreigners.

Moses married

daughter of a Kenite and then

first

the

even an Ethiopian

woman, which is commonly interpreted to mean a negress. Solomon was the son of a Hittite woman, and yet he became king of that even David,

now

Israel.

Schrader points out

considered the national hero of

It is a fact Israel, was not an Israelite but a Gentile. commonly agreed on by Old Testament scholars, and

Professor Sayce

calls attention to

David's appearance

described in Samuel (xvi, 12, and again in xvii, 42)

and of a

as red-haired

fair

Schrader

complexion.*

thinks that he belonged to the tribes of the Cherithites

and

Pelethites, of

The etymology

whom

his

body-guard was composed.

of Cherethites^ has been brought into

name

connection with the

of the Cretans and

it

seems

probable that they, together with their kinsmen, the

Aryan

Philistines,

must have come from the Greek This would prove David Sea.

^gean

islands in the

The hostility to be an Aryan instead of a Semite. between Saul and David was not purely personal, and it is noteworthy that when David fled before Saul, he sought refuge at the court of a Philistine king. historical truth

*The authorized version translates Sam. of a fair countenance." is

also used of

xvii, 42,

But the Hebrew word

"ruddy and

'5^''37^

Sam. XV,

which

Esau (as already stated by Gesenius) can not

designate a ruddy complexion but means "red-haired." •2

The

which Old Testament scholars discover

18.


THE PLEROMA.

88

in the contradictory stories of David's

the fact that he

which

was the founder of the

life,

points to

tribe of

Judah

mainly a conglomeration of southern clans of

is

Edom, among them der (Keilinschr.

Kaleb, Peresh and Zerakh.

d.

it.

A. T.,p. 228) says

Schra-

'That there

:

was no tribe of Judah belonging to Israel before David, can be safely concluded from Biblical sources alone. Further it follows, that in prehistoric times Judah did not stand in any relation to the other tribes." David was

first

chieftain of Kaleb, his capital being Hebron.

After a conflict with the kingdom of Saul, David con-

quered part of the territory of Benjamin incorporating the tribes Peresh and Zerakh.

They were formerly

regarded as belonging to Benjamin, but later were treated as Judeans. It

was natural

that later redactors with their tend-

ency to represent David as a Judean and the national hero of min.

Israel, tried to conceal his conflict

Schrader says

(ibid., p.

210)

with Benja-

:

"If the development of the monotheistic doctrine

which was proclaimed in Judah-Israel in the name of Yahveh, must be assumed to have had its roots in the center of civilization of Hither Asia, then the purpose of the patriarchal legend torical

—

if it

pursues at

all

an

his-

purpose besides the general one of instruction

can have been only to lay bare the threads which could be traced back to them from Judah.

It

is

not the

ethnological genesis of a small pure-blooded nation


THE PAGANISM OF ANCIENT

ISRAEL.

89

which is to be described, but the growth of its reHgion and its world-conception. To be the representative of this world-conception,

ideal calling,

Judah ought

—although

to regard as her

as a matter of fact at that

time she neither did nor could so regard

it."


CHAPTER

XIII.

THE TEMPLE REFORM AND JUDAISM.

"]\TONOTHEISTIC tendencies ^^^ selves both in Egypt and in remained limited

Babylon, but they

and had not

to the educated classes

affected the polytheistic service in

Egypt

at the time

when

In

temples.

the

Amarna

the Tel

them-

manifested

Tablets were

had tried to influence the religion of the people, but had failed utterly. Conditions were more favorable in Persia; there it w^as a

written, the monotheistic reform

success.

We

how much Israel was influenced by these movements, but we know that a purer and deeper conception of God as a god of justice had been prepared through the prophets who denounced social can not say

wrongs as well

as the abuses of religion, in opposition

to the established

movement spread among

those

who were

zealous for a

purification of the official worship of the country last

exerted a strong hold on the

hood of the

capital.

The

priesthood and aristocracy.

The

result

and

at

more intelligent priestwas the famous temple

reform of the year 621 B. C, which

may

be regarded

as the date of the birth of Judaism.

The temple reform was

a compromise between the

prophetic party and the Jerusalemitic priesthood. prophetic party denounced worship on

The

the heights, but


THE TEMPLE REFORM AND JUDAISM.

91

they looked up to the holy place on Mt. Zion as the national sanctuary and the favorite place of Yahveh,

and the with

priests of Jerusalem

this view,

for

were naturally pleased

procured for them a religious

it

monopoly.

The

was greatly respected

prophetic party

in Jerusa-

lem on account of a successful prophecy made by Isaiah about a quarter of a century before the temple reform. In the days of

King Hezekiah, he had

glorified

Mount

Zion as the holy place of Yahveh, and when the Assyrians in their campaign of 702-701 threatened Jerusalem, he declared "that the

and the poor of his people

compare also 2 Kings

was

justified

Lord had founded Zion

shall trust in it" (Is. xiv,

xix, 31

ff )

.

.

by subsequent events, for

that "the angel of the

32

;

Isaiah's confidence it

is

reported

Lord smote an hundred

four-

score and five thousand,"^ and Sennacherib raised the siege and It is

pillage

went home.

true that Jerusalem

and

it is

was spared the horrors of

possible that the appearance of a sud-

den epidemic caused the king to lead the army home, but the event was not quite so glorious as in the Bible

and as

it

it is

described

appeared in later times to the

imagination of the Jews, for King Hezekiah remained a vassal of Assyria and Sennacherib had carried into

two hundred thousand inhabitants of Judea. was merely the salvation of a remnant at which the

captivity It

"2

Kings xix, 35; comp.

Is.

xxxvii, 36.


THE PLEROMA.

92

prophet rejoiced, and Hezekiah was thankful that he did not suffer the terrible fate of Samaria.

Sennacherib's account of this same expedition, written in cuneiform characters

on a clay

cylinder,

is

also

preserved and the passage referring to Judea reads in

an English translation thus

and forty of the fenced cities, and the fortresses, and the villages round about them, belonging to Hezekiah the Jew, who had not submitted to my rule, I besieged and stormed and captured. I carried away them hundred thousand and from two one hundred and fifty souls, great and small, male and female, and horses, mules, asses, camels, oxen and sheep without number. In his house in Jerusalem I shut up Hezekiah I threw up mounds round about like a bird in a cage. the city from which to attack it, and I blockaded his gates. The cities which I had captured from him I took away from his kingdom and I gave them to ''Six

Mitlnti,

The

king of Ashdod."

preservation of Jerusalem

is

commonly spoken

of by orthodox Christians as a mysterious event and a wonderful occurrence, but the

main thing

was

believed to be a miracle by the Jews.

had

fatal

consequences.

It

made

the

is

that

it

This belief

Jews overconfi-

dent in their faith so that they clung to their cause

even when there was no hope of success; but while they ruined thereby their national existence, they sunk their nationality in their religion

way

into an international people.

and developed

in this


THE TEMPLE REFORM AND JUDAISM. The

93

confidence that the walls of Jerusalem were im-

pregnable because Yahveh would not suffer Zion to into the hands of the Gentiles,

fall

made

the

Jews

stub-

born, so as to render the eventual downfall of Judea

an inevitable necessity.

The immediate

fulfilment of this prophecy

result of the

was an increase of power

for the prophetic party in Jerusalem and thereby they

were enabled to carry into

effect their

momentous plan

of a temple reform.

The

story of the temple reform

xvii-xviii,

to

it

his

and we

in Professor Cornill's

Prophets of

is

told in 2

Kings

will recapitulate the events leading

Israel,

words where, on page 81 of

he says

'The prophetic party, which had apparently not been some time, must have kept up secretly a continuous and successful agitation. The priests in persecuted for

the temple of Jerusalem must have been

won

over to

must its aspirations have found access to the heart of the young king, who, from all we know of him, was a thoroughly good and noble character. it,

or at least influenced

''The time

"When,

now

by

it,

and

especially

appeared ripe for a bold stroke.

in the eighteenth year of Josiah,

Shaphan the

621 B. C,

scribe paid an official visit to the temple

of Jerusalem, the priest Hilkiah handed to

him a book

of laws which had been found there. Shaphan took the

book and immediately brought it to the King, before whom he read it." The book was declared to be genuine and on the basis


THE PLEROMA.

94

of

it

the religion of Judea

was newly

regulated.

Pro-

fessor Cornill continues

''Our

first

question must be

:

What

is

this

book of

laws of Josiah, which was discovered in the year 621 ? The youthful De Wette, in his thesis for a professorship at Jena in the year 1805, clearly proved that this

book of laws was essentially the fifth book of Moses, known as Deuteronomy. The book is clearly and distinctly marked off from the rest of the Pentateuch and its legislation, whilst the reforms of worship introduced by Josiah correspond exactly to what it called for. The proofs adduced by De Wette have been generally accepted, and his view has become a common possession of Old Testament research."

The priests in the country who opposed the temple reform were treated with great cruelty (See 2 Kings xiii, 20) and the wizards and witches of the land were also exterminated, as we read in 2 Kings xxiii, 24 "Moreover the workers with

familiar spirits,

wizards, and the images, and the idols, and

and the all

the

abominations that were spied in the land of Judah and in Jerusalem, did Josiah put away, that he might per-

form the words of the law which were written in the book that Hilkiah the priest found in the house of the Lord."


CHAPTER

XIV.

THE BABYLONIAN

^T^HE TEMPLE -*

EXILE.

reform established the supremacy

of the priestly party, but the priests were poor

Believing that

statesmen.

temple to

fall into

Yahveh would not

suffer the

the hands of his enemies, they pur-

sued a short-sighted policy, siding always with the

wrong

party,

and

this

ended in a most deplorable de-

Jerusalem was taken, and the aristocracy of the

feat.

people

together with

classes, the scribes

in iron

all

leaders,

the educated

and even the smiths who could work

were deported into

This fate was

their

Babylon.''^

sufficient to destroy

did not ruin the Jews.

any nation, but

Having gained by

it

the temple

reform the conviction that they were the chosen people of God, the exile only served to harden them in the furnace of tribulation, and so Judaism was prepared for the part which

it

was going

development of religious

When we

to play in the further

ideas.

bear in mind that the deported Jews be-

longed to the upper and more highly educated

we

classes,

can easily understand that their ideas of monothe-

ism,

which

in those days constituted

an advanced stage

of free thinking, soon became with them a monomania.

They may have become acquainted with Babylonian 'See 2 Kings xxiv, 14-16.


THE PLEROMA.

96

monotheists, and whenever they had an opportunity to

may have claimed that their God was God and that he had manifested himself literature. One thing is sure, they now inter-

discuss rehgion

the only true in their

preted the treasures of their literature in the spirit of

and

this conviction,

new redacnew faith.

their priests prepared

tions of their old books in the light of the

While the Jewish conception of religion was ously monotheistic, for Yahveh was regarded only true

God

rigor-

as the

of the universe, the creator of heaven

and earth, it was at the same time narrowed down to a most egotistical nationalism, and this nationalism

was made the quintessence of their religion. Every nation passes through a phase in which regards

itself as

ing with contempt or pity on called the

it

the favored people of the earth, lookall

others.

The Greeks

non-Greeks barbarians, the Germanic

tribes

non-Germanic races Welsh, the Egyptians looked upon all foreigners as unclean, and the Chinese are possessed of similar notions up to this day. Among the Jews, this idea was incorporated into the fabric of their faith, and thus we may say that while Judaism called the

marked a progress in the history of religion, it must at the same time be regarded as a contraction of the religious sentiment; instead of broadening the people, it

restricted

their horizon. While libersome of the grossest superstiJews cherished a mistaken and

and limited

ating themselves from tions of paganism, the


THE BABYLONIAN most

fatal belief in their

own

EXILE.

97

pre-eminence over the

Gentiles.

Their adherence to

this notion

made

the Jews so

intolerable to others that they carried the cause of their

calamity with them wherever they went.

Whatever

wrongs the Gentiles did, the Jews gave the first provocation, and the very way in which they banded themselves against the rest of the world made them naturally the "odium" of the human race, as Tacitus calls them. since,

However

innocent individuals

may have

the race as a whole imbibed these ideas

been

from

childhood. It is

easy for us to see that the exclusiveness of the

Jews was a fault, that their progressiveness was lamentably cramped by the reactionary spirit of a most Chauvinistic tribal patriotism, but this very fault ren-

dered them

fit

to

become the

vessel that

to hold the monotheistic belief.

Without

was wanted

their supersti-

tion of the holiness of their tribal existence, they

would

never have persisted as Jews; they would have disap-

peared

among

the nations.

In order to become the

torch-bearers of the light of monotheism, their faith

had

to be

their very

hardened into a nationalistic religion and shortcoming rendered them

fit

to serve a

higher purpose in the history of mankind.

We must grant one thing, that while the temple reform and the subsequent exile hardened the national character of the

Jews to such an extent that the Jews


98

THE PLEROMA.

remained Jews wherever they went, this very the success ence of the Jewish race ensured uUimately persist-

of Christianity as a world-reHgion.


CHAPTER

XV.

THE DISPERSION.

/^NE OF the most remarkable ^^ history of mankind, and in

phenomena

way

its

is

The Jews

the Dispersion of the Jews.

people of antiquity which type, but the

its

still

Jewish people

in the

quite unique,

are the only

and preserves from all other

exists differ

nations of the world in this one particular point, that

they are a people without a country.

Ancient Judea no longer Jewish, the Jews live among the other nations; they are scattered and wherever we go, we find Jews. This Dispersion (or, as it was called in is

awe and won-

Greek, Diaspora) has been an object of

der

;

and though

it

gives the Jews a decided advantage

in the struggle for existence,

it

has been regarded as a

curse which rests upon this race of "rovers."

We that

it

are so accustomed to the dispersion of the scarcely rouses our curiosity

can not discover the slightest

Jews any longer, and I

scientific

phenomenon. The best Christian and Jewish, accept the facts

plain the

when

both

in the traditional

interpretation as a kind of mysterious

instance Professor Sayce,

attempt to ex-

authorities,

doom.

So

for

discussing the peculiar-

ities

of the Jewish people, speaks of the Babylonian

exile

and the world-exile of the Jews as the two great

national calamities of the race.

He

says

^mni^


THE PLEROMA.

100

'The Jews

flourish

everywhere except in the country

The

of which they held possession for so long a time.

few Jewish colonies which exist there are mere exotics, influencing the surrounding population as little as the

German

colonies that have been founded beside them.

That population is Canaanite. In physical features, in mental and moral characteristics, even in its folklore, it is the descendant of the population which the Israelitish invaders vainly

attempted to extirpate.

It

has survived, while they have perished or wandered elsewhere.

from the

The Roman succeeded soil

which

his

fathers

never succeeded in driving from

When

sessor.

the

in driving the

Jew

had won; the Jew it,

its

Jew departed from

original pos-

it,

whether for

exile in Babylonia, or for the longer exile in the

world

of a later day, the older population sprang up again in

vigor and freshness, thus asserting

all its

its

right to

be indeed the child of the soil."

Professor Graetz, the best Jewish authority on Jewhistory, expresses himself thus (Geschichte der

ish

Juden,

I,

619-620)

:

"At the cradle of the Jewish nation was sung the song of ceaseless wandering and dispersion such as no other nation has ever* known, and this dread lullaby There was hardly a corner in either of the two dominant empires, the Roman and the Parthian, where Jews were not to be found, where they had not formed a religious com-

came

to fulfilment with terrible literalness.

munitv.

The border

of the great Mediterranean basin


THE DISPERSION. and the estuaries of

all

the

main

101

rivers of the old world,

the Nile, the Euphrates, the Tigris, and the

Danube

were peopled with Jews. As by an inexorable fate, the sons of Israel were driven farther and farther away from their center. But this dispersion was likewise a blessing and an act of providence. It sowed abroad the seeds which were destined to bear to all directions a nobler God-conception and a purer civilization." Even Karl Vollers, the most recent liberal writer on the history of religion, says in Die Weltreligionen^ that "the dispersion {Diaspora, Gola) which had started centuries before [the breakdown of the Jewish theocracy] now becomes general, and down to our own days forms the signature of the history of the Jews." Convinced of the enormous significance which the

Jews possesses in the history of Christianity, I have given the problem some thought and I have come to the following conclusion fact of the dispersion of the

The name Diaspora cause

it

or Dispersion

is

misleading be-

suggests that some mysterious cause scatters

the Jews

among

the Gentiles.

no more and no

Jews

scatter

ality,

but while

all

less

The

truth

is

that the

than any other nation-

other nationalities become acclima-

new homes, Jews remain Jews wherever they go. The problem therefore is not how did the Jews scatter, but how did they preserve their own type, tized to their

and the answer is not far to seek. Judaism is a prematurely acquired 'Publlshed at

Eugen Dietrichs Verlag,

belief in Jena, 1907.

monothe-


THE PLEROMA.

102

ism, which

means

Jews had adopted mono-

that the

theism before they were able to grasp

The Jews

its

significance.

of the Exile believed that there

was but

one God, the creator of heaven and earth and ruler of the universe, and that this only true

own God Yahveh;

God was

they identified him in their

their

own

history with the God-conceptions which their different tribes

had held

at different times.

He was

the Shaddai

of Abraham, the Elohim of the patriarchs, the Zebaoth of Ephraim, and above

David and of Moses.

all,

he was Yahveh, the

All these

God

of

names became designa-

same deity. If the Jews had been ripe for monotheism, they would have abolished the barbarous and pagan institutions of which their religion was still possessed, as for tions of the

instance the practice of offering bloody sacrifices to

God, repeatedly denounced by the prophets.

Had

the

Jews been sufficiently matured to understand the moral applications of a belief in one God, they would have seen that before

Jew and

who

God

there

is

no difference between

Gentile and that the chosen people are those

This inconwhich combined a universistency of the Jewish and almost breadth with an outspoken salistic unparalleled narrowness, pampered by national vanity, rendered it possible for them to cling to some oldactualize the divine will in their lives. faith,

fashioned institutions, called the Law, or the

Law

of

Moses, which was kept with a remarkably punctilious


THE DISPERSION.

108

would have been worthy of a better cause. But circumcision, abstinence from pork, certain rules

piety that

of butchering, a rigorous observance of the Sabbath, etc.,

would

in themselves

have been harmless, had not

same time become a belief in the Jewish nationality which established a line of demarcation between the Jews and the rest of the world. Here lies the root of the tenacity of Judaism which has produced that most remarkable historical phenomenon of the preservation of the Jews in the midst of the other nations, a phenomenon known as the Dispersion. their religion at the

All the nations scatter.

The

great capitals of the

world contain representatives of any race that

is

suf-

fered admittance, but within the second or third generation these strangers are being absorbed.

alone resists absorption.

newcomer him. The

How many!

He

The Jew The

remains a Jew.

and associates with circle grows and a synagogue is built. many nations have sent their sons into GerThink of the innumerable French Huguenots, finds his co-religionist,

Italians such as the Cottas, the Brentanos.

From

Scot-

land came Kant's father, and Keith, the famous general of

Frederick the Great.

Who now

thinks of their

They have all become Germans. The same is true of the Germans who settle in other countries, France, Italy, Spain, etc. The traveler foreign ancestry?

comes across them here and there, but their children scarcely know whence their father of grandfather came.


THE PLEROMA.

104

The

truth

scattered

that the children of every nation are

is

among the other nations. Everywhere there who go abroad to seek their fortunes. There

are people is

everywhere a constant tendency to migrations of

small fractions of the population to distant countries

where they are attracted by the hope of improving their condition. That the Jews are not assimilated as the others, is due to their religion, the main import of which, as we have seen, is the preservation of the Jewish nationality.

Every man has the inborn tendency of being a Hebrew,

Jew

is

i.

e.,

"a.

rover."

All

not an exception.

human

He

life radiates.

The

simply follows the gen-

same time, preserves his own Jews everywhere, and this gives the

eral rule, but he, at the

kind.

We

find

impression that they are scattered

Not having

all

over the world.

a country of their own, the idea naturally

originated that the Jews have become scattered because

they no longer possess a country of their own, but the dispersion of the Jews antedates the destruction of

Jerusalem and would be the same even

if

Jerusalem

had never been destroyed.

The Jewish

dispersion

is

frequently regarded as a

mysterious curse that has befallen the race because they

have rejected the Saviour and crucified Christ; and this romantic conception has found a poetic expression in the

grewsome legend of Ahasuerus,

Jew," the

man who

tation of the

phenomenon

the

"Wandering

die.

This occult interpre-

casts a

glamour of mystery

can not


THE DISPERSION.

105

upon the Jews and makes them an object of

We

not indeed of love, but of awe.

view

this

is

more

interest;

need not add that

poetical than true, for the

Jewish

dispersion existed before the crucifixion. Horace quotes a proverb, Credat Jitdaeus Apella, viz.

the

Jew

Apella believe

among

it,"

as sharp fellow^s

They

existed not only in

Roman

:

''Try to

implies

make

that

the

Romans and were known to who would not be taken in easily.

Jews them

lived

—which

the

Rome

but

all

over the Grseco-

empire, and w^herever Paul went on his mission-

ary journeys he found Jewish congregations, he himself was born during the Dispersion.

The Jews were known tives of a rigorous

—

in fact

to the Gentiles as representa-

monotheism;

their claim that they

were the worshipers of the only true God was reiterated, and their literature, written wdth mysterious characters in a strange tongue, was commonly accepted as a verification. The ancient pagan gods had lost the last semblance of authority, and so the Jewish protestation that they were idols, nonentities, vain conceits of an idle imagination, was willingly believed. Taken all in all, the Jew was surrounded with a mystery which made it very plausible that some secret truth was hidden in Judaism. The striking characteristics which distinguish the Jew, called for an explana-

and made it desirable for a universal religion, which like Judaism was monotheistic, to explain their existence and assign them a part in the development

tion

of truth.


THE PLEROMA.

106

This work was done by St. Paul, and his explanation was the more willingly accepted by the Gentiles as it explained also the odium in which the Jews were held. According to St. Paul, the Jews had been the chosen people of God, but who were now rejected on account of their stubborn attitude toward the Gospel which

he preached.

There existed for some time a few Jewish colonies which were not dominated by the spirit of the postExilic reform.

We

name

the one in Elephantine (or

Jeb) in Upper Egypt and the other one in Tahpanhes, in

of

Lower Egypt, both flourishing communities where, late, interesting monuments have been discovered;

but

it is

noteworthy that none of the colonies survived.

Not being

so narrow-minded as

approach to the

life

to

condemn

any

and habits of and intermarriage

with the Gentiles, they disappeared in the long run.

They lacked that preservative talisman without which the Jew would not essentially differ from other human beings.


CHAPTER XVL JEW AND GENTILE.

"^rOW LET -^

US ask what were the objections of the

^ Jews to paganism ? We know that in all pagan

religions a belief in the

immortality of the soul was dearest to the pious, and

judging from an ancient Babylonian poem, 'Tshtar's Descent to Hell," and from other indications, we must

assume that the Babylonians and other Gentiles tried to communicate with the dead in some way after the fashion of spiritualist seances by professional conjurors.

These mediums of ancient times are

called in the

Bible "wizards and witches," and their controls "familiar spirits."

Against

this class of people the ire of

Jews seems to have blazed up most furiously, condemned in the strongest terms in Deuteronomy and the Deuteronomic insertions of the priestly redactors. We are told again and again that they wxre expelled from Israel and the penalty of death by stoning was imposed upon them. And yet they must have existed in ancient times, for we have a graphic account of the witch of Endor whom Saul visited. Those verses which mention the expulsion of the wizards and witches by Saul (i Sam. xxviii. 9-10)

the exiled

for they are

are perhaps a later insertion of the priestly redactor


THE PLEROMA.

108

how

and, in order to explain if

Saul could consult a witch,

witches were not tolerated in Israel,

we

are told that

Saul visited the witch of Endor in the stealth of night.

The account and

lines,

it

seems to be complete without these

itself

would then appear

secret of his intention to seek

that the king

made no

an interview with the

ghost of Samuel. At any rate the custom of citing ghosts was a great abomination to the Exilic and postExilic Jew, and

almost seems as

it

if

the leaders of the

Jews who gave a definite shape to Judaism by impressing their views upon the rest of the Jewish people, omitted, on account of their aversion to a ghostexiled

conception of the dead,

from

all

references to a future life

their sacred literature

and so gave the impression

that they did not believe in immortality. to say

what the

Israelites

times of Saul, but

it is

It is difficult

thought of the soul in the

probable that they then shared

the views of their neighbors, while in post-Exilic times, the Jews were opposed to the immortality-conception

of the Gentiles.

Now, lief in

at the

same time we know

immortality

is

gends of the God-man

that the Gentile be-

closely connected with their le-

who

is

born on earth, becomes a

hero and a saviour, struggles for the cause of mankind,

from the tomb. All this was Jew as was the worship of the Queen of Heaven. To the Jew, God was God and not a man, neither was he a woman. The idea

and as

is slain,

much

to rise again

of an abomination to the


JEW AND GENTILE.

109

of a mother of God, a Goddess mother, or even a God-

was

dess bride

them so

to

senseless that the

Hebrew

language avoided the formation of a word to express the female form of God.

We do not mean to defend its

the ancient paganism and

we must

superstitions, but in fairness to truth

that

many

say

accusations of the Jews against the Gentile

conception of gods proposition

is

the

that

statues of their gods.

"The

erroneous, Gentiles

especially

worshiped

The Psalmist

the

very

says

idols of the heathen are silver

The work

so,

the

and gold

of men's hands.

"They have mouths, but they speak not; Eyes have

they, but they see not

"They have Neither

is

ears, but they

hear not;

there any breath in their mouths,

"They that make them are like unto them So is every one that trusteth in them."

When we

read the religious

lon and Egypt, tion,

we

many

hymns

of ancient Baby-

of which are full of noble inspira-

receive quite another impression of the

polytheistic faith.

pagan

Consider, for instance, the fervor

and devotion of the following penitential psalm^ which was sung in Babylon long before the Hebrew psalms were composed and may worthily be compared with the best of them "O

that the heart of the

Lord would turn

me! *Delit2ch Babel

and

Bible, pp. 187, 206.

his

wrath far from


THE PLEROMA.

no

1

Lord my sins are many, great are my transgressions, my God, my Goddess, whether known or unknown to me, Many are my sins and great are my transgressions sought around about, but no one took my hand,

I

cry aloud, but no one gives

!

1

wept, but there

was none came near

me

Sorrowful, and overwhelmed,

I

to comfort.

ear.

can not look up."

The venerable poets who sang hymns of this kind might very well be considered believers in monotheism, for the gods play the part of angels and archangels while one God reigns supreme in heaven. We read On earth — who When Thy word bow

is

Thou

exalted?

alone art exalted!

goeth forth in the heavens, the heavenly hosts

before Thee;

When Thy word

goes forth upon earth, the

spirits

of earth

kiss the ground.

When upward

mounteth Thy word

like a hurricane,

food,

and

drink are in plenty abounding.

Resoundeth Thy word in terrestrial grass in the meadows.

Thy word maketh

fat

places,

green groweth the

the flocks and herds, and increaseth

all

breath-endowed creatures.

We

may

be sure that the gods in the temples were

not deemed to be gods themselves, representative

between

ence

and

images,

pagan

we

idolatry

can so

use of icons in Christian churches.

main point

but

only their

see

no

called

But

differ-

and

the

this is a side

Jews were opposed to the worship of idols including the making of statues and images in any form they were further opposed to the idea of a God-man, and to the belief in immortality issue

;

the

is

that the

;


JEW AND GENTILE. such as was held by

all

way

for the foundation of gnostic views

resembling Christianity, Apollos and finally

The ally

These ideas, howApocrypha and thus

the Gentiles.

ever, reasserted themselves in the

prepared the

Ill

among

such Jews as Philo,

St. Paul, the Apostle.

contrast between

Jew and

Gentile

is

fundament-

based upon a temperamental difference.

The Jew

wants religion pure and simple; he takes monotheism seriously and brooks no mediation of intercessors, no mysticism, no allegorizing, no profound and abstruse

The Gentile sees the divine everywhere. His monotheism is no rigid Unitarianism. He is a dualist whose conception of the duality of things is explained by a higher union and thus he formulates his belief in God as trinitarianism. He loves art and myth, and this makes him appear in the eye of the Jew as an symbols.

idolator, a

worshiper of images.

He

seeks

God

not

only above the clouds but also in the living examples of heroes, of ideal men, of the great representatives of

God on

earth.

This same contrast of the two attitudes gave

rise to

the rigorously monotheistic Islam, but as there are

among

among among the Sheites, those who believe in a second advent of Mohammed, of a Mahdi, or a saviour of some kind; and Behaism, the new reUnitarians

the Christians, so there are

the Moslems, especially

ligion that originated in Persia, proves that the idea of

a

divine

countries.

Mediator

is

still

alive

in

Mohammedan


CHAPTER

XVII.

THE JUDAISM OF

SAINT PAUL speaks

JESUS.

of Christ as the

Son of David

according to the flesh and follows in this the rabbinical tradition

which was commonly established at David was the great hero in the whose rule marks the period of the

the time of Jesus. history of Israel

nation's greatest glory.

In the times of their oppres-

sion they longed for a hero

who would

reestablish the

kingdom of David and so it was but natural that the expected Messiah was called the son of David. But though the Messiah was so called, there is no reason

why he should actually belong to the house of David. The house of David had died out with Zerubbabel, and there were any of his family left they would have been able to trace their genealogy only indirectly to if

the royal house.

The

genealogies of Joseph preserved in the

New

Testament are positively impossible and obviously of a Even if they were tenable they would prove late date. nothing of the descent of Jesus on the orthodox assumption, because Joseph was not deemed his father. We ought to have had a genealogy of Mary.

We must assume that in

the days of Jesus, the claim the expected Messiah was was he of his disciples that met with the objection that nothing good could come


THE JUDAISM OF

JESUS.

113

from Nazareth, and that the Messiah must be of the house of David. If Jesus could by any genealogy have established the claim of his descent from David, it would certainly have been recorded, but we have in the New Testament a passage repeated in the three synoptic

Gospels which proves the very opposite, in the presence of a large

viz.,

that Jesus,

number of people assembled

in the court of the temple, disproves the idea current

among

the scribes and Pharisees that the Messiah must

be a son of David. xii,

This incident

is

repeated in

Mark

35-37; Matt. XXV, 41-46; and Luke xx, 41-44. quote the shortest report according to the Gospel

We

Mark as follows "And Jesus answered and

of St.

the temple,

How

said,

while he taught in

say the scribes that Christ

is

the son

of David?

"For David himself said by the Holy Ghost, The Lord said to my lord, Sit thou on my right hand, till I

make

thine enemies thy footstool.

"David therefore himself calleth him Lord; and whence is he then his son? And the common people heard him gladly." In reading these verses we must bear in mind that Psalm ex, to which Jesus refers, was in his days commonly ascribed to David, and the expression "My Lord" was interpreted to be addressed to the Anointed One, the Messiah.

In claiming the dignity of Messiah,

Jesus refutes the popular notion of a Messiahship which


THE PLEROMA.

114

was

constituted merely

by descent, the aristocracy of

blood.

The

is not whether the Psaim was by David nor whether the point which Christ makes is unanswerable. We have simply to

question here

really written

note that by this argument he silenced the claim of the

and Pharisees which they must have made for if this is an answer to a point raised by his enemies, it can only have been the proposition that no one else but a descendant of David ought to be the Messiah. scribes

The answer presupposes

;

that Jesus

was not of the

family of David, but, that while he did not claim to be

a descendant of the royal house, he yet held to the If he was called the son of David by his adherents and by the sick who sought his help, it was only because in popular parlance the terms Messiah and Son of David had been identified. For these reasons we must assume that Jesus was born a Galilean, a child of the people, and the story of It was attribhis royal descent was an afterthought. uted to him in the same way as five hundred years before him, it was claimed that Buddha was the son of

claim of Messiahship.

a king.

While Jesus was probably a

and as such, of Gentile blood, though not purely Aryan,^^ yet he Galilean,

^''The Galileans were fanatical Jews according to their religion, but they were a mixed race and we will grant to Professor Haupt (See Open Court, Vol. XXIII, p. 193 ff.) that Galilee has been peopled by immigrants of Aryan descent. Granting the argument, we are, however, not prepared to say that Jesus was an Aryan. First we know that the Aryan immigrants were not


THE JUDAISM OF was

certainly a

Jew by

JESUS.

He

religion.

ciples to the ''lost sheep of the

115

sent out his dis-

house of Israel," and

adds the special injunction not to go to the Samaritans nor to the Gentiles (Matt, x, 5-6). How little tenable it

to interpret this as a

is

temporary measure to be

superseded afterwards by a world mission, appears

from verse

2.2^,

where Christ

declares, "Verily I say

unto you, ye shall not have gone over the Israel

mean

till

the son of

man

the second advent of Christ in

any other possible sense the place, since the

son of

of

cities

be come," which can only

first

all

his glory, for in

advent had taken

man had come and was

speaking

to them.

According to Matt, xv, 22

ff.,

and Mark

Jesus refuses his help to a Gentile called a Canaanite in the

vii,

woman.

and full

cast

it

is

ff.,

She

is

former account and a Greek

of Syro-Phoenician nationality in the other. says to her, "it

25

Jesus

not meet to take the children's bread

to the dogs."

She takes

his harsh

answer

in

recognition of the superiority of the Jews, and

taking up the same

mode

of expression which Jesus

uses she answers, "Yet the dogs eat the crumbs which fall

from

their master's table."

Only on account of

like the Persians and even more than they, were considerably mixed with Semitic blood, for their ancestors had been living among Semites for centuries; and in addition we know that many Syrians and Phoenicians and remnants of the aboriginal population were living in Galilee. All we can say is that Jesus was a Galilean and the Galileans were a people of mixed blood.

pure Aryans, but,


THE PLEROMA.

116

her great faith Jesus yields and heals her daughter.

Luke,

who

a Gentile himself, omits the story.

is

We must

remember that the Jews called the Gentiles "dogs" and ''swine" and we may very well interpret Christ's saying (Matt, vii, 6), that that which is "holy" should not be given to the dogs, and that pearls should not be cast before the swine, in this same sense, that the blessings of his Gospel do not belong to the Gentiles.

The most important passage in which Jesus stands up for Judaism is contained in the Sermon on the Mount, where we read "For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law,

till all

be

fulfilled."

The Greek words critical points

"jot" and "tittle" denote the dia-

used in the Hebrew

ing of Jesus does not only insist letter

and so this sayon the law in the

text,

but includes the most unessential parts of the

One

letter also.

could not express himself

verely as insisting on the significance

presentation of the law than ascribed to Jesus, and this

is

of

more a

se-

literal

done here in a word

word stands

in strong con-

which permeates the religion of commonly understood, and especially to

tradiction to the spirit

Jesus as

it

is

the principles in which the written.

Sermon on

the

Mount

is

In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus insists

that the spirit

is

the

main

thing,

and according

to other

passages he would abolish the letter in order to pre-


THE JUDAISM OF

JESUS.

117

serve and insist on the spirit which constitutes the

But

purpose of the law. it

if this

says, the fulfilment of the

passage means what

law must go down into

the most minute details, insisted on so vigorously that

the law in

its

very

letter is

Heaven and

more

stable than

heaven

away before we can expect a relaxation of the Mosaic law. The parallel passage of this sentence is found in Luke xvi,

and

earth.

earth shall pass

which reads as follows: it is easier for heaven and earth to one tittle of the law to fail." 17,

''And

It

is

obvious that this doctrine

is

pass, than

contrary to the

interpretation which had been established in the Gentile churches, and we know that it was vigorously opposed by St. Paul. He claimed that the law had been fulfilled, and that the pagans need not be held to observe

the details of the Mosaic law, such as circumcision,

abstinence from pork, equivocal.

etc.,

and yet the passage

is

This seems to be the best proof of

units

genuineness.

Texts have often been altered to conform to new doctrines, and so we are justified in assuming that verses which incorporate an older but rejected view

represent the original text and are traces of a belief

no longer countenanced. Only by some inadvertence were they suffered to remain, and after the text became too sacred for alterations, proved a stumthat

is

bling-block to exegetics.

ance such a

relic,

Our passage

is

to

the character of which

all

appear-

still

bears


THE PLEROMA.

118

The

witness to an older tradition. modified, however, by the

words

which upon is

severity with

the preservation of the Mosaic law

is

insisted

''Till all

be

fulfilled."

not impossible that this second clause in the

It is

sentence,

"till all

be fulfilled,"

is

an addition made by

a Gentile Christian scribe, with the intention of soft-

ening the meaning of the law

was

Paul claimed that

this sentence.

fulfilled in Christ,

and for

this

reason

need no longer be observed by the Gentiles.

it

Paul's

arguments appealed to the Gentiles and they no longer felt bound to obey the Alosaic law, so the scribe by adding the clause

"till

all

be

fulfilled"

reminds his

readers of the Pauline doctrine that in spite of the

acknowledged divinity of the Mosaic law longer in force since it had been fulfilled but in inserting this clause, forgot to cancel the

"till

all

be

it

was no

in Christ;

fulfilled,"

other statement which

it

he

was

"till heaven and earth shall pass and so we have here a double condition, one which reflects the original meaning, the other, the new interpretation put on it. Since it is not probable that these passages which

intended to replace,

away"

;

were later invenwould not have in-

indicate the Jewish spirit of Jesus tions, because the Gentile Church

vented these sayings and would not have superadded

them

to the sacred text, the opposite

must be assumed was

to be nearer the truth, viz., that the original Jesus

and actually remained a Jew in his religion but that later traditions tended more and more to obliterate his


THE JUDAISM OF

JESUS.

119

Jewish conviction and superadded to the traditional text, sayings of a more cosmopohtan character. It is noticeable, for instance, that the only important passage

which Jesus shows the intention of founding a uniis an utterance attributed to him after before his ascension, when he says (Mark his death and xvi, 15), "Go ye into all the world and preach the in

versal religion

Gospel to every creature."

The

must have been unusually and sympathetic, especially to the poor, the lowly, the oppressed but he was a Jew in his convictions, and had he not been a Jew he would have been personality of Jesus

attractive

;

out of harmony with his surroundings, for cosmopolitan ideas would scarcely have appealed to the poor Galilean fisher-folk.

We

do not accept the theory that the life of Jesus We believe that he was a real person and that ultimately the Gospel accounts are based upon fact.

was

a myth.

Nevertheless the Gospel story

is

not history;

it

is

strongly colored by the Christology of the Church, and

the modifications which the original story underwent are the

communal work of

successive generations, until

the Gospel assumed a shape that was generally acceptNew Testament able to the majority of Christians. scholars are fairly well agreed that

Mark

the oldest account of the historical Jesus.

poses

an

earlier

Gospel,

represents It

presup-

the so-called Proto-Mark,

w^hich served as a source for the three synoptic Gospels

and

is,

in its turn, based

upon

still

older documents,


THE PLEROMA.

120

the Logia and other personal reminiscences of Jesus.

Matthew

a Judaizing redaction and

is

incorporates

additional material, while Luke, being compiled

from

other sources, was adapted for the use of Gentiles.^^

The

fourth Gospel, however, though

new

incorporated some

reliable information,

genuine Johannine traditions, least historical, but ical

conception.

It

it

seems to have

it

is,

probably

upon the whole, the

ranges highest in

its

philosoph-

represents the final stage in which

Jesus, the Messiah, the son of David, the son of

has at

of

all

last

become the

Man,

Christ, the Logos, the Saviour

mankind.

There

is

a faction of Christianity to-day, as there

who would

always has been,

discard the Christological

additions and go back to the historical Jesus, but their

procedure seems to

me

single occurrences, nor

must always life it;

rest

upon an error. Reupon historical facts or

to be based

ligion can never be founded

upon

upon individual eternal truths.

of Jesus that will be helpful, but

characters, but It is

not the

what we make of

mankind needs a Christ and thus each

successive

Christian generation has interpreted the story of Jesus in the spirit of its highest conception of Christ.

Scholarly investigations of Gospel documents to de-

termine the facts of the

life

of Jesus as to his actuality,

his views, his race, his character, etc.,

may

be of archae-

"That Luke quotes Buddhist texts as "Scriptures" has been proved by Mr. Albert J. Edmunds in his Buddhist and Christian Gospels,


THE JUDAISM OF ological interest, or

may even

JESUS.

121

possess historical value,

but they are absolutely useless for religious purposes.

was a Jew, or Galilean, whether a Semite or an Aryan, and it is also of very little consequence what view he held. Whether It

quite indifferent whether Jesus

is

which we have to deal with

rightly or wrongly, the fact is this,

The

become the Christ. mere thread upon which

that to Christians Jesus has

personality of Jesus

a

is

Christians string the pearls of their religious Interpretations of ideals of

deity that has

manhood, of the God-man, of the

become

flesh.

Historical investigations of the story of Jesus are

would not please us, modern man is most repug-

apt to disclose conditions which for

it

seems that what to a

nant, his claims of being able to drive out devils, historically the

most assured

fact of his

life.

dead past bury

is

But

what of

it ?

Jesus

gone, but Christ remains, and the living presThe religion of the Christians has for

is

Religion

lets the

its

dead.

ence counts.

good reasons been

called,

not Jesuism after the

name

the ideal of

of Jesus, but Christianity after Christ, is not an individual being but a super-

humanity, which

personal presence, not a

man who

lived

and died at a

certain time, but like the Platonic ideas, an eternal type,

the prototype of the highest ideal of manhood.

And

the Christian doctrine of the preexistence of Christ

conveys a great truth, for this prototype is eternal with God it is the Logos uncreate and without end it is, to ;

;


THE PLEROMA.

122

use the mystic and profound symbolism of dogmatic Christianity,

God

God

the Father.

the

Son begotten

in all eternity

by


CONCLUSION.



CHAPTER

XVIII.

SUMMARY.

/^CHRISTIANITY may ^^-^

portrait as

mimber

way

made by

be compared to a composite Galton,

who photographed

a

of faces belonging to a certain class in such a

as to bring out their general type, taking only

They must be so posed that the noses and the eyes coincide upon the sensitive plate. In the composite picture which results short exposures of each individual.

therefrom, the individual differences disappear while the

a

common

new

features

portrait,

which

come out strongly and produce is

the ideal type of

all its

com-

ponent factors.

The

relation of Christianity to the ancient

pagan

religions is quite similar to that w^hich obtains be-

tween the composite photograph and the several exEvery faith of antique posures which produce it. paganism left an impression more or less dim and every one was repudiated with its individual traits. Nevertheless the underlying principles of all the several re-

which were mostly the same, remained in the minds of the people, and they produced a new type which was impressed upon the dualistic world-concepThis picture, a composite of all tion then prevalent. ligions

the previous religions, looked quite unlike each single

one of the originals that had contributed

its

share to


THE PLEROMA.

124

the formation of the whole, and yet

it

was the sum

total of their fusion.

The

alliance

between Christianity and Judaism was

as close as childhood

by adoption can

be.

Christianity

entered upon the inheritance and claimed the history

and traditions of

Israel as its

own, but for

all that, its

inmost constitution remained different from Judaism.

The

nature of an adopted child will not be that of

foster father, but will keep true to the blood of

parents.

The

spirit

its

its

own

of Christianity was Gentile from

the start and has remained so in spite of the great influ-

ence of the Old Testament Scriptures upon

its

further

development. It is difficult to appreciate

rivals

is

always interlinked.

how

closely the fate of

Judaism gave to Chris-

and Christianity incorpoof much Judaism, yet the two have

tianity its finishing touches

rated into itself

most fanatically anathematized each other in the past. In one sense Christianity supersedes the ancient paganism, and in another sense the ancient paganism reappears in a new form in Christian doctrines. Yet the Church Fathers can not speak of the pagans without maligning them bitterly and unjustly. It may be literally true that the bitterer the hostility between two rivals, the more similar are they in spirit; the more marked the contrast is, the greater must be their kinship.

This statement almost appears

like

a corrobora-

tion of the pantheistic idea of the identity of

Brahma


SUMMARY.

125

which makes the red slayer the same as one he slays. we speak of the pagan character of Christi-

in all things,

his victim, the

When anity,

to

we mean

deny the

neither to disparage Christianity nor

fact that its

appearance represents a

new

We use the term

only

era in the history of the world.

to bring out forcibly the truth that

(in spite of the

important part played by Judaism) Christianity all

is

in

essential doctrines the legitimate result of the

its

religious development of mankind,

but of the whole world, Jews and

of the Gentiles, Christianity,

i.

e.,

the nations.

we must

respect for paganism,

raise

— not

of Judaism,

Gentiles, but

mainly

Instead of belittling

our estimate of and our

which was neither so thoughtit has been com-

lessly idolatrous, nor so immoral as

monly represented.

The Jewish is more

ligion

contribution to the development of re-

negative than positive;

that gives the flavor, but the meat

it is

like the salt

was furnished by

the Gentiles. Christianity

is like

a big river which drains an enor-

has not one source but innumerable sources, and the character of its waters together with

mous its

territory.

It

course depends upon the geography of the whole

country, not

Yet people

upon what on

will insist

is

system the source of the caused

its

commonly

called its source.

calling one spring of the river,

as

if

whole had

that alone

existence and none of the others need be

taken into consideration.


THE PLEROMA.

126

Sometimes

it

happens (as for instance in the Mis-

sissippi-Missouri system) that the largest stream which

suppHes most of the water and has the longest course

name

does not bear the

same

of the main river, and the

true in the history of Christianity.

is

supply of

its

is

concerned,

portion which determines the nature of

not furnished by Judaism to which

monly

largest

substance and also the most essential

ingredients so far as quality

is

The

traced, but

its

its

viz.,

that

doctrines,

origin

is

com-

by paganism; and when we pass in

review the teachings of Jesus himself, as recorded in

we can

the synoptic gospels,

discover nothing that

is

typically Christian.

There is

is

a joke told by Austrians on a

Magyar who

said to have traveled to the source of the Danube,

where he stopped the water so that for a little while it would not flow, and with a mischievous twinkle in his eye

dry

!"

"What a surprise it will be to when the Danube suddenly runs

he exclaimed:

the people in Vienna

This view of the origin of rivers

is

not unlike

the current interpretation of the history of Christianity

supposed to have received all its momentum from the Sermon on the Mount, or the death of Jesus on the cross. The spread of the Gospel of Jesus which we trace in

which

is

either

its

continuity in ecclesiastic history,

is

to be comple-

mented by a consideration of innumerable other

lines

which, like tributaries of a stream,

have

of thought


SUMMARY. become merged

127

into the Christian doctrines

and have

considerably modified them.

We

shall

never be able to understand the nature of

the records of the to us, unless

we

life

of Jesus that have

bear in mind

how

come down

they were altered

and interpreted from the standpoint of these later how they were redacted to remove what had

additions,

become

obsolete,

and generally how they were again

and again adapted to the new requirements. Christianity is not the work of one man, but the product of ages. tries

the

When

the inhabitants of the coun-

that surround the Mediterranean Sea were, for

first

time in history, united into one great empire,

they became conscious of the solidarity of the race and

felt

the need of a universal religion.

human In re-

sponse to that need, answers were given by thinkers,

moral teachers, and religious leaders, whose doctrines were more or less echoed in the sentiment of the large

These large masses were, after all, the ultimate court of appeal which would render a final demasses.

cision.

Several religions originated, but Christianity alone survived, because

it

contained in a definite form what

vaguely and indefinitely was slumbering in the subconscious sentiment of public opinion. Christianity

had gathered into itself the quintessence of the past, and presented solutions of the problems of religion which were most compatible with the new conditions.


THE PLEROMA.

128

The generations

of the

first

three centuries

and remolded the Christian documents

molded

until they ac-

quired a shape that would be in accord with the prevalent

view of the times.

The subconscious

ideal

which in dim outlines ani-

mated multitudes, consisted of traditional religious views inherited from the hoary past. It was fashioned by the old religions and contained the ideas of a saviour, of the God-man, and of his martyr death, of his victory over all ill and of his return to life, of forgiveness of sins, of the restitution of the world, of

a golden age, a millennium and the foundation of a

kingdom of God on

earth.

Such was the demand of is one instance only

the age, and Virgil's fourth eclogue in

which

this

At

same

the

discredited.

sentiment finds a poetical expression. time,

The

all

the fables of mythology were

tales of Heracles,

^sculapius, and of Osiris, of

all

and of Adonis, of the several ancient

were no longer believed; they now appeared and had become untrue and unsatisfactory. A real saviour of historical actuality was demanded. It is natural that some people expected him to appear on the throne as the restorer of peace and many greeted

saviours,

fantastical

Augustus as a divine incarnation, the representative of God on earth. But his successors did not come up to the expectations of the people and Nero's example alone was sufficient to overthrow the belief in the divinity of the Emperor. The saviour could not be of this world, he had to be a man, and yet a God, not of


SUMMARY.

129

secular power, but king of a spiritual empire, a king of truth, and so the personality of Jesus became more

and more acceptable as the true saviour. The ideal which constituted the demand was of Gentile manufacture, and Christianity, its fulfilment, is in this respect Gentile too; it was un-Jewish, or pagan. But being such, pagan means human; it denotes what is typical of mankind. The pagan world offered some positive solutions of the old world-problem

ism

and JudaJudaism represents the spirit of a much needed and wholesome nega-

criticized them.

—

negation

albeit

tion.

We grant that paganism contains many objectionable features and so the Jewish attitude of negation

is

justi-

Paganism was weighed and found wanting. Christianity then renewed the old issues but made them

fied.

pass through the furnace of the Jewish condemnation

of pagan mythology.

The

result

was

that the

same

old beliefs were so thoroughly transfigured as to render

them something quite new. Christianity accepts the old

and yet If

we

it is

^'paganism redivivus"

we do

remains on the same

level

call it

say that

it

pagan world-conception

not a mere repetition of the old paganism.

superstitions.

It is

not

mean

the old paganism, broadened into

universalism and purified by a severe monotheism. old religion faults,

to

of primitive

was thereby

liberated of

its

of narrowness, of crude literalism,

naturalism, and other childish notions.

The

most obvious of naive


THE PLEROMA.

130

The God

of evolution works by laws and the marvels

of his dispensation can be traced in the natural develop-

ment of

affairs.

Just as the snowflake exhibits a design

of unfailing regularity and great beauty, so the denoue-

ment of

historical events takes place according to

intrinsic necessity

and when

which gives

it

an

a definite direction,

aims are atwhich have been prepared by preceding

at the seasonable time definite

—aims events — tained

work of a predeteran immanent teleology which

the result appears like the

mined purpose.

It is

dominates the world. like prophecies

fulfilment,

The

old legends naturally appear

which in Jesus Christ have found

their

and so we can truly speak of Christianity as

the pleroma.


CHAPTER

XIX.

THE FUTURE OF CHRISTIANITY.

NOW THE

question arises,

"What

will

become of

Christianity ?"

If the historical events of the past are to be taken

as precedents, religions to definite conditions.

and

their end,

come and pass away according They will have their beginning

and Christianity may disappear

the religions of antiquity died out. its

origin

ment

;

it

;

it

reached the heights of

changing.

We have

its

had

dogmatic unfold-

most

have been

silently

essential doctrines are fast

lost the naivete of

Some dogmas have been

our forefathers.

considerably modified, others

dropped, and not a few have become

Upon

purely symbolical.

Are

its

passed through several phases, and at present,

the current views of

we no

just as

Christianity

the whole

we may

say that

longer believe in the letter of the credo. these facts to be considered as

symptoms of We do

decay which indicate the end of Christianity? not think so; representatives.

all

depends upon Christianity and If

Christianity

innate strength to assimilate the it

will

It

new

survive and emerge from

stronger than before; but it is

if it

possesses

its

sufficient

truths of science, the present

rejects the

new

crisis

revelation

doomed. has been customary to characterize

scientific truth


THE PLEROMA.

132

as secular ical

in contrast with theolog-

The truth of science, if it not made by man, it is superhuman.

an is

and purely human,

truth as divine, but this conception error.

is

is

based upon

genuine truth,

Scientific truths

are not fashioned by scientists, they are discovered,

and being the

eternalities of existence, they represent

sway the world. Science is a genuine revelation, and we may look upon it, to use theological language, as the revelation of the Holy Spirit. There is a great truth in the saying that all sins may be forgiven, except the sin against the Holy Spirit. If a portion of mankind a church or a sect, the divine thoughts that

or individuals

— —harden themselves against the

science, if they shut out progress, if they

light of

deny

truth,

they will necessarily stunt, their individual and moral

growth.

Their souls will be crippled thereby, they will

from the

cut themselves off

tree of life

by refusing the

guidance of God's truth.

But the question before us tial

is

whether

it is

an essen-

feature of Christianity to shut out the light of

science, to repudiate progress,

and refuse

to learn

from

the living revelation of God's eternal truths. Christianity has

again and again;

it

itself to new conditions grown thereby and gradually

adapted has

developed into the religion that is

no reason

to doubt that

it

it is

will

to-day,

and there

do so again.

The

Christianity of the future will be broader, deeper, and

more

in

accord with

scientific truth.


THE FUTURE OF CHRISTIANITY. It is true

enough that the confessions of

faith

in former centuries are antiquated, but they

regarded as historical documents their time, but

hension

it is

scientific

thinking, that a scientific compre-

not Christianity as

stood, that

must be

We grant the claim of those who cling

manner of

is

made

they were good for

must make way for a more

comprehension. to the old

;

133

was

it

originally under-

something entirely new which

in

many

respects destroys the childlike spirit of a literal belief.

But did not the God of Christianity himself proclaim

make all things new" ? We, who have passed from the

*'Lo, I

old to the new, some-

times become homesick for the old, comfortable belief

when man was

so easily satisfied with the symbol, with

the parable, with a poetical figure and a pious senti-

Even

ment.

the

mained dear

to

remembrance of those days has us.

Goethe,

who

change of mind himself, has repeatedly described attitude

in

glowing terms.

Faust,

re-

experienced this this

on hearing the

Easter bells proclaiming the resurrection of Christ, thinks of the faith of his childhood, and he regrets that the

message has no longer a meaning for him since is gone. Yet the vision of the faith of his

his belief earlier

days haunts him.

He

thinks of his

trust in God's eternal love, of seeking

Him

in solitude

unbounded

communion with

and of the unspeakable rapture of

fervent prayer *'Und ein Gebet war briinstiger Genuss."


THE PLEROMA.

134

If the belief in the

same time discard

dogma

is

gone, shall

been so important a guide to mankind in turies

?

Is that

we

at the

which has former cen-

that religious sentiment

rapturous devotion that

thrills the indi-

vidual and adjusts his relation to the cosmos really a fantastic illusion, of

future

which we must

rid ourselves in

?

Christianity has been the sacred vessel in which the

noble sentiments of religion have been treasured; and will not the contents be spilled if the

Does the breakdown of dogmatism

cup be broken?

really forebode the

end of religion?

A

prominent French scholar, M.

J.

Guyau, has writ-

ten a book which created a sensation, and

its

tenets

have been adopted by innumerable freethinkers the world over. It is entitled ''The Irreligion of the Future/' and Guyau claims in it that, in ages to come,

mankind

without any religion, for science will have destroyed the strongholds of the old faith one will be

after another until nothing

and the formulae of His views seem quite plausible to those who have grown up in a country where people have only the choice between the irreconcilable contrast of ultra-montanism on the one hand, and the libres penseurs on the other. In France, people who hold a middle ground are so rare, that during the last half century they have played no prominent part is left

natural law will rule supreme.

in public different.

life.

The

In Protestant countries conditions are large majorities do not favor either


THE FUTURE OF CHRISTIANITY.

135

extreme, but are in a state of transition that will result in a new and higher conception. Protestantism has its weak points, but it has guided mankind on the right

path and prepared a faith that will no longer stand in contradiction to science.

Protestantism It is a

scious

is

not the end or final state of religion.

movement which from the start was not conof its final aims. While its leaders tried only

to bring about a reform, they actually introduced a

new

principle

and

development.

some

features

led religion into a

was

It

in

new phase

The very name

started as a protest to the old; but

the consequences of

its first step,

its

mere negation of

originally a

Roman

the administration of the

Catholic Church.

of

it

that

indicates is

which

bound is

it

to take

the recogni-

tion of scientific truth, of liberty of conscience, of the

duty of inquiry. its

This will lead to a new assertion, and

position will advance to a firmer and

more enduring

foundation.

Unless the very nature of mankind changes, the future of history will not be irreligious. trary,

it

will be

more

On

truly religious than ever.

the conIt will

discard those superstitious elements that are so often regarded as the essential features of religion, and will insist,

with greater emphasis, on essential truths.

We

are bound to reach the bottom rock where religion will

have nothing to fear from the critique of

We

venture to say that the

science.

new movement

will


THE PLEROMA.

136

Spring from the very orthodox ranks, which, bye and bye, will unhesitatingly recognize all the truth of sci-

ence and reinterpret the old in the spirit of the new.

They will retain all the good of their traditions without making the slightest concession to either hypocrisy or equivocation, and without sacrificing the uplift of gen-

uine devotion.

In a word, the future of religion will

be a reinterpretation of the all

old,

and

it

is

natural that

religions will convergingly tend towards the

goal.

same


CHAPTER

XX.

RELIGION ETERNAL.

THE FUTURE.

^HE RELIGION -'

of the future will have to satisfy

human

the essential needs of the

tempest-tossed on

the ocean of

life,

and we

ance and comfort and encouragement. the unrest that surrounds us,

We

heart.

drift

need guid-

In the face of

we want

to

have the

assurance of a firm ground wherein our anchor can

We

catch.

want

to

know our

goal and the direction in

which we have to steer. All this must be supplied by religion, and where our knowledge is insufficient, faith steps

in.

Religion

is

inborn in every soul in the same

way

as

Every an inalienable part of all matter. particle that exists is interlinked with the whole of the cosmos. Its momentum is determined in the exact progravity

is

portion of its

its

weight, of

relation to the All.

particle,

and generally of The innate energy of every

its

position,

every molecule, every atom, presses forth in

one direction or another w^ere yearning

beyond

existence in itself;

its

beyond

itself.

its

No

own

limits as if

piece of matter

nature and

its

its

longing only outside

In the same way, every sentient

it

an

movements are

conditioned by the rest of the universe and the fulfilment of

is

its

it

can find

own

being.

soul yearns beyond


THE PLEROMA.

138 itself

and becomes

easily conscious of the fact that

it is

only a part of an immeasurably great whole, of the All that stretches forth into

the significance of

infinitudes,

religion,

human

and religion

is

and that

outside the sphere of

This All-feeling of the individual,

ego. is

unknown

its life lies

this

its

panpathy,

a natural presence in every

breast.

Religion grows up in unconscious spontaneity and asserts itself first in sentiment. it

is

may

It is

so strong that

be counted as the deepest passion of which

capable.

It

is

other passions, even love not excepted, and

excels

all

can,

misdirected, lead to deeds that

if

man

possessed of a motive power that

would otherwise

be impossible, such as sacrifice of what

is

dearest to

the heart, even the bodily sacrifice of oneself or of one's

own

believed

to,

children on the altar of a deity

demand such

But religion into

every

is

fibre

is

offerings.

not merely feeling. of

who

man's

spiritual

Religion enters existence,

throughout the development of human actions

and

it

re-

mains the factor that adjusts the relation of the individual to the All. It grows and matures with the

growth and maturity of man.

It

experiences a world-conception in

him

to his place, assigns his duties

weaves out of his which it appoints

and furnishes

direc-

tion for his conduct.

Religion teaches us that

whole.

We

we

are parts only of a great

are not alone in the world.

our bodily existence

at every

Not only

moment determined by

is

its


RELIGION ETERNAL.

139

surroundings, but our souls also are interlinked with the fate of others, of creatures

who have

sentient beings

more or

less like us,

developed by our side as

formations parallel to us, in whose company we have become such as we are. Our own destiny extends to them, and makes them parts of this, our extended self. Neither are

come

we

the beginning nor the end of

into being

which we have emerged, remains. things

we

life.

We

and disappear, while the whole, from

From

this state of

learn to treat our fellows with consideration,

yea, with respect, to look

upon the past with reverence

and upon the future with

Our neighbor

is

solicitude.

our alter-ego.

No

one

is

a stranger

to us; all are our brothers and we cannot maltreat them without hurting ourselves. The same truth that holds good for space, is applicable to time. We are a mere phase in the life of the whole. We have grown from the past and we owe to it our entire existence.

In

fact,

The

we

are the past as

it

continues in the present.

past has furnished even the potentialities from

which we develop our noblest aspirations.

Our very made by us in building up the future, and in the future we continue. The future is the harvest which we expect. It is our own existence as we mold it, and all the duties we have in life are for selves are additions

the future.

In the future

lie

the mansions which our

souls build up, therein to live fallen to dust.

when our

bodies have


THE PLEROMA.

140

The

function of religion, however, goes deeper

This entire world It develops

still.

the actualization of eternal types.

is

according to law and brings into existence

those possibilities which, in philosophy, are called Platonic Ideas.

Accordingly,

of atoms, he

is

of matter, he

man

more than

is

is

not a mere congeries

a corporeal conglomeration

the actualization of the type of his

personality; his essential and characteristic being consists in

the ideas he thinks, in the aims he pursues, and

in the significance

movement

which he possesses for the whole

human

of

life.

In every one of us there has

made

its

is

something eternal that

appearance in corporeal and visible shape,

and no thinking man

will identify himself

with the

dust of his body; he will seek his real being in his volitions, his aims, his ideals

—

in all that constitutes

his spiritual nature.

Religion

reminds

us of

against which the fleeting

world take shape.

The

the

eternal

background

phenomena of the material

eternal of

man's

life

is

the

essential part of his being transfiguring the transient

in

which

Man

is

it is

actualized.

not born a philosopher.

primitive conditions and his conduct even before

And

is

He grows

up from

compelled to act and adjust

he knows the world or himself.

so religion, which, as

we have

seen, animates his

and unconsciously dominates all his sentiments from the very bottom of his heart, comes to him entire being


RELIGION ETERNAL. in the shape of allegories

man

higher

rises,

it

feels relig-

in doctrines,and the first

mere formulations of the symdawns upon him. But the

doctrines are naturally

wherein truth

He

and symbols.

ion before he formulates

bols

141

first

how

the better he understands

to

distinguish between symbol and truth, between letter

and

spirit,

between the parable and its meaning. In we were like children, nursed with

the dogmatic state fairy tales

and parables; but

in

manhood we

shall see

the truth face to face and shall have a clear and une-

quivocal comprehension of

it.

which we know must come, certainly not be less religious than its former

That will

faith of the future

phases.

be simply the fulfilment of the present

It will

which we then shall regard as mere preparations for it, as mere stations on the road to the goal the new pleroma, the pleroma expected to-day.

—

*

We

*

*

are aware that Christianity

ion in the world, and

its rivals,

is

not the only relig-

from

their standpoint,

have made honest endeavors to reach the truth

own

w^ays.

In every part of the world

the light at his disposal.

we

man

in their

has used

In consideration of this fact

can no longer look upon one religion as possessing

the absolute truth, and

We

know

all

others as inventions

that all of them possess more or and that not one of them is perfect. do not wish to be misunderstood; we do not

of Satan.

less of the truth

We

upon


THE PLEROMA.

142

say that

ent

religions are alike;

all

toward the same goal

travel

;

and are more or

stations

we

only say that

all

they have reached differless

The

advanced.

nearer to truth, to the living truth that teaches the right

way

There

of living, the higher they are.

is

a stage of development in which

own we look with a sectarian who magnifies

we

lose the

religion at the expense of

desire to glorify our

others; and

smile upon the anxiety of

the

the merit of his

own

sect

and delights in defaming others, although he does it in maiorem Dei gloriam in the hope of thus pleasing There is a higher ideal the deity whom he serves. than our own church affiliation. It is truth, and the

God

of truth

is

higher than our God, higher than our

limited conception of deity.

We

learn

wherever

it

more and more

may

to give

honor to the truth

be found, and under the influence of

this sentiment a brotherly feeling

has originated which

gave birth to the Religious Parliament

in 1893, in

even the most orthodox churches took part.

ness.

world came together

Every one came

an

all

the great

in tolerance

and kind-

actual instance wherein representatives of faiths of the

which

It is

to explain his

own

faith,

not to

disparage that of others; nor was there any intention to break

down

or to replace the old traditions by a

new

religion.

The new, when the old, and

it

it

comes, will have to develop from

will practically

have to be the old in a


RELIGION ETERNAL.

new

We

interpretation.

the past, and

we have

143

must build the future from

to utihze the materials

which we

have on hand.

We

deem

it

may

possible that several religions

con-

tinue side by side to the end of the world, and there

would be no harm and organizations. parts of religion.

in a disparity in

name, institutions

These things are not the It

essential

might be good for the world,

if

would remain between

different churches, dif-

ferent races, different nations.

There can be no ob-

rivalry

jection to a divergence of types; but, after

ever

may

their essential doctrines, the

and above

nies

come

the

all,

what-

be the names of religions and denominations,

all

meaning of

moral ideals

their

their

will

ceremo-

have to be-

same throughout the world, for these are the and must accord with the eternal

essentials of religion,

truths of cosmic existence.

The Church

universal of the future need not be one

large centralized body,

it

need not be one power con-

solidated into one organization,

it

need not be governed

from one central point, but it must be one in spirit, it must be one in love of truth, one in brotherhood, and one I

in the earnestness of

moral endeavor.

conclude these remarks on the nature of the re-

ligion of the future with the

words which,

of the Religious Parliament Extension, at the decennial celebration of the

Parliament in 1903

I

as secretary

pronounced

World's Religious


THE PLEROMA.

144

"Let us ligion.

all

join in the

work of extending

true re-

Let us greet, not only our brethren, but also

those who, in sincerity, disagree with us, and thus prepare a

home

in

let

us

our hearts for truth, love and

kingdom of heaven, which is as it was nineteen hundred years ago, may manifest itself within us, and become more and more the reformatory power of our public and charity, so that the

near at hand to-day as

private life."


COLLATERAL READING. Articles on Subjects Relating to the Origin of Christianity.

By

Dr.

Paul Carus.

Angelus Silesius.— 0/>^n Court XXII, 291-297.* Anubis, Seth, and Christ. Open Court XV, 65. Apocrypha of the Old Testament.— 0/>£'n Court, IX, 4700. Assyrian Poems on the Immortality of the Soul. Open Court, XIX, 107. Babism Behaism in Chicago. Open Court, XX, 755. Babylonian and Hebrew Views on Man's Fate After Death.

:

—Open

Court,

XV,

346.

Babylonian Myths, Prof. Tiele On. Open Court XV, 436. Bride of Christ, the. Illustrated. Open Court XXI, 449-464.* Caaba, The.— Open Court XVII, 151. Chastity and Phallic Worship. Open Court, XVII, 611. Christ and Christian.— O/'^n Court XXII, 110. Christ Ideal and the Golden Age, the.—-O/'t'w Court, XXII,

328.

Christian Conception of Death, the. Open Court, XI, .752. Christian Doctrine of Resurrection, the. Monist XV, 115. Christian Prophecy, the Number tt m.— Monist XVI. 415. Christian Sunday, the. Open Court XX, 360 Christianity as the Pleroma. Monist XIV, 120 * Christianity, Message of Buddhism to. Open Court XX, 755. Conception of the Soul and Belief in Resurrection Among the Egyptians. Monist XV, 409. Creed, the Revision of a. Open Court III, 2075. Dances of Death. Opeji Court XII, 40. Death and Resurrection. Open Court XIII, 495. Death and the Dead, the Skeleton as a Representation of. Monist XXII, 620. Death in Religious Art. Open Court XI, 678. Death, Modern Representations of. Open Court XII, 101. Republished in book form.

— —

145


COLLATERAL READING.

146

its Significance in the New Christianity, the. Open Court, IX, 4738. Dogma of the Trinity. Open Court XI, 85. Dogma, the Clergy's Duty of Allegiance to, and the Struggle Between World-Conceptions. Monist II, 278. Easter, the Festival of Life Victorious. Open Court, XVI,

Doctrine of Resurrection, and

— —

193.

EscHATOLOGY IN CHRISTIAN Art. Open Court XI, 40L Fairy-tale Element in the Bible, the. Monist XI, 405, 500. Food of life and the Sacrament^ the. Monist X, 246, 343. Gnosticism in its Relation to Christianity. Monist VIII, 502.

— —

God, Essay on, and Discussion. Monist IX, 106. Greek Mysteries, a Preparation for Christianity.

—Monist XI, Articles on. — Open

87.

Greek Religion and Mythology, Three Court, XIV, 513. 577, 641, 705; XV, 1. Haeckel's Monism. Monist II, 598. Haeckel's Monism, and the Ideas of God and Immortality.

—Open Court V, 2957. Haeckel's Theses for a Monistic Alliance. Monist XVI, 120. Harmony of the Spheres. Open Court XX, 220. Holy Edict of K'ang Hi. Monist XIV, 733. Jew and Gentile in Early Christianity. Monist XI, 267. Lord's Prayer, the. Open Court XII, 491. Mazdaism, the Religion of the Ancient Persians. Open Court XI. 141. Mesha's Declaration of Independence. Open Court XVII, 662. Mithraism and its Influence Upon Christianity. Open Court XVII, 104. Mysticism, Truth in. Mon. XVII, 75-10. Mysticism, Value of.— Open Court III, 2039-2040. (Republished in Homilies of Science.) Naran-Sin's Stzlz— Open Court XVIII, 563. Nativity, the.— Open Court XIII, 710: XIV, 46.

— —

Ox and the Ass

in Illustrations of the Nativity, the. Open XIV, 46. Pagan Elements of Christianity and the Significance op

Court,

Jesus.—Mon/j/ XII,

416.


COLLATERAL READING.

147

Personality of Jesus, and His Historical Relation to Christianity, THE. Monist X, 573. Philosophical Parties and Their Significance as Factors in the Evolution of Thought. Open Court XI, 564. Pro DoxMO.— O/'^w Court, XIX, 577. Religion of Proto-Semitism, the. Open Court XVIII, 42L Religious Character of Monism. Open Court II, 1381. Resurrection, a Hyper- Historical Fact, the.— Open Court

— —

XIX,

G90.

Resurrection, Festival of, (Republished in Homilies of Science).— 0/>^w Court IV, 2179. Rosetta Stone, the.— Open Court XVIII, 531 XIX, 89. Sampson, Mythical Elements in the Story of. Monist XVII, ;

33.*

Seven, the Sacred Number. Open Court XV, 335, 412. Siloam Inscription. Open Court XVII, 662. Stone Worship.— 0/^^n Court XVIII, 45, 661; XX, 289. Theophanies. open Court XX, 705.

Third Commandment.

Open Court XVIII, 502. the.— O/J^n Court XVI, 612. Trinity Idea, the. Open Court XI, 85. Vera Icon, King Abgar and St. Veronica, the. Open Court XXII, 663. Widow's Two Mites, the. Open Court XVII, 352. Yahveh and Manitou. Monist IX, 382. Yahveh, the Oracle; the Urim and Thummim, the Ephod. and the Breastplate of Judgment. Monist XVII, 365. Zoroaster's Contributions to Christianity.— OA^*" Court XIX, Trinity,

409.

Zoroastrian Religion and the Bible. •Republished in book form.

— Open

Court

XX,

434.



INDEX. Apella, the Jew,

Apocrypha, Aberrations, religious,

Abiram,

5.

Apollonius of Tyana,

85.

Abraham,

84.

Acts of the Apostles, Simon Magus, Philip and Peter, in the,

43,

47.

Actualization

eternal

of

types,

140.

Adam, snake's promise Adonis,

16,

29,

to,

39,

128.

Advent of Jesus, second, 51. and the serpent symbol of healing, 39; discred-

.^sculapius,

ited as a saviour, 128.

Ahriman, 17. Ahura Mazda, 17. Alexander the Great and the adjustment of state religions, 27; William the Conqueror and,

Allegories

dawns

and

in,

140

of

the

and Jesus?

truth

extol the,

8.

4.

St.

138.

between Christianity and Judaism, nature of tlie,

the

term

86.

Babylon,

of foreign nations, 130 f; of Jesus, according to Paul, 112. Ancient Hellas, influence of Eastern religion on, 27. "Anointed One, the," not by descent, but by grace, 113 f. Antichrist, Simonian founder

in, 49; in, 83,

Christianity prepared monotheistic tendencies 90.

Babylonian,

calendar,

15;

hymns,

38; heroes, miraculous birth of, 49; inscriptions, 51; hero, the Jesus of the Revelation a, 74 poem on immor;

tality,

called, 44.

107.

Basis of the religion of Judea,

faith,

93f.

133. to,

Behaism, new religion of Persia,

9;

religions of classical, 48, 54.

Anu,

f

B Baal,

8;

what we owe

20,

62.

62.

Ananias, 47. Ancestry, of Christian thought,

historical value of,

the

128.

124.

Antiquity,

on

Augustus, called a saviour, 22

Aztecs,

Alliance

Antiquated confessions of

quoted

of Christianity.

Author's use of "pagan", 7-8.

All-feeling, true significance of,

primitive,

were David

46.

f.

American Indians,

;

114f.

Aspirations spring from past inheritance, our noblest, 139. Assurbanipal, 49. Assyrians, defeat of the, 91. Augustan Age, world-conception

definition indi-

87,

5.

Ascension of Christ, 51. Asceticism, of manichaeism, 42; of the Essenes, 46. Asia Minor, 38, 45. Asiatic, present tendency to

of the,

138ff.

symbols,

Apollos, 111. Aristotle, 8. Aryans, Semitic, 59

Augustine,

29.

All, inter-relation vidual and the,

105.

111.

111.

Bel, the Christ, 18, 64, 77.

18.

149


INDEX.

150

Belief in the traditional God discredited after Alexander's

conquest,

27.

Benjamin, territory Bethlehem, 69.

of,

88.

and the history

Blasphemy,

original

mean-

ing, 21. ;

and Christhood,

and

gnosis, 57. Bodhisattva, potentiality of the 56;

Bodhi,

Book

56.

of the

Book,

the, Laws. 93

Brahma,

Dead, the, Henoch,

61

Breakdown

;

of

f.

of

the end of Buddha, 18

of, 76; of, 114.

in

all

dogmatism not

religion,

;

and

14.

of

idenilfied 18; 124f.

things,

acter

the,

Christian

134.

char-

descent of Jesus

and

comprehension, 132

the climax

of oriental thought, 57.

Buddhism, no contradiction

in,

56.

Buddhist,

the

bodhi, 38, injunctions, 76.

40;

scientific f.

every moral 96 significance of the idea. 102; why rejected by God, 106. Christ, all things in. 1; as Ornation,

the,

83;

;

pheus, 29; the psychical and the spiritual, 39; was a Nazarene, 45; as the Pleroma, 49 f pagan saviours and, 52; St Paul's conception of, 69; pre decessors of, 76; the risen, 80 world-mission of, the 115; Logos, the Saviour of mankind,

120.

Christhood 55;

Buddha-conception,

moral

Cherithites, 87. Childlike faith

Chosen people,

Bodhi, the 38

dragon 69.

Chauvinistic tribal patriotism of the Jews, 97.

Biblical sources, of Judah, 88. its

Celestials, and the of the Revelations, Celsus, 44.

by Jesus,

acquired

eternal,

56.

ceremonies, pagan origin of, 10; doctrines preserved by critics, 41; Era, tendencies at the beginning of

Christian

the, 79;

47,

typical

61;

features,

documents remolded ac-

cording

prevalent

to

ideas,

128.

Christianity, Biblical reports of

Calamities so-called, two great Jewish, 99f. Calculus and Christianity, prerequisites "Calves of

of,

66

f.

Dan and

Bethel,"

the, 86.

Calvin, 23.

Cambridge Codex, quoted on the Holy Ghost, 55. the, Canaanite woman, and Jesus, 115. of Reason

Canon

and

Virtue

78.

Catacombs

many

of

Rome

pre-Christian

contain symbols,

29.

Categories and religion, 65. Catholic theology and the mangod redeemer, 63; faith, Jewish

and

cluded

in,

heathen 66.

faiths

in-

predetermined

its

origin,

by

existing spiritual condi2; traditional and cur-

1;

tions,

rent views of its origin, 2f; a grandchild of paganism, 3 Paul, or Jesus, founder of? ;

the religion of the lowly, 5-6; pagan traditions fused on the background of Judaism, 8; defined by St. Augustine, 20; helped by Alexander's conquest of Asia, ascetic 31; tendencies of, 42; influenced by the Zabian movement, 45; gnosticism the mother of, 48; prepared among the Gentiles, 59f; came to fulfill, 63; not 3f;

a revamped paganism, the

struggle

79;

connection 81;

due

sistence,

98;

and,

for to

64;

in

supremacy,

Judaism Jewish per-

of

significance

of

the dispersion of the Jews for, 101; the historical Jesus, and

modern,

120; like a composite photograph, 123; pagan char-


INDEX. acter no disparagement, 125; not the work of one man, 127; why it conquered, 127f; pagan from the start, 129; what will become of, 131; the living revelation

of 132.

science,

through

trutli

Jewish, 22; of the New Testament, influenced by the Persian system, 61. Christology and the historical Christians,

Jesus, 119f.

Chronology, Christian,

Church

historians,

124

65.

;

4

1,

fathers,

;

universal of the fu-

143.

ture,

Church

of England, of the, 60.

a theologian

Circumcision, an antiquated and barbarous custom, 84; a pagan institution, I02f. Civilization, western, factors of, before the Christian era, 9; 47.

Clans, of,

Judah a conglomeration

88.

Greece

Classical

and

Rome,

trinity idea in, 18.

Clement,

Crito, 76. Cross of Jesus,

Crucified One, SOf.

of Jesus, 69; as a sun offering. 80; the Dispersion took place before the,

Crucifixion 105.

Cuneiform

inscriptions,

the

51,

49.

Jews

and the

Jew,

in

the

of

D

Nazarenes

47.

Danube religion,

studs'"

of,

60.

Congeries of atoms, man is more than a, 140. Conquests often hasten religious development, 30. Constantine wrongly surnamed the Great,

49,

92.

Curse upon the Jews, the dispersion considered a, 99; a romantic conception, 104. Cycles, Babylonian notion of,

106.

Comparative

the mystic, 80. slaves and the,

Exile, 60.

Communists, were,

Country, the Jews a people without a, 99. Court of appeal, the masses are the ultimate, 127. "Credat Judaeus Apella," 105. Credo, belief in the letter of the, fast disappearing, 131. Cress, and Syrian Easter Customs, 16. Critique of science, truth has nothing to fear from the, 135.

Cyrus

44.

Cleobolus, 43. Colonies, post-exilic

Egypt,

151

6.

Consummation, and the notion Babylonian cycles, 50. Continuity of cause and effect unbroken, 68. Contrast between Jewish Uniof

tarianism, and gentile Trinitarianism, 111. Cornill, Prof. Carl W., 86, 93. Cosmic existence, all parts in accord, 143. Cosmos and of religion, laws of the, 1371

David,

river, the, 126. the hero of Israel,

an Aryan?

87: the 112.

Jesus and,

and

Death Osiris,

85;

ancestry of

resurrection, of Marduk, 15;

14;

Tammuz,

Adonis,

of of

Melkarth,

Samson, and Christ, 16. Decay of Christianity, symptoms of the, 131. Deities, Loi'ds of the tion,

Deity,

Lamenta-

50.

Jewish

designations

of,

102.

Demeter,

28.

Demon, the good, on Abraxas gems,

39.

Denouement

cf historical events,

130.

Deuteronomy,

demned

in,

wizards 107.

con-


INDEX. De Wette, Wilhelm Martin Leberecht, 94. Dharma, the

Egypt, 38; Philo and the Therapeutes in, 45 monotheism in,

18.

;

83,

a misleading name,

Yahveh,

99;

of, 103; all 103ff.

Profs.

Ephesians, Epistle to the,

nations scat-

Ephod,

Divinity of the Mosaic law, 118. Doctrines, Persian and Babylonian, 46.

Documents

remolded,

Chris-

tian, 128.

Jewish

"Dogs" and "swine," epithets for Gentiles, 116. Dositheus, 43. the. Dove, as the spiritual Christ, 39.

Dragon, the, as the principle of evil in Parseeism, 39; of the Revelation of St. John, 69.

"Dread

lullaby" at the cradle of the Jewish nation, 100. Drift of the age, Manichseism

and

the,

42.

in the beginning of the Christian era, 10; a necessary religious phase, 59. Dualistic Christianity, 9. Duality resolved into a higher

Dualism,

unity,

Easter,

59.

the

Babylonian,

15

;

customs in Syria and Tyre, 16; a Teutonic word, 17. Easter bells and Faust, 133. Ebionites,

44,

Ecbatana,

41.

106.

Greek mysteries at, Elijah and Yahveh, 86. Elohim, 102 (see Yahveh).

Eleusis,

Sayce and Graetz quoted on the, 99f; Karl Vollers quoted, 101; real problem of, 101; true cause

84.

Elephantine,

;

81,

hymns

of the, 14f; despoiled by Israelites at the command of

Testament, 49. Dionysos, 28, 29, 56. Dispersion of the Jews, Mesimportant to siah of the, 61 Christianity,

90.

Egyptians, prayers and

99, 101; (see Dispersion). Die Keilinschriften und das alte

ter,

Euse-

bius', 45.

Dialectic, 65.

Diaspora,

History,

Ecclesiastical

47.

the history of Ecclesiastic spread of the Gospel, 126.

28.

1.

the, 85.

Epictetus,

5,

10, 53.

Epiphanius, 40, 46. Episcopal theologians, 67f, Epistle to the Hebrews, the Holy Ghost and Christhood according to the, 56. Era, Christian, manlchseism belongs to the, 42; prepared below the surface of events, 68; Gentiles and Jews at the beginning of the, 83. Eros and Psyche, and the doctrine of immortality, 28; and the Good Shepherd, 29. Esdras, 11. Esoteric doctrine, monotheism as an, 83. Essenes, 44, 46. Essential parts of religion, 143. Eternal, the, Buddha and Christ as, 56; Christ as the type of, 121; bacl<.ground of the material world, 140. Eternalities of existence, 132. Ethics, lofty Christian, equally characteristic of pagan philosophy, 76.

Ethnic faiths, 65. Ethnological genesis of Judah, 88f.

Etruria,

IS.

Etymology, tracing kinship by, 87.

Eucharist,

pre-Christian. 17; spirit and mode of its celebration, absolutely un-Jewish, 24.


INDEX. Euphrates, founder of sect of the Naasteans, 38. Eurydice, 28. Eusebius, 43, 45, 46. Events, below the surface of,

15S

Future, the, Christianity of, 132f inherits the past, 143. ;

G.

68.

Evolution of Christianity, 130. Exaltation of Christ, 51. Exegetics, altered texts a stumbling block for, 11 7f.

Jews

Ebcile,

through

Facts of history, mental, of life,

11,

48

;

59.

funda-

66.

Faith, kin and constitution of the new, 4. Faithful and True (Revelations), 73.

Fakir, the turbaned, as a representative of spirituality, 9. Falsification

history,

of

45.

Fatal belief in self-importance, the Jews', 97. Fatherhood, supernatural, pagan types of, 56. Fausbol Prof., Michael Viggo, 57.

Faust and the Easter

bells, 133.

Feeling, religion not merely, 138. Felix, Paul accused before, 45. "Firstling, the," Christ as leader,

20.

subconscious

the

Folk-soul,

realms of, 7. Formative presences, Jesus and Buddha, 57f. narrative of Fourth Gospel Christ's

life,

80; least histori-

cal, 120.

Christianity comes to, 63. Till all be," 118. Fundamental needs and aspiraFulfil,

"Fulfilled,

tions of

man,

Furnace of in the, 95,

Putak,

41.

114

a,

fisher

;

119.

Galton, 123.

and

Christhood,

56,

57.

Genealogy, of the gods, 27; of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, 112. Gentile spirit of Christianity, 3; Church founded by Paul, 4; pagans, i. e.. nations outside Judaism, 7; hostility to the Jews, 22; Saviour and immortality,

lOSf.

Geography and the source

of Christianity, 125f. an abomination Ghost-citing, to the exilic Jew, Gilgamos, King, 49.

Gnosis,

38, 39;

108.

pre-Christian,

42,

45.

Gnostic sects in the Augustan age,

4.

Gnosticism, antedates Christianity, 5, 43; non-Christian, 41; a fusion of pagan religions, 47. God, personal interference of, 2; as the Logos, incognito, 13 universal doctrine of, 19; as 40 incarnathe demiurge, contions in Israel, 43, 44 ception of the Jews of the exile, 102 as father, and as son, 122 of Evolution, the, His eternal love, not 130 ;

;

;

;

;

;

lost

in

Goethe,

scientific

truth,

133f.

133.

Golden Age, Roman,

hoped

22;

for return of the, 23. 15; Good Friday, Israelitic and Syrian, 16. Good for evil, pagan sentiment

Babylonian,

of returning, 76.

Goodness, requite hatred with,

63.

tribulation,

folk,

Gautama

of the, 60, 95.

originates Existence the contrast of duality,

Galatians, 1. Galilean, Jesus

Judaism

78 (see Lao tse). Gospel, as we know

based on

facts,

it,

119.

the 74;


INDEX.

154

Grseco-R

oman mythology paganism

polytheistic

Mithras and, 59

;

25

of,

;

repudiated,

connection, between Greek mysteries and Christian

Historical

doctrine, 29; Episcopal clergythe love of, 68 in accounts of David, 87f; of Jesus and Christology, 120. Historicity of special revela-

men and

82.

Graetz, Dr. Leo, quoted on the Dispersion, 100. Greece, doctrines studied in, 47. Greek mysteries, doctrine of immortality in, 28; Heracles an example to youths, 52f; Christian characters of philosophers, 76. Gunkel, Joh. Friedr. Hermann, 69.

W.

Guthrie, Rev.

N., 54. Jean, 134.

Guyau, Maris

tion,

62.

History

strongly colored by Christology, 119. History of the People of Israel, 86.

Hither Asia, 88. "Hodge podge" of orthodoxy,

a,

65.

Holiness of monks, the, 45. original meaning,

Holy Ghost, 55.

H Haoma, daism,

Holy

Maz-

the holy drink of 17.

Harnack, Prof. Adolph, quoted on the origm of Manichseism. 42.

Harun

Rashid and Thor, al similar stories of, 13. Harvest of our hopes, the future is the, 139. Hatred with goodness, requite,

(Lao Tse) 78. Hawkesworth, Rev. Alan 64,

62.

Hebrew,

scriptures, 41, 81; every man at heart a, 104; language lacks the female form of the

word God,

Heliand, the,

109.

ligion,

Hyppolytus,

and Samson, 52 idealized, tales of, 128.

54;

5,

;

an 57;

19.

characteristics of the saviour, 52. Hezekiah, King, a vassal of Assyria, 91.

Hiel, 85.

race, religion of a, 44.

65.

Hermes Trismegistos, Hero

Hyperborean

to, 39.

9.

27.

ideal hero, discredited,

62.

Hygeia, the snake sacred Hymns, Babylonian, 38. Hypatia, 5. 62.

Hellas, 38. Hellenistic period, the preparatory stage of the new re-

Heracles,

rivalry, of Judaism to 42; paganism, 82; between David and Saul, 87. Human need of comfort and

hope, universal, S.,

67.

Hebron, 88. Hegelian logic,

Spirit, sin against the, 132. Hor, the Avenger, 14. Horace, 105. Horation ode, Integer vitae scelerisque purus, 28, 29. Horus, 18, 56. Hosea, the prophet, 85, S6, Hostility, religious, based upon

I raldabaoth, 39. Icons in Christian churches, 110. Ideals, Christ, Heracles, Buddha, as living, 5S; religious traditions and subconscious, 128.

Idealization, process of, 49. Ideas, typically Christian, pagan parallels for, 19. Identification of Marduk, Yahveh, and Christ, 49.


INDEX. use of, David, 85.

Idols,

in

the

time of

pagan and Christian,

Idolatry, 110.

house gods, 85; wrong impression of tlie gentiles as worshippers of, 109. Immortality, Greek doctrine of, Images,

as

28.

In

as an,

44.

Incarnation, of the divine word, Ptah as the, 5 of God in Is;

rael,

of

43;

"Him who was

the Light", 63; of

God

in

man,

128.

Incas,

62.

faith,

of

the

Jewish

102.

38,

57.

on Mandaean on gnosticism, 40. Inheritance from the hoary past, influence

religion, 38;

religious, 128. Initiates of ancient

mysteries,

80.

Intermarriage of Jews and foreigners in pre-exilic times, 87. International people, the Jews an, 92. necessity and theIntrinsic ology, 130. Iran, religion of ancient, 38, 59. Irenaeus, 44. Isaiaih calls Cyrus "the Saviour prophesies King," tho 49;

glory of Zion, Ishtar,

with,

91.

Marduk's marriage feast 15;

84.

Jephthah's daughter, 85. Jericho, foundations of, 85. Jerome, 46. Jerusalem and monotheism, 83f; siege of, 91; preservation of, fall

of,

55.

Jerusalemitic priesthood,

Christians,

45

;

90.

Jesuism and Christianity,

121.

Jesus, the credited founder of Christianity, 3f; made no claims to originating the essentials of religion, 6: and Judaism, 12; baptized by a

Zabian, 45; reference to "the poor," 47; prophesies tribulaaccording to St. 51; John, 69; personality of, 79; mystic cross of, SO; ancestry of, 112; an Aryan Jew, 114f; always a Jew in his religion, llSf; his desire to found a universal religion, 119; died, but Christ still lives, a prototype of the highest ideal in man, tion,

Inconsistency

Indian

Jacob,

92;

Maiorem Dei Gloriam, the

motto of bigotry, 142. Incarnate God, Simon Magus

India,

155

descends into Hell,

107. Isis, 14, 18.

Islam, contrast of attitudes in monotheistic. 111. Israel, ancient, Messiahs of, 43; and the gentiles, 84; patriarchs and idols of. 84, 85; God-conception of, 90; witches expelled from, 107.

121.

Jethro, Gentile father-in-law of

Moses, 84. Jewish Messiah, ras,

the,

Christian

61;

and Mithredactor

of the Revelations, 74;

appropriated 81;

religion,

canon

by

Christians, nationalism the

quintessence

of, 96, 103; rituals, many of pagan origin, 102f; spirit of Jesus, 118.

Jew and

Gentile, mutual conas contrasting 11 tempt, terms, contrast funda83; mental, 111. Jews, the. of the exile, 60; of Judea, 61; a remarkable people, 83; tenacity and fatal over-confidence of, 92, 97. 103; as the chosen people, 81, 83; of the Dispersion, 61, 81, 101 to be found everywhere, yet nowhere allowed to remain. 100, 101 not ripe for monotheism, 102 main purpose of ;

;

;

their religion, 104. Johannine traditions, 120. John the Baptist, 49.


INDEX.

156

Jonah and the resurrection

idea,

lations, 69.

mentions

Josephus

senes, 46. Josiah, laws

and

"Jot

Es-

the

94.

meaning

tittle"

of,

Judah-Israel, tribe of David, the founders of, 88; witches

exterminated Judaism, less

scarcely

a

superseded by

Christianity, 63f; its history, 83 the development of Christianity and, 84; date of birth, ;

90; a progress and a contrac-

tion, 96;

premature monothe-

ism, 101 true root of its tenacity, 103; supposed secret truths of, 105; its aversion to ;

ghosts and belief in immor108; not the only in-

tality,

the molding of fluence in Christianity. 125f; represents negation, 129. Judaism and Christianity, traditional view of their relation. mutual aversion, 2ff 11; religion of Jesus the connecting link between, 12; and the Sermon on the Mount. 116; closely interlinked yet the two anathematized each other, ;

124.

ancient, inevitable

captivity

downfall 91 no longer Jewish, 99. 93 Judeanp, 88. ;

Christ as, 52. the Apostate,

.Judge,

Krishna the deified, Kyrie Eleison, the

57.

litany

pagan soothsayers,

of

10.

of, of,

Damb, the, blood of, 71; marriage supper of, 73. Lamentations, Lord of the, 50. Lao

tse,

Law

in

78.

history,

Legend of Merodach, 78. Leo the Great, Pope, 41. Literal

Living ideal

K

is

a potent factor

Logia, of Jesus, the, 120. Logos, God as the word or, 19

;

end, uncreate and without Christ as the, 121. Lord's Supper, the, of probable Persian origin, 18; an abomJudaism, ination to ancient 23; supposed to have been instituted by St. Paul. 24; Caland Luther's interpreta-

vin

tion, 23f.

Loving-kindness, Buddhist junction to show, 77.

Mandix?ans,

Mani,

88.

Kessler, Dr. Hans, 41.

of

birth,

in iiistory, a, 58.

Magyar's joke, the, Mahdi, or saviour. Manasseh, 86. Manda, 38.

the,

dogma

56.

in-

M

44.

Katha Vpanishad,

the

belief in

Holy Ghost and virgin

5.

18.

Justin Martyr,

of Moses,

58;

102.

IS.

Jupiter,

Kaleb,

9;

than

dualistic

tianity, 48, 81f;

;

in Thor and of gnostic sects, 4G.

Kinship of belief

94.

in,

Christian doctrine can be reconciled with, 23; the mother of Chris10;

Judea,

73. 49.

paganism or Christian-

either

Julian Juno,

of the Moabites,

King of Kings, King Sargon I, Christ,

of,

116.

ity.

Khemosh, God 84.

50f.

Joseph and Mary of the Reve-

15.

38,

4,

founder

126. 111.

79.

of

manichaeism,

41.

Manicliseans,

4,

41,

79,

80.


INDEX. Mansions

of our

future,

souls,

139.

Monopoly,

religious,

in

Israel,

91.

Marcus Aurelius,

Marduk 49.

157

5,

10.

a saviour god,

as

15,

50.

Martin Luther, 23. Martyr death of Jesus,

Mary

79.

the Revelations, 69; mother of Jesus, genealogy of, of

112.

Masonic lodges and Mitliraism, 80.

Mass, the Persian myazda, the Hebrew Mazza, and the, 18. Maya, the Virgin Buddhist Mary, 56. Mazdaism, 17, 38. (See Zorastianism.

Medes and Persians,

107.

Melkarth, the Phoenician Samson,

16.

Messiah,

original

45.

meaning not

21; in Israel, 43; translated into Christ,

saviour.

when 61.

by grace, not by descent, Jesus' claim of, 113f. Michal, and David's housegod, Messiahship 85.

Michael. St. and the 71. (See Revelation.) Mills, Prof.

23; Persian, 38; and Yahveh, 88; monomania of the Jews of the Exile, 95 the Jews a fit vessel of, 97; Judaism and, lOlf; the Jews represented a rigorous, 105; venerable poets ;

of, 110.

Monotheistic paganism, 82f ancient Israel not, 85; tendencies in Egypt and Babylon, 90. Mosaic law, regarded by Paul as temporary, 24; barbaric, 84; fulfilled,

Lawrence

117.

of, 2; and the 84; a patriotic marriage of, 87; narrowness of the law of, 102. Moslems, unitarian. 111. Mount Horeb, 84. Mt. Zion, the national sanctuary of Yahveh, in Israel, 91.

religion

Yahveh

idea

Menander, 43. Mesopotamia, 38,

Jews. 11; doctrine of the Trinity incompatible with Jewish,

Moses,

59.

of a divine, in Mohammedan countries, 111. Mediums, Biblical spiritualist,

Mediator,

Monotheism, only point of contact between Christians and

dragon,

H., 18, 60.

Minerva, 18. (Menrva.) Mithras and Christ, 17,

61,

62.

Miracles, psychical power of Christ to perform, 39f; and the preservation of Jerusalem,

Israelite,

cult, 85;

Multiplicity in unity, 59. Myazda, the consecrated cake, the resurrection body, 17. Mystic, formula of the cycle and the Greek letter tt, 72; cross of Jesus, the, 80. Mystery, the Dispersion misinterpreted as a, 99f: the Jews

surrounded by, 105. Myth, the Samson and Heracles, 52f; Jesus, not a, 119. Mythology, similar religious legends of, 13; of the several

nations unified, 27; of the revelation of St. John. 69, 74; of ancient paganism, 82; finally discredited, 128.

N

92.

Mithraism, 5, 6, 79. Moabites, Khemosh, God of the, 84.

Mohammea ven' 01

Monism, a lition of

expected second ad-

tic, 83, 96.

Nazarenes,

111.

solution, not

dualism,

Monks, pagan,

Naivete, religious 131. Nationalism of tht Jews, egotis-

59.

10, 45.

an abo-

44ff.

Nazareth as the birthplace of Jesus, 112f.

Neander,

38.

40.


INDEX.

158

Neighbor, our alter-ego, 139. Neo-Platonisni, 5; as dualistic as Christian philosophy, 10; God as the Logos in, 19; anticipated in ancient Iran. 59; eclectic systems of, 67; in the struggle for supremacy, 79; psychology and ethics of, 80. Nero's example overthrew belief in the emperor's divinty, 128.

New movement spring from

in religion

will the orthodox, the,

135f.

New 134.

Number

notion of, in antiquity, 15f; and the mystic formula of the Revelations, tt,

the

72.

of

the

human

Jews considered

race,"

the, 97.

utilized by Testament, Good Fri11 Christianity, day of the, 16; Doctrine of the Lord's Supper conflicts with the spirit of the, 23; scholars

Old

;

agree regarding David's anIts influence on cestry, 87; Christianity, 124. Ophites, 4; snake worshippers, 38; their doctrine of evil per se, 40.

Oriental, the, of today, 9; westof.

61.

Pagan, the author's use of the term, as non-Jewish, 7; modem use of the word, 8ff;

civilization

and customs

30.

Orientalism, the Buddha conception a climax of, 57. Orient and Occident, idealizing process in the, 57. Origen, 44.

Orpheus, 28. Orphic and teries.

and

saviours

to,

Christian Jesus,

gods,

62;

52,

not related transfigured

80;

in

mythology

Christianity,

129.

Paganism, Christianity a grandchild of ancient, 3; the teachings of stoics and idealized, 5; noble traditions of pre-Christian.

not monistic,

8;

9;

its

main features and mode of between link growth, 13; Christianity and. 25; rise of a Jewish objecmonistic, 82 by tion to, 107; superseded Christianity in which it reappears, its claim to 124; Christian sources. 126. Paganus, the natural man, 66. Palestine, 38. Pali scholar, a, Prof. Fausbol, ;

o "Odium

Ancient

in

Persia/' Prof. Mills quoted, 60,

Christs.

Testament, claim of Jesus

as the son of David, 113; and the Gospel of Mark, 119. Non-Religion of the future, the

ern

Ostara, the goddess, and Ostern the German Easter, 17.

"Our own Religion

Eleusinian

mys-

62.

Orthodox Christian scholars. 61; meaning of the term in America, 65.

Osiris, 13, 14, 18, 29, 62, 128.

57.

promptings of natural religion, 138. Parallel between Mithras and Christ, 17; terms for saviour, 22; conceptions of the Eucharist, 24; between the snake, the Dragon and the Brazen serpent of Moses, 39; form.ations

Panpathy.

in

history,

60.

Parliament of Religions, 142

f.

Parousia, of Christ, the, 51. Parseeism, t'.^.e dragon symbol of,

39.

Passion, of Christ, same idea in Babylon and China, 50; of Jesifs, 79; religion the deepest

human,

138.

Passover, the Christian-Jewish, 17.

Patriarchal legend.

SS.

Paul tho npostle, missionary activity

of,

4.


INDEX. "Pearls

before

swine,"

ex-

plained, 116. Pelethites, 87. Pella, headquarters of the

159

Poimander,

Naz-

(Hermes Tris-

19.

megistos. Polytheistic

temple

service

in

Egj-pt, 90.

arenes, 46. Penitential, 109.

Pope Leo the Great,

People without a country, the

Post-Exilic reform, 106. Potentialities of the past continue in the present, 139. "Power of God," gnostic expres-

Jews

a.

Peresh,

Porphyry,

99.

88.

Persephone, 28. Persia, overthrow

affected

of.

religion, 27; successful

reform

trines,

and

Babylonian

doc-

of Christianity, 97f. Personality of Jesus, attractive, 119 thread upon which to string interpretations, 121. ;

Pharisaic Jews,

61.

Phenomena

of the material world, fleeting, 140. Phenomenon, the Dispersion, a

remarkable, 5.

44,

99.

46,

111.

Philosophers, pagan, 10; Christian character of Greek, 76; not born as such, 140. Phoenicians not regarded as idolaters,

86.

Photograph, a composite, Piety, Jewish punctilious,

123.

102f.

Pinches, Theophilus, G., 77. Pittacus, 76. Plato, as a Christian pagan, 8,

Platonic

38.

131.

ideas doctrine, 121.

and

charist,

monks,

gentiles, 9 religions,

Eu-

;

17;

44;

45.

Pre-exilic times, intermarriage with foreigners in, 87. Pre-existence of Christ, a great truth, 121. Pre-requisites in faith as well as in Calculus, 66. Present need of a new pleroma. the,

141.

Priesthood, why the old, lost its hold on the people, 27. Principle of wisdom and of evil. the, 41.

Problem of the Dispersion is not how did the Jews scatter but

how own

did

they preserve their

type, 101-102.

Prophecies, spiritual meaning of, not understood by the Jews, pagan religions, 22; true, 68.

Christian

Plebeian spirit of the primitive church, 80. Pleroma, definition. 1; Christ and Christianity as the, 49f,

in Israel,

literature, 90,

93.

Prophet, false,

74.

86

Prophets of Israel, 93. Protestantism started

;

party

on

the

right path, 135. Prototypes of Christ's miraculous birth, 49 of the gospels, ;

74.

130.

5.

Plutarch and Osiris as Logos, 19. Poets of heathen hymns, 110.

religious,

Prophetic 7,

76.

Pliny, 46. Plotinus,

sion, 44,

Prayers of the Mandaeans,

Pre-Christian

46.

Persistence of Jewish character, in relation to the success

Philo,

5.

Precedents, historical events as

in, 90.

Persian

41.

the 109,

Proto-Mark, gospel of, 119. Psalm, pagan penitential, 109. Psyche. (See Eros.) Psychology of Xeo-Platonism, SO.

Ptah, the Egyptian,

5.


INDEX.

160

"Pure Being" and "Pure Nothing,"

65.

Puritanism,

of

conception

its

Christianity, 63. in pointing kinship of prepre-Christian sects, 46 determined, 130.

Purpose

;

Pythagoreanism,

27.

truths, not upon single events or persons, 120; inborn, 137; function of, 140; a church universal of the future, 143f. Religious development by unification of mythologies, 26; infidelity of the priesthood, 27; hymns, ancient, 109; Parliament in 1893, 142 Parlia;

ment Extension

Q of

Reminiscences

of

Christianity

the

past, 127f.

the,

is

Heaven, the worship an abomination to Jews, of

lOSf.

of

Jesus,

per-

sonal, 120.

Resurrection, symbolized by the rising sun, 14; Christ's, 50. Revelation, of St. John the Divine, 21, 70, 75; New Year's day and, 52; Science, the new, 131.

Reverence for the past, 139. "Righteousness Incarnat Mithras as, 17. Ringleader of the Nazarenes, Paul a, 46.

R Rachel,

85.

Radau, Dr. Hugo,

62, 64.

Ram, the saviour-god

the

in

shape of a, 72. Rapture of fervent prayer, 133. Records of Jews, how to understand the, 127. Redactor, the, of the Revelation of St. John, 74; tendency of, 88; of Deuteronomy, 107; of the Gospel of Matthew, 120. Redivivus, is Christianity paganism? 129. Reform in Egypt, monotheistic, 90;

sec-

words,

143f.

Quintessence of their religion, Jewish nationalism, the, 96;

Queen

of 1903,

concluding

retary's

post-exilic, 106.

Reformed paganism, Reformatory power ligion,

79.

of true re-

144.

Regeneration, emblems

of,

28.

Reinterpretation of the past, the future of religion, a, 136. the new universal, Religion,

dawn

and

disciples

of,

5;

Christianity and Mithraipm to the only true, 6;

claims

e,"

St.

Rituals, Christian, not any are of Jewish origin, 10; primitive, 80.

Rival faiths, principle involved in their struggle for existence, 5-6 manichaeism and Christianity, 41; pre-Christian, 79; doctrines and theories of, 81 ;

;

fate

of,

interlinked, 129.

River system, Christianity like a, 125.

Roman

Catholic

Church,

the,

135.

the, in the Augustan age, 4; rival faiths of, 5f; expectation of a saviour to bring back the Golden Age of. 22; new religion of, 27; spread

Roman Empire,

of pre-Christian ideas in, 45. Rosary, the, unquestionable pa-

gan origin

of, 10.

99 a universal tendency to be, 104.

"Rovers,"

Jews,

;

of

Alexander's conquest of Persia greatly affected, 27; early Christian, accessible to the

masses, 80; Jewish rigorous monotheistic, 96; nationalism, the quintessence of the Jewbased on eternal ish, 96;

Sacred books, Buddhist,

76; ves-

Christianity the, 134. Sacrifice, Jephthah's, 85. sel.


INDEX. Samaria, a hot bed of religious commotion, 43. Samson, death and resurrection of,

and the pagan saviour

16;

idea, 52, 56.

Samuel, ghost of, 108. Sangha, the, 18. Kbionite, Sapphira, an (See Ananias.)

47;

107.

99f.

Shiva, 18. Siege of Jerusalem

Rome and

54.

SS.

Simonism,

truth discovered, not contrasted with theo-

logical truth, 131f. Seances, Biblical, 107.

Snake, originally a .symbol of goodness, 39; messenger of the highest God, 40. (See serpent.) Socrates, 7, 8, 76. Solar worship In the temple of

Jerusalem,

Segab, 85. Seneca, 10, 53. Sennacherib and the siege Jerusalem, 91. Sentiment, first expression religious emotion, 238.

of of

original Hebrew Seraphim, meaning, 39. Sermon on the Mount, the, 69; 116f;

In,

compared

to

the origin of a river system, 126.

Serpent, true brazen, 39

meaning

;

tions,

the,

of

the

the Revelaof

71.

Seth, the Eg^Titian and the Biblical, 5.

86.

Solicitude for the future, 139.

Solomon, temple

of,

86;

mother

87.

Soothsayers, Kyrie Eleison and Sorcery, of,

10.

Simon Magus accused

43.

nature,

Spiritual

attributes

of,

140.

Spontaneity,

Biblical,

and

107.

widespread

religious Ideas, 60, 138. St.

(See Augustus.)

Sebastos, 28.

Judaism

43f.

79.

Spiritualists,

made,

62.

religion, 125.

pagan,

Scientific

by Senna-

America,

Simon Magus,

of,

hymn, Heracles and,

Scholarly Investigations. real value to religion of, 120f. Scholars, Old Testament, 87. Schrader, Prof. Otto, quoted, 49, 87,

(See

Sinai, 84.

;

Schiller's

102.

Sheites, 111.

Simile between geography and

Jesus as, Saviour, the, 11; equivalents for the word, 22; Christ as the inaugurator of a new age, 49; Cyrus and Marduk as the. 49f; the word not in the Hebrew language, 61; of Christhe Revelations, 72 tian human character of, 79; actuality of, 128. historical Sayce, Rev. Archibald Henry, 87,

Shaddai of Abraham, Yahveh.

cherib, 91. Similar faiths in Egypt, Greece,

Satan, inventions of. 141. Saul, and the house gods of David, 85; visits the Witch of

Endor,

161

St.

Athanasius, C5. Augustine, 20, 65.

St Paul, believed to have Instituted the Lord's Supper, 24; and the Greek mystery plays, 29; accused before Felix, 45; born during the Dispersion, 105 explains the cause of the Dispersion, 106; gnostic views of. 111; the ancestry of Jesus and the according to, 112; Mosaic law, 117. Ananias and SapSt. Peter, phira before, 47. ;

St.

Thomas Aquinas,

65.

State religions in ancient cities, 25.

Statues, ish,

why

there are no Jew-

110.

Stoics, pvirified

paganism

of,

5.


INDEX.

162

Stone Pillar, the, 85. Story of Jesus reinterpreted by successive generations, 120. of the reason Stubbornness, Jewish, 93. Subconscious ideals, 128. Success of Christianity, reasons for the, 79.

Suffering sanctifies, 79. Summation, Christianity

the,

67.

Superhuman

personality,

the,

the Revelations of St. John, 69, Supernaturalism, Greek belief of

in,

an immanent, 130. Temple of Jerusalem, reform ous,

ras and Christ, 61, Supremacy, struggle

121.

rival

of

faiths for, 79.

Sutta Nipata, a,

the,

39.

Symbolical, the Lord's Supper by Calvin and interpreted Zwingli as, 23. Symbolism of dogmatic Christianity, 122.

Synagogue, the, modern center of Jewish nationalism, 103f. 74 based Gospels, Synoptic on earlier documents, 119. ;

Teraphitn, 85.

Greek, Terminology, Indian, and Buddhist, 38. Terms used by St. Paul in his doctrines, signifiChristian cant of Greek mysteries, 29. Teutonic world-conception, 9. Thalna, 18. Theologian, on the coincidences between paganism and Chris-

views

of,

62

informed, 67. Therapeutes, 4, 44. Things, all, in one,

;

1.

Thousand and One Nights, monks,

10.

Traditions reconstructed in the Revelation of St. John, 75. Transfigured paganism, Christianity the fulfilment of, 129. Transition, period of, 25; phase of the Christ ideal, 69. Transubstantiation, niystical act of. 24. Tribulation, and the Saviour, 51; Judaism in the furnace of, the Egyptian, Simonian, 44.

Trinitarianism, Trinities,

his

epithet

Jews,

for

97.

Tahpanhes, Jew colony er Egypt, 106. Talisman, preservative,

in

Low-

of

the

Tammuz,

the,

131f; in

dawns 11.

the

111.

Roman,

superhuman, symbols,

132;

141.

Tusita heaven of eternal

16, 29.

Tarsus, Paul of, 24. Tathagata, 23. Technical terms, gnostic,

Gentile,

well-known,

14;

Etrurian. Egyptian, Babylonian, Brahman, Buddhist, 18. Triratna, Buddhist doctrine of, and the Trinity, IS. Truth, scientific and theological,

106.

Talmud,

13.

Tonsure, the practice of pagan

Trinity,

Jews,

a well-

95.

38.

Tacitus,

86;

Jerusalem, the fam-

Tinia, 18.

11.

Symbol of divine wisdom, the snake as

in

9 Off.

tianity,

9.

Superpersonal presences, Mith-

Syria,

Tel Amarna Tablets, the, 90. Teleology dominates the world,

bliss,

the, 56.

Jewish, how preserved under the Dispersion, lOlf. Tyre, Easter customs in, 16.

Type, 44.


INDEX.

U Urim and Thummlm,

World-conception u n d e

of

tion, the,

62.

special

1

ying

the Teutonic, 9; of Judah, 89; the old pagan, 129. 4;

jews

83.

Uniqueness

r

and pagan myths,

old creeds 85.

Unique phenomenon, the a,

163

revela-

World, the, renewal and breakdown of, 51; mission of Christ, 115; swayed by divine thought,

Unitarianism, Jewish, 111. Universal religion founded by Jesus, 119; why needed, 127; of the future. 137.

132.

Worship in Israel, customary form of, 86. "Worship on the Heights." 90.

X

V

Xenions, Heracles in Schiller's,

Venerable poets, 110. Vessel of monotheism, the Jews a,

55.

97.

Views of the Jewish Dispersion, poetical, 105. Virgil's fourth eclogue

a Christian prophecy, 23, 128. Virgin, Mary and the worship of Isis, 15; birth, literal belief in the dogma of, 56. Vishnu,

Tahveh,

the

Israel,

49,

national God of 84ff; the Jews

stubborn belief in, 95f; identified with different Jewish tribal God-conceptions, 102.

IS.

Prof. Karl, quoted on the Dispersion, 101.

Vollers,

Zabians, Mani and the faith of

w White horse the,

the,

of the Revelations,

73.

William the Conqueror and Alexander the Great, 30. snake symbol of di-

Wisdom,

vine, 39. of Endor, 107. Witnesses for Christianity,

Witch

Jews,

the

81.

Wizards and witches exterminated in Israel, 94. of God, the, 73. Vv'orld-religions, the same unwhatever name. 2; similar der

Word

essentials of, must be universal, 6; Christianity as one of the, due to Jewish persistence, 98.

origins

of,

3:

41.

Zarathustra, 8, 59. Zealous converts made by sympathy, 79. Zebaoth of Ephraim, 102. (See

Yahveh.) Zion, Mt., the favorite place of

Yahveh, 91. Zend literature. Prof. Mills an authority on,

L.

H.

18ff.

Zerakh, 88. Zerubbabel, last of the house of David, 112. Zeus, Heracles' sonship to, 53, 56.

Zodiac,

the Revelations of

John and

the,

Zoroastrianism,

St.

69.

38,

60.

Mazadism.) Zwingli, Huldreich, 23.

(See




Works by Dr. Paul Cams The Mechanistic

Principle and the

Non-Mechanical,

An

fundamentals into inquiry with extracts from representatives of eitlier side. Cloth, $1.00.

COc.

Our Children. Hints from practical experience Cloth, for parents and teachers.

75c.

of the Religion of Science. 50c.

The Soul

of Man. investigation of the facts of physiological and experimental psychology. Illustrated. Cloth, $1.50; papr, 85c.

An

The Story of Samson. And its place in the religious velopment of mankind,

With

special reference to superpersonalities and the interpersonal character of ideas. Cloth, 75c.

The Philosopher's Martyrdom,

A satire. Illlustrated. Boards, $1.00; parchment wrapper, 50c. Philosophy of Science. An Epitome of the writings of Boards, 50c; Dr. Paul Carus. paper, 25c. The Principle of Relativity. In the light of the philosophy of science. Cloth, $1.00.

Psychology of the Nervous System. An extract from the author's of

Man."

Paper, 30c. Yin Chih Wen. The Tract of the Quiet Way. With extracts from the Chinese Commentary. Boards, 25c.

de-

Illnstr

Boards, $1.00. The Surd .of Metaphysics. An inquiry into the questiol Are there things-in-themselves?" ted.

Cloth, 7oc.

T'ai-Shang Kan-Yan P'len. Treatise of the Exalted One on response and Retribution. Boards, 75c.

Truth and Other Poems. Truth; Time; Love; De

$1.00.

Personality.

work "The Soul

Man.

Sacred Tunes for the Consecration

Hymns

Eng-

Oracle of Yahveh. T'rim and Tlmmmim, the Ephod, the Breastplate of Judgment. IlPaper, 30c. lustrated.

larger

of

sketch of the origin of the hurace. Illustrated. Boards,

man

Cloth,

satirizing

diplomacy and the Triple lish Paper, 50c. Entente. Nietzsche. And other exponents of individualism. Illustrated. Cloth, $1.25. Nirvana, a Story of Buddhist Psycholoey. Illustrated by Kveason Suzuki. Cloth.

A

of Life.

of the State. Cloth, 50c; paper, 20c.

The Nature

The New Morn. A dramatic poem

The Rise

rerum

natura; Death. Cloth, $1.00; boards, 50c. Truth on Trial. An exposition of the nature of truth, preceded by a critique of pragmatism. Cloth, $1.00: paper,

50c.

The Venus

of Mile. archeological study goddess of womanhood. tratcd. Cloth, $1.00.

An

of

the

lilus-

"Whence and Whither. An inquiry into the nature of the soul, its origin and its destiny. Cloth, 73c; paper. 35c.

The World's Parliament ligions

of Reand the Religious Parlia-

ment Extension.

A

memorial published by the Parliament Extension

Religious

Committee.

Popular edition, 10c. of Science. Cloth, 50c; paper, 30c.

The Religion

The Open Court Publishing Company 122 South Michigan Avenue

: :

: :

Chicago, Illinois








Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.