TREATISE
OF
THE THREE
IMPOSTORS

Frontispiece
of
the 1777
edition
Moses,
Jesus
en Mahomet
1777 A.D.
Foreword
At the beginning
of the 18th century an entirely new genre of clandestine books and
manuscripts
arose. Especially France and the Netherlands provided a large share to
that. There was a shade
world of hidden printing presses producing large numbers of insurgent
and
rebellious writings, with fictitious writers and fictitious publishers
on the frontispiece.
Most notorious was the publisher Pierre Marteau, being a pure
concoction, and invented
by some Dutch publishers, publishing works under that name, which
otherwise would
not survive the censure. In the same fiction the publisher Pierre
Marteau
mentioned on the frontispiece that he was established in Köln.
Amsterdam was the centre of those clandestine publications and
French the language of the escaped Huguenots. Probably the name Pierre
Marteau
was used by the publisher Elsevier, and it published hundreds of books
with
rather hazardous ideas. Thus possibly the Dutch edition of the Trois
Imposteurs has been printed by Elsevier in Amsterdam. For an
extensive review in English, see the publication of the
American historian, Margaret Jacob, professor of history at the
Californian Ucla University and doctor honoris causa of the University
of Utrecht: http://www.pierre-marteau.com/c/jacob/clandestine.html
She considers the
"Treatise of the Three Impostors" as the most radical text of the
Enlightenment and wrote herself the book "The radical Enlightenment."
In his collection
of tales ‘the Aleph’ Jorge Luis Borges writes, in the story Deutsches
Requiem:
The world was
dying of Judaism and of that sickness of Judaism, the faith of Jesus;
it taught
us violence and the faith of the sword. That sword is slaying us, and
we are
comparable to the wizard who fashions a labyrinth and is then doomed to
wander
in it to the end of his days.
It is absolutely
justifiable adding to that the Islam as a sickness of both Judaism
and
Christianity. Actually they all three are fallen in the pitfall which
the
writers of the Gospels have put in the mouth their self created fairy
character
Jesus: "neither put new wine into old bottles" (Matthew. 9.17). In
essence all religion founders, all prophets, gurus, philosophers and
other
so-called enlightened people, commit plagiarism. Knowing there really
is nothing
new under the sun and everything many times has been told already, they
only
all serve up more and more of the same, merely in another packing. Thus
at
present a Gospel absolutely would have not a ghost of chance because
the
critics would state very rightly that no idea at all being really
original. In
their book "The Jesus Mysteries: Was the "Original Jesus" a
Pagan God?" Peter Gandy and Timothy Freke actually tell
the same
what the Treatise is saying. In fact it comes to the Jews also wanted
to have
their own tale and shamelessly and banally have plagiarised, and so
have poured
new wine in old bottles. Voltaire wrote in its Philosophical Stories,
in
the
tale "From the letters of Amabed":
Indeed in the
time of Alexander there was a small people of money changers and
usurers in an out-of-the-way
place of Phenicia, that had lived a very long time in slavery in Babylonia.
During
its captivity it knocked together an own
history, and only in that history has been some talk of Noah ever. When
later
that little people got some privileges in Alexandria, it
translated their annals in Greek. Then they were
translated in Arab, and just since very short our scholars have been
informed
of it slightly. But for that history they (the Brahmans) have as much
contempt
as for the miserable horde which has written it. (You can, however, see
that
Shastasid here speaks as a Brahman, which do not have the gift of
belief and
which must lack that grace.)
About the year
zero that out-of-the-way place of Phenicia was a region, you may
compare complete
well with the present Afghanistan, where tribal chiefs were fighting a
murderous battle with each other and where occupying forces fruitlessly
were
trying to create some order. At that time it swarmed in that torn
little nation
with Messiahs, like is swarms at us with gurus, consultants and other
experts,
claiming that they know the way others have to live and the people,
that always
has believed blindly in authorities still calls for a powerful leader,
because
someone allowing himself to lead does not need thinking himself. Still
the
people is kept quiet with bread and games, still applies the motto
"divide
et impera," divide and dominate, still people maintain their ramshackle
world and self image, whereas they know that it does not tally and
still daily
people rise who think that they have invented the wheel and come out
with something
complete news. But there is really nothing new under the sun. Only
never has
been listened.
A.N.
___________________________________________________________________

CHAPTER 1
OF GOD
I
However
important it may be for all men to know the Truth, very few,
nevertheless, are
acquainted with it, because the majority are incapable of searching it
themselves, or perhaps, do not wish the trouble. Thus we must not be
astonished
if the world is filled with vain and ridiculous opinions, and nothing
is more capable
of making them current than ignorance, which is the sole source of the
false
ideas that exist regarding the Divinity, the soul, and the spirit, and
all the
errors depending thereon.
The
custom of being satisfied with born prejudice has prevailed, and by
following
this custom, mankind agrees in all things with persons interested in
supporting
stubbornly the opinions thus received, and who would speak otherwise
did they
not fear to destroy themselves.
II
What
renders the evil without remedy, is, that after having established
these silly
ideas of God, they teach the people to receive them without
examination. They
take great care to impress them with aversion for philosophers, fearing
that
the Truth which they teach will alienate them. The errors in which the
partisans of these absurdities have been plunged, have thrived so well
that it
is dangerous to combat them. It is too important for these impostors
that the
people remain in this gross and culpable ignorance than to allow them
to be
disabused. Thus they are constrained to disuse the truth, or to be
sacrificed
to the rage of false prophets and selfish souls.
III
If
the people could comprehend the abyss in which this ignorance casts
them, they
would doubtless throw off the yoke of these venal minds, since it is
impossible
for Reason to act without immediately discovering the Truth. It is to
prevent
the good effects that would certainly follow, that they depict it as a
monster
incapable of inspiring any good sentiment, and however we may censure
in general
those who are not reasonable, we must nevertheless be persuaded that
Truth is
quite perverted. These enemies of Truth fall also into such perpetual
contradictions that it is difficult to perceive what their real
pretensions
are. In the meanwhile it is true that Common Sense is the only rule
that men
should follow, and the world should not be prevented from making use of
it.
We
may try to persuade, but those who are appointed to instruct, should
endeavor
to rectify false reasoning and efface prejudices, then will the people
open
their eyes gradually until they become susceptible of Truth, and learn
that God
is not all that they imagine.
IV
To
accomplish this, wild speculation is not necessary, neither is it
required to
deeply penetrate the secrets of Nature. Only a little good sense is
needed to
see that God is neither passionate nor jealous, that justice and mercy
are
false titles attributed to him, and that nothing of what the Prophets
and
Apostles have said constitutes his nature nor his essence. In effect,
to speak
without disguise and to state the case properly, it is certain that
these
doctors were neither more clever or better informed than the rest of
mankind,
but far from that, what they say is so gross that it must be the people
only
who would believe them.
The
matter is self-evident, but to make it more clear, let us see if they
are
differently constituted than other men.
V
As to
their birth and the ordinary functions of life, it is agreed that they
possessed nothing above the human; that they were born of man and woman
and
lived the same as ourselves. But for mind, it must be that God favored
them
more than other men, for they claimed an understanding more brilliant
than
others. We must admit that mankind has a leaning toward blindness,
because it
is said that God loved the prophets more than the rest of mankind, that
he
frequently communicated with them, and he believed them also of good
faith. Now
if this condition was sensible, and without considering that all men
resembled
each other, and that they each had a principle equal in all, it was
pretended
that these prophets were of extraordinary attainments and were created
expressly to utter the oracles of God. But further, if they had more
wit than
common, and more perfect understanding, what do we find in their
writings to
oblige us to have this opinion of them?
The
greater part of their writings is so obscure that it is not understood,
and put
together in such a poor manner that we can hardly believe that they
comprehended it themselves, and that they must have been very ignorant
impostors. That which causes this belief of them is that they boasted
of
receiving directly from God all that they announced to the people -- an
absurd
and ridiculous belief -- and avowing that God only spoke to them in
dreams.
Dreams are quite natural, and a person must be quite vain or senseless
to boast
that God speaks to him at such a time, and when faith is added, he must
be
quite credulous since there is no evidence that dreams are oracles.
Suppose
even that God manifested himself by dreams, by visions, or in any other
way,
are we obliged to believe a man who may deceive himself, and which is
worse,
who is inclined to lie?
Now
we see that under the ancient law they had for prophets none more
esteemed than
at the present day. Then when the people were tired of their sophistry,
which
often tended to turn them from obedience to their legitimate Ruler,
they
restrained them by various punishments, just as Jesus was overwhelmed
because
he had not, like Moses, [Moses killed at one time 24,000 men for
opposing his
law.] an army at his back to sustain his opinions. Added to that, the
Prophets
were so in the habit of contradicting each other that among four
hundred not
one reliable one was to be found. [It is written in the First Book of
Kings,
ch. 22, v. 6, that Ahab, King of Israel, consulted 400 prophets, and
found them
entirely false in the success of their predictions.]
It is
even certain that the aim of their prophecies, as well as the laws of
the
celebrated legislators were to perpetuate their memories by causing
mankind to
believe that they had private conference with God. Most political
objects have
been projected in such manner. However, such tricks have not always
been
successful for those, who -- with the exception of Moses -- had not the
means
of providing for their safety.
VI
This
being determined, let us examine the ideas which the Prophets had of
God, and
we will smile at their grossness and contradictions. To believe them,
God is a
purely corporeal being. Micah sees him seated. Daniel clothed in white
and in
the form of an old man, and Ezekiel like a fire. So much for the Old
Testament,
now for the New. The disciples of J.C. imagined the Holy Spirit in the
figure
of a dove; the apostles, in the form of tongues of fire, and St. Paul, as a light which dazzled the
sight unto blindness.
To
show their contradictory opinions, Samuel, (I. ch. 15, v. 29), believed that God never
repented of his own resolution. Again, Jeremiah, (ch. 18, v. 10), says
that God
repented of a resolve he had taken. Joel, (ch. 2, V. 13), says that he
only
repents of the evil he has done to mankind. Genesis (ch. 4, v. 7),
informs us
that man is prone to evil but that He has nothing for him but
blessings. On the
contrary, St. Paul, (Romans,
ch. 9, v. 10), says that men have no command of concupiscence except by
the
grace and particular calling of God. These are the noble sentiments
that these
good people have of God, and what they would have us believe.
Sentiments,
however, entirely sensible, and quite material as we see, and yet they
say that
God has nothing in common with matter, is a sensible and material
being, and
that he is something incomprehensible to our understanding. I should
like to be
informed how these contradictions may be harmonized, and how, under
such
visible and palpable conditions it is proper to believe them. Again,
how can we
accept the testimony of a people so clownish that they, notwithstanding
all the
artifices of Moses, should imagine a calf to be their God! But not
considering
the dreams of a race raised in servitude, and among the superstitious,
we can
agree that ignorance has produced credulity, and credulity falsehood,
from
whence arises all the errors which exist today.

CHAPTER II
REASONS WHICH
HAVE CAUSED MANKIND TO
CREATE FOR THEMSELVES AN INVISIBLE BEING WHICH HAS BEEN COMMONLY CALLED
GOD.
I
Those
who ignore physical causes have a natural fear born of doubt *. Where
there
exists a power which to them is dark or unseen, from thence comes a
desire to
pretend the existence of invisible Beings, that is to say their own
phantoms
which they invoke in adversity, whom they praise in prosperity, and of
whom in
the end they make Gods. And as the visions of men go to extremes, must
we be
astonished if there are created an innumerable quantity of Divinities?
It is
the same perceptible fear of invisible powers which has been the origin
of
Religions, that each forms to his fashion. Many individuals to whom it
was
important that mankind should possess such fancies, have not scrupled
to
encourage mankind in such beliefs, and they have made it their law
until they
have prevailed upon the people to blindly obey them by the fear of the
future.
(*) Cætera,
quæ.fieri in terris, Cæloque tuentur
Mortales pavidis cum pendens mentibus sæpr
Efficiunt animos humileis formidine
Divum
Depressosque
premum
ad terram ,propterea quod
lgnorantia causarum conferre Deorum
Cogit ad imperium res, & concedere regnum: &
Quorum operum causas
nulla
ratione videre
Possunt hæc fierj Divino
numine rentur.
Lucret. de rer. Nat,
Lib
VI, vers 49 & seq.
II
The
Gods having thus been invented, it is easy to imagine that they
resembled man,
and who, like them, created everything for some purpose, for they
unanimously
agree that God has made nothing except for man, and reciprocally that
man is
made only for God. [Man is the noblest work of God -- but nobody ever
said so
but man. -- Fra Elbertus.] This conclusion being general, we can see
why man
has so thoroughly accepted it, and know for that reason that they have
taken
occasion to create false ideas of good and evil, merit and sin, praise
and
blame, order and confusion, beauty and deformity -- and similar
qualities.
III
It
should be agreed that all men are born in profound ignorance, and that
the only
thing natural to them is a desire to discover what may be useful and
proper,
and evade what may be inexpedient to them. Thence it follows:
- that we
believe
that to be free it suffices to feel personally that one can wish and
desire without being annoyed by the causes which dispose us to wish and
desire, because we do not know them.
- Second, it
consequently occurs that men are contented to do nothing but for one
object, that is to say, for that object which is preferable above all,
and that is why they have a desire only to know the final result of
their action, imagining that after discovering this they have no reason
to doubt anything. Now as they find in and about themselves many means
of procuring what they desire: having, for example, ears to hear, eyes
to see, animals to nourish, a sun to give light, they have formed this
reasoning, that there is nothing in nature, which was not made for
them, and of which they may dispose and enjoy. Then reflecting that
they did not make this world, they believe it to be a well-founded
proposition to imagine a Supreme Being who has made it for them such as
it is, for after satisfying themselves that they could not have made
it, they conclude that it was the work of one or several Gods who
intended it for the use and pleasure of man alone. On the other hand,
the nature of the Gods whom man has admitted, being unknown, they have
concluded in their own minds that these Gods susceptible of the same
passions as men, have made the earth only for them, and that man to
them was extremely precious. But as each one has different inclinations
it became proper to adore God according to the humor of each, to
attract his blessings and to cause Him to make all Nature subject to
his desires.
IV
By
this method this precedent becomes Superstition, and it is implanted so
that
the grossest natures are believed capable of penetrating the doctrine
of final
causes as if they had perfect knowledge. Thus in place of showing that
nature
has made nothing in vain, they show that God and Nature dream as well
as men,
and that they may not be accused of doubting things, let us see how
they have
put forth their false reasoning on this subject.
Experience
causing them to see a myriad of inconveniences marring the pleasure of
life,
such as storms, earthquakes, sickness, famine and thirst, they draw the
conclusion that nature has not been made for them alone. They attribute
all
these evils to the wrath of the Gods, who are vexed by the offences of
man, and
they cannot be disabused of these ideas by the daily instances which
should
prove to them that blessings and evils have been always common to the
wicked
and the good, and they will not agree to a proposition so plain and
perceptible.
The
reason for that is, it is more easy to remain in ignorance than to
abolish a
belief established for many centuries and introduce something more
probable.
V
This
precedent has caused another, which is the belief that the judgments of
God
were incomprehensible, and that for this reason, the knowledge of truth
is
beyond the human mind; and mankind would still dwell in error were it
not that
mathematics and several other sciences had destroyed these prejudices.
VI
By
this it may be seen that Nature or God does not propose any end, and
that all
final causes are but human fictions. A long lecture is not necessary
since this
doctrine takes away from God the perfection ascribed to him, and this
is how it
may be proved. If God acted for a result, either for himself or
another, he
desires what he has not, and we must allow that there are times when
God has
not the wherewith to act; he has merely desired it and that only
creates an
impotent God. To omit nothing that may be applied to this reasoning,
let us
oppose it with those of a contrary nature. If, for example, a stone
falls on a
person and kills him, it is well known they say, that the stone fell
with the
design of killing the man, and that could only happen by the will of
God. If
you reply that the wind caused the stone to drop at the moment the man
passed,
they will ask why the man should have passed precisely at the time when
the
wind moved the stone. If you say that the wind was so severe that the
sea was
also troubled since the day before while there appeared to be no
agitation in
the air, and the man having been invited to dine with a friend, went to
keep
his appointment. Again they ask, for the man never got there, why he
should be
the guest of his friend at this time more than another, adding
questions after
questions, finally avowing that it was but the will of God, (which is a
true
"asses bridge") and the cause of this misfortune.
Again
when they note the symmetry of the human body, they stand in admiration
and
conclude how ignorant they are of the causes of a thing which to them
appears
so marvelous, that it is a supernatural work, in which the causes known
to us
could have no part.
Thence
it comes that those who desire to know the real cause of supposed
miracles and
penetrate like true scholars into their natural causes without amusing
themselves with the prejudice of the ignorant, it happens that the true
scholar
passes for impious and heretical by the malice of those whom the vulgar
recognize as the expounders of Nature and of God. These mercenary
individuals
do not question the ignorance which holds the people in astonishment,
upon whom
they subsist and who preserve their credit.
VII
Mankind
being thus of the ridiculous opinion that all they see is made for
themselves,
have made it a religious duty to apply it to their interest, and of
judging the
price of things by the profit they gain. Thence proceed the ideas they
have
formed of good and evil, of order and confusion, of heat and cold, of
beauty
and ugliness, which serve to explain to them the nature of things,
which in the
end are not what they imagine. Because they pride themselves in having
free
will they judge themselves capable of deciding between Praise and
blame, sin
and merit, calling everything good which redounds to their profit and
which
concerns divine worship, and to the contrary denominate as evil that
which agrees
with neither. Because the ignorant are not capable of judging what may
be a
little abstruse, and having no idea of things only by the aid of
imagination
which they consider understanding, these folk who know not what
represents
order in the world believe all that they imagine. Man being inclined in
such a
manner that they think things well or ill ordered as they have the
facility or
trouble to conclude when good sense would teach differently. Some are
more
pleased to be weary of the means of investigation, being satisfied to
remain as
they are, preferring order to confusion, as if order was another thing
than a
pure effect of the imagination of man, so that when it is said that God
has
made everything in order, it is recognizing that he has that faculty of
imagination as well as man. If it was not so, perhaps to favor human
imagination they pretend that God created this world in the easiest
manner
imaginable, although there are an hundred things far above the force of
imagination, and an infinity which may be thrown into disorder by
reason of
weakness.
VIII
For
other ideas, they are purely the effect of the same imagination, which
have
nothing real, and which are but the different modes of which this power
is
capable. For example, if the movement which objects impress upon the
nerves by
the means of the eyes is agreeable to the senses, we say that these
objects are
beautiful, that odors are good or bad, that tastes are sweet or bitter,
that
which we touch hard or soft, sounds, harsh or agreeable. According as
odors,
tastes or sounds strike and penetrate the senses, just so we find a
belief that
God is capable of taking pleasure in melody, that the celestial
movements are a
harmonious concert, proof evident that each one believes that things
are such
as they are imagined, or that the world is purely imaginary. That is
why we
should not be surprised if we rarely found two men of the same opinion,
and
some who glorify themselves in doubting everything. For while men have
bodies
which resemble each other in many particulars, they differ in some
others, and
it should not astonish us that what seems good to one appears bad to
another:
what pleases this one displeases the other, from which we may infer
that
opinions only differ by fancy, that understanding passes for little,
and to
conclude, things which happen every day are purely the effects of
imagination.
If one should consult the lights of understanding of philosophers he
would have
faith that everybody would agree to the truth, and that judgments would
be more
uniform and reasonable than they are.
IX
It is
then evident that all the reasons of which men are accustomed to avail
themselves when they endeavor to explain Nature, are only methods of
imagination which prove nothing less than they pretend, and because
they have
given to these reasons names so real that if they existed otherwise
than in
imagination I would not call them reasonable beings, but purely
chimerical,
seeing nothing more easy than to respond to arguments founded on these
vulgar
notions and which we oppose as follows.
If it
was true that the universe was a chance happening, and a necessary
sequel of
divine nature, whence come the imperfections and faults which we
remark? For
example, corruption which fills the air with bad odor, many
disagreeable
objects, so many disorders, so much evil, so many crimes and other like
occurrences. Nothing is more easy than to refute these objections, for
one
cannot judge of the perfection of ancient existence only by knowing its
essence
and nature, and we deceive ourselves in thinking that a thing is more
or less
perfect, as it pleases or displeases, is useful or useless to human
nature; and
to close the mouths of those who ask why God has not created all men
without
exception that they might be guided by the light of reason, it is
enough to say
that it was because the material was not sufficient to give each being
the
degree of perfection that was most suitable for him, or to speak more
proper,
because the laws of nature were so ample and extensive that they could
suffice
for the production of all things of which an infinite understanding is
capable.
X
Until
now we have fought the popular idea concerning the Divinity, but we
have not
yet said what God is, and if we were asked, we should say that the word
represents to us an Infinite Being, of whom one of his attributes is to
be a
substance of extent and consequently eternal and infinite. The extent
or the
quantity not being finite or divisible, it may be imagined that the
matter was
everywhere the same, our understanding not distinguishing parts. For
example,
water, as much as water is imagined, is divisible, and its parts
separable from
one another, though as much as a corporeal substance it is nether
separable nor
divisible. [So of water, however, it may be subject to generation and
corruption, as long as it is substance it is not subject to separation
and
division.] Thus neither matter or quantity have anything unworthy of
God, for
if all is God, and all comes surely from his essence, it follows quite
absolutely that He is all that he contains, since it is
incomprehensible that
Beings quite material should be contained in a Being who is not. That
we may
not think that this is a new opinion, Terlullian, one of the foremost
men among
the Christians, has pronounced against Apelles, that, "that which is
not
matter is nothing," and against Praxias, that "all substance is
matter," without having this doctrine condemned in the four first
Councils
of the Christian Church, ecumenical and general. (The four first
Councils were 1.
That of Nice in the year 345, under the Emperor Constantine the Great,
and
under Pope Sylvester
I.; 2. That of Constantinople in the
year
381, under the Emperors Gratian, Valentinian and Theodore and the Pope Damase I.; 3. That of Ephesus
in the year 431, under the Emperor
Theodore, the younger, and Valentinian and under the Pope Celestin; 4.
That of Chalcedon in the year 451, under
Valentinian and Martian, and under Pope Leo I.).
XI
These
sentiments are plain and the only ones that good and sound judgment can
form of
God. However, there are but few who are satisfied with such simplicity.
Boorish
people, who are accustomed to adulation of opinion, demand a God who
resembles
earthly kings. The pomp and circumstance surrounding them so
fascinates, that
to take away all hope of going after death to increase the number of
heavenly
courtiers enjoying the same pleasure which attaches to the Court of
Kings, is
to take away the consolation and the only things which prevent them
from going
to despair over the miseries of life. They want a just and avenging
God, who
rewards and punishes after the manner of kings, a God susceptible of
all human
passions and weaknesses. They give him feet, hands, and ears, and yet
they do
not regard a God so constituted as material. They say that man is his
masterpiece, and even his own image, but do not allow that the copy is
like the
original. In a word, the God of the people of today is subject to as
many forms
as Jupiter of the Pagans, and what is still more strange, these follies
contradict
each other and shock good sense. The vulgar reverence them because they
firmly
believe what the Prophets have said, although these visionaries among
the
Hebrews, were the same as the augurs and the diviners among the pagans.
[These,
among us, are the Astrologers and Fanatics.] They consult the Bible as
if God
or nature was therein expounded to them in a special manner, however
this book
is only a rhapsody of fragments, gathered at various times, selected by
several
persons, and given to the people according to the fancy of the Robbins,
who did
not publish them until after approving some, and rejecting others, and
seeing
if they were conformable or opposed to the Law of Moses. [the Talmud
remarks
that the Robbins deliberated whether they should omit the Book of
Proverbs and
that of Ecclesiastes from the number of canonicals, and would have done
so had
they not found in several places that they eulogized the Mosaic law.
They would
have done the same with the prophecies of Ezekiel had not a certain
Chananias
undertook to harmonize them with the same law.] Yes, such is the malice
and
stupidity of men that they prefer to pass their lives disputing with
one
another, and worshipping a book received from ignorant people; a book
with
little order or method, which everyone admits as confused and badly
conceived,
only serving to foment divisions.
Christians
would rather adore this phantom than listen to the law of Nature which
God --
that is to say, Nature, which is the active principle -- has written in
the heart
of man. All other laws are but human fictions, and pure illusions
forged, not
by Demons or evil spirits, which are fanciful ideas, but by the skill
of
Princes and Ecclesiastics to give the former more warrant for their
authority,
and to enrich the latter by the traffic in an infinity of chimeras
which sell
to the ignorant at a good price.
All
other laws are not supported save on the authority of the Bible, in the
original of which appear a thousand instances of extraordinary and
impossible
things, [The versions that we have differ greatly in a thousand places,
one
with another, until the end of the book.] and which speaks only of
recompenses
or punishments for good or bad actions, but which are wisely deferred
for a
future life, relying that the trick will not be discovered in this, no
one
having returned from the other to tell the news. Thus, men kept ever
wavering
between hope and fear, are held to their duty by the belief they aver
that God
has created man only to render him eternally happy or unhappy, and
which has
given rise to the infinity of religions which we are about to discuss.

CHAPTER IV
WHAT THE WORD
RELIGION SIGNIFIES, AND HOW
AND WHY SUCH A GREAT NUMBER HAVE BEEN INTRODUCED IN THE WORLD.
I
Before
the word Religion was introduced in the world mankind was only obliged
to
follow natural laws and to conform to common sense. This instinct alone
was the
tie by which men were united, and so very simple was this bond of
unity, that
nothing among them was more rare than dissensions. But when fear
created a
suspicion that there were Gods, and invisible powers, they raised
altars to
these imaginary beings, so that in putting off the yoke of Nature and
Reason,
which are the sources of true life, they subjected themselves by vain
ceremonies and superstitious worship to frivolous phantoms of the
imagination,
and that is whence arose this word Religion which makes so much noise
in the
world.
Men
having admitted invisible forces which were all-powerful over them,
they
worshipped them to appease them, and further imagined that Nature was a
being
subordinate to this power, thence they had the idea that it was a great
mace
that threatened, or a slave that acted only by the order that such
power gave
him. Since this false idea had broken their will they had only scorn
for
Nature, and respect only for those pretended beings that they called
their
Gods. Thence came the ignorance in which mankind was plunged, and from
which
the well-informed, however deep the abyss, could have rescued them, if
their
zeal had not been extinguished by those who led them blindly, and who
lived by
imposture. But though there was but little appearance of success in the
enterprise, it was not necessary to abandon the party of truth, and
only in
consideration of those who were afflicted with the symptoms of so great
an
evil, were generous souls available to represent matters as they were.
II
Fear
which created Gods, made also Religion, and when men imbibed the notion
that
there were invisible agencies which were the cause of their good and
bad
fortune, they lost their good sense and reason substituting for their
chimeras
so many Divinities who had care of their conduct.
After
having forged these Gods they were curious to know of what matter they
consisted, and finally imagined that they should be of the same
substance as
the soul. Then being persuaded that the latter resembled the shadows
which
appear in a mirror, or during sleep, they believed that some Gods were
real
substances but so thin and subtle that to distinguish them from bodies
they
called them Spirits. So that bodies and spirits were in effect the same
thing,
and differed neither more nor less, and to be both corporeal and
incorporeal is
a most incomprehensible thing. The reason given is that each spirit has
a
proper form, and is included within some limit, that is to say that it
has some
boundaries, and consequently must be a body however thin and subtle it
might
be. (See Tertullian ante, also Hobbes' Leviathan, C. 12, p. 56.)
III
The
ignorant, that is, the greater part of mankind having settled in this
manner
the substance of their Gods, tried also to determine by what methods
these
invisible powers produced their effects. Not being able to do this
definitely
by reason of their ignorance, they put faith in their conjectures,
blindly
judging the future by the past, while seeing neither cohesion nor
dependence.
In
all that they undertook they saw but the past, and foretold good or
evil for
the future according as the same enterprise had at another time turned
out
either good or bad. Phormion having defeated the Lacedemonians at the
battle of
Naupacte, the Athenians, after his death, chose another general of the
same
name: Hannibal having succumbed to the arms
of Scipio Africanus, the Romans, remembering this great success, sent
another
Scipio to the same country against Caesar, which acts gained nothing
for either
the Athenians or the Romans. So after two or three experiences, good or
bad
fortune is made synonymous with certain names or places; others make
use of
certain words called enchantments, which they believe to be
efficacious; some
cause trees to speak, create man from a morsel of bread, and transform
anything
that may appear before them. (Hobbes' Leviatlian de homine. Cap. 12, p.
56-57.)
IV
Invisible
powers being established in this way, straightway men revere them only
as they
do their rulers, that is to say, by tokens of submission and respect,
as
witness offerings, prayers, and similar things, I say at first, for
nature has
not yet learned to use on such occasions sacrifices of blood, which
have only
been instituted for the benefit of the sacrificers and the ministers
called to
the service of these beautiful Gods.
V
These
causes of Religion, that is, Hope and Fear, leaving out the passions,
judgments
and various resolutions of mankind, have produced the great number of
extravagant beliefs which have caused so much evil, and the many
revolutions
which have convulsed the nations.
The
honor and revenue which attaches to the priesthood, and which has since
been
accorded to the ministry of the Gods, and those having ecclesiastical
charges,
inflame the ambition and the avarice of cunning individuals who profit
by the
stupidity of the people, who readily submit in their weakness, and we
know how
insensibly is caused the easy habit of encouraging falsehood and hating
truth.
VI
The
empire of falsehood being established, and the ambitious ones
encouraged by the
advantage of being above their fellows, the latter endeavor to gain
repute by a
pretense of being friendly with the invisible Gods whom the vulgar
fear. For
better success, each schemes in his own way, and multiplies deities so
that
they are met at every turn.
VII
The
formless matter of the world they term the god Chaos, and the same
honor is
accorded to heaven, earth, the sea, the wind, and the planets, and they
are
made both male and female. Further on we find birds, reptiles, the
crocodile,
the calf, the dog, the lamb, the serpent, the hog, and in fact all
kinds of
animals and plants constitute the better part. Each river and fountain
bears
the name of a God, each house had its own, each man his genius; in fact
all
space above and beneath the earth was occupied by spirits, shades and
demons.
It was not sufficient to maintain a Divinity in all imaginable places,
but they
feared to offend time, day, night, concord, love, peace, victory,
contention,
mildew, honor, virtue, fever, and health, or to insult these charming
divinities whom they always imagined ready to discharge lightning on
the heads
of men, provided temples and altars were not erected to them.
As a
sequel, man commenced to fear his own special genius, whom some invoked
under
the name of Muses, and others under the name of Fortune adored their
own
ignorance. The latter sanctified their debauches in the name of Cupid,
their
rage in the name of Furies, and their natural parts under the name of
Priapus,
in a word, there was nothing which did not bear the name of a God or a
Demon.
(Hobbes' de homine, Chap. 12, p. 58.)
VIII
The
founders of Religion having based their impostures on the ignorance of
the
people, took great care to maintain them by the adoration of images
which they
pretended were inhabited by the Gods, and this caused a flood of gold
and
benefactions called holy things, to pour into the coffers of the
priests. These
gifts were regarded as sacred, and designed for the use of these holy
ministers, and none were so audacious as to pretend to their office, or
even to
touch them. To allure the people more successfully, these priests made
prophecies and pretended to penetrate the future by the commerce which
they
boasted of having with the Gods. There is nothing so natural as to know
destiny. These impostors were too well informed to omit any
circumstance so
advantageous for their designs. Some were established at Delos, others at Delphos and elsewhere,
where
by ambiguous oracles they replied to the demands made of them. Women
even were
engaged in these impostures, and the Romans in their great Calamities
had
recourse to the Sibylline books; fools and lunatics passed for
enthusiasts, and
those who pretended to converse with the dead were called necromancers.
Others
read the future by the flight of birds, or by the entrails of beasts.
Indeed
the eyes, the hands, the face, or an extraordinary object, all seemed
to them
to possess a good or bad omen, so it is true that the ignorant will
receive any
desired impression when the secret of their wish is found. (Hobbes' de
homine,
Chap. 12, pp. 58-59.)
IX
The
ambitious, who have always been grand masters of the art of trickery,
have
always followed this method in expounding their laws, and to oblige the
people
to submit to them they have persuaded them that they had received them
either
from a God or a Goddess.
Although
there was a multitude of Divinities, those who worshipped them called
Pagans
had no general system of Religion. Each republic, each state and city,
each
particular place had its own rites and thought of the Divinity as fancy
dictated. Following this came legislators more cunning than these first
tricksters, and who employed methods more studied and more certain for
the
propagation and perpetuity of their laws, as well as the culture of
such
ceremonies and fanaticism as they deemed proper to establish.
Among
the great number Arabia and its frontiers has given birth to three who
have
been distinguished as much by the kind of laws and worship which they
established, as by the idea they have given of a Divinity to their
followers,
and the means they have taken to cause this idea to be received and
their laws
to be approved.
Moses
is the most ancient; Jesus coming after labored after his manner in
preserving
the foundation of his laws while abolishing the remainder; and Mahomet
appearing later on the scene has taken from one and the other religion
to
compose his own, and therefore he is declared the enemy of all the
Gods.
Let
us see the character of these three Legislators, examine their conduct,
and
then judge afterwards who are the best founded: those who revered them
as Holy
men and Gods, or those who treated them as schemers and impostors.
X
OF MOSES
The
celebrated Moses, grandson of a great magician, [This word must not be
taken in
the ordinary sense, for what is called a magician among learned people
means an
adroit man, a skillful charlatan, and a subtle juggler whose entire art
consists in dexterity and skill, and not in any compact with the devil
as the
common people believe.] by the account of Justin Martyr, had all the
advantages
proper for what he afterwards became. It is well known that the
Hebrews, of whom
he became the Chief, were a nation of shepherds whom King Pharaoh Orus
I.
received in his country in consideration of services that he had
received from
one of them in the time of a great famine, He gave them some lands in
the east
of Egypt in a country fertile in pasturage, and consequently adapted
for their
flocks.
During
200 years they rapidly increased, because, being considered foreigners
they
were not required to serve in the armies of Pharaoh, and because of the
natural
advantages of the lands which Orus had granted them. Some bands of
Arabs came
to join them as brothers, for they were of a similar race, and they
increased
so astonishingly that the land of Goshen not being able to contain them
they
spread all over Egypt, giving Pharaoh Memnon II. good reason to fear
that they
might be capable of some dangerous attempt in case Egypt was attacked (as happened soon
after) by
their active enemies, the Ethiopians.
Thus
a policy of state compelled this Prince to curtail their privileges,
and to
seek means to weaken and enslave them. Pharaoh Orus II. surnamed
Busiris
because of his cruelty, and who succeeded Memnon, followed his plan
regarding
the Jews. Wishing to perpetuate his memory by the erection of the
Pyramids and
building the city of Thebes, he condemned the Hebrews to labor
at making bricks, the material
in the earth of their country being adapted for this purpose. During
this
servitude the celebrated Moses was born, in the same year that the King
issued
an edict to cast all the male Hebrew children into the Nile, seeing that he had no surer means
of
exterminating this rabble of foreigners.
Moses
was exposed to perish in the waters in a basket covered with pitch,
which his
mother placed in the rushes on the banks of the river. It chanced that
Thermitis,
daughter of Orus, was walking near the shore and hearing the cries of
the
child, the natural compassion of her sex inspired her to save it.
Orus
having died, Thermitis succeeded him, and Moses having been presented
to her,
she caused him to be educated in a manner befitting the son of a Queen
of the
wisest and most polished nation of the universe. In a word he was
tattered in
all the science of the Egyptians, and it is admitted, and they have
represented
Moses to us as the greatest politician, the wisest philosopher and the
most
famous magician of his time. It followed that he was admitted to the
order of
Priesthood, which was in Egypt
what the Druids were in Gaul,
that is to say -- everything.
Those
who are not familiar with what the government of Egypt was, will be
pleased to
know that the famous dynasties having come to an end, the entire
country was
dependent upon one Sovereign who divided it into several provinces of
no great
extent. The governors of these countries were called monarchs, and they
were
ordinarily of the powerful order of Priests, who possessed nearly
one-third of Egypt. The king named these
monarchs, and if we can believe the authors who have written of Moses
and
compare what they have said with what Moses himself has written, we may
conclude that he was monarch of the land of Goshen, and that he owed his
elevation to Thermitis, who had also saved his life.
We
see what Moses was in Egypt, where he had both time and means
to study the manners of the
Egyptians, and those of his nation: their governing passions, their
inclinations, and all that would be of service to him in his effort to
excite
the revolution of which he was the promoter.
Thermitis
having died, her successor renewed the persecution against the Hebrews,
and
Moses having lost his previous favor, and fearing that he could not
justify
several homicides that he had committed, took the precaution to flee.
He
retired to Arabia Petrea, on the confines of Egypt, and chance brought him to the
home of a
tribal chief of the country. His services, and the talents that his
master
remarked in him, merited his good graces and one of his daughters in
marriage.
It is here to be noted that Moses was such a bad Jew, and knew so
little of the
redoubtable God whom he invented later, that be wedded an idolatress,
and did
not even think of having his children circumcised.
It
was in the Arabian deserts, while guarding the flocks of his
father-in-law and
brother-in-law, he conceived the design of avenging the injustice which
had
been done him by the King of Egypt, by bringing trouble and sedition in
the
court of his states; and he flattered himself that he could easily
succeed in
this by reason of his talents, as by the disposition which he knew he
would
find in his nation already incensed against the government by reason of
the bad
treatment that they had been caused to suffer.
It
appears by the history which he has told of this revolution, or at
least by the
author of the books attributed to Moses, that Jethro, his
brother-in-law, was
in the conspiracy, as well as his brother Aaron and his sister Mary,
who had
remained in Egypt, and with whom he could
arrange to hold correspondence. As may be seen by the sequel he had
formed a
vast plan in good politics, and he could put in service against Egypt
all the
science he had learned there, and the pretended Magic in which he was
more
subtle and skillful than all those at the Court of Pharaoh who
possessed the
same accomplishments. It was by these pretended miracles that he gained
the
confidence of those of his nation that he caused to rebel. He joined to
them
thousands of mutinous Egyptians, Ethiopians and Arabs. Boasting the
power of
his Divinity and the frequent interviews he held with Him, and causing
Him to
intervene in all the measures he took with the chiefs of the revolt, he
persuaded them so well that they followed him to the number of 600,000
combatants -- besides the women and children -- across the deserts of
Arabia,
of which he knew all the windings.
After
a six days march on a laborious retreat, he commanded his followers to
consecrate the seventh to his God by a public rest, to make them
believe that
this God favored him, that he approved his sway, and that no one could
have the
audacity to contradict him.
There
were never any people more ignorant than the Hebrews, and consequently
none
more credulous. To be convinced of this profound ignorance, it is only
necessary to recall the condition of these people in Egypt when Moses made them revolt. They
were
hated by the Egyptians because of their pastoral life, persecuted by
the
Sovereign and employed in the vilest labor.
Among
such a populace it was not very difficult for Moses to avail himself of
his
talents. He made them believe that his God (whom he sometimes simply
called an
angel) -- the God of their Fathers -- appeared to him, that it was by
his order
that he took care to lead them, that he had chosen him for Governor,
and that
they would be the favored people of this God, provided they believed
what he
said on his part.
He
added to his exhortations on the part of his God, the adroit use of his
prestige, and the knowledge that he had of nature. He confirmed what he
said to
them by what might be called miracles, always easy to perform, and
which made a
great impression on an imbecile populace.
It
may be remarked above all, that he believed he had found a sure method
for
holding this people submissive to his orders, in making accessory of
the
statement that God himself was their leader: by night a column of fire
and a
cloud by day. But it can be proved that this was the grossest trick of
this
impostor, and that it might serve him for a long time. He had learned
during
his travels that he had made in Arabia, a country vast and uninhabited,
that it
was the custom of those who traveled in companies to take guides who
conducted
them in the night by means of a brazier, the flame of which they
followed, and
in the day time by the smoke of the same brazier which all the members
of the
caravan could see, and consequently not go astray. This custom
prevailed among
the Medes and Assyrians, and it is quite natural that Moses used it,
and made
it pass for a miracle, and a mark of the protection of his God. If I
may not be
believed when I say that this was a trick, let Moses himself be
believed, who
in Numbers, Chap. x. v. 29-33, asks his brother-in-law, Hobab, to come
with the
Israelites, that he may show them the roads, because he knew the
country. This
is demonstrative, for if it was God who marched before Israel night and day in the cloud and the
column
of fire could they have a better guide? Meanwhile here is Moses
exhorting his
brother-in-law by the most pressing motives of interest to serve him as
Guide.
Then the cloud and the column of fire was God only for the people, and
not for
Moses, who knew what it was.
These
poor unfortunates thus seduced, charmed at being adopted by the Master
of God,
as they were told, emerging from a hard and cruel bondage, applauded
Moses and
swore to obey him. His authority was thus confirmed. He sought to
perpetuate
it, and under pretext of establishing divine worship, or of a supreme
God of
whom he said he was the lieutenant, he made his brother and his
children chiefs
of the Royal Palace,
that is to say, of the place where
miracles were performed out of the sight and presence of the people.
So he
continued these pretended miracles, at which the simple were amazed and
others
stupefied, but which caused those who were wise and who saw through
these
impostures to pity them. However skillful Moses was, and how many
clever tricks
he knew how to do, he would have had much trouble to secure obedience
if he had
not a strong army. [He remained from time to time in a solitary place
under
pretext of privately conferring with God, and by this pretended
intercourse
with the Divinity he taught them a respect and obedience which was, in
the
meanwhile, unlimited.] Deceit without force has rarely succeeded.
It
was in order to have assured means to maintain obedience against the
discerning
that he continued to place in his own faction those of his tribe,
giving them
all the important charges and exempting them from the greater part of
the
labors. He knew how to create jealousies among the other tribes, some
of whom
took his part against the others. Finally assuring adroitly to his
interest
those who appeared the most enlightened, by placing them in his
confidence, he
secured them by giving them employment of distinction.
After
that he found some of these idiots had the courage to reproach his bad
faith;
that under his false pretense of justice and equity he was seizing
everything.
As the sovereign authority was vested in his blood in such manner that
no one
had a right to aspire to it, they considered finally that he was less
their
father than their tyrant.
On
such occasions Moses by cunning policy confounded these 'free-thinkers'
and
spared none who censured his government.
With
such precautions, and cloaking his punishments under the name of Divine
vengeance, he continued absolute, and to finish in the same way he
began, that
is to say by deceit and imposture, he chose an extraordinary death. He
cast
himself in an abyss in a lonely place where he retired from time to
time under
pretext of conferring with God, and which he had long designed for his
tomb.
His body never having been found, it was believed that his God had
taken him,
and that he had become like Him.
He
knew that the memories of the patriarchs who preceded him were held in
great
veneration when their sepulchers were found, but that was not
sufficient for an
ambition like his. He must be revered as a God for whom death had no
terrors,
and to this end all his efforts were directed since the beginning of
his reign
when he said that he was established of God -- to be the God of
Pharaoh. Elijah
[See Book of Kings, Chapter II.] gave his example, also Romulus, [Romulus drowned himself in the morass of
Cherres, and his body, not being found, it was believed that he was
raised to
heaven and deified.
When Romulus was reviewing his forces in
the plain of Caprae there suddenly arose a thunderstorm during which he
was
enveloped in so thick a cloud that he was lost to the view of his army:
nor
thereafter on this earth was Romulus
seen. Livy 1. I, c. 16.] Empedocles [Empedocles, a celebrated
philosopher, threw himself into the crater of Mount Etna, to cause the
belief
that, like Romulus, he was raised to heaven.] and all those who from a
desire
to immortalize their names, have concealed the time and place of their
death so
that they would be deemed immortal.
XI
To
return to the law-givers, there were none who, having attributed their
laws to
Divinity, did not endeavor to encourage the belief that they themselves
were
more than human.
Numa,
having tasted the delights of solitude, did not wish to leave it for
the throne
of Rome, but being forced by public
acclamation, he profited by the devotion of the Romans. He informed
them that
he had talked with God, and if they desired him for King they must
observe the
Divine laws and institutions which had been dictated to him by the
nymph
Egeria. [It is recorded by Livy (liber II., c. 21,) that there is a
grove
through which flowed a perennial stream, taking its origin in a dark
cave, in
which Numa was accustomed to meet the goddess, and to receive
instructions as
to his political and religious institutions.]
Alexander
wished to be considered a son of Jupiter. Perseus pretended to be a son
of the
same God and the virgin Danae; Plato, of Apollo, and a virgin, which,
perhaps,
is the cause of the belief among the Egyptians that the Spirit of God
"AvE'Dpa Tea-(" [Breath or inspiration of the Gods.] could get a
woman with child as the wind did the Iberian mares. [The Tartars assert
that
Genghis Khan was born of a virgin, and that Foh, according to the
Chinese
belief, derived his origin from a virgin rendered pregnant by the rays
of the
sun.
Since
the introduction of the umbrella or sun-shade into the Central Flowery Kingdom occurrences like the latter have
been
infrequent.]
XII
OF JESUS CHRIST
Jesus
Christ, who was not unacquainted with the maxima and science of the
Egyptians,
among whom he dwelt several years, availed himself of this knowledge,
deeming
it proper for the design which he meditated. Considering that Moses was
renowned because he commanded an ignorant people, he undertook to build
on a
similar foundation, and his followers were only some idiots whom he
persuaded
that the Holy Spirit was his Father, and his Mother a Virgin. [NOTE:
Celsus
says, in Origen, that Jesus Christ was a native of a little hamlet in Judea, and that his mother was a poor
villager
who only existed by her labor. Having been convicted of adultery with a
soldier
named Pandira, she was induced to flee by her betrothed, who was a
carpenter by
trade, who condoned their offence, and they wandered miserably from
place to
place. She was secretly delivered of Jesus, and finding themselves in
want,
they were constrained to flee to Egypt.
After several years, his services being of no value to the
Egyptians, he returned to his own country, where, quite proud of the
miracles
he knew how to perform, he proclaimed himself God.
Human
nature was at those times not fundamentally different from what it is
now, and
we need, therefore, not be surprised to hear that one of the stalwart
Roman
warriors, whose name was Pandira, fell in love with one of the
dark-eyed
daughters of Nazareth, and that the fruit of their "illegitimate"
union was a son whom they called Jehoshua, and who inherited from his
father
the manly pride of the Roman, and from his Jewish mother his almost
feminine
beauty and modesty.
Of
Jehoshua's mother, little is to be said. * * * Ignorant, innocent, and
of
modest manners, uneducated but kind, sympathetic and beautiful, Stada,
like
many others of her sex, was guided more by the decision of her heart
than by
the calculations of her intellect. Her heart yearned for love and she
hoped to
find in Pandira the realization of her ideal. -- Life of Jehoshua, The
Prophet
of Nazareth, an Occult Study and a Key to
the Bible. Franz Hartmann, M.D., Boston,
1889.] These good people being accustomed to be satisfied with
dreams and fancies, adopted this fable, believed all that he wished,
and even
more willingly that a birth out of the natural order was not so
marvelous a
circumstance for them to believe. To be born of a Virgin by the
operation of
the Holy Spirit, [A beautiful dove overshadowed a virgin; there is
nothing
surprising in that. It happened frequently in Lydia, and the swan of Leda is the
counterpart
of the dove of Mary.
When a pretty dove under her wing
Happens to conceal a Virgin,
There is nothing surprising in that.
The same thing is known in Lydia,
For the beautiful swan of Leda
Is
just as good as Mary's pigeon was, in their estimation, as wonderful as
what
the Romans said of their founder, Romulus,
who owed his birth to a Vestal and a God.
This
happened at a time when the Jews were tired of their God, as they had
been of
their judges, [In the book of Samuel, chap. vii, it is related that the
Israelites being discontented with the sons of Samuel who judged them,
demanded
a King, the same as other nations, with whom they wished to conform.]
and
wished to have a visible God like other nations. As the number of fools
is
infinite, he found followers everywhere, but his extreme poverty was an
invincible obstacle to his elevation. The Pharisees, delighted with the
boldness of a man of their sect, A while startled at his audacity,
elevated or
depressed him according to the fickle humor of the populace, so that
when it
became noised about concerning his Divinity, it was impossible -- he
being possessed
of no power -- that his design could succeed. No matter how many sick
he cured,
nor how many dead he raised, having no money and no army, he could not
fail to
perish, and with that outlook it appears that he had less chance of
success
than Moses, Mahomet, and all those who were ambitious to elevate
themselves
above others. If he was more unfortunate, he was no less adroit, and
several
places in his history give evidence that the greatest fault in his
policy was
not to have sufficiently provided for his own safety. So it may be seen
that he
did not manage his affairs any better than those two other legislators,
of
whose memory exists but the remains of the belief that they established
among
the different nations.
CHAPTER VIII
OF THE POLICY
OF JESUS CHRIST
XIII
Is
there anything, for example, more dexterous than the manner in which he
treated
the subject of the woman taken in adultery? (St. John, c. viii.) The Jews having asked
if they
should stone this unfortunate, instead of replying definitely, yes or
no, by
which he would fall in the trap set by his enemies: the negative being
directly
against the law, and the affirmative proving him severe and cruel,
which would
have alienated the saints. Instead of replying as any ordinary person
but him
would have done, he said, "whoever is without sin, let him cast the
first
stone," a skillful response, which shows us his presence of mind.
Another
time being asked if it was lawful to [By this Norman reply he eluded the question. A Norman never says yes, or no. Blason
populaire de la
Normandie.] Pay
tribute to Caesar, and seeing the image of the Prince on the coin that
they
showed him, he evades the difficulty by replying that they should
"render
unto Caesar what belongs to Caesar, and unto God what belongs to God."
The
difficulty consisted in that he would be guilty of lese majeste if he
had said
it was not permitted, and by saying that it was, he would reverse the
law of
Moses which he always protested he would not do, because he felt that
he was
either too weak, or that he would be worsted in the endeavor. So he
made
himself more popular, by acting with impunity after the manner of
Princes, who
allowed the privileges of their subjects to be confirmed while their
power was
not well established, but who scorned their promises when they were
well
enthroned.
He
again skillfully avoided a trap that the Pharisees had set for him.
They asked
him -- having in their minds thoughts which would only tend to convict
him of
lying -- by what authority he pretended to instruct and catechize the
people.
Whether he replied that it was by human authority because he was not of
the
sacred body of Levites, or whether he boasted of preaching by the
express
command of God, his doctrine was contrary to the Mosaic law. To relieve
this
embarrassment, he availed himself of the questioners themselves by
asking them
in the name of whom they thought John baptized? The Pharisees, who for
policy
opposed the baptism by John, would be condemned themselves in avowing
that it
was of God. If they had not admitted it they would have been exposed to
the
rage of the populace, who believed the contrary. To get out of this
dilemma,
they replied that they knew nothing of it, to which Jesus answered that
he was
neither obliged to tell them why, nor in the name of whom he preached.
XIV
Such
were the skillful and witty evasions of the destroyer of the ancient
law and
the founder of the new. Such were the origins of the new religion which
as
built on the ruins of the old or to speak disinterestedly, there was
nothing
more divine in this than in the other sects which preceded it. Its
founder, who
was not quite ignorant, seeing the extreme corruption of the Jewish
republic,
judged it as nearing its end, and believed that another should be
revived from
its ashes. The fear of being prevented by one more ambitious than
himself, made
him haste to establish it by methods quite opposed to those of Moses.
The
latter commenced by making himself formidable to other nations. Jesus,
on the
contrary, attracted them to him by the hope of the advantages of
another life,
which he said could be obtained by believing in him, while Moses only
promised
temporal benefits as a recompense for the observation of his law. Jesus
Christ
held out a hope which never was realized. The laws of one only regarded
the
exterior, while those of the other aimed at the inner man, influencing
even the
thoughts, and entirely the reverse of the law of Moses. Whence it
follows that
Jesus believed with Aristotle that it is with Religion and States, as
with individuals
who are begotten and die, and as nothing is made except subject to
dissolution,
there is no law which can follow which is entirely opposed to it. Now
as it is
difficult to decide to change from one law to another, and as the great
majority is difficult to move in matters of Religion, Jesus, in
imitation of
the other innovators had recourse to miracles, which have always been
the peril
of the ignorant, and the sanctuary of the ambitious.
XV
Christianity
was
founded by this method, and Jesus profiting by the faults of the
Mosaic
policy, never succeeded so happily anywhere, as in the measures which
he took
to render his law eternal. The Hebrew prophets thought to do honor to
Moses by
predicting a successor who resembled him. That is to say, a Messiah,
grand in
virtue, powerful in wealth, and terrible to his enemies; and while
their
prophecies have produced the contrary effect, many ambitious ones have
taken
occasion to proclaim themselves the promised Messiah, which has caused
revolts
that have endured until the entire destruction of their republic.
Jesus
Christ, more adroit than the Mosaic prophets, to defeat the purpose of
those
who rose up against him predicted (Matthew xxiv. 4-5-24-25-26. II.
Thessalonians ii. 3-10. John ii. 11-18) that such a man would be a
great enemy
of God, the delight of the Devil, the sink of all iniquity and the
desolation
of the world. After these fine declarations there was, to my mind, no
person
who would dare to call himself Anti-Christ, and I do not think he could
have found
a better way to perpetuate his law. There was nothing more fabulous
than the
rumors that were spread concerning this pretended Anti-Christ. St. Paul said (11. Thessalonians xi.
7) of his existence, that "he was already born," consequently was
present on the eve of the coming of Jesus Christ while more than twelve
hundred
years have expired since the prediction of this prophet was uttered,
and he has
not yet appeared.
I
admit that these words have been credited to Cherintus and Ebion, two
great
enemies of Jesus Christ, because they denied his pretended divinity,
but it
also may be said that if this interpretation conforms to the view of
the
apostle, which is not credible; these words for all time designate an
infinity
of Anti- Christ, there being no reputable scholar who would offend by
saying
that the [Vide Boniface VIII. (1294) and Leo X. (1513) Boniface said
that men
had the same souls as beasts, and that these human and bestial souls
lived no
longer than each other. The Gospel also says that all other laws teach
several
virtues and several lies; for example, a Trinity which is false, the
child-birth of a Virgin which is impossible, and the incarnation and
transubstantiation which are ridiculous. I do not believe, continued
he, other
than that the Virgin was a she-ass, and her son the issue of a she-ass.
Leo
X. went one day to a room where his treasures were kept, and exclaimed
"we
must admit that this fable of Jesus Christ has been quite profitable to
us.]
history of Jesus Christ is a fable, and that his law is but a tissue of
idle
fancies that ignorance has put in vogue and that interest preserves.
XVI
Nevertheless
it
is pretended that a Religion which rests on such frail foundations
is quite
divine and supernatural, as if we did not know that there were never
persons
more convenient to give currency to the most absurd opinions than women
and
idiots.
It is
not strange, then, that Jesus did not choose Philosophers and Scholars
for his
Apostles. He knew that his law and good sense were diametrically
opposed. [The
belief in the Christian doctrine is strange and wild to reason and
human
judgment. It is contrary to all Philosophy and discourse of Truth, as
may be
seen in all the articles of faith which can neither be comprehended nor
understood by human intellect, for they appear impossible and quite
strange.
Mankind, in order to believe and receive them, must control and subject
his
reason, submitting his understanding to the obedience of the faith, St. Paul says that if man considers
and hears philosophy and measures things by the compass of Truth, he
will
forsake all, and ridicule it as folly.
That
is the avowal made by Charron in a book entitled "The Three Truths,"
page 180. Edition of Bordeaux, 1593, -- this inserted note is
written on the back of a portion
of a letter addressed to "Prince graaft by de Sepigel straat. A Amsterdam," postmarked Ce 4e.
Aout. 1746] That is the reason why he declaims in so many places
against the
wise, and excludes them from his kingdom, where were to be admitted the
poor in
spirit, the silly and the crazy. Again, rational individuals did not
think it
unfortunate to have nothing in common with visionaries.
XVII
As
for his Morals, we see nothing more divine therein than in the writings
of the
ancients, or rather we find only what are only extracts or imitations. St. Augustine (ch. 9 and v. 20 of the
Confessions, Book 7,) even admits that he has found in some of their
works
nearly all of the beginning of the Gospel according to St. John. As far as may be seen, that
Apostle is
believed, in many places, to have stolen from other authors, and that
it was
not difficult to rob the Prophets of their enigmas and visions to make
his
Apocalypse. Whence comes the conformity which we find between the
doctrine of
the Old Testament and that of Plato? to say nothing of what the Robbins
have
done, and those who have fabricated the Holy Writings from a mass of
fragments
stolen from this Grand Philosopher.
Certainly
the birth of the world has a thousand times more probability in his
Timaeus
than in Genesis, and it cannot be said that that comes from what Plato
had read
in the books of the Jews during his travels in Egypt, for according to
St.
Augustine himself, (Confessions, Book 7, ch. 9, v. 20,) Ptolemy had not
yet
translated them. The description of the country of which Socrates
speaks to
Simias in the Phaedon (?) has infinitely more grace than the
Terrestrial
Paradise (of Eden) and the Androgynus [Hermaphrodites.] is without
comparison,
better conceived than what Genesis says of the extraction of Eve from
one of
the sides of Adam. Is there anything that more resembles the two
accidents of Sodom and Gomorrah than that which happened to
Phaeton? Is
there anything more alike than the fall of Lucifer and that of Vulcan,
or that
of the giants cast down by the lightnings of Jupiter? Anything more
similar
than Samson and Hercules, Elijah and Phaeton, Joseph and Hippolitus,
Nebuchadnezzar and Lycaon, Tantalus and the tormented rich man (Luke
xvi, 24),
the manna of the Israelites and the ambrosia of the Gods? St. Augustan
--
quoted from God, Book 6, chap. 14, -- St. Cyrile and Theophylactus
compare
Jonah with Hercules, surnamed Trinsitium (?Trinoctius), because he had
dwelt
three days and three nights in the belly of a whale. The river of Daniel, spoken of in the Prophets, ch.
vii, is
a visible imitation of Periphlegeton, which is mentioned by Plato in
the
Dialogue on the "Immortality of the Soul."
Original,
sin has been taken from Pandora's box, the sacrifice of Isaac and
Jephthah from
the story of Iphigenia, although in the latter a hind was substituted.
What is
said of Lot and his Wife is quite like
the tale which is told of Baucis and Philemon. In short, it is
unquestionable
that the authors of the Scriptures have transcribed word for word the
works of Hesiod
and Homer.
XVII
But
it seems that I have made quite a digression which, however, may not be
unprofitable. Let us return then to Jesus, or rather, to his Morals.
Celsus
proves, by the account of Origen (Book VI, against Celsus), that he had
taken from
Plato his finest sentiments, such as that which says (Luke, c. xviii,
v. 25),
that a camel might sooner pass through the eye of a needle than a rich
man
should enter the Kingdom of God. It was the sect of Pharisees of
which
he was, and who believed in him, which gave birth to this. What is said
of the
Immortality of the Soul? of the Resurrection, of Hell, and the greater
part of
his Morals, I see nothing more admirable than in the works of
Epictetus,
Epicurus and many others. In fact, the latter was cited by St. Jerome
(Book
VIII, against Jovian, ch. viii), as man whose virtue puts to the blush
better
Christians, observing that all his works were filled with but herbs,
fruits and
abstinence, and whose delights were so temperate that his finest
repasts were
but a little cheese, bread and water. With a life so frugal, this
Philosopher,
pagan as he was, said that it was better to be unlucky and rational,
than rich
and opulent without having good sense, adding, that it is rare that a
fortune
and wisdom are found in the same individual, and that one could have no
knowledge of happiness nor live with pleasure unless felicity was
accompanied
by prudence, justice and honesty, which are qualifications of a true
and
lasting delight.
As
for Epictetus I do not believe that any man, not excepting Jesus
himself, was
more austere, more firm, more equitable, or more moral. I say nothing
but what
is easy to prove, and not to pass my prescribed limit I will not
mention all
the exemplary acts of his life, but give one single example of
constancy which
puts to shame the weakness and cowardice of Jesus in the sight of
death. Being
a slave to a freeman named Epaphroditus, captain of the guards of Nero,
it took
the fancy of this brute to twist the leg of Epictetus. Epictetus
perceiving
that it gave him pleasure said to him, smiling, that he was well
convinced that
the game would not end until he had broken his leg; in fact, this
crisis
happened. "Well," said Epictetus with an even smiling face, "did
I not say that you would break my leg?" Was there ever courage equal to
that? and could it have been said of Jesus Christ had he been the
victim? He
who wept and trembled with fear at the least alarm, and who evinced at
his
death a lack of spirit that never was witnessed in the majority of his
martyrs.
I
doubt not but what it might be said of this action of Epicteus what the
ignorant remark of the virtues of the Philosophers, that vanity was
their
principle, and that they were not what they seemed. But I say also that
those
who use such language are people who, in the pulpit, say all that comes
into
their heads -- either good or evil -- and they want the privilege of
telling it
all. I know also that when these babblers, sellers of air, wind and
smoke, have
vented all their strength against the champions of common sense they
think they
have well earned the revenues of their livings: that they have not
merited a
call to instruct the people unless they have declared against those who
know
what common sense and true virtue is.
So it
is true that nothing in the world approaches so little to the manners
of true
scholars as the actions of the ignorant who decry them and who appear
to have
studied only to procure preferment which gives them bread; and which
preferment
they worship and magnify when this height is attained, as if they had
reached a
condition of perfection, which, to those who succeed, is a condition of
self-love, ease, pride and pleasure, following nothing less than the
maxims of
the religion which they profess.
But
let us leave these people who know not what virtue is, and examine the
divinity
of their Master.
XIX
After
having examined his policy and morals we have seen nothing more Divine
than in
the writings and conduct of the ancients. Let us see if the reputation
which
followed him after his death is an evidence that he was God. Mankind is
so
accustomed to false reasoning that I am astonished that any one can
reach a
sane conclusion from their conduct. Experience shows that there is
nothing they
followed that is in any wise true, and that nothing has been done or
said by
them which gives any evidence of stability. In the meanwhile it is
certain that
common opinions are continually surrounded with chimeras
notwithstanding the
efforts of the learned, which have always opposed them. Whatever care
has been
taken to extirpate follies the people have never abandoned them only
after
having been surfeited with them. Moses was proud to boast himself the
Lieutenant of the Lord of Lords, and to prove his mission by
extraordinary
signs. If ever so little he absented himself (which he did from time to
time to
confer, as he said, with his God, as Numa and other lawgivers also did)
he only
found on his return traces of the worship of the Gods which the
Israelites had
seen in Egypt. He successfully held them
forty years in the wilderness that they might lose the idea of those
they had
abandoned, and not being yet satisfied they obeyed him who led them,
and bore
firmly whatever hardship they were caused to suffer in this regard.
Only
the hatred which they had conceived for other nations, by an arrogance
of which
most idiots are susceptible, made them insensibly forget the Gods of
Egypt and
attach themselves to those of Moses whom they adored, and sometimes
with all
the circumstance marked in the laws. But when they quitted these
conditions
little by little to follow those of Jesus Christ, I cannot see what
inconstancy
caused them to run after the novelty and change.
XX
The
most ignorant Hebrews having given the most vogue to the law of Moses
were the
first to run after Jesus, and as their number was infinite and they
encouraged
each other, it is not marvelous that these errors spread so easily. It
is not
that novelty does not always beget suffering, but it is the glory that
is
expected that one hopes will smooth the difficulties. Thus the
Disciples of
Jesus, miserable as they were, reduced at times to nourish themselves
with
grains of corn which they gathered from the fields (Luke vi., 1), and
seeing
themselves shamefully excluded from places where they thought to enter
to ease
their fatigue (Luke ix., 52-53) they began to be discouraged with
living; their
Master being without the pale of the law and unable to give them the
benefits,
glory and grandeur which he had promised them.
After
his death his disciples, in despair at seeing their hopes frustrated,
and
pursued by the Jews who wished to treat them as they had treated their
Master,
made a virtue of necessity and scattered over the country, where by the
report
of some women (John xx, 18) they told of his resurrection, his divine
affiliation and the rest of the fables with which the Gospels are
filled.
[Which determined the Emperor Julian to abandon the sect of Nazarenes
whose
faith he regarded as a vulgar fiction of the human mind, which he found
based
solely on a simple tale of Perdiccas.] The trouble which they had to
make
progress among the Jews made them resolve to pass among the Gentiles,
and try
to serve themselves better among them; but as it was necessary to have
more
learning for that than they possessed -- the Gentiles being
philosophers and
too much in love with truth to resort to trifles -- they gained over a
young
man (Saul or St. Paul) of an active and eager mind and a little better
informed
than the simple fishermen or than the greater babblers who associated
with
them. A stroke from Heaven made him blind, as is said (without this the
trick
would have been useless) and this incident for a time attracted some
weak
souls., By the fear of Hell, taken from some of the fables of the
ancient poets,
and by the hope of a glorious Resurrection and a Paradise which is
hardly more
supportable than that of Mahomet; all these procured for their Master
the honor
of passing for a God which he himself was unable to obtain while
living. In
which this kind of Jesus was no better than Homer: six cities which had
driven
the latter out with contempt and scorn during his life, disputed with
each
other after his death to determine with whom remained the honor of
having been
his birth-place.
By
this it may be seen that Christianity depends, like all other things,
on the
caprice of men, in whose opinion all passes either for good or bad,
according
as the notion strikes them. Further, if Jesus was God, nothing could
resist
him, for St. Paul (Romans, v. 19), is witness
that nothing could overcome his will. Yet this passage is directly
opposed to
another in Genesis (iv, 7), where it is said that as the desires and
appetites
of man belong to him, who is the Master, so it is agreed to accord
free-will to
the master of animals, that is to say, man, for whom it is said God has
created
the universe.
But
without wandering in a maze of errors and positive contradictions, of
which we
have discoursed sufficiently, let us say something of Mahomet, who
founded a
law upon maxims totally opposed to those of Jesus Christ.
CHAPTER XXII
OF MAHOMET
Hardly
had the Disciples of Jesus abandoned the Mosaic law to introduce the
Christian,
than mankind, with their usual caprice and ordinary inconstancy,
suddenly
changed their sentiments, and all the East was seen embracing the
sentiments of
the celebrated Arius, who had the boldness to oppose the fable of
Jesus, and
prove that he was no more a God than any other man. Thus Christianity
was
almost abolished, and there appeared a new law-giver, who, in less than
ten
years time, formed a considerable sect. This was Mahomet. [A friend of
the
celebrated Golius having asked what the Mahometans said of their
prophet, this
wise professor sent him the following extract which contains an
abridgement of the
life of that Impostor taken from a manuscript in the Turkish language:
"The Lord Mahomet Mustapha, of glorious memory, the greatest of the
Prophets, was born in the fortieth year of the Empire of Anal Schirwan,
the
just. His holy nativity happened the twelfth day in the second third of
the
month Rabia. Now, after the fortieth year of his age had passed, he was
divinely inspired, received the crown of prophecy and the robe of
Legation,
which were brought him from God by the faithful messenger Gabriel, with
instructions to call mankind to Islamism. After this inspiration from
God was
received, he dwelt at Mecca for thirteen years. He left there
aged fifty-three years the
eighth day of the month Rabia, which was a Friday, and took refuge at Medina. Now, it was there, after his
retreat the twentieth day of the eleventh month, and the sixty-third
year of
his blessed life, he succeeded to the enjoyment of the divine presence.
Some
say that he was born while Abelaka, (These names, Abdul-Motallab and,
Abdallah,
in Arabic, seem to be rendered Abdo-Imutalib and Abelaka in the Turkish
language. -- A.N.) his father, was yet living, others say after his
death. Lady
Amina, a daughter of the Wahabees, gave him for nurse lady Halima, of
the tribe
of Beni- Saad. Abdo Imutalib, his grandfather, gave him the blessed
name of
Mahomet. He had four sons and four daughters. The sons were Kasim,
Ibrahim,
Thajib and Thahir, and the daughters, Fatima, Omokeltum, Rakia and
Zeineb. The
companions of this august envoy of God were Abulekir, Omar, Osman and
Ati, all
of sacred memory,]
To be
well acquainted with him, it must be known that the part of Arabia
where he was
born, was commonly called "the Happy," by reason of its fertility,
and being inhabited by people who formed several Republics, each
Republic being
a family called a "tribe," and having for its head the chief of the
principal family, among those which composed the "tribe."
That
in which Mahomet was born was named the Tribe of Koreish, of which the
principal family was that of Hashem, of which the chief was then a
certain
Abdul Motallab, grandfather of Mahomet, whose father, eldest son of
Abdul
Motallab, was named Abdallah.
This
tribe inhabited the shores of the Red sea, and Abdul Motallab was High
Priest
of the Temple of Mecca where were worshipped the Idols of
the
country. As Chief of his Tribe he was Prince of this country in which
quality
he had sustained the war against the King of Persia and the Emperor of
Ethiopia, which shows that Mahomet was not of the riff-raff of the
people.
His
father dying before his grandfather, his tender years caused him to
lose the
rights he had to the Sovereignty, which one of his uncles usurped. It
was for
this reason, not being able to succeed to the title of Prince, that he
was
reduced to the humble condition of shop-boy in the employ of a wealthy
widow
for whom he became afterwards factor. Having found him to her liking
she
married him and made him one of the richest citizens of Mecca. He was then about 30 years
of age, and seeing at hand the means to enforce his rights, his
ambitions
awakened, and he meditated in what manner he could reestablish himself
in the
dignity of his grandfather.
The
correspondence that he had had with Christians in Egypt and Jews in Judea, where he had traded a long time
for his
wife while he was only her factor, gave him an opportunity of knowing
who Moses
was and also Jesus Christ. He also had remarked into how many different
sects
their Religion was divided, and which produced such diversity of
opinions, and the
zeal of each sect. By this he profited, and he believed he could better
succeed
in the interest of establishing a new Religion. The conditions of the
time when
he formed this design were very favorable to him, for nearly all of the
Arabs,
disgusted with the worship of their Idols, were fallen into a species
of
Atheism. Thus Mahomet began by leading a retired life, being exemplary,
seeking
solitude, and passing the greater part of the day in prayers and
meditations.
He caused himself to be admired for his modest demeanor, and commenced
to speak
of revelations and visions. By such action is gained the credence of
the
populace, and by such methods Moses and Jesus commenced. He called
himself a
prophet and an envoy of God, and having as much skill as his
predecessors in
working miracles, he soon gained attention, then admiration, and soon
after the
confidence of the people. A Jew and a Christian monk who were in his
conspiracy
aided him in his dexterous moves, and he soon became powerful enough to
resist
a vigorous man named Corais, a learned Arab, who endeavored to expose
his
imposture.
During
this time his uncle, the governor of Mecca, died, and not being yet
strong
enough to assume the authority of sovereign, he was obliged to yield to
one of
his kinsmen who, penetrating his designs, obliged him to flee from
Mecca and
take refuge at Medina, where one party in the city who were Arian
Christians
joined him.
Then
he ceased to support his authority by argument, and persuaded his
disciples to
plant the Mussulman faith at the point of the sword. Having
strengthened his
party by alliances, marrying his daughters to four of the principal
citizens of Medina, he was in condition to place
armies in the field who subjugated the various tribes, one after the
other, and
with whom he finally seized Mecca. He
did not die until after he had accomplished his purpose by
his hypocrisy and imposture, which elevated him to the dignity of
sovereign,
which he transmitted to his successors, and his faith so well
established that
there has been no evidence of its failure for six hundred years, and
yet it may
be upon the eve of its destruction.
XXIII
Thus
Mahomet was more fortunate than Jesus Christ. After having labored
during
twenty-three years in the establishment of his Law and Religion, he saw
its
progress before his death, and having an assurance which Jesus Christ
had not,
that it would exist a long time after his death, since he prudently
accommodated the genius and passions of his followers.
Such
was the last of these three impostors. Moses threw himself into an
abyss by an
excess of ambition to cause himself to be believed immortal. Jesus
Christ was
ignominiously hung up between two thieves, being covered with shame as
a
recompense for his imposture, and lastly, Mahomet died in reality in
his own
bed, and in the midst of grandeur, but with his bowels consumed by
poison given
him by a young Jewess, to determine if he really was a prophet.
This
is all that can be said of these four [This includes Numa Pompilius. --
A.N.]
celebrated impostors. They were just as we have painted them after
nature, and
without giving any false shading to their portraits, that it may be
judged if
they merited any confidence, and if it is excusable to be led by these
guides,
whom ambition and trickery have elevated, and whom ignorance has
destroyed.

CHAPTER IV
SENSIBLE AND
OBVIOUS TRUTHS.
I
It is
not sufficient to have discovered the disease if we do not apply a
remedy. It
would be better to leave the sick man in ignorance. Error can only be
cured by Truth,
and since Moses, Jesus and Mahomet were what we have represented them,
we
should not seek in their writings for the veritable idea of the
Divinity. The
apparitions and the divine conformation of the former and the latter,
and the
divine filiation of the second, are sufficient to convince us that all
is but
imposture.
II
God
is either a natural being or one of infinite extent who resembles what
he
contains, that is to say, that he is material without being,
nevertheless,
neither just nor merciful, nor jealous, nor a God in any way as may be
imagined, and as a consequence is neither a punisher nor a remunerator.
This
idea of punishment and recompense only exists in the minds of the
ignorant who
only conceive that simple being called God, under images which by no
means
represent him. Those who use their understanding without confounding
its
operations with those of the imagination, and who are powerful enough
to
abandon the prejudice of a limited education, are the only ones who
have sound,
clear and distinct ideas. They consider him as the source of all beings
which
are produced without distinction: one being no more than another in His
regard,
and man no more difficult to produce than a worm or a flower.
III
That
is why it is not to be believed that this natural and infinite being
which is
commonly called God, esteems man more than an ant, or a lion more than
a stone,
or any other being more than a phantasy, or who has any regard for
beauty or
ugliness, for good or bad, for the perfect or imperfect. Or that he
desires to
be praised, prayed, sought for or caressed, or that he cares what men
are, or
say, whether susceptible of love or hate *, or in a word that he thinks
more of
man than of any other creatures of whatever nature they be. All these
distinctions
are only the invention of a narrow mind, that is to say, ignorance has
created
them and interest keeps them alive.
(*)
Omnis enim per se
divum natura necesse est
Imoortali
avo summa
cum pace fruatur
Semota
ab nostris
rebus, sejunctaque longe ;
Nam
privata dolore
omni privata preiclis,
Ipsa
suis pollens
opibus : nihil indigna Nostri
Nec
bene pro meritis capitur, nec tangitur, ira.
Lucretius, de
rerum
nat. Lib. Vers. 57 & seq.
IV
Thus
there is no good sensible man who can be convinced of hell, a soul,
spirits or
devils, in the manner of which they are commonly spoken. All these
great
senseless words have only been contrived to delude or intimidate the
people.
Let those then who wish to know the truth read what follows, with a
liberal
spirit and an intention to only give their judgment with deliberation.
V
The
myriads of stars that we see above us are allowed to be so many solid
bodies
which move, and among which there is not one designed as the Court
Divine where
God is like a King in the midst of his courtiers; which is the abode of
the
blest, and where all good souls fly after leaving this body and world.
But
without burdening ourselves with such a rude and ill-conceived opinion,
and
that it may not be entertained by any man of good sense, it is certain
that
what is called Heaven is nothing but the continuation of our
atmosphere, more
subtitle and more refined, where the stars move without being sustained
by any
solid mass more than the Earth on which we live, and which like the
stars is
suspended in the midst of space.
VI
As
may be imagined, a Heaven intended for the eternal abode of the happy
and of
God, was the same among the Pagans. Gods and goddesses were also
represented in
the same way, also a Hell or a subterranean place where it was
pretended that
the wicked souls descended to be tormented. But this word "hell"
taken in its proper and natural signification means nothing but a
"lower
place," which poets have invented to oppose the dwelling of the
celestial
inhabitants, who are said to be very sublime and exalted. That is what
the
Latin word Infernus or inferi signifies, and also the Greek word @#@%
[Hades.]
that is to say, an obscure place like the sepulchre, or any other low
and
hidden place. All the rest of what has been said is only pure fiction
and the
invention of poets whose symbolical discourses are taken literally by
feeble,
timid and melancholy minds, as well as by those who are interested in
sustaining this opinion.

CHAPTER V
OF THE SOUL
I
The
Soul is something more delicate and more difficult to treat of than
either
Heaven or Hell. That is why it is proper to satisfy Your Majesty's
curiosity,
to speak of it a little more at length. Before saying what I desire on
this
subject, I will recall in a few words what the most celebrated
Philosophers
have thought of it.
II
Some
have said that the Soul is a spirit or an immaterial substance; others,
a kind
of divinity; some, a very subtle air, and others a harmony of all parts
of the
body. Again, others have remarked that it is the most subtle and fine
part of
the blood, which is separated from it in the brain and is distributed
by the
nerves: so that the source of the Soul is the heart where it is
produced, and
the place where it performs its noblest function is the Brain, because
there it
is well purified from the grosser parts of the blood. These are the
principal
opinions which have been held concerning the Soul, but to render them
more
perceptible let us divide them into material and spiritual, and name
the
supporters of each theory that we may not err.
III
Pythagoras
and Plato have said that the soul is spiritual, that is to say, a being
capable
of existence without the aid of the body, and can move itself: that all
the
particular souls of animals are portions of the universal soul of the
world:
that these portions are spiritual and immortal, and of the same nature,
as we
may conceive that one hundred little fires are of the same nature as
the great
fire at which they have been kindled.
IV
These
philosophers believed the animated universe a substance, spiritual,
immortal
and invisible, pursuing always that which attracts, which is the source
of all
movements, and of all Souls which are small particles of it. Now, as
Souls are
very pure, and infinitely superior to the body, they do not unite
immediately,
but by means of a subtle body, such as flame, or that subtle and
extensive air
which the vulgar take for heaven. Afterwards they take a body less
subtle, then
another a little more impure, and always thus by degrees, until they
can unite
with the sensible bodies of animals, whence (sic) they descend like
into
dungeons or sepulchers. The death of the body, they say, is the life of
the
soul wherein it was buried, and where it exercises but weakly its most
beautiful functions.
Thus
at the death of the body the soul comes out of its prison untrammelled
by
matter, and reunites with the soul of the universe, from whence it
came. Thus,
following this thought, all the Souls of animals are of the same
nature, and
the diversity of their functions comes only from the difference in the
bodies
that they enter.
Aristotle
admits further, a universal understanding common to all beings, and
which acts
in regard to particular intelligences as light does in regard to the
eyes; and
as light makes objects visible, the universal understanding makes
objects
intelligible. This philosopher defines the Soul as that which makes us
live,
feel, think and move, but he does not say what the Being is that is the
source
and principle of these noble functions, and consequently we must not
look to
him to dispel the doubt which exists concerning the Nature of the Soul.
V
Dicearchus,
Asclesiade (?Esculapius), and in some ways Galen, have also believed
the soul
to be incorporeal, but in another manner, for they have said that it is
nothing
more than the harmony of all parts of the body, that is to say, that
which
results in an exact blending and disposition of the humors and spirits.
Thus,
they say, health is not a part of him who is well, however it be his
condition,
so that, however, the soul be in the animal, it is not one of its
parts, but a
mutual accord of all of which it is composed. On which it is remarked
that
these authors believe the soul to be incorporeal, on a principle quite
opposed
to their intent, by saying that it is not a body, but only something
inseparably attached to a body, that is to say, in good reasoning, that
it is
quite corporeal, since corporeality is not only that which is a body,
but all
which is form or accident that cannot be separated from matter.
These
are the philosophers who have believed the soul incorporeal or
immaterial, who,
as you see, are not in accord with themselves, and consequently do not
merit
any belief. Let us now consider those who have avowed it to be a body.
VI
Diogenes
believed that it was formed of air, from which he has inferred the
necessity of
breathing, and defines it as an air which passes from the mouth through
the
lungs to the heart, where it is warmed, And from whence it is
distributed
through the entire body.
Leucippus
and Democritus have claimed that it was Fire, as that element is
composed of
atoms which easily penetrate all parts of the body, and makes it move.
Hippocrates has said that it is a composition of water and fire.
Empedocles
says that it includes the four elements. Epicurus believed like
Democritus,
that the soul is composed of fire, but he adds that in that composition
there
enters some air, a vapor, and another nameless substance of which is
formed a
very subtle spirit, which spreads through the body and which is called
the
soul.
Not
to shuffle, as all these philosophers have done, and to have as perfect
an idea
as is possible of the souls of animals, let us admit that in all,
without
excepting man, it is of the same nature, and has no different
functions, but by
reason of the diversity of organs and humors; hence we must believe
what
follows.
It is
certain that there is in the universe a very subtle spirit, or a very
delicate
matter, and always in motion, the source of which is in the Sun, and
the remainder
is spread in all the other bodies, more or less, according to Nature or
their
consistency. That is the Soul of the Universe which governs and
vivifies it,
and of which some portion is distributed among all the parts that
compose it.
This Soul, and the most pure Fire which is in the universe does not
burn of
itself, but by the different movements that it gives to the particles
of other
bodies where it enters, it burns and reflects its heat. The visible
fire has
more of this spirit than air, the latter more than water, and the earth
much
less than the latter. Among the mixed bodies, plants have more than
minerals,
and animals more than either. To conclude, this fire being enclosed in
the
body, it is rendered capable of thought, and that is what is called the
soul,
or what is called animal spirits, which are spread in all parts of the
body.
Now, it is certain that this soul being of the same nature in all
animals,
disperses at the death of man in the same manner as in other animals,
from
whence it follows that what Poets and Theologians sing or preach of the
other
world, is a chimera which they have invented, and which they narrate
for
reasons that are easy to guess.

CHAPTER VI
OF SPIRITS
WHICH ARE CALLED DEMONS.
I
We
have fully commented on how the belief in Spirits was introduced among
men, and
how these Spirits were but phantoms which existed in their imagination.
The
ancient Philosophers were not sufficiently clear to explain to the
people what
these phantoms were, and did not allow themselves to say that they
could raise
them. Some seeing that these phantoms dissolved and had no consistence,
called
them immaterial, incorporeal, forms without matter, or colors and
figures,
without being, nevertheless, bodies either colored or defined, adding
that they
could cover themselves with air like a mantle when they wished to
render
themselves visible to the eyes of men. Others said that they were
animated
bodies, but were composed of air, or some other more subtle matter
which
condensed at their will when they wished to appear.
II
These
two kinds of Philosophers being opposed in the opinion which they had
of
phantoms, agreed in the name which they gave them, for all called them
Demons,
in which they were but little more enlightened than those who believed
they saw
in their sleep the souls of the dead, and that it is their soul which
they see
when they look in a mirror, and who also believed that they saw
(reflected) in
the water the souls of the stars. After this foolish fancy they fell
into an
error which is hardly less supportable, that is, the current idea that
these
phantoms had infinite power. An absurd but ordinary belief with the
ignorant
who imagined that whatever they did not understand was an infinite
power.
III
This
ridiculous opinion was no sooner published than the Sovereigns began to
use it
to support their power. They established a belief concerning spirits
which they
called Religion, so that the fear which the people possessed for
invisible
powers would hold them to their obedience. To have it carry more
influence they
distinguished the demons as good and bad. The latter to encourage men
to obey
their laws, and the former to restrain and prevent them from infringing
them.
Now to learn what these demons were it is only necessary to read the
Greek poets
and their histories, and above all what Hesiod says in his Theogony
where he
fully treats of the origin and propagation of the Gods.
IV
The
Greeks were the first who invented them, and by them they were
propagated
through the medium of their colonies, and their conquests in Asia, Egypt and Italy. The Jews who were dispersed in Alexandria and elsewhere got their
acquaintance with them from the Greeks. They used them as effectively
as the
other peoples but with this difference, they did not call them Demons
like the
Greeks, but good and bad spirits; reserving for the good Demons the
name of
Spirit of God, and calling those Prophets who were said to possess this
good
spirit called the Divine, which they held as responsible for great
blessings,
and cacodaemons or Evil spirits on the contrary those which were
provocative of
great Evil.
V
This
distinction of good and evil made them name as Demoniacs those whom we
call
lunatics, visionaries, madmen and epileptics, and those who spoke to
them in an
unknown tongue. A man ill-shaped and of evil look was to their notion
possessed
of an unclean spirit, and a mute of a dumb spirit. Now, these words
spirit and
demon became so familiar to them that they spoke of them on all
occasions, so
that it is evident that the Jews believed like the Greeks, that these
phantoms
were not mere chimeras and visions, but real beings that existed
independent of
imagination.
VI
So it
happens that the Bible is quite filled with these words Spirits, Demons
and
Fiends, but nowhere is it said when they were first known, nor the time
of
their creation, which is hardly pardonable in Moses, who is earnest in
depicting the Creation of Heaven, Earth and Man. No more then is Jesus Christ who
had
such close intimacy with them, who commanded them so absolutely
according to
the Gospel, and who spoke so often of angels and good and bad spirits,
but
without saying whether they were corporeal or spiritual; which makes it
plain
that he knew no more than the Greeks had taught other nations, in which
he is not
less culpable than for denying to all men the virtue of faith and piety
which
he professed to be able to give them.
But
to return to the Spirits. It is certain that the words Demon, Satan and
Devil,
are not proper names which designated any individual, and which never
have any
credence but among the ignorant; as much among the Greeks who invented
them, as
among the Jews where they were tolerated. So the latter being overrun
by them
gave them names -- which signified enemy, accuser, inquisitor, -- as
well to
invisible powers as to their own adversaries, the Gentiles, whom they
said
inhabited the Kingdom of Satan; there being none but themselves, in
their own
opinion, who dwelt in that of God.
VII
As
Jesus Christ was a Jew, and consequently imbued with these silly
opinions, we
read everywhere in the Gospels, and in the writings of his Disciples,
of the
Devil, of Satan and Hell as if they were something real and effective.
While it
is true, as we have shown, that there is nothing more imaginary, and
when what
we have said is not sufficient to prove it, but two words will suffice
to
convince the most obstinate. All Christians agree unanimously that God
is the
first principle and the foundation of all things, that he has created
and
preserves them, and without his support they would fall into
nothingness.
Following this principle it is certain that God must have created what
is
called the Devil, and Satan, as well as the rest, and if he has created
both
good and evil, why not all the balance, and if by this principle all
evil
exists, it can only be by the intervention of God.
Now
can one conceive that God would maintain a creature, not only who
curses him
unceasingly, and who mortally hates him, but even who endeavors to
corrupt his
friends, to have the pleasure of being cursed by a multitude of mouths.
How can
we comprehend that God should preserve the Devil to have him do his
worst to
dethrone him if he could, and to alienate from his service his elect
and his
favorites? What would be the object of God in such conduct? Now what
can we say
in speaking of the Devil and Hell. If God does all, and nothing can be
done
without him how does it happen that the Devil hates him, curses him,
and takes
away his friends? Now he is either agreeable, or he is not. If he is
agreeable,
it is certain that the Devil in cursing him only does what he should,
since he
can only do what God wills. Consequently, it is not the Devil, but God
in
person who curses himself; a situation to my idea more absurd than
ever.
If it
is not in accord with his will then it is not true that he is all
powerful.
Thus there are two principles, one of Good, the other of Evil, one
which causes
one thing and the other that does quite the contrary. To what does this
reasoning lead us? To avow without contradiction that there is no God
such as
is conceived, nor Devil, nor Soul, nor Paradise, such as has been
depicted, and
that the Theologians, that is to say, those who relate fables for
truth, are
persons of bad faith who maliciously abuse the credulity of the
ignorant by
telling them what they please, as if the people were capable of nothing
but
chimera or who should be fed with insipid food in which is found only
emptiness, nothingness and folly, and not a grain of the salt of truth
and
wisdom. Centuries have passed, one after the other, in which mankind
has been
infatuated by these absurd imaginations which have been combatted; but
during
all the period there have also been found sincere minds who have
written
against the injustice of the Doctors in Tiaras, Mitres and Gowns, who
have kept
mankind in such deplorable blindness which seems to increase every day.
Felix qui
potuit rerum cognoscere causas, Atque metus omnes et
inexorabile fatum Subjecit pedibus, streptitumque Acheronis
avari.(Virgilius,
Georgica, book 2)
Blessed
is
he whose mind has power to probe the causes of things and
trample underfoot all terrors and inexorable fate
and the clamour of devouring Acheron
FINIS
By
permission of the Lord Baron Georg Wilhelm de Hohendorf I have compiled
this
epitome out of the manuscript Library of his Most August Highness, Duke
François
Eugene of Sabaudio, in the year 1716.
