THE PROPHECIES.
The clergy having ever claimed that the prophecies are Divine
revelations of events yet to occur, and having incessantly agitated
society by preaching their speedy fulfillment, we propose to expose the
fallacy of their teachings by showing that these scriptures are not the
records of future events, Divinely reavealed, but that they originated
with the founders of Astral worship, who predicated them upon
predetermined events of their own concoction, relative to the general
judgment, and setting up of the kingdom of heaven, which were to occur as
the finale of the plan of redemption and from which were derived the
doctrines of second adventism; and, in determining the exact time when
then were to occur, we have but to prove that it was coincident with the
conclusion of the last half of the grand cycle of 12,000 years, which, as
we have shown, was dedicated to man as the duration of his race on earth.
As evidence that the founders of the Jewish or ancient Christianity
believed, like the votaries of other forms of Astral worship, that the
prophecies were soon to be fulfilled, we find that the New Testament, of
the original version of which they were the authors, is replete with such
texts as “Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand,” Matt. iv. 17;
“There be some standing here which shall not taste death till they see the
Son of Man coming in His kingdom,” Matt. xxi. 28; “The time is fulfilled,
and the Kingdom of God is at hand,” Mark i. 15. That the original version
of the New Testament was composed when the Vernal Equinox was in the sign
of Aries we are assured by reason of the fact that it inculcates homage to
the Lord under the symbol of the Lamb; and that it was during the last, or
30th degree of that sign, can readily be proven by appealing to history
and to astronomy, the former of which teaches that the Jews were removed
from Judea to Alexandria twenty-five years before the accession to the
throne of Philadelphus, the Second Ptolemy, to whom we have referred in
our preceding article, and who, after reigning thirty-nine years, died 246
years before the beginning of our era. By reference to the Celestial atlas
we will find that the Vernal Equinox will pass out of the sign of Pisces
into that of Aquarius, or in the year 1900, and we have but to deduct that
period of time from 2150, the number of years required for the cardinal
points to pass through one whole sign, to determine that the Spring
Equinox passed out of the sign of Aries into that of Pisces 250 years
before the beginning of our era, or about 2,100 years ago. Now, from the
projections of the astrological science, we are assured that the last half
of the grand cycle of 12,000 years, which was allotted to man as the
duration of his race on earth, was made to begin at a time corresponding
to the Autumnal Equinox, when that cardinal point was passing out of the
sign of Virgo, and that of necessity it had to come to an end at a time
corresponding to the Vernal Equinox, when that cardinal point was passing
out of the sign of Aries; from which we know why, at the last judgment,
the office of trumpeter was assigned to the Archangel Gabriel, the genius
of Spring, and why it was a ram's horn with which he was to “toot the
crack o' doom”
When the time arrived for the fulfillment of the prophecies we can well
imagine that, fearing the wrath of the Lamb, there were weeping, wailing
and gnashing of teeth among the terror-stricken sinners, while those who
believed they had made their calling and election sure were looking with
feverish expectancy for the second advent of their Lord and Saviour; and,
doubtless, clothed with their ascension robes, they watched and waited,
with ears alert, to hear the sound of Gabriel's trumpet, summoning the
quick, and the dead to the general judgment. But not a blast from the
archangel's ram's horn was heard reverberating along the skies, no Lord
appeared descending upon the clouds to meet the elect in the air, and, in
the last act of the fearful drama of “judgment day,” the curtain refused
to be rung down upon a burning world.
With the non-fulfillment of the prophecies, the more enlightened
elements of society began to scoff at the priests, who were temporarily
demoralized, but true to their deceptive instincts, soon rallying with the
plea of a mistake having been made in the calculations based upon the
prophecies, they undoubtedly concocted scripture to meet that very
emergency, for, to the taunts of the scoffers who, in reference to the
second advent of the Lord, enquired “Where is the sign of His coming? for,
since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the
beginning of creation,” they answered that “The Lord is not slack
concerning His promise,” but “as a thief in the night” he would soon come
and all things be fulfilled. See II. Peter, chapter iii.
Following up the history of this interesting subject, we find that the
founders of modern Christianity, to which we will refer in our next
article, in composing their version of the New Testament from that of the
Jewish, or ancient Christians, made no change in its verbiage relative to
the prophecies; but when Constantine I., Emperor of Rome, became the
patron of the church, her hierarchy, tired of figuring upon them, secured
a long respite from that troublesome subject by claiming to have made
other calculations, which put off the time of fulfillment to the year
1000; and from history we learn when the time arrived the whole of
Christendom was fearfully agitated upon the subject: Since then every
generation has been vexed with the fallacies of second adventism; and the
facts of the case justify the charge that the clergy, by teaching that the
prophecies refer to events yet to occur, are perpetuating a most
stupendous fraud upon Christendom, and an earnest and efficient protest
should be inaugurated against the further agitation of the monstrous
delusion of second adventism, which is frightening thousands of
weak-minded people into insanity and causing a vast amount of social
distress. |