CONCLUSION.
Having presented the evidences in support of the apparently untenable
assertion that, notwithstanding the numerous modes in which man has
manifested his devotional proclivities, the world has virtually had but
the one religion founded in the worship of personified nature, we are
necessitated to recognize the facts that the Christian Scriptures like the
sacred records of other forms of nature worship are, but a collection of
astronomical allegories; that the gospel story is truly “the old, old
story” which had been told of a thousand other Saviours before it was
applied to the Christian Messiah; that Jesus is but one of the many names
given to imaginary incarnations of the mythical genius of the sun; and
that the Disciples and Evangelists are but the genii of the months and the
seasons. Such being the facts, which cannot be successfully refuted, we
must believe that the Christian religion, instead of being of Divine
authenticity, as popularly claimed, is purely and entirely of human
origin, and that all its teachings relative to a future state are but
priestly inventions, concocted for the purpose of enslaving the ignorant
masses.
When we think of the thousand millions of dollars invested in church
properties, and estimate the cost of maintaining more than a hundred
thousand priests and ministers, in supporting foreign and domestic
missions and in publishing religious literature; besides the taxes applied
to the care of the religious insane, and realize the fact that all of this
vast sum of money is abstracted from the resources of the people, we would
not have to go outside of our own country to appreciate the fact that
religion is the burden of all burdens to society; and when we contemplate
the great disturbance to the social relation, resulting from sectarian
strife, and the almost universal disposition of Christians to persecute
and ostracize those who differ with them in opinion, we can readily
subscribe to the sentiment accredited to one of our revolutionary sires,
that “this would be a good world to live in if there was no religion in
it.”
If the clergy had been laboring as faithfully to impress the observance
of ethical principles as they have to indoctrinate the people with the
superstitions of religion, we would not now be deploring the great
demoralization of society. It is a grave arraignment of the clericals to
charge them with being, indirectly, the cause of this lamentable state of
things; but it is a condition that might have been expected, for, when
entering the ministry, they engaged themselves, not so much to teach
ethics as to propagate faith in the doctrines of their respective sects.
Thus hampered they cannot do the good to society their better natures
might desire. Hence the only hope for improvement is for the people to
wholly ignore the dogmatic element of religion, and refusing to longer
support it, demand that moral training shall be the grand essential of
education. If this course were adopted and persistently followed, it would
be but a question of time when mankind would come into being with such a
benign heredity that crime would be almost impossible.
Then, since religion inculcates a salvation that does not save, let us
rise superior to its false teachings and, accepting science as the true
saviour of mankind, find our whole duty in the code of natural morality,
the spirit of which is embodied in that comprehensive precept known as the
golden rule, which, being the outgrowth of the discovered necessities of
association, without which society could not exist, it necessarily
constituted man's sole rule and guide long before priest or temple; and
founded in the eternal principles of right, truth and justice must remain
as man's sole rule and guide when priest and church are numbered among the
things that were. Spirit of progress! speed the day when all mankind,
redeemed from the bondage of superstition, will recognize the great truth
that nature, governed by her own inherent forces, is all that has been,
all that is and all that shall be; and that, ceasing to indulge in the
vain hope of a blissful immortality in a paradise beyond the stars, will
make a real paradise of this old earth of ours.
[1](Editorial note: the original text erroneously attributed this quote
to Genesis 20:8-11; actually it is from Exodus 20:8-11.) |