NRLF LIBRA* I UNIVERSITY THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IN MEMORY OF CAROLINE GUSHING DUNIWAY THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS, OR HINTS OF THE PHILOSOPHY OF MAN AND NATURE. TO WHICH ARE APPENDED TWO POETICAL SCRAPS, AND DOGMAS OF INFIDELITY BY F. VV. ADAMS. M. D. MONTPELIER: PUBLISHED BY J. E. THOMPSON. 1843. 4PAN STACK W<4JsTAA*AS*' ERRATA. Page 75, 6th line, for if ignorant, read of ignorance. " " 23th " for Pity, read Piety. " 83, 8th " for Nature, read Matter. " 87, 13th " for the propensities, read propen- sities. " 88, last " for of, read or. " 102, 2d " for Manatau, read Manatou. " 108, 9th " for severitees, read severities. " 110, 7th " for further, read any further. " 115, last" for cowardice, read moral coward- ice. " 116, 2d " for threat, read threats. " 132.11th" for infringe, read impinge. " 144, 21st " for Emphyrean, read Empyrean. " 208, last " for general, read generous. f.Ts TO THE READER. HAVING been particularly known among my familiar acquaintances, and, reputedly, by the public within my vicinity, as an avowed dissenter from the literality and supernatural i?ni of the Scriptures, in which there seemed enough of singularity, to induce a curious in- dividual to solicit, from time to time, during several years, a publication of my anti-theolgical opinions, to which however, circumstances forbade assent; until, at length, I was importuned by letter, at two several times, from a reverened disciple of Universalism, to make the curious disclosure: And hence concluded to comply, and, therefore, set about expending, occa- sionally, a leisure hour, in noting some few reflect- ions upon the subjects of inquiry. This I was the more willing to undertake, from the clearest convict- ion, that Theology unconnected with Morality, was a phamom which had seduced or frightened the world into its most terrible and exterminating evils. And that even Christianity, in which Morality, as it seems to have been particularly intended, strikingly pre- dominates over Theology, has been the subject and occasion of the most cruel and murderous dissention : 929 IV PREFACE. A consequence, it would be blasphemous to charge upon Truth or Reason. And having, from my child- hood, detested the moral cowardice, so well exempli- fied in its character and consequences, by the fictitious Jonah, on the one hand; arid, on the other, equally idolized the moral courage of the Hebrew Daniel, in whom this attribute is made so godly and moment- ous, as that miracles were reputedly performed to save the subject of so magnanimous a soul. Hence, I resolved upon the hazard of a publica- tion, in the form of a letter, or rather a series of let- ters, to the reverend solicitor; and which had made con- siderable progress toward its conclusion, when I was interrogated on behalf of some dozens of my friends, whether I would address them in a course of public lectures, upon the questions I had essayed to discuss in the letter series. No other objector appearing, than that ignominious huzzy, who seduced Jonah to take lodgings in the stomach of a whale; and she being annihilated by a single scowl, the recollection of Daniel developed, my consent was given; and the letters adopted as the basis of the following essays, into which they were very conveniently transformed. And being subse- quently solicited for the manuscript for publication, this little volume has come out to testify to my cour- tesy, sincerity and moral courage. These lectures, though originating in specific inqui- ries, and therefore appearing to claim the character of specific answers, were nevertheless written, under th assumption of a general license, and are. there- fore, designedly, rather elicitations to theological in- quiry than solutions of numerous and reputedly mys- terious problems. I would that every individual should not only have opinions upon all subjects of hu- man interest, but. that they should be sanctioned by Reason and justified by truth. And however harshly custom and expediency may growl at such opinions, as innovations upon hereditary rights, Experience, Posterity and Nature will ultimately and cheerfully accord their approbation ! One consideration, however, more than any other, which has embarrassed both the oral and typographi- cal announcement of my peculiar dogmas, is that most plausible of all stupefacti ves to the geni us of inno- vation, viz., that the present state of opinions and practices should not be unsettled upon any other pr ill- principle, than that of the offer of a more valuable substitute. Justice and generosity, both, emphatically demand a strict observance of this rule, whenever it falls with- in the power of the agent: And yet there are so many exceptions, as to embarrass, essentially, the au- thority of the rule; especially where one hypothesis is to be contested by another; and where Facts refrain, us much as possible, fVom giving evidence. This embarrassment is at length overcome by the settled conviction, that Theology is not only a fiction, but that were it otherwise, it would be a dark and profitless subject for human con templation;belonginga.s it does exclusively to God and his spiritual providence , and one that He would scarcely thank his creatures, for VI PREFACE. assisting Him to manage. Beside, it seems most irrefragible, that Morality, the very Genius. Christ, or Savior, of Society, has been slandered, disparaged and trodden upon by this cloven-footed, leaden-head- ed progeny of Barbarism, until the very heart of Reason should burst with indignation. But so long as Ethics shall remain subordinate to a decrepid, fic- titious Spiritualism, it will continue to be starved and {scourged into a degraded dwarfishness and imbecility, wherein it vainly attempts to repel the indignities its effeminacy has elicited. Yes, whilst Ethics, which, with proper nourishment and care, is competent to rear the standard of literal salvation is destructively neglected, Theology is petted, for its fallacious promi- ses of a future fiction. Now, if Theology is a fiction, it is, at least, a waste of thought to contemplate it, and its influence must, after all the expense of its support, be nugatory or mischievous; hence the demand for a substitute needs not to be recognized. To reflect upon any thing that is, must be preferable to reflecting upon nothing at all. But, if it is not a fiction, it has both God and Nature to support it, and hence defies subversion. Thus, is the Reader, not quite unceremoniously, introduced to our legitimate, dogmatical and hypo- thetical progeny, from which, as he cannot fail to ob- serve, a foot, at least, has been amputated, for the convenience of the Printer; and perhaps not less to the satisfaction of the Reader; since, whatever lessens a deformity, proportionally improves it. THE AUTHOR. OF INFIDELITY. Nature is an uncreated, indivisible and unlimited system of matter and functionality; whose eternity is no more difficult to admit, than that of an antece- dent creator: Nor is humanity competent to acquire an earlier idea of things, than that which is expressed by the term, formation ! Thus, when it is said that a thing is made, nothing more can be understood, than that a portion of preexisting material has assumed a new arrangement of its parts, or atoms, denominated, accurately, a new formation, but much more frequent- ly, miscalled a new creation ! The idea of God is identical with that of ultimate causality, of which no other knowledge can be obtain- ed, than that of its logical necessity, as a termination of all philosophic inquiry; and appears to be insus- ceptible of any better definition, than that it is another name for ignorance: For God is never referred to, whilst any apprehensible, specific cause remains avail- able. And were there a God, detached from matter, with the attribute we call intelligence, in an infinite degree, the continuance of his being, beyond the pe- VIM DOGMAS OF riocl of a single thought, would be entirely nugatory. Suppose a God, such as it maybe thought Christian- ity hath assumed, and Plato's brain engendered of ul- timate causality personified; and, subsequently, en- dowed with that trinity of attributes, called wisdom, power and goodness, so indispensable to such a char- acter! Can there be a doubt, that wisdom, such as God's, and called of men omnisciency, would scan suc- cessfully, the laws and their relationship, by which a world's phenomena were intended to be governed; or that a single thought would settle their arrange- ment? And who believes, that more than one determi- nation of omnipotence, would be required to put those laws in operation? Is God immutable? He, there- fore, would not modify his own decrees! Isheomnip- otent? No other power could do it! And hence, the supervisionship of such a God, would be as nugato- ry, as the idea of his being is fallacious! Were it not an uudefinable causality, of which man- kind has wrought its deity; that dogma, without the aid of superhuman revelation, could never have be- come so universal as it has been; and doubtless would not have been acquired at all ! Hence, the universal- ity of the idea of God is applicable only to such a principle; and not at all to that discrepancy of attri- butes, with which a diverse human fancy has endowed its personification. Notwithstanding the existence of matter, like that of God, has readily obtained universal belief, it is, nevertheless, a problem, whose truth can never be de- monstrated. It is, naturally, deducible from the ideas INFIDELITY. IX it is supposed to develope, and the properties of which it is supposed to be the predicate, and yet its intrinsi- cality must, forever, elude investigation., Matter may be supposed to possess an ultimate be- ing and functionality; a state it may successively re- sume, in imitation of its original, at the termination of each complete revolution of its metamorphosis; and below which, it is incapable of reduction, or sim- plification. Life is a supposed principle, to whose agency or- ganic phenomena have been exclusively referred; and which may be contemplated in the triple character of ultimate, structural and functional. Ultimate, or primitive life, may be defined, to be that connate, or coeternal, attribute of matter, upon which modification, or transformation, originally depends; and without which, as without ultimate causality, no phenomenon could ever occur. Structural life is that modification of ultimate life, npon which the arrange- ment of appropriate material, into specific organiza- tion, depends; from the mushroom to the mimosa, in vegetation, and from the sponge and polypus to man, in animation; in all of which, it may be rationally pre- sumed, the parenchyma* is, organically, the same. Functional life is that which results from, and is char- acterized by, organization, upon which the two pre- ceding kinds of life have been already employed; and * By parenchyma is meant the common organized material of which particular organs are constructed. 1 DOGMAS OF is either constituent, as in particular organs, or aggre- gate, as in the whole animal; which latter state is de- nominated animal life, whereon are established the pe- culiar relations that exist, between sentient beings, and the objects of sensation. Every phenomenon of the living animal is a modi- fication of the state of organism, of which the phe- nomenon is a function: whether it be structural or an- irnal physical or psychological. Whilst the action of a muscle developes the phe- nomenon of motion, that of the braiii constitutes con- sciousness: And the inactivity of the one is denomi- nated rest of the other sleep. Psychology, therefore, consists of organic phenomena; and should never tjave been displaced, from its legitimate position, at the head of physical philosophy. Metaphysics is no otherwise associated with, nor less dependent upon, anatomy and physiology, than mechanics, with, or upon, mechanism. And these, as well as all other sciences, are but deductions from facts, contemplated in their several legitimate rela- tions. Man consists, firstly, of a parenchyma, which is the common basis of all organism, to which are superadd- ed, and of the same material, differently arranged, all ^hose peculiar apparatuses, which constitute him, in the aggregate, a living, moving, sentient, conscious, enduring, and reproductive machine: For, machine he is, notwithstanding his obstinate and egotistic ad- herence to the fallacious dogma, of freed om-of-the- will, upon which psychological phantom, M. Cousin, INFIDELITY. the present supervisor of the classical literature of France, together with a host of infatuated disciples, has exhausted every hypothetical and sophistical re- source.. Nor will posterity deem it an abuse of his arguments that we denominate them mere blarney. Nature is a system of adaptations, denominated cause and effect, within which, men and mushroons are equally included; and of equal importance, in its mysterious and interminable revolutions: Nor is man, with all his wild conceit of voluntary independence, one whit less subject to the dominion of physical and natural laws, than though he were a mass of unmodi- fied material. Curious, that Nature should h:ive formed an animal to take precedence of herself! Organization is a structural arrangement of elabo- rated material, derived from the common stock of el- ements, and subsequently transmuted, Iby the agency of organic life, into the specific constituents of the specimen referred to each intermediate order, be- tween the two extremes of the graduated scale, heing nourished by an inferior, and, in turn, yielding itself as the nourishment of a superior, and so on to the end of the chapter; presenting, thus, a series of re- volving adaptive transmutation. A circle, in which man and common matter ultimately meet; and which has been, theologically, misinterpreted, and errone- ously propagated as infinite design. Man, from the time of Socrates, has been contem- plated, as consisting of body and soul or of a mate- rial, physical organism, to which an immaterial, unor- ganized and immortal spirit is somehow, and at some period, superadded. XII DOGMAS OF This <}ogma, of an immortal spirit, which Socrates had presented to the world, in a state of nudity, was zealously adopted, by the spiritual enthusiast, Plato, who, laboriously and ingeniously clothed up the falla- cy, with all the fascinations of an invaluable truth; which, being thus presented to man's strongest pro- pensity, his love of lite, could, scarcely, have failed of a ready and unanimous acceptance. But unanimity of belief can never deserve credit, as evidence of sci- entific, or philosophic truth, since the mass, even of the intelligent portion of mankind, has been found, contentedly, groping, in the unprogressive routine of traditionary prejudice, and hereditary obstinacy, a half century, at least, behind the foot-prints of the Genius of social amelioration: Nor has it, ever, acquired a knowledge of those principles of science, to the truth of which, it has, finally, given a tardy assent. Man- kind are, constantly, witnessing the phenomena, and participating the benefits, of science, of whose princi- ples, they are as ignorant, as of the statistics of the moon: and yet, their vanity vociferates "How wise our generation ! v Nor, meanwhile, think how in- significant have been their, or their father's, contribu- tions to that stock of wisdom; nor how small a part they, individually, share! Man consists of structural organism, and consequent functionality, of which brain and consciousness are important particulars: Nor is the latter, which is sy- nonymous with soul, one whit more spiritual, than the elasticity of steel. He is, indeed, what reputed in- spiration, a long time since, interpreted him "a liv- INFIDELITY. ing soul" Or in other words, a thinkingcreature. It is written. Gen. 2. 7. "And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nos- trils the breath of life; and man became a living soul." And who can have been so stupid, as to have innp- centiy interpreted this text of sciripture, to mean that the soul of man is not a function of his organism,, or that it was superadded, subsequently to such for- mation, while the text expressly declares the man to be the living soul? Whilst reflection cannot miss a thousand evidences, that the soul is functional, exclusively; HO counter one has been adduced, which might not be as well ap- plied affirmatively. Whilst Truth will never fail to repay the labor of investigation; Error, like a hibernating reptile, will sting the hand that warms it into vigor! Theology is a human fantasy, which possesses neither a type in Nature, nor affinity with Reason! Natural Theology is an unnatural dogma, with \vhich, affectation of piety has, abortively, attempted to relieve the accumulating embarrassments of a fic- titious revelation ! Notwithstanding Christianity, as delineated in the Gospel, is }/ undeniably, a most successful compilation of the highest and purest metaphysical, moral and re- ligious dogmas, of which the world was in possession at its date; it is, nevertheless, pregnant with fallacies too numerous and palpable, to escape the notice of an unprejudiced, modern school-boy! The Gospel, which is, now, almost universally, be-r 1 x'lV DOGMAS OF lieved to have been supernaturally communicated to mankind, through the incomprehensible medium of the fictitious Son of God, is cognizable, only, as a judicious and convenient compendium of the an- cient Eclectic Philosophy, of which Philo, the Essen Jew, was an eminent disciple, and promulgator; and who, it may be well enough supposed, in his abundant affection for his national kindred, wrote out a copy, in his o\vn peculiar style, and in the Jewish, allegorical manner, in the laudable hope, that it would be adopt- ed, by his ignorant and superstitious brethren, as an invaluable substitute for the fallacies and bigotries of Judaism. Christianity is compounded of Theology and Ethics; wherein the fantasms of the former, are sustained by the realities of the latter. Whilst Ethics forms the most eminent department of Natural knowledge, nor needs an adjunct to sustain itself; Theology would, long since, have arrived at a state of insupportable decrepitude, had it been de- prived of Ethics to lean upon ! Theology, in consonance with its own fictitious- ness, has instituted a censorship of Faith, instead of Fact, which denominates all else, mere scoria of the truth, save wkat has passed, unscathed, the crucible of its fanaticism: It has, grimly, scowled at nat- ural science, as an unholy obtruder upon its sanctimo- ny, and a subverter of its superhuman truths; and has never failed to persecute the man, while living, nor to heap up obloquy upon hisname, when dead, who has ever ventured to propagate a truth, that threaten- ed a collision with the fallacies of its creed. INFIDELITY. XV The whole superstructure of modern Theology i* erected upon a Socratic or Platonic fiction of the hu- man soul, which, both, fact and reason emphatically repadiate. And, if there were, both, God and soul, they would be inexplicable to humanity, and also themselves subjected to Zeno's Fate, or that Necessi- ty, imposed by the laws of their nature. Whilst the falsehood has been vociferously reitera- ted, throughout the wide domain of Christendom, that natural science owes to Christianity, its success; a counter truth is stamped on every page of civil histo- ry: And, if doubt remains upon this plain question, you are directed to enquire of the ghosts of Roger Bacon, Nicholas 1 Copernicus and Galileo Galilei ! LECTURE I. THE PRIMITIVE CHARACTER OF MAN. Friends of Free Enquiry : It is not from the instigation of a love of notoriety, nor for the unenviable privilege of suffering persecu- tion for a frank avowal of my peculiar heterodoxy, that I stand here this evening, as a traitor to my own popularity, as though I were insanely soliciting the honor of martyrdom; but in a self-distrustful obedi- ence to your joint solicitation for a public disclosure of my personal views of some particular questions, in whose satisfactory solution, the world possesses a deeper interest than even the querulous obstinacy, with which they have been contested, indicates: And my first wish is, that you were in possession of a rea- sonable assurance, that your hope of edification is not altogether futile. The peculiar character of the present enterprise seems to demand that this introductory lecture should consist mostly of its own preface, declarative of the sentiments by which we are actuated, and the objects 18 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. to !>e attained: And while I express the following per- x >nai views, I may hope that the heart of every audi- tor will heat an unequivocal response. Man id allowed to have been born with certain inal- ienable rights and privileges, to which Nature haa given him an irrevocable title: Nor is she, whatever it.s seeming, justly chargeable with partiality in the distribution of her favors... If the philosopher is delighted with the success of his investigations; he is also annoyed with contempla- ting the narrowness by which they are limited: And whilst he regrets the insignificancy of hjs best acquire- ments, " the fool is happy, that he knows no more." Thus is the impartiality of Nature established, in re- pect of intellectual happiness. All rational political, philosophy concurs in admitting tljat all social privi- leges should be reciprocal or that no, individual shall claim a right to do, for and of himself, an act, from which any other individual, under similar circumstan- ces, is prohibited. Earth, air and water, witha.ll their convertible pro- ducts, are the common property of their human in- heritors and Wisdom emphatically declares, thai such a distribution and use, should be made of them, n.i to insure the greatest amount of innocent enjoy- ment. And yet they are mostly monopolized, by a very small proportion of our species; no.r would th air itself be excluded from the list, were it subject to the arbitrary regulation of meets and bounds: And tho poor might gasp, or bend in servitude to its owner, fir the material of vital respiration. THEOLOGICAL CBITICISMS. J0 Air is, however, most fortunately free; nor is opin- ion, however unfortunately, less BO. To coerce opinion has, nevertheless, beca arbitra- rily, mischievously and abortively attempted by every generation that History has recognized i And millicr.'* have fought and bled und died in a contest, of which children should have been ashamed. Opinion being the inalienable property of every in- dividual, the acquisition of which can never b* r!ij- bonestj nor its possession dishonorable, should never be assailed, but by the kindest expressions that suc- cessful invalidation will justify; nor attempted so be subverted-, but with the commendable expectation of uhstituting a better. Reason is the grand distinguishing characteristic of humanity; find is therefore appropriately subservient, to its highest purposes: And the higher, and more ab- stract from mere propensity our objects are, the more is roa.son required in their examination: Whatever )s above reason is above humanity; and whatever its in- fluence upon the species, it can never become an ob- ject of consciousness. Nor is there a plausible prof- oaitiou that suffers more from analysis, than i very popular one among the clergy; viz. "that revelation begins where reason ends; and yet, that reason clearly tees the need of such a revelation." That the need of a circumstance, should be clearij apprehended whilst its character is entrrely unknown, is a proposition that cannot bear the slightest icn*- tiny. As well might the hungry be said to see tbs ned of bread, before it wfts known to be nutritious. 20 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. But the world is full of this kind of sophistry, there- in sound is offered and accepted as a substitute for sense. Wherein unembelished Truth surrenders its rightful dominion to furbished and artful fallacy. Nor are men aware how easily they are deceived by high- sounding, though unmeaning sentences ; nor how much nor often, familiar terms are perverted from their original and genuine interpretation, in order to subserve the purposes of a sect. However differently the case may stand with others, it is clearly my own conviction, that Reason unequiv- ocally discharges me from all responsibility, for either the possession or propagation of opinion. For if any individual has a right to express an opinion, whose accuracy is not already acknowledged by the public, that right belongs, equally, to the rest of the popula- tion. And if such a right were not acknowledged, and its practical consequences permitted, where, allow me to ask, would be found the history of human im- provement? When was the public ever known to suggest an im- provement? or, an occasional genius having made tin ameliorating suggestion, when was the public ever known, promptly, to afford it a practical illustration r Have not the originators of important improvements of the various interests of their species, slept, long and soundly, with their fathers, before their stupid successors have been able to appreciate the value of their suggestions? Alas! this public, that arrogates to itself the attributes of a god, marches, nevertheless, in the rearward shadow of that adventurous, invent- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 11 vc Genius, to whom the world is irredeemably in- debted and whose statue, if ever wrought, is erected upon a pyramid of antecedent reproaches. Reason, however fallacious, is the only guardian of human actions; nor, should propensity, in any case, digress its most fastidious prescriptions. Yet, how differently has been the case with all successive ger*e- rations or history belies their character! Man has been effectually shown up, as the creature of propensity, too indomitably obstinate for exhorta- tion, or even experience, to improve. And still he rails, each against his neighbor, for the slightest scent of inconsistency, that the sensitive and obtrusive nose of suspicion is able to smell out, even, amongst tha privacies of domestic life. Whilst he enviously and maliciously assails his neighbor's happiness, he igco- rantly, though deservedly thwarts his own. His life is a succession of fears and disasters, that Reason, were her admonitions heeded, would enable him to evade: But, to her utter discouragement, man has su- perstitiously adopted a set of fictitious mysticisms, under the cognomen of Theology, by which she is nearly superceded in her highest vocation with hu- manity. Start not at a mere declaration, which is of no mo- ment whatever, unless supported by satisfactory ar- gument; and which, when thus supportedj must right- fully supercede its antagonist: For Truth, however threatening in the distance, is always peaceful in pos- session! For myself, I am not ashamed to own, that ! am a tS THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. devout disciple of Reason; and an anxious, however iucccssless, inquirer after truth, whose homeliest physiognomy, however often and grossly misappre- hended, is really mbre beautiful than error, with ell fcd paint and furbishing. Opinions being always honestly acquired, their eor,- sequences, however disastrous, are chargeable only as misfortunes, not as crimes. Opinions, it is true, should be always right, since erroneous ones possess, more or less, untoward ten- dencies, from which Ignorance has taken occasion to excuse the exercise of its malevolence, wherein noth- ing but the kindest sympathy is justifiable. The most unfortunate individual is he, whose hap- piness is most marred by the inaccuracy of his opin- ions; and he the most fortunate, the accuracy of whose opinions, most successfully, provides for his welfare. A common error with mankind, is the too precipi- tate formation of opinion, whereby his best exertions work out his worst discomfiture. As with the travol- fsr who misses his road, and is therefore the farther from his way, the longer and more expeditiously he travels. Hence opinion, should be deliberately nnd carefully formed, and as far as possible, founded in a dear apprehension of all the truths concerned in iu institution. Thus, Truth becomes the primary acd paramount object of human inquiry; and should nei- ther be mistaken nor contemned, by arbitrary, obsu- rrate prejudice, scarcely Jess blind to truth than to itoelf. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 23 Whatever is seriously proposed as truth, should be patiently and carefully examined before it is rejected. Who would not declare it preposterous for a cherniet ti> throw away, unexamined, a specimeu of precious ore, because he is not already acquainted with its character? And opinions, with all their dependen- cies, deserve no less to be analyzed, than unexamined tpecimens of mineralogy. But superstitious preju- dice, would crucify Innovation, though it were com- missioned only to take from it the instruments of in- Toluntary suicide. Heterodoxy and Infidelity are terms scarcely lees familiar than the names of our household goods. And yet, they ought never to have commanded the respect of an interpretation. They are epithets, that Igno- rance, long ago, malicious!)' appended to imaginary offenses, against imaginary authority. In the purest theological sense, the Grecian Socra- tes, the probable prototype of the reputed author of Christianity, was a heretic, in opposing, by the mos* conclusive arguments, the settled superstitions of hia time and country. And if it were well, that he was sacrificed to the eyeless, conceited and obstinate ge-- nius of stability, whilst attempting to eradicate a mis- chievous and senseless mythology; tjien it was justi- fiable to crucify the reputed Son of God for attempting a similar innovation. Nor should a reproach res: upon the consistent obstinacy of the descendants of Abraham, though they had really murdered the Savior of the world. For it matters not, by whom good or eyil la perpetrated, whether by demigod qr diabolist. 24 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. The visionary Plato, whose theological cogitations, with very little revision, have been adopted by more than eighty generations, as the genuine oracles of Al- mighty God, was also a heretic: And, as a disturber of the public peace an innovator upon established opinion, should have been early treated to a bowl of the lethean beverage, which had already made his tu- tor, Socrates, sleep so soundly, beneath a nation's au- dible regret, for so mischievious and diabolical a homicide. Copernicus too, who brought forth from a chaos of fallacies, an astronomical system, apparently too deep for human cogitation; whereon he stood so far above coternporary humanity, that he must have seemed, at that dark day, somewhat like an unearthly spirit, sent down to put these vagrant worlds in order, was, for this, condemned and excommunicated by the Romish Church, as a heretic and vilifier of the word of God. Nor did that Church acquire sufficient shame of its former godliness, to annul its worse than Irish bull against the philosopher, until 1821, or little less than three hundred years. A very short time, indeed, for Bigotry to relent, or Superstition to be enlightened. Or, to utter a very plain truth, this almost superhu- man philosopher, to whom the world is more deeply indebted than any acknowledgment can reach, waa persecuted and finally outlawed, by a church, that ar- rogated to itself both the wisdom and justice of God, for propagating opinions, which are, at present, so well and generally understood to be true, that an im- pugner of them, would be a butt fbr childish ridicule. TaEOLO3ICll, CRITICISMS. 55 Did Galileo persist in scrutinizing Nature, until she deigned to repay his importunity with disclosures, she had hitherto denied to the most devoted of her admi- rers? Was not this incontinence to God, the Church and Stability, a deeper heresy than common men could perpetrate: 1 So thought the Church, and there- fore ordered its inquisitors to torture out the culprit'* recantation, or his life! Did his firmness fail him, in this desperate contest between his principles and his fears? And did he yield, in base hypocrisy, to the clamor of the last, and humbly bend before the sym- boi'tof a fiction, and forswear himself upon the repu- ted oracles of God? And did shame for his duplicity, and compunction for what he deemed the basest sacri- lege, goad up his manhood to a contradiction of his oath, at the hazard of interminable imprisonment, to which he was immediately sentenced? And was it right that such men's and indeed any men's opinions, that happened to be inappreciable by the stupidity of the time, should subject them to death, unlimited imprisonment or excommunication, another name for outlawry, by which life was left at the disposal of any bigoted, ferocious villain, who hould choose to talte it? Then Paul and Stephen met justice in their deaths, and all were bound to sanction it with a hearty amen. Nor should a Zuin- glius, a Luther, a Calvin, a Kn ox,, with interminable and so forths, have escaped the hand of the execu- tioner. And yet they lived to see the Romish Harlot ahorn of many of her most seductive fascinations, and discarded by numerous, enthusiastic admirers; 9 t< TH10L03IC1L CHITICISMI. And finally, to bequeath their names to ProtesUnt Christendom, as objects of a superstitious and shame- ful idolatry. Thus much for the irresponsibility of opinion, and the universal, reciprocal right, and incalculable utilitj of its promulgation. The following remarks wiri be more particularly appropriate;! to the questions ofthe origin, and primi- tive character, of man. i'here are, of the present generation of men, nu- merous, sincere worshipers of antiquity, and still more, pious venerators of the fallacies of the oldem time; for whom I feel much more respect than for the stupid fancies by which they are distinguished. Numerous hypotheses have been instituted in expli- cation ofthe origin of mankind, which have betn mostly stamped,, not only, widi a characteristic falll- bilitv, but with the most palpable and disgraceful fu- tility. That man originally vegetated, or sprang up spon- taneously from the soil, deriving nourishment from the earth, by means of fibrous appendages of histoe* \igers, until his progressive organism enabkd him to extricate hi m.se if from his maternal attach- ment.-, and henceforth to commence a life of inde- pendent, voluntary exertion, is a theory scarcely plau- sible enough to secure its ijnmediate and general adoption. Nor is it jnucli more plausible, that our primitive ancestor was a chattering baboon, whom progressive cultivation succeeded, at length, in trans- forming ta a human being. And, were it true, it TDCEOEOGICJL CRITICISM!. 37 nevertheless fail to afford a satisfactory solu- tion of our problem. The same difficulty would rent with the question, whence came the baboon/ And when we contemplate the Mosaic account of the same phenomenon, in the light of modern philoso- phy, it seems but little better than an unnatural aggre- gation of uncomely protuberances, whose deformity ihould not escape the superficial scrutiny of child- hood. And however thankless, it may not be alto- gether unprofitable, to spend a few crnicis/ris upo ibis very popular hypothesis. The reader of the Mosaic account finds, that " in the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. " Although this is a reputed specimen of divine revela- tion, it would seem, that no extraordinary, human in- genuity were required for the attainment of so sim- ple a reflection. Fatuity itself would scarcely have overlooked the necessity of the earth's existence, an- tecedently to that of its products. This text might therefore escape a formal criticism, but for its illegiti- mate connexions, and a question it involves about which the world has already expended a great deal of nncaudid altercation, viz., whether God created th material of the world, or that he merely formed it out of a material already existing? There would aeem to bo nothing further required for the satisfactory dis- posal of this question, than that the inquirer should make an effort to attain the idea of something having been made out of nothing; and that he shall cease bi importunity until he shall hare succeeded in the at- tempt. v tS VBEOL.OGICAL CRITICISMS. The connections referred to, demand a rnoreeerictif examination. Revelation declares, that " the earth was without form and void." And wherefore should God have thus created it? Is it a plausible suggestion, that God should have created a formless world, in or- der to display his ingenuity in remodeling it? Thi would hardly be admitted as a specimen of ordinary, human wisdom. Is it not then a better interpretation of the text, that God formed, out of the materials al- ready existing in a chaotic state, the system of things as it at present exists? It certainly appears thus to me. Again. t^on. We find that on the third day of creation, " God said, Let the waters under the heaven he gathered together, unto one place, and let the dry land appear." "And God called the dry land earth; and the gather- ing together of the waters called he seas." It would seem, therefore, that gravitation is not principle inherent in matter, but was instituted for the especial purpose of making water run down hill, ia order that it should be accumulated in the superficial hollows of the earth. And with this principle atao^ the revelator seems not to have been very well ac- quainted. This divine record also informs us that, upon th fourth day of creation, God made the sun, rnoon and tars, and set them in the firmament, to give light upon the earth; to rule over the day and over ih night; and to divide the light from the darkness. Criticism finds no lack of food in this relation, t t its teeth upon. We find in 'the commencement of creation, that God created light, and that it was good; that he diri- ded it from the darkness, and called the light day, and the darkness night ; and that the evening and th morning were the first day. Three days, therefore, or as most, learned theologians will have it, thre pochs of a thousand years each, transpired before these planetary luminaries were created. Now, it would seem, since these were understood by infinite Wisdom to be indispensable to the system of wbioii THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS., 51 tfac earth is a very insignificant component, that h* would have practiced the economy of providing them in season, to have answered his earliest purpose. And to corroborate this suggestion, it is proverbial that th strictest economy is observed in all the operations of Nature. 'Hence the apparent singularity, that .God should hav r e wasted a. single effort of almighty power, as the above circumstance would indicate. Geological researches have already raised many se- rious doubts, amongst the educated, both clergy and laity, whether these great, Mosaic, creative, terres- trial phenomena, absolutely and successively trans- pired, in the short space of one hundred and forty-four hours, or six days; and there ore attempt to obviate their embarrassment, by the futile, if not contempti- ble, hypothesis, that those days were geological eras, pr periods of, at least, a .thousand years each. By this expedient they have created a dilemma, that af- fords the theological wiseacre, the amplest opportu- nity, for the display of his sophistical jugglery. For, consonant with this dogma, the whole vegetable king- dom must not only have subsisted, during a thousand years, without the invigorating, and at present indis- pensable influence of sun-light, but without any light at all, during the somewhat protracted night of fiv hundred years. This is a bone for ^him to gnavr, whose nien,tal hunger has made him desperate. I would be allowed a word more in addition to a foregoing remark upon the firmament, whiph God Jiimself declared to be Heaven, or the revelator wan grossly mistaken. For it is thus written, in the eighth It THEOLOGICAL, CRITICISMS. verso of the first chapter of Genesis: "And God called the firmament Heaven." This appears to be a definition of heaven, that spiritualists have entirety overlooked, or flagitiously neglected, in the construc- tion of their systems; and apparently involves them in an inextricable dilemma. If Moses has not misrepresented God, nor God misapprehended his subject, heaven is a nullity. For, as has been already suggested, modern science has demonstrated the firmament to be only the termina- tion of vision, in an unobstructed atmosphere. Henco it should have constituted an article, in every creed of spiritualism, that the only heaven God has reared, is built of man's imagination. Whenever the subject shall have been fairly exam- ined, it may be reasonably anticipated, that the idea* associated with heaven and hell, originated in a total ignorance of astronomical facts. During several thousand years of human history, the earth was supposed to be circular, and as fiat as a trencher, but of very uncertain thickness; overwhich was erected a substantial canopy or firmament, thai covered its upper or habitable surface,, like a tent, of which Josephus, the interpreter of the Jewish scrip- tures, thus writes, more than half a century after the commencement of the Christian era : " He (God) also placed a crystaline firmament round it, and put it together in a manner agreeable to the earth, and fit- ted it for giving moisture and rain, and for affording the advantage of dews." This is an explicit avowal of the opinion, that rains and dews were transmitted THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. by the firmament, from a fountain of water sustained upon its upper surface. And whilst you deem this opinion too futile for grown-up children ever to have adopted, let me tell you that it was no less judicious than most of the philosophic opinions of the great Lord Bacon, nearly sixteen hundred years after. Notwithstanding the unavoidable admission of u deep and gloomy cavern beneath the earth, it remained entirely unappropriated, to any human purpose, until the doctrine of spiritualism, or the soul's immortality and accountability, was instituted in Greece, about four hundred years before the Christian era, when it was converted into a residence for the disembodied spirits of unjust men, and denominated ades or hades, iu the English translation hell, and doubtless a cor- ruption of the Hebrew hull, a word denoting infirmi- ty, pain, misery, &.c, On the contrary, the imaginary region above the firmament, was supposed to be constantly illuminated, with an atmosphere of light and odor, especially adapted to the felicity of God, and the spirits* of just men. Now you have no difficulty in apprehending the en- tire fallacy of these ancient opinions; nor the utter absurdity of respecting, or even retaining, terms, which science has rendered, not merely ambiguous, but absolutely nugatory. It has been long since demonstrated th^t, with re- spect to the inhabitants of the earth, nothing is per- manently above or below them; but erery thing both, In a series of diurnal succession. Hence the express* 4 34 THBOLOQICAL CRITICISMS. ions, ao familiar with Theology, Heaven above and Hell beneath, possess too little meaning, to be at all impaired by a direct transposition. Again. "And God set them (the sun moon and stars) in the firmament," &c. It is unnecessary that you should be reminded of the gross, astronomical ignorance, indicated by this expression. You are aware that, as very accurately computed, the distance of the sun from the earth is ninety-fire million of miles, nearly, and that the laoon, though nearest to the earth of any of the plan- etary bodies, revolves at a mean distance of two hun- dred and thirty-seven thousand miles. Now, to say nothing of the distance of the fixed stars, which is altogether too great for trigonometry to compute, it must be a very transparent material, of which the Mosaic firmament was composed, to transmit light, with the splendor of the sun, a distance equal to that between the sun and the moon's orbit, or forty-four million seren hundred and sixty-three thousand miles. And if it would take a ball, as fired from a cannon, twenty-six years to reach the sun, and it is thus com- puted, it would be a tedious time, in a drouth, before we should be drenched from such a distance, beside the danger to all living organism from the velocity a rain-drop would have acquired in such a descent. Omitting any further remarks upon the manner in which the human race was primitively introduced upon the earth, a subject, upon which speculation may, as abortively exhaust itself, as upon a literal and substantial Trinity, we will pass on to the princi- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISM*. 55 pal subject of our discourse, or the primitive state of man as revealed in the following text, Gen. 1. 27. ** So God created man in his own image: in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them." Here the questions very forcibly obtrude themselves : In what respect did man resemble his maker? Whether in his physical, or intellectual character, or both? If we admit the accuracy of the Mosaic account of God, we are constrained to admit his very near re- temblance to humanity, and that not of the most ex- alted character. That he was corporeal and organized, is most clear- ly deducible from the physical phenomena it is said he performed, such as seeing, hearing, talking, walk- ing &c. And that his intellect resembled man's, is no less clearly deducible, from numerous instances of its imbecility, of which notice will be taken as they suc- cessively occur. But if Adam and Eve, as they are represented to have been at their creation, really re- sembled God, his worship must be somewhat humili- ating to rational creatures. If we should forego our criticisms of the, appa- rently, inevitable embarrassments, attending the ad- mission that God is a physical being, which, most certainly, with respect to the attribute of omnipres- ence, must occasion, either from his bulk or bustle, very serious inconvenieuce to the existence, or har- mony, of his creation, and contemplate his intellectual and moral character, as represented by our first pa- rents, we can scacrely charge a dissent from his wor- 36 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. ship, as an unpardonable sacrilege, or even an Unrea- sonable neglect. The innocence of the primitive pair JB made to depend upon their ignorance, which pro- hibited their knowing good from evil. And yet they were in possession of propensities, for whose direc- tion, knowledge or instinct was indispensable, as the reputed catastrophe sufficient!}- proves. Their curi- osity and credulity were also proportioned to their innocence, whereby they were ruinously imposed up- on by the misrepresentation of a snake. Now r , you would not, deliberately, recognize these, as consistent attributes of a God, notwithstanding Hebrew igno- rance shall have thus described them: You would doubtless sooner distrust it as a fable; and as having originated with some human egotist, who thought so smartly of himself, that, therefore, God would choose to be like him. Subsequently, we read, * c And God said. Behold I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is up- on the face of all the earth, and every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed, to you it shall bo for meat." Query. Did original transgression so strangely modify the constitution and principle of both animal and vegetable nature, that a thousand articles designed for nutrition, should thus become dangerous and fatal poisons? Or is it not more likely to be a specimen of the ignorance of that early time? With these very liberal criticisms of the first chap- ter of Genesis, we will pass to the second, wherein are several propositions, upon which a generous crit- icism may be profitably exercised. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. And I hope you will think my claim to your indul- gence justifiable, while I continue to examine tho Mosaic evidences of the primitive character of man, that being our subject, and this its most popular his- tory. In the first verse, \ve read, " Thus the heavens and the earth were finished," &c. Man having been made as the last labor of the six day's creation, both male and female. And in the second verse it is de- clared that God rested from all his work of creation, upon the seventh day, which he blessed and sancti- fied. Hence it must be settled, if our text is true, that nothing has been subseqently created. Omitting all counter geological circumstances, the following difficulty is, nevertheless, to be in some manner obvi- ated, in order to leave the subject as clear as divine revelation ought to be. We find it repeated in verse 7, That the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground &.C., and that he subsequently planted the garden of Eden; and took the man and put him therein, to dress and keep it - meanwhile prohibiting the eating of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, which was equivalent to saying, He should continue forever in his state of in- fantile ignorance, or purchase knowledge at the ex- pense of a terrible^ retribution. Or in other words, that he should either be a fool or be damned. After this, as in verse 19, God indulged, his curiosity, by bringing all the creatures he had made unto Adam to see what he would call them. And Adam gave to these many thousands their several appropriate Dames. S3 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. And this ceremony of passing so many creatures in re- view before Adam, must have occupied no little time. The poor man was nevertheless thus far, a bachel- or. And perhaps some suspicious persons may doubt whether he did not afterwards repent, that he had not tontinued so. After all this, however, God manufac- tured Eve from one of Adam's ribs. The difficulty therefore is in reconciling the fact of the entire crea- tion having been accomplished in six days, including man, both male and female, and yet that the first wo- man was not made until a long time afterward, at least until the eighth day, leaving a Sabbath interval, or era, as modern theology will have it, of a thousand years: By which time Adam could not have been at all too young to marry, nor yet too little childish to refrain. Omitting several circumstances recorded in this chapter, which are not particularly relevant to our present subject, to which however I shall immediate- ly recur, 1 will pass it, with a single remark upon the last verse, which declares that they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed, show- ing, conclusively, that modesty is not instinctive, but merely social, or conventional, with our species. And thus it seems to be with every moral virtue. Igno- rance, although it may afford excuse for wrong, does not insure, nor is itself, a virtue. But on the contrary it may well be called the mother of all moral mis- chief, as is clearly proved by the catastrophe it is said to have early wrought with human nature. We are told, in the commencement of the succeed- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 39 ing chapter, that the serpent was, not only, the most subtle of the beasts, (a very sing rar classification of the reptile) but that, (more singular still) he talked familiarly in human dialect; and although truly one of God's good creatures, With infidel temerity, gave God the lie; And swore that Eve might eat the fruit, nor surely die: And thus succeeded with an ignorance and inexperi- ence, that God must have, purposely, prepared for the occasion, since omniscience could not have misap- prehended the result, nor the circumstances upon which it depended. It must have been a most singu- lar state of things, when snakes knew more than folks ! And yet the case was so, or this reputed reve- lation is a fable. In either case my point is gained: That is, to show the ignorance of primeval manhood; which must have been extreme, if Moses told the truth. Or, if the story is a fable, it shows still more; viz. That ages of observation, experience and human intercourse were wasted upon our stupid race: For surely the inconsistencies, fallacies and even absurdi- ties of this Mosaic history, leave no room to doubt, that the writer, in comparison with a common clown of the present time, was verily a blockhead. And if, meantime, the wisest of his species, no doubt his an- cestors, and may be his cotemporaries, knew less than Makes. To corroborate this, apparently, severe remark, a few brief additional references will be presented, in- cluding some of the omissions we have made in chap- ter second. 40 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS, In the third chapter and fourth verse, it is thua written: " And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die." Now, at the time, when the prohibition of the fruit was communicated, (and we do not read that it ever was repeated,) Eve was not abstracted from the costal furniture of her intended spouse, and therefore must have learned of him, or the lying serpent, all she knew of God's especial interdiction. But suppose Adam to have been God's messenger to his wife, of which, however, no hint is given, the problem must have been still, with her, whether Ad- orn or the serpent told the truth. And if it were sup- po.-able, that Adam could, thus early, have abused the confidence of his better half, as grossly as the after custom has, too often, been, had Eve believed the serpent, or the devil, sooner than her spouse, she scarcely could have been culpable. We find the following declaration, chap. 2. v. 5 &. 6. " For the Lord God had not caused it to rain up- on the earth, and there was not a man to till the ground." But there went up a mist from the earth, and watered the whole face of the ground." And then God planted the garden of Eden, having, v. 7, just formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into him the breath of life, &,c. The earth therefore had not been watered from the time that the seas were formed, viz., at the beginning of the third day, and at the close of which, vegetation had occurred, " and God saw that it was good. Here the question very naturally presents itself, How long had THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 41 this drouth continued antecedently to the mist above referred to ? And how should vegetation have been thence affected? Vegetation is declared to have oc- curred upon the third day, or the same in which the waters were drained from the more elevated portions of the earth; and whereon the dry land first appeared after its creation. Now if the rnist occurred, as it seems to have done, to promote vegetation in the garden where Adam was to be immediately placed, it must have been upon, or after, the sixth day 'of crea- tion. And one of the two interpretations must be admitted as applicable to this strange relation. Ei- their this interval consisted, according to any plausi- ble interpretation, of some three revolutions of the earth upon its axis, or about 72 hours, or of three geological eras of a thousand years each, which cer- tainly would be no slight consideration in the case in question. For admitting that God made the earth out of nothing, it seems to have consisted of a mis- cellaneous admixture of its constituent elements du- ring one or two of these periodical revolutions at least, and was entirely corered with water until the third, leaving, as above remarked, three other revo- lutions, up to the creation of man. Now if these revolutions, days or epochs, consisted of twenty-four hours each, or seventy-two in the whole, the earth having been so lately and thoroughly drenched, could scarcely suffer from a drouth so soon, nor other than aquatic vegetables thrive lustily. And on the other hand, if those eras were each a thousand years, an^J 5 42 THEOLOGICAL CBITICISMS. a drouth had lasted during three of them, it seems ft moisture would have been difficultly raised from such a parched and desert surface. And then, a moisture taken from the earth, could do no more by its return, than to supply the loss it must have first occasioned. And, if this process were necessary in Eden, already watered by the sources of four of the largest rivers in the world, a general barrenness must have destructively prevailed; and have rendered a new* creation indispensable, un- less Nature were possessed of the power of procre- ation, which seems to be clearly though strangely in- sinuated in the fifth verse of the chapter we are con- sidering; and upon which we shall hereafter raore particularly remark. " And a river went out of Eden, to water the gar- den; and from thence it parted and became into four heads." Here we find ourselves embarrassed by the lollowing queries. If the river went out of Eden, to water the garden, could the garden, nevertheless, huve been in Eden, as it is declared to have been, in a preceding verse of the same chapter? And if not, at what distance and in what country east of that imaginary one, denominated Eden, was it most likely situated? Or was it located only in the imagination of the writer? And again. How are we to under- stand the declaration, that the river of Eden parted mto four heads as it passed onward, consistently with our present notions of that subject? It is certainly, mn ordinary occurrence, that a stream should divide iuelf into four larger ones, which this must have THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. '1 done, if there is any meaning to the reputed revela- tion. The only rivers to which this text can hav any consistent allusion, are the Euphrates and Tigris, nor do they form a junction until one of them ha* traversed a distance of nearly fourteen hundred miles. At this junction, however, theologians hav thought fit to place the fictitious Eden, together with the two additional, fictitious rivers. It may not be amiss, to enquire also, how it hap- pened that Eve, in her reputed ignorance, should have so highly appreciated the knowledge of good and evil, or that Gods were happier than men, as that it should have become a motive to such preposterous disobedience. And the serpent not having told her, that wisdom was worth possessing, how very singular that she should have had a desire for it! But the fruit was eaten, and their eyes were opened to a recognition of their nakedness. And wherefore? Was it because the nakedness, in which God had placed them, was an evil, a sin, or shame? Then it seems that God should have earlier supplied them with garments of skins, from his own manufactory; as we are informed he afterwards did, when they had, however, already learned to manufacture for themselves, and were therefore in less need of his as- sistance. Another query very naturally arises: Whether the formal communication between God and his creatures, was consistent with any rational idea of the Creator of the Universe? Or was it not rather indicative of human childishness; or, at least, an ig- norance of which children should now be ashamed? 44 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. In the curse pronounced upon the serpent, there is a problem of no very easy solution, viz: What sort of locomotion did the serpent perform; and by what sort of apparatus was it effected, previous to the exe*- cution of the curse ? And wherefore, was the serpent cursed, for saying what he could not have known was false, unless he were omniscient, or most unreasona- bly familiar with his maker for such a lying, traitor- ous reprobate. But what would seem the oddest part of this most singular narration is, that this infernal reptile, having much more wit than man, and hence much moro responsibility, and having also most dia- bolically seduced God's favorites, to a willful disobe- dience of his positive command, and thus transferred his only hope and heritage, interminably, to the devil, should have been merely sentenced to that peculiar mode of locomotion, to which his organism had al- ready inevitably doomed him; and that he should thenceforth subsist, exclusively, upon a diet which he has never eaten, but which was aueiently believed to be mostly, if not entirely, the creature's subsistence: And had the writer of the revelation known, that gnakes have none, or moveless eyelids, he would, doubtless, have made their winkless eyes an item of the curse. We see that this transgression wrought strangely with both the Deity and his works, eliciting a curse, that changed the state and character of creation. Why not indulge the query then, wherefore God should not have hindered the transgression, apparent- ly so easily performed, rather than have wasted o THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 45 much almighty skill, in remodeling his affairs, and in finally obviating, at the halves, the eternal consequen- ces of one poor, ignorant man's delinquency? It seems to have been no small mistake of the di- vine revelator, that he contemplated labor as a curse; whilst it doubtless contributes, aside from its pecuni- ary attainments, much more than all things else, to human health and happiness. The very necessity too, which the fall is said to have engendered, is the sole circumstance, upon which the development of man's physical and intellectual energies depend. But for this, he would never have emerged from the le- thean gtupidity the slough of barbarism, in which he must have been originally immersed. " And the Lord God said, Behold the man is be- come as one of us, to know good and evil." In this particular therefore, man was not made in the like- ness of God; but, by a most heinous transgress- ion, he unluckily attained it. And lest he should par- take of the tree of life &c. he was driven out of the garden, whose entrance was subsequently defended by a much more miraculous process, than to have cor- rupted the fruit, and blasted the tree, for which the miracle was instituted. Thus have I adverted to some of the evidences af- forded by the three first chapters of the Pentateuch, of the characteristic ignorance and imbecility of the early specimens of our race. Nor should it be deemed discourteous, that Josephus calls his ancien* brethren savages. For so, without a doubt, they were; nor thus unlike all human nature, unwhipped, unschooled by long, calamitous experience. 46 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS, I am aware, that the slight criticisms I have made upon the Bible, will work my serious disparagement, with all its superstitious votaries, who shall have learned the fact. And yet I have the temerity to pur- Bue and propagate them, carefully and fearlessly to ihe last recorded fantasm of the Christian revelator: And for the sole purpose of eliciting and reciproca- ting truth and its legitimate deductions, upon a sub- ject which hitherto, has seemed to cost a great deal more than it has been worth. In this however I know my liability to mistake; and will therefore in- vite all counter criticism, and make my frank ac- knowledgment, for every fallacy my opponem shall detect me in. Nor should he, with all his faith in revelation, be frightened at a snarling human criti- cism; but breathe with still more freedom, as he feels that truth will thus be more clearly and abundantly elicited. If God or Nature owns theology as true, imbecile man will no less vainly, seek its controver- sion, than he will his own best good in practicing li- centiousness. And if it is a fiction, however brilliant- ly illusive in the gloom, it will, nevertheless, like an ignis faluus, allure its votary from the plain, direct and safe highway, wherein right reason charges man to prosecute his earthly journey, and leave him to in- numerable annoyances, he might otherwise avoid. Had our race pursued, for eighteen hundred years, a fearless, vigilant and unprejudiced search for the truths of Nature, instead of spiritual phantoms, it might now, with some good show of plausibility deny its reputed primicve consanguinity with the ape. . I LECTURE II. THE PRIMITIVE AND PROGRESSIVE CHARACTER OP MAff. Not having had sufficient opportunity, upon a for- mer occasion, to finish my remarks, upon the primi- tive character of man, which I had adopted as the subject of my discourse, I am constrained, at this time, to solicit your attention to a few additional ones. History, both sacred and profane, explicitly declares the primitive state of man, whenever and wherever he has been thus found, to have been one of degraded, savage ignorance and ferocity. Nor could it have been otherwise, unless he were, once, supernaturally endowed with what he now acquires by study and experience. And this is a subject, we hope to live, hereafter, to discuss. In addition to the testimony afforded us, by naviga- tors, travelers and missionaries, from the renowned Christopher Columbus downward, of the ignorance, barbarism, and even cannibalism of the natives of our own continent, and of the numerous islands of the Pacific ocean, which ought to afford satisfactory cor- roboration of our remark, we have abundant other, 48 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. more ancient and perhaps more satisfactory historical evidence, that we can conveniently adduce, to th* same point. England, or more anciently, Britain, or Albion, when first visited by the Romans, about half a centu- ry before the Christian era, was inhabited by a race of savages, either naked, or but partly clothed with the skins of beasts, the earliest kind of covering, next to fig-leaves, ever adopted by our species, and in the case of our first parents, as has been before alluded to, manufactured by God himself, they being known, or supposed to be, incapable of doing it themselves. These savage islanders were divided into numerous petty tribes, each being governed by a chief of its own electing, under whose direction they were, more or less of them, almost unremittingly engaged in fero- cious and exterminating conflicts. They were hunt- ers, or roving herdsmen, without any knowledge of agriculture; and debased by the most absurd and Druidical superstition; in whose rites, scores of hu- man beings were offered at a time, in their diabolical sacrifice to an imaginary God. And these pagan, un- clad deer-hunters these literal cannibals of nineteen hundred years ago, were the lineal ancestors of the present demigods of the cliff-bound isle, whose litera- ry fallacies we are fain to mouth; and whose fashion- able absurdities we aspire to imitate. Nor does his- tory speak better of the early character of their con- tinental neighbors, than of themselves. And that, even, God's reputed favorites, the Jews, were once in the same predicament, as other uncultivated eava- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISM*. 49 is evident, not only from the testimony of ih Jewish historian, but from the infallible source of dn vine revelation, wherein we find, that they, though coder God's especial guidance and instruction, trr oo less Pagans, Polytheists, and detestable desecratorp of both Reason and Justice, in the particular of hu- man sacrifice, than any of those Gentile infidelfl, whom God so deeply cursed for Hebrew benefit. Did Dot Rachel steal her father's household gods, and sub- sequently escape detection, by a much less hone&t than ingenious artifice, although that would scarcely hare succeeded with a Catholic inquisitor? Did nor the idolatry of his brethren so enrage the godly leader of the Jewish Exodus, that he brake the graven ta- blets of his God; nor knew, that such an invaluable bequest would be repeated. Does not each Hebrew record, from Genesis to Chronicles, inclusive, declare idolatry to have been the crying, and almost unreoail- ted sin of God's elected nation, for more than eleven hundred years? The Hebrews, then, form no ex- ception to the rule, that savages are idolaters. And have you heard it from the sacred desk, as all, moat urely, should have done; nor so seldom either, & that it shall have been forgotten, that this peculiar, pious people believed that God was pleased with hu- man sacrifice, a sign of deepest moral degradation? However careful Theology has been to let this ques- tion rest, without a comment, or a breath so free, ft* that it might awake the sleeping dragon, there stands a witness of its own, amidst its treasured oracle* that says, emphatically! the thing is truel I 50 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. devoted," (for sacrifice) " which shall be devoted of men, shall be redeemed; but shall surely be put to death.' 1 Thus we find, that one of the ordinances that God imposed upon ibe Levites, or holy priest- hood, was to sacrifice human beings under certain cir- cumstances, without the right of redemption at anj rate whatever. And if corroboration is demanded, we will refer you to the fulfillment of Jeptha's vow, in which he promised the Lord, if he succeeded in his invasion of the Ammonites, that whatsoever came forth of the doors of his house to meet him r on his return, should be consecrated to Him, and offered up for a burnt offering. We think that Incredulity it- self, would be ashamed to demand further corrobora- tion of the truth of our remark. And to leave no doubt of a Hebrew Polytheism, or that religion which includes a catalogue of inferior deities, or subordinate Sods, you have only to avail yourselves of a single fact, viz: That their language includes a nomencla- ture, of the kind in question, amongst which are the following: Elihorepb, God of winter or of youth; Eliashib, God of conversion; Elijah, God of strength; Eliphalet, God of deliverance; Elisha, God of salva- tion; Eiishah, God of help; Elmodam, God of mea- iure; Ishmael, God that hears; Tabeal, God of good- ness; Uriel, God of fire. Ajraiu we have the follow- ing, wherein father is synonymous with God, viz: Abidah, Father of knowledge; Abidan, Father of judgment; Abiezer, Father of help; Abihail, Father of strength; Abijam, Father of the sea ; Abilene, Father of mourning, or of grief; Abiuadab, Father of willingness; Abinoam, Father of beauty; Abisha- lom, Father of Pence; Abishua, Father of salvation; Abishur, Father of uprightness; Abital, Father of the dew; Abitub, Father of goodness; Abiud, Father of praise; Abncr, Father of light; Absalom, Father of Peace. Again, Baal-perazhn, God of divisions; Baal-zebub, God of the fly, &c. Here we close our evidence of the primitive burtm- rism of the human race, which we think should b* satisfactorily received hy any candid enquirer. 14 The proper study of mankind, is man!" So wrote the poetic philosopher, Alexander Pop<% whose works have successfully defied the most labo- rious attempts at emulation, for more than a hundred years. And yet we venture to suggest, that the study of man would be too limited and monotomous to com- pensate the trouble of its prosecution, were it not as- sociated with that of other numerous phenomena, with which he stands in a more or less intimate rla- tion. The proper study of mankind seems, there- fore, that of the phenomena of nature, where man belongs, and where he rightfully claims precedence. Nature is to be contemplated, as a magnificent work-shop, wherein a few primitive principles arc enabled, by indefinite modification, to produce the in- numerable, and interminably t'i versified phenomena of the material world; which phenomena in the char- acter of so many transformations of the matter of th universe, clearly illustrate, that its parts are in a per- petual state of action and reaction upon each other. And, strange as it may appear, it is becoming $. qufp.- 48 TBEOtOCIClJ. CRITICISMS. don of no inconsiderable interest and plausibility, among the simplifiers of science, whether electricity, variously modified by successive and peculiar cir- cumstances, is not the exclusive principle, upon which all the phenomena, or changes of Nature, depend, h would be, doubtless, premature, however, to eettlt this question either way, at present. At any rate, corroborative facts ought to be much more abundantly accumulated, before the affirmative of this proposi- tion can be safely adopted, as a valid corollary of physical science. It is true that Nature, with all her infinitude of r* ources, is, nevertheless, economical of her princi- ples and expenditures; squandering nothing by io- adaptness, inadequacy, or superfluous multiplication of causes: And whatever number of laws she has in- stituted, their simplicity has been a subject of agreea- ble surprise, to all who have, fortunately discovered them. As spectators of Nature's phenomena, our vision with all its artificial aid, is comparatively limited to a roere point; and yet that point is much too pregnant with variety, for man's successful inquisition. For what is all our pictured firmament, though its radius were measured by a Herschel's telescope, compared with worlds interminably piled on worlds? And then again, each drop, of yon transparent, rippling brook, though but a mimic world, is, notwithstanding, crowded with a countless, living population that de- fies no less our vulgar scrutiny, than does the nature f th laws that formed it. THEOLOGICAL CRITIC18MB. M What then, must be the insignificance of individual, yea of aggregate, humanity, in attempting to direct or modify the phenomena of an infinite creation, or ven to apprehend the intrinsic character of the law* that govern them? Human imbecility is more than proverbial, whe- 6rer it is employed upon a subject as magnificent an Nature's greatest, or as intricate as her minutest pro- ducts. Nor less than thus, whenever it would invade the recess of ultimate causality. But it would seem, that Nature intended to com- pensate for the barrenness of our discrimination, by the fertility of our imaginations; thereby enabling UB, with all desired facility, to transport ourselves, from this matter-of-fact world of disagreeable realities, to an imaginary one, fruitful of the happiest fictions. However imbecile are the human powers, or how* ever circumscribed is the theater of human enterprise, there are, nevertheless, many circumstances, with which man may, and should, become acquainted: Nor are they rendered unimportant, by an insignificance disproportion^ to his own. They are well adapted to his situation and capacity: Nor has Nature or- dained a phenomenon, that is not emphatically great, to little man. Yes; so great is the least, that Nature ever deigned to present, that it is intrinsically, and in its ultimatum, as incomprehensible as infinity itself. It is not, therefore, with ultimate principles nor pri- mary states of matter, that human cognizance has to do: They are indefinitely removed beyond the limits of finite scrutiny; and are known only as deductions 14 THBOLOaiCAL CRITICISMS. from secondary phenomena: And these arc the cir- cumstances that occupy exclusively, the whole field of human observation; and constitute the only mate- rials of human knowledge. All genuine science, therefore, consists in a knowl- edge of specific and comparative facts, and inferences legitimately deduced therefrom; and hence can be ac- quired in no other manner, than by observation and reflection. Nor can the latter be exercised, but- upon tho materials already provided by the former. And in this circumstance is to be formed a solution of the problem of the tardy progress of intellectual im- provement. Nothing promises greater indulgence of human curiosity than literary antiquarianism; nor anything more gratifying to the literary speculator, than a concise, but judiciously compiled history of the progress of human knowledge from its primitive barbarism to its highest, present elevation : Nor should it be doubted, that a competent genius could not be more usefully and profitably employed, than upon such an enterprise. And you will permit me to express my regret, at the want of both talents and opportunity, to afford you more than a few miscella- neous hints upon this voluminous and interesting sub- ject. Whatever vacillation science may have suffered during several thousand years, or however differently It may have advanced with different nations, and nt different times, it is not deducible from any authentic, historical record, that it had ever attained a higher elevation than at the time, and by the contributions of THEOLOGICAL CRITICISES. Si the proverbially great Sir Francis Bacon, whose time commenced the era of .renovated science the resusci- tation of a long smothered genius, that Bigotry had hitherto, for sixteen hundred years, securely immersed in the Stygian element, until its. long unslruggling si- lence, attested to its dissolution. And Superstition, Bigotry and, the Church, blessed the God of obsti- oate, ignorant Stability fur so great and happy a de- liverance. But thoir joy was turned to sorrowing, when they found that Genius had been only sleeping. Whatever we may be called to do upon another oc- casion, wo will confine our remarks, at present, to the question of comparative difference between tha present state of natural, or physical science, and that of the time of Lord Bacon, of whom you have all heard much and often. ^Hc has been represented, and no doubt truly, as the wonder and disgrace of his ageA-the precocious philosopher, who in the sixteenth year of his childhood, ventured upon the invalidation of the fallacies of the Aristofliun philosophy, which for near two thousand years, had held unqualified dominion over the scientific opinions of mankind a literary Hercules, who had the temerity to beard the peripatetic Lion in his den -the man of universal ge- nius, and indefatigable industry, who wrote volumi- nously upon history, law, medicine, theology, physi- cal and metaphysical philosophy, geology, mineralo- gy, agriculture, horticulture, witchcraft and magic. "And here we stop, to introduce, to your notice, A few specimens of this intellectual prodigy, of the. olden time. id THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. Speaking of the spontaneous elimination of salt, from sea-water, he says, vol. 1, p 240, of his worki, in 10 vols., London, 1800, that he has little doubt, "that the very dashing of the water thatcometh from the sea, is more proper to strike off the salt part, thaa when the water slideth of its own motion." Thif pecimen affords indubitable evidence, that the great Lord Bacon was totally ignorant of the solvency and raporability of water. He appears not to har known, that sea-water is but fresh-water holding m olution more or less common-salt, or muriate of o- da; which is elimenated by the evaporation of th olvent, and aggregated, into more or less perfect cubic crystals. But this is knowledge, so familiar to all of you, that, were not the fact most veraciously record- ed, you would seriously doubt, that a learned man of any period, could have been so grossly ignorant. Again, on the same page, speaking of the percolation of water and other liquids, through cloth, sand and wood, as being good strainers &c., he says: "Th gum of trees, which we see to be commonly shining and clear, is but a fine passage, or straining of the juice of the tree, through the wood and bark; and in like manner, cornish diamonds, and rock rubies, which are yet more resplendent than gums, are the 6ne exudations of stone." What backwoodsman what aboriginal forestef could have displayed a profounder ignorance, upon these subjects, than has this great scholar of the eer- Seas must have risen, in form of water-spout ! And were it, thus far, marvelously done, The work of miracles was but begun ! Since ten thousand years, at the common rate,, Were scanty, for it to evaporate ; And time itself, would scarcely fit the soil, To recompense the ploughman for his toij ! And were the flood no higher than the hill, Upon whose top, the Ark, at length, stood still, Four thousond years would scarcely dry the .plain, That trees and herbage might appear again. Hence, to have dried it expeditiously, Earth's heat must have been raised prodigiously, So high indeed^ that gods might be supplied, With steaming chowder from the boiling tide ; And, if the gods have hearts, it would not do, That they should not have food and entrails too : And were the water, as it may be said, Especially, for this occasion made Say, whence the elements, of which 'twas wroui; Or what the neighboring planet, whence 'twas brought ; And then, how much almighty pow'r 'twould cost, To right again, the system's balance lost! Nor seems a -work, with more vexation fraught, THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. Except to make a universe of naught, Than to unmake that world of surplus rain, Which else must have involved the earth again : And were there gods, whom mankind could abuse, By any terms of slander, he could uee How base the sacrilege, to charge a plan So fatuous, on any thing but man! Or, if you would have it said in vulgar prose Did God foresee, ere man was made, the strange prepos- terous character he would sustain the mad devotion he would pay to passion and licentiousness the deep corruption of a perverted mind, and the voluntary wickedness he would perpetrate; nor yet, revoke, nor modify, a plan so palpably defective? Or did he sleep so soundly, those, more than, sixteen hundred years, from the creation, to the flood, that the whole world's joint, boisterous blasphemy awaked him, only, when human wickedness was so incorrigible, that his own omnipotence was unable to reform it? And did he, therefore, as the only, or most feasible, expedi- ent, decree the total extermination of the race? A project, you must all acknowledge would have been, especially, successful, had he punctiliously pursued it! But that it seems he did not do! And do you really believe an all-wise God could have been so improvi- dent, as to expect to regenerate mankind, by making drunken Noah their progenitor? Was it like a God to fail in his mechanical design? Or having failed, to destroy the labor of his hands, in childish petu- lance, in order to allay his own heart's grief? And is this to be received as a specimen of God's almighty triple infinitude? Was the project of the Flood, that involved a course of countless miracles, of which the THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 93 least was tantamount to original creation, verily, the suggestion of that unearthly Logos, that planned the system of both temporal and eternal things? And was it not the inevitable consequence of the sweeping . agitations the lacerating and disorganizing concuss- ions the suffocative pressure, and atmospheric exclu- sion, attendant upon the deluge, that vegetable, as well as animal, life must have been universally ex- tinguished? And how were fish of countless species, saved from being overwhelmed, destroyed and deeply buried amidst the avalanches of upland rocks and trees and soil, the myriads of newborn cataracts must have driven, madly, ocean ward? Do you think it probable, that fish and vegetables, which seem to have been uncared for, were really able to withstand a shock, that, without the aid of countless miracles, must inevitably have been the world's catastrophe? And would you not severely chide your wild imagi- nation that should see, in retrospect, the diluvian pa- triarch, as he may have stood upon the then youthful brow of the long-since venerable and snow-capped Ararat, (where one seems to see that unique water- craft of primeval time, entombed beneath accumula- ting frosts of more than forty centuries) and in fear- ful sadness, look around him, upon the utter desola- tion of all of life and hope, that once had been; when lo! from where had lately swept the besom of de- struction, and earth itself but just unwrapped of one continuous ocean, there shall have come forth, a feathered witness, to cheer the little household, with the gladsome tidings, that the lately ruined earth was 94 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. now itself airain, and already green, with renovated heritage: And this diluvian fallacy, together with the fabu- lous childish nonsense of the Fall, is seriously, and even coercively. urged upon the people of philosophic Christendom, in this forty-third year of the nineteenth century, as though it were the very genius of Inspi- ration, rehearsing the revelations of Almighty God. And with whom there rests a doubt of its divinity, there also rests the undivided curse of Spiritualism? And yet, the question urges itself again, and again, upon human consideration, whether God did really repent and gvieve at his heart, like a disappointed in- fant, for what omniscience did not foresee, or omnip- otence could not prevent? Or whether it was not Jehovah's plan, To stultify, or curse, the race of manr And, lest he should relent, assumed an cath. He kept so well, as to accomplish both! And do you feel assured, that Noah's fabled ark was adequate to the object, for which it is said to have been constructed? And have you carefully ex- amined all the circumstances involved therein, and found them clearly to corroborate the probabilitv of that event? If so, you are much more fortunate, in these particulars, than your humble servant, who has, never yet, been fully able to reconcile, with his poor dividend of intellect, all the apparent difficulties pre- sented in the case. And yet religious Faith descries innumerous things, as clearly, as shines the cloudless sun at noon-day, that impious Reason, with all her THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 9l> artificial aids, as vainly looks for, as for courtesy from a bigot. Have you not already learned, from fre- quent, pulpit specimens, hq\v entirely abortive are Reason's efforts in behalf of Faith? Nor is the cast- susceptible of amendment, whilst their vocations art- less alike than cash and credit! Allow me to present you with a single specimen of the imbecility of Reason, in its unnatural association \vith Faith; and in what hopeless predicament that subject must be, that relies upon no better arguments in its favor, than 1 have sometimes heard from the pulpit, upon the question of the deluge. Yes, I have heard a reverend advocate for the Bible's literality and truth, contest the doubts of Scepticism, with zeal enough to frighten Reason from the sanctuary; and, in conclusion of a labored argument of sounds and attitudes, in proof of written revelation, declare, em- phatically, "that Noah's ark had room enough for all it was intended to preserve; at least for all with ivhich mankind were then acquainted." Alas ! that God should be obliged to leave his work to be accomplished by such infirmity ! And do you think that Reason would ever risk herself again with such an incompe- tent interpreter? Or insanely blast her honor, to aid the credit of a fiction?^ A sacrifice, in either case, too wanton to justify a serious suspicion. Considering the peculiar embarrassments of time and circumstances, it would really seem to have been rather an extraordinary undertaking, for a single indi- vidual, or even a single family, to construct, in the very teeth, of a jeering and opposing Incredulity, that 96 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. mammoth world-preservative, within the time allotted by Biblical Chronologists. Ere log-canoes, or bulrush substitutes, were invent- ed, a Nation's genius, and a Nation's wealth would have been scarcely adequate to such an enterprise. And yet I will not pronounce the thing impossible; but, rather than risk my teeth with so unchewable a mouthful, will put my capacious gullet into requisi- tion, and swallow it at once. But there are other particulars, which are not, so conveniently, to be dis- posed of; being, not only, too tough to chaw, but, palpably, too gross to swallow. But admitting Noah to have been either the butt of ridicule for his appa- rent simplicity, or an object of pity, for his supposed lunacy, throwing him entirely npon his individual re- sources, for the accomplishment of his magnificent undertaking; and that he, nevertheless, succeeded, and that, too, within the apparently inadequate period of the year two thousand three hundred and forty- nine before Christ; and that it was also fully adequate to its design; however heavy their demand upon our credulity, are altogether the most plausible particulars of this preposterous narrative. Do you think it within the range of the strangest probability that, in the short period of seven days, allowed to Noah for freighting his vessel, seventy thousand living creatures were actually and simulta- neously collected from their peculiar and indefinitely diversified locations and climates from every point of compass, and every habitable portion of the earths geographical surface, together with their appropriate THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 97 nourishment, which could not have been less than ten times their own bulk, or even their own weight; amounting, in the aggregate to an equivalent of seven hundred and seventy thousand such animals, ten of which only> viz., the mastadon, elephant, rhinoceros, hippopotamus and elk, would have required, at least, one hundred and ninety tons of vegetable food; a lit- tle less than an ordinary ship load, and, in the com- mon, farming way of packing, would have filled five common barns: And in this way of proceeding, we shall soon have appropriated the whole of Noah's mammoth vessel. Have you ever thought, how very odd it must have seemed, to see so many thousands of dissimilar ani- mals, spontaneously emigrating from country and kindred; and contrary to every impulse of instinct and habit, compassing, by one universal miracle, trackless, and almost immeasurable distances of des- ert land and ocean, to form the least congenial con- gregation, insanity could have dreamed of; and also each, since any other mode seems quite impossible, voluntarily transporting ten times its weight of that peculiar nourishment, its adopted country would not afford, nor yet an answerable substitute? And since it seems to be a law, amongst the carnivorous tribes, that each inferior species, successively, shall become the sustenance of its superior, how odd, to see each several, single pair or septenary, group, (for birds, however carniverous and foul were no less cared for, than delicious poultry, and therefore saved in septen- ary pairs,) how odd, I say, to see them eachj and all, 12 9S attended Ly their appropriate, nutrient herds, ami flocks, and swarms of living creatures, most unnatu- rally and marvelously anxious to he eaten ! Omitting to notice any of the thousand, specific pe- culiarities, by which animal existence must have been distinguished., in the different climates and localities of Asia and Africa; and the apparent inconveniences attending their sudden congregation at a single point in ancient Armenia, there are, still, innumerable cir- cumstances, with which my incredulity is querulous!}' at issue; of which however, an instance or two must suffice our present purpose. Among the many kinds of animals peculiar to South America, which must have been included in the diluvian, salvatory project, however difficultly accom- plished, there are four species of Ant-eaters: Hence we may reasonably contemplate eight of them, ac- companied by countless millions of those diminutive insects, for whose destruction P. M. Roget & Co. would declare these animals were intentionally and especially created; and these also attended by their multiplied myriads of aphides or vine-fretters, no less indispensable to their own necessities: For it would be preposterous to pretend that Noah, in addition to all his other perplexities, should have been obliged to hunt up ant's nests enough to provision these eight gormandizers, for the period of a full year after their arrival in Armenia ! And, in order to strengthen the probability of the principal event, we may also ima- gine those insectiverous myrmecophaga, with their in- calculably numerous attendant insects, most provi- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 9$ riAo j/jKiojoaii? 001 tlcntlv pioneered, in their seven days excursion of j i ' r more than six thousand miles, by their enterprising, sprightly compatriot, the Sloth; of which it is said, that he is so deliberate in his progressive expeditions, as, having become fattened upon one forest tree, 10 be reduced to the last state of emaciation, while trav- eling to the next one, though but a few yards distant. Nor would the Dodo, of the Isle of France, the literal impersonation of deformity and inactivity, be an un- apt commissary in such an anomulous enterprise? In what condition do you think the Boa, Crocadile, Sloth, Ape, Lion, Elephant and]Ostrich, from the hottest cli- mates, would have been found, at the end of this strange catastrophe, and at a point of elevation marked by perpetual frost? And do you deem it a plausible suggestion, that the White-bear would spon- taneously prosecute a journey, from Greenland, to the interior of Asia, when he pants in the sunshine of his own polar zero; thus, not only, to be broiled in the plains of the Frat or the Kur, but to starve for lack of fresh fish and seals, which the deluge must have rendered it particularly difficult to obtain. The Argos-pheasant, also, must have been somewhat diffi- cultly sustained, upon so long a voyage, unless its character has been misrepresented: For it is said of it, that it cannot be kept alive beyond a single month, in a state of bondage. Suppose, however, all these, and a thousand other apparently impossible events to have really occurred; and the ark, not only, to have been built, but fully freighted, consonantly with its reputed purpose; and ,00 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. all that heterogeneous congregation quietly nibbling" its several rations, in strange, promiscuous harmony it still remains a problem of most unfeasible solution, how Noah, with his undisciplined and scanty help, could have safely navigated such an unwieldly enor- mity, in such a limitless, dark and boisterous ocean, without rudder, anchor, star or compass, nor yet, have failed to end his anomalous and erratic voyage, within the limits of his own Armenia. But may be, you are ready to retort, that God was Noah's pilot; and hence the safety of the ship, and prosperity of the issue! Then, in my opinion, God has been much more ingenious and successful in his nautical, than spiritual, affairs! a much better mariner, than meta- physician or legislator; or both Jews and Christians have slanderously misrepresented Him! And again; though theological credulity shall be able to reconcile these preposterous circumstances, to its peculiar stand- ard of consistency, it would seem that, were it not early and constantly disciplined in swallowing absurd- ities by the volume, it would find itself, not a little, perplexed with the state of affairs, inevitably conse- quent upon the deluge. It must have required much more than a mimic miracle, to produce a sudden crop of luxuriant verdure from out the mud and rock, the flood, so lately, had abandoned a state, in which the earth could have been, scarcely, more prolific, than when it first emerged from a primeval chaos! And Theology, as we have seen, at length admits an epoch, of at least a thousand years, to have been expended upon the earth's first, verdant mantle, ere insects, THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 101' beasts and birds, the product of such an other epoch, were sent to nestle in its folds: Nor terminates the difficulty here! For, admitting vegetable luxuriance to have, miraculously, succeeded the deluge, there yet remains the perplexing consideration, that a great proportion of Noah's omnigenous congregation was carniverous; and therefore, in the absence of another, no less miraculous creation, than that wherein the life of animals originated, these imprisoned, fleshly feed- ers must have been turned adrift, with the improvi- dent and evil chance of eating one another ending thus the catastrophe of the fable ! And yet, the most surprising miracle of all is unrecounted; viz., that God should not have saved himself so unnatural and perplexing an administration of his own affairs, as, by a single miracle, to have aided our first progeni- tors, in a successful resistance of the devil; nor left them to become, by disobedience, so exactly like himself and that at such an awful hazard! I have thus presented yon with an inconsiderable fraction of the evidence of inconsistency in the char- acter of the Jewish God, as contained in his own reve- lation of himself. And if more is required, in order to complete any undecided conviction, a general refer- ence may be made to the entire pentateuch, wherein the greatest follies and the blackest crimes are abet- ted and enjoined by this personification of the genius of superstition. And should men be stigmatized as atheists, and thrust without the pale of civil privilege, and protection, because their faith but darkly sees the worth of such a character; or their reason has broke 02 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISM loose from traditionary leading-strings, nr>; its light of supervisorship ? The Indian's Man \vithout a doubt, deserves as much respect as this of Israel, or as any other extra-mundane fiction called si God, or by any other name, that men have chosen for their ignorance of causation ! oittoqo-ui Of an extra-mundane God, of whom it has been al- ready said, that he would be inevitably as useless as a marble statue, in superintending the phenomena of the world, the following additional remark may not be unacceptable, as an illustration. * Let me refer you to that primitive, ideal state of things, when universal chaos reigned. When God ? s omniscience planned a Universe unlimited ; and his omnipoteucy spoke it into being. When his single contemplation must have viewed infinity of circum- stance and space, throughout an interminably revol- ving series, as though all changes, to be thereafter wrought, were but as unity, in the present tense. Nor could that contemplation be repeated, since noth- ing new could possibly occur, to call it into action. One effort also of omnipotence, must have been the alpha and omega of God's determination, since that must have set the world's machinery effectually and infallibly in motion ; and wherein it must resistlessly continue as long as he shall have decreed it ! Thus we see that such a God's creation must have com- menced and ended simultaneously, and not progressed by regular succession of time and circumstance : And therefore, since he passed his first decree, he must have sat an idle and a passive looker on of all i flown i; xti 10 fiwanano 4 do; k THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. the world's innumerable and inevitable phenomena: Nor would his presence be one whit less nugatory, than that of him, who shall have made a clock, to measure out, with absolute precision, each moment of a hundred years, and that but with a single winding, and then should sit and count the motions of its pen- dulum. Would not the hands of such machine revolve as well, were he who wrought them dead, as though he lived to watch the progress of their uniform and per- fect revolutions ? And if thus wherefore should doubt, or disbelief, of such a character be bandied, except from fool to fool, as sinfulness or reproach ? What but Bigotry, or Lunacy would deem it blasphe- mous to say, that such a God, whether of Gentile, Jew, or Christian, is not more useful than a man of straw ; nor more deserving of human veneration ? But then you say, perhaps, that intelligence must have been employed, in arranging the materials of this complicated physical Universe, and the phenome- na, they specifically and relatively present. Intelli- gence, therefore, becomes the subject of present and particular inquiry ; and is, without a doubt, as far as ordinary humanity is able to distinguish, exclusive- ly, an atribute of an organized, living sentient being, in possession of a brain and nervous system, and consists in a more or less clear perception of the phe- nomena of Nature, and the several relations existing among them : And hence the brain, and not the heart, should be contemplated, as the exclusive in- strument of mind, thought or soul j and this, wheth- 104 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. cr consciousness result from organic from a more or less successful effort of the soul to display itself, through the vulgar medium of physical organism. And, whatever the mode of operation, it is already the settled opinion of all educated persons, that the better developed, the more healthy, and the better disciplined and sustained, is this cranial or psychological machinery, the clearer, and more ele- vated, is the intellectual product or functional intel- ligence, it displays. In these respects, thought and locomotion possess a parallel character, both being alike embarrassed by defective, or unhealthy, organism, or deficient, or ex- cessive exercise. The idea of thought existing abstractly from a brain, would be no less preposterous, than that of animal motion, unconnected with muscular developement. A brainless philosopher, and an agile skeleton would be equally strange phenomena. In fine, it appears to me quite impossible to conceive of mind, or soul, but as an attribute or function of organized, living, animal matter. And hence it follows, that deity, in order to posses the attribute of intelligence, should be also in possession of a brain, or some other appro- priate, physical organ, through which intelligence, mind, or soul, may be displayed, or by which it may be generated. It appears, therefore, incontrovertible, that the intelligence of God must be animal intelli- gence, or that, of which mankind can have no man- ner of conception: And hence the theist cannot es- cape the vexatious dilemma, that his God is clothed THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 106 with human attributes, or with none at all, as far a he can apprehend. And do you think the former kind, which is scarcely adequate, at best, to the or- dinary exigences of temporal humanity, well befitting the creator and director of a world's affairs ? Nor can the difficulty be at all obviated, by the vulgar, senseless expedient, of annexing the term, infinite, to this, or any other, imputed attribute of God. For this adjective, like the subject, it is so often used to qualify, however convenient, or indespensable, use may have rendered it, means neither more nor less, than an indefinite extension of its substantive, beyond the limits of human apprehension: And in every case in which it is used, it is exactly synonymous with an acknowledgement of total ignorance of what it is intended to express. Therefore, whoever speaks of wisdom, power and goodness, as attributes of God, whether qualified by the nugatory adjective, infinite, or not, is manufacturing a deity of the attributes of mere humanity. And here you will allow me to ask again s Who else but fool or lunatic would kneel in pious veneration, to so uncomely and so strange a vagary : The difficulty upon this question seems to depend upon the fallacy of confounding an attribute of mere humanity, and one in no inconsiderable degree com- mon to men and beast?, denominated intelligence, with the adaptiveness or consistency of Nature, of which this same human intelligence is a constituent; man himself being a part of her physical system, and employed in the performance of her functions. And were I indulged a moment for recapitulation, 13 106 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 1 would express my own belief of God and his intel- ligence, in the language of the following theorems. First, That the original idea of God is universally and unexceptionably the same, with all mankind, who are endowed with the ordinary powers and op- portunities of reflection; and that it is identical with that of inherent, primitive, or ultimate causality, and spontaneously engendered in the mind of every in- quirer after the causes of things. And thus, is the only plausible notion of atheism completely invalida- ted no man being obnoxious to the epithet, who is able to contemplate the existence of an unknown cause: Upon which point, the savage and the sage are nearly equal competitors; both infallibly attaining their goal, but by different steps, and unequal des- Second. That natural Theology affords no other evidence, or knowledge of Deity, than that of mere abstract existence, obtained by induction whilst in- vestigating the relation of cause and effect. And that nothing more can ever be known upon the subject, except by the assistance of supernatural revelation. Third. That intelligence, as applied to God, is al- together void of meaning, or palpably slanderous of his imputed omnisciency; and cannot be theologically employed without the basest irreverence, or, the deepest stupidity. It would, nevertheless, be striking- ly absurd, to utter an explicit denial of the intelli- gence of God, or causality, which it is not man's province to determine; but it is his right to insist up- on the truth of the proposition, that human apprehen- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 10 So, sion cannot, in any conceivable manner, apply itself to the subject of infinite wisdom, admitting such wis- dom to exist. Nor is it possible for mankind to ac- quire any definite idea of the existence of any other intelligence, affection, or propensity, than that which is displayed by living animals. Thus, are men stig- matized, as infidels and atheists, because they st>> and own their ignorance of all beyond the pale of time and things, and humbly jaeld, to God or Nature, the sole direction of superhuman incidents Mean- while, the human egotist, who assumes to be famil- iar with the privacies of God, and with the undevel- oped circumstances of, perhaps, a ficticious future state of being; and who, both night and morning, im- pudently asks his God, to shape His providence, to his own immediate, particular occasions; or, at least reminds Him of the duty of looking carefully to His own affairs, is eulogized as a model of huiuu :! :yj and as a very pink of piety and wisdom. Nor aie vanity and impudence the only faults, that reason charges upon such pharisaic holiness. She hears them confi- dently reiterate the purest Gospel-precepts, as though they were themselves the Logos, whence they came, and, meanwhile, hourly contradict them by their base examples. She also hears their daily, formal prayers, in which they ask their God to be a benefactor to the poor to feed the hungry and clothe the na^ed; nor even dream that God has made them stewards of :i bounty, He intended should be thus appropriated ; And hence she tells her votaries, that there is some thing wrong, or rotten, in the system of theology. ,0* THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. . , - . , IMMUfll ftkUnrifMM MM , And for this, she and they are slandered and con- demned as miscreants, and fearful agents of the ad- versary, in the diabolical project of both temporal and eternal ruin: Nor has she ever ventured a com- ment upon its absurdities, even those, which itself has subsequently discarded, in shame for their very ugliness, but that superstition has, forthwith, perse- cuted her from Dan to Beersheba and back again; nor relaxed in her severities, until by tortures, and oaths of extermination, the exhausted and dishearten- ed heritic has been made to utter a heartless recanta- tion. Nor has the cry of heresy, blasphemy, infidelity and atheism, ever failed to be raised against the vota- ries of Reason, who have dared to inculcate her sug- gestions of the deformities of Popery, and even of Judaism itself; nor have its echoes ceased, wherever Superstition has set its cloven hoof, since Seth and Enos, lucklessly, mistook causation for a God: But even here, in this focus of discordant spiritualism, or. as discourtesy might say , this menagere of biped ani- mals, where precept and example are hot at logger- heads, and vociferously bandying the lie, in each other's teeth, Superstition is already getting hoarse with brawling of its danger and its infallibility. Thus you see I have thrown the gauntlet to Juda- jsm, and the superstitions of Christianity; nor intend ever to resume it, whilst I retain the power to wield either tongue or pen, in what I deem a most holy, contest a contest of Reason and Truth and Amity against Lunacy, Error and murderous Dissension. But lest I should be mistaken for a disorganizer THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 109 a civil and moral nuisance an abettor of crime, and an advocate of licentiousness, I must beg your atten- tion to the following avowal. I hold to equal, and mutual rights, privileges, and responsibilities, among all persons, of all countries, and of all colors; and that it is the especial duty of each individual in every community, to act conscien- tiously, or in accordance with the suggestions of rea- son, uninfluenced by personal considerations, by preju- dice or partiality or by the fear of consequences, to persons or characters; and, meanwhile, aim to make the greatest possible contributions to the common stock of human happiness. I hold that the moral precepts of the New Testa- ment should be adopted, as the standard of rectitude among mankind, until an unquestionably better sys- tem shall have been obtained. And that the Gospel can never become seriously objectionable, until its precepts shall have been surpassed by the excellence of human conduct; of which disparagement, it a|j- pears in no immediate danger. I hold, that Legislation should seek to elevate the character and promote the welfare of its subjects, with the least possible infringement of the principle of reciprocity; being itself obedient to those institu- tions of Nature, that regard the production, preserva- tion, usefulness and happiness of the human race. And were there a power, that I could successfully invoke, I would become a wrestling Jacob, until I were blessed with the happy consciousness, of having fully exemplified the purity of the Gospel, in. my own daily practices. LECTURE IV. INFIDELITY AND RELIGIOUS FAITH CRITICALLY EXAMINED, AND COMPARED. Infidelity, or unbelief, in its religious acceptation, is a disbelief of the supernatural inspiration of the Scriptures, or of the superhuman origin of Christian- ity! whilst the opposite should, of course, be received as the definition of religious faith. Since Nature is entirely barren of testimony in fa- vor of theology, anil further than the inductive con- viction, she enforces, of the existence of an ultimate cause, which we have considered, heretofore, as iden- tical with God the creator, mankind have found it convenient to introduce, upon this question, the testi- mony of a reputed divine revelation. And, upon this, I believe the utmost reliance is almost universal- ly placed. If, therefore, it should fail to sustain it- self, under the severest scrutiny, Theology will be inevitably exposed in its naked decrepitude; and ab- horred for its digusting deformities: But, on the other hand, if it is marked with the consistency and infalli- bility of the laws of Nature, it will grow brighter by THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. Ill collision, and more and more conspicuous by the tests to which it is submitted. And were I a disciple of revealed religion, I would solicit, and even provoke, discussion upon the question of supernatural revela- tion, until the infidel shall have relinquished the last hook, upon which to hang even the shadow of an ob- jection; glorying, meanwhile, in my increasing confi- dence of the truth, as my adversary shall have re- treated from the field of contest. When have men fallen to loggerheads, about the permanency of the laws of Nature? Or whether they were in danger of being obstructed or perverted by the fallacy of human opinion? Have they not proceeded with the same regularity and results, what- ever opinion mankind have maintained of them? And, were Theology of a similar character, would it surrender its dominion over the opinions of men. sooner than gravitation over his physical corporality? Revelation is, nevertheless, believed to be, in tech- nical phrase, a noli me tangere, or touch me not a sanctum sanctorum, or holy of holies, wherein the profanity of human reason is, peremptorily, forbid- den to enter, lest it should corrupt the savor of holi- ness, or be itself extinguished, for its sacrilegious te- merity. But then again, the laws of Nature, which Theology admits to be the institutions of God, are, in no wise, impaired by the closest examination; and wherefore revelation should be more endangered, from a similar scrutiny, is a question of no easy solu- tion, unless it is itself a fiction. The truth of revelation, or the supernatural char- 112 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. acter of the Scriptures, therefore, offers itself for ex- amination: An enterprise so full of danger, if not of difficulty, that less than the temerity of martyrdom would cower at the enunciation of its terrible threat- enings. It is deemed an unhallowed encroachment upon the sanctuary of the holy mountain, which The- ology has fenced about with a mysterious sanctity that pales the face of the most dauntless intruder. A critical inquiry into the divinity of revelation is, at any time, a desperate undertaking, and affords a prac- tical illustration of the language ^of the author of Christianity, wherein he exclaims,i>" Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword. For I am come to set a man at variance ; - ; father, and the daughter against her mother,^ tec. a declaration that every page of Christian history has fully verified. And thus, inno- vation upon established prejudices has always done! But if, as the present opinion is, God permits man- kind to examine, and speculate upon his works wherefore should his word be excluded from the same ordeal.' Would God have promulgated a sentiment or a principle, for the theological, moral or political direction of mankind, less infallible, in truth and ef- fect, than are the laws that govern the inorganic world? I Whence, then, the cowardly dread that the word of God is in danger of being subverted: But perhaps the disciple of Christianity deprecates the temporary evils of Infidelity upon the weak and credulous, during a contest in which the latter shall be finally overcome? i O ( aoilto?n 10 fi; THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 113 This is, nevertheless, an unjustifiable fear; since the path to Christian conversion must be constantly, if not fatally, obstructed, until every stumbling-block to scepticism shall have been effectually removed. Hence the necessity of collision, until Theological, shall vie with mathematical, truth, in the clearness of its demonstrations when man shall be again admit- ted to a personal interview with his maker; nor be cheated of the certainty of truth, of all the most mo- mentous, through the fallacious medium of human in- terpretation. And here, I must solicit your patience, while I speak a few words, in explanation of my own particular predicament. Notwithstanding the notoriety of my irreligion. which I have never shrunk from declaring, whenever solicited, with a frankness that ought to have vouched, at least, for my sincerity, I have succeeded in acqui- ring the friendship and patronage of a great number of individuals, and mostly too of Christian denomina- tions, whose acquaintance any man might have been proud to share; but, I may be allowed to say, upon this particular occasion, that I have, nevertheless, been, more than any other individual of rny acquaint- ance, the object of an unremitted, relentless and big- oted persecution, for more than thirty years; and after all, am, at this moment, enjoying the compensa- tory reflection, that I have contemptuously rejected hundreds of solicitations to place myself, even in the foremost ranks of Christian communities; and that 1 have also resisted as many temptations to secure my 14 114 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. temporal prosperity, at the sacrifice of both my rea- son and conscience. But then the oddest point in this long history of bloodless persecution is, that after thirty years of frank avowal of my scepticism, the tug of war, with murderous Bigotry, shall hare but now arrived. And wherefore all my Christian friends should deem me closer leagued with Satan now, than at any former day of thirty years, is beyond my feeble power of divination. My principles were drawn, like theirs, from Gospel infallibility, wherein my spirit has been daily schooled, from childhood onward: And though its warfare with the flesh has proved its discipline de- fective, nor made my case, in this respect, at all pe- culiar; is it reasonable to fear, that wear and tear have made me more licentious? But when my friends, in tearful sorrow for my waywardness, shall threaten to withdraw their friend- ship and their patronage, in conformity with the plain injunctions of a Christian conscience, and prescribed allegiance to the infinite source of merciful forgive- ness; I have but one reply to such denounemejit; which is: However dearly I esteem the affection of my friends, and that can scarcely be suspected, in one, who honestly declares his willingness to yield his life in sacrifice for the welfare of his foes. I cannot hesi- tate, in the arbitrary and unnatural dilemma, wherein my friends, or liberty, must be relinquished. You know 'tis base, contemptibly base, that man should enter into voluntary slavery to his fellow man; but that 'tis baser still, except by moral suasion, to at- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 115 tempt to modify a single thought: But then, all other baseness may, comparatively, assume the name of virtue, when contrasted with that low sycophancy, that would purchase favor with its self respect a baseness inexpressible by any epithets afforded by our language. And then suppose that penury, with its hungry importunity and rags, should drive me to a base relinquishment of libeity and self respect, for patronage and friendship. What magnanimity in friendship thus developed, thus obtained and thus di- rected ? Moral putrefaction would be a savor of right- eousness in comparison ! But enough of this un- comely egotism, which nothing but apparent necessi- ty would have elicited. The question of supernatu- ralism is much more worthy of my labor, and your attention. The scriptures purport to be a divine revelation from God to man; and in this assumption, the popu- lation of Christendom, almost unanimously concur. And in order to frighten incredulity, and even timidi- ty into acquiescence, Imposture has set its seal there- on, engraven with a denunciation of the unbeliever ; and damnation to him that doubts. But to this par- ticular point, whatever the imputed heresy, the Ameri- can citizen, white or black, male or female, should not hesitate to speak with a frankness, emphasis and boldness, persuasive of his sincerity, and his proud consciousnes of personal liberty. And here, in the unbending spirit of reciprocal and impartial freedom, I venture to enunciate my irrevocable curse upon cowardice, and blush to think, how many Jonahs 116 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. arc my brethren. Yes, to be frightened into a relin- quishment of one's opinion, by threat* purporting to be either from God or man, is a base servility, to which an upright, manly consciousness can never bend: Nor i.s there more than seeming heresy in this re- mark: For it is a truth, no one can hope to contro- vert, that a God can?iot, and that man should not, be unreasonable. The disciples of Christianity are, or ought to be, fully conscious, that both the supernatural ami literal characters of the scriptures have been subjects of censorious controversy for many hundred years: For that an occasional individual, has oroke loose from the restraints of traditionary superstition, and with a temerity that defied persecution, promulgated his heresies in the teeth of a retaliatory, malignant and fashionable theology. Nor does the question ap- pear, at present, to be any nearer settled, than at any former period of the protracted contest. Chris- tians ought not, therefore, arbitrarily, to impose upon an opponent, a series of essays, as indisputable au- thority, whose character and import have been a sub- ject of interminable, malevolent dissention, even among themselves. Were the truth of biWical divinity susceptible of demonstration, or even of plausible support, by ex- trinsic circumstances, or intrinsic consistency, it would, assure lly, have been, long since, shorn of its countless horns, upon which Scepticism has, so long and securely, hung its myriads of objections. But to the great annoyance of its disciples, those horns have THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 117 grown more numerous and conspicuous, as science ' has dispersed the darkness in which they were gener- ated. Whenever testimony is demanded of the truth of divine revelation, the inquirer having been firstly presented with a motley preface of hems and haws, of grins and grimaces, of groans and grumblings at the absurdity and even sinfulness of such a query, is finally referred to what are denominated prophecy and miracles for a demonstration of its validity; as though the most unlikely, if not impossible, things in nature, were to be credited as self-evident truths. These are propositions which Nature abhors and Phi- losophy detests which cultivated reason indignantly spurns; and to which, nothing but the darkest super- stition, or the. wildest mysticism can be made to as- sent. And yet in these palpable fallacies, slanders of Nature, and mockeries of her consistency, there js something that may be seriously, but mournfully, contemplated. One truth, at least, is included in these propositions, which must not only be admitted, but is doubtless deserving an explanation; viz., the almost universal conviction of their validity. It is not to be doubted, that the probability of very many future, or anticipated, events, may have been very clearly apprehended by many of the Jewish, Pagan and Christian moralists and politicians, and accordingly promulgated, in the language of positive assurance; by which ignorant credulity may have been successfully imposed upon, and a positive knowledge of future events very naturally supposed 113 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. to exist, in the character of an undefinable, supernat- ural state, or kind, of human consciousness. Those nominal prophecies, of whatever date, place or character, were, doubtless, more or less rational inductions from known moral or political circumstan- ces, and generally promulgated, especially among the Hebrews, in the imaginative spirit and style of an- tique poetry: But however legitimately and success- fully they may have been deduced from substantial premises, they must, nevertheless, have been, and remained, mere matters of faith, and not of fact, un- til their actual transpiration shall have given them a palpable and indisputable existance: For the most confident and reasonable expectation of an event, can never be identical with its certainty. An event in prospect is not an event in fact: And whatever has not already assumed the character of a specific phenomenon, possesses no other identity than that of an idea, in the mind of the projector : Therefore, pheno- mena, not yet transpired, are no phenomena at all; and however probable their occurrence, cannot make any part of the positive knowledge of mankind. They are, therefore, to be guessed at, as the nearest ap- proach to certainty. To doubt that the sun will rise tomorrow, would be justly deemed insanity-, and yet it is equally ab- surd to think we know it will. Water has hitherto, when left to the law of gravitation, invariably run down hill, and nothing appears more likely, than that it will continue thus to do; but to know the fact, is not an attribute of ordinary humanity. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 119 The difference, therefore, between knowledge and belief, is too palpable to be mistaken; and may be seen to consist in this while the former depends ex- clusively upon nn especial cxamination,and accurate ap- prehension of the fact iiself; the latter is a in ere deduc- tion from other facts, to which the particular fact in question is supposed to stand in a logical relation. And so of the events of prophecy, which must have existed in the mind of the prophet, as more or less distinct anticipations, produced by a course of reflec- tion upon the relation existing between apparent causes and unapparent effects. It appears entirely incontrovertible, whatever at- tempts may have been made to invalidate it, that no idea was ever acquired, but by the collision of some external circumstance with an organ of sense, or by reflecting upon ideas already thus acquired: Or in other words, we have no means of direct knowledge, except by the aid of our senses, and that too by their direct application to the objects of inquiry, or to their representatives; or of indirect, or inductive, knowl- edge, except by judicious reflection upon the relations and tendencies of such objects, or upon the ideas they shall have created. There is perhaps no greater absurdity in Nature, than the idea that mind can anticipate thought. Mind and thought are synonymous, and therefore converti- ble terms. Hence it would be no less absurd to say, that mind thinks, while that very contemplation is mind itself, than to say that thought thinks, or that motion moves. 120 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. It is true, that mind has been erroneously interpre- ted as the instrument of thought, which appears to be an injudicious epithet for brain, that is now recog- nized, by all educated persons, as the exclusive psy- chological apparatus. In this manner, cause and ef- lect are palpably confounded, and the function of an organ mistaken for the organ itself. Mind is as clear- ly an organic function as muscular motion; both be- ing phenomena, produced by irresistible impulse up- on the thinking and motive organs. Nor can either brain or muscle excite itself to action. They must passively await the presence of excitation, without which neither would ever act: To speak physiologically: Man is an aggregate of complicated organism, which is so arranged as that, whilst each individual organic structure possesses a specific identity and functionality, the whole are as- sociated by means of vascular and nervous intercom- munication, into an individual, living, thinking, ac- ting machine, whose phenomena are either psycho- logical or automatic, or, in other words, voluntary or involuntary; with the former of which only, are we at present concerned. A voluntary action is that which occurs in conso- nance with, and as an impulse of, the will, and is pri- marily produced in the following manner-, viz. An appropriate external stimulus is presented to a heal- thy organ of sensation; whence a corresponding im- pulse is received by the nerves, or sentient medium between the world and consciousness; which impulse being transmitted to the brain, a corresponding con- sciousness, idea or perception is, at once, developed. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 121 Nor can I apprehend any other mode, by which an original, or primitive, idea can have been ever ac- quired. And yet, this primitive idea may become it- self an efficient stimulus to thought an adequate substitute for physical impulse, in the development of any formal series of reflections. And beside these, there seems to be no natural and apprehensible mode of inducing the state denominated consciousness. What, therefore, is apparently more innocent or judi- cious, than an inquiry after the peculiar mode by which a reputed supernatural idea may have been ac- quired? But upon this question, or rather this para- doxical fatuity, Philosophy frowns contemptuously, whilst all Nature is as mute as vacancy itself. No ! never has she whispered a thing so senseless as su- pernatural revelation; nor practiced the servility of owning a superior. And is not man, at best, a hum- ble part of this same adaptive, systematic Nature? And what is all his aggregate biography, but a single paragraph of her voluminous and interminable histo- ry? Can he, a mere instrument, like a pair of pin- cers. in his mother's hand, with which to work her purposes, successfully aspire to that which she has not intended ? That humanity can acquire a thought, above what Nature can suggest, is a fallacy, at which reflecting infancy should sneer. Prophecy, therefore, can never have been, at best, any thing more than an expression of opinion relative to an anticipated event, of which known circumstances appeared to the repu- ted seer, to indicate a greater or less probability : For, as we have already heard, certainty with man, 15 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. pertains to nothing which has not yet transpired; and even of that, he is too often conscious of misappre- hension, not to distrust the infallibility of his senae> It seems to be high time, therefore, that the stultify- ing phantasm, prophetic, or supernatural, inspiration. was effectually exploded, and intellect disenthralled from its superstitious servility. Nor does it seem less derogatory to cultivated common sense, that mankind should admit the occurrence of phenomena, independ- ent and transcendental of Nature's laws. It is said, that God wrought miracles, in aid of Ju- daism, and of the subjugation and extermination of those who ventured an opposition to Hebrew robbery and dominion.? And what, meanwhile, became of his omnisciency, that he should have wholly overlooked rliose palpable defects, in both the ethics and theology of Judaism, for which a few years after, he found it indispensable to substitute the novel system called Christianity? And did that project prove abortive, which a senior God had instituted, especially, for the Jew, and which a junior God was miraculously com- missioned to enforce? And did God waste a world of pains, in this and various other ways-, upon His peculiar people, until His undisguised partiality be- came a by-word of reproach, and a plausible excuse for atheism; and then, alas, resign them up, with ap- propriate denunciations, to His satanic- adversary for both temporal and eternal ruin ? And did he not al- low the only Theocracy on earth, the only govern- ment, be ever, personalty, administered, to be sub verteJ, and its subjects, who bad long basked in the THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 123 egotizing beams of culpable partiality, to be persecu- ted, dispersed, enslaved and murdered, by the samo pagan idolaters as had been the particular objects of His almighty vengeance? Now, do you seriously be- lieve in the existence of such a god, or in his power to interrupt or modify the laws of Nature; and that for purposes so fatuous or vile, that common justice deprecates, and cammon sense detests, them? And would a god like this, be fully competent to direct a world's phenomena, so broad, so limitless, that this whole system called our own, is, comparatively, a single atom? But these comparisons are nugatory, since such a god could not produce a spear of grass, nor scarcely tell it from a turnip. It is also said, that God wrought miracles in order to convince mankind of Christ's divinity, and of Gos- pel-truth. And with what success, though aided by the fagot and the sword, the genuine disciple of Christianity, of this, or any other, time, would blush to tell. And if we may measure the extent of unbe- lief, by the deep and reiterated lamentations of the pious; Christendom has dearly paid, perhaps too dear- ly, for its reformation, however tenaciously its friends may hold the contrary. The proposition is plausible at least, that no less miracle is required to produce conviction of a super- human truth, in the mind of an individual, than in the minds of the whole human race nor can it mat- ter at all, whether the subject of such communication is philosopher or fool; since a supernatural idea, being acquired ceither by sensation nor reflection, can stand 134 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. in no relation, whatever, to a natural one, nor be modified in the least, by any of the phenomena of Man or Nature. What worse improvidence, therefore, of either God or man, than to begin to propagate a truth, especially of the Gospel's reputed moment, too late to benefit a hundred generations; and by a method, so defective, that eighteen hundred years have been wasted on its preface a method inevitably, and proverbially, abor- tive, without the aid of God's incessant, miraculous interposition, through the medium of His Grace! And if the Gospel-dispensation were made for man's immediate safety, wherefore was God so culpably im- provident, as to defer that dispensation for the period of four thousand years, wherein some hundred thou- sand million souls must have been lost, for want of gospel intervention? Or wherefore all this bustle, about a novel method of salvation, while the Hea- then's piety and the Jew's obedience were adequate to its accomplishment? And is a god of such a char- acter worthy of respect, and his absurdities to be ac- credited as supernatural and divine phenomena? Or is it not inversely true, that such a god does not exist, except in Superstition's wild imagination, and thus, too palpably preposterous for serious contemplation? And however generally or universally the idea may have been adopted, or venerated, is it at all too sacred for children to break their jests upon? And yet, is not this fallacious whim personified, the very God both Jews and Christians worship, and to which the work of miracles is imputed? And to THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 125 which the wisest and best of men must bow, m hum- blest adoration, or be stigmatized as willfully corrupt and dangerous atheists, to shake whose hands is thought, by not a few, a cleanseless contamination? Superstition seems to have sworn her votaries upon the altar of incorrigible ignorance, never to yield as- sent to the suggestions of Reason, upon the dogmas of theology; nor to discard a folly she has ever taught. Nor has that oath been often broken, nor she annoyed by frequent heresy. But upon the question of the supernatural charac- ter of revelation, were all the other, innumerable ob- jections nugatory, the two following appear to be suf- ficient to invalidate the superstitious dogma. These are the fallibility of the compilers, and the metaphys- ical ignorance of their authors. To substantiate the first objection, it should be only necessary to refer to the word apocryphal, as applied to the character of religious essays, of both the Old and New Testament eras. Were it true, that individuals have beensupernatu- rally inspired with ideas, that Nature could never have suggested, and therefore nugatory to common sense; and entirely incommunicable to others, but by the same supernatural process; there is, nevertheless, a serious difficulty presented, in the absence of an in- fallible criterion by which the uninspired may clearly determine its character: For unless there is some- thing of this kind associated with such unnatural com- munication, there must be a perpetual liability to mis- take, imposture and scepticism. Hence it should not 1-6 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. be denied, that a sufficient test should be connected with divine revelation, or with the revelator himself, to resolve entirely, the doubts of the rankest incre- dulity. And upon this momentous subject, it seems omniscience would thus have certainly suggested, and omnipotence have promptly instituted. Now. you will not misunderstand me, when I em- phatically declare, in this public position, that, what- ever the consequence, I fearlessly assume the respon- sibility of denying the existence of any such provi- sion, and cast my defiance of con tro version, boldly in the teeth of a reputedly infallible Tritheism. You are all, doubtless, aware, that both the old, and new Testaments were compiled from a great number of miscellaneous manuscripts, differing very widely, from each other, in style, and in moral and religious character. And that from such betrogen- eous mass, those selections were made, which ap- peared to be most consonant, in the opinion of the compilers, with the genuine spirit of divine truth that i?, truth upon moral and religious subjects. Of these manuscripts, it cannot be doubted, that very many were entirely rejected, on account of the ab- sence of the required characteristic. ^-Others were believed to possess it, but in too slight a degree to ex- tinguish every possible doubt of their genuineness. Those it would seem, were too highly appreciated, to be altogether discarded; and were, therefore, pres- erved, and finally arranged under the denomination, Apocrypha. A third class appears to have consisted of those writings, which carried about them the indu- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 1*27 bitable evidence of supernatural origin, and Mere compiled under the denominations of The Old and New Testaments. These, however, have undergone, at different lime* and by different tribunals, several revisions and mod- ifications-/So that what has been unsuspiciously adopted, as genuine revelation, at one period, has been rejected as fallacious, or apocryphal, at another.) Hence it is a most natural, however injudicious, con- clusion, that what are distinguished as the holy scrip- tures have, at all times, participated of the fallacies, ad even absurdities, of the illiterate eras in which they originated, and in which they have been succes- sively, though not successfully, weeded: For not- withstanding they have undergone much advantage- ous pruning, they have still retained many superflu- ous and uncomely appendages. Now, do you not think it most preposterous, that a supernatural discrimination could have suffered the embarrassment of a doubt? Or that there could have remained, under such a criticism, an apocryphal, or doubtful, essay? And yet there are many such, of both the Jewish and Christian scriptures, which have at different periods of religious history, been confi- dently adopted, and devotionally used, as portions of divine revelation. Hence the conclusion appears to be unavoidable, that the scriptures were compiled, under the fallible direction of mere human judg- ment; and consequently of no higher authority than any other human speculations. Nor does this con- sideration, in the least, depreciate their value: For 1-2-3 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. truth can never be intrinsically modified by the pecu- liarity of its origin, or mode of communication. And were it suggested by an idiot or a devil, and in harsh or exquisite poetry or prose, it would be no less val- uable in its effects, when adopted, than though it were really communicated by the incomprehensible, if not impracticable method of divine revelation. And this is confidently offered as intrinsic evidence of the fal- lacy of the aforesaid dogma. Of the second objection, or the metaphysical igno- rance of the biblical writers, very much more ought to be said, in its elucidation, than is compatible witli our present opportunity, or the feeble ability of your humble servant. That mankind were anciently and scripturally deemed to be morally and religiously responsible for the character of their belief, admits of no manner of doubt, whilst the validity of any part ef the scriptures continues to be acknowledged. This proposition is not only positively and unequiv- ocally asserted by Christ himself, or by the author of the Gospel, and often repeated by his apostles, but i> so common a sentiment in both the old and new Testaments, especially the latter, that I should deem itself justly chargable with a willful insult to your religious education, were I to designate particular in- stances. Hence, it cannot be denied, that man is positively responsible to his maker, for, at least, his religious opinions and affections, or that the Omnis- cient Son of God was grossly ignorant of the meta- physical character of his creatures. Nor do I feel the least embarrassment from the predicament in which THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 129 this proposition places me; since I deem it wholly unnecessary to review the history of metaphysical fallacies, or to disturb the literary lumber of by-gone ages, under which a superstitious Theology has been indefatigably laboring to bury the question of man's religious irresponsibility. I am confident that no scientific question is less difficult of apprehension than the one under consideration; since it requires nothing more of any individual whatever, in order that he should be able to judge, with sufficient accu- racy, of every psychological phenomenon, concerned in its solution, than to watch carefully and impartial- ly, the operation of his own mind, in any given in- stance of voluntary action. Nor does it matter, in this inquiry, whether a thinking soul, or a thinking brain, is admitted in the premises. In either case, the psychological history is the same; the mental phe- nomena being developed by the same causes, and in the same order of succession, whether thought is a function of the brain; or of the soul, displaying itself through that medium. Hence we again assume, that thought is not self generative, but entirely dependent upon impulse, for its developement; and, as an ex- emplification, would offer the following. You. are doubtless aware that many petrified speci- mens, or organic remains, of extinct species of vegeta- bles and animals, have been exhumed from deep and solid masses of transition and younger rocks, in va- rious geographical situations upon our globe; and that their examination has not only produced a series of novel reflections among philosophers, but has literal- 16 130 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS, ly established a new era in the science of geology: and beside these, has thrown an enormous weight in the scale of probabilities against the Mosaic Cosmogony: and hence against the supernatural character of the Pentateuch. And were you asked, whether you be- lieve that any of these particular reflections and opin- ions would have occurred, if accident had not exposed the aforesaid petrifactions to human observation; would you hesitate to yield an answer upon the side of its negative? You are also aware, that, once, the whole human race, who were capable of reflection, believed the earth's surface to be flat, with the slight exception of hill and dale; nor sho-uld it be suspected, that you are unacquainted with the circumstances that prove it to be spherical. And were not these circumstances ap- plied, and reapplied successively, for thousands of years, before they produced a final conviction of the truth? And is it, nevertheless, preposterously pre- tended, that such conviction could have been other- wise attained uninduced and self-generated? Yes. to the deep disgrace of present metaphysical science, it is so! Nor is this the only, nor the silliest dogma, that Prejudice has instituted, for common-sense to sneer at. Thought has been referred to the brain, whose ac- tion, or functional excitation is assumed to be identi- cal with thought, as that of muscle is with motion; nor is the one more capable than the other of origina- ting its own actions. For. if the brain, were really possessed of such ca- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 131 I fwcity, it would have been nugatory, for any intellect- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. of Popery, that shall have cleared off the opacity of your vision, with the despatch of a successful occu- list, whereby you shall have come to detest the opin- ion you lately thought so valuable! And where is DOW the responsibility for this new opinion, which the church calls heresy, and deserving of torture and perdition : Did you predetermine it, or design, or in- stitute, the means of its accomplishment? O'r were not those. means produced by talents much surpassing yours, and dropped, by accident, upon the supersti- tious path, you were stupidly and contentedly pursu- ing: and which you ignorantly, but piously believed the only way to heaven? Having acquired your opinion, you thought it pass- ing strange, that you should have been so obstinately wrong, or so well pleased with so palpable an error. And yet your conscience told you, there was no need of penitence. And had you been a practical inquisi- tor, and tortured out the lives of countless, conscien- tious men, for what you deemed the welfare of the church, your worst reflection should have been re- gret, that your opinions were not sooner changed. And thus thought Paul, of his Christian persecutions. In this example, you have also an illustration of the fallacy of an almost universal opinion, that we are happier with our present belief, than we should be with any possible substitute. For it has been shown, that you were not only entirely satisfied with, but obstinately tenacious of your opinions, as papists: and that, as protestants, also, you were not only equally sat istied with your new ones; but were sur- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 13'J | prised at the grossness of your former errors, and blushed at the recollection of having stupidly adopted them. Opinion, therefore, is not the more satisfac- tory, for being one thing or another, but for being ours: Hence it should be a matter of indifference, whether \ve retain our present opinion or not wheth- er we hold the same perpetually, or change it hourly, so far at least as mere opinion contributes to happi- nes. But you have already heard that there is anoth- er, and more substantial, value in opinion, estimated by its salutary influence upon human conduct. Our object, therefore should not be to retain a present opinion, but to acquire a right one, in which our real interest always predominates. And do you really think it a successful display of what you deem to be infinite wisdom, wherein the in- carnate Logos, or wisdom of God, is made to say, that He will reprove the world of sin, because they be- lieve not on him and that they who believe not that he is the Christ shall die in their sins, and of course be excluded from paradise? That he that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned; and that he that believeth on the Son, hath everlasting life; and he that believeth not shall not see life, &c.; especially, when contrasted with the following, Mark 9.23: "Jesus said unto him, If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth" ? Most certainly the man could believe in the power of Christ to restore the health of his epiliptic son, as readily as he could believe His superhuman character. (The first he might believe if he could the latter he should believe or be damned A 136 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. Did Christ upbraid his appostles, as in Mark 16.14; because they believed not the witnesses to his resur- rection, and. nevertheless, condescend to afford Thom- ratuitous demonstration of the fact, without demanding his belief upon a less consideration; as though unbelief were not altogether reprehensible wherein testimony, however direct and unimpeacha- ble, fails to produce conviction? And what do you think of the natural, or supernat- ural, acquirements of the renowned disciple of the ficticious, Jewish Gamaliel, or recompense of God, when he charges his brethren "to take heed, lest there be, in any of them, an evil heart of unbelief," to which abundant reference is made, as the seat of propensities, affections, preference, will and even opinion itself, leaving 1 the brain, which is the exclusive psychological organ, without a single function to per- foTrn? The bible, therefore, promulgates opinions, whose absurdity should have secured their explosion, even among the children of the peasantry, centuries ago: And yet their appreciation with theology renders them, apparently, too invaluable to be voluntarily re- linquished, or even wrenched from the gripe of a superstitious obstinacy, which tradition has so long petted, that it has become altogether incorrigible. It should be deemed no less than blasphemous, in these latter days of improved erudition, to reiterate the preposterous fallacies of reputed divine revela- tion, as though God were once so ignorant or abusive, as to have adopted or promulgated them, to his own, THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 137 and his creature's shame. Insanity and idocy, only, should be excused for charging God with having wrought a fallacy, or committed a mistake. No ! that which is untrue in Nature, a God can never have adopted, nor inculcated. The foregoing, therefore, are human fallacies; anatomical^ physiological and metaphysical errors, of which the Clergy, from ignc- rance or prejudice, or both, continue to be madly te- nacious, in spite of reiterated confutation: And io the very language, that science has long since rendered nugatory, they pretend to philosophize and instruct an illiterate laity, whose stupidity fattens upon their theological and metaphysical stultiloquence. And here, you will permit me to give a brief reca- pitulation of my sentiments relative to that most stupid of all serious questions, viz., that of moral culpabili- ty for mere abstract opinion;, which is, metaphysically interpreted, a state of mind either favorable, or unfa* vorable, to whatever suggestion or proposition it shall have been presented with the former constituting belief, the latter unbelief. If, therefore, a person can- not institute an opinion antecedently to suggestive circumstances,- and even contrary to their natural ten- dencies, it is clear, that belief and unbelief, in all pos- sible cases, are irresistibly forced upon him; and hence the charge of moral or religious responsibility must be entirely nugatory. The mind, as has been already said, is dormant du- ring the absence of excitation; nor can opinion be ever formed without a presentation to the mind, of more or less of those circumstances, which have ac- 17 13* THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. quired the name of evidence. As well might math- ematics be instituted without numbers, or geometry without figure. Hence, if opinion, or belief and dis- belief cannot occur, in the absence of what the mind recognizes as testimony, which would be equivalent to aa opinion without an object, it must depend, in- eontrovertibly, and exclusively, upon circumstances, over which the mind possesses no modifying control. Responsibility, therefore, for the formation, or pos- session, of opinion, is one of the senseless dogmas of illiterate superstition; of which it is disgraceful to acknowledge, that it is, yet, to be exploded: For. if it is culpable, in any case, to have acquired an errone- ous belief, a single exception to the rule is altogether inadmissible; and hence culpability must be as cer- tainly, if not as momentously, involved in an errone- oirs opinion of astronomy, or chemistry, as of theolo- ^Pp'frf morality. And who. allow me to ask, is so un- reasonable, as to reproach a cobbler, with his ignorance of Sir Isaac Newton's Principia; or a back-woods log-roller, with that of Sir Humphrey Davy's, or Jus- tus Liebig's Agricultural Chemistry; of which, in all probability, neither has ever heard ? Yet. if the scriptures are literally true, an erroneous opinion of the personality, or divinity of Jesus Christ, which, by the by, stands upon the same foundation as any other, is to be visited with the amazingly dispropor- tioned penalty of eternal damnation. And, most cer- tainly, if belief can be instituted without apparent evidence, it can be so, in, direct opposition to it. And. hence, a Lazarus might have sanely believed, that he THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 1S ( J was snugly deposited in Abraham's bosom. Nor, upon tiiis principle, would the literal incarnation oi' the spirit of evil find the least inconvenience in be- lieving 1 himself, to be the immaculate Son of God. And so Napoleon might, if he would, have believed his ruinous defeat at Waterloo a splendid victory; and that his murderously unexampled retreat from Moscow, and his exiles to Klb, and St. Helena, as so many magnificent triumphs. Now, religious infidelity consists, in fact, of a dis- belief of these and similar contemptible absurdities, which Theology has arbitrarily and successfully im- posed upon mankind: Nor dees it involve the slight- est distrust of a single truth in Nature. It frankly admits all the testimony afforded by Nature, and all the inductions Reason has been able to draw there- from, in favor of the existence of a God, which it is, however, entirely unable to distinguish from the idea of ultimate causality, whereat every continuous in- quiry must finally terminate; and at which every se- ries of phenomena must have commenced. Religious faith, on the contrary, appears to have nothing to do with Nature, or with any of her palpa- ble realities; but professes to spurn them, as objects entirely unworthy of its exalted contemplation ! It constitutes one of the three rundles of the ladder, upon which a fictitious Spiritualism anticipates its ascent to a fictitious Paradise. And yet, so inconsist- ent are spiritualists, that while they decry the world and the flesh, as being too uncleanly far the residence and habitation of tbeir sanctified souls, they are often 140 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISM 1 *. found so firmly clinched to its veriest corruptions, that Death itself can scarcely unloose their gripe! -^Yes, while they are importuning you to relinquish your attachment to "the things of time and sense" for a more exalted devotion to God and spiritualism, they are doubtless sometimes, much more seriously devising some artful plan, to circumvent a neighbor in a bargain, and thereby transfer, unpaid for, anoth- er's property to themselves: Nor is it dealing unfairly with spiritualists, an occasional, magnanimous ex- ception having been admitted, to say that, while they point with one hand toward an imaginary heaven, they are literally committing felony with the othenj Such is the apparent practical result of both Theism and Tri-theism, notwithstanding they assume to have been instituted and patronized of God; sustained by miracles; and verified by martyrdom; and all, espe- cially, for man's regeneracy, from a state of nature, to a state of grace! And, in the face of ail this palpable invalidation, the religious Fanatic, nevertheless, believes all truth, superior to that which ministers to the welfare of the beast, to be safely wrapped up within the folds of a stultifying and maddening spiritualism! AVherefore then, I boldly ask, should the slightest blush suffuse the cheek of him, who is peevishly taunted with his infidelit* 1 ? Should he not rather glory in his, little less than miraculous, emancipation from the intellect- ual thraldom to which his race has so long, tamely and shamefully submitted? And let me indulge the hope, that your affirmative assent is unembarrassed bv a momentary doubt! LECTURE V. THE CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF THE OBJECTS OF RELIGIOUS FAITH CONTINUED. Scepticism has been constantly, and, doubtless, with no little propriety, taunted with its ignorance of both, the letter and spirit of those scriptures it would, as is said, ruinously, if not maliciously, invalidate. But admitting the justice of the general charge, that sceptics are poorly read, in, both, the scriptures and their voluminous, elaborate commentaries; the rule has, nevertheless, been interrupted by frequent indi- vidual exceptions, wherein may have been found enough of biblical erudition to have done credit to the cowl or suplice to pope or bishop. QAnd yet the general reading of those scriptures, superficial as it may have been, has, doubtless, engendered and nourished the present luxuriant Infidelity^ that threat- ens, ere long, to supersede the superstitions of Chris- tianity; and that, without detracting from its ethical, and only, truth: Therefore, whilst the Christian solicits attention to the Scriptures, as an infallible mean of instituting and confirming spiritual faith, the seep- 142 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. tic may, with, at least, an equal confidence, advance the same proposition, to invalidate their superhuman Character: And whilst the one is laboriously search- ing out biblical concordances; the other, with much less labor, may sate himself with the contrary. Apply yourselves, therefore, both to the volume of Nature, and that of reputed, divine revelation, perusing and comparing them, carefully, page by page, that you may, judiciously, decide, how far the truths of the former corroborate the hypotheses of the latter! Nor distrust the validity of this assertion. That Nature is one great, infallible truth a magnificent aggrega- tion of all the miscellaneous particulars of herself and history; constituting the sole criterion, by which all human truth, of both thought and action, should be tested! For veritable thoughts and opinions are but Nature spiritualized literal truths accurately cop- ied by the brain! However ample, the apparent cir- cumference of our rule, religious faith is, neverthe- less, excluded from its limits. One of its earliest and warmest advocates has, most aptly, defined it in Heb. 11, Iff' Now faith is the substance of things hoped v iuTj the evidence of things not seen." And, in this, we have a striking instance of old fashioned, logical acumen, which, by the by, is shamefully in fashion yet; especially, in the service of theism! j Two propositions are, pretty clearly, included in the apostle's definition of faith; first, that it is the substance, and second, that it is the evidence, of a thing or, that it is, both, the substance and evidence, that our confident expectations will be verified; the THEOLOGICAL CRITICISM*. 14 slightest analysis of which, must clearly expose the inanity, if not the insanity, of its author. By what sophistical necromancy, a literal substance can he wrought, out of mere mental confidence, or how mind can be transformed to matter, can be known, only, to supernaturalism ! Nor can it be reconciled, with any of the views of common sense, that faith is the evidence of any truth whatever, except that the mind has been, antecedently, influenced by real or imaginary testimony in favor of the event hoped for! And yet this sonorous inanity this rhetorical mi- gacity, has been pompously enunciated from every pulpit in Christendom, and upon every convenient occasion, as being especially imbued with the awful spirit of divine wisdom! Faith, of whatever kind, or degree, is nothing, more nor less, but a confident expectation of the lite- ral occurrence of some anticipated event; and is, therefore, neither the substance, nor the evidence of such event; being itself as fallacious as any other at- tribute of humanity. But if religious faith possesses the efficiency imputed to it by the Scriptures, and yet can claim no strength, superior to that of any other; for that faith is still but faith, whatever subject shall have developed it, nor always stronger in the right than wrong; then, Monomania should never err; Li- centiousness be disappointed; nor Parsimony be un- happy: Nor should Millerians, or Second-adventists, remain, in lingering disappointment, for having failed of their anticipated translation to the skies! But to return to the Pentateuch, where Criticism 144 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. will find no wane of objects, on which to vent its ae. rimony. At the termination of the deluge, we find the hu- man nice reduced to eight individuals of a single family, from three of whom the world was to be pa- ternally indebted for its repopulation : And yet, bu-t about a century had elagsed, when Babylon the great the queen of cities a peopled world in miniature, stood, gigantically, astride the majestic river of Eden; and, in her vain assumption of omnipotence, mocked at invasion, and laughed at the reiterated, prophetic threatening of the Almighty. Around and in her midst, arose a wall, in competition with the ciouds, and vying with a mountain's strength; whose hundred brazen gates yawned at a population whose num- bers historians have not ventured to compute: And, within its westerly enclosure, sublimely stood the towering Babel-pyramid, that reared its ostentatious higlit, in sacreligious nearness to the throne of God. /"Nor yet so near that Omnipercipience could clearly view it from its own Emphyrean; and therefore "God came down, to see the City and the TowerTV And because it was so fearfully indicative of the almighty power of human strength combined, as to threaten Omnipotence with successful competition, God resort- ed to the surprisingly ingenious expedient, of con- founding, or diversifying, human dialect, in order to disperse its dangerous population, and divide its threatening enterprise. And so successful was the project, that Ninus, the son of him who founded Babylon, successfully emulated the enterprise of his THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS/ ' 145 father, in the erection of magnificent Ninevah scarcely inferior to Babylon itself: Nor could Egypt- ian Thebes have been much less, or later in its origin, than those already named ! f Now, would you not deem yourselves insulted, were you offered an opinion of the absurdity and abor- tireness of the foregoing project; or of the utter in- consistency of the biblical record, which preposter- ously derives all this immensity of people, wealth and art from Noah's sons, within the period Chronology designates, or one hundred and two years? Are you aware, that all the population, which could have re- sulted from the six prolific individuals of Noah's family, at the rate of doubling in sixteen years, au increase more rapid than was ever known, would (numberless than five hundred, in a single century ?J And do you still believe great Babylon was peopled thence; and that her millions were from Noah's loins, iti contravention of Nature's institutes:; nor yet, a miracle pretended to be wrought, in aid of its accom- plishment? Then you may fearlessly proceed to swallow, both, Jonah and the whale, as a very feasi- ble employment for so capacious a credulity! J And again; whose dialect, but that of the builders of the sacreligious edifice, was confounded? Or were it of the whole population of the great city, or even of Chaldea itself; that' were but an inconsiderable portion of the inhabitants of a populated world, as the Hebrew tradition explicitly and repeatedly de- clares that ancient one to have been. And, should Ignorance venture upon a contradiction, it may be 18 146 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. r:-'r>:ed, where were Armenia, Assyria, Mesopotamia, \rani, or Syria, Persia, or the land of Nod, Egypt and Ethiopia? Were they not already planted with towns and cities; and also bloated with a population, from which millions could be spared for defense, or depredation? And \\hen Abram first passed through the land of promise, were not the Canaanite and the Perizzite already there, and in countless numbers too: And were not the Horites, Amalekites and Arnorites fsettledttpbn their borders? What better than a sense- i'able, therefore, is the story of the confusion of human dialect? I will not stop here to recount the contemptuous reflections, elicited by the palpable inconsistencies of \!>r;uri's going with his family and effects, from Ha- rau, in Mesopotamia, to a position between Bethel ' i, or Hai, in the land of Canaan, a distance, by any practicable route, of more than five hundred miles, and that in a country too, which Josephus says " it requires much time to pass through; it being te- dious traveling, both in winter for depth of clay, and in summer for want of water: and besides this, for the robberies there committed, which are not to be avoided by travelers, but by caution beforehand." And this long, difficult and dangerous journey accom- plished, without a single incident, worthy to be re- corded; nor but two short lines appropriated to the whole account, viz. ''And they went forth, to go into the land of Canaan; and into the land of Canaan they came." Now do you not deem this quite too insignificant a THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 147 journal, for divine Inspiration to have suggested of so inevitably eventful a peregrination? And do you not think, that Contempt would debase itself, were it to condescend to scowl upon so utterly worthless an item of civil history? I do not intend, in these essays, to commit a waste c .f your, or my own, time, by noticing unimportant discrepancies; nor, especially, by a snarling pedagog- ical criticism of mere style: But a specimen or two just now presents itself, of quite too singular a char- acter to, entirely, escape remark. (in Gen. 9, 23, we read, " And Shem and Japheth took a garment, and laid it upon both their shoulders, and went backward, and covered the nakedness of their father; and ihe'ir faces were backward, and they saw not their father's nakedness." In order to make sense of this quotation, it is necessary that the word backward, as repeated in tlie same sentence, should be inversely interpreted in its two positions, i. c. if those two sons of Noah went backward, in approach- ing their father, they could not, at the same time, have conveniently looked backward, or in the same direction without seeing the very nakedness it appears to have been their object to avoid. But this is merely a blunder, and not a falsehood; And yet, it seems ex- ceptionable, that Inspiration should commit the slight- est blunder."^ It seems an instance of somewhat more than austere justice, that Ham shall have been cursed with perpet- ual servitude to his brethren, for having accidentally. or even purposely, seen his drunken father's naked- 148 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. ness; and, therefore, how inexcusably absurd, to ac- cuse a being of reputed infinite justice, of having ar- bitrarily transferred a penalty from the immediate transgressor, (admitting Ham to have been such) to his unborn, unparticipant, innocent and irresponsible posterity! And do you seriously believe that God, intentionally, dictated this palpable slander of him- self; and that too, with the fallacious expectation, that it would escape detection by our imdiscrimiuative race? Then you may, with the utmost consistency, admit the accuracy of the Jewish description of Him; and that He had really forgotten, or never knew, how cunning, an intercourse with Satan would make man- kind. We were, however, agreeably disappointed upon meeting with the subsequent declaration, that the subject of the aforesaid condemnation should, never- theless, be also the servant of the Lord: For it is written, in verse 26, of the chapter referred to, " And he said, blessed be the Lord God of Shem, and Ca- naan, (Ham's posterity) shall be his servant." That is, in its only grammatical acceptation, the culprit \vas sentenced, not to be the servant of Shem, but of the Lord God of Shem; a somewhat singular dispen- sation toward the subject of so serious a retribution as that of perpetual slavery to one's kindred. (^Nor should we believe that Noah was better than insane, having just awaked from a state of drunken stupidi- ty, to the consciousness of deserving himself to be cursed J to utter such an unnatural denouncement, were it not a matter of subsequent history, that Ca- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 149 naan was really invaded, conquered, enslaved and murdered. And were the question asked by whom: Would you not very confidently reply, by the de- scendants of Shem, through the loins of Eber or He- ber and Peleg; and meanwhile think yourselves fully justified by the letter of the record? Then you would be, for once, palpably mistaken. For to your utter confusion, and that of all believers in the con- sistency of Jewish supernaturalism, you will find in the following, or 27th verse, this declaration, that " God shall enlarge Japheth, and he (Japheth shall dwell in the tents of Shem; and Canaan shall be his (Japheth's) servant;" which seems not, however, to have been historically verified. It is explicitly declared by this theological oracle, that Eber was the father of the Hebrews, and the great-grand-son of Shem; from whom Peleg was the first, and Abram the sixth generation: And that the Hebrews, or descendants of Shem, were the conquer- ors and enslavers of unfortunate. Canaan. But the record is a direct contradiction of this, wherein it says, as above, " that Japheth, (or Japhet) shall dwell in the tents of Shem, and Canaan shall be his (that is Japheth's servant:" Japheth being, meanwhile, rep- resented as the father of the nations who inhabited the isles of the Gentiles; or, as Josephus says, the father of the Galls, Sythians, Medes, Greeks, Thracians, Cyprians, &c. &c. by whom the primitive Canaanites seem not to have been at all disturbed. It is certain, therefore, that the texts under conside- ration, are grossly inconsistent, either in their construe- 150 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISM?. tion or import. They either do not convey the mean- ing of the writer, or he was guilty of promulgating folsehoodi. For, it is, at best, historically true, that the Canaanites were neither the servants of God nor Japheth. Thus ends our criticism of the syntax adopted hy supernatural Inspiration; but not with its other nu- merous connections. I would he indulged in a single remark, upon the discrepancy observable between the pentateuch of Moses, and the history of Josephus, in regard to the length of each of the seven generations between Shem and Tcrah. While the former allows but thirty-two years and a half, as the average length of a generation, the latter extends it to a little less than one hundred and thirty- two. Arphaxad is also declared by the former, to have been bom but two years after the deluge, while the latter, as emphatically, declares it to have been twelve. This may*be taken as very plausible evi- dence, at least, that different, if not numerous tradi- tions had been preservedof the same historical events, respecting the Hebrew people. Now, it is recorded of the patriarchs of these seven generations, that they lived to the average age of three hundred and thirty years; not, however gradu- ally decreasing, as Josephus declares, but between the consecutive ones of Eber and Peleg, abruptly reduced to little more than one half; or from 464, to 239, year-. And do you think it credible, that, while human litV was prolonged to 380 years, that connubial eligibility THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 151 shall have arrived earlier than when it was abridged to 120, as the case appears to have been with Moses and his cotemporaries? And here I am reminded of a somewhat striking disparity between the account given by Moses and Josephus, respecting the time and manner of the aforesaid abridgement of human life. f We find, agreeable to the biblical chronology, that, in the year two thousand three hundred and forty nine before the present era, God said " my Spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is flesh; yet his days shall be a hundred and twenty years." At what period of human history, this decree is to be literally and permanently enforced, remains for futurity to determine, since it has not been veri- fied in the past, j Subsequently' this declaration, Hebrew genealo- gy informs us, that the average length of human life, during eleven generations, was three hundred and five years nearly. And we learn from the poetry of David, Ps. 90, 10; That the days of man'i years were three score years, and ten; and that if by reason of strength, they were extended to fourscore years, yet their strength was labor and sorrow; for it was soon cut off, and they were flown away. Hence it may be very reasonably concluded, that, during the last three thousand years, the period of human life has been very nearly as it is at present; and therefore the val- idity of Inspiration, in this instance, apparently, not a little suspicious. But Josephus, failing as may be supposed, to find, amongst the traditions of his coun- trymen, a satisfactory reason, for the abridgment of 152 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. human life, has employed his own ingenuity, with laughable success, in constructing one, viz., because Moses happened to live one hundred and twenty years, God, therefore, in respect of him, determined that to be the length of human life: A most exalted idea of Deity, and of the motives by which He is actuated. Another circumstance also, which bears strongly upon the validity of the Mosaic account of the shortness of the seven generations, between Shern and Terah, is, that the average length of the eight subsequent ones, or those from Terah to Moses, inclusive, was about 46 1-4 years, or nearly 13 3-4 longer than the preceding, which seems to be altogether dissonant with the principle of gradual abridgment, therein clearly inculcated. This however, though apparently too absurd to have been committed by divine Inspiration, is com- paratively too trifling to expend a serious objection upon. And thus, it may be said of its innumerable associates; such as the profane implication of God iu the fraudulent imposture, practiced upon the un- wary Egyptian King, wherein, at Abram's instigation, Sarai disavowed her connubial relationship, and pal- pably., as did her husband, also, perverted the truth, by an avowal of consanguinity that did not exist; ffor she was not his father's, but his uncles daughter?) And do you think it probable, that God connived with such a black-leg cheat as Abram, to circumvent, abuse defraud and frighten honest Pharaoh? And such he surely was, for aught the record tells us: For it is a fair conclusion from history itself, that the custom THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS, 15$ then, not only excused, but even justified Pharaoh's contemplated intercourse with Sarai, had she been unmarried. Wherefore then, was Pharaoh plagued with great plagues? Was it as a punishment for the witless confidence he placed in the word of God's particular favorite; as though he were himself re- sponsible for a mere contemplated delinquency; and that too, one into which he had been cheated, by the willful misrepresentation of righteous Abram? Or did God, really, contrary to any rational expectation of him, suggest the expedient of a palpable false- hood, and a most reprehensible fraud, in order to subserve the interests of a favorite, which could not have been honestly accomplished; thus admitting Om- niscience to have fallen into a dilemma, wherein, infi- nite justice was unavoidably sacrificed to the imbe- cility of almighty power? ^But this was a Hebrew god, from which nothing better could have been ra- tionally expected JAnd yet both orthodox and unor- thodox theology owns such a character to be the ob- ject of its most pious veneration; and would damn, to endless wo, whoever ventures a dissent from the justice of its claim! Alas, that superstitious Tyran- ny shall have scourged mankind, so long and safely; nor even now, afford a hope that its dotage will ever yield a chance for successful revolution. But what is stranger still, in this most strange nar- ration, (especially wherein a Jewish god's" insanity is not concerned) is that Sarai should have retained, un- til her ninetieth year, and in that prematuring climate too, so many of the fascinations of her youthful beau- 19 13. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. ty, as to supersede, with king Abimelech, the fairest of all the countless damsels he might command; and who, without a question, as the eastern fashion was, were emulous of domestication, within the precincts of his harem, or moral slaughter-house. What induced Abram to go into the south, in a journey from Egypt to Canaan, situated as those pla- ces are in relation to each other, i. e. east north east, and west south west, having Ramesees or its neigh- borhood for the Egyptian extremity, whereby dis- tance and difficulties must have been continually in- creased, is a question, apparently somewhat difficult of solution. Again Do you believe that Abram and his nephew, Lot, acquired in Egypt, during a residence, scarcely more than sufficient to relate the incredible story, such numbers of a little while before, is said to have pitched his tent toward 163 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. Sodom, (not built his house therein) should have been thus cooped up within the gate of the city, with no other household than his wife and two provident and precocious daughters, Avho were in the oddest of all predicaments, that of married virgins^as in Gen. 19, 8 and 14, is a circumstance, apparently ,;absurd enough for second-adventists to believe. But perhaps you are, this moment, meditating a retort, in the follow- ing language, 14, 12. "And they took Lot, Abram's brother's son, wiio dwelt in Sodom, and his goods, and departed." And yet, before you shake your sides to lameness, with laughter at your conscious victory, just take a peep at what Jpsephus says about the same event, viz: "Now when the Sodomites joined battle with the Assyrians, and the fight was very obstinate, many of them (the Sodomites) were killed, and the rest were carried captive; among which captives was Lot, who had come to assist the Sodomites. "- But to say another word or two, of those minister- ing angels, or, spiritual messengers of an omnipresent God. How strange it seems, that they shall have (bund occasion to revise their cogitations to reverse their predeterminations, or expose themselves to per- sonal abuse, from a licentious and beastly populace, whom they had the power, as it \vould clearly seem, to blast with blindness, paralysis or death; according as their almighty pleasure was inclined. And do you deem it other than miraculous, that Lot shall have offered, so unnaturally, to sacrifice, his two virgin daughters, (who, by the by, were already mar- ried) to the diabolical concupisence of a countless THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 169 multitude; and, especially, that such an offer shall have been still more unnaturally rejected? We further find what curiotis things those appari- tions were, who, having been repeatedly transformed, and retransformed, from men to angels, and also phy- sically employed in dragging forth the loitering family from destruction, were, finally, in consummation of the strange, unnecessary metamorphoses, sublimated to an individual God, whom Lot thus ventures to ad- dress: " O, not so my Lord!" And then proceeds to banter him about the place of his retreat, and with as good success, as did his uncle Abraham, in the former case; although the bargain turned out less profitably than Lot had probably expected : For the record says, he soon left Zoar, for the mountain, where it is repu- ted that the patriarchs of Moab and Ammon were more miraculously, than immaculately, begotten. This is, nevertheless, explicitly contradicted by Jose- phus, who says, " There (in Zoar) it was that he (Lot) lived a miserable life, on account of his having no company, and his want of provisions." With these remarks, which are not a tythe of those demanded by the absurdities of the record, but which are all, our alloted opportunity will allow, we shall pass, with but an occasional criticism, to the story of the Hebrew exodus. At Gen. 20, 1, we find that Abraham sojourned at Gerar, between Kadesh and Shur, which appears somewhat difficult of apprehension; since both the latter places are some miles to the south of the for- mer. It must have been, therefore, quite a supernat- 21 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. ural circumstance, that Abraham shall have lived. at Gerar, and, at the same time, many miles south of it. this chapter, we also find a repetition of Abram's farcial denial of his connubial relation, and auain, hypocritically, passing off his wife as his sister, with the intention of prosecuting a successful fraud, or basely preserving his own skin, at the expense of his wife's chastityj A dilemma, it would seem, that both God's power and warm affection for his favorite, should have prevented. Nor would it have required, that we can see, a greater miracle, than that which did prevent Abimelech's intended intercourse. Of Hagar's repudiation from Abraham's family, it is written, Gen. 21, 15, "And the water (with which Abraham had supplied her) was spent in the bottle, and she cast the child under one of the shrubs. Ami she went, and sat down over against him, a good way off, as it were a bow-shot: For she said, Let rne not see the death of the child." And again, verse 18, And God said to Hagar, "Arise, lift up the lad and hold him in thy hand," &c. This narration, when fairly interpreted, presents a most singular phasis. We find by biblical chronology, that Ishrnael was eighteen years old at the time of Hagar's repudiation; and therefore, in all probability, a very great baby, to make such childish work with; especially,^fhat he lacked but two years of the period, at which the He- Jbrews were made to wield the war-club.) And do you think that Ishmael's ghost, yet conscious of its former patriarchal dignity, would deem it flattery, to see this THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 1 item of its base biography? But this is supernatu- ralism; and therefore spiritually true, though literally as false as Satan's war in Heaven. In the last verse of the present chapter, we read, "And Abraham sojourned in the Philistine's lai.d ma- ny days." An attempt to reconcile this with its context would be met with no little difficulty. For we find the places of Abraham's residence, after his return from Egypt to Canaan, to have been first, the plain of Marnre, near Hebron, where he remained until the destruction of the cities of the plain; when he is said to have jour- neyed from thence toward the south country, and so- journed in Gerar; and thence to Beer-sheba, or the place of profanity between Abimelech and himself, and where he appears to have been at the close of this chapter. And the following considerations are found to embarrass the consistency of the text, viz: All the forementioned places are noted in biblical maps,*and asserted by Josephus, to have been within the limits, and constituting a part, of the country called Canaan, or Palestine. Therefore it entirely fails of being historically true, that Abraham ever resided in the land of the Philistines at all. Beside, Gerar and Mamre appear to have been convertible terms; hence we find the location spoken of as Gerar, or Mamre. Hence Abraham's journey from the one place, to tli other, must have been an extremely short one ! Omitting to notice the several- particulars of the senseless fable, contained in the 22d chapter, it should be deemed sufficient to remark of God's project to 172 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. tempt Abraham, or, as more appropriate, to test the measure of his faith, that, were man the arbiter, some such trial might be plausibly prosecuted, in or- der to develope satisfactory confidence of the fact. But how contemptibly absurd, when Omniscience judges in his stead; which needs no testimony to a fact, that must have been an item of the aggregate of infinite contemplation. {^And yet, this question being of a Jewish god, I quit the point, in utter hopeless- ness of success. > t Again, Gen. 24, 29. " And Rebekah had a brother, and his name was Laban;" and at 29, 5, cc And he (Jacob) said unto them, (the three flocks of sheep of course, since no persons are said to have been there) Know ye Laban, the son of Nahor?" At 24, 47, we find the following: "And I (Isaac) asked her (Rebekah) and said, Whose daughter art thou? And she said, the daughter of Bethuel, Na- hor's son, whom Milcah bear unto him." Again, at 29, 1ft, " And Jacob told Rachel that he was her fath- er's brother, and that he was Rebekah's son." The plain state of all which is, that Abram, or Abraham, and Nahor were brothers, and married their nieces, the daughters of Haran. That Isaac, the son of Abraham, married Rebekah, the daughter of Bethuel, and grand daughter of Nahor. Pursuing therefore the foregoing relationship, in the next or second de- gree. And that finally Jacob, the grand son of Abra- ham, married Leah and Rachel, the daaghters of La- ban, or grand daughters of Bethuel, and great-grand laughters of Nahor, the same relation being here pre- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 173 served in the next degree. And here we leave this subject to be reconciled, in its several parts, by whom- soever, that can command the leisure and ability. Our opportunity not permitting us to dwell upon secondary topics, we are constrained to pass innu- merable absurdities without remark; such as Jacob's curious device, to defraud his father-in-law out of the produce of his cattle; Rachel's theft of her father's household gods; Jacob's meeting God's angelic host at Mahanaim, or place of angels, near the middle of Palestine, whence he "sent messengers before him to Esau, his brother into the land of Seir, the country of Edom^ &c. &c. And wherefore he shall have sent messengers the distance of a hundred and forty miles, and into a government entirely beyond fiis con-r templated residence, simply to report his childish fearfulness of his brother, Esau, whom he had al- ready succeeded in defrauding of his birthright and his father's blessing, seems to have been left to the discovery of second-sight. " And Jacob was left alone; and there wrestled a man with him, until the breaking of the day. And when he saw that he prevailed not against him, he touched the hollow of his thigh: and the hollow of Jacob's thigh was out of joint, as he wrestled with him. And he (the man) said, Let me go, for the day breaketh: And he (Jacob) said, I will not let thee go, except thou bless me," which, it seems he did; and therefore " Jacob called the name of the place Peniel: for I have seen God face to face, and my life is pro- served." Nqw, do you think that this adventure be- 174 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. twecn Jacob and God Almighty, in the form and phys- ;- i^al character of humanity, actually, or literally o.c- \ curred: Doe? it not seem most strange, nor less contempti- ble, that such puerile notions of a Deity shall ever have prevailed among mankind, as that he banters, speculates and wrestles with his creatures, as man with man, or rather clown with clown? And these are beauties that religious Faith would wed and hug, as though they were the very life of paradise it hopes for. And is it probable, seeing there was no miracle in the case, that Jacob pursued his journey, so immedi- ately and well, with an unreduced luxation of his thigh, by which it seems,however, God made him permanently a cripple^ And was it really generous in God, to leave his friend in such predicament? The story of Dinah's ravishment is too absurd to pass unnoticed; and yet we cannot stop to pay it half the compliment it deserves. Chronologically, Leah was given to Jacob in the year 1753 before Christ; and Dinah's ravishment per- petrated in 1732, B. C. If, therefore, Reuben, Leah's eldest son, was born one year after the former date, he will have been nineteen years old, at the time of his sister's insult. And if we take the case of Isaac, as a precedent of the age, at which infants were, at that time weaned, we shall have Simeon to be near five years younger, or fifteen, at the uttermost, at the period above allu- ded to: and, by the same rule, Levi, Leah's third THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 175 son> would have been but ten years old. And yet, we are bound to believe, (the story of Ishmael to the con- trary notwithstanding,) that these two infants, " Sim- eon and Levi, Dinah's brethren, took each man his sword, and came upon the city boldly, and slew all the males. And they slew Hamor, and Shechem his son, with the edge of the sword, and took Dinah out of Shechem's house, and went out." But the gist of this affair is not yet exposed. For, by the rule adopt- ed for the interval between the births of children, Dinah must have been at the time in question several years unborn; And, at the most accommodating calcu- lation, she could not have exceeded four years. Rath- er young to have been the subject of that species of abuse! Nor ought we to ornit the expression of our deepest cantempt for the fraud, these children of God practiced upon the credulous House of Hamor. Passing over the story of Joseph and its connections^ with the frank avowal, that, with all its faults, (and they are as numerous as even Scepticism could wish,) it is, nevertheless, particularly creditable, amongst its baser relatives, we will sit down, deliberately, to the task of criticising the wonderful story of the Hebrew Exodus. And firstj of the course of miracles instituted by God, in order to induce Pharaoh to release the He- brews from bondage. We find at Ex. 1, 22, a decree of Pharaoh, " That every son that is born, ye shall cast into the river," and that Moses was preserved by a breach of it, while Aaron being born four years ear- lier, escaped its application. Several entire chapters 17G THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. of this book are appropriated to an account of mira- cles wrought by God and the Egyptian sorcerers a contest most obstinately and successfully prosecuted, for one, wherein the parties were so amazingly une- qual. We find, for several trials, that God's advan- tage was unessential; until, at length, he came to the finer work of making lice, to which it seems the gross machinery of the 1 sorcerers was not adapted. And yet we think it strange, that those magicians should have failed, at all, even against the Deity, with the power they are admitted to have had: For it seems that nothing less than Omnipotence could make a frog. In this case, therefore, the admission is too little or too much since he who could really produce a frog, could scarcely fail to make whatever else he might intend. And then this whole parade must have been no better than a farce, or fiction, whilst, if mira- cles were possible, a single one, and less than these, had it been wrought on Pharaoh's obstinacy, to soften, not to harden, might have superseded all this cata- logue; and answered quite as well, except the nice excuse God found in Pharaoh's obstinacy, for damn- ing him most heartily. Another striking inconsistency, in this old, witless^ tale, appears in this. Notwithstanding God had, al- ready, turned all the waters of Egypt, to blood, so that "the fish died, and all the river stank," yet it is said the magicians did the same with their enchant- ments. And we ask what waters, not already changed to blood, they could have found, on which to operate? And again, while Egypt was so immersed in frogs, as THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 177 that they croaked and skipped from kneading-trough to oven, how was it accurately determined that the magicians had also made their share? And then again, the strangest oversight is here. The hail, most wonderfully thick and large, destroys both man and beast unsheltered, and also, all of living vegetation, except in Goshen, where the Hebrews were : And yet the locusts came; nor were restrained from eating up the last and least green vestige that remained, through- out the whole of Egypt. Another oversight appears in this. That God, hav- ing sent a murrain, of which all the cattle of Egypt died, he then sent, thoughtlessly, a storm of hail to do the work already done. And still, as though he were forgetful, or insane, he swears to srnite the first born of the whole, upon the evening of his memora- ble passover. But what insufferable slander should we deem the following, were it of any other, than a Hebrew god! Ex. 12, 13. "And the blood (upon the door-posts) shall be to you for a token upon the houses where you (the Hebrews) are; and when I see the blood, I will pass over you, and the plague shall not be upon you, to destroy you, when I smite the land of Egypt." What could be said, in deeper derogation of God's omnisciency, than that he should need such bloody signal, to save him from mistake? And what worse slander of his justice, than to charge him, as in 11, 2, of having said to Moses, " Speak now in the ears of the people, and let every man borrow of his neigh- bor, and every woman of her neighbor, jewels of sil- 22 173 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. ver and jewels of gold;' 3 except that he shall have been accused, as in verse 3d, of directly participating of the fraud, by "giving the people (Hebrews) favor in the sight of the Egyptians?" Or, as in 12. 36, that he shall have given "the people favor in the sight of the Egyptians, so thai they lent unto them such things as they required: and they spoiled the Egyptians." fit was entirely unnecessary that the writer of the pentateuch should have revealed the aforesaid slan- ders of his god, since fraud and inconsistency are con- sonant with his general character; and that, beside, the Egyptians would never have been thus defrauded by their slaves, had not their stupor been miraculous.^ ^nd again, verse 37, "And the children of Israel journeyed from Rameses to Succoth, about six hun- dred thousand on foot, that were men, beside children." Upon this extraordinary item of Jewish history, our first object is, to establish, by a careful compari- son of testimony, and an unprejudiced, and even lib- eral computation, the most probable number of per- sons- and animals, included in this memorable exodus. First then, we find several biblical declaration?, more or less explicit upon the point in question; our text being first in order. And next in order is Ex. 1, 46, " Even all they that were numbered (of an age fit for war) were six hundred and three thousand five hundred and fifty." And also as enumerated by tribes, 2, 32, "These are those which were numbered of the chil- dren of Israel, by the house of their fathers: all those that were numbered of the camps, throughout their hosts, were six hundred thousand, and three thou- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 17$ sand, and five hundred and fifty. But the Levites were not numbered among the children of Israel;" they not being included, more than women, in the list of warriors. And in corroboration we may be allowed to introduce the testimony of Josephus; who says: " Now the entire multiude of those that went out, in- cluding the women and children, was not easy to be numbered, but those that were of an age fit for war" (from twenty to fifty) " were six hundred thousand." If, therefore, we adopt the number explicitly given in the Scriptures, we have first, of the class of warriors, 603,550, who were of an age between 20 and 50 years. Nor can there be found either fact or reason, against there having been an equal number of coeval females, or 603,550. And of both males and females, above and below the foregoing numbers., (seeing that 120 years were established as the period of human life,) it must be sufficiently liberal to estimate them at an equal number, or 1,207,100; to which the Levites are yet to be added. To this point we find at Num. 8, 29, that, cc All that were numbered of the Levites, which Moses and Aaron numbered at the command of the Lord, throughout their families, all the males from a month old and upward, were twenty and two thou- sand;" to which should, most reasonably, be added as many females, making an aggregate of 44,000. Which several numbers, being added together, amount to 2,458,200 as the least probable aggregate of persons, concerned in this event; not including the indefinite "mixed multitude, that went up also with them." And of the flocks and herrh tfrev are : - 180 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. driven forth, it would be erroneous to say, as in Ex. If, 38, that "there went up with them even very much cattle," unless each family possessed a number of animals of all sorts, double that of its human indi- viduals. And even this with them, both for food and sacrifice, and also, stocking Canaan in the end, would be a state of poverty indeed. It is, therefore, more than generous, to compute their number thus; or at 4,912,200, which, added to the aggregate of persons, is, 7,374,300 individuals, of both men and beasts, go- ing out together, from the land of Egypt. And here, we are met by a difficulty, not very easily surmount- ed, viz., the surprising expedition with which they marched from Rameses to the Red Sea, i. e. a dis- tance, by the biblical map, of about one hundred and twenty miles in three days, and that too, through a district, of which Josephus says, "And, indeed, that land was difficult to be traveled over, not only by ar- mies, but by single persons." Now, we find no intimation, that th.e manner, or ra- pidity of the Hebrew's march, .wrnre miraculously as- sisted, whatever other circumstances may have been thus modified. These, therefore, are subjects of law- ful criticism; which may be handled alike, without mittens, and without the guiliof blasphemy, however justly chargeable with heresy. To the validity of the record, that these 7,374,300 individuals actually commenced their march from Rameses, on the morning after the passover, and. more especially, harnessed, or by fives, and at eve- ning encamped at Succotb, a distance of about forty THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 181 miles, there is at least one very obstinate objection, viz: That, in that form of march, admitting, them all to be well disciplined soldiers, and proceeding in line, allowing two feet for each platoon, they would have extended, from front to rear, but little less than nine hundred miles. And, admitting the eligibility of the country, and that they really marched in platoons of forty individ- uals abreast, they would still have occupied a dis- tance of one hundred and eleven miles; at which es- timate (whereby we yield eight hundred per cent of our rightful advantage) the case would, then, stand thus. The first platoon having commenced its march, at Rameses, and proceeded at the quickest rate of military progression, would have required twenty hours of incessant marching, to reach its destined Succoth. And yet, being followed by the rest, in the manner indicated, but little more than a third of this living immensity will have started. And ere the last platoon can have removed a step from Rameses, the first must have been nearly at the sea, and have been marching at the very swiftest rate, and unremittingly, but little less than five whole days, or from sunrise un- til sunset each. Hence, the rear platoon would not have reached the sea, until near the close of the tenth day. It is, therefore, apparently impossible, to reconcile the story, with the circumstances it inevitably involves. Another objection here, importunately obtrudes. Did Pharaoh repeal the prudent ordinance, from which Moses, in his infancy, so marvelously escaped ? \ 18-2 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. If so, why has Inspiration neglected to reveal it, and hence afford another hook for Scepticism to hang up- on? And if not, the conclusion is resistless, that Mo- ses was the youngest Hebrew living (some rare eva- sions of the law excepted) at the time of this strange exodus. And still another, somewhat unyielding difficulty comes up, from out this fertile mass of tradionary rottenness. We find the Hebrews to have numbered two mill- ions, four hundred fifty-eight thousand and two hun- dred. And that this immense population shall have proceeded from the seventy Israelites of Jacob's tribe, is what we should sooner chaw upon, than undertake to swallow whole. Allowing these seventy persons to have doubled each twenty years, during the period of their residence in Egypt which is not only a more rapid increase, than a state of cruel slavery, would justify, but than any other history has ever recorded, the whole num- ber at the time of their exodus would have been fifty- five thousand six hundred and eighty. Or a little more than one eleventh of the Hebrew warriors. And still, to doubt that this is veritably God's reve- lation of a literal occurrence, is deemed unpardonable heresy, for which its subject should be physically kicked, and spiritually damned. At least, so seems good orthodoxy to consider it; and wonders that God should be so dilatory, in his almighty retribution. And here, at the threshold of our inquiry into the absurdities of Judaism, our already expended oppor- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 1SS tunity admonishes me that a close of this discourse is indispensable. Anil hence the residue of this He- brew miscellany, compiled of fabulous traditions, senseless theology, exagerated, partial civil-history, moral allegories, tracts and dogmas, with much sub- lime and graphic poetry, must pass untouched, and scarcely pointed at. However discourteous, or even diabolical, it may be deemed by Christien Superstitionists, I am, never- theless, constrained, in obedience to 'my deep contempt of its recorded, superstitious fatuities, to pass over the entire book of Leviticus, with this single critical remark, viz: That Reason may fret herself to mad- ness, before she finds a mode of reconciling its for- malities with any higher views of God or Nature, than those, a savage Superstition would engender: And, as contrasted with 'Gospel principles, must have been the senseless institutions of a different God; or else a stranger thing must be admitted, than that of seperate Gods, for Jew and Christian; I mean, the acquisition, by the Jewish one, of so much wisdom and consistency, as would constitute respectable hu- manity ! Of Deuteronomy I would say more, and less con- temptuously, were not my opportunity expended. But as it is, I may venture upon a single question. In contemplation of the Jewish, civil code, do you feel disposed to its adoption, as a substitute for that you have; or its author, as your executive, rather than elect one from among yourselves? Or rather, do you not most heartily contemn that antiquated, blood- less mummy, that literary death's head, that Platonism 134 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. has lugged along, to frighten fools and children with. Of God's extreme civility to Joshua, much com- ment might be divertingly expended, were ic admissi- ble; nor less than volumes upon the book containing his biography. But we can only stop to ask, if you believe God taught such bungling astronomy, as this stupid fable indicates? Or that he was so lame in al- mighty calculation, as to adopt a plan, for Joshua's benefit, by which the world must have been physical- ly deranged, instead of a dozen others, not less effi- cient, and that common-sense would sanction! Upon the farce, (Judg. 6, 37) between God and Gid- eon, about the miraculous bedewing the fleece of wool, I would not even waste contempt. What strange unnatral thing, was that old giant, Sampson, whose strength, so commonly of flesh and bone, resided so entirely in his hair. Nor was Deli- lah's method to effect her object, less odd than Samp- son's constitution! In the llth chapter of Samuel, we find the history of an event, although not reputedly miraculous, appa- rently, too superhuman to have been otherwise ac- complished. We are here told, that messengers were sent from Jabesh Gilead to Gibeah, soliciting the aid of Saul. To whom he replied, "To-morrow, by the time the sun be hot, ye shall have help." And so punctual was Joshua, that he collected, from all Israel and Judah 330,000 warriors, (in no time) and marched them in a single night, a distance, by any practicable route, of at least 60 miles, and fell upon the enemy at Jabeshj before sunrise, the next morning. And thus stands the character of the objects of religious faith t LECTURE VI. OF , THE ORIGIN AND CHARACTER OF CHRISTIANITY AND THE GOSPEL. Suspect not your humble servant of standing here, as a malicious impugner of Christianity, or its adopted oracle; nor charge me with insincerity, while I, em- phatically, avow my preference for the Gospel, wheth- er of style or sentiment, to any other tract, of human, or superhuman, origin. And yet, to yield entire as- sent to its utter infallibility, is not consistent with my present views. Nor is it dissonant with its own ex- plicit teaching, that we should, not merely adopt opin- ions honestly, but that we should carefully test them, by the exercise of reason. Not having a moment's opportunity to spare upon a preface, we may claim to be excused that want of etiquette; and, therefore, unreproached, fall, warmly and abruputly, at our work. Of the origin of Christianity, we are too poor in historical evidence, to forego the use of much hypo- thesis; and hence, we hope for pardon, for its subse- quent adoption* xi A sdJ ;o-fi Imioc.iwi bnn , 33 186 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. That Christianity is quite as old, as itself has claimed, (and \ve doubt not older still) should he, at once, accorded to all its advocates, who hope to make it their advantage. Our first hypothesis is this. That Christianity, originated in Platonism, or, indeed, is but that, suc- cessively and variously modified. And, in support of this opinion, we adduce the fol- lowing circumstances. Plato is universally known, where learning has been taught, as the Grecian prophet, or man of God. As having amplified, as well as mystified, the theological crudities of his teacher, Socrates; and finally wrought them into an elaborate system of incomprehensible Spiritualism, which we assume to have been adopted bp the Jewish sect of philosophers, denominated Es- scns, of which Philo appears to have been an eminent disciple. Platonism was promulgated, in Greece, a little less than four hundred years before the Christian era, and became the uncontested criterion, or test, of all exist- ing literature, until Aristotle's almost superhuman strength pulled the academic from the clouds, and used him up as condiment to common matter. That Platonism, introduced thus early into Greece, should not have found its way the little distance from Athens to Judea, some time before the Christian era, is too unnatural to be the subject of a doubt. And lustory explicitly informs us, that this philosophy was inculcated in Judea, during the reign of the Ptole- mies, and imported from the Alexandrian school. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 187 And still it could not have retained its name of Pla- tonism, among the Jews, or .Toseplms would, most certainly, have noticed it; and therefore it must have had some other epithet. It cannot well be doubted, that the Jewish sect, called Essens, from its character and habits, was iden- tical with Platonism. And yet, its origin is, historically, a mystery. This sect is unquestionably referred to in the apocrypha] writings denominated Maccabees, more than 160 years before the present era. And Josephus, who makes no reference to its origin, says it had existed for a long time, previous to the date of his writing. We are also informed, that Philo, the learned Jew, was a most, devout disciple of new, or modified, Pla- tonism, or Eclecticism, which, in their time, appear to have he en convertible terms, and that he was, as be- fore remarked, a member of the sect of Essens also. Having thus assumed what it is impossible, at this long after time, to prove, that Platonism was called Essenism in Judea, we will now proceed to test its claims as mother of Christianity. Josephus informs us that the sect of Essens existed in his own time; and gives the following account of their religious principles and conduct. They hold that all things are best ascribed to God. That man consists of body and soul, the first corrupti- ble, the last immortal; and that the rewards of right- eousness are to be earnestly striven for. That, though they send presents to the temple, they offer up no sa- crificesj but have more pure lustrations of their own; 188 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. (or sacrifices of the heart) on which account they are prohibited the temple, and therefore sacrifice, or wor- ship, by themselves. They also live a better life than other men, and ad- dict themselves entirely to husbandry. They excel, to admiration, all other men in virtue; theirs not being common virtue, but real righteousness, and such as never hath appeared among others, either barbarian or Greek, not even for a little time, and yet it hath long endured among them. They have all things in common; and stewards are appointed to distribute equally to all, according to their necessities. They reject pleasure, as an evil, but esteem conti- nence and conquest of the passions as virtue. 1 They choose not to marry, and only consent to it, on the principle of necessity, in perpetuating the species. They guard against the laciviousriess of women, of whose fidelity they are suspicious.^. They despise riches, and are communicative to admiration. They have no one certain city, but many of them dwell in every city, and wherever they are, they partake of whatever they need, as though it were their own; and therefore carry nothing with them, when they travel into remote parts; though still they take their weapons with them, for fear of thieves. They neither discard nor change their clothes or shoes, until they are en- tirely worn out, or torn, to pieces."^ They neither buy nor sell between each other, but make such exchanges, as will best accommodate; and are allowed to take from each other, whatever they may need, as though it were their own. Their extraordinary piety con- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS'. 189 strains them to keep a strict silence about profane matters, until sunrise, employing their time, mean- while, in prayers and supplications, when they go, in- dustriously and faithfully to their several employ- ments. They are toad of clothing themselves in white veils; and punctilious in the practice of bathing their bodies in cold water. They are particular to have grace said before and after meals, praising their God as the author of the benefaction. They permit no clamor, nor disturbance, to pollute their houses, but permit every one to speak in his turn. They are eminent for sobriety and fidelity, and are ministers of peace. They dispense their anger with perfect just- ice, and restrain their passions within proper bounds. They condemn swearing as being worse than perjury, and hold their mere word more binding than an oath. They study attentively, the writings of the ancients, and choose from them, whatever they deem most ad- vantageous to their souls and bodies. They do not admit their proselytes to full membership, at once; but adopt them on trial for a year, presenting them, at the same time, a hatchet, a girdle, and a white gar- ment: And if they succeed in their observances, to the satisfaction of the sect, they then participate of the waters of purification. They are so strict obser- vers of the seventh day, as a day of rest, that they not only refrain from their ordinary labors, but pre- pare their food beforehand, that they may avoid even the kindling a fire. They believe, like the Greeks, in a future spiritual retribution that the souls of the just retire to a state of extatic happiness, while those of the wicked are subjects of an endless torment. 190 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. We find, at the commencement of the present era, that there were three prominent philosophic sects, as they were called, among the Jews; but which, with us, would be denominated religious sects. These were the Pharisees, or disciples of Reason, despisers of luxury and ostentation; respecters of age. believers in spiritual immortality, and future reward and pun- ishment, according to the virtuous or vicious charac- ter of the recipient. They believed that all things were governed by fate, except the actions and thoughts of mankind, which they considered free. The second sect was the Saducees, or aristocrisy; disbelievers in immortality, and strict observers of the Mosaic law. Of the third sect, or Essens,, we have already spo- ken. Now, of these three sects, we may very reasonably conclude, judging by the manner in which Josephus treats them, that the Essen, was a very numerous and popular sect, as late as seventy years after the reputed birth of Christ, or near forty years after his crucifix- ion. And, therefore, were not this the sect, known, subsequently as Christian, a most singular phenome- non is thus developed in the fact, that there is not a single reference, within the pages of the Testament, to such a sect, nor even to such a name. On what principle, therefore, except the one sug- gested, can this anomaly be accounted for? By what strange, yet secret, providence or catastrophe, did such a numerous and interesting sect become, so sud- denly, extinguished ? Indeed, we find the eulogy of THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 191 Josephus to have been written near forty years after Christ's reputed mission; and still this sect existed. And whoever shall carefully compare Josephus' ac- count of it, with the apostolic Acts, and yet is uncon- vinced that Christians and Essens were identical, must, we think, be blinded by his prejudices. There seems, in truth, no chance for reasonable dissent. But, not having time, at present, to note the partic- ulars of their agreement, I must, therefore, leave you to make the examination for yourselves, with this ad- ditional suggestion. That, in forming your conclu- sion, you will make all proper allowance for want of uniformity, that an admission of successive modifica- tion would demand. On account of the barrenness of our subject, in the article of positive testimony, upon the question of the origin of Christianity, we are thrown -upon the em- barrassing resource, of relying upon negative circum- - stances, as evidence in our own behalf. And, to this point, but a few moments can be appropriated. First then, of Philo, the Jew, who was born seve- ral years before the Christian era. Whilst he talked familiarly of the Logos, or wis- dom of God, as having planned the universe, and su- perintended its phenomena; and as being adequate and available to man's extremes! temporal and spirit- ual good, we still hear nothing of this miraculous re- former, denominated Christ, or God incarnate. Nor yet a hint of Christian reformation, nor its wonderful, or miraculous associates. And that no opportunity for information, could have been more favorable than 192 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. his. is evinced, most clearly, from the several circum- stances of character, situation and cotemporality. The latter circumstance being fully established, by the his- torical fact, that in A. D. 42, or eight years after the reputed crucifixion, he was selected by his country- men, as embassador to Rome, being esteemed the most learned and eloquent of his nation. Vow, do you think it, at all, reasonable, that the most literary and popular scholar in Judea, and living cotemporaneously with so extraordinary a personage, as Christ is represented to have been, and necessarily, from his situation, an attendant spectator of more or less of the extraordinary phenomena, said to have ac- companied his supernatural mission, and what is more, a brother Jew, by birth and parentage, would have observed, in all his writings, so profound a si- lence, as he appears to have done? If so, it can scarcely be disputed, that your preju- dice has stupified your reason. Plutarch comes next, to tell the world of his re- proachful ignorance, or willful, base suppression of the truth: For, in his ample, labored writings, neither the name of Christ, nor Christian can be found. And yet this greatest Grecian scholar of his time, was born but fifty years, after Christ, or but seventeen after his notorious miracles and crucifixion. Norcouldhe, well, have evaded knowing quite as much of these events, under circumstances no less favorable, as did the Roman Pliny, who, doubtless, has been made to say. while dead, what he never even dreamed of while alive. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. , 193 We next, presume upon the testimony of Josephus^ the eminent Jewish historian, whose ghost is doubt- less yet reproaching, with its shadowy scowls, that of every hooded Romanist, that lands on yonder side the river Styx, for having made his book tell lies, of which his living self would have been most heartily ashamed. This most eminent scholar of his time, whether of Judea, Greece or Rome, we find was born A. D* 37, or four years after the Logos had closed its per- sonal, earthly, mission: And yet, with all this, best possible, opportunity for knowledge, of all his learned countrymen, (Philo, or Paul, alone, excepted,) he has observed the strictest silence, unless the best, and most, of modern scholars are entirely mistaken, upon the question of a supposed interpolation in this thor's book. That the single sentence, of all the work, appro- priated to this momentous subject, is an interpolation by the Romish clergy, who propagated, unblushingly . the damnable, but church-saving doctrine, that false- hood is commendable, whenever it contributes to the interest of religion, is a plausible conclusion, at least. In corroboration of this opinion, we have that of the most ingenious Christian philosopher of the last century, Father James Henry Bernardino; patronized by Lous 16th, knighted by Napoleon, and pensioned by Joseph Bonaparte: And of whom it should be suf- ficient praise (were that his sole production) that In wrote the matchless tale, Paul and Virginia. This worthy, and hence extraordinary father of the Romish Church, remarks, and with quite his usual 84 ) U^fVMI lis au- 1 ^ THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. emphasis, (Studies of Nature, vol. 2, p 166,) having nlready, severely, animadverted upon the dishonesty of tho.se early Christian writers, through whose hands the ancient manuscripts had passed : " It is impossi- ble to adduce a more satisfactory demonstration of this ancient infidelity of the two parties" (meaning Christians and sceptics) " than an interpolation to be found in the writings of Flavius Josephus, who was cotemporary with Pliny." (One of the greatest scholars in Rome, but silent, we believe, upon the subject in question,) " He is made to say, in so many words, that the Messiah was just born; and he con- tinues his narration, without referring, so much as once, to this wonderful event, to the end of a volu- minous history. How can it be believed that Jose- phus, who frequently indulges himself in a tedious detail of minute circumstances, relating to events of little importance, should not have reverted a thousand and a thousand times, to a birth so deeply interesting to his nation, considering that its very destiny was in- volved in that event; and that even the destruction of Jerusalem was only one of the consequences of the death of Jesus Christ? He on the contrary perverts the meaning of the prophecies which announce Him, applying them to Vespasian and Titus; for he, as well as the other Jews, expected a Messiah trium- phant. Beside had Josephus believed in Christ, would he not have embraced his religion r" And this is a quotation from a voluminous work designed especially to sustain the divinity of the Scriptures. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 195 Iti simple courtesy, we are bound to own that the religious sect, called Christians, has, undoubtedly, existed, and been known by that cognomen, for nearly eighteen hundred years, at least. The question, therefore, next occurring, is. \\ r hen, whence, and wherefore was its name obtained. The first occurrence of the name of Christian is said to have been about A. D. 43, or 10 years from the crucifixion; as found in Acts 11, 26, which says, "the disciples were called Christians first in Antioch. This text clearly evinces, from its particular con- struction, that this name was not assumed, but arbi- trarily, and may be tauntingly, imposed upon the sect, as a stigma, intended to reproach it with, like Qua- ker, Methodist, Holy Roller, &c., and suggested by some objectionable peculiarity in their creed or con- duct. And, if the Christian sect acquired its known cognomen thus; must we thence conclude it had no previous epithet, though countless thousands, and al- most daily too, are said to have been proselyted to this new, and strange philosophy this revision of God's first attempt at creefl or statute making, for thirteen years preceding. And had Christ been known, throughout Judea, as its human, or superhu- man author, and also as its surprisingly, if not mirac- ulously, successful promulgator; would those million proselytes have witlessly relinquished the conscious credit of his name, and stupidly have waited, those ten whole years from his departure, in order that Re- proach might taunt them with an epithet? This would have been strange indeed, were not the 196 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. whole an allegory: But then, the name exists, as wo have seen, or else the record is untrue, since Saul and Barnabus taught Eclecticism, alias, Christianity, a full year at Antioch: And hence our next enquiry Whence its name? Nor can we here proceed a step, without hypothesis; and, however weak the crutch on which we limp, 'tis our dilemma, to hobble thus, or not at all. The first suggestion of our friend Hypothesis is this. The Gospel is an allegory, containing the very cream of all the known philosophy, at its date; and doubtless written out by Philo, the Eclectic. Nor could Judea have found another Jew, nor the world, perhaps, another man, who could have done the thing so well! But that he could do it thus, we have no doubt, if Fame has not most falsely, nor less flatter- ingly treated him. We think it breathes his match- less style and spirit; or rather glows with superhu- man pathos and benignity, of which he, much more than other men, was master. Nor is this suggestion, apparautly less plausible, than that which makes il- literate fishermen its author. Had such obtained the revelation; they would scarcely have told it thus. Nor has superhuman Inspiration but seldom found its way from God to man, through such a brilliant medium. And hence, and also from the Logos that inspired it, and that Philo worshipped as the Son,orsecoud attri- bute of God as He of the trinity personified, who planned the world and still remains its supervisor: and who, M both morally preventive and recupera- THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 197 live salvation. Nor can we deem it less than strange, that any careful reader of the Gospel, who knows a thought of Philo's upon the point in question. houM possibly evade our own conclusion ! And would you have, at once, a lucid specimen oi' our author's style, and plain acknowledgment, of alle- gory; read, carefully, what he has uttered by fictitious John in chapter first, of that sublime compendium of all the best philosophy of man, when that compendi- um was written. " Tn the beginning (of the creation) was the Wore! (Logos, or wisdom of God) and the Word was with (an attribute of) God, and the Word was God," (in- finite or omniscient.) " The same (Logos) was in the beginning with God. All things were made (form- ed or planned) by him (Logos or wisdom personified.) And him the Logos, Word or wisdom of God, isfirsr- ]y made to assume a personality, it allegorical ly re- tains throughout the work. Again, " In him (Logos) was life; (being) and the life was the light (moral wisdom, or Gospel truth) of men." Verse 14th, " And the Word (Logos) was made flesh;" i.'e. the wisdom of God was personified by the writer, for the purpose of more effectually illustrating it by practi- cal application to the business of human life. As an allegory, we think the Gospel a most transparent and invaluable production; while, as literal history, u is spiritless, insipid and even stultifying; at least to or- dinary common sense! This Gospel, Hypothesis again declares, and con- sonantly with the work itself, was written fov 198 TnnoLor.ir \L CRITICISMS. Jew*, whom Philo. doubtless, wished to benefit, by this superior philosophy: and that he, most ingenious- ly, however unsuccessfully, adopted allegory to effect his purpose, which only failed, from having met with superstitious, Hebrew obstinacy and bigoted, Mosaic infallibility the natural and inevitable result of a fic- titious political Theocracy. And this partiality, or affection, for the Jews, appears to us, much more like Philo, than like God; and, therefore, think it Philo's saying. That the general character, even of the Old Testa- ment, is allegorical, there can scarcely be a doubt with him, who has attentively reflected upon its moral tracts. The story of Joseph was doubtless fabricated, with the view of practically illustrating the virtue and effects of continence, or self command; whilst that of Job is equally explicit upon the point of pious resignation to whatever a Providence shall dispense. Nor can we imagine a clearer illustration of moral cowardice and its opposite, than is contained in those tracts, or allegories denominated Jonah and Daniel, \vhile literally, they are subjects of derision or contempt. And here, the author of the Gospel found a precedent, sufficient to justify himself. Nor would any other mode, than that of allegory, have promised half as much success, 'among an' ignorant and superstitious race. Nor did he fail, most faith- fully, to follow the example. In proof of which we make the following references. At the fifth chapter of Mark, we find an account of a maniac, which we are unable to interpret in any other manner, than as an allegory. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 199 We think the writer adopted, and most appropri- ately too, the literal maniac, or one laboring under the disease of insanity, as a most fit representative of him, who yields unqualified obedience to the dictates of his propensities. He is represented, in the tale, as one, on whom both common and extraordinary means of reformation and restraint had been expended uselessly. In fine, that every mean, except the Gospel influence had been vainly tried. -sL But that the Logos failed not, even here, of its re- cuperative and salvatory effect. And what a smudge envelopes us, whenever we most stupidly, contem- plate this as literally true A. legion of itinerent, vol- untary devils, not only to create, but uncreate to fit this one occasion. The subject of a trinity of divinities, as deducible from the Gospel, is doubtless also allegorical. God has been long contemplated as possessed, or rather constitued, of three grand attributes, Power, Wisdom and Goodness, infinitely extended. Power to create Wisdom to devise, and Goodness to direct the system of the universe. Nor could less than these have ever formed a rational idea of God in- deed. Power without design would be nugatory; whilst both power and design might be abortive or disastrous, without direction to a proper end. Almighty power, or Omnipotence personified, ig therefore God the creator, and individual in the human mind Wisdom, Logos, or omnisciency, is reflective- ly engendered, or begotten of omnipotence, as indis- 200 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. pensible to its exercise; and hence the second of the three personifications that constitute the trinity.- Goodness, or beneficence, is likewise reflectively en- gendered, or begotten of both power and wisdom, as being also indispensible to the judicious exercise of these; and constitutes the last of these three allegorical individuals, whose aggregation forms the trinitarian Godhead. Thus have we, or rather our Hypothesis, disclosed, and most concisely too, our notions of the when, the whence and wherefore of Christianity; Nor that with- out regret, that want of opportunity has thus restrict- ed us. We are come, at length, where Superstition would HCOVV! us into silence; and that with such acerbity, as should turn the sweetest milk of human kindness in- to bonnyclabber, Y*Z, to the question of the divinity, or superhuman character of the Gospel. Here again, we find ourselves upon the negative- side of the question, where hypothesis is unavoidable, and plausibility the highest point attainable. And yet, there are numerous facts available, that stand much nearer, than a cousinshipj to real demonstration, in favor of our position. Theology assumes, as evidence of the supernatural character of the Gospel, that it contains superior sen- timents, to those the world can have derived from any other source. This mav'j nevertheless, have been said much more in honesty than in truth. At least, we apprehend no difticulty in its entire invalidation both, by extrinsic circumstances, and intrinsic discrepancies. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 201 In this inquiry, we may be excused for calling up the Grecian Socrates, who was born near five hundred years before our era, to testify in our behalf. Socrates is said by his biographers, to have aban- doned all inquiries concerning the origin, and physi- cal phenomena of NViture, for what he deemed the higher, or more important departments of Religion and Morality. Yet, although he neglected, he did not despise physical or natural philosophy. But moral philosophy was the subject upon which he expended his best attention; and wherein his success was so ex- traordinary, that it was said of him, " That he brought philosophy down from heaven, to the abodes of men." He was fully convinced of the existence of an invisi- ble Creator of the universe, a being in possession of almighty power, wisdom and goodness, and who rules the world by a providence of his own. The existence of this Being he believed was clearly deducible from the system of Nature, and, especially, from the struc- ture of tbe human frame. And that, as man is capa- ble of reason, its author should be much more amply endowed. That we should no more doubt the exist- ence of Deity, because he is invisible and intangible, than that of other powers or principles, known only by their effects: But he thought the question about the substance of the Deity, unprofitable for specula- tion; and that it was sufficient that we clearly appre- hend his spiritual nature. Though fee was educated in polytheism, and sometimes spoke of minor deities, he was still the worshiper of one only God, the Crea- tor of the world, and the Judge of mankind; and to 25 202 THKOLO&ICAL CRITICISMS. whose kind providence lie traced all human blessing*; and maintained, that the omniscient and omnipresent Deity knows everything, and observes every secret thought and action of mankind. And hence our duty to wsrship him with all our powers, (mind, might and strength,) and one, that he most punctually performed, both in public and private; and sincerely believed, that God made especial, divine revelations of himself to his sincere petitioners; and that his holy spirit warned them of evil and aided them in virtue He taught that man cannot purchase, but must merit, the favor of God; and that, by a blameless life, w hich*is the truest and best service of the Deity: And hence his efforts to abrogate all sacrificial worship, to which his countrymen were obstinately inclined, and to which he became himself an offering. He considered prayer, essential to a virtuous life, and taught his dis- ciples thus to pray. ; ' Father Jupiter," (the Grecian name of God) " give us all good, whether we ask it or not; and avert from us all evil, though we do not pray thee so to do," (or do not name particulars.) u Bless all our good actions, and reward them with suc- cess and happiness. 1 ' He believed in the existence of an immaterial, immortal human soul, of divine origi- nal, and eternal destination; ana 1 connected with Deity by consciousness and reason. The. improvement of mind he considered of paramount importance; and self knowledge its first department; and that he who knew all things else, except himself, was still a fool. He distinguished the soul, as sensible and reasonable; or, as we ^hould say, propensitive and rational. THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. 205 The soul's immortality he deduced from its dignity, its vitalizing energy, its activity in sleep, and from the Mature of God from whom it is derived. He viewed death to the good, as but a transition to a better life, of which his hope was confident and clear, and where- in, he thought, with rapture, of meeting the virtuous of other ages. He was fearless of death and judg- ment, in the consciousness of having labored after truth, and struggled for virtue; but believed the souls of wicked and licentious men were sentenced to unut- terable woe, in a place for the especial retribution of impenitent wickedness. He made religion the foun- dation of morality: And that, as God wishes men to be virtuous, they should therefore be so. He believed that happiness depended, solely, upon the perform- ance of duty; and the desire of it, he considered as but one of the various motives to the performance of virtue; and thus established an intimate connection between virtue and religion. He had the highest conceptions of the dignity of virtue; and declared do- minion over the senses, (propensities) to be the high est state of freedom; and that virtue, only, is true wisdom: Whilst on the contrary, he deemed vice identical with insanity. See this allegorized in the three first Gospels, Mat. 8, 28, Mark 5, 2, and Luke 8, 27. His yet unsystemized morality was founded upon the only true metaphysical basis, "Do what the Deity" (or His proxy, Conscience) "commands thee^" Anil though he mistook somewhat the character and function of Conscience; he made it anjindispensabte attribute of the human soul, as a judge and director 04 THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. between right and wrong. He held, that human prac- tice is qualified by human kno wedge; and that, there- fore, perfect knowledge would, infallibly, insure per- fect happiness. He defined virtue to be the striving to make one's self and others as perfect as possible, and reduced it to the two great principles, Temperance and Justice; the former embracing duties we owe ourselves; the latter, those we owe to others. He defined temperance to be dominion over every sensual impulse; acid this he regarded as the basis of all other virtues, and indispensable to the proper exercise of Conscience and Knowledge. He held injustice to be one of the greatest evils ; and that perfect justice should be rendered equally to friends and foes; and that men should reader obedience to the laws of their country, however unjustly they are administered; and that the golden mean (or middle way between the two extremes) should be carefully observed in every thing. Thus, you are presented with a summary of a No- tice of the great Grecian moralist, to be found in the American Encyclopedia, under its appropriate head; and in which, you can recognize, even at the distance of nearly 23 centuries the great moral luminary the undoubted prototype of Philo^s Christ, who caught its brilliancy, and, as brightened too by Plato's fire, and further burnished by the allegorical inspiration of the Jew, thence reflected its broad and radiant briL- liancy, over Europe and the world. We will pass, without further comment, from So- crates to other equally veracious, and scarcely less THEOLOGICAL, CRITICISMS. 205 important, testimony; and firstly, call Confucius, the Chinese prophet, and not less ancient than the Greek, to tell what he once thought and taught, of moral principle. And thus he testifies. That temperance, justice and the minor virtues are indispensable to the happiness of society. That riches, pomp or luxury should be contemned, while the magnanimity, and greatness of soul, which make men incapable of dissimulation and insincerity, should be carefully encouraged: And that a life of reason is incomparably preferable to a life of pleasure, or sen- suality. That man possesses a reasoning soul, which he derived from Tien, (God) and that its cultivation and improvement is the highest and most useful em- ployment of man; and as thus improved, should be actively employed, in the improvement of others: And, in order to insure success, in the project of so- cial regeneration, each individual should begin with himself, and thereby add the weight of example to that of precept. We should, first, become that, which we would have others to be; and acquire an indelible love of virtue, and hatred of vice. That ufricient to ex- pose the discordances and fallacies of the New Test- ament, we are restricted to scarcely more than a sin- gle paragraph, and that the termination of our uniu- structive, thankless course. First, of the genealogies of Christ, as recorded liy Mat. and Luke. Here we have, for the same period, in the former, 41 genearations, (though Matthew declares them to be 42,) and in the latter 56, a difference of 15. No small difficulty to be surmounted ! For if wo allow but 41 generations, v,e have about 49 years for each, or an average of 17. more than are allowed, from Shem to Tera-h. And if 56 are allowed, we then have an average length of nearly 36, still an excess of 4 years, over the length of those more ancient ones. It has been, most foolishly, or impudently, said, that this apparent genealogical discrepancy, depends upon the misapprehension of the fact, that one belongs to Jesus and the other to Mary. Why should one have had fifteen more ancestors in its line, of equal length, than the other? And why should they both end in Joseph, unless he were the father of both, instead of neither? /And here comes a mouthful for the ostritch stomach of Theology to digest. If Christ was be- gotten of the Holy Ghost, and not of Joseph, how could he have been related to David or Jesse, by the way of Joseph^ Again, did Herod murder hundreds of JIG THEOLOGICAL CRITICISMS. children in Bethlehem and all its coasts, nor history have blabbed of" such denionian cruelty? Did Jesus lind Andrew and Simon, as he was walking by the sea of Galilee, as in Matthew, Mark and Luke? Or before he \veni there, as in John? Did Peter,firstly deny iiis master, to a maid, while sitting without in the palace; and again to another, in the porch; and also a third time before the cock crew, as in Matthew; and at the same time, as in John, make his first denial as he passed in with another disciple, and secondly, to the officers and servant of the court, not a maid, w r hile standing and warming himself? And did Judas, as in Matthew, cast down the price of treason, and go and hanif himself?- And, at the same time, as in Acts, purchase a field with the reward of iniquity; and, falling headlong, burst asunder in the midst, and all his bowels gush out? ^When the two Marys visited Christ's sepulcher, was there and was there not, a great earthquake? Or, did none but Matthew deem the thing worth mentioning ?j Did they come, as in Mat., as it began to dawn, and at the same time, at the rising of the sun, as in Mark? And also, as in John while it was yet dark? Did Mary Magdalene, visit the sepulcher with the mother of James, and at the same time, alone? Or did she do both these, and at the same time have other company also ? Did she find the sepul- rher closed, and at ihe same time unclosed ? Did she see an angel descend, and remove the stone, and sit upon it; and, also, the stone to have been already removed, and nothing upon it? Did she seethe angel sitting upon the stone, \vithout,and at the same time, within ? And did she see two angels 5 and : at the same time.butone? &c. &c AN ADDRESS TO THE GENIUS OF POVERTY A POEM IN TWO CANTOS. BY AN EXPERIMENTALIST. 184S. 1-0 ( brr/ ift * ariJ llmi ,o7t^ If t W\iow hn/ '.*' ( ) r hlii ow .*i-kvH dJ And why shpuld'st tbmi be scouted, as an imp Of Satan, and condemned to Infaiffj^' ^ As though thou wert, not less, accessory ,, avtf , To hian's depravity, than to his grief? Thou hast been charged, of old time, as the blight The mildew of man's brightest, earthly hopes, And spoiler of his noblest enterprise; The strfler of his out-side piety^ j^^ . (The sine qua non of its growth within) Nor yet, wert named in Eden's catalogue Of condemnations and delinquences ! .;. Thy biography, were it written out, And with a Peacock's feather, would almost Match the Pilgrim's Progress; and, quite excel The twisticals, of Boz's Oliver, Which seem too heavy, to have been written, Entirely, with the plucking of a wing: And yet, it is no literary trash, Would find a place in Littell's Museum! No book produced by mortal intellect, Save Gulliver's, (for Moses was inspired) Is so corpulent, with the marvelous, And yet, those marvels true, as thine would bel And could'st thou realize the ample fund, in any currency, but Biddle's rags, And those, above the fraction of a dime., Or, even, half the copyright should fetch, And would, if offered to the Harpers, first, Thou would'st, as suddenly, unknow thyself, As did the Royal-little- Gentleman, When knighted, for deftouring Caroline:* Which is the punishment, John Bull inflict*, On knaves, for trespassing on foreigners'! Dids't thou make thy first debut in Eden, With grandsire Adam, and our grandarn Eve, And other gentry, quite too amorous, To trust a youthful married woman with; And yet, escape, withal, the fearful curse, That fell on other luckless spirits, there; And, in the artless texture of a leaf, Become the small clothes of the needy pair? Nor, wert thou, erewhile thus incorporate, !n those primeval, undegenerate times, Less honored, than thine after substitutes. Mentioned, onlv, as unmentionables! *The boat, destroyed in the Schlosser outrag' If these remarks are consonant with truth, Thou could'st not then have had the threatening scowl. That makes folks, now, detest thee so: For, such a look would have monopolized, Exclusively, the stock of curses there; At least, if they had been dispensed by us: For we were, never, half, so much annoyed, By any other devil, as by thee ! . And strange we deem it, that Omnipotence, Who did foresee thy fihhiness and rags, Nor less forebear thy murmurings of fate, And reprehensions of a Providence, That fails to gratify thy selfishness Did not doom thoe, in mercy to mankind, To stop and curse the fiends of Tartarus! If thou wert promised, in thine infancy, A day of cloudless sunshine, it was vain: For, almost ere that luminary rose, The flame-lit clouds gave counter evidence, That a storm was rising, to overwhelm thee ! The pride of Wealth and its magnificence, Which oft-times, steals out human hearts and bruins., Looked, scornfully, on thy humble bearing, And marked thee, as the prey of Opulence, Together with thy numerous progeny ! And, in spite of Equity and Heaven, Thou and they and after generations, Were doomed to infamy and servitude, As an Inheritance , forevermore! And by thy junior, thus in bondage held, * J J e 3 By claim, pretended from Omnipotence, In vindication of accursed wrong; As though Benignity would have transmitted, From its throne, a license lor oppression! , ., , rx3 Shameless slander of a God of justice, Who hath, with nicest impartiality, Dispensed his mercies, equallv. to all; I -1.5 3 Nor designed the rule should be perverted! l b * oAW Thy history declares, the time was once, When all thy caste was stigmatized as brutes, To feed on threats, and grieve in thankfulness^ Or suffer scourging for ingratitude. Nor do we lack examples, nearer home, (We hope Judge Lynch wont hear the allusion) Of metamorphosing men to cattle; Though, not exactly, by the Power Divine, By which hereditary Kings are made, But what is nearest in authority, That of the Federal-Constitution, Which owns the equal rights of all mankind, And therefore deems the African a beast! For else, his freedom is as well secured By this same Compact, paramount to law, As that of any yankee-mother's son, Whose sire, the war-torch lit, at Lexington ! Glorious Spirit of Seventy -six, Which did, the fetters, of the black-man, fix. Through countless generations of his race; Nor heeded the anomalous disgrace, Of rearing its standard, in name of God, And striping its flag, with the negro's blood; Bestowing its freedom on all our kin, Whom nature wrapped not, in too dark a skin ! Thus doth Columbia's Charter secure The mutual justice, of Simon Pure! Nor is dominion counter to the plans Of brawling, nominal republicans! With whom, liberty is another name For downright, political recklessness Of all the rules a wise Consistency Has established, for its preservation A liberty, that bold Licentiousness Might feed upon, to gouty corpulence That fain, would make Philosophy and Art Shake hands with Ignorance and Quackery. And call this breach of Nature's institutes This impracticable absurdity, Sublime, political equality A liberty that spurns a guardian, Though it were a Deity incarnate ! Nor will it yield the insane privilege, Of being cheated, and imposed upon By any false pretender, who shall choose To expend his wit in that direction! As those ancient chronicles inform us. Whose veracity must not be doubted, Thou wert, firstly manacled, where the Nile Made corn abundant, yet where vassals starved: Where slaves,by thousands, wrought for one mmllorii, And other millions, for an insane king; Where princely vanity could gorge itself, With lumbrous, architeet'ral monuments Obelisks, Pyramids and Labyrinth, For Glory, Sepulture and Sacrilege; Nor grieve at such a reckless sacrifice, Of human flesh and sinews, as should draw Tears, from an eyeless, marble monument'. That thou wert, next, enslaved in Palestine. By those annointed Hebrew Partialists, That claimed, by contract of the Deity. The entire beneficence of Heaven: Nor, like innumerous, modern Christians, Would they admit a soul to Paradise, But through the slough, of their formalities! Thenceforth, the world, (for such were Greece and Rome,) Assumed the right to scourge thee at its will: And tho' that world has met sad changes since. It has not changed its hate of thee, Except in few and rare particulars ! Thou art, tho' men have known thee long too well. A thing anomalous inscrutable, And which no single definition fitsf Chameleon like, thou art as changeful As conscience, fashion and opinion are! For that which bears thine epithet, to-day Mightj yesterday, have been called competence, And to-morrow, with equal justice, wealth. Like one, who holds left-handed sentiments, Of Religion, Politics or Morals, Or like a debtor irresponsible, Thou art unwilling to expose thy stale Of feeling, or of funds! Kind hearted thing! To be so careful of our sympathies, As though we had a wish, to waste on thee, But that thou had'stbeen drowned with Egypt's Host Nor lived, to snarl at Providence so long. For ills, thy sordidness hath merited ! Thou art as friendless as ophthalmia, Or Parsimony, Toothache 3 or the Gout, And as heartily contemned as Treason ! And so thou should'st! for rank duplicity, The vilest trait, in Satan's character, And e'en in some, who own him not as master. Has marked thy wanderings, six thousand years And yet thou would'st. like most of us, be thought Possessed of virtues, which were never thine; And charge on others, want of complaisance, While thou dost not, one whit, respect thyself! Thou art the cringing sycophant of Wealth, Whom, meanwhile, thou pretendest to despise ! Norcan'st yet sustain e'en Honor's shadow, Without a golden crutch, to lean upon ! Nor is such lameness rare, among mankind i to To imitate Wealth's worst delinquencies. And play the tyrant, well, with Beggary, Seems the apex of thy mean aspirings. Such baseness fits thee, for a paltry slave. And shapes thy pliant limbs, for manacles! The ape and mocking-bird excel thee, more. In principle than art! For they do not. Select, for imitation, but the worst, Of all the practical examples, Of prank and voice, but fain attempt the whole! Thou art the pander of Licentiousness, The supple catspaw of thine enemy, To scratch out nuts, from where 'twould burn its owu ! Not much unlike, some talking animals. Who, being served, (ungrateful fratricides) Then serve themselves, by sacrificing those, Who have been catering for their baseness! Yet thou, with all these staius upon thy hands, Art no less sensitive, when honor ; s touched, Than though, memory had, to thee, turned traitor, And left thee unacquainted with thyself! Or wert a Congress man, or Col. Webb. To murder folks in injured manhood's cause, While the transaction proves themselves are beasts! And, were detraction whispered in thine ear, Thy carcase would, like a percussion cap, Explode, and let thy mammoth spirit out, To plant a Cypress, on a mad-man's grave f 11 So much like human nature is thine own, Thou wilt worship all of earth, that glistens, Or bears the stamp or" Mammon, on its back ! And he, who hath what thou hast sought, in vain. Hath thy reproaches, and thine envy too! Meanwhile, thou art vociferously mad With human folly, for its love of gold, Which, thou sayest, is so idolatrous. That Elysium would be rejected, Unless it were a mint, for coining cash, And, also, Immortality refused, (Were it a thing provisional,) If unemployed in counting o'er the trash 1 Our answer, to thy charge, must be concise! We wish it were, both, false and slanderous! Thou sayest, and thy saying is too true, (Though, in thy fits of frenzy, for the stuff. Which Fate determined should elude thy grasp.) That gold perverts the Law, and smothers Truth That Justice cannot hold her scales, so tight, That dust will not disturb its equipoise ! And, lo! thy sense of right is so acute, (And sharper, much., for its apprenticeship.) That thy philanthropy calls, loud and Jong, To have the order of the thing reversed, And then, the balance, to thy jaundiced eye. Would be, most admirably, adjusted ! Thou sayest, also, that the tyrant Wealth Assumes, too much dictation, and controls, > Disastrously, the fashion of the world, Which, blindly, runs a jack-a-lantern race, After the shadow of fictitious worth! So it does; and so thou would 'st, if thou could'st! Or professions have much, higher merit, In thy case, than they ever had in ours: For men, who \vould be Neroes, if in power, Are most obsequious, in manacles; And he, who would live free, or cease to live, Would be No! he would not be a master! Among thy numerous complaints of Wealth, Thou sayest it claims honor, not its due, In rearing all those mighty piles of art, Whether designed, for worship, or for show. Whose ruins, yet, attest magnificence, At which the traveler gaps, staringly, And wonders, at the human enterprise, Which could have planned and executed works, Apparently so impracticable! Nor apprehends, that these were monuments, Which superstitious Tyranny hath reared, In ostentatious show of piety, Or to inflate the pride of Opulence, And at a waste of human happiness, Which recklessness, itself, should deprecate! In fine, whatever Intellect hath planned, Or Labor hath, successfully, accomplished. Beyond the value of a moccason, Is claimed, exclusively, as Mammon's v/ork; And yet, from quarrying, to stuccoing, Not a hod of brick nor mortar shouldered. Nor a hammer nor a trowel wielded. Except, by muscles of my luckless tribe! For Beggary is not available To the basest projects of a tyrant, From lack of all, but begging enterprise! It is, in truth, too mean to be a slave! Be it so! Nor would we contradict it! Vet, what claim hast thou, thou madcap braggart, To the half a thimble full of merit, For all the vaunted labor, thou hast done? Thou would'st have been no less contemptible And indolent, than those who whittle chips, And muse upon the unhallowed means, Which cunning Indolence bath sometimes found Successful, in replenishing thy ranks, And most unluckily, from out the midst Of those whom God hath owned his noblest work, Had not dire necessity compelled thee! For stubborn Nature is not changed with dress! Knaves are the same with epaulette or brand ! Where, then exists thy claim to moral worth, For doing what thy virtue ne'er enjoined ? We'll tell thee, vvould'st thou know, and doubtless true ! Where the religious hyprocrite will find, The blissful plaudit of the Deity; And that, as Murphy said, of land he owned, Is not, in fath sir, either here or there ! The chains that gall thee, thine own right hand forged, And thy servility hath riveted : 14 Ask not redress for wrongs, thy baseness sought, And which, thy lameness hath solicited, As though a slave were written on thy brow ! The faults, thou charges! Wealth and Heaven with. Proceed, alone, from thy delinquency! Have not thy virtues been apocryphal, And thy professions slandered by thy deeds? When hath thy servile spirit ventured forth, In name of Truth, of Heaven and Equity. And Nature's holy Impartiality, In gallant contest, for equality? When hast thou owned the claims of Intellect, (Immortal spark, from God inherited. Consciousness, memory, and contemplation Of principles and joys ineffable, And for which, only, Paradise was made) Above the groveling propensities, Whose base indulgence stigmatizes man As brother of the beast that perishes, And seems the limit of his enterprise? Never! nor ever will, while thou dost kneel. In humble supplication of the molten god, Whose greatest benefaction is a curse! " Thy motto is, as it hath always been, A curse on wealth's unjust supremacy ! And yet, thou hast, immemorially, Yielded it thine envy and submission ! Nor hast thou ever dreamed, that happiness Can be attained, through any other means! 15 And yetj Wealth is a scorpion, to sting The hand that, covetously, would grasp it! And had'st thou read the gospels, thou would 'st know That ragged usefulness, in Heav'n's account, Is worthier than ermined uselessness ! And that humble virtue, wrapt in sackcloth, Is still a Goddess, brighter in her tears, And happier than wealth or flattery, Or stars or crowns can make Licentiousness! And so hath God, in equity, decreed! There is a way which he who runs may read, For thee and thine, to be unmanacled, As sure as mandate of the Deity ! Nor is it, otherwise than, wonderful, That thou should'st not have sought it earlier, And broke the chain, by which wealth rules the world ! Thou shoulcT'st discard the idol, Opulence, And worship at the Goddess Reason's shrine! Her response will teach thee, clear as sunlight, How thy manacles may be dissevered; And thine unpitied subjugation, To the Tyrant, Wealth, forever ended! CANTO II. Would'st thou break the chain, that binds thee closer. To Wealth's contemptible idolatry. Than is the native. Pagan Indian bound To the accursed Car of Juggernaut? Discard, forthwith, that slander of the truth. Which says, that wealth produces happiness: A plant congenial, but to virtue's soil, And reared by vigilant cultivation; Nor still perpetuate thy name and woes, By wearing Mammon's tinsel livery, Which cheats thee, of thy cash and credit, too. And fits thee, for a beggar or a thief! Descend not to the basest mimicry, Of Folly's first and worst delinquency, A gaudy, superficial frippery; But, frankly, own thy name and character, And miss the stigma of duplicity, Which seems, too deeply, graven on the heart Of man, to be, by reason, burnished out. Or extinguished by regeneration ' We've said, thou shoulcPst invoke the Pythoness Of Wisdom's Temple, (\vhb is Reason's self, Improved by patient, useful discipline, Amongst earth's real apprehensibles) To teach thee, how thou shalt release thyself, At once, from a disgraceful servitude; And furthermore, how wrongly, thou hast judged Of Wealth's exclusive aptitude for bliss! The rule, thou hast adopted for thy guide, In adding up and balancing accounts, Between thyself and Mammon's favorite, Was not proposed by Solomon nor Paul; But smacks of Parsimony's rule of three, Which proves, as clearly as the a, b, c. That good for you is better, still, for me! And thus, thou hast augmented, wrongfully, Wealth's real happiness above thine own. Thy mouth is, doubtless, full of verbal proofs, In form of oathful asservation. That, of the warp and woof which wealth enjoys. Thou would'st weave an interminable web Of most exquisite, earthly happiness A Cashmere suit, for every brat of thine ! And so, fell Parsimony promises To its inimitable self, at least; And hence it starved, to hoard the magic stuff. In which, like almost all mankind, ic thinks The very soul of happiness resides ! And, as a most judicious episode, It steals thy very rags, to clothe itself! 18 Success, on such a plan, can scarcely fail, Oftener than \vouid a vigorous attempt. To lift one's self, by tugging, lustily, At boot-straps, or waistband of one's breeches! > Nor is Ostentation more successful Than Parsimony, in the bliss it seeks ! And though, apparently, less groveling Less soiled by loam, than by licentiousness, There's not a vice so reprehensible, With the exception of Intemperance, Whose omnipotence is proverbial, In transmuting manhood to beastliness, As we think this same ostentation is! Nor has it 'mongstthe foes of righteousness. Or of mutual, social happiness. A single, other, fair competitor! Each follows out the promptings of its own Indomitable, base propensity, And would monopolize the world itself, Were not its pow'r unequal to its ends! The oiie, in order to maintain a state Of base, contemptible magnificence, For the exquisite glorification, Of being gaped at by the idiot! The other, in its fearful providence. Would miss the thousand curses, heaped on thee, And, therefore, lives the very mimic Of the character, it so much detests ! So near together are the two extremes ! What vvould'st thou profit, therefore, by exchange 19 Of state and character, with those we've named? E'en Beggary, itself, would be insane, To swop its very worst estate with either! Each is engaged in vigilant pursuit Of exclusive, individual bliss, Which both, remotely miss, and equally: For Happiness is perched on Reason's shield, Whose standard is erected just midway, Between these antipodes of wretchedness, The furbished, and the furfuraceous: And, surely, thou dost offer evidence, Amidst thy lengthened catalogue of faults, As indubitable as truth itself, That thou art much less mischievous than they: And yet, thy virtue, like the most of ours, Is both negative and apocryphal : For, that thy guilt is less than theirs is not From want of inclination, but of power; Therefore, until thy principles are changed, Thy miseries, with thy means, would multiply: Success would stultify thine intellect, And indolence destroy thine enterprise; So that thou might, successfully, contest, With human things, the prize of infamy! Awake! and take a peep at destiny,, As fate hath settled it with human kind. And as God, in Scripture, hath revealed it! There, thou may'st measure with exactitude, The length and breadth of both thy weal and wo; Nor Heaven, nor Fate, hath meditated ill To thee; but, to thy moral turpitude! Tliy name, in Christendom, was coupled onee, AVith saintly and prophetic piety; And thought to be almost synonymous. With unsophisticated holiness! And who, from choice, became thy devotee, Was honored as a saint, and deified ! And so he might be now, with little risk Of multiplying acts of sacrilege; For no one knows thee, and detests thee not, Unless his fast-receding sinciput Proclaims his irresponsibility: Nor was it, anciently, a small mistake, That thine was thought the name of righteousness! For thou hast not, from thy birth, been better, Nor more deserving of respc ow: Nor was the laim of Lazarus to Heaven, Improved by his companionship with thee, But that he bowed not, in idolatry, To a golden calf } wh.ich, interpreted, Means adoration of a wealthy Fool! This sacrilege has been, amongst mankind So nearly universal, hitherto, That an exception has been ever deemed A most remarkable phenomenon! And while thou shalt continue to succumb- To any less authority than God ; s, Or Reason's (its admitted substitute, \n all emergencies apocryphal: For understanding comcth from the LercL Qr Solomon, for once, mistook the truth) Thine unbroken manacles will bold thee, To a servitude, not unmerited ! Nor hath Idleness escaped thine envy. Whene'r Inheritance enabled it To riot boldly in licentiousness: And when reduced to starving nudity, (The doom Heav'n stamped on its delinquency, ; Thou hast o'erlooked its culpability, And wasted thy reproaches on its rags! This truth is clear, whatever blockheads think: Were not thy ranks repaired by Indolence, They would dwindle to the merest shadow. And thine would be recruits of competence ! Thou hast deemed labor ignominious, As though it were exclusively for slaves; And that true-freedom's definition is, Release, from the restraints of usefulness. . \ {n this thou'dost resemble some" of u.s, Who deem it, clearly, a primeval curse, That man must be familiar vvuU the sail, A^hd barter, for his bread, his daily toii; And rather than appear so ungenteel, Will practice ev'ry fraud, and sometimes steal: As though the Deity had branded labor With his most emphatic malediction, And the soiling fingers, as a stigma. Too foul for soap and water to remove! These are the dogmas of Theocracy, Inherited by aristocracy. But, thanks to God and the Devolution; To Liberty and our Constitution; This twin inheritance, with worldly wealth, Too often gained as basely, as by stealth, Will slip, together, through the grandson's hands, Or Heav'n has recently revised its plans! Hebrew Theocracy assumed the right, To despoil the heretic Canaanite, Enslave his infants, gorge upon his/ blood, In name of Justice, Piety and God. 'Tis aristocracy's calculation, To succeed as well by legislation. The one with bigoted temerity, Would crucify the Christ for heresy: The other sooner^ than resign its place, Would, doubtless, crucify the human race! What Theocracy achieved by bravery, Aristocracy hath wrought by knavery. One has met deserved retribution, In the course of civil revolution: The other's fate, we think we know as well, And yet, would wait for ballotings to tell, Which, doubtless, are as unequivocal. We, surely, have been wandering from our text, And must have known it, had we not been vexed. But since we've fully cancelled thy demands, We'll pass thee over into better hands ! Hark ye, then, to Reason's admonition, Corroborated by the word of God, And plainly registered, in Holy-Writ. And thus we heard or dreamed that Reason spoke. 23 " Desist from Mammon's service, nnd henceforth. Appreciate money, at its real worth. And dost thou ask its value I reply, That of the real happiness 'twill buy. Render obedience to God and me, Which constitutes genuine liberty. Not the factitious, the licentious know, Which works their own inevitable wo; But one of holiness, without alloy, The freedom which the sons of God enjoy. Thus shall every votary of mine, Bask in the rays of liberty divine. "Had'st thou but known and heeded Agur's prayer, Of Bible specimens, the finest there, Which shames vain man's loquacious levity, As much in spirit as in brevity, Thou would'st have deprecated Mammon's gii'i.s. No less than thou hast done thy luckless shifts. " The prophet prays, as warmly, as for health, To be preserved from- Poverty and Wealth. What can be gathered from a prayer like this, But that the two are equal foes to bliss?- And what induction can be plainer seen, Than that the proper place is one between ? Nor can'st thou, in this instance, fail to See. That holy Agur and myself agree. " Heav'n cannot, pecuniarily, dispense A blessing so exact as competence! He, therefore, who solicits less or more, Invokes a curse, possession must deplore: -Tis, therefore. Competence I will protost. Alone, can make an earthly spirit blest: And though attainable by common sense, 'Tis oft extinguished by i?nprovidence ! " Saint Peter knew, that competence is good, And who that needs, might have it if he would; Or he would not, the pious spouse compel To it. or rank beneath the infidel: Who supplies not, his house, hath both denied His faith) in Christ, and duty, to his bride. The cost of one his penitence may pay; The other, doubtless, will provoke a fray. ' : 'Tis therefore clear, that industry can find Enough for comfort, if she's so inclined; And with Frugality, to tend the purse, Escape, thine own, hereditary curse. Nor would a prudent votary of mine Rely on either, but the two combine; Nor venture on the opposite extreme. Since Parsimony's curse is not a dream, " Invoke Temperance for absolution, From thy deepest and un holiest stain; And the Deity for resolution, That, henceforth, thou shall not relapse again !- For, of thy sources of replenishment, Intemperance contributes two of three, And yet affords as great a compliment. Or greater, to the ranks of beggary. Let Virtue, Morals and Integrity, With Undefiled Religion, all agree- To 1 form thy character, which, though rar& Jlmong mankind, is not at all too fair ! Another source of thy peculiar wo, Is an unconquerable love of show; Thine outside gilt, thou carest not a fly. Thine inside, being filthy as a sty ! " Thou hast fed Fashion with thy humble gain* And been despised and laugh'd at for thy pains: For Opulence, if mean, will not confess A fit companion, in thine apishness. In folly's service, thou can'st never be An equal match for Aristocracy: Therefore desist from acting ns its tool. Nor curse thyself, by mimicking a fool ! " The biped, man, perchance, may take the whim, That this courtesy is designed, for him: But with that favorite of Providence, Who esteems my best suggestions nonsense, My admonitions have been withheld long since: And though thou art more tractable than he. My patience hath been sorely tried by thee ' " 'Tis strange, that thou should'st still remain so dull With my incessant rapping at thy skull; Nor, can it be disputed that thy pate, Unless -tis human, is but second-rate ! For, one would think that such repeated polls, Would have awakened anything but dolts! "Thou dost complain, that thou hast wrought for wealth ! \it owl li* ! tea M .VarAMtf* yiwtK What else would have as well preserved thy health r For he can never labor for himselF. * tStSO* 1 Whose life's consumed, in worshipping his pelf; And yet, wealth^ time, employed to count its store. Might be much better spent in earning more ! And Competence requires but little time, To ' Thy .sweat hath also irrigated soil, Not thine! It cooled and fitted thee for toil! Thou sayest Wealth can feast on a ragout, While thou must make a plainer diet do! And, iiiice. thy nether limbs can stub about, ' ' While Luxury's are crippled with the gout: Nor can it sleep on feathers, half so sound, As honest industry upon the ground ! Neither hath W r ealth effectual defense, But by eternal, anxious vigilance: For it hath wings, which it doth sometimes use, Leaving its votary 3 danglin? from a noose !' ; ->d 0*41 *niojdim J To whom, I've constant preached, six thousand years, And vainly, as though asses had no ears! vdtiow off? . '3JBii^0jL sf> j>^0^l *}o user Mftf ot fMfldti) " Among this race, improvement is all fudge; As trudged the father, so the son doth trudge; And when exception offers to the rule, j Its subject is admonished as a fool!t -nisiu-yf dttdw 'iTftl art! noqu JUiigiSt fsidrrmiq 4 " I'll now leave thee, to thy contemplation Of my proposals for reformation! Heed my precepts remember Amur's prayer:^ , Thou shalt be free, as spirits of the air!" '*IMH ao yi^n Montpelier, 1839^^^^ rf br liw eav, -'indut FASHION'S SOLILOQUY. 1 ID/, While indulging a recent exacerbation of literary .antiquarianism, among the curiosities of my great- great-grand-father's ScrajvJSook; I casually fell upon the subjoined burlesque of the fashionable monoma- nia, of Louis 14th of France: And for which, as indi- cated hy an autographic mariginal-note, we are in- debted to the pen of Pere de Lachaise, the worthy Confessor of that royal friend, and zealous patron, of the delirious ostentation, and senseless etiquette, with which Europe was bedizened, for near a century; and which remains, at least, with the reflecting moralist, a proverbial stigma upon the Parisian, to the present day; And however inapplicable to the good people of Vermont, in the year of our Lord 1830; it may, not- withstanding, claim, of the curious, to be preserved as a literary relic of the seventeenth century. The following may be received, as, very nearly, a literal translation of the Scrap-Book copy, which is jttumbly submitted to those who will condescend to read it. ANTIQUARIAN/ " Reason, that sour misanthrope, yet persists, In her senseless contest, for dominion, O'er those unfeathtr-td geese, or tailless apes, Denominated, by tJiemselves, mankind; As though her monastic melancholy, That maddens at the thought of earthly bliss, And calls man's pleasure all concupiscence That would fed his enterprise, with shadows, And pay his weariness, with hope-deferred, Could vie, with my felicitous employ, That pays the laborer with connate joy! As well may tasteless Fountain-water hope, To supercede delicious Alcohol, Among the children of the Temperate' * Her vanity is inexhaustible; Or she would have, long 1 since, deemed it hopcle*?;, To force her whims on Sensuality, The true synonym of Humanity; At least, with those, who bow at Mammon's shrine. And think, that Wealth makes Man a Demigod: And these are all the true Nobility, Among my countless, biped worshippers * True Pioneers, to that Ostentation, To which the Mimicry of Man aspires- Thanks, to the premature development Of those exquisite) apt Propensities, Which are able to descry, so soon And clearly, my superiority O'er Reason, as the Monitor of Man, Whose unrestrained indulgence constitutes, With singular exceptions, now and then, The most exquisite, noble enterprise, Of thi.s improvement of the Baboon-Race! ' ; Dame Nature could never have intended Man, to be the Proselyte of Reason; rtm <;!*.'.> hnA For else, his Appetites would have been wrought Less dissonant with her cold suggestions, Which, like an Iceberg to the Mariner, Freeze up the current of fictitious enterprise. That claims, exclusively, his vigilance! * A ^oal JL utttttUfe fer*wfu oT " Humanity consists of sympathies, So very amiably domestic, That they commence, and terminate, Within the circle of judicious Selfishness Nor, will it, soon, be so improvident To swop the smallest Pleasure, of to-day, nJ IT For the mere Image of the richest Bliss, That Reason paints upon To-morrow's Map: So incredulous of her promises, 1* 9**d3 beA Which he has, most judiciously, esteemed, Too spiritless^ and fatuous, to test; Of ,41WWoi Is that two-legged thing, she calls her Pet ! ' Man's proverbial Magnanimity, d ot Like the Philanthropy, he practices, Forms a Halo, but dimly luminous, hall ha\e shrunk her Shrfwship to a JWummy* My triendc. will heed her jnst about a-* well. As modern children do their guardians' Dear little gentlefolk! how mart they are. l>nme Heason may assail them, if she dare! And, ii* she dorit get trained, \ will admit. That she may humanize the Monkeys yet !'" Bearing date lt>3U: and signed Fouelteitr I' Whipper of Maii^ifJ 14 DAY USE RETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED LOAN DEPT. This book is due on the last date stamped below, or on the date to which renewed. Renewed books are subject to immediate recall. 5Jun'63AEH *~~"~ m < I 7PM - 5 LD 21A-50m-ll,'62 (D3279slO)476B General Library University of California Berkeley 33. 6 , 170. . 'V * iii