READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A LIFE OF JESUS
1.-State and various forms of Pagan Religion, and of Philosophy.2.-State of Judaea—The Belief in the Messiah3.-Commencement of the Public Life of Jesus.4.-Public Life of Jesus from the First to the Second Passover.5.-Second Year of the
Public Life of Jesus.
6.-Third Year of the public Life of Jesus.7.-The last
Passover.—The Crucifixion.
1.State and various forms of Pagan Religion, and of Philosophy
The reign of Augustus Caesar is the most remarkable epoch in the history of
mankind. For the first time, a large part of the families, tribes, and nations,
into which the human race had gradually separated, were united under a vast,
uniform, and apparently permanent, social system. The older Asiatic empires
had, in general, owed their rise to the ability and success of some adventurous
Conqueror; and, when the masterhand was withdrawn,
fell asunder; or were swept away to make room for some new kingdom or dynasty,
which sprang up with equal rapidity, and in its turn experienced the same
fate. The Grecian monarchy established by Alexander, as though it shared in
the Asiatic principle of vast and sudden growth and as rapid decay, broke up at
his death into several conflicting kingdoms; yet survived in its influence, and
united, in some degree, Western Asia, Egypt, and Greece into one political
system, in which the Greek language and manners predominated. But the monarchy
of Rome was founded on principles as yet unknown; the kingdoms, which were won
by the most unjustifiable aggression, were, for the most part, governed with a
judicious union of firmness and conciliation, in which the conscious strength
of irresistible power was tempered with the wisest respect to national usages.
The Romans conquered like savages, but ruled like philosophic statesmen. From the Euphrates to the Atlantic, from the shores of Britain, and the borders
of the German forests, to the sands of the African Desert, the whole Western
world was consolidated into one great commonwealth, united by the bonds of law
and government, by facilities of communication and commerce, and by the general
dissemination of the Greek and Latin languages.
For civilisation followed in the train of Roman conquest: the
ferocity of her martial temperament seemed to have spent itself in the civil
wars: the lava flood of her ambition had cooled; and wherever it had spread, a
rich and luxuriant vegetation broke forth. At least down to the time of the Antonines, though occasionally disturbed by the contests
which arose on the change of dynasties, the rapid progress of improvement was
by no means retarded. Diverging from Rome as a centre,
magnificent and commodious roads connected the most remote countries; the free
navigation of the Mediterranean united the most flourishing cities of the
empire; the military colonies had disseminated the language and manners of the
South in the most distant regions; the wealth and population of the African and
Asiatic provinces had steadily increased; while, amid the forests of Gaul, the
morasses of Britain, the sierras of Spain, flourishing cities arose; and the
arts, the luxuries, the order, and regularity of cultivated life were
introduced into regions which, a short time before, had afforded a scanty and
precarious subsistence to tribes scarcely acquainted with agriculture. The frontiers
of civilisation seemed gradually to advance, and to
drive back the still-receding barbarism; while within the pale, national
distinctions were dying away; all tribes and races met amicably in the general
relation of Roman subjects or citizens, and mankind seemed settling down into
one great federal society.
About this point of
time Christianity appeared. As Rome had united the whole Western world into
one, as it might almost seem, lasting social system, so Christianity was the
first religion which aimed at an universal and permanent moral conquest. The
religions of the older world were content with their dominion over the
particular people which were their several votaries. Family, tribal, national,
deities were universally recognised; and as their
gods accompanied the migrations or the conquests of different nations, the
worship of those gods was extended over a wider surface, but rarely propagated
among the subject races. To drag in triumph the divinities of a vanquished
people was the last and most insulting mark of subjugation. Yet, though the
gods of the conquerors had thus manifested their superiority, and, in some
cases, the subject nation might be inclined to desert their inefficient
protectors who had been found wanting in the hour of trial; still the godhead
even of the defeated divinities was not denied. Though their power could not
withstand the mightier tutelar deity of the invaders; yet their right to a seat
in the crowded synod of heaven, and their rank among the intermediate rulers of
the world, were not called in question. The conqueror might, indeed, take
delight in showing his contempt, and, as it were, trampling under
foot the rebuked and impotent deities of his subject; and thus religious
persecution be inflicted by the oppressor, and religious fanaticism excited
among the oppressed. Yet, if the temple was desecrated, the altar thrown down,
the priesthood degraded or put to the sword, this was done in the fierceness of
hostility, or the insolence of pride; or from policy, lest the religion should
become the rallying point of civil independence; rarely, if ever, for the
purpose of extirpating a false, or supplanting it by a true, system of belief;
perhaps in no instance with the design of promulgating the tenets of a more
pure and perfect religion. A wiser policy commenced with Alexander.
The deities of the conquered nations were treated with uniform reverence, the sacrilegious
plunder of their temples punished with exemplary severity.
According to the Grecian system, their own gods were recognised in those of Egypt and Asia. The foreign deities were called by Grecian names, and worshipped with the accustomed offerings; and thus all religious differences between Macedonian, and Syrian, and Egyptian, and Persian, at once vanished away. On the same principle, and with equal sagacity, Rome, in this as in other respects, aspired to enslave the mind of those nations which had been prostrated by her arms. The gods of the subject nations were treated with every mark of respect: sometimes they were admitted within the walls of the conqueror, as though to render their allegiance, and rank themselves in peaceful subordination under the supreme divinity of the Roman Gradivus, or the Jupiter of the Capitol; till, at length, they all met in the amicable synod of the Pantheon, a representative assembly, as it were, of the presiding deities of all nations in Rome, the religious as well as the civil capital of the world. The state, as Cicero shows in his Book of Laws, retained the power of declaring what forms of religion were permitted by the law (licite); but this authority was rarely exercised with rigour, excepting against such foreign superstitions as were considered pernicious to the morals of the people,—in earlier times, the Dionysiac; in later, the Isiac and Serapic rites. Christianity
proclaimed itself the religion, not of family, or tribe, or nation, but of
universal man. It admitted within its pale, on equal terms, all ranks and all
races. It addressed mankind as one brotherhood, sprung from one common
progenitor, and raised to immortality by one Redeemer. In this respect
Christianity might appear singularly adapted to become the religion of a great
empire. At an earlier period in the annals of the world, it would have encountered
obstacles apparently insurmountable, in passing from one province to another,
in moulding hostile and jealous nations into one religious
community. A fiercer fire was necessary to melt and fuse the discordant
elements into one kindred mass, before its gentler warmth could penetrate and
permeate the whole with its vivifying influence. Not only were the
circumstances of the times favourable to the
extensive propagation of Christianity, from the facility of intercourse between
the most remote nations, the cessation of hostile movements, and the uniform
system of internal police, but the state of mankind seemed imperiously to
demand the introduction of a new religion, to satisfy those universal
propensities of human nature which connect man with a higher order of things.
Man, as history and experience teach, is essentially a religious being. There
are certain faculties and modes of thinking and feeling apparently inseparable
from his mental organisation, which lead him
irresistibly to seek some communication with another and a higher world. But at
the present juncture, the ancient religions were effete: they belonged to a
totally different state of civilisation; though they
retained the strong hold of habit and interest on different classes of
society, yet the general mind was advanced beyond them; they could not supply
the religious necessities of the age. Thus the world, peaceably united under
one temporal monarchy, might be compared to a vast body without a soul. The
throne of the human mind appeared vacant; among the rival competitors for its
dominion, none advanced more than claims local, or limited to a certain class.
Nothing less was required than a religion coextensive at least with the empire
of Rome, and calculated for the advanced state of intellectual culture: and in
Christianity this new element of society was found; which, in fact, incorporating
itself with manners, usages, and laws, has been the bond which has held
together, notwithstanding the internal feuds and divisions, the great European
commonwealth; maintained a kind of federal relation between its parts; and
stamped its peculiar character on the whole of modern history.
Christianity
announced the appearance of its Divine Author as the era of a new moral
creation; and if we take our stand, as it were, on the isthmus which separates
the ancient from the modern world, and survey the state of mankind before and
after the introduction of this new power into human society, it is impossible
not to be struck with the total revolution in the whole aspect of the world. If
from this point of view we look upward, we see the dissociating principle at
work both in the civil and religious usages of mankind; the human race
breaking up into countless independent tribes and nations, which recede more
and more from each other as they gradually spread over the surface of the
earth; and in some parts, as we adopt the theory of the primitive barbarism,
or that of the degeneracy of man from an earlier state of culture, either
remaining stationary at the lowest point of ignorance and rudeness, or sinking
to it; either resuming the primeval dignity of the race, or rising gradually to
a higher state of civilisation. A certain diversity
of religion follows the diversity of race, of people, and of country. In no
respect is the common nature of human kind so strongly indicated as in the
universality of some kind of religion; in no respect is man so various, yet so
much the same. All the religions of antiquity, multiform and countless as they
appear, may be easily reduced to certain classes, and, independent of the traditions
which they may possess in common, throughout the whole, reigns something like a
family resemblance. Whether all may be rightly considered as depravations of
the same primitive form of worship; whether the human mind is necessarily
confined to a certain circle of religious notions; whether the striking
phenomena of the visible world, presented to the imagination of various people
in a similar state of civilisation, will excite the
same train of devotional thoughts and emotions,—the philosophical spirit, and
extensive range of inquiry, which in modern times have been carried into the
study of mythology, approximate in the most remarkable manner the religions of
the most remote countries. The same primary principles everywhere
appear, modified by the social state, the local circumstances, the civil
customs, the imaginative or practical character of the people.
Each state of
social culture has its characteristic theology, self-adapted to the
intellectual and moral condition of the people, and coloured in some degree by the habits of life. In the rudest and most savage races we
find a gross superstition, called by modern foreign writers Fetichism, in which
the shapeless stone, the meanest reptile, any object however worthless or
insignificant, is consecrated by a vague and mysterious reverence, as the
representative of an unseen Being. The beneficence of this deity is usually
limited to supplying the wants of the day, or to influencing the hourly
occurrences of a life, in which violent and exhausting labour alternates either with periods of sluggish and torpid indolence, as among some
of the North American tribes; or, as among the Africans, with wild bursts of
thoughtless merriment. This Fetichism apparently survived in more polished
nations, in the household gods, perhaps in the Teraphim, and in the sacred
stones (the Boetylia), which were thought either to
have fallen from heaven, or were sanctified by immemorial reverence.
In the Oriental
pastoral tribes, Tsabaism, the simpler
worship of the heavenly bodies, in general prevailed; which among the
agricultural races grew up into a more complicated system, connecting the
periodical revolutions of the sun and moon with the pursuits of husbandry. It
was Nature-worship, simple in its primary elements, but branching out into
mythological fables, rich and diversified in proportion to the poetic genius
of the people. This Natureworship in its simpler, probably its earlier form,
appears as a sort of dualism, in which the two great antagonist powers, the
creative and destructive, Light and Darkness, seem contending for the
sovereignty of the worlds and, emblematical of moral good and evil, are
occupied in pouring the full horn of fertility and blessing, or the vial of
wrath and misery, upon the human race. Subordinate to, or as a modification of,
these two conflicting powers, most of the Eastern races concurred in deifying the
active and passive powers of generation. The sun and the earth, Osiris and
Isis, formed a second dualism. And it is remarkable how widely, almost
universally extended throughout the earlier world, appears the institution of
a solemn period of mourning about the autumnal, and of rejoicing about the
vernal, equinox. The suspension, or apparent extinction of the great vivifying
power of nature, Osiris or Iacchus; the destitution
of Ceres, Isis, or the Earth, of her husband or her beautiful daughter, torn in
pieces or carried away into their realms by the malignant powers of darkness;
their reappearance in all their bright and fertilising energy; these, under different forms, were the great annual fast and festival
of the early heathen worship.
But the poets were
the priests of this Nature-worship; and from their creative imagination arose
the popular mythology, which gave its separate deity to every part of animate
or inanimate being; and, departing still farther from the primitive allegory,
and the symbolic forms under which the phenomena of the visible world were
embodied, wandered into pure fiction; till Nature-worship was almost supplanted
by religious fable: and hence, by a natural transition, those who discerned God
in every thing, multiplied every separate part of
creation into a distinct divinity. The mind fluctuated between a kind of vague
and unformed pantheism, the deification of the whole of nature, or its
animation by one pervading power or soul, and the deification of every object
which impressed the mind with awe or admiration. While every nation, every
tribe, every province, every town, every village, every family, had its
peculiar, local, or tutelar deity, there was a kind of common neutral ground on
which they all met, a notion that the gods in their collective capacity
exercised a general controlling providence over the affairs of men, interfered,
especially on great occasions, and, though this belief was still more vague
and more inextricably involved in fable, administered retribution in another
state of being. And thus even the common language of the most polytheistic
nations approached to monotheism.
Wherever, indeed,
there has been a great priestly caste, less occupied with the daily toils of
life, and advanced beyond the mass of the people, the primitive Nature-worship
has been perpetually brought back, as it were, to its original elements; and,
without disturbing the popular mythological religion, furnished a creed to the
higher and more thinking part of the community, less wild and extravagant. In
Persia the Magian order retained or acquired something like a pure theism, in
which the Supreme Deity was represented under the symbol of the primal
uncreated fire; and there Nature-worship, under the form of the two conflicting
principles, preserved much more of its original simplicity than in most other
countries. To the influence of a distinct sacerdotal order may be traced, in
India, the singular union of the sublimest allegory,
and a sort of lofty poetical religious philosophy, with the most monstrous and
incoherent superstitions; and the appearance of the profound political religion
of Egypt in strange juxtaposition with the most debasing Fetichism, the worship
of reptiles and vegetables.
From this
Nature-worship arose the beautiful anthropomorphism of the Greeks, of which the
Homeric poetry, from its extensive and lasting popularity, may in one sense be
considered the parent. The primitive traditions and the local superstitions of
the different races were moulded together in these
songs, which, disseminated throughout Greece, gave a kind of federal character
to the religion of which they were, in some sort, the sacred books. But the
genius of the people had already assumed its bias: few, yet still some,
vestiges remain in Homer of the earlier theogonic fables. Conscious, as it were, and prophetic of their future pre-eminence in
all that constitutes the physical and mental perfection of our race, this wonderful
people conformed their religion to themselves. The cumbrous and multiform idol,
in which wisdom, or power, or fertility, was represented by innumerable heads
or arms, or breasts, as in the Ephesian Diana, was refined into a being, only
distinguished from human nature by its preterhuman development of the noblest
physical qualities of man. The imagination here took another and a nobler
course; it threw an ideal grandeur and an unearthly loveliness over the human
form, and by degrees deities became men, and men deities, or, as the
distinction between the godlike and the divine became more indistinct, were united in the intermediate form of heroes and
demigods. The character of the people here, as elsewhere, operated on the
religion; the religion reacted on the popular character. The religion of
Greece was the religion of the Arts, the Games, the Theatre; it was that of a
race, living always in public, by whom the corporeal perfection of man had been
carried to the highest point In no other country would the legislator have
taken under his protection the physical conformation, in some cases the procreation,
in all the development of the bodily powers by gymnastic education; and it
required the most consummate skill in the sculptor to preserve the endangered
preeminence of the gods, in whose images were embodied the perfect models of
power and grace and beauty.
The religion of
Rome was political and military. Springing originally from a kindred stock to that
of earlier Greece, the rural Gods of the first cultivators of Italy, it received
many of its rites from that remarkable people, the Etruscans; and rapidly
adapted itself, or was forced by the legislator into an adaptation to the
character of the people. Mars or Gradivus was the
divine ancestor of the race. The religious calendar was the early history of
the people; a large part of the festivals was not so much the celebration of
the various deities, as the commemoration of the great events in their annals.
The priesthood was united with the highest civil and military offices; and the
great occupation of Roman worship seems to have been to secure the stability of
her constitution, and still more, to give a religious character to her wars,
and infuse a religious confidence of success into her legionaries. The great
office of the diviners, whether augurs or aruspices, was to choose the
fortunate day of battle; the Fetiales, religious
officers, denounced war: the standards and eagles possessed a kind of sanctity;
the eagle was in fact a shrine. The altar had its place in the centre of the camp, as the ark of God in that of the Israelites.
The Triumph may be considered as the great religious ceremony of the nation;
the god Terminus, who never receded, was, as it were, the deified ambition of
Rome. At length Rome herself was impersonated and assumed her rank in heaven,
as it were the representative of the all-conquering and all-ruling republic.
There was a
stronger moral element in the Roman religion than in that of Greece. In
Greece the gods had been represented in their collective capacity as the
avengers of great crimes; a kind of general retributive justice was assigned to
them; they guarded the sanctity of oaths. But in the better days of the
Republic, Rome had, as it were, deified her own virtues. Temples arose to
Concord, to Faith, to Constancy, to Modesty (Pudor), to Hope. The Penates, the
household deities, became the guardians of domestic happiness. Venus
Verticordia presided over the purity of domestic morals, and Jupiter Stator
over courage. But the true national character of the Roman theology is most
remarkably shown in the various temples and various attributes assigned to the
good Fortune of the city, who might appear the Deity of Patriotism. Even Peace
was at length received among the gods of Rome. And as long as the worship of
the heart continued to sanctify these impersonations of human virtues, their
adoration tended to maintain the lofty moral tone; but so soon as that was
withdrawn or languished into apathy, the deities became cold abstractions,
without even that reality which might appear to attach itself to the other gods
of the city: their temples stood, their rites were perhaps solemnised,
but they had ceased to command, and no longer received, the active veneration
of the people. What, in fact, is the general result of the Roman religious
calendar, half a year of which is described in the Fasti of Ovid. There are
festivals founded on old Italian and on picturesque Grecian legends; others
commemorative of the great events of the heroic days of the Republic; others
instituted in base flattery of the ruling dynasty; one ceremonial only, that of
the Manes, which relates to the doctrine of another life, and that preserved
as it were from pride, and as a memorial of older times. Nothing can show more
strongly the nationality of the Roman religion, and its almost complete transmutation from a moral into a political power.
Amidst all this
labyrinth we behold the sacred secret of the divine Unity, preserved inviolate,
though sometimes under the most adverse circumstances, and, as it were,
perpetually hovering on the verge of extinction, in one narrow district of the
world, the province of Palestine. Nor is it there the recondite treasure of a
high and learned caste, or the hardly worked-out conclusion of the thinking and
philosophical few, but the plain and distinct groundwork of the popular creed.
Still, even there, as though in its earlier period, the yet undeveloped mind of
man was unfit for the reception, or at least for the preservation of this doctrine,
in its perfect spiritual purity; as though the Deity condescended to the
capacities of the age, and it were impossible for the divine nature to maintain
its place in the mind of man without some visible representative; a kind of
symbolic worship still enshrines the one great God of the Mosaic religion.
There is a striking analogy between the Shechinah or luminous appearance which “dwelt
between the cherubim,” and the pure immaterial fire of the Theism, which
approaches nearest to the Hebrew, that of the early Persians. Yet even here
likewise is found the great indelible distinction between the religion of the
ancient and of the modern world; the characteristic, which besides the general
practice of propitiating the Deity, usually by animal sacrifices, universally
prevails in the pre-Christian ages. The physical predominates over the moral
character of the Deity. God is Power in the old religion; He is Love under the new. Nor does his pure and essential spirituality in the more complete
faith of the Gospel attach itself to, or exhibit itself under any form. “God,”
says the Divine Author of Christianity, “is Spirit, and they that worship
him, must worship him in spirit and in truth”. In the early Jewish worship, it
was the physical power of the Deity which was chiefly and perpetually presented
to the mind of the worshipper: he was their temporal king, the dispenser of
earthly blessings, famine and plenty, drought and rain, discomfiture or success
in war. The miracles recorded in the Old Testament, particularly in the earlier
books, are amplifications, as it were, or new directions of the powers of
nature; as if the object were to show that the deities of other nations were
but subordinate and obedient instruments in the hand of the great self-existent
Being, the Jehovah of Jewish worship.
Yet, when it is said
that the physical rather than the moral character of the Deity predominated, it must not be supposed that the latter was altogether excluded. It is
impossible entirely to dissociate the notion of moral government from that
belief, or that propensity to believe in the existence of a God implanted in
the human mind; and religion was too useful an ally not to be called in to
confirm the consciously imperfect authority of human law. But it may be laid
down as a principle that the nearer the nation approaches to barbarism, the
childhood of the human race, the more earthly are the conceptions of the Deity;
the moral aspect of the divine nature seems gradually to develope itself with the development of the human mind. It is at first, as in Egypt and
India, the prerogative of the higher class; the vulgar are left to their stocks
and their stones, their animals and their reptiles. In the republican states
of Greece, the intellectual aristocracy of the philosophers, guarded by no such
legally established distinction, rarely dared openly to assert their superiority,
but concealed their more extended views behind a prudential veil,
as a secret or esoteric doctrine, and by studious conformity to the national
rites and ceremonies.
Gradually, however,
as the period approaches in which the religion of civilisation is to be introduced into the great drama of human life, as we descend nearer
towards the point of separation between the ancient and modern world, the human
mind appears expanding. Polytheism is evidently relaxing its hold upon all
classes: the monarch maintains his throne, not from the deep-rooted, or
rational, or conscientious loyalty of his subjects, but from the want of a
competitor; because mankind were habituated to a government which the
statesman thought it might be dangerous, and the philosopher, enjoying perfect
toleration, and rather proud of his distinctive superiority than anxious to
propagate his opinions throughout the world, did not think it worthwhile, at
the hazard of popular odium, to disturb.
Judaism gave
manifest indications of a preparation for a more essentially spiritual, more
purely moral faith. The symbolic presence of the Deity (according to their own
tradition) ceased with the temple of Solomon; and the heathen world beheld with
astonishment a whole race whose deity was represented under no visible form or
likeness. The Prophets, in their spiritual as in their moral tone, rose high
above the Law. The conqueror Pompey, who enters the violated temple, is filled
with wonder at finding the sanctuary without image or emblem of the presiding
deity; the poet describes them as worshipping nothing but the clouds and the
divinity that fills the Heaven; the philosophic historian, whose profounder
mind seems struggling with hostile prejudices, defines, with his own inimitable
compression of language, the doctrine, to the sublimity of which he has closed
his eyes. “The worship of the Jews is purely mental; they acknowledge but one
God—and that God supreme and eternal, neither changeable nor perishable.” The
doctrine of another life (which derived no sanction from the Law, and was
naturally obscured by the more immediate and intelligible prospect of temporal
rewards and punishments) dawns in the prophetic writings; and from the
apocryphal books and from Josephus, as well as from the writings of the New
Testament, clearly appears to have become incorporated with the general
sentiment. Retribution in another life has already taken the place of the
immediate or speedy avenging or rewarding providence of the Deity in the land
of Canaan.
Judaism, however,
only required to expand with the expansion of the human mind; its sacred
records had preserved in its original simplicity the notion of the Divine
Power; the pregnant definitions of the one great self-existing Being, the
magnificent poetical amplifications of his might and providence were of all
ages: they were eternal poetry, because they were eternal truth. If the moral
aspect of the Divine nature was more obscurely intimated, and, in this respect,
had assumed the character of a local or national Deity, whose love was
confined to the chosen people, and displayed itself chiefly in the beneficence
of a temporal sovereign: yet nothing was needed but to give a higher and
more extensive sense to those types and shadows of universal wisdom; an
improvement which the tendency of the age manifestly required; and which the
Jews themselves, especially the Alexandrian school, had already attempted, by allegorising the whole annals of their people, and extracting
a profound moral meaning from all the circumstances of their extraordinary
history.
But the progress of
knowledge was fatal to the popular religion of Greece and Rome. The awestruck
imagination of the older race, which had listened with trembling belief to the
wildest fables, the deep feeling of the sublime and the beautiful, which,
uniting with national pride, had assembled adoring multitudes before the
Parthenon or the Jove of Phidias, now gave place to cold and sober reason.
Poetry had been religion—religion was becoming mere poetry. Humanizing the
Deity, and bringing it too near the earth, naturally produced, in a less
imaginative and more reflecting age, that familiarity which destroys respect.
When man became more acquainted with his own nature, the less was he satisfied
with deities cast in his own mould. In some respects
the advancement of civilisation had no doubt softened
and purified the old religions from their savage and licentious tendencies.
Human sacrifices had ceased, or had retired to the remotest parts of Germany,
or to the shores of the Baltic. Though some of the secret rites were said to be
defiled with unspeakable pollutions, yet this, if true, arose from the depravation
of manners, rather than from religion. The orgies of the Bona Dea were a profanation of the sacred rite, held up to
detestation by the indignant satirist, not as among some of the early Oriental
nations, the rite itself.
But with the tyranny, which could thus extort from reluctant human
nature the sacrifice of all humanity and all decency, the older religions had
lost their more salutary, and, if the expression may be ventured, their
constitutional authority. They had been driven away, or silently receded from
their post, in which indeed they had never been firmly seated, as conservators
of public morals. The circumstances of the times tended no less to loosen the
bonds of the ancient faith. Peace enervated the deities, as well as the
soldiers of Rome : their occupation was gone; the augurs read no longer the signs
of conquest in the entrails of the victims; and though down to the days of
Augustine, Roman pride clung to the worship of the older and
glorious days of the Republic, and denounced the ingratitude of forsaking
gods, under whose tutelary sway Rome had become the empress of the world, yet
the ceremonies had now no stirring interest; they were pageants in which the
unbelieving aristocracy played their parts with formal coldness, the contagion
of which could not but spread to the lower classes. The only novel or exciting
rite of the Roman religion was that which probably tended more than any other,
when the immediate excitement was over, to enfeeble the religious feeling, the
deification of the living, or the apotheosis of the dead emperor, whom a few
years or perhaps a few days abandoned to the open execration or contempt of the
whole people. At the same time that energy of mind, which had consumed itself
in foreign conquest or civil faction, in carrying the arms of Rome to the
Euphrates or the Rhine, or in the mortal conflict for patrician or plebeian
supremacy, now that the field of military or civil distinction was closed,
turned inward and preyed upon itself; or, compressed by the iron hand of
despotism, made itself a vent in philosophical or religious speculations. The
noble mind sought a retreat from the degradation of servitude in the groves of
the Academy, or attempted to find consolation for the loss of personal dignity,
by asserting with the Stoic the dignity of human nature.
But Philosophy aspired in vain to fill that void in the human mind,
which had been created by the expulsion or secession of religion. The objects
of Philosophy were twofold: either—1. To refine the popular religion into a
more rational creed; or, 2. To offer itself as a substitute. With this first
view it endeavoured to bring back the fables to
their original meaning to detect the latent truth under the allegoric shell:
but in many cases the key was lost, or the fable had wandered so far from its
primary sense as to refuse all rational interpretation; and where the truth had
been less encumbered with fiction, it came forth cold and inanimate. The
philosopher could strip off the splendid robes in which the moral or religious
doctrine had been disguised, but he could not instil into
it the breath of life. The imagination refused the unnatural alliance of cold
and calculating reason; and the religious feeling, when it saw the old deities
reduced into ingenious allegories, sank into apathy; or vaguely yearned for
some new excitement which it knew not from what quarter to expect.
The last hopes of the ancient religion lay in the Mysteries. Of them
alone the writers, about the time of the appearance of Christianity, speak with
uniform reverence, if not with awe. They alone could bestow happiness in life,
and hope in death. In these remarkable rites the primitive Nature-worship had
survived under a less refined and less humanized form; the original and more
simple symbolic forms (those of the first agricultural inhabitants of Greece) had
been retained by ancient reverence: as its allegory was less intricate and
obscure it accommodated itself better with the advancing spirit of the age. It
may indeed be questioned whether the Mysteries did not owe much of their
influence to their secrecy, and to the impressive forms under which they
shadowed forth their more recondite truths. These, if they did not satisfy, yet
kept the mind in a state of progressive and continued excitement. They were, if
it may be so said, a great religious drama, in which the initiated were at once
spectators and actors; where the fifth act was designedly delayed to the utmost
possible point, and of this still suspended catastrophe, the dramatis personae,
the only audience, were kept in studied ignorance. The Mysteries had, perhaps,
from an early period associated a moral purport with their sacred shows; and
with the progress of opinion, the moral would more and more predominate over
the primitive religious meaning. Yet the morality of the Mysteries was
apparently that of the ancient Nature-worship of the East. It taught the immortality
of the soul as a part of that vast system of nature, which, emanating from the
Supreme Being, passed through a long course of deterioration or refinement,
and at length returned and resolved itself into the primal source of all
existence. But the Mysteries, from their very nature, could only act upon the
public mind in a limited manner: directly they ceased to be mysteries they lost
their power. Nor can it be doubted, that while the local and public Mysteries,
particularly the greatest of all, the Eleusinian, were pure and
undefiled by licentiousness, and, if they retained any of the obscene symbols,
disguised or kept them in the back ground; the private and moveable mysteries,
which, under the conduct of vagabond priests, were continually flowing in from
the East, displayed those symbols in unblushing nakedness, and gave occasion
for the utmost licence and impurity.
Philosophy as a substitute for religion was still more manifestly
deficient. For, in the first place, it was unable, or condescended not, to reach the body of the people, whom the progress of civilisation was slowly bringing up towards the common level; and where it found or
sought proselytes, it spoke without authority, and distracted with the
multitude of its conflicting sects the patient but bewildered inquirer.
Philosophy maintained the aristocratic tone, which, while it declared that to a
few elect spirits alone it was possible to communicate the highest secrets of
knowledge, more particularly the mystery of the great Supreme Being, proclaimed
it vain and unwise to attempt to elevate the many to such exalted speculations. “The Father of the worlds,” says Plato in this tone,“it is difficult to discover, and, when discovered, it is impossible to make him
known to all.” So, observes a German historian of Christianity, think the
Brahmins of India. Plato might aspire to the creation of an imaginary republic,
which, if it could possibly be realised, might stand
alone an unapproachable model of the physical and moral perfection of man;
but the amelioration of the whole world, the simultaneous elevation of all
nations, orders, and classes to a higher degree of moral advancement would
have been a vision from which even his imagination would have shrunk in
despair. This remained to be conceived and accomplished by one who appeared to
the mass of mankind in his own age, as a peasant of Palestine.
It cannot be denied that to those whom it deigned to address
philosophy was sufficiently accommodating; and whatever the bias of the individual
mind, the school was open, and the teacher at hand, to lead the inquirer,
either to the luxurious gardens of Epicurus, or among the loftier spirits of
the Porch. In the two prevalent systems of philosophy, the Epicurean and the
Stoic, appears a striking assimilation to the national character of the two
predominant races which constituted the larger part of the Roman world. The
Epicurean, with its subtle metaphysics, its abstract notion of the Deity, its
imaginative character; materialism, its milder and more pleasurable morals, and
perhaps its propensity to degenerate into indolence and sensuality, was kindred
and congenial to that of Greece, and the Grecian part of the Roman society. The Stoic, with its more practical character, its mental strength and
self-confidence, its fatalism, its universally diffused and allgoverning
Deity, the soul of the universe (of which the political power of the all-ruling
republic might appear an image), bore the same analogy to that of Rome. While
the more profound thinkers who could not disguise from themselves the
insufficiency of the grounds on which the philosophical systems rested,
either settled into a calm and contented scepticism, or, with the Academics, formed an eclectic creed from what appeared the better
parts of the rest.
Such on all the great questions of religion, the divine nature,
providence, the origin and future being of the soul, was the
floating and uncertain state of the human mind. In the department of morals,
Philosophy nobly performed her part; but perhaps her success in this respect
more clearly displayed her inefficiency. The height to which moral science was
carried in the works of Cicero, Seneca, Epictetus, and Marcus Antoninus, while it made the breach still wider between the
popular religion and the advanced state of the human mind, more vividly
displayed the want of a faith, which would associate itself with the purest and
loftiest morality; and remarry, as it were, those thoughts and feelings which
connect man with a future state of being, to the practical duties of life.
For while these speculations occupied the loftier and more thinking
minds, what remained for the vulgar of the higher and of the lower orders
Philosophy had shaken the old edifice to its base; and even if it could have
confined its more profound and secret doctrines within the circle of its own
elect, if its contempt for the old fables of the popular creed had been more
jealously guarded, it is impossible but that the irreligion of the upper order
must work downwards upon the lower. When religion has, if not avowedly, yet
manifestly, sunk into an engine of state policy, its most imposing and solemn
rites will lose all their commanding life and energy. Actors will perform ill
who do not feel their parts. “It is marvellous,”
says the Epicurean in Cicero, “that one soothsayer (Haruspex) can look another
in the face without laughing.” And when the Epicurean himself stood before the
altar, in the remarkable language of Plutarch, “he hypocritically enacted
prayer and adoration from fear of the many; he uttered words directly opposite
to his philosophy. While he sacrifices, the ministering priest seems to him no
more than a cook, and he departs uttering the line of Menander, ‘I have
sacrificed to Gods in whom I have no concern’.”
Unless indeed the literature as well as the philosophy of the age
immediately preceding Christianity had been confined to the intellectual aristocracy;
the reasoning spirit, which rejected with disdain the old imaginative fables,
could not but descend at least as low as the rudiments of liberal education.
When the gravest writers, like Polybius and Strabo, find it necessary to apologise to their more learned and thinking readers for the
introduction of those mythic legends which formed the creed of their ancestors,
and to plead the necessity of avoiding offence, because such tales are still
sacred among the vulgar, this deference shows rather the increasing
indifference, than the strength of popular opinion. “Historians,” says the
former writer, “must be pardoned, if for the sake of maintaining piety among
the many, they occasionally introduce miraculous or fabulous tales; but they
must not be permitted on these points to run into extravagance.” “Religion,”
he declares in another passage, “would perhaps be unnecessary in a commonwealth
of wise men. But since the multitude is ever fickle, full of lawless desires,
irrational passions and violence, it is right to restrain it by the fear of the
invisible world, and such tragic terrors. Whence our ancestors appear to have
introduced notions concerning the Gods, and opinions about the infernal regions,
not rashly or without consideration. Those rather act rashly and
inconsiderately who would expel them?.” “It is impossible,” observes the
inquiring geographer, “to govern a mob of women, or the whole mixed multitude
by philosophic reasoning, and to exhort them to piety, holiness, and faith; we
must also employ superstition with its fables and prodigies. For the thunder,
the aegis, the trident, the torches, the serpents, the thyrsi of the Gods are
fables, as is all the ancient theology; but the legislature introduced these
things as bugbears to those who are children in understanding.” In short even
when the Roman writers professed the utmost respect for the religious
institutions of their country, there was a kind of silent protest against their
sincerity. It was an evident, frequently an avowed, condescension to the
prejudices of the vulgar. Livy admires the wisdom of Numa,
who introduced the fear of the Gods, as a “most efficacious means of
controlling an ignorant and barbarous populace.” Even the serious Dionysius
judges of religion according to its usefulness, not according to its truth, as
the wise scheme of the legislator, rather than as the revelation of the Deity.
Pausanias, while he is making a kind of religious survey of Greece, expressing
a grave veneration for all the temples and rites of antiquity, frequently
relating the miraculous intervention of the several deities, is jealous and
careful lest he should be considered a believer in the fables which he relates.
The natural consequence of this double doctrine was not unforeseen. “What,”
says the Academic in Cicero, “when men maintain all belief in the immortal Gods
to have been invented by wise men for the good of the state, that religion
might lead to their duty those who would not be led by reason, do they not
sweep away the very foundations of all religion?”
The mental childhood of the human race was passing away, at least it had
become wearied of its old toys. The education itself, by which, according to
these generally judicious writers, the youthful mind was to be impregnated with
reverential feelings for the objects of national worship, must have been coldly
conducted by teachers conscious that they were practising a pious fraud upon their disciples, and perpetually embarrassed by the
necessity of maintaining the gravity befitting such solemn subjects, and of
suppressing the involuntary smile, which might betray the secret of their own
impiety. One class of fables seems to have been universally exploded even in
the earliest youth, those which related to another life. The picture of the
unrivalled satirist may be overcharged, but it corresponds strictly with the
public language of the orator, and the private sentence of the philosopher:
The silent realm of
disembodied ghosts,
The frogs that
croak along the Stygian coasts;
The thousand souls
in one crazed vessel steer’d,
Not boys believe,
save boys without a beard.
Even the religious Pausanias speaks of the immortality of the soul as a
foreign doctrine, introduced by the Chaldeans and the Magi, and embraced by
some of the Greeks, particularly by Plato. Pliny, whose Natural History opens
with a declaration that the universe is the sole Deity, devotes a separate
chapter to a contemptuous exposure of the idle notion of the immortality of
the soul, as a vision of human pride, and equally absurd, whether under the
form of existence in another sphere, or under that of transmigration.
We return then again to the question, what remained for minds thus
enlightened beyond the poetic Religions, faith of their ancestors, yet not ripe
for philosophy? how was the craving for religious excitement to be appeased,
which turned with dissatisfaction or disgust from its accustomed nutriment?
Here is the secret of the remarkable union between the highest reason and the
most abject superstition which characterises the age
of Imperial Rome. Every foreign religion found proselytes in the capital of the
world; not only the pure and rational theism of the Jews, which had made a
progress, the extent of which it is among the most difficult questions in
history to estimate: but the Oriental rites of Phrygia, and the Isiac and Serapic worship of
Egypt, which, in defiance of the edict of the magistrate and the scorn of the
philosopher, maintained their ground in the capital, and were so widely
propagated among the provinces, that their vestiges may be traced in the remote
districts of Gaul and Britain; and at a later period the reviving Mithriac Mysteries, which in the same manner made their way
into the western provinces of the empire. In the capital itself, every thing that was new, or secret, or imposing, found a
welcome reception among a people that listened with indifference to
philosophers who reasoned, and poets who embodied philosophy in the most attractive
diction. For in Rome, poetry had forsworn the alliance of the old imaginative
faith. The irreligious system of Euhemerus had found
a translator in Ennius; that of Epicurus was
commended by the unrivalled powers of Lucretius. Virgil himself, who, as he
collected from all quarters the beauties of ancient poetry, so he inlaid in his
splendid tessellation the noblest images of the poetic faith of Greece: yet,
though at one moment he transfuses mythology into his stately verse, with all
the fire of an ardent votary, at the next he appears as a pantheist, and
describes the Deity but as the animating soul of the universe. An occasional
fit of superstition crosses over the careless and Epicurean apathy of Horace.
Astrology and witchcraft led captive minds which boasted themselves emancipated from the idle terrors
of the avenging gods. In the Pharsalia of Lucan,
which manifestly soars far above the vulgar theology, where the lofty Stoicism
elevates the brave man who disdains, above the gods who flatter, the rising
fortunes of Caesar; yet in the description of the witch Erictho evoking the dead (the only purely imaginative passage in the whole rhetorical
poem), there is a kind of tremendous truth and earnestness, which show that if
the poet himself believed not “the magic wonders which he drew,” at least he
well knew the terrors that would strike the age in which he wrote.
The old established traders in human credulity had almost lost their
occupation, but their place was supplied by new empirics, who swarmed from all
quarters. The oracles were silent, while astrology seized the administration of
the secrets of futurity. Pompey, and Crassus, and Caesar, all consulted the Chaldaeans, whose flattering predictions that they should
die in old age, in their homes, in glory, so belied by their miserable fates,
still brought not the unblushing science into disrepute. The repeated edicts
which expelled the astrologers and “mathematicians” from Rome, were no less an
homage to their power over the public mind, than their recall, the tacit
permission to return, or the return in defiance of the insulted edict. Banished
by Agrippa, by Augustus, by Tiberius, by Claudius, they are described in the
inimitable language of Tacitus, as a race who, treacherous to those in power, fallacious
to those who hope for power, are ever proscribed, yet will ever remain. They
were at length taken under the avowed patronage of Vespasian and his successors.
All these circumstances were manifest indications of the decay and of the
approaching dissolution of the old religion. The elegiac poet had read, not
without sagacity, the signs of the times.
None sought the aid
of foreign gods, while bow’d
Before their native
shrines the trembling crowd.
And thus, in this struggle between the old household deities of the
established faith, and the half-domiciliated gods of the stranger, undermined
by philosophy, supplanted by still darker superstition, Polytheism seemed, as
it were, to await its death-blow; and to be ready to surrender its ancient honours to the conqueror, whom Divine Providence should
endow with sufficient authority over the human mind to seize upon the abdicated
supremacy.
Such is the state in which the ancient world leaves the mind of man. On
a sudden a new era commences; a rapid yet gradual revolution takes place in the opinions, sentiments, and principles of mankind; the void is
filled; the connexion between religion and morals
re-established with an intimacy of union yet unknown. The unity of the Deity
becomes, not the high and mysterious creed of a privileged sacerdotal or
intellectual oligarchy, but the common property of all whose minds are fitted
to receive it: all religious distinctions are annihilated; the jurisdictions of
all local deities abolished; and imperceptibly the empire of Rome becomes one
great Christian commonwealth, which even sends out, as it were, its peaceful
colonies into regions beyond the limits of the Imperial power. The
characteristic distinction of the general revolution is this: that the physical
agency of the Deity seems to recede from the view, while the spiritual
character is more distinctly unfolded; or rather, the notion of the Divine
Power is merged in the more prevailing sentiment of his moral Goodness. The
remarkable passage in the Jewish history, in which God is described as
revealing himself to Elijah, “neither in the strong wind, nor in the earthquake,
nor in the fire, but in the still small voice,” may be considered, we will not
say prophetic, but singularly significant of the sensations to be excited in
the human mind by the successive revelations of the Deity.
The doctrine of the immortality of the soul partook the same change with the notion of the Deity; it became at once popular, simple, and spiritual. It was disseminated throughout all orders of society: it admitted no aristocratic elysium of heroes and demi-gods, like that of the early Greeks; it separated itself from that earlier and widely prevalent form, which it assumed in the theogonies of the Natureworship, where the soul emanating from the source of Being, after one or many transmigrations, was reabsorbed into the Divine Essence. It announced the resurrection of all mankind to judgment, and the reunion of the spirit to a body, which, preserving the principle of identity, nevertheless should be of a purer and more imperishable nature. Such are the great primary principles, which became incorporated with the mind of man; and, operating on all human institutions, on the common sentiments of the whole race, form the great distinctive difference between the ancient and the modern, the European and the Asiatic world. During the dark ages there was a strong reaction of
barbarism: in its outward form Christianity might appear to recede towards the
polytheism of older times; and, as has been shown, not in a philosophic, but in
a narrow polemic spirit of hostility to the Church of Rome, many of the rites
and usages of heathenism were admitted into the Christian system; yet the
indelible difference between the two periods remained. A higher sense and meaning
was infused into these forms; God was considered in his moral rather than his
physical attributes—as the Lord of the future as much or even more than of the
present world. The saints and angels, who have been compared to the
intermediate deities of the older superstitions, had, nevertheless, besides
their tutelar power against immediate accidents and temporal calamities, an
important influence over the state of the soul in the world to come; they
assumed the higher office of ministering the hopes of the future, in a still
greater degree than the blessings of the present life.
To the more complete development of this fact we shall descend in the
course of our History, which will endeavour to trace
all the modifications of Christianity, by which it accommodated itself to the
spirit of successive ages; and by this apparently almost skilful,
but in fact necessary condescension to the predominant state of moral culture,
of which itself formed a constituent element, maintained its uninterrupted
dominion. It is the author’s object, the difficulty of which he himself fully
appreciates, to portray the genius of the Christianity of each successive age,
in connexion with that of the age itself; entirely to
discard all polemic views; to mark the origin and progress of all the
subordinate diversities of belief; their origin in the circumstances of the
place or time in which they appeared; their progress from their adaptation to
the prevailing state of opinion or sentiment: rather than directly to confute
error or to establish truth; in short, to exhibit the reciprocal influence of civilisation on Christianity, of Christianity on civilisation. To the accomplishment of such a scheme he is
well aware, that besides the usual high qualifications of a faithful historian,
is requisite, in an especial manner, the union of true philosophy with perfect
charity, if indeed they are not one and the same. This calm, impartial, and dispassionate
tone he will constantly endeavour, he dares scarcely
hope, with such warnings on every side of involuntary prejudice and unconscious
prepossession, uniformly to maintain. In the honesty of his purpose he will
seek his excuse for all imperfection or deficiency in the execution of his
scheme. Nor is he aware that he enters on ground preoccupied by any writers of
established authority, at least in our own country, where the History of
Christianity has usually assumed the form of a History of the Church, more or
less controversial, and confined itself to annals of the internal feuds and
divisions in the Christian community, and the variations in doctrine and discipline,
rather than to its political and social influence. Our attention, on the other
hand, will be chiefly directed to its effects on the social and even political
condition of man, as it extended itself throughout the Roman world, and at
length entered into the administration of government and of law; the gradual
manner in which it absorbed and incorporated into the religious commonwealth
the successive masses of population, which, after having overthrown the
temporal polity of Rome, were subdued to the religion of the conquered people;
the separation of the human race into the distinct castes of the clergy and
laity; the former at first an aristocracy, afterwards a despotic monarchy: as
Europe sank back into barbarism, the imaginative state of the human mind, the
formation of a new poetic faith, a mythology and a complete system of
symbolical worship; the interworking of Christianism with barbarism, till they
slowly grew into a kind of semi-barbarous heroic period, that of Christian
chivalry; the gradual expansion of the system, with the expansion of the human
mind; and the slow, perhaps not yet complete, certainly not general,
development of a rational and intellectual religion. Throughout his work the
author will equally, or as his disposition inclines, even more diligently, labour to show the good as well as the evil of each phasis
of Christianity; since it is his opinion that, at every period, much more is to
be attributed to the circumstances of the age, to the collective operation of
certain principles which grew out of the events of the time, than to the
intentional or accidental influence of any individual or class of men.
Christianity, in short, may exist in a certain form in a nation of savages as
well as in a nation of philosophers, yet its specific character
will almost entirely depend upon the character of the people who are its
votaries. It must be considered, therefore, in constant connexion with that character; it will darken with the darkness, and brighten with the light,
of each succeeding century; in an ungenial time it will recede so far from its
genuine and essential nature as scarcely to retain any sign of its divine
original: it will advance with the advancement of human nature, and keep up the
moral to the utmost height of the intellectual culture of man.
While, however, Christianity necessarily submitted to all these
modifications, I strongly protest against the opinion, that the origin of the religion can be attributed, according to a theory adopted by many foreign
writers, to the gradual and spontaneous development of the human mind. Christ
is as much beyond his own age, as his own age is beyond the darkest barbarism.
The time, though fitted to receive, could not by any combination of prevalent
opinions, or by any conceivable course of moral improvement, have produced Christianity. The conception of the human character of Jesus, and the simple
principles of the new religion, as they were in direct opposition to the predominant
opinions and temper of his own countrymen, so they stand completely alone in
the history of our race; and, as imaginary no less than as real, altogether
transcend the powers of man’s moral conception. Supposing the Gospels purely
fictitious, or that, like the Cyropaedia of Xenophon,
they embody on a groundwork of fact the highest moral and religious notions to
which man had attained, and show the utmost ideal perfection of the divine and
human nature, they can be accounted for, according to my judgment, on none of
the ordinary principles of human nature. When we behold Christ standing in the
midst of the wreck of old religious institutions, and building, or rather at
one word commanding to arise, the simple and harmonious structure of the new
faith, which seems equally adapted for all ages—a temple to which nations in
the highest degree of civilisation may bring their
offerings of pure hearts, virtuous dispositions, universal charity,—our
natural emotion is the recognition of the Divine goodness, in the promulgation
of this beneficent code of religion; and adoration of that Being in whom that
Divine goodness is thus embodied and made comprehensible to the faculties of
man. In the language of the apostle, “God is in Christ, reconciling the world
unto himself.”
State of Judaea—The Belief in the Messiah
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