THE TRACES OF A PRIMITIVE MONOTHEISM
There are two conflicting theories
now in vogue in regard to the origin of religion.
The first is that of Christian theists as taught in
the Old and New Testament Scriptures, viz., that
the human race in its first ancestry, and again in
the few survivors of the Deluge, possessed the knowledge
of the true God. It is not necessary to suppose
that they had a full and mature conception of Him,
or that that conception excluded the idea of other
gods. No one would maintain that Adam or Noah
comprehended the nature of the Infinite as it has been
revealed in the history of God’s dealings with
men in later times. But from their simple worship
of one God their descendants came gradually to worship
various visible objects with which they associated
their blessings the sun as the source of
warmth and vitality, the rain as imparting a quickening
power to the earth, the spirits of ancestors to whom
they looked with a special awe, and finally a great
variety of created things instead of the invisible
Creator. The other theory is that man, as we now
behold him, has been developed from lower forms of
animal life, rising first to the state of a mere human
animal, but gradually acquiring intellect, conscience,
and finally a soul; that ethics and religion
have been developed from instinct by social contact,
especially by ties of family and the tribal relation;
that altruism which began with the instinctive care
of parents for their offspring, rose to the higher
domain of religion and began to recognize the claims
of deity; that God, if there be a God, never revealed
himself to man by any preternatural means, but that
great souls, like Moses, Isaiah, and Plato, by their
higher and clearer insight, have gained loftier views
of deity than others, and as prophets and teachers
have made known their inspirations to their fellow-men.
Gradually they have formed rituals and elaborated
philosophies, adding such supernatural elements as
the ignorant fancy of the masses was supposed to demand.
According to this theory, religions,
like everything else, have grown up from simple germs:
and it is only in the later stages of his development
that man can be said to be a religious being.
While an animal merely, and for a time even after
he had attained to a rude and savage manhood, a life
of selfish passion and marauding was justifiable, since
only thus could the survival of the fittest be secured
and the advancement of the race attained. It
is fair to say that there are various shades of the
theory here presented some materialistic,
some theistic, others having a qualified theism, and
still others practically agnostic. Some even
who claim to be Christians regard the various religions
of men as so many stages in the divine education of
the race all being under the direct guidance
of God, and all designed to lead ultimately to Christianity
which is the goal.
That God has overruled all things,
even the errors and wickedness of men, for some wise
object will not be denied; that He has implanted in
the human understanding many correct conceptions of
ethical truth, so that noble principles are found
in the teachings of all religious systems; that God
is the author of all truth and all right impulses,
even in heathen minds, is readily admitted. But
that He has directly planned and chosen the non-Christian
religions on the principle that half-truths and perverted
truths and the direct opposites of the truth, were
best adapted to certain stages of development in
other words, that He has causatively led any nation
into error and consequent destruction as a means of
preparing for subsequent generations something higher
and better, we cannot admit. The logic of such
a conclusion would lead to a remorseless fatalism.
Everything would depend on the age and the environment
in which one’s lot were cast. We cannot
believe that fetishism and idolatry have been God’s
kindergarten method of training the human race for
the higher and more spiritual service of His kingdom.
Turning from the testimony of the
Scriptures on the one hand and the a priori
assumptions of evolution on the other, what is the
witness of the actual history of religions? Have
they shown an upward or a downward development?
Do they appear to have risen from polytheism toward
simpler and more spiritual forms, or have simple forms
been ramified into polytheism? If we shall be
able to establish clear evidence that monotheistic
or even henotheistic types of faith existed among all,
or nearly all, the races at the dawn of history, a
very important point will have been gained. The
late Dr. Henry B. Smith, after a careful perusal of
Ebrard’s elaborate presentation of the religions
of the ancient and the modern world, and his clear
proofs that they had at first been invariably monotheistic
and had gradually lapsed into ramified forms of polytheism,
says in his review of Ebrard’s work: “We
do not know where to find a more weighty reply to the
assumptions and theories of those writers who persist
in claiming, according to the approved hypothesis
of a merely naturalistic evolution, that the primitive
state of mankind was the lowest and most debased form
of polytheistic idolatry, and that the higher religions
have been developed out of these base rudiments.
Dr. Ebrard shows conclusively that the facts all lead
to another conclusion, that gross idolatry is a degeneration
of mankind from antecedent and purer forms of religious
worship.... He first treats of the civilized nations
of antiquity, the Aryan and Indian religions, the
Védas, the Indra period of Brahmanism and Buddhism;
then of the religion of the Iranians, the Avesta of
the Parsees; next of the Greeks and Romans, the Egyptians,
the Canaanites, and the heathen Semitic forms of worship,
including the Phoenicians, Assyrians, and Babylonians.
His second division is devoted to the half-civilized
and savage races in the North and West of Europe, in
Asia and Polynesia (Tartars, Mongols, Malays,
and Cushites); then the races of America, including
a minute examination of the relations of the different
races here to the Mongols, Japanese, and old Chinese
immigrations."
Ebrard himself, in summing up the
results of these prolonged investigations, says:
“We have nowhere been able to discover the least
trace of any forward and upward movement from fetichism
to polytheism, and from that again to a gradually
advancing knowledge of the one God; but, on the contrary,
we have found among all the peoples of the heathen
world a most decided tendency to sink from an earlier
and relatively purer knowledge of God toward something
lower."
If these conclusions, reached by Ebrard
and endorsed by the scholarly Dr. Henry B. Smith,
are correct, they are of great importance; they bring
to the stand the witness of the false religions themselves
upon an issue in which historic testimony as distinguished
from mere theories is in special demand in our time.
Of similar import are the well-considered words of
Professor Naville, in the first of his lectures on
modern atheism. He says: “Almost all
pagans seem to have had a glimpse of the divine unity
over the multiplicity of their idols, and of the rays
of the divine holiness across the saturnalia of their
Olympi. It was a Greek (Cleanthus) who wrote
these words: ’Nothing is accomplished on
the earth without Thee, O God, save the deeds which
the wicked perpetrate in their folly.’
It was in a theatre at Athens, that the chorus of a
tragedy sang, more than two thousand years ago:
’May destiny aid me to preserve, unsullied,
the purity of my words, and of all my actions, according
to those sublime laws which, brought forth in the celestial
heights, have the raven alone for their father, to
which the race of mortals did not give birth and which
oblivion shall never entomb. In them is a supreme
God, and one who waxes not old.’ It would
be easy to multiply quotations of this order and to
show, in the documents of Grecian and Roman civilization,
numerous traces of the knowledge of the only and holy
God.”
With much careful discrimination,
Dr. William A.P. Martin, of the Peking University,
has said: “It is customary with a certain
school to represent religion as altogether the fruit
of an intellectual process. It had its birth,
say they, in ignorance, is modified by every stage
in the progress of knowledge, and expires when the
light of philosophy reaches its noon-day. The
fetish gives place to a personification of the powers
of nature, and this poetic pantheon is, in time, superseded
by the high idea of unity in nature expressed by monotheism.
This theory has the merit of verisimilitude.
It indicates what might be the process if man were
left to make his own religion; but it has the misfortune
to be at variance with facts. A wide survey of
the history of civilized nations (and the history
of others is beyond reach) shows that the actual process
undergone by the human mind in its religious development
is precisely opposite to that which this theory supposes;
in a word, that man was not left to construct his
own creed, but that his blundering logic has always
been active in its attempts to corrupt and obscure
a divine original. The connection subsisting between
the religious systems of ancient and distant countries
presents many a problem difficult of solution.
Indeed, their mythologies and religious rites are
generally so distinct as to admit the hypothesis of
an independent origin; but the simplicity of their
earliest beliefs exhibits an unmistakable resemblance,
suggestive of a common source.
“China, India, Egypt, and Greece
all agree in the monotheistic type of their early
religion. The Orphic hymns, long before the advent
of the popular divinities, celebrated the Pantheos,
the Universal God. The odes compiled by Confucius
testify to the early worship of Shangte, the Supreme
Euler. The Védas speak of ’one unknown
true Being, all-present, all-powerful; the Creator,
Preserver, and Destroyer of the universe.’
And in Egypt, as late as the time of Plutarch, there
were still vestiges of a monotheistic worship.
‘The other Egyptians,’ he says, ’all
made offerings at the tombs of the sacred beasts;
but the inhabitants of the Thebaid stood alone in
making no such offerings, not regarding as a god anything
that can die, and acknowledging no god but one, whom
they call Kneph, who had no birth, and can have no
death. Abraham, in his wanderings, found the
God of his fathers known and honored in Salem, in
Gerar, and in Memphis; while at a later day Jethro,
in Midian, and Balaam, in Mesopotamia, were witnesses
that the knowledge of Jéhovah was not yet extinct
in those countries.’"
Professor Max Mueller speaks in a
similar strain of the lapse of mankind from earlier
and simpler types of faith to low and manifold superstitions:
“Whenever we can trace back a religion to its
first beginning,” says the distinguished Oxford
professor, “we find it free from many of the
blemishes that offend us in its later phases.
The founders of the ancient religions of the world,
as far as we can judge, were minds of a high stamp,
full of noble aspirations, yearning for truth, devoted
to the welfare of their neighbors, examples of purity
and unselfishness. What they desired to found
upon earth was but seldom realized, and their sayings,
if preserved in their original form, offered often
a strange contrast to the practice of those who profess
to be their disciples. As soon as a religion
is established, and more particularly when it has
become the religion of a powerful state, the foreign
and worldly elements encroach more and more on the
original foundation, and human interests mar the simplicity
and purity of the plan which the founder had conceived
in his own heart and matured in his communings with
his God."
But in pursuing our subject we should
clearly determine the real question before us.
How much may we expect to prove from the early history
of the non-Christian systems? Not certainly that
all nations once received a knowledge of the Old Testament
revelation, as some have claimed, nor that all races
possessed at the beginning of their several historic
periods one and the same monotheistic faith. We
cannot prove from non-scriptural sources that their
varying monotheistic conceptions sprang from a common
belief. We cannot prove either the supernatural
revelation which Professor Max Mueller emphatically
rejects, nor the identity of the well-nigh universal
henotheisms which he professes to believe. We
cannot prove that the worship of one God as supreme
did not coexist with a sort of worship of inferior
deities or ministering spirits. Almost as a rule,
the worship of ancestors, or spirits, or rulers, or
the powers of nature, or even totems and fetishes
has been rendered as subordinate to the worship of
the one supreme deity who created and upholds all
things. Even the monotheism of Judaism and of
Christianity has been attended with the belief in angels
and the worship of intercessory saints, to say nothing
of the many superstitions which prevail among the
more ignorant classes. We shall only attempt to
show that monotheism, in the sense of worshipping
one God as supreme, is found in nearly all
the early teachings of the world. That these crude
faiths are one in the origin is only presumable, if
we leave the testimony of the Bible out of the account.
When on a summer afternoon we see
great shafts of light arising and spreading fan-shaped
from behind a cloud which lies along the western horizon,
we have a strong presumption that they all spring from
one great luminary toward which they converge, although
that luminary is hidden from our view. So tracing
the convergence of heathen faiths with respect to
one original monotheism, back to the point where the
prehistoric obscurity begins, we may on the same principle
say that all the evidence in the case, and it is not
small, points toward a common origin for the early
religious conceptions of mankind.
Professor Robert Flint, in his scholarly
article on theism in “The Britannica,”
seems to discard the idea that the first religion of
mankind was monotheism; but a careful study of his
position will show that he has in view those conceptions
of monotheism which are common to us, or, as he expresses
it, “monotheism in the ordinary or proper sense
of the term,” “monotheism properly so called,”
“monotheism which excludes polytheism,”
etc. Moreover, he maintains that we cannot,
from historical sources, learn what conceptions men
first had of God. Even when speaking of the Old
Testament record, he says: “These chapters
(of Genesis), although they plainly teach monotheism
and represent the God whose words and acts are recorded
in the Bible as no mere national God, but the only
true God, they do not teach what is alone in the question that
there was a primitive monotheism, a monotheism revealed
and known from the beginning. They give no warrant
to the common assumption that God revealed monotheism
to Adam, Noah, and others before the Flood, and that
the traces of monotheistic beliefs and tendencies in
heathendom are derivable from the tradition of this
primitive and antediluvian monotheism. The one
true God is represented as making himself known by
particular words and in particular ways to Adam, but
is nowhere said to have taught him that He only was
God.” It is plain that Professor Flint
is here dealing with a conception of monotheism which
is exclusive of all other gods. And his view
is undoubtedly correct, so far as Adam was concerned.
There was no more need of teaching him that his God
was the only God, than that Eve was the only woman.
With Noah the case is not so plain. He doubtless
worshipped God amid the surroundings of polytheistic
heathenism. Enoch probably had a similar environment,
and there is no good reason for supposing that their
monotheism may not have been as exclusive as that
of Abraham. But with respect to the Gentile nations,
the dim traces of this monism or henotheism which Professor
Flint seems to accord to Adam and to Noah, is all
that we are contending for, and all that is necessary
to the argument of this lecture. We may even admit
that heathen deities may sometimes have been called
by different names while the one source of power was
intended. Different names seem to have been employed
to represent different manifestations of the one God
of the Old Testament according to His varied relations
toward His people. There are those who deny this
polyonomy, as Max Mueller has called it, and who maintain
that the names in the earliest Veda represented distinct
deities; but, by similar reasoning, Professor Tiele
and others insist that three different Hebrew Gods,
according to their respective names, were worshipped
in successive periods of the Jewish history. It
seems quite possible, therefore, that a too restrictive
definition of monotheism may prove too much, by opening
the way for a claim that even the Jewish and Christian
faith, with its old Testament names of God, its angels,
its theophanies, and its fully developed trinity, is
not strictly monotheistic. For our present purpose,
traces of the worship of one supreme God call
it monotheism or henotheism is all that
is required.
With these limitations and qualifications
in view, let us turn to the history of some of the
leading non-Christian faiths. Looking first to
India, we find in the 129th hymn of the Rig Veda, a
passage which not only presents the conception of
one only supreme and self-existing Being, but at the
same time bears significant resemblance to our own
account of the creation from chaos. It reads thus:
“In the beginning there was
neither naught nor aught,
Then there was neither atmosphere
nor sky above,
There was neither death nor
immortality,
There was neither day nor
night, nor light, nor darkness,
Only the EXISTENT ONE breathed
calmly self-contained.
Naught else but He was there,
naught else above, beyond.
Then first came darkness hid
in darkness, gloom in gloom;
Next all was water, chaos
indiscrete,
In which ONE lay void, shrouded
in nothingness."
In the 121st hymn of the same Veda
occurs a passage which seems to resemble the opening
of the Gospel of St. John. It reads thus, as
translated by Sir Monier Williams:
“Him let us praise,
the golden child that was In the beginning, who
was born the Lord, Who
made the earth and formed the sky.”
“The one born Lord” reminds
us of the New Testament expression, “the only
begotten Son.” Both were “in the beginning;”
both were the creators of the world. While there
is much that is mysterious in these references, the
idea of oneness and supremacy is too plain to be mistaken.
Professor Max Mueller has well expressed this fact
when he said: “There is a monotheism which
precedes polytheism in the Veda; and even in the invocation
of their (inferior) gods, the remembrance of a
God, one and infinite, breaks through the mist of an
idolatrous phraseology like the blue sky that is hidden
by passing clouds." These monotheistic conceptions
appear to have been common to the Aryans before their
removal from their early home near the sources of the
Oxus, and we shall see further on that in one form
or another they survived among all branches of the
migrating race. The same distinguished scholar
traces the early existence of monotheism in a series
of brief and rapid references to nearly all the scattered
Aryans not only, but also to the Turanians on the
North and East, to the Tungusic, Mongolic, Tartaric,
and Finnic tribes. “Everywhere,” he
says, “we find a worship of nature, and the
spirits of the departed, but behind it all there rises
a belief in some higher power called by different
names, who is Maker and Protector of the world, and
who always resides in heaven." He also speaks
of an ancient African faith which, together with its
worship of reptiles and of ancestors, showed a vague
hope of a future life, “and a not altogether
faded reminiscence of a supreme God,” which certainly
implies a previous knowledge.
The same prevalence of one supreme
worship rising above all idolatry he traces among
the various tribes of the Pacific Islands. His
generalizations are only second to those of Ebrard.
Although he rejects the theory of a supernatural revelation,
yet stronger language could hardly be used than that
which he employs in proof of a universal monotheistic
faith. “Nowhere,” he says, “do
we find stronger arguments against idolatry, nowhere
has the unity of God been upheld more strenuously
against the errors of polytheism, than by some of the
ancient sages of India. Even in the oldest of
the sacred books, the Rig Veda, composed three or
four thousand years ago, where we find hymns addressed
to the different deities of the sky, the air, the earth,
the rivers, the protest of the human heart against
many gods breaks forth from time to time with no uncertain
sound.” Professor Mueller’s whole
position is pretty clearly stated in his first lecture
on “The Science of Religion,” in which
he protests against the idea that God once gave to
man “a preternatural revelation”
concerning Himself; and yet he gives in this same
lecture this striking testimony to the doctrine of
an early and prevailing monotheistic faith:
“Is it not something worth knowing,”
he says, “worth knowing even to us after the
lapse of four or five thousand years, that before the
separation of the Aryan race, before the existence
of Sanskrit, Greek, or Latin, before the gods of the
Veda had been worshipped, and before there was a sanctuary
of Zeus among the sacred oaks of Dodona, one Supreme
deity had been found, had been named, had been invoked
by the ancestors of our race, and had been invoked
by a name which has never been excelled by any other
name?” And again, on the same subject, he says:
“If a critical examination of the ancient language
of the Jews leads to no worse results than those which
have followed from a careful interpretation of the
petrified language of ancient India and Greece, we
need not fear; we shall be gainers, not losers.
Like an old precious medal, the ancient religion,
after the rust of ages has been removed, will come
out in all its purity and brightness; and the image
which it discloses will be the image of the Father,
the Father of all the nations upon earth; and the
superscription, when we can read it again, will be,
not only in Judea, but in the languages of all the
races of the world, the Word of God, revealed where
alone it can be revealed revealed in the
heart of man."
The late Professor Banergea, of Calcutta,
in a publication entitled “The Aryan Witness,”
not only maintained the existence of monotheism in
the early Védas, but with his rare knowledge
of Sanskrit and kindred tongues, he gathered from
Iranian as well as Hindu sources many evidences of
a monotheism common to all Aryans. His conclusions
derive special value from the fact that he was a high
caste Hindu, and was not only well versed in the sacred
language, but was perfectly familiar with Hindu traditions
and modes of thought. He was as well qualified
to judge of early Hinduism as Paul was of Judaism,
and for the same reason. And from his Hindu standpoint,
as a Pharisee of the Pharisees, though afterward a
Christian convert, he did not hesitate to declare his
belief, not only that the early Vedic faith was monotheistic,
but that it contained traces of that true revelation,
once made to men.
In the same line we find the testimony
of the various types of revived Aryanism of our own
times. The Brahmo Somaj, the Arya Somaj, and other
similar organizations, are not only all monotheistic,
but they declare that monotheism was the religion
of the early Védas. And many other Hindu
reforms, some of them going as far back as the twelfth
century, have been so many returns to monotheism.
A recent Arya catechism published by Ganeshi, asserts
in its first article that there is one only God, omnipotent,
infinite, and eternal. It proceeds to show that
the Védas present but one, and that when
hymns were addressed to Agni, Vayu, Indra, etc.,
it was only a use of different names for one and the
same Being.
It represents God as having all the
attributes of supreme Deity. He created the world
by His direct power and for the revelation of His
glory to His creatures. Man, according to the
Aryas, came not by evolution nor by any of the processes
known to Hindu philosophy, but by direct creation
from existing atoms.
In all this it is easy to see that
much has been borrowed from the Christian conception
of God’s character and attributes, but the value
of this Aryan testimony lies in the fact that it claims
for the ancient Védas a clear and positive monotheism.
If we consult the sacred books of
China, we shall find there also many traces of an
ancient faith which antedates both Confucianism and
Taouism. The golden age of the past to which all
Chinese sages look with reverence, was the dynasty
of Yao and Shun, which was eighteen centuries earlier
than the period of Confucius and Laotze. The records
of the Shu-king which Confucius compiled, and from
which unfortunately his agnosticism excluded nearly
all its original references to religion, nevertheless
retain a full account of certain sacred rites performed
by Shun on his accession to the full imperial power.
In those rites the worship of One God as supreme is
distinctly set forth as a “customary service,”
thereby implying that it was already long established.
Separate mention is also made of offerings to inferior
deities, as if these were honored at his own special
instance. It is unquestionably true that in China,
and indeed in all lands, there sprang up almost from
the first a tendency to worship, or at least to fear,
unseen spirits. This tendency has coexisted with
all religions of the world even with the
Old Testament cult even with Christianity.
To the excited imaginations of men, especially the
ignorant classes, the world has always been a haunted
world, and just in proportion as the light of true
religion has become dim, countless hordes of ghosts
and demons have appeared. When Confucius arose
this gross animism had almost monopolized the worship
of his countrymen, and universal corruption bore sway.
He was not an original thinker, but only a compiler
of the ancient wisdom, and in his selections from
the traditions of the ancients, he compiled those
things only which served his great purpose of building
up, from the relations of family and kindred, the
complete pyramid of a well-ordered state in which
the Emperor should hold to his subjects the place
of deity. If such honor to a mortal seemed extravagant,
yet in his view a wise emperor was far worthier of
reverence than the imaginary ghosts of the popular
superstitions. Yet, even Confucius could not quite
succeed in banishing the idea of divine help, nor could
he destroy that higher and most venerable worship
which has ever survived amid all the corruptions
of polytheism. Professor Legge, of Oxford, has
claimed, from what he regards as valid linguistic
proofs, that at a still earlier period than the dynasty
of Yao and Shun there existed in China the worship
of one God. He says: “Five thousand
years ago the Chinese were monotheists not
henotheists, but monotheists” though
he adds that even then there was a constant struggle
with nature-worship and divination.
The same high authority cites a remarkable
prayer of an Emperor of the Ming dynasty (1538 A.D.)
to show that in spite of the agnosticism and reticence
of Confucius, Shangte has been worshipped in the centuries
which have followed his time. The prayer is very
significant as showing how the One Supreme God stands
related to the subordinate gods which polytheism has
introduced. The Emperor was about to decree a
slight change in the name of Shangte to be used in
the imperial worship. He first addressed the
spirits of the hills, the rivers, and the seas, asking
them to intercede for him with Shangte. “We
will trouble you,” said he, “on our behalf
to exert your spiritual power and to display your
vigorous efficacy, communicating our poor desires to
Shangte, and praying him graciously to grant us his
acceptance and regard, and to be pleased with the
title which we shall reverently present.”
But very different was the language used when he came
to address Shangte himself. “Of old, in
the beginning,” he began, “Of
old in the beginning, there was the great chaos without
form, and dark. The five elements had not begun
to revolve nor the sun and moon to shine. In the
midst thereof there presented itself neither form
nor sound. Thou, O spiritual Sovereign! earnest
forth in thy presidency, and first didst divide the
grosser parts from the purer. Thou madest heaven:
Thou madest earth: Thou madest man. All
things got their being with their producing power.
O Te! when Thou hadst opened the course for the inactive
and active forces of matter to operate, thy making
work went on. Thou didst produce, O Spirit! the
sun and moon and five planets, and pure and beautiful
was their light. The vault of heaven was spread
out like a curtain, and the square earth supported
all on it, and all creatures were happy. I, thy
servant, presume reverently to thank Thee.”
Farther on he says: “All the numerous tribes
of animated beings are indebted to Thy favor for their
being. Men and creatures are emparadised in Thy
love. All living things are indebted to Thy goodness.
But who knows whence his blessings come to him?
It is Thou, O Lord! who art the parent of all things."
Surely this prayer humbly offered
by a monarch would not be greatly out of place among
the Psalms of David. Its description of the primeval
chaos strikingly resembles that which I have quoted
from the Rig Veda, and both resemble that of the Mosaic
record. If the language used does not present
the clear conception of one God, the Creator and the
Upholder of all things, and a supreme and personal
Sovereign over kings and even “gods,”
then language has no meaning. The monotheistic
conception of the second petition is as distinct from
the polytheism of the first, as any prayer to Jéhovah
is from a Roman Catholic’s prayer for the intercession
of the saints; and there is no stronger argument in
the one case against monotheism than in the other.
Dr. Legge asserts that both in the Shu-king and in
the Shiking, “Te,” or “Shangte,”
appears as a personal being ruling in heaven and in
earth, the author of man’s moral nature, the
governor among the nations, the rewarder of the good
and the punisher of the evil. There are proofs
that Confucius, though in his position with respect
to God he fell short of the doctrine of the ancient
sages, yet believed in the existence of Shangte as
a personal being. When in old age he had finished
his writings, he laid them on an altar upon a certain
hill-top, and kneeling before the altar he returned
thanks that he had been spared to complete his work.
Max Mueller says of him: “It is clear from
many passages that with Confucius, Tien, or the Spirit
of Heaven, was the supreme deity, and that he looked
upon the other gods of the people the spirits
of the air, the mountains, and the rivers, and
the spirits of the departed, very much with the same
feeling with which Socrates regarded the mythological
deities of Greece."
But there remains to this day a remarkable
evidence of the worship of the supreme God, Shangte,
as he was worshipped in the days of the Emperor Shun,
2356 B.C. It is found in the great Temple of Heaven
at Peking. Dr. Martin and Professors Legge and
Douglas all insist that the sacrifices there celebrated
are relics of the ancient worship of a supreme God.
China is full of the traces of polytheism; the land
swarms with Taouist deities of all names and functions,
with Confucian and ancestral tablets, and with Buddhist
temples and dagobas; but within the sacred enclosure
of this temple no symbol of heathenism appears.
Of the August Imperial service Dr. Martin thus eloquently
speaks: “Within the gates of the southern
division of the capital, and surrounded by a sacred
grove so extensive that the silence of its deep shades
is never broken by the noise of the busy world around
it, stands the Temple of Heaven. It consists
of a single tower, whose tiling of resplendent azure
is intended to represent the form and color of the
aerial vault. It contains no image; but on a
marble altar a bullock is offered once a year as a
burnt sacrifice, while the monarch of the empire prostrates
himself in adoration of the Spirit of the Universe.
This is the high place of Chinese devotion, and the
thoughtful visitor feels that he ought to tread its
courts with unsandalled feet, for no vulgar idolatry
has entered here. This mountain-top still stands
above the waves of corruption, and on this solitary
altar there still rests a faint ray of its primeval
faith. The tablet which represents the invisible
deity is inscribed with the name Shangte, the Supreme
Ruler, and as we contemplate the Majesty of the Empire
before it, while the smoke ascends from his burning
sacrifice, our thoughts are irresistably carried back
to the time when the King of Salem officiated as priest
of the Most High God. There is,” he adds,
“no need of extended argument to establish the
fact that the early Chinese were by no means destitute
of the knowledge of the true God.” Dr.
Legge, the learned translator of the Chinese classics,
shares so fully the views here expressed, that he actually
put his shoes from off his feet before ascending the
great altar, feeling that amidst all the mists and
darkness of the national superstition, a trace of
the glory of the Infinite Jéhovah still lingered there.
And in many a discussion since he has firmly maintained
that that is in a dim way an altar of the true and
living God.
Laotze, like Confucius, was agnostic;
yet he could not wholly rid himself of the influence
of the ancient faith. His conception of Taou,
or Reason, was rationalistic, certainly, yet he invested
it with all the attributes of personality, as the
word “Wisdom” is sometimes used in the
Old Testament. He spoke of it as “The Infinite
Supreme,” “The First Beginning,”
and “The Great Original.” Dr. Medhurst
has translated from the “Taou Teh King”
this striking Taouist prayer: “O thou perfectly
honored One of heaven and earth, the rock, the origin
of myriad energies, the great manager of boundless
kalpas, do Thou enlighten my spiritual conceptions.
Within and without the three worlds, the Logos, or
divine Taou, is alone honorable, embodying in himself
a golden light. May he overspread and illumine
my person. He whom we cannot see with the eye,
or hear with the ear, who embraces and includes heaven
and earth, may he nourish and support the multitudes
of living beings.”
If we turn to the religion of the
Iranian or Persian branch of the Aryan family, we
find among them also the traces of a primitive monotheism;
and that it was not borrowed from Semitic sources,
through the descendants of Abraham or others, Ebrard
has shown clearly in the second volume of his “Apologetics.”
Max Mueller also maintains the identity of the Iranian
faith with that of the Indo-Aryans. The very first
notices of the religion of the Avesta represent it
as monotheistic. Ahura Mazda, even when opposed
by Ahriman, is supreme, and in the oldest hymns or
gathas of the Yasna, Ahriman does not appear; there
are references to evil beings, but they have no formidable
head; Persian dualism, therefore, was of later growth.
Zoroaster, whom Monier Williams assigns to the close
of the sixth century B.C., speaks of himself as
a reformer sent to re-establish the pure worship of
Ahura, and Haug considers the conception of Ahura
identical with that of Jéhovah. High on a rocky
precipice at Behistun, Rawlinson has deciphered an
inscription claiming to have been ordered by Darius
Hystaspes, who lived 500 B.C., which is as clearly
monotheistic as the Song of Moses. The Vendidad,
which Rawlinson supposes to have been composed 800
years B.C., is full of references to minor gods, but
Ahura is always supreme. The modern Parsees of
Bombay claim to be monotheistic, and declare that such
has been the faith of their fathers from the beginning.
A Parsee catechism published in Bombay
twenty-five years ago reads thus: “We believe
in only one God, and do not believe in any besides
Him.... He is the God who created the heavens,
the earth, the angels, the stars, the sun, the moon,
the fire, the water, ... and all things of the worlds;
that God we believe in, Him we invoke, Him we adore.”
And lest this should be supposed to be a modern faith,
the confession further declares that “This is
the religion which the true prophet Zurthust, or Zoroaster,
brought from God.”
The Shintoists of Japan, according
to their sacred book, the “Kojiki,” believe
in one self-existent and supreme God, from whom others
emanated. From two of these, male and female,
sprang the Goddess of the Sun, and from her the royal
line of the Mikados. There was no creation,
but the two active emanations stirred up the eternally
existing chaos, till from it came forth the teeming
world of animal and vegetable life.
It has often been asserted that tribes
of men are found who have no conception of God.
The author of “Two Years in the Jungle”
declares that the Hill Dyaks of Bornéo are without
the slightest notion of a divine being. But a
Government officer, who for two years was the guest
of Rajah Brooke, succeeded after long delay in gaining
a key to the religion of these Dyaks. He gives
the name of one Supreme being among subordinate gods,
and describes minutely the forms of worship. Professor
Max Mueller, while referring to this same often-repeated
allegation as having been applied to the aborigines
of Australia, cites one of Sir Hercules Robinson’s
Reports on New South Wales, which contains this description
of the singular faith of one of the lowest of the interior
tribes: First a being is mentioned who is supreme
and whose name signifies the “maker or cutter-out,”
and who is therefore worshipped as the great author
of all things. But as this supreme god is supposed
to be inscrutable and far removed, a second deity
is named, who is the revealer of the first
and his mediator in all the affairs of men.
Rev. A.C. Good, now a missionary
among the cannibal tribes of West Africa, stated in
the Presbyterian General Assembly at Saratoga in May,
1890, that with all the fetishes and superstitions
known among the tribes on the Ogovie, if a man is
asked who made him, he points to the sky and utters
the name of an unknown being who created all things.
When Tschoop, the stalwart Mohican chief, came to the
Moravians to ask that a missionary might be sent to
his people, he said: “Do not send us a
man to tell us that there is a God we all
know that; or that we are sinners we all
know that; but send one to tell us about salvation."
Even Buddhism has not remained true to the atheism
of its founder. A Thibetan Lama said to Abbe
Huc: “You must not confound religious
truths with the superstitions of the vulgar. The
Tartars prostrate themselves before whatever they
see, but there is one only Sovereign of the universe,
the creator of all things, alike without beginning
and without end.”
But what is the testimony of the great
dead religions of the past with respect to a primitive
monotheism? It is admitted that the later developments
of the old Egyptian faith were polytheistic. But
it has generally been conceded that as we approach
the earliest notices of that faith, monotheistic features
more and more prevail. This position is contested
by Miss Amelia B. Edwards and others, who lean toward
the development theory. Miss Edwards declares
that the earliest faith of Egypt was mere totemism,
while on the other hand Ebrard, gathering up the results
of the researches of Lepsius, Ebers, Brugsch,
and Emanuel de Rouge, deduces what seem to be clear
evidences of an early Egyptian monotheism. He
quotes Manetho, who declares that “for the first
nine thousand years the god Ptah ruled alone; there
was no other.” According to inscriptions
quoted by De Rouge, the Egyptians in the primitive
period worshipped “the one being who truly lives,
who has made all things, and who alone has not been
made.” This one God was known in different
parts of Egypt under different names, which only in
later times came to stand for distinct beings.
A text which belongs to a period fifteen hundred years
before Moses says:
“He has made all that is; thou
alone art, the millions owe their being to thee; he
is the Lord of all that which is, and of that which
is not.” A papyrus now in Paris, dating
2300 B.C., contains quotations from two much older
records, one a writing of the time of King Suffern,
about 3500 B.C., which says: “The operation
of God is a thing which cannot be understood.”
The other, from a writing of Ptah Hotep, about 3000
B.C., reads: “This is the command of the
God of creation, the peaceable may come and issue
orders.... The eating of bread is in conformity
with the ordinance of God; can one forget that his
blessing rests thereupon?... If thou art a prudent
man teach thy son the love of God."
Professor Ernest Naville, in speaking
of this same subject in a course of popular lectures
in Geneva, said: “Listen now to a voice
which has come forth actually from the recesses of
the sepulchre: it reaches us from ancient Egypt.
“In Egypt, as you know, the
degradation of the religious idea was in popular practice
complete. But under the confused accents of superstition
the science of our age is succeeding in catching from
afar the vibrations of a sublime utterance. In
the coffins of a large number of mummies have been
discovered rolls of papyrus containing a sacred text
which is called ‘The Book of the Dead.’
Here is the translation of some fragments which appear
to date from a very remote epoch. It is God who
speaks thus: ’I am the Most Holy, the Creator
of all that replenishes the earth, and of the earth
itself, the habitation of mortals. I am the Prince
of the infinite ages. I am the Great and Mighty
God, the Most High, shining in the midst of the careering
stars and of the armies which praise me above thy
head.... It is I who chastise the evil-doers
and the persecutors of Godly men. I discover and
confound the liars. I am the all-seeing Avenger,
... the Guardian of my laws in the land of the righteous.’
These words are found mingled in the text, from which
I extract them, with allusions to inferior deities;
and it must be acknowledged that the translation of
the ancient documents of Egypt is uncertain enough;
still this uncertainty does not appear to extend to
the general sense and bearing of the recent discoveries
of our savans."
Professor Flint as against Cudworth,
Ebrard, Gladstone, and others, maintains that the
Egyptian religion at the very dawn of its history had
“certain great gods,” though he adds that
“there were not so many as in later times.”
“Ancestor worship, but not so developed as in
later times, and animal worship, but very little of
it compared with later times.” On the other
hand, as against Professor Tiele, Miss Amelia B. Edwards,
and others, he says: “For the opinion that
its lower elements were older than the higher there
is not a particle of properly historical evidence,
not a trace in the inscriptions of mere propitiation
of ancestors or of belief in the absolute divinity
of kings or animals; on the contrary ancestors are
always found propitiated through prayer to some of
the great gods; kings worshipped as emanations and
images of the sun god and the divine animals adored
as divine symbols and incarnations.”
Among the Greeks there are few traces
of monotheism, but we have reason for this in the
fact that their earliest literature dates from so late
a period. It began with Homer not earlier than
600 B.C., and direct accounts of the religion of the
Greeks are not traced beyond 560 B.C. But Welcker,
whose examinations have been exhaustive, has, in the
opinion of Max Mueller, fairly established the primitive
monotheism of the Greeks. Mueller says:
“When we ascend with him to the most distant
heights of Greek history the idea of God as the supreme
being stands before us as a simple fact. Next
to this adoration of One God the father of men we
find in Greece a worship of nature. The powers
of nature, originally worshipped as such, were afterward
changed into a family of gods, of which Zeus became
the king and father. The third phase is what
is generally called Greek mythology; but it was preceded
in time, or at least rendered possible in thought,
by the two prior conceptions, a belief in a supreme
God and a worship of the powers of nature....
The divine character of Zeus, as distinguished from
his mythological character, is most carefully brought
out by Welcker. He avails himself of all the
discoveries of comparative philology in order to show
more clearly how the same idea which found expression
in the ancient religions of the Brahmáns, the
Sclavs, and the Germans had been preserved under the
same simple, clear, and sublime name by the original
settlers of Hellas."
The same high authority traces in
his own linguistic studies the important fact that
all branches of the Aryan race preserve the same name
for the Supreme Being, while they show great ramification
and variation in the names of their subordinate gods.
If, therefore, the Indo-Aryans give evidence of a
monotheistic faith at the time of their dispersion,
there is an a priori presumption for the monotheism
of the Greeks. “Herodotus,” says
Professor Rawlinson, “speaks of God as if he
had never heard of polytheism.” The testimony
of the Greek poets shows that beneath the prevailing
polytheism there remained an underlying conception
of monotheistic supremacy. Professor Rawlinson
quotes from an Orphic poem the words:
“Ares
is war, peace
Soft Aphrodite, wine that God has
made
Is Dionysius, Themis is the right
Men render to each. Apollo,
too,
And Phoebus and AEschlepius, who
doth heal
Diseases, are the sun. All
these are one.”
Max Mueller traces to this same element
of monotheism the real greatness and power of the
Hellenic race when he says: “What was it,
then, that preserved in their hearts (the Greeks),
in spite even of the feuds of tribes and the jealousies
of states, the deep feeling of that ideal unity which
constitutes a people? It was their primitive religion;
it was a dim recollection of the common allegiance
they owed from time immemorial to the great father
of gods and men; it was their belief in the old Zeus
of Dodona in the Pan-Hellenic Zeus." “There
is, in truth, but one,” says Sophocles, “one
only God, who made both heaven and long-extended earth
and bright-faced swell of seas and force of winds.”
Xenophanes says: “’Mongst gods and
men there is one mightiest God not mortal or in form
or thought. Entire he sees and understands, and
without labor governs all by mind.” Aratus,
whom Paul quotes, says: “With Zeus
began we; let no mortal voice of men leave Zeus unpraised.
Zeus fills the heavens, the streets, the marts.
Everywhere we live in Zeus. Zeus fills the sea,
the shores, the harbors. We are his offspring,
too.” The reference made by Paul evidently
implies that this Zeus was a dim conception of the
one true God.
That all branches of the Semitic race
were monotheistic we may call not only Ebrard and
Mueller, but Renan, to witness. According to Renan,
evidences that the monotheism of the Semitic races
was of a very early origin, appears in the fact that
all their names for deity El, Elohim, Ilu,
Baal, Bel, Adonai, Shaddai, and Allah denote
one being and that supreme. These names have
resisted all changes, and doubtless extend as far
back as the Semitic language or the Semitic race.
Max Mueller, in speaking of the early faith of the
Arabs, says: “Long before Mohammed the
primitive intuition of God made itself felt in Arabia;”
and he quotes this ancient Arabian prayer: “I
dedicate myself to thy service, O Allah. Thou
hast no companion, except the companion of whom thou
art master absolute, and of whatever is his.”
The book of Job and the story of Balaam indicate the
prevalence of an early monotheism beyond the pale
of the Abrahamic church. In the records of the
kings of Assyria and Babylonia there is a conspicuous
polytheism, yet it is significant that each king worshipped
one God only. And this fact suggests, as
a wide generalization, that political and dynastic
jealousies had their influence in multiplying the
names and differentiating the attributes of ancient
deities. This was notably the case in ancient
Egypt, where each invasion and each change of dynasty
led to a new adjustment of the Egyptian Pantheon.
Rome had many gods, but Jupiter was
supreme. Herodotus says of the Scythians, that
they had eight gods, but one was supreme, like Zeus.
The Northmen, according to Dr. Dascent, had one supreme
god known as the “All-fader.” The
Druids, though worshipping various subordinate deities,
believed in One who was supreme the creator
of all things and the soul of all things. Though
conceived of in a Pantheistic sense, He was personal
and exerted a moral control, as is shown by the famous
triad: “Fear God; be just to all men; die
for your country.” In the highest and purest
period of the old Mexican faith we read of the Tezcucan
monarch Nezahualcoyotl, who said: “These
idols of wood and stone can neither hear nor feel;
much less could they make the heavens and the earth,
and man who is the lord of it. These must be
the work of the all-powerful unknown God, the Creator
of the universe, on whom alone I must rely for consolation
and support." The Incas of Peru also, though
sun-worshippers, believed in a supreme creator who
made the sun. The oldest of their temples was
reared to the supreme god “Virachoca.”
And one of the greatest Incas has left his declared
belief that “there must be above the sun a greater
and more powerful ruler, at whose behest the sun pursues
his daily and untiring round."
It has been assumed throughout this
lecture, that instead of an advance in the religions
of men, there has everywhere been decline. Our
proofs of this are not theoretic but historic.
As an example, all writers are agreed, I believe,
that during the historic period the religion of the
Egyptians steadily deteriorated until Christianity
and Mohammedanism superseded it. In strong contrast
with the lofty and ennobling prayer which we have
quoted from an ancient Egyptian record, is the degradation
of the later worship. On a column at Heliopolis,
belonging to the fourth century before Christ, is
inscribed this petition: “O thou white cat,
thy head is the head of the sun god, thy nose is the
nose of Thoth, of the exceeding great love of Hemopolis.”
The whole prayer is on this low level. Clement,
of Alexandria, after describing the great beauty of
an Egyptian temple, proceeds to say: “The
innermost sanctuary is concealed by a curtain wrought
in gold, which the priest draws aside, and there is
seen a cat, or a crocodile, or a serpent, which wriggles
on a purple cover."
That the religions of India have degenerated
is equally clear. The fact that all the medieval
and modern reforms look back for their ideals to the
earlier and purer Aryan faith, might of itself afford
sufficient proof of this, but we have also abundant
evidence which is direct. In the Rig Veda there
is little polytheism, and no idolatry. There is
no doctrine of caste, no base worship of Siva with
the foul enormities of Saktism. In the most ancient
times there was no doctrine of transmigration, nor
any notion that human life is an evil to be overcome
by self-mortification. Woman was comparatively
free from the oppressions which she suffered
in the later periods. Infanticide had not then
been sanctioned and enjoined by religious authority,
and widow burning and the religious murders of the
Thugs were unknown. And yet so deeply were these
evils rooted at the beginning of the British rule in
India, that the joint influence of Christian instruction
and Governmental authority for a whole century has
not been sufficient to overcome them.
Buddhism in the first two or three
centuries had much to commend it. King Ashoka
left monuments of practical beneficence and philanthropy
which have survived to this day. But countless
legends soon sprang up to mar the simplicity of Gautama’s
ethics. Corruptions crept in. Compromises
were made with popular superstitions and with Hindu
Saktism. The monastic orders sank into corruption,
and by the ninth century of our era the system had
been wholly swept from India. The Buddhism of
Ceylon was planted first by the devout son and daughter
of a king, and for a time was characterized by great
purity and devotion. But now it exists only in
name, and a prominent missionary of the country declared,
in the London Missionary Conference of 1888, that nine-tenths
of the Cingalese were worshippers of serpents or of
spirits. The prevailing Buddhism in Thibet, from
the eighth to the tenth century, was an admixture
with Saktism and superstition. Where the system
has survived in any good degree of strength, it has
been due either to government support or to an alliance
with other religions. The history of Taouism
has shown a still worse deterioration. Laotze,
though impracticable as a reformer, was a profound
philosopher. His teachings set forth a lofty
moral code. Superstition he abominated. His
ideas of deity were cold and rationalistic, but they
were pure and lofty. But the modern Taouism is
a medley of wild and degrading superstitions.
According to its theodicy all nature is haunted.
The ignorant masses are enthralled by the fear of
ghosts, and all progress is paralyzed by the nightmare
of “fung shuay.” Had not Taouism been
balanced by the sturdy common-sense ethics of Confucianism,
the Chinese might have become a race of savages.
The decline of Mohammedanism from
the sublime fanaticism of Abu Bekr and the intellectual
aspirations of Haroun Al Raschid, to the senseless
imbecility of the modern Turk, is too patent to need
argument. The worm of destruction was left in
the system by the vices of Mohammed himself; and from
the higher level of his early followers it has not
only deteriorated, but it has dragged down everything
else with it. It has destroyed the family, because
it has degraded woman. It has separated her immeasurably
from the status of dignity and honor which she enjoyed
under the influence of the early Christian church,
and it has robbed her of even that freedom which was
accorded to her by heathen Rome. One need only
look at Northern Africa, the land of Cyprian and Origen,
of Augustine and the saintly Monica, to see what Islam
has done. And even the later centuries have brought
no relief. Prosperous lands have been rendered
desolate and sterile, and all progress has been paralyzed.
In the history of the Greek religion
it is granted that there were periods of advancement.
The times of the fully developed Apollo worship showed
vast improvement over previous periods, but even Professor
Tiele virtually admits that this was owing to the
importation of foreign influences. It was not
due to any natural process of evolution; and it was
followed by hopeless corruption and decline. The
last days of both Greece and Rome were degenerate
and full of depression and despair.
It is not contended that no revivals
or reforms are possible in heathenism. There
have been many of these, but with all allowance for
spasmodic efforts, the general drift has been always
downward. There is a natural disposition among
men to multiply objects of worship. Herbert Spencer’s
principle, that development proceeds from the homogeneous
to the heterogeneous, is certainly true of the religions
of the world; but his other principle, that development
proceeds from the incoherent to the coherent, does
not apply. Incoherency and moral chaos mark the
trend of all man-made faiths. The universal tendency
to deterioration is well summed up as follows by Professor
Naville:
“Traces are found almost everywhere
in the midst of idolatrous superstitions, of a religion
comparatively pure and often stamped with a lofty
morality. Paganism is not a simple fact; it offers
to view in the same bed two currents (like the Arve
and the Arveiron) the one pure, the other
impure. What is the relation between these two
currents? ... Did humanity begin with a coarse
fetishism, and thence rise by slow degrees to higher
conceptions? Do the traces of a comparatively
pure monotheism first show themselves in the recent
periods of idolatry? Contemporary science inclines
more and more to answer in the negative. It is
in the most ancient historical ground that the laborious
investigators of the past meet with the most elevated
ideas of religion. Cut to the ground a young
and vigorous beech-tree, and come back a few years
afterward. In place of the tree cut down you will
find coppice-wood; the sap which nourished a single
trunk has been divided among a multitude of shoots.
This comparison expresses well enough the opinion
which tends to prevail among our savants on the subject
of the historical development of religions. The
idea of one God is at the roots it is primitive;
polytheism is derivative."
We have thus far drawn our proofs
of man’s polytheistic tendencies from the history
of the non-Christian religions. In proof of the
same general tendency we now turn to the history of
the Israelites, the chosen people of God. We
may properly appeal to the Bible as history, especially
when showing idolatrous tendencies even under the
full blaze of the truth. In spite of the supernatural
revelation which they claimed to possess notwithstanding
all their instructions, warnings, promises, deliverances,
divinely aided conquests they relapsed into
idolatry again and again. Ere they had reached
the land of promise they had begun to make images
of the gods of Egypt. They made constant compromises
and alliances with the Canaanites, and not even severe
judgments could withhold them from this downward drift.
Their wisest king was demoralized by heathen marriages,
and his successors openly patronized the heathen shrines.
The abominations of Baal worship and the nameless
vices of Sodom were practised under the very shadow
of the Temple. Judgments followed upon this miserable
degeneracy. Prophets were sent with repeated
warnings, and many were slain for their faithful messages.
Tribe after tribe was borne into captivity, the Temple
was destroyed, and at last the nation was virtually
broken up and scattered abroad.
There was indeed a true development
in the church of God from the Abrahamic period to
the Apostolic day. There was a rising from a narrow
national spirit to one which embraced the whole brotherhood
of man, from type and prophecy to fulfilment, from
the sins that were winked at, to a purer ethic and
the perfect law of love; but these results came not
by natural evolution far enough from it.
They were wrought out not by man, but we might almost
say, in spite of man. Divine interpositions
were all that saved Judaism from a total wreck, even
as the national unity was destroyed. A new Dispensation
was introduced, a Divine Redeemer and an Omnipotent
Spirit were the forces which saved the world from a
second universal apostasy.
We come nearer still to the church
of God for proofs of man’s inherent tendency
to polytheism. Even under the new Dispensation
we have seen the church sink into virtual idolatry.
Within six centuries from the time of Christ and His
apostles there had been a sad lapse into what seemed
the worship of images, pictures, and relics, and a
faith in holy places and the bones of saints.
What Mohammed saw, or thought he saw, was a Christian
idolatry scarcely better than that of the Arabian Koreish.
And, as if by the judgment of God, the churches of
the East were swept with a destruction like that which
had been visited upon the Ten Tribes. In the
Christianity of to-day, viewed as a whole, how strong
is the tendency to turn from the pure spiritual conception
of God to some more objective trust a saint,
a relic, a ritual, an ordinance. In the old churches
of the East or on the Continent of Europe, how much
of virtual idolatry is there even now? It is
only another form of the tendency in man to seek out
many devices to find visible objects of
trust to try new panaceas for the ailments
of the soul to multiply unto himself gods
to help his weakness. This is just what has been
done in all ages and among all races of the world.
This explains polytheism. Man’s religious
nature is a vine, and God is its only proper support.
Once fallen from that support, it creeps and grovels
in all directions and over all false supports.
We have not resorted to Divine revelation
for proofs except as history. But our conclusions
drawn from heathen sources bring us directly, as one
face answereth to another face in a glass, to the plain
teachings of Paul and other inspired writers, who
tell us that the human race was once possessed of
the knowledge of One Supreme God, but that men apostatized
from Him, preferring to worship the creature rather
than the Creator. There are no traces of an upward
evolution toward clearer knowledge and purer lives,
except by the operation of outward causes, but there
are many proofs that men’s hearts have become
darkened and their moral nature more and more depraved.
In all lands there have been those who seemed to gain
some glimpses of truth, and whose teachings were far
above the average sentiment and character of their
times, but they have either been discarded like Socrates
and the prophets of Israel, or they have obtained
a following only for a time and their precepts have
fallen into neglect. It has been well said that
no race of men live up to their religion, however
imperfect it may be. They first disregard it,
and then at length degrade it, to suit their apostate
character.
Paul’s estimate of heathen character
was that of a man who, aside from his direct inspiration,
spoke from a wide range of observation. He was
a philosopher by education, and he lived in an age
and amid national surroundings which afforded the
broadest knowledge of men, of customs, of religious
faiths, of institutions. Trained as a Jew, dealing
constantly with the most enlightened heathen, persecuting
the Christians, and then espousing their cause, his
preparation for a broad, calm, and unerring judgment
of the character of the Gentile nations was complete;
and his one emphatic verdict was apostasy.