When, during the fourth century, the
weakened empire split asunder like an overburdened
scale whose beam is broken, this political divorce
perpetuated a moral separation that had existed for
a long time.The opposition between the Greco-Oriental
and the Latin worlds manifests itself especially in
religion and in the attitude taken by the central power
toward it.
Occidental paganism was almost exclusively
Latin under the empire.After the annexation
of Spain, Gaul and Brittany, the old Iberian, Celtic
and other religions were unable to keep up the unequal
struggle against the more advanced religion of the
conquerors.The marvelous rapidity with which
the literature of the civilizing Romans was accepted
by the subject peoples has frequently been pointed
out.Its influence was felt in the temples as
well as in the forum; it transformed the prayers to
the gods as well as the conversation between men.Besides, it was part of the political program of the
Caesars to make the adoption of the Roman divinities
general, and the government imposed the rules of its
sacerdotal law as well as the principles of its public
and civil law upon its new subjects.The municipal
laws prescribed the election of pontiffs and augurs
in common with the judicial duumvirs.In
Gaul druidism, with its oral traditions embodied in
long poems, perished and disappeared less on account
of the police measures directed against it than in
consequence of its voluntary relinquishment by the
Celts, as soon as they came under the ascendency of
Latin culture.In Spain it is difficult to find
any traces of the aboriginal religions.Even
in Africa, where the Punic religion was far more developed,
it maintained itself only by assuming an entirely Roman
appearance.Baal became Saturn and Eshmoun AEsculapius.It is doubtful if there was one temple in all the
provinces of Italy and Gaul where, at the time of
the disappearance of idolatry, the ceremonies were
celebrated according to native rites and in the local
idiom.To this exclusive predominance of Latin
is due the fact that it remained the only liturgic
language of the Occidental church, which here as in
many other cases perpetuated a preexisting condition
and maintained a unity previously established.By imposing her speech upon the
inhabitants of Ireland and Germany, Christian Rome simply continued the work of
assimilation in the barbarian provinces subject to her influence that she had
begun while pagan.
In the Orient, however, the churches
that are separate from the Greek orthodoxy use, even
to-day, a variety of dialects calling to mind the great
diversity of races formerly subject to Rome.In
those times twenty varieties of speech translated
the religious thought of the peoples joined under
the dominion of the Caesars.At the beginning
of our era Hellenism had not yet conquered the uplands
of Anatolia, nor central Syria, nor the divisions
of Egypt.Annexation to the empire might retard
and in certain regions weaken the power of expansion
of Greek civilization, but it could not substitute
Latin culture for it except around the camps of
the legions guarding the frontier, and in a very few colonies.It especially benefitted the individuality
of each region.The native religions retained
all their prestige and independence.In their
ancient sanctuaries that took rank with the richest
and most famous of the world, a powerful clergy continued
to practise ancestral devotions according to barbarian
rites, and frequently in a barbarian tongue.The traditional liturgy, everywhere performed with
scrupulous respect, remained Egyptian or Semitic, Phrygian
or Persian, according to the locality.
Neither pontifical law nor augural
science ever obtained credit outside of the Latin
world.It is a characteristic fact that the worship
of the deified emperors, the only official worship
required of every one by the government as a proof
of loyalty, should have originated of its own accord
in Asia, received its inspiration from the purest monarchic
traditions, and revived in form and spirit the veneration
accorded to the Diadochi by their subjects.
Not only were the gods of Egypt and
Asia never supplanted like those of Gaul or Spain,
but they soon crossed the seas and gained worshipers
in every Latin province.Isis and Serapis, Cybele
and Attis, the Syrian Baals, Sabazius and Mithra were
honored by brotherhoods of believers as far as the
remotest limits of Germany.The Oriental reaction
that we perceive from the beginning of our era, in
studying the history of art, literature, and philosophy,
manifested itself with incomparably greater power in
the religious sphere.First, there was a slow
infiltration of despised exotic religions, then, toward
the end of the first century, the Orontes, the
Nile and the Halys, to use the words of Juvenal, flowed
into the Tiber, to the great indignation of the old
Romans.Finally, a hundred years later, an influx
of Egyptian, Semitic and Persian beliefs and conceptions
took place that threatened to submerge all that the
Greek and Roman genius had laboriously built up.What called forth and permitted this spiritual commotion,
of which the triumph of Christianity was the outcome?Why was the influence of the Orient strongest in the
religious field?These questions claim our attention.Like all great phenomena of history, this particular
one was determined by a number of influences that concurred
in producing it.In the mass of half-known particulars
that brought it about, certain factors or leading
causes, of which every one has in turn been considered
the most important, may be distinguished.
If we yielded to the tendency of many
excellent minds of to-day and regarded history as
the resultant of economic and social forces, it would
be easy to show their influence in that great religious
movement.The industrial and commercial preponderance
of the Orient was manifest, for there were situated
the principal centers of production and export.The ever increasing traffic with the Levant induced
merchants to establish themselves in Italy, in Gaul,
in the Danubian countries, in Africa and in Spain;
in some cities they formed real colonies.The
Syrian emigrants were especially numerous.Compliant,
quick and diligent, they went wherever they expected
profit, and their colonies, scattered as far as the
north of Gaul, were centers for the religious propaganda
of paganism just as the Jewish communities of the
Diaspora were for Christian preaching.Italy
not only bought her grain from Egypt, she imported
men also; she ordered slaves from Phrygia, Cappadocia,
Syria and Alexandria to cultivate her depopulated
fields and perform the domestic duties in her palaces.Who can tell what influence chambermaids from Antioch
or Memphis gained over the minds of their mistresses?At the same time the necessities of war removed officers
and men from the Euphrates to the Rhine or to the outskirts
of the Sahara, and everywhere they remained faithful
to the gods of their far-away country.The requirements
of the government transferred functionaries and their
clerks, the latter frequently of servile birth, into
the most distant provinces.Finally, the ease
of communication, due to the good roads, increased
the frequency and extent of travel.
Thus the exchange of products, men
and ideas necessarily increased, and it might be maintained
that theocracy was a necessary consequence of the
mingling of the races, that the gods of the Orient
followed the great commercial and social currents,
and that their establishment in the Occident was a
natural result of the movement that drew the excess
population of the Asiatic cities and rural districts
into the less thickly inhabited countries.
These reflections, which could be
developed at some length, surely show the way in which
the Oriental religions spread.It is certain that the merchants acted as
missionaries in the seaports and places of commerce, the soldiers on the
frontiers and in the capital, the slaves in the city homes,
in the rural districts and in public affairs.But while this acquaints us with the means and the
agents of the diffusion of those religions, it
tells us nothing of the reasons for their adoption
by the Romans.We perceive the how, but not the
why, of their sudden expansion.Especially imperfect
is our understanding of the reasons for the difference
between the Orient and the Occident pointed out above.
An example will make my meaning clear.A Celtic divinity, Epona, was held in particular
honor as the protectress of horses, as we all know.The Gallic horsemen worshiped her wherever they were
cantoned; her monuments have been found scattered
from Scotland to Transylvania.And yet, although
this goddess enjoyed the same conditions as, for instance
Jupiter Dolichenus whom the cohorts of Commagene
introduced into Europe, it does not appear that she
ever received the homage of many strangers; it does
not appear, above all, that druidism ever assumed
the shape of “mysteries of Epona” into
which Greeks and Romans would have asked to be initiated.It was too deficient in the intrinsic strength of
the Oriental religions, to make proselytes.
Other historians and thinkers of to-day
prefer to apply the laws of natural science to religious
phenomena; and the theories about the variation of
species find an unforeseen application here.It
is maintained that the immigration of Orientals,
of Syrians in particular, was considerable enough
to provoke an alteration and rapid deterioration in
the robust Italic and Celtic races.In addition,
a social status contrary to nature, and a bad political
regime effected the destruction of the strongest, the
extermination of the best and the ascendancy of the
worst elements of the population.This multitude,
corrupted by deleterious cross-breeding and weakened
by bad selection, became unable to oppose the
invasion of the Asiatic chimeras and aberrations.A lowering of the intellectual level and the disappearance
of the critical spirit accompanied the decline of morals
and the weakening of character.In the evolution
of beliefs the triumph of the Orient denoted a regression
toward barbarism, a return to the remote origins of
faith and to the worship of natural forces.This is a brief outline of
explanations recently proposed and received with some favor.
It cannot be denied that souls and
morals appear to have become coarser during the Roman
decline.Society as a whole was deplorably lacking
in imagination, intellect and taste.It seemed
afflicted with a kind of cerebral anemia and incurable
sterility.The impaired reason accepted the coarsest
superstitions, the most extreme asceticism and most
extravagant theurgy.It resembled an organism
incapable of defending itself against contagion.All this is partly true; but the theories summarized
proceed from an incorrect conception of things; in
reality they are based on the illusion that Asia,
under the empire, was inferior to Europe.While
the triumph of the Oriental religions sometimes assumed
the appearance of an awakening of savagery, these
religions in reality represented a more advanced type
in the evolution of religious forms than the ancient
national devotions.They were less primitive,
less simple, and, if I may use the expression, provided
with more organs than the old Greco-Roman idolatry.We have indicated this on previous occasions, and
hope to bring it out with perfect clearness in the
course of these studies.
It is hardly necessary to state that
a great religious conquest can be explained only on
moral grounds. Whatever part must be ascribed
to the instinct of imitation and the contagion of
example, in the last analysis we are always face to
face with a series of individual conversions.The mysterious affinity of minds is as much due to
reflection as to the continued and almost unconscious
influence of confused aspirations that produce faith.The obscure gestation of a new ideal is accomplished
with pangs of anguish.Violent struggles must
have disturbed the souls of the masses when they were
torn away from their old ancestral religions, or more
often from indifference, by those exacting gods who
demanded a surrender of the entire person, a devotion
in the etymological meaning of the word.The consecration to Isis of the hero of
Apuleius was the result of a call, of an appeal, by the goddess who wanted the
neophyte to enlist in her sacred militia.
If it is true that every conversion
involves a psychological crisis, a transformation
of the intimate personality of the individual, this
is especially true of the propagation of the Oriental
religions.Born outside of the narrow limits
of the Roman city, they grew up frequently in hostility
to it, and were international, consequently individual.The bond that formerly kept devotion centered upon
the city or the tribe, upon the gens or the
family, was broken.In place of the ancient social groups communities of
initiates came into existence, who considered themselves brothers no matter
where they came from. A god, conceived of as being universal,
received every mortal as his child.Whenever these
religions had any relation to the state they were
no longer called upon to support old municipal or
social institutions, but to lend their strength to
the authority of a sovereign regarded as the
eternal lord of the whole world jointly with God himself.In the circles of the mystics, Asiatics mingled with
Romans, and slaves with high functionaries.The
adoption of the same faith made the poor freedman
the equal and sometimes the superior, of the decurion
and the clarissimus.All submitted to the
same rules and participated in the same festivities,
in which the distinctions of an aristocratic society
and the differences of blood and country were obliterated.The distinctions of race and nationality, of magistrate
and father of a family, of patrician and plebeian,
of citizen and foreigner, were abolished; all were
but men, and in order to recruit members, those religions
worked upon man and his character.
In order to gain the masses and the
cream of Roman society (as they did for a whole century)
the barbarian mysteries had to possess a powerful charm,
they had to satisfy the deep wants of the human soul,
and their strength had to be superior to that of the
ancient Greco-Roman religion.To explain the
reasons for their victory we must try to reveal the
nature of this superiority I mean their
superiority in the struggle, without assuming innate
superiority.
I believe that we can define it by
stating that those religions gave greater satisfaction
first, to the senses and passions, secondly, to the
intelligence, finally, and above all, to the conscience.
In the first place, they appealed
more strongly to the senses.This was their most
obvious feature, and it has been pointed out more often
than any other.Perhaps there never was a religion
so cold and prosaic as the Roman.Being subordinated
to politics, it sought, above all, to secure the
protection of the gods for the state and to avert the
effects of their malevolence by the strict execution
of appropriate practices.It entered into a contract
with the celestial powers from which mutual obligations
arose:sacrifices on one side, favors on the other.The pontiffs, who were also
magistrates, regulated the religious practices with the exact precision of
jurists; as far as we know the prayers were all
couched in formulas as dry and verbose as notarial
instruments.The liturgy reminds one of the ancient
civil law on account of the minuteness of its prescriptions.This religion looked suspiciously at the abandonment
of the soul to the ecstasies of devotion.It
repressed, by force if necessary, the exuberant manifestations
of too ardent faith and everything that was not in
keeping with the grave dignity befitting the relations
of a civis Romanus with a god.The Jews had the same scrupulous respect as
the Romans for a religious code and formulas of the past, but in spite of their
dry and minute practices, the legalism of the Pharisees stirred the heart more
strongly than did Roman formalism."
Lacking the recognized authority of
official creeds, the Oriental religions had to appeal
to the passions of the individual in order to make
proselytes.They attracted men first by the
disturbing seductiveness of their mysteries, where
terror and hope were evoked in turns, and charmed
them by the pomp of their festivities and the magnificence
of their processions.Men were fascinated by
the languishing songs and intoxicating melodies.Above all these religions taught men how to reach that
blissful state in which the soul was freed from the
tyranny of the body and of suffering, and lost
itself in raptures.They led to ecstasy either by means of nervous tension
resulting from continued maceration and fervent contemplation or by more
material means like the stimulation of vertiginous dances and dizzy music, or
even by the absorption of fermented liquors after a long abstinence, as in the case
of the priests of the Great Mother.In mysticism
it is easy to descend from the sublime to the vile.
Even the gods, with whom the believers
thought they were uniting themselves in their mystic
outbursts, were more human and sometimes more sensual
than those of the Occident.The latter had that
quietude of soul in which the philosophic morality
of the Greeks saw a privilege of the sage; in the
serenity of Olympus they enjoyed perpetual youth; they
were Immortals.The divinities of the Orient, on the contrary, suffered and died,
but only to revive again. Osiris, Attis and Adonis were mourned like
mortals by wife or mistress, Isis, Cybele or Astarte.With them the mystics moaned for their deceased god
and later, after he had revived, celebrated with exultation
his birth to a new life.Or else they joined in
the passion of Mithra, condemned to create the world
in suffering.This common grief and joy were
often expressed with savage violence, by bloody mutilations,
long wails of despair, and extravagant acclamations.The manifestations of the extreme fanaticism of those
barbarian races that had not been touched by Greek
skepticism and the very ardor of their faith inflamed
the souls of the multitudes attracted by the exotic
gods.
The Oriental religions touched every
chord of sensibility and satisfied the thirst for
religious emotion that the austere Roman creed had
been unable to quench. But at the same time they
satisfied the intellect more fully, and this is my
second point.
In very early times Greece later
imitated by Rome became resolutely rationalistic:her greatest originality lies here.Her philosophy
was purely laical; thought was unrestrained by any
sacred tradition; it even pretended to pass judgment
upon these traditions and condemned or approved of
them.Being sometimes hostile, sometimes indifferent
and some times conciliatory, it always remained independent
of faith.But while Greece thus freed herself
from the fetters of a superannuated mythology, and
openly and boldly constructed those systems of metaphysics
by means of which she claimed to solve the enigmas
of the universe, her religion lost its vitality and
dried up because it lacked the strengthening nourishment
of reflection.It became a thing devoid of sense,
whose raison d’etre was no longer understood;
it embodied dead ideas and an obsolete conception of
the world.In Greece as well as at Rome it was
reduced to a collection of unintelligible rites, scrupulously
and mechanically reproduced without addition or omission
because they had been practised by the ancestors of
long ago, and formulas hallowed by the mos maiorum,
that were no longer understood or sincerely cherished.Never did a people of advanced culture have a more
infantile religion.
The Oriental civilizations on the
contrary were sacerdotal in character.As in
medieval Europe, the scholars of Asia and Egypt were
priests.In the temples the nature of the gods
and of man were not the only subjects of discussion;
mathematics, astronomy, medicine, philology and history
were also studied.The successors of Berosus,
a priest from Babylonia, and Manetho, a priest from Heliopolis, were considered
deeply versed in all intellectual disciplines as late as the time of Strabo.
This state of affairs proved detrimental
to the progress of science.Researches were conducted
according to preconceived ideas and were perverted
through strange prejudices.Astrology and magic
were the monstrous fruit of a hybrid union.But
all this certainly gave religion a power it had never
possessed either in Greece or Rome.
All results of observation, all conquests
of thought, were used by an erudite clergy to attain
the principal object of their activities, the solution
of the problem of the destiny of man and matter, and
of the relations of heaven and earth.An ever
enlarging conception of the universe kept transforming
the modes of belief.Faith presumed to enslave
both physics and metaphysics.The credit of every
discovery was given to the gods.Thoth in Egypt
and Bel in Chaldea were the revealers not only of theology and the ritual, but
of all human knowledge.
The names of the Oriental Hipparchi and Euclids who
solved the first problems of astronomy and geometry
were unknown; but a confused and grotesque literature
made use of the name and authority of Hermes Trismegistus.The doctrines of the planetary spheres and the opposition
of the four elements were made to support systems
of anthropology and of morality; the theorems of astronomy
were used to establish an alleged method of divination;
formulas of incantation, supposed to subject divine
powers to the magician, were combined with chemical
experiments and medical prescriptions.
This intimate union of erudition and
faith continued in the Latin world.Theology
became more and more a process of deification of the
principles or agents discovered by science and a worship
of time regarded as the first cause, the stars whose
course determined the events of this world, the four
elements whose innumerable combinations produced the
natural phenomena, and especially the sun which preserved
heat, fertility and life.The dogmas of the mysteries
of Mithra were, to a certain extent, the religious
expression of Roman physics and astronomy.In
all forms of pantheism the knowledge of nature appears
to be inseparable from that of God Art itself
complied more and more with the tendency to express
erudite ideas by subtle symbolism, and it represented
in allegorical figures the relations of divine powers
and cosmic forces, like the sky, the earth, the ocean,
the planets, the constellations and the winds.The sculptors engraved on stone everything man thought
and taught.In a general way the belief prevailed that redemption and salvation
depended on the revelation of certain truths, on a knowledge of the gods, of the
world and of our person, and piety became gnosis.
But, you will say, since in the classic
age philosophy also claimed to lead to morality through
instruction and to acquaint man with the supreme good,
why did it yield to Oriental religions that were in
reality neither original nor innovating?Quite
right, and if a powerful rationalist school, possessed
of a good critical method, had led the minds, we may
believe that it would have checked the invasion of
the barbarian mysteries or at least limited their
field of action.However, as has frequently been
pointed out, even in ancient Greece the philosophic
critics had very little hold on popular religion
obstinately faithful to its inherited superstitious forms.But how many second century minds shared
Lucian’s skepticism in regard to the dogmatic
systems!The various sects were fighting each
other for ever so long without convincing one another
of their alleged error.The satirist of Samosata
enjoyed opposing their exclusive pretensions while
he himself reclined on the “soft pillow of doubt.”But only intelligent minds could delight in doubt
or surrender to it; the masses wanted certainties.There was nothing to revive confidence in the power
of a decrepit and threadbare science.No great
discovery transformed the conception of the universe.Nature no longer betrayed her secrets, the earth remained
unexplored and the past inscrutable.Every branch
of knowledge was forgotten.The world cursed
with sterility, could but repeat itself; it had the
poignant appreciation of its own decay and impotence.Tired of fruitless researches, the mind surrendered
to the necessity of believing.Since the intellect
was unable to formulate a consistent rule of life
faith alone could supply it, and the multitudes gravitated
toward the temples, where the truths taught to man
in earlier days by the Oriental gods were revealed.The stanch adherence of past generations to beliefs
and rites of unlimited antiquity seemed to guarantee
their truth and efficacy.This current was so
strong that philosophy itself was swept toward mysticism
and the neo-Platonist school became a theurgy.
The Oriental mysteries, then, could
stir the soul by arousing admiration and terror, pity
and enthusiasm in turn.They gave the intellect
the illusion of learned depth and absolute certainty
and finally our third point they
satisfied conscience as well as passion and reason.Among the complex causes that guaranteed their domination,
this was without doubt the most effective.
In every period of their history the
Romans, unlike the Greeks in this respect, judged
theories and institutions especially by their practical
results.They always had a soldier’s and
business man’s contempt for metaphysicians.It is a matter of frequent observation that the philosophy
of the Latin world neglected metaphysical speculations
and concentrated its attention on morals, just as
later the Roman church left to the subtle Hellenes
the interminable controversies over the essence of
the divine logos and the double nature of Christ.Questions that could rouse and divide her were those
having a direct application to life, like the doctrine
of grace.
The old religion of the Romans had
to respond to this demand of their genius.Its poverty was honest. Its mythology did not possess
the poetic charm of that of Greece, nor did its gods
have the imperishable beauty of the Olympians, but
they were more moral, or at least pretended to be.A large number were simply personified qualities, like
chastity and piety.With the aid of the censors
they imposed the practice of the national virtues,
that is to say of the qualities useful to society,
temperance, courage, chastity, obedience to parents
and magistrates, reverence for the oath and the law,
in fact, the practice of every form of patriotism.During the last century of the republic the pontiff
Scaevola, one of the foremost men of his time, rejected
as futile the divinities of fable and poetry, as superfluous
or obnoxious those of the philosophers and the exegetists,
and reserved all his favors for those of the
statesmen, as the only ones fit for the people. These were the ones protecting the old customs, traditions
and frequently even the old privileges.But in
the perpetual flux of things conservatism ever carries
with it a germ of death.Just as the law failed
to maintain the integrity of ancient principles, like
the absolute power of the father of the family, principles
that were no longer in keeping with the social realities,
so religion witnessed the foundering of a system of
ethics contrary to the moral code that had slowly
been established.The idea of collective responsibility
contained in a number of beliefs is one instance.If a vestal violated her vow of chastity the divinity
sent a pest that ceased only on the day the culprit
was punished.Sometimes the angry heavens granted
victory to the army only on condition that a general
or soldier dedicate himself to the infernal gods as
an expiatory victim.However, through the influence
of the philosophers and the jurists the conviction
slowly gained ground that each one was responsible
for his own misdeeds, and that it was not equitable
to make a whole city suffer for the crime of an individual.People ceased to admit that the gods crushed the good
as well as the wicked in one punishment.Often,
also, the divine anger was thought to be as ridiculous
in its manifestations as in its cause.The rural
superstitions of the country districts of Latium continued
to live in the pontifical code of the Roman people.If a lamb with two heads or a colt with five legs
was born, solemn supplications were prescribed to avert the misfortunes
foreboded by those terrifying prodigies.
All these puerile and monstrous beliefs
that burdened the religion of the Latins had
thrown it into disrepute.Its morality no longer
responded to the new conception of justice beginning
to prevail.As a rule Rome remedied the poverty
of her theology and ritual by taking what she needed
from the Greeks.But here this resource failed
her because the poetic, artistic and even intellectual
religion of the Greeks was hardly moral.And
the fables of a mythology jeered at by the philosophers,
parodied on the stage and put to verse by libertine
poets were anything but edifying.
Moreover this was its second
weakness whatever morality it demanded of
a pious man went unrewarded.People no longer
believed that the gods continually intervened in the
affairs of men to reveal hidden crimes and to punish
triumphant vice, or that Jupiter would hurl his thunderbolt
to crush the perjurer.At the time of the proscriptions
and the civil wars under Nero or Commodus it was more
than plain that power and possessions were for the
strongest, the ablest or even the luckiest, and not
for the wisest or the most pious.The idea of
reward or punishment beyond the grave found little
credit.The notions of future life were hazy,
uncertain, doubtful and contradictory.Everybody knows Juvenals famous
lines:That there are manes, a subterranean kingdom, a ferryman with a long
pole, and black frogs in the whirlpools of the Styx; that so many thousand men
could cross the waves in a single boat, to-day even children refuse to believe."
After the fall of the republic indifference
spread, the temples were abandoned and threatened
to tumble into ruins, the clergy found it difficult
to recruit members, the festivities, once so popular,
fell into desuetude, and Varro, at the beginning
of his Antiquities, expressed his fear lest the gods might perish, not
from the blows of foreign enemies, but from very neglect on the part of the
citizens." It is well known that Augustus,
prompted by political rather than by religious reasons,
attempted to revive the dying religion.His religious
reforms stood in close relation to his moral legislation
and the establishment of the imperial dignity.Their tendency was to bring the people back to the
pious practice of ancient virtues but also to chain
them to the new political order.The alliance
of throne and altar in Europe dates from that time.
This attempted reform failed entirely.Making religion an auxiliary to moral policing is
not a means of establishing its empire over souls.Formal reverence for the official gods is not incompatible
with absolute and practical skepticism.The restoration
attempted by Augustus is nevertheless very characteristic
because it is so consistent with the Roman spirit which
by temperament and tradition demanded that religion
should support morality and the state.
The Asiatic religions fulfilled the
requirements.The change of regime, although
unwelcome, brought about a change of religion.The increasing tendency of Caesarism toward absolute
monarchy made it lean more and more upon the Oriental
clergy.True to the traditions of the Achemenides and the Pharaohs, those priests
preached doctrines tending to elevate the sovereign above humanity, and they
supplied the emperors with dogmatic justification for their despotism.
It is a noteworthy fact that the rulers
who most loudly proclaimed their autocratic pretentions,
like Domitian and Commodus, were also those that
favored foreign creeds most openly.
But his selfish support merely sanctioned
a power already established.The propaganda of
the Oriental religions was originally democratic and
sometimes even revolutionary like the Isis worship.Step by step they advanced, always reaching higher
social classes and appealing to popular conscience
rather than to the zeal of functionaries.
As a matter of fact all these religions,
except that of Mithra, seem at first sight to be far
less austere than the Roman creed.We shall have
occasion to note that they contained coarse and immodest
fables and atrocious or vile rites.The Egyptian
gods were expelled from Rome by Augustus and Tiberius
on the charge of being immoral, but they were called
immoral principally because they opposed a certain
conception of the social order.They gave little
attention to the public interest but attached considerable
importance to the inner life and consequently to the
value of the individual.Two new things, in particular,
were brought to Italy by the Oriental priests:mysterious methods of
purification, by which they claimed to wash away the impurities of the soul, and
the assurance that a blessed immortality would be the reward of piety.
These religions pretended to restore lost purity to the soul either through the performance
of ritual ceremonies or through mortifications and penance.They had a series of ablutions and lustrations
supposed to restore original innocence to the mystic.He had to wash himself in the sacred water according
to certain prescribed forms.This was really a
magic rite, because bodily purity acted sympathetically
upon the soul, or else it was a real spiritual
disinfection with the water driving out the evil spirits
that had caused pollution.The votary, again, might drink or besprinkle himself
with the blood of a slaughtered victim or of the priests themselves, in which
case the prevailing idea was that the liquid circulating in the veins was a
vivifying principle capable of imparting a new existence. These and
similar rites used in the mysteries were supposed to regenerate the initiated
person and to restore him to an immaculate and incorruptible life.
Purgation of the soul was not effected
solely by liturgic acts but also by self-denial and suffering. The meaning of the term expiatio
changed.Expiation, or atonement, was no longer
accomplished by the exact performance of certain ceremonies
pleasing to the gods and required by a sacred code
like a penalty for damages, but by privation and personal
suffering.Abstinence, which prevented the introduction
of deadly elements into the system, and chastity,
which preserved man from pollution and debility, became
means of getting rid of the domination of the evil
powers and of regaining heavenly favor. Macerations,
laborious pilgrimages, public confessions, sometimes
flagellations and mutilations, in fact all forms
of penance and mortifications uplifted the fallen man
and brought him nearer to the gods.In Phrygia
a sinner would write his sin and the punishment he
suffered upon a stela for every one to see and would return thanks to heaven
that his prayer of repentance had been heard. The Syrian, who had offended his
goddess by eating her sacred fish, dressed in sordid
rags, covered himself with a sack and sat in the public
highway humbly to proclaim his misdeed in order to
obtain forgiveness. Three times, in the depths of winter, says Juvenal, the
devotee of Isis will dive into the chilly waters of the Tiber, and shivering
with cold, will drag herself around the temple upon her bleeding knees; if the
goddess commands, she will go to the outskirts of Egypt to take water from the
Nile and empty it within the sanctuary."
This shows the introduction into Europe of Oriental
asceticism.
But there were impious acts and impure
passions that contaminated and defiled the soul.Since this infection could be destroyed only by expiations
prescribed by the gods, the extent of the sin and the
character of the necessary penance had to be estimated.It was the priest’s prerogative to judge the
misdeeds and to impose the penalties.This circumstance
gave the clergy a very different character from the
one it had at Rome.The priest was no longer
simply the guardian of sacred traditions, the intermediary
between man or the state and the gods, but also a
spiritual guide.He taught his flock the long
series of obligations and restrictions for shielding
their weakness from the attacks of evil spirits.He knew how to quiet remorse and scruples, and to restore
the sinner to spiritual calm.Being versed in
sacred knowledge, he had the power of reconciling
the gods.Frequent sacred repasts maintained a
spirit of fellowship among the mystics of Cybele,
Mithra or the Baals, and a daily service unceasingly
revived the faith of the Isis worshipers.In
consequence, the clergy were entirely absorbed in their
holy office and lived only for and by their temples.Unlike the sacerdotal
colleges of Rome in which the secular and religious functions were not yet
clearly differentiated, they were not an administrative commission ruling the
sacred affairs of the state under the supervision of the senate; they formed
what might almost be called a caste of recluses distinguished from ordinary men
by their insignia, garb, habits and food, and constituting an independent body
with a hierarchy, formulary and even councils of their own. They did not return to every-day duties as
private citizens or to the direction of public affairs
as magistrates as the ancient pontiffs had done after
the solemn festival service.
We can readily understand that these
beliefs and institutions were bound to establish the
Oriental religions and their priests on a strong basis.Their influence must have been especially powerful
at the time of the Caesars.The laxity of morals
at the beginning of our era has been exaggerated but
it was real.Many unhealthy symptoms told of
a profound moral anarchy weighing on a weakened and
irresolute society.The farther we go toward the
end of the empire the more its energy seems to fail
and the character of men to weaken.The number
of strong healthy minds incapable of a lasting aberration
and without need of guidance or comfort was growing
ever smaller.We note the spread of that feeling
of exhaustion and debility which follows the aberrations
of passion, and the same weakness that led to crime
impelled men to seek absolution in the formal practices
of asceticism.They applied to the Oriental priests
for spiritual remedies.
People flattered themselves that by
performing the rites they would attain a condition
of felicity after death.All barbarian mysteries
pretended to reveal to their adherents the secret
of blessed immortality.Participation in the
occult ceremonies of the sect was a chief means of salvation. The vague and
disheartening beliefs of ancient paganism in regard to life after death were
transformed into the firm hope of a well-defined form of happiness.
This faith in a personal survival
of the soul and even of the body was based upon a
strong instinct of human nature, the instinct of self-preservation.Social and
moral conditions in the empire during its decline gave it greater strength than
it had ever possessed before. The third century saw so much suffering,
anguish and violence, so much unnecessary ruin and
so many unpunished crimes, that the Roman world took
refuge in the expectation of a better existence in
which all the iniquity of this world would be retrieved.No earthly hope brightened life.The tyranny
of a corrupt bureaucracy choked all disposition for
political progress.Science stagnated and revealed
no more unknown truths.Growing poverty discouraged
the spirit of enterprise.The idea gained ground that humanity was afflicted with
incurable decay, that nature was approaching her doom and that the end of world
was near. We must remember all these
causes of discouragement and despondency to understand
the power of the idea, expressed so frequently, that
the spirit animating man was forced by bitter necessity
to imprison itself in matter and that it was delivered
from its carnal captivity by death.In the heavy
atmosphere of a period of oppression and impotence
the dejected soul longed with incredible ardor to
fly to the radiant abode of heaven.
To recapitulate, the Oriental religions
acted upon the senses, the intellect and the conscience
at the same time, and therefore gained a hold on the
entire man. Compared with the ancient creeds,
they appear to have offered greater beauty of ritual,
greater truth of doctrine and a far superior morality.The imposing ceremonial of their festivities and the
alternating pomp and sensuality, gloom and exaltation
of their services appealed especially to the simple
and the humble, while the progressive revelation of
ancient wisdom, inherited from the old and distant
Orient, captivated the cultured mind.The emotions
excited by these religions and the consolations offered
strongly attracted the women, who were the most fervent
and generous followers and most passionate propagandists
of the religions of Isis and Cybele.Mithra was
worshiped almost exclusively by men, whom he subjected
to a rigid moral discipline.Thus souls were gained
by the promise of spiritual purification and the prospect
of eternal happiness.
The worship of the Roman gods was
a civic duty, the worship of the foreign gods the
expression of a personal belief.The latter were
the objects of the thoughts, feelings and intimate
aspirations of the individual, not merely of the traditional
and, one might say, functional adoration of the citizen.The ancient municipal devotions were connected with
a number of earthly interests that helped to support
each other.They were one of various forms of
family spirit and patriotism and guaranteed the prosperity
of the community.The Oriental mysteries, directing
the will toward an ideal goal and exalting the inner
spirit, were less mindful of economic utility, but
they could produce that vibration of the moral being
that caused emotions, stronger than any rational faculty,
to gush forth from the depths of the soul.Through
a sudden illumination they furnished the intuition
of a spiritual life whose intensity made all material
happiness appear insipid and contemptible.This
stirring appeal of supernatural life made the propaganda
irresistible.The same ardent enthusiasm guaranteed
at the same time the uncontested domination of neo-Platonism
among the philosophers.Antiquity expired and
a new era was born.