Introduction.-Ethnic and Catholic Religions.
Se. Object of the present Work.
The present work is what the Germans
call a Versuch, and the English an Essay, or
attempt. It is an attempt to compare the great
religions of the world with each other. When
completed, this comparison ought to show what each
is, what it contains, wherein it resembles the others,
wherein it differs from the others; its origin and
development, its place in universal history; its positive
and negative qualities, its truths and errors, and
its influence, past, present, or future, on the welfare
of mankind. For everything becomes more clear
by comparison We can never understand the nature of
a phenomenon when we contemplate it by itself, as
well as when we look at it in its relations to other
phenomena of the same kind. The qualities of
each become more clear in contrast with those of the
others. By comparing together, therefore, the
religions of mankind, to see wherein they agree and
wherein they differ, we are able to perceive with
greater accuracy what each is. The first problem
in Comparative Theology is therefore analytical, being
to distinguish each religion from the rest. We
compare them to see wherein they agree and wherein
they differ. But the next problem in Comparative
Theology is synthetical, and considers the adaptation
of each system to every other, to determine its place,
use, and value, in reference to universal or absolute
religion. It must, therefore, examine the different
religions to find wherein each is complete or defective,
true or false; how each may supply the defects of
the other or prepare the way for a better; how each
religion acts on the race which receives it, is adapted
to that race, and to the region of the earth which
it inhabits. In this department, therefore, it
connects itself with Comparative Geography, with universal
history, and with ethics. Finally, this department
of Comparative Theology shows the relation of each
partial religion to human civilization, and observes
how each religion of the world is a step in the progress
of humanity. It shows that both the positive
and negative side of a religion make it a preparation
for a higher religion, and that the universal religion
must root itself in the decaying soil of partial religions.
And in this sense Comparative Theology becomes the
science of missions.
Such a work as this is evidently too
great for a single mind. Many students must co-operate,
and that through many years, before it can be completed.
This volume is intended as a contribution toward that
end. It will contain an account of each of the
principal religions, and its development. It
will be, therefore, devoted to the natural history
of ethnic and catholic religions, and its method will
be that of analysis. The second part, which may
be published hereafter, will compare these different
systems to show what each teaches concerning the great
subjects of religious thought,-God, Duty,
and Immortality. Finally, it will compare them
with Christianity, and will inquire whether or not
that is capable of becoming the religion of the human
race.
Se. Comparative Theology;
its Nature, Value, and present Position.
The work of Comparative Theology is
to do equal justice to all the religious tendencies
of mankind. Its position is that of a judge, not
that of an advocate. Assuming, with the Apostle
Paul, that each religion has come providentially,
as a method by which different races “should
seek the Lord, if haply they might feel after him
and find him,” it attempts to show how each
may be a step in the religious progress of the races,
and “a schoolmaster to bring men to Christ.”
It is bound, however, to abstain from such inferences
until it has accurately ascertained all the facts.
Its first problem is to learn what each system contains;
it may then go on, and endeavor to generalize from
its facts.
Comparative Theology is, therefore,
as yet in its infancy. The same tendency in this
century, which has produced the sciences of Comparative
Anatomy, Comparative Geography, and Comparative Philology,
is now creating this new science of Comparative Theology.
It will be to any special theology as Comparative
Anatomy is to any special anatomy, Comparative Geography
to any special geography, or Comparative Philology
to the study of any particular language. It may
be called a science, since it consists in the study
of the facts of human history, and their relation to
each other. It does not dogmatize: it observes.
It deals only with phenomena,-single phenomena,
or facts; grouped phenomena, or laws.
Several valuable works, bearing more
or less directly on Comparative Theology, have recently
appeared in Germany, France, and England. Among
these may be mentioned those of Max Mueller, Bunsen,
Burnouf, Doellinger, Hardwicke, St. Hilaire, Duencker,
F. C. Baur, Renan, Creuzer, Maurice, G. W. Cox, and
others.
In America, except Mr. Alger’s
admirable monograph on the “Doctrine of the
Future Life,” we have scarcely anything worthy
of notice. Mrs. Lydia Maria Child’s work
on the “Progress of Religious Ideas” deserves
the greatest credit, when we consider the time when
it was written and the few sources of information
then accessible. Twenty-five years ago it was hardly
possible to procure any adequate information concerning
Brahmanism, Buddhism, or the religions of Confucius,
Zoroaster, and Mohammed. Hardly any part of the
Védas had been translated into a European language.
The works of Anquetil du Perron and Kleuker were still
the highest authority upon the Zendavesta.
About the Buddhists scarcely anything was known.
But now, though many important lacunae remain
to be filled, we have ample means of ascertaining
the essential facts concerning most of these movements
of the human soul. The time seems to have come
to accomplish something which may have a lasting value.
Se. Ethnic Religions. Injustice often done to them by Christian
Apologists.
Comparative Theology, pursuing its
impartial course as a positive science, will avoid
the error into which most of the Christian apologists
of the last century fell, in speaking of ethnic or
heathen religions. In order to show the need
of Christianity, they thought it necessary to disparage
all other religions. Accordingly they have insisted
that, while the Jewish and Christian religions were
revealed, all other religions were invented; that,
while these were from God, those were the work of man;
that, while in the true religions there was nothing
false, in the false religions there was nothing true.
If any trace of truth was to be found in Polytheism,
it was so mixed with error as to be practically only
evil. As the doctrines of heathen religions were
corrupt, so their worship was only a debasing superstition.
Their influence was to make men worse, not better;
their tendency was to produce sensuality, cruelty,
and universal degradation. They did not proceed,
in any sense, from God; they were not even the work
of good men, but rather of deliberate imposition and
priestcraft. A supernatural religion had become
necessary in order to counteract the fatal consequences
of these debased and debasing superstitions.
This is the view of the great natural religions of
the world which was taken by such writers as Leland,
Whitby, and Warburton in the last century. Even
liberal thinkers, like James Foster and John Locke,
declare that, at the coming of Christ, mankind had
fallen into utter darkness, and that vice and superstition
filled the world. Infidel no less than Christian
writers took the same disparaging view of natural
religions. They considered them, in their source,
the work of fraud; in their essence, corrupt superstitions;
in their doctrines, wholly false; in their moral tendency,
absolutely injurious; and in their result, degenerating
more and more into greater evil.
A few writers, like Cudworth and the
Platonists, endeavored to put in a good word for the
Greek philosophers, but the religions of the world
were abandoned to unmitigated reprobation. The
account which so candid a writer as Mosheim gives
of them is worth noticing, on account of its sweeping
character. “All the nations of the world,”
he says, “except the Jews, were plunged in the
grossest superstition. Some nations, indeed, went
beyond others in impiety and absurdity, but all stood
charged with irrationality and gross stupidity in
matters of religion.” “The greater
part of the gods of all nations were ancient heroes,
famous for their achievements and their worthy deeds,
such as kings, generals, and founders of cities.”
“To these some added the more splendid and useful
objects in the natural world, as the sun, moon, and
stars; and some were not ashamed to pay divine honors
to mountains, rivers, trees, etc.”
“The worship of these deities consisted in ceremonies,
sacrifices, and prayers. The ceremonies were,
for the most part, absurd and ridiculous, and throughout
debasing, obscene, and cruel. The prayers were
truly insipid and void of piety, both in their form
and matter.” “The priests who presided
over this worship basely abused their authority to
impose on the people.” “The whole
pagan system had not the least efficacy to produce
and cherish virtuous emotions in the soul; because
the gods and goddesses were patterns of vice, the
priests bad men, and the doctrines false."
This view of heathen religions is
probably much exaggerated. They must contain
more truth than error, and must have been, on the whole,
useful to mankind. We do not believe that they
originated in human fraud, that their essence is superstition,
that there is more falsehood than truth in their doctrines,
that their moral tendency is mainly injurious, or that
they continually degenerate into greater evil.
No doubt it may be justly predicated of all these
systems that they contain much which is false and
injurious to human virtue. But the following considerations
may tend to show that all the religions of the earth
are providential, and that all tend to benefit mankind.
To ascribe the vast phenomena of religion,
in their variety and complexity, to man as their author,
and to suppose the whole a mere work of human fraud,
is not a satisfactory solution of the facts before
us. That priests, working on human ignorance
or fear, should be able to build up such a great mass
of belief, sentiment, and action, is like the Hindoo
cosmogony, which supposes the globe to rest on an elephant,
the elephant on a turtle, and the turtle on nothing
at all.
If the people were so ignorant, how
happened the priests to be so wise? If the people
were so credulous, why were not the priests credulous
too? “Like people, like priests,”
is a proverb approved by experience. Among so
many nations and through so many centuries, why has
not some one priest betrayed the secret of the famous
imposition? Apply a similar theory to any other
human institution, and how patent is its absurdity!
Let a republican contend that all other forms of government-the
patriarchal system, government by castes, the feudal
system, absolute and limited monarchies, oligarchies,
and aristocracies-are wholly useless and
evil, and were the result of statecraft alone, with
no root in human nature or the needs of man.
Let one maintain that every system of law (except
our own) was an invention of lawyers for private ends.
Let one argue in the same way about medicine, and
say that this is a pure system of quackery, devised
by physicians, in order to get a support out of the
people for doing nothing. We should at once reply
that, though error and ignorance may play a part in
all these institutions, they cannot be based on error
and ignorance only. Nothing which has not in it
some elements of use can hold its position in the
world during so long a time and over so wide a range.
It is only reasonable to say the same of heathen or
ethnic religions. They contain, no doubt, error
and evil. No doubt priestcraft has been carried
very far in them, though not further perhaps than it
has sometimes been carried in Christianity. But
unless they contained more of good than evil, they
could not have kept their place. They partially
satisfied a great hunger of the human heart. They
exercised some restraint on human wilfulness and passion.
They have directed, however imperfectly, the human
conscience toward the right. To assume that they
are wholly evil is disrespectful to human nature.
It supposes man to be the easy and universal dupe
of fraud. But these religions do not rest on such
a sandy foundation, but on the feeling of dependence,
the sense of accountability, the recognition of spiritual
realities very near to this world of matter, and the
need of looking up and worshipping some unseen power
higher and better than ourselves. A decent respect
for the opinions of mankind forbids us to ascribe
pagan religions to priestcraft as their chief source.
And a reverence for Divine Providence
brings us to the same conclusion. Can it be that
God has left himself without a witness in the world,
except among the Hebrews in ancient times and the
Christians in modern times? This narrow creed
excludes God from any communion with the great majority
of human beings. The Father of the human race
is represented as selecting a few of his children
to keep near himself, and as leaving all the rest to
perish in their ignorance and error. And this
is not because they are prodigal children who have
gone astray into a far country of their own accord;
for they are just where they were placed by their Creator.
He “has determined the times before appointed
and the bounds of their habitation.” He
has caused some to be born in India, where they can
only hear of him through Brahmanism; and some in China,
where they can know him only through Buddha and Confucius.
The doctrine which we are opposing is; that, being
put there by God, they are born into hopeless error,
and are then punished for their error by everlasting
destruction. The doctrine for which we contend
is that of the Apostle Paul, that God has “determined
beforehand the bounds of their habitation, that they
should seek the Lord, if haply they
may feel after him and find
him.” Paul teaches that “all
nations dwelling on all the face of the earth”
may not only seek and feel after God, but also find
him. But as all living in heathen lands are heathen,
if they find God at all, they must find him through
heathenism. The pagan religions are the effort
of man to feel after God. Otherwise we must conclude
that the Being without whom not a sparrow falls to
the ground, the Being who never puts an insect into
the air or a polyp into the water without providing
it with some appropriate food, so that it may live
and grow, has left the vast majority of his human children,
made with religious appétences of conscience,
reverence, hope, without a corresponding nutriment
of truth. This view tends to atheism; for if the
presence of adaptation everywhere is the legitimate
proof of creative design, the absence of adaptation
in so important a sphere tends, so far, to set aside
that proof.
The view which we are opposing contradicts
that law of progress which alone gives meaning and
unity to history. Instead of progress, it teaches
degeneracy and failure. But elsewhere we see progress,
not recession. Geology shows us higher forms
of life succeeding to the lower. Botany exhibits
the lichens and mosses preparing a soil for more complex
forms of vegetation. Civil history shows the
savage state giving way to the semi-civilized, and
that to the civilized. If heathen religions are
a step, a preparation for Christianity, then this
law of degrees appears also in religion; then we see
an order in the progress of the human soul,-“first
the blade, then the ear, afterward the full corn in
the ear.” Then we can understand why Christ’s
coming was delayed till the fulness of the time had
come. But otherwise all, in this most important
sphere of human life, is in disorder, without unity,
progress, meaning, or providence.
These views, we trust, will be amply
confirmed when we come to examine each great religion
separately and carefully. We shall find them always
feeling after God, often finding him. We shall
see that in their origin they are not the work of
priestcraft, but of human nature; in their essence
not superstitions, but religions; in their doctrines
true more frequently than false; in their moral tendency
good rather than evil. And instead of degenerating
toward something worse, they come to prepare the way
for something better.
Se. How Ethnic Religions
were regarded by Christ and his Apostles.
According to Christ and the Apostles,
Christianity was to grow out of Judaism, and be developed
into a universal religion. Accordingly, the method
of Jesus was to go first to the Jews; and when he left
the limits of Palestine on a single occasion, he declared
himself as only going into Phoenicia to seek after
the lost sheep of the house of Israel. But he
stated that he had other sheep, not of this fold, whom
he must bring, recognizing that there were, among
the heathen, good and honest hearts prepared for Christianity,
and already belonging to him; sheep who knew his voice
and were ready to follow him. He also declared
that the Roman centurion and the Phoenician woman
already possessed great faith, the centurion more
than he had yet found in Israel. But the most
striking declaration of Jesus, and one singularly
overlooked, concerning the character of the heathen,
is to be found in his description of the day of judgment,
in Matthew (chap. XXV.). It is very curious
that men should speculate as to the fate of the heathen,
when Jesus has here distinctly taught that all good
men among them are his sheep, though they never heard
of him. The account begins, “Before him
shall be gathered all the Gentiles” (or heathen).
It is not a description of the judgment of the Christian
world, but of the heathen world. The word here
used ([Greek: ta ethnae]) occurs about one
hundred and sixty-four times in the New Testament.
It is translated “gentiles” oftener than
by any other word, that is, about ninety-three times;
by “heathen” four or five times; and in
the remaining passages it is mostly translated “nations.”
That it means the Gentiles or heathen here appears
from the fact that they are represented as ignorant
of Christ, and are judged, not by the standard of
Christian faith, but by their humanity and charity
toward those in suffering. Jesus recognizes,
therefore, among these ethnic or heathen people, some
as belonging to himself,-the “other
sheep,” not of the Jewish fold.
The Apostle Paul, who was especially
commissioned to the Gentiles, must be considered as
the best authority upon this question. Did he
regard their religions as wholly false? On the
contrary, he tells the Athenians that they are already
worshipping the true God, though ignorantly. “Whom
ye ignorantly worship, Him declare I unto you.”
When he said this he was standing face to face with
all that was most imposing in the religion of Greece.
He saw the city filled with idols, majestic forms,
the perfection of artistic grace and beauty.
Was his spirit then moved only with indignation
against this worship, and had he no sympathy with the
spiritual needs which it expressed? It does not
seem so. He recognized piety in their souls.
“I see that ye are, in all ways, exceedingly
pious.” He recognized their worship as passing
beyond the idols, to the true God. He did not
profess that he came to revolutionize their religion,
but to reform it. He does not proceed like the
backwoodsman, who fells the forest and takes out the
stumps in order to plant a wholly different crop;
but like the nurseryman, who grafts a native stock
with a better fruit. They were already ignorantly
worshipping the true God. What the apostle proposed
to do was to enlighten that ignorance by showing them
who that true God was, and what was his character.
In his subsequent remarks, therefore, he does not
teach them that there is one Supreme Being, but he
assumes it, as something already believed.
He assumes him to be the creator of all things; to
be omnipotent,-“the Lord of
heaven and earth”; spiritual,-“dwelleth
not in temples made with hands”; absolute,-“not
needing anything,” but the source of all things.
He says this, as not expecting any opposition or contradiction;
he reserves his criticisms on their idolatry for the
end of his discourse. He then states, quite clearly,
that the different nations of the world have a common
origin, belong to one family, and have been providentially
placed in space and time, that each might seek the
Lord in its own way. He recognized in them a
power of seeking and finding God, the God close at
hand, and in whom we live; and he quotes one of their
own poets, accepting his statement of God’s
fatherly character. Now, it is quite common for
those who deny that there is any truth in heathenism,
to admire this speech of Paul as a masterpiece of
ingenuity and eloquence. But he would hardly have
made it, unless he thought it to be true. Those
who praise his eloquence at the expense of his veracity
pay him a poor compliment. Did Paul tell the
Athenians that they were worshipping the true God when
they were not, and that for the sake of rhetorical
effect? If we believe this concerning him, and
yet admire him, let us cease henceforth to find fault
with the Jesuits.
No! Paul believed what he said,
that the Athenians were worshipping the true God,
though ignorantly. The sentiment of reverence,
of worship, was lifting them to its true object.
All they needed was to have their understanding enlightened.
Truth he placed in the heart rather than the understanding,
but he also connected Christianity with Polytheism
where the two religions touched, that is, on their
pantheistic side. While placing God above
the world as its ruler, “seeing he is Lord of
heaven and earth,” he placed him in the
world as an immanent presence,-“in
him we live, and move, and have our being.”
And afterward, in writing to the Romans, he takes
the same ground. He teaches that the Gentiles
had a knowledge of the eternal attributes of God (Rom.
and saw him in his works , and that
they also had in their nature a law of duty, enabling
them to do the things contained in the law. This
he calls “the law written in the heart”
(Rom. i,15). He blames them, not for ignorance,
but for disobedience. The Apostle Paul, therefore,
agrees with us in finding in heathen religions essential
truth in connection with their errors.
The early Christian apologists often
took the same view. Thus Clement of Alexandria
believed that God had one great plan for educating
the world, of which Christianity was the final step.
He refused to consider the Jewish religion as the
only divine preparation for Christianity, but regarded
the Greek philosophy as also a preparation for Christ.
Neander gives his views at length, and says that Clement
was the founder of the true view of history. Tertullian
declared the soul to be naturally Christian.
The Sibylline books were quoted as good prophetic works
along with the Jewish prophets. Socrates was
called by the Fathers a Christian before Christ.
Within the last few years the extravagant
condemnation of the heathen religions has produced
a reaction in their favor. It has been felt to
be disparaging to human nature to suppose that almost
the whole human race should consent to be fed on error.
Such a belief has been seen to be a denial of God’s
providence, as regards nine tenths of mankind.
Accordingly it has become more usual of late to rehabilitate
heathenism, and to place it on the same level with
Christianity, if not above it. The Védas
are talked about as though they were somewhat superior
to the Old Testament, and Confucius is quoted as an
authority quite equal to Paul or John. An ignorant
admiration of the sacred books of the Buddhists and
Brahmíns has succeeded to the former ignorant
and sweeping condemnation of them. What is now
needed is a fair and candid examination and comparison
of these systems from reliable sources.
Se. Comparative Theology will furnish a new Class of Evidences in Support
of Christianity.
Such an examination, doing full justice
to all other religions, acknowledging their partial
truth and use, will not depreciate, but exalt the
value of Christianity. It will furnish a new kind
of evidence in its favor. But the usual form
of argument may perhaps be changed.
Is Christianity a supernatural or
a natural religion? Is it a religion attested
to be from God by miracles? This has been the
great question in evidences for the last century.
The truth and divine origin of Christianity have been
made to depend on its supernatural character, and
to stand or fall with a certain view of miracles.
And then, in order to maintain the reality of miracles,
it became necessary to prove the infallibility of
the record; and so we were taught that, to believe
in Jesus Christ, we must first believe in the genuineness
and authenticity of the whole New Testament.
“All the theology of England,” says Mr.
Pattison, “was devoted to proving the Christian
religion credible, in this manner.” “The
apostles,” said Dr. Johnson, “were being
tried one a week for the capital crime of forgery.”
This was the work of the school of Lardner, Paley,
and Whately.
But the real question between Christians
and unbelievers in Christianity is, not whether our
religion is or is not supernatural; not whether Christ’s
miracles were or not violations of law; nor whether
the New Testament, as it stands, is the work of inspired
men. The main question, back of all these, is
different, and not dependent on the views we may happen
to take of the universality of law. It is this:
Is Christianity, as taught by Jesus, intended by God
to be the religion of the human race? Is it only
one among natural religions? is it to be superseded
in its turn by others, or is it the one religion which
is to unite all mankind? “Art thou he that
should come, or look we for another?” This is
the question which we ask of Jesus of Nazareth, and
the answer to which makes the real problem of apologetic
theology.
Now the defenders of Christianity
have been so occupied with their special disputes
about miracles, about naturalism and supernaturalism,
and about the inspiration and infallibility of the
apostles, that they have left uncultivated the wide
field of inquiry belonging to Comparative Theology.
But it belongs to this science to establish the truth
of Christianity by showing that it possesses all the
aptitudes which fit it to be the religion of the human
race.
This method of establishing Christianity
differs from the traditional argument in this:
that, while the last undertakes to prove Christianity
to be true, this shows it to be true. For
if we can make it appear, by a fair survey of the
principal religions of the world, that, while they
are ethnic or local, Christianity is catholic or universal;
that, while they are defective, possessing some truths
and wanting others, Christianity possesses all; and
that, while they are stationary, Christianity is progressive;
it will not then be necessary to discuss in what sense
it is a supernatural religion. Such a survey
will show that it is adapted to the nature of man.
When we see adaptation we naturally infer design.
If Christianity appears, after a full comparison with
other religions, to be the one and only religion which
is perfectly adapted to man, it will be impossible
to doubt that it was designed by God to be the religion
of our race; that it is the providential religion
sent by God to man, its truth God’s truth its
way the way to God and to heaven.
Se. It will show that, while
most of the Religions of the World are Ethnic, or
the Religions of Races, Christianity is Catholic, or
adapted to become the Religion of all Races.
By ethnic religions we mean those
religions, each of which has always been confined
within the boundaries of a particular race or family
of mankind, and has never made prosélytes or
converts, except accidentally, outside of it.
By catholic religions we mean those which have shown
the desire and power of passing over these limits,
and becoming the religion of a considerable number
of persons belonging to different races.
Now we are met at once with the striking
and obvious fact, that most of the religions of the
world are evidently religions limited in some way to
particular races or nations. They are, as we have
said, ethnic. We use this Greek word rather
than its Latin equivalent, gentile, because
gentile, though meaning literally “of,
or belonging to, a race,” has acquired a special
sense from its New Testament use as meaning all who
are not Jews. The word “ethnic” remains
pure from any such secondary or acquired meaning,
and signifies simply that which belongs to a race.
The science of ethnology is a modern
one, and is still in the process of formation.
Some of its conclusions, however, may be considered
as established. It has forever set aside Blumenbach’s
old classification of mankind into the Caucasian and
four other varieties, and has given us, instead, a
division of the largest part of mankind into Indo-European,
Semitic, and Turanian families, leaving a considerable
penumbra outside as yet unclassified.
That mankind is so divided into races
of men it would seem hardly possible to deny.
It is proved by physiology, by psychology, by glossology,
and by civil history. Physiology shows us anatomical
differences between races. There are as marked
and real differences between the skull of a Hindoo
and that of a Chinaman as between the skulls of an
Englishman and a negro. There is not as great
a difference, perhaps, but it is as real and as constant.
Then the characters of races remain distinct, the same
traits reappearing after many centuries exactly as
at first. We find the same difference of character
between the Jews and Arabs, who are merely different
families of the same Semitic race, as existed between
their ancestors, Jacob and Esau, as described in the
Book of Genesis. Jacob and the Jews are prudent,
loving trade, money-making, tenacious of their ideas,
living in cities; Esau and the Arabs, careless, wild,
hating cities, loving the desert.
A similar example of the maintaining
of a moral type is found in the characteristic differences
between the German and Kelts, two families of the
same Indo-European race. Take an Irishman and
a German, working side by side on the Mississippi,
and they present the same characteristic differences
as the Germans and Kelts described by Tacitus and Cæsar.
The German loves liberty, the Kelt equality; the one
hates the tyrant, the other the aristocrat; the one
is a serious thinker, the other a quick and vivid
thinker; the one is a Protestant in religion, the other
a Catholic. Ammianus Marcellinus, living in Gaul
in the fourth century, describes the Kelts thus (see
whether it does not apply to the race now).
“The Gauls,” says
he, “are mostly tall of stature, fair and
red-haired, and horrible from the fierceness of their
eyes, fond of strife, and haughtily insolent.
A whole band of strangers would not endure one of
them, aided in his brawl by his powerful and blue-eyed
wife, especially when with swollen neck and gnashing
teeth, poising her huge white arms, she begins, joining
kicks to blows, to put forth her fists like stones
from a catapult. Most of their voices are terrific
and threatening, as well when they are quiet as when
they are angry. All ages are thought fit for
war. They are a nation very fond of wine, and
invent many drinks resembling it, and some of the
poorer sort wander about with their senses quite blunted
by continual intoxication.”
Now we find that each race, beside
its special moral qualities, seems also to have special
religious qualities, which cause it to tend toward
some one kind of religion more than to another kind.
These religions are the flower of the race; they come
forth from it as its best aroma. Thus we see
that Brahmanism is confined to that section or race
of the great Aryan family which has occupied India
for more than thirty centuries. It belongs to
the Hindoos, to the people taking its name from the
Indus, by the tributaries of which stream it entered
India from the northwest. It has never attempted
to extend itself beyond that particular variety of
mankind. Perhaps one hundred and fifty millions
of men accept it as their faith. It has been
held by this race as their religion during a period
immense in the history of mankind. Its sacred
books are certainly more than three thousand years
old. But during all this time it has never communicated
itself to any race of men outside of the peninsula
of India. It is thus seen to be a strictly ethnic
religion, showing neither the tendency nor the desire
to become the religion of mankind.
The same thing may be said of the
religion of Confucius. It belongs to China and
the Chinese. It suits their taste and genius.
They have had it as their state religion for some
twenty-three hundred years, and it rules the opinions
of the rulers of opinion among three hundred millions
of men. But out of China Confucius is only a
name.
So, too, of the system of Zoroaster.
It was for a long period the religion of an Aryan
tribe who became the ruling people among mankind.
The Persians extended themselves through Western Asia,
and conquered many nations, but they never communicated
their religion. It was strictly a national or
ethnic religion, belonging only to the Iranians and
their descendants, the Parsees.
In like manner it may be said that
the religion of Egypt, of Greece, of Scandinavia,
of the Jews, of Islam, and of Buddhism are ethnic religions.
Those of Egypt and Scandinavia are strictly so.
It is said, to be sure, that the Greeks borrowed the
names of their gods from Egypt, but the gods themselves
were entirely different ones. It is also true
that some of the gods of the Romans were borrowed
from the Greeks, but their life was left behind.
They merely repeated by rote the Greek mythology, having
no power to invent one for themselves. But the
Greek religion they never received. For instead
of its fair humanities, the Roman gods were only servants
of the state,-a higher kind of consuls,
tribunes, and lictors. The real Olympus of Rome
was the Senate Chamber on the Capitoline Hill.
Judaism also was in reality an ethnic religion, though
it aimed at catholicity and expected it, and made
prosélytes. But it could not tolerate unessentials,
and so failed of becoming catholic. The Jewish
religion, until it had Christianity to help it, was
never able to do more than make prosélytes here
and there. Christianity, while preaching the doctrines
of Jesus and the New Testament, has been able to carry
also the weight of the Old Testament, and to give
a certain catholicity to Judaism. The religion
of Mohammed has been catholic, in that it has become
the religion of very different races,-the
Arabs, Turks, and Persians, belonging to the three
great varieties of the human family. But then
Mohammedanism has never sought to make converts,
but only subjects; it has not asked for belief,
but merely for submission. Consequently Mr. Palgrave,
Mr. Lane, and Mr. Vambery tell us, that, in Arabia,
Egypt, and Turkistan, there are multitudes who are
outwardly Mohammedan, but who in their private belief
reject Mohammed, and are really Pagans. But, no
doubt, there is a catholic tendency both in Judaism
and Mohammedanism; and this comes from the great doctrine
which they hold in common with Christianity,-the
unity of God. Faith in that is the basis
of all expectation of a universal religion, and the
wish and the power to convert others come from that
doctrine of the Divine unity.
But Christianity teaches the unity
of God not merely as a supremacy of power and will,
but as a supremacy of love and wisdom; it teaches God
as Father, and not merely as King; so it seeks not
merely to make prosélytes and subjects, but to
make converts. Hence Christianity, beginning as
a Semitic religion, among the Jews, went across the
Greek Archipelago and converted the Hellenic and the
Latin races; afterward the Goths, Lombards, Franks,
Vandals; later still, the Saxons, Danes, and Normans.
Meantime, its Nestorian missionaries, pushing east,
made converts in Armenia, Persia, India, and China.
In later days it has converted negroes, Indians, and
the people of the Pacific Islands. Something,
indeed, stopped its progress after its first triumphant
successes during seven or eight centuries. At
the tenth century it reached its term. Modern
missions, whether those of Jesuits or Protestants,
have not converted whole nations and races, but only
individuals here and there. The reason of this
check, probably, is, that Christians have repeated
the mistakes of the Jews and Mohammedans. They
have sought to make prosélytes to an outward system
of worship and ritual, or to make subjects to a dogma;
but not to make converts to an idea and a life.
When the Christian missionaries shall go and say to
the Hindoos or the Buddhists: “You are already
on your way toward God,-your religion came
from him, and was inspired by his Spirit; now he sends
you something more and higher by his Son, who does
not come to destroy but to fulfil, not to take away
any good thing you have, but to add to it something
better,” then we shall see the process of conversion,
checked in the ninth and tenth, centuries, reinaugurated.
Judaism, Islam, and Christianity,
all teaching the strict unity of God, have all aimed
at becoming universal. Judaism failed because
it sought prosélytes instead of making converts.
Islam, the religion of Mohammed (in reality a Judaizing
Christian sect) failed because it sought to make subjects
rather than converts. Its conquests over a variety
of races were extensive, but not deep. To-day
it holds in its embrace at least four very distinct
races,-the Arabs, a Semitic race, the Persians,
an Indo-European race, the Negroes, and the Turks
or Turanians. But, correctly viewed, Islam is
only a heretical Christian sect, and so all this must
be credited to the interest of Christianity.
Islam is a John the Baptist crying in the wilderness,
“Prepare the way of the Lord”; Mohammed
is a schoolmaster to bring men to Christ. It
does for the nations just what Judaism did, that is,
it teaches the Divine unity. Esau has taken the
place of Jacob in the economy of Providence.
When the Jews rejected Christ they ceased from their
providential work, and their cousins, the Arabs, took
their place. The conquests of Islam, therefore,
ought to be regarded as the preliminary conquests
of Christianity.
There is still another system which
has shown some tendencies toward catholicity.
This is Buddhism, which has extended itself over the
whole of the eastern half of Asia. But though
it includes a variety of nationalities, it is doubtful
if it includes any variety of races. All the
Buddhists appear to belong to the great Mongol family.
And although this system originated among the Aryan
race in India, it has let go its hold of that family
and transferred itself wholly to the Mongols.
But Christianity, from the first,
showed itself capable of taking possession of the
convictions of the most different races of mankind.
Now, as on the day of Pentecost, many races hear the
apostles speak in their own tongues, in which they
were born,-Parthians, Mèdes, Elamites,
dwellers in Mesopotamia, Judaea, and Cappadocia, Pontus
and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts
of Lybia about Cyrene, strangers of Rome, Crêtes
and Arabians. The miracle of tongues was a type
of the effect of the truth in penetrating the mind
and heart of different nationalities. The Jewish
Christians, indeed, tried to repeat in Christianity
their old mistake which had prevented Judaism from
becoming universal. They wished to insist that
no one should become a Christian unless he became a
Jew at the same time. If they had succeeded in
this, they would have effectually kept the Gospel
of Christ from becoming a catholic religion. But
the Apostle Paul was raised up for the emergency,
and he prevented this suicidal course. Consequently
Christianity passed at once into Europe, and became
the religion of Greeks and Romans as well as Jews.
Paul struck off from it its Jewish shell, told them
that as Christians they had nothing to do with the
Jewish law, or with Jewish Passovers, Sabbaths, or
ceremonies. As Christians they were only to know
Christ, and they were not to know him according to
the flesh, that is, not as a Jew. So Christianity
became at once a catholic religion, consisting in
the diffusion of great truths and a divine life.
It overflowed the nationalities of Greece and Rome,
of North Africa, of Persia and Western Asia, at the
very beginning. It conquered the Gothic and German
conquerors of the Roman Empire. Under Arian missionaries,
it converted Goths, Vandals, Lombards. Under Nestorian
missionaries, it penetrated as far east as China, and
made converts there. In like manner the Gospel
spread over the whole of North Africa, whence it was
afterwards expelled by the power of Islam. It
has shown itself, therefore, capable of adapting itself
to every variety of the human race.
Se. Comparative Theology
will probably show that the Ethnic Religions are one-sided,
each containing a Truth of its own, but being defective,
wanting some corresponding Truth. Christianity,
or the Catholic Religion, is complete on every Side.
Brahmanism, for example, is complete
on the side of spirit, defective on the side of matter;
full as regards the infinite, empty of the finite;
recognizing eternity but not time, God but not nature.
It is a vast system of spiritual pantheism, in which
there is no reality but God, all else being Maya,
or illusion. The Hindoo mind is singularly pious,
but also singularly immoral. It has no history,
for history belongs to time. No one knows when
its sacred books were written, when its civilization
began, what caused its progress, what its decline.
Gentle, devout, abstract, it is capable at once of
the loftiest thoughts and the basest actions.
It combines the most ascetic self-denials and abstraction
from life with the most voluptuous self-indulgence.
The key to the whole system of Hindoo thought and
life is in this original tendency to see God, not man;
eternity, not time; the infinite, not the finite.
Buddhism, which was a revolt from
Brahmanism, has exactly the opposite truths and the
opposite defects. Where Brahmanism is strong,
it is weak; where Brahmanism is weak, it is strong.
It recognizes man, not God; the soul, not the all;
the finite, not the infinite; morality, not piety.
Its only God, Buddha, is a man who has passed on through
innumerable transmigrations, till, by means of
exemplary virtues, he has reached the lordship of
the universe. Its heaven, Nirvana, is indeed the
world of infinite bliss; but, incapable of cognizing
the infinite, it calls it nothing. Heaven, being
the inconceivable infinite, is equivalent to pure
negation. Nature, to the Buddhist, instead of
being the delusive shadow of God, as the Brahman views
it, is envisaged as a nexus of laws, which reward
and punish impartially both obedience and disobedience.
The system of Confucius has many merits,
especially in its influence on society. The most
conservative of all systems, and also the most prosaic,
its essential virtue is reverence for all that is.
It is not perplexed by any fear or hope of change;
the thing which has been is that which shall be; and
the very idea of progress is eliminated from the thought
of China. Safety, repose, peace, these are its
blessings. Probably merely physical comfort,
earthly bien-être, was never carried further
than in the Celestial Empire. That virtue so
much exploded in Western civilization, of respect
for parents, remains in full force in China. The
emperor is honored as the father of his people; ancestors
are worshipped in every family; and the best reward
offered for a good action is a patent of nobility,
which does not reach forward to one’s children,
but backward to one’s parents. This is
the bright side of Chinese life; the dark side is
the fearful ennui, the moral death, which falls on
a people among whom there are no such things as hope,
expectation, or the sense of progress. Hence
the habit of suicide among this people, indicating
their small hold on life. In every Chinese drama
there are two or three suicides. A soldier will
commit suicide rather than go into battle. If
you displease a Chinaman, he will resent the offence
by killing himself on your doorstep, hoping thus to
give you some inconvenience. Such are the merits
and such the defects of the system of Confucius.
The doctrine of Zoroaster and of the
Zend Avesta is far nobler. Its central thought
is that each man is a soldier, bound to battle for
good against evil. The world, at the present
time, is the scene of a great warfare between the
hosts of light and those of darkness. Every man
who thinks purely, speaks purely, and acts purely
is a servant of Ormazd, the king of light, and thereby
helps on his cause. The result of this doctrine
was that wonderful Persian empire, which astonished
the world for centuries by its brilliant successes;
and the virtue and intelligence of the Parsees of
the present time, the only representatives in the world
of that venerable religion. The one thing lacking
to the system is unity. It lives in perpetual
conflict. Its virtues are all the virtues of a
soldier. Its defects and merits are, both, the
polar opposites of those of China. If the everlasting
peace of China tends to moral stagnation and death,
the perpetual struggle and conflict of Persia tends
to exhaustion. The Persian empire rushed through
a short career of flame to its tomb; the Chinese empire
vegetates, unchanged, through a myriad of years.
If Brahmanism and Buddhism occupy
the opposite poles of the same axis of thought,-if
the system of Confucius stands opposed, on another
axis, to that of Zoroaster,-we find a third
development of like polar antagonisms in the systems
of ancient Egypt and Greece. Egypt stands for
Nature; Greece for Man. Inscrutable as is the
mystery of that Sphinx of the Nile, the old religion
of Egypt, we can yet trace some phases of its secret.
Its reverence for organization appears in the practice
of embalming. The bodies of men and of animals
seemed to it to be divine. Even vegetable organization
had something sacred in it: “O holy nation,”
said the Roman satirist, “whose gods grow in
gardens!” That plastic force of nature which
appears in organic life and growth made up, in various
forms, as we shall see in the proper place, the Egyptian
Pantheon. The life-force of nature became divided
into the three groups of gods, the highest of which
represented its largest generalizations. Kneph,
Neith, Sevech, Pascht, are symbols, according to Lepsius,
of the World-Spirit, the World-Matter, Space and Time.
Each circle of the gods shows us some working of the
mysterious powers of nature, and of its occult laws.
But when we come to Greece, these personified laws
turn into men. Everything in the Greek Pantheon
is human. All human tendencies appear transfigured
into glowing forms of light on Mount Olympus.
The gods of Egypt are powers and laws; those of Greece
are persons.
The opposite tendencies of these antagonist
forms of piety appear in the development of Egyptian
and Hellenic life. The gods of Egypt were mysteries
too far removed from the popular apprehension to be
objects of worship; and so religion in Egypt became
priestcraft. In Greece, on the other hand, the
gods were too familiar, too near to the people, to
be worshipped with any real reverence. Partaking
in all human faults and vices, it must sooner or later
come to pass that familiarity would breed contempt.
And as the religion of Egypt perished from being kept
away from the people, as an esoteric system in the
hands of priests, that of Greece, in which there was
no priesthood as an order, came to an end because the
gods ceased to be objects of respect at all.
We see, from these examples, how each
of the great ethnic religions tends to a disproportionate
and excessive, because one-sided, statement of some
divine truth or law. The question then emerges
at this point: “Is Christianity also one-sided,
or does it contain in itself all these truths?”
Is it teres atque rotundus, so as to be able
to meet every natural religion with a kindred truth,
and thus to supply the defects of each from its own
fulness? If it can be shown to possess this amplitude,
it at once is placed by itself in an order of its own.
It is not to be classified with the other religions,
since it does not share their one family fault.
In every other instance we can touch with our finger
the weak place, the empty side. Is there any
such weak side in Christianity? It is the office
of Comparative Theology to answer.
The positive side of Brahmanism we
saw to be its sense of spiritual realities. That
is also fully present in Christianity. Not merely
does this appear in such New Testament texts as these:
“God is spirit,” “The letter killeth,
the spirit giveth life”: not only does the
New Testament just graze and escape Pantheism in such
passages as “From whom, and through whom, and
to whom are all things,” “Who is above
all, and through all, and in us all,” “In
him we live and move and have our being,” but
the whole history of Christianity is the record of
a spiritualism almost too excessive. It has appeared
in the worship of the Church, the hymns of the Church,
the tendencies to asceticism, the depreciation of earth
and man. Christianity, therefore, fully meets
Brahmanism on its positive side, while it fulfils
its negations, as we shall see hereafter, by adding
as full a recognition of man and nature.
The positive side of Buddhism is its
cognition of the human soul and the natural laws of
the universe. Now, if we look into the New Testament
and into the history of the Church, we find this element
also fully expressed. It appears in all the parables
and teachings of Jesus, in which man is represented
as a responsible agent, rewarded or punished according
to the exact measure of his works; receiving the government
of ten or five cities according to his stewardship.
And when we look into the practical working of Christianity
we find almost an exaggerated stress laid on the duty
of saving one’s soul. This excessive estimate
is chiefly seen in the monastic system of the Roman
Church, and in the Calvinistic sects of Protestantism.
It also comes to light again, curiously enough, in
such books as Combe’s “Constitution of
Man,” the theory of which is exactly the same
as that of the Buddhists; namely, that the aim of
life is a prudential virtue, consisting in wise obedience
to the natural laws of the universe. Both systems
substitute prudence for Providence as the arbiter of
human destiny. But, apart from these special
tendencies in Christianity, it cannot be doubted that
all Christian experience recognizes the positive truth
of Buddhism in regarding the human soul as a substantial,
finite, but progressive monad, not to be absorbed,
as in Brahmanism, in the abyss of absolute being.
The positive side of the system of
Confucius is the organization of the state on the
basis of the family. The government of the emperor
is paternal government, the obedience of the subject
is filial obedience. Now, though Jesus did not
for the first time call God “the Father,”
he first brought men into a truly filial relation
to God. The Roman Church is organized on the
family idea. The word “Pope” means
the “Father”; he is the father of the
whole Church. Every bishop and every priest is
also the father of a smaller family, and all those
born into the Church are its children, as all born
into a family are born sons and daughters of the family.
In Protestantism, also, society is composed of families
as the body is made up of cells. Only in China,
and in Christendom, is family life thus sacred and
worshipful. In some patriarchal systems, polygamy
annuls the wife and the mother; in others the father
is a despot, and the children slaves; in other systems,
the crushing authority of the state destroys the independence
of the household. Christianity alone accepts
with China the religion of family life with all its
conservative elements, while it fulfils it with the
larger hope of the kingdom of heaven and brotherhood
of mankind.
This idea of the kingdom of heaven,
so central in Christianity, is also the essential
motive in the religion of Zoroaster. As, in the
Zend Avesta, every man is a soldier, fighting for
light or for darkness, and neutrality is impossible;
so, in the Gospel, light and good stand opposed to
darkness and evil as perpetual foes. A certain
current of dualism runs through the Christian Scriptures
and the teaching of the Church. God and Satan,
heaven and hell, are the only alternatives. Every
one must choose between them. In the current
theology, this dualism has been so emphasized as even
to exceed that of the Zend Avesta. The doctrine
of everlasting punishment and an everlasting hell
has always been the orthodox doctrine in Christianity,
while the Zend Avesta probably, and the religion in
its subsequent development certainly, teaches universal
restoration, and the ultimate triumph of good over
evil. Nevertheless, practically, in consequence
of the greater richness and fulness of Christianity,
this tendency to dualism has been neutralized by its
monotheism, and evil kept subordinate; while, in the
Zend religion, the evil principle assumed such proportions
as to make it the formidable rival of good in the
mind of the worshipper. Here, as before, we may
say that Christianity is able to do justice to all
the truth involved in the doctrine of evil, avoiding
any superficial optimism, and recognizing the fact
that all true life must partake of the nature of a
battle.
The positive side of Egyptian religion
we saw to be a recognition of the divine element in
nature, of that plastic, mysterious life which embodies
itself in all organisms. Of this view we find
little stated explicitly in the New Testament.
But that the principles of Christianity contain it,
implicitly, in an undeveloped form, appears, (1.) Because
Christian monotheism differs from Jewish and Mohammedan
monotheism, in recognizing God “in all things”
as well as God “above all things.”
(2.) Because Christian art and literature differ from
classic art and literature in the romantic
element, which is exactly the sense of this mysterious
life in nature. The classic artist is a [Greek:
poietes], a maker; the romantic artist is a troubadour,
a finder. The one does his work in giving form
to a dead material; the other, by seeking for its
hidden life. (3.) Because modern science is invention,
i.e. finding. It recognizes mysteries in
nature which are to be searched into, and this search
becomes a serious religious interest with all truly
scientific men. It appears to such men a profanity
to doubt or question the revelations of nature, and
they believe in its infallible inspiration quite as
much as the dogmatist believes in the infallible inspiration
of Scripture, or the churchman in the infallible inspiration
of the Church. We may, therefore, say, that the
essential truth in the Egyptian system has been taken
up into our modern Christian life.
And how is it, lastly, with that opposite
pole of religious thought which blossomed out in “the
fair humanities of old religion” in the wonderful
Hellenic mind? The gods of Greece were men.
They were not abstract ideas, concealing natural powers
and laws. They were open as sunshine, bright as
noon, a fair company of men and women idealized and
gracious, just a little way off, a little way up.
It was humanity projected upon the skies, divine creatures
of more than mortal beauty, but thrilling with human
life and human sympathies. Has Christianity anything
to offer in the place of this charming system of human
gods and goddesses?
We answer that the fundamental doctrine
of Christianity is the incarnation, the word made
flesh. It is God revealed in man. Under some
doctrinal type this has always been believed.
The common Trinitarian doctrine states it in a somewhat
crude and illogical form. Yet somehow the man
Christ Jesus has always been seen to be the best revelation
of God. But unless there were some human element
in the Deity, he could not reveal himself so in a
human life. The doctrine of the incarnation, therefore,
repeats the Mosaic statement that “man was made
in the image of God.” Jewish and Mohammedan
monotheism separate God entirely from the world.
Philosophic monotheism, in our day, separates God from
man, by teaching that there is nothing in common between
the two by which God can be mediated, and so makes
him wholly incomprehensible. Christianity gives
us Emmanuel, God with us, equally removed from the
stern despotic omnipotence of the Semitic monotheism
and the finite and imperfect humanities of Olympus.
We see God in Christ, as full of sympathy with man,
God “in us all”; and yet we see him in
nature, providence, history, as “above all”
and “through all.” The Roman Catholic
Church has, perhaps, humanized religion too far.
For every god and goddess of Greece she has given us,
on some immortal canvas, an archangel or a saint to
be adored and loved. Instead of Apollo and the
Python we have Guido’s St. Michael and the Dragon;
in place of the light, airy Mercury she provides a
St. Sebastian; instead of the “untouched”
Diana, some heavenly Agnes or Cecilia. The Catholic
heaven is peopled, all the way up, with beautiful human
forms; and on the upper throne we have holiness and
tenderness incarnate in the queen of heaven and her
divine Son. All the Greek humanities are thus
fulfilled in the ample faith of Christendom.
By such a critical survey as we have
thus sketched in mere outline it will be seen that
each of the great ethnic religions is full on one side,
but empty on the other, while Christianity is full
all round. Christianity is adapted to take their
place, not because they are false, but because they
are true as far as they go. They “know in
part and prophesy in part; but when that which is
perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be
done away.”
Se. Comparative Theology
will probably show that Ethnic Religions are arrested,
or degenerate, and will come to an End, while the Catholic
Religion is capable of a progressive Development.
The religions of Persia, Egypt, Greece,
Rome, have come to an end; having shared the fate
of the national civilization of which each was a part.
The religions of China, Islam, Buddha, and Judaea
have all been arrested, and remain unchanged and seemingly
unchangeable. Like great vessels anchored in
a stream, the current of time flows past them, and
each year they are further behind the spirit of the
age, and less in harmony with its demands. Christianity
alone, of all human religions, seems to possess the
power of keeping abreast with the advancing civilization
of the world. As the child’s soul grows
with his body, so that when he becomes a man it is
a man’s soul and not a child’s, so the
Gospel of Jesus continues the soul of all human culture.
It continually drops its old forms and takes new ones.
It passed out of its Jewish body under the guidance
of Paul. In a speculative age it unfolded into
creeds and systems. In a worshipping age it developed
ceremonies and a ritual. When the fall of Rome
left Europe without unity or centre, it gave it an
organization and order through the Papacy. When
the Papacy became a tyranny, and the Renaissance called
for free thought, it suddenly put forth Protestantism,
as the tree by the water-side sends forth its shoots
in due season. Protestantism, free as air, opens
out into the various sects, each taking hold of some
human need; Lutheranism, Calvinism, Methodism, Swedenborgianism,
or Rationalism. Christianity blossoms out into
modern science, literature, art,-children
who indeed often forget their mother, and are ignorant
of their source, but which are still fed from her
breasts and partake of her life. Christianity,
the spirit of faith, hope, and love, is the deep fountain
of modern civilization. Its inventions are for
the many, not for the few. Its science is not
hoarded, but diffused. It elevates the masses,
who everywhere else have been trampled down.
The friend of the people, it tends to free schools,
a free press, a free government, the abolition of
slavery, war, vice, and the melioration of society.
We cannot, indeed, here prove that Christianity
is the cause of these features peculiar to modern
life; but we find it everywhere associated with them,
and so we can say that it only, of all the religions
of mankind, has been capable of accompanying man in
his progress from evil to good, from good to better.
We have merely suggested some of the
results to which the study of Comparative Theology
may lead us. They will appear more fully as we
proceed in our examination of the religions, and subsequently
in their comparison. This introductory chapter
has been designed as a sketch of the course which
the work will take. When we have completed our
survey, the results to which we hope to arrive will
be these, if we succeed in what we have undertaken:-
1. All the great religions of
the world, except Christianity and Mohammedanism,
are ethnic religions, or religions limited to a single
nation or race. Christianity alone (including
Mohammedanism and Judaism, which are its temporary
and local forms) is the religion of all races.
2. Every ethnic religion has
its positive and negative side. Its positive
side is that which holds some vital truth; its negative
side is the absence of some other essential truth.
Every such religion is true and providential, but
each limited and imperfect.
3. Christianity alone is a [Greek:
plaeroma], or a fulness of truth, not coming to destroy
but to fulfil the previous religions; but being capable
of replacing them by teaching all the truth they have
taught, and supplying that which they have omitted.
4. Christianity, being not a
system but a life, not a creed or a form, but a spirit,
is able to meet all the changing wants of an advancing
civilization by new developments and adaptations, constantly
feeding the life of man at its roots by fresh supplies
of faith in God and faith in man.