For the benefit of those who ignorantly,
if not deliberately by deceit, misled to believe that
the priest has any authority, which the truly converted
Christian could not exercise, the present chapter is
offered in the spirit of love without any fear of
contradiction or dispute, because the facts given
here are well established upon the Scriptural Truths
and the reader may at all times maintain the proofs
to disprove refutable arguments of persons whose only
purpose is to serve their own individual interests.
The priest, one who officiates in
secret offices, it is the definition given in Webster’s
dictionary. And from the most authentic Biblical
concordances we derive the following information:
The priest under the law was a person consecrated
and ordained of God, not only to teach the people
and pray for them, but also to offer up sacrifices
for his own sins and those of the people. The
priesthood was not annexed to a certain family, till
after the promulgation of the law of Moses.
Before that time the first born of
every family, the fathers, the kings, the princes,
were priests, born in their city and in their own homes.
Cain and Abel, Noah, Abraham and Job, Abimelech and
Laban, Isaac and Jacob, offered themselves their own
sacrifices. In the solemnity of the covenant
that the Lord made with his people at the foot of Mount
Sinai, Moses performed the office of meditator, and
young men were chosen from among the children of Israel
to perform the office of priests. But after that
the Lord had chosen the tribe of Levi to serve him
in his tabernacle, and that the priesthood was annexed
to the family of Aaron, then the right of offering
sacrifices to God was reserved to the priests alone
of this family.
Duties of the priests: The priests
were required to prove their descent from Aaron, to
be free from all bodily defect or blemish; must not
be observed mourning except for near relatives; must
not marry a woman that had been a harlot; or divorced,
or profane. The priest’s daughter who committed
whoredom was to be burned, as profaning her father.
The priests were to have the charge of the sanctuary
and the altar, which being once kindled the priest
was always to keep it burning. In later times,
and upon extraordinary occasions, at least, they flayed
the burnt-offerings and killed the Passover.
They were to receive the blood of the burnt-offerings
in basins and sprinkle it around about the altar,
arrange the wood and the fire, and to burn the parts
of the sacrifices. If the burnt sacrifices were
of doves, the priest was to nip off the head with
the finger nail, squeeze out the blood on the edge
of the altar, pluck off the feathers, and throw them
with the crop into the ash-pit, divide down the wings,
and then completely burn it. He was to offer
a lamb every morning and evening, and a double number
on the Sabbath, the burnt-offerings ordered at the
beginning of months, and the same on the feast of
Unleavened Bread, and on the day of the First Fruits;
to receive the meat-offering of the offerer, bring
it to the altar, take of it a memorial, and burn it
upon the altar; to sprinkle the blood of the peace-offerings
upon the altar around about, and then to offer of
it a burnt-offering; to offer the sin-offering for
the sins of a ruler or any of the common people; to
eat the sin-offering at the holy place; and the same
way to offer offerings for all the kinds of sin and
the priest should eat these offerings at the holy place;
to offer for the purification of women after child-birth;
to judge of the leprosy in the human body or garments
(it is remarkable that the Jewish race from the beginning,
has been all through the ages a heavy victim of leprosy).
The priest was to make the ointment of spices; to prepare
the water of separation; to act as assessor in judicial
proceedings; to encourage the army when going to battle,
and probably to have charge of the law.
The emoluments of the priests:
The perquisites of the priests were many and various,
and as Philo calls them very rich, and this statement
holds good all the way down to the Christian priest
who inherited most of the virtues of his Jewish predecessors.
Thus no wonder for the priests to keep their people
in dense ignorance of the historical originality of
the priesthood. And the high priest, besides all
duties and privileges already mentioned as common
to him and the ordinary priest, he must not marry
a widow, nor a divorced woman, or a profane, or that
had been a harlot, but a virgin Israelitess.
He must not eat anything that died of itself, or was
torn by beasts; must wash his hands and feet when he
went into the tabernacle to offer the mass. The
high priest was the divinely inspired judge and truly
he was the supreme ruler till the time of David, and
again after the captivity. He would ask counsel
of the Lord if a new ruler was worthy or not and accordingly
grant or regret the appointment of the ruler.
It is the privilege which the Pope derives from Eleazar
and trying to exercise this privilege against the rulers
of Europe for fifteen centuries became the menace
in the progress of humanity. The high priest
had also unlimited power upon the funds of the sanctuary.
And it may be out of proportion in this book to give
a complete description of all the privileges and regalia
of the high priest, yet the reader could easily imagine
the frivolities unfortunately existing even today
in the ceremonial dress of the high priest, and to
confirm this fact he only has to enter in the first
Russian or Greek or Roman Catholic church at any day
of some special celebration and there he cannot help
but observe an imitation of the lamentable vanity
of a high priest of the old Jewish faith. And
the truth is visible to the naked eye. Would
ever sincerity and priesthood meet in one and the
same person it would make the most paradox phenomenon,
and such exceptional occurrences are very rare in the
ecclesiastical horizon, for virtue and priesthood are
the very logical antithesis, and chemically speaking
they are protogon matters not yielding to adulteration.
Between priesthood and Christ there is an abyss of
argument, but there is no bridge to join both sides.
Priesthood on one side in the most pharisaic manner
imposing its superfluous authority upon all mortals.
And Jesus the Christ of God with his wounded side,
in the most emphatic manner, condemning the pharisaic
scheme, which is a continuation in the Greek Russian Roman
Catholic church: “For they bind heavy burdens
and grievous to be borne, and lay them on man’s
shoulders; but they themselves will not move them with
one of their fingers.” And if the words
of the blessed Christ himself speaking in the 23d
chapter of Matthew, have no effect upon the consciousness
of the priest, there is all vain to any other way
trying to bring him into the light of wisdom.
In the history of all mankind there are three distinct
stages of priesthood, and in its two former stages
it had been a complete failure, in its present stage
is falling so fast, and it is condemned, already,
by all reasoning minds, that it is only a matter of
time before the human race shall be free from these
parasites. The priest, of the Jewish faith, failed
because he was inhuman, the priest of the Greek idolatry
failed, because he was a philosophical fraud; and
the priest of the present time, shall fail, because
he is the very opposing visible enemy of God’s
kingdom. The sacerdotal office of the priest,
is anti-christian.
Here we shall attempt to only describe
one piece of the dress of the high priest, the breast-plate
(rationale); a gorget, ten inches square, made of
the same sort of cloth as the ephod, and doubled so
as to form a kind of pouch or bag, in which was to
be put the urim and thummim, which are also mentioned
as is already known. The external part of this
gorget was set with four rows of precious stones;
the first row, a serdious, a topaz, and a carbuncle;
the second, an emerald, a sapphire, and a diamond;
the third, a ligure, an agate, and an amethyst, and
the fourth, a beryl, an onyx and a jasper, set in
a golden socket. Upon each of these stones was
to be engraven the name of one of the sons of Jacob.
In the ephod in which there was a space left open
sufficiently large for the admission of this pectoral,
were four rings of gold, to which four others at the
four corners of the breast-plate corresponded; the
two lower rings of gold being fixed inside. It
was confined to the ephod by means of dark blue ribbons,
which passed through these rings; and it was also
suspended from the onyx stones on the shoulder by chains
of gold, or rather cords of twisted gold thread, which
were fastened at one end to two other larger rings
fixed in the upper corners of the pectoral, and by
the other end going around the onyx stones on the shoulders,
and returning and being fixed in the larger ring.
And a splendid ornament upon the breast was a winged
scarabaeus, the emblem of the Sun, and the unavoidable
portion of the ceremonial dress peculiar to the high
priest was the miter, mitre or Cidaris, a head
gear of gold and silver and precious stones whose
magnificence we would not dare to describe in this
work, but the reader may in his life be fortunate enough
to see one of these wonderful paraphernalia on the
head of some of the now-a-days self-styled representatives
of Jesus Christ, who came to seek and save the lost
and he did not make of himself a show in these follies
of the old Jewish faith that proved a failure.
That the priests in Israel more than
once by their indulgence went down to idolatry, the
old testament abounds in evidences, but I shall only
mention the incidents of Eli the high priest and his
two sons, Hophni and Phinehas. Josephus says,
the high priest had also the very idolatrous symbolical
meanings of every part of his dress, which being made
of linen signified the earth; the blue color denoted
the sky, being like lightning in its pomegranate,
and in the noise of its bells resembling thunder.
The ephod showed that God had made the universe of
four elements, the gold relating to the splendor by
which all things are enlightened, the breast-plate
in the middle of the ephod resembled the earth, which
has the middle place in the world. The girdle
signified the sea, which goes around the world.
The sardonyxes declared the sun and moon. The
twelve stones are the twelve months of signs of the
zodiac. The mitre is the heaven, because above
all. The seven lamps upon the golden candlesticks
represent the seven planets, and so on every article
had a reference to some particle of the Egyptian Deities.
But the time came when man understood better God’s
plan of salvation. And divinely inspired they
fearlessly stopped all these idolatrous practises.
Who could dare say, at the beginning
of the sixteenth century that God could only through
Jesus Christ save a soul without the necessity of a
priest? Yet today even the priest himself would
not dare say, not in a civilized community, that his
presence is necessary for the forgiveness of sin.
But what of the millions of people that are drifting
away from God with the idea, that the priest is taking
care of their souls? Am I criticising the priest?
God forbid, for I am not. There are good and bad
priests, as far as their personal character is concerned,
as there are good and bad professional Christians,
I have met in my Christian experience. But I
will say, in the authority of the word of God, that
the man who diligently searcheth the Scriptures and
sincerely read his Bible and still he insists in holding
his sacerdotal office and call himself a priest, he
is deceived or he is deceiving.
“Thou art a priest for ever
after the order of Melchizedec.” Christ
is the only priest, holy, harmless, undefiled, separate
from sinners, and made higher than the heavens, who
needeth not daily, as those high priests, to offer
up sacrifice, first for his own sins, and then for
the people’s; for this he did once, when he
offered up himself.
The Church makes men high priests
which have infirmity but the power of God makes every
man a high priest, who offers up himself to live and
work for the salvation of all. “Whosoever
believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting
life.” God’s promises are true and
the reader has only to study the Epistle of Paul to
the Hebrews, to be convinced that the sacerdotal office
of the priest sooner or later has to go out of existence
as the spirit of Christ spreads upon the hearts of
men and women and the knowledge of His salvation makes
them “Priests unto God and His Father”
and thus establish God’s kingdom upon the solid
foundations of love. Then shall they all be made
unto kings and priests, and they shall reign upon
the earth. (Re-6, etc.)