The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II..

The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II..
delivered by the Romans, who would have set him at liberty had he not elected to be tried at Rome.  If we turn to the conduct of the Pagans, we meet the same blank absence of evidence of persecution, until we come to the disputed passage in Tacitus, wherein none of the eye-witnesses are said to have been concerned; and we have, on the other side, the undisputed fact that, under the imperial rule of Rome, every subject nation practised its own creed undisturbed, so long as it did not incite to civil disturbances.  “The religious tenets of the Galileans, or Christians, were never made a subject of punishment, or even of inquiry” ("Decline and Fall,” vol. ii., p. 215).

This view of the matter is thoroughly corroborated by Lardner:  “The disciples of Jesus Christ were under the protection of the Roman law, since the God they worshipped and whose worship they recommended, was the God of the heavens and the earth, the same God whom the Jews worshipped, and the worship of whom was allowed of all over the Roman Empire, and established by special edicts and decrees in most, perhaps in all the places, in which we meet with St. Paul in his travels” ("Credibility,” vol. i., pt.  I, pp. 406, 407.  Ed. 1727).  He also quotes “a remarkable piece of justice done the Jews at Doris, in Syria, by Petronius, President of that province.  The fact is this:  Some rash young fellows of the place got in and set up a statue of the Emperor in the Jews’ synagogue.  Agrippa the Great made complaints to Petronius concerning this injury.  Whereupon Petronius issued a very sharp precept to the magistrates of Doris.  He terms this action an offence, not against the Jews only, but also against the Emperor; says, it is agreeable to the law of nature that every man should be master of his own places, according to the decree of the Emperor.  I have, says he, given directions that they who have dared to do these things contrary to the edict of Augustus, be delivered to the centurion Vitellius Proculus, that they may be brought to me, and answer for their behaviour.  And I require the chief men in the magistracy to discover the guilty to the centurion, unless they are willing to have it thought, that this injustice has been done with their consent; and that they see to it, that no sedition or tumult happen upon this occasion, which, I perceive, is what some are aiming at....  I do also require, that for the future, you seek no pretence for sedition or disturbance, but that all men worship [God] according to their own customs” (Ibid, pp. 382, 383).  After giving some other facts, Lardner sums up:  “These are authentic testimonies in behalf of the equity of the Roman Government in general, and of the impartial administration of justice by the Roman presidents—­toward all the people of their provinces, how much soever they differed from each other in matters of religion” (Ibid, p. 401).

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The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.