Superstition In All Ages (1732) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 293 pages of information about Superstition In All Ages (1732).

Superstition In All Ages (1732) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 293 pages of information about Superstition In All Ages (1732).

Holy doctors! you constantly tell us that man’s nature is perverted; you tell us that the way of all flesh is corrupt; you tell us that nature gives us but inordinate inclinations.  In this case you accuse your God, who has not been able or willing to keep this nature in its original perfection.  If this nature became corrupted, why did not this God repair it?  The Christian assures me that human nature is repaired, that the death of his God has reestablished it in its integrity.  How comes it then, that human nature, notwithstanding the death of a God, is still depraved?  Is it, then, a pure loss that your God died?  What becomes of His omnipotence and His victory over the Devil, if it is true that the Devil still holds the empire which, according to you, he has always exercised in the world?

Death, according to Christian theology, is the penalty of sin.  This opinion agrees with that of some savage Negro nations, who imagine that the death of a man is always the supernatural effect of the wrath of the Gods.  The Christians firmly believe that Christ has delivered them from sin, while they see that, in their religion as in the others, man is subject to death.  To say that Jesus Christ has delivered us from sin, is it not claiming that a judge has granted pardon to a guilty man, while we see him sent to torture?

CLXIV.—­OF JESUS CHRIST, THE PRIEST’S GOD.

If, closing our eyes upon all that transpires in this world, we should rely upon the votaries of the Christian religion, we would believe that the coming of our Divine Saviour has produced the most wonderful revolution and the most complete reform in the morals of nations.  The Messiah, according to Pascal, [See Thoughts of Pascal] ought of Himself alone to produce a great, select, and holy people; conducting and nourishing it, and introducing it into the place of repose and sanctity, rendering it holy to God, making it the temple of God, saving it from the wrath of God, delivering it from the servitude of sin, giving laws to this people, engraving these laws upon their hearts, offering Himself to God for them, crushing the head of the serpent, etc.  This great man has forgotten to show us the people upon whom His Divine Messiah has produced the miraculous effects of which He speaks with so much emphasis; so far, it seems, they do not exist upon the earth!

If we examine ever so little the morals of the Christian nations, and listen to the clamors of their priests, we will be obliged to conclude that their God, Jesus Christ, preached without fruit, without success; that His Almighty will still finds in men a resistance, over which this God either can not or does not wish to triumph.  The morality of this Divine Doctor which His disciples admire so much, and practice so little, is followed during a whole century but by half a dozen of obscure saints, fanatical and ignorant monks, who alone will have the glory of shining in the celestial court; all the remainder of mortals, although redeemed by the blood of this God, will be the prey of eternal flames.

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Superstition In All Ages (1732) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.