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846 lines
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Plaintext
13 page printout, page 127 to 139
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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CHAPTER 11.
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DID HE ATTACK 'THE THEOLOGY OF FIFTY YEARS AGO'?
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OR DID HE ATTACK THE CHRISTIANITY OF THE TIME?
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A Criticism very frequently heard from those who seem to have
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in view the double object of belittling Ingersoll's work and
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strengthening their own position is, that he showed no familiarity
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with the achievements of modern biblical scholarship, -- the
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so-called "higher criticism," -- and that, consequently, it was not
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the real Christianity of his day which he opposed, but rather, the
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Christianity, or theology, 'of fifty years ago.' And this assertion
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is made in spite of the fact that much of his time was devoted to
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rescuing the character and teachings of "the man Christ" from the
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aspersions of theology. It is interesting to note, however, that
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the criticism mentioned was rarely urged while Ingersoll lived. And
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it is very hard to resist the temptation of inquiring why, said
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criticism be Just, such distinguished Christian controversialists
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as Judge Black, Dr. Field, Cardinal Manning, and Mr. Gladstone felt
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called upon to enter the arena against him. Or were they, blind to
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the results of the higher criticism, and therefore unable to
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recognize that the Great Agnostic did not come legitimately within
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their range? And if the arguments which they sought to meet were
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not directed against the Christian religion proper, is it not
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logical to expect the Christian critics to disclaim, as foreign to
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their system, all that Ingersoll opposed, and to cling only to so
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much thereof as he did not oppose? Is the Christen world ready to
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take this step?
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Assuming, however, that there is reason for questioning
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Ingersoll's attitude toward the genuine Christian doctrines, let us
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carefully consider some of his arguments in the premises. To insure
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perfect dearness, we will begin with what is believed to be not
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only a basic, but an absolutely indispensable quotation from the
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Great Agnostic himself: --
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"Among the evangelical churches there is a substantial
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agreement upon what they consider the fundamental truths of the
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gospel. These fundamental truths, as I understand them are:
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"That there is a personal God, the creator of the material
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universe; that he made man of dust, and woman from part of the man;
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that the man and woman were tempted by the devil; that they were
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turned out of the Garden of Eden; about fifteen hundred years
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afterward, God's patience having been exhausted by the wickedness
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of mankind, he drowned his children with the exception of eight
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persons; that afterward he selected from their descendants Abraham,
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and through him the Jewish people; that he gave laws to these
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people, and tried to govern them in all things; that he made known
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his will in many ways; that he wrought a vast number of miracles;
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that he inspired men to write the Bible; that in the fullness of
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time, it having been impossible to reform mankind, this God came
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upon earth as a child of the Virgin Mary; that he lived in
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Palestine; that he preached for about three years, going from place
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to place, occasionally raising the dead, curing the blind and the
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halt; that he was crucified -- for the crime of blasphemy, as the
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Jews supposed, but that, as a matter of fact, he was offered as a
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sacrifice for the sins of all who might have faith in him; that he
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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127
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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was raised from the dead and ascended into heaven, where he now is,
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making intercession for his followers; that he will forgive the
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sins of all who believe on him, and that those who do not believe
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will be consigned to the dungeons of eternal pain. These -- it may
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be with the addition of the sacraments of Baptism and the Last
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Supper -- constitute what is generally known as the Christian
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religion."
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To demonstrate by quotations from Ingersoll, or otherwise,
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that he produced exhaustive arguments in refutation of each of the
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so-called "fundamental truths" of Christianity would be not merely
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specifically impossible, but unnecessary. It would be unnecessary
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for the reason that, if he refuted the first of these "truths," he
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refuted, at least by logical implication, not only all the rest,
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but all those of every other religion, natural or supernatural. I
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shall therefore present his views of such only of the "truths" in
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question as are universally conceded to be indispensable to the
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Christian religion.
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Now, although I have previously indicated that he produced the
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arguments of a scientist and philosopher to prove that both
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substance and energy are from and to eternity, and that, therefore,
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no First Cause, or Creator, -- no God of the Bible, -- ever
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existed, it will be well, I think, to quote, just here, his own
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words on this basic point. He says: --
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"If we have a theory, we must have facts for the foundation.
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We must have corner-stones. We must not build on guesses, fancies,
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analogies or inferences. The structure must have a basement. If we
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build, we must begin at the bottom.
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"I have a theory and I have four corner-stones.
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"The first stone is that matter -- substance -- cannot be
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destroyed, cannot be annihilated.
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"The second stone is that force cannot be destroyed, cannot be
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annihilated.
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"The third stone is that matter and force cannot exist apart
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-- no matter without force -- no force without matter.
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"The fourth stone is that which cannot be destroyed could not
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have been created; that the indestructible is the uncreatable.
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"If these corner-stones are facts, it follows as a necessity
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that matter and force are from and to eternity; that they can
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neither be increased nor dimmished.
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"It follows that nothing has been or can be created; that
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there never has been or can be a creator."
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And in the following collated paragraphs, Ingersoll objects to
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the Christian conception of God as a personality: --
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"This God must be, if he exists, a person -- a conscious
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being."
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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128
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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"As a matter of fact, it is impossible for a man to conceive
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of a personal God, other than as a being having the human form. No
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one can think of an infinite being having the form of a horse, or
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of a bird, or of any animal beneath man. It is one of the
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necessities of the mind to associate forms with intellectual
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capacities. The highest form of which we have any conception is
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man's, and consequently, his is the only form that we can find in
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imagination to give to a personal God, because all other forms are,
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in our minds, connected with lower intelligences.
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"It is impossible to think of a personal God as a spirit
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without form. We can use these words, but they do not convey to the
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mind any real and tangible meaning. Every one who thinks of a
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personal God at all, thinks of him as having the human form. Take
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from God the idea of form; speak of him simply as an all-pervading
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spirit -- which means an all-pervading something about which we
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know nothing -- and Pantheism is the result."
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"Is it possible for the human mind to conceive of an infinite
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personality? Can it imagine a beginningless being, infinitely
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powerful and intelligent? If such a being existed, then there must
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have been an eternity during which nothing did exist except this
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being; because, if the Universe was created, there must have been
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a time when it was not, and back of that there must have been an
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eternity during which nothing but infinite personality existed. Is
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it possible to imagine an infinite intelligence dwelling for an
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eternity in infinite nothing? How could such a being be
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intelligent? What was there to be intelligent about? There was but
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one thing to know, namely, that there was nothing except this
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being. How could such a being be powerful? There was nothing to
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exercise force upon. There was nothing in the universe to suggest
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an idea. Relations could not exist -- except the relation between
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infinite intelligence and infinite nothing."
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As before stated, it of course follows, by logical
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implication, that, in endeavoring to prove that belief in the God
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of the Bible is untenable, Ingersoll endeavored to prove that the
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Christian belief in the "special creation" of man is untenable; but
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as I am anxious to show that he left nothing to inference; that he
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took no chances with the illogic and the inconsistency of mankind;
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that, indeed, there was no solitary point upon the enemy's
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battleground at which he failed to plant a mine or drop a shell, I
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shall give, in his own words, his views concerning the origin of
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man -- views which, expressed with characteristic earnestness in
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his earliest lectures, were set forth with even deeper conviction
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in his very last.
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In describing his mental evolution; in presenting us with a
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panorama of his upward journey, from the orthodox quagmire of his
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youthful environment, to the "skyish head" of Olympian reason, from
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which he viewed the superstitions of mankind, he said: --
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"Then I studied biology -- not much -- just enough to know
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something of animal forms, enough to know that life existed when
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the Lutheran rocks were made -- just enough to know that implements
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of stone, implements that had been formed by human hands, had been
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found mingled with the bones of extinct animals, bones that had
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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129
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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been split with these implements, and that these animals had ceased
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to exist hundreds of thousands of years before the manufacture of
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Adam and Eve."
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After thus showing that neither the purely biblical, nor any
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theological, account of man's "special creation" can by any
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possibility whatsoever be accepted as chronologically true, he
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presents the scientific explanation of our origin; and he marshals
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his facts as a general marshals his battalions: --
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"If matter and force are from eternity, then we can say that
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man had no intelligent creator, that man was not a special
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creation.
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"We now know, if we know anything, that Jehovah, the divine
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potter, did not mix and mould clay into the forms of men and women,
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and then breath the breath of life into these forms.
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"We now know that our first parents were not foreigners. We
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know that they were natives of this world, produced here, and that
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their life did not come from the breath of any God. We now know, if
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we know anything, that the universe is natural, and that men and
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women have been naturally produced. We now know our ancestors, our
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pedigree. We have a family tree.
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"We have all the links of the chain, twenty-six links
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inclusive from moner to man.
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"We did not get our information from inspired books. We have
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fossil facts and living forms.
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"From the simplest creatures, from blind sensation, from
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[an]organism, from [with] one vague want, to a single cell with a
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nucleus, to a hollow ball filled with fluid, to a cup with double
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walls, to a flat worm, to a something that begins to breath, to an
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organism that has a spinal chord, to a link between the
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invertebrate to [and] the vertebrate, to one that has a cranium --
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a house for a brain -- to one with fins, still onward to one with
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fore and hinder fins, to the reptile [to the] mammalia, to the
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marsupials, to the lemurs, dwellers in trees, to the simple, to the
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pithecanthropi, and lastly, to man."
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The next of the alleged "fundamental truths which is
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sufficiently important to require attention here is, that Jehovah
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wrought a vast number of miracles. Following Ingersoll's arguments
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for the eternal and inexorable persistence of substance and energy,
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an elaborate demonstration of the fact that he sought to prove that
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all miracles are impossible would be a work of supererogation. I
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shall therefore introduce only a few of his own specific view of
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the subject: --
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"Jehovah, according to the Scriptures, wrought hundreds of
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miracles for the benefit of the Jews." ... "Mr. Locke was in the
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habit of saying: 'Define your terms.' So the first question is,
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What is a miracle?
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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130
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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"If a man could make a perfect circle, the diameter of which
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was exactly one-half the circumference, that would be a miracle in
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geometry. If a man could make twice four, nine, that would be a
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miracle in mathematics. If a man could make a stone, falling in the
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air, pass through a space of ten feet the first second, twenty-five
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feet the second second, and five feet the third second, that would
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be a miracle in physics. If a man could put together hydrogen,
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oxygen and nitrogen and produce pure gold, that would be a miracle
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in chemistry. * * * To make a square triangle would be a most
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wonderful miracle. To cause a mirror to reflect the faces of
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persons who stand behind it, instead of those who stand in front,
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would be a miracle. To make echo answer a question would be a
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miracle. In other words, to do anything contrary to or without
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regard to the facts in nature is to perform a miracle."
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Having thus given what he believes to be "the only honest
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definition of a miracle," and having cited several phenomena the
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production of which would constitute miracles, he proceeds, with
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the weapons of science and logic, to demonstrate their
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impossibility. He says: --
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"Now we are convinced of what is called the 'uniformity of
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nature.' We believe that all things act and are acted upon in
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accordance with their nature; that under like conditions the
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results will always be substantially the same; that like ever has
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and ever will produce like. We now believe that events have natural
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parents and that none die childless." ... "Science asserts the
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absolute, the unvarying uniformity of nature."
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"If, again, we take the ground of some of the more advanced
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clergy, that a miracle is in accordance with the facts in nature,
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but with facts unknown to man, then we are compelled to say that a
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miracle is performed by a divine slight-of-hand; as, for instance,
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that our senses are deceived; or, that it is perfectly simple to
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this higher intelligence, while inexplicable to us. If we give this
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explanation, then man has been imposed upon by a superior
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intelligence. It is as though one acquainted with the sciences --
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with the action of electricity -- should excite the wonder of
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savages by sending messages to his partner. The savages would say,
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'A miracle;' but the one who sent the message would say, 'There is
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no miracle; it is in accordance with facts in nature unknown to
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you.' So that, after all, the word miracle grows in the soil of
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ignorance."
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"Miracles are not simply impossible, but they are unthinkable
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by any man capable of thinking.
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"Now an intelligent man cannot believe that a miracle ever
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was, or ever will be, performed."
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My next task is to show how, if at all, Ingersoll dealt with
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the assertion, that "God came upon earth as a child born of the
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Virgin Mary." Probably all Christians, except a small handful of
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Christian Scientists and Unitarians (the latter having been said,
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by Fawcett, to represent "one of the drollest of compromises
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between Christianity and Agnosticism"), will admit that a belief in
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Jesus Christ, as the divine Son of God, is essential to
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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131
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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Christianity. Indeed, it is inconceivable that any one outside the
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Christian Science and Unitarian churches should deny that the
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miracles of the birth, life, crucifixion, resurrection, and
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ascension of Christ are the very foundations of the Christian
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edifice, and that to put underneath them the dynamite of denial is
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to leave Christendom to struggle and perish in a heap of
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theological ruin.
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Now, it is not even remotely suspected that the average person
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who has read Ingersoll's arguments in opposition to the theory of
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a First Cause, Creator, or God of the Bible, will consider it
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possible that the Great Agnostic believed in a Son of God, -- a
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Jesus Christ, -- in the true supernatural sense. But as there may
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be readers who are not familiar with Ingersoll's views of Christ,
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and as it is of the utmost importance that nothing be left to
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inference, I shall here present, verbatim, some of those views. Of
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the birth of Christ, he says: --
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"I cannot believe in the miraculous origin of Jesus Christ. I
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believe he was the son of Joseph and Mary; that Joseph and Mary had
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been duly and legally married; that he was the legitimate offspring
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of that union. Nobody ever believed the contrary until he had been
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dead at least one hundred years." ... "In order to place themselves
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on an equality with Pagans they started the claim of divinity, and
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also took the second step requisite in that country: First, a god
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for his father, and second, a virgin for his mother. This was the
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Pagan combination of greatness, and the Christians added to this
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that Christ was God." ... "Neither Matthew, Mark, nor Luke ever
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dreamed that he was of divine origin. He did not say to either
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Matthew, Mark, or Luke, or to any one in their hearing, that he was
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the Son of God, or that he was miraculously conceived. He did not
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say it. It may be asserted that he said it to John, but John did
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not write the gospel that bears his name. The angel Gabriel, who,
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they say, brought the news, never wrote a word upon the subject.
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His alleged father never wrote a word upon the subject, and Joseph
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never admitted the story. We are lacking in the matter of
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witnesses. ... "At that time Matthew and Luke believed that Christ
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was the son of Joseph and Mary. And why? They say he descended from
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David, and in order to show that he was of the blood of David, they
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gave the genealogy of Joseph. And if Joseph was not his father, why
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did they not give the genealogy of Pontius Pilate or of Harod?
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Could they, by giving the genealogy of Joseph, show that he was of
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the blood of David if Joseph was in no way related to Christ? And
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yet that is the position into which the Christian world is driven."
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And elsewhere, after pointing out that Apollo, Baldur,
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Chrishna, Hercules, Samson, Osiris, Bacchus, Zoroaster, Lao-tsze,
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and many other gods of mythological and religious history were sun-
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gods; that they all "had gods for fathers," and virgins for
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mothers; that "the births of nearly all were announced by stars,"
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and "celebrated by celestial music"; that all "were born at the
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winter solstice -- on Christmas" -- "in humble places -- in caves,
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under trees, in common inns"; that "tyrants sought to kill them all
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when they were babes"; that "nearly all were worshiped by 'wise
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men'"; that "all of them fasted for forty days -- all of them
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taught in parables -- all of them wrought miracles -- all met with
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a violent death, and all rose from the dead," he declares: --
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|
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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132
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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"The history of these gods is the history of our Christ.
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"This is nor a coincidence -- an accident. Christ was a sun-
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god. Christ was a new name for an old biography -- a survival --
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the last of the sun-gods. Christ was not a man but a myth -- not a
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life but a legend."
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And he also declared: --
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"There is not, in all the contemporaneous literature of the
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world, a single word about Christ or his apostles. The paragraph in
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Josephus is admitted to be an interpolation, and the letters, the
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account of the trial, and several other documents forged by the
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zeal of the early fathers, are now admitted to be false."
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And he asks, in a tone that brings an affirming answer: --
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"Is it not wonderful that Josephus, the best historian the
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Hebrews produced, says nothing about the life or death of Christ
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...?" [NOTE: During three succeeding periods, Ingersoll held as
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many different views of the Christ of the New Testament: First,
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that he was a man; second, that he was either a myth or a man;
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third, that he was a myth. The views held during the first two
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periods were, of course, modified by more comprehensive research
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and thought.]
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Having shown that Ingersoll denied not only the possibility of
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miracles, but the very existence of Christ as an historical
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character, I shall doubtless be credited by some with a gratuitous
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task if I here present any of the Great Agnostic's arguments
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concerning the wonders wrought by the Nazarene, or concerning his
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crucifixion, resurrection, or ascension. Nevertheless, as a
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majority would doubtless not be satisfied with the bare knowledge
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of Ingersoll's final conclusion that Jesus was merely a myth, -- a
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sun-god, -- and as it is deemed important to make as clear as
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possible the former's position on the entire subject, I propose to
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go somewhat further, presenting next his contention, that, even if
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Christ did exist in physical form, he was a man, and nothing more:
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"I do not believe that Christ ever claimed to be divine; ever
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claimed to be inspired; ever claimed to work a miracle. In short,
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I believe that he was a man. These claims were all put in his mouth
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by others -- by mistaken friends, by ignorant worshipers, by
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zealous and credulous followers, and sometime by dishonest and
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designing priests."
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And elsewhere he inquires: --
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"How could any man now, in any court, by any known rule of
|
||
evidence, substantiate one of the miracles of Christ?"
|
||
|
||
"How could we prove, for instance, the miracle of the loves
|
||
and fishes? There were, plenty of other loves and other fishes in
|
||
the world. Each one of the five thousand could have had a loaf and
|
||
a fish with him. We would have to show that there was no other
|
||
possible way for the people to get the bread and fish except by
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
133
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
miracle, and then we are only half through. We must show that they
|
||
did, in fact, get enough to feed five thousand people, and that
|
||
more was left than was had in the beginning.
|
||
|
||
"Of course this is simply impossible."
|
||
|
||
Referring to Christ's alleged raising of the dead, Ingersoll
|
||
makes an observation that by no means detracts from his reputation
|
||
as a judge of human nature: --
|
||
|
||
"If you should tell a man that the dead were raised two
|
||
thousand years ago, he would probably say: 'Yes, I know.' If you
|
||
should say that a hundred thousand years from now all the dead will
|
||
be raised, he might say: 'Probably they will.' But if you should
|
||
tell him that you saw a dead man raised and given life that day, he
|
||
would likely ask the name of the insane asylum from which you had
|
||
escaped."
|
||
|
||
Again: --
|
||
|
||
"There is one wonderful thing about the dead people that were
|
||
raised -- we do not hear of them any more. What became of them? *
|
||
* * They did not even excite interest when they died a second time.
|
||
Nobody said, 'Why, that man is not afraid. He has been there once.
|
||
He has walked through the valley of the shadow.' Not a word. They
|
||
pass quietly away."
|
||
|
||
"I do not believe these miracles," continued the Great
|
||
Agnostic, in language which very clearly shows his attitude with
|
||
reference to the crucifixion: --
|
||
|
||
"There was a man who did all these things, and thereupon they
|
||
crucified him. Let us be honest. Suppose a man came into this city
|
||
and should meet a funeral procession, and say, 'Who is dead?' and
|
||
they should reply, 'The son of a widow; her only support.' Suppose
|
||
he should say to the procession, 'Halt!' and to the undertaker,
|
||
'Take out the coffin, unscrew that lid. Young man, I say unto thee,
|
||
arise!' and the dead should step from the coffin and in a moment
|
||
afterward hold his mother in his arms. Suppose this stranger should
|
||
go to your cemetery and find some woman holding a little child in
|
||
each hand, while the tears fell upon a new-made grave, and he
|
||
should say to her, 'Who lies buried here?' And she should reply,
|
||
'My husband,' and he should cry, 'I say unto thee, oh grave, give
|
||
up thy dead!' and the husband should rise, and in a moment after
|
||
have his lips upon his wife's, and the little children with their
|
||
arms around his neck; do you think that the people of this city
|
||
would kill him? Do you think any one would wish to crucify him? Do
|
||
you not rather believe that every one who had a loved one out in
|
||
that cemetery would go to him, even upon their knees, and beg him
|
||
to give back their dead? Do you believe that any man was ever
|
||
crucified who was the master of death?"
|
||
|
||
Of course, if there was no crucifixion, there was no
|
||
resurrection; but justice to Ingersoll himself, and consideration
|
||
for his critics, alike demand that we here note at least the gist
|
||
of his thought on this phase of our subject: --
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
134
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
"The miracle of the resurrection I do not and cannot believe."
|
||
... "Why? Because it is altogether more reasonable to believe that
|
||
the people were mistaken about it than that it happened. And why?
|
||
Because, according to human experience, we know that people will
|
||
not always tell the truth, and we never saw a miracle ourselves,
|
||
and we must be governed by our experience; and if we go by our
|
||
experience, we must say that the miracle never happened -- that the
|
||
witnesses were mistaken." ...
|
||
|
||
"How do they prove that Christ rose from the dead? They find
|
||
the account in a book. Who wrote the book? They do not know. What
|
||
evidence is there? None, unless all things found in books are
|
||
true."
|
||
|
||
"* * * if the dead Christ rose from the grave, why did he not
|
||
appear to his enemies? Why did he not visit Pontius Pilate? Why did
|
||
he not call upon Caiaphas, the high priest? upon Herod? Why did he
|
||
not again enter the temple and end the old dispute with
|
||
demonstration? Why did he not confront the Roman soldiers who had
|
||
taken money to falsely swear that his body had been stolen by his
|
||
friends? Why did he not make another triumphal entry into
|
||
Jerusalem? Why did he not say to the multitude: 'Here are the
|
||
wounds in my feet, and in my hands, and in my side. I am the one
|
||
you endeavored to kill, but Death is my slave?' Simply because the
|
||
resurrection is a myth."
|
||
|
||
We find also, that the acme and tiara of events in the life of
|
||
Christ, -- the gravity-scorning incident known as the ascension, --
|
||
met at the hands of Ingersoll no better fate. We find it subjected
|
||
to the same analysis as other miracles. Concerning its
|
||
improbability, he says: --
|
||
|
||
"After the story of the resurrection, the Ascension became a
|
||
necessity. They had to dispose of the body." ... "I cannot believe
|
||
in the miracle of the ascension of Jesus Christ. Where was he
|
||
going? In the light shed upon this question by the telescope, I
|
||
again ask, where was he going? The New Jerusalem is not above us.
|
||
The abode of the gods is not there. Where was he going? Which way
|
||
did he go? Of course that depends upon the time of day he left. If
|
||
he left in the evening, he went exactly the opposite way from that
|
||
he would have gone had he ascended in the morning. What did he do
|
||
with his body? How high did he go? In what way did he overcome the
|
||
intense cold? The nearest station is the moon, two hundred and
|
||
forty thousand miles away. Again I ask, where did he go? He must
|
||
have had a natural body, for it was the same body that died. His
|
||
body must have been material, otherwise he would not as he rose
|
||
have circled the earth, and he would have passed from the sight of
|
||
his disciples at the rate of more than a thousand miles per hour."
|
||
|
||
Finally, as to the scriptural testimony concerning the
|
||
ascension: --
|
||
|
||
"Matthew says nothing upon the subject. Either Matthew was not
|
||
there, had never heard of the ascension, -- or, having heard of it,
|
||
did not believe it, or having seen it, thought it too unimportant
|
||
to record. To this wonder of wonders Mark devotes one verse: 'So
|
||
then, after the Lord had spoken unto them, he was received up into
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
135
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
heaven, and sat on the right-hand of God.' Can we believe that this
|
||
verse was written by one who witnessed the ascension of Jesus
|
||
Christ; by one who watched his Master slowly rising through the air
|
||
till distance riffed him from his tearful sight? Luke, another of
|
||
the witnesses, says: 'And it came to pass, while he blessed them,
|
||
he was parted from them, and carried up into heaven.' John
|
||
corroborates Matthew by saying nothing on the subject. Now, we find
|
||
that the last chapter of Mark, after the eighth verse, is an
|
||
interpolation; so that Mark really says nothing about the
|
||
occurrence. Either the ascension of Christ must be given up, or it
|
||
must be admitted that the witnesses do not agree, and that three of
|
||
them never heard of that most stupendous event."
|
||
|
||
It seems necessary to indicate Ingersoll's position in
|
||
relation to but one more of the alleged "fundamental truths,"
|
||
namely, that Christ "was offered as a sacrifice for the sins of all
|
||
who might have faith in him."
|
||
|
||
In discussing the atonement, Ingersoll begins, as in
|
||
everything else, at the bottom. He declares that the doctrine is
|
||
"far older than our religion," and that, while it is not even
|
||
hinted at by Matthew, Mark, or Luke," * * * the necessity of
|
||
belief, the atonement, and the scheme of salvation are all set
|
||
forth in the Gospel of John -- a gospel, in my opinion, not written
|
||
until long after the others." As to the real origin of the
|
||
doctrine, he (Ingersoll) points out, that, under the Mosaic
|
||
dispensation, there was no remission of sin, except through the
|
||
shedding of blood; that when a man sinned, he would bring to the
|
||
priest some animal; that the priest would lay his hands upon the
|
||
animal, to which the sins of the man would thereby be transferred;
|
||
that the animal would be killed in the place of the real sinner;
|
||
and that when the animal's blood had been sprinkled upon the altar,
|
||
Jehovah was satisfied. Ingersoll says: --
|
||
|
||
"Every priest became a butcher, and every sanctuary a
|
||
slaughterhouse. Nothing could be more utterly shocking to a refined
|
||
and loving soul. Nothing could have been better calculated to
|
||
harden the heart than this continual shedding of innocent blood.
|
||
This terrible system is supposed to have culminated in the
|
||
sacrifice of Christ. His blood took the place of all other. It is
|
||
necessary to shed no more. The law at last is satisfied, satiated,
|
||
surfeited. The idea that God wants blood is at the bottom of the
|
||
atonement, and rests upon the most fearful savagery."
|
||
|
||
And Ingersoll declares: --
|
||
|
||
"We are told that the first man committed a crime for which
|
||
all his posterity are responsible, -- in other words, that we are
|
||
accountable, and can be justly punished for a sin we never in fact
|
||
committed. This absurdity was the father of another, namely, that
|
||
a man can be rewarded for a good action done by another. God,
|
||
according to the modern theologians, made a law, with the penalty
|
||
of eternal death for its infraction. All men, they say, have broken
|
||
that law. In the economy of heaven, this law had to be vindicated.
|
||
This could be done by damming the whole human race. Though what is
|
||
known as the atonement, the salvation of a few was made possible.
|
||
They insist that the law -- whatever that is -- demanded the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
136
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
extreme penalty, that justice called for its victims, and that even
|
||
mercy ceased to plead. Under these circumstances, God, by allowing
|
||
the innocent to suffer, satisfactorily settled with the law, and
|
||
allowed a few of the guilty to escape. The law was satisfied with
|
||
this arrangement. To carry out this scheme, God was born as a babe
|
||
into this world * * * [and] was sacrificed as an atonement for man.
|
||
It is claimed that he actually took our place, and bore our sins
|
||
and our guilt; that in this way the justice of God was satisfied,
|
||
and that the blood of Christ was an atonement, an expiation, for
|
||
the sins of all who might believe on him."
|
||
|
||
After this expression of Ingersoll's views concerning the
|
||
origin and development of the atonement, it is important that we
|
||
should know his opinion as to the wisdom and justice of that
|
||
institution, when examined in the light of our knowledge of cause
|
||
and effect in human conduct and relations: --
|
||
|
||
"We are told that the sinner is in debt to God, and that the
|
||
obligation is discharged by the Savior." " * * * how * * * is it
|
||
possible to make the suffering of the innocent a justification for
|
||
the criminal?" ... "If I rob Mr. Smith, and God forgives me, how
|
||
does that help Smith? If I, by slander cover some poor girl with
|
||
the leprosy of some imputed crime, and she withers away like a
|
||
blighted flower and afterward I get the forgiveness of God, how
|
||
does that help her?" ... "The best that can be said of such a
|
||
transaction is that the debt is transferred, not paid. As a matter
|
||
of fact, the sinner is in debt to the person he has injured." ...
|
||
"Even when forgiven by the one you have injured, it is not as
|
||
though the injury had not been done." ... "We must remember that in
|
||
nature there are neither rewards nor punishments -- there are
|
||
consequences. The life and death of Christ do not constitute an
|
||
atonement." ... "We are not accountable for the sins of 'Adam' and
|
||
the virtues of Christ cannot be transferred to us. There can be no
|
||
vicarious virtue, no vicarious vice."
|
||
|
||
And elsewhere Ingersoll declares, that the doctrine of the
|
||
atonement "is the enemy of morality," because "it teaches that the
|
||
innocent can justly suffer for the guilty, that consequences can be
|
||
avoided by repentance, and that in the world of mind the great fact
|
||
known as cause and effect does not apply."
|
||
|
||
With the preceding sentence, I conclude the last of the
|
||
arguments which I have chosen to represent Ingersoll's position in
|
||
relation to such, -- and such only, -- of the alleged "fundamental
|
||
truths" as are universally conceded to be indispensable to the
|
||
Christian religion. Considering the vast and bountiful field in
|
||
which selections could be made, I have, of course, given only a
|
||
comparative few of the arguments advanced by the Great Agnostic on
|
||
the several "truths" that it is deemed necessary to mention; but,
|
||
in my opinion, even these few indubitably prove, that Ingersoll
|
||
attacked not only the Christianity, or theology, of fifty years
|
||
ago, but the Christianity of his ripest years -- yea, not only the
|
||
Christianity of August 11, 1833, but the Christianity of July 21,
|
||
1899, or the latter has ceased to be a supernatural religion, and
|
||
has become merely a code of morals.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
137
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
If there be those who still believe in the existence of a
|
||
legitimate Christianity, or, indeed, a legitimate supernatural
|
||
religion of any form, which Ingersoll did not fairly and
|
||
uncompromisingly assail, let them read, at first hand, the only
|
||
words potent to set their minds aright. Let them go to the twelve
|
||
volumes containing the wheat and efflorescence of that mighty brain
|
||
for thirty-nine years, and they will marvel, not at the opinion
|
||
just expressed, but at themselves. They will find that Ingersoll,
|
||
the supreme general in controversial warfare, touched with
|
||
"withering fire," every inch of the enemy's field; every inch of
|
||
the vast Christian edifice, from the shattered and crumbling
|
||
foundation-stones, to the tarnished and toppling dome; every point,
|
||
"essential" or otherwise; every so-called "fundamental truth";
|
||
every particle of "evidence"; absolutely everything connected with
|
||
the Christian system, -- from its inconceivable First Cause, or
|
||
creator of substance and energy, to its unpsychological and
|
||
impossible "scheme" of atonement and paradise through faith, --
|
||
from its barbaric and idiotic cosmogony, to its unthinkable heaven.
|
||
They will find, in addition to the specific arguments which I have
|
||
quoted, multitudinous ones to show that the God or Gods of our
|
||
Bible, like all other gods, instead of being creators, were
|
||
themselves created by barbarians, in a barbaric age -- wombed in
|
||
mental night, long before the first pale star trembled in the east
|
||
of thought; that, in the biblical account of creation,
|
||
contradictory to science and repugnant to common sense, there is
|
||
nothing new; that it is unique to the extent that (according to
|
||
Jews and Christians; it was copied into other similar accounts
|
||
written many centuries before (!); that man, having already risen
|
||
from the moner, was struggling for existence, upon this spinning
|
||
speck we call the earth, hundreds of thousands of years before the
|
||
names "Adam" and "Eve "fell from human lips; and that the universal
|
||
Deluge, with the same claim to uniqueness, is simply a childish
|
||
myth which Mother Nature was wont to tell in the nursery of the
|
||
race. They will find, in full, the Great Agnostic's contention,
|
||
that biblical inspiration is merely pious pretension, -- a poor,
|
||
scarce viable foundling left by priestcraft on the doorsteps of
|
||
intelligence, during the long night of the past; that the real
|
||
question, after all, is not whether the Bible is inspired, but
|
||
whether it is true; that if true, it needs no inspiration, but that
|
||
if merely inspired, all human brains should have been inspired to
|
||
read it, -- should have been made precisely alike, chemically,
|
||
atomically, physiologically, psychologically, in order to attach to
|
||
it the same interpretation; that, far from being "the Book of
|
||
Books," it is a strange mingling of good and bad, of the monstrous,
|
||
cruel and absurd; that it is an infallible guide in none of the
|
||
human relations whatsoever; that, as art, as literature, as
|
||
philosophy, it is infinitely below Shakespeare's "book and volume
|
||
of the brain"; and that, confined in its blood-stained, fire-lapped
|
||
slave-tracked lids, it lies to-day upon the path of progress the
|
||
greatest stumbling-block of the human race.
|
||
|
||
Let them read the twelve books of Ingersoll -- those twelve
|
||
apostles inspired by the glorious trinity of reason, justice, and
|
||
humanity, and they will discover the best possible grounds for not
|
||
merely a passive rejection of Christianity, but for an aggressive
|
||
opposition to it, whether in the form in which it existed in
|
||
Torquemada's sunless day or in the form into which it is rapidly
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
138
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
being molded by the pseudo-religious, pseudo-scientific,
|
||
vacillating, abashed, and vertebrateless apologists.
|
||
|
||
They will find, in unmistakable words, the Great Agnostic's
|
||
contention that, in the mental temple of the really intelligent and
|
||
unprejudiced, the figure of Christ can no longer occupy the topmost
|
||
niche; that, in his teachings, there is absolutely nothing new, --
|
||
nothing that had not been taught hundreds of years before; that in
|
||
none of the attributes which we revere was he superior to Buddha,
|
||
Chrishna, Zoroaster, Confucius, Lao-tsze, Socrates, or even Cicero;
|
||
That, if we weigh in the scales of reason, observation, and
|
||
experience all of the supposed sayings of Christ, we are compelled
|
||
to state, that, while many of them contain the profoundest,
|
||
tenderest, noblest, and loftiest thoughts, many others are absurd,
|
||
impracticable, inhuman, and heartless; that Christ uttered no word
|
||
in favor of the home, -- no word in favor of science or education,
|
||
-- no word in favor of physical or intellectual liberty; and that
|
||
he was ignorant of the very existence of the Western Hemisphere,
|
||
although it was destined to become the hope and glory of the human
|
||
race.
|
||
|
||
Let them read the twelve volumes, -- listen to the silent
|
||
voices of the twelve apostles, -- and they will have presented to
|
||
them, with all the virility of conviction born of logical,
|
||
philosophical and historical insight, the argument that, in the
|
||
Christian religion, there is absolutely nothing original, --
|
||
nothing good which is absent from the other great religions, --
|
||
nothing good which is not in every adequate code of morals; that
|
||
Christianity simply "furnished new steam for an old engine"; that
|
||
all its divine personages are "foreigners"; that its purgatory,
|
||
hell, and heaven, its rites, customs, and holy days, its forms,
|
||
symbols, and ceremonies, are only the revamped garments, the
|
||
borrowed trappings and paraphernalia, of paganism; that, for
|
||
example, baptism was practiced long before Christ was born; that
|
||
the Hindoos, the Egyptians, the Greeks, and the Romans had
|
||
holy-water; that the eucharist is pagan; and that the very cross at
|
||
the waist of the priest is a pendent plagiarism.
|
||
|
||
They will also find in the twelve books of Ingersoll the
|
||
contention, that Christian ethics is unpsychological and untenable
|
||
-- that its hopeless impracticability is evident in the conduct of
|
||
every Christian nation, which, although professing the borrowed
|
||
Golden Rule and the doctrine of non-resistance (itself
|
||
impracticable and absurd), is continually resisting with mailed and
|
||
bloody hands; that Christianity has always persecuted to the exact
|
||
extent of its power; that it is opposed to real education, -- to
|
||
the universal dissemination of science unmixed with superstition,
|
||
-- to perfect freedom of thought and expression; and that, as a
|
||
benefactor of mankind, it has, after a trial of nineteen hundred
|
||
years, ignominiously failed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
139
|
||
|