93/4 Ad3 Columbia Untotrsftp mtljeGttptrfltogork LIBRARY Date Due . - ^-^"■Jf ' *~- *- THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. By the same Author. THE REFORMATION. One vol., 8vo., cloth, . g 3 .oo SUPERNATURAL ORIGIN OF CHRISTIANITY, with Special Reference to the Theories of Renan, Strauss, and the Tubingen School. Neiv and greatly enlarged edition. One vol., 8vo., cloth, . . . $3.00 *** Sent post-paid on receipt of price by the publishers, SCRIBNER, ARMSTRONG & CO., # 743 & 745 Broadway} NEW TORk. THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY WITH A VIEW OF THE STATE OF THE ROMAN WOULD AT THE BIRTH OF CHRIST.j GEORGE P. FISHER, D.D. PROFESSOR OP ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY IN YALE COLLEGE; AUTHOR OF "ESSAYS ON THE SUPERNATURAL ORIGIN OF CHRISTIANITY,' "THE REFORMATION," ETC. t CO! -.COLL. LIBRARY v !N YORK. NEW YORK : SCRIBNER, ARMSTRONG & CO. 1877. IldvTtq yap avOpa>~ot nepl Oswv eyoustv bit6Xr^(ptv. Aristotle, de Ccelo, I. 3. Aliud est de silvestri cacumine videre patriam pacis . . . et ali- ud tenere viam illuc ducentem. Augustine, Confess., VII., xxi. Salvation is of the Jews. John iv. 20. We have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God and not of us. II Cor. iv. 7. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year '1877, by SCRIBNER, ARMSTRONG & CO. In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. GRANT, FAIRBS & RODGERS, ELECTROTYPERS AND PRINTERS, PHILADELPHIA. TO EDWARDS AMASA PARK A3 A TOKEN OF RESPECT FOR HIS SERVICES IN PROMOTING THEOLOGICAL SCIENCE AND OF GRATITUDE FOR PERSONAL KINDNESS THIS WORK IS DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR. 21948 PREFACE. In this volume — which is founded on a Course of Lectures delivered at the Lowell Institute, in Boston, in February and March, 1876 — I have undertaken, first, to describe the ancient Roman world, including both Heathen and Jewish Society, into which Christianity entered, and in which it first estab- lished itself; secondly, to examine the New Testament docu- ments from which our knowledge of the beginnings of the Christian religion must be derived; and thirdly, to discuss some of the most important topics connected with the Life of Jesus and the Apostolic Age. The title given to the Lectures was the " Rise of Christianity and its Historical Environ- ment," the last term being borrowed from the students of nat- ural science ; but finding that this title, although a good equivalent for my own conception, needed explanation, I have exchanged it for one expressed in plainer words. Under the first of the heads above named, in addition to the preparation for Christianity which was furnished, in a more external way, by the unification of mankind under the Roman Empire, I have dwelt upon the less familiar but more deeply interesting branch of the topic — the mental and moral prep- aration for the Gospel, which was partly the result of the Roman polity, but which flowed, also, from the entire develop- ment of the ancient religion and philosophy. I should be glad to inspire my readers with the interest which I feel in this portion of the subject, especially in tracing the affinities be- tween the noblest products of the poetry and philosophy of Antiquity and the Christian faith. The best of the Fathers yi PREFACE. discerned so clearly the peculiarity of the Gospel, and the short-comings of Philosophy even in its best estate, that they did not fear to recognize the large measure of truth which heathen sages had embodied in their writings. Justin Martyr tells us that Christ was known in part to Socrates, he being enlightened by the Word. 1 Augustine was roused from sen- suality and ambition by "the incredible ardor" which was kin- dled in his mind by a passage in the "Hortensius" of Cicero on the worth and dignity of philosophy, and burned, as he says, " to remount from earthly things to God." 2 He af- firms that Christianity is as old as the creation. 3 He speaks very often of the near approach of Platonism to Christian doc- trine ; 4 yet he does not find in the Platonic writings a way of salvation: "No one hears Christ call, in these books — 'Come unto me all ye that labor.' " 5 When we pass within the circle of Revealed Religion, and mark the divine training of the Hebrew People, in its successive stages, we understand how it is true that " Salvation is of the Jews." In the introductory chapter, I have dealt with this topic, and have illustrated the manner in which, as I conceive, the gradually developing char- acter of Revelation contains a solution of moral difficulties in the Old Testament. In the second division of the work, I have to take the reader into the field of New Testament criticism. It is necessary to investigate the origin and credibility of the New Testament histories, in the light of modern researches and controversies. 6 I must leave it to others to judge of the degree of candor and thoroughness with which the investigations under this head have been pursued. No one who has kept up with the German literature in this province can fail to have observed that the 1 Apol. ii. 10. 2 Confess., iii. 7. 3 Retractt, I. xiii. 3. 4 E. g., de vera Religione, 3. 5 Confess., vii. 27. 6 In a former work, (Essays on the Supernatural Origin of Christianity, 1865 ; 3d ed., 1870), some of these questions were considered. In the present volume nothing is reproduced from that work ; but I have taken the liberty occasionally to refer to it for a more full discussion of certain special topics. PREFAC E. Vll ground taken by the Tubingen school respecting the " ten- dency," or theological bias, of the first two Gospels, and of the writings of Luke, is not now maintained by critics of an inde- pendent spirit, such as Reuss, Holtzmann, and Mangold. Is it too much to believe that a similar retrogression may be ex- pected in the case of the Fourth Gospel ? The two great criti- cal questions are the credibility of the Acts, and the author- ship of this Gospel. On the first of these questions, as it appears to me, the most enlightened criticism is moving steadily towards a general recognition of the trustworthiness of Luke. Respecting the Fourth Gospel, there are no present signs of an approaching unanimity of judgment. For one, I cannot bring myself to believe that this Gospel was manufac- tured by a Christian believer early in the second century, and palmed off on the churches of Asia where John had lived and died. For the attempt of Keim and Scholten to drive the Apostle out of Asia can only be considered as a desperate ex- pedient to escape a conclusion which seems inevitable from the fact of his having lived and taught there. While I reject the extreme positions of the Tubingen school, I should be the last to deny that, directly or indirectly, by its agency, and especially by the labors of the late Dr. Baur, a flood of light has been thrown upon the New Testament period. What life and movement there was in the Apostolic age ! What momen- tous questions were agitated among the Apostles themselves ! What a progress of doctrine among them ! And how wide of the mark, in many particulars, is the popular apprehension of the opening era ! After having formed a judgment of the character and value of the original documents, the way is open for the considera- tion of certain main points in the life and ministry of Jesus, together with the leading events in the Apostolic age. The chapters under this head conclude with a description of the characteristic features of early Christianity. In prosecuting the studies, the results of which are included in this volume, I have resorted to the primary sources ; and I Viii PREFACE. venture to hope that, here and there, especially in the part relating to the New Testament writings and their contents, I have been able to set forth some points in a somewhat clearer light than has been done heretofore. Where I have been assisted by the labors of others, it is little to say that I have exercised an independent judgment, and have tested statements and opinions by the evidence on which they claim to rest. I wish, however, to give full credit to the modern writers to whom I am most iudebted. Upon the Greek religion I am under large obligations to the excellent treatises of Nagels- bach on the Homeric and Post-homeric Theology. 1 Although I have been guided by him, to a considerable extent, even in the order of topics, yet it is proper to say that in al- most all cases, the illustrative passages from the ancient au- thors were selected by myself, in my own reading. 2 Upon the history of the Jews, and their social and religious life, I must, first, gratefully own my indebtedness to Ewald. His faults — his arrogant temper in relation to other scholars, and the dogmatic tone in which unverified conjectures are put on a level with demonstrated truth — lie on the surface, and are patent to all. But not less obvious are his profound and exact learning, with which is blended a rare ability to seize on comprehensive points of view, and, I will add, his unaf- fected piety. I have derived aid from the recent German works on the contemporary history of the times of Christ. Hausrath I have consulted with profit, although I differ widely from his critical views ; but the condensed, lucid, and 1 Die homerische Theologie in ihrem Zusammenhange dargestellt, von Carl Friedrich Nagelsbach, 1840. Die nachhomerische Theologie des griechisch. Volks-glanbens bis auf Alexander, dargestellt von Dr. Karl Friedrich ISagelsbach, Prof. d. Philolog. zu Erlangen. 1857. 2 The extracts from Homer are given from Mr. Bryant's translation ; those from ^Fschylus and Sophocles from the translations by Mr. Plump- tre ; and the passages from Plato are cited from Prof. Jowett's version (the ed. in 4 vols., 1861). But I have usually given the original text of the ancient authors, for the benefit of those who prefer to translate for themselves. PREFACE. IX thorough work of Schiirer, 1 which confines itself to the Jews, I have found of great service. Derenbourg, among others, has supplied me with information from Rabbinical sources. Gfrorer has been useful upon the subject of the Jewish The- ology in the time of Christ. I have not neglected the modern Hebrew scholars, Jost, Gratz, Herzfeld, Geiger, and others. On various points of Jewish history I have referred with ad- vantage to Milman, and to the graphic pages of Stanley. As to Roman customs and manners, I owe most to the compact and well-digested treatise of Friedlander. 2 Although I cannot always follow him to the full extent, in his judgments respecting ancient society, where they depart from the usual opinions, I have drawn freely from the invaluable store of facts which he has collected. As regards the Reforms of Augustus, the work of M. Boissier on the Roman Religion from Augustus to the Antonines, has been of advantage. The Histoire des Theories et des Idies Morales dans I'Antiquite, of M. Denis, has brought to my attention certain aspects of this subject which, without its aid, I might have overlooked. When a student in Ger- many I translated, and published in an American Journal, 3 an Essay of Neander on the Relation of Grecian to Christian ethics. 4 That Essay, more than anything else, has stimulated me to the study of Greek Philosophy in this particular rela- tion, and some of its thoughts will no doubt be found in the chapter on that subject. With respect to the critical discussions upon the New Testa- ment books, and upon the early Christian history, I have not undertaken to make references to the copious literature any far- ther than was absolutely needful. It seemed undesirable to do 1 Lehrbuch d. Neutestamentl. Zeitgeschichte, von Dr. Emil Schiirer, A. o. Prof, d, Theol. zu Leipzig. 1874. 2 Darstellungen aus d. Sittengeschichte Koms in d. Zeit von August bis znni Ausgang d. Antonine. Von Ludwig Friedlander, Professor in Konigsberg. Th. i. (ed. 4), 1873 ; Th. ii. (ed. 3), 1874 ; Th. iii. (1871). 3 Bibliotheea Sacra, vol. x. 4 Wissenchaftl. Abhandlungen, von Dr. August Neander, pp. 140- 214. (1851.) X PREFACE. more in this direction, as I have written, not for scholars and ministers alone, but also for the cultivated public who are inter- ested in such inquiries. Besides, the best works on the Introduc- tion to the New Testament supply this information, and the stu- dent has access to the accurate and exhaustive bibliographical Articles of Professor Abbot, in the American edition of Smith's Bible Dictionary. It gives me pleasure to express the obliga- tions I am under to the writings of Professor Lightfoot. The frequent references which I have naturally been led to make to them, indicate better than any words of eulogy can do, my appreciation of the scholarship, candor, and critical tact which characterize them. Those who have long been accustomed • to look to the Germans to lead the way in these studies must hail with peculiar satisfaction the appearance, in our own lan- guage, of works of so high merit. The writings of Lightfoot, Westcott, Ellicott, Jowett, Stanley, Discussions like those of Mr. Hutton and of Mr. Sanday upon the Fourth Gospel, even the Essays of Matthew Arnold, unsatisfactory as many of the opinions expressed in them may be, and the anonymous work entitled " Supernatural Religion," which reproduces the most extreme theories of the Tubingen School, all indicate that the barren age of English Theology, in the department of Criti- cism, is fast drawing to a close. It remains for me to make my grateful acknowledgments to my friends, Mr. W. L. Kingsley, and Professor L. R. Packard of Yale College, for the assistance which they have given me while this volume -has been passing through the press. New Haven, September, 1877. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. PAGE THE NATURE OF CHRISTIANITY AND ITS RELATION TO THE JEW- ISH AND HEATHEN RELIGIONS 1 CHAPTER II. THE ROMAN EMPIRE AS A PREPARATION FOR CHRISTIANITY . 40 CHAPTER III. THE POPULAR RELIGION OF THE GREEKS AND ROMANS . . 74 CHAPTER IV. THE POPULAR RELIGION OF THE GREEKS AND ROMANS AND ITS DECLINE 112 CHAPTER V. THE GREEK PHILOSOPHY IN ITS RELATION TO CHRISTIANITY . 140 / CHAPTER VI. THE STATE OF MORALS IN ANCIENT HEATHEN SOCIETY . • 191 CHAPTER VII. THE SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS CONDITION OF THE JEWS AT THE BIRTH OF CHRIST « 221 xi Xll CONTENTS, CHAPTER VIII. THE FIRST EVANGELICAL RECORDS : THE GOSPELS OF MARK AND OF MATTHEW 258 CHAPTER IX. THE WRITINGS OF LUKE 286 CHAPTER X. THE GOSPEL OF JOHN 320 CHAPTER XI. WATER-MARKS OF AGE IN THE NEW TESTAMENT HISTORIES . 363 CHAPTER XII. THE CRITICAL TREATMENT OF THE NEW TESTAMENT HISTORIES 390 CHAPTER XIII. JOHN THE BAPTIST AND THE BEGINNING OF THE MINISTRY OF JESUS 416 CHAPTER XIV. THE PLAN OF JESUS AND HIS MEANS OF ACCOMPLISHING IT . 441 CHAPTER XV. THE SEPARATION OF THE CHURCH FROM THE TEMPLE . . 460 CHAPTER XVI. THE SPREAD OF CHRISTIANITY IN THE APOSTOLIC AGE . . 506 CHAPTER XVII. THE CHARACTERISTICS OF CHRISTIANITY IN THE FIRST CEN- TURY 546 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY WITH A VIEW OF THE STATE OF THE ROMAN WORLD AT THE BIRTH OF CHRIS*: ( ' £yi LIBRARY CHAPTER I. THE NATURE OF CHRISTIANITY AND ITS RELATION TO THE JEWISH AND HEATHEN RELIGIONS. Christianity is an historical religion. It is made up of events, or, to say the least, springs out of events which, however peculiar in their origin, form a part of the history of mankind. This characteristic of Christianity is sug- gested on the first page of the New Testament, where we find the genealogy of Jesus carried back, through David, to Abraham, the progenitor of the Hebrew nation. The Evangelist Luke, a Gentile by birth, sets his narrative in connection with universal history. He tells us that "in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judea," Herod and others ruling in Palestine and the adjacent districts, Annas and Caiaphas being the high priests at Jerusalem, there began the series of events which he proposes to record. 1 He will describe transactions that took place, at a definite epoch, in a par- ticular province of the Roman Empire. And the lineage of Jesus he follows back to Adam. 2 The Apostle Paul re- fers to the birth of Christ as having occurred "when the fulness of time was come." 3 His thought evidently is, 1 Luke iii. 1, 2. 2 Luke iii. 38. 3 Gal. iv. 4. 1 2 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. not only that a certain measure of time must run out, but that a train of historical events and changes must occur which have the coming of Christ for their proper sequence. Of the nature of these antecedents in the previous course of history, he speaks when he has occasion to discuss the relation of the Mosaic dispensation to the Christian, and to point out the aims of Providence in regard to the Gen- tile nations. It was formerly a mistake of both Orthodox and Rationalist to look upon Christianity too exclusively as a system of doctrine addressed to the understanding. Revelation has been thought of as a communication writ- ten on high, and let down from the skies, — delivered to men as the Sibylline books were said to have been con- veyed to Tarquin. Or, it has been considered, like the philosophical system of Plato, a creation of the human in- tellect, busying itself with the problems of life and des- tiny: the tacit assumption in either case being that Chris- tianity is merely a body of doctrine. The truth is that Revelation is at the core historical. It is embraced in a series of transactions in which men act and participate, but which are referable manifestly to an extraordinary agency of God, who thus discloses, or reveals Himself. The su- pernatural element does not exclude the natural, 3 miracle is not magic. Over and above teaching, there are laws, institutions, providential guidance, deliverance, and judg- ment. Here is the ground-work of Revelation. For the interpretation of this extraordinary and exceptional line of historical phenomena, prophets and apostles are raised up, — men inspired to lift the veil and explain the dealings of heaven with men. Here is the doctrinal or theoretical side of Revelation. These individuals behold with an open eye the significance of the events of which they are wit- nesses, or participants. The facts of secular history require to be illuminated by philosophy. Analogous to this office THE NATURE OF REVELATION. 3 • of philosophy, is the authoritative exposition and comment which we find in 'the Scriptures along with the historical record. The doctrinal element is not a thing independent, purely theoretic, disconnected from the realities of life and history. These lie at the foundation ; on them everything of a didactic nature is based. This fact will be impressively obvious to one who will compare the Bible, as to plan and structure, with the Koran. The character of Revelation is less likely to be miscon- ceived when the design of Revelation is kept in view. The end is not to satisfy the curiosity of those who " seek after wisdom," by the solution of metaphysical problems. The good offered is not science, but salvation. The final cause of Revelation is the recovery of men to communion with God ; that is, to true religion. Whatever knowledge is com- municated is tributary to this end. Hence the grand aim, under the Old Dispensation and the New, was, not the production of a Book, but the train- ing of a people. To raise up and train up a nation that should become a fit instrument for the moral regeneration of mankind was the aim of the old system. A deep con- sciousness of this high providential design connected with them as a people, pervades the Hebrew mind from the be- ginning. In the darkest hours of their national history, this conviction bursts forth in the exultant strains of pro- phecy. The purpose of Providence might be imperfectly understood, crudely defined, especially in the earlier ages ; it might even engender pride and narrowness, and be turned into a spring of fanaticism ; yet it was a great, inspiring faith, and has been justified by the history of mankind down to the present hour. The Hebrew people were in the end fitted for the office which, even in the far-distant past, they had expected to fulfill. Under the new or Christian system, the object was not 4 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. less tbe training of a people j not, however, with any limi- tations of race. The fruit of the system was to be a com- munity of men who should be " the light of the world," and " the salt of the earth." The Scriptures which, when collected into a volume, are called the Bible, are the records and monuments of this long process of divine training. They are the original documents through which we get an authentic knowledge of this his- torical process in its consecutive stages. Whether narra- tives, devotional lyrics, ethical treatises, the fervid utterances of prophets, or the didactic and admonitory letters of Apostles, — the compilation of these writings into a volume was not included in the intention of their several authors. These wrote, as they were moved to write, under the pres- sure of the circumstances that surrounded them ; in some cases to meet special exigencies, in all cases for the particu- lar benefit of those to whom their compositions were de- livered. In the growth of the Bible the providential de- sign outran the thoughts and purposes of the individual writers. The grand idea of the kingdom of God is the connecting thread that runs through the entire course of divine Reve- lation. We behold a kingdom, planted in the remote past, and carried forward to its ripe development, by a series of transactions in which the agency of God mingles in an altogether peculiar way in the current of human affairs. There is a manifestation of God in act and deed. Verbal teaching is the commentary attached to the historic fact, ensuring to the latter its true meaning. For example, the emancipation of the Israelites from bondage in Egypt was the standing illustration of the character of God, who re- vealed Himself in that act, and the symbol of the great redemption from sin, itself not less an act and achievement than the event which prefigured it. All Apostolic doctrine CHRISTIANITY AND THE OLD TESTAMENT RELIGION. 5 is the exposition of the events of the Gospel history — an unveiling of their true import. The historical basis of Christianity marks the distinction between Christian theology and metaphysical philosophy. The starting-point of the philosopher is the intuitions of the mind : on them as a foundation, with the aid of logic, he builds up his system. His only postulates are the data of consciousness. In Christian theology, on the contrary, we begin with facts recorded in history, and explore, with the aid of inspired authors, their rationale. To reverse this course, and seek to evolve the Christian religion out of consciousness, to transmute its contents into a speculative system, after the manner of the Pantheistic thinkers in Germany, is not less futile than would be the pretence to construct American history with no reference to the Puri- tan emigration, the Revolutionary war, or the Southern Rebellion. The distinctive essence of Christianity evapo- rates in an effort like that undertaken by Schelling in his earlier system, and by Hegel, to identify it with a process of thought. Christianity stands in organic connection with the Old Testament religion, both being parts of a gradually devel- oping system. Of the Hebrew people, Ewald writes : u The history of this ancient people is, at the foundation, the history of the true religion passing through all the stages of progress by which it attained to its consummation; the religion which, on this narrow territory, advances through all struggles to complete victory, and at length reveals itself in its full glory and might, to the end that, spreading abroad by its own irresistible energy, it may never vanish away, but may become the eternal heritage and blessing of all nations." l 1 Gesch. d. Volkes Israel, i. 9. 6 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. The Christian religion does not profess to spring from an absolutely new and independent beginning. The very name " Christ" is an Old Testament title. The Founder of Christianity, and his immediate followers, were Jews, — earnest believers in the doctrine of Moses and the prophets. For all that they did and taught, they claimed some kind of warrant in the Old Testament Scriptures, which they constantly cited. We have scanty information relative to the childhood and youth of Jesus; but there can be no doubt that the one book in his hands, the one book that, more than any other external influence, evoked within him the consciousness of his peculiar relation to God, and office among men, was the Old Testament. As he brooded over its contents, this consciousness, indistinct in his earliest years, gradually assumed the clearness and certainty of an intuition. When he would declare to his own townsmen at Nazareth who he was, and what his work was to be, he took in his hand the roll of the Prophet Isaiah, and read a passage from it. 1 The New Testament is steeped in the Old. The Greek of the New Testament is tinged through- out with the Hebrew idiom, and betrays, in matter as well as in style, on every page, the influence of the ancient books. "Salvation is of the Jews." 2 It is equally true, however, that Christianity is an ad- vance upon the Old Testament religion. It is a further step in the progress of Revelation. What mischief has re- sulted from overlooking this truth, and from treating the earlier and later dispensations as in all respects on a level! The Mosaic legislation has been sometimes considered a perfect model for political communities to follow, in Chris- tian times. Religious intolerance has appealed in self-de- fence to Hebrew enactments. But the Old Testament re- ligion was an imperfect, because an inchoate system. It 1 Luke iv. 16-31. 2 John iv. 22. THE OLD TESTAMENT THEOCRACY. 7 was rudimental, introductory to something better, by which it was eventually to be superseded. The Kingdom of God existed at the outset in a national form, in the form of a theocratic state. A civil community was established, to which God assumed the relation of a law-giver. Civil, moral, and religious enactments — statutes framed to meet temporary needs and conditions, and laws which have an unchangeable validity — were mingled indiscriminately in one code, the design being to set the entire life in a direct relation to God, and to train a single people in the elements of true religion. In this nascent form of the Kingdom of God, an externality belonged to it which it was destined to outorow, and finally to shuffle off. Taking our stand back at the organization of the theocracy, we can see how the two diverse elements that coalesce in its structure, must inevi- tably dissolve their unity, and we can divine the struggles that must eventually arise from the conflict of these ele- ments, and from the imperfect discernment of their mutual relations. There was, on the one hand, the political, na- tional element, local and limited in its very nature; and, on the other hand, there was the element of religion and the doctrine of God, in its nature universal and impartial. When the time shall come for this element to burst the bonds that confine it, will the local and temporary polity be readv to give way ? Will not men cling to it as an end in itself? The whole history of Israel is the record of the expansion of the germ of pure religion, until the time should come for it to separate completely from the entan- glements of the theocratic polity. It is plain that the religious consciousness, or the gene- ral type of religious ideas and feelings, rises higher and higher as we pass from one epoch to another of Hebrew his- tory. Only by degrees did that which was latent in the relation assumed by God towards men come to the light. 8 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHKISTIANITY. How scanty and indistinct are the references to a future life in the earlier books of the Old Testament ! Sheol, the realm of the dead, is a dark, gloomy, subterranean abode, a land of shadows and forgetful ness. Advancing to a later age, we find in some of the Psalms brighter hopes for the righteous, and retribution anticipated for the wicked. In the canonical books written last, immortality and the resur- rection are distinctly asserted. The rewards and punish- ments of the law were temporal. The sense of a moral go- vernment was kept alive by visible allotments of justice, within the circle of earthly experience. The Messianic expectation, the great prophetic feature of the Old Testament, emerges from a vague presentiment into a definite and concrete form. It is like a vast object seen far off in a mist, which acquires definite outline the nearer it is approached. As the ideal of the kingdom ex- panded before the imagination of poet and seer, the con- ception of the Messiah, through whom the ideal was to be realized, gained a corresponding development. Every one sees that the Prophets stand on a higher mount of vision than belonged to the age of Moses. In Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, a broad view is taken of the providential plan, in which the mighty Powers then on the stage — Assyria, Babylon, Egypt, Persia — play each an ap- pointed part. We have the beginning of a philosophy of history, from the right point of view, where the Kingdom of God is made the final cause of the rise and fall of em- pires. There is, moreover, a more vivid discernment of the spirituality of religion. A sharp line of discrimination is drawn between moral and ceremonial enactments. This is a step in advance of the Mosaic Revelation. Ceremonies and outward services are relegated to a subordinate place. No more scorching denunciations of formalism in religion were ever poured out from human lips. Pure affections THE PROGRESS OF REVELATION. V and righteous conduct are what Jehovah demands : He de- lights "not in the blood of bullocks, or of lambs, or of he- goats." 1 In like manner, the religious consciousness of the Mosaic period is perceptibly in advance of that of the primitive era of which we have glimpses in the Patriarchal traditions that form the Prolegomena to the Mosaic legislation. It is evident that a book having the characteristics of Job must have been composed much later than the date of these tra- ditions. The problems which are agitated in this book belong 1 to an age of reflection. It would be an anachronism to put them in the primeval times. 2 A book like Eccle- siastes evidently falls much later than Job. It belongs chronologically in the third and final section of the Hebrew canon. The Hebrew Scriptures themselves point forward to an epoch when the Old Testament system is to resolve itself into something higher. The words of John the Baptist, "He must increase, but I must decrease," 3 indicate the feel- ing that belonged to the highest representatives of the Old Economy. It was felt to be the forerunner of a more per- fect system. What other religion ever foretold its own disappearance ? It is true that there was felt to be a per- manent, as well as a transient element in the religion of Israel. It was never to be utterly thrown aside, like a worn-out garment. There was a life in it that would never become extinct. The distinct foresight of what was to fol- low was not possible to the vision of prophecy. When the Prophets depicted the future destiny of the Old Testament religion, they could not so far transport themselves beyond their age as to discriminate precisely between what was to endure and what was to vanish away. Hence Jeremiah > Isa. i. 11. 2 See Bleek, Eml. in d. A. T., p. 659. 3 John lii. 30. 10 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. declares that a man shall never be wanting to sit on the throne of David, nor Levites to offer sacrifices on the al- tar. 1 "The Jew," observes Dr. Payne Smith, "could only use such symbols as he possessed, and in describing the per- fect ness of the Christian Church, was compelled to repre- sent it as the state of things under which he lived, freed from all imperfections." 2 Nevertheless he beheld in the dim future a momentous crisis and revolution, when, in a manner that he could but imperfectly portray, old things were to pass away, and a new order of things was to arise in their place. Had it been granted to an ancient prophet to foresee the rapidity of modern travelling, it is too much to expect of him that he should describe the steam-engine; he would picture to himself the end as attained by a preter- natural perfection given to the steeds and vehicles with which his eyes were familiar. A more full and literal pre- diction would imply that the goal had already been reached. The Prophet Jeremiah, in another place, standing on the pinnacle of Old Testament inspiration, predicts a mighty change in religion: "Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah : not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day that I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt." The covenant made at the Exodus, proclaimed at Sinai, is to be superseded by one of a different nature. "This shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel : after those days, saith the Lord, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people." This is the first characteristic of the new covenant: the law is to be converted from an outward statute into a transforming principle. And the second characteristic is expressed in 1 Jer. xxxiii. 18. 2 "Speaker's Commentary," in loco. THE PROGRESS OF REVELATION. 11 the words: "I will forgive their iniquity, and I will re- member their sin no more." 1 The free forgiveness of sin is to take the place of the infliction of penalty. These two cardinal features are to distinguish the new charter, in comparison with the old. The outward spread of the king- dom is equally an object of glowing anticipation. "There shall be an handful of corn in the earth upon the top of the mountains ; the fruit thereof shall shake like Lebanon." 2 If the coming glory of the kingdom was sometimes figured under the symbols of the Davidic monarchy, spreading its conquests among the heathen, and of the sanctuary at Je- rusalem attracting the most remote nations to worship within its walls, this, again, was an unavoidable limitation imposed upon the prophetic mind. It must frame its vi- sions out of materials within the circle of experience. It was true of the most illuminated of the prophets, as Ewald says, that, "as soon as they ventured on more explicit in- dications of the form which the future would take, they were unable to think of it except as linking itself to that spot on which the sanctity of the true religion had already obtained an abiding seat and a distinct shape for so many centuries ; for the imagination of the true Prophet never loses itself in shapeless and unsupported visions." 3 That Christianity is a higher stage in a process of reve- lation, the New Testament leaves us no room to doubt. Christianity did not confine itself to the mere reform of a traditional system which had fallen into degeneracy. Ka- ther was it claimed that, in the Gospel, Revelation was car- ried far above the level which it reached at the purest epoch of Judaism. It was indeed a reform, but it was something more. It was affirmed that while, among all the worthies of the Old Testament, no greater personage had appeared than John the Baptist, the least in the kingdom 1 Jer. xxxi. 31-35. 2 Ps. lxxii. 16. 3 Geschichte, iv. 43. 12 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. of heaven, which was now to burst through its confined, theocratic form, was greater than he. The least disciple of Jesus was lifted above John by standing on a higher plane of divine revelation. The imperfection of Old Tes- tament law in comparison with Christian ethics is taught by Christ. He set his precepts in direct contrast with what had been said to them " of old time." * When He was consulted on the subject of divorce, and reference was made to the legislation of Moses, which permitted a husband to discard a wife by going through certain formalities, Jesus said that the Mosaic law on this matter had been accommo- dated to the hardness of men's hearts. 2 It had been adapted to the obtuse moral perceptions prevalent at the time when it was given, and thus fell short of the ideal of morality. This memorable statement illustrates the remark of Herder that the defects of the Old Testament are those of the pupil and not of the teacher. The law of Moses went as far as it was practicable to go, in view of the debased condition of the people. To have attempted more would have been to accomplish nothing. The law of Moses was a good begin- ning. It called for an improvement upon the existing practice. It laid a degree of restraint upon lawless passion and caprice. It was a license in form, but a restriction in reality. But it did not, and could not, embody the true idea of the conjugal relation, as that idea lay at the begin- ning in the Creator's mind. The New Testament law on this subject was the fulfilment of the Levitical rule. Moral difficulties in the Old Testament, both in its teach- ing, and in the recorded actions of good men, are in many cases removed by an application of the truth included in this pregnant declaration of Jesus respecting a single topic of duty. The doctrine of the ethical superiority of the Gos- pel to the Mosaic system is a plain inference from it. The 1 Matt. v. 21, 27, 33, 38, 43. 2 Matt. xix. 8 ; Mark x. 5. MQEAL DIFFICULTIES IX THE OLD TESTAMENT. 13 heroes of the Old Covenant who are named with honor by the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews, 1 are men whose conduct was often repugnant to the standard of the Gospel. Of some of them it has been said that were they living now, in a civilized Christian state, they would be lodged in the penitentiary. Rahab and Samson, Gideon and Jeph- thah, are names that look strange when placed in the same category with the Evangelist John. It is enough to say that they did not live in the light of the Gospel. We do not expect men to see as well at midnight as at noonday. At a period of barbarism and wild anarchy, they had a faith in the Invisible, and a fidelity induced by it, which have an imperishable worth. They espoused the right side in a conflict on the issue of which was staked the weal of all future generations. The historic movement which they, often in a rough way, but at the cost of peril and sacrifice, helped forward, was in the right direction. Men must be judged in relation to their times. There are paintings pro- duced in the infancy of Art, which elicit sympathy, for the intent out of which they spring, and for the sentiment be- neath them which struggles for expression, though the ma- terials are crude, and the execution very imperfect. Thus it is with the moral and religious element that shines out even in the dark ages of Hebrew history. The general aim may be right, when the means chosen to reach it are the fruit of an uneducated moral sense. We must approach these ancient records in a catholic spirit, and with the same historic sense that we apply in judging the medieval cru- sader, or the soldiers of Cromwell. When the heart of Ciovis, the chief of the Franks, had been touched by Chris- tian teaching, and he listened to the story of the crucifixion, as told to him by the venerable Remigius, the Bishop of Rheims, he cried out : " Had I only been there with my 1 Heb. xi. 14 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. Franks, I would have taught those Jews a better lesson ! " l It was the impulse of the impetuous disciple who drew his sword in the Garden. The act may be rebuked, but not the warm devotion, the honest though unenlightened zeal, that prompted it. The principle of " the gradualness and partialness " of divine Revelation helps to explain events in Hebrew history which otherwise are perplexing. The invasion and partial extermination of the Canaanites is one of these. Let us suppose for a moment that this had taken place, without an explicit command, under the ordinary Providence of God. Not only do we find in history that men are indiscriminately destroyed by pestilence and earthquake ; but that migration and conquest are means providentially employed for bring- ing retribution upon nations sunk in corruption, and for planting the seeds of a better form of society. Suppose, then, that the Israelites, after their liberation from bondage, and their wanderings in the desert, animated, to use the language of Ewald, with the newly-roused energy of a unanimous faith in God, attacked the idolatrous tribes of Palestine, the worshippers of Baal, Astarte, and Moloch — names fitly adopted by Milton for the chiefs of Pandemo- nium — put a multitude of them to the sword, and drove the remainder, with the " human sacrifices and licentious orgies" of their religion, to the northern sea-coast of the country. Suppose that the natural and rational dread of the seductions of idolatry moved the best of them — their leaders — to insist upon a wholesale destruction and expul- sion of the inhabitants, whose iniquities they abhorred ; the intent being to isolate the worshippers of Jehovah from the contamination of heathenism. Two things, at least, are plain. The crusade sprang out of religious impulses. It was not personal vindictiveness ; however congenial the 1 Neander, Church History, iii. 8. MORAL DIFFICULTIES IX THE OLD TESTAMENT. 15 way of prosecuting the contest may have been with the barbarous methods of waging war then in vogue. And the alternative was rightly understood ; it was either an unrelenting hostility, or a compromise and a mingling of the Hebrews and idolaters, which must have resulted in the extinguishment of the light of truth, dim as it was, of which the former were possessed. Had the world been different from what it was, had the Hebrews been different — more firm in their faith, more enlightened — the alterna- tive would not have existed. But it did exist ; and the preservation of true religion in its germs, our Christian civilization to-day, are dependent upon the course that was actually taken, revolting as it would be to humane feel- ing, if repeated at a later day, and under altered circum- stances. Had the Canaanites been spared, the historic stream, narrow and turbid as it then was, would have been choked up, or turned out of its channel, instead of flowing on in a broader and clearer current, until, at a point far remote from its source, it issued in a pure Christian theism, the life of our civilization. All this is clear to the historical student, whatever may be his creed, who values the Christian religion, and dis- cerns the genetic connection of events. We must conclude that the extirpation of the Canaanites, the only means by which the contagion of their idolatry and sensuality could be avoided — " terrible surgery " though it was, to borrow language of Carlyle in speaking of another matter — was yet a part of the wise and beneficent order of Providence. We must conclude, also, that it was the fruit of the highest religious impulses of the people who were charged with the seed of what is most precious in modern religion and civili- zation. Were this the whole case, we should have to say that the excesses springing from the untamed religious zeal of an uncivilized people, were overruled by Providence, 16 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. educing good out of partial evil, in subservience to a far- sighted plan for the salvation of the human race. But if we bring in, as an additional element, the manifested will of God, as the warrant for their proceeding, they are raised to the level of executioners, not merely of a permissive, provi- dential appointment, but of a direct commandment. It becomes an instance where human agency is employed for the infliction of divine judgment, the agent consciously acting as the instrument of divine justice. How can such a commandment, enjoining indiscriminate massacre, be consistent with the divine attributes ? As far as the consequences are concerned, the destruction of life, there is no greater difficulty than exists in the case of a hurricane or a plague, which sweeps away myriads of both sexes and of all ages. As far as the effect upon the actors is concerned, there is no offence done to the moral sense; there is no such de- parture from the common ideas, the accepted laws of war and conquest in that age, as would produce a moral deteri- oration in the Israelites themselves. Eather is it'true, that feeling themselves to be deputies of the Supreme Power for the execution of penalties, and for the carrying out of a plan not their own, they would perform their stern work with a kind of sacred enthusiasm, unlike the base feeling of malice and revenge, as for a private injury, and impressed at every step with their own exposure to a like retribution in case they trod in the path of those whom they were commanded to destroy. If they were used as a flail and a scourge, the victims of their hostility suffered no heavier calamity than has been visited by the will of Providence upon many a corrupt and enervated nation, which has been crushed under the foot of the invader ; while for the Israelites themselves a wall was built up around them against the pollutions of heathen- MORAL DIFFICULTIES IN THE OLD TESTAMENT. 17 ism, and a sense of the guilt and peril of apostacy was gained, which their whole subsequent history proves that they could not afford to spare. Yet it may be said that the commandment took the form that it did take on account of "the hardness of their hearts.'' Had they been more susceptible to the influence of gentler motives, less inclined to the debasing rites of idolatry, and had their moral sense been capable of discriminations which are easy to an educated conscience — in a word, had they stood upon a higher spiritual plane, the injunction might have been different. It might then have been as safe for them to mingle with the heathen as it was in the later ages of their history, when no enticements and no terrors could move them to take part in idolatry. When the Israelites seized upon the mountains of Ju- dea, Samaria, and Galilee, and dispossessed their inhabi- tants at the edge of the. sword, the divine behest by which they were impelled, evinced, both in its motive and in its form, the imperfect morality of the chosen people. The motive was to seclude them from the corruptions of idola- try; its form was accommodated to that low stage of moral discernment, where the guilt of the individual is conceived of as extending its pollution to the family and the clan, and where the obligation of love is limited by the bounda- ries of kinship. The evils inflicted were such as God has a right to inflict by human agency, and such as He does thus inflict in the course of His Providence ; the agents in the infliction of them acted up to the full level of con- scientious feeling to which they had attained. They did no violence to any moral instinct. * The supernatural ele- 1 This solution of the problem suggested by the "Wars of Extermina- tion, recorded in the Bible as undertaken by divine command, does not differ in the essential points from that offered by Dr. Mozely in "The Ruling Ideas in Early Ages, and their relation to Old Testament Faith,"— a work which I have examined since these pages were written, 2 18 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. ment — the inspiration — that animated the Israelites to their crusade, is not more responsible for the imperfect morality of their conduct, than if that conduct had sprung altogether from their own undeveloped moral sense. Is it asked, what then is the advantage of inspiration and su- pernatural guidance, if they go no farther in lifting the recipients above the level of natural conscience ? The an- swer is that the test of a gradual Revelation is not its pre- liminary stages, but its final outcome. 1 He says: "It seems to belong suitably to the Divine Governor of the world, to extract out of every state of mankind, the highest and most noble acts to which the special conceptions of the age can give rise, and direct those earlier ideas and modes of thinking, toward such great moral achievements as are able to be founded upon them," (pp. 55, 56). " A divine command to undertake a war of extermination could only, to begin with, necessarily have been a command by condescension to the defect in the state of man's moral perceptions in that age." " What it [the command] starts from is the evil in man, and not the perfect good in the divine will," (p. 159). "That dispensation starts with the sanction of a class of actions, which could not be done by an enlightened people with full and mature moral perception," (p. 170). 1 This truth is well presented by Dr. Mozely in the last chapter of his Moral Ideas, etc., — " The End the Test of a Progressive Eevelati on." (Lect x.) Bishop Butler has the following interesting passage : " Indeed, there are some particular precepts in Scripture, given to particular persons, requiring actions, which would be immoral and vi- cious, were it not for such precepts. But it is easy to see, that all these are of such a kind, as that the precept changes the whole nature of the case, and of the action ; and both constitutes and shows that not to be unjust or immoral, which, prior to the precept, must have appeared and really have been so ; which may well be, since none of these precepts are contrary to immutable morality. If it were commanded to culti- vate the principles, and act from the spirit of treachery, ingratitude, cruelty ; the command would not alter the nature of the case, or of the action in any of these instances. But it is quite otherwise in precepts which require only the doing an external action ; for instance, taking away the property or life of any. For men have no right to either life or property, but what arises solely from the grant of God. When this PROGRESS OF REVELATION. 10 Each successive epoch in the progress of the ancient Reve- lation was attended with a corresponding development of religious and ethical ideas. Not only conduct, but also doctrinal and devotional utterances are homogeneous with the particular era in which they are found. The inspira- tion of prophets affords but a partial disclosure of truth ; it does not escape the limitations of time and situation. In the stormy period of the Judges, Deborah the Prophetess grant is revoked, they cease to have any rights at all in either. And though a course of external acts, which without command would be im- moral, must make an immoral habit, yet a few detached commands have no such natural tendency. I thought proper to say thus much of the few Scripture precepts, which require not vicious actions, but actions which would have been vicious, had it not been for such precepts ; be- cause they are sometimes weakly urged as immoral, and great weight is laid upon objections drawn from them. But to me there seems no diffi- cult}' at all in these precepts, but what arises from their being offences ; i. e., from their being liable to be perverted, as indeed they are, by wicked, designing men, to serve the most horrid purposes, and perhaps, to mislead the weak and enthusiastic." Analogy, Part ii. Ch. iii. Mr. Grote, in comments on this passage, in a note in his work on Plato (Vol. iii. pp. 394, 395), appears to think that a conservative Greek, on the same grounds, might have defended the obnoxious acts and commands of his divinities against one who would take them as examples for his own conduct. But Mr. Grote's remarks involve several fallacies. The first is that they overlook the fact that the revocation of the grant of life and property by the Deity, in the cases supposed by Butler, is considered to be based on justice, and to be a part of a wise scheme of general govern- ment ; whereas in the case of the myths in question, the gods act mani- festly from caprice, lust, and other obviously selfish passions. The in- ference to be drawn as to the character of the objects of worship in each case is plain. Then, secondly, Butler implies that the precepts to which he refers are shown to be the sole warrant of the particular acts which they enjoin. They are so shown by the circumstances under which they are given, and — what is here specially worthy of note — by subse- quent revelations concerning human duties. Thus, these special com- mands are on a level with the injunctions of a magistrate to his deputies to take property or life, which these individuals, without the authority derived from the commands, would not think themselves to have a right to do. 20 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. chanted a song of triumph over the fallen enemies of Israel. In this song, we read : " Blessed above women shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be." 1 Jael had treacherously- slain Sisera whom she had decoyed into her tent. No argu- ment is needed to show the inconsistency of such an act with the precepts of Christianity. Yet it receives from the mouth of a Prophetess the most distinguished praise. The motive of the act was a high and unselfish one; the deed which sprang from it was wrong, though ignorantly done. " If we can overlook the treachery and violence which belonged to the morals of the age and country, and bear in mind Jael's ardent sympathies with the oppressed people of God, her faith in the right of Israel to possess the land in which they were now slaves, her zeal for the glory of Jehovah as against the gods of Canaan, and the heroic courage and firmness with which she executed her deadly purpose, we shall be ready to yield her the praise which is her due." 2 " Deborah speaks of Jael's deed by the light of her own age, which did not make manifest the evil of guile and bloodshed; the light in ours does." 3 What shall be said, in the light of the Gospel, of Deborah's applause of Jael ? It is merited if applied to the motive ; it is mis- placed when directed to the act. The act was right " ac- cording to that dispensation," where " love your friend and hate your enemy " was the highest recognized rule of con- duct. Deborah was cognizant of no broader rule of mo- rality. 4 Nowhere do the deepest emotions of the religious mind find so pathetic an expression as in the Psalms. Yet this collection embraces, in addition to lyrics composed by David, others of an earlier date, and many of later origin, ex- 1 Judges v. 24. 2 " Speaker's Commentary," Judges v. 24. 3 Ibid., Judges iv. 21. * See Dr. Mozely's remarks. Ruling Ideas, etc., p. 163 seq. THE PROGRESS OF REVELATION. 21 tending down beyond the Exile. And they bear the traces of the elder dispensation out of which they were produced. The Christian reader occasionally meets with imprecations that grate upon his ear, from their seeming antagonism to the humane precepts of the New Testament. This feeling is not confined to sentimental religionists who would sub- tract righteousness from religion. It is generally felt. Some have sought to construe these passages as a mere pro- phecy of what is actually to befall evil-doers; but this untenable interpretation simply shows the pressure of the difficulty which it seeks to avoid. Some would consider them an outburst of righteous indignation, free from all personal vindictiveness, like the cry of Milton in the Son- net upon the Massacre of the Waldenses : "Avenge, O Lord, thy slaughtered saints whose hones Lie scattered on the Alpine mountains cold." More commonly it is alleged that such imprecations were uttered by David in his character as theocratic king, as per- sonating the Messiah, and with reference to the enemies of Christ. But if imprecations were uttered by David and other authors of the Psalms, from what may be called public con- siderations as distinguished from personal resentment, it still remains true that Jesus himself did not pour out mal- edictions against his foes, or against the enemies of his kingdom ; for the denunciations uttered with reference to the Scribes and Pharisees (Matt, xxiii.), though expressive of indignation as well as grief, are not to be thus construed. On the contrary, He bade his disciples pray for those who hated them and their cause. They were rebuked for wish- ing to call down fire from heaven to consume his enemies. He himself prayed on the cross for the pardon of his de- stroyers. Among his precepts we feel ourselves in a new atmosphere, where the retributive sentiment is no longer uppermost. 22 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHEISTIANITY. But do all the maledictions in the Psalms admit of being referred to sympathy with divine justice, as contrasted with personal revenge ? Is there not a residue which do not come under this category? Who can suppose the 109th Psalm to emanate wholly from this impersonal motive, or to have been written by a Christian disciple ? " Let his prayer become sin," "let his days be few," "let there be none to extend mercy to him," "let his children be contin- ually vagabonds and beg," "let his posterity be cut off" — compare these invocations with the Sermon on the Mount. The truth is that the rule of retaliation — " an eye for an eye " — had been given to them of old time, but Christ gave another law, the law of love. Forbearance, and mercy to enemies are not unknown to the Old Testament; but they are in the background. They did not find that place in the Old Testament type of piety, which is given them in the teaching and example of Jesus. If Christ had nothing new to teach, why should he teach at all ? To expect all the characteristic graces of the Gospel in the writers of the Psalms, and to complain if they are absent, is not less un- reasonable than to wonder that flowers do not blossom in January. "The law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ." x The revelation of jus- tice must precede that of forgiveness ; and revenge, which Lord Bacon calls a kind of wild justice, bad as it is, is a less evil than torpidity of conscience. It was well that men should learn to abhor wickedness; the Gospel has taught us to discriminate between the evil principle and the person in whose character it mingles. The method of progress in the revelation of the Gospel is like that which is to govern its spread : " First the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear." 2 In the ancient Scriptures there is one book, analogous in 1 John i. 17. 2 Markiv. 28. THE PROGRESS OF REVELATION. 23 its structure to the Psalms, but of an ethical character, — the Book of Proverbs. It is an "anthology from the say-: ings of the sages of Israel, taking its name from the chief- est of them ;" for it is a compilation which did not see the light in its present form until centuries after the time of Solomon. It is like the Psalms, which are "an anthology from the hymns, not of David only, but of the sons of Ko- rah and others, some named, and some anonymous." * The Proverbs are distinguished from heathen literature of a si- milar kind by the characteristic elements of the Old Testa- ment religion which are found in them. The Fear of the Lord is made the beginning of "Wisdom. Yet in the pro- minence given to prudential motives, in the stress laid upon temporal rewards, the difference of tone from that of the Gospel is manifest. It is the point of view of the ear- lier dispensation. 2 The difference between the Christian and the Jewish Dispensation is affirmed by Jesus in the reply which he made to the disciples when they were disposed to call down fire from heaven upon the inhospitable Samaritans, in imi- tation of the Prophet Elijah. " Wist ye not," he said, — for the answer should probably be read as a question — " Wist ye not what manner of spirit ye are of?" 3 The Spirit of God that animated them was a spirit of forbear- ance and love. The Spirit of God was with Elijah; 4 but 1 "Speaker's Commentary," Introd. to Proverbs. 2 When the historical and progressive character of Revelation is clearly apprehended, the value of such books, for example, as Ruth, Es- ther, and Canticles, is easily discerned. There is no book in the Old Testament which does not aid in illustrating the Dispensation. The moral standards, the social and religious sentiments, engendered at a given stage of Revelation, are reflected in the contemporaneous litera- ture that springs up within its circle. All of this literature is stamped with a character which distinguishes it from the products of Gentile thought. 3 Luke ix. 55. * Compare Luke i. 17. 24 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. the retributive sentiment — the stern tone of justice — marked the elder Dispensation. It was a high, but not the highest, not the complete, expression of the principle of goodness. The superiority of Christianity over the Judaic system, and the fact that it effected more than a bare purification of a corrupted doctrine and ritual, are involved in the re- ply of Jesus to the question of his disciples about fasting — why he did not make them to fast, as John made his disci- ples. " New wine," he said, " must be put into new bottles." 1 Institutions must conform to the doctrine which they em- body. They must be new, because that is new. A new type of piety must create a new ritual congenial with it- self. It will not brook customs incongruous with it. Closely connected as his religion was with the antecedent faith, it was yet no mere reproduction of the old. It was something original, differing from the former doctrine; though, in some sense, the complement of it. The New Testament authors call the hallowed rites of the Old Tes- tament, shadows, — unsubstantial images of the realities of which the believer in Christ is possessed. 2 Indignant that Christian believers should retreat back to the Mosaic ob- servances, the Apostle Paul styles them "weak and beg- garly elements," or rudiments, which the Gospel has left behind. 3 The law which formed the kernel of the Mosaic Revelation is described in its moral as well as ceremonial features, as a schoolmaster, taking charge of the unripe youth, and leading him to a place where this provisional office is superseded. 4 Apart from all other defects, the Apostle Paul sets forth the radical insufficiency of the Old Testament system. It was, in its predominant character, a law-system. Law, coming from without, had to encounter the principle of sin 1 Luke v. 38, (Matt. ix. 17, Mark ii. 22.) 2 Col. ii. 17. 3 Gal. iv. 9. * Gal. hi. 24, 25. THE PERFECTION OF CHRISTIANITY. 25 within the soul ; and law had in it no power of moral re- generation. The proper result of the Old Testament sys- tem, as the Apostle Paul explains it, was to make this fact manifest in the consciousness of men, and to awaken a yearning for deliverance from sin, through a power work- ing from within. The triumph of the Old Testament form of the kino-dom was in the demonstration of its own fail- ure ; its failure, that is, to do more than to pave the way for something more effective. The ancient theocracy wrought its victory and attained its end when it moved "a Hebrew of the Hebrews" to turn from it in despair, with the cry, "Who shall deliver me?" We proceed a step further in the discussion, when we say that Christianity is the perfect form of religion. In other words, it is the absolute religion. It is the final out- come of this long process of growth. It is not an inchoate, defective system, destined to vanish, like Judaism, by being merged in a higher form of creed and worship. The interest that is taken at present in the study of comparative religion, the more charitable spirit in which heathenism and heathen philosophy are judged, and a wide-spread skepticism in re- spect to the miraculous element in Christianity, predispose many to reduce the religion of the Gospel to the level of the Jewish or even of the ethnic systems. Such plainly is not the view which Christianity, as presented in the New Tes- tament, takes of its own rank. Rather is it the culminating point in the progress of Revelation, fulfilling, or filling out to perfection, that which preceded. Several considerations will tend to establish this claim. 1. In Jesus Religion is actually realized in its per- fection. By such means alone could the kingdom of God on earth be consummated. This the Prophets, and especially Isaiah, 26 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. had discerned. "There must come some one who should perfectly satisfy all the demands of the true religion, so as to become the centre from which all its truth and force should operate." "Unless there first comes some one who shall transfigure this religion into its purest form, it will never be perfected, and its kingdom will never come. But he will and must come, for otherwise the religion which demands him would be false; he is the first true king of the community of the true God, and as nothing can be con- ceived of as supplanting him, he will reign forever in irre- sistible power." "Before the lightning flash of this truth in Isaiah's soul, every lower hope retreated." * This lofty, inspired ideal was fulfilled in Him who made it his meat and drink to do the will of God, and who drank the deep- est cup of anguish with the words: "Nevertheless, not my will, but Thine, be done!" 2 2. In Christ the Revelation of God to and through man reaches its climax. Revelation had been, from the begin- ning, the revelation of God. In the inspiration of the prophets, He became "at sundry times," for a season, a liv- ing Power in the soul, exalting and prompting its natural activities. These revelations, temporary and sporadic, fore- shadow an abiding Presence of God in man, such as con- stitutes the peculiarity of the person of Christ. 3. In Christianity the fundamental relations of God to the world are completely disclosed. The old dispensation was a long crusade against heathenism. Heathenism par- tially, if not wholly, merged God in nature. The first verse of Genesis is a denial of an' element of heathenism that clings to it even in its most refined forms. The Zoroastrian religion, the nearest approach to pure theism, divided the work of creation between two eternal Powers. Plato held to the eternity of matter, to say nothing of the realm of 1 Ewald, Geschichte, iii. 710, 711. J Luke xxii. 42. THE PERFECTION OF CHRISTIANITY. 27 ideas. The Old Testament insists on the unity, the per- sonality, and the transcendence of God. He is above the world, and distinct from it. This truth being secured, it remained for the New Testament to bring forward its coun- terpart, the immanence of God. He is in the world, though not, as the Pantheist dreams, to be identified with it. Thus the Xew Testament rounds out the revelation of God's essential relations to the world. 4. Through Christ, the kingdom of God actually attains its universal character. The heathen religions belonged each to a particular na- tion. The divinities of every people were supposed to have appointed the rites of their worship within the territory which they protected. The religion of each country was interwoven with its civil constitution. It was part and parcel of a political system, and strongly reflected the pecu- liarities of the people in which it had arisen. Thus, instead of bringing men together in a common society, the heathen religions rather tended to keep them apart. Religion formed one of the barriers that separated nations from each other. Of necessity, Revealed Religion, at the outset, in its rudi- mental stage, was likewise national. It was confined within the limits of a civil community. Whoever would have the benefit of it must become, if he could, a member of that state. The privileges of the true religion were accessible only within the pale of a single people. Although they were ever assured that they were chosen, not because they were more deserving than others, but merely to be almoners of a blessing to mankind, yet their distinction might have, and did have, the effect even upon them to engender a proud isolation. Through Christianity, the external theo- cracy was dropped as a thing outgrown. Everything that was accidental, provisional, local, in religion, fell away. " Not in this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem," was the 28 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. Father to be worshipped ; His temple was to be in the hu- man soul. 1 In the new kingdom, there was neither Jew nor Greek, barbarian nor Scythian, male nor female, bond nor free. 2 That is to say, in this high fellowship of religion, distinctions of race, of sex, and of condition — as between masters and slaves — vanish. A common sympathy sweeps away the walls of separation between man and man. The heavenly good of the gospel is of such a nature that it can be offered indiscriminately to all. The sense of a common relationship to Christ and to God melts away all differences. The brotherhood of the race is no more a phil- osopher's dream; it has become a realized fact. Appealing to a common religious sentiment, a common consciousness of sin and of the need of help, and offering a remedy that is equally adapted to all, Christianity shows itself possessed of the attributes of a universal religion. Christianity vindicates its claim to this character, as being a religion of principles, not of rules. The Old Testament system was predominantly legal. The duties of men were enumerated, one by one; worship in its minute details was prescribed. Nothing in this department was left to choice. The law of human conduct was splintered into a multitude of particulars. A thoughtful mind always feels relief when it can descend below rules to their ground and source. In proportion as one penetrates to the ground-work of princi- ples, he is enabled to dispense with rules. The soul be- comes a law to itself; the end which the soul sets before it is it- self a criterion of what is to be done and omitted. The rational perception and choice of an end of action bring freedom, emancipation. Conduct then flows from an interior im- pulse; it is a product of spontaneity. Christian life is not an "imitation" of Christ, in the ordinary conception of the term. It is a relation like that of the branches to the vine 1 Jolm iv. 21, 22. 2 Gal. iii. 28, Col. iii. 11, THE PERFECTION OF CHRISTIANITY. 29 that infuses into them life. The work of the Gospel is de- scribed as a new creation in humanity ; its disciples as new creatures in Christ ; Christ as another Adam, a second head of the race. 1 It is evident, that a code of rules, however adapted to the condition of a particular nation, in a certain state of civilization, may not answer when circumstances are altered. A legal system, therefore, cannot be permanent ; it can never be an absolute religion in the sense we have given to the term. But the Gospel establishes a filial relation be- tween man and God. It implants principles that can never become obsolete, because they coincide with rectitude itself, and can never need a supplement, since they involve in themselves all specific obligations. It is not conceivable that any more comprehensive principle should be brought forward to supersede love. No type of goodness can ever be dis- covered that excels the spirit of Christ. Because Christian- ity contents itself with the inculcation of seminal principles, not seeking: to dictate or restrain conduct farther than these may prompt, it shows itself the ultimate form of religion. It may be added that the institutions of the Christian religion — its polity and worship — are not cast into an in- flexible shape. They flow out of its own creative spirit, and are, therefore, subject to variation. Even the simple features of the polity and cultus, which have an authori- tative sanction, are in direct accord with the nature of Christian society. There are thus no unalterable forms of church government, and no unbending ritual, but room for that diversity which is required by differences in tempera- ment, and by different grades of culture. Those who contend for a leaden uniformity in things external, miscon- ceive the genius of the Christian religion. They lose sight of the catholic quality that belongs to it. ' 2 Cor. v. 17, 1 Cor. xv. 45. 30 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. The progress of religion within the circle of the Scrip- tures is not to be confounded with that kind of develop- ment through which Christianity has passed since it was first promulgated by the Apostles. That there has been a development since that epoch is no more than to say that Christianity is a living system. But there is this differ- ence: in the giving of Revelation, at each successive stage, and especially at the consummation, there was an incre- ment of its contents. New truths were added to the pre- vious stock. This is not true of Christianity since the Apostolic age. Those who consider the Gospel a purely natural product, would efface this line of demarcation be- tween Apostolic and post- Apostolic theology, and put both on the same level. Among the writers who have handled the subject with marked ability are certain Roman Catho- lic authors, as De Maistre, and Mohler, on the continent, and Newman in England. As Newman, in his most in- teresting and suggestive Essay, has shown, political and re- ligious ideas are in their own nature fructifying. They do not, like mathematical truth, lie inert in the minds into which they fall. On the contrary, they produce a ferment. Christian truth affects in this living way the intellect, the emotions, and the will. The mind receives these ideas as into an alembic. It exercises upon them its analysis ; it formulates them, connects them with the rest of its beliefs, elucidates and defends them by blending with them collateral truth which they imply. Theology, or the translation of Christian truth into dogma, is the re- sult of this intellectual process. Christian ideas, likewise, and the objects of faith, excite the emotional nature. They call into life sentiments which incorporate themselves in Christian art and worship. In the proportion in which they transform the mind and character, they transform life. The ethical relations of Christianity are by degrees un- CHRISTIAN ETHICS. 31 folded. New obligations are brought to consciousness, from day to day. Cruel amusements of heathen antiquity died out under the silent influence of the Christian spirit. An atmosphere of feeling is produced, in which unrigh- teous legislation and brutal punishments cannot survive. Less than a century ago, Christian ministers imported slaves from Africa for domestic service. When the Ameri- can Constitution was formed, Christian sentiment had not risen to a strength sufficient to forbid the continuance of the slave trade ; and it was allowed for a term of years. Now this traffic is treated as piracy by the Christian na- tions. The New Testament did not, in express terms, prohibit slavery ; but the spirit of Christianity abolished it. The treatment of the poor, of the insane, and of the suf- fering and afflicted classes generally, which failed to shock the Christian sense of a former day, is now felt to be in- human. All these developments, whether of thought and belief, of worship and devotion, of Christian politics, or morals, as far as they are sound or wholesome, are due to the genius of Christianity. Here is at once their source, and the touchstone of their character. As Protestants, Ave must demur to the doctrine that an infallible safeguard exists against the introduction of elements at variance with Christian truth, which may prove the germ of a false de- velopment. But even the writers to whom we refer, hold that the whole deposit of revealed truth was with Christ and the apostles, and is contained in their teaching. So far as the development is normal, it springs out of the primitive seed. What we behold results from a clearer understanding, a more vivid appreciation, of the truth set forth in the New Testament. To the sum and substance of this truth, nothing has been added. Christian ethics have sometimes been charged with fault. Mr. J. S. Mill, in his Essay on Liberty, says : " I believe 32 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. that other ethics than that which can be evolved from ex- clusively Christian sources, must exist side by side with Christian ethics to produce the moral regeneration of man- kind." 1 He guards against misunderstanding, by add- ing : " I believe that the sayings of Christ are all that I can see any evidence of their having been intended to be ; that they are irreconcilable with nothing which a compre- hensive morality requires ; that everything which is ex- cellent in ethics may be brought within them, with no greater violence to their language than has been done by all who have attempted to deduce from them any practical system of conduct whatever." 2 If nothing more were meant than that the New Testament does not pretend to define all the particulars of duty, but leaves them in some cases to be inferred, Mr. Mill's observation would be just. He refers, in support of his criticism, to the absence of any recognition, in Christian ethics, of duty to the state, to the negative character of Christian precepts, to an exclusive emphasis laid upon the passive virtues, and to the want of reference to magnanimity, personal dignity, the sense of honor, and the like, — qualities which, he says, we learn to esteem from Greek and Roman sources. The imputation that Christian precepts are pre-emi- nently negative, is surely not founded in truth. It is not "a fugitive and cloistered virtue " which is enjoined in the New Testament. To do good is made not less obligatory than to shun evil. The religion which has for its work to transform the world is not satisfied with a mere abstinence from wrong-doing. It is not true that by insisting on mutual benevolence, Christianity thereby weakens the force of particular obliga- tions. The Gospel does not frown upon patriotism any more than upon the domestic affections. Not the love of 1 Page 93. 2 Page 94. CHRISTIAN ETHICS. 33 country, more than the love of kindred, is chilled by Christian teaching. The state, as well as the family, is recognized as a part of the divine order. It was an Apostle who loved his own nation so ardently that he was willing to be accursed for their sake. If the passive virtues are exalted in the Christian system, it is not as the substitute, but as the complement of quali- ties of another class. Kevenge is unlawful ; truth is not to be propagated by violence; but unrighteousness in every form is assailed with an earnestness that admits of no increase. Nor does the religion of the New Testament discountenance the use of force for the protection of society. The magistrate is the minister of God for the execution of justice. As for magnanimity, the sense of honor, and kindred feelings, they are included in the category of whatsoever things are true, honest, pure, lovely, and of good report. 1 Christianity excludes nothing that is admirable from its ideal of character ; and if there be virtues which have flourished on heathen ground, Christianity takes them up, while at the same time it infuses into them a new spirit — the leaven of an unselfish love. Eobust and aggressive elements enter into the Christian ideal of character; yet there was a reason why, at the outset, emphasis should be laid upon meekness, patience, resignation, and the other virtues called passive. The fues of a Christian were of his own household. All the forces of society, civil and ecclesiastical, were arrayed against him. There was the strongest possible need for the exer- cise of just these qualities. Particular affections, like the love of home and of country, have a root in Christian ethics. But since Christianity came into a world where patriotism, and other affections limited in their range, ex- ercised a control that supplanted the broader principle of * Phil. iv. 8. 34 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. philanthropy, it was requisite that the wider and more generic principle should be inculcated with all urgency, not with a view to extirpate or enervate, but to curb and purify subordinate principles of action. In Christian ethics, all the virtues, the milder and more negative, with the bolder and more heroic — courage in suffering, and courage in action, the self-sacrifice of the mother in her household, of the patriot on the battle-field, of the mis- sionary to distant nations — find a just recognition. We have now to inquire in what relation Christianity stands to the higher forms of heathen religion. Independently of the doctrine set forth, there is an un- deniable contrast between the tone of prophets and apostles, and that of heathen poets and sages in their loftiest moods. There is in the former a holy urgency, an authoritative directness, a pungency of rebuke, which strike the mind as a voice from within the veil. As in no other literature, the soul feels itself in contact with the supernatural. The human author speaks as one inspired, as the organ of the Eternal. " He taught them as one having authority " ex- presses the feeling of those who heard Jesus. 1 It indicates a character that belongs to the Bible, in distinction from all the products of heathen wisdom. Yet underneath the superstition of heathenism the Apostle Paul recognized a true seeking for God. He quoted with approval a sentence from a heathen poet to the effect that there is something in man akin to the divine nature. 2 He declares that if a law had been given to the Jews, the same was true of the heathen. They, too, had a law written upon the heart, — a rule which was implied in their judgments of one another. 3 The contents of this unwritten mandate of conscience corresponded to the moral 1 Matt. vii. 29 ; Mark i. 22. 2 Acta xvii 28. 3 Rom. ii. 14, 15. CHRISTIANITY AND HEATHENISM. 35 precepts of the Old Testament. There were not wanting teachers, of whom Socrates was the foremost, to inculcate moral obligations. There were influences fitted to educate the conscience. The sense of sin was far from being con- fined to the Hebrews. It finds a deep utterance in the literature of other nations. Even the other element of the Jewish system, the ele- ment of prophecy, is not without its analogou among the heathen. There is a natural prophecy, the act of " the prophetic soul Of the wide world, dreaming on things to come." There "were yearnings that could not be met on the plane of natural religion, and under the order of things insepara- ble from heathenism. The sense of an unnatural estrange- ment from one another, and from God, sprang up in the hearts of men. There were walls of separation which had begun to chafe the spirit, but which it was impossible to surmount. There were ideas not to be realized under the divisive influence of Polytheism — u luminous anticipa- tions '' — glimpses, at least, of something better for man, yet beyond his reach. There was thus a kind of prophecy, as well as law, outside of Judaism. If all this be true, and if the heathen nations, as well as the Jews, were subject to a providential training, why not assign the same propedeutic office to Gentile religion and philosophy that we assign to the Judaic system ? Some have thought that we should do this ; and among them, the eminent theologian, Schleiermacher. The arguments for this view do not lack plausibility. Heathenism, it is said, at least in its best representatives, was monotheistic. The Gentiles were ecpially objects of divine favor, and they were on the same footing, as regards the offer of salvation, as the Jews : " for there is no difference between the Jew and the Greek" (Rom. x. 12). Moreover, it is a significant fact 36 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. in connection with the first preaching of Christianity that the Gentiles were found, as a rule, more ready to receive it. The number of converts from the Jewish side was small in comparison with the multitude of heathen who welcomed the new faith. The Apostle Paul had been sur- prised — we might say, perplexed — by this unexpected and startling fact. This feeling in his mind was at the root of that whole discussion about election and the plan of God, in the Epistle to the Romans, which has been a battle- ground of theologians ever since. What could be the meaning of Providence ? That the chosen people, the pos- terity of Abraham, should turn away from the blessing which the Gentiles were flocking to grasp! The immedi- ate cause which the Apostle assigns, was the unbelief of the Jews, A moral blindness had overtaken them. But if the Old Testament people had become degenerate, and if the heathen were more open to the truth than they, where lay the pre eminence of the Judaic system as a poedagogic instrument ? Is not this a case where the tree is to be judged by its fruits ? But this question is not one to be settled by a count of heads. It remains true that " salvation is of the Jews." The fact of capital importance is that Judaism is the parent of Christianity. There was the hearth-stone of the new religion. The new system sprang up on the soil of the old, and could spring up nowhere else. There were " the ora- cles of God ; " there were the Messianic promises, and the aspirations kindled by them, in a form that made it possible for the Messiah to arise, with a full consciousness of his calling, and to be recognized by others. The peculiarity lies in the organic relation of the parts of the earlier Reve- lation to each other, and the collective relation of the whole of them to the Gospel. Hence, the earliest adherents of the Christian faith by whom it was first propagated in the CHRISTIANITY AND HEATHENISM. 37 world, its authoritative expounders for all time, were of Jewish extraction. Among the heathen, on the contrary, the foregleams of the Light to come were disconnected, scattered. There was no steady advance. Why was there no defined Messianic expectation among them ? Why was not the Messiah born of the Gentiles? The Platonic Philosophy has educated many, from Augustine to Neander, for the kingdom of Christ ; but out of Platonism the Gos- pel could not come. The kingdom of Plato is presented in " the Republic." Nor would men imbued with Platonism have formed the best nucleus of the early church. In the first centuries, the attempt to sever the new dispensation from the old, and to degrade or ignore the Old Testament, resulted in the wild speculations of Gnosticism. The fate of the new system, thus torn from its organic relations, was like that of a ship, cut loose from its moorings, and left to drift whither it might. The privilege conferred on the Jews, in the special train- ing to which they were subjected, might, if abused, place them at a disadvantage as to receiving the Good News, even in comparison with the nations which had been suffered "to walk in their own ways." "It might be," says Dr. Arnold, " that they were tempted by their very distinctness to despise other nations ; still they did God's work, — still they preserved unhurt the seed of eternal life, and were the ministers of blessing to all other nations, even though themselves failed to enjoy it." It is a question how far the principle of Natural Selection will account for progress in the animal kingdom. It is certain that a principle of providential selection is often exemplified in history, in the dealings of God with mankind. Nations are sifted. A process of judgment and of rejection is witnessed. There is an apparent loss and waste ; as when a few blossoms only, out of a multitude, fructify. The Apostle Paul affirms 38 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. this very principle of selection in the case of the Jews. There was an elect fraction who did not turn their backs on the Messiah — just as, in the days of Elijah, seven thou- sand were found who had not bowed the knee to Baal. 1 Moreover, it must be remembered that in some cases the docility which the heathen manifested when the Gospel was first preached, was due to an influence of the Old Testa- ment religion upon them. The Apostle Paul illustrates the character of ancient heathenism, by comparing the Gentile part of the church to the wild olive grafted into the native olive. 2 The wild olive is not worthless, but it can not bear savory fruit until it draws its sap from the stock that has grown up in the garden of the Lord. The branches of this stock, it is true, were broken off; yet to the engrafted branch, which par- takes of its root and fatness, it is said: "Thou bearest not the root, but the root thee." 3 In the same spirit, Schelling has called the heathen religions " wild-growing." They are like the flowers that spring up of themselves by the way-side, — not destitute of fragrance and beauty, yet inferior to the plants which have been watered and pruned by the hand of a skilful gardener. In the inquiries before us it is important to bear in mind the distinctive character of Christianity. It is a religion. It is not merely, or chiefly, an ethical doctrine. Morality finds a broader statement, a more solemn sanction, and, above all, gains a new motive. But the morals of the Gos- pel is not the first or the main thing. Gibbon plumes himself on finding in Isocrates a precept which he pronounces the equivalent of the Golden Rule. He might have col- lected like sayings from a variety of heathen sources ; al- though neither Confucius, nor any other of the authors in whom these sayings are found, contains the precept in a 1 Kora. xi. 4. 2 Bora. xi. 24. 3 Kora. xi. 18. THE SUBSTANCE OF CHRISTIANITY. 39 form at once positive and universal. But an ethical maxim not very remote in its tenor from the Golden Rule, may undoubtedly be cited from a number of heathen teachers, and also from the Rabbis. Nowhere else indeed does this precept have the prominence that is given it in the New Testament. But the originality of the Gospel does not consist in particular precepts for the conduct of life, however noble they may be. The obligation to be pure, truthful, just, even the obligation to forbearance and compassion, was not unknown to the sages of an- tiquity. On these points of duty, Christianity, to be sure, speaks with an impressiveness never equalled before. But apart from the holy fervor of its moral injunctions, there is not so much that is absolutely new. Christianity in its essence is a religion. Nor is it in any special truth, like the doctrine of im- mortality, that the substance of Christianity is to be found, Faith in immortality is not the exclusive possession of Christian believers. Philosophers argued for this doctrine and some believed in it, with nothing to instruct them but the light of nature. They looked forward to a future state of rewards and punishments. The same thing might be said of various other propositions which are considered a part of religion. Christianity has been properly styled the religion of re- demption. Here lies its peculiarity. It is the approach of heaven to men ; the love of God taking hold of men to lift them up to a higher fellowship. The originality of the Christian religion is to be sought in the character and person of Christ Himself, and in the new life that flows out from Him. 40 THE BEGINNINGS OE CHRISTIANITY. CHAPTER II. THE ROMAN EMPIRE AS A PREPARATION FOR CHRISTIANITY. "The coming of Jesus Christ is the providential justifi- cation of the conquering policy of the Senate." 1 The close relation of the Roman Empire to Christianity has not failed to strike thoughtful minds of whatever creed. A stern spi- rit, a hard, unrelenting policy, marked the steps of Roman conquest. To spare the submissive and war down the proud — parcere subjcctis et debellare superbos 2 — was the recognized maxim ; but in practice the Romans not seldom fell below the measure of humanity dictated by this rule. There were flagrant crimes against civilization, like the de- struction of the grtat commercial cities of Carthage and Corinth, and the enslaving of their inhabitants. Yet in the course of events that built up the stupendous and long- enduring fabric of Roman dominion, even the Christian Fathers who reprobated those crimes, discerned a provi- dential purpose. 3 Circumstances favored the growth of Roman power. Had Alexander the Great lived to carry his arms west- ward, the issues of history might have been wholly altered. Had Greece not fallen politically and morally, and had the kingdoms of the East not sunk into decrepitude, the subju- gation of these countries might have been impossible, and Rome might have been stopped in her career of conquest. 1 Laurent, Borne, p. 8. 2 Virgil, JEk. VI. 483. 3 Augustine, de Civit. Dei, v. 12, 15 seq. THE EMPIRE AND THE CHURCH. 41 But after Carthage, her great rival, had been crushed, there was no other people that had the energy requisite to with- stand her progress to universal empire. So extended was the sway of Rome, and so deep were its foundations, that it seemed incapable of overthrow, and came to be regarded as a part of the fixed order of things, on a level with the unalterable system of nature. Some of the early Fathers, therefore, looked forward to the sub- version of the Roman dominion as the precursor of Anti- christ, and the signal for the final catastrophe in the world's history. 1 The idea of the perpetuity of the Roman Empire entered deeply into the Christian thinking of the middle ages. That Empire was conceived of as the counterpart of the Church, securing that unity of mankind in the secu- lar sphere, which corresponded, as a necessary condition, to their unity in things spiritual. An imperishable State was mated to an imperishable Church. Hence when Europe crystallized anew under the auspices of the Franks, it was the revived Roman Empire of which Charlemagne became the anointed head; and the same Empire was continued, in all its sacred authority, under the line of German Em- perors. While the agency of Rome in paving the way for Chris- tianity has never been overlooked, the tendency has been to dwell too exclusively upon the external features of this preparatory work. The wide-spread peace consequent upon the subjection of so many nations to a common govern- ment, the facilities for travel and intercourse which were open to the first preachers of the Gospel, the shield thrown over them by Roman law, and other advantages of a kin- dred nature, have justly attracted notice. But there is ano- ther side to the influence of Rome that is even more im- pressive in connection with the subject before us. The ef- 1 Tertullian, ApoL, 32; Lactantius, Listt., vii. 19, 25. 42 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. feet of the consolidation of so large a part of mankind in, one political body, in breaking up local and tribal narrow- ness, and in awakening what may be termed a cosmopolitan, feeling, is in the highest degree interesting. The Roman, dominion was the means of a mental and moral preparation for the Gospel ; and this incidental effect is worthy of spe- cial note. The Kingdom of Christ proposed the unification of mankind through a spiritual bond. Whatever tended to melt down the prejudices of nation, and clan, and creed, and instil in the room of them more liberal sentiments, opened a path for the Gospel. Now we find that under the political system established by Rome, a variety of agencies co-operated to effect such a result. Powerful forces were at work whose effect was not limited to the creation of out- ward advantages for the dissemination of the religion of Christ, but tended to produce a more or less genial soil for its reception. We have then to embrace in one view the influence of the Roman Empire in both of these relations, ' in shaping outward circumstances, and in favoring a men- tal habit, which were propitious to the introduction of the new faith. 1. Glance at the extent and general character of the Empire established by the Romans. It stretched from the Atlantic to the Euphrates, a distance of more than three thousand miles, and from the Danube on the north, and the friths of Scotland, to the cataracts of the Nile and the African desert. All the tribes and nations inhabiting this immense territory had surrendered their independence, and were connected together in one political system. The Par- tisans in the far East were left unsubdued ; and beyond the Rhine were the Germans whom the Romans failed to conquer, and could only repel to their native forests. There have been, and there are now, empires which cover more square miles; but the peculiarity in the case of Rome is THE DIVISIONS OF THE EOMAN EMPIRE. 43 that she brought under her sceptre all the civilized nations of the world. And the relation of most of her provinces to the Mediterranean gave to her dominion a geographical unity. Of its entire population we have not the data for an exact estimate. It was somewhere from eighty to one hundred and twenty millions. The Roman world — orbis Romanus, as the Romans proudly called it — naturally divided itself into two regions, the East and the West. 1 It was not a mere geographical line that separated them, but differences lying deep in his- tory and in the characteristics of their inhabitants ; so that subsequently, when the Empire was divided, it was not an accident that drew the line between these two grand sections. The East comprised that portion of Western Asia which was included between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean on the west, the Caucasus on the north, the valley of the Nile on the south, and the Caspian, the Euphrates, and the deserts of Arabia on the east. Egypt was placed by the ancients in Asia, and formed a j>art of the Orient. In the Isthmus between the Euxine and the Caspian, were the numerous tribes of the Caucasus, grouped in con- federacies or kingdoms under the protectorate of the Ro- mans. Mostly uncivilized, and in perpetual conflict with the Sarmatians, Scythians, and other Asiatic hordes which were already in motion, they formed the vanguard of the Empire. The Greek colonies along the coast of the Euxine served as a connecting link and a channel of commercial intercourse between the Caucasus and the East, and the civilized communities of the West. Armenia, harassed by the Arsacides, the Parthian rulers who held Babylonia and 1 See Amedee Thierry, Tableau de V Empire Romaln, p. 8-1 seq., with the references. In the hrief paragraphs which immediately follow, I am principally guided by M. Thierry's sketch. 44 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. Chaldea, received its kings from the Romans, and was re- duced to a province by Trajan. In Asia Minor there was a mixture of various races. Besides the indigenous peo- ples, the Greeks had their ancient and flourishing cities on the sea-coast. The Thracians had made their way to the coast of Bithynia. Celtic invaders had penetrated into Phrygia, and founded there the Galatian kingdom. A branch of the Syrian race had planted itself in Cappadocia. And, after the expedition of Alexander, all these different nations were mingled with occidental Greeks. From the shores of the Halys eastward to the Tigris, and from the mountains of Caucasus on the north to the Arabian gulf, were spread the different branches of the Se- mitic race. On the north and extending to the Euphrates were the Syrians; in Palestine were the Hebrews, and upon the Tyrian coast the Phoenicians ; in Babylon were the Chaldeans ; while the nomadic Arab tribes roamed over the peninsula of Arabia and the plains of Mesopotamia. From the neighborhood of the Tigris, stretching toward the East, were the Persian dialects and nations. In the time of Augustus, the Roman boundary was the Euphrates. Arabia was still independent. The native Egyptian race remained unmoved in its tra- ditions, its social organization, and its religion ; but in a few cities, of which Alexandria was the chief, under the auspi- ces of the Ptolemies, Greek civilization attained to a flour- ishing development. Greece, which was considered to be- long to the East, where it eventually fell at the division of the Empire, had nothing to boast of, save its glories in the past. The primitive inhabitants of the African coast of the Mediterranean had belonged to one race, but had been di- vided into two aggregations or confederacies of tribes. West of the Lybian nations, along the whole coast as far as the THE PROVINCES OF THE EMPIRE. 45 ocean, the Moors or Numidians had established themselves, whom tradition had traced to "Western Asia as their prior home. Upon these barbarous peoples had come in the Greeks, who planted themselves about Cyrene, and the Carthaginians who made their abode in Carthage and its dependencies. Malta and Sardinia attached themselves to Carthaginian civilization, but Sicily was essentially Greek. The fierce and warlike Iberians, the primitive inhabitants of Spain, whose territory was fringed by Carthaginian and Greek settlements, after yielding to the Romans, not only learned military discipline from their conquerors, but developed a taste for letters. Over Gaul and Britain were spread the Celtic race, with its various branches, of which we have so full a description in the Commentaries of Caesar. The Romans generally included under the term Illyricum the lands situated between Switzerland, Italy, and the Dan- ube, and the confines of Greece and Macedonia; lands in- habited by a multitude of petty nations, only a portion of whom had adopted, in any considerable measure, the arts of civilization. Thrace felt the beneficial effect of its con- tiguity to Asia, and to the Greek cities, especially Byzan- tium. The provinces into which the Roman world was divided were separated by Augustus (b. c. 27) into the proconsu- lar, under the rule of the Senate, and the imperial, which were governed by the lieutenants of the Emperor. In these last were placed the standing armies. In the Senatorial provinces, the Emperor's authority, when he was present in person, superseded that of the proconsuls. In truth, the rule of the Senate within its own provinces was little more than nominal. Spain was divided into three provinces, of which the largest, Tarragona, in the north and east, and Lusitania, embracing the principal part of modern Portu- gal, were imperial, while Bsetica, which corresponds pretty 46 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. nearly to the present Andalusia, with Seville and Granada, was under the Senate. Of the provinces into which Gaul Avas divided, Gallia Lugdunensis — so called from the flour- ishing colony of Lyons — and Belgica, lying beyond the Seine, with Aquitania, which extended from the Atlantic Ocean to the Rhone, were imperial, while Gallia Narbonensis, or Languedoc and Provence, was senatorial. Upper and Lower Germany, stretching from Basle to Leyden, on the west bank of the Rhine, were not constituted into provinces until later. They fell into the imperial class. Britain, also, was conquered, and became an imperial province in A. D. 43 ; comprising England, "Wales, and the Lowlands of Scotland as far as the Friths. The other imperial pro- vinces, under Augustus, were Rhcetia and Vindelicia, stretching from the top of the Alps to the Danube, and eastward to its junction with the Inn; Noricum, a battle- ground for the Roman legions and their German enemies ; Pannonia, east of Noricum, embracing modern Hungary and portions of Austria ; Moesia, whose barbarous inhabi- tants occupied the territory which is now known as Servia and Bulgaria, and which, with Pannonia, included the whole right bank of the Danube, from Vienna to the Black Sea ; and, in the East, Cilicia, Syria, Egypt. Dacia, on the north of the Danube, was not incorporated among the impe- rial provinces until its conquest in the time of Trajan (a. D. 107). Under the sway of the Senate, besides Sicily, Sardi- nia and Corsica, of which, however, the last, together with Dalmatia on the east of the Adriatic, were subsequently allotted to the Emperor, were Gallia Narbonensis, or Languedoc and Provence, Bsetica or South Spain, Dalmatia, Achaia, Macedonia, Cyprus, Bithynia, and Pontus, or the land south-west of the Black Sea, Asia — that is, the portion of Asia Minor to the west of Mt. Taurus and the River Halys, Crete, with Cyrenaica, or the northern coast of THE EARLIER EMPIRES. 47 Africa, which is now divided between Egypt and Tripoli ; Africa — that is, the main part of the ancient Carthaginian territory as far as the boundary of Mauretania between Cirta and Sitifis, now Constantine and Setif, in Algiers. Eastern and Southern Spain, the oldest of these pro- vinces, with the exception of Sicily, had been con- quered about the middle of the sixth century after the foundation of the city ; the youngest, Egypt, Mcesia, Pannonia, were annexed to the Empire as the fruit of the victory over Mark Antony ; Pannonia not be- ing constituted a province until a. d. 10. Italy, of which Augustus fixed the Northern boundary at the Yar, was governed, not by a proconsul, but by the civil officers of its own colonies and municipalities ; and was divided for administrative purposes into eleven regions or circles. * There were districts under direct imperial control, which had not a regular provincial organization, but might be governed, like the Alpine districts, and Judea, by Pro- curators, or, in the case of Egypt, by a Prefect. Pome did not make the first experiment towards the unification of mankind in a political form, — the only form in which the ancients could conceive of such a union. There had arisen a series of great Empires, extending back to the dawn of authentic history. First, Egypt, then the earlier kingdom of Babylon, then the Assyrian Empire, then the later Babylonian kingdom, had each of them col- lected multitudes of men under the sway of a single master. These colossal despotisms, notwithstanding the oppression and cruelty that belonged to them, were necessary to the rise of civilization. They put an end to the isolation of 1 On the division of the Empire into provinces, see Marquardt in the Handb. d. rom Allerthiimer, Vol. iv. (1873) ; especially the table, p. 330 seq. See, also, Von Keumont, Gesch. d. Stadt Bom. i. 217, and Merivale, Hist, of the Romans, i. 122. 48 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. warring tribes. They brought men together in peaceful intercourse, within walled towns. There, since the arts of defence always kept in advance of the means of attack, the fruits of industry could be stored up, and the conditions of society were fitted in some degree to stimulate invention and discovery. Yet under these old conquering powers, men were welded together in a mass ; the individual counted for nothing. With the rise of the Persian mon- archy, dominion was transferred from the Semitic to the Aryan family. The Persians in many things anticipated the Romans. Great roads, for example, bound together the different parts of their Empire. Herodotus describes the grand highway stretching from Susa, the capital, to Sardes near the western coast of Asia Minor ; along whose whole length of 1,500 miles, were placed, at short intervals, government stations, and fine caravansaries for travellers, and which was traversed by the couriers of the Great King, riding by post, in five or six days. 1 But the nations subject to the Persian dominion were not assimilated. It was a conglomerate of tributary peo- ples, with no approach to an organic union among them. The Greeks attached a moral value to the individual ; through them a government of laws superseded the will of a despot, philosophy arose, and liberty and culture were appreciated. Yet the Greeks, notwithstanding their politi- cal talent, were driven by circumstances to organize them- selves in small communities. Their states were municipal. Their confederacies were loosely bound together, and easily dissolved. The allies of Athens were so harshly treated that they deserted her in the time of her deepest distress, and left her to be crushed by her enemies ; while the wis- dom of Roman policy was manifest in the continued fidelity of the Latin allies in the great crisis of the struggle with ' Hist. v. 52 seq. ROMAN CITIZENSHIP. 49 Hannibal. The empire of the Macedonian conqueror fell to pieces at his death. It perished with its founder. He spread the Greek language in the East, and with it a tinge of Hellenic culture ; but he founded no united dominion co-extensive with his conquests. Rome, on the contrary, which properly succeeded to the work of Alexander, moved forward with a slower but sure advance, and held whatever she won, not solely or chiefly by the iron grasp of military power, but rather by a sagacious policy which, without sweeping away local customs and laws, aimed to dissolve former political bonds, and to establish stronger ligaments of connection with herself. Through her colonial system she established bodies of trustworthy supporters in the very heart of the communities that she annexed. Rome did not begin, like the Greek cities, in the subju- gation of one race by a stronger which trampled under foot the subject population. In the Palatine settlement there was a combination of different tribes and races on a footing of equality, and it furnished an open asylum to fugitives of all sorts. A distinction of classes, and an ar- istocracy arose, and the exclusiveness of the Patrician crder increased after the expulsion of the kings. But within the walls of the city, the Plebeians gained, step by step, the con- cessions which at last broke down all the barriers of privilege. In the treatment of allies without, there was an analogous growth of liberality. The inhabitants of certain towns — municipia — were granted the rights of Roman citizenship. Citizenship became not a local but a personal distinction. It embraced certain private rights, and certain political rights; these last being principally the right of suffrage, and eligibleness to office. One possessed of the full prerogatives of a citizen, wherever his abode might be, could present himself at Rome and take part in the elections. 4 50 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHEISTIANITY. He belonged to a great fraternity — the civitas — actuated by common ideas, and taking pride in the possession of pecu- liar immunities and powers. The privileges involved in citizenship might be conferred on foreigners, in whole or in part. Not unfrequently upon Latin towns the private rights — for example, the right of commerce or of marriage with Romans — were bestowed, without the grant of politi- cal rights. Thus there grew up in connection with the Roman hegemony in Latium, a legal system — the jus Latii — which defined the rights and privileges of these more favored cities ; and a similar system — the jus ItaMcum — with reference to the Italic communities, which were favored, though in a less degree than the Latin towns. 1 The struggle for equality on the part of the Latins and Italians resulted, in the end, in the communication of the rights of citizenship to all these allies. This advantage was gained by the Latins b. c. 90, by the Lex Julia, as the fruit of the Social War, and was soon after extended to the Italians. The territories outside of Italy, which were subject to Rome, were either provinces, free or confederated cities, or allied kingdoms. The jus Italieum, and sometimes the jus Latii, was conferred upon cities, here and there, beyond the bounds of Italy. The tendency of historical changes was to diffuse abroad the privileges connected with citizenship. This tendency was strengthened by the conversion of the Republic into the Empire. Cresar had sedulously befriended the provinces, and in the civil war found in them his strongest support. By his victory, the democratic party of which Caius Gracchus may be con- sidered the principal founder, and which Marius had after- wards led, gained the ascendency, and the ruling oligarchy fell from power. It has been questioned whether Csesar 1 Upon the Jus Latii and the Jus Italieum, see Walter, Gesch. d. rom Rechts, pp. 194, 196. COSMOPOLITAN POLICY OF CESAR. 51 had distinctly in view the political elevation of the pro- vinces, or anything beyond their rescue from rnisgovern- ment. It is certain, however, that the party by which he was raised to power, had generally stood as the opponent of Roman exclusiveness, and that his own measures tended strongly in the same direction. The government of the world by a single city could not be perpetual. There was a constant reaction of the provinces upon Rome. A vast influx of for- eigners had filled the capital with a mixed, heterogeneous populace. The spirit and policy of Cresar were cosmopolitan. He scandalized conservative Romans by filling up the Senate with Gauls and other foreigners. He gave the suf- frage to transpadane Gaul, and annexed that province to Italy. The same privilege he conferred on many commu- nities and individuals in transalpine Gaul and in Spain. With the establishment of the Empire began a series of changes that led eventually to the granting of the rights of citizenship to all of its subjects. The tendency of the im- perial system from the beginning was towards administra- tive uniformity, and towards the effacing of the distinction between subject and citizen. It is significant that the pro- vinces were glad to see the rule of the Senate subverted, and the imperial government taking its place. Tacitus, speaking of the concentration of power in the hands of Au- gustus, says : " Neither were the provinces averse to that condition of affairs; since they mistrusted the government of the Senate and people, on account of the contentions among the great, and the avarice of the magistrates; while the protection of the laws was enfeebled and borne down by violence, intrigue, and bribery." * Even the worst Em- perors, Nero not excepted, were sometimes not unpopular in the provinces, which felt their cruelty less than the Ro- mans themselves, and rejoiced in their own escape from the 1 Annal., i. 2. 52 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. tyranny and extortion of that class of Republican magis- trates of whom Yerres was one. The main point is that under the Emperors Eome became merely the capital, in- stead of the mistress, of the world. In proportion as the government was resolved into an absolute monarchy, Rome was reduced to the level of other municipalities. At length the chiefs of the State came to be taken from the provinces, and in the end from the barbarians themselves. The level- ing influence of Roman absolutism, a tendency that inhered in it from the start, aided essentially in producing a sense of equality among men. 2. Deserving of special mention is the unifying influence of Roman jurisprudence. The great system of law, the principal legacy of Rome to subsequent ages, was of gradual growth. In the middle of the 5th century b. c, the first written code, the Laws of the Twelve Tables, was composed. This continued to be an object of reverence and eulogy long after many of its provisions had become antiquated, and vast additions had been made to its meagre contents. The annual Edict of the Prsetor was the principal provision for the modification and expansion of the legal system, to meet the altered state of society, and the demands of an advancing morality. When this magistrate assumed his office, he was required to set forth publicly the rules on which he proposed to pro- ceed in administering justice; in particular the form and method of the remedies that would be open to litigants. The Edict constituted really a supplement to the established code, and a means of liberalizing as well as enlarging it. Beneficent legal fictions were introduced for the purpose of getting rid of the inconvenient formalism and unjust require- ments of the ancient system. The jus gentium was not without its influence in effecting this amelioration. This was not a system of international law. The Romans had no ROMAN LAW. 53 such system, and did not recognize the equality of States, on which this branch of modern law is founded. The nearest approach to international rules was furnished by the jusfcclale which defined the customs to be used in declaring and beginning wars ; but no inquisition into their justice was involved in its injunctions. The old^'us gentium was not a rule for the intercourse of nations. It was simply the rules of proceeding in the case of sojourners not entitled to the privileges of Roman law; rules deduced by Roman officials from a comparison of their own system with that of the nations to which the class in question belonged. A com- mon law was sought for, which could be applied to the de- termination of causes in which foreigners were parties. As early as 247 B. c, a special magistrate, the Prretor Peregri- nus, was created to take cognizance of this class of causes. In the later days of the Republic, however, after the Stoic philosophy was naturalized at Rome, the lawyers who had imbibed its tenets, connected with the Roman Law the Stoic idea of a universal law of nature or reason, which under- lies all particular codes, and is exalted above them in rank. The jus gentium came to be identified in this way with the jus naturale. 1 Cicero, in the " Commonwealth " and in the " Laws," frequently dilates upon the Natural Law, and upon the great community of gods and men, of which each single country is only a portion, or a constituent part. " This universe," he says in a passage of the last named treatise, "forms one immeasurable commonwealth and city, common alike to gods and mortals. And as in earthly States, certain particular laws, which we shall hereafter describe, govern the particular relationships of kindred tribes; so in the nature of things doth an universal law, far more magnificent and resplendent, regulate the affairs of that universal city where gods and men compose 1 See Hadley, Introd. to Roman Law, p. 92. 54 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. one vast association." x Of law he writes in another place of the same work, that " it was neither excogitated by the genius of men, nor is it anything discovered in the progress of society; but a certain eternal principle which governs the entire universe, wisely commanding what is right, and prohibiting what is wrong." 2 As we shall see hereafter, the doctrine of a Natural Law, the expression of general justice and reason, did not remain, in imperial times, a barren maxim. It affected to some ex- tent the contents of the law. For example, it softened the legislation relative to slavery, and thus mitigated the rela- tion of master and slave. Through the Praetorian Edicts, there grew up, by the side of the old law, a more broad system of Equity. The Edict was termed perpetual, as not being subject to altera- tion during the term of office of the Prsetor who issued it. Finally, under Hadrian, a Perpetual Edict was composed or compiled by Salvius Julianus, which was to be open to no further increase in the future. 3 Through the labors of jurisconsults from about 100 B.C., this great body of sup- plementary laws was reduced to a scientific form. The Roman Law was for Roman citizens alone. For example, a sojourner at Rome, or a provincial in his own 1 — ut jam universus hie mundus una ci vitas communis deorum atque hominum existirnanda ; et quod in civitatibus ratione quadarn, de qua dicetur idoneo loco, agnationibus familiarum distinguuntur status, id in rerum natura tanto est magnificentius, tantoque prseclarius, ut homines deorum agnatione et gente teneantur. De Legibus, L. i. 7. 2 — legem neque hominum ingeniis excogitatum, nee scitum aliquod esse populorum, sed seternum quiddam, quod universuin mundum regeret, imperandi prohibendique sapientia. Leges, L. ii. 4. 3 This is Mr. Maine's view of the controverted question as to the na- ture of the work done by Julianus. See Ancient Law, pp. 61, 63, and Prof. Dwight's remarks, p. xxv. (Am. ed., 1877) ; also, Phillimore's Ro- man Private Law, p. 53. Compare, however, Wenck's note in Smith's Gibbon, i. 268, and Merivale, Hist, of the Romans, vii. 426. SPREAD OP ROMANO-HELLENIC CULTURE. 55 home, could not have the aid of the Roman magistrate in enforcing the father's authority — the patria potestas— which was so fundamental a feature of the Roman code. And the same was true of all the rights and immunities which were inseparable from citizenship. But wherever there was a citizen, this law was operative. Hence in the colonies everywhere, justice was administered according to its provisions. This, however, was far from being the li- mit of its operation. The governors of provinces issued edicts analogous to those issued by the praetors. In these, they proclaimed the rules and methods by which they would abide in the administration of justice. While the local laws and customs were left in force, especially in minor causes, the Roman law was not without a decided and increasing influence upon the programme of the prefect, and upon the whole judicial administration of the pro- vinces. 1 This was more likely to be the case as the Edict would often be prepared at Rome, and under the advice of lawyers. As the bounds of citizenship were extended, the sphere of the Roman law was, of course, correspond- ingly widened. In the period when Christianity was spread- ing in the Roman world, the minds of men were becoming more and more familiar with this legal system. It was one of the means of reducing to homogeneity the component parts of the Empire. The conceptions that entered into the warp and woof of this great code were insinuating them- selves into the common thinking of mankind. 3. We have to refer to the assimilation of mankind in language and culture. The monarchy that was formed under the auspices of Ju- lius Caesar was Romano-Hellenic in its essential character. It was not a sudden creation ; the materials of it had been long in preparation. The two nations which the policy of 1 See Walter, Gesch. d. rom. Rechts, p. 436. 56 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. this great statesman aimed to unite as the main component elements of the Empire, had long been acting powerfully upon one another, as Avell as upon the so-called barbarian peoples. The process of Komanizing and Hellenizing the nations — if these terms may be allowed — had begun centu- ries before. The Greeks, like the Phoenicians before them, were a maritime and colonizing people. Their cities on the "Western coast of Asia Minor were founded prior to 776 B. c, when the authentic history of Greece begins. The Greek towns in Sicily, and in the South of Italy, were some of them coeval with Rome. Cumre preceded Rome by se- veral centuries. Greek settlements were dispersed on the islands and along the sea-coast of the Mediterranean. Mar- seilles was founded by Phocsean colonists. From there Greek colonies planted themselves in Spain. The Greeks early came into close intercourse with Egypt; and through them was built up the flourishing city of Cyrene. The ex- pedition of Alexander extended far and wide the Hellenic influence. The foundation of the city of Alexandria was an event of vast moment in this direction. There a multi- tude of Greeks were collected, who made the place a great centre, not only of trade and manufactures, but of Hellenic philosophy and culture. At Alexandria, the streams of Jewish and Oriental thought mingled with the current of Greek speculation. Its population in the early days of the Empire was not less than one million. Recent excavations have uncovered the seven main streets, running in straight lines through the city, and the twelve other main streets that crossed them at right angles. Alexandria had an equal reputation for industry and thrift on the one hand, and for wit and learning on the other. The Museum, or Academy, and the Library, which were founded by the Ptolemies, were brilliant nurseries of scientific and literary study. Antioch, founded by Seleucus Nicator, rivalled the Egyptian SPREAD OF ROMANO-HELLENIC CULTURE. 57 capital in grandeur, and in the number and diverse nation- ality of its inhabitants. Its main street extended in a straight line for four miles, and like the main street of Alex- andria, was bordered on both sides by colonnades. The rivals and successors of the Tyrians and Carthaginians, the Greeks transplanted their language to every port to which their ships sailed. But the Greeks were the lettered people of antiquity. Wherever a love of knowledge and of art' was awakened, there Greek books penetrated, and Greek teachers and artists were welcomed. The downfall of Greek liberty, and the political and social calamities that followed, contributed efficiently to diffuse their language and learning. The phenomena, though on a vaster scale, may remind us of what occurred before and after the cap- ture of Constantinople by the Turks, in the fifteenth cen- tury. A multitude of Greek slaves, especially after the fall of Corinth, were brought into Italy. Roman households were filled with them. The conservative Roman spirit had at first resisted the introduction of Greek learning. Cicero refers to the prejudice of his grandfather against the study of the Greek language. Cato was for driving the embassy of Greek philosophers out of Rome. He opined the worst results from the introduction of their doctrines. There was a contest like that between the old learning and the new, which prevailed at the Renaissance. But it was vain to attempt to stem the tide of innovation. The Roman youth, if at all studious, could not be withheld from acquiring the tongue of Plato and Sophocles, from placing themselves under the tuition of Greek rhetoricians and philosophers, and even, as in the case of Cicero, from resorting to Athens for instruction. Greek was the language of commerce, and the vehicle of polite intercourse, far more even than was true of French, in Europe, in the age of Louis XIV. "Greek," says Cicero, in his Oration for Archias, "is read 58 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. in almost all nations; Latin is confined by its own boun- daries, which, of a truth, are narrow." x " Wherever the Roman legionary went, the Greek schoolmaster, no less a conqueror in his own way, followed ; at an early date we find famous teachers of the Greek language settled on the Guadalquivir, and Greek was as well taught as Latin in the institute at Osca." 2 To a vast number of Jews dwell- ing out of Palestine, Greek was the vernacular tongue. Two centuries and a half before Christ, the Septuagint ver- sion of the Old Testament had been made at Alexandria; and this was the Bible with which they were chiefly fami- liar. But the inhabitants of Palestine itself, like so many other peoples at that time, were bilingual. Their narrow strip of territory was bordered on the east and west by Greek-speaking towns. The disciples of Christ were doubt- less acquainted with Greek from their childhood. When the Apostle Paul was rescued from the mob at Jerusalem by a detachment of the Roman garrison, he craved the priv- ilege of addressing the people. When they found that he spoke to them in Hebrew — that is, Aramaic — "they were the more attentive." 3 It is implied that they would have understood him had he spoken in Greek, as they seemed to expect that he would ; but their own dialect was more grateful, as well as more familiar, to their ear. An illustration of this bilingual characteristic so common at that time, is presented in Luke's account of the preaching of Paul and Barnabas at Lystra, a town of Lycaonia in Asia Minor. 4 A miracle wrought by Paul had such an effect upon the people, that they took him and his companion for gods who had come down in the form of men, identifying Barnabas with Jupiter, and Paul, as the principal speaker, 1 Graeca leguntur in omnibus fere genribus, Latina suis finibus, exi- guis sane, continentur. — Pro Akch., 10. 2 Mommsen, Hist, of Borne, iv. 641. 3 Actsxxii. 2. i Acts xiv. 8-19. SPREAD OP THE GREEK LANGUAGE. 59 with Mercury. In their excitement, they called out in their own dialect — " in the speech of Lycaonia " — that the gods were with them, and forthwith made ready to pay them divine honors. Paul and his associate had not at first perceived what they would do, — not understanding their language ; but as soon as the Apostles found out what was intended, they repelled the design with warmth. The discourse of the Apostles had been in Greek, which was perfectly intelligible to their auditors ; but these, when moved with strong emotion, fell back upon their vernacu- lar, which Paul and Barnabas did not comprehend. Had the Lycaonians not been familiar with Greek, the mes- sengers of the Gospel could not have preached to them. But for the diffusion of the Greek language generally, they would have been stopped everywhere by a like insu- perable barrier. Under this check, the new religion, ex- posed as it was to hostility on the right hand and left, might not have lived long enough to take root. Perse- cuted in one city, its preachers could flee to another; and they were possessed, wherever they went, of a ready vehicle of communication with the people. Greek may be said to be the language of the primitive Church, at least beyond the bounds of Palestine. The earliest Chris- tian worship at Rome was in that tongue. It was the medium for the expression of Christian thought, the lan- guage of theology in the first age of Christianity, in the West as well as East. Of the wide-spread influence of the Greek language and culture, Dollinger writes : " The sway of Greek customs, of the Hellenic tongue, maintained and extended itself continually, from the Euphrates to the Adriatic. Like a mighty stream, rushing forward in every direction, Hellenism had there overspread all things. Even in remote Bactria, as far as the banks of the Indus, Greek was understood. Greek culture held its 60 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHEISTIANITY. ground as late as the first centuries after Christ. Parthian kings had the dramas of Euripides enacted before them. Greek rhetoric and philosophy, the Hellenic predilection for public speeches, discussions, and lectures, prevailed through the Asiatic cities." * In the Roman dominions west of the Adriatic, the Latin had a corresponding prevalence. Gaul, conquered by- Julius Cresar, rapidly experienced the influence of the lan- guage and civilization of Rome. The same eifect followed in Spain, and, in a greater or less degree, in all the other provinces of the West. Speaking of the age of the An- tonines, Gibbon says : " The language of Virgil and Cicero, though with some inevitable mixture of corruption, was so universally adopted in Africa, Spain, Gaul, Britain, and Pannonia, that the faint traces of the Punic or Celtic idioms were present only in the mountains or among the peasants." 2 As regards Britain only, the statement needs to be essentially curtailed ; respecting the other countries named, it is well sustained by proof. Nor was the influ- ence of the Latin restricted to the Occident. Roman mag- istrates, wherever they were, promulgated their laws and decrees in their own tongue. It was the language of courts and of the camp. In the year 88 b. c., by the order of Mithridates, all the Romans in the cities of Asia were massacred in a single day. The number was at least forty thousand ; it is made twice as large by two of the ancient writers, and Plutarch's statement is one hundred and fifty thousand. The Romans who, at all times, were found in so great numbers in the countries of the East, on errands of business, war, or pleasure, made the Latin familiar to numerous natives of those regions. 4. We have to notice briefly the means and motives of intercourse between the inhabitants of the Empire. Fried- 1 Heidentkum u. Judentkum, p. 33. 2 Vol. i., p. 174, (Smith's ed.) TRAVEL AND INTERCOURSE. 61 lander, in his learned discussion of this topic, Y has pointed out that at no time down to the beginning of the present century, has it been possible to make journeys with so much ease, safety, and rapidity, as in the first centuries of the imperial era. The motives and occasions of travel were quite as various then as now. The Empire brought peace to the world. It was a new condition of mankind. The constant employment of nations had been war. The ancient writers dwell with rapture upon the reign of tran- quillity which now prevailed. The security of the traveller and the facility of intercourse are a common theme of con- gratulation in writers from one end of the Empire to the other. The majesty of Rome, as Pliny proudly declares, was the shield of the wayfarer in every place. Epictetus, and the Alexandrian Philo are especially fervid in their remarks on this subject. 2 They dilate on the busy ap- pearance of the ports and marts. " Caesar," writes the Stoic philosopher, " has procured us a profound peace ; there are neither wars, nor battles, nor great robberies, nor piracies ; but we may travel at all hours, and sail from east to west." 3 The vast territory subject to Rome was covered with a net-work of magnificent roads, which moved in straight lines, crossing mountains and bridging rivers, binding together the most remote cities, and con- necting them all with the capital. The deep ruts, worn in the hard basaltic pavement, and still visible even in places far from the metropolis, show to what extent they were used. Five main lines went out from Rome to the extremities of the Empire. These, with their branches running in whatever direction public convenience required, were connected at the sea-ports with the routes of mari- time travel. A journey might have been made upon 1 Sittengeschichte Roros. , ii. 1 seq. (3d ed.) 2 See the references in Friedlander, ii. 4. 3 Diss., iii. 13. 9. 62 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. Roman highways, interrupted only by brief trips upon the sea, from Alexandria to Carthage, thence through Spain and France, and northward to the Scottish border ; then back through Leyden, Cologne, Milan, eastward by land to Constantinople and Antioch, and thence to Alexandria ; and the distance traversed would have exceeded 7,000 miles. The traveller could measure his progress by the mile-stones along all these roads ; and maps of the route, giving distances from place to place, with stopping-places for the night, facilitated his journey. Augustus established a system of postal conveyances, which were used by officers, couriers, and other agents of the government ; but private enterprise provided similar means of travel for the public generally. In the principal streets of large cities carriages could be hired, and one could arrange for making a journey, in Italy at least, by a method resembling the modern post, or vetturino. The fact that so extensive territories were united under one government gave rise to a great deal of journeying from one part to another. Magistrates, and official persons of every sort, were travelling to and from their posts. There were frequent embassies from the provinces to Rome. Large bodies of troops were transferred from place to place, and thus became acquainted with regions remote from their homes. A stream of travel flowed from all directions to the capital ; but there was also a lively intercourse between the several provinces. " Greek scholars," says Fried lander, " kept school in Spain ; the women of a Roman colony in Switzerland employed a goldsmith from Asia Minor ; in the cities of Gaul were Greek painters and sculptors; Gauls and Germans served as body-guards of a Jewish king at Jerusalem; Jews were settled in all the provinces." The Empire gave a new impetus to commerce. There was everywhere one system of law, free-trade with the capital, INTERCOURSE BY COMMERCE. 63 and uniformity in coins, measures, and weights. In the reign of Claudius, an embassy came to Rome from a prince of the island of Ceylon, who had been struck with admiration for the Komans by finding that the denarii, though stamped with the images of different Emperors, were of just the same weight. In ancient times, mercantile transactions could not, as now, be carried forward by cor- respondence. Hence, merchants were commonly travellers, visiting foreign markets, and negotiating with foreign pro- ducers and dealers, in person. Horace frequently refers to the unsettled, rambling life characteristic of merchants. Pliny describes them as found in a throng upon every ac- cessible sea. In an epitaph of a Phrygian merchant, acci- dentally preserved, he is made to boast of having sailed to Italy, round Cape Malea, seventy-two times. The pirates, who, before the time of Pompey and Caesar, had rendered navigation so perilous, had been swept from the Mediterranean. The annexation of Egypt enabled Augustus to establish a new route of commerce with the East, by the way of the Nile and the Arabian gulf. Ro- man merchants visited every land. They had their ports for trade in Britain, and on the coast of Ireland, They brought amber, in the first century, from the shores of the Baltic. They went with their caravans and vessels to Ethiopia and India. The increase of luxury in the capital stimulated trade. Whatever could gratify the palate was brought from all quarters to the markets of Rome ; and the same was true of the multiform products of art and mechanical skill. In the Book of Revelation, where Rome is designated as Babylon, her imports are thus enumerated : " The merchan- dise of gold, and silver, and precious stones, and of pearls, and fine linen, and purple and silk, and scarlet, and all thyme wood, and all manner vessels of ivory, and all man- 64 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. ner vessels of most precious wood, and of brass and iron, and marble, and cinnamon, and odors, and ointments, and frankincense, and wine, and oil, and fine flour, and wheat, and beasts, and sheep, and horses, and chariots, and slaves, and souls of men " (Rev. xviii. 12-14). Except in winter, when the ancients laid up their ships, the sea was alive with vessels, transporting to Rome the precious metals from the mines of Spain, wild animals for the arena from Africa, the wines of Greece, the woollens of Asia Minor, the gums, and silks, and diamonds, of the East. The great corn fleet from Egypt was met at Puteoli by a deputation of Senators, and greeted with public demonstrations of joy. Journeys from scientific curiosity were not at all unfre- quent. Men visited distant countries in quest of knowledge. Each province had seats of education to which young men resorted. To Rome, Alexandria, and Athens, students came from all parts of the world. In Rome, and Athens, chairs of instruction were established by the State, and thus, like Constantinople afterwards, they had what resembled modern universities. Rhetorical teachers were accustomed to jour- ney from city to city. To the more successful of them statues were erected by their admiring pupils, or by the municipal authorities, in the various places where they had sojourned. Artists, and manufacturers of artistic works of every kind, led a wandering life. They plied their voca- tion for a time in one city, and then transplanted themselves to another. They might be summoned from remote com- munities for some task of peculiar magnitude, or requiring extraordinary skill. If this class of persons were migratory in their habit, much more was this true in the case of act- ors, musicians, athletes, and purveyors of amusement of every description. When we consider how universal was the taste for art and artistic decoration, and how insatiable the craving for popular entertainments, we can judge how MOTIVES OF TRAVEL. 65 numerous were the itinerants whose business it was to mi- nister to these demands. Great public festivals, like the Pythian games, drew together a countless throng of specta- tors. Religious ceremonies, like those of the Eleusinian mysteries, had a like attractive power. Religious pilgrim- ages are not a peculiar feature of Christian society. Such visits were not uncommon to the shrines of heathenism. Invalids, in those days as at present, either of their own motion, or by the advice of physicians, undertook journeys by land and upon the sea, for the restoration of health. Then tourists who visited different countries, from a cu- riosity to see strange lands, and to inspect places of histori- cal renown, were scarcely less numerous then than now. Egypt and its antiquities had a peculiar fascination for the Romans, — the same fascination that Rome and its monu- ments now have for us. Men journeyed from afar to be- hold the stupendous edifices upon the Nile. Grecian his- tory, too, had a profound interest for the Romans. To them it belonged to a glorious past, and they resorted with reverence and delight to the spots made famous by Hellenic wisdom and valor. 1 In speaking of the means of social in- tercourse, we should not omit to mention the great water- ing-places, — places of fashionable resort, like Baiae, where multitudes were collected at the proper season, and which w°re centres of gaiety, dissipation, and political intrigue. tracing the causes that produced a mingling of man- •o 01 . . ° 1 13 a curious fact that the relish for wild and romantic scenery, espe r mountainous scenery, is of recent origin. It seldom appears in the li - ure of antiquity, or of the middle ages. It is not until the eighte ith century that this taste manifests itself to any considerable de- gree. The changed feeling, as contrasted with times previous, on this subject, may almost be said to date from Eousseau. Ruskin has called attention to the remarkable difference between modern and ancient feel- ing in this particular. The topic is fully treated by Friedl'ander, ii. 204 seq. (3d ed.). But as to Homer, see Shairp, On Poetic Interpret, of Na- ture, p 1 43. 5 66 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. kind, we find that the terrible scourges, war and slavery, played a conspicuous part. The Roman Empire had been built up by incessant wars. In war, men of different races met, though it were for the purpose of mutual destruction. They crossed their own boundaries, and gained a better knowledge of each other. Armies were captured and sur- rendered, towns occupied by a conquering force. In like manner, slavery as it existed in the ancient world, leading as it often did, to the deportation of thousands of people at once from their homes to a new and, perhaps, distant abode, contributed to the same result. The hostility and cruelty of men were overruled by Providence, and made the occa- sion of a certain benefit. We have stated that the Roman policy was to break up nationalities. In the case of the Jews all efforts in this direction proved futile. They maintained their separation of race, and held together in an unbroken unity. There were three nations of antiquity, each of which was entrusted with a grand providential office in reference to Christianity. The Greeks, whatever they may have learned from Babylon, Egypt, and Tyre, excelled all other races in a self-expanding power of intellect — in "the power of lighting their own fire." They are the masters in science, literature, and art. Plato, speaking of his own countrymen, made "the love of knowledge" the special character ^ ><. of " our part of the world," as the love of mone; ^ ^ attributed with equal truth to the Phoenicians and T ^ ^ tians. 1 The robust character of the Romans, anf*^ sense of right, qualified them to rule, and to origins ^jV transmit their great system of law, and their methc of political organization. Virgil lets Anchises define the func- tion of the Roman people, in his address to iEneas, a visitor to the abodes of the dead : — 1 Republic, iv. 435 (Jowett, ii. 265.) DISPEESION OF THE JEWS. 67 "Others, I know, more tenderly may beat the breathing brass, And better from the marble block bring living looks to pass ; Others may better plead the cause, may compass heaven's face, And mark it out, and tell the stars, their rising and their place: But thou, O Roman, look to it the folks of earth to sway ; For this shall be thine handicraft, peace on the world to lay, To spare the weak, to mar the proud by constant weight of war." * Greece and Rome had each its own place to fill ; but true religion — the spirit in which man should live — comes from the Hebrews. The remarkable fact which we have to notice, respecting the Hebrews, is their dispersion over the world at the epoch of the birth of Christ. 2 Among those who listened to the Apostles on the day of Pentecost, at Jerusalem, were Jews "out of every nation under heaven" — Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites, and dwellers in Mesopotamia, and in Judea and in Cappadocia, in Pontus and Asia, Phrygia, and Pam- phylia, Egypt, Cyrene, Crete, Arabia, and Rome. 3 Jo- seph us says that there is no country on earth where Jews do not make up a part of the population. 4 In Strabo we find almost the same assertion. In Babylon and the neigh- boring region a multitude of' them had remained after the close of the captivity; and, according to the Jewish histo- rian, they were numbered there by tens of thousands. A colony of them had been planted at Alexandria by its founder; and there they became so numerous as to occupy two out of the five sections of the city, but were not con- 1 Excudent alii sperantia mollius sera, Credo equidem : vivos ducent de marmore vultus ; Orabunt causas melius ; ccelique meatus Describent radio, et surgentia sidera dicent : Tu regere imperio populos, Eomane, memento : Hac tibi erunt artes ; pacique imponere morem, Parcere subjectis, et debellare superbog. — iEn. vi. 8-47-853. * See Winer, Realworterbuch, Art. Zeitrechnung. 8 Acts ii. 5-12. * Bell Jud., vii. 33; Ant., xiv. 7, 2. 68 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. fined to these quarters. They were governed by magistrates of their own ; and while, in common with Jews every where, they kept up a connection with the sanctuary at Jerusalem, they not only reared synagogues, but had also a temple of their own at Leontopolis. In Egypt, in the first century of our era, there were not less than a million of Jews, con- stituting an eighth part of the population of the country. In the flourishing city of Cyrene they formed a large por- tion of the inhabitants. Nowhere, outside of Palestine, was the Jewish population more numerous than in Syria and Asia Minor. At Antioch they constituted a powerful body, and enjoyed there privileges analogous to those of their brethren at Alexandria. From Syria, they passed over into Asia Minor, forming settlements in all the prin- cipal towns. Besides the natural emigration from Syria, Antiochus the Great had transplanted to that region two thousand Jewish families from Mesopotamia. Among other places, Ephesus and Tarsus were noted seats of Jewish com- munities. In Crete, Cyprus, and other islands, there were synagogues crowded with worshippers. From Asia the Jews had found their way into the cities of Macedonia and Greece. Athens, Corinth, Thessalonica, Philippi, are among the places where were Jewish settlements. Jews were found in Illyricum, and early penetrated to the northern coasts of the Black Sea. The Jewish prisoners brought by Pompey to Rome, afterwards received their freedom. The district across the Tiber was principally occupied by them. An embassy of Herod to Augustus is said to have been accom- panied by eight thousand Jewish residents of Rome. Among other towns of Italy, Caprea, and especially Puteoli, are known to have had a Jewish population. Apart from per- manent residents of Hebrew extraction, Jewish merchants made their way to every place in the Roman Empire where there was any hope of profit from trade. Thus the Pales- SPREAD OF JUDAISM. 69 tinian community, though still the religious centre of all the Jews, comprised within its limits only a portion of this ubiquitous nation. Capable of making a home for himself anywhere, the Jew was specially adapted to the state " which was to be built on the ruins of a hundred living polities." "In the ancient world, also, Judaism was an effective leaven of cosmopolitanism and national decompo- sition ; and to that extent specially entitled to membership in the Csesarian State, the polity of which was really noth- ing but a citizenship of the world, and the nationality of which was really nothing but humanity." x Julius Ccesar, like Alexander before him, granted to the Jews special favors. Especially was this the case at Alexandria and Rome. Yet the Jews throughout the Yvest were regarded with a peculiar antipathy. In Egypt, they were always objects of a national animosity. By the Roman writers, in particular after the stubborn and bloody insurrections in which the Jews en- deavored to gain their freedom, they were spoken of with abhorrence. Their steadfast assertion that they alone were possessed of the true religion, excited both hatred and con- tempt from those who could see nothing in such a claim but the spirit of arrogance and intolerance. " Whatever," says Tacitus, " is held sacred by the Romans, with the Jews is profane ; and what in other nations is unlawful and im- pure, with them is permitted." 2 Nevertheless, the Jews succeeded in making proselytes to their faith and worship to such an extent as to call out the sarcastic animadversion of Roman satirists, and to elicit from Seneca the complaint that "the conquered had given laws to the conquerors:" Victi victoribus leges dederunt? Wherever they went, they carried a pure monotheism which neither bribes nor torture could move them to surrender, and which led them to spurn 1 Mommsen, iv. 643. 2 Hist. v. 4. 5 Ap. Augustine, de civ. Dei, vi. 11. 70 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. with loathing all participation in the rites of heathenism. As the first preachers of Christianity went from city to city, it was in the synagogues that they first gained a hearing, and found a starting-point for their labors. There the law and the prophets were read on every Sabbath ; and there would be found assemblies capable of apprehending, even if disinclined to believe, the proclamation of Jesus as the predicted Messiah. 5. What was the effect of the union and commingling of nations upon the heathen religions ? The consideration of the general state of religion in the Roman Empire is reserved for subsequent pages. We advert here to a single circumstance, — the effect which must have resulted, and which, as history tells us, did result from the combination of so many nations under one sovereignty. There had existed a multiplicity of local religions. The gods of each people, it was believed, had ordained the method of their worship within the bounds of the territory over which they stood as guardians. National divinities were treated with respect by the Romans, and the diversified systems of wor- ship were left untouched as long as they kept within their own limits. This was the extent of Roman toleration. For Roman citizens to bring in new divinities, or foreign rites of worship, was both repugnant to the laws, and abhorrent to conservative Roman feeling. Cicero, with all his lib- erality of sentiment, advocates, in his book of " the Laws," the suppression, among the Roman people themselves, of all departures from the legally established cultus. 1 Loyalty to the state involved a strict adherence to the state-religion. But polytheism could find room in its Pantheon for an in- definite number of deities. In early times, when the Romans attacked a foreign tribe, or city, they were at pains to invite in solemn form the local divinities to abandon 1 De Legibus, B. ii. THE MINGLING OF RELIGIONS. 71 the place where they were worshipped, and to transfer their abode to Rome. What must have been the effect upon the conquered nations of the inability or unwilling- ness of their ancestral gods to defend their own temples and worshippers? It is hardly possible that a shock should not have been given, in many instances, to the faith and devotion which experienced so terrible a disappointment. But our main inquiry here relates to the effect upon the minds of men of a familiar acquaintance with so great a variety of dissimilar religions. As regards a certain class, the tendency unquestionably was to engender skepticism. Lucian may stand as a representative of this class. In one of his diverting dialogues, 1 he represents Jupiter as pale and anxious on account of a debate which had sprung up on earth between Damis, an Epicurean Atheist, and Ti- mocles, who maintained that there are gods and a provi- dence. To avert a common danger all the divinities were summoned to a council. They came in a throng, those with names, and those without a name, from Egypt, and Syria, Persia, and Thrace, and every country under the sun. Mercury, to whom it belonged to seat them, could not quell their wrangles for precedence, and Jupiter ordered them to be seated promiscuously until a council could be convoked to determine their rank. While the debate goes on below between Damis and Timocles, the gods tremble with anxiety lest their champion should be worsted, and they should lose, as a consequence, their offerings and honors. Timocles appeals to the universal belief in the gods. " Thank you," rejoins Damis, " for putting me in mind of the laws and manners of nations, which sufficiently show how uncertain everything is which relates to their gods ; it is nothing but error and confusion. Some wor- ship one, and some another. The Scythians sacrifice to a 1 Jupiter Tragoedus. 72 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. scimetar ; the Thracians to Zamolxis, who came to them, a fugitive from Sanios; the Phrygians to Mine [the moon]; the Cyllenians to Phales ; the Assyrians to a Dove ; the Persians to Fire; the Egyptians to Water." Then the special sorts of Egyptian worship, all differing from each other, are enumerated ; and Damis concludes his lively speech with the exclamation : " How ridiculous, my good Timocles, is such variety !" It would be an error to con- clude that the spirit of this passage, and of other passages in Lucian of like tenor, prevailed among his contempora- ries. Yet it is obvious that he did not stand alone. All these religions must have seemed to many a confused jum- ble, and have moved some to reject all in common, if not to disbelieve in anything divine. < ^- Another large class were tempted to forsake, in a degree at least, their traditional creed and worship, and to espouse another, — it might be some older religion from the East, which came clothed with the fascination of mystery. A tendency to syncretism — to a mingling of heteroge- neous religions — was a notable characteristic of the age contemporaneous with the introduction of Christianity. Men of a philosophical turn, in whom reverence for re- ligion was still strong, sought to combine iu a catholic sys- tem, and in harmonious unity, the apparently discordant creeds of heathenism. Plutarch is a conspicuous example of this tendency. The effort, futile as it proved, was one of the signs of the times, and was owing largely to the commingling of nations, and of the multiform religions which had divided the homage of mankind. An escape was sought from the distracting influence of polytheism, by an identification of divinities bearing different names, and by connecting a conception of the divine unity with the ad- mission of multitudinous deities with subordinate functions. Old beliefs were dissolving, at least were assuming new THE IDEA OF HUMANITY. 73 forms, in the ferment of the Eoman world. But the hope that there could be one religion for all mankind was deemed visionary. Celsus, the noted opponent of Chris- tianity in the second century, thought that it might be a good thing " if all the inhabitants of Asia, Europe, and Lybia, Greeks and barbarians, all to the uttermost ends of the earth " were to come under one religious system ; but, he says, "any one who thinks this possible knows nothing." 1 An expectation of this sort struck him as utterly chimerical. The Emperor Julian who dreamed of restoring paganism from its fall could not consider it natural or possible for the different nations to have a common religion. Their diver- sities were too radical. The Roman Empire did much to pre- pare the way for a universal religion ; but such a religion it had no power to create from the materials of polytheism. The idea of a common humanity, far as it was from at- taining the force of a practical conviction, capable of neu- tralizing deeply-rooted prejudices of an opposite nature, was obscurely present in the minds even of men unused to philosophic speculation. The line of Terence, " Homo sum : humani nihil a me alienum puto," — " I am a man ; nothing that affects man is indifferent to me" — signified, in the connection where it occurs, that the cala- mities which afflict one man should interest all. 2 " One touch of nature makes the whole world kin." A Roman theatre, filled though it was with an ignorant rabble, when that line was heard, rang with applause. 3 1 Origenes c. Celsum, viii. 72. 2 Heaut. Act i. Sc. i. 25. On the use made of this passage by Cicero, and other ancient and modern writers, see Parry, P. Terentii Comcedice, p. 174. " I think, articulate, I laugh and weep, And exercise all functions of a man. How then should I and any man that lives Be strangers to each other?" 3 Augustine, Ep., 52. — Cowpep., The Task. (TJte Garden.) 74 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. CHAPTER III. THE POPULAR RELIGION OF THE GREEKS AND ROMANS. The heathen religions did not spring out of a mere scientific curiosity which, in its rude beginning, can give no better account of the world than to attribute it to a multitude of personal agents. No explanation of the origin of heathenism is adequate, which fails to recognize the re- ligious factor, — the sense of the supernatural, the feelings of dependence and accountableness, and that yearning for a higher communion which is native to the soul. These in- nate sentiments lie at the root of religion, even in its cruder forms. " I consider it impossible " — writes one of the most genial and profound of scholars — " that that all- comprehending and all-pervading belief in the divine essence, which we find in the earliest times among the Greeks, as well as other nations, can be deduced in a convincing man- ner from sensible impressions, and conclusions built thereon ; and I am of opinion, that the historian must here rest satisfied with pre-supposing that the assumption of a hyper-physical living world and nature, which lay at the bottom of every phenomenon, was natural and necessary to the mind of man, richly endowed by nature." 1 This na- tive faith was determined as to the particular forms it should assume, by the nature and circumstances of in- dividual nations and tribes : hence the various modes of religion. Under the prompting of this latent belief, the 1 K. O. Miiller, Proleg. zu einer tuissenschaftl. Myth., Leitch's Eng- lish Transl., p. 176. CHARACTER OF THE ANCIENT RELIGIONS. <5 personifying imagination, so rife in the childhood of man- kind, endues all the separate parts of nature with personal life and agency. 1 The various beings thus created by fancy discharge the functions attributed by science after- wards to material and mental forces. 2 To them the phe- nomena of nature without, and to a considerable extent, of the mind within, as well as the course of events in the world, are relegated, each of them being in charge of his particular province. The classic religions had risen above that simpler stage, where the god is shut up to the special natural operation which it belongs to him in particular to fulfil. The deities of Greece and Rome are anthropomorphic beings, still performing, each in his place, the various offices in the movement of nature and of human affairs, which they had been — so to speak — called into being to execute ; but they are no longer limited to these specialties. They constitute a society, and enjoy a wider range of ac- tivity. Poseidon (Neptune), in addition to the management of the seas, takes part, as a member of the Olympian Council, in the administration of the world's affairs. It is the middle stage of religion, where the divinity is not yet set free from the bonds of nature, distinguished from natural agencies, and elevated above them. This progress has begun, but is only partially accomplished. But the minds of men demanded more in the object of worship than the imagination could impart. "The ten- dency to individualize, and the endeavor to comprehend the universality of Deity," blindly struggled with each other. Hence the conflict of higher and lower conceptions 1 Upon the process of the development of myths, and the agency of lan- guage in connection with it, see Max Miiller's Chips from a German Work- shop, Vol. ii. 2 Upon the impossibility of monotheism in the ancient worship of Greece, in connection with the prevalent notions of the external world, see K. O. Miiller, p. 184. 76 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. — in the case of Zeus, for example — and that undercurrent in the direction of unity, which marks the history of the Greek religion. 1 We shall have to notice three phases in the development of the Greek popular religion — the Homeric faith; that system as altered and ennobled in the age of the tragic poets, when Greek life was at its highest point of vigor, and the later era of decline and dissolution. We begin with the Homeric theology. 1. The nature of the gods and their relation to the world. The gods in Homer are human beings with greatly magnified powers. They are males and females, each class having the characteristics of the corresponding sex among men. Their dwelling is in the sky above us, and their abode on the top of Mt. Olympus. 2 They have bodies like those of men, but their veins, in the room of blood, are filled with a celestial ichor. In size they do not, generally speaking, surpass the human measure, but sometimes they are spoken of as gigantic. When Ares (Mars) (II. xxi. 407) is struck down upon the field of Troy, he stretches over seven plethrums (nearly two acres) of ground. They ex- perience hunger, but feast upon ambrosia and nectar. They are overcome with sleep. They acquire knowledge through the senses, which are of vastly augmented power. Hence they must be present where their power is to be exerted. This, however, does not hold true of influences upon the mind; but it is true of all external, visible doings, with the exception of a few instances in the case of Zeus. The cry of Ares and of Poseidon when they are wounded, is like that of nine or ten thousand men (II. v. 860 ; x. 14, 1 See Muller, p. 184, and compare Nagelsbach, Horn. Theol. p. 11, seq., with the criticism upon the views of B. Constant in his work, De la Religion, iii. 327 seq. 2 On the distinction between the Iliad and Odyssey as to the abode of the gods, see Prof. Ihne, in Smith's Diet, of Biog. and Myth,., i. p. 510. THE NATURE OF THE GODS. 77 148). The eye, and ear, and the other corporeal organs have a like strength as compared with man. The deities travel with miraculous swiftness. Hera flies from Mount Ida to Olympus as swiftly as thought. But some physical instrumentality is frequently introduced, as when Athena puts on her beautiful sandals in preparation for her jour- neys. The divinities mingle in battle with men. They cohabit with human beings, and heroes are the offspring. Thetis was obliged to defer presenting the complaint of Achilles to Zeus, on account of his absence from home on a visit, of twelve days duration, among the Ethiopians. With regard to the mental and spiritual faculties of the gods, there is the same unsuccessful, inconsistent effort to liberate them from the limitations of humanity. Their boundless knowledge and power are asserted in terms, but their title to these high attributes is not at all sustained by what is narrated of them. Even Zeus is the victim of a trick of Hera, and is kept in ignorance of what is taking place before the Trojan walls. It was only after the event that Poseidon had knowledge of the blinding of Cyclops by Ulysses. As to their power, they are the creators neither of nature, nor of men. They can hasten or retard the processes of nature ; they can heal diseases by a miracle ; they can transform the physical shape of men. Ulysses is changed by Athena into an old and shrivelled beggar, and restored back again to himself. Moreover, they can give life to things inanimate ; golden statues, " with firm gait," order the steps of Hephaestus. 1 They can give immor- tality to whomsoever they desire. The ease and blessedness of the dwellers upon Olympus are celebrated. Yet this bliss is far from being perfect. To Aphrodite, wounded and distressed, Dione says : » II. xviii. 523-528. 78 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. " Submit, my daughter, and endure, Though inly grieved ; for many of us who dwell Upon the Olympian mount have suffered much From mortals, and have brought great miseries Upon each other." ' The goddess proceeds to tell of Ares, who was chained up for thirteen months in a cell, and who became withered and weak from long confinement; and of the anguish of Hera, and of Pluto, when they were pierced with arrows. If we look at the moral conduct of the Homeric divinities, we find it rather below than above that of the heroes who figure in their company. They resort to treachery and deceit to compass their ends. Zeus sends a false dream to Agamemnon, in order to effect a slaughter of the Greeks. Athena incites the Trojans to break their truce, to furnish an occasion for their own destruction ; and she is sent on this malignant errand by Zeus, who, in turn, is instigated by the pleas of Hera. Athena, assuming the form and voice of Deiphobus, gives to Hector a deceitful promise of assistance, for the purpose of betraying him to death. Ulysses, lying in ambush by night, and finding himself cold, assumes that some god has misled him into leaving his cloak behind in the camp. It is needless to refer to examples of cruelty and sensuality on the part of the Ho- meric divinities. They are painted as the authors of evil, as well as of good. Hera and Athena never forgave the judgment of Paris in favor of Aphrodite, and pursued the Trojans with implacable wrath. The deities are capable of being appeased in individual instances ; but as they act in this matter on no fixed principles, they may show them- selves utterly implacable. 1 lerladt, tekvov ipov, Kal avaoxeo, nqdo/uivTi nep. Ho?Jm yftp 6fi r2.yp.ev 'OXvpiua dupar' exovreg 'Ef avdptiv ^aAen-' a\ys' in aXkifkoioi TiOivrec. II. v. 382-384 (Bryant, v. 472-476). AGENCY OF THE GODS. 79 The prime distinction of the gods is their exemption from death. They are immortal. But for this they are dependent on bodily sustenance. There is a virtue in their food which avails to keep them alive. The very words " ambrosia and nectar " signify this. These, infused into the body of Patroclus, keep it from decay ; "a rosy and ambrosial oil " saved the corpse of Hector from being torn, when it was dragged along the earth. The gods have a birth and beginning; but they are lifted above the lot of men by the one distinction of being immortal. The gods are the guides and rulers of nations. Their interposition is potent, their protection and aid are indis- pensable. But they act in this capacity according to no wise and continuous plan. Caprice and personal favor play a principal part in their proceedings. The depend- ence of the individual upon the gods is entire. All physi- cal and mental advantages are their gift. As Polydamas reminds Hector : " On one the god bestows Prowess in war, upon another grace In dance, upon another skill to touch The harp and sing. In yet another, Jove The Thunderer implants the prudent mind, By which the many profit, and by which Communities are saved." 1 Ulysses reminds Laodamas that the gods make one man comely in person, but may deny to him the gift of genius and eloquence which they bestow upon another less beau- tiful. Two caskets of gifts, one full of good things, and 1 aXTia) fiev yap ttduns deog iro^e/ifi'ia ipya' [dAAu 6' bpxyorbv, hepo) Ki'dapiv nai aoiSfjv~\ aXXu 6' kv arr/6eaai ridec vdov ivpvona Zevg iadTidv, tov 6e re iro^Aol ewavpiaKovT' avOpunoc' Kai re no'/iias eoauoe, (idXia^a 6e k' aiirbg avkyvu. II. xiii. 729-734 (Bryant xiii. 913-927). 80 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. the other of evil, stand by the threshold of Zeus : out of these the lot of men is made up. It is some god that makes Achilles brave. Athena inspires Diomede with valor. Zeus sends panic fear into the soul of Hector. Athena be- reaves the Trojans of reason, that they may choose to fight in the open plain instead of behind their walls. The wis- dom of the wise, the courage of the brave, felicity in do- mestic relations, safety and prosperity on the land and the sea, flow from the favor of the gods ; and so infirmities and calamities of every sort are equally due to them. There is no devil in the Homeric system ; no one being who plans and executes evil exclusively. The idea of such agents falls into a later period in the development of Greek reli- gion. Hence, in Homer, evil suggestions and doings are credited to the gods generally. The functions of the Temp- ter and Adversary reside in them. They mislead, seduce, contrive mischief, prompt to crime. So far as evil pur- poses and proceedings are felt to be of preternatural origin, they are traced to Zeus and his associates. A deity is said to have prompted Helen to the foul wrong which led to the war of Troy (Od. iv. 339-343). The general doctrine as to the administration of the world is expressed in the lines : " The great gods are never pleased With violent deeds ; they honor equity And justice." ' But the exceptions to this rule on the pages of Homer are quite as numerous as the examples. The actual govern- ment of Olympus was marked by the same sort of injustice, oppression and partiality which were mingled in the con- duct of human rulers towards their subjects. 1 ov fj.kv ax^rTiia ipya deoi fiampe^ (pikeovaiv, d/lAd 6'iki/v t'lovcl ml alaifia spy' avdp6nuv. Od. xiv. 83, 84 (Bryant xiv. 100-102). THE OLYMPIAN FAMILY. 81 2. The relation of the gods to each other. Zeus sits as a King in the midst of his Council. They are not mere instruments of the Supreme Euler. Posidon allows to his brother only a patriarchal supremacy, not an absolute, de- spotic rule. Like a family, the gods consult and debate on the summit of Olympus, where " The calm ether is without a cloud ; And in the golden light that lies on all, Day after day the blessed gods rejoice." l But this high assembly is far from being dignified or har- monious. Poor Hephaestus, limping across the floor, is greeted with inextinguishable laughter. The device by which he entraps Ares and unfaithful Aphrodite, provokes the same demonstration from the entire group of gods, — the goddesses, for decency's sake, having staid away from the brazen palace of the god of fire. 2 The converse of the deities is disturbed by harsh mutual crimination. There is little domestic concord between Zeus and Hera. Some- times he takes pleasure in provoking her to anger. Then, like a timid husband, he advises Thetis not to be seen to leave his presence, lest Hera should raise new disputes and stir up his anger with contumelious language. The Iliad and Odyssey abound in passages in which the gods charge each other with crimes and follies, — generally with good reason. When the final struggle takes place between the Greeks and Trojans, the deities are sent down by Zeus to fight for whichever side each may choose to favor ; and when he beholds them in the fierce contest with each other, 1 fid?.' aldpri iZETZTarai dve6e2.og } ?iSVK7J d' emdeSpofiev aly^rf Tu Ivt Teprrovrai ndnapeq 6eol fjaara rrdvra. Od. vi. 44-46 (Bryant vi. 58-60). 2 But this passage is considered an interpolation in the Poem. There is nothing in the Poem which is like it, in the way of burlesque upon ths gods. 6 82 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. from his quiet seat upon Olympus, he is said " to laugh in his secret heart." Yet Zeus is supreme. None of the deities can vie with him in strength. None venture to contend with him, hand to hand. When he rouses himself, he enforces silence and submission. Hera and Athena may sulk, but they obey. When his anger is excited, he even flings about the gods without ceremony, and to their imminent peril. There existed in the Greek mind a natural craving for a unity in the divine administration. The superiority of Zeus grati- fied, in some degree, this feeling. When the Greek thinks of no other god, he thinks instinctively of Zeus. Still more is the tendency to monotheism disclosed in the rela- tion of Zeus to his four children, Aphrodite, Hermes, Athena, and Apollo; especially to the two last. They stand as his deputies to execute his will and pleasure. The unifying tendency appears, also, in the conception of Fate — Moira — which in Homer hardly attains to the distinct- ness of personality. There were events which presented themselves to the Greek mind as the product of a blind, inevitable force. There were things which could not, without difficulty, be ascribed to the will of the gods ; things which even Zeus deplored but could not help. Hence arose the notion of an all-determining Fate. In Homer, Fate is in some passages identified with the will of Zeus. Elsewhere there is a separation between the two. The idea hovers between a personification and a person. 1 3. Modes of Divine Revelation. The gods made them- selves known by personal intercourse with men. They visit the earth, confer with mortals, and exhibit their preternatural attributes. But this communication between heaven and earth belonged, according to the Homeric be- 'On the Homeric idea of Moira, see Welcker, Griech. Gotterhhre, i. 186 sq. MODES OF KEVELATION. 83 lief, to an age prior to the Poet. The record is given of a state of things that had once existed, but had come to an end. l Even in the epic period, during the Trojan war, there were no further marriages of gods and men. The divinities present themselves invisibly, or visibly in their real form, or — what is most common — in the shape of man, and frequently of some particular hero whose form and voice they simulate. There were signs by which they made known their will, — such as thunder and lightning:, the sudden passing of a great bird of prey. Where portents were of doubtful import, it belonged to the art of the seer, or soothsayer, to interpret them. Yet auguries were not always regarded with trust. When the eagle dropped from his talons the bleeding serpent into the Trojan army, Hector refused to be turned from his purpose, saying to Polydamas : "Thou dost ask That I no longer reverence the decree Of Jove, the Thunderer of the sky, who gave His promise, and confirmed. Thou dost ask That I be governed by the flight of birds, Which I regard not, whether to the right And towards the morning and the sun they fly Or toward the left and evening. We should heed The will of mighty Jupiter, who bears Rule over gods and men. One augury There is, the surest and the best — to fight For our own land." 2 1 N'agelsbach, p. 132 seq. 2 el d' eteqv d?j tovtov anb CKOvifiq ayopsiiEtg if apa 6tj toi ekeito. i?cot typivaq u7xaav avToi, 5f KE^ksat T.tjvbq fi£v EpiySoviToco Xa&Ea&ai fiovliuv, acTE fioi avrbc vn£Cx eT0 Ka ' KarivEvaev tvvt) 6" oluvolai TawTTTEpvyEcat keXevel^ Trci&ea&ar tuv ovtc fierarpEnofj.', ovd' a^Eyi^a, sir' ettI degi' luac npbg 'Ho r 'HeTiiov te, eIt' £t' apicsTEpa Toiys ttot'l ^6ov TjEpoEVTa. rjjxElq 6e fiEydXoco Aibc KEi-dufiE^a fiovTiy, 84 THE BEGINNINGS OP CHRISTIANITY. Dreams were another great channel of divine revelation ; but these, likewise, might be of doubtful interpretation, or might be sent on purpose to misguide. More trustworthy than such outward vehicles of communication was the vision of the future, granted to individuals at favored moments, especially the open vision vouchsafed to the dying. Such a superhuman insight was the constant gift from the gods to select prophets, like Calchas, by whom not only the future, but the past and present also, were clearly be- held. Even these might not, in every case, command implicit confidence; so that the surest means of obtaining a knowledge of the gods, and of their will, was through their direct personal manifestation, in visible theophanies. The oracles, in Homer, are quite in the background. 4. Piety and the expressions of it in worship and con- dud. — No doctrine and no law were communicated from the gods. There was no body of written teaching to serve as a standard of belief and conduct. The religious senti- ment through all the earlier ages of Grecian history was profoundly active. A sense of dependence on the gods, and of the need of their help, existed in all except the few who are denounced as impious. Hector says to Achilles : " I know that I In might am not thy equal, hut the event Rests in the laps of the great gods." * Sacrifice and supplication, the two chief forms of devo- tion., attend every important undertaking and emergency of life. Thank-offerings follow upon good fortune. The of ndai -&VT!To'iai /cat adavaroiaiv avaaaei. elg oluvbg aptaroq, afivveadai wepl Trdrprjc. II. xii. 233-243 (Bryant, xii. 282-291). 1 olda 6", oti cv fiev todMc, eyo) de oeQev iro7Ju ^apwv. aTJC 7]tol fisv ravTa 8euv tv yovvaai kbitoi. II. xx. 434-435 (Bryant, xx. 545-547). PIETY AND ITS EXPRESSIONS. 85 deities occasionally visit their temples and shrines, where these exist -, 1 and with each of them a priest is connected. But there is no dominant hierarchy ; the father is priest in his own household. Prayers are chiefly petitions, and not unfrequently assume the form of claims on the ground of some service rendered by the suppliant to the divinity. When Chryses beseeches Apollo to give him redress for the wrong done by Achilles, he rests his appeal on the fact that he had decked the temple of the god, and burned goats and bullocks upon his altar. Zeus feels a kind of compunction in allowing Hector to be slain, who has offered him so many welcome gifts, and so many victims upon the altar. 2 Whether supplication was answered, or not, was contingent on the will of the divinities, which was determined not so much by general grounds of reason, or justice, as by personal favor, or disfavor. Moreover, the gods might resist and baffle one another, and so disappoint the hopes of the suppliant. Then to what god should a man in trouble resort? Which particular divinity was frowning upon him? The distracting effect of polytheism is constantly apparent in Homer. Resignation becomes a passive acquiescence in what is inevitably ordained. It is far removed from an active, cordial submission to the be- hest of a higher wisdom. Power eclipses the other attri- butes of divinity. Hence, the sufferer breaks out in loud complaints against the deities. Agamemnon more than once asserts that Zeus has cheated him. Menelaus, when his sword breaks in the duel with Paris, cries : — " O Father Jove ! thou art of all the gods The most unfriendly." 3 1 See N'agelsbach, 175. In only one passage is an image of a god in a temple referred to, (II. vi. 92). 2 II. xxiv. 91-95. 3 Zev xarsp, ovrig ado fisav okourepoq aXXoq' — II. iii. 365 (Bryant, iii. 447-448). 86 THE BEGINNINGS OP CHRISTIANITY. This scolding of the gods on the part of men is for the most part, if not uniformly, directed against Zeus. 1 In the Homeric system, morality is interwoven with re- ligion. Justice and the fear of the gods are involved in each other. The heroes are simple and frank in the avowal of their feelings. When they are smitten with sorrow, they weep. Thus Achilles weeps aloud over Patroclns, and Ulysses and Telemachus weep aloud in each other's embrace. Truthfulness is j>rized. Achilles declares that he who hides one thing in his heart, and utters another with his lips, is as hateful to him as the gates of hell. 2 So there is a sense of honor and of shame, which rise above the dread of censure, and spring from an ideal of worthy character. Above all, oaths are sacred, and oath-breakers detested by gods and men. The ties of affection, where they subsist, are peculiarly tender. Many passages of the deepest pathos, in the Iliad and Odyssey, are linked to this theme. The power of friendship is displayed in the relation of Achilles and Patroclus. Monogamy prevailed among the Greeks. The attachment of husband and wife to one another is deep and fervent. On the whole subject of the relation of the sexes, an air of purity and innocence pervades the Homeric poems. Maidenly modesty is held in honor. The wife must be faithful to her husband. The husband, though he may have concubines, is bound to the wife by a higher and an indissoluble tie. Only death dissolves their connection. The wife, though she may be acquired by purchase, is not a slave, but a companion, and, with certain qualifications, an equal. Homer has much to say of the silence and compliance that befit woman ; but his female personages, whether divine or human, exercise a high degree of practical freedom in speech. In the stories of Hector and Andromache, Ulysses and Penelope, we have pio 1 . * Nagelsbach does not admit any exception, p. 194. 2 II. ix. 3S6-388. THE TREATMENT OF ENEMIES. 87 tures of refined domestic love. Ulysses says to Nausicaa : — " There is no better, no more blessed state, Than when the wife and husband in accord Order their household lovingly." 1 The thoughts of the wounded Sarpedon revert to his "dear wife and little son." 2 Helen, to express the depth of her attachment to Hector, tells him that he is " father and dear mother " now to her. One of the most pathetic touches in the lament of Andromache, is the reflection that Hector had not been permitted to speak a word of comfort to her, on which she might think, day and night, with tears. 3 The heart of Ulysses melted within him as he clasped his aged father to his breast. The Homeric poems abound in kindred references to the strength and tender- ness of parental, filial, and conjugal love. Even the lot of the slave was softened in families where the patriarchal sys- tem prevailed ; although it is said that the day that makes a man a slave takes away half of his worth. The min- strel, and the aged, have a right to kindness and protection. As concerns the treatment of enemies and the feelings excited by injury, we find abundant examples of unbridled anger and savage retaliation. On the battle-field of Troy, the heroes rage, much in the temper of the wolves, and wild boars, and ravenous lions, to which they are so often likened. They often deny quarter to the suppliant, and exult over his fallen body. Agamemnon advises Mene- laus to spare not a life among the Trojans : — " The very babe within his mother's womb, Even that must die." 4 1 ov fiev yap rov ye Kpelaaov kol apsiov, fj W bfxotypovtovTe voi][iaaiv oIkov e^rov avfip t]6e yvvij.—OA. vi. 182-184 (Bryant, vi. 229-232). 2 II. v. 860-862. 3 II. xxiv. 945-946. 4 fir/d' bvnva yaorepi fit/rnp Kovpov k6vra (pipoc, p.7/6' bg (pvyor —II. vi. 58-59 (Bryant, vi. 73-74). 88 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHEISTIANITY. Yet gentle sentiments are not wanting ; and it is a mis- take, even in reference to the early stages of the Greek religion, to affirm that forbearance and forgiveness are wholly unknown. Magnanimity and mercy could never be imported into human nature, if some sparks of placable feeling were not native to the human soul. Peleus had warned Achilles that " gentle ways are best," and bidden him " to keep aloof from sharp contentions." 1 Agamem- non points to Pluto as the god who never relents, and pro- nounces him, on this account, of all the divinities, " most hateful to men." Patroclus was admired as a model of gentleness. Even Achilles, in a better mood, exclaims : " Would that Strife Might perish among gods and men, with Wrath, Which makes even wise men cruel, and, though sweet At first as dropping honey, growing, fills The heart with its foul smoke." 2 Achilles will not be appeased, and never tires of inflict- ing vengeance, not sparing the dead body of his foe, and slaying twelve Trojans upon the funeral pile of Patroclus. But the wrath of Achilles is the subject of the Iliad. His immitigable anger is not held up for approbation, but rather as an object of censure, and even of loathing. The duty of forbearance is made to rest upon religious motives. The finest illustration of this whole subject is the exquisite speech which Phoenix made, " with many sighs and tears," to Achilles. After referring to his own tender nurture of the hero in his childhood, and to the hopes he had cherished respecting him, he exhorts him to subdue his spirit : — 1 II. ix. 318-319. 2 g } bg ktyopa iravra sal npa-vvec — Electra, 174-175. * Kovdh tovtuv b n (it) Zevg.— Maidens of Trachis, 1278. 6 — Oefiig Aibg xlapiov. — Suppliants, 354. RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT. 97 But live forever, nor can man assign "When first they sprang to being." ' Parallel with this is the splendid passage in the Ajax upon the sovereignty of law over winter, and night, and storm — over the mightiest things in nature, and by analogy, over human feeling and conduct. 2 There are not wanting as- sertions of the tenderness of Zeus ; as in " the Maidens of Trachis :"— " — "Who hath known in Zeus forgetfulness Of those he children calls." 3 It must be remembered that we have here the highest thoughts of the Greek mind upon divine things. It must not be supposed that this lofty mood was uniformly main- tained even by the few ; much less, that it was diffused among the multitude, on whom the Homeric theology re- tained a firm hold. On the contrary, the doubts of the divine rectitude, which are uttered in iEschylus and Sopho- cles, must not be taken as habitual to the poets themselves. They represent the occasional questionings and perplexities which sprang up in view of the mysteries of life. A simi- lar struggle with doubt meets us in Job and in Ecclesiastes. Perhaps the most striking feature of the Greek popular faith, as reflected in the classic writers, is the righteousness of the divine government, evinced, in particular, in the pun- ishment of evil-doers. Not the worst men alone, as in Ho- mer, but transgressors generally, are punished in Hades, as well as on earth. Retribution surely, though it may be slow, overtakes the guilty. The idea that " if the millstones 1 ovAe gVeveiv tooovtov cj6/ut/v to. ca Kr/fiij/uad', ghjt' aypairra mopa/if/ deuv v6/ii/j.a dvvaodai Ovr/rbv bvd' vtvEpiSpajxeiv. ov yap ti vvv ye mxOig, aTJJ aei ttote {,•>) ravra, noiidelg oldev k% otov 'fyavq. — Antig., 453-457. 2 Ajax, 668-678. 3 — ettei tic; uSe TEKvotoi Z-qv 1 a(3ov?iov eldev.— Maidens of Trachis, 139-140. 7 98 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. of the gods grind slow, they grind fine," was cherished, long before it was coined into a proverb. The Greek tragedies would be emasculated, were they deprived of this pervading element. That which especially calls down the vengeance of the gods is haughty self-assertion, breaking through the bounds of law ; the pride and insolence, which are ex- pressed in the word uftpcc;. Zeus is called, in " the Per- sians " of iEschylus, " the avenger of o'er lofty thoughts." 1 The ghost of Darius sends the admonition to Xerxes, '' To cease his daring sacrilegious pride," 2 and predicts that the slaughter of Platsea will " witness to the eyes of men That mortal man should not wax over-proud ; For wanton pride from blossom grows to fruit, The full corn in the ear, of utter woe, And reaps a tear-fraught harvest." 3 The daring transgressor, who tramples on justice, " as time wears on Will have to take in sail, When trouble makes him hers, and each yard-arm Is shivered by the blast." 4 Then he will call in vain for help, and, in the midst of " woes inextricable," 5 will make shipwreck of his happi- 1 Zevg roc KoAaarr)g tuv {nzEpud/unov ayav afu koX Trapaifiarov T(l TTo7Cka Tzavrdipvpf clvev 6'iKag fiiaiug £vv XP 0V Q Kadi)aEiv Tialtyog, brav Tidjirj n6voq y Qpavojikvaq Kspaiag. — Eumenides, 523-527. 5 kv jikaa SvcTraTitZ te diva. — Ibid. 528, 529. THE PUXISHMENT OF PRIDE. 99 ness. The feeling of Sophocles on this subject is expressed in the CEdipus Tyraimus, in the words : — " But pride begets the mood Of wanton, tyrant power; Pride filled with many thoughts, yet filled in vain, Untimely, ill-advised, Scaling the topmost height, Falls to the abyss of woe." l The "Antigone " winds up with the moral from the chorus :- " Man's highest blessedness, In wisdom chiefly stands ; And in the things that touch upon the gods, 'Tis best in word or deed, To shun unholy pride ; Great words of boasting bring great punishments, And so to grey-haired age Teach wisdom at the last." 2 In the Ajax the same injunction is enforced : — " Nor boast thyself, though thou excel in strength, Or weight of stored-up wealth. All human things] A day lays low, a day lifts up again ; But still the gods love those of ordered soul, And hate the evil." 3 1 v(3pic (pv-evsi Tvpavvov v(ipig, el ttoTiXuv invepTrTiTjoOr) /udrav, a /IT) 'ninatpa /xtj6e ovufyipovra, aupdrarnv eiaavafiaa' [outtoc] aTrdrofinv upovaev fif dvdynav, evd' ov no6l xpt/g'i/ig) Xpi/rai.— (Ed. Kex., 873-879. 2 noA.ApovE~tv eSiSa^ev.— Antig., 1348-1353. 3 /*7jd' bynov dpi) /it/Sep', eI tlvoq itaeov fj x £i Pi- Ppideic rj fianpov ■kaovtov j3d0Ei. uc I'lfiEpa kMvel te ndvdyEt ndfav airavTa TdvOpdjirsw tov<; Se outypovaq deol (piAovac nal CTvyovat tovc KaKoLc. — Ajax, 129-133. 100 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. There is no escape from punishment for any form of ini- quity. Pindar ends a verse in a strain that reminds one of the First Psalm : — " While he that walks sin's wandering way, Ends not in hliss the changeful day." 1 The criminal is followed by "Vengeance, with hands that bear The might of righteousness." 2 If the murderer were to escape, atheism would be the result : — " For if the dead, as dust and nothing found, Shall lie there in his woe, And they shall fail to pay The penalty of blood, Then should all fear of gods from earth decay, And all men's worship prove a thing of naught." 3 Such lofty and inspiring sentiments place their authors far above the nominally Christian writers who have felt the enervating breath of a materialistic or Pantheistic creed. Unhappily these sentiments are connected with other notions which operated to diminish their proper in- fluence. The doctrine of an all-controlling Fate was one of these counteracting forces. The idea was entertained that a taint might cling to a particular family, like the race of Atreus, and blight one generation after another of its members. The Homeric theology contained the idea that the gods themselves tempt to sin, and spread a net to 1 obx 6/zwf TravTa xpovov BaXk&v bfiiku. — Isth. iii., Str. l. 2 Aina, 6'maia v ?.6yog TfiTvurcu, fib/av TeTiEodsvTa '//iad' . — (Ed. at Col., 324-325. 2 ovde j ap KaKug naaxovTc, filaog typovEiv yap /xtjSev i/diorog fHoq, kur to \aipEtv aal to 2.VTEiadai /u&Oyc;. Ajax, 554-555. 2 — t]tol fipoTuv ■)£ /cenpiTat irtipag bv ti. davarov } oi>d' davxifj-ov dfiipav ondTC, Traid" aViov. aTEipel aiiv ayad£> TETiEVTaaofisv poal d'aTiXor' aTiXai, ebdvfitaV te fiETa /cat ttovuv £f avdpEg efiav. Olymp. ii. Ant. ii. 3 — a/j.(pl rT av&puTtuv aalv aimkaKiaL avapidfiriToi. apt fj.avTa.1' tovto d'cifiaxavov Evpslv, otl vvv ev nai te^evtq ^spraTOv avdpl rt/^eZv. Olymp. vii., Str. ii. 110 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. anticipation connected with death. The enthusiasm of CEdipus seems to intimate a happy hereafter; yet there we find no definite suggestion of such a prospect. 1 On occa- sions where we might look for some glowing expression of hope in reference to the departed, as in the funeral ora- tion of Pericles for the fallen patriots, there is an ominous silence. 2 The consciousness of guilt left a sting in death. The Orphic and Eleusinian mysteries were a means of purifying the conscience, and of awakening more joyful hopes for the future. Underlying the former was the Py- thagorean tenet of transmigration. The aim was to cleanse the soul from sin and guilt, and thus to give peace to the conscience, and a better hope. The Eleusinian ceremonies, acting principally upon the feelings, served to dispel the gloomy dread of the grave, and to infuse a more glad belief and anticipation respecting the destiny of the soul. The hopes thus engendered find expression in Pindar. In passages, which Plutarch cites in the " Consolation to Apol- lonius," 3 the Poet describes the abode of the righteous, where there is no night, where grow the fairest blossoms and the most fragrant plants, and trees inhaling the sweetest per- fume: " Death doth its efforts on the body spend, But the aspiring soul doth upward tend. Nothing can damp that bright and subtile flame Immortal as the Gods from whence it came." i In the second Olympic Ode, the lot of the good, whose souls have thrice stood a trial on earth, and are now in the Happy Isle, among gentle breezes and " blooms of gold," is contrasted with the doom of the bad. In the tragic ^d at Col., 1611 seq. 2 Thucyd., ii. 35-46. 3 Consol. ad Apoll. xxiv. * cu/ia /iev navruv etcetcu davarij) nepiadev£l } £wv 6e Tis'nreTai aluvoQ clduTiOV \to\ yap n6i>ov iariv ek 6euv. THE FUTURE LIFE. Ill poets, it is only the select few, like Agamemnon, who, being raised in the under world to the rank of heroes, and even invoked, have a blessed lot. But apart from the in- fluence of the mysteries upon the initiated class, and as regards the mass of the people, it is probable that the Homeric notions still prevailed, and were the foundation of the popular beliefs respecting the dead. With the culti- vated, with the exception of a select band of philosophers, the desire of posthumous fame took the place of the faith in a future, immortal existence of the soul. 112 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY, CHAPTER IV. THE POPULAR RELIGION OF THE GREEKS AND ROMANS AND ITS DECLINE. It is natural to ask how the Greeks could ever have given credence to the myths which attributed gross immo- rality to the gods, and at the same time have continued to venerate them. How could men adore, and laud as just and good, beings to whom they imputed deeds of treachery, lust, and cruelty, such as, when done by men, they abhorred ? In the history of religion it is often found that incongruous conceptions may abide in the mind without jostling each other. The myths in question might be credited, in an unreflecting age, without prompting to such an induction relative to the general character of the gods, as these stories would logically warrant. These exalted beings might be thought to stand on a different plane as to moral responsi- bility, and to enjoy a license not the privilege of mortals. Some might be content to leave the crimes and infirmities of the gods in the twilight of mystery, not allowing their general habit of reverence to be disturbed by their in- ability to solve difficulties. The ambition of the leading families in Greece to trace their descendants to the gods tended to multiply the tales relative to theamours of Jove, and of his Olympian companions. The combination of myths having a separate origin — the identification of deities having different names — had the same effect. Not an impure fancy chiefly, but circumstances attending the OBJECTIONS TO THE MYTHS. 113 growth of mythology in the form in which it was cast by the poets, had led to the creation of these offensive stories. ' One main key to the solution of the problem just presented lies in the peculiar anthropomorphic idea of the government exercised by the dwellers upon Olympus. It was fashioned after the analogy of city governments so familiar to Greek experience. One civil administration might subvert an- other ; individuals clothed with authority might occasion- ally abuse their power, and avail themselves of their extraordinary opportunities for the gratification of ambition and lust; yet, on the whole, justice was administered, society was protected, government was a blessing, and rulers were to be loyally and reverently supported. Zeus and the members of his great council might wrangle with one another, and the ruling body might be torn by faction, and its members do deeds of fraud and violence ; yet, in the main, it was a righteous and wholesome sway which they exercised over men. The time must come, however, and did come, when the myths to which we refer, became repugnant to the moral sense, and men were reluctant to believe such things of their divinities. Then they were rejected as an invention of the poets, or explained away by some device of interpretation. This protest on moral grounds goes back as far as Pindar. He declares that nothing but what is becoming should be related of the heavenly powers. 2 He denounces as blasphemous the story of the cannibal feast spread for the gods by the father of Pelops. 3 Xenophanes also, in the sixth century before Christ, openly attacked on moral grounds the mythical tales of Homer and Hesiod. He also drew at- tention to the anthropomorphic character of the popular religion, as shown in the fact that the Ethiopians make 1 Compare K. O. Miiller, Prolegomena, Engl, transl., p. 294. u 01. Od. i. Str. ii. » Ibid Ep ii# 8 114 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. the images of their gods black and with flat noses, as the people are themselves ; the Thracians, on the other hand, make their gods blue-eyed and red ; and in general every nation copies its own physical characteristics. He said that if beasts were to draw a likeness of the gods, the horses would make them like themselves, and so oxen and lions would ascribe their own forms to the divinities. Xeno- phanes himself asserted the unity of God, according to a Pantheistic conception. Afterwards the philosophers, Soc- rates and Plato, and their contemporary, the orator Isoc- rates, deny that anything is true of the gods but what is honorable and worthy, and reject the immoral fables as the product of fiction. But the entire fabric of mythology, being a creation of the fancy of rude and simple ages, was ill fitted to bear an examination. It must betray its weakness the moment it is exposed to the light of rational inquiry. The expan- sion of the Greek mind brought with it the spirit of in- vestigation. Natural philosophy had another explanation to give for physical phenomena than that of the incessant interference of a crowd of personal divinities. Historical study dissolved many a sacred legend, taught men to call for proofs where no proofs could be forthcoming, and tended to inspire a general temper of distrust in regard to the popular creed. As civilization advanced, and men in large numbers were trained to use their reason in the complex affairs of peace and war, the weak places in the traditional faith must become more and more exposed to view. ! Al- legory was a natural method of treating what could not safely be made the object of a direct assault. Anaxagoras pronounced the several deities to be symbols of physical forces, and thus converted the whole mythology into a 1 For a description of this intellectual change, see Grote's Hist, of Greece, i. ch. xvi. PROGRESS OF SKEPTICISM. 115 scheme of natural philosophy. Metrodorus, on the con- trary, resolved the popular system into a moral philoso- phy, by identifying the deities with abstract ethical pre- cepts. These were not isolated individuals, but represented schools, or more general movements, of opinion. Anaxag- oras, a man of great ability, asserted that the sun, instead of being alive, as was universally supposed, was a stone, incandescent and larger than the Peloponnesus. The moon, he said, was an earth, with heights and hollows. He denied, also, destiny — efftap/uivy — and pronounced it an empty word. He went so far, moreover, as to deny the reality of the signs and omens on which auguries were founded. When Lampon the diviner, predicted from the circumstance that a ram with one horu was found on the farm of Pericles, that his party would triumph over the opposite faction and obtain the government, the philosopher dissected the skull, and. showed to the by- standers the natural cause of the phenomenon in the peculiar shape of the animal's brain. It is worth while to observe that Plutarch argues that both the philosopher, and the diviner were right. The divine agency had shaped the brain of the ram that it might serve as a sign of what was to occur. Prosecuted for impiety, Anaxagoras was delivered only by the strenuous exertions of Pericles. 1 Some, as Diagoras of Melos, in the latter part of the 5th century B. c, if the traditions about him are to be ac- cepted, avowed a downright atheism. He is said to have indicated his general tone of feeling by throwing a wooden image of Hercules into the fire to cook a dish of lentils. Then, in the time of Alexander the Great, Euemerus arose, who broached the doctrine that the myths are exaggera- tions of veritable human history, — natural persons and events, raised by fancy to the height of the supernatural. 1 Vita Periclis. 116 THE BEGINNINGS OP CHRISTIANITY. Zeus, for example, was once a king of Crete, and a con- queror. It was claimed that his grave had been found. His position and achievements as a god were the result of a poetic transformation. It belonged to historical inquiry to penetrate to the real nucleus at the centre of the mythi- cal and legendary narratives. This naturalistic theory of- fered a plausible ground for many to stand upon, who shrank from a total rejection of the old traditions. The dramas of Euripides, in connection with the way in which they were received, afford striking evidence that an era of skepticism was arising which provoked a reac- tionary hostility on the side of conservative and supersti- tious feeling. The irreverent and unbelieving utterances which the poet put into the mouths of some of his characters awakened the wrath of his auditors. A certain degree of liberty in this direction must be allowed to a dramatist, and had been exercised here and there by Sophocles, and, though to a less extent — if we except the Prometheus, where there was justification in the peculiarity of the theme, and in the final part of the trilogy — by iEschylus. In Milton's Paradise Lost, or in the "Two Voices" of Tennyson, the poet is not to be charged with all the sentiments uttered in the dialogue. But there was a skeptical tone in Euri- pides, a betrayal of sympathy on the part of the writer with the obnoxious sentiments expressed by the personages of the drama, — which, coupled with the increased sensi- tiveness of his audiences, excited their anger and caused them, on one occasion at least, to drown the voice of the actors with their indignant outcries. It was the age of the Sophists, and Euripides had caught the spirit of the time. Whatever merit may have belonged to individuals among the Sophists, however legitimate and useful their vocation as teachers may have been, there is no reason, notwithstand- ing the defence of them by Mr. Grote, to modify essentially THE PROGRESS OF SKEPTICISM. 117 the verdict of the best of their contemporaries concerning their character and influence. Their method fostered a skepticism which tended not only to undermine the mytho- logical system, but to subvert generally the foundations of religious truth. The maxim of Protagoras that man, meaning each individual, is the measure of all things, was an assertion of the relativity of knowledge, which strikes at the root of objective reality. 1 The cleverness and logical dexterity which their training was directed to produce, in the absence of a proportionate development of moral feeling, was unfavorable to positive convictions of any sort. The philosophical service of the Sophists was of a negative and destructive sort. 2 They pulled down, but could not build up. Hence their existence is an indication of the change which was passing over the Greek mind, and which their influence helped to accelerate. The influence of historical curiosity, and the growth of a historical sense, in overturning the popular faith, were potent. This effect appears, in a certain degree, in Hero- dotus, who, with all his natural devoutness and credulity, is driven by his own reflection to subtract something from the legends ; for instance, to reject the story of the miracu- lous labors of Hercules. In one remarkable passage He- rodotus asserts, on the ground of what he had learned at Dodona, that the ancient Pelasgi, the ancestors of the Greeks, had given no distinct names or appellations to the gods, but had prayed to them collectively. Their names, the historian erroneously thought, came from Egypt. But as for the special epithets attached to them, and the func- ^iog. L. ix. 51. (Hitter and Preller, Hist. Phil., p. 132.) The maxim of Protagoras is confuted by Plato, in the Thecetetas. 2 For an impartial estimate of the influence of the Sophists upon Phi- losophy, see Zeller, Phil. d. Griechcn, i. 244, seq. The views of Mr. Grote are confuted by Prof. Blackie in his Horce Hellenicce, p. 197, seq. 118 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. tions or occupations severally attributed to them — all this, he says, goes no further back than Homer or Hesiod. 1 Yet the comparatively recent date of this change appears not to have affected the credence which Herodotus gave to the body of the Homeric and Hesiodic system. In Thu- cydides, the historical feeling is much more apparent. Grecian antiquity is dealt with in a calm, judicial tone, which, whatever may be said of the particular results ar- rived at, is in marked contrast with the unquestioning cre- dulity of a former day. There is a characteristic remark of this great historian, which follows his interesting account of the plague at Athens. There had been an ancient pre- diction, so the old men said, that two heavy judgments would come at once ; a Doric war without, and a pestilence within, the walls. There had been a dispute whether the correct reading of the prophecy was Xoi/ioc,, a plague, or hp-bc., a famine. The people concluded that Xotp.bc, — a plague — was the right word; "but, in my judgment," says Thucy- dides, " should they ever again be engaged in a Doric war, and a famine happen at the same time, they will have re- course with equal probability to the other interpretation." 2 Thucydides records without comment the alarm occasioned in the army of Nikias by an eclipse of the moon, and the consequent delay of the commander, acting under the ad- 1 Ovtoi [Hesiod and Homer] 6e elai ol -rzoif] est de natura Deorum, sintne Dei, necne sint. Difficile est negare, credo, si in concione quseratur ; sed in hujusmodi sermone et consessu facillimum.— De Nat. Deorum i. 22. 2 M. Die, quseso, num te ilia terrent? Triceps apud inferos Cerberus? Cocyti fremitus ? travectio Acherontis ? ' Mento summam aquam attingens enectus siti/ Tantalus, turn illud quod, ' Sisiphus versat Saxum sudans nitendo neque proficit hilum,' fortasse etiam inexorabiles judices Minos et Rhadamanthus? apud quos nee te L. Crassus defendet, nee M. Antonius ; nee, quoniam apud Grtecos judices res agetur, poterk adhibere Demosthenen ; tibi ipsi pro te SKEPTICISM AMONG THE ROMANS. 131 Sallust may recall the account which he gives of the debate in the Roman Senate on the question how Catiline should be punished. Julius Caesar opposed the infliction of capi- tal punishment, on the ground that death puts an end to pain, since beyond it there is no room either for anguish or joy. 1 Both Cato and Cicero, in their speeches, refer to the doctrine of future retribution as an opinion held by the ancients, without attempting to defend it. It must be observed that skepticism frequently did not stop short with the denial of the mythical divinities, and of the fables relating to them. It extended to the founda- tions of natural religion, the truth of the being of God and of a Providence The sneer of Pilate — what is Truth ? — expressed a prevalent feeling of cultivated men, that the attempt to ascertain anything certain on these things is vain — the fit pursuit of visionaries. There were those who mingled with their scorn for the popular credulity the acknowledgment of one God, whom, however, they stripped of personal attributes. It was a sort of materialistic Pan- theism. The elder Pliny, whatever may be his defects as a naturalist, and however inferior his work may be to kin- dred writings of Aristotle, was not only a man of unex- ampled industry, but also of a vigorous understanding. Near the beginning of his Natural History, he devotes a chapter to the subject of "God." " Whatever God be," he says, " if there be any other God [than the world], and wherever he exists, he is all sense, all sight, all hearing, all life [totus anima?] all mind [totus animi], and all within himself." 2 He asserts the folly of believing in erit maxima corona causa dicenda. Hsec fortasse metnis, et idcirco mortem censes esse sempiternum malum. VI. A. Adeone me delirare censes, ut ista esse credara ? M. An tu haec non credis ? A. Minime vero. M. Male hercule narras. A. Cur, quseso. M. Quia disertus esse possem, si contra ista dicerem. Tuscl. I. v. vi. 1 Sallust, B. c. 50. s Nat. Hist., ii. 5. 132 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. gods, who are personified virtues, and vices, and even per- sonified diseases, and in the marriages, quarrels, foibles, and crimes which are ascribed to divinities. The deification of men is the best kind of worship. " But," he proceeds to say, "it is ridiculous to suppose, that the great head of all things, whatever it be, pays any regard to human af- fairs. Can we believe — or rather can there be any doubt, that it is not polluted by such a disagreeable and compli- cated office ?" It is difficult to determine, he thinks, which opinion, that which admits a divine agency with reference to human affairs, or the utter denial of it, is most advantageous, so multiplied and foolish are the ex- travagances of superstition. Our skepticism respecting God is increased by the deification of Fortune, who has become the most popular of divinities, "whom every one invokes." " We are so much in the power of chance, that chance it- self is considered as a God, and the existence of God be- comes doubtful." "There are others," Pliny goes on to observe, " who reject this principle, and assign events to the influence of the stars, and to the laws of our nativity ; they suppose that God, once for all, issues His decrees, and never afterwards interferes. This opinion begins to gain ground, and both the learned and unlearned vulgar are falling into it. Hence we have the admonitions of thunder, the warnings of oracles, the predictions of soothsayers, and things too trifling to be mentioned, as sneezing and stumb- ling with the feet, reckoned among omens. The late Em- peror Augustus relates that he put the left shoe on the wrong foot, the day when he was near being assaulted by his soldiers." " Such things as these," concludes Pliny, "so embarrass improvident mortals, that among all of them this alone is certain, that there is nothing more proud or more wretched than man." The lower animals never think about glory, or money, or ambition, and, above all, they never reflect on death. SKEPTICISM AND SUPERSTITION. 133 Skepticism, in the absence of a ruling caste, such as maintains an esoteric S)-stem in Oriental countries, could not be confined to officials and educated persons. It must betray its existence, and to some extent communicate itself to other classes, in the stir and ferment of Groeco-Roman society. To what extent had the leaven of unbelief thus worked its way downward into the lower ranks of society ? This is a question difficult to answer. Undoubtedly there is a striking contrast between the impression made by the literature, which reflects the tone of the cultivated class, and that produced by the sepulchral and votive inscrip- tions which emanate from all orders of men. 1 If there be the spirit of incredulity in the one, there is, on the whole, in the other, the manifestation of an unquestioning faith. Yet, especially at the close of the Republican era, and prior to the reconstruction of society under the Emperors, skepticism had widely spread. Superstition followed in the wake of infidelity as its natural companion. The void left in the soul by the departure of the old faith was filled by new objects of belief, often more degraded than the old, which rushed in to fill its place. The eagerness of Romans for foreign rites, as the cultus of Isis and Sera- pis, which was partly due to this cause, prevailed in spite of efforts at legal suppression. Devotional practices and ceremonies, such as the old Romans would have despised, were imported from the East, and came into vogue. Ma- gicians, sorcerers, and necromancers, swarmed in every part of the empire, and drove a lucrative trade. They stood in the path of the first preachers of Christianity, as we see in the book of Acts, and in the early Fathers. At the same time, a consciousness, vague and undefined it might be, that the old religion was gradually losing ground, imparted a fanatical tinge to the struggles that were made 1 See Friedlamler, Sittengeschichte Boms., iii. 423, 424. 134 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. to uphold it. It was the bitterness that attends the defence of a sinking cause which is kept from downfall by artifi- cial props. The mischiefs and extravagances of superstition are de- picted by Plutarch, in his famous Essay on this subject. Plutarch, unlike Pliny, was a religious man. By means of his Platonic eclecticism, he could believe in one supreme Deity, and yet find room for gods and demons in the ca- pacity of subordinate agents. The tract, to which we refer, opens by affirming that from our ignorance of divine things there flow out two streams; " whereof the one in harsh tmd coarse tempers, as in dry and stubborn soils, produces atheism, and the other in the more tender and flexible, as in moist and yielding grounds, produces superstition." Superstition has one disadvantage compared with atheism, that the latter is not attended with any passion or pertur- bation of mind. Its effect is rather frigidity and indiffer- ence. The superstitious man is under the distracting in- fluence of fear, and of a sort of fear that is attended with the dread of everything. It haunts him everywhere, whether he is awake or asleep, on the land or the sea. He flies to the next fortune-teller, or vagrant interpreter of dreams. He cannot use his reason when awake, nor dismiss his fears when asleep. Dreading the divine government as an in- exorable and implacable tyranny, he is yet unable to escape from its presence. He quivers at his preservers and benign benefactors. Even at the altars, to which men betake themselves to revive their courage, he is full of trembling. The atheist is blind, or sees amiss, but he is not subject to a frightful passion. He sees not the gods at all, while the superstitious man mistakes " their benignity for terror, their paternal affection for' tyranny, their providence for cruelty, and their frank simplicity for savageness and bru- tality." Afraid of the gods, he still fawns upon them, THE REFORMS OF AUGUSTUS. 135 and runs after them. He reviles himself as an object of detestation to heaven. " God," says Plutarch, " is the brave man's hope, and not the coward's excuse." Trust in him is inspiration to valor. A man would rather have his ex- istence denied altogether, than to be thought of as vin- dictive, fickle and unstable. It is the foul and senseless excesses of superstition that breed atheism in the beholders. We should flee from superstition, yet not rashly, " as people run from the incursions of robbers or from fire, and fall into bewildered and untrodden paths full of pits and preci- pices. For so some, while they would avoid superstition, leap over the golden mean of true piety into the harsh and coarse extreme of atheism." * Plutarch is one of the earliest representatives of that movement which aimed to find a via media between super- stition and unbelief, and to reconstruct paganism by placing under it a monotheistic, or pantheistic foundation. A be- liever himself in the unity and personality of God, he ex- plained what was repulsive in the mythological tales by the supposition of inferior demons, to whom much that had been attributed to the superior divinities was ascribed. In the second and third centuries, this general philosophical movement, which aimed at the rescue and elevation of the popular faith, secured many adherents among the educated heathen, and assumed the form of a reaction against the spread of Christianity. Augustus had undertaken religious reforms as a part of his general scheme for the renovation of society and the restoration of order. His efforts were naturally directed in the main towards the re-establishment of religious ob- servances. If this movement gained little sympathy in that frivolous and skeptical society, there were some, of whom Virgil may stand as an example, of a graver and 1 De Superstit., 1, 3, 8, 14. 136 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. more serious turn, who sincerely desired to infuse a fresh life into the ancient forms. In the second century, the in- fluence of philosophy, which inculcated in some form the divine unity, and the influence due to the introduction of other, especially oriental, objects and methods of worship, conspired to produce in the cultivated classes an idea of the essential identity of the various religions. God was con- ceived of as one being under various names, and the mul- titude of divinities below the Supreme were taken as repre- senting the variety of His functions, or as subordinate in- struments of His Providence. The old rites were left un- altered, but a new meaning was attached to them. This late revival of Paganism in a philosophical form, accompa- nied as it often was with a real devoutness, constituted a formidable obstacle to the progress of the Christian faith. At the same time, however, the failure of heathenism un- der its improved aspect to afford precise and satisfactory solutions to the most important problems, operated to pre- pare many thoughtful minds for the reception of the Gos- pel. The change in the apprehension of the old system acted in opposite directions, now as an obstacle, and now as a help, to the religion of Christ. At no time was it a slight thing to break away from the old religion. To quote the language of Gibbon : " The in- numerable deities and rites of polytheism were closely inter- woven with every circumstance of business or pleasure, of public or private life; and it seemed impossible to escape the observance of them without, at the same time, re- nouncing the commerce of mankind, and all the offices and amusements of society." l But the spread of skepticism rendered the abandonment of the old system easier. It is possible to exaggerate, and, as we have said before, it is difficult to estimate exactly, the extent of this feeling in the 1 Ch. xv. (Smith's ed., ii. 1C6.) MYTHOLOGY AND REVELATION. 187 age of Cicero, and in that of Pliny. But this is clear, that the mythological religion had entered upon a process of de- cay and dissolution, which might, to be sure, be retarded by efforts on the side of conservatism, by ingenious com- binations and artificial explanations, but which must even- tually run its course. The superstition and unbelief to which we have referred are not indications of disease wholly; they are, likewise, indications of health. Super- stition might, it is true, arise from an evil conscience, and unbelief might result from the insensibility engendered by a profligate life. But, as they existed in the Roman world, they sprang, in great part, from the fact that the human mind had outgrown the polytheistic religion which the ima- gination of former ages had created, and was waiting for something better. Superstition testified to the need of ob- jects of faith, which lies deep in the heart, and which Christianity alone could satisfy. Skepticism arose from the insufficiency of the traditional beliefs to satisfy the craving of the spirit, ever reaching forth for some connec- tion with the supernatural world. Christianity could never be evolved out of this unsatisfied yearning of the soul ; but it was a hunger and thirst which prepared many minds to receive with open hands the bread of life. In bringing to a close the two chapters in which we have considered the religion of the Greeks and Romans, a brief space may be given for an answer to the question : What relation of sympathy or affinity to Christian Revelation can the mythological religion sustain ? 1. It was religion. The subjective sentiments which enter into religion, as fear, reverence, gratitude, dependence, adoration, the spirit of prayer and supplication to Deity, were there. These sentiments might lack purity, the ob- ject on which they should fasten might be, and was, very defectively conceived; "yet there was worship, in its kind 138 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. often very earnest." Plato, in the course of his fervent protest against Atheism, incidentally brings out this fact with impressive force. "I speak," he says, "of those who will not believe the words which they have heard as babes and sucklings from their mothers and nurses, who used them as charms, both in jest and earnest, whom also they have heard and seen offering up sacrifices and prayers — sights and sounds delightful to children — of their parents sacrificing in the most earnest manner on behalf of them and of themselves, and with eager interest talking to the gods, and beseeching them, as though they were firmly convinced of their existence; moreover, they see and hear the genuflexions and prostrations which are made by Hel- lenes and barbarians to the rising and setting sun and moon, in all the various turns of good and evil fortune, not as if they thought that there were no gods, but as if there were no suspicion of their non-existence." * In the light of such a description, who can doubt that an ardent and genuine devotion, for ages long, in the case of a mul- titude of heathen, entered into their religious services? The myths not unfrequently embodied truth of the most exalted character. A gifted Christian scholar, speaking of the " beautiful and sublime fable in the Theogony, of the espousal by Zeus of Themis, the moral and physical go- vernment of the world, by whom he begot the Destinies ; and of Eurynome, of whom were born the Charites, "who lend a grace and charm to every form of life," says: "He who does not here recognize religion, genuine, true religion, for him have Moses and the prophets written in vain." 2 2. There was a seeking after God in the heathen devo- tions. 3 The subjective sentiments which belong to religion, 1 Laws, x. 888 (Jowett, iv. 397). 2 K. O. Miiller, Prolegomena, etc. (Engl. Transl.), p. 186. 8 Acts xvii, 27. MONOTHEISTIC TENDENCY - IX HEATHENISM. 139 could not reach their perfection of development, or meet with satisfaction, until the one object, worthy of them, who might be "ignorantly worshipped," was revealed in his true attributes. There was thus an unfulfilled demand in the religious nature, which impelled the soul of the earnest worshipper on the path towards a goal that was hidden from his sight, prior to the Christian Revelation. 3. The drift towards monotheism, which was due to the necessities of moral and religious feeling, as well as to in- tellectual progress, is discerned from the Homeric days. If Zeus mingled in human aifairs, often displaying weak- ness and folly, there was another conception of him, as one who dwells in iEther, the father of gods and men, who flashes the lightning from the clouds, governs all, and ac- complishes all his will. 1 More and more, as we advance towards the Christian era, the monotheistic tendency grows in strength. 1 Compare K. 0. Miiller, p. 186. 140 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. CHAPTER V. THE GREEK PHILOSOPHY IN ITS RELATION TO CHRISTIANITY. The Greek Philosophy was a preparation for Christi- anity in three ways. It dissipated, or tended to dissipate, the superstitions of polytheism ; it awakened a sense of need which philosophy of itself failed to meet; and it so educated the intellect and conscience as to render the Gospel apprehensible, and, in many cases, congenial to the mind. It did more than remove obstacles out of the way ; its work was positive as well as negative. It origi- nated ideas and habits of thought which had more or less direct affinity with the religion of the Gospel, and which found in this religion their proper counterpart. The pro- phetic element of the Greek philosophy lay in the glimpses of truth which it could not fully discern, and in the obscure and unconscious pursuit of a good which it could not defi- nitely grasp, Socrates stands at the beginning of this movement. The preceding philosophy had been predominantly physical. It sought for an explanation of nature. The mystic, Pythagoras, blended with his natural philosophy moral and religious doctrine ; but that doctrine, whatever it was, appears to have rested on no scientific basis. Socrates is the founder of moral science ; and the whole subsequent course of Greek philosophy is traceable to the impulse which emanated from this sublime man. A parallel has more than once been drawn between Socrates and Jesus himself; nor are there wanting points of resemblance, which readily suggest themselves. More aptly was So- THE DOCTRINES OF SOCRATES. 141 crates styled by Marsilius Ficinus, the Florentine Platonist of the Renaissance, the John the Baptist for the ancient world. Respecting the relation of Socrates and of his teaching to Christianity, the following points are worthy of notice: — 1. The soul and its moral improvement was the great subject that employed his attention. He turned away from the study of material nature. He could not spare time for such inquiries ; they seemed to him unpractical, — which was not so strange a judgment, considering the physical theories that prevailed ; and they meddled with a province which it belonged to the gods to regulate. ll As for him- self," writes his loving disciple, Xenophon, " man, and what related to man, were the only subjects on which he chose to employ himself. To this end, all his inquiries and consideration turned upon what was pious, what impious ; what honorable, what base; what just, what unjust; what wisdom, what folly ; what courage, what cowardice ; what a state or political community/' and the like. * His great maxim — " know thyself" — called the individual to look within himself in order to become acquainted with his de- ficiencies, duties, and responsibilities. To probe the con- ceited and shallow, expose them to themselves, and by that process of interrogation which he called "midwifery," to elicit clear and tenable thinking, was his daily employ- ment, Euthydemus, an ambitious young man, who thought himself fitted for the highest public office, after being examined by Socrates, u withdrew," Xenophon says, " full of confusion and contempt of himself, as beginning to perceive his own insignificance." 2 " Many," Xenophon 1 a i-or 6e Trepl tuv avSpuxeiuv av ael dieXkyero, cwxuv, t'l eveeftec;, t'l aae(ieq- ri na7.6v, t'l maxpdv t'l dlmiov, t'l adinov t'l au) avdpurrov, t'l apx^bq avdpu-uv, ml TzefH. tuv ci7.7mv, etc. — Mem., I. i. 16. 2 Kal ndvv adv/uug ejwv airyA-&e ml mTatypovfjaat; iavTov ml vojiiaaq T H)vtl av5pdwodov elvac. — Mem., IV. ii. 39. 142 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. adds, " who were once his followers, had forsaken him " l for this very reason that he laid bare their self-sufficiency, and their other faults. Who can fail to be reminded of the fizzdvota — the self-judgment and reform — which were re- quired at the very first preaching of the Gospel ? 2. Socrates asserted the doctrine of Theism, and taught and exemplified the spiritual nature of religion. It is true that he believed in " gods many and lords many." But he believed in one supreme, personal being, to whom the deepest reverence was to be paid. He presents the argument from design for the existence of God, appeal- ing to the structure of the human body, and of the eye in particular, and to the various instances of adaptation in nature, precisely in the manner of Paley and other Chris- tian writers. He argues with Aristodemus to show him the folly, being conscious of reason and intelligence him- self, of supposing that there is no intelligence elsewhere. How irrational to disbelieve in the gods, because he can- not see them, when he admits the reality of his own soul, which is invisible ! 2 In looking at a book of Anaxagoras, Socrates had been struck with pleasure in finding that he admitted a supreme intelligence — vou^ ; but he was pro- portionately disappointed in discovering that nothing was said to be done by this being, except to give the initial motion to matter. 3 He taught the truth of a universal Providence. "He was persuaded," says Xenophon, "that the gods watch over the actions and affairs of men in a way altogether different from what the vulgar imagined ; for while these limited their knowledge to some particulars only, Socrates, on the contrary, extended it to all ; firmly persuaded that every word, every action, nay, even our 1 UoXXol nlv ovv tuv ovtq SiaredivTuv vkq JZonpaTovg ovkctl avrC) Trpoa- fcaav. — Ibid., \ 40. 1 Mem., I. iv. 2 seq. s Ibid. THE DOCTRINES OF SOCRATES. 143 most retired deliberations, are open to their view ; that they are everywhere present, and communicate to mankind all such knowledge as relates to the conduct of human life." 1 He had only one prayer, that the gods would give him those things that were good, of which they alone were the competent judges. To ask for gold, silver, or power, was to seek for a doubtful advantage. The poor man's gift was as acceptable to heaven, as the offerings of the wealthy. " The service," he said, " paid to the Deity by the pure and pious soul, is the most grateful sacrifice." 2 Not only as to offerings, but also as to all other things, he had no better advice to give to his friends, than that " they should do all things according to their abil- ity." 3 He counseled absolute obedience to the Deity, and acted on this principle. It was no more possible to induce him to go counter to any intimation from the Deity respecting what should or should not be done, than to make him desert a clear, well-instructed guide for one who is ignorant and blind. 4 He looked with contempt, writes his faithful disciple, upon "all the little arts of human prudence," when placed in comparison with di- vine counsels and admonitions. 5 He chose his career in compliance with an inward call from God, which he did not feel at liberty to disregard. He abstained from any proposed action when he felt himself checked by a feeling within, which he considered to be the voice of the demon, or 1 ml yap eTrc/ue^elodac dsobg Ivdfii^ev av8puKuv t oi'x ov rpoirov ol T7o2,lol vojii^ovaiv. ovtoi fiev yap olovrai rovg deovg to. fisv eldhac, ra 6' ova zidkvai. ^UKparr/g 6e navra fiev f/yel-o Qeovg eldevat, ra re le) oueva ml Trpar-rSfieva Kal ra aiyy fiovTievo/xeva, navraxov Se* napeivai, nal or/fiaivecv rolg avdpdjTrocg TTspl row avdpuTTeiuv tt&vtuv. — Mem., I. i. 19. 2 'A/.?.' kvouL^E rair deovg ralg napa. tuv e'vcefocTaTuv Tifialg fia'AiOTa. Xa'tpeiv. — Mem., I. iii. 3. 3 Mem., I. iii. 3. * Mem., I. iii. 4. 5 Abrbg Je Travra ravdpuiriva virepeupa npbg tt/v napa ruv dtuv ^v/u/3ov- Tiiav. — Mem., I. iii. 4. 144 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. spirit, that attended him. These things belong to the cha- racter of Socrates; but, in this case, character and conduct are not to be separated from teaching. His spirit is well shown in the beautiful story of the Choice of Hercules, which he narrates to Aristippus, whom he would persuade to lead a manly and virtuous life. 1 There is reason to think that the "Apology" reports with substantial truth what So- crates said to his judges. After explaining how his plain dealing, in exposing to men their defects, and in unveiling false pretensions, made him many enemies, he says that he lamented this fact; "but," he adds, ''necessity was laid upon me, — the word of God, I thought, ought to be consi- dered first." 2 His immovable fidelity to his convictions of right was connected with his profound faith in the mo- ral government of the world, and in the care of God for His servants. "A man" — so he spoke to his judges — "a man who is good for any thing ought not to calculate the chance of living or dying ; he ought only to consider whether in doing any thing, he is doing right or wrong — acting the part of a good man, or of a bad." 3 " Be of good cheer about death, and know this of a truth — that no evil can happen to a good man, either in life, or after death. He and his are not neglected by the gods ; nor has my own approaching end happened by mere chance. But I see clearly that to die and be released was better for me ; and therefore the oracle" — that is, the demon who imparted only negative monitions — "gave no sign." 4 1 Mem., II. i. 2 buur St avaynalov kdoKEi slvai to roll fieov nepi ■k\ugtov Tvoieicdai. 21 E.— (Jowett, i. 336). 3 Ob Ka/.(~>r /iyeic, u dv&puire, e'l oiei Selv nivdvvov vTTo/^oyi&a&ai. rob (,ijv fj rsdvavai avfipa, brov ti kcll (j/MKpbv 6 <•> avdpeg dittaoTai, tvu-idaq elvac Tzpbq rbv -&dva-oi; THE DOCTRINES OF SOCRATES. 145 3. Socrates had a belief, though not a confident belief, in the future life and in the immortality of the soul. In the " Apology," he refrains from any positive, dogmatic utter- ance on this subject. The fear of death is unwise, "since no one knows whether death," which is apprehended as the greatest evil, " may not be the greatest good." 1 Such a dread implies a conceit of knowledge. He argues that either death is unconsciousness and a state of nothingness, an eternal sleep, or, for the good, a companionship with noble and glorious beings who have gone before us ; and that, in either event, it is no evil. The last word in his address is : "The hour of departure has arrived, and we go our ways — I to die, and you to live. Which is better, God only knows." 2 But his last words to his friends were — for on this point we may trust the Phsedo — a direction to make an offering for him to the god of healing, which implies an expectation of a blessing in store for him in another state of being. 3 4. In the ethical doctrine of Socrates, virtue is identi- fied with knowledge, with the discernment of the highest good. This is evident from the reports of Xenophon, as well as from Plato. No action was truly righteous that was not consciously so, — done, not from mechanical Kai : r ri roi'To Siavosic&ai «///i9,'r, bri ova eotlv avfipl a~}a$£ h ■ ::■-/. ovre T£?i£VT7]aavTi, ovfie hfitkelrai invb ■deuv tcl tovtov irpdyftara- ip a~b tov avTO/iarov yiyovev, aXka /joi 6ffk(n> egti tovto, bri fj6jj TE&vavai Kal a—r/?.?Ax&ai rrpay/uiTuv f3£hnov i]v fioi. Sid tovto nal eue ovda/iov a-erpeipe to arjuliov — 41 C, D (Jowett, i. 355). 1 07(5? fiev yap ovSslr tov davarov ovS' el tvyxo.vei.tC) avd-pcowc) tt&vtwv ftsy- iotov bv rSyv aya&Siv, dedlaoi (V tav d£ Kal outypoGvvTjv ov dtupt'ev, a?3.a rbv to, fiev KaTid te Kal ayada ■ytyvuoKOvTa xPV°® at ovTolg, Kal rbv to, alaxpd el66rd EVAafii'iaBai, ao(p6v te Kalcu6pova Enpivev. — Mem., III. ix. 4. For further illustrative passages, see Ueberweg, Hist, of Phil, i. 85. THE DOCTRINES OF PLATO. 147 racterized by a genuine humility. The Pythian prophetess had called him the wisest of men. He could explain this laudation only by the reflection that he was conscious of his ignorance. After talking with a politician, he said to himself: f( He knows nothing, and thinks that he knows. I neither know nor think that I know. In this latter particular, then, I seem to have slightly the advantage of him." 1 After plying others with questions, he was led to the same conclusion. Simmias, in the Phsedo, says that one who cannot learn the truth about the great matters connected with the soul and the future life, must take the best of human notions as a raft on which to sail through life, "if he cannot find some word of God which will more surely and safely carry him." 2 This reference to a possi- ble divine revelation is quite in the Socratic spirit. In passing to Plato, we do not leave Socrates ; but it is not possible to draw the line, in the Platonic Dialogues, be- tween the teaching of the master, and the ideas and opinions of the more speculative disciple. The elevated tone of the Platonic system, and its many points of congeniality with Christian truth, have always been recognized in the Church. Men like Origen and Augustine, among the Fathers, were imbued with the Platonic spirit. Not a few, as far back as Justin Martyr and as late as Meander, have found in the pure and lofty teaching of Plato a bridge over which they have passed into the kingdom of Christ. Turn where we will in these immortal productions, we are in the bracing at- mosphere of a spiritual philosophy. We touch on some of the most important points which invite comparison with Christian doctrine. 1 Apol., 21 (Jowett, i. 335). 2 — f t ii// rir 6ivaiTo aaTOQ rj ?.6yov deiov nvbg 6ia-opev6?jvai. Plued. 3 85 (Jowett, I. 434). 148 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY 1. Plato's conception of God approaches but does not attain to that of Christianity. His sense of the mystery that surrounds the divine being is expressed in the Timseus, where he asks : " How can we find out the Father and Maker of all the universe? Or when we have found him, how shall we be able to speak of him to all men ?'' l Plato teaches that God is a Person, a self-conscious intel- ligence. No other interpretation of his doctrine can be consistently applied to his various utterances on the subject. When, in the Republic, he refers to the idea of the good as " that which imparts truth to the object and knowledge to the subject," 2 he is setting forth the final cause, which is also the moving spring, of divine action, and of human action so far as it is rational. In the Philebus, he speaks of Zeus as possessed of the mind and soul of a king, and affirms that, mind rules the universe. 3 It is impossible to doubt his profound earnestness, when, in the tenth book of the Laws, he speaks of the " lost and perverted natures " who have adopted atheism, and describes it as a notion which superficial youth may take up, but which, as men advance in life, they abandon. It is with moral indigna- tion that he comments on this disbelief in the existence of Deity, and on the skepticism which dreams that the gods stand aloof from human affairs, or can be bribed by offer- ings to withhold the retribution that is due to sin — as if they . 1 tot //•')' ov" KQUtjrrjy Kai rcarepa rovdt rov —error fvpslv re epyov Kal eir- povra t'tr rrarrnr advvarov Myeiv. — Timseus, 28 (Jowett, ii- 524). 2 Tof'7<> tolvw to rf/v aXq&eiavirapexov role yiyvuo-KOfievois ml tu yiyvixtKovrt T//r fivvauiv aizodiSbv T7jv tov ayadov ideav adt elvac. — VI. 508 (Jowett, ii. 344). The interpretation given above seems to be most consistent with Plato's other teachings. By some the idea of the good is identified abso- lutely with God. See Butler's Lectures on Ancient Phil., ii. 02, but also Thompson's Note. See, also, Bitter, His/, of Anc. Phil., ii. 284. For other views of the passage, see Zeller, Gesch. d. Griech. Phil, ii. 208, 309, 310. s Phileb., 30. THE DOCTKIXES OF PLATO. 149 were ready to share with a robber his spoils. His doctrine is that an inward affinity between us and the gods leads us to believe in them and honor them. 1 But Plato did not escape from the dualism which clung to Greek as well as to Oriental thinking. Matter is eternal, and is an independent and a partially intractable material. God fashions, He does not create, the world. Then, side by side with the Supreme Being, is the realm of ideas, the patterns and archetypes of whatever comes to be, and which, it is clear not only from Plato himself, but also from the polemical attitude of Aris- totle, are conceived of as substantial entities. By thus assign- ing to the ideas a kind of separate existence, Plato gave room and occasion for the pantheistic turn which his system as- sumed in the hands of professed Platonists of a later day. Recognizing the gods of the popular creed, Plato dis- carded as false and impious the myths which attributed to them infirmities and crimes, and he would banish from the ideal Republic the poets who related these revolting stories. In the beautiful dialogue at the opening of the Phsedrus, Socrates, who reclines upon the sloping grass, in the shadow of "a lofty and spreading plane-tree/' on the margin of the Ilissus, and with his feet resting in its cool water, explains to his companions his reasons for rejecting the rationalistic solutions of Euemerus. Of divine Providence, so far as the care of the individual is concerned, it is enough to quote this passage from the Republic, which sounds like Apostolic teaching: "This must be our notion of the just' man, that even when he is in poverty, or sickness, or any other seeming misfortune, all things will in the end work together for good to him, in life and death : for the gods have a care of any one whose desire is to become just and to be like God, as far as 1 Leges, x. 899 (Jowett, iv. 411). 150 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. man can attain his likeness, by the pursuit of virtue." * This faith in Providence led to the condemnation of suicide. Man has a post assigned him by heaven, and he has no right to desert it on account of any hardship that he suffers. " The gods are our guardians," says Socrates, " and we are a possession of theirs." 2 When one remembers how the opposite doctrine prevailed among the Stoics, one is struck with the deep religious feeling of Plato. But we miss in him, as in the ancient philosophers generally, any concep- tion of the final cause of history, of a goal to which the course of history tends, such as we have in the Christian idea of the kingdom of God on earth ; and hence there is wanting a broad and satisfying conception of the Providence of God as related to mankind. Hellenic pride, the Greek feeling of superiority to the barbarian, was one thing which stood in the way of an ampler idea of the plan of God re- specting the human race. Plato was not emancipated from this feeling. 3 But, independently of all prejudice, the means of arriving at a larger view were not present on the plane of ancient heathenism. Here was a limitation which Plato could not surmount; but as to the moral government of God, under which the good are rewarded and the evil chastised and punished, both in this world and in the world to come — this is a conviction with which his mind is pro- foundly impressed. The rewards and punishments which we receive here, he says, are nothing " in comparison with 1 Ovtuc dpa vkoTitjkteov TTEpl tov diKaiov avdp6c, edv r' ev -Ktvla yiyv?/- rat edv re ev v6aoig fj tivl aXku tuv Sokovvtov aanuv, ug tovtu ravra elg ayadov tl Tefavrqaei, £avTi rj nal dnotiavdvTi. ob yap Si] vir6 ye -deuv ttots hfiekelraL Sf av irpcrdviielo&ai h^ffa) Slaaiog yiyveadai. ml erriTr/Sevuv aperyv elg boov dwarbv av&p^wu bfioiovodai i9ecj. — X. 613 (Jowett, ii. 455). 2 TO ftedv TE ELVai TOV £77lflE?iOV[XEVOV T/fl&V KOt IjfiaQ EKe'iVOV UTT/fiaTd dva«. Ph£ed., 62 (Jowett, i. 406). 3 Plato's objection to the distinction of Hellenes and Barbarians, in the Politicus (262), is on a logical ground; just as, in the context, he objects to the distinction of men and animals. PLATO ON THE SOUL. 151 those other recompenses which await both the just and the unjust after death." l 2. Plato teaches the super-terrestrial properties and des- tiny of the soul. Man is possessed of a principle of intelligence — vdbc, and is thus in the image of God. In a beautiful passage of the Phoedo, the notion is confuted that the soul is a mere harmony of parts or elements, sub- ject to the affections of the body. Rather is it a nature which leads and masters them — " herself a diviner thing than any harmony." 2 The soul is immortal. The inward life is " the true self and concernment of a man." 3 "Let each one of us," says Plato, "leave every other kind of knowledge, and seek and follow one thing only, if perad- venture he may be able to learn and find also who there is that can and will teach him to distinguish the life of good and evil, and to choose always and everywhere the better life as far as possible." 4 There are two patterns before men, the one blessed and divine, the other godless and wretched. It is utter folly and infatuation to grow like the last. We are to cling to righteousness at whatever sacrifice. " No man," says Plato, " but an utter fool and coward is afraid of death itself, but he is afraid of doing wrong. For, to go to the world below, having a soul which is like a vessel full of injustice, is the last and worst 1 Tai'-a Toivvv, tjv 6' ky6, ovSev ecrrc nfa'/fiei ovds /ueye&Ei irpbg EKEiva a relevT/'/aavra eaarepov irEpipivEC. — Rep., x. 614 (Jowett, ii. 456). a Phffid., 94 (Jowett, i. 444). 3 — ak'Aa TTFpi T7jv kvrbg avSpeg, fi'waiov diavoqdfjvai, oti el tiep !] ipvx*> adavarog ectiv, Exi/isle'tag 6?/ dsiTai ov% imip tov xp^vov tovtov fiovov ev u v rb £yv, akV birep tov iravrbc, nal 6 nivdwog vvv Srj nal du^eicv av Seivbg elvai, hi Tig avTfjg afielijaei. — Phsed., 107 (Jowett, i. 458). *lTim., vi. 7. 5 Eep., ix. 586 (Jowett, ii. 426). plato's idea of redemption. 153 original image can hardly be discerned because bis natural members are broken off, and crushed, and in many ways damaged by the waves, and incrustations have grown over them of sea-weed, and shells, and stone, so that he is liker to some sea-monster than to his natural form." 1 But Plato's idea of the nature of redemption is faulty from the defect that belongs to his notion of sin. Redemption is not strictly moral, the emancipation of the will from the control of evil, although this element is not ignored; but it is the purification of the soul from the pollution sup- posed to be inevitable from its connection with matter. The spirit is to be washed from the effect of its abode in the body, its contact with a foreign, antagonistic element that denies it. And what is the method of redemption ? Sin being conceived of as ignorance, as an infatuation of the understanding, deliverance is through instruction, through science. Hence the study of Arithmetic and Geometry is among the remedies prescribed for the disorder of human nature. The intellect is to be corrected in its action. The reliance is predominantly upon teaching. Thus, Plato, through his dualism on the one hand, and the exaggerated part which he gives to the understanding in connection with moral action, on the other, fails to apprehend exactly both the nature of sin, and of salvation. 4. There is a Christian idea at the bottom of Plato's ethical system. Virtue he defines as resemblance to God according to the measure of our ability. 2 To be like God Christianity declares to be the perfection of human cha- racter. But there was wanting to the heathen mind, even in its highest flight, that true and full perception of the divine excellence which is requisite for the adequate reali- zation of this ethical maxim. We cannot but wonder at ^ep., x. 612 (Jowett II. 454). 2 — ofioiuaig iSfoJ nara to dvvarov. — Theait., 176 A (Jowett, iii. 400). 154 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. hearing Plato say, almost by inspiration : "In God is no unrighteousness at all- — He is altogether righteous ; and there is nothing more like Him than he of us who is most righteous." " To become like Him is to become holy, just, and wise." l Yet, with Plato, justice is the crowning vir- tue, the highest attribute of character. It is Justice which keeps all the powers of the soul in harmony, and connected with this regnant virtue are Wisdom, Courage, and Tem- perance, corresponding respectively to the several functions, reason, the will with the higher impulses of the spirit, and the appetitive nature. Plato has only an occasional glimpse of the higher principle of Love, which Chris- tianity makes the sum and source of moral excellence; it does not enter as an essential link in his system. 2 Moreover, the possession of virtue in the highest sense is possible only to the philosopher. And Plato says that the philosophic nature is a plant that rarely grows among men. 3 In the ideal commonwealth, it is only the few who are endowed with philosophic reason. It is their pre- rogative to rule the many ; and it is only the few who are capable of realizing the moral ideal in its perfection. How opposed is this to the Gospel, which offers the heavenly good to all ! The idea of an intellectual aristocracy, with respect to which Plato stands on the common level of ancient thought, is made somewhat less repulsive by the duty which is laid upon the philosopher of descending " into the den," 4 and working among men, laboring " to make their ways as far as possible agreeable to the ways of God." 5 1 Ibid. ( Jowett, iii. 400). a The Symposium, which, though difficult of analysis, contains pass- ages of great beauty, shows how far he went in this direction. 3 Kepublic, B. vi. (Jowett, ii. 324). * —irakiv Karallaivetv nap' EKeivovg rovg deo/uurag. Kep. vii. 519 (Jow- ett, ii. 353). 5 — £(jf av on fidTitffra avd-pcnvEia ij&tj elg baov evjf^erat ■decxptfJ/ noi'/oeiav. Eepub., vi. 501 (Jowett, ii. 335). plato's republic. 155 Plato's Republic offers the finest illustration of the lofti- ness of his aspirations, and, at the same time, of the barriers which it was impossible for him to overpass. This work gives evidence of the yearning of his mind for a more in- timate union and fellowship of men than had hitherto existed. How could this aspiration be realized ? The only- form of society in which he could conceive it possible for such a community to come into being, was the State. And, in order to give effect to his conception, individuality must be lost in the all-controlling influence and sway of the social whole. Plato says that in the best ordered state there will be a common feeling, such as pervades the parts of the human body ; he uses the very figure of St. Paul when he says of Christians that they are members one of another. But this relation could never be produced by any form of political society. Besides this insurmountable difficulty, Plato does not escape from the pride of race. It is an Hellenic state, which he will found, and the Hellenes are not to treat the barbarians as they treat one another, the Hellenic race being " alien and strange to the barbarians." x The vision of the Republic must, therefore, stand as an unconscious prophecy of the kingdom of Christ. The ancient heathen world could not supply the conditions de- manded for its fulfilment. Aristotle, when compared with Plato, his great teacher and friend, presents fewer points of similarity to Christian teaching, for the reason that his mind is less religious, and that he confines himself more closely to this mundane sphere, and to the phenomena that fall directly under hu- man observation. Aristotle was a Theist. He undertakes a scientific proof of the existence of a supreme intelligent i —$T]u.i yap to uev 'E/U^v ' K0V yevog av-b avru o'lkeIov elvat nal tjvyye- v£$, ry Je j3ap3apiKw bOvuov re nai a/26rpiov. Rep., v. 470 (Jowett, ii. 303). 156 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. Being, who must be presupposed as the first cause of mo- tion. God is, in His nature, pure energy, not a mere poten- tiality ; He is eternal, immaterial, unchangeable, incapable of motion ; He is one being, a pure intelligence, leading a life of serene and blessed contemplation. x His conception, though lofty, is defective from a Christian point of view, since God is brought into no constant, living relation to the world, as its Creator and Euler, and, especially, no place is found for His moral government. Aristotle holds, likewise, to an immaterial, intelligent principle in man ; but he leaves it doubtful whether this element of the soul is invested with individuality, and thus whether our personal life continues after death. Ethics, according to Aristotle, relates to human conduct, and does not concern itself with the end or rule of action which the gods adopt for themselves. He sets forth no general prin- ciple like that of Plato, that we are to imitate God as far as possible. And as the highest bond of unity is political, Ethics is treated as a subordinate branch of Politics. But within his own horizon, the perspicacity of this powerful thinker merits the admiration which has generally been bestowed upon it. He discerns and opposes the error of Socrates in confounding virtue with knowledge. He assigns to the voluntary faculty its proper place. If passion were caused by ignorance, he says, then ignorance ought to precede the passion, which is not the case — for example, when a man allows himself to be carried away by anger. Moreover, if sin were merely ignorance, there would be no ground for blame or punishment. As far as men are the authors of their character, they are responsible for the at- traction which, in consequence of that character, evil as- sumes. Our vices are voluntary, and are not the less Aristotle, Metaphys., B. xii., where the whole doctrine of God is syste- matically unfolded. THE DOCTRINES OF ARISTOTLE. 157 guilty, because they have become, through long indulgence and the power of habit, incurable. Luther attacked the doctrine of Aristotle that a virtuous principle is created by the doing of virtuous acts. The Reformer asserted that such acts presuppose a virtuous principle, and spring from it. It is true that Aristotle is acquainted with no trans- forming principle which may dictate conduct the reverse of what has existed hitherto; but, as Xeander has pointed out, the doctrine of Aristotle as to the effect of moral action holds good when applied to the fortifying of a principle al- ready implanted. One must be good in order to do good ; but it is a case where the fountain is deepened by the outflow of its waters. Passing by the discussion of the particular virtues, where much is said in harmony with Christian morals, we advert to the interesting passage, in the Fourth Book of the Nicomachean Ethics, where Aristotle describes the man of magnanimity, or noble pride. This portraiture of the ideal man contains many features which deserve approval, from a Christian point of view. Yet when such a man is repre- sented as eager to do favors, but as ashamed to receive them, unwilling to stand in a relation of dependence on his fellow-men, and therefore scorning to be the recipient of benefits from them, we have a type of character at variance with the humility and fraternal fellowship which belong to Christian excellence. The character which is depicted by Aristotle in this remarkable passage, is grand in its out- lines, but it lacks an essential element, the very leaven of Christian goodness, the spirit of love. It is evident that Aristotle does not rise above the intel- lectualism, which excludes the mass of mankind, on account of an alleged incapacity, from access to the highest good. In his treatise on Politics he makes slavery to be of two kinds, one of which springs from violence, and the law of 158 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. war, and the other from the inferior mental powers of the enslaved. * This last species of servitude he defends, on the ground that the enslaved are not fitted by nature for any higher lot. Some are born to command ; others are fitted only to obey. To these last, servitude is a benefit. As reason in the individual is to the lower faculties, and as the soul is to the body, so is the enlightened class in society to those beneath them. The latter perform the part of animated implements, guided and managed by the su- perior intelligence of their owners. 2 But in his Ethics, when he undertakes to explain the nature and foundation of friendship, he raises the question whether a man can have a slave for a friend, and betrays some perplexity in answering it. As being a mere animated tool, a slave can- not stand in the relation of friend ; but, as a man, he may ; and as such, may be the object of sincere attachment. 3 In this distinction, Aristotle shows a partial discernment of the incompatibility of slavery with the laws of nature, which, nevertheless, from the ancient point of view, he denied. 4 At the close of his principal ethical treatise, Aristotle dilates with genuine eloquence on the lofty delight which belongs to intellectual contemplation, wherein man calls into exercise that part of his being in which he resembles the gods, and in this act must, therefore, be most pleasing to them. This is to live conformably to that which is highest in us, which is, to be sure, in bulk small, but in dignity and power is incomparably superior to all things 1 B. I. 3, seq. 2 Kal 6 SovXoq KTij/id ti ifiipvxov. — Polit., i. 3. 6 de doling fiepog n tov dsawoTov, olov e/nipvxov ti tov aufiaTog KExupio/uevov 6e /uepog. — Lib., i. 7. 3 Hi [lev ovv dovAog, ova eoti iAia Trpbg aiirbv, y o'av&puizoQ- Sokei yap elvai ti dimtov izavrl civ&puTTC) trpbg navTa tov dvvafievov noivuvrjaai vbixov Kal cvvdijKW ml / o'vmr ?,nyinrj Kal ttoXltlkt]. tt6?j.c kcu irarfi'ic, <-jr uh> Avrovivu, fioi 7) 'Pufiij, uc t'f avdpu-o), 6 Kda/xoc. Meditations, vi. 44 (Long, p. 178). 2 — Kal baipbfiEvov cpikslv avro'vr AainovTac d>(; narepa ttcivtuv, u>g aded.Qov. Discourses, III. xxii. 54 (Carter's translation, Boston Ed., 1866, p. 250). 3 — -poxetpov eotcj to 6i6tl ovSev vpbc i/iL Encheirid. i. (Carter, p. 376). i ovdeu hyKa/.ovvTa, ova avOputru- opt^iv apai ae del navre/MQ, ekkXiocv £-1 p.6va fxeradelvai to. npoaiperiiid. Discourses, III. xxii. 13 (Carter, p. I'll.. ZriiOepEt ek&otu, b ov ayaOdv tare, nai ola ,ufj del, rovro fi6vov nandv ■nov in /taxi? ; nov \oi6opia; nepl rivuv • nspi ruv ovdiv irpbq ■fjiiac,' npbt; rivag ; npbc; rofrf ayvnovvra^. npbq rovr dvarvxovvra^, Trpof rni>c i/Karrjuevovg irep) tov fieyicruv. Discourses, TV., v. 32. (Carter, p. 332). 3 Plotinus was born A- D. 204, and died A. D 269. NEW PLATONISM. 179 refuge was in mysticism, where feeling and intuition super- sede the slow and doubtful processes of the intellect. Plotinus found in Platonism the starting-point and principal materials for his speculations ; although the reconciliation of philosophies, and especially of the two masters, Plato and Aristotle, was a prominent part of his effort. With Plotinus, the absolute Being, the antecedent of all that exists, is impersonal, the ineffible unity, exalted above all vicissitude and change. The idea of a creative activity on the part of God is thus excluded. Emanation, after a Pantheistic conception, would seem to be the method by which the universe originates from the primary being ; yet this notion is discarded, since it would imply division in this being, and the imparting of a portion of its contents. Matter is evil, and the original fountain of evil. The hu- man soul finds its purification only in separating itself from the material part with which here it stands in connection. The highest attainment and perfect blessedness lie in the ecstatic condition, in which the soul rises to the intuition and embrace of the Supreme Entity, sinking for the time its own individuality in this rapturous union with the Infinite While the Platonic idea of resemblance to God, as the life and soul of virtue, is held in form, its practical value is lost by this sacrifice of personality in the object towards which we are to aspire. The civil virtues l — wisdom, cou- rage, temperance and justice — are retained; but higher than these are placed the purifying or cathartic virtues, by which the soul emancipates itself from subjection to sense ; while the highest achievement is the elevation to God, where the consciousness of personal identity is drowned in the beatific contemplation of the Supreme. 1 7ro?.irinal aperai. 180 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. This kind of rapture is possible only to elect spirits, who are qualified by superior endowments for so lofty an ascent. The supercilious tone of the ancient philosophy, the notion of an olio-archy of philosophers, to whom the common herd are subservient, is thus maintained to the full in this final phase of Greek thought. " The life of worthy men," says Plotinus, " tends to the summit and that which is on high." The life which is merely human is two-fold, "the one being mindful of virtue and partaking of a certain good ; but the other pertaining to the vile rabble, and to artificers who minister to the necessities of more worthy men." l Asceticism was the natural offspring of a system in which all that is corporeal is evil. Superstition, especially in the form of magic and sorcery, was likewise conspicuous in Jamblichus, and in the other later devotees of this school. Christianity holds to a possible illumination of the human mind, and to a blessed communion with God. But this is not a boon open only to a few who are raised intellectually above the rest of mankind. The egoistic absorption of the individual in his own mental states, where the idea of doing good is banished from thought, or supplanted by a contempt for mankind generally, is an- tagonistic to the spirit of the Gospel. Self-purification is an end which the Christian sets before him ; but he pur- sues it, not in the way of mystic contemplation, but by the daily practice of all the virtues of character. 2 What were the actual resources of Philosophy ? What power had it to assuage grief, and to qualify the soul for the exigencies of life, and to deliver it from the fear of 1 — rolg fiev GTfovdaioiQ Trpbg to riKpdraTnv Kal to avu ) TOtc 6e avdpuTTiKU- repoig, dirrbc av uv, 6 fiev /j.EfzvTj/uivog aperyq fisriox^t ayadov Tivog, 6 6s tyavTioq o%Aog olov \uporEx vr IZ T ^ v npbg avaynrjv to'iq eTrceacsaTEpocc — Enn., ii. 9. 2 Compare Neander, Wissenschaftl. Abhandll., p. 213. THE PRACTICAL INFLUENCE OF PHILOSOPHY. 181 death ? An instructive "answer to this inquiry may be gathered from the works of Cicero. Whatever were his faults as a man, in the writings of no Roman of that age does there breathe a more enlightened spirit. The Stoic conception of the universal city is a familiar thought to him. That the individual is to live for mankind, and to restrict his sympathies by no narrower limit, he expressly affirms. Humanity, in the sense of a philanthropic regard for the race, is a word frequently upon his lips. Anti- theses like that of Greek and Barbarian, he declares to be contrary to truth and nature. A good man is not even to requite injuries, but to confine himself to the restraint of the aggressor. In his political course, however, and in dealing with ethical questions in the concrete, Cicero too often failed to exemplify these liberal maxims. There is a like failure to realize practically his religious theories. In his work on the Nature of the Gods, and in that on Divination, he shows the folly of polytheism, and of the cultus connected with it. He wishes that it were as easy to discover the truth as to confute error. 1 He is a Theist, preferring to follow Plato in the belief in a personal God, rather than the Stoics in their dogma of the impersonal spirit of nature. He finds in the wonderful order of the world irresistible evidence of the supreme Mind. He sees a corroboration of this faith in the concurrent judgments of men, as evinced in the universal prevalence of religion. Equally strenuous is he in maintaining that the soul is immaterial and immortal. 2 But we have the opportunity of testing the character of his convictions when he is brought into circumstances of keen distress. What was the practical force and value of these opinions ? He com- posed the Tusculan Discussions when he was sixty-two 1 cle Nat. Deorum, i. 32. 2 E. g. Disp. Tusc. I. xxvii. xxviii. 182 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. years of age, after the death of his beloved daughter Tullia. Just after this heavy bereavement, Jie wrote a treatise on Consolation, for the purpose of alleviatiug his sorrow, — a treatise which is lost, but the general character of which he describes. The topics of the Tusculan Discussions are the Contempt of Death, on Bearing Pain, on Grief of Mind, on other Perturbations of Mind, on the Sufficiency of Virtue to make a man happy. In the perusal of these writings, we are struck with the distinctness with which the problems of life — the practical necessities of the soul, exposed as it is to affliction, and looking forward to death — are discerned and stated. We are equally impressed with the effort that is put forth to find a ground of rest. Ingenious reflections are brought forward, remedies against grief, which in Christianity are collateral and quite sec- ondary to the main sources of consolation. He says : " There are some who think with Cleanthes that the only duty of a comforter is to prove that what one is lament- ing is by no means an evil. Others, as the Peripatetics, prefer saying that the evil is not great. Others, with Epicurus, seek to divert your attention from the evil to good. Some think it sufficient to show that nothing has happened but what you had reason to expect ; and this is the practice of the Cyrenaics. But Chrysippus thinks that the main thing in comforting is to remove the opinion from the person who is grieving, that to grieve is his bounden duty. There are others who bring together all these various kinds of consolation, as I have done myself in my book on Consolation ; for as my own mind was much disordered, I have attempted in that book to discover every method of cure." l " The principal medi- cine to be applied in consolation is to maintain either that it is no evil at all, or a very inconsiderable one ; the 1 B. ii., U 31, 32. THE PRACTICAL INFLUENCE OF PHILOSOPHY. 183 next best to that is to speak of the common condition of life, having a view, if possible, to the state of the person whom yon comfort particularly. The third is that it is folly to wear yourself out with grief which can avail nothing." He says in another place : " In order to persuade those to whom any misfortune has happened that they can and ought to bear it, it is very useful to set before them an enumera- tion of other persons who have borne similar calamities." 1 To be sure, Cicero argues eloquently for the existence of God, and for the immortality of the soul. But when he is himself plunged into affliction, we find that neither he, nor his intimate friends who strive to console him, recur to truths of this nature. There is a striking contrast between the discourses composed for the public eye, and the familiar letters which passed between him and these friends. His correspondence with Servius Sulpicius, after Tullia's death, is an impressive illustration of the small degree of practical power which these religious opinions or speculations had over the minds of such men. The Letter of Condolence which Sulpicius writes to Cicero is marked by refinement and tenderness. He adverts to the fall of the Republic, an event which had filled the cup of grief to the brim, so that no new event could increase the weight of calamity that had fallen on his friend ; to the ruins of four renowned Grecian cities, of which Corinth was one, which had met his eyes upon a recent voyage, and which brought to mind dis- asters compared with which any loss that an individual could suffer is small; 2 to the fact that Tullia had lived to witness her father's public honors and fame ; to the cir- cumstance that Cicero, who had sought to console others, 1 B. iii. 29. 2 Coepi egoraet mecum sic cogitare: Heus ! nos homnnculi indigna- mur, si quia nostrum interiit aut occisus est, quorum vita brevior esse debet; quumunoloco tot oppidorum cadavera prqjectajacent t-Serv. Sul- picius Ciceroni, F., iv. 5. 184 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. would be charged with inconsistency if he himself gave way to sorrow. These are among the prominent thoughts in this remarkable letter. Cicero, in his Reply, dilates upon the peculiar circumstances of aggravation that be- longed to his affliction, being deprived, as he was, of the occupation and diversion which arise from official employ- ment, and left without a solace at home. l In neither of these letters is there the slightest reference to God, or to a future life. Cicero's treatise on Old Age is another monu- ment of the vain attempt to elevate considerations which, when merely subordinate and auxiliary, have their value, into prime sources of consolation. How current the con- solatory reflections were, which are recited by Cicero, in his moral treatises, is evident from their familiar use by other writers. Plutarch, in his Letter of Consolation to Apollonius, who had lost a son, and in his Letter to his own wife after the death of his daughter, a child two years of age, incorporates some of these reflections. As usual, he inveighs against that Stoical apathy which "can never happen to a man without detriment ; for as now the body, so soon the very mind would be wild and savage." "A wise and well educated man," he observes, in the first of these Letters, " must keep his emotions within proper bounds. It is no unusual thing for a man to be afflicted ; Socrates was right in saying that if all of our misfortunes were laid in one common heap, most people would be content, instead of taking an equal share, to take their own and depart ; the sufferer endures nothing but what is common to him with other men ; how irrational to wonder when that perishes which by nature is perishable ; we must call to mind the reasons which we have urged to our kinsmen when they were in trouble, and apply them to ourselves — these thoughts have 1 When in exile, Cicero conceived of his calamities as altogether ex- ceptional.— See Epistt. ad Atlicum, iii. 10, 15. THE PRACTICAL INFLUENCE OF PHILOSOPHY. 185 a prominent place in Plutarch's Epistle. He intermingles references to the Providence of God which may have or- dained for us what is best, and to the possible felicity of another state of being. But the doctrine of the future life, even in Plutarch, is not set forth as a firm conviction, but only as a probability ; and he makes an argument in behalf of serenity, on the hypothesis, which is admitted to be not ab- solutely disproved, that death is the dissipation of our being, and the termination, therefore, of pain as well as of joy. Even outside of the limits of the Stoical school, there was a ten- dency to make much of natural fortitude and manliness as a means of counteracting sorrow. Plutarch himself says, that when evil comes " one must put on a masculine brave spirit, and so resolve to endure it." l Plato says that the principle which inclines us to recollection of our troubles and to lamentation, is " irrational, indolent, and cowardly." We are not, " like children who have had a fall, to be keep- ing hold of the part struck and wasting time in setting up a howl." Hence the emotional nature must not be in- dulged. For this reason the dramatic poets must be ex- cluded from the Republic. This poetry " feeds and waters the passions instead of withering and starving them." It evokes pity by showing us the calamities of others, and the result is that when we are afflicted we pity ourselves. 2 The Stoic element which entered into the character of Socrates, an element which is quite discernible in Plato's account of his apology to his judges, crops out occasionally in the Platonic dialogues, though connected with other tenets not consonant with the Stoical system. In Cicero's time, and in the century that followed, faith in the immortality of the soul is mostly confined to minds imbued with the Platonic influence. We have adverted to 1 Consol, ad Apoll., 4. 2 Republic, x, 606. (Jowett, ii. 448). 186 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. the gloomy disbelief that prevailed in a class of whom the elder Pliny is an example. l The Epicureans were avowed free-thinkers, and at the close of the civil wars, the Epi- curean creed was popular at Rome. We have already adverted to the fact that Julius Caesar, in an address to the Senate against the infliction of capital punish- ment upon the associates of Catiline, maintained that death would be a less severe penalty, since it would end all life and sensation ; the idea of a survival of the soul he treated as a chimera. 2 Tacitus, who was not without a belief in the existence of the gods, and in their providential agency, shows himself to be a doubting adherent of the opinion of Chrysippus that the souls of the most worthy survive until the final conflagration. In the beautiful apostrophe with which he closes the Life of Agricola, he de- sires that " if there be any habitation for the shades of the virtuous ; if, as philosophers suppose, exalted souls do not perish with the body ;" the illustrious dead may repose in peace, and recall his kindred from vain laments to the contemplation of his virtues. In the second century, along with the revival of the ancient religion, and the restoration of political order, phi- losophy played a more important part as an educator among the Romans than it had ever done before. 3 There had been not only a popular dislike of philosophers, but also a strong prejudice against any absorbing devotion to philosophical study, which was felt by persons like Tacitus, on the ground that it diverted men's minds from the affairs of state, and made them poor citizens. For political reasons partly, from a sense of the dangerous tendency of philosophical thinking, philosophers had been repeatedly banished from 1 See above, p. 132. 2 Sallust, b. c. 50. 3 See, on this subject, Boissier, La Religion Romaine, etc., ii. 410 seq. THE PRACTICAL INFLUENCE OF PHILOSOPHY. 187 Rome in the course of the first century ; but, after the death of Domitian, philosophy not ouly gained a toleration, but often received an effective personal patronage from the Emperors. There was still a popular antipathy from the supposed uselessness of studies and discussions of this na- ture, and from the Pharisaical character of many who were devoted to them. There was, also, a vehement opposition from the rhetoricians like Quintilian, who had to defend themselves against censorious criticism, and who claimed that ethics was embraced in their own art, since virtue was an essential quality of a true orator. A great number of the noblest minds embraced Stoicism, though the systems of Epicurus, and the Eclectic school were not without numerous adherents. Philosophers taught in schools, deli- vering lectures which were often received with great ap- plause, and taking under their oversight the entire conduct of the young men who adopted them as guides in the for- mation of character. Their exactions were sometimes severe, and their rebukes faithful. Besides the work of philoso- phers in this public capacity as the heads of schools, they exerted their influence in a more private relation. They were sometimes received into the families of the great in the character of spiritual advisers. As a pastor or confessor, the philosopher solved questions of duty, gave counsel, and administered consolation, in the household where he took up his abode. In certain cases, he accompanied to the place of execution, and soothed in the last moments of life, per- sons sentenced to death, ostensibly for political offences. If these household instructors, like chaplains in great fami- lies in more modern times, were, according to the descrip- tions of Lucian, occasionally subject to indignities, there is no doubt that not unfrequently they held a dignified and useful position. Princes associated with these philoso- phers for the sake of their instructive companionship. 188 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. There was a certain class of philosophers, the Cynics, who engaged in a distinctively missionary work. Like mendicant friars, they perambulated the streets and high- ways, offering their doctrine and their rebukes to whomso- ever they chose to address. Hated and despised as they were, not unfrequently with good cause, there were not wanting among them individuals of a mild spirit, and of disinterested, noble aims. Epictetus, in one of his Dis- courses, has sketched the ideal of the Cynic Missionary. 1 He who takes upon him this work, it is said, must not do it without divine guidance. He must not presumptuously take this office upon himself. He must divest himself of discontent, and of all the excitements of passion. He must j:>urify his mind ; learn to despise the body, and give up all dread of death. He must be, and feel himself to be, a messenger from Zeus to men, and must tell them the truth at all hazards. He must give up house, land, property, and external comforts of all sorts, and take up with the hardest fare. He must not return evil for evil, but as a brother love those who beat him. He must, as the ser- vant of Zeus, be indifferent to Csesar or to Proconsul. He must be without the distraction of worldly care — Epictetus uses the same word (azipcoTzdavcoz) with Paul (1 Cor. vii. 35) — that he may be entirely attentive to the service of God ; and for this reason he must abstain from marriage. He must have a sound bodily constitution, so that his pure doctrine and exalted standard may not be attributed to the accident of bodily infirmity. He must be endowed with natural tact and acuteness. He must, above all, be free from every vice, with his reason clearer than the sun. Few, if any, fulfilled the lofty ideal which the Stoic sage presents of one who undertakes to reform and guide his fellow-men. Yet it is interesting to know that such an *Diss., iii.22. THE RELATION OF PHILOSOPHY TO CHRISTIANITY. 189 ideal was exhibited, and that, here and there, an individual was found who made some near approach to the realiza- tion of it. Philosophy yielded a certain amount of strength and solace to able and cultivated men ; an increased amount, we may say, among the Romans, in the second century, as compared with the age that witnessed the introduction of Christianity. The Stoics looked forward to a continuance for an indefinite, though limited period, of personal life beyond the grave. Platonists may not unfrequently have cherished a larger hope. But it must be remembered that philosophy exerted no appreciable influence on the mass of mankind, either in the way of restraint or of inspira- tion. They were left in the adversities of life, in sickness, in bereavement, and in death, to such consolation as was to be drawn from the old mythological system. The epi- taphs in memory of the dead in some cases betray a crass materialism, in other cases a bitter and resentful despair; while many express a hope in behalf of the beloved who are gone, which is slow to be extinguished in the human heart. When we look back upon the ancient philosophy in its entire course, we find in it nothing nearer to Christianity than the saying of Plato that man is to resemble God. But, on the path of speculation, how defective and dis- cordant are the conceptions of God ! And if God were adequately known, how shall the fetters of evil be broken, and the soul attain to its ideal? It is just these questions that Christianity meets through the revelation of God in Jesus Christ. God, the Head of that universal society on which Cicero delighted to dwell, is brought near, in all His purity and love, to the apprehension, not of a coterie of philosophers merely, but of the humble and ignorant. 190 THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. There is a real deliverance from the burden of evil, achieved through Christ, actually for Himself, and po- tentially for mankind. How altered in their whole cha- racter are the ethical maxims which, in form, may not be without a parallel in heathen sages ! Forgiveness, forbear- ance, pity for the poor, universal compassion, are no longer abstractions, derived from speculation on the attributes of Deity. They are a part of the example of God. He has so dealt with us in the mission and death of His Son. 1 The Cross of Christ was the practical power that annihi- lated artificial distinctions among mankind, and made human brotherhood a reality. In this new setting, ethical precepts gain a depth of earnestness and a force of impres- sion which heathen philosophy could never impart. We might as well claim for starlight the brightness and warmth of a noon-day sun. 1 See Col. iii. 12 ; Eph. iv. 32 ; 1 Pet. ii. 18 ; 2 Cor. x. 1 ; Luke xxii. 27 ; John xiii. 14 ; 1 John iii. 16 ; 2 Cor. viii. 9 ; Eph. v. 2 ; Phil. ii. 7 ; and the New Testament passi7ii. THE MORALS OF HEATHENISM. 191 CHAPTER VI. THE STATE OF MORALS IN ANCIENT HEATHEN SOCIETY. Beneath the tranquillity that prevailed under the rule of Augustus Csesar, there appeared appalling signs of ex- haustion and decay in the central portions of the Roman Empire. The world was weary of strife, and resigned itself to the sway of a master who was supported by a standing army of 340,000 men, and who, by absorbing the various magistracies in his own person, knew how to com- bine the substance of absolute power with the forms of republican government. But the decay of that virile ener- gy, the loss of that virtue, which had carried Rome forward on its career of conquest, were visible on every hand. The civil wars, from the time of Sylla, had desolated the most nourishing regions of the Empire. The wars in Gaul had been attended with an enormous destruction of life in that country. Of these wars Plutarch says that Caesar had not pursued them for ten years "when he had taken by storm 800 towns, subdued 300 states, and of the 3,000,000 of men who made up the gross sum of those with whom at several times he engaged, he had killed 1,000,000, and taken captive a second." 1 This loss of population was par- tially made up by the large influx of Roman colonists. There were countries, like Sicily and Egypt, whose extra- ordinary fertility enabled them to recover rapidly from the devastating effects of war, and to furnish supplies of food to provinces whose agriculture was blighted. Greece, as a 1 Vita Caesaris. ' THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY. consequence of the Macedonian and Roman wars, was covered with ruins. The most of her renowned cities were reduced to villages. Corinth only, favored by its situa- tion, rose from its ashes, and gained rapidly in population and wealth — the increase of luxury and profligacy keeping pace with its growth. The nobler qualities of the Hellenic race had vanished. Still proud of their blood, dexterous, supple, unprincipled, and accomplished in the art of cater- ing to the appetite for amusement and sensual indulgence, they swarmed in Italy and Rome, and infected the whole atmosphere of domestic and social life with their pestiferous influence. Juvenal pours out his wrath at seeing " a Gre- cian capital in Italy," * and his scorn at '' The flattering, cringing, treacherous, artful race, Of fluent tongue, and never-blushing face, A Protean tribe, one knows not what to call, That shifts to every form, and shines in all." 2 " Greece," he says, " is a theatre where all are players ;" this versatile, insincere, sensual race " make all parts their 1 "non possum ferre, Quirites, Grsecam urbem." Sat. iii. 2 These lines of Gifford are a free paraphrase of the original : — " Ingenium velox, audacia perdita, sermo Promptus, et Isaeo torrentior : ede quid ilium Esse putes ? quemvis hominem secum attulit ad nos : Grammaticus, Rhetor, Geometres, Pictor, Aliptes, Augur, Schcenobates, Medicus, Magus : omnia novit : Grceculus esuriens in Ccelum, jusseris, ibit." Sat. iii. 73-78. A more literal rendering is that of Madan : — ''A quick wit, desperate impudence, speech Ready, and more rapid than Isseus. Say— what do you Think him to be ? He has brought us with himself what man you please : Grammarian, Rhetorician, Geometrician, Painter, Anointer, Augur, Rope-dancer, Physician, Wizard : he knows all things. A hungry Greek will go into heaven, if you command." THE MORALS OF HEATHEN SOCIETY. 193 own ;" they cast an enchantment over all, and defile what- ever they touch. The population of Italy, like that of Greece, was diminishing. The slaughter of men in battle was a cause, but not the chief cause, of this remarkable fact. The country was blighted by slavery, to which more than to any other agency the fall of Rome was eventually due. In the room of the farmers who had once owned the soil which they tilled, and who had filled the Roman armies with hardy soldiers, were the few great proprietors, each with his throng of bondmen who toiled in the fields with fetters on their limbs. Thus the race of independent Italian yeomen was extirpated. It was one consequence of this calamitous change, that numerous acres, which had previously been cultivated with the plough and the spade, were turned into grazing land. The grain and the wine which had once been produced at home were now imported from abroad. Moreover, the small land-owners who had been left, were expelled from their homes, in large numbers, to give place to the disbanded soldiers of the legions of Au