Paganism
by C.C. MARTINDALE
Paganism, in the broadest sense includes all religions other than the
true one revealed by God, and, in a narrower sense, all except
Christianity, Judaism, and Mohammedanism. The term is also used as the
equivalent of Polytheism (q.v.). It is derived from the Latin pagus,
whence pagani (i. e. those who live in the country), a name given
to the country folk who remained heathen after the cities had become
Christian. Various forms of Paganism are described in special articles
(e.g. Brahminism,
Buddhism,
Mithraism); the present article deals only with certain aspects of
Paganism in general which will be helpful in studying its details and in
judging its value.
I. CLAIMS OF PAGANISM TO
THE NAME OF RELIGION
INFLUENCE ON PUBLIC AND PRIVATE
LIFE
Historians of religion usually assume
that religions developed upwards from some common germ which they call
Totemism, Animism, Solar or Astral Myth, Nature Worship in general or
Agrarian in particular, or some other name implying a systematic
interpretation of the facts. We do not propose to discuss,
theologically, philosophically, or even historically, the underlying
unity, or universal originating cause, of all religions, if any such
there be. History as a matter of fact presents us in each case with a
religion already existing, and in a more or less complicated form.
Somewhere or other, some one of the human elements offered as universal,
necessary, and sufficient germ of the developed religion, can, of
course, be found. But we would point out that, in the long run, this
element was not rarely a cause of degeneration, not progress; of lower
forms of cult and creed, not pure Monotheism. Thus it is almost certain
that Totemism went for much in the formation of the Egyptian religion.
The animal-standards of the tribes, gradually and partially
anthropomorphized, created the jackal-, ibis-, hawk-headed gods familiar
to us. But there is no real trace of the evolution from Zoolatry to
Polytheism, and thence to Monotheism. The monotheistic records are more
sublime, more definite in the earlier dynasties. Atum, the object of a
superb worship, has no animal equivalent. Even the repression of popular
follies by a learned official caste failed to check the tendency towards
gross and unparalleled Zoolatry, which was food for Roman ridicule and
Greek bewilderment, and stirred the author of Wisdom (xi, 16) to
indignation (Loret, "L'Egypte au temps du totemisme", Paris, 1906;
Cappart in "Rev. d'hist. relig.", LI, 1905, p. 192; Clement Alex.,
"Pæd.", III, ii, 4; Diodorus Siculus, I, lxxxiv; Juvenal, "Satires",
xv).
Animism also entered largely into the
religions of the Semites. Hence, we are taught, came Polyd monism,
Polytheism, Monotheism. This is not correct. Polydmonism is undoubtedly
a system born of belief in spirits, be these the souls of the dead or
the hidden forces of nature. It "never exists alone and is not a
'religious' sentiment at all": it is not a degenerate form of Polytheism
any more than its undeveloped antecedent. Animism, which is really a
naive philosophy, played an immense part in the formation of
mythologies, and, combined with an already conscious monotheistic
belief, undoubtedly gave rise to the complex forms of both Polydmonism
and Polytheism. And these, in every Semitic nation save among the
Hebrews, defeated even such efforts as were made (e.g. in Babylon and
Assyria) to reconstitute or achieve that Monotheism of which Animism is
offered as the embryo. These facts are clearly indicated and summed up
in Lagrange's "Etudes sur les Religions s mitiques" (2nd ed., Paris,
1904).
Nature Worship generally, and Agrarian in
particular, were unable to fulfill the promise they appeared to make.
The latter was to a large extent responsible for the Tammuz cult of
Babylon, with which the worships of Adonis and Attis, and even of
Dionysus, are so unmistakably allied. Much might have been hoped from
these religions with their yearly festival of the dying and rising god,
and his sorrowful sister or spouse: yet it was precisely in these cults
that the worst perversions existed. Ishtar, Astarte, and Cybele had
their male and female prostitutes, their Galli: Josiah had to cleanse
the temple of Yahweh of their booths (cf. the Qedishim and
Kelabim, Deut., xxiii, 17; II Kings, xxiii, 7; cf. I Kings, xiv, 24;
xv, 12), and even in the Greek world, where prostitution was not else
regarded as religious, Eryx and Corinth at least were contaminated by
Semitic influence, which Greece could not correct. "Although the story
of Aphrodite's love", says Dr. Farnell, "is human in tone and very
winning, yet there are no moral or spiritual ideas in the worship at
all, no conception of a resurrection that might stir human hopes. Adonis
personifies merely the life of the fields and gardens that passes away
and blooms again. All that Hellenism could do for this Eastern god was
to invest him with the grace of idyllic poetry" ("Cults of the Greek
States", II, 649, 1896-1909; cf. Lagrange, op. cit., 220, 444 etc.)
Mithraism (q.v.) is usually regarded as a
rival to nascent Christianity; but Nature Worship ruined its hopes of
perpetuity. "Mithra remained", says S. Dill, "inextricably linked with
the nature-worship of the past." This connexion cleft between it and
purer faiths "an impassable gulf" which meant its "inevitable defeat"
("Roman Soc. from Nero to Aurel.", London, 1904, pp. 622 sqq.), and, "in
place of a divine life instinct with human sympathy, it had only to
offer the cold symbolism of a cosmic legend" (ibid.). Its very
adaptability, M. Cumont reminds us, "prevented it from shaking itself
free from the gross or ridiculous superstitions which complicated its
ritual and theology; it was involved, in spite of its austerity, in a
questionable alliance with the orgiastic cult of the mistress of Attis,
and was obliged to drag behind it all the weight of a chimerical or
hateful past. The triumph of Roman Mazdeism would not only have ensured
the perpetuity of all the aberrations of pagan mysticism, but of the
erroneous physical science on which its dogma rested." We have here an
indication why religions, into which the astral element entered largely,
were intrinsically doomed. The divine stars that ruled life were
themselves subject to absolute law. Hence relentless Fatalism or final
Scepticism for those sufficiently educated to see the logical results of
their mechanical interpretation of the universe; hence the discrediting
of myth, the abandonment of cult, as mendacious and useless; hence the
silencing of oracle, ecstasy, and prayer; but, for the vulgar, a riot of
superstition, the door new opened to magic which should coerce the
stars, the cult of hell, and honor for its ministers -- things all
descending into the Satanism and witchcraft of not un-recent days. Even
the supreme and solar cult reached not Monotheism, but a splendid
Pantheism. A sublime philosophy, a gorgeous ritual, the support of the
earthly Monocracy which mirrored that of heaven, a liturgy of
incomparable solemnity and passionate mysticism, a symbolism so pure and
high as to cause endless confusion in the troubled mind of the dying
Roman Empire between Sun-worship and the adorers of the Sun of
Righteousness -- all this failed to counteract the aboriginal lie which
left God still linked essentially to creation. (See F. Cumont, "Les
religions orientales dans le paganisme romain", 2nd ed., Paris, 1909,
especially cc. v, vii-viii; "Le mysticisme astral", Brussels, 1909,
invaluable for references and bibliography; "Textes et Monuments . . .
relatifs aux Myst res de Mithra", I, 1899, II, 1896; "Théol. solaire du
paganisme rom.", Paris, 1909.) We do not hint that these elements which
have been assigned as the origin of an upward revolution have always, or
only, been a cause of degeneration: it is important to note, however,
that they have been at times a germ of death as truly as of life.
II. SOCIAL ASPECT
Christianity first and alone of religions
has preached, as one of its central doctrines, the value of the
individual soul. What natural religion already, but ineffectually
implied, Christianity asserted, reinforced, and transmuted. The same
human nature is responsible at once for the admirable kindnesses of the
pagan, and for the deplorable cruelties of Christian men, or groups, or
epochs; the pagan religions did little, if anything, to preserve or
develop the former, Christianity waged ceaseless battle against the
latter. As for woman, the promiscuity which is the surest sign of her
degradation never existed as a general or stable characteristic of
primitive folk. In China and Japan, Buddhism and Confucianism depressed,
not succored her; in ancient Egypt, her position was far higher than in
late; it was high too among the Teutons. Even in historic Greece as in
Rome, divorce was difficult and disgraceful, and marriage was hedged
about with an elaborate legislation and the sanctions of religion. The
glimpses we have of ancient matriarchates speak much for the older,
honourable position of women; their peculiar festivals (as in Greece, of
the Thesmophoria and Arrephoria; in Rome, of the Bona Dea) and
certain worships, as of the local Korai or of Isis, kept their
sex within the sphere of religion. As long, however, as their intrinsic
value before God was not realized, the brute strength of the male
inevitably asserted itself against their weakness; even Plato and
Aristotle regarded them more as living instruments than as human souls;
in high tragedy (an Alcestis, an Antigone) or history (a Cloelia, a
Camilla), there is no figure which can at all compare, for religious and
moral influence, with a Sara, a Rachel, an Esther, or a Deborah. It is
love for mother, rather than for wife, that Paganism acknowledges (see
J. Donaldson, "Woman in anc. Greece and Rome, etc.... among the early
Christians", London, 1907; C. S. Devas, "Studies of Family Life",
London, 1886; Daremberg and Saglio, "Gynæceum", etc.).
Essentially connected with the fate of
women is that of children. Their charm, pathos, possibilities had
touched the pagan (Homer, Euripides, Vergil, Horace, Statius), even the
claim of their innocence to respect (Juvenal). Yet too often they were
considered merely as toys or the destined support of their parents, or
as the hope of the State. With Christianity, each becomes a soul,
infinitely precious for God's sake and its own. Each has its heavenly
guardian, and for each death is better than loss of innocence.
Education, in the fullest sense, was created by Christianity. The
elaborate schemes of Aristotle and Plato are subordinated to state
interest. Though based upon "sacred" books, education in ancient times,
when organized, found these highly mythological, as in Greece or Rome,
or rationalized, as in Confucian spheres of influence. Both Greeks and
Romans attached great importance to a complete education, supported it
with state patronage (the Ptolemies) state initiative and direction (the
Antonines), and conceived for it high ideals (the "turning of the soul's
eye towards the light", Plato, "Republic", 515 b); yet, failing to
appreciate the value of the individual soul, they made education in fact
merely utilitarian, the formation of a citizen being barely more
complete than under the narrow and rigid systems of Sparta and Crete.
The restriction, in classical Greece, of education among women to the
Hetairai is a fact significant of false ideal and disastrous in
results (J. B. Mahaffy, "Old Gk. Educ.", London, 1881; S. S. Laurie,
"Historical Survey of Pre-Christian Educ.", London, 1900; L. Grasberger,
"Erziehung u. Unterricht im klass. Alterum", Würzburg, 1864-81; G.
Boissier, "L'instruct. publique dans l'empire romain." in "Rev. de Deux
Mondes", March, 1884; 3. P. Rossignol, "De l'educ. des hommes et des
femmes chez les anciens", Paris, 1888).
Error in education was conditioned, we
saw, by error of political ideal. No doubt, all the older polities were
sanctioned directly by religion. The local god and the local ruler were,
for the Semites, each a melek (king), a baal (proprietor),
and their attributes and qualification almost fused. Or, the ruling
dynasty descended remotely, or immediately, from a god or hero, making
the king divine; so the Mikado, the Ionian and Doric overlords.
Especially the Orient went this way, most notably Egypt. The Chinese
emperor alone might pray to the Sublime Ruler whose son he was. Rome
deifies herself and her governors, and the emperor-cult dominates army
and province, and welds together aristocracy and the masses (J. G.
Frazer, "Early Hist. of the Kingship", London, 1905; Maspero, "Comment
Alex. devint Dieu en Egypte"; Cumont, "Testes et Monuments de Mithra",
I, p. ii, c. iii; J. Toutain, "Cultes paiens dans l'emp. rom.", I,
Paris, 1907). It is hard to judge of the practical effects; obviously
autocracy profited, the development of obedience, loyalty, courage in
the governed (Rome; Japan) being undoubted. Yet the system reposed upon
a lie. The scandals of the court, the familiarities of the camp, the
inevitable accidents of human life, dulled the halo of the god-king. Far
more stable were the organizations resulting from the subtle polities
devised by Greek experiment and speculation, and embodied in Roman law.
Aristotle's political philosophy, almost designed -- as Plato's frankly
was -- for the city state, was carried on through the Stoic vision of
the City of Zeus, of world-empire, into the concrete majesty of Rome,
which was itself to pass, when confronted in Christianity with that
individual conscience it would not recognize, into the Civitas Dei
of an Augustine. Aristotle and Plato survived in Aquinas, the Stoic
vision in Dante; Gregory VII reproduced, in his age and manner, the
effective work of an Augustus. And of it all the soul was that Kingdom,
Hebrew-born, which, spiritualized by Christ and preached by Paul, has
been a far mightier force for civilization than ever was the polis
of the Greeks. As long as the ultimate source of authority, the
inalienable rights of conscience, and the equality of all in a Divine
sonship were unrealized, no true solution of the antinomy of state and
individual, such as Paul could offer (Rom., xiii etc.) was possible.
[Cf. E. Barker, "Polit. Thought of Plato and Aristotle", London, 1906,
esp. pp. 237-50, 281-91, 119-61, 497-515; G. Murray, "Rise of the Gk.
Epic.", Cambridge, 1907; P. Allard, "Ten Lectures on the Martyrs", tr.
(London, 1907); Idem, "Les Persécutions" (Paris, 1885-90); Sir W.
Ramsay's books on St. Paul, esp. "Pauline Studies" (London, 1906); "Paul
the Traveller" (1897); "Ancient King Worship", C.C. Lattey, S.J.,
English C.T.S.]
In these systems, the weakest necessarily
went to the wall. Even the good Greek legislation on behalf of orphans,
wards, the aged, parents, and the like; even the admirable instinct of
aidos which shielded the defenseless, the suppliant, the
stranger, the "stricken of God and afflicted", could not (e.g.) stop the
exposition of sickly or deformed infants (defended even by Plato), or
render poverty not ridiculous, suffering not merely ugly, death not
defiling. Yet the sober religion of the Avesta preaches charity and
hospitality, and these, the latter especially, were recognized Greek
virtues. In proportion as travel widened minds, and ideals became
cosmopolitan, the barbarian became a brother; under the Antonines
charity became official and organized. Always, in the Greek world, the
temples of Æsculapius were hospices for the sick. Yet all this is as
different in motive, and therefore in practical effect, from the "mutual
ministry of love" obligatory within the great family of God's children,
as is the counterpart of Christian self-sacrifice, Buddhist Altruism.
(Cf. L. de la V. Poussin, "Bouddhisme", Paris, 1909, especially pp. 7-8,
where he quotes Oldenberg, "Buddhismus u. christliche Liebe" in
"Deutsche Rundschau", 1908, and "Orientalischen Relig.", pp. 58, 266
sqq., 275 sqq.) In slavery, of course, a chasm is cleft between Paganism
and Christianity. By proclaiming the rights of conscience and the
brotherhood of men, Christianity did for the slave what could never have
been accomplished by demanding the instant and universal abolition of
slavery, thereby risking the dislocation of society. In Christ, a new
relation of master to man springs up (I Cor., vii, 21; I Tim., vi, 2):
the Epistle to Philemon becomes possible. Yet while it is true that in
many ways the slave's lot might be miserable (the ergastulum),
and inhuman (the Roman slave might technically not marry), and immoral
(Petronius: "nil turpe quod dominus jubet"), yet here too, human nature
has risen above its own philosophies, laws, and conventions. Kindness
increases steadily: even Cato was kind; social motives (Horace),
philosophical considerations (Seneca), sheer legislation (already under
Augustus), devotion (at Delphi, slaves are manumitted to Apollo:
contrast the beautiful Christian emancipation in Ennodius, P. L., LXIII
257; sentiment, and even law protected the slaves' tomb or loculus)
answered the promptings of gentle hearts. The contubernium became
parallel to marriage; nationality never of itself meant slavery;
education could make friends of master and man ("loco filii habitus",
says one inscription); Seneca generalizes: "homo res sacra homini;
servi, humiles amici." But not all the sense of the "dignity of man",
taught by the Roman comedians and philosophers, could supply even the
emancipating principles, far less the force, of Christian equality in
the service of God and the fellowship of Christ (H. A. Wallon, "Hist. de
l'Esclavage de l'Antiq.", Paris, 1847; Boeckh, "Staatshaushaltung d.
Athener.", I, 13; C. S. Devas, "Key en." (1906), 143-150 and c. v; P.
Allard, "Les Esclaves chrét.", Paris, 1876; O. Boissier, "Relig.
romaine", II, Paris, 1892).
III. ART AND RITUAL
Omnia plena deo:
the nearer God is realized to be, the richer the efflorescence of
religious art and ritual; and the purer the concept of His nature, the
nobler the sense-worship that greets it. Hence the world's grandest art
has grown round Christ's Real Presence, though Christ said no word of
art. Thus, heresy has always been iconoclastic; the distant God of
Puritanism, the disincarnate Allah of Islam must be worshipped, but not
in beauty. To Hindus, gods were near, but vile; and their art went mad.
To the Greeks, save to a smaller band of mystics, whose enthusiasm
annihilated external beauty in the effort after spiritual loveliness,
all comeliness was bodily; hence the splendid soulless statues of gods
(though for a few choice perceptions -- Pausanias, Plutarch -- the
Olympian Zeus had "expression", and conveyed divine significance); hence
their treatment of the inanimate beauty of Nature was far less
successful and profound than was that of the austere Hebrew, to whom, in
his struggle against nature worship and idolatry, plastic art was
forbidden, but whose nature-psalms rise higher than anything in Greek
literature. The pure new spirit breathing in the art of the Catacombs
disguises from us, at first, that its categories are all pagan -- though
in human models little was directly borrowed, the Orpheus, Hercules,
Aristeas type are given to Christ; strange symbols (the disguised cross,
the dolphin speared on trident) occur sporadically; "pagan" sarcophagi
were doubtless bought direct from pagan warehouses; most startlingly is
the difference felt in the spiritual treatment by early Christian Art of
the nude (E. Müntz, "Etudes s. l'hist. de la peinture et de
l'iconographie chrétienne", Paris, 1886; A. Pératé, "L'archéologie
chrét.", Paris, 1892; Wilpert, "Roma Sotteranca: le pitture, etc.",
Rome, 1903).
Christian ritual developed when, in the
third century, the Church left the Catacombs. Many forms of
self-expression must needs be identical, in varying times, places,
cults, as long as human nature is the same. Water, oil, light, incense,
singing, procession, prostration, decoration of altars, vestments of
priests, are naturally at the service of universal religious instinct.
Little enough, however, was directly borrowed by the Church -- nothing,
without being "baptized", as was the Pantheon. In all these things, the
spirit is the essential: the Church assimilates to herself what she
takes, or, if she cannot adapt, she rejects it (cf. Augustine, Epp.,
xlvii, 3, in P. L., XXXIII, 185; "Contra Faust.", XX, xxiii, ibid.,
XLII, 387; Jerome, "Epp.", cix, ibid., XXII, 907). Even pagan feasts may
be "baptized": certainly our processions of 25 April are the Robigalia;
the Rogation days may replace the Ambarualia; the date of Christmas Day
may be due to the same instinct which placed on 25 Dec., the Natalis
invicti of the solar cult. But there is little of this; our wonder is,
that there is not far more [see Kellner, "Heortologie" (Freiburg, 1906).
See CHRISTMAS; EPIPHANY. Also Thurston, "Influence of Paganism on the
Christian Calendar" in "Month" (1907), pp. 225 sqq.; Duchesne, "Orig. du
Culte chrétien", tr. (London, 1910) passim; Braun, "Die priestlichen
Gewänder" (Freiburg, 1897); Idem, "Die pontificalen Gewänder" (Freiburg,
1898); Rouse, "Greek Votive Offerings" (Cambridge, 1902), esp. c.v]. The
cult of saints and relics is based on natural instinct and sanctioned by
the lives, death, and tombs (in the first instance) of martyrs, and by
the dogma of the Communion of Saints; it is not developed from definite
instances of hero-worship as a general rule, though often a local
martyr-cult was purposely instituted to defeat (e.g.) an oracle
tenacious of pagan life (P.G., L, 551; P. L., LXXII 831; Newman, "Essay
on Development, etc.", II, cc. ix, xii., etc.; Anrich, "Anfang des
Heiligenkults, etc.", Tübingen, 1904; especially Delehaye, "Légendes
hagiographiques," Brussels, 1906). Augustine and Jerome (Ep. cii, 8, in
P. L., XXXIII, 377; "C. Vigil.", vii, ibid., XXXIII, 361) mark wise
tolerance: Duchesne ["Hist. ancienne de l'église", I (Rome, 1308), 640;
cf. Sozomen, "Hist. eccl." VII, xx, in P. G., LXVII, 1480] reminds us of
the occasional necessary repression: Gregory, writing for Augustine of
Canterbury, fixes the Church's principle and practice (Bede, "Hist.
eccl.", I, xxx, xxxii, in P. L., XCV, 70, 72). Reciprocal influence
there may to some small extent have been; it must have been slight, and
quite possibly felt upon the pagan side not least. All know how Julian
tried to remodel a pagan hierarchy on the Christian (P. Allard, "Julien
l'Apostat", Paris, 1900).
IV. MORALITY, ASCESIS,
MYSTICISM
For an appreciation of pagan religions in
themselves, and for an estimate of their pragmatic value in life, it
should be noted that, in proportion as a pagan religion caught glimpses
of high spiritual flights, of ecstacy, penance, otherworldliness, the
"heroic", it opened the gates of all sorts of moral cataclysms. A
frugi religio was that of Numa: the old Roman in his worship was
cautissimus et castissimus. For him, Servus says, religion and fear
(=awe) went close together. Pietas was a species of justice
(filial, no doubt), but never superstitio. The ordinary man "put
the whole of religion in doing things", veiling his head in
presence of the modest, featureless numina, who filled his world
and (as their adjective-names show -- Vaticanus, Argentarius,
Domiduca) presided over each sub-section of his life. Later the
Roman virtues, Fides, Castitas, Virtus (manliness), were
canonized, but religion was already becoming stereotyped, and therefore
doomed to crumble, though to the end the volatile Greeks (paides aei)
marvelled at its stability, dignity, and decency. So too the high
abstractions of the Gâthâs (Moral Law, Good Spirit, Prudent Piety etc.,
the Amesha-spentas of the Avesta to be -- Obedience, Silent Submission,
and the rest), especially the enormous value set by Persian ethic upon
Truth (a virtue dear to Old Rome), witness to lives of sober, quiet
citizenship, generous laborious, unimaginative, just to God and man.
Exactly opposite, and disastrous, were the tendencies of the idealistic
Hindu, losing himself in dreams of Pantheism, self-annihilation, and
divine union. Especially the worship of Vishnu (god of divine grace and
devotion), of Krishna (the god so strangely assimilated by modern
tendency to Christ), and of Siva (whence Saktism and Tantrism) ran riot
into a helpless licence, which must modify, one feels, the whole
national destiny. We cannot pass conventional judgments on these
aberrations. It is easily conceded that pagans constantly lived better
than their creed, or, anyhow, than their myth; blind terrors, faulty
premisses, warped traditions originated, preserved, or distorted customs
pardonable when we know their history: astounding contradictions coexist
(the ritual murders and prostitution of Assyria, together with the high
moral sense revealed in the self-examination of the second Shurpu
tablet; the sanctified incest and gross myth of Egypt, with the superb
negative Confession of the Book of the Dead). Even in Greece, the
terrifying survivals of the old clithonic cults, the unmoral influence
(for the most part) of the Olympian deities, the unexacting and far more
popular cult of local or favourite hero (Herakles, Asklepios), are
subordinate to the essential instincts of aidos, themis, nemesis
(so well analysed by G. Murray, op. cit.), with their taboos and
categorical imperatives, reflected back, as by necessity, to the
expressed will of God. The religion of the ordinary man is perfectly and
finally expressed in Plato's sketch of Cephalus (Republic, init.) whose
instincts and traditions had carried him, at life's close, to a goal
practically identical with that achieved by the philosophers at the end
of their laborious inquiry.
All asceticism is, however, founded on a
certain Dualism. In Persia, beyond all others dualist, the fight between
Light and Darkness was noble and fruitful till it ran out into Manichism
and its debased allies. Certainly, from the East came much of the mystic
Dualism, enjoining penance, focusing attention beyond the grave,
preconizing purity of all sorts (even that abstention from thought which
leads to ecstacy), which inspired Orphism, Pythagoreanism etc., and
transfused the Mysteries. Till Plato, these notions achieved no high
literary success. Æschylus preaches a sublime gospel: his austere series
-- Wealth, Self-sufficiency, Insolence, God-sent Infatuation, Ruin --
has echoes of Hebrew prophecy and anticipates the "Exercises"; yet even
his stern drasanti pathein is calmed into the pathein mathos
-- a true wisdom, repose, reconciliation. Even in this life Sophocles
sees high laws living eternally in serene heaven, a joy for men of
obedience. Euripides, in the chaos of his skepticism, lives in angry
bewilderment, not knowing where to place his ideal, since Aphrodite and
Artemis and the other world-forces are, for him, essentially at war. It
is in Plato, far better than in the nihilist asceticisms of the East,
that the note -- not even yet quite true -- of asceticism is struck. The
body is our tomb (soma, sema); we must strip ourselves of the
leaden weights, the earthy incrustations of life: the true life is an
exercise in death, a homoiosis to theo, as far as may be; like
the swans we sing when dying, "going away to God", whose servants we
are; "death dawns", and we owe sacrifice to the Healer-hero for the cure
of life's fitful fever; "I have flown away", (the Orphic magic tablets
will cry) "from the sorrowful weary wheel" of existences.
Directly after Plato, the schools are
colored by his thought, if not its immediate heirs. Stoic and Epicurean
really aimed at one thing when they preached their apatheia and
ataraxia, respectively Anechou kai apechou: be the
autarches, master of your self and fate. In Roman days of imperial
persecution, this Stoicism, "touched with emotion", passed into the
beautiful, though ill-founded religion of Seneca: all philosophy became
practical, an ars vivendi: Life is our ingens negotium,
yet not to be despaired of. Heaven is not proud: ascendentibus di
manum porrigent. Ano phronein, St. Paul was even then
enjoining (Col., iii, 1,2), echoing Plato's phronein athanata kai
theia (Tim., 90 c), his tes ano hodou aei hexometha (Rep.,
621 c.), his "life must be a flight" apo ton enthende ekeise (529
A), and Aristotle's doctrine that a man must athanatein eph oson
endechetai (Eth. N., X, vii), written so long ago. The more acute
expressions of this mystical asceticism were much occupied with the
future life and much fostered or provoked by the developed Mysteries.
Impossible as it seems to find a race which believed in the extinction
of the soul by death, survival was often a vague and dismal affair,
prolonged in cavernous darkness, dust, and unconsciousness. So Babylon,
Assyria, the Hebrews, earlier Greece. Odysseus must make the witless
ghosts drink the hot blood before they can think and speak. At best,
they depend on human attendance and even companionship; hence certain
offerings and human sacrifice on the grave. Or they can, on fixed days,
return, harry the living, seek food and blood. Hence
expulsion-ceremonies, the Anthesteria, Lemuria, and the like. Kindlier
creeds, however, are created, and, at the Cara Cognatio, the
souls are welcomed to the places set for them, as for the gods, at the
hearth and table, and the family is reconstituted in affection. Hopes
and intuitions gather into a full and steady light, even before the
inscriptions of the catacombs show that death was by now scarcely reason
for tears at all. The "surer bark of a divine doctrine", for which the
anxious lad in the "Phædo" had sighed, had been given to carry souls to
that "further shore" to which Vergil saw them reaching yearning hands.
But the Mysteries had already
fostered, though not created, the conviction of immortality. They gave
no revelations, no new and secret doctrine, but powerfully and vividly
impressed certain notions (one of them, immortality) upon the
imagination. Gradually, however, it was thought that initiation ensured
a happy after-life, and atoned for sins that else had been punished, if
not in this life, in some place of expiation (Plato, "Rep.", 366; cf.
Pindar, Sophocles, Plutarch). These mysteries usually began with the
selection of initiandi, their preliminary "baptism", fasting, and
(Samothrace) confession. After many sacrifices the Mysteries proper were
celebrated, including nearly always a mimetic dance, or "tableaux",
showing heaven, hell, purgatory; the soul's destiny; the gods [so in the
Isis mysteries. Appuleius (Metamorphoses) tells us his thrilling and
profoundly religious experiences]. There was often seen the "passion" of
the god (Osiris): the rape and return of Kore and the sorrows of Demeter
(Eleusis), the sacred marriage (Here at Cnossus), or divine births
(Zeus: Brimos), or renowned incidents of the local myth. There was also
the "exhibition" of symbolical objects -- statues usually kept veiled,
mysterious fruits or emblems (Dionysus), an ear of corn (upheld when
Brimos was born). Finally there was usually the meal of mystic foods --
grains of all sorts at Eleusis, bread and water in the cult of Mithra,
wine (Dionysus), milk and honey (Attis), raw bull's flesh in the Orphic
Dionysus-zagreus cult. Sacred formulæ were certainly imparted, of
magical value.
There is not much reason to think these
mysteries had a directly moral influence on their adepts; but their
popularity and impressiveness were enormous, and indirectly reinforced
whatever aspiration and belief they found to work on. Naturally, it has
been sought to trace a close connexion between these rites and
Christianity (Anrich, Pfleiderer). This is inadmissible. Not only was
Christianity ruthlessly exclusive, but its apologists (Justin,
Tertullian, Clement) inveigh loudest against the mysteries and the myths
they enshrine. Moreover, the origin of the Christian rites is
historically certain from our documents. Christian baptism (essentially
unique) is alien to the repeated dippings of the initiandi, even
to the Taurobolium, that bath of bull's blood, whence the dipped emerged
renatus in æternum. The totemistic origin and meaning of the
sacred meal (which was not a sacrifice) wherein worshippers communicated
in the god and with one another (Robertson Smith, Frazer) is too obscure
to be discussed here (cf. Lagrange, "Etudes, etc.", pp.257, etc.). The
sacred fish of Atergatis have nothing to do with the origin of the
Eucharist, nor, even probably, with the Ichthys anagram of the
catacombs. (See Fr. J. Dölger: ICHTHYS, das Fischsymbol, etc.,
Rome, 1910. The anagram does indeed represent Iesous Christos Theou
Houios Soter, the usual order of the third and fourth words
being inverted owing to the familiar formula of the imperial cult; the
propagation of the symbol was often facilitated owing to the popular
Syrian fish-cult.) That the terminology of the mysteries was largely
transported into Christian use (Paul, Ignatius, Origen, Clement etc.),
is certain; that liturgy (especially of baptism), organization (of the
catechumenate), disciplina arcani were affected by them, is
highly probable. Always the Church has forcefully moulded words, and
even concepts (soter, epipsanes, baptismos, photismos, teletes, logos)
to suit her own dogma and its expression. But it were contrary to all
likelihood, as well as to positive fact, to suppose that the adogmatic,
mythic, codeless practices and traditions of Paganism could subdue the
rigid ethic and creed of Christianity. [Consult Cumont, opp. cit.;
Anrich, "Das antike Mysterienwesen, etc." (Göttingen, 1894); O.
Pfleiderer, "Das Christenbild, etc." (Berlin, 1903), tr. (London, 1905).
Especially Cabrol, "Orig. liturgiques" (Paris, 1906); Duchesne,
"Christian Worship", passim; Blötzer in "Stimmen aus Maria
Laach", LXXI, (1906), LXXII, (1907); G. Boissier, "Fin du Paganisme"
(Paris, 1907), especially 1, 117 sqq.; "Religion Romaine", passim;
Sir S. Dill, op. cit.; C. A. Lobeck, "Aglaophamus" (1829); E. Rohde,
"Psyche" (Tübingen, 1907); J. Reville, "Relig. ` Rome, s. l.
Sevès;res" (Paris, 1886); J. E. Harrison, "Prolegomena" (Cambridge,
1908), especially the appendix; L. R. Farnell, op. cit., and the
lexicons.]
As strange historical phenomena, we note
therefore the coexistence of the highest with the lowest; the sublime
tendency, the exiguum clinamen, and the terrific catastrophe:
human nature buffeted by the craving for divine union, prayer, and
purity, and by the sense of sin, the need of penance, and helplessness
of its own powers. Hence, savagery and blood attend the
communion-feasts, grotesque myths accompany the loftiest ideals, sensual
reaction follows flagellation and fasting. And we admire how, in the
Hebrew nation alone, the teleological ascent was constant; sobriety
meant no lowered aim; passion implied no frenzy. In the strong grasp of
the Christian discipline alone, the further antimony of self-abnegation
and self-realization was practically and spiritually solved, though
theoretically no adequate expression may ever be discovered for that
solution. As historical problems remain certain connexions yet to be
more accurately defined between the "dress" of Christian dogma and rite
(whether liturgical, or of formula, or of philosophic category) and the
circumambient religions. As historical certainty stands out the
impassable gulf, in essence and origin, between the moral and religious
systems of contemporary Paganism, especially of the Mysteries, and the
Christian dogma and rite, formed on Palestinian soil with extraordinary
rapidity, and rigidly exclusive of infection from alien sources. [Cf. L.
Friedinder, "Roman Life and Manners, etc." (1909-10), espec. III,
84-313; O. Seeck, "Gesch. des Unterganges der antiken Welt", I (Berlin,
1910), II (1901), III (1909), and appendices, B. Allo, "L'Evangile en
face du syncr tisme palen" (Paris, 1910).]
V. RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHY
This, we suppose, is the highest form of
human reaction upon the religious datum of which the soul finds itself
in possession, or at least may provide it with the purest, if not the
most imperative, mode of worship. From this point of view the older
rationalizing cosmogonies (as of Greece) are of little interest to us,
save in so far as they witness already to that distinction between Zeus,
supreme, and Fate, to which he yet is subject, an earlier unconscious
attempt, perhaps, to reconcile the antinomies easily seized by true
religious instinct in the popular traditions as to the gods. The
mythological cosmogonies of Babylon and Assyria will, however, be of
surpassing interest to the "comparative" student of Semitic religions.
Noteworthy is the curve of Greek tendency -- starting in Ionia,
monistic, static, and anti-religious; grown dynamic in Heraclitus, whose
Fire will pass, as Logos, into the Stoic system; transferred after the
Persian wars to Attica, and profoundly dualized in Plato and Aristotle,
whose concepts, however, of World-soul and of the Immanent Nature-force
were powerful for all time. Through the Stoics, expressed in terms
borrowed consistently from the exquisite Egyptian mythology, of Thot, of
Osiris, and of Isis, this elaborate system of converging currents is
synthesized in Plutarch, while from Plutarch's sources Philo had drawn
the philosophy in which he strove to see the doctrines of Moses, and in
terms of which he struggled to express the Hebrew books.
Thus was it that the Logos, in theory,
impersonal, immanent, blindly evolving in the world, became
(transfigured on the one hand by pagan myth, and by too close contact,
on the other, with the Angel of Yahweh and the ideals of the Alexandrian
sapiential literature) so near to personification, that John could take
the expression, mould it to his dogma, cut short all perilous
speculation among Christians, and assert once and for all that the Word
was made flesh and was Jesus Christ. Yet many of the earlier apologists
were to make great trouble with their use of Platonic formul , and with
the Logos. Two principles emerge as governing Greek thought -- God must
have the first place, ou gar parergou dei poieisthai ton theon,
-- and yet the nearer we approach Him, the less can we express Him,
theon eurein te ergon, euronta de ekpherein en pollois adynaton
(Pythagoras, Plato). To how many answers tentatively given does
Euripides's sad prayer witness: "O Thou that upholdest earth, and on
earth hast Thy Throne, whoe'er Thou be, hard to guess, hard to know --
Zeus, be Thou law of nature, or human thought of man, to Thee I pray:
for Thou, moving in silent path, in justice guidest all things mortal."
To the immanent, supreme Force, consciously exacting service, or, at
least, blindly imposing obedience, Greek philosophy almost inevitably
came, and, in spite of itself and its sceptical and mechanical premises,
amounted to a religion. In the mouth of Epictetus God is still sung
triumphantly -- "What can I do, I, a lame old man, save sing God's
praises, and call on all men to join me in my song?" -- till the Stoic
current died out in Aurelius, stunned to acquiescence, no more
enthusiastically uniting himself to the great law of God in the world.
But into neo-Platonism, coloured with
Persian, Jewish, and even Christian language, the movement passed;
already, in the "Isis and Osiris" of Plutarch, a pure mysticism and
sublimity of emotion barely to be surpassed had been achieved; in the
"Metamorphoses" of Apuleius the syncretistic cult of the Egyptian
goddess expresses itself in terms of tenderness and majesty that would
fit the highest worship, and, in the concluding prayer of the Apuleian
Hermes, an ecstatic adoration of God is manifested in language and
thought never equalled, still less surpassed, save in the inspired
writers of the Church. But all these efforts of pagan religious
philosophy, committed nearly always to a rigid Dualism, entangled
accordingly in mechanical and magic practices, tricked out in false
mythology, risking and losing psychical balance by the use of a nihilist
asceticism of sense and thought, died into the miserable systems of
Gnosticism, Manich ism, and the later neo-Platonism; and the current of
true life, renewed and redirected by Paul and John, passed into the
writings of Augustine. [Consult Zeller, "Phil. der Griechen" (Leipzig,
1879), tr. (London, 1881); Idem, "Grundriss, etc." (4th ed., Leipzig,
1908), tr. (London, 1892); Gomperz, "Gr. Denken" (Leipzig, 1903), tr.
(London, 1901); cf. Flinders Petrie, "Personal Relig. in Egypt before
Christianity" (New York, 1909), unsatisfactory; J. Adam, "Religious
Teachers of Greece" (Edinburgh, 1908); Dill, op. cit.; Idem, "Roman
Society in the last century of the Western Empire ", especially valuable
as a picture of the tenacity of the dying pagan cult and thought;
Spence, "Early Christianity and Paganism" (London, 1904); L. Habert,
"Doctr. Relig. d. Philosophes Grecs" (Paris, 1909); L. Campbell,
"Religion in Greek Literature" (London, 1898); E. Caird, "Evolution of
Theology in Greek Philosophies" (Glasgow, 1904), "Evolution of Religion"
(Glasgow, 1907); H. Pinard in "Revue Apologétique" (1909); S. Lebreton,
"Origines du Dogme de la Trinité", I (Paris, 1910), where the summits
reached by Greek and Hellenized Jewish religious endeavour are
appreciated. On the general question: de Broglie, "Problèmes et
Conclusions de l'hist. des Religions", Paris, 1889.]
VI. RELATIONS BETWEEN
PAGANISM AND REVELATION
Ethnology and the comparative history of
pagan religions do not impose upon us as an hypothesis that primitive
Revelation which Faith ascertains to us. As a hypothesis it would,
however, solve many a problem; it was the easier therefore for the
Traditionalist of a century ago to detect its traces everywhere, and for
Bishop Huet ("Demonstr. evangelica", Paris, 1690, pp. 68, 153, etc.),
following Aristobulus, Philo, Josephus, Justin, Tertullian, and many
another disciple of the Alexandnians, to see in all pagan law and ritual
an immense pillage of Jewish tradition, and, in all the gods, Moses. The
opposite school has, in all ages, fallen into worse follies. Celsus saw
in Judaism an "Egyptian heresy", and in Christianity a Jewish heresy, on
an equality with the cults of Antinous, Trophonius etc. (C. Cels., III,
xxi); Calvin (Instit., IV, x, 12) and Middleton (A letter from Rome,
etc., 1729) saw an exact conformity between popery and paganism. Dupuis
and Creuze herald the modern race of comparative religionists, who
deduce Christianity from pagan rites, or assign to both systems a common
source in the human spirit. Far wiser in their generation were those
ancient Fathers, who, not always seeing in pagan analogies the trickery
of devils (Justin in P. G., VI, 364, 408, 660; Tertullian in P. L., I,
519, 660; II, 66; Firmicus Maternus, ibid., XII, 1026, 1030),
disentangle, with a true historic and religious sense, the reasons for
which God permitted, or directed, the Chosen People to retain or adapt
the rites of their pagan ancestry or environment, on at least,
reproaching them with this, recognize the facts (Justin, loc. cit., VI,
517; Tertullian, P. L., II, 333; Jerome, ibid., XXV, 194, XXIV, 733,
XXII, 677, is striking; Eusebius, P. G., XXII, 521; especially
Chrysostom, ibid., LVII, 66, and Gregory of Nazianzus, ibid., XXXVI,
161, who are remarkable. Cf. St. Thomas, I-II, Q. cii, a. 2). The
relation of the Hebrew code and ritual to those of pagan systems need
not be discussed here: the facts, and, a fortiori, the comparison and
construction of the facts, are not yet satisfactorily determined: the
admirable work of the Dominican school (especially the "Religions
sémitiques" of M. J. Lagrange; cf. F. Prat, S.J., "Le Code de Sinai",
Paris, 1904) is preparing the way for more adequate considerations than
are at present possible.
Whether Paganism made straight a path for
Christianity may be considered from two points of view. Speaking from
the standpoint of pure history, no one will deny that much in the
antecedent or environing aspirations and ideals formed a præparatio
evangelica of high value. "Christo jam tum venienti", sang
Prudentius, "crede, parata via est". The pagan world "saw the road",
Augustine could say, from its hilltop. "Et ipse Pileatus Christianus
est" said the priest of Attis; while, of Heraclitus and the old
philosophers, Justin avers that they were Christians before Christ.
Indeed, in their panegyric of the Platonic philosophy, the earlier
Apologists go far beyond anything we should wish to say, and indeed made
difficulties for their successors. Attention is nowadays directed, not
only to the ideas of the Divine nature, the logos-philosophies, popular
at the Christian era, but especially to those oriental cults, which,
flooding down upon the shrivelled, officialized, and dying worship of
the Roman or Hellenic-Roman world, fertilized within it whatever
potentialities it yet contained of purity, prayer, emotional religion,
other-worldliness generally. A whole new religious language was evolved,
betokening a new tendency, ideal, and attitude; here too Christianity
did not disdain to use, to transcend, and to transform.
Theologically, moreover, we know that God
from the very outset destined man to a supernatural union with Himself.
"Pure nature", historically, has never existed. The soul is
naturaliter Christiana. The truest man is the Christian. Thus the
"human spirit" we have so often mentioned, is no human spirit left to
itself, but solicited by, yielding to a resisting grace. Better than
Aristotle guessed, mankind echei ti theion. For Christus
cogitabatur. Aei ponei to zoon, said the same philosopher:
and all creation groans and travails together until the full redemption;
"all nations of men" were by God "made of one blood for to dwell on all
the face of the earth . . . that they should seek the Lord, if haply
they might grope after Him and find Him." They failed, alas, though they
had the epignosis of God (Rom., i, 32; cf. i, 19): the higher
they went, the more terribly they fell: but, alongside of the tragic
first chapter of Paul's Epistle, is the second, and we dare not forget
that the elect people, the Eldest Son, the heir of oracles and law fell
equally or worse, and made the name of God to be blasphemed among the
Gentiles it contemned (Rom., ii, 24). Yet for all that, God used the
Jews in his plan, and none will dare to say He did not use the Gentiles.
They reveal themselves in history as made for God, and restless till
they rest in him. History shows us their effort, and their failure; we
thank God for the one, and dare not scorn the other. God's revelation
has been in many fragments and in many modes; and to the pagan king,
whose right hand He had holden, He declared: "For Jacob my servant's
sake, and Israel my chosen, I have called thee by thy name: I have
surnamed thee, though thou, thou hast not known Me: I am Yahweh, and
there is none else; beside Me there is no God: (yet) will I guide thee,
though Me thou hast not known (ls., xlv, 4 sq.). For still Cyrus
worshipped at the shrine of Ahura.
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