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<h2> JUDGMENT DAY. </h2>
<p>The end of the world has been a fertile and profitable theme with pulpit
mountebanks and pious adventurers. Ever since the primitive ages of
Christianity it has served to frighten the credulous and feather the nests
of their deceivers.</p>
<p>In the apostolic days the Second Coming of Christ was generally and
constantly expected. According to the twenty-fourth of Matthew, Jesus
predicted that the end of all things would soon arrive. The sun and moon
were to be darkened; the stars were to fall from heaven; and the Son of
Man was to come through the clouds with great power and glory, and gather
the elect together from every quarter of the earth, According to the
twenty-fifth of Matthew, this wondrous scene was to be followed by a Great
Assize. All the nations were to be judged before the heavenly throne, and
divided into two lots, one destined for heaven and the other for hell. And
Jesus significantly added, "Verily I say unto you, this generation shall
not pass, till all these things be fulfilled."</p>
<p>St. Paul also, in the fourth chapter of the first of Thessalonians, said
that the Lord would "descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of
the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall
rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together
with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air."</p>
<p>Nothing of the sort has happened. There is no sign of the Lord's coming,
and he is already eighteen centuries behind date. "Behold I come quickly"—"Surely
I come quickly." Such was the announcement. But, like many other divine
promises, it has been falsified. The only orthodox way out of the
difficulty is to say that the Lord does not reckon time as we do; with him
a day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as a day.</p>
<p>The general public, however, eighteen hundred years ago, did not know how
long the prophecy was to remain unfulfilled, and it had an extraordinary
power over them. Being mostly very ignorant, and therefore very credulous,
they were easily terrified by the notion that the world was to be burnt up
speedily; and they as readily embraced the doctrine which promised to
bring them safely through the catastrophe. From the way in which the game
answers still with the Christian mob, after nearly two thousand years of
exposure, we can understand what a splendid instrument of proselytising it
must have been in the hands of the fanatical preachers of the early
Church. Combine with it the Millennium promised to the saints after the
Second Coming of Christ, in which they were to enjoy themselves royally,
and you will feel the justice of Gibbon's remark that "it must have
contributed in a very considerable degree to the progress of the Christian
faith." It was inculcated by a succession of Fathers, from Justin Martyr
to Lactantius. But when it had served its purpose it was allowed to drop.
As Gibbon says, "it was at first treated as a profound allegory, was
considered by degrees as a doubtful and useless opinion, and was at length
rejected as the absurd invention of heresy and fanaticism." The Millennium
is stigmatised, in what once stood as the forty-first Article of the
English Church, as "a fable of Jewish dotage." We wonder whether the
plain-spoken divines who drew up that article included Jesus Christ, St.
Paul, and St. John among the Jewish dotards.</p>
<p>At the end of the tenth century the doctrine of the Second Coming was
revived. The people were led to believe that the old serpent's thousand
years of bondage was nearly up, that he would be let loose about the year
1,000, that Antichrist would then appear, and that the end of the world
would follow. Churches and houses were therefore left to decay, as they
would cease to be wanted. Whenever an eclipse of the sun or moon took
place, the people ran into caverns and caves. Multitudes hurried off to
Palestine, where they supposed Christ would make his descent. They
transferred their property to the priests, who could say with Iago, "thus
do I ever make my fool my purse." Others not only gave their property to
the priests, but actually became their slaves; hoping, says Mosheim, that
"the supreme Judge would be more favorable to them if they made themselves
servants to <i>his</i> servants."</p>
<p>Jortin justly observes that the priests industriously cherished the
delusion for the sake of filthy lucre. They accepted the gifts of their
poor dupes, although earthly possessions would be as useless to them as to
the laity if the last days were at hand. Donations to the Church were
given by fools and received by knaves. The reason assigned for the gift is
generally thus expressed: <i>Appropinquante mundi termino—The end of
the world being now at hand</i>.*</p>
<p>When the tenth century ended without a sign of the Second Advent, people
looked at each other and said "He is not come then." And the priests
chuckled, "No, he has not come, but your property is gone." There was no
chance of bringing an action for obtaining money under false pretences,
and Holy Mother Church never gives back a farthing of what she obtains,
for what is once devoted to God can never be alienated without sacrilege.</p>
<p>Although the delusion has been milder since then, it has always lurked
among the ignorant, and occasionally become acute. Silly Christians still
shake their heads when a comet is visible, and regard it as a blazing
portent. They even hint that one of these wanderers through space may
collide with our globe and cause the final smash; not knowing that comets
are quite harmless, and that hundreds of cubic miles of their tails would
not outweigh a jar-ful of air.</p>
<p>Dr. Cumming foretold the grand collapse several times. His books were read
by thousands of superstitious people. Finally, he was played out, and he
went to his grave a discredited prophet. Had he been wiser he would have
fixed the event some time after he was likely to be buried. Then the game
would have lasted his lifetime, and what does it matter if you are found
out when you are dead?</p>
<p>How far Gumming believed his own prophecies is a moot point. It is said
that he bought the lease of a house, which expired about twenty-five years
after his date for the day of judgment.</p>
<p>Prophet Baxter, of the <i>Christian Herald</i>, now runs the business. He
wrote a book to prove that Louis Napoleon was Antichrist. Louis Napoleon
is dead and nearly forgotten. Then he proved that Gambetta was Antichrist.
Gambetta is dead and not forgotten. Then he proved that Prince Jerome was
Antichrist. Prince Jerome is nowhere, and Baxter is looking out for a
fresh Antichrist. Yet his paper is read by hundreds of thousands. As Heine
said, the fool-crop is perennial.</p>
<p>Over in America the Second Adventists are a numerous body. They watch and
pray for the coming of Christ, and keep white robes ready for their
ascension. Some time ago they donned their linen in the expectation that
the Lord was coming that very night. But the Lord did not put in an
appearance, and the robes were laid up in lavender again. A fat matron
trying to fly in that outfit would be a sight worth seeing. It would take
several angels to float some of them. Even the archangel Michael might
shrink from tackling twenty-stone.</p>
<p>Like everything else in Christianity, except the accursed doctrine of
salvation by faith, the idea of the end of the world and a day of judgment
is derived from older sources.</p>
<p>The Hindu <i>Kalpas</i>, covering thousands of millions of years, are
periods of creation and destruction, and each is called a day of Brahma.
During this enormous interval the universe begins and ends. Brahma wakes
from his slumbrous solitude, and his thoughts and emotions embody
themselves in worlds and creatures. When he falls to rest again, the whole
system of finite things vanishes like the baseless fabric of a vision.</p>
<p>The Stoics also believed in a periodical destruction and renovation of all
things. They, as Alger says, "conceived of God as a pure artistic force or
seed of universal energy, which exhibits its history in the evolution of
the cosmos, and, on its completion, blossoms into fire and vanishes. The
universal periodical conflagration destroys all evil, and leaves the
indestructible God alone in his pure essence again."</p>
<p>The Persians entertained a similar conception, which more closely
resembles the Christian doctrine. Ahura-Mazda creates all things good, and
the race of men happy and immortal. But Angra-Mainyas, his adversary, the
old serpent, corrupts them, brings upon them misery and death, and leads
their souls to his dark abode. Good and evil spirits fill all creation
with their conflict. But at last Ahura-Mazda subdues Angra-Mainyas,
nullifies all the mischief he has done by means of a great deliverer, who
is sent to instruct and redeem mankind, raises the dead, purifies the
world with fire, and restores all nature to its paradisiacal condition.</p>
<p>The Scandinavians had their Ragnarok, or Twilight of the Gods, when all
the powers of good and evil join in battle. The horn sounds, the last day
dawns in fire and splendor from the sky, in fog and venom from the abyss.
Flames destroy the earth, the combatants mostly slay each other, but
Gimli, the heaven of the All-Father, is a refuge for the survivors, and
the beginning of a new and fairer world.</p>
<p>Chiefly influenced by the Persian, and partly by other systems, the later
Jewish theology, as represented by the Pharisees, taught that Jehovah
would reappear in the last days; and the Day of the Lord, which in former
ages meant any national calamity, became transformed into the Day of
Judgment. What was to happen on that occasion is described in the Book of
Enoch. This was written about a century before Christ, yet it is quoted in
the Epistle of Jude as the work of old transported Enoch, the seventh from
Adam; a fact which throws a singular light on the critical acumen of the
early Christians. Jesus Christ, Paul, and especially the author of
Revelation, are indebted to the Book of Enoch. It provided them with
nearly all the plot, dialogue and scenery of their judgment drama.</p>
<p>As judges of the dead, the Greeks had Minos, who presided at the trial of
souls from Europe; Rhada-mauthus, who examined those from Asia; and Æacus,
who tried those from Africa, America and Australia were then unknown, and
souls from those continents were not provided with inspectors. Of course
the dead who held communication with the living, never told them more than
they knew. The same thing continues to this day. All the messages from the
departed given at all the Spiritist <i>séances</i> have not added a single
fragment to the world's stock of information.</p>
<p>The ancient Egyptians believed in "after death the judgment." Souls were
tried in the Hall of the two-Truths, or the double Justice. They were
weighed in the balance. Thoth noted the result, and Osiris pronounced
sentence. Before burial, also, the Egyptian dead underwent a saner trial.
The friends and relatives, the enemies and accusers of the deceased,
assembled around the sarcophagus before forty-two assessors. He was put on
his trial before them; and if justified, awarded an honorable burial; but,
if condemned, disgraced by the withholding of funeral rites. Kings, as
well as commoners, were apparently subject to the same ordeal. Does this
account for the beneficent character of their government, and the
prosperous-content of the people, which is reflected in the placid smile
of their sphinxes?</p>
<p>Probably the antique notion of a general Day of Judgment arose from the
imposing trials, where the King sat in judgment, throned, jewelled, and
guarded; where all were free to approach and claim justice; and where the
sentences were executed by the soldiers-directly they were passed. Add to
this scene a general <i>auto da fé</i>, in which Christ plays the part of
Grand Inquisitor, the saints that of familiars, and the Devil; that of
executioner, and you have a very fair idea of the Christian Day of
Judgment.</p>
<p>"Day," we presume, must not be taken too literally. The Mohammedans
believe the Great Assize will last thousands of years. In that case the
people who are fond of hearing trials will have a fine time, until their
own turn comes. After all, even the Mohammedan computation seems too
slender. To say nothing of the scientific antiquity of man, and reckoning
according to the Bible chronology, about two hundred thousand million
souls have passed into eternity already, and the Lord knows how many more
will join them. Imagination fails in conceiving the time it would take to
try all that multitude, especially if there are a good number of Tichborne
cases. Besides, the whole thing seems unfair. Those who get a ticket for
heaven at the end of the Day will enjoy a few thousand years less of bliss
than the more fortunate ones who came early; and those who get a ticket
for hell in the first hour will suffer a few thousand years of torture
more than those who are sentenced at the finish.</p>
<p>The criterion at the Day of Judgment will be Faith. That is a difficult
virtue to wise men, and an easy one to fools. The ninnies, therefore, will
have the best chance. This must be very consoling to mankind if Carlyle's
estimate of England's population—"thirty millions, mostly fools"—may
be extended to the rest of the world.</p>
<p>All who have faith enough to secure a seat in heaven are called "sheep,"
and they could not be labelled better. All the others are called "goats,"
that is, lusty, strong-legged fellows who despise the game of
follow-my-leader, who object to walking along the road made for them, and
are always leaping the fence to see what is on the other side. There was
war in heaven once, we are told, but that was before Satan and his crew
were kicked out. There will never be war in heaven again. Jesus Christ
will easily be able to manage his sheep. But the Devil will have a tougher
job with his goats. There will always be a kingdom in heaven, but ten to
one there will be a republic in hell.</p>
<p>Christianity says we are to be saved by faith. Our view is different. Men
are saved by thinking and acting. While Christian monks were trying to
degrade men below the level of brutes, some unknown Secularists invented
windmills and glass windows. While the Inquisition was exterminating
heresy and purifying the faith, Galileo was inventing the telescope. While
Church of Englandism and Methodism were fighting over the faith in
England, Watt was discovering the use of steam. Faith never saved men
here, and why should it save them hereafter? God, if he exist, must be too
humane and sensible to judge men according to their belief; and if he
endowed us with reason, he will never damn us for exercising it.</p>
<p>Wandering in an immense forest during the night, said Diderot, I have only
one little light to guide me. A stranger comes to me and says, "My friend,
blow out your candle to find your way better." That light is reason, and
that stranger is a theologian.</p>
<p>Science, no less than common sense, dispels Christian superstition.
Evolution destroys the idea of a general catastrophe. There was a time
when life could not exist on the earth, and there will probably come a
time when it will cease to exist. Long before then man will have
disappeared. But the aeon of our race may extend to millions of years. Is
not this time practically infinite? And do not those who make it a cause
for lamentation and despair resemble the man that Spinoza ridicules, who
refuses to eat his dinner to-day because he is not sure of a dinner for
ever and ever? Sit down, you fool, and eat.</p>
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