bookssland.com » Literary Collections » The Creation of God - Jacob Hartmann (readict TXT) 📗

Book online «The Creation of God - Jacob Hartmann (readict TXT) 📗». Author Jacob Hartmann



1 ... 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66
Go to page:
her own peculiar “Doodle.” If the man or woman or child had never heard this melody they would certainly not have known anything about it, and therefore could not have enjoyed that particular melody. He or she might have heard another melody just as simple, perhaps just as stupid, but differently constructed.

The culture of these theological ideas forms the fundamental groundwork of our educational church system, and each sect has its own method of planting its seed according to its peculiar notions. We must always bear in mind that before nerve tissue was developed, nerve force or thought could not exist; that the phenomena of imagination, or the product of a combination of ideas, the result of the impressions received by the senses, retained, and passing, connectedly or disconnectedly, through the brain, could not be effected except by experience and training.

The idea of a God or Gods impressed early in life, while the brain is being developed—the brain tissue of course—remains firmly rooted, and is very difficult to change or eradicate later in life. In case a change is ever produced, it takes place by a process of reasoning, when understanding has been acquired. The acceptance of an idea or an opinion requires little sense and no reasoning, and, indeed, no education. Children believe anything they are told, until they grow older and learn to know better. Men and women believe because they don’t know better. Accidentally they were placed in a particular groove of thinking, wherein they can glide forward, backward, round in a circle, perpetually, with ease and without interruption, without effort and without understanding. This perpetual gliding motion, within circumscribed limits, is over the same God, Holy Ghost, Christ, sin and salvation, or the reverse; no advancement or progress. Whatever has been accomplished in the affairs of men, has been done without the prescribed limits, and to that we owe our present civilization and material prosperity.

Whoever the first individual was that proposed worship, no matter how it originated, or what it was, or how crude, the thought was the product of some man’s brain. Whether he ever stood face to face with his own idea like Moses, or Mohammed, or anyone else, makes not the slightest difference. It was a man’s individual notion, prompted by fear, ignorance, or astonishment. It is the work of the brain just the same. It was their idols, images, god, gods, and men that were endowed with divinity, were held sacred, worshiped, and honored. These human inventions were supplemented by other human inventions, rites and rituals, up to this present time. We discard ideas that have been tried and found wanting for modified or new ones—as Abraham, Moses, Christ, Mohammed, Luther, Wesley, etc. The notions of these men in turn have undergone the civilizing filtering process, until there is little left but the mere sound. The Unitarians, for example, have stripped the Christian trinity down to a skeleton. They seem to say: This was once the great bugaboo: you need not be scared, it’s perfectly harmless. It has been civilized, you know. Science did it. Hell is out of fashion. Heaven we have on earth, if we have the means to do it with. We can be angels if we wish to, saints if necessary, and holy if desirable. Every man makes his own heaven, his own hell, his own angels, his own bliss, and his own god. Yes, he has his own saints and his own divinities. A woman does precisely the same thing. The imagination supplies all the necessary material for their production, selected from natural objects and put together in a manner most pleasing, acceptable, and satisfactory to each one. We make them as good as we know how, as pretty and as delightful as our taste and fancy can create them. Yet the kind of whimsical representations of the mind depends largely upon the condition of the nervous system, time of life, and our daily occupation. A young girl at puberty, whose mind is entering into that beautiful paradise of dreamland, blooming with buds of hopes and rosy wishes, experiences the delights of new sensations, creates her God, her Jesus, or her Holy Ghost, to fill the nooks of her aspirations, with all the abounding exaltation and luxuries of her creative power. Every cloud has wings, every star bright eyes that wink and beckon her to future bliss, to desires unknown yet longed for. She listens with eager ears for every sound. The zephyrs of the spring of life are wafting music to her ear. As she gazes with gushing eyes into ethereal space, she is searching the heavens for coming enchantment. Her doll, the god or the plaything of childhood, has lost its interest, and all the pretty things that formerly were so pleasing have lost their charm, as the bell and smaller infantile toy had lost theirs before the doll had nestled into her affections. Now a more realistic feeling permeates her senses, and beauties of a new and more attractive form occupy her agitated heart and brain. What is the awakening of these new emotions, the unfolding of these new sentiments, that seem to linger on the borderland of restrained passion? Is it not the dawn of love, the transitory period, that bridge of nervous exaltation that leads from puberty to maternity? She has her own god, a figure to her notion as pure, refined, and beautiful as she can picture in the visions of her waking or sleeping dreamland mind. Her sighs, her prayers, her devotions, are directed to him. This is her coming Messiah, her angel, her everything, that is to realize all her hopes and expectations. It is her God.

Can a jockey or a prizefighter have feelings like these? The former has a horsey god, the latter a muscular. The fisherman, the sailor, the soldier, each in his sphere has his or her god. Underlying all the busy activities of daily life, whatever feelings of care or pleasure each may experience, it is but upon rare occasions he puckers his lips to give vent to his devotional feelings and whistles his Yankee Doodle—his God!

Our gods are as we make them. If we are good our god is good, if we are pure our god is pure, and if our senses are subordinate to our reason and understanding our god will be one of reason and understanding, but if we are impure, bad, and evil-minded, our senses and passions ruling supreme, reason and understanding are subordinate in our god, and the evils of animal sense predominate.

Every man is his own god. As he is, so is his god. As he makes himself, so will his god be. As he protects himself, so God will protect him. As he guides himself, so will God guide him. Whatsoever a man accomplishes for himself, that will God accomplish for him. Whatsoever a man does for himself, that God will do for him. If a man supports himself, God will support him. If he neglects himself, God will neglect him. The more he depends on himself, the surer is his dependence on God. As he saves himself, so God will surely save him. As he injures himself, so will he be injured by God. As a man punishes himself, so will he be punished by God. God will help him who can help himself. If a man is true to himself, God will be true to him.

By industry, economy, and sobriety you will confer blessings on yourself; you have no need of God to bless you.

Make yourself a good man or woman, and you will surely have a good God.

A brutal man never has a meek god, a stingy man a generous god, nor a vicious man a merciful god. Every man brings himself to the level of a brute or lower, or to the highest type of nobility of man.

God never made man, but every man makes his god.

THE GATEWAYS THROUGH WHICH KNOWLEDGE ENTERS THE SENSES.

The functions of the brain.

Perception—Receiving impressions—Retaining impressions—Reproducing
impressions—Knowing—Forming simple ideas—Compound
ideas—Complex ideas—Mixed ideas and
complicated ideas—Conducting, transferring,
and reflexation—
Coördination. Sight. Hearing. Touch-feeling. Smell. Taste. Recognition } In common. Comparing Discernment Attention Retention Succession Identity Diversity Continuity Contemplation Distance Distance Distance Color Solidity Solidity Solidity Figure Figure Shape Shape Shape Size { long thick Size thin Dimensions Dimensions Softness Softness Softness Hardness Hardness Hardness Rough Roughness Roughness Roughness Smooth Smoothness Smoothness Smoothness Motion Motion Motion Motion Action Action Action Action Dryness Dryness Dry Dryness Moisture Moisture Moist Moisture Fluidity Fluid Fluidity Fluidity Vibration Vibration Vibration Vibration Heat Heat Heat Heat Cold Cold Cold Cold Pain Pleasure Odor Odor Expansion Expansion Expansion Expansion Contraction Contraction Contraction Contraction Resistance Resistance Relation Relation Relation Rest Rest Rest Unrest Unrest Sound Appearance Proportion Proportion Proportion Proportion
PRODUCE Sensations
Emotions—Feelings—
Ideation—Thought—Understanding—
Reflection—Recollection—Deliberation—Induction—
Memory—Imagination—Judgment—Intellect—Will Power—Mind:
The normal products of a healthy nervous system.
(The abnormal result from a deranged condition of the cerebro-spinal system.)

MORALS: WHENCE THEY SPRING.

To be moral means that the organs be properly and legitimately used, in accordance with the law of nature:

STOMACH. SEXUAL ORGANS. For nutrition of the body. For the propagation of the species. Wants Normally Supplied. Satisfaction } LEAD TO Health and Happiness, Purity, Chastity, Love, Affection, Joy. { Satisfaction Contentment Contentment Comfort Comfort Pleasure Pleasure Peace Peace Abnormal Use of the Organs. Starvation } LEAD TO Vanity, Negligence, Indolence, Deception, Discontent, Selfishness, Disease. { Passion Hunger Lust Poverty Overindulgence Luxury Lasciviousness Extravagance Vice Drunkenness Whoredoms Crime. Sin. ———— Will Power Intellectually Used. Industry, Integrity, Activity, Honor, Courage, Goodness, Charity, Benevolence, Sympathy, Pity, Humanity. ————

Be wise, let the gods and church alone;

They’re false, contrary to nature’s plan.

Trespass not, there’s nothing to atone.

Be human, an upright man.

All their rites and creeds are full of flaws.

As nature’s products, we thrive and grow.

But we must be ruled by nature’s laws

If we’d happy be—ourselves must know.

Morals! are the laws we must obey.

Infringe them not, prayers cannot save.

Though blessed, we the penalty must pay.

Not to God, or church, or priest be slave!

CHAPTER XXX. THE NON CREDO.

Religion, supernaturalism, ecclesiastical control of human affairs, have done more harm than the good they have ever effected. For several thousand years they have been doing the worst of mischief—in spite of their conceited belief to the contrary—to actual enlightenment, to the advancement and prosperity of the masses, to the progress of nations generally. They have been a persistent barrier to every step forward, and have persecuted every idea that threatened in any way to interfere with their organized system. The sacred or Hebraic nationality, steeped in barbarism, washed in cruelty, and bathed in the blood of humanity, was succeeded by another organized system, the Roman Catholic church, which was by no means an improvement upon the Bible methods. They added savagery and cruelty

1 ... 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66
Go to page:

Free e-book «The Creation of God - Jacob Hartmann (readict TXT) 📗» - read online now

Comments (0)

There are no comments yet. You can be the first!
Add a comment