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<xml><p> 35 page printout, pages 56 to 88 of 322
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CHAPTER II</p>
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<p> HEBREW HOLY FORGERIES</p>
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<p> "Hinneh lash-sheqer asah et sheqer sepharim -- Behold, the
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lying pen of the scribes hath wrought lies." Jeremiah, viii. 8.</p>
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<p> SUNDRY HOLY HEBREW men of old, we are told on the authority of
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the name of the pseudo-first Jewish-Christian Pope, "spake as they
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were moved by the Holy Ghost" (2 Peter, i, 21). These literary
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movings of the Spirit were sometime reduced to writing in "Sacred
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Scriptures"; and again later Christian authority assures: "All
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scripture is given by inspiration of God" (2 Tim. iii, 16), --
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though this is a falsified rendition: the true reading is: "Every
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scripture suitable for edification is divinely inspired," as the
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original Greek text is quoted by Father Tertullian. (ANF. iv, 16.)</p>
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<p> It is the popular supposition that the 66 -- (Catholic Bible
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||
73) -- "little books" which comprise the Bible as we know it, are
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the whole sum of Hebrew and Christian "sacred writings," which have
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||
claimed and have been accorded the sanction of Divine inspiration
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and "treated by the Church as canonical." The term "canonical" in
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ecclesiastical parlance means Books accepted as divinely inspired;
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books which "were definitely canonized, or adjudged to have a
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uniquely Divine or authoritative quality," as is the authorative
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||
definition. (CE. iii, 267.) "Canonicity depends on inspiration."
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(EB. i, 653.) The holy Hebrew "canon" was closed, or the last
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inspired Book of the Old Testament written, according to Jewish
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"Tradition," by Ezra, about 444 B.C. (Ib. i, 658, 662.) In truth,
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||
however, several of the Books of the Old Testament were written
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much later, and were never heard of by Ezra; and "some found their
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way in, others not, on grounds of taste -- the taste of the
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period," says Wellhausen. (Einleitung, p. 652, 6th Ed.)</p>
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<p> The popular idea is that when the "moving" of the above
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inspired 66 sacred writings was ended, the moving Spirit retired
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from the field of Hebrew, and later of Christian literature, and
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thus closed the "sacred canon" of the respective Hebrew and
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Christian Testaments. This will be seen to be a mistake, in the
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judgment of the True Christian Church, according to which the Jews
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evidently did not know their own inspired writings, and curiously
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omitted from their "canon" a number of divinely "moved" books and
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scraps of books, which the better-instructed Christian Church has
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adopted as full of inspiration into its own present official Bible,
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as we shall notice in its place. There is also a much greater
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number of such books, of both Hebrew and Christian origin, which
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the inspired Church formerly and for ages regarded as inspired and
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"canonical," but which it now repudiates as "apocryphal" and
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acknowledges as forgeries; as we shall also duly note.</p>
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<p> There is, indeed, an eminence mass of religious writings, the
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work of Jewish or Christian priests or professional religious
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persons, or composite productions of both sets of forgers, which
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are generally known as "apocrypha" or pious forgeries; but which
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each and all have been held by the Church through many ages of
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faith as of the highest inspired sanctity and accredited with the
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full rank of "canonical" truth of God.</p>
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||
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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56
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FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
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<p> The term apocryphal or forged "takes in those compositions
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which profess to have been written either by Biblical personages or
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men in intimate relation with them." (CE. i, 601.) "Since these
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[apocryphal] books were forgeries, the epithet in common parlance
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today denotes any story or document which is false or spurious, ...
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apocryphal in the disparaging sense of bearing names to which they
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have no right; all come under the definition above, for each of
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then has at one tine or another been treated as canonical." (EB. i,
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249-250.)</p>
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<p> That the above 66 (or 73) Books of the accepted Bible of
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Christianity come exactly, both as to manner of spurious origin and
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matter of fictional content, within the above definition of
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apocrypha or forgery, shall be made exceedingly evident. A brief
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review of these acknowledged religious forgeries in the name of God
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and of his inspired biographers, will afford a curious and
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instructive study of the workings of the fervid, credulous and
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contorted priestly mind, reckless of truth, and shed a floodlight
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of understanding on the origins and incredibility of the so-called
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"canonical" Books of the Bible, Hebrew and Christian alike.</p>
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<p> While speaking here immediately of the Jewish Apocrypha or
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pious forgeries, it is to be noted and borne in mind that it is the
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Holy-Ghost-guided True Christian Church which alone has accepted
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and cherished these spurious productions of Jewish priestcraft --
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(scornfully repudiated by the Jews), has adulterated and re-forged
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them to more definite deceptive purposes of Christian propaganda,
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and has outdone Jewry by adding innumerable like forgeries, -- "a
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||
whole literature" of fabrications -- to its own spurious
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hagiography, or sacred writings. There will thus occur some
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necessary and unavoidable over-lappings of Jewish and Christian
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forgeries in the course of our treatment.</p>
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<p> "It must be confessed," admits the Catholic Encyclopedia,
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"that the early Fathers and the Church, during the first three
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centuries, were more indulgent towards Jewish pseudograph [i.e.
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forged writings] circulating under venerable Old Testament, names.
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The Book of Henoch [Enoch] and the Assumption of Moses had been
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cited by the canonical Epistle of Jude. Many Fathers admitted the
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inspiration of Fourth Esdras. Not to mention the Shepherd of
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Hermas, the Acts of St. Paul (at least in the Thecla portion) and
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||
the Apocalypse of St. Peter were highly revered at this and later
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||
periods. ... In the Middle Ages ... many pseudographic [i.e.
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forged] writings enjoyed a high degree of favor among both clerics
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and laity." (CE. i, 615.)</p>
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<p> A curious and edifying side-light on the chronic clerical
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flair for forgery is thrown by a sentence from the paragraph above
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quoted from the Catholic Encyclopedia. The earliest papal decree
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condemning certain of these pious forgeries is itself a Christian
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forgery! "The so-called 'Decretum de recipiendis et non recipiendis
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libris,' which contained a catalogue of some half-hundred works
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||
condemned as apocryphal, was attributed to Pope Gelasius (495),
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but, in reality is a compilation dating from the beginning of the
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Sixth century." (CE,. i, 615.)</p>
|
||
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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57
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FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
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<p> And, be it noted, these Christian forgeries were not at all
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condemned by the Church as forgeries and pious lies, but simply
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because they contained some dogmatic doctrines which were regarded
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by the Orthodox as "heresies" they were condemned "always, however,
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||
with a preoccupation against heresy." And again in the same
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||
article: "Undoubtedly it was the large use heretical Circles,
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||
especially the Gnostics made of this insinuating literature which
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first called out the animadversions of the official guardians of
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||
doctrinal purity." (lb. p. 615.)</p>
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<p> The same authority cautiously and clerically explains, that
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"ancient literature, especially in the Orient, used methods much
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more free and clastic than those permitted by our modern and
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occidetital culture. Pseudographic [falsified] compositions was in
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vogue among the Jews in the two centuries before Christ and for
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some time later. This holds good for the so-called 'Wisdom of
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Solomon,' written in and belonging to the Church's sacred cannon.
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-- [This admits that this book of the Catholic Bible is spurious.]
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In other cases, where the assumed name did not stand as a symbol of
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a type of a certain kind of literature, the intention was not
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without a degree of at least literary dishonesty." (Ib. p. 601.)</p>
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<p> Apocryphal religious literature consists of several classes,
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||
one of the most important subdivisions being that designated as
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||
"apocalyptic," and which consists of "pretended prophecies and
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revelations of both Jewish and Christian authorship, and dating
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from about 200 B.C. to about 150 A.D.," the latter being the
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approximate date of the new "canonical" Books of the New Testament,
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Their general subject is the problem of the final triumph of what
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is called the Kingdom of God. Speaking particularly of the
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apocalypses, the best known of which are the Hebrew Book of Daniel,
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||
written about 165 B.C., and the Jewish-Christian Book of Revelation
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||
imputed to the Apostle John of Patmos, a recent secular authority
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||
(corroborated at all points by clerical authorities) points out
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||
that many if not all of the Jewish apocalypses are adulterated with
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||
"alterations and interpolations by Christian hands, making the
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alleged predictions, point more definitely to Jesus," which pious
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tempering "gave certain of these Jewish works a very wide
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circulation in the early Church. ... The revelations and
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||
predictions are set forth as though actually received and written
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or spoken by ancient worthies, as Enoch, Moses, etc. ... They were
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||
once widely accepted as genuine prophecies, and found a warm
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||
reception in Jewish and early Christian circles." (The New
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||
International, Encyclopedia, vol. i, p. 745.) This form of pious
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||
fraud is admitted as quite the expected thing: "Naturally baaing
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itself upon the Pentateuch and the Prophets, it clothed itself
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||
fictitiously with the authority of a patriarch or prophet who was
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made to reveal the transcendent future" (CE. i, 602), -- most
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usually long ex post facto.</p>
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<p> The vast and varied extent of Jewish-Christian forgery of
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religious books is shown by the groupings under which the several
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kinds of apocrypha forgeries are quite exhaustively considered in
|
||
the technical works treating of them, such as the Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia and the Encyclopedia Biblica, as well as the more
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||
popular Britannica and New International Encyclopedias, where the
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||
subject is fully discussed. "Speaking broadly," says the first, </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
58
|
||
|
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FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>"The Apocrypha of Jewish origin are coextensive with what are
|
||
styled of the Old Testament, and those of Christian origin the
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||
apocrypha of the New Testament. The subject will be treated
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||
["according to their origin"] -- as follows: (I) Apocrypha of
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||
Jewish origin: (II) Jewish Apocrypha with Christian accretions;
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||
(III) apocrypha of Christian origin, comprising (1) apocryphal
|
||
Gospels; (2) Pilate literature and other apocrypha concerning
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||
Christ; (3) apocryphal Acts of Apostles; (4) apocryphal doctrinal
|
||
works; (5) apocryphal Epistles; (6) apocryphal Apocalypses, (IV)
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the apocrypha and the Church." (CE. i, 601.)</p>
|
||
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<p> What a catalogue of confessed ecclesiastical forgers, and
|
||
fraud in the name of God, Christ and his Apostles, and the Church
|
||
of God, for the propaganda of priestly frauds as "our Most Holy
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Faith"!</p>
|
||
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<p> What will probably -- In view of the foregoing and what is yet
|
||
to come -- be appreciated by many as a peculiarly rare bit of
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||
apocrypha (in its secondary sense) is the following, uttered
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||
apparently with the due and usual ecclesiastical solemnity, in the
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||
celebrated Dictatus of Pope Gregory VII (1073-1085), stating the
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||
presumptuous pretenses of the Papacy:</p>
|
||
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||
<p> "The Roman Church has never erred, nor will it err to all
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||
eternity. No one may be considered a Catholic Christian who
|
||
does not agree with the Catholic Church. No book is
|
||
authoritative unless it has received the papal sanction. ... </p>
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||
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<p> The pope is the only person whose feet are to be kissed
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||
by all princes"; "the Pope may depose emperors and absolve
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||
subjects from allegiance to an unjust ruler." (Cited by
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||
Robinson, 'The Ordeal of Civilization, pp. 126, 128; Library
|
||
of Original Sources, vol. iv, p. 126-321.)</p>
|
||
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<p> This puts the stamp of canonical inspiration and verity on
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||
some dozen Jewish books and parts of books of the Catholic Bible
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||
which the Jews and the whole body of otherwise discordant sects of
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||
Protestants hesitate not unanimously to pronounce apocryphal and
|
||
forged. These "apocrypha" are either entire rejected Jewish books,
|
||
all doubtless with Christian "interpolations," or apocryphal
|
||
chapters or parts, interpolated probably by the same industry into
|
||
the equally apocryphal books of the accepted Jewish canon. The
|
||
names of these books, original and interpolations, and which are
|
||
not included in the Hebrew Old Testament, -- but are in the True
|
||
Church Bible, -- are: Tobit, Judith, Baruch, with the Epistle of
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||
Jeremiah, Wisdom of Solomon, Wisdom of Jesus son of Sirach (or
|
||
Ecclesiastics), I and II Maccabees, Prayer of Manasseh, Additions
|
||
to Esther, and Additions to the Book of Daniel, consisting of the
|
||
Prayer of Azarias, the Song of the Three Holy Children (in the
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||
Fiery Furnace), the History of Susannah, the History of Bel and the
|
||
Dragon, and sundry such precious fables. (See CE. iii, pp. 267,
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||
270; iv, 624, passim.) These are all included in the Greek
|
||
Septuagint and in the Latin Vulgate, were read as Scripture in
|
||
early Christian Church, and were declared by the Council of Trent,
|
||
at its Fourth Session, in 1546, -- under the Curse of God on all
|
||
skeptical doubters, -- to be "inspired and canonical"; and they are
|
||
so held by the Roman, and some of the Greek and Oriental Catholic </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
59
|
||
|
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FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
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<p>Churches, but are declared "apocrypha" and forged by Jewry and all
|
||
the rest of Christendom. To several of these extra-revelations of
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Judaism included in the Christian True Bible, head-notes apologetic
|
||
for their inclusion are attached, of which that to the celebrated
|
||
Book of Tobit or Tobias is typical: "Protestants have left it out
|
||
of their modern Bibles, alleging that it is not in the canon of the
|
||
Jews. But the Church of Christ, which received the Scriptures not
|
||
from the Jews, but from the Apostles of Christ, -- [who were all
|
||
Jews, to believe the Christian record] -- by traditions from them,
|
||
has allowed this book a place in the Christian [sic] Bible from the
|
||
beginning." (See Cath. Bible, Tobit, et passim). We may admire in
|
||
synopsis the divine inspiration of</p>
|
||
|
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<p> THE INSPIRED FABLE OF TOBIT</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> This Book of Tobit, or Tobias, scoffed both by Jews and
|
||
Protestants as a ridiculous fable, but held by all True Believers
|
||
as a precious revelation of God, to disbelieve which is to be
|
||
damned, is a veritable treasure-trove of exalted heavenly
|
||
inspiration, for the preservation of which Jew and Gentile alike
|
||
may be dubiously grateful to the pious "tradition" of the Apostles
|
||
of Christ, as above said. This Tobias was a very pious and stubborn
|
||
Israelite of the Captivity, who, before departing, had cached all
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||
his available cash with his kinsman Gabelus, of Rages, a city of
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||
the Medes, "taking a note of his hand" for its repayment on demand.
|
||
While captive in a strange and pagan land, Tobias wan visited by a
|
||
piteous calamity, for "as he was sleeping, hot dung out of a
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||
swallows nest fell upon his eves, and he was made blind"; which
|
||
affliction Tobias looked reverently to the Lord as visiting upon
|
||
him as "revenge for my sins"; as a result Tobias became extremely
|
||
poor, and his wife took in work. At that time there lived in the
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||
city of Rages another pious Israelite by name Raguel, who had a
|
||
marriageable -- or rather muchly married daughter, Sara, who was
|
||
under grave reproach and even imputation of murder, "Because she
|
||
had been given to seven husbands, and a devil named Asmodeus had
|
||
killed them, at their first going in unto her," so that she
|
||
complained that though sevenfold a widow she remained yet a virgin.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> At this juncture Tobias bethought himself of the good money he
|
||
had left with Gabelus of Rages, and after much palaver decided to
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||
send his son, Tobias, Jr., a comely youth, with the note of hand in
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||
his pocket, and his dog (name unrevealed), on the long journey to
|
||
recoup the fortune of ten talents of silver. As Tobias, Jr. started
|
||
on the journey, a beautiful young man, who was really the Archangel
|
||
Raphael, met him and introduced himself as Azarias, son of Ananias,
|
||
-- (Ananias must have written the account) -- and offered to
|
||
accompany and guide him upon his journey, which offer was
|
||
gratefully accepted. As the two journeyed they came to the river
|
||
Tigris; Tobias waded in to wash his feet, when, lo, "a monstrous
|
||
fish came up to devour him," whereat Tobias called to his companion
|
||
for help. The Angel told him to take the monster fish by the gill
|
||
and haul him out, which Tobias seems to have had no trouble in
|
||
doing. The Angel then directed Tobias to open the yet live and
|
||
"panting" fish, "and lay up his heart, his gall, and his liver, for
|
||
thee; for these are necessary for useful medicines"; this done,
|
||
they cooked the fish and carried it all along for provisions for
|
||
the trip. As they journeyed, Tobias asked the Angel what these </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
60
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>medicinal scraps were good for; "and the Angel answering said, if
|
||
thou put a little piece of its heart upon coals, the smoke thereof
|
||
driveth away all kinds of devils, either from man or from woman, so
|
||
that they come no more to them. And the gull is good for anointing
|
||
the eyes, in which there is a white speck, and they shall be
|
||
cured."</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> So discoursing pleasantly and instructively, the twain arrived
|
||
at Rages, and the Angel guided Tobias straight to the house of
|
||
Raguel and his daughter Sara, his sole heiress, and told Tobias to
|
||
ask for her in marriage. Tobias said that he was afraid of Sara,
|
||
for he had heard of what happened to those seven other men; but the
|
||
Angel reassured him, that he would show him how to overcome the
|
||
devil Asmodeus; that he should marry Sara and go to bed with her
|
||
for three nights, but should continently confine his activities "to
|
||
nothing else but to prayers with her", and, assured the Angel, on
|
||
the first night "lay the liver of the fish on the fire, and the
|
||
devil shall be driven away," other holy marvels happening on the
|
||
succeeding nights; "and when the third night is past, thou shalt
|
||
take the virgin with the fear of the Lord, moved rather for love of
|
||
children than for lust." The affair was arranged according to these
|
||
prescriptions; with Sara and her parents; after the wedding supper,
|
||
the newlyweds were left alone in their boudoir; Tobias did nothing
|
||
but pray and put a part of the fish liver in the fire, whereupon
|
||
"the Angel Raphael took the devil, and bound him in the desert of
|
||
Upper Egypt"; then both prayed some more, the fervid prayers being
|
||
repeated verbatim. In the morning, Raguel, out of force of habit,
|
||
called his servants and ordered them to go into the garden and dig
|
||
an eighth grave for the reception of Tobias; when the maidservant
|
||
went to the room to arrange for the removal of the corpse, she to
|
||
her great surprise "found them safe and sound, sleeping both
|
||
together." The empty grave was filled up, a big banquet prepared,
|
||
and the happy bridal couple spent two weeks with the bride's
|
||
family, while the Angel took the note of hand, went to Gabelus,
|
||
collected the money, and paid it over to Tobias; Raguel gave Tobias
|
||
one-half of all his property, and executed a writing to give him
|
||
one-half of the remainder upon the death of Raguel and wife. Tobias
|
||
sent the Angel back to Gabelus, to invite him to his wedding, and
|
||
the Angel made him Come.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> To proceed swiftly to the climax of marvel, Tobias; and the
|
||
Angel, leaving the hymeneal cortege to follow as best it could,
|
||
with such impedimenta of wealth, hastened back to the home of
|
||
Tobias, Sr., where blind father and the mother were in great grief
|
||
over the supposed loss of their son and the money with him. But at
|
||
the behest of the Angel, Tobias, Jr. ran into the house, though
|
||
"the dog, which had been with them in the way, ran before, and
|
||
coming as if he had brought the news, showed his joy by his fawning
|
||
and wagging his tail," an act which has since become habitual with
|
||
dogs which have enough tail to wag. After kissing his mother and
|
||
father, as the Angel had suggested, Tobias, Jr. took the remaining
|
||
fish gall out of his traveling bag, and anointed with it the eyes
|
||
of his father; "and he stayed about half an hour; and a white skin
|
||
began to come out of his eyes, like the skin of an egg. And Tobias
|
||
took hold of it, and drew it from his eyes, and immediately he
|
||
recovered his sight. And they glorified God," and Tobias, Sr.
|
||
dutifully said "I bless thee, Lord God of Israel, because thou hast</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
61
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>chastised me, and thou hast saved me: and behold I see Tobias my
|
||
son." Then, "after seven days Sara his son's wife, and all the
|
||
family arrived safe, and the cattle, and the camels, and abundance
|
||
of money of his wife's, and that money also which he had received
|
||
of Gabelus"; they all feasted for seven days "and rejoiced with all
|
||
great joy"; then, when Tobias, Sr. suggested doing something
|
||
handsome for the "holy man" through whom all their good fortune had
|
||
come, the Angel introduced himself as really not Azariah, son of
|
||
Ananias, but "The Angel Raphael, one of the Seven, who stand before
|
||
the Lord"; and he explained, "I seemed indeed to eat, and to drink
|
||
with you, but I use an invisible meat and drink, which cannot be
|
||
seen by men"; thereupon in true angel style he dissipated into thin
|
||
air and they could see him no more. The whole Tobias family then,
|
||
"lying prostrate for three hours upon their face, blessed God: and
|
||
rising up they told all his wonderful works." Thus endeth happily
|
||
the reading of the lesson, dictated by the Holy Ghost to the pious
|
||
Ananias who recorded it for the edification of True Believers. Let
|
||
us pray that it is true.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Until the Council of Trent, in 1546, there was no infallibly
|
||
defined sanction of inspiration of these Jewish "apocrypha"; like
|
||
the "canon" sacred Books of the Hebrew Bible, all alike were more
|
||
or lest; eclectically accepted and used in the True Church; but, as
|
||
said: "The Tridentine decree from which the above list is extracted
|
||
was the first infallible and effectually promulgated pronouncement
|
||
on the Canon, addressed to the Church universal. Being dogmatic in
|
||
its purport, it implies that the Apostles bequeathed the same Canon
|
||
to the Church as a part of the depositum fidei. ... We should
|
||
search the pages of the New, Testament in vain for any trace of
|
||
such action. ... We affirm that such a status points to Apostolic
|
||
sanction, which in turn must have rested on revelation either by
|
||
Christ or the Holy Spirit." (CE. iii, 270.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> This is luminous clerical reasoning: a lot of anonymous Jewish
|
||
fables, derided by Jews and all the rest of the world for want of
|
||
even common plausibility of fact or truth, and as to which the
|
||
"inspired" Christian books said to emanate from Apostles, are
|
||
silent as the grave, are declared after 1500 years to have the ear-
|
||
marks of Apostolic sanction, which "must have" been founded on
|
||
divine revelation to them "either by Christ or the Holy Spirit," --
|
||
which the Church claims are one and the same person; and it is
|
||
curious that the "infallible" Council couldn't say which was which,
|
||
but vaguely and uncertainly opined it must have been one or the
|
||
other. So much for infallible cock-suredness as to "inspiration" of
|
||
holy Scriptures. Even the Old Testament itself, says our logician
|
||
of inspiration, "reveals no formal notion of inspiration," though,
|
||
again, "the later Jews must have possessed the idea." (Ib. p. 269.)
|
||
The cursory notice which we shall take of the Old Testament books
|
||
will serve to confirm that they reveal no notion at all of
|
||
inspiration; that the later Jews must have had the idea that they
|
||
were inspired, does not much help the case for them.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> In addition to these rejected Jewish books admitted into full
|
||
canonical fellowship by the inerrant True Church, there are several
|
||
other Jewish apocrypha which are only semi-canonical and admitted </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
62
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>into a sort of bar-sinister fellowship with the legitimates. They
|
||
have a place in the Orthodox Bible for the "edification" of the
|
||
Faithful, but are usually printed in the Appendix as suggestive to
|
||
the devout that they will not be damned for not fully believing
|
||
these particular forgeries,</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Among these are two very celebrated books forged in the name
|
||
of the great Restorer of Israel, Ezra, under the titles of Third
|
||
and Fourth Esdras, as the name is written in the True Bibles.
|
||
"Third Esdras," says the Encyclopedia, "Is, one of the three
|
||
uncanonical books appended to the official edition of the Vulgate.
|
||
... It enjoyed exceptional favor in the early ages of the Church,
|
||
being quoted as Scripture with implicit faith by the leading Greek
|
||
and Latin Fathers." (CE,. i, 605.) In like errant faith was
|
||
regarded its companion forgery, Fourth Esdras, of which the same
|
||
ecclesiastical authority says: "The personage serving as the screen
|
||
of the author of this book is Esdras (Ezra). ... Both Greek and
|
||
Latin Fathers cite it as prophetical. ... Notwithstanding this
|
||
widespread reverence for it, in early times, it is a REMARKABLE
|
||
FACT that the book never got a foothold in the Canon or liturgy of
|
||
the Church ... and even after the Council of Trent, together with
|
||
Third Esdras. it was placed in the appendix to the official edition
|
||
of the Vulgate. ... The dominant critical dating assigns it to a
|
||
Jew writing in the reign of Domitian, A.D. 81-98," -- the "screen"
|
||
Ezra being gathered to his fathers since about 444 B.C. (Ib. p.
|
||
603-604; v, 537-8; EB. i, 653, 1393.) It is curious that it is
|
||
regarded as "remarkable" that the Holy Ghost did not "fall" for
|
||
this particular forgery, when it did for so many others!</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> EZRA "RESTORES" THE LAW</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> A remarkable apocryphal tale relating to the Hebrew Scriptures
|
||
is enshrined by pseudo-inspiration in chapter 14 of this Fourth of
|
||
Esdras, regarding the miraculous restoration of Hebrew Holy Writ
|
||
after its total perishment. In the calamity of the capture and
|
||
destruction of the Holy City by Nebuchadnezzar, 586 B.C., the
|
||
Temple of Solomon was destroyed, together with the entire
|
||
collection of the sacred Rolls of Scriptures, so that not a scratch
|
||
of inspired pen remained to tell the tale of theocratic Hebrew
|
||
history and its "revealed" religion. This inconsolable and
|
||
apparently irreparable loss affected the holy People all the time
|
||
of the of the Babylonian captivity. But upon their return to the
|
||
restored City of God, and over a century after their loss, God, we
|
||
are told in Fourth Esdras, inspired Ezra and commissioned him to
|
||
reproduce the sacred lost Books, which, judging from the result, of
|
||
his inspired labors, were many more than the supposed twenty and
|
||
two of the supposed old Hebrew canon. Accordingly Ezra, employing
|
||
five scribes, dictated to them (from inspired memory) the textual
|
||
contents of the lost sacred books, and in just forty days and
|
||
nights reproduced a total of 94 sacred books, of which he
|
||
designated 24 as the sacred canon, the remaining 70 being termed
|
||
esoteric and reserved fir the use of only the wisest. This inspired
|
||
fable was eagerly accepted for truth by the early Church Fathers,
|
||
many of whom, from Irenaeus on, "admitted its inspiration"; and it
|
||
was frequently quoted and commented on as canonical by such Church
|
||
luminaries as Tertullian, St. Ambrose, Clement Alexandrensis, </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
63
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Origen, Eusebius, St. Jerome, et als., and was prevalently accepted
|
||
as Scripture throughout the scholastic period. (EB. i, 654, 139 2-
|
||
94; CE. i 537-8, 601-615.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> This legend, however, had, through a better understanding of
|
||
"the powers of ordinary human memory," quite faded out by the time
|
||
of the Reformation, but only to make way for a more modern and
|
||
rationalistic one, invented by the Jew Levita, who died in 1549.
|
||
According to his new fable Ezra and the Talmudic "Men of Great
|
||
Synagogue" simply united into one volume the 24 books which until
|
||
that time had circulated separately, and divided them into the
|
||
three great divisions yet recognized, of the Law the Prophets, and
|
||
the Hagiography or holy writings. This fabulous statement of Levita
|
||
"became the authoritative doctrine of the orthodoxy of the
|
||
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries." (EB. i, 654.) This new
|
||
legend is cited simply to show how prone is the credulous clerical
|
||
mind to accept as truth the most baseless fables; and how, when one
|
||
of their precious bubbles of faith is pricked by tardy exposure or
|
||
common sense, they eagerly catch at the next which comes floating
|
||
by.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> THE "FINDING OF THE LAW"</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Another ancient priestly fiction, which to this day passes
|
||
current among the credulous as inspired truth of God, is the fabled
|
||
"finding of the Law" as recorded in the Word of God. We are all
|
||
familiar with the notable "finding" by the late lamented Prophet.
|
||
Joseph Smith -- thereto led by the Angel Moroni -- of the golden
|
||
plates containing the hieroglyphic text of Book of Mormon, near
|
||
Palmyra N.Y. in 1823-1827. (Book of Mormon, Introd.) History
|
||
repeated itself. A like remarkable discovery was made in the year
|
||
621 B.C., this time by a priest, with the help of a witch or lady
|
||
fortune-teller. As related in 2 Kings xxii, corroborated by 2
|
||
Chronicles xxxiv, in the eighteenth year of the "good king" Josiah
|
||
of Judah, while some repair work was being done in the Temple,
|
||
Hilkiah the priest of a sudden "found the book of the law of Yahweh
|
||
given by Moses," over 800 years before, and never heard of since.
|
||
Hilkiah called in Shaphan the scribe, and they took the great
|
||
"find" to Josiah the King. To verify the veracity of the high-
|
||
priest, Huldah the lady prophet was consulted; being intimately
|
||
familiar with the sentiments of God, she at once declared that
|
||
Yahweh was very angry about it, "because," as the King said, "our
|
||
fathers have not hearkened unto the words of this book, to do after
|
||
all that is written in this book"; and the King at once set about
|
||
to carry into effect the laws prescribed in Deuteronomy, -- just
|
||
then for the first time in the history of Israel ever heard of or
|
||
acted upon. This "book of the law given to Moses" 800 years before
|
||
was doubtless the priestly work of Hilkiah, palmed off under the
|
||
potent name of Moses to force its very reluctant observance and
|
||
belief on the superstitious Jews. That this is the fact is the
|
||
consensus of the scholars, as summarized in the Encyclopedia
|
||
Biblies, and any modern work of O.T. criticism. An examination of
|
||
the Bible texts themselves, as made in my previous work,
|
||
demonstrates that this holy "law of Mosses" was totally unknown and
|
||
unobserved through all the History of Israel from its beginnings
|
||
until Josiah, and was composed by his priests and enlarged into the
|
||
present Pentateuch during and after the captivity in Babylon.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
64
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> THE "SEPTUAGINT" TRANSLATION INTO GREEK</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> As priestly forged tales were fabricated to account for the
|
||
origin and preservation of the sacred Hebrew Books, so like pious
|
||
fraud was adopted to account for their very notable translation
|
||
into Greek, in what is known as the Sepuagint, Version. After the
|
||
conquests by Alexander the Great and his establishment of the city
|
||
of Alexandria in Egypt, immense numbers of Jews were settled in the
|
||
new city, which quickly became the commercial and intellectual
|
||
center of the ancient world, with Greek the universal language. The
|
||
holy Hebrew language had became a dead language to the Jews of the
|
||
"Dispersion"; their synagogue services could not be conducted in
|
||
the mother tongue. The Alexandrian Jews were accordingly under
|
||
necessity to render the "Law" into Greek for their public use; and
|
||
this was gradually done by such of them as thought themselves able
|
||
to do such work. But this common-place mode of rendering the sacred
|
||
Hebrew into a Gentile speech did not satisfy the pious wonder-
|
||
craving Jewish mind. Accordingly, somewhere about 200 B.C., an
|
||
anonymous Jew invented a more satisfactory tale, which has had
|
||
incalculable influence on the Christian faith and dogmas. This
|
||
pious Israelite had the customary recourse to religions forgery; he
|
||
forged a letter in the name of one Aristeas, an official of Ptolemy
|
||
II, Philadelphus, the Greek king of Egypt, 285-247 B.C., purporting
|
||
to be addressed to his brother, Philocrates, and giving a marvelous
|
||
history of the Translation.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Here, in substance, is what we read of the first origin of the
|
||
Version, limited therein to the "law" of Moses, as first related by
|
||
Josephus. Ptolemy had recently established a library at Alexandria,
|
||
which he purposed should contain a copy of every obtainable
|
||
literary work extant. This Library became the most extensive and
|
||
celebrated of the ancient world, containing some 700,000 manuscript
|
||
books at the time it was savagely destroyed, in 391 A.D., by the
|
||
benighted Christian zeal and fury of Bishop Theophilus of
|
||
Alexandria and his crazy monks of Nitria, as related in Kingsley's
|
||
Hypatia or any history of the times. CE. xiv, 625.) At the
|
||
suggestion of Demetrius, his Librarian, fables the pseudo-Aristeas
|
||
through Josephus, that he should enrich the Library with a copy of
|
||
the sacred law of the Jews Ptolemy wrote to Eleazar the chief
|
||
priest at Jerusalem, sending the letter and magnificent presents
|
||
"to God" by the hand of a delegation including Aristeas, requesting
|
||
a copy of the Law and a number of learned Jews competent to
|
||
translate it into Greek. The embassy was successful; a richly
|
||
ornamented copy of the holy law, written in letters of gold, was
|
||
sent to the King, together with seventy-two Doctors of Israel,
|
||
deputed to deliver the Book and to carry out the wishes of the
|
||
King. They were received with great honor, says pseudo-Aristeas,
|
||
and duly feted for several days; they were then conducted across
|
||
the long causeway to the Island of Pharos to the place which was
|
||
prepared for them, "which was a house that was built near the
|
||
shore, and was a quiet place, and fit for their discoursing
|
||
together about their work, ... Accordingly they made an accurate
|
||
interpretation, with great zeal and great pains," working until the
|
||
ninth hour each day, and visiting Ptolemy every morning. "Now when
|
||
the Law was transcribed, and the labor of interpretation was over,
|
||
which came to its conclusion in seventy-two days," the work was
|
||
read over to the assembled Jews, who rejoiced that "the </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
65
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>interpretation was happily finished"; they were enjoined to report
|
||
any errors or emissions which they might discover, to the
|
||
"Seventy," who would make the necessary corrections in their work.
|
||
(Josephus, Antiq. Jews, Bk. XII, chap. 2; CE. xiii, 722.) Thus the
|
||
translation wag only of "The Law," the Five Books of Moses; and it
|
||
was open team-work, all the Seventy-two working together, comparing
|
||
and discussing as they proceeded, and expressly enjoining the Jews
|
||
to note and report for correction all errors of omission or
|
||
commission which they might discover.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Thus the pseudo-Aristeas, as cited by Josephus; though, as a
|
||
matter of fact, this Septuagint Version, so-called because of the
|
||
legendary Seventy-(two), was in the grossest manner inaccurate, and
|
||
imported innumerable errors into the Christian religion which was
|
||
based upon and propagated for several centuries only through the
|
||
Septuagint texts. Indeed, "the text of the Septuagint was regarded
|
||
as so unreliable, because of its freedom in rendering, and of the
|
||
alterations which had been introduced into it, etc., that, during
|
||
the second century of our era it was discarded by the Church." (CE.
|
||
iv, 625.) We shall notice the fearful error of Isaiah's "virgin-
|
||
birth" text; for other well-known instances, it makes out Creation
|
||
1195 years earlier than the Hebrew and Vulgate, 4004 B.C., and the
|
||
venerable Methuselah is made to survive the Flood by fourteen
|
||
years.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Despite, however, its patently legendary character, the
|
||
pseudo-Aristeas' account, the forged letter and the story, were
|
||
eagerly accepted as genuine and authentic by Fathers, Popes and
|
||
ecclesiastic writers until the sixteenth century, when their
|
||
spurious character was revealed by the nascent modern criticism.
|
||
"The authenticity of the letter, called in question first by Louis
|
||
Vives (1492-1540), professor at Louvain, is now universally
|
||
denied." (CE. xiii, 722.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The Fathers, however, could not rest content with this
|
||
unvarnished original fabrication in the name of Aristeas, of an
|
||
ordinary human and errant translation of the "Law"; they avidly set
|
||
about embellishing it in the accepted clerical style, adding
|
||
fanciful and lying details to emphasize the miraculous and inspired
|
||
origin of the Version. As this notable instance serves admirably to
|
||
illustrate the childish and uncritical credulity of the Fathers,
|
||
their reckless disregard of truth, their chronic zest for any
|
||
untruth or fable quotable to pander to the glory of God and enhance
|
||
the pious superstition of the Faithful, let us here watch the
|
||
growth of this simple human yarn of the Jewish aristeas-forger into
|
||
the wonderful and ever more embellished miracle as it passes from
|
||
Father to Father, -- exactly as the Gospel-fables grew from "Mark"
|
||
to "John." According to Fathers Tertullian, St. Augustine, St.
|
||
Jerome, et als., the 72 were inspired by God each severally for the
|
||
entire work; in translating they did not consult with one another;
|
||
they had been shut up incomunicados in separate cells on Pharos,
|
||
either singly or in pairs, and their several translations, when
|
||
finished and compared, were found to agree entirely both as to
|
||
sense and the expressions employed, with the original Hebrew text
|
||
and with each other (St. Clement of Alexandria, St. Irenaeus,
|
||
Justin Martyr). Finally, the 72 translated not only the Law, but
|
||
the entire Old Testament, -- several of whose Books were not yet at
|
||
the time written.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
66
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Father Justin Martyr adds near-eye-witness verification to the
|
||
false and already embroidered history, saying that the "Seventy"
|
||
were, by order of the King, "shut up in as many separate cells, and
|
||
were obliged by him, each to translate the whole Bible apart, and
|
||
without any communication with each other, yet all their several
|
||
translations were found to agree verbatim from the beginning to the
|
||
end, and were by that means demonstrated to be of divine
|
||
inspiration"; and he adds, for confirmation of faith! -- like Paul,
|
||
protesting he is not lying in anticipation of the accusation:
|
||
"These things, ye men of Greece, are no fable, nor do we narrate
|
||
fictions; but we ourselves having been in Alexandria, saw the
|
||
remains of the little [cells] at the Pharos still preserved." (Ad
|
||
Graec. ch. xiii; ANF. i, 278-9.) But in repeating the tale to the
|
||
Roman Emperor, Father Justin makes the unhappy blunder of saying,
|
||
that Ptolemy "sent to Herod, who was at that time king of the Jews,
|
||
requesting that the books of the prophets [pseudo-Aristeas said the
|
||
"Law"] be sent to him; and the king did indeed send them" (I Apol.
|
||
ch. xxxi; ANF. i, 173); whereas Herod lived some 300 years after
|
||
Ptolemy died. This forged fable is time and again repeated as sober
|
||
truth. Bishop Saint Irenaeus emphasizes the miraculous nature of
|
||
the translation of all the Books, saying that when the 72 identical
|
||
translations were compared, "God was indeed glorified, and the
|
||
Scriptures were acknowledged an truly divine; ... even the Gentiles
|
||
present perceived that the Scriptures had been interpreted by the
|
||
inspiration of God. And there was nothing astonishing in God having
|
||
done this. ... He inspired Esdras the priest (after the return from
|
||
captivity) to recast all the words of the former prophets, and to
|
||
reestablish with the people of God the Mosaic legislation." (Adv.
|
||
Haer. III, xxi, 2; ANF. i, 451-2.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> In the course of a century or two before the Christian Era,
|
||
the other Hebrew sacred books were likewise translated into Greek
|
||
for the use of the Greek-speaking Jews of "the Dispersion,"
|
||
together with numbers of the forged Jewish apocrypha, and all these
|
||
were added to the rolls of "Scriptures." This final and adulterated
|
||
form of the Septuagint "was the vehicle which conveyed these
|
||
additional Scriptures [i.e. the apocryphal Tobias, etc.] into the
|
||
Catholic Church." (CE. iii, 271.) This vagary of the Holy Ghost in
|
||
certifying the ill-translated and tempered Septuagint for the
|
||
foundations of Christian Faith, was very disastrous, as CE. points
|
||
out: "The Church had adopted the Septuagint as its own; this
|
||
differed from the Hebrew not only by the addition of several books
|
||
and passages but also by innumerable variations of text, due partly
|
||
to the ordinary process of corruption in the transcription of
|
||
ancient books, partly to the culpable temerity, as Origen called
|
||
it, of correctors who used not a little freedom in making
|
||
'corrections,' additions, and suppressions, partly to mistakes in
|
||
translation, and finally in great part to the fact that the
|
||
original Septuagint had been made from a Hebrew text quite
|
||
different from that fixed at Jamnia as the one standard by the
|
||
Jewish Rabbis." (CE. vii, 316.) So Yahveh only knows what he
|
||
actually said and did in the 4004 years up to the time his Son came
|
||
to try to "redeem" his people from some of the tangles of his Holy
|
||
Law.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Matters grew worse as time progressed: the ex-Pagan Greek
|
||
Fathers who founded Christianity, propagated the new Faith for
|
||
several centuries only from the tortuous texts of this falsified </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
67
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Septuagint, which was the only Old Testament "Scriptures" known to
|
||
and used by them as the source of the "prophecies fulfilled by
|
||
Jesus Christ" and the holy mysteries of the Jewish-Christian Faith.
|
||
"Copies of the Septuagint." says CE., "were multiplied, and, as
|
||
might be expected, many changes, deliberate as well as involuntary,
|
||
crept in." (CE. xiii, 723.) Indeed, the itch for Scripture-
|
||
scribbling was so rife among such ex-Pagan Christians as could
|
||
write and get hold of a copy, that St. Augustine complains: "It is
|
||
possible to enumerate those who have translated the Scriptures from
|
||
Hebrew into Greek, but not those who have translated them into
|
||
Latin. In sooth, in the curly days of the faith whoso possessed a
|
||
Greek manuscript and thought he had some knowledge of both tongues
|
||
was daring enough to undertake a translation." (De Doct. Christ.
|
||
II, xi; CE. ix, 20.) So the Faith was founded on befuddlement of
|
||
the Blessed Word of God as any nondescript scribbler palmed it off
|
||
to be.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> We shall more than abundantly see that Holy Church never
|
||
possessed or used a single book of "Scripture" or other document of
|
||
importance, to the glory of God and the glorification of the
|
||
Church, which was not a rank original forgery and bristled besides
|
||
with "many deliberate changes" or forged interpolations.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> THE SEPTUAGINT AND THE "VIRGIN-BIRTH" FRAUD</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The most colossal of the blunders of the Septuagint
|
||
translators, supplemented by the most insidious, persistent and
|
||
purposeful falsification of text, is instanced in the false
|
||
translation of the notoriously false pretended "prophecy" of Isaiah
|
||
vii, 14, -- frauds which have had the most disastrous and fatal
|
||
consequences for Christianity, and to humanity under its blight;
|
||
the present exposure of which should instanter destroy the false
|
||
Faith built on these frauds.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The Greek priest who forged the "Gospel according to St.
|
||
Matthew," having before him the false Septuagint translation of
|
||
Isaiah, fables the Jewish Mary yielding to the embraces of the
|
||
Angel Gabriel to engender Jesus, and backs it up by appeal to the
|
||
Septuagint translation of Isaiah vii, 14:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth
|
||
a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel." (Matt. i, 23.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Isaiah's original Hebrew, with the mistranslated words
|
||
underscored, reads: "Hinneh ha-almah harah ve-yeldeth ben ve-karath
|
||
shem-o immanuel"; -- which, falsely translated by the false pen of
|
||
the pious translators, runs thus in the English: "Behold, a virgin
|
||
shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel"
|
||
(Isa. vii, 14.) The Hebrew words ha-almah mean simply the young
|
||
woman; and harah is the Hebrew past or perfect tense, "conceived,"
|
||
which in Hebrew, as in English, represents past and completed
|
||
action. Honestly translated, the verse reads: "Behold, the young
|
||
woman has conceived -- [is with child) -- and beareth a son and
|
||
calleth his name Immanuel."</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Almah means simply a young woman, of marriageable age, whether
|
||
married or not, or a virgin or not; in a broad general sense
|
||
exactly like girl or maid in English, when we say shop-girl, </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
68
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>parlor-maid, bar-maid, without reference to or vouching for her
|
||
technical virginity, which, in Hebrew, is always expressed by the
|
||
word bethulah. But in the Septuagint translation into Greek, the
|
||
Hebrew almah was erroneously rendered into the Greek parthenos,
|
||
virgin, with the definite article 'ha' in Hebrew, and e in Greek,
|
||
(the), rendered into the indefinite "a" by later falsifying
|
||
translators. (See Is It God's Word? pp. 277-279; EB. ii, 2162; New
|
||
Commentary on the Holy Scripture, Pt. I, p. 439.) And St. Jerome
|
||
falsely used the Latin word virgo.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "As early as the second century B.C.," says the distinguished
|
||
Hebrew scholar and critic, Salomon Reinach, "the Jews perceived the
|
||
error and pointed it out to the Greeks; but the Church knowingly
|
||
persisted in the false reading, and for over fifteen centuries she
|
||
has clung to her error." (Orpheus, p, 197.) The truth of this
|
||
accusation of conscious persistence in known error through the
|
||
centuries is proved by confession of St. Jerome, who made the
|
||
celebrated Vulgate translation from the Hebrew into Latin, and
|
||
intentionally "clung to the error," though Jerome well knew that it
|
||
was an error and false; and thus he perpetuated through fifteen
|
||
hundred years the myth of the "prophetic virgin birth" of Jesus
|
||
called Christ.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Being criticized by many for this falsification, St. Jerome
|
||
thus replies to one of his critics, Juvianus: "I know that the Jews
|
||
are accustomed to meet us with the objection that in Hebrew the
|
||
word Almah does not mean a virgin, but a young woman. And, to speak
|
||
truth, a virgin is properly called Bethulah, but a young woman, or
|
||
a girl, is not Almah, but Naarah"! (Jerome, Adv. Javianum I, 32;
|
||
N&PNF, vi, 370.) So insistent was the criticism, that he was driven
|
||
to write a book on the subject, in which he makes a very notable
|
||
confession of the inherent incredibility of the Holy Ghost
|
||
paternity-story "For who at that time would have believed the
|
||
Virgin's word that she had conceived of the Holy Ghost, and that
|
||
the angel Gabriel had come and announced the purpose of God? and
|
||
would not all have given their opinion against her as an
|
||
adulteress, like Susanna? For at the present day, now that the
|
||
whole world has embraced the faith, the Jews argue, that when
|
||
Isaiah says, 'Behold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a son,' the
|
||
Hebrew the Hebrew word denotes a young woman, not a virgin, that is
|
||
to say, the word is ALMAH, not BETHULAH"! (Jerome, The Perpetual
|
||
Virginity of Blessed Mary, N&PNF, vi, 336.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> So the Greek Father or priest who forged the false "virgin-
|
||
birth" interpolation into the manuscript of "Matthew," drags in
|
||
maybe ignorantly the false Septuagint translation of Isaiah vii,
|
||
14, which the Latin Father St. Jerome purposely perpetuated as a
|
||
pious "lie to the glory of God." The Catholic and King James
|
||
Versions purposely retain this false translation; the Revised
|
||
Version keeps it in, but with a gesture of honesty, which is itself
|
||
a fraud, sticks into the margin in fine type, after the words "a
|
||
virgin" and "shall conceive," the words, "Or, the maiden is with
|
||
child and beareth," -- which not one in thousands would ever see or
|
||
understand the significance of. So it is not some indefinite "a
|
||
virgin" who 750 years in the future "shall conceive" and "shall
|
||
bear" a son whose name she "shall call" Immanuel, Jesus; but it was
|
||
some known and definite young female, married or un-married -- but </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
69
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>not a "virgin" -- who had already conceived and was already
|
||
pregnant, and who beareth a son and calleth his name Immanuel, ...
|
||
who should be the "sign" which "my lord" should give to Ahaz of the
|
||
truth of Isaiah's false prophecy regarding the pending war with
|
||
Israel and Syria, as related in Isaiah vii, and of which the total
|
||
falsity is proven in 2 Chronicles xxviii, as all may read.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Although Papal Infallibility has declared that "it will never
|
||
be lawful to grant ... that the sacred writers could have made a
|
||
mistake" (Leo XIII, Eneyc. Provid. Deus; CE. ii, 543), yet, the
|
||
fraud being notorious and exposed to the scorn of the world, and
|
||
being driven by force of modern criticism, CE. definitely and
|
||
positively -- though with the usual clerical soft-soaping,
|
||
confesses this age-long clerical fraud and falsification of Holy
|
||
Writ, and relegates it to the junk-heap of discredited -- but not
|
||
discarded -- dogmatic myth:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "Modern theology does not grant that Isaiah vii, 14, contains
|
||
a real prophecy fulfilled in the virgin birth of Christ; it must
|
||
maintain, therefore, that St. Matthew misunderstood the passage
|
||
when he said: 'Now all this was done that it might be fulfilled
|
||
which the Lord spoke by the prophet, saying, Behold, a virgin shall
|
||
be with child, and bring forth a son, etc."! (CE. xv, 451.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Thus is apparent, and confessed, the dishonesty of "Matthew"
|
||
and of the Church of Christ in perverting this idle, false and
|
||
falsified text of Isaiah into a "prophecy of the virgin birth of
|
||
Jesus Christ," and in persisting in retaining this falsity in their
|
||
dishonest Bibles as the basis of their own bogus theology unto this
|
||
day of the Twentieth Century. The Church, full knowing its falsity,
|
||
yet, clings to this precious lie of Virgin Birth and all the
|
||
concatenated consequences. Thus it declares its own condemnation as
|
||
false. Some other viciously false translations of sacred Scripture
|
||
will be duly noticed in their place.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> As Thomas Jefferson prophetically wrote, -- as is being
|
||
verified:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "The day will come when the mystical generation of Jesus by
|
||
the Supreme Being as his father, in the womb of a virgin, will be
|
||
classed with the fable of the generation of Minerva in the brain of
|
||
Jupiter"!</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> OTHER HEBREW SACRED FORGERIES</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The marvels of the canonical apocrypha of the Hebrew sacred
|
||
Books, or of the whole 94 miraculously "restored" by Ezra, could
|
||
not slake the thirst of the Jewish intellect for such edifying
|
||
histories, and their priests were very industrious in supplying the
|
||
demands of piety and marvel-craving. Making use, as above admitted,
|
||
of the most "venerable Old Testament names," they forged a
|
||
voluminous literature of fanciful and fantastic fairy-tales in the
|
||
guise of sacred history, revelations, oracles or predictions, all
|
||
solemnly "set forth as thought actually received, and written or
|
||
spoken by ancient worthies, as Enoch, Moses, etc., which were
|
||
widely accepted as genuine, and found a warm reception in Jewish
|
||
and early Christian circles." Scarcely is there a Biblical notable </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
70
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>of Israel in whose name these pious false writings were not forged,
|
||
including Adam and Eve and most of the ante- and post-Diuvian
|
||
Patriarchs. It is impossible here to much more than mention the
|
||
names of some of the principal ones of these extra-canonical
|
||
apocrypha and forgeries of the Jews, as listed in the Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia and the Encyclopedia Biblica, most of them worked over
|
||
with surcharge of added Christian forgeries, to adapt them to their
|
||
pious propaganda.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The names of these "intriguing" volumes of forgotten lore,
|
||
listed somewhat after the order of their distinguished pretended
|
||
authors and times, are: Life of Adam and Eve; Testament of Adam;
|
||
The Book of Creation; the Books of Seth (son of Adam); Book of
|
||
Enoch (grandson of Adam); Secrets of Enoch; Parables of Enoch; Book
|
||
of Lamech; Book of Noah; Book of Zoroaster (identified with Ham,
|
||
son of Noah); Apocalypse of Noah; Apocalypse of Abraham; Testament
|
||
of Abraham; Testament of Isaac; Testament of Jacob; The Testaments
|
||
of the Twelve Patriarchs; Testament of the Three Patriarchs;
|
||
Testament of Naphthali; The Prayer of Menassch; The Prayer of
|
||
Joseph; The Story of Asenath (wife of Joseph); Prayer of Asenath;
|
||
The Marriage of Asenath; The Assumption of Moses; The Testament of
|
||
Moses; Book of Jannes and Mambres (the Egyptian magicians with whom
|
||
Moses contended); Penitence of Jannes and Mambres; The Magical
|
||
Books of Moses; The Book of Jubilees. or Little Genesis; Book of Og
|
||
the Giant, Treatise of the Giants, Josippon; Book of Jasher; The
|
||
Liber Antiquitatem Bibliarum, ascribed to Philo; The Chronicles of
|
||
Jerameel; Testament of Job; Psalm CLI of David, "when he fought
|
||
with Goliath"; Testament of Solomon; The Contradictio Salomonis (a
|
||
contest in wisdom between Solomon and Hiram); The Psalms of
|
||
Solomon; Apocalypse of Elijah; Apocalypse of Baruch; The Rest of
|
||
the Words of Baruch; History of Daniel; Apocalypse of Daniel;
|
||
Visions of Daniel; Additions to Daniel, viz.: The History of
|
||
Susanne (Chap. 13), the Song of the Three Children, Story of Bel
|
||
and the Dragon (Chap. 14); Tobit; Judith; Additions to Esther; The
|
||
Martyrdom of Isaiah; The Ascension of Isaiah; III and IV Esdras;
|
||
Apocalypse of Esdras; Story of the Three Pagans, in I Esdras; I,
|
||
II, III, and IV Mitceabee"; The Prophecy of Eldad and Medad;
|
||
Apocalypse of Zephaniah, Stories of Artaphanus; Eupolemus; Story of
|
||
Aphikia, wife of Jesus Sirach; The Letter of Aristeas to
|
||
Philocrates; The Sibylline Oracles.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Quite half of the above Jewish false-writings, separately
|
||
listed under the grouping of "Jewish with Christian Accretions,"
|
||
the Catholic Encyclopedia describes with comments such as "recast
|
||
or freely interpolated by Christians," "many Christian
|
||
interpolations," etc., "presenting in their ensemble a fairly full
|
||
Christology" (CE. i, 606). If the pious Christians, confessedly,
|
||
committed so many and so extensive forgeries and frauds to adapt
|
||
these popular Jewish fairy-tales of their God and holy Worthies to
|
||
the new Christian Jesus and his Apostles, we need feel no surprise
|
||
when we discover these same Christians forging outright new wonder-
|
||
tales of their Christ under the fiction of the most noted Christian
|
||
names and in the guise of inspired Gospels, Epistles, Acts and
|
||
Apocalypses.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
71
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> THE "INSPIRED" HEBREW SCRIPTURES</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The processes of the formation of the Hebrew Old Testament
|
||
Scriptures are, however, interesting and intriguing, if sacred
|
||
tradition is true. According to priestly lore, the man Moses,
|
||
"learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians" (another Christian
|
||
assurance; Acts vii, 22), sat down in the Wilderness of Sinai and
|
||
under divine inspiration wrote his Five Books of prehistorical
|
||
history, codes of post-exilic divine Law, and chronicles of
|
||
contemporary and future notable events, including four different
|
||
names of his father-in-law -- (Wz.: Jethro, Ex. iii, 1; Reuel, Ex.
|
||
ii, 18; Jether, Ex. iv, 18, and Raguel, Num. x, 29, while a fifth
|
||
name, Hobab, is awarded him in Judges iv, II), together with a
|
||
graphic account of his own death and burial, and of the whole month
|
||
afterwards spent by all Israel mourning his death. He also records
|
||
the death of his brother Aaron at Mt. Hor (Num. xx, 28; xxxiii,
|
||
38), just six months before his own death; though, in amazing
|
||
contradiction, he elsewhere records Aaron as having died at Mosera,
|
||
just after leaving Sinai (Deut. x, 6), thirty-nine years previously
|
||
-- and thus nullifies the entire history of the wonderful career
|
||
and deeds of Aaron as high priest during the whole 40 years of
|
||
wandering in the Wilderness, of which the Books of Exodus,
|
||
Leviticus and Numbers are largely filled; as also many other
|
||
matters and things occurring for some centuries after his death,
|
||
and known as "post-Mosaica" to the scholars.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Joshua, the successor of Moses, next wrote the history of his
|
||
life and times, working in, too, a sketch of his own death and
|
||
funeral obsequies (Josh. xxiv, 29-30), and quoting the celebrated
|
||
miracle of the nun standing still, of which he says, "Is it not
|
||
written in the Book of Jasher?" -- which Book of Jasher was not
|
||
itself written until several hundred years later, at least in or
|
||
after the time of David; for it is recorded: "And he [David] bade
|
||
them teach the children of Judah the use of the bow; behold, it is
|
||
written in the Book of Jasher." (2 Sam. i, 18.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The Book of Judges was written by nobody knows whom, nor when,
|
||
except that it was long "post-exilic." It relates that, "Now the
|
||
children of Judah had fought against Jerusalem, and had taken it"
|
||
(Jud. i, 18); whereas it was not until David had reigned seven
|
||
years and six months in Hebron, that "the King and his men went to
|
||
Jerusalem" and failed to capture it, "nevertheless, David took the
|
||
stronghold of Zion, and called it the City of David." (2 Sam. v,
|
||
5-9.) It is further recorded in Judges that the tribe of Dan made
|
||
a silver idol of the Hebrew God and hired a grandson of Moses to
|
||
serve it, and "he and his sons were priests to the tribe of Dan
|
||
until the captivity of the land" (Jud. xviii, 30) -- about a
|
||
thousand years later.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The gifted Samuel. Prophet of the heathen High Places of Baal
|
||
worship, gives his name and inspiration to two books of mythical
|
||
history written piecemeal until the "return from captivity," as
|
||
above indicated, and early in his work he records the historic
|
||
episode of the calling up of his own ghost from the dead by the
|
||
famous Witch of En-dor. (I Sam. xviii, 1, 7-19.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
72
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The ex-bandit David, "man after God's own heart" -- after
|
||
murdering a man to get his adulterous wife, and engendering of her
|
||
his all-wise son and hero, Solomon, wrote the 150 songs of the
|
||
Hebrew Hymn Book, many of his psalms singing of the long posthumous
|
||
Babylonian Captivity.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Solomon himself, who was son-in-law to nearly everybody in the
|
||
heathen nations round about who had eligible daughters, wrote the
|
||
wisdom of the ages into his Book of Proverbs, though not one of
|
||
them is by Solomon, and in his lighter (headed or hearted) spells
|
||
penned his erotic Canticles, which for realistic lubricity quite
|
||
outdo Boccaccio, and would be really unmailable under the Postal
|
||
laws if they weren't in the Holy Bible and clerically captioned
|
||
"The Church's Love unto Christ." These are indeed but one
|
||
collection out of the great many pornographic stories of The Holy
|
||
Ghost's Decameron, enshrined in God's Holy Word for delectation of
|
||
the Puritans of Faith.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Other divinely inspired and anonymous writers, falsely
|
||
entitling their effusions under the names of this or that Prophet
|
||
or other wholly fictitious personage, as Job, Esther, Ruth, Daniel,
|
||
gave forth yet other inspired histories, books of oracles or
|
||
prophecies, apocalypses or high powered visions into Futurity, and
|
||
a miscellany of sacred novels, love-stories and nondescript musings
|
||
or ravings known collectively as the hagiographa or holy writings
|
||
of the Jews. All these together, now thirty-nine in number,
|
||
comprise the Hebrew Bible or Old Testament. It being out of
|
||
question to review each of these here, it may be stated with
|
||
assurance that not one of them bears the name of its true author;
|
||
that every one of them is a composite work of many hands
|
||
"interpolating" the most anachronistic and contradictory matters
|
||
into the original writings, and often reciting as accomplished
|
||
facts things which occurred many centuries after the time of the
|
||
supposed writer, as Psalms, isaiah, Daniel, and the so-called
|
||
"historical" books. For scientific detailed demonstration of this
|
||
the Encyclopedia Biblica digests the most competent authorities; my
|
||
own Is It God's Word? makes the proofs from the sacred texts
|
||
themselves. See the recent "Religions Book of the Month Club's"
|
||
notable Unraveling the Book of Books, by Trattner. (1929.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> But as the Christian religion depends more vitally on Genesis
|
||
and Moses than on all the other sacred writings and writers, we may
|
||
appeal to the admissions of CE., thereto driven by force of modern
|
||
criticism, for the destruction and abandonment of the Moses Myths.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "It is true that the Pentateuch, so long attributed to Moses,
|
||
is now held by the vast majority of non-Catholic, and by an
|
||
increasing number of Catholic, scholars to be a compilation of four
|
||
independent sources put together in final shape soon after the
|
||
Captivity." (CE. i, 622.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> This scores strongly for Hebrew-Christian forgery and fraud in
|
||
attributing this primitive system of Bible "science" and barbarous
|
||
law to a god as a pretext for priestly domination of the
|
||
superstitious people. That God-given forged law thus prescribes for
|
||
priestcraft: "The man that will do presumptuously, and will not
|
||
hearken unto the priest, ... even that man shall die." (Deut. xvii,</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
73
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>12.) The whole Five Books of Moses are thus a confessed forgery in
|
||
the names of Moses and of God; every one of the Thus saith the Lord
|
||
a thousand times repeated, with speeches and laws put into the
|
||
mouth of the God, are false and forged. Speaking of the
|
||
"difficulty, in the present condition of Old Testament criticism,
|
||
of recognizing more than a small portion of the Peritateuch as
|
||
documentary evidence contemporary with Moses," -- who, if he ever
|
||
lived, which may be confidently denied, -- never wrote a line of
|
||
it, CE. further confesses to the natural evolution -- not the
|
||
"divine revelation" -- of the Hebrew mythology into a (no less
|
||
mythological) monotheistic religion: "The Hegelian principle of
|
||
evolution ... applied to religion, has powerfully helped to beget
|
||
a tendency to regard the religion of Israel as evolved by processes
|
||
not transcending nature, from a polytheistic worship of the
|
||
elements to a spiritual and ethical monotheism." (CE. i, 493.) But
|
||
this finally and very late evolved monotheism is neither a tardy
|
||
divine revelation to the Jews, nor a novel invention by them; it
|
||
was a thousand years antedated by Amenhotep IV and Tut-ankh-amen in
|
||
Egypt, -- nor were even they the pioneers. We have seen the
|
||
admission that the Zoroastrian Mithra religion was "a divinely
|
||
revealed Monotheism" (CE., ii, 156). But the Hebrews were confessed
|
||
and notorious idolaters and polytheists until after the Captivity;
|
||
that fact is a thousand times alleged throughout the Scriptures as
|
||
the sole reason for their troubles and captivity. As above
|
||
suggested, and as thoroughly demonstrated by the texts in my other
|
||
book, the Hebrew God Yahveh was but one of the many gods worshipped
|
||
by the Hebrews; and Yahveh never claimed more than to be a "God
|
||
above all gods," to be preferred before them all; -- as at Sinai he
|
||
enacted: "Thou shalt have no other gods before [in preference to]
|
||
me," -- thus admitting the other gods.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> FORGERY BY CONTRADICTIONS</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Contradictions throughout the Bible, Old and New Testaments
|
||
alike, abound by the many thousands, and in virtually every book of
|
||
both Testaments, -- as every one knows who has read the Bible even
|
||
casually. See some thousand and more of the most notorious and
|
||
vital ones as cited in "deadly parallel" in my Is It God's Word? as
|
||
one of the most conclusive proofs of uninspired human origin and of
|
||
confusion worse confounded of tinkering, "interpolation" and
|
||
forgery outright, by the pious priests of Israel and Judah, and the
|
||
Ezra "school" of forgers of the "Law and the Prophets."</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> OUR "PHONY" CHRISTIAN ERA</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "It was a monk of the 6th century, named Dionysiug Exiguus
|
||
(Dennis the Little), who fixed our present Christian era, laying
|
||
down that Jesus Christ was born on the 25th of December, A.U.C.
|
||
753, and commencing the new era from the following year, 754. That
|
||
date, as we shall see, cannot be correct and, instead of being an
|
||
improvement on, is farther from the truth than the dates assigned
|
||
by the early Fathers, St. Irenaeus and Tertullian, who fixed the
|
||
date of the Nativity in the 41st year of Augustus, that is to say,
|
||
3 years B.C., or A.U.C, 751 ... All this points to the fact that
|
||
Herod died in the year 4 B.C., and that our Savior must have been
|
||
born before that date ... Our Savior was born some time before
|
||
Herod's death, probably two years or more. So that, if Herod died </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
74
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>in the year 4 B.C., we should be taken to 6 or 7 B.C. as the year
|
||
of the Nativity" (CE. 735-6).</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> This, of course, discredits the date given by the inspiration
|
||
of [71] Luke, and demonstrates that both he and Matthew merely
|
||
alleged fictitious dates for what in all human probability was a
|
||
purely fictitious event. The new Era of Christ was, however, very
|
||
slow in gaining recognition; the first official secular document
|
||
dating by it was a charter of Charlemagne, after 800 A.D., and it
|
||
did not come into general use until about 1000 A.D. I may mention
|
||
a fiery sermon I once heard, in which the expounder of truth
|
||
vindicated the glory of God by declaiming that every Jew and
|
||
Infidel confessed to Jesus Christ every time he dated a letter or
|
||
mentioned the year of an event. Being simply a hearer of the Word,
|
||
I could not rise to suggest, that by the same token we confess more
|
||
to the Pagan gods than to the Christian, -- for more than half the
|
||
months and every day of the week are named for Pagan deities, and
|
||
we name them much more often than we do the years of grace and
|
||
salvation of Christ. After this bad start from Gospel error and
|
||
contradiction, we now turn to further evidences of "Gospel truth"
|
||
in contradictions and forgery.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Among the most signal of these incessant contradictions and
|
||
scientific impossibilities of Divine Inspiration, are those
|
||
relating to the capital matter, -- for the credit of the Christian
|
||
Religion, of the time and manner of Creation of earth and Man,
|
||
based on Holy Writ and on the "chronology" worked out, with several
|
||
hundred disparate results, from the inspired pedigrees of the ante-
|
||
Diluvian Patriarchs. So fatally important is this to Christianity,
|
||
that the 'True Church -- "which never deceived anyone" and "has
|
||
never erred," -- speaking through CE., thus admits that
|
||
Christianity stands or falls with -- "the literal, historical sense
|
||
of the first three chapters of Genesis in as far as they bear on
|
||
the facts touching the foundations of the Christian religion, e.g.,
|
||
the creation of all things by God at the beginning of time, the
|
||
especial creation of man, the formation of the first woman from the
|
||
first man, the unity of the human race"! (Papal Biblical
|
||
Commission, June 30, 1909; CE. vii, 313). Thus: No Adam and Eve, no
|
||
Garden of Eden and Talking Snake, no "Fall" and Curse -- therefore:
|
||
No Savior Jesus Christ, no Plan of Salvation, no truth in the
|
||
Christian Religion! The fatal point is elucidated with inexorable
|
||
logic and dogmatic truth by the "Reformed" ex-Father Peter Martyr:
|
||
"So important is it to comprehend the work of creation that we see
|
||
the creed of the Church take this as its starting point. Were this
|
||
Article taken away, there would be no original sin; the promise of
|
||
Christ would become void, and all the vital force of our religion
|
||
would be destroyed"! Father Luther inherited the same faith and
|
||
bequeathed it to his dissident following: "Moses spoke properly and
|
||
plainly, and neither allegorically nor figuratively; and therefore
|
||
the world with all creatures was created in six days." Calvin, in
|
||
his "Commentary on Genesis," argues that the Genesis account of
|
||
Creation is literally true, and warns those who dare to believe
|
||
otherwise, and thus "basely insult the Creator, to expect a Judge
|
||
who will annihilate them." Again he says: "We know on the authority
|
||
of Moses, that longer ago than 6000 years the world did not exist."
|
||
So too, the Westminster Confession of Faith, in full Protestant
|
||
force and effect today -- specially lays it down as "necessary to </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
75
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>salvation to believe that all things visible and invisible were
|
||
created not only out of nothing but exactly in six days." And the
|
||
Churches have murdered countless thousands to impress this
|
||
beautiful impossible truth.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Notwithstanding the crushing disproofs of those primitive
|
||
forged "Fables of Moses," by every fact of astronomy, geology,
|
||
anthropology, biology, and kindred sciences, known to schoolboys
|
||
today, Faith clings fatuously to its fetches: Arkansas ("Now
|
||
laugh!"), Mississippi, Tennessee, three States of the Twentieth
|
||
Century United States, have made it crime by Law to teach the
|
||
sciences which discredit the Genesis Myths, upon which Christian
|
||
Superstition utterly depends;, and like medieval laws are sought to
|
||
be imposed in all our States. The True Church, like all the others,
|
||
still founds its "Faith and Morals" upon these old Hebrew forgeries
|
||
of Genesis and peddles them to its Faithful; but it knows better.
|
||
Thus the whole True Faith is shipwrecked by these heretical
|
||
confessions of CE., forced from it by the truths of heretical
|
||
Modernism, in full face of the fierce inspired fulminations of the
|
||
Syllabus of Errors: "In an article on Bible chronology it is hardly
|
||
necessary in these days to discuss the date of the Creation. At
|
||
least two hundred dates have been suggested, varying from 3483 to
|
||
6934 year B.C. all based on the supposition that the Bible enables
|
||
us to settle the point. But it does nothing of the kind. ... The
|
||
literal interpretation has now been entirely abandoned; and the
|
||
world is admitted to be of immense antiquity"! (CE. iii, 731.)
|
||
Again the "sacred science" of Genesis and of Christianity is
|
||
further admitted to be false, and the fabulous "Septuagint" Bible
|
||
on which Christianity was founded before the era of the second
|
||
century forgeries of Gospels and Epistles, to be a holy fraud, in
|
||
these further excerpts accrediting the true revelations of modern
|
||
Science as against those of Moses:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "The church ... does not attach decisive influence to the
|
||
chronology of the Vulgate, the official version of the Western
|
||
Church, since in the Martyrology for Christmas day, the creation of
|
||
Adam is put down in the year 5199 B.C., which is the reading of the
|
||
Septuagint. It is, however, certain that we cannot confine the
|
||
years of man's sojourn on earth to that usually set down. ...
|
||
Various explanations have been given of chapter v (Genesis) to
|
||
explain the short time it seems to allow between the Creation and
|
||
the Flood. ... The total number of years in the Hebrew, Samaritan,
|
||
and Septuagint differs, in the Hebrew it being 1656, in the
|
||
Samaritan 1307, and in the Septuagint 2242. ... According to
|
||
Science the length of this period was much greater than appears
|
||
from the genealogical table. ... In any case, whether we follow the
|
||
traditional or critical view, the numbers obtained from the
|
||
genealogy of the Patriarchs in chapter xi must be greatly
|
||
augmented, in order to allow time for such a development of
|
||
civilization, language, and race type as had been reached by the
|
||
time of Abraham." (CE. iii, 731-3.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> FORGERY BY FALSE TRANSLATIONS</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> We have noted the capital forgery wrought by the Church in
|
||
consciously and unconscionably adopting and perpetuating the false
|
||
translation in the Septuagint, of the "virgin shall conceive" </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
76
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>pretended prophecy of Isaiah vii, 14. Indisputably the whole forged
|
||
fabric of supernatural Christianity is based on, and depends upon,
|
||
this one monumental forgery falsely used to give credit to the
|
||
Christian forgery of "the Gospel according to Matthew" as to the
|
||
Divine and miraculous "Virgin birth of Jesus Christ." Out of scores
|
||
of other notoriously falsified translations of the sacred Old
|
||
Testament texts, attention is here called only to several of the
|
||
most signal ones which vitally affect and destroy the validity of
|
||
the most essential pretensions of truth of the Christian religion.
|
||
These frauds of translation and others, have been thoroughly
|
||
examined and supported by numerous texts from the original Hebrew,
|
||
and falsified verses of the English versions, in my 'Is It God's
|
||
Word?,' to which references must be made for a more complete
|
||
treatment than is here pertinent. Those now cited in summary are
|
||
all of them deliberate falsifications and forgeries in translation
|
||
which go to the vitals of the Hebrao-Christian system of holy
|
||
imposture.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> If the Hebrew originals had been truthfully translated, we
|
||
should have no such false pretenses for faith as the Hebrew One God
|
||
anciently revealed to Adam, and to Moses, no Adam, no man "but
|
||
little lower than the angels" because of his immortal soul, no
|
||
unique "revelation' of the "Ineffable Name" Jehovah to Moses; all
|
||
that we would have, -- all that the Hebrew texts reveal -- is a
|
||
primitive polytheistic idolatry of the crudest and most
|
||
superstitious order. Let us see.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> (a) The "God" Forgery</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The first sentence of the translated Bibles is a falsification
|
||
and forgery of the highest importance. We read with awed solemnity
|
||
of faith: "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth"
|
||
(Gen. i, 1). The Hebrew word for God is el; the plural is elohim,
|
||
gods. The Hebrew text of Genesis i, 1, reads: "Bereshith bara
|
||
elohim," etc., -- "In-beginning created gods the-heavens and-the-
|
||
earth." And, in the same chapter we read in Hebrew honestly
|
||
translated, -- thirty times the word "elohim" gods, to whom are
|
||
attributed all the works of creation in the six peculiar "days" of
|
||
Genesis. This is plainly evident from the Hebrew texts of Genesis
|
||
i, which even false intention could not hide in the translation,
|
||
"And-said elohim (gods), let-US-make man (adam) in-image-OUR,
|
||
after-likeness-OUR" (i, 26). And when "adam" had eaten of the
|
||
forbidden fruit of the tree of knowledge, "the Lord God" said,
|
||
"Behold, the-man has become like one of US, to know good and evil"
|
||
(iii, 27). And when the Tower of Babel was abuilding, "The Lord
|
||
[Heb. Yahveh] said ... Come, let US go down," etc. And thus, some
|
||
2570 times the plural, elohim, gods, is used in the Hebrew texts,
|
||
but is always falsely translated "God" in the false singular, when
|
||
speaking of the Hebrew deity, Yahveh.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> In the three Genesis verses above quoted, we have three
|
||
different designations of the Hebrew deity or deities: elohim,
|
||
gods, falsely translated "God"; "Lord God" (Heb. Yahveh-elohim);
|
||
and "Lord" (Heb. Yahveh). Yahveh is the proper name of the Hebrew
|
||
God, in English rendered Jehovah: Yahveh-elohim is a Hebrew
|
||
"construct-form" honestly meaning "Yahveh-of-the-gods." Invariably
|
||
(with rare exceptions to be noted), these personal names are </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
77
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>falsely rendered "Lord" and "Lord God," respectively, for purposes
|
||
of pious fraud which we shall now expose to the shame of a theology
|
||
of imposture. We will return to this after noting a pair of others.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> (b) The "Adam" Forgery</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> There was no first man "Adam," according to the Hebrew texts
|
||
of the story. The word adam in Hebrew is a common noun, meaning man
|
||
in a generic sense; in Genesis i, 26, we have read: "And elohim
|
||
(gods) said, Let us make adam (man)"; and so "elohim created ha-
|
||
adam (the-man); ... male and female created he them" (i. 27). And
|
||
in the second story, where man is first made alone: "Yahveh formed
|
||
ha-adan (the-man) out of the dust of ha-adamah-the ground" (ii, 7).
|
||
Man is called in Hebrew adam because formed out of adamah, the
|
||
ground; just as in Latin man is called homo because formed from
|
||
humus, the ground, -- homo ex humo, in the epigram of Father
|
||
Lactantius. (Lact., Divine Institutes, ii, 58; ANF. vii, 58.) The
|
||
forging by the common noun adam into a mythical proper name Adam,
|
||
was a post-exilic fraud in the forging of fictitious genealogies
|
||
from "in the beginning" to Father Abraham.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> (c) The "Soul" Forgery</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> In Genesis i is the account of the creation of elohim -- gods
|
||
-- on the fifth day, of "nephesh hayyah -- the moving creature that
|
||
hath life," and of "nephesh hayyah -- every living creature" -- out
|
||
of the waters (i, 20, 21); and on the sixth day of "nephesh hayyah
|
||
-- the living creature" out of the ground (i, 24); and he gave to
|
||
ha-adam -- the-man dominion over "kol nephesh hagyah, -- everything
|
||
wherein there is life," (i, 30.) So reads the Hebrew text -- all
|
||
these dumb animal living creatures are by God called "nephesh
|
||
hayyah," "literally "living soul," as will be found stuck into the
|
||
margins of the Authorized Version. In chapter ii we have the
|
||
history of ha-adam made from ha-adamah; and, in wonderful contrast
|
||
to these lowly "living creatures" (nephesh hayyah), Yahveh-clohim
|
||
"breathed into his nostrils nishmath hayyim -- (living breaths),
|
||
and ha-adam became nephesh hayyah -- a living soul"! (ii, 7.) In
|
||
Hebrew nephesh everywhere and simply means soul, and hayyah
|
||
(living) is the feminine singular adjective from hai, life. Man,
|
||
therefore, was created exactly the same as the other animals; all
|
||
had or were nephesh hayyah -- living souls, indistinctly. The
|
||
"false pen of the scribes," who in translation made the dumb
|
||
animals merely living creatures, and "Creation's micro-cosmical
|
||
masterpiece, Man," a "living soul," falsely altered these plain
|
||
words so as to deceive into a belief of a special God-breathed soul
|
||
in man, far different from the brute animal that perisheth.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> (d) The "Mosaic Revelation" Forgery</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> When Yahveh appeared to Moses in the Burning Bush, and
|
||
announced himself as "the God of thy fathers," he was a total
|
||
stranger to Moses; Moses did not at all know him, had never heard
|
||
of him; so that he asked, "What is thy name?" -- so that he could
|
||
report it to the people back home in Egypt, who had never heard it.
|
||
After some intermission, the God came directly to the point, and
|
||
declared -- l quote the exact words -- one of the most notorious
|
||
falsities in Holy Writ:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
78
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "And elohim spake unto Moses, and said unto him., anoki Yahveh
|
||
-- I am the Lord!</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "And I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto Jacob, by
|
||
the name of el-shaddai, but by my name Yahvch (JEHOVAH) was I not
|
||
known to them." (Ex. vi, 2, 8.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Here we have the positive averment of the Hebrew God himself
|
||
to the effect that here, for the first time since the world began,
|
||
is "revealed" to mankind the "ineffable name" of Yahveh, here first
|
||
appearing in the Bible translations, and there printed as JEHOVAH
|
||
in capital letters; for more vivid and awe-inspiring impression.
|
||
But this is a capital Lie of the Lord, or of his biographer who
|
||
imputed it to him. In verse 4 of Genesis ii, the name YAHVEH first
|
||
appears; "in the day that Yahveh-elohim made the earth and the
|
||
heavens." Its first recorded use in the mouth of a mystical
|
||
personage, was when Mother Eve "conceived, and bare Cain, and said,
|
||
I have gotten a man from Yahveh -- the Lord." (Gen. iv, 1.) One
|
||
hundred and fifty-six times the personal name YAHVEH occurs in the
|
||
Book of Genesis alone; and scores of times in the mouths of
|
||
Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, as any one may read in Genesis,
|
||
with the assurance that every single time that the title "the Lord"
|
||
and "the Lord God" appears, it is a false translation by the
|
||
priests for the Hebrew personal name YAHVEH. Throughout the Hebrew
|
||
"Scriptures" the Divine Name thousands of times occurs: "The sacred
|
||
name occurs in Genesis about 156 times; ... in round numbers it is
|
||
found in the Old Testament 6000 times, either alone or in
|
||
conjunction with another Divine name." (CE. viii, 829, 331.) More
|
||
exactly, "What is called the Tetragrammaton, YHVH, appears in the
|
||
Old Testament 6823 times as the proper name of God as the God of
|
||
Israel. As such it serves to distinguish him from the gods of the
|
||
other nations." (EB. iii, 3320.) Thus was the Hebrew tribal god
|
||
YAHVEH distinguished from Bel, and Chemosh, and Dagon, and Shamash,
|
||
and the scores of "gods of the nations"; just as Bill distinguishes
|
||
its bearer from Tom, Dick, and Harry. This was precisely the Hebrew
|
||
usage -- to distinguish one heathen god from another. And this the
|
||
false translators sought to hide, giving names to all the "other
|
||
gods," but suppressing a name for the Hebrew deity, who as "the
|
||
Lord," or "the Lord God," was high and unique, "a god above all
|
||
gods," -- the one and only true God.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> But yet more malicious and evil-intentioned of deception: 6828
|
||
times is the name of the Hebrew God concealed by false rendition
|
||
for the deliberate purpose of forging the whole Hebrew Bible, as
|
||
translated, into semblance of harmony with the false avowal of
|
||
Exodus vi, 3, that "by my name YAHVEH was I not know unto them."
|
||
Search as one may, outside Exodus vi, 3, the god-name YAHVEH
|
||
(Jehovah) is never to be found in the translations in a single
|
||
instance, except in Psalm lxxxiii, 18, and Isaiah xii, 2 and xxvi,
|
||
4. The false translations thus "make truth to be a liar," the lie
|
||
of Exodus vi, 3 to seem the truth; and a barbarous heathen tribal
|
||
god among a hundred neighbor and competitive gods to be the
|
||
nameless One Lord God of the Universe. The Hebrew-Christian One God
|
||
is a patent Forgery and Myth; a mycological Father-god can have no
|
||
"only begotten Son"; Jesus Christ is a myths even before he is
|
||
mythically born in the fancies of the Church Fathers, as we shall
|
||
soon have ample evidence to prove.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
79
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> With respect to the mythical Hebrew-Christian God or gods, we
|
||
may safely say, as says Father Justin Martyr apropos of the other
|
||
mythic Pagan gods: "And we confess that we are atheists, so far as
|
||
gods of this sort are concerned." (First Apology, ch. vi; ANF. i,
|
||
169.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> THE ANCIENT IDEA OF "HISTORY"</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> We may pause a moment to catch a vitutable view which will be
|
||
of great aid to understanding the mental processes of the ancient
|
||
writers in their portrayal of events, real or fanciful, which they
|
||
set about to record as "history." These pioneers of historical
|
||
literature lived in an age of simple-minded credulity, and
|
||
everything which they saw recorded or heard related, however
|
||
extravagant and seemingly incredible or impossible, passed all as
|
||
perfectly good history in their receptive and uncritical minds.
|
||
Speaking of the legendary, the traditional, the supernatural
|
||
stories, myths, folk-lore and fables, -- "in short, everything
|
||
which seemed to testify to the past," -- which formed the raw
|
||
material of the early historians, the Encyclopedia Biblica gives a
|
||
graphic picture of primitive history-writing, not only Hebraic but
|
||
Gentilic:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "Their sources, like those of the Greek logographers with whom
|
||
it is natural to compare them, were poems, genealogies, often
|
||
representing clan-groupings, tribal and local traditions of diverse
|
||
kinds, such as furnish the materials for most of the Book of
|
||
Judges; the historical traditions of sanctuaries; the sacred
|
||
legends of holy places, relating theophanies and other revelations,
|
||
the erection of the altar or sacred stone, the. origin of popular
|
||
usages -- e.g. Bethel; laws; myths of foreign or native origin;
|
||
folk-lore and fable, -- in short, everything which seemed to
|
||
testify of the past.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "To us the greater part of this material is not in any proper
|
||
sense historical at all; but for the early Israelite as for the
|
||
early Greek historian it was otherwise; our distinctions between
|
||
authentic history, legendary history, pure legend, and myth, he
|
||
made as little as he recognized our distinction of natural and
|
||
supernatural. It was all history to him; and if one part of it had
|
||
a better attestation than another, it was certainly the sacred
|
||
history as it was told at the ancient sanctuaries of the land.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The early Hebrew historians did not affix their names to their
|
||
works; they had, indeed, no idea of authorship. The traditions and
|
||
legends which they collected were common property, and did not
|
||
cease to be so when they were committed to writing; the written
|
||
book was in every sense the property of the scribe or the possessor
|
||
of the roll. Only a part of the great volume of tradition was
|
||
included in the first books. Transcribers freely added new matter
|
||
from the same sources on which the original authors had drawn, the
|
||
traditions of their own locality or sanctuary, variants of
|
||
historical traditions or legend. Every new copy was thus in some
|
||
measure a fresh rescension. ... Scribes compared different copies,
|
||
and combined their contents according to their own judgment or
|
||
interests. ... Of records or monuments there are but a few traces,
|
||
and these for the most part doubtful." (EB. ii, 2075-76.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
80
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> To say nothing now of the Old or New Testament "canonical" and
|
||
"apocryphal" literature, countless examples of this imaginative
|
||
method of history-writing abound in all the ancient writers, as all
|
||
who are familiar with such classics as Herodotus, Thucydides,
|
||
Xenophon, Josephus, Livy, will readily recall. One of the most
|
||
inveterate forms of imaginative creation on the part of the old
|
||
historiographers was the invention of sayings and whole speeches
|
||
which, just as do the fiction-writers of today, they put entire
|
||
into the mouths of the personages of whom they were writing, which
|
||
discourses they not only invented whole, but always wrought them in
|
||
the style and manner of the writer and his epoch, and not in those
|
||
of their ancient subjects. All are familiar with such instances in
|
||
Homer, Dante, Shakespeare and Milton, and which we all known are
|
||
pure inventions of those writers. Naming several of the ancient
|
||
historians above mentioned, and others, a distinguished philosopher
|
||
of history thus describes the art:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "Such speeches as we find in Thucydides (for example), of
|
||
which we can positively assert that they are not bona-fide
|
||
records. ... Thus Livy puts into the mouths of the old Roman
|
||
Kings, Consuls, and generals, such orations as would be
|
||
delivered by an accomplished advocate of the Livian era... In
|
||
the same way he gives us descriptions of battles, as if he had
|
||
been an actual spectator; but whose features would serve well
|
||
enough for battles in any period." (Hegel, The Philosophy of
|
||
History, i). 2.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Speaking of much later times, and of a different class, but
|
||
like type, of writers, Hegel again says: "In the Middle Ages, we
|
||
except the Bishops, who were placed in the very center of the
|
||
political world, the Monks monopolized this category as maine
|
||
chroniclers." (Ib. p. 3.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> As typical illustration of the principles and practices above
|
||
described of the best of the ancient writers, but more especially
|
||
as an example of the kind of "history" written by the most learned
|
||
and illustrious historian of Jewry, fellow-countryman and
|
||
contemporary of the supposed Apostolic writers of the New Testament
|
||
books, it is of the highest significance to cite some of the solemn
|
||
historical recordation of Josephus, from two of his most famous
|
||
works; they will make more appreciated at their real value some of
|
||
the inspired historical recitals of contemporaneous sacred
|
||
history.'</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> In his Antiquities of the Jews Josephus follows closely the
|
||
subject matter and order of narration of the early Old Testament,
|
||
books, beginning with the Creation, giving the full substance of
|
||
those histories, and adding quaint comments all his own and
|
||
expansions and embellishments unknown to or unrecorded by Moses. In
|
||
Eden, not only the Talking Snake could speak, but all the now dumb
|
||
animals: "All living creatures had one language, at that time" (I,
|
||
i, 4). After our parents had eaten of the Fruit of Knowledge and,
|
||
discovering themselves naked, hid themselves from the Creator,
|
||
"This behavior surprised God," who delivers a lengthy speech of
|
||
reprieval not recorded by Moses (Ib.); and such orations are
|
||
plentiful and detailed between God and all the other notables who
|
||
came into personal contact with him; a gem is his oration to Noah. </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
81
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>He relates the wars waged by the wicked posterity of Cain, to the
|
||
great distress of Adam, who predicted the two-fold destruction of
|
||
the earth, once by water and again by fire. As the Sethites were
|
||
good people and intelligent, and had made great discoveries in
|
||
astronomy, which they wished preserved for such posterity as might
|
||
survive the yet future Flood, "they made two pillars, the one of
|
||
brick, the other of stone; they inscribed their discoveries on them
|
||
both, that in case the pillar of brick should be destroyed by the
|
||
Flood, the pillar of stone might remain, and exhibit these
|
||
discoveries to mankind; and also inform them that there was another
|
||
pillar of brick erected by them. Now this remains in the land of
|
||
Siriad to this day." (lb., I, ii, 2.) He relates with naive and
|
||
realistic garnishment the tale of Sodom, and Lot and his daughters,
|
||
and of Lot's wife turned to a pillar of salt, which is Gospel
|
||
truth, "for I have seen it, and it remains at this day"! (Ib. 1,
|
||
xi, 4.) These historical drolleries might be quoted ad infinitum
|
||
from Jewry's greatest historian.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The name of Solomon was most potent conjure in the Orient
|
||
through all the succeeding centuries; the spells and charms,
|
||
amulets and fetishes inscribed with his mystic symbol and
|
||
pronounced in his name, were the terror of all the devils who so
|
||
populated the Jewish mind, and the Christian. A noted instance of
|
||
the potency of this Name, exhibited before the Roman Emperor
|
||
Vespasian and his court and army, and witnessed by Josephus
|
||
himself, so circumstantial, so faith-compelling, so artless and
|
||
childishly fabling, that I am constrained to quote it for the
|
||
lightit sheds on the "historical" methods of the "age of apocryphal
|
||
literature":</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "God also enabled him [Solomon] to learn that skill which
|
||
expels demons, which is a science useful and sensitive to men.
|
||
He composed such incantations also by which distempers are
|
||
alleviated. And he left behind him the manner of using
|
||
exorcisms, by which they drive away demons, so that they never
|
||
return, and this method of cure is of great force unto this
|
||
day; for I have seen a certain man of my own country, whose
|
||
name was Eleazar, relieving people that were demoniacs in the
|
||
presence of Vespasian, and his sons, and his captains, and the
|
||
whole multitude of his soldiers. The manner of the cure was
|
||
this: he put a ring, that had a root of one of the sorts
|
||
mentioned by Solomon, to the nostrils of the demoniac, after
|
||
which he drew out the demon through his nostrils; and when the
|
||
man fell down immediately, he abjured him to return into him
|
||
no more, making still mention of Solomon, and reciting the
|
||
incantation which he composed. And when Eleazar would persuade
|
||
and demonstrate to the spectators that he had such a power, he
|
||
set a little way off a cup or basin full of water, and
|
||
commanded the demon, as he went out of the man, to overturn
|
||
it, and thereby to let the spectators know that he had left
|
||
the man; and when this was done, the skill and wisdom of
|
||
Solomon was shown very manifestly; for which reason it is,
|
||
that all men may know the vastness of Solomon's abilities, and
|
||
how he was beloved of God, and that the extraordinary virtues
|
||
of every kind with which this king was endowed, may not be
|
||
unknown to any people under the sun; for this reason, I say,
|
||
it is that we have proceeded to speak so largely of these
|
||
matters." (Josephus, Antiq. Jews, Bk. VIII, Ch. ii, 5;
|
||
Whiston's trans.)
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
82
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY
|
||
|
||
This is followed by the full text of the autograph letters
|
||
between Solomon and Hiram regarding the building of the Temple.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Whether the same kind of root of Solomon's magical powers just
|
||
above used by Eleazar, or one of another species of like power, it
|
||
was very difficult to obtain and the quest was attended with many
|
||
dangers, which of course enhanced the value and potency of its
|
||
magic; but here is Josephus's solemn description of the plant and
|
||
account of the eerie and risky manner of securing this treasure,
|
||
known locally as Baaras root:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "Its color is like that of flame, and toward evening it
|
||
sends out a certain ray like lightning: it is not easily taken
|
||
by such as would do it, but recedes from their hands, nor will
|
||
yield itself to be taken quietly, until either the urine of a
|
||
woman, or blood, be poured upon it; nay, even then it is
|
||
certain death to those that touch it, unless anyone take and
|
||
hang the root itself down from his hand, and so carry it away.
|
||
It may also be taken another way, without danger, which is
|
||
this: they dig a trench quite round about it, till the hidden
|
||
part of the root be very small, then they tie a dog to it,
|
||
and, when the dog tries hard to follow him that tied him, this
|
||
root is easily plucked up, but the dog dies immediately, as if
|
||
it were instead of the man that would take the plant away nor
|
||
after this need anyone be afraid of taking it into their
|
||
hands. Yet, after all this pains in getting, it is only
|
||
valuable on account of one virtue it hath, that if it be only
|
||
brought to sick persons, it quickly drives away those called
|
||
demons, which are no other than the spirits of the wicked,
|
||
that enter into any men that are alive and kill them, unless
|
||
they can obtain some help against them." (Josephus, Wars of
|
||
the Jews, Book VII. Chap. iv, 3.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Instead of artful mendacity, some readers, in view of this,
|
||
may charitably impute artless simplicity of wit to some of the
|
||
devil-exorcising fable-mongers of the New Testament, the pious
|
||
Fathers who forged its Books.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> If such examples are abounding in the most brilliant of Jewish
|
||
historians, distinguished for nobility of lineage, for
|
||
statesmanship and for literary ability, what may be expected from
|
||
the admittedly "ignorant and unlearned men" such as traditionally
|
||
wrote those Gospels and Epistles of the Christians? We may now
|
||
appreciate the full significance of the admission of the Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia, speaking of the Church Fathers and writers through
|
||
all the Ages of Faith "before the eighteenth century," of whom it
|
||
says:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The early ecclesiastical writers were unconscious of
|
||
nearly all the problems to which criticism has given rise. ...
|
||
Looking at the Divine side, they deemed as of trifling account
|
||
questions of authorship, date, composition, accepting
|
||
unreservedly for these points such traditions as the Jewish
|
||
Church had handed down. ... The Fathers saw in every sentence
|
||
of the scripture a pregnant oracle of God. Apparent
|
||
contradictions and other difficulties were solved without
|
||
taking possible human imperfections into view. Except in </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
83
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> regard to the preservation of the sacred text there was
|
||
nothing to elicit a critical view of the Bible in the age of
|
||
the Fathers, and this applies also to the Scholastic period."
|
||
(CE. iv, 492.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> CHRISTIAN "REVELATIONS" IN JEWISH FORGERIES</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Christians no doubt believe in simple faith that the wonderful
|
||
inspired truths of their New Testament were original pronouncements
|
||
of Jesus Christ or directly revealed by him to his holy apostles,
|
||
who in turn revealed them to the populace for the first time as the
|
||
"good news" of the new religion for the salvation of sinful man.
|
||
Even a brief glance at a few of the most, notable of the Jewish
|
||
forgeries of the "age of apocryphal literature" will dispel that
|
||
pious belief, and show the most characteristic and essential
|
||
doctrines and dogmas of Christianity to be but refurbished vagaries
|
||
of the fanciful and fabulous tpectulations of already existing
|
||
Jewish apocryphal writings of the times just preceding and within
|
||
the new Christian era. These writings were put forth falsely as the
|
||
utterances of long since dead or wholly legendary Old Testament
|
||
notables, and were neither inspired nor revealed heavenly truth,
|
||
but simply vain and forged speculations of their fantastic writers.
|
||
We shall see the cardinal tenets of "revealed" Christianity in a
|
||
glance at a few of these Jewish pseudographs, and let the Christian
|
||
apologist explain.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> This literature is of the highest value today because of the
|
||
light it throws on the growth of esehatological and Messianic
|
||
doctrines among the Jewish people just previous to the rise of
|
||
Christianity, especially since these doctrines have, in a purified
|
||
form, found a permanete place in the Christian system." (New Int.
|
||
Enyc. i, 745.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The Book of Enoch, forged in the name of the grandson of Adam,
|
||
is the fragmentary remains of a whole literature which circulated
|
||
under the pretended authorship of that mythical Patriarch. In its
|
||
present form, the work, of 104 chapters, is composed of five Books,
|
||
with the following titles, of which those of Books 3 and 4 are of
|
||
particular significance, namely: 1. The Rape of Women by Fallen
|
||
Angels, and the Giants that were Begotten of Them; 2. The Visions
|
||
of Enoch begun; 3. The Visions continued, with Views of the
|
||
essiah's Kingdom; 4. Man's Destiny revealed in Dreams from the
|
||
beginning to the End of the Messianic Kingdom; 5. The Warnings of
|
||
Enoch to his own Family and to Mankind. This work is a composite of
|
||
at least five unknown Jewish writers, and was composed during the
|
||
last two centuries B.C. The forged Book of Enoch is quoted as
|
||
genuine and inspired in the Christian Epistle of Jude (14, ef
|
||
seq.), and as "Scripture" in the near canonical Epistle of
|
||
Barnabas; with the early Church Fathers and Apologists, among whom
|
||
Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Athenagoras, Tertullian, Clement of
|
||
Alexandria, Anatolius, Origen, St, Augustine, etc., "it, had all
|
||
the wright of a canonical book," but was finally condemned as a
|
||
forgery by the forged Apostolic Constitutions, -- an instance of
|
||
the very dubious divine guidance of the inspired Church against all
|
||
error. Father Tertullian devotes an entire chapter "Concerning the
|
||
Genuineness of the Prophecy of Enoch." in which he gives fantastic
|
||
patristic reasons as to how the Book survived Noah's Flood, either </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
84
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>by the providence of Noah himself or by the Providence of God as in
|
||
the mythical case of Esdras. In answer to the scoffing objections
|
||
that the Jews rejected the Book, "I suppose," he seriously argues,
|
||
"that they do not think that, having been published before the
|
||
Deluge, it could have safely survived that world-wide calamity, the
|
||
abolisher of all things." But, he urges, "let them recall to their
|
||
memory that Noah, the survivor of the deluge, was the great-grand-
|
||
son of Enoch himself," and that Noah probably preserved it at the
|
||
behest of Methuselah. But, again, "If Noah had not preserved it in
|
||
this way, there would still be this consideration to warrant our
|
||
assertion of the genuineness of this Scripture: he could equally
|
||
renewed it, under the Spirit's inspiration, after it, had been
|
||
destroyed by the violence of the Deluge, as, after the destruction
|
||
of Jerusalem by the Babylonian storming of it, every document of
|
||
the Jewish literature is generally agreed to have been restored
|
||
through Ezra." But the good Father had other and equally cogent
|
||
clerical reasons for accepting the Book as inspired Scripture: "But
|
||
since Enoch in the same Scripture has preached likewise concerning
|
||
the Lord, nothing at all must be rejected by us which pertains to
|
||
us; and we read that 'every Scripture suitable for edification is
|
||
divinely inspired.' ... To these considerations is added the fact
|
||
that Enoch possesses a testimony in the Apostle Jude." (On the
|
||
Apparel of Women, II, ii; ANF. iv, 15-16.) By this excerpt from the
|
||
pious Father may be judged the value of the "testimony" of Apostles
|
||
and Church Fathers as to the inspiration, truth and authenticity of
|
||
holy "Scriptures," -- which is nil.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Of the immense significance of these forged Jewish "sacred
|
||
writings" in general upon Christian "revelation," and of the
|
||
fabulous Book of Enoch in particular, with its elaborated myth of
|
||
the Messiah, CE. thus confesses: "Jewish Apocalyptic is an attempt
|
||
to supply the place of prophecy, which had been dead for centuries,
|
||
and has its roots in the sacred oracles of Israel. ... Naturally
|
||
basing itself upon the Pentateuch and the Prophets, it clothed
|
||
itself fictitiously with the authority of a patriarch or prophet
|
||
who was made to reveal the transcendent future. ... Messianism of
|
||
Course plays an important part in apocalyptic eschatology, and the
|
||
idea of the Messiahs in certain books received a very high
|
||
development. ... The parables of Henoch, with their pre-existent
|
||
Messiahs, mark the highest point of development -- (hence not
|
||
Divine Revelation) -- of the Messianic concept to be found in the
|
||
whole range of Hebrew literature." (CE. i, 601, 602.) From these
|
||
uninspired ravings of Jewish forgers came thus the "divine
|
||
revelation" of the co-eternal "Son of God" worked up instead of the
|
||
old "revealed" human King "of the seed of David."</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The forged Book of Enoch, thus vouched for, is notable for
|
||
being "the earliest appearance of the Messiah in non-canonical
|
||
literature." It is of the greatest importance for its doctrine of
|
||
the Jewish Messiah, who here appears as wholly an earthly human
|
||
deliverer and King over Israel forever, and for the origin of the
|
||
exalted titles applied to the Messiah in the New Testament Books,
|
||
as well as of a number of supposedly distinctive Christian
|
||
doctrines, first "revealed" by Jesus the Christ. In this Book we
|
||
first find the lofty titles: "Christ" or "the Anointed One," "Son
|
||
of Man," "the Righteous One," "the Elect One," -- all of which were
|
||
boldly plagiarized by the later Christians and bestowed on Jesus of</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
85
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Nazareth The Messiah, just as in the New Testament of later times,
|
||
exists from the beginning (48, 2); he sits on the throne of God
|
||
(45,3); and all judgment is committed unto him (69, 27). The
|
||
acceptance of Enoch as a Messianic prophet by the Christians led to
|
||
his rejection by the Jews. Here is the earliest invention of the
|
||
Christian Hell of fire and brimstone for eternal torture: "The
|
||
wicked shall go down into the Sheol of darkness and fire and dwell
|
||
there forever"; this being "one of the earliest mentions of Sheol
|
||
as a hell of torment" (CE. i, 602-3; EB. i, 223-5). It is the
|
||
oldest piece of Jewish literature which teaches the general
|
||
resurrection of Israel, a doctrine expanded to include Gentiles in
|
||
later "interpolations" into New Testament books. It abounds in such
|
||
"Christian" doctrines as the Messianic Kingdom, Hell, the
|
||
Resurrection, and Demonology, the Seven Heavens, and the
|
||
Millennium, all of which have here their apocryphal Jewish
|
||
promulgation, after being plagiarized bodily from the Persian and
|
||
Babylonian myths superstitions, as we have seen confessed. There
|
||
are numerous quotations, phrases, clauses, or thoughts derived from
|
||
Enoch, or of closest kin with it, in several of the New Testament
|
||
Gospels and Epistles, which may be readily found and compared as
|
||
catalogued in the authorities below cited; -- Pagan-Jewish myths
|
||
and doctrines which shared in molding the analogous New Testament
|
||
"revelations" or formed the necessary link in the development of
|
||
doctrines from the Old to the New Testament. The CE. says of the
|
||
Book of Enoch:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "It had left its imprint on the New Testament and the
|
||
works of the early Fathers. ... Clement of Alexandria,
|
||
Tertullian, Origen, and even St. Augustine suppose the work to
|
||
be a genuine one of the patriarch. ... The work is a
|
||
compilation, and its component parts were written in Palestine
|
||
by Jews of the orthodox school ... in the latter part of the.
|
||
second century before Christ. (See CE. i, 602. passim; EB. v,
|
||
220-224.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> In Fourth Esdras, as in the Apocalypse of Baruch, we find for
|
||
the first time, the fatal phrase and doctrine, "all mankind sinned
|
||
with Adam" (CE. i, 604), whence Paul forged his fearful and
|
||
accursed dogma of original sin and eternal damnation. Fourth
|
||
Marcabees, erroneously ascribed by Eusebius and others to Josephus,
|
||
dates from about 4 B.C., just after the death of Harod. It is
|
||
strongly indoctrinated with the Stoic philosophy, from which the
|
||
author "derived his four cardinal virtues, Prudence, Justice,
|
||
Fortitude, Temperance; and it was through Fourth Maccabees that
|
||
this category was appropriated by early Christian ascetical
|
||
writers" (CE. i, 605-6), and later "canonized" by the Church. (CE.
|
||
xi, 391.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The Assumption of Moses was forged in the name of that worthy
|
||
as its genuine author, about the beginning of, or early in the
|
||
Christian era, with the ostensible purpose of confirming the Mosaic
|
||
Laws in Deuteronomy. It gives the parting communications of Moses
|
||
to his successor, Joshua, and unfolds, in a series of oretended
|
||
predictions, delivered in written from, the course of Israel's
|
||
history down to Herold's time. Here is found the legend of the
|
||
dispute between Michael Archangel and Satan over the body of Moses,
|
||
which the Christian Epistle of Jude (v. 9) cites as God-inspired </p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
86
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>truth. (CE. i, 602-3.) The book of Jubilees, or little Geneses, is
|
||
a fabricated embellishment of the Old Testament Genesis, written in
|
||
the name of Moses somewhere between 135 B.C., or 60 A.D., and
|
||
purports to be a revelation made to Moses by the 'Angel of the
|
||
Face' of events from Adam to Moses' own day; the Patriarchs are
|
||
made the exponents of the writer's own Pharisaic views and hopes.
|
||
It is quoted as good "Scripture" by Greek and Latin Fathers down to
|
||
the twelfth century, when its forged character was discovered.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> One of the most important of apocryphal forgeries is the
|
||
Apocalypse of Baruch, "a pseudograph with evident Christian
|
||
interpolations" (CE. i, 604), written by a Jewish Pharisee about
|
||
50-90 A.D., who speaks in the first person in the name of Baruch,
|
||
secretary of the Prophet Jeremiah. The book begins by declaring
|
||
that the word of the Lord came to him in the 25th year of King
|
||
Jeconiah, -- who reigned only three months, and was carried away
|
||
captive to Babylon eleven years before the fall of Jerusalem, 586
|
||
B.C., which event the forgery bewails; it is filled with the
|
||
Messianic hopes of Jewry at the time of the fall of Jerusalem in 70
|
||
A.D. The book furnishes a setting and background of many
|
||
distinctive New Testament doctrines and problems, treating of
|
||
Original Sin, which it traces to the sin of Adam, Forgiveness,
|
||
Works, Justification, Free Will, etc., and this enables us to
|
||
estimate the contributions made in this respect by Jewish forgeries
|
||
to inspired Christian thought as developed in the so-called Pauline
|
||
Epistles, -- which Paul never wrote. Some notable Fathers, such as
|
||
Athenagoras, St. Justin Martyr, and St. Irenaeus, cite Beruch as a
|
||
Prophet, and vouch for him as on the same footing as Jeremiah, just
|
||
as Irenaeus vouches for Susanna and Bel and the Dragon as the
|
||
inspired work of Daniel. (CE. i, 604; iii, 271; EB. i 220.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Father Justin, in several chapters, accuse the Jews of having
|
||
"removed from Esdras and Jeremiah passages clearly mentioning the
|
||
Savior," as also from Psalms; he says: "they have altogether taken
|
||
away many Scriptures from the translation affected by those Seventy
|
||
elders who were with Ptolemy, and by which this very man was
|
||
crucified is proved to have been set forth expressly as God, and
|
||
man, and as having been crucified, and as dying." (Dial. Trypho,
|
||
chs. lxxi-lxxiv; ANF. i, 234-235.) But these passages, says
|
||
Middleton, were never in the Hebrew Scriptures; "they were not
|
||
erased by the Jews, but added [to their copies] by the Christians,
|
||
or forged by Justin." (Op. cit., 41, 42.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> To which extent these pious Jewish forgeries formed the
|
||
background and basis of the Christian doctrines and dogmas of
|
||
pretended direct "revelation," and informed the thought and
|
||
utterance of Jesus Christ -- the raw material and working tools of
|
||
the Christian propagandist, may be realized from this
|
||
acknowledgement:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "The most important and valuable of the extant Jewish
|
||
apocrypha are those which contain the visions and revelations of
|
||
the unseen world and the Messianic future. Jewish apocryphal
|
||
literature is a theme which deserves the attention of all
|
||
interested in the development of the religion of Israel, that body
|
||
of concepts and tendencies in which are fixed the roots of the
|
||
great doctrinal principles of Christianity itself, just as its
|
||
Divine Founder took his temporal generation from the stock of
|
||
orthodox Judaism.
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
87
|
||
|
||
FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The Jewish apocryphas furnish the completing links in the
|
||
progress of Jewish theology and fill what would otherwise be a gap,
|
||
though a small one, between the advanced stage marked by the
|
||
deutero-canonical -- [i.e. long doubted but finally accepted] --
|
||
books and its full maturity so relatively perfect that Jesus could
|
||
suppose as existing in the popular consciousness, without teaching
|
||
de novo, the doctrines of Future Retribution, the Resurrection of
|
||
the body, and the existence, nature and office of angels." (CE. i,
|
||
601.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> All these divine and "revealed" doctrines of Christian faith
|
||
we have seen to be originally heathen Zoroastrian mythology, taken
|
||
over first by the Jews, then boldly plagiarized by the ex-Pagan
|
||
Christians. Dean Milman, of St. Paul's, thus describes the
|
||
universality of these notions among the heathens and the borrowing
|
||
by the Jews and Christians of what were originally Pagan
|
||
superstitions -- now become articles of Christian revelation:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> "Satan, angels, immortality, resurrection -- all Persian
|
||
and Zoroastrian doctrines imbibed by the Jews. ... During the
|
||
whole life of Christ, and the early propagation of the
|
||
religion, it must be borne in mind, that they took place in an
|
||
age, and among a people, which superstition had made so
|
||
familiar with what were supposed to be preternatural events,
|
||
that the wonders awakened no emotion, or were speedily
|
||
superseded by some new demand on the every-ready belief."
|
||
(Milman, History of Christianity, I, 93.)</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Thus, again, the most precious Christian truths, of supposed
|
||
divine "revelation" through God, Christ and apostles -- were
|
||
plagiarizations from forged Jewish pseudo-Scriptures, taken over
|
||
into them from long contact with the Zoroastrian Pensions. These
|
||
myths and superstitions Jesus the Son of God found ready at hand
|
||
"in the popular consciousness" of the ignorant wonder-craving
|
||
Jewish peasantry; and, Lo, our "revealed" Christian religion! We
|
||
may begin to suspect the later "inspired" books of the "Apostles"
|
||
as not beyond the taint of Pagan superstition and of the suspicion
|
||
of Christian forgery.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> **** ****</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The UNITED STATES of America
|
||
must again become
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> **** ****</p>
|
||
|
||
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
88
|
||
</p></xml> |