Percy Bysshe Shelley as a Philosopher and Reformer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 79 pages of information about Percy Bysshe Shelley as a Philosopher and Reformer.

Percy Bysshe Shelley as a Philosopher and Reformer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 79 pages of information about Percy Bysshe Shelley as a Philosopher and Reformer.
precious secret, were used by his son, Rabbi Elizzar, and other learned men.  Making a compilation of the whole, they so produced the famous work called Zohar (God’s splendor).  This book proved an inexhaustible mine for all the subsequent Cabalists, their source of information and knowledge, and all more recent and genuine Cabalas were all more or less carefully copied from the former.  Before that, all the mysterious doctrines had come down in an unbroken line of merely oral tradition as far back as man could trace himself on earth.  They were scrupulously and jealously guarded by the wise men of Chaldea, India, Persia and Egypt, and passed from one initiate to another, in the same purity of form as when handed down to the first man by the angels, students of God’s great Theosophic seminary.”

Many Free Thinkers, in their anxiety to crush everything belonging to Christianity, often forget that, in throwing aside the Hebrew records as utterly worthless, they are getting rid of one of the most ancient literatures in the world.  They also do not remember the history of a peculiar nation, strangely preserved amid the fluctuations of time, the purity and excellence of the Book of Job, the Psalms, and others which I could name.  They cast unmerited contempt on these compilations, when, at the same time, they will throw themselves, with almost Fetish reverence, and apparently rapt adoration, before the Institutes of Menu, the Bhagvat-Geeta, the morals of Chaoung-Fou-Tszee, the Zend-Avesta, the Rig-Veda, the Oracles of Zoroaster, the Book of the Dead, the Puranas, the Shastras, and the like.

Well may the Sons of Israel be proud of their ancient descent.  They suffered through Christian persecutions uncomplainingly—­the torture, the rack, the auto-da-fe—­and yet they bowed their heads in submission to the will of Adonai.  To-day they stand upright and united, as in olden times.  They have gained the victory over the false disciples of the Nazarene, who, in days gone by, forgot their erudition, their medical knowledge, their commercial activity, and general culture.  Pre-eminent in wealth and learning, they are found on the lecture-platform, in the fields of literature and science, in the councils of rulers, on the exchange, in the legislature—­everywhere.  When Greece and Rome were in their infancy, this extraordinary people was in middle age; and when our Saxon forefathers were in the lowest stage of barbarism, they were in a state of high civilization; and to-day, although scattered, they show a compact front, firmly knit in the bonds of brotherly love, a model for Christians.  The great reform movement now agitating Judaism, as well as every other species of political and metaphysical thought, will eventually aid to consolidate all the races into one race—­Humanity.

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Percy Bysshe Shelley as a Philosopher and Reformer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.