Caesar's Column eBook

Ignatius Donnelly
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 355 pages of information about Caesar's Column.

Caesar's Column eBook

Ignatius Donnelly
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 355 pages of information about Caesar's Column.
garments you wear—­shall exist, undiminished by the friction of eternity, aeons after our planet is blotted out of space and our sun forgotten, can you believe that this intelligence, whereby I command your souls into thought, and communicate with the unsounded depths of your natures, can be clipped off into annihilation?  Nay, out of the very bounty and largess of God I speak unto you; and that in me which speaks, and that in you which listens, are alike part and parcel of the eternal Maker of all things, without whom is nothing made.” [Applause.]

“And so, my friends, every good man who loves you, and would improve your condition, in time or in eternity, is your friend, and to be venerated by you.” [Applause.] “And while we may regret the errors of religion, in the past, or in the present, let us not forget its virtues.  Human in its mechanism, it has been human in its infirmities.  In the doctrine of the brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God, which are the essential principles of Christianity, lies the redemption of mankind.  But some of the churchmen have misconceived Christ, or perverted him to their own base purposes.  He who drove the money-changers out of the temple, and denounced the aristocrats of his country as whited sepulchres, and preached a communism of goods, would not view to-day with patience or equanimity the dreadful sufferings of mankind.  We have inherited Christianity without Christ; we have the painted shell of a religion, and that which rattles around within it is not the burning soul of the Great Iconoclast, but a cold and shriveled and meaningless tradition.  Oh! for the quick-pulsing, warm-beating, mighty human heart of the man of Galilee!  Oh! for his uplifted hand, armed with a whip of scorpions, to depopulate the temples of the world, and lash his recreant preachers into devotion to the cause of his poor afflicted children!” [Great applause.]

“There is no Power in the world too great or too sacred to be used by Goodness for the suppression of Evil.  Religion—­true religion—­not forms or ceremonies, but inspired purpose—­should take possession of the governments of the world and enforce justice! The purified individual soul we may not underestimate.  These are the swept and garnished habitations in which the angels dwell, and look with unpolluted eyes upon the world.  But this is not all.  To make a few virtuous where the many are vicious is to place goodness at a disadvantage.  To teach the people patience and innocence in the midst of craft and cruelty, is to furnish the red-mouthed wolves with woolly, bleating lambs.  Hence the grip of the churches on humanity has been steadily lessening during the past two hundred years.  Men permanently love only those things that are beneficial to them.  The churches must come to the rescue of the people or retire from the field.  A babe in the claws of a tiger is not more helpless than a small virtuous minority in the midst of a cruel and

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Caesar's Column from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.