Superstition in All Ages (1732) Common Sense by Meslier, Jean, 1664-1729
Superstition in All Ages (1732) Common Sense by Meslier, Jean, 1664-1729
Superstition in All Ages (1732) Common Sense by Meslier, Jean, 1664-1729
By Jean Meslier
1732
1878
Contents
LIFE OF JEAN MESLIER BY VOLTAIRE.
COMMON SENSE.
I. APOLOGUE.
II WHAT IS THEOLOGY?
III.
IV MAN BORN NEITHER RELIGIOUS NOR DEISTICAL.
V IT IS NOT NECESSARY TO BELIEVE IN A GOD
VI RELIGION IS FOUNDED UPON CREDULITY.
VII EVERY RELIGION IS AN ABSURDITY.
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Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
XLII THE EXISTENCE OF MAN DOES NOT PROVE THAT OF GOD.
XLIII HOWEVER, NEITHER MAN NOR THE UNIVERSE IS THE EFFECT OF
CHANCE.
XLIV NEITHER DOES THE ORDER OF THE UNIVERSE PROVE THE
EXISTENCE OF A GOD
XLV CONTINUATION.
XLVI A PURE SPIRIT CAN NOT BE INTELLIGENT
XLVII ALL THE QUALITIES WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES TO ITS GOD ARE
CONTRARY
XLVIII CONTINUATION.
XLIX IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT THE HUMAN RACE IS THE OBJECT AND
THE END
L GOD IS NOT MADE FOR MAN, NOR MAN FOR GOD.
LI IT IS NOT TRUE THAT THE OBJECT OF THE FORMATION OF THE . . .
LII WHAT IS CALLED PROVIDENCE IS BUT A WORD VOID OF SENSE.
LIII THIS PRETENDED PROVIDENCE IS LESS OCCUPIED IN CONSERVING . .
.
LIV NO! THE WORLD IS NOT GOVERNED BY AN INTELLIGENT BEING.
LV GOD CAN NOT BE CALLED IMMUTABLE.
LVI EVIL AND GOOD ARE THE NECESSARY EFFECTS OF NATURAL
CAUSES
LVII THE VANITY OF THEOLOGICAL CONSOLATIONS
LVIII ANOTHER IDLE FANCY.
LIX IN VAIN DOES THEOLOGY EXERT ITSELF TO ACQUIT GOD OF MAN'S
DEFECTS.
LX WE CAN NOT BELIEVE IN A DIVINE PROVIDENCE
LXI CONTINUATION.
LXII THEOLOGY MAKES OF ITS GOD A MONSTER OF NONSENSE, OF
INJUSTICE
LXIII ALL RELIGION INSPIRES BUT A COWARDLY AND INORDINATE FEAR
LXIV THERE IS IN REALITY NO DIFFERENCE BETWEEN . . .
LXV ACCORDING TO THE IDEAS WHICH THEOLOGY GIVES OF DIVINITY
LXVI BY THE INVENTION OF THE DOGMA OF THE ETERNAL TORMENTS OF
HELL
LXVII THEOLOGY IS BUT A SERIES OF PALPABLE CONTRADICTIONS.
LXVIII THE PRETENDED WORKS OF GOD DO NOT PROVE AT ALL . . .
LXIX THE PERFECTION OF GOD DOES NOT SHOW TO ANY MORE
ADVANTAGE . . .
LXX THEOLOGY PREACHES THE OMNIPOTENCE OF ITS GOD
LXXI ACCORDING TO ALL THE RELIGIOUS SYSTEMS OF THE EARTH
LXXII IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT EVIL DOES NOT COME FROM GOD.
LXXIII THE FORESIGHT ATTRIBUTED TO GOD
LXXIV ABSURDITY OF THE THEOLOGICAL FABLES UPON ORIGINAL SIN
LXXV THE DEVIL, LIKE RELIGION, WAS INVENTED TO ENRICH THE PRIESTS.
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Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
LXXVI IF GOD COULD NOT RENDER HUMAN NATURE SINLESS, HE HAS NO
RIGHT . . .
LXXVII IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT GOD'S CONDUCT MUST BE A MYSTERY
TO MAN
LXXVIII IT IS ABSURD TO CALL HIM A GOD OF JUSTICE AND GOODNESS
LXXIX A GOD WHO PUNISHES THE FAULTS WHICH HE COULD HAVE
PREVENTED
LXXX FREE WILL IS AN IDLE FANCY.
LXXXI WE SHOULD NOT CONCLUDE FROM THIS THAT SOCIETY HAS NOT
THE RIGHT . . .
LXXXII REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENTS IN FAVOR OF FREE WILL.
LXXXIII CONTINUATION.
LXXXIV GOD HIMSELF, IF THERE WAS A GOD, WOULD NOT BE FREE
LXXXV EVEN ACCORDING TO THEOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES, MAN IS NOT FREE
LXXXVI ALL EVIL, ALL DISORDER, ALL SIN, CAN BE ATTRIBUTED BUT TO
GOD
LXXXVII MEN'S PRAYERS TO GOD PROVE SUFFICIENTLY THAT THEY ARE NOT
...
LXXXVIII THE REPARATION OF THE INIQUITIES AND THE MISERIES OF THIS
LXXXIX THEOLOGY JUSTIFIES THE EVIL AND INJUSTICE PERMITTED BY ITS
GOD,
XC REDEMPTION, AND THE CONTINUAL EXTERMINATIONS ATTRIBUTED
TO JEHOVAH
XCI HOW CAN WE DISCOVER A TENDER, GENEROUS, AND EQUITABLE
FATHER
XCII THE LIFE OF MORTALS, ALL WHICH TAKES PLACE HERE BELOW
XCIII IT IS NOT TRUE THAT WE OWE ANY GRATITUDE TO WHAT WE CALL .
..
XCIV TO PRETEND THAT MAN IS THE BELOVED CHILD OF PROVIDENCE
XCV COMPARISON BETWEEN MAN AND ANIMALS.
XCVI THERE ARE NO MORE DETESTABLE ANIMALS IN THIS WORLD THAN
TYRANTS.
XCVII REFUTATION OF MAN'S EXCELLENCE.
XCVIII AN ORIENTAL LEGEND.
XCIX IT IS FOOLISH TO SEE IN THE UNIVERSE ONLY THE BENEFACTIONS
OF GOD
C WHAT IS THE SOUL? WE KNOW NOTHING ABOUT IT
CI THE EXISTENCE OF A SOUL IS AN ABSURD SUPPOSITION
CII IT IS EVIDENT THAT THE WHOLE OF MAN DIES.
CIII INCONTESTABLE PROOFS AGAINST THE SPIRITUALITY OF THE SOUL.
CIV THE ABSURDITY OF SUPERNATURAL CAUSES
CV IT IS FALSE THAT MATERIALISM CAN BE DEBASING TO THE HUMAN
RACE.
CVI CONTINUATION.
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Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
CVII THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFE IS USEFUL BUT FOR THOSE WHO
PROFIT BY IT
CVIII IT IS FALSE THAT THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFE CAN BE
CONSOLING
CIX ALL RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES ARE IMAGINARY
CX EVERY RELIGION IS BUT A SYSTEM IMAGINED FOR THE PURPOSE . . .
CXI ABSURDITY AND INUTILITY OF THE MYSTERIES
CXII CONTINUATION.
CXIII CONTINUATION.
CXIV A UNIVERSAL GOD SHOULD HAVE REVEALED A UNIVERSAL
RELIGION.
CXV THE PROOF THAT RELIGION IS NOT NECESSARY
CXVI ALL RELIGIONS ARE RIDICULED BY THOSE OF OPPOSITE . . .
CXVII OPINION OF A CELEBRATED THEOLOGIAN.
CXVIII THE DEIST'S GOD IS NO LESS CONTRADICTORY . . .
CXIX WE DO NOT PROVE AT ALL THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD BY SAYING . . .
CXX ALL THE GODS ARE OF A BARBAROUS ORIGIN; ALL RELIGIONS ARE . .
.
CXXI ALL RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES BEAR THE SEAL OF STUPIDITY OR
BARBARITY.
CXXII THE MORE ANCIENT AND GENERAL A RELIGIOUS OPINION IS . . .
CXXIII SKEPTICISM IN THE MATTER OF RELIGION
CXXIV REVELATION REFUTED.
CXXV WHERE, THEN, IS THE PROOF THAT GOD DID EVER SHOW HIMSELF
TO MEN
CXXVI NOTHING ESTABLISHES THE TRUTH OF MIRACLES.
CXXVII IF GOD HAD SPOKEN, IT WOULD BE STRANGE THAT HE HAD SPOKEN
CXXVIII OBSCURE AND SUSPICIOUS ORIGIN OF ORACLES.
CXXIX ABSURDITY OF PRETENDED MIRACLES.
CXXX REFUTATION OF PASCAL'S MANNER OF REASONING
CXXXI EVEN ACCORDING TO THE PRINCIPLES OF THEOLOGY ITSELF . . .
CXXXII EVEN THE BLOOD OF THE MARTYRS, TESTIFIES . . .
CXXXIII THE FANATICISM OF THE MARTYRS
CXXXIV THEOLOGY MAKES OF ITS GOD AN ENEMY OF COMMON SENSE
CXXXV FAITH IS IRRECONCILABLE WITH REASON
CXXXVI HOW ABSURD AND RIDICULOUS IS THE SOPHISTRY OF THOSE . . .
CXXXVII HOW PRETEND THAT MAN OUGHT TO BELIEVE VERBAL TESTIMONY
CXXXVIII FAITH TAKES ROOT BUT IN WEAK, IGNORANT, OR INDOLENT MINDS.
CXXXIX TO TEACH THAT THERE EXISTS ONE TRUE RELIGION IS AN
ABSURDITY,
CXL RELIGION IS NOT NECESSARY TO MORALITY AND TO VIRTUE.
CXLI RELIGION IS THE WEAKEST RESTRAINT THAT CAN BE OPPOSED . . .
CXLII
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Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
HONOR IS A MORE SALUTARY AND A STRONGER CHECK THAN
RELIGION.
CXLIII RELIGION IS CERTAINLY NOT A POWERFUL CHECK UPON THE
PASSIONS
CXLIV ORIGIN OF THE MOST ABSURD, THE MOST RIDICULOUS, AND . . .
CXLV RELIGION IS FATAL TO POLITICS; IT FORMS BUT LICENTIOUS . . .
CXLVI CHRISTIANITY EXTENDED ITSELF BUT BY ENCOURAGING
DESPOTISM
CXLVII THE ONLY AIM OF RELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES IS TO PERPETUATE . . .
CXLVIII HOW FATAL IT IS TO PERSUADE KINGS THAT THEY HAVE ONLY GOD
...
CLXIX A RELIGIOUS KING IS A SCOURGE TO HIS KINGDOM.
CL THE SHIELD OF RELIGION IS FOR TYRANNY
CLI RELIGION FAVORS THE ERRORS OF PRINCES
CLII WHAT IS AN ENLIGHTENED SOVEREIGN?
CLIII THE DOMINANT PASSIONS AND CRIMES OF PRIESTCRAFT.
CLIV CHARLATANRY OF THE PRIESTS.
CLV COUNTLESS CALAMITIES ARE PRODUCED BY RELIGION
CLVI EVERY RELIGION IS INTOLERANT, AND CONSEQUENTLY
DESTRUCTIVE OF
CLVII ABUSE OF A STATE RELIGION.
CLVIII RELIGION GIVES LICENSE TO THE FEROCITY OF THE PEOPLE
CLIX REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENT, THAT THE EVILS ATTRIBUTED TO
RELIGION
CLX ALL MORALITY IS INCOMPATIBLE WITH RELIGIOUS OPINIONS.
CLXI THE MORALS OF THE GOSPEL ARE IMPRACTICABLE.
CLXII A SOCIETY OF SAINTS WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE.
CLXIII HUMAN NATURE IS NOT DEPRAVED
CLXIV OF JESUS CHRIST, THE PRIEST'S GOD.
CLXV THE DOGMA OF THE REMISSION OF SINS HAS BEEN INVENTED
CLXVI THE FEAR OF GOD IS POWERLESS AGAINST HUMAN PASSIONS.
CLXVII THE INVENTION OF HELL IS TOO ABSURD TO PREVENT EVIL.
CLXVIII ABSURDITY OF THE MORALITY AND OF THE RELIGIOUS VIRTUES
CLXIX WHAT DOES THAT CHRISTIAN CHARITY AMOUNT TO
CLXX CONFESSION, THAT GOLDEN MINE FOR THE PRIESTS
CLXXI THE SUPPOSITION OF THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD IS NOT NECESSARY
CLXXII RELIGION AND ITS SUPERNATURAL MORALITY ARE FATAL TO THE
PEOPLE
CLXXIII HOW THE UNION OF RELIGION AND POLITICS IS FATAL TO THE
PEOPLE
CLXXIV CREEDS ARE BURDENSOME AND RUINOUS TO THE MAJORITY OF
NATIONS.
CLXXV RELIGION PARALYZES MORALITY.
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Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
CLXXVI FATAL CONSEQUENCES OF PIETY.
CLXXVII THE SUPPOSITION OF ANOTHER LIFE IS NEITHER CONSOLING TO
MAN . . .
CLXXVIII AN ATHEIST HAS MORE MOTIVES FOR ACTING UPRIGHTLY
CLXXIX AN ATHEISTICAL KING WOULD BE PREFERABLE TO ONE WHO IS
RELIGIOUS
CLXXX THE MORALITY ACQUIRED BY PHILOSOPHY IS SUFFICIENT TO
VIRTUE.
CLXXXI OPINIONS RARELY INFLUENCE CONDUCT.
CLXXXII -REASON LEADS MEN TO IRRELIGION AND TO ATHEISM
CLXXXIII FEAR ALONE CREATES THEISTS AND BIGOTS.
CLXXXIV CAN WE, OR SHOULD WE, LOVE OR NOT LOVE GOD?
CLXXXV THE VARIOUS AND CONTRADICTORY IDEAS WHICH EXIST
EVERYWHERE
CLXXXVI THE EXISTENCE OF GOD, WHICH IS THE BASIS OF ALL RELIGION
CLXXXVII PRIESTS, MORE THAN UNBELIEVERS, ACT FROM INTEREST.
CLXXXVIII PRIDE, PRESUMPTION, AND CORRUPTION OF THE HEART
CLXXXIX PREJUDICES ARE BUT FOR A TIME, AND NO POWER IS DURABLE
CXC HOW MUCH POWER AND CONSIDERATION THE MINISTERS OF THE
GODS . . .
CXCI WHAT A HAPPY AND GREAT REVOLUTION WOULD TAKE PLACE . . .
CXCII THE RETRACTION OF AN UNBELIEVER AT THE HOUR OF DEATH
CXCIII IT IS NOT TRUE THAT ATHEISM SUNDERS ALL THE TIES OF SOCIETY.
CXCIV REFUTATION OF THE ASSERTION THAT RELIGION IS NECESSARY
CXCV EVERY RATIONAL SYSTEM IS NOT MADE FOR THE MULTITUDE.
CXCVI FUTILITY AND DANGER OF THEOLOGY. WISE COUNSELS TO PRINCES.
CXCVII FATAL EFFECTS OF RELIGION UPON THE PEOPLE AND THE PRINCES.
CXCVIII CONTINUATION.
CXCIX HISTORY TEACHES US THAT ALL RELIGIONS WERE ESTABLISHED . . .
CC ALL RELIGIONS, ANCIENT AND MODERN, HAVE MUTUALLY
BORROWED . . .
CCI THEOLOGY HAS ALWAYS TURNED PHILOSOPHY FROM ITS TRUE
COURSE.
CCII -THEOLOGY NEITHER EXPLAINS NOR ENLIGHTENS ANYTHING IN THE
WORLD
CCIII HOW THEOLOGY HAS FETTERED HUMAN MORALS AND RETARDED
THE PROGRESS
CCIV CONTINUATION.
CCV WE COULD NOT REPEAT TOO OFTEN HOW EXTRAVAGANT AND
FATAL RELIGION
CCVI RELIGION IS PANDORA'S BOX, AND THIS FATAL BOX IS OPEN.
Contents 7
Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
I OF RELIGIONS.
II OF MIRACLES.
III SIMILARITY BETWEEN ANCIENT AND MODERN MIRACLES.
IV OF THE FALSITY OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION.
V THE HOLY SCRIPTURES. (1) OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
VI THE HOLY SCRIPTURES. (2) THE NEW TESTAMENT.
VII ERRORS OF DOCTRINE AND OF MORALITY.
PUBLISHER'S PREFACE.
PREFATORY NOTE BY THE TRANSLATOR
PREFACE OF THE EDITOR OF THE FRENCH EDITION OF 1830.
Becoming curate of Etrepigny in Champagne and vicar of a little annexed parish named Bue, he was
remarkable for the austerity of his habits. Devoted in all his duties, every year he gave hat remained of his
salary to the poor of his parishes; enthusiastic, and of rigid virtue, he was very temperate, as much in regard to
his appetite as in relation to women.
MM. Voiri and Delavaux, the one curate of Varq, the other curate of Boulzicourt, were his confessors, and the
only ones with whom he associated.
The curate Meslier was a rigid partisan of justice, and sometimes carried his zeal a little too far. The lord of
his village, M. de Touilly, having ill-treated some peasants, he refused to pray for him in his service. M. de
Mailly, Archbishop of Rheims, before whom the case was brought, condemned him. But the Sunday which
followed this decision, the abbot Meslier stood in his pulpit and complained of the sentence of the cardinal.
"This is," said he, "the general fate of the poor country priest; the archbishops, who are great lords, scorn them
and do not listen to them. Therefore, let us pray for the lord of this place. We will pray for Antoine de Touilly,
that he may be converted and granted the grace that he may not wrong the poor and despoil the orphans." His
lordship, who was present at this mortifying supplication, brought new complaints before the same
archbishop, who ordered the curate Meslier to come to Donchery, where he ill-treated him with abusive
language.
There have been scarcely any other events in his life, nor other benefice, than that of Etrepigny. He died in the
odor of sanctity in the year 1733, fifty-five years old. It is believed that, disgusted with life, he expressly
refused necessary food, because during his sickness he was not willing to take anything, not even a glass of
wine.
At his death he gave all he possessed, which was inconsiderable, to his parishioners, and desired to be buried
in his garden.
They were greatly surprised to find in his house three manuscripts, each containing three hundred and
sixty-six pages, all written by his hand, signed and entitled by him, "My Testament." This work, which the
author addressed to his parishioners and to M. Leroux, advocate and procurator for the parliament of Meziers,
is a simple refutation of all the religious dogmas, without excepting one. The grand vicar of Rheims retained
one of the three copies; another was sent to Monsieur Chauvelin, guardian of the State's seal; the third
remained at the clerk's office of the justiciary of St. Minehould. The Count de Caylus had one of those three
copies in his possession for some time, and soon afterward more than one hundred were at Paris, sold at ten
Louis-d'or apiece. A dying priest accusing himself of having professed and taught the Christian religion, made
a deeper impression upon the mind than the "Thoughts of Pascal."
The curate Meslier had written upon a gray paper which enveloped the copy destined for his parishioners
these remarkable words: "I have seen and recognized the errors, the abuses, the follies, and the wickedness of
men. I have hated and despised them. I did not dare say it during my life, but I will say it at least in dying, and
after my death; and it is that it may be known, that I write this present memorial in order that it may serve as a
witness of truth to all those who may see and read it if they choose."
At the beginning of this work is found this document (a kind of honorable amend, which in his letter to the
Count of d'Argental of May 31, 1762, Voltaire qualifies as a preface), addressed to his parishioners.
"You know," said he, "my brethren, my disinterestedness; I do not sacrifice my belief to any vile interest. If I
embraced a profession so directly opposed to my sentiments, it was not through cupidity. I obeyed my
parents. I would have preferred to enlighten you sooner if I could have done it safely. You are witnesses to
what I assert. I have not disgraced my ministry by exacting the requitals, which are a part of it.
"I call heaven to witness that I also thoroughly despised those who laughed at the simplicity of the blind
people, those who furnished piously considerable sums of money to buy prayers. How horrible this
monopoly! I do not blame the disdain which those who grow rich by your sweat and your pains, show for
their mysteries and their superstitions; but I detest their insatiable cupidity and the signal pleasure such
fellows take in railing at the ignorance of those whom they carefully keep in this state of blindness. Let them
content themselves with laughing at their own ease, but at least let them not multiply their errors by abusing
the blind piety of those who, by their simplicity, procured them such an easy life. You render unto me, my
brethren, the justice that is due me. The sympathy which I manifested for your troubles saves me from the
least suspicion. How often have I performed gratuitously the functions of my ministry. How often also has my
heart been grieved at not being able to assist you as often and as abundantly as I could have wished! Have I
not always proved to you that I took more pleasure in giving than in receiving? I carefully avoided exhorting
you to bigotry, and I spoke to you as rarely as possible of our unfortunate dogmas. It was necessary that I
should acquit myself as a priest of my ministry, but how often have I not suffered within myself when I was
forced to preach to you those pious lies which I despised in my heart. What a disdain I had for my ministry,
and particularly for that superstitious Mass, and those ridiculous administrations of sacraments, especially if I
was compelled to perform them with the solemnity which awakened all your piety and all your good faith.
What remorse I had for exciting your credulity! A thousand times upon the point of bursting forth publicly, I
was going to open your eyes, but a fear superior to my strength restrained me and forced me to silence until
my death."
The abbot Meslier had written two letters to the curates of his neighborhood to inform them of his Testament;
he told them that he had consigned to the chancery of St. Minnehould a copy of his manuscript in 366 leaves
in octavo; but he feared it would be suppressed, according to the bad custom established to prevent the poor
from being instructed and knowing the truth.
While the abbot Meslier naively acknowledged that he did not wish to be burned till after his death, Thomas
Woolston, a doctor of Cambridge, published and sold publicly at London, in his own house, sixty thousand
copies of his "Discourses" against the miracles of Jesus Christ.
It was a very astonishing thing that two priests should at the same time write against the Christian religion.
The curate Meslier has gone further yet than Woolston; he dares to treat the transport of our Saviour by the
devil upon the mountain, the wedding of Cana, the bread and the fishes, as absurd fables, injurious to divinity,
which were ignored during three hundred years by the whole Roman Empire, and finally passed from the
lower class to the palace of the emperors, when policy obliged them to adopt the follies of the people in order
the more easily to subjugate them. The denunciations of the English priest do not approach those of the
Champagne priest. Woolston is sometimes indulgent, Meslier never. He was a man profoundly embittered by
the crimes he witnessed, for which he holds the Christian religion responsible. There is no miracle which to
him is not an object of contempt and horror; no prophecy that he does not compare to those of Nostredamus.
He wrote thus against Jesus Christ when in the arms of death, at a time when the most dissimulating dare not
lie, and when the most intrepid tremble. Struck with the difficulties which he found in Scripture, he inveighed
against it more bitterly than the Acosta and all the Jews, more than the famous Porphyre, Celse, Iamblique,
Julian, Libanius, and all the partisans of human reason.
There were found among the books of the curate Meslier a printed manuscript of the Treatise of Fenelon,
Archbishop of Cambray, upon the existence of God and His attributes, and the reflections of the Jesuit
Tournemine upon Atheism, to which treatise he added marginal notes signed by his hand.
DECREE
of the NATIONAL CONVENTION upon the proposition to erect a statue to the curate Jean Meslier, the 27
Brumaire, in the year II. (November 17, 1793). The National Convention sends to the Committee of Public
Instruction the proposition made by one of its members to erect a statue to Jean Meslier, curate at Etrepigny,
in Champagne, the first priest who had the courage and the honesty to abjure religious errors.
SIGNED—P. A. Laloy, President; Bazire, Charles Duval, Philippeaux, Frecine, and Merlin (de Thionville),
Secretaries.
SIGNED—Batellier, Echasseriaux, Monnel, Becker, Vernetey, Pérard, Vinet, Bouillerot, Auger, Cordier,
Delecloy, and Cosnard.
Originally, savage nations, ferocious, perpetually at war, adored, under various names, some God conformed
to their ideas; that is to say, cruel, carnivorous, selfish, greedy of blood. We find in all the religions of the
earth a God of armies, a jealous God, an avenging God, an exterminating God, a God who enjoys carnage and
whose worshipers make it a duty to serve him to his taste. Lambs, bulls, children, men, heretics, infidels,
kings, whole nations, are sacrificed to him. The zealous servants of this barbarous God go so far as to believe
that they are obliged to offer themselves as a sacrifice to him. Everywhere we see zealots who, after having
sadly meditated upon their terrible God, imagine that, in order to please him, they must do themselves all the
Thus man was, and always remained, a child without experience, a slave without courage, a loggerhead who
feared to reason, and who could never escape from the labyrinth into which his ancestors had misled him; he
felt compelled to groan under the yoke of his Gods, of whom he knew nothing except the fabulous accounts of
their ministers. These, after having fettered him by the ties of opinion, have remained his masters or delivered
him up defenseless to the absolute power of tyrants, no less terrible than the Gods, of whom they were the
representatives upon the earth. Oppressed by the double yoke of spiritual and temporal power, it was
impossible for the people to instruct themselves and to work for their own welfare. Thus, religion, politics,
and morals became sanctuaries, into which the profane were not permitted to enter. Men had no other morality
than that which their legislators and their priests claimed as descended from unknown empyrean regions. The
human mind, perplexed by these theological opinions, misunderstood itself, doubted its own powers,
mistrusted experience, feared truth, disdained its reason, and left it to blindly follow authority. Man was a
pure machine in the hands of his tyrants and his priests, who alone had the right to regulate his movements.
Always treated as a slave, he had at all times and in all places the vices and dispositions of a slave.
These are the true sources of the corruption of habits, to which religion never opposes anything but ideal and
ineffectual obstacles; ignorance and servitude have a tendency to make men wicked and unhappy. Science,
reason, liberty, alone can reform them and render them more happy; but everything conspires to blind them
and to confirm them in their blindness. The priests deceive them, tyrants corrupt them in order to subjugate
them more easily. Tyranny has been, and will always be, the chief source of the depraved morals and habitual
calamities of the people. These, almost always fascinated by their religious notions or by metaphysical
fictions, instead of looking upon the natural and visible causes of their miseries, attribute their vices to the
imperfections of their nature, and their misfortunes to the anger of their Gods; they offer to Heaven vows,
sacrifices, and presents, in order to put an end to their misfortunes, which are really due only to the
negligence, the ignorance, and to the perversity of their guides, to the folly of their institutions, to their foolish
customs, to their false opinions, to their unreasonable laws, and especially to their want of enlightenment. Let
the mind be filled early with true ideas; let man's reason be cultivated; let justice govern him; and there will be
no need of opposing to his passions the powerless barrier of the fear of Gods. Men will be good when they are
well taught, well governed, chastised or censured for the evil, and justly rewarded for the good which they
have done to their fellow-citizens. It is idle to pretend to cure mortals of their vices if we do not begin by
curing them of their prejudices. It is only by showing them the truth that they can know their best interests and
the real motives which will lead them to happiness. Long enough have the instructors of the people fixed their
eyes on heaven; let them at last bring them back to the earth. Tired of an incomprehensible theology, of
ridiculous fables, of impenetrable mysteries, of puerile ceremonies, let the human mind occupy itself with
natural things, intelligible objects, sensible truths, and useful knowledge. Let the vain chimeras which beset
the people be dissipated, and very soon rational opinions will fill the minds of those who were believed fated
to be always in error. To annihilate religious prejudices, it would be sufficient to show that what is
inconceivable to man can not be of any use to him. Does it need, then, anything but simple common sense to
perceive that a being most clearly irreconcilable with the notions of mankind, that a cause continually opposed
to the effects attributed to him; that a being of whom not a word can be said without falling into
contradictions; that a being who, far from explaining the mysteries of the universe, only renders them more
inexplicable; that a being to whom for so many centuries men addressed themselves so vainly to obtain their
happiness and deliverance from their sufferings; does it need, I say, more than simple common sense to
COMMON SENSE.
Detexit quo dolose Vaticinandi furore sacerdotes mysteria, illis spe ignota, audactur publicant.—PETRON.
SATYR.
I.—APOLOGUE.
There is a vast empire governed by a monarch, whose conduct does but confound the minds of his subjects.
He desires to be known, loved, respected, and obeyed, but he never shows himself; everything tends to make
uncertain the notions which we are able to form about him. The people subjected to his power have only such
ideas of the character and the laws of their invisible sovereign as his ministers give them; these suit, however,
because they themselves have no idea of their master, for his ways are impenetrable, and his views and his
qualities are totally incomprehensible; moreover, his ministers disagree among themselves in regard to the
orders which they pretend emanated from the sovereign whose organs they claim to be; they announce them
diversely in each province of the empire; they discredit and treat each other as impostors and liars; the decrees
and ordinances which they promulgate are obscure; they are enigmas, made not to be understood or divined
by the subjects for whose instruction they were intended. The laws of the invisible monarch need interpreters,
but those who explain them are always quarreling among themselves about the true way of understanding
COMMON SENSE. 13
Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
them; more than this, they do not agree among themselves; all which they relate of their hidden prince is but a
tissue of contradictions, scarcely a single word that is not contradicted at once. He is called supremely good,
nevertheless not a person but complains of his decrees. He is supposed to be infinitely wise, and in his
administration everything seems contrary to reason and good sense. They boast of his justice, and the best of
his subjects are generally the least favored. We are assured that he sees everything, yet his presence remedies
nothing. It is said that he is the friend of order, and everything in his universe is in a state of confusion and
disorder; all is created by him, yet events rarely happen according to his projects. He foresees everything, but
his foresight prevents nothing. He is impatient if any offend him; at the same time he puts every one in the
way of offending him. His knowledge is admired in the perfection of his works, but his works are full of
imperfections, and of little permanence. He is continually occupied in creating and destroying, then repairing
what he has done, never appearing to be satisfied with his work. In all his enterprises he seeks but his own
glory, but he does not succeed in being glorified. He works but for the good of his subjects, and most of them
lack the necessities of life. Those whom he seems to favor, are generally those who are the least satisfied with
their fate; we see them all continually revolting against a master whose greatness they admire, whose wisdom
they extol, whose goodness they worship, and whose justice they fear, revering orders which they never
follow. This empire is the world; its monarch is God; His ministers are the priests; their subjects are men.
II.—WHAT IS THEOLOGY?
There is a science which has for its object only incomprehensible things. Unlike all others, it occupies itself
but with things unseen. Hobbes calls it "the kingdom of darkness." In this land all obey laws opposed to those
which men acknowledge in the world they inhabit. In this marvelous region light is but darkness, evidence
becomes doubtful or false, the impossible becomes credible, reason is an unfaithful guide, and common sense
changed into delirium. This science is named Theology, and this Theology is a continual insult to human
reason.
III.
By frequent repetition of if, but, and perhaps, we succeed in forming an imperfect and broken system which
perplexes men's minds to the extent of making them forget the clearest notions, and to render uncertain the
most palpable truths. By the aid of this systematic nonsense, all nature has become an inexplicable enigma for
man; the visible world has disappeared to give place to invisible regions; reason is obliged to give place to
imagination, which can lead us only to the land of chimeras which she herself has invented.
I.—APOLOGUE. 14
Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
IX.—ORIGIN OF SUPERSTITION.
How is it that we have succeeded in persuading reasonable beings that the thing most impossible to
understand was the most essential for them. It is because they were greatly frightened; it is because when men
are kept in fear they cease to reason; it is because they have been expressly enjoined to distrust their reason.
When the brain is troubled, we believe everything and examine nothing.
XIII.—CONTINUATION.
In the matter of religion, men are but overgrown children. The more absurd a religion is, and the fuller of
marvels, the more power it exerts; the devotee thinks himself obliged to place no limits to his credulity; the
more inconceivable things are, the more divine they appear to him; the more incredible they are, the more
merit he gives himself for believing them.
XIII.—CONTINUATION. 18
Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
XVIII.—CONTINUATION.
A thing is impossible when it is composed of two ideas so antagonistic, that we can not think of them at the
same time. Evidence can be relied on only when confirmed by the constant testimony of our senses, which
alone give birth to ideas, and enable us to judge of their conformity or of their incompatibility. That which
exists necessarily, is that of which the non-existence would imply contradiction. These principles, universally
recognized, are at fault when the question of the existence of God is considered; what has been said of Him is
either unintelligible or perfectly contradictory; and for this reason must appear impossible to every man of
common sense.
XXI.—SPIRITUALITY IS A CHIMERA.
The barbarian, when he speaks of a spirit, attaches at least some sense to this word; he understands by it an
agent similar to the wind, to the agitated air, to the breath, which produces, invisibly, effects that we perceive.
By subtilizing, the modern theologian becomes as little intelligible to himself as to others. Ask him what he
means by a spirit? He will answer, that it is an unknown substance, which is perfectly simple, which has
nothing tangible, nothing in common with matter. In good faith, is there any mortal who can form the least
idea of such a substance? A spirit in the language of modern theology is then but an absence of ideas. The idea
of spirituality is another idea without a model.
XX.—TO SAY THAT GOD IS A SPIRIT, IS TO SPEAK WITHOUT SAYING ANYTHING AT ALL. 20
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XXVI.—WHAT IS GOD?
To unsettle the existence of a God, it is only necessary to ask a theologian to speak of Him; as soon as he
utters one word about Him, the least reflection makes us discover at once that what he says is incompatible
with the essence which he attributes to his God. Therefore, what is God? It is an abstract word, coined to
designate the hidden forces of nature; or, it is a mathematical point, which has neither length, breadth, nor
thickness. A philosopher [David Hume] has very ingeniously said in speaking of theologians, that they have
found the solution to the famous problem of Archimedes; a point in the heavens from which they move the
world.
XXVI.—WHAT IS GOD? 22
Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
God, we are told, created men intelligent, but He did not create them omniscient: that is to say, capable of
knowing all things. We conclude that He was not able to endow him with intelligence sufficient to understand
the divine essence. In this case it is demonstrated that God has neither the power nor the wish to be known by
men. By what right could this God become angry with beings whose own essence makes it impossible to have
any idea of the divine essence? God would evidently be the most unjust and the most unaccountable of tyrants
if He should punish an atheist for not knowing that which his nature made it impossible for him to know.
All children are atheists—they have no idea of God; are they, then, criminal on account of this
ignorance? At what age do they begin to be obliged to believe in God? It is, you say, at the age of reason. At
what time does this age begin? Besides, if the most profound theologians lose themselves in the divine
essence, which they boast of not comprehending, what ideas can common people have?—women,
XXIX.—THE INFINITY OF GOD AND THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF KNOWING THE DIVINE ESSENCE,
23 O
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mechanics, and, in short, those who compose the mass of the human race?
XXXIII.—ORIGIN OF PREJUDICES.
The brain of man is, especially in infancy, like a soft wax, ready to receive all the impressions we wish to
make on it; education furnishes nearly all his opinions, at a period when he is incapable of judging for
himself. We believe that the ideas, true or false, which at a tender age were forced into our heads, were
received from nature at our birth; and this persuasion is one of the greatest sources of our errors.
XXX.—IT IS NEITHER LESS NOR MORE CRIMINAL TOBELIEVE IN GOD THAN NOT TO BELIEVE
24 IN
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XXXVIII—CONTINUATION.
Nature, you say, is totally inexplicable without a God; that is to say, in order to explain what you understand
so little, you need a cause which you do not understand at all. You pretend to make clear that which is
obscure, by magnifying its obscurity. You think you have untied a knot by multiplying knots. Enthusiastic
philosophers, in order to prove to us the existence of a God, you copy complete treatises on botany; you enter
into minute details of the parts of the human body; you ascend into the air to contemplate the revolutions of
the stars; you return then to earth to admire the course of the waters; you fly into ecstasies over butterflies,
insects, polyps, organized atoms, in which you think to find the greatness of your God; all these things will
not prove the existence of this God; they will only prove that you have not the ideas which you should have of
the immense variety of causes and effects that can produce the infinitely diversified combinations, of which
the universe is the assemblage. This will prove that you ignore nature, that you have no idea of her resources
when you judge her incapable of producing a multitude of forms and beings, of which your eyes, even by the
aid of the microscope, see but the least part; finally, this will prove, that not being able to know the sensible
and comprehensible agents, you find it easier to have recourse to a word, by which you designate an agent, of
whom it will always be impossible for you to form any true idea.
XL.—CONTINUATION.
You see that everything in nature is in a state of activity, and you pretend that nature of itself is dead and
without energy! You believe that all this, acting of itself, has need of a motor! Well! who is this motor? It is a
spirit, that is to say, an absolutely incomprehensible and contradictory being. Conclude then, I say to you, that
matter acts of itself, and cease to reason about your spiritual motor, which has nothing that is necessary to put
it into motion. Return from your useless excursions; come down from an imaginary into a real world; take
hold of second causes; leave to theologians their "First Cause," of which nature has no need in order to
produce all the effects which you see.
XXXIX.—THE WORLD HAS NOT BEEN CREATED, AND MATTER MOVES BY ITSELF. 27
Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
even occupy my thought with any matter whatever. It is said in the schools, that the essence of a being is that
from which flow all the properties of that being. Now then, it is evident that all the properties of bodies or of
substances of which we have ideas, are due to the motion which alone informs us of their existence, and gives
us the first conceptions of it. I can not be informed or assured of my own existence but by the motions which I
experience within myself. I am compelled to conclude that motion is as essential to matter as its extension,
and that it can not be conceived of without it. If one persists in caviling about the evidences which prove to us
that motion is an essential property of matter, he must at least acknowledge that substances which seemed
dead or deprived of all energy, take motion of themselves as soon as they are brought within the proper
distance to act upon each other. Pyrophorus, when enclosed in a bottle or deprived of contact with the air, can
not take fire by itself, but it burns as soon as exposed to the air. Flour and water cause fermentation as soon as
they are mixed. Thus dead substances engender motion of themselves. Matter has then the power to move
itself, and nature, in order to act, does not need a motor whose essence would hinder its activity.
Man is intelligent, hence it is concluded that he must be the work of an intelligent being, and not of a nature
devoid of intelligence. Although nothing is more rare than to see man use this intelligence, of which he
appears so proud, I will admit that he is intelligent, that his necessities develop in him this faculty, that the
society of other men contributes especially to cultivate it. But in the human machine and in the intelligence
with which it is endowed, I see nothing that shows in a precise manner the infinite intelligence of the
workman who has the honor of making it. I see that this admirable machine is subject to derangement; that at
that time this wonderful intelligence is disordered, and sometimes totally disappears; from this I conclude that
human intelligence depends upon a certain disposition of the material organs of the body, and that, because
man is an intelligent being, it is not well to conclude that God must be an intelligent being, any more than
because man is material, we are compelled to conclude that God is material. The intelligence of man no more
proves the intelligence of God than the malice of men proves the malice of this God, of whom they pretend
that man is the work. In whatever way theology is taken, God will always be a cause contradicted by its
effects, or of whom it is impossible to judge by His works. We shall always see evil, imperfections, and follies
resulting from a cause claimed to be full of goodness, of perfections, and of wisdom.
XLI.—OTHER PROOFS THAT MOTION IS IN THE ESSENCEOF MATTER, AND THAT IT IS NOT
28 NECE
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Nature is a word which we make use of to designate the immense assemblage of beings, diverse substances,
infinite combinations, and all the various motions which we see. All bodies, whether organized or not
organized, are the necessary results of certain causes, made to produce necessarily the effects which we see.
Nothing in nature can be made by chance; all follow fixed laws; these laws are but the necessary union of
certain effects with their causes. An atom of matter does not meet another atom by accident or by hazard; this
rencounter is due to permanent laws, which cause each being to act by necessity as it does, and can not act
otherwise under the same circumstances. To speak about the accidental coming together of atoms, or to
attribute any effects to chance, is to say nothing, if not to ignore the laws by which bodies act, meet, combine,
or separate.
Everything is made by chance for those who do not understand nature, the properties of beings, and the effects
which must necessarily result from the concurrence of certain causes. It is not chance that has placed the sun
in the center of our planetary system; it is by its very essence, the substance of which it is composed, that it
occupies this place, and from thence diffuses itself to invigorate the beings who live in these planets.
Nature follows constantly the same progress; that is to say, the same causes produce the same effects, as long
as their action is not interrupted by other causes which occasion the first ones to produce different effects.
When the causes, whose effects we feel, are interrupted in their action by causes which, although unknown to
us, are no less natural and necessary, we are stupefied, we cry out miracles: and we attribute them to a cause
far less known than all those we see operating before us. The universe is always in order; there can be no
To be astonished that a certain order reigns in the world, is to be surprised to see the same causes constantly
producing the same effects. To be shocked at seeing disorder, is to forget that the causes being changed or
disturbed in their action, the effects can no longer be the same. To be astonished to see order in nature, is to be
astonished that anything can exist; it is to be surprised at one's own existence. What is order for one being, is
disorder for another. All wicked beings find that everything is in order when they can with impunity put
everything into disorder; they find, on the contrary, that everything is in disorder when they are prevented
from exercising their wickedness.
XLV.—CONTINUATION.
Supposing God to be the author and the motor of nature, there could be no disorder relating to Him; all causes
which He would have made would necessarily act according to their properties the essences and the
impulsions that He had endowed them with. If God should change the ordinary course of things, He would not
be immutable. If the order of the universe—in which we believe we see the most convincing proof of
His existence, of His intelligence, His power, and His goodness—should be inconsistent, His existence
might be doubted; or He might be accused at least of inconstancy, of inability, of want of foresight, and of
wisdom in the first arrangement of things; we would have a right to accuse Him of blundering in His choice of
agents and instruments. Finally, if the order of nature proves the power and the intelligence, disorder ought to
prove the weakness, inconstancy, and irrationality of Divinity. You say that God is everywhere; that He fills
all space; that nothing was made without Him; that matter could not act without Him as its motor. But in this
case you admit that your God is the author of disorder; that it is He who deranges nature; that He is the Father
of confusion; that He is in man; and that He moves man at the moment when he sins. If God is everywhere,
He is in me; He acts with me; He is deceived when I am deceived; He questions with me the existence of God;
He offends God with me. Oh, theologians! you never understand yourselves when you speak of God.
Divine intelligence, divine ideas, divine views, you say, have nothing in common with those of men. So much
the better! But in this case, how can men judge of these views—whether good or evil—reason
about these ideas, or admire this intelligence? It would be to judge, to admire, to adore that of which we can
form no idea. To adore the profound views of divine wisdom, is it not to worship that of which it is impossible
for us to judge? To admire these same views, is it not admiring without knowing wry? Admiration is always
the daughter of ignorance. Men admire and worship only what they do not understand.
Dante, in his poem of Paradise, relates that the Divinity appeared to him under the figure of three circles,
which formed an iris, whose bright colors arose from each other; but having wished to retain its brilliant light,
the poet saw only his own face. In worshiping God, man adores himself.
XLVIII.—CONTINUATION.
The slightest reflection suffices to prove to us that God can not have any of the human qualities, virtues, or
perfections. Our virtues and our perfections are the results of our temperament modified. Has God a
temperament like ours? Our good qualities are our habits relative to the beings in whose society we live. God,
according to you, is a solitary being. God has no one like Him; He does not live in society; He has no need of
XLVI.—A PURE SPIRIT CAN NOT BE INTELLIGENT, AND TO ADORE A DIVINE INTELLIGENCE
31 IS
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any one; He enjoys a happiness which nothing can alter. Admit, then, upon your own principles, that God can
not possess what we call virtues, and that man can not be virtuous in regard to Him.
1. According to you, it would always be impossible for man to know his God, and he would be kept in the
most invincible ignorance of the Divine essence.
2. A being who has no equals, can not be susceptible of glory. Glory can result but from the comparison of his
own excellence with that of others.
3. If God by Himself is infinitely happy and is sufficient unto Himself, why does He need the homage of His
feeble creatures?
4. In spite of all His works, God is not glorified; on the contrary, all the religions of the world show Him to us
as perpetually offended; their great object is to reconcile sinful, ungrateful, and rebellious man with his
wrathful God.
XLVIII.—CONTINUATION. 32
Superstition in All Ages, by Jean Meslier
We think to justify Providence by saying, that in this world there are more blessings than evil for each
individual man. Let us suppose that the blessings which this Providence makes us enjoy are as one hundred,
and that the evils are as ten per cent.; would it not always result that against these hundred degrees of
goodness, Providence possesses a tenth degree of malignity?—which is incompatible with the
perfection we suppose it to have.
All the books are filled with the most flattering praises of Providence, whose attentive care is extolled; it
would seem to us, as if in order to live happy here below, man would have no need of exerting himself.
However, without labor, man could scarcely live a day. In order to live, I see him obliged to sweat, work,
hunt, fish, toil without relaxation; without these secondary causes, the First Cause (at least in the majority of
countries) could provide for none of his needs. If I examine all parts of this globe, I see the uncivilized as well
LI.—IT IS NOT TRUE THAT THE OBJECT OF THE FORMATION OF THE UNIVERSE WAS TO
33 RENDE
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as the civilized man in a perpetual struggle with Providence; he is compelled to ward off the blows which it
sends in the form of hurricanes, tempests, frost, hail, inundations, sterility, and the divers accidents which so
often render all their labors useless. In a word, I see the human race continually occupied in protecting itself
from the wicked tricks of this Providence, which is said to be busy with the care of their happiness. A devotee
admired Divine Providence for having wisely made rivers to flow through all the places where men had built
large cities. Is not this man's way of reasoning as sensible as that of many learned men who do not cease from
telling us of Final Causes, or who pretend to perceive clearly the benevolent views of God in the formation of
things?
The Hottentots—wiser in this particular than other nations, who treat them as
barbarians—refuse, it is said, to adore God, because if He sometimes does good, He as often does
harm. Is not this reasoning more just and more conformed to experience than that of so many men who persist
in seeing in their God but kindness, wisdom, and foresight; and who refuse to see that the countless evils, of
which the world is the theater, must come from the same Hand which they kiss with transport?
Everything which takes place in the world proves to us in the clearest way that it is not governed by an
intelligent being. We can judge of the intelligence of a being but by the means which he employs to
accomplish his proposed design. The aim of God, it is said, is the happiness of our race; however, the same
necessity regulates the fate of all sentient beings—which are born to suffer much, to enjoy little, and to
die. Man's cup is full of joy and of bitterness; everywhere good is side by side with evil; order is replaced by
disorder; generation is followed by destruction. If you tell me that the designs of God are mysteries, and that
His views are impossible to understand, I will answer, that in this case it is impossible for me to judge
whether God is intelligent.
1. The existence of another life has no other guaranty than the imagination of men, who, in supposing it, have
but manifested their desire to live again, in order to enter upon a purer and more durable state of happiness
than that which they enjoy at present.
2. How can we conceive of a God who, knowing all things, must know to their depths the nature of His
creatures, and yet must have so many proofs in order to assure Himself of their proclivities?
3. According to the calculations of our chronologists, the earth which we inhabit has existed for six or seven
thousand years; during this time the nations have, under different forms, experienced many vicissitudes and
calamities; history shows us that the human race in all ages has been tormented and devastated by tyrants,
conquerors, heroes; by wars, inundations, famines, epidemics, etc. Is this long catalogue of proofs of such a
nature as to inspire us with great confidence in the hidden views of the Divinity? Do such constant evils give
us an exalted idea of the future fate which His kindness is preparing for us?
4. If God is as well-disposed as they assure us He is, could He not at least, without bestowing an infinite
happiness upon men, communicate to them that degree of happiness of which finite beings are susceptible? In
order to be happy, do we need an Infinite or Divine happiness?
LVI.—EVIL AND GOOD ARE THE NECESSARY EFFECTS OF NATURAL CAUSES. WHAT IS
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5. If God has not been able to render men happier than they are here below, what will become of the hope of a
Paradise, where it is pretended that the elect or chosen few will rejoice forever in ineffable happiness? If God
could not or would not remove evil from the earth (the only sojourning place we know of), what reason could
we have to presume that He can or will remove it from another world, of which we know nothing? More than
two thousand years ago, according to Lactance, the wise epicure said: "Either God wants to prevent evil, and
can not, or He can and will not; or He neither can nor will, or He will and can. If He wants to, without the
power, He is impotent; if He can, and will not, He is guilty of malice which we can not attribute to Him; if He
neither can nor will, He is both impotent and wicked, and consequently can not be God; if He wishes to and
can, whence then comes evil, or why does He not prevent it?" For more than two thousand years honest minds
have waited for a rational solution of these difficulties; and our theologians teach us that they will not be
revealed to us until the future life.
We can forgive an unskillful workman for doing imperfect work, because he must work, well or ill, or starve;
this workman is excusable; but your God is not. According to you, He is self-sufficient; in this case, why does
He create men? He has, according to you, all that is necessary to render man happy; why, then, does He not do
it? You must conclude that your God has more malice than goodness, or you must admit that God was
compelled to do what He has done, without being able to do otherwise. However, you assure us that your God
is free; you say also that He is immutable, although beginning in time and ceasing in time to exercise His
power, like all the inconstant beings of this world. Oh, theologians! you have made vain efforts to acquit your
God of all the defects of man; there is always visible in this God so perfect, "a tip of the [human] ear."
Cicero has said with reason that if God does not make Himself agreeable to man, He can not be his God. [Nisi
Deus homini placuerit, Deus non erit.] Goodness constitutes Divinity; this Goodness can manifest itself to
man only by the advantages he derives from it. As soon as he is unfortunate, this Goodness disappears and
ceases to be Divinity. An infinite Goodness can be neither partial nor exclusive. If God is infinitely good, He
owes happiness to all His creatures; one unfortunate being alone would be sufficient to annihilate an unlimited
goodness. Under an infinitely good and powerful God, is it possible to conceive that a single man could
suffer? An animal, a mite, which suffers, furnishes invincible arguments against Divine Providence and its
infinite benefactions.
LIX.—IN VAIN DOES THEOLOGY EXERT ITSELF TOACQUIT GOD OF MAN'S DEFECTS. EITHER
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LXI.—CONTINUATION.
According to theologians, the afflictions and evils of this life are chastisements which culpable men receive
from Divinity. But why are men culpable? If God is Almighty, does it cost Him any more to say, "Let
everything remain in order!"—"let all my subjects be good, innocent, fortunate!"—than to say,
"Let everything exist?" Was it more difficult for this God to do His work well than to do it so badly? Was it
any farther from the nonexistence of beings to their wise and happy existence, than from their non-existence
to their insensate and miserable existence? Religion speaks to us of a hell—that is, of a fearful place
where, notwithstanding His goodness, God reserves eternal torments for the majority of men. Thus, after
having rendered mortals very miserable in this world, religion teaches them that God can make them much
more wretched in another. They meet our objections by saying, that otherwise the goodness of God would
take the place of His justice. But goodness which takes the place of the most terrible cruelty, is not infinite
kindness. Besides, a God who, after having been infinitely good, becomes infinitely wicked, can He be
regarded as an immutable being? A God filled with implacable fury, is He a God in whom we can find a
shadow of charity or goodness?
Although men repeat to us that their God is infinitely good, it is evident that in the bottom of their hearts they
can believe nothing of it. How can we love anything we do not know? How can we love a being, the idea of
whom is but liable to keep us in anxiety and trouble? How can we love a being of whom all that is told
conspires to render him supremely hateful?
LXI.—CONTINUATION. 39
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LXIII.—ALL RELIGION INSPIRES BUT A COWARDLY AND INORDINATE FEAR OF THE DIVINITY.
40
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torments upon him; in short, to punish him for the least faults. No man upon earth can have the least spark of
love for a God who holds in reserve eternal, hard, and violent chastisements for ninety-nine hundredths of His
children.
It could have been but the most cruel barbarity, the most notorious imposition, but the blindest ambition
which could have created the dogma of eternal damnation. If there exists a God who could be offended or
blasphemed, there would not be upon earth any greater blasphemers than those who dare to say that this God
is perverse enough to take pleasure in dooming His feeble creatures to useless torments for all eternity.
All religions agree in exalting the wisdom and the infinite power of the Divinity; but as soon as they expose
His conduct, we discover but imprudence, want of foresight, weakness, and folly. God, it is said, created the
world for Himself; and so far He has not succeeded in making Himself properly respected! God has created
men in order to have in His dominion subjects who would render Him homage; and we continually see men
revolt against Him!
Master, and even attempted to expel Him from His throne? God intended the happiness of angels and of men,
and He has never succeeded in rendering happy either angels or men; pride, malice, sins, the imperfections of
His creatures, have always been opposed to the wishes of the perfect Creator.
LXIX.—THE PERFECTION OF GOD DOES NOT SHOW TOANY MORE ADVANTAGE IN THE43PRETEN
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LXXII.—IT IS ABSURD TO SAY THAT EVIL DOES NOT COME FROM GOD. 44
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a tempter? Why did not God, who was so desirous of doing good to mankind, why did He not annihilate, once
for all, so many evil genii whose nature rendered them enemies of our happiness? Or rather, why did God
create evil spirits, whose victories and terrible influences upon the human race He must have foreseen?
Finally, by what fatality, in all the religions of the world, has the evil principle such a marked advantage over
the good principle or over Divinity?
Could not God have at least endowed men with that sort of perfection of which their nature is susceptible? If
some men are good or render themselves agreeable to their God, why did not this God bestow the same favor
or give the same dispositions to all beings of our kind? Why does the number of wicked exceed so greatly the
Priests! you teach us that the designs of God are impenetrable; that His ways are not our ways; that His
thoughts are not our thoughts; that it is folly to complain of His administration, whose motives and secret
ways are entirely unknown to us; that there is temerity in accusing Him of unjust judgments, because they are
incomprehensible to us. But do you not see that by speaking in this manner, you destroy with your own hands
all your profound systems which have no design but to explain the ways of Divinity that you call
impenetrable? These judgments, these ways, and these designs, have you penetrated them? You dare not say
so; and, although you season incessantly, you do not understand them more than we do. If by chance you
know the plan of God, which you tell us to admire, while there are many people who find it so little worthy of
a just, good, intelligent, and rational being; do not say that this plan is impenetrable. If you are as ignorant as
we, have some indulgence for those who ingenuously confess that they comprehend nothing of it, or that they
see nothing in it Divine. Cease to persecute for opinions which you do not understand yourselves; cease to
slander each other for dreams and conjectures which are altogether contradictory; speak to us of intelligible
and truly useful things; and no longer tell us of the impenetrable ways of a God, about which you do nothing
but stammer and contradict yourselves.
In speaking to us incessantly of the immense depths of Divine wisdom, in forbidding us to fathom these
depths by telling us that it is insolence to call God to the tribunal of our humble reason, in making it a crime to
LXXVI.—IF GOD COULD NOT RENDER HUMAN NATURESINLESS, HE HAS NO RIGHT TO46PUNISH
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judge our Master, the theologians only confess the embarrassment in which they find themselves as soon as
they have to render account of the conduct of a God, which they tell us is marvelous, only because it is totally
impossible for them to understand it themselves.
The fantastic and supernatural notions of theology have succeeded so thoroughly in overcoming the simplest,
the clearest, the most natural ideas of the human spirit, that the pious, incapable of accusing God of malice,
accustom themselves to look upon these sad afflictions as indubitable proofs of celestial goodness. Are they in
affliction, they are told to believe that God loves them, that God visits them, that God wishes to try them.
Thus it is that religion changes evil into good! Some one has said profanely, but with reason: "If the good God
treats thus those whom He loves, I beseech Him very earnestly not to think of me." Men must have formed
very sinister and very cruel ideas of their God whom they call so good, in order to persuade themselves that
the most frightful calamities and the most painful afflictions are signs of His favor! Would a wicked Genii or
a Devil be more ingenious in tormenting his enemies, than sometimes is this God of goodness, who is so often
occupied with inflicting His chastisements upon His dearest friends?
According to the principles of theologians themselves, man, in his actual state of corruption, can do nothing
but evil, for without Divine grace he has not the strength to do good. Moreover, if man's nature, abandoned to
itself, of destitute of Divine help, inclines him necessarily to evil, or renders him incapable of doing good,
what becomes of his free will? According to such principles, man can merit neither reward nor punishment; in
rewarding man for the good he does, God would but recompense Himself; in punishing man for the evil he
does, God punishes him for not having been given the grace, without which it was impossible for him to do
better.
Man's birth does not depend upon his choice; he was not asked if he would or would not come into the world;
nature did not consult him upon the country and the parents that she gave him; the ideas he acquired, his
opinions, his true or false notions are the necessary fruits of the education which he has received, and of
which he has not been the master; his passions and his desires are the necessary results of the temperament
LXXIX.—A GOD WHO PUNISHES THE FAULTS WHICH HE COULD HAVE PREVENTED, IS48A FOOL
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which nature has given him, and of the ideas with which he has been inspired; during the whole course of his
life, his wishes and his actions are determined by his surroundings, his habits, his occupations, his pleasures,
his conversations, and by the thoughts which present themselves involuntarily to him; in short, by a multitude
of events and accidents which are beyond his control. Incapable of foreseeing the future, he knows neither
what he will wish, nor what he will do in the time which must immediately follow the present. Man passes his
life, from the moment of his birth to that of his death, without having been free one instant. Man, you say,
wishes, deliberates, chooses, determines; hence you conclude that his actions are free. It is true that man
intends, but he is not master of his will or of his desires. He can desire and wish only what he judges
advantageous for himself; he can not love pain nor detest pleasure. Man, it will be said, sometimes prefers
pain to pleasure; but then, he prefers a passing pain in the hope of procuring a greater and more durable
pleasure. In this case, the idea of a greater good determines him to deprive himself of one less desirable.
It is not the lover who gives to his mistress the features by which he is enchanted; he is not then the master to
love or not to love the object of his tenderness; he is not the master of the imagination or the temperament
which dominates him; from which it follows, evidently, that man is not the master of the wishes and desires
which rise in his soul, independently of him. But man, say you, can resist his desires; then he is free. Man
resists his desires when the motives which turn him from an object are stronger than those which draw him
toward it; but then, his resistance is necessary. A man who fears dishonor and punishment more than he loves
money, resists necessarily the desire to take possession of another's money. Are we not free when we
deliberate?—but has one the power to know or not to know, to be uncertain or to be assured?
Deliberation is the necessary effect of the uncertainty in which we find ourselves with reference to the results
of our actions. As soon as we believe ourselves certain of these results, we necessarily decide; and then we act
necessarily according as we shall have judged right or wrong. Our judgments, true or false, are not free; they
are necessarily determined by ideas which we have received, or which our mind has formed. Man is not free
in his choice; he is evidently compelled to choose what he judges the most useful or the most agreeable for
himself. When he suspends his choice, he is not more free; he is forced to suspend it till he knows or believes
he knows the qualities of the objects presented to him, or until he has weighed the consequence of his actions.
Man, you will say, decides every moment on actions which he knows will endanger him; man kills himself
sometimes, then he is free. I deny it! Has man the ability to reason correctly or incorrectly? Do not his reason
and his wisdom depend either upon opinions that he has formed, or upon his mental constitution? As neither
the one nor the other depends upon his will, they can not in any wise prove his liberty.
If I make the wager to do or not to do a thing, am I not free? Does it not depend upon me to do or not to do it?
No; I will answer you, the desire to win the wager will necessarily determine you to do or not to do the thing
in question. "But if I consent to lose the wager?" Then the desire to prove to me that you are free will have
become to you a stronger motive than the desire to win the wager; and this motive will necessarily have
determined you to do or not to do what was understood between us. But you will say, "I feel myself free." It is
an illusion which may be compared to that of the fly in the fable, which, lighting on the shaft of a heavy
wagon, applauded itself as driver of the vehicle which carried it. Man who believes himself free, is a fly who
believes himself the master-motor in the machine of the universe, while he himself, without his own volition,
is carried on by it. The feeling which makes us believe that we are free to do or not to do a thing, is but a pure
illusion. When we come to the veritable principle of our actions, we will find that they are nothing but the
necessary results of our wills and of our desires, which are never within our power. You believe yourselves
free because you do as you choose; but are you really free to will or not to will, to desire or not to desire?
Your wills and your desires, are they not necessarily excited by objects or by qualities which do not depend
upon you at all?
LXXXIII.—CONTINUATION.
To take away from man his free will, is, we are told, to make of him a pure machine, an automaton without
liberty; there would exist in him neither merit nor virtue What is merit in man?
It is a certain manner of acting which renders him estimable in the eyes of his fellow beings. What is virtue? It
is the disposition that causes us to do good to others. What can there be contemptible in automatic machines
LXXXI.—WE SHOULD NOT CONCLUDE FROM THIS THAT SOCIETY HAS NOT THE RIGHT
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capable of producing such desirable effects? Marcus Aurelius was a very useful spring to the vast machine of
the Roman Empire. By what right will a machine despise another machine, whose springs would facilitate its
own play? Good people are springs which assist society in its tendency to happiness; wicked men are
badly-formed springs, which disturb the order, the progress, and harmony of society. If for its own interests
society loves and rewards the good, she hates, despises, and removes the wicked, as useless or dangerous
motors.
LXXXIII.—CONTINUATION. 51
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LXXXVI.—ALL EVIL, ALL DISORDER, ALL SIN, CAN BE ATTRIBUTED BUT TO GOD; AND
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LXXXVIII.—THE REPARATION OF THE INIQUITIES AND THE MISERIES OF THIS WORLD53IN ANOT
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everything is allowed to tyrants, who are too strong for them to resist.
By a foolish simplicity, or rather by a plain contradiction of terms, do we not see devotees exclaim, amidst the
greatest calamities, that the good Lord is the Master? Well, illogical reasoners, you believe in good faith that
the good Lord sends you the pestilence; that your good Lord gives war; that the good Lord is the cause of
famine; in a word, that the good Lord, without ceasing to be good, has the will and the right to do you the
greatest evils you can endure! Cease to call your Lord good when He does you harm; do not say that He is
just; say that He is the strongest, and that it is impossible for you to avert the blows which His caprice inflicts
upon you. God, you say, punishes us for our highest good; but what real benefit can result to a nation in being
exterminated by contagion, murdered by wars, corrupted by the examples of perverse masters, continually
pressed by the iron scepter of merciless tyrants, subjected to the scourge of a bad government, which often for
centuries causes nations to suffer its destructive effects? The eyes of faith must be strange eyes, if we see by
their means any advantage in the most dreadful miseries and in the most durable evils, in the vices and follies
by which our kind is so cruelly afflicted!
Has the Jew any more rational ideas than the Christian of Divine justice? A king, by his pride, kindles the
wrath of Heaven. Jehovah sends pestilence upon His innocent people; seventy thousand subjects are
exterminated to expiate the fault of a monarch that the kindness of God resolved to spare.
Travelers assert that in some part of Asia reigns a sultan full of phantasies, and very absolute in his will. By a
strange mania this prince spends his time sitting before a table, on which are placed six dice and a dice-box.
One end of the table is covered with a pile of gold, for the purpose of exciting the cupidity of the courtiers and
of the people by whom the sultan is surrounded. He, knowing the weak point of his subjects, speaks to them in
this way: "Slaves! I wish you well; my aim is to enrich you and render you all happy. Do you see these
treasures? Well, they are for you! try to win them; let each one in turn take this box and these dice; whoever
shall have the good luck to raffle six, will be master of this treasure; but I warn you that he who has not the
luck to throw the required number, will be precipitated forever into an obscure cell, where my justice exacts
that he shall be burned by a slow fire." Upon this threat of the monarch, they regarded each other in
consternation; no one willing to take a risk so dangerous. "What!" said the angry sultan, "no one wants to
play? Oh, this does not suit me! My glory demands that you play. You will raffle then; I wish it; obey without
replying!" It is well to observe that the despot's dice are prepared in such a way, that upon a hundred thousand
throws there is but one that wins; thus the generous monarch has the pleasure to see his prison well filled, and
his treasures seldom carried away. Mortals! this Sultan is your God; His treasures are heaven; His cell is hell;
and you hold the dice!
You speak of your soul. But do you know what your soul is? Do you not see that this soul is but the
assemblage of your organs, from which life results? Would you refuse a soul to other animals who live, who
think, who judge, who compare, who seek pleasure, and avoid pain even as you do, and who often possess
organs which are better than your own? You boast of your intellectual faculties, but these faculties which
render you so proud, do they make you any happier than other creatures? Do you often make use of this
reason which you glory in, and which religion commands you not to listen to? Those animals which you
XCIII.—IT IS NOT TRUE THAT WE OWE ANY GRATITUDE TO WHAT WE CALL PROVIDENCE.
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disdain because they are weaker or less cunning than yourself, are they subject to troubles, to mental anxieties,
to a thousand frivolous passions, to a thousand imaginary needs, of which your heart is continually the prey?
Are they, like you, tormented by the past, alarmed for the future?
Limited solely to the present, what you call their instinct, and what I call their intelligence, is it not sufficient
to preserve and to defend them and to provide for their needs? This instinct, of which you speak with disdain,
does it not often serve them much better than your wonderful faculties? Their peaceable ignorance, is it not
more advantageous than these extravagant meditations and these futile investigations which render you
miserable, and for which you are driven to murdering beings of your own noble kind? Finally, these animals,
have they, like mortals, a troubled imagination which makes them fear not only death, but even eternal
torments? Augustus, having heard that Herod, king of Judea, had murdered his sons, cried out: "It would be
better to be Herod's pig than his son!" We can say as much of men; this beloved child of Providence runs
much greater risks than all other animals. After having suffered a great deal in this world, do we not believe
ourselves in danger of suffering for eternity in another?
The brute is not affected by the same objects as man; it has neither the same needs, nor the same desires, nor
the same whims; it early reaches maturity, while nothing is more rare than to see the human being enjoying all
of his faculties, exercising them freely, and making a proper use of them for his own happiness.
XCIV.—TO PRETEND THAT MAN IS THE BELOVED CHILDOF PROVIDENCE, GOD'S FAVORITE,
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Man differs from other animals but by the difference of his organization, which causes him to produce effects
of which they are not capable. The variety which we notice in the organs of individuals of the human race,
suffices to explain to us the difference which is often found between them in regard to the intellectual
faculties. More or less of delicacy in these organs, of heat in the blood, of promptitude in the fluids, more or
less of suppleness or of rigidity in the fibers and the nerves, must necessarily produce the infinite diversities
which are noticeable in the minds of men. It is by exercise, by habitude, by education, that the human mind is
developed and succeeds in rising above the beings which surround it; man, without culture and without
experience, is a being as devoid of reason and of industry as the brute. A stupid individual is a man whose
organs are acted upon with difficulty, whose brain is hard to move, whose blood circulates slowly; a man of
mind is he whose organs are supple, who feels very quickly, whose brain moves promptly; a learned man is
one whose organs and whose brain have been exercised a long while upon objects which occupy him.
The man without culture, experience, or reason, is he not more despicable and more abominable than the
vilest insects, or the most ferocious beasts? Is there a more detestable being in nature than a Tiberius, a Nero,
a Caligula? These destroyers of the human race, known by the name of conquerors, have they better souls than
those of bears, lions, and panthers? Are there more detestable animals in this world than tyrants?
Man's vanity persuades him that he is the sole center of the universe; he creates for himself a world and a
God; he thinks himself of sufficient consequence to derange nature at his will, but he reasons as an atheist
when the question of other animals is involved. Does he not imagine that the individuals different from his
species are automatons unworthy of the cares of universal Providence, and that the beasts can not be the
objects of its justice and kindness? Mortals consider fortunate or unfortunate events, health or sickness, life
and death, abundance or famine, as rewards or punishments for the use or misuse of the liberty which they
arrogate to themselves. Do they reason on this principle when animals are taken into consideration? No;
although they see them under a just God enjoy and suffer, be healthy and sick, live and die, like themselves, it
does not enter their mind to ask what crimes these beasts have committed in order to cause the displeasure of
the Arbiter of nature. Philosophers, blinded by their theological prejudices, in order to disembarrass
themselves, have gone so far as to pretend that beasts have no feelings!
Will men never renounce their foolish pretensions? Will they not recognize that nature was not made for
them? Will they not see that this nature has placed on equal footing all the beings which she produced? Will
they not see that all organized beings are equally made to be born and to die, to enjoy and to suffer? Finally,
instead of priding themselves preposterously on their mental faculties, are they not compelled to admit that
they often render them more unhappy than the beasts, in which we find neither opinions, prejudices, vanities,
nor the weaknesses which decide at every moment the well-being of men?
which enjoys, and that all of its faculties are the necessary results of its own mechanism or of its organization.
If I ask what ground we have for supposing that the soul is immortal: they reply, it is because man by his
nature desires to be immortal, or to live forever. But I rejoin, if you desire anything very much, is it sufficient
to conclude that this desire will be fulfilled? By what strange logic do they decide that a thing can not fail to
happen because they ardently desire it to happen? Man's childish desires of the imagination, are they the
measure of reality? Impious people, you say, deprived of the flattering hopes of another life, desire to be
annihilated. Well, have they not just as much right to conclude by this desire that they will be annihilated, as
you to conclude that you will exist forever because you desire it?
We ridicule the simplicity of some nations whose fashion is to bury provisions with the dead—under
the idea that this food might be useful and necessary to them in another life. Is it more ridiculous or more
absurd to believe that men will eat after death than to imagine that they will think; that they will have
C.—WHAT IS THE SOUL? WE KNOW NOTHING ABOUT IT.IF THIS PRETENDED SOUL WAS
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agreeable or disagreeable ideas; that they will enjoy; that they will suffer; that they will be conscious of
sorrow or joy when the organs which produce sensations or ideas are dissolved and reduced to dust? To claim
that the souls of men will be happy or unhappy after the death of the body, is to pretend that man will be able
to see without eyes, to hear without ears, to taste without a palate, to smell without a nose, and to feel without
hands and without skin. Nations who believe themselves very rational, adopt, nevertheless, such ideas.
CVI.—CONTINUATION.
The esteem which so many people have for the spiritual substance, appears to result from the impossibility
they find in defining it in an intelligible way. The contempt which our metaphysicians show for matter, comes
from the fact that "familiarity breeds contempt." When they tell us that the soul is more excellent and noble
than the body, they tell us nothing, except that what they know nothing about must be more beautiful than that
of which they have some faint ideas.
We are repeatedly told that religious ideas offer infinite consolation to the unfortunate; it is pretended that the
idea of the immortality of the soul and of a happier life has a tendency to lift up the heart of man and to
sustain him in the midst of the adversities with which he is assailed in this life. Materialism, on the contrary,
is, we are told, an afflicting system, tending to degrade man, which ranks him among brutes; which destroys
his courage, whose only hope is complete annihilation, tending to lead him to despair, and inducing him to
commit suicide as soon as he suffers in this world. The grand policy of theologians is to blow hot and to blow
cold, to afflict and to console, to frighten and to reassure.
According to the fictions of theology, the regions of the other life are happy and unhappy. Nothing more
difficult than to render one worthy of the abode of felicity; nothing easier than to obtain a place in the abode
of torments that Divinity prepares for the unfortunate victims of His eternal fury. Those who find the idea of
another life so flattering and so sweet, have they then forgotten that this other life, according to them, is to be
accompanied by torments for the majority of mortals? Is not the idea of total annihilation infinitely preferable
to the idea of an eternal existence accompanied with suffering and gnashing of teeth? The fear of ceasing to
exist, is it more afflicting than the thought of having not always been? The fear of ceasing to be is but an evil
for the imagination, which alone brought forth the dogma of another life.
You say, O Christian philosophers, that the idea of a happier life is delightful; we agree; there is no one who
would not desire a more agreeable and a more durable existence than the one we enjoy here below. But, if
As soon as we refuse the proofs which theology pretends to give of the existence of a God, they oppose to the
arguments which destroy them, an innate conviction, a profound persuasion, an invincible inclination inherent
in every man, which brings to him, in spite of himself, the idea of an Almighty being which he can not
altogether expel from his mind, and which he is compelled to recognize in spite of the strongest reasons that
we can give him. But if we wish to analyze this innate conviction, upon which so much weight is placed, we
will find that it is but the effect of a rooted habit, which, making them close their eyes against the most
demonstrative proofs, leads the majority of men, and often the most enlightened ones, back to the prejudices
of childhood. What can this innate sense or this ill-founded persuasion prove against the evidence which
shows us that what implies contradiction can not exist?
We are told, very gravely, that it is not demonstrated that God does not exist. However, nothing is better
demonstrated, notwithstanding all that men have told us so far, than that this God is an idle fancy, whose
existence is totally impossible, as nothing is more evident or more clearly demonstrated than that a being can
not combine qualities so dissimilar, so contradictory, so irreconcilable as those which all the religions of the
earth ascribe to Divinity. The theologian's God, as well as the God of the theist, is He not evidently a cause
incompatible with the effects attributed to Him? In whatever light we may look upon it, we must either invent
another God, or conclude that the one which, for so many centuries, has been revealed to mortals, is at the
same time very good and very wicked, very powerful and very weak, immutable and changeable, perfectly
intelligent and perfectly destitute of reason, of plan, and of means; the friend of order and permitting disorder;
very just and very unjust; very skillful and very awkward. Finally, are we not obliged to admit that it is
CVIII.—IT IS FALSE THAT THE DOGMA OF ANOTHER LIFECAN BE CONSOLING; AND IF65
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impossible to reconcile the discordant attributes which are heaped upon a being of whom we can not say a
single word without falling into the most palpable contradictions? Let us attempt to attribute but a single
quality to Divinity, and what is said of it will be contradicted immediately by the effects we assign to this
cause.
As soon as we complain of not understanding religion, finding in it at every step absurdities which are
repulsive, seeing in it but impossibilities, we are told that we are not made to conceive the truths of the
religion which is proposed to us; that wandering reason is but an unfaithful guide, only capable of conducting
us to perdition; and what is more, we are assured that what is folly in the eyes of man, is wisdom in the eyes
of God, to whom nothing is impossible. Finally, in order to decide by a single word the most insurmountable
difficulties which theology presents to us on all sides, they simply cry out: "Mysteries!"
It is advantageous for the ministers of religion that the people should not comprehend what they are taught. It
is impossible for us to examine what we do not comprehend. Every time that we can not see clearly, we are
obliged to be guided. If religion was comprehensible, priests would not have so many charges here below.
No religion is without mysteries; mystery is its essence; a religion destitute of mysteries would be a
contradiction of terms. The God which serves as a foundation to natural religion, to theism or to deism, is
Himself the greatest mystery to a mind wishing to dwell upon Him.
CXII.—CONTINUATION.
All the revealed religions which we see in the world are filled with mysterious dogmas, unintelligible
principles, of incredible miracles, of astonishing tales which seem imagined but to confound reason. Every
religion announces a concealed God, whose essence is a mystery; consequently, it is just as difficult to
conceive of His conduct as of the essence of this God Himself. Divinity has never spoken to us but in an
enigmatical and mysterious way in the various religions which have been founded in the different regions of
our globe. It has revealed itself everywhere but to announce mysteries, that is to say, to warn mortals that it
designs that they should believe in contradictions, in impossibilities, or in things of which they were incapable
of forming any positive idea.
The more mysteries a religion has, the more incredible objects it presents to the mind, the better fitted it is to
please the imagination of men, who find in it a continual pasturage to feed upon. The more obscure a religion
is, the more it appears divine, that is to say, in conformity to the nature of an invisible being, of whom we
have no idea.
It is the peculiarity of ignorance to prefer the unknown, the concealed, the fabulous, the wonderful, the
incredible, even the terrible, to that which is clear, simple, and true. Truth does not give to the imagination
such lively play as fiction, which each one may arrange as he pleases. The vulgar ask nothing better than to
listen to fables; priests and legislators, by inventing religions and forging mysteries from them, have served
them to their taste. In this way they have attracted enthusiasts, women, and the illiterate generally. Beings of
this kind resign easily to reasons which they are incapable of examining; the love of the simple and the true is
found but in the small number of those whose imagination is regulated by study and by reflection. The
inhabitants of a village are never more pleased with their pastor than when he mixes a good deal of Latin in
his sermon. Ignorant men always imagine that he who speaks to them of things which they do not understand,
is a very wise and learned man. This is the true principle of the credulity of nations, and of the authority of
those who pretend to guide them.
CXIII.—CONTINUATION.
To speak to men to announce to them mysteries, is to give and retain, it is to speak not to be understood. He
who talks but by enigmas, either seeks to amuse himself by the embarrassment which he causes, or finds it to
his advantage not to explain himself too clearly. Every secret betrays suspicion, weakness, and fear. Princes
and their ministers make a mystery of their projects for fear that their enemies in penetrating them would
cause them to fail. Can a good God amuse Himself by the embarrassment of His creatures? A God who enjoys
a power which nothing in the world can resist, can He apprehend that His intentions could be thwarted? What
interest would He have in putting upon us enigmas and mysteries? We are told that man, by the weakness of
his nature, is not capable of comprehending the Divine economy which can be to him but a tissue of
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mysteries; that God can not unveil secrets to him which are beyond his reach. In this case, I reply, that man is
not made to trouble himself with Divine economy, that this economy can not interest him in the least, that he
has no need of mysteries which he can not understand; finally, that a mysterious religion is not made for him,
any more than an eloquent discourse is made for a flock of sheep.
A universal God ought to have revealed a universal religion. By what fatality are so many different religions
found on the earth? Which is the true one amongst the great number of those of which each one pretends to be
the right one, to the exclusion of all the others? We have every reason to believe that not one of them enjoys
this advantage. The divisions and the disputes about opinions are indubitable signs of the uncertainty and of
the obscurity of the principles which they profess.
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Is there anything more contradictory, more impossible, or more mysterious, than the creation of matter by an
immaterial Being, who Himself immutable, causes the continual changes that we see in the world? Is there
anything more incompatible with all the ideas of common sense than to believe that a good, wise, equitable,
and powerful Being presides over nature and directs Himself the movements of a world which is filled with
follies, miseries, crimes, and disorders, which He could have foreseen, and by a single word could have
prevented or made to disappear? Finally, as soon as we admit a Being so contradictory as the theological God,
what right have we to refuse to accept the most improbable fables, the most astonishing miracles, the most
profound mysteries?
Compelled to acknowledge that your good God, in contradiction with Himself, distributes with the same hand
good and evil, you will find yourself obliged, in order to justify Him, to send me, as the priests would, to the
other life. Invent, then, another God than the one of theology, because your God is as contradictory as its God
is. A good God who does evil or who permits it to be done, a God full of equity and in an empire where
innocence is so often oppressed; a perfect God who produces but imperfect and wretched works; such a God
and His conduct, are they not as great mysteries as that of the incarnation? You blush, you say, for your fellow
beings who are persuaded that the God of the universe could change Himself into a man and die upon a cross
in a corner of Asia. You consider the ineffable mystery of the Trinity very absurd Nothing appears more
ridiculous to you than a God who changes Himself into bread and who is eaten every day in a thousand
different places.
Well! are all these mysteries any more shocking to reason than a God who punishes and rewards men's
actions? Man, according to your views, is he free or not? In either case your God, if He has the shadow of
justice, can neither punish him nor reward him. If man is free, it is God who made him free to act or not to act;
it is God, then, who is the primitive cause of all his actions; in punishing man for his faults, He would punish
him for having done that which He gave him the liberty to do. If man is not free to act otherwise than he does,
would not God be the most unjust of beings to punish him for the faults which he could not help committing?
Many persons are struck with the detail of absurdities with which all religions of the world are filled; but they
have not the courage to seek for the source whence these absurdities necessarily sprung. They do not see that a
God full of contradictions, of oddities, of incompatible qualities, either inflaming or nursing the imagination
of men, could create but a long line of idle fancies.
There was a time when all men believed that the sun revolved around the earth, while the latter remained
motionless in the center of the whole system of the universe; it is scarcely more than two hundred years since
this error was refuted. There was a time when nobody would believe in the existence of antipodes, and when
they persecuted those who had the courage to sustain it; to-day no learned man dares to doubt it. All nations of
the world, except some men less credulous than others, still believe in sorcerers, ghosts, apparitions, spirits;
no sensible man imagines himself obliged to adopt these follies; but the most sensible people feel obliged to
believe in a universal Spirit!
The religious opinions of men in every country are antique and durable monuments of ignorance credulity, of
the terrors and the ferocity of their ancestors. Every barbarian is a child thirsting for the wonderful, which he
imbibes with pleasure, and who never reasons upon that which he finds proper to excite his imagination; his
ignorance of the ways of nature makes him attribute to spirits, to enchantments, to magic, all that appears to
him extraordinary; in his eyes his priests are sorcerers, in whom he supposes an Almighty power; before
whom his confused reason humiliates itself, whose oracles are for him infallible decrees, to contradict which
would be dangerous. In matters of religion the majority of men have remained in their primitive barbarity.
Modern religions are but follies of old times rejuvenated or presented in some new form. If the ancient
barbarians have worshiped mountains, rivers, serpents, trees, fetishes of every kind; if the wise Egyptians
worshiped crocodiles, rats, onions, do we not see nations who believe themselves wiser than they, worship
with reverence a bread, into which they imagine that the enchantments of their priests cause the Divinity to
CXIX.—WE DO NOT PROVE AT ALL THE EXISTENCE OF AGOD BY SAYING THAT IN ALL
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descend? Is not the God-bread the fetish of many Christian nations, as little rational in this point as that of the
most barbarous nations?
Modern nations, at the instigation of their priests, have even excelled the atrocious folly of the most barbarous
nations; at least do we not find that it never entered into a savage's mind to torment for the sake of opinions, to
meddle in thought, to trouble men for the invisible actions of their brains? When we see polished and wise
nations, such as the English, French, German, etc., notwithstanding all their enlightenment, continue to kneel
before the barbarous God of the Jews, that is to say, of the most stupid, the most credulous, the most savage,
the most unsocial nation which ever was on the earth; when we see these enlightened nations divide
themselves into sects, tear one another, hate and despise each other for opinions, equally ridiculous, upon the
conduct and the intentions of this irrational God; when we see intelligent persons occupy themselves foolishly
in meditating on the wishes of this capricious and foolish God; we are tempted to exclaim, "Oh, men! you are
still savages! Oh, men! you are but children in the matter of religion!"
CXX.—ALL THE GODS ARE OF A BARBAROUS ORIGIN;ALL RELIGIONS ARE ANTIQUE MONUMEN
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All nations speak of a God; but do they agree upon this God? No! Well, difference of opinion does not serve
as evidence, but is a sign of uncertainty and obscurity. Does the same man always agree with himself in his
ideas of God? No! This idea varies with the vicissitudes of his life. This is another sign of uncertainty. Men
always agree with other men and with themselves upon demonstrated truths, regardless of the position in
which they find themselves; except the insane, all agree that two and two make four, that the sun shines, that
the whole is greater than any one of its parts, that Justice is a benefaction, that we must be benevolent to
deserve the love of men, that injustice and cruelty are incompatible with goodness. Do they agree in the same
way if they speak of God? All that they think or say of Him is immediately contradicted by the effects which
they wish to attribute to Him. Tell several artists to paint a chimera, each of them will form different ideas of
it, and will paint it differently; you will find no resemblance in the features each of them will have given to a
portrait whose model exists nowhere. In painting God, do any of the theologians of the world represent Him
otherwise than as a great chimera, upon whose features they never agree, each one arranging it according to
his style, which has its origin but in his own brain? There are no two individuals in the world who have or can
have the same ideas of their God.
To be a skeptic, is to lack the motives necessary to establish a judgment. In view of the proofs which seem to
establish, and of the arguments which combat the existence of a God, some persons prefer to doubt and to
suspend their judgment; but at the bottom, this uncertainty is the result of an insufficient examination. Is it,
then, possible to doubt evidence? Sensible people deride, and with reason, an absolute pyrrhonism, and even
consider it impossible. A man who could doubt his own existence, or that of the sun, would appear very
ridiculous, or would be suspected of reasoning in bad faith. Is it less extravagant to have uncertainties about
the non-existence of an evidently impossible being? Is it more absurd to doubt of one's own existence, than to
hesitate upon the impossibility of a being whose qualities destroy each other? Do we find more probabilities
for believing in a spiritual being than for believing in the existence of a stick without two ends? Is the notion
of an infinitely good and powerful being who permits an infinity of evils, less absurd or less impossible than
that of a square triangle?
Let us conclude, then, that religious skepticism can be but the effect of a superficial examination of
theological principles, which are in a perpetual contradiction of the clearest and best demonstrated principles!
CXXII.—THE MORE ANCIENT AND GENERAL A RELIGIOUSOPINION IS, THE GREATER THE
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To doubt is to deliberate upon the judgment which we should pass. Skepticism is but a state of indecision
which results from a superficial examination of subjects. Is it possible to be skeptical in the matter of religion
when we design to return to its principles, and look closely into the idea of the God who serves as its
foundation? Doubt arises ordinarily from laziness, weakness, indifference, or incapacity. To doubt, for many
people, is to dread the trouble of examining things to which one attaches but little interest. Although religion
is presented to men as the most important thing for them in this world as well as in the other, skepticism and
doubt on this subject can be for the mind but a disagreeable state, and offers but a comfortable cushion. No
man who has not the courage to contemplate without prejudice the God upon whom every religion is founded,
can know what religion to accept; he does not know what to believe and what not to believe, to accept or to
reject, what to hope or fear; finally, he is incompetent to judge for himself.
Indifference upon religion can not be confounded with skepticism; this indifference itself is founded upon the
assurance or upon the probability which we find in believing that religion is not made to interest us. The
persuasion which we have that a thing which is presented to us as very important, is not so, or is but
indifferent, supposes a sufficient examination of the thing, without which it would be impossible to have this
persuasion. Those who call themselves skeptics in regard to the fundamental points of religion, are generally
but idle and lazy men, who are incapable of examining them.
CXXIV.—REVELATION REFUTED.
In all parts of the world, we are assured that God revealed Himself. What did He teach men? Does He prove
to them evidently that He exists? Does He tell them where He resides? Does He teach them what He is, or of
what His essence consists? Does He explain to them clearly His intentions and His plan? What He says of this
plan, does it agree with the effects which we see? No! He informs us only that "He is the One that is," [I am
that I am, saith the Lord] that He is an invincible God, that His ways are ineffable, that He becomes furious as
soon as one has the temerity to penetrate His decrees, or to consult reason in order to judge of Him or His
works. Does the revealed conduct of God correspond with the magnificent ideas which are given to us of His
wisdom, goodness, justice, of His omnipotence? Not at all; in every revelation this conduct shows a partial,
capricious being, at least, good to His favorite people, an enemy to all others. If He condescends to show
Himself to some men, He takes care to keep all the others in invincible ignorance of His divine intentions.
Does not every special revelation announce an unjust, partial, and malicious God?
Are the revealed wishes of a God capable of striking us by the sublime reason or the wisdom which they
contain? Do they tend to the happiness of the people to whom Divinity has declared them? Examining the
Divine wishes, I find in them, in all countries, but whimsical ordinances, ridiculous precepts, ceremonies of
which we do not understand the aim, puerile practices, principles of conduct unworthy of the Monarch of
Nature, offerings, sacrifices, expiations, useful, in fact, to the ministers of God, but very onerous to the rest of
mankind. I find also, that they often have a tendency to render men unsocial, disdainful, intolerant,
quarrelsome, unjust, inhuman toward all those who have not received either the same revelations as they, or
the same ordinances, or the same favors from Heaven.
How did God show Himself? Did He Himself promulgate His laws? Did He speak to men with His own
mouth? I am told that God did not show Himself to a whole nation, but that He employed always the organism
of a few favored persons, who took the care to teach and to explain His intentions to the unlearned. It was
never permitted to the people to go to the sanctuary; the ministers of the Gods always alone had the right to
report to them what transpired.
What witnesses are referred to in order to make us believe incredible miracles? They call as witnesses stupid
people, who have ceased to exist for thousands of years, and who, even if they could attest the miracles in
question, would be suspected of having been deceived by their own imagination, and of permitting themselves
to be seduced by the illusions which skillful impostors performed before their eyes. But, you will say, these
miracles are recorded in books which through constant tradition have been handed down to us. By whom were
these books written? Who are the men who have transmitted and perpetuated them? They are either the same
people who established these religions, or those who have become their adherents and their assistants. Thus,
in the matter of religion, the testimony of interested parties is irrefragable and can not be contested!
CXXV.—WHERE, THEN, IS THE PROOF THAT GOD DID EVER SHOW HIMSELF TO MEN OR
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CXXVII.—IF GOD HAD SPOKEN, IT WOULD BE STRANGE THAT HE HAD SPOKEN DIFFERENTLY
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An attempt is made to persuade us that men who have been favored by the Most High have received from
Him the power to perform miracles; but in order to perform a miracle, it is necessary to have the faculty of
creating new causes capable of producing effects opposed to those which ordinary causes can produce. Can
we realize how God can give to men the inconceivable power of creating causes out of nothing? Can it be
believed that an unchangeable God can communicate to man the power to change or rectify His plan, a power
which, according to His essence, an immutable being can not have himself? Miracles, far from doing much
honor to God, far from proving the Divinity of religion, destroy evidently the idea which is given to us of
God, of His immutability, of His incommunicable attributes, and even of His omnipotence. How can a
theologian tell us that a God who embraced at once the whole of His plan, who could make but perfect laws,
who can change nothing in them, should be obliged to employ miracles to make His projects successful, or
grant to His creatures the faculty of performing prodigies, in order to execute His Divine will? Is it probable
that a God needs the support of men? An Omnipotent Being, whose wishes are always gratified, a Being who
holds in His hands the hearts and the minds of His creatures, needs but to wish, in order to make them believe
all He desires.
Is a miracle capable of destroying a demonstrated truth? Although a man should have the secret of curing all
diseases, of making the lame to walk, of raising all the dead of a city, of floating in the air, of arresting the
course of the sun and of the moon, will he be able to convince me by all this that two and two do not make
four; that one makes three and that three makes but one; that a God who fills the universe with His immensity,
could have transformed Himself into the body of a Jew; that the eternal can perish like man; that an
immutable, foreseeing, and sensible God could have changed His opinion upon His religion, and reform His
own work by a new revelation?
Christianity is an impiety, if it is true that Judaism as a religion really emanated from a Holy, Immutable,
Almighty, grid Foreseeing God. Christ's religion implies either defects in the law that God Himself gave by
Moses, or impotence or malice in this God who could not, or would not make the Jews as they ought to be to
please Him. All religions, whether new, or ancient ones reformed, are evidently founded on the weakness, the
inconstancy, the imprudence, and the malice of the Deity.
Persecutions themselves are considered as a convincing proof in favor of the religion of those who have
suffered them; but a religion which boasts of having caused the death of many martyrs, and which informs us
that its founders have suffered for its extension unheard-of torments, can not be the religion of a benevolent,
equitable, and Almighty God. A good God would not permit that men charged with revealing His will should
be misused. An omnipotent God desiring to found a religion, would have employed simpler and less fatal
means for His most faithful servants. To say that God desired that His religion should be sealed by blood, is to
say that this God is weak, unjust, ungrateful, and sanguinary, and that He sacrifices unworthily His
missionaries to the interests of His ambition.
To die for an opinion, proves no more the truth or the soundness of this opinion than to die in a battle proves
the right of the prince, for whose benefit so many people are foolish enough to sacrifice themselves. The
courage of a martyr, animated by the idea of Paradise, is not any more supernatural than the courage of a
warrior, inspired with the idea of glory or held to duty by the fear of disgrace. What difference do we find
between an Iroquois who sings while he is burned by a slow fire, and the martyr St. Lawrence, who while
upon the gridiron insults his tyrant?
The preachers of a new doctrine succumb because they are not the strongest; the apostles usually practice a
perilous business, whose consequences they can foresee; their courageous death does not prove any more the
truth of their principles or their own sincerity, than the violent death of an ambitious man or a brigand proves
that they had the right to trouble society, or that they believed themselves authorized to do it. A missionary's
profession has been always flattering to his ambition, and has enabled him to subsist at the expense of the
common people; these advantages have been sufficient to make him forget the dangers which are connected
with it.
I will not sacrifice my reason, because this reason alone enables me to distinguish good from evil, the true
from the false. If, as you pretend, my reason comes from God, I will never believe that a God whom you call
so good, had ever given me reason but as a snare, in order to lead me to perdition. Priests! in crying down
reason, do you not see that you slander your God, who, as you assure us, has given us this reason?
I will not give up experience, because it is a much better guide than imagination, or than the authority of the
guides whom they wish to give me. This experience teaches me that enthusiasm and interest can blind and
mislead them, and that the authority of experience ought to have more weight upon my mind than the
suspicious testimony of many men whom I know to be capable of deceiving themselves, or very much
interested in deceiving others.
Our Doctors of Divinity tell us that we ought to sacrifice our reason to God; but what motives can we have for
sacrificing our reason to a being who gives us but useless gifts, which He does not intend that we should make
use of? What confidence can we place in a God who, according to our Doctors themselves, is wicked enough
to harden hearts, to strike us with blindness, to place snares in our way, to lead us into temptation? Finally,
how can we place confidence in the ministers of this God, who, in order to guide us more conveniently,
command us to close our eyes?
The less enlightenment and reason men possess, the more zeal they exhibit for their religion. In all the
religious factions, women, aroused by their directors, exhibit very great zeal in opinions of which it is evident
they have not the least idea. In theological quarrels people rush like a ferocious beast upon all those against
whom their priest wishes to excite them. Profound ignorance, unlimited credulity, a very weak head, an
irritated imagination, these are the materials of which devotees, zealots, fanatics, and saints are made. How
can we make those people understand reason who allow themselves to be guided without examining
anything? The devotees and common people are, in the hands of their guides, only automatons which they
move at their fancy.
A king of Macassar, tired of the idolatry of his fathers, took a notion one day to leave it. The monarch's
council deliberated for a long time to know whether they should consult Christian or Mohammedan Doctors.
In the impossibility of finding out which was the better of the two religions, it was resolved to send at the
same time for the missionaries of both, and to accept the doctrine of those who would have the advantage of
arriving first. They did not doubt that God, who disposes of events, would thus Himself explain His will.
Mohammed's missionaries having been more diligent, the king with his people submitted to the law which he
had imposed upon himself; the missionaries of Christ were dismissed by default of their God, who did not
permit them to arrive early enough. God evidently consents that chance should decide the religion of nations.
Those who govern, always decide the religion of the people. The true religion is but the religion of the prince;
the true God is the God whom the prince wishes them to worship; the will of the priests who govern the
prince, always becomes the will of God. A jester once said, with reason, that "the true faith is always the one
which has on its side 'the prince and the executioner.'"
Emperors and executioners for a long time sustained the Gods of Rome against the God of the Christians; the
latter having won over to their side the emperors, their soldiers and their executioners succeeded in
suppressing the worship of the Roman Gods. Mohammed's God succeeded in expelling the Christian's God
from a large part of the countries which He formerly occupied. In the eastern part of Asia, there is a large
country which is very flourishing, very productive, thickly populated, and governed by such wise laws, that
the most savage conquerors adopted them with respect. It is China! With the exception of Christianity, which
was banished as dangerous, they followed their own superstitious ideas; while the mandarins or magistrates,
undeceived long ago about the popular religion, do not trouble themselves in regard to it, except to watch over
it, that the bonzes or priests do not use this religion to disturb the peace of the State. However, we do not see
CXXXIX.—TO TEACH THAT THERE EXISTS ONE TRUE RELIGION IS AN ABSURDITY, AND
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that Providence withholds its benefactions from a nation whose chiefs take so little interest in the worship
which is offered to it. The Chinese enjoy, on the contrary, blessings and a peace worthy of being envied by
many nations which religion divides, ravages, and often destroys. We can not reasonably expect to deprive a
people of its follies; but we can hope to cure of their follies those who govern the people; these will then
prevent the follies of the people from becoming dangerous. Superstition is never to be feared except when it
has the support of princes and soldiers; it is only then that it becomes cruel and sanguinary. Every sovereign
who assumes the protection of a sect or of a religious faction, usually becomes the tyrant of other sects, and
makes himself the must cruel perturbator in his kingdom.
Although very useless for the majority of men, the ministers of religion have tried to make death appear
terrible to the eyes of their votaries. If the most devoted Christians could be consistent, they would pass their
whole lives in tears, and would finally die in the most terrible alarms. What is more frightful than death to
those unfortunate ones who are constantly reminded that "it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of a living
God;" that they should "seek salvation with fear and trembling!" However, we are assured that the Christian's
death has great consolations, of which the unbeliever is deprived. The good Christian, we are told, dies with
the firm hope of enjoying eternal happiness, which he has tried to deserve. But this firm assurance, is it not a
punishable presumption in the eyes of a severe God? The greatest saints, are they not to be in doubt whether
they are worthy of the love or of the hatred of God Priests who console us with the hope of the joys of
Paradise, and close your eyes to the torments of hell, have you then had the advantage of seeing your names
and ours inscribed in the book of life?
Every religion, in its origin, was a restraint invented by legislators who wished to subjugate the minds of the
common people. Like nurses who frighten children in order to put them to sleep, ambitious men use the name
of the gods to inspire fear in savages; terror seems well suited to compel them to submit quietly to the yoke
which is to be imposed upon them. Are the ghost stories of childhood fit for mature age? Man in his maturity
no longer believes in them, or if he does, he is troubled but little by it, and he keeps on his road.
The most religious persons sometimes show more respect for a servant than for God. A man that firmly
believes that God sees everything, knows everything, is everywhere, will, when he is alone, commit actions
which he never would do in the presence of the meanest of mortals. Those even who claim to be the most
firmly convinced of the existence of a God, act every instant as if they did not believe anything about it.
Religion, in every country, has made of the Monarch of Nature a cruel, fantastic, partial tyrant, whose caprice
is the rule. The God-monarch is but too well imitated by His representatives upon the earth. Everywhere
religion seems invented but to lull to sleep the people in fetters, in order to furnish their masters the facility of
devouring them, or to render them miserable with impunity.
Many tyrants and wicked princes, whose conscience reproaches them for their negligence or their perversity,
far from fearing their God, rather like to bargain with this invisible Judge, who never refuses anything, or with
His priests, who are accommodating to the masters of the earth rather than to their subjects. The people, when
reduced to despair, consider the divine rights of their chiefs as an abuse. When men become exasperated, the
divine rights of tyrants are compelled to yield to the natural rights of their subjects; they have better market
with the gods than with men. Kings are responsible for their actions but to God, the priests but to themselves;
there is reason to believe that both of them have more faith in the indulgence of Heaven than in that of earth.
It is much easier to escape the judgments of the gods, who can be appeased at little expense, than the
judgments of men whose patience is exhausted. If you take away from the sovereigns the fear of an invisible
power, what restraint will you oppose to their misconduct? Let them learn how to govern, how to be just, how
to respect the rights of the people, to recognize the benefactions of the nations from whom they obtain their
grandeur and power; let them learn to fear men, to submit to the laws of equity, that no one can violate
without danger; let these laws restrain equally the powerful and the weak, the great and the small, the
sovereign and the subjects.
The fear of the Gods, religion, the terrors of another life—these are the metaphysical and supernatural
barriers which are opposed to the furious passions of princes! Are these barriers sufficient? We leave it to
experience to solve the question! To oppose religion to the wickedness of tyrants, is to wish that vague
speculations should be more powerful than inclinations which conspire to fortify them in it from day to day.
CXLIV.—ORIGIN OF THE MOST ABSURD, THE MOSTRIDICULOUS, AND THE MOST ODIOUS
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God created the nations but to be toys for the passions and follies of His representatives upon earth.
Christianity boasts of having brought to men a happiness unknown to preceding centuries. It is true that the
Grecians have not known the Divine right of tyrants or usurpers over their native country. Under the reign of
Paganism it never entered the brain of anybody that Heaven did not want a nation to defend itself against a
ferocious beast which insolently ravaged it. The Christian religion, devised for the benefit of tyrants, was
established on the principle that the nations should renounce the legitimate defense of themselves. Thus
Christian nations are deprived of the first law of nature, which decrees that man should resist evil and disarm
all who attempt to destroy him. If the ministers of the Church have often permitted nations to revolt for
Heaven's cause, they never allowed them to revolt against real evils or known violences.
It is from Heaven that the chains have come to fetter the minds of mortals. Why is the Mohammedan
everywhere a slave? It is because his Prophet subdued him in the name of the Deity, just as Moses before him
subjugated the Jews. In all parts of the world we see that priests were the first law-givers and the first
sovereigns of the savages whom they governed. Religion seems to have been invented but to exalt princes
above their nations, and to deliver the people to their discretion. As soon as the latter find themselves unhappy
here below, they are silenced by menacing them with God's wrath; their eyes are fixed on Heaven, in order to
prevent them from perceiving the real causes of their sufferings and from applying the remedies which nature
offers them.
In continually directing the eyes of men toward Heaven, making them believe that all their evils are due to
Divine wrath, in furnishing them but inefficient and futile means of lessening their troubles, it would appear
that the only object of the priests is to prevent the nations from dreaming of the true sources of their miseries,
and to perpetuate them. The ministers of religion act like those indigent mothers, who, in need of bread, put
their hungry children to sleep by songs, or who present them toys to make them forget the want which
torments them.
Blinded from childhood by error, held by the invincible ties of opinion, crushed by panic terrors, stupefied at
the bosom of ignorance, how could the people understand the true causes of their troubles? They think to
remedy them by invoking the gods. Alas! do they not see that it is it the name of these gods that they are
ordered to present their throat to the sword of their pitiless tyrants, in whom they would find the most visible
cause of the evils under which they groan, and for which they uselessly implore the assistance of Heaven?
Credulous people! in your adversities redouble your prayers, your offerings, your sacrifices; besiege your
temples, strangle countless victims, fast in sackcloth and in ashes, drink your own tears; finally, exhaust
yourselves to enrich your gods: you will do nothing but enrich their priests; the gods of Heaven will not be
propitious to you, except when the gods of the earth will recognize that they are men like yourselves, and will
give to your welfare the care which is your due.
It is a notion destructive to wholesome politics and to the morals of princes, to persuade them that God alone
is to be feared by them, when they injure their subjects or when they neglect to render them happy.
Sovereigns! It is not the Gods, but your people whom you offend when you do evil. It is to these people, and
by retroaction, to yourselves, that you do harm when you govern unjustly.
Nothing is more common in history than to see religious tyrants; nothing more rare than to find equitable,
vigilant, enlightened princes. A monarch can be pious, very strict in fulfilling servilely the duties of his
religion, very submissive to his priests, liberal in their behalf, and at the same time destitute of all the virtues
and talents necessary for governing. Religion for the princes is but an instrument intended to keep the people
more firmly under the yoke. According to the beautiful principles of religious morality, a tyrant who, during a
long reign, will have done nothing but oppress his subjects, rob them of the fruits of their labor, sacrifice them
without pity to his insatiable ambition; a conqueror who will have usurped the provinces of others, who will
have slaughtered whole nations, who will have been all his life a real scourge of the human race, imagines that
his conscience can be tranquillized, if, in order to expiate so many crimes, he will have wept at the feet of a
priest, who will have the cowardly complaisance to console and reassure a brigand, whom the most frightful
despair would punish too little for the evil which he has done upon earth.
In almost all countries, priests and devout persons are charged with forming the mind and the heart of the
young princes destined to govern the nations. What enlightenment can teachers of this stamp give? Filled
themselves with prejudices, they will hold up to their pupil superstition as the most important and the most
sacred thing, its chimerical duties as the most holy obligations, intolerance, and the spirit of persecution, as
the true foundations of his future authority; they will try to make him a chief of party, a turbulent fanatic, and
a tyrant; they will suppress at an early period his reason; they will premonish him against it; they will prevent
truth from reaching him; they will prejudice him against true talents, and prepossess him in favor of
despicable talents; finally they will make of him an imbecile devotee, who will have no idea of justice or of
injustice, of true glory or of true greatness, and who will be devoid of the intelligence and virtue necessary to
the government of a great kingdom. Here, in brief, is the plan of education for a child destined to make, one
day, the happiness or the misery of several millions of men.
For the sake of the supernatural titles which religion has forged for the most wicked princes, the latter have
generally united with the priests, who, sure of governing by controlling the opinion of the sovereign himself,
have charge of tying the hands of the people and of keeping them under their yoke. But it is vain that the
tyrant, protected by the shield of religion, flatters himself with being sheltered from all the blows of fate.
Opinion is a weak rampart against the despair of the people. Besides, the priest is the friend of the tyrant only
so long as he finds his profit by the tyranny; he preaches sedition and demolishes the idol which he has made,
when he considers it no longer in conformity with the interests of Heaven, which he speaks of as he pleases,
and which never speaks but in behalf of his interests. No doubt it will be said, that the sovereigns, knowing all
the advantages which religion procures for them, are truly interested in upholding it with all their strength. If
religious opinions are useful to tyrants, it is evident that they are useless to those who govern according to the
laws of reason and of equity. Is there any advantage in exercising tyranny? Does not tyranny deprive princes
of true power, the love of the people, in which is safety? Should not every rational prince perceive that the
despot is but an insane man who injures himself? Will not every enlightened prince beware of his flatterers,
whose object is to put him to sleep at the edge of the precipice to which they lead him?
CL.—THE SHIELD OF RELIGION IS FOR TYRANNY, A WEAK RAMPART AGAINST THE DESPAIR
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a restraint upon the sovereigns, entitles them, without fear and without remorse, to the errors which are as
fatal to themselves as to the nations which they govern. Men are never deceived with impunity. Tell a prince
that he is a God, and very soon he will believe that he owes nothing to anybody. As long as he is feared, he
will not care much for love; he will recognize no rights, no relations with his subjects, nor obligations in their
behalf. Tell this prince that he is responsible for his actions to God alone, and very soon he will act as if he
was responsible to nobody.
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souls and render Heaven favorable to nations. Here, they practice circumcision upon a child to procure it
Divine benevolence; there, they pour water upon his head to wash away the crimes which he could not yet
have committed; in other places he is told to plunge himself into a river whose waters have the power to wash
away all his impurities; in other places certain food is forbidden to him, whose use would not fail to excite
celestial indignation; in other countries they order the sinful man to come periodically for the confession of
his faults to a priest, who is often a greater sinner than he.
The ministers of religion incessantly declaim against the corruption of the age, and complain loudly of the
little success of their teachings, at the same time they assure us that religion is the universal remedy, the true
panacea for all human evils. These priests are sick themselves; however, men continue to frequent their stands
and to have faith in their Divine antidotes, which, according to their own confession, cure nobody!
Every nation boasts itself of worshiping the true God, the universal God, the Sovereign of Nature; but when
we come to examine this Monarch of the world, we perceive that each organization, each sect, each religious
party, makes of this powerful God but an inferior sovereign, whose cares and kindness extend themselves but
over a small number of His subjects who pretend to have the exclusive advantage of His favors, and that He
does not trouble Himself about the others.
The founders of religions, and the priests who maintain them, have intended to separate the nations which
they indoctrinated, from other nations; they desired to separate their own flock by distinctive features; they
gave to their votaries Gods inimical to other Gods as well as the forms of worship, dogmas, ceremonies,
separately; they persuaded them especially that the religions of others were ungodly and abominable. By this
infamous contrivance, these ambitious impostors took exclusive possession of the minds of their votaries,
rendered them unsocial, and made them consider as outcasts all those who had not the same ideas and form of
worship as their own. This is the way religion succeeded in closing the heart, and in banishing from it that
affection which man ought to have for his fellow-being. Sociability, tolerance, humanity, these first virtues of
Instead of cherishing peace among men, the priests stirred up hatred and strife. They pleaded their conscience,
and pretended to have received from Heaven the right to be quarrelsome, turbulent, and rebellious. Do not the
ministers of God consider themselves to be wronged, do they not pretend that His Divine Majesty is injured
every time that the sovereigns have the temerity to try to prevent them from doing injury? The priests
resemble that irritable woman, who cried out fire! murder! assassins! while her husband was holding her
hands to prevent her from beating him.
Must we imitate the God of the Jews? Will we find a model for our conduct in Jehovah? He is truly a savage
God, really created for an ignorant, cruel, and immoral people; He is a God who is constantly enraged,
breathing only vengeance; who is without pity, who commands carnage and robbery; in a word, He is a God
whose conduct can not serve as a model to an honest man, and who can be imitated but by a chief of brigands.
Shall we imitate, then, the Jesus of the Christians? Can this God, who died to appease the implacable fury of
His Father, serve as an example which men ought to follow? Alas! we will see in Him but a God, or rather a
fanatic, a misanthrope, who being plunged Himself into misery, and preaching to the wretched, advises them
to be poor, to combat and extinguish nature, to hate pleasure, to seek sufferings, and to despise themselves; He
tells them to leave father, mother, all the ties of life, in order to follow Him. What beautiful morality! you will
say. It is admirable, no doubt; it must be Divine, because it is impracticable for men. But does not this sublime
morality tend to render virtue despicable? According to this boasted morality of the man-God of the
Christians, His disciples in this lower world are, like Tantalus, tormented with burning thirst, which they are
not permitted to quench. Do not such morals give us a wonderful idea of nature's Author? If He has, as we are
assured, created everything for the use of His creatures, by what strange caprice does He forbid the use of the
good things which He has created for them? Is the pleasure which man constantly desires but a snare that God
has maliciously laid in his path to entrap him?
The whole universe is infected more or less with a religious morality which is founded upon the opinion that
to please the Deity it is necessary to render one's self unhappy upon earth. We see in all parts of our globe
penitents, hermits, fakirs, fanatics, who seem to have studied profoundly the means of tormenting themselves
for the glory of a Being whose goodness they all agree in celebrating. Religion, by its essence, is the enemy of
joy and of the welfare of men. "Blessed are those who suffer!" Woe to those who have abundance and joy!
These are the rare revelations which Christianity teaches!
It is evident that the literal and rigorous practice of the Divine morality of the Christians would lead nations to
ruin. A Christian who would attain perfection, ought to drive away from his mind all that can alienate him
from heaven—his true country. He sees upon earth but temptations, snares, and opportunities to go
astray; he must fear science as injurious to faith; he must avoid industry, as it is a means of obtaining riches,
which are fatal to salvation; he must renounce preferments and honors, as things capable of exciting his pride
and calling his attention away from his soul; in a word, the sublime morality of Christ, if it were not
impracticable, would sever all the ties of society.
A saint in the world is no more useful than a saint in the desert; the saint has an unhappy, discontented, and
often irritable, turbulent disposition; his zeal often obliges him, conscientiously, to disturb society by opinions
or dreams which his vanity makes him accept as inspirations from Heaven. The annals of all religions are
filled with accounts of anxious, intractable, seditious saints, who have distinguished themselves by ravages
that, for the greater glory of God, they have scattered throughout the universe. If the saints who live in
solitude are useless, those who live in the world are very often dangerous. The vanity of performing a role, the
desire of distinguishing themselves in the eyes of the stupid vulgar by a strange conduct, constitute usually the
distinctive characteristics of great saints; pride persuades them that they are extraordinary men, far above
human nature; beings who are more perfect than others; chosen ones, which God looks upon with more
complaisance than the rest of mortals. Humility in a saint is, is a general rule, but a pride more refined than
that of common men. It must be a very ridiculous vanity which can determine a man to continually war with
his own nature!
Holy doctors! you constantly tell us that man's nature is perverted; you tell us that the way of all flesh is
corrupt; you tell us that nature gives us but inordinate inclinations. In this case you accuse your God, who has
not been able or willing to keep this nature in its original perfection. If this nature became corrupted, why did
not this God repair it? The Christian assures me that human nature is repaired, that the death of his God has
reestablished it in its integrity. How comes it then, that human nature, notwithstanding the death of a God, is
still depraved? Is it, then, a pure loss that your God died? What becomes of His omnipotence and His victory
over the Devil, if it is true that the Devil still holds the empire which, according to you, he has always
exercised in the world?
Death, according to Christian theology, is the penalty of sin. This opinion agrees with that of some savage
Negro nations, who imagine that the death of a man is always the supernatural effect of the wrath of the Gods.
The Christians firmly believe that Christ has delivered them from sin, while they see that, in their religion as
in the others, man is subject to death. To say that Jesus Christ has delivered us from sin, is it not claiming that
a judge has granted pardon to a guilty man, while we see him sent to torture?
If we examine ever so little the morals of the Christian nations, and listen to the clamors of their priests, we
will be obliged to conclude that their God, Jesus Christ, preached without fruit, without success; that His
Almighty will still finds in men a resistance, over which this God either can not or does not wish to triumph.
The morality of this Divine Doctor which His disciples admire so much, and practice so little, is followed
during a whole century but by half a dozen of obscure saints, fanatical and ignorant monks, who alone will
have the glory of shining in the celestial court; all the remainder of mortals, although redeemed by the blood
of this God, will be the prey of eternal flames.
There are in the religious pharmacy infallible receipts for calming the conscience; the priests in every country
possess sovereign secrets for disarming the wrath of Heaven. However true it may be that the anger of Deity is
appeased by prayers, by offerings, by sacrifices, by penitential tears, we have no right to say that religion
holds in check the irregularities of men; they will first sin, and afterward seek the means to reconcile God.
Every religion which expiates, and which promises the remission of crimes, if it restrains any, it encourages
the great number to commit evil. Notwithstanding His immutability, God is, in all the religions of this world,
a veritable Proteus. His priests show Him now armed with severity, and then full of clemency and gentleness;
now cruel and pitiless, and then easily reconciled by the repentance and the tears of the sinners. Consequently,
men face the Deity in the manner which conforms the most to their present interests. An always wrathful God
would repel His worshipers, or cast them into despair. Men need a God who becomes angry and who can be
appeased; if His anger alarms a few timid souls, His clemency reassures the determined wicked ones who
intend to have recourse sooner or later to the means of reconciling themselves with Him; if the judgments of
God frighten a few faint-hearted devotees who already by temperament and by habitude are not inclined to
evil, the treasures of Divine mercy reassure the greatest criminals, who have reason to hope that they will
participate in them with the others.
Whom does the idea of God overawe? A few weak men disappointed and disgusted with this world; some
persons whose passions are already extinguished by age, by infirmities, or by reverses of fortune. Religion is a
restraint but for those whose temperament or circumstances have already subjected them to reason. The fear
of God does not prevent any from committing sin but those who do not wish to sin very much, or who are no
longer in a condition to sin. To tell men that Divinity punishes crime in this world, is to claim as a fact that
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which experience contradicts constantly The most wicked men are usually the arbiters of the world, and those
whom fortune blesses with its favors. To convince us of the judgments of God by sending us to the other life,
is to make us accept conjectures in order to destroy facts which we can not dispute.
To establish morality, or the duties of man, upon the Divine will, is founding it upon the wishes, the reveries,
or the interests of those who make God talk without fear of contradiction. In every religion the priests alone
have the right to decide upon what pleases or displeases their God; we may rest assured that they will decide
upon what pleases or displeases themselves.
The dogmas, ceremonies, the morality and the virtues which all religions of the world prescribe, are visibly
calculated only to extend the power or to increase the emoluments of the founders and of the ministers of
these religions; the dogmas are obscure, inconceivable, frightful, and, thereby, very liable to cause the
imagination to wander, and to render the common man more docile to those who wish to domineer over him;
the ceremonies and practices procure fortune or consideration to the priests; the religious morals and virtues
consist in a submissive faith, which prevents reasoning; in a devout humility, which assures to the priests the
submission of their slaves; in an ardent zeal, when the question of religion is agitated; that is to say, when the
interest of these priests is considered, all religious virtues having evidently for their object the advantage of
the priests.
The Christian religion which was originally preached by beggars and by very wretched men, strongly
recommends alms-giving under the name of charity; the faith of Mohammed equally makes it an
indispensable duty. Nothing, no doubt, is better suited to humanity than to assist the unfortunate, to clothe the
naked, to lend a charitable hand to whoever needs it. But would it not be more humane and more charitable to
foresee the misery and to prevent the poor from increasing? If religion, instead of deifying princes, had but
taught them to respect the property of their subjects, to be just, and to exercise but their legitimate rights, we
should not see such a great number of mendicants in their realms. A greedy, unjust, tyrannical government
multiplies misery; the rigor of taxes produces discouragement, idleness, indigence, which, on their part,
produce robbery, murders, and all kinds of crime. If the sovereigns had more humanity, charity, and justice,
their States would not be peopled by so many unfortunate ones whose misery becomes impossible to soothe.
The Christian priests tell us that the goods which they possess are the goods of the poor, and pretend by this
title that their possessions are sacred; consequently, the sovereigns and the people press themselves to
accumulate lands, revenues, treasures for them; under pretext of charity, our spiritual guides have become
very opulent, and enjoy, in the sight of the impoverished nations, goods which were destined but for the
miserable; the latter, far from murmuring about it, applaud a deceitful generosity which enriches the Church,
but which very rarely alleviates the sufferings of the poor.
According to the principles of Christianity, poverty itself is a virtue, and it is this virtue which the sovereigns
and the priests make their slaves observe the most. According to these ideas, a great number of pious
Christians have renounced with good-will the perishable riches of the earth; have distributed their patrimony
to the poor, and have retired into a desert to live a life of voluntary indigence. But very soon this enthusiasm,
this supernatural taste for misery, must surrender to nature. The successors to these voluntary poor, sold to the
religious people their prayers and their powerful intercession with the Deity; they became rich and powerful;
thus, monks and hermits lived in idleness, and, under the pretext of charity, devoured insultingly the substance
of the poor. Poverty of spirit was that of which religion made always the greatest use. The fundamental virtue
of all religion, that is to say, the most useful one to its ministers, is faith. It consists in an unlimited credulity,
which causes men to believe, without examination, all that which the interpreters of the Deity wish them to
believe. With the aid of this wonderful virtue, the priests became the arbiters of justice and of injustice; of
good and of evil; they found it easy to commit crimes when crimes became necessary to their interests.
Implicit faith has been the source of the greatest outrages which have been committed upon the earth.
Mortals imagine that they can, with impunity, injure each other by making a suitable reparation to the
Almighty Being, who is supposed to have the right to remit all the injuries done to His creatures. Is there
anything more liable to encourage wickedness and to embolden to crime, than to persuade men that there
exists an invisible being who has the right to pardon injustice, rapine, perfidy, and all the outrages they can
inflict upon society? Encouraged by these fatal ideas, we see the most perverse men abandon themselves to
the greatest crimes, and expect to repair them by imploring Divine mercy; their conscience rests in peace
when a priest assures them that Heaven is quieted by sincere repentance, which is very useless to the world;
this priest consoles them in the name of Deity, if they consent in reparation of their faults to divide with His
ministers the fruits of their plunderings, of their frauds, and of their wickedness. Morality united to religion,
becomes necessarily subordinate to it. In the mind of a religious person, God must be preferred to His
creatures; "It is better to obey Him than men!" The interests of the Celestial Monarch must be above those of
weak mortals. But the interests of Heaven are evidently the interests of the ministers of Heaven; from which it
follows evidently, that in all religions, the priests, under pretext of Heaven's interest's, or of God's glory, will
be able to dispense with the duties of human morals when they do not agree with the duties which God is
entitled to impose.
Besides, He who has the power to pardon crimes, has He not the right to order them committed?
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pleases or displeases him. It is enough that a man knows that another man is a sensible being like himself, in
order for him to know what is useful or injurious to him. It is enough that man needs his fellow-creature, in
order that he should fear that he might produce unfavorable impressions upon him. Thus a sentient and
thinking being needs but to feel and to think, in order to discover that which is due to him and to others. I feel,
and another feels, like myself; this is the foundation of all morality.
"People, to arms! Your God's cause is at stake! Heaven is outraged! Faith is in danger! Down upon infidelity,
blasphemy, and heresy!"
By the magical power of these valiant words, which the people never understand, the priests in all ages were
the leaders in the revolts of nations, in dethroning kings, in kindling civil wars, and in imprisoning men. When
we chance to examine the important objects which have excited the Celestial wrath and produced so many
ravages upon the earth, it is found that the foolish reveries and the strange conjectures of some theologian who
did not understand himself, or, the pretensions of the clergy, have severed all ties of society and inundated the
human race in its own blood and tears.
Metaphysical speculations or the religious opinions of men, never influence their conduct except when they
believe them conformed to their interests. Nothing proves this truth more forcibly than the conduct of a great
number of princes in regard to the spiritual power, which we see them very often resist. Should not a
sovereign who is persuaded of the importance and the rights of religion, conscientiously feel himself obliged
to receive with respect the orders of his priests, and consider them as commandments of the Deity? There was
a time when the kings and the people, more conformable, and convinced of the rights of the spiritual power,
became its slaves, surrendered to it on all occasions, and were but docile instruments in its hands; this happy
time is no more. By a strange inconsistency, we sometimes see the most religious monarchs oppose the
enterprises of those whom they regard as God's ministers. A sovereign who is filled with religion or respect
for his God, ought to be constantly prostrate before his priests, and regard them as his true sovereigns. Is there
a power upon the earth which has the right to measure itself with that of the Most High?
Nothing is more onerous and more ruinous for the greatest part of the nations than the worship of their Gods!
Everywhere their ministers not only rank as the first order in the State, but also enjoy the greater portion of
society's benefits, and have the right to levy continual taxes upon their fellow-citizens. What real advantages
do these organs of the Most High procure for the people in exchange for the immense profits which they draw
from them? Do they give them in exchange for their wealth and their courtesies anything but mysteries,
hypotheses, ceremonies, subtle questions, interminable quarrels, which very often their States must pay for
with their blood?
CLXXIII.—HOW THE UNION OF RELIGION AND POLITICS ISFATAL TO THE PEOPLE AND
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Religion, which is so sadly occupied with its gloomy reveries, represents man to us as but a pilgrim upon
earth; it concludes that in order to travel with more safety, he should travel alone; renounce the pleasures
which he meets and deprive himself of the amusements which could console him for the fatigues and the
weariness of the road. A stoical and morose philosophy sometimes gives us counsels as senseless as religion;
but a more rational philosophy inspires us to strew flowers on life's pathway; to dispel melancholy and panic
terrors; to link our interests with those of our traveling companions; to divert ourselves by gaiety and honest
pleasures from the pains and the crosses to which we are so often exposed. We are made to feel, that in order
to travel pleasantly, we should abstain from that which could become injurious to ourselves, and to avoid with
great care that which could make us odious to our associates.
Can an atheist have conscience? What are his motives for abstaining from secret vices and crimes of which
other men are ignorant, and which are beyond the reach of laws? He can be assured by constant experience
that there is no vice which, in the nature of things, does not bring its own punishment. If he wishes to preserve
If ignorance is useful to priests and to the oppressors of humanity, it is very fatal to society. Man, deprived of
intelligence, does not enjoy the use of his reason; man, deprived of reason and intelligence, is a savage, who is
liable at any moment to be led into crime. Morality, or the science of moral duties, is acquired but by the
study of man and his relations. He who does not reflect for himself does not know true morals, and can not
walk the road of virtue. The less men reason, the more wicked they are. The barbarians, the princes, the great,
The religious partisans generally designate the incredulous as libertines. It may be that many incredulous
people are immoral; this immorality is due to their temperament, and not to their opinions. But what has their
conduct to do with these opinions? Can not an immoral man be a good physician, a good architect, a good
geometer, a good logician, a good metaphysician? With an irreproachable conduct, one can be ignorant upon
many things, and reason very badly. When truth is presented, it matters not from whom it comes. Let us not
judge men by their opinions, or opinions by men; let us judge men by their conduct; and their opinions by
their conformity with experience, reason, and their usefulness for mankind.
The priests have made of God such a malicious, ferocious being, so ready to be vexed, that there are few men
in the world who do not wish at the bottom of their hearts that this God did not exist. We can not live happy if
we are always in fear. You worship a terrible God, O religious people! Alas! And yet you hate Him; you wish
that He was not. Can we avoid wishing the absence or the destruction of a master, the idea of whom can but
torment the mind? It is the dark colors in which the priests paint the Deity which revolt men, moving them to
hate and reject Him.
You say, O priests of the Lord! that the passions cause unbelievers; you pretend that they renounce religion
through interest, or because it interferes with their irregular inclinations; you assert that they attack your Gods
because they fear their punishments. Ah! yourselves in defending this religion and its chimeras, are you, then,
really exempt from passions and interests? Who receive the fees of this religion, on whose behalf the priests
are so zealous? It is the priests. To whom does religion procure power, credit, honors, wealth? To the priests!
In all countries, who make war upon reason, science, truth, and philosophy and render them odious to the
sovereigns and to the people? Who profit by the ignorance of men and their vain prejudices? The priests! You
are, O priests, rewarded, honored, and paid for deceiving mortals, and you punish those who undeceive them.
The follies of men procure you blessings, offerings, expiations; the most useful truths bring to those who
announce them, chains, sufferings, stakes. Let the world judge between us.
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Have the priests any right to accuse the unbelievers of pride? Do they distinguish themselves by a rare
modesty or profound humility? Is it not evident that the desire to domineer over men is the essence of their
profession? If the Lord's ministers were truly modest, would we see them so greedy of respect, so easily
irritated by contradictions, so prompt and so cruel in revenging themselves upon those whose opinions offend
them? Does not modest science impress us with the difficulty of unraveling truth? What other passion than
frenzied pride can render men so ferocious, so vindictive, so devoid of toleration and gentleness? What is
more presumptuous than to arm nations and cause rivers of blood, in order to establish or to defend futile
conjectures?
You say, O Doctors of Divinity! that it is presumption alone which makes atheists. Teach them, then, what
your God is; instruct them about His essence; speak of Him in an intelligible way; tell of Him reasonable
things, which are not contradictory or impossible! If you are not in the condition to satisfy them; if, so far,
none of you have been able to demonstrate the existence of a God in a clear and convincing way; if, according
to your own confession, His essence is as much hidden from you as from the rest of mortals, pardon those
who can not admit that which they can neither understand nor reconcile. Do not accuse of presumption and
vanity those who have the sincerity to confess their ignorance; accuse not of folly those who find it impossible
to believe in contradictions. You should blush at the thought of exciting the hatred of the people and the
vengeance of the sovereigns against men who do not think as you do upon a Being of whom you have no idea
yourselves. Is there anything more audacious and more extravagant than to reason about an object which it is
impossible to conceive of?
You tell us it is corruption of the heart which produces atheists; that they shake off the yoke of the Deity
because they fear His terrible judgments. But why do you paint your God in such black colors? Why does this
powerful God permit that such corrupt hearts should exist? Why should we not make efforts to break the yoke
of a Tyrant who, being able to make of the hearts of men what He pleases, allows them to become perverted
and hardened; blinds them; refuses them His grace, in order to have the satisfaction of punishing them
eternally for having been hardened, blinded, and not having received the grace which He refused them? The
theologians and the priests must feel themselves very sure of Heaven's grace and of a happy future, in order
not to detest a Master so capricious as the God whom they announce to us. A God who damns eternally must
be the most odious Being that the human mind could imagine.
Have not the ministers of the Lord seen that in pampering the sovereigns, in forging Divine rights for them,
and in delivering to them the people, bound hand and foot, they were making tyrants of them? Have they not
reason to fear that these gigantic idols, whom they have raised to the skies, will crush them also some day? Do
not a thousand examples prove that they ought to fear that these unchained lions, after having devoured
nations, will in turn devour them?
We will respect the priests when they become citizens. Let them make use, if they can, of Heaven's authority
to create fear in those princes who incessantly desolate the earth; let them deprive them of the right of being
unjust; let them recognize that no subject of a State enjoys living under tyranny; let them make the sovereigns
feel that they themselves are not interested in exercising a power which, rendering them odious, injures their
own safety, their own power, their own grandeur; finally, let the priests and the undeceived kings recognize
that no power is safe that is not based upon truth, reason, and equity.
Priests! lay aside your idle fancies, your unintelligible dogmas, your despicable quarrels; banish to imaginary
regions these phantoms, which could be of use to you only in the infancy of nations; take the tone of reason,
instead of sounding the tocsin of persecution against your adversaries; instead of entertaining the people with
foolish disputes, of preaching useless and fanatical virtues, preach to them humane and social morality; preach
to them virtues which are really useful to the world; become the apostles of reason, the lights of the nations,
the defenders of liberty, reformers of abuses, the friends of truth, and we will bless you, we will honor you,
we will love you, and you will be sure of holding an eternal empire over the hearts of your fellow-beings.
In the hands of an enlightened government the priests would become the most useful of citizens. Could men
with rich stipends from the State, and relieved of the care of providing for their own subsistence, do anything
better than to instruct themselves in order to be able to instruct others? Would not their minds be better
satisfied in discovering truth than in wandering in the labyrinths of darkness? Would it be any more difficult
to unravel the principles of man's morals, than the imaginary principles of Divine and theological morals?
Would ordinary men have as much trouble in understanding the simple notions of their duties, as in charging
their memories with mysteries, unintelligible words, and obscure definitions which are impossible for them to
understand? How much time and trouble is lost in trying to teach men things which are of no use to them.
What resources for the public benefit, for encouraging the progress of the sciences and the advancement of
knowledge, for the education of youth, are presented to well-meaning sovereigns through so many
monasteries, which, in a great number of countries devour the people's substance without an equivalent. But
superstition, jealous of its exclusive empire, seems to have formed but useless beings. What advantage could
not be drawn from a multitude of cenobites of both sexes whom we see in so many countries, and who are so
well paid to do nothing. Instead of occupying them with sterile contemplations, with mechanical prayers, with
monotonous practices; instead of burdening them with fasts and austerities, let there be excited among them a
salutary emulation that would inspire them to seek the means of serving usefully the world, which their fatal
vows oblige them to renounce. Instead of filling the youthful minds of their pupils with fables, dogmas, and
puerilities, why not invite or oblige the priests to teach them true things, and so make of them citizens useful
to their country? The way in which men are brought up makes them useful but to the clergy, who blind them,
and to the tyrants, who plunder them.
Cleomenes, King of Sparta, having shown little respect for the Gods during his reign, became superstitious in
his last days; with the view of interesting Heaven in his favor, he called around him a multitude of sacrificing
priests. One of his friends expressing his surprise, Cleomenes said: "What are you astonished at? I am no
longer what I was, and not being the same, I can not think in the same way."
The ministers of religion in their daily conduct, often belie the rigorous principles which they teach to others,
so that the unbelievers in their turn think they have a right to accuse them of bad faith. If some unbelievers
contradict, in sight of death or during sickness, the opinions which they entertained in health, do not the
priests in health belie opinions of the religion which they hold? Do we see a great multitude of humble,
generous prelates devoid of ambition, enemies of pomp and grandeur, the friends of poverty? In short, do we
see the conduct of many Christian priests corresponding with the austere morality of Christ, their God and
their model?
Could a people who had no idea of the Deity, conduct itself in a more detestable manner than many believing
people in whom we see dissolute habits, and the vices most unworthy of rational beings? Do we not see the
artisan or the man of the people go from his church and plunge headlong into his usual excesses, persuading
himself all the while that his periodical homage to God gives him the right to follow without remorse his
vicious practices and habitual inclinations? If the people are gross and ignorant, is not their stupidity due to
the negligence of the princes who do not attend to the public education, or who oppose the instruction of their
subjects? Finally, is not the irrationality of the people plainly the work of the priests, who, instead of
interesting them in a rational morality, do nothing but entertain them with fables, phantoms, intrigues,
observances, idle fancies, and false virtues, upon which they claim that everything depends?
Religion is, for the people, but a vain attendance upon ceremonies, to which they cling from habit, which
amuses their eyes, which enlivens temporarily their sleepy minds, without influencing the conduct, and
without correcting their morals. By the confession even of the ministers at the altars, nothing is more rare than
the interior and spiritual religion, which is alone capable of regulating the life of man, and of triumphing over
his inclinations. In good faith, among the most numerous and the most devotional people, are there many
capable of understanding the principles of their religious system, and who find them of sufficient strength to
stifle their perverse inclinations?
Many people will tell us that it is better to have some kind of a restraint than none at all. They will pretend
that if religion does not control the great mass, it serves at least to restrain some individuals, who, without it,
would abandon themselves to crime without remorse. No doubt it is necessary for men to have a restraint; but
they do not need an imaginary one; they need true and visible restraints; they need real fears, which are much
better to restrain them than panic terrors and idle fancies. Religion frightens but a few pusillanimous minds,
whose weakness of character already renders them little to be dreaded by their fellow-citizens. An equitable
government, severe laws, a sound morality, will apply equally to everybody; every one would be forced to
believe in it, and would feel the danger of not conforming to it.
The metaphysical arguments of theology, and the religious disputes which have occupied for so long many
profound visionists, are they made any more for the common man than the arguments of an atheist? More than
this, the principles of atheism, founded upon common sense, are they not more intelligible than those of a
theology which we see bristling with insolvable difficulties, even for the most active minds? The people in
every country have a religion which they do not understand, which they do not examine, and which they
follow but by routine; their priests alone occupy themselves with the theology which is too sublime for them.
If, by accident, the people should lose this unknown theology, they could console them selves for the loss of a
thing which is not only entirely useless, but which produces among them very dangerous ebullitions.
It would be very foolish to write for the common man or to attempt to cure his prejudices all at once. We write
but for those who read and reason; the people read but little, and reason less. Sensible and peaceable people
enlighten themselves; their light spreads itself gradually, and in time reaches the people. On the other hand,
those who deceive men, do they not often take the trouble themselves of undeceiving them?
Princes! instead of taking part in the senseless contentions of your priests, instead of espousing foolishly their
impertinent quarrels, instead of striving to bring all your subjects to uniform opinions, occupy yourselves with
their happiness in this world, and do not trouble yourselves about the fate which awaits them in another.
Govern them justly, give them good laws, respect their liberty and their property, superintend their education,
encourage them in their labors, reward their talents and their virtues, repress their licentiousness, and do not
trouble yourselves upon what they think about objects useless to them and to you. Then you will no longer
need fictions to make yourselves obeyed; you will become the only guides of your subjects; their ideas will be
uniform about the feelings of love and respect which will be your due. Theological fables are useful but to
tyrants, who do not understand the art of ruling over reasonable beings.
Those who boast so much upon the importance and usefulness of religion, ought to show us its beneficial
results, and the advantages that the disputes and abstract speculations of theology can bring to porters, to
artisans, to farmers, to fishmongers, to women, and to so many depraved servants, with whom the large cities
are filled. People of this kind are all religious, they have implicit faith; their priests believe for them; they
accept a faith unknown to their guides; they listen assiduously to sermons; they assist regularly in ceremonies;
they think it a great crime to transgress the ordinances to which from childhood they have been taught to
conform. What good to morality results from all this? None whatever; they have no idea of morality, and you
see them indulge in all kinds of rogueries, frauds, rapine, and excesses which the law does not punish. The
masses, in truth, have no idea of religion; what is called religion, is but a blind attachment to unknown
opinions and mysterious dealings. In fact, to deprive the people of religion, is depriving them of nothing. If
we should succeed in destroying their prejudices, we would but diminish or annihilate the dangerous
confidence which they have in self-interested guides, and teach them to beware of those who, under the
pretext of religion, very often lead them into fatal excesses.
CXCVIII.—CONTINUATION.
Under pretext of instructing and enlightening men, religion really holds them in ignorance, and deprives them
even of the desire of understanding the objects which interest them the most. There exists for the people no
other rule of conduct than that which their priests indicate to them. Religion takes the place of everything; but
being in darkness itself, it has a greater tendency to misguide mortals, than to guide them in the way of
science and happiness. Philosophy, morality, legislation, and politics are to them enigmas. Man, blinded by
religious prejudices, finds it impossible to understand his own nature, to cultivate his reason, to make
experiments; he fears truth as soon as it does not agree with his opinions. Everything tends to render the
people devout, but all is opposed to their being humane, reasonable, and virtuous. Religion seems to have for
its object only to blunt the feeling and to dull the intelligence of men.
The war which always existed between the priests and the best minds of all ages, comes from this, that the
wise men perceived the fetters which superstition wished to place upon the human mind, which it fain would
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keep in eternal infancy, that it might be occupied with fables, burdened with terrors, and frightened by
phantoms which would prevent it from progressing. Incapable of perfecting itself, theology opposed
insurmountable barriers to the progress of true knowledge; it seemed to be occupied but with the care to keep
the nations and their chiefs in the most profound ignorance of their true interests, of their relations, of their
duties, of the real motives which can lead them to prosperity; it does but obscure morality; renders its
principles arbitrary, subjects it to the caprices of the Gods, or of their ministers; it converts the art of
governing men into a mysterious tyranny which becomes the scourge of nations; it changes the princes into
unjust and licentious despots, and the people into ignorant slaves, who corrupt themselves in order to obtain
the favor of their masters.
CXCVIII.—CONTINUATION. 121
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Christians are still commanded to regard with respect the monuments of the legislators, the priests, and the
prophets of the Hebrew religion, which, according to appearances, has borrowed from Egypt the fantastic
notions with which we see it filled. Thus the extravagances invented by frauds or idolatrous visionists, are still
regarded as sacred opinions by the Christians!
If we but look at history, we see striking resemblances in all religions. Everywhere on earth we find religious
ideas periodically afflicting and rejoicing the people; everywhere we see rites, practices often abominable, and
formidable mysteries occupying the mind, and becoming objects of meditation. We see the different
superstitions borrowing from each other their abstract reveries and their ceremonies. Religions are generally
unformed rhapsodies combined by new Doctors of Divinity, who, in composing them, have used the materials
of their predecessors, reserving the right of adding or subtracting what suits or does not suit their present
views. The religion of Egypt served evidently as a basis for the religion of Moses, who expunged from it the
worship of idols. Moses was but an Egyptian schismatic, Christianity is but a reformed Judaism.
Mohammedanism is composed of Judaism, of Christianity, and of the ancient religion of Arabia.
principles of reason and evidence, and to surround the truth with an insurmountable barrier.
Ask a Christian philosopher what is the origin of the world. He will answer that God created the universe.
What is God? We do not know anything about it. What is it to create? We have no idea of it! What is the
cause of pestilences, famines, wars, sterility, inundations, earthquakes? It is God's wrath. What remedies can
prevent these calamities? Prayers, sacrifices, processions, offerings, ceremonies, are, we are told, the true
means to disarm Celestial fury. But why is Heaven angry? Because men are wicked. Why are men wicked?
Because their nature is corrupt. What is the cause of this corruption? It is, a theologian of enlightened Europe
will reply, because the first man was seduced by the first woman to eat of an apple which his God had
forbidden him to touch. Who induced this woman to do such a folly? The Devil. Who created the Devil? God!
Why did God create this Devil destined to pervert the human race? We know nothing about it; it is a mystery
hidden in the bosom of the Deity.
Does the earth revolve around the sun? Two centuries ago a devout philosopher would have replied that such
a thought was blasphemy, because such a system could not agree with the Holy Book, which every Christian
reveres as inspired by the Deity Himself. What is the opinion to-day about it? Notwithstanding Divine
Inspiration, the Christian philosophers finally concluded to rely upon evidence rather than upon the testimony
of their inspired books.
What is the hidden principle of the actions and of the motions of the human body? It is the soul. What is a
soul? It is a spirit. What is a spirit? It is a substance which has neither form, color, expansion, nor parts. How
can we conceive of such a substance? How can it move a body? We know nothing about it. Have brutes
souls? The Carthusian assures you that they are machines. But do we not see them act, feel, and think in a
manner which resembles that of men? This is a pure illusion, you say. But why do you deprive the brutes of
souls, which, without understanding it, you attribute to men? It is that the souls of the brutes would embarrass
our theologians, who, content with the power of frightening and damning the immortal souls of men, do not
take the same interest in damning those of the brutes. Such are the puerile solutions which philosophy, always
guided by the leading-strings of theology, was obliged to bring forth to explain the problems of the physical
and moral world.
What sensible man who has a love for science, and is interested in the welfare of humanity, can reflect
without sorrow and pain upon the loss of so many profound, laborious, and subtle heads, who, for many
centuries, have foolishly exhausted themselves upon idle fancies that proved to be injurious to our race? What
light could have been thrown into the minds of many famous thinkers, if, instead of occupying themselves
with a useless theology, and its impertinent disputes, they had turned their attention upon intelligible and truly
important objects. Half of the efforts that it cost the genius that was able to forge their religious opinions, half
of the expense which their frivolous worship cost the nations, would have sufficed to enlighten them perfectly
upon morality, politics, philosophy, medicine, agriculture, etc. Superstition nearly always absorbs the
attention, the admiration, and the treasures of the people; they have a very expensive religion; but they have
for their money, neither light, virtue, nor happiness.
CCIV.—CONTINUATION.
Some ancient and modern philosophers have had the courage to accept experience and reason as their guides,
and to shake off the chains of superstition. Lucippe, Democritus, Epicurus, Straton, and some other Greeks,
dared to tear away the thick veil of prejudice, and to deliver philosophy from theological fetters. But their
systems, too simple, too sensible, and too stripped of wonders for the lovers of fancy, were obliged to
surrender to the fabulous conjectures of Plato, Socrates, and Zeno. Among the moderns, Hobbes, Spinoza,
Bayle, and others have followed the path of Epicurus, but their doctrine found but few votaries in a world still
too much infatuated with fables to listen to reason.
In all ages one could not, without imminent danger, lay aside the prejudices which opinion had rendered
sacred. No one was permitted to make discoveries of any kind; all that the most enlightened men could do was
to speak and write with hidden meaning; and often, by a cowardly complaisance, to shamefully ally falsehood
CCIII.—HOW THEOLOGY HAS FETTERED HUMAN MORALS AND RETARDED THE PROGRESS
124 OF
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with truth. A few of them had a double doctrine—one public and the other secret. The key of this last
having been lost, their true sentiments often became unintelligible and, consequently, useless to us. How
could modern philosophers who, being threatened with the most cruel persecution, were called upon to
renounce reason and to submit to faith—that is to say, to priestly authority—I say, how could
men thus fettered give free flight to their genius, perfect reason, or hasten human progress? It was but in fear
and trembling that the greatest men obtained glimpses of truth; they rarely had the courage to announce it;
those who dared to do it have generally been punished for their temerity. Thanks to religion, it was never
permitted to think aloud or to combat the prejudices of which man is everywhere the victim or the dupe.
It is not permitted to err in the matter of religion; on every other subject we can be deceived with impunity;
we pity those who go astray, and we have some liking for the persons who discover truths new to us. But as
soon as theology supposes itself concerned, be it in errors or discoveries, a holy zeal is kindled; the sovereigns
exterminate; the people fly into frenzy; and the nations are all stirred up without knowing why. Is there
anything more afflicting than to see public and individual welfare depend upon a futile science, which is void
of principles, which has no standing ground but imagination, and which presents to the mind but words void
of sense? What good is a religion which no one understands; which continually torments those who trouble
themselves about it; which is incapable of rendering men better; and which often gives them the credit of
being unjust and wicked? Is there a more deplorable folly, and one that ought more to be abated, than that
which, far from doing any good to the human race, does but blind it, cause transports, and render it miserable,
depriving it of truth, which alone can soften the rigor of fate?
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multiply them and render them more durable.
Let us, then, say, with the celebrated Lord Bolingbroke, in his posthumous works: "Theology is the Box of
Pandora; and if it is impossible to close it, it is at least useful to give warning that this fatal box is open."
I believe, my dear friends, that I have given you a sufficient preventative against all these follies. Your reason
will do more than my discourses, and I sincerely wish that we had only to complain of being deceived! But
human blood has flowed since the time of Constantine for the establishment of these horrible impositions. The
Roman, the Greek, and the Protestant churches by vain, ambitious, and hypocritical disputes have ravaged
Europe, Asia, and Africa. Add to these men, whom these quarrels murdered, the multitudes of monks and of
nuns, who became sterile by their profession, and you will perceive that the Christian religion has destroyed
half of the human race.
I conclude with the desire that we may return to Nature, whose declared enemy the Christian religion is, and
which necessarily instructs us to do unto others as we would wish them to do unto us. Then the universe will
be composed of good citizens, just fathers, obedient children, tender friends. Nature has given us this
Religion, in giving us Reason. May fanaticism pervert it no more! I die filled with these desires more than
with hope.
JOHN MESLIER
By Voltaire;
I.—OF RELIGIONS.
As there is no one religious denomination which does not pretend to be truly founded upon the authority of
God, and entirely exempt from all the errors and impositions which are found in the others, it is for those who
purpose to establish the truth of the faith of their sect, to show, by clear and convincing proofs, that it is of
Divine origin; as this is lacking, we must conclude that it is but of human invention, and full of errors and
deceptions; for it is incredible that an Omnipotent and Infinitely good God would have desired to give laws
and ordinances to men, and not have wished them to bear better authenticated marks of truth, than those of the
numerous impostors. Moreover, there is not one of our Christ-worshipers, of whatever sect he may be, who
can make us see, by convincing proofs, that his religion is exclusively of Divine origin; and for want of such
proof they have been for many centuries contesting this subject among themselves, even to persecuting each
other by fire and sword to maintain their opinions; there is, however, not one sect of them all which could
convince and persuade the others by such witnesses of truth; this certainly would not be, if they had, on one
side or the other, convincing proofs of Divine origin. For, as no one of any religious sect, enlightened and of
good faith, pretends to hold and to favor error and falsehood; and as, on the contrary, each, on his side,
pretends to sustain truth, the true means of banishing all errors, and of uniting all men in peace in the same
sentiments and in the same form of religion, would be to produce convincing proofs and testimonies of the
truth; and thus show that such religion is of Divine origin, and not any of the others; then each one would
accept this truth; and no person would dare to question these testimonies, or sustain the side of error and
imposition, lest he should be, at the same time, confounded by contrary proofs: but, as these proofs are not
found in any religion, it gives to impostors occasion to invent and boldly sustain all kinds of falsehoods.
Here are still other proofs, which will not be less evident, of the falsity of human religions, and especially of
the falsity of our own. Every religion which relies upon mysteries as its foundation, and which takes, as a rule
of its doctrine and its morals, a principle of errors, and which is at the same time a source of trouble and
eternal divisions among men, can not be a true religion, nor a Divine Institution. Now, human religions,
especially the Catholic, establish as the basis of their doctrine and of their morals, a principle of errors; then, it
follows that these religions can not be true, or of Divine origin. I do not see that we can deny the first
proposition of this argument; it is too clear and too evident to admit of a doubt. I pass to the proof of the
second proposition, which is, that the Christian religion takes for the rule of its doctrine and its morals what
they call faith, a blind trust, but yet firm, and secured by some laws or revelations of some Deity. We must
necessarily suppose that it is thus, because it is this belief in some Deity and in some Divine Revelations,
which gives all the credit and all the authority that it has in the world, and without which we could make no
use of what it prescribes. This is why there is no religion which does not expressly recommend its votaries to
be firm in their faith. ["Estate fortes in fide!"] This is the reason that all Christians accept as a maxim, that
faith is the commencement and the basis of salvation, that it is the root of all justice and of all sanctification,
as it is expressed at the Council of Trent.—Sess. 6, Ch. VIII.
Now it is evident that a blind faith in all which is proposed in the name and authority of God, is a principle of
errors and falsehoods. As a proof, we see that there is no impostor in the matter of religion, who does not
pretend to be clothed with the name and the authority of God, and who does not claim to be especially
inspired and sent by God. Not only is this faith and blind belief which they accept as a basis of their doctrine,
a principle of errors, etc., but it is also a source of trouble and division among men for the maintenance of
their religion. There is no cruelty which they do not practice upon each other under this specious pretext.
Now then, it is not credible that an Almighty, All-Kind, and All-Wise God desired to use such means or such
a deceitful way to inform men of His wishes; for this would be manifestly desiring to lead them into error and
to lay snares in their way, in order to make them accept the side of falsehood. It is impossible to believe that a
God who loved unity and peace, the welfare and the happiness of men, would ever have established as the
basis of His religion, such a fatal source of trouble and of eternal divisions among them. Such religions can
The second motive for credulity, they draw from the innocence and the holiness of life in those who embraced
it with love, and defended it by suffering death and the most cruel torments, rather than forsake it: it not being
credible that such great personages would allow themselves to be deceived in their belief, that they would
renounce all the advantages of life, and expose themselves to such cruel torments and persecutions, in order to
maintain errors and impositions. Their third motive for credulity, they draw from the oracles and prophecies
which have so long been rendered in their favor, and which they pretend have been accomplished in a manner
which permits no doubt. Finally, their fourth motive for credulity, which is the most important of all, is drawn
from the grandeur and the multitude of the miracles performed, in all ages, and in every place, in favor of their
religion.
But it is easy to refute all these useless reasonings and to show the falsity of all these evidences. For, firstly,
the arguments which our Christ-worshipers draw from their pretended motives for credulity can serve to
establish and confirm falsehood as well as truth; for we see that there is no religion, no matter how false it
may be, which does not pretend to have a sound and true doctrine, and which, in its way, does not condemn
all vices and recommend the practice of all virtues; there is not one which has not had firm and zealous
defenders who have suffered persecution in order to maintain their religion; and, finally, there is none which
does not pretend to have wonders and miracles that have been performed in their favor. The Mohammedans,
the Indians, the heathen, as well as the Christians, claim miracles in their religions. If our Christ-worshipers
make use of their miracles and their prophecies, they are found no less in the Pagan religions than in theirs.
Thus the advantage we might draw from all these motives for credulity, is found about the same in all sorts of
religions. This being established, as the history and practice of all religions demonstrate, it evidently follows
that all these pretended motives for credulity, upon which our Christ-worshipers place so much value, are
found equally in all religions; and, consequently, can not serve as reliable evidences of the truth of their
religion more than of the truth of any other. The result is clear.
Secondly. In order to give an idea of the resemblance of the miracles of Paganism to those of Christianity,
could we not say, for example, that there would be more reason to believe Philostratus in what he recites of
the life of Apollonius than to believe all the evangelists in what they say of the miracles of Jesus Christ;
because we know, at least that Philostratus was a man of intelligence, eloquence, and fluency; that he was the
secretary of the Empress Julia, wife of the Emperor Severus, and that he was requested by this empress to
write the life and the wonderful acts of Apollonius? It is evident that Apollonius rendered himself famous by
great and extraordinary deeds, since an empress was sufficiently interested in them to desire a history of his
life. This is what can not be said of Jesus Christ, nor of those who have furnished us His biography, for they
were but ignorant men of the common people, poor workmen, fishermen, who had not even the sense to relate
consistently the facts which they speak of, and which they mutually contradict very often. In regard to the One
whose life and actions they describe, if He had really performed the miracles attributed to Him, He would
have rendered Himself notable by His beautiful acts; every one would have admired Him, and there would be
statues erected to Him as was done for the Gods; but instead of that, He was regarded as a man of no
consequence, as a fanatic, etc. Josephus, the historian, after having spoken of the great miracles performed in
favor of his nation and his religion, immediately diminishes their credibility and renders it suspicious by
saying that he leaves to each one the liberty of believing what he chooses; this evidently shows that he had not
much faith in them. It also gives occasion to the more judicious to regard the histories which speak of this
I prove it by the evidence of what even our Christ-worshipers call the Word of God, and by the evidence of
the One they adore; for their books, which they claim contain the Word of God, and Christ Himself, whom
they adore as a God-made man, show us explicitly that there are not only false prophets—that is to say,
impostors—who claim to be sent by God, and who speak in His name, but which show as explicitly
that these false prophets can perform such great and prodigious miracles as shall deceive the very elect. [See
Matthew, chapter xxiv., verses 5, 21-27.] More than this, all these pretended performers of miracles wish us to
put faith only in them, and not in those who belong to an opposite party.
On one occasion one of these pretended prophets, named Sedecias, being contradicted by another, named
Michea, the former struck the latter and said to him, pleasantly, "By what way did the Spirit of God pass from
me to you?"
But how can these pretended miracles be the evidences of truth? for it is clear that they were not performed.
For it would be necessary to know: Firstly, If those who are said to be the first authors of these narrations truly
are such. Secondly, If they were honest men, worthy of confidence, wise and enlightened; and to know if they
were not prejudiced in favor of those of whom they speak so favorably. Thirdly, If they have examined all the
circumstances of the facts which they relate; if they know them well; and if they make a faithful report of
them. Fourthly, If the books or the ancient histories which relate all these great miracles have not been
falsified and changed in course of time, as many others have been?
If we consult Tacitus and many other celebrated historians, in regard to Moses and his nation, we shall see
that they are considered as a horde of thieves and bandits. Magic and astrology were in those days the only
fashionable sciences; and as Moses was, it is said, instructed in the wisdom of the Egyptians, it was not
difficult for him to inspire veneration and attachment for himself in the rustic and ignorant children of Jacob,
and to induce them to accept, in their misery, the discipline he wished to give them. That is very different
from what the Jews and our Christ-worshipers wish to make us believe. By what certain rule can we know that
we should put faith in these rather than in the others? There is no sound reason for it. There is as little of
certainty and even of probability in the miracles of the New Testament as in those of the Old.
It will serve no purpose to say that the histories which relate the facts contained in the Gospels have been
regarded as true and sacred; that they have always been faithfully preserved without any alteration of the
truths which they contain; since this is perhaps the very reason why they should be the more suspected, having
been corrupted by those who drew profit from them, or who feared that they were not sufficiently favorable to
them.
Generally, authors who transcribe this kind of histories, take the right to enlarge or to retrench all they please,
in order to serve their own interests. This is what even our Christ-worshipers can not deny; for, without
mentioning several other important personages who recognized the additions, the retrenchments, and the
falsifications which have been made at different times in their Holy Scriptures, their saint Jerome, a famous
philosopher among them, formally said in several passages of his "Prologues," that they had been corrupted
and falsified; being, even in his day, in the hands of all kinds of persons, who added and suppressed whatever
they pleased; so, "Thus there were," said he, "as many different models as different copies of the Gospels."
In regard to the books of the Old Testament, Esdras, a priest of the law, testifies himself to having corrected
and completed wholly the pretended sacred books of his law, which had partly been lost and partly corrupted.
He divided them into twenty-two books, according to the number of the Hebraic letters, and wrote several
other books, whose doctrine was to be revealed to the learned men alone. If these books have been partly lost
The Manicheans wrote a gospel of their own style, and rejected the Scriptures of the prophets and the apostles.
The Etzaites sold a certain book which they claimed to have come from Heaven; they cut up the other
Scriptures according to their fancy. Origen himself, with all his great mind, corrupted the Scriptures and
forged changes in the allegories which did not suit him, thus corrupting the sense of the prophets and apostles,
and even some of the principal points of doctrine. His books are now mutilated and falsified; they are but
fragments collected by others who have appeared since. The Ellogians attributed to the heretic Corinthus the
Gospel and the Apocalypse of St. John; this is why they reject them. The heretics of our last centuries reject as
apocryphal several books which the Roman Catholics consider as true and sacred—such as the books
of Tobias, Judith, Esther, Baruch, the Song of the Three Children in the Furnace, the History of Susannah, and
that of the Idol Bel, the Wisdom of Solomon, Ecclesiasticus, the first and second book of Maccabees; to
which uncertain and doubtful books we could add several others that have been attributed to the other
apostles; as, for example, the Acts of St. Thomas, his Circuits, his Gospel, and his Apocalypse; the Gospel of
St. Bartholomew, that of St. Matthias, of St. Jacques, of St. Peter and of the Apostles, as also the Deeds of St.
Peter, his book on Preaching, and that of his Apocalypse; that of the Judgment, that of the Childhood of the
Saviour, and several others of the same kind, which are all rejected as apocryphal by the Roman Catholics,
even by the Pope Gelasee, and by the S. S. F. F. of the Romish Communion. That which most confirms that
there is no foundation of truth in regard to the authority given to these books, is that those who maintain their
Divinity are compelled to acknowledge that they have no certainty as a basis, if their faith did not assure them
and oblige them to believe it. Now, as faith is but a principle of error and imposture, how can faith, that is to
say, a blind belief, render the books reliable which are themselves the foundation of this blind belief? What a
pity and what insanity! But let us see if these books have of themselves any feature of truth; as, for example,
of erudition, of wisdom, and of holiness, or some other perfections which are suited only to a God; and if the
miracles which are cited agree with what we ought to think of the grandeur, goodness, justice, and infinite
wisdom of an Omnipotent God.
There is no erudition, no sublime thought, nor any production which surpasses the ordinary capacities of the
human mind. On the contrary, we shall see on one side fabulous tales similar to that of a woman formed of a
man's rib; of the pretended terrestrial Paradise; of a serpent which spoke, which reasoned, and which was
more cunning than man; of an ass which spoke, and reprimanded its master for ill-treating it; of a universal
deluge, and of an ark where animals of all kinds were inclosed; of the confusion of languages and of the
division of the nations, without speaking of numerous other useless narrations upon low and frivolous subjects
which important authors would scorn to relate. All these narrations appear to be fables, as much as those
invented about the industry of Prometheus, the box of Pandora, the war of the Giants against the Gods, and
similar others which the poets have invented to amuse the men of their time.
On the other hand we will see a mixture of laws and ordinances, or superstitious practices concerning
sacrifices, the purifications of the old law, the senseless distinctions in regard to animals, of which it supposes
some to be pure and others to be impure. These laws are no more respectable than those of the most idolatrous
nations. We shall see but simple stories, true or false, of several kings, princes, or individuals, who lived right
or wrong, or who performed noble or mean actions, with other low and frivolous things also related.
From all this, it is evident that no great genius was required, nor Divine Revelations to produce these things. It
would not be creditable to a God.
Finally, we see in these books but the discourses, the conduct, and the actions of those renowned prophets
who proclaimed themselves especially inspired by God. We will see their way of acting and speaking, their
dreams, their illusions, their reveries; and it will be easy to judge whether they do not resemble visionaries and
fanatics much more than wise and enlightened persons.
There are, however, in a few of these books, several good teachings and beautiful maxims of morals, as in the
Proverbs attributed to Solomon, in the book of Wisdom and of Ecclesiastes; but this same Solomon, the wisest
of their writers, is also the most incredulous; he doubts even the immortality of the soul, and concludes his
works by saying that there is nothing good but to enjoy in peace the fruits of one's labor, and to live with those
whom we love.
How superior are the authors who are called profane, such as Xenophon, Plato, Cicero, the Emperor
Antoninus, the Emperor Julian, Virgil, etc., to the books which we are told are inspired of God. I can truly say
that the fables of Aesop, for example, are certainly more ingenious and more instructive than all these rough
and poor parables which are related in the Gospels.
But what shows us that this kind of books is not of Divine Inspiration, is, that aside from the low order,
coarseness of style, and the lack of system in the narrations of the different facts, which are very badly
arranged, we do not see that the authors agree; they contradict each other in several things; they had not even
sufficient enlightenment or natural talents to write a history.
Here are some examples of the contradictions which are found among them. The Evangelist Matthew claims
that Jesus Christ descended from king David by his son Solomon through Joseph, reputed to be His father;
and Luke claims that He is descended from the same David by his son Nathan through Joseph.
Matthew says, in speaking of Jesus, that, it being reported in Jerusalem that a new king of the Jews was born,
and that the wise men had come to adore Him, the king Herod, fearing that this pretended new king would rob
him of his crown some day, caused the murder of all the new-born children under two years, in all the
neighborhood of Bethlehem, where he had been told that this new king was born; and that Joseph and the
mother of Jesus, having been warned in a dream by an angel, of this wicked intention, took flight immediately
to Egypt, where they stayed until the death of Herod, which happened many years afterward.
On the contrary, Luke asserts that Joseph and the mother of Jesus lived peaceably during six weeks in the
place where their child Jesus was born; that He was circumcised according to the law of the Jews, eight days
after His birth; and when the time prescribed by the law for the purification of His mother had arrived, she and
Joseph, her husband, carried Him to Jerusalem in order to present Him to God in His temple, and to offer at
the same time a sacrifice which was ordained by God's law; after which they returned to Galilee, into their
town of Nazareth, where their child Jesus grew every day in grace and in wisdom. Luke goes on to say that
In regard to the duration of the public life of Jesus Christ, according to what the first three Evangelists say,
there could be scarcely more than three months from the time of His baptism until His death, supposing He
was thirty years old when He was baptized by John, according to Luke, and that He was born on the 25th of
December. For, from this baptism, which was in the year 15 of Tiberius Caesar, and in the year when Anne
and Caiaphas were high-priests, to the first Easter following, which was in the month of March, there was but
about three months; according to what the first three Evangelists say, He was crucified on the eve of the first
Easter following His baptism, and the first time He went to Jerusalem with His disciples; because all that they
say of His baptism, of His travels, of His miracles, of His preaching, of His death and passion, must have
taken place in the same year of His baptism, for the Evangelists speak of no other year following, and it
appears even by the narration of His acts that He performed them consecutively immediately after His
baptism, and in a very short time, during which we see but an interval of six days before his Transfiguration;
during these six days we do not see that He did anything. We see by this that He lived but about three months
after His baptism, from which, if we subtract the forty days and forty nights which He passed in the desert
immediately after His baptism, it would follow that the length of His public life from His first preaching till
His death, would have lasted but about six weeks; and according to what John says, it would have lasted at
least three years and three months, because it appears by the Gospel of this apostle, that, during the course of
His public life He might have been three or four times at Jerusalem at the Easter feast which happened but
once a year.
Now if it is true that He had been there three or four times after His baptism, as John testifies, it is false that
He lived but three months after His baptism, and that He was crucified the first time He went to Jerusalem.
If it is said that these first three Evangelists really mean but one year, but that they do not indicate distinctly
the others which elapsed since His baptism; or that John understood that there was but one Easter, although he
speaks of several, and that he only anticipated the time when he repeatedly tells us that the Easter feast of the
Jews was near at hand, and that Jesus went to Jerusalem, and, consequently, that there is but an apparent
contradiction upon this subject between the Evangelists, I am willing to accept this; but it is certain that this
apparent contradiction springs from the fact, that they do not explain themselves in all the circumstances that
are noted in the narration which they make. Be that as it may, there will always be this inference made, that
they were not inspired by God when they wrote their biographies of Christ.
Christ did immediately after His baptism; for the first three Evangelists state, that He was transported
immediately by the Spirit into the desert, where He fasted forty days and forty nights, and where He was
several times tempted by the Devil; and, according to what John says, He departed two days after His baptism
to go into Galilee, where He performed His first miracle by changing water into wine at the wedding of Cana,
where He found Himself three days after His arrival in Galilee, more than thirty leagues from the place in
which He had been.
In regard to the place of His first retreat after His departure from the desert, Matthew says that He returned to
Galilee, and that leaving the city of Nazareth, He went to live at Capernaum, a maritime city; and Luke says,
that He came at first to Nazareth, and afterward went to Capernaum.
In regard to the Lord's Supper, the first three Evangelists note that Jesus Christ instituted the Sacrament of His
body and His blood, in the form of bread and wine, the same as our Roman Christ-worshipers say; and John
does not mention this mysterious sacrament. John says that after this supper, Jesus washed His apostles' feet,
and commanded them to do the same thing to each other, and relates a long discourse which He delivered
then. But the other Evangelists do not speak of the washing of the feet, nor of the long discourse He gave
them then. On the contrary, they testify that immediately after this supper, He went with His apostles upon the
Mount of Olives, where He gave up His Spirit to sadness, and was in anguish while His apostles slept, at a
short distance. They contradict each other upon the day on which they say the Lord's Supper took place;
because on one side, they note that it took place Easter-eve, that is, the evening of the first day of Azymes, or
of the feast of unleavened bread; as it is noted (1) in Exodus, (2) in Leviticus, and (3) in Numbers; and, on the
other hand, they say that He was crucified the day following the Lord's Supper, about midday after the Jews
had His trial during the whole night and morning. Now, according to what they say, the day after this supper
took place, ought not to be Easter-eve. Therefore, if He died on the eve of Easter, toward midday, it was not
on the eve of this feast that this supper took place. There is consequently a manifest error.
They contradict each other, also, in regard to the women who followed Jesus from Galilee, for the first three
Evangelists say that these women, and those who knew Him, among whom were Mary Magdalene, and Mary,
mother of James and Joseph, and the mother of Zebedee's children, were looking on at a distance when He
was hanged and nailed upon the cross. John says, on the contrary, that the mother of Jesus and His mother's
sister, and Mary Magdalene were standing near His cross with John, His apostle. The contradiction is
manifest, for, if these women and this disciple were near Him, they were not at a distance, as the others say
they were.
They contradict each other upon the pretended apparitions which they relate that Jesus made after His
pretended resurrection; for Matthew speaks of but two apparitions: the one when He appeared to Mary
Magdalene and to another woman, also named Mary, and when He appeared to His eleven disciples who had
returned to Galilee upon the mountain where He had appointed to meet them. Mark speaks of three
apparitions: The first, when He appeared to Mary Magdalene; the second, when He appeared to His two
disciples, who went to Emmaus; and the third, when He appeared to His eleven disciples, whom He
reproaches for their incredulity. Luke speaks of but two apparitions the same as Matthew; and John the
Evangelist speaks of four apparitions, and adds to Mark's three, the one which He made to seven or eight of
His disciples who were fishing upon the shores of the Tiberian Sea.
They contradict each other, also, in regard to the place of these apparitions; for Matthew says that it was in
Galilee, upon a mountain; Mark says that it was when they were at table; Luke says that He brought them out
of Jerusalem as far as Bethany, where He left them by rising to Heaven; and John says that it was in the city of
Jerusalem, in a house of which they had closed the doors, and another time upon the borders of the Tiberian
Sea.
Thus is much contradiction in the report of these pretended apparitions. They contradict each other in regard
to His pretended ascension to heaven; for Luke and Mark say positively that He went to heaven in presence of
the eleven apostles, but neither Matthew nor John mentions at all this pretended ascension. More than this,
Matthew testifies sufficiently that He did not ascend to heaven; for he said positively that Jesus Christ assured
His apostles that He would be and remain always with them until the end of the world. "Go ye," He said to
them, in this pretended apparition, "and teach all nations, and be assured that I am with you always, even unto
I pass in silence many other contradictions; what I have said is sufficient to show that these books are not of
Divine Inspiration, nor even of human wisdom, and, consequently, do not deserve that we should put any faith
in them.
II.—OF MIRACLES.
But by what privilege do these four Gospels, and some other similar books, pass for Holy and Divine more
than several others, which bear no less the title of Gospels, and which have been published under the name of
some other apostles? If it is said that the reputed Gospels are falsely attributed to the apostles, we can say the
same of the first ones; if we suppose the first ones to be falsified and changed, we can think the same of the
others. Thus there is no positive proof to make us discern the one from the other; in spite of the Church, which
assumes to deride the matter, it is not credible.
In regard to the pretended miracles related in the Old Testament, they could have been performed but to
indicate on the part of God an unjust and odious discrimination between nations and between individuals;
purposely injuring the one in order to especially favor the other. The vocation and the choice which God made
of the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in order to make for Himself of their posterity a people which
He would sanctify and bless above all other peoples of the earth, is a proof of it. But it will be said God is the
absolute master of His favors and of His benefits; He can grant them to whomsoever He pleases, without any
one having the right to complain or to accuse Him of injustice. This reason is useless; for God, the Author of
nature, the Father of all men, ought to love them all alike as His own work, and, consequently, He ought to be
equally their protector and their benefactor; giving them life, He ought to give all that is necessary for the
well-being of His creatures.
If all these pretended miracles of the Old and of the New Testament were true, we could say that God would
have had more care in providing for the least good of men than for their greatest and principal good; that He
would have punished more severely trifling faults in certain persons than He would have punished great
crimes in others; and, finally, that He would not have desired to show Himself as beneficent in the most
pressing needs as in the least. This is easy enough to show as much by the miracles which it is pretended that
He performed, as by those which He did not perform, and which He would have performed rather than any
other, if it is true that He performed any at all. For example, it is claimed that God had the kindness to send an
Let us come to the pretended miracles of the New Testament. They consist, as is pretended, in this: that Jesus
Christ and His apostles cured, through the Deity, all kinds of diseases and infirmities, giving sight to the blind,
hearing to the deaf, speech to the dumb, making the lame to walk, curing the paralytics, driving the devils
from those who were possessed, and bringing the dead to life.
We find several of these miracles in the Gospels, but we see a good many more of them in the books that our
Christ-worshipers have written of the admirable lives of their saints; for in these lives we nearly everywhere
read that these pretended blessed ones cured diseases and infirmities, expelled the devils wherever they
encountered them, solely in the name of Jesus or by the sign of the cross; that they controlled the elements;
that God favored them so much that He even preserved to them His Divine power after their death, and that
this Divine power could be communicated even to the least of their clothing, even to their shadows, and even
to the infamous instruments of their death. It is said that the shoe of St. Honorius raised a dead man on the
sixth of January; that the staff of St. Peter, that of St. James, and that of St. Bernard performed miracles. The
same is said of the cord of St. Francis, of the staff of St. John of God, and of the girdle of St. Melanie. It is
said that St. Gracilien was divinely instructed as to what he ought to believe and to teach, and that he, by the
influence of his prayer, removed a mountain which prevented him from building a church; that from the
sepulchre of St. Andrew flowed incessantly a liquor which cured all sorts of diseases; that the soul of St.
Benedict was seen ascending to Heaven clothed with a precious cloak and surrounded by burning lamps; that
St. Dominic said that God never refused him anything he asked; that St. Francis commanded the swallows,
swans, and other birds to obey him, and that often the fishes, rabbits, and the hares came and placed
themselves on his hands and on his lap; that St. Paul and St. Pantaleon, having been beheaded, there flowed
milk instead of blood; that the blessed Peter of Luxembourg, in the first two years after his death (1388 and
1389), performed two thousand four hundred miracles, among which forty-two dead were brought to life, not
including more than three thousand other miracles which he has performed since; that the fifty philosophers
whom St. Catherine converted, having all been thrown into a great fire, their whole bodies were afterward
found and not a single hair was scorched; that the body of St. Catherine was carried off by angels after her
death, and buried by them upon Mount Sinai; that the day of the canonization of St. Antoine de Padua, all the
bells of the city of Lisbon rang of themselves, without any one knowing how it was done; that this saint being
once near the sea-shore, and calling the fishes, they came to him in a great multitude, and raised their heads
out of the water and listened to him attentively. We should never come to an end if we had to report all this
idle talk; there is no subject, however vain, frivolous, and even ridiculous, on which the authors of these
"LIVES OF THE SAINTS" do not take pleasure in heaping miracles upon miracles, for they are skillful in
forging absurd falsehoods.
It is certainly not without reason that we consider these things as lies; for it is easy to see that all these
pretended miracles have been invented but by imitating the fables of the Pagan poets. This is sufficiently
obvious by the resemblance which they bear one to another.
If our Christ-worshipers assert that their saints had the power of raising the dead, and that they had Divine
revelations, the Pagans had said before them that Athalide, son of Mercury, had obtained from his father the
gift of living, dying, and coming to life whenever he wished, and that he had also the knowledge of all that
transpired in this world as well as in the other; and that Esculapius, son of Apollo, had raised the dead, and,
among others, he brought to life Hyppolites, son of Theseus, by Diana's request; and that Hercules, also,
raised from the dead Alceste, wife of Admetus, King of Thessalia, to return her to her husband.
If our Christ-worshipers say that Christ was miraculously born of a virgin, the Pagans had said before them
that Remus and Romulus, the founders of Rome, were miraculously born of a vestal virgin named Ilia, or
Silvia, or Rhea Silvia; they had already said that Mars, Argus, Vulcan, and others were born of the goddess
Juno without sexual union; and, also, that Minerva, goddess of the sciences, sprang from Jupiter's brain, and
that she came out of it, all armed, by means of a blow which this god gave to his own head.
If our Christ-worshipers claim that their saints made water gush from rocks, the Pagans pretend also that
Minerva made a fountain of oil spring forth from a rock as a recompense for a temple which had been
dedicated to her.
If our Christ-worshipers boast of having received images from Heaven miraculously, as, for example, those of
Notre-Dame de Loretto, and of Liesse and several other gifts from Heaven, as the pretended Holy Vial of
Rheims, as the white Chasuble which St. Ildefonse received from the Virgin Mary, and other similar things:
the Pagans boasted before them of having received a sacred shield as a mark of the preservation of their city
of Rome, and the Trojans boasted before them of having received miraculously from Heaven their Palladium,
or their Idol of Pallas, which came, they said, to takes its place in the temple which they had erected in honor
of this Goddess.
If our Christ-worshipers pretend that Jesus Christ was seen by His apostles ascending to Heaven, and that
several of their pretended saints were transported to Heaven by angels, the Roman Pagans had said before
them, that Romulus, their founder, was seen after his death; that Ganymede, son of Troas, king of Troy, was
transported to Heaven by Jupiter to serve him as cup-bearer that the hair of Berenice, being consecrated to the
temple of Venus, was afterward carried to Heaven; they say the same thing of Cassiope and Andromedes, and
even of the ass of Silenus.
If our Christ-worshipers pretend that several of their saints' bodies were miraculously saved from
decomposition after death, and that they were found by Divine Revelations, after having been lost for a long
time, the Pagans say the same of the holy of Orestes, which they pretend to have found through an oracle, etc.
If our Christ-worshipers say that the seven sleeping brothers slept during one hundred and seventy-seven
years, while they were shut up in a cave, the Pagans claim that Epimenides, the philosopher, slept during
fifty-seven years in a cave where he fell asleep.
If our Christ-worshipers claim that several of their saints continued to speak after losing the head, or having
the tongue cut out, the Pagans claim that the head of Gambienus recited a long poem after separation from his
body.
If our Christ-worshipers glorify themselves that their temples and churches are ornamented with several
pictures and rich gifts which show miraculous cures performed by the intercession of their saints, we also see,
or at least we formerly saw in the temple of Esculapius at Epidaurus, many paintings of miraculous cures
which he had performed.
If our Christ-worshipers claim that several of their saints have been miraculously preserved in the flames
without having received any injury to their bodies or their clothing, the Pagans claim that the Holy women of
the temple of Diana walked upon burning coals barefooted without burning or hurting their feet, and that the
priests of the Goddess Feronie and of Hirpicus walked in the same way upon burning coals in the fires which
were made in honor of Apollo.
If the angels built a chapel for St. Clement at the bottom of the sea, the little house of Baucis and of Philemon
was miraculously changed into a superb temple as a reward of their piety. If several of their saints, as St.
James and St. Maurice, appeared several times in their armies, mounted and equipped in ancient style, and
fought for them, Castor and Pollux appeared several times in battles and fought for the Romans against their
enemies; if a ram was miraculously found to be offered as a sacrifice in the place of Isaac, whom his father
Abraham was about to sacrifice, the Goddess Vesta also sent a heifer to be sacrificed in the place of Metella,
daughter of Metellus: the Goddess Diana sent a hind in the place of Iphigenie when she was at the stake to be
sacrificed to her, and by this means Iphigenie was saved.
If St. Joseph went into Egypt by the warning of an angel, Simonides, the poet, avoided several great dangers
by miraculous warnings which had been given to him.
If Moses forced a stream of water to flow from a rock by striking it with his staff, the horse Pegasus did the
same: by striking a rock with his foot a fountain issued.
If St. Vincent Ferrier brought to life a dead man hacked into pieces, whose body was already half roasted and
half broiled, Pelops, son of Tantalus king of Phrygia, having been torn to pieces by his father to be sacrificed
to the Gods, they gathered all the pieces, joined them, and brought them to life.
If several crucifixes and other images have miraculously spoken and answered, the Pagans say that their
oracles have spoken and given answers to those who consulted them, and that the head of Orpheus and that of
Policrates gave oracles after their death.
If God revealed by a voice from Heaven that Jesus Christ was His Son, as the Evangelists say, Vulcan showed
by the apparition of a miraculous flame, that Coceculus was really his son.
If God has miraculously nourished some of His saints, the Pagan poets pretend that Triptolemus was
miraculously nourished with Divine milk by Ceres, who gave him also a chariot drawn by two dragons, and
that Phineus, son of Mars, being born after his mother's death, was nevertheless miraculously nourished by her
milk.
Finally, to abbreviate, because we could report many others, if our Christ-worshipers pretend that the walls of
the city of Jericho fell by the sound of their trumpets, the Pagans say that the walls of the city of Thebes were
built by the sound of the musical instruments of Amphion; the stones, as the poets say, arranging themselves
to the sweetness of his harmony; this would be much more miraculous and more admirable than to see the
walls demolished.
There is certainly a great similarity between the Pagan miracles and our own. As it would be great folly to
give credence to these pretended miracles of Paganism, it is not any the less so to have faith in those of
Christianity, because they all come from the same source of error. It was for this that the Manicheans and the
Arians, who existed at the commencement of the Christian Era, derided these pretended miracles performed
by the invocation of saints, and blamed those who invoked them after death and honored their relics.
Let us return at present to the principal end which God proposed to Himself, in sending His Son into the world
to become man; it must have been, as they say, to redeem the world from sin and to destroy entirely the works
of the pretended Devil, etc. This is what our Christ-worshipers claim also, that Jesus Christ died for them
according to His Father's intention, which is plainly stated in all the pretended Holy Books. What! an
Almighty God, who was willing to become a mortal man for the love of men, and to shed His blood to the last
drop, to save them all, would yet have limited His power to only curing a few diseases and physical infirmities
of a few individuals who were brought to Him; and would not have employed His Divine goodness in curing
the infirmities of the soul! that is to say, in curing all men of their vices and their depravities, which are worse
than the diseases of their bodies! This is not credible. What! such a good God would desire to preserve dead
corpses from decay and corruption; and would not keep from the contagion and corruption of vice and sin the
souls of a countless number of persons whom He sought to redeem at the price of His blood, and to sanctify
by His grace! What a pitiful contradiction!
In order to give a just idea of it, I believe it is best to say in general, that they are such, that if any one should
dare now to boast of similar ones, or wish to make them valued, he would certainly be regarded as a fool or a
fanatic.
God, as these pretended Holy Books claim, having appeared for the first time to Abraham, said to him: "Get
thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred and from thy father's house, into a land that I will show thee."
Abraham, having gone there, God, says the Bible, appeared the second time to him, and said, "Unto thy seed
Here is yet another vision. Watching the flocks of his father-in-law, Laban, who had promised him that all the
speckled lambs produced by his sheep should be his recompense, he dreamed one night that he saw all the
males leap upon the females, and all the lambs they brought forth were speckled. In this beautiful dream, God
appeared to him, and said: "Lift up now thine eyes and see that the rams which leap upon the cattle are
ring-streaked, speckled, and grizzled; for I have seen all that Laban does unto thee. Now arise, get thee out
from this land, and return unto the land of thy kindred." As he was returning with his whole family, and with
all he obtained from his father-in-law, he had, says the Bible, a wrestle with an unknown man during the
whole night, until the breaking of the day, and as this man had not been able to subdue him, He asked him
who he was. Jacob told Him his name; and He said: "Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel; for
as a prince hast thou power with God and with men, and hast prevailed."
This is a specimen of the first of these pretended Visions and Divine Revelations. We can judge of the others
by these. Now, what appearance of Divinity is there in dreams so gross and illusions so vain? As if some
foreigners, Germans, for instance, should come into our France, and, after seeing all the beautiful provinces of
our kingdom, should claim that God had appeared to them in their country, that He had told them to go into
France, and that He would give to them and to their posterity all the beautiful lands, domains, and provinces
of this kingdom which extend from the rivers Rhine and Rhone, even to the sea; that He would make an
everlasting alliance with them, that He would multiply their race, that He would make their posterity as
numerous as the stars of Heaven and as the sands of the sea, etc., who would not laugh at such folly, and
consider these strangers as insane fools!
Now there is no reason to think otherwise of all that has been said by these pretended Holy Patriarchs,
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in regard to the Divine Revelations which they claim to have had. As to the
institution of bloody sacrifices, the Holy Scriptures attribute it to God. As it would be too wearisome to go
into the disgusting details of this kind of sacrifices, I refer the reader to Exodus. [See chapters xxv., xxvii.,
xxyiii., and xxix.]
Were not men insane and blind to believe they were honoring God by tearing into pieces, butchering, and
burning His own creatures, under the pretext of offering them as sacrifices to Him? And even now, how is it
that our Christ-worshipers are so extravagant as to expect to please God the Father, by offering up to Him the
sacrifice of His Divine Son, in remembrance of His being shamefully nailed to a cross upon which He died?
Certainly this can spring only from an obstinate blindness of mind.
In regard to the detail of the sacrifices of animals, it consists but in colored clothing, blood, plucks, livers,
birds' crops, kidneys, claws, skins, in the dung, smoke, cakes, certain measures of oil and wine, the whole
being offered and infected by dirty ceremonies as filthy and contemptible as the most extravagant
performances of magic. What is most horrible of all this is, that the law of this detestable Jewish people
commanded that even men should be offered up as sacrifices. The barbarians, whoever they were, who
introduced this horrible law, commanded to put to death any man who had been consecrated to the God of the
Jews, whom they called Adonai: and it is according to this execrable precept that Jephthah sacrificed his
daughter, and that Saul wanted to sacrifice his son.
But here is yet another proof of the falsity of these revelations of which we have spoken. It is the lack of the
fulfillment of the great and magnificent promises by which they were accompanied, for it is evident that these
promises never have been fulfilled.
Firstly. Their posterity was to be more numerous than all the other nations of the world.
Secondly. The people who should spring from their race were to be the happiest, the holiest, and the most
victorious of all the people of the earth.
Thirdly. His covenant was to be everlasting, and they should possess forever the country He should give them.
Now it is plain that these promises-never were fulfilled.
Firstly. It is certain that the Jewish people, or the people of Israel—which is the only one that can be
regarded as having descended from the Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the only ones to whom
these promises should have been fulfilled—have never been so numerous that it could be compared
with the other nations of the earth, much less with the sands of the sea, etc., for we see that in the very time
when it was the most numerous and the most flourishing, it never occupied more than the little sterile
provinces of Palestine and its environs, which are almost nothing in comparison with the vast extent of a
multitude of flourishing kingdoms which are on all sides of the earth.
Secondly. They have never been fulfilled concerning the great blessings with which they were to be favored;
for, although they won a few small victories over some poor nations whom they plundered, this did not
prevent them from being conquered and reduced to servitude; their kingdom destroyed as well as their nation,
by the Roman army; and even now the remainder of this unfortunate nation is looked upon as the vilest and
most contemptible of all the earth, having no country, no dominion, no superiority.
Finally, these promises have not been fulfilled in respect to this everlasting covenant, which God ought to
have fulfilled to them; because we do not see now, and we have never seen, any evidence of this covenant;
and, on the contrary, they have been for many centuries excluded from the possession of the small country
they pretended God had promised that they should enjoy forever. Thus, since these pretended promises were
never fulfilled, it is certain evidence of their falsity; which proves, plainly, that these pretended Holy Books
which contain them were not of Divine inspiration. Therefore it is useless for our Christ-worshipers to pretend
to make use of them as infallible testimony to prove the truth of their religion.
Let us see, then, who these pretended prophets are, and if we ought to consider them as important as our
Christ-worshipers pretend they are. These men were but visionaries and fanatics, who acted and spoke
according to the impulsions of their ruling passions, and who imagined that it was the Spirit of God by which
they spoke and acted; or they were impostors who feigned to be prophets, and who, in order to more easily
deceive the ignorant and simple-minded, boasted of acting and speaking by the Spirit of God. I would like to
know how an Ezekiel would be received who should say that God made him eat for his breakfast a roll of
parchment; commanded him to be tied like an insane man, and lie three hundred and ninety days upon his
right side, and forty days upon his left, and commanded him to eat man's dung upon his bread, and afterward,
as an accommodation, cow's dung? I ask how such a filthy statement would be received by the most stupid
people of our provinces?
What can be yet a greater proof of the falsity of these pretended prophecies, than the violence with which
these prophets reproach each other for speaking falsely in the name of God, reproaches which they claim to
make in behalf of God. All of them say, "Beware of the false prophets!" as the quacks say, "Beware of the
counterfeit pills!" How could these insane impostors tell the future? No prophecy in favor of their Jewish
nation was ever fulfilled. The number of prophecies which predict the prosperity and the greatness of
Jerusalem is almost innumerable; in explanation of this, it will be said that it is very natural that a subdued and
captive people should comfort themselves in their real afflictions by imaginary hopes—as a year after
King James was deposed, the Irish people of his party forged several prophecies in regard to him.
But if these promises made to the Jews had been really true, the Jewish nation long ago would have been, and
would still be, the most numerous, the most powerful, the most blessed, and the most victorious of all nations.
Firstly. An angel having appeared in a dream to a man named Joseph, father, or at least so reputed, of Jesus,
son of Mary, said unto him:
"Joseph, thou son of David fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for that which is conceived in her is of
the Holy Ghost. And she shall bring forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name JESUS; for He shall save His
people from their sins." This angel said also to Mary:
"Fear not, Mary, for thou hast found favor with God. And behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb and bring
forth a Son, and shalt call His name Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and
the Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of His father David. And He shall reign over the house of Jacob
forever; and of His kingdom there shall be no end!" Jesus began to preach and to say:
"Repent, for the kingdom of Heaven is at hand. Take no thought for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye
shall drink, nor yet for your body what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the body than
raiment, for your Heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things. But seek ye first the kingdom
of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you."
Now, let every man who has not lost common sense, examine if this Jesus ever was a king, or if His disciples
had abundance of all things. This Jesus promised to deliver the world from sin. Is there any prophecy which is
more false? Is not our age a striking proof of it? It is said that Jesus came to save His people. In what way did
He save it? It is the greatest number which rules any party. For example, one dozen or two of Spaniards or
Frenchmen do not constitute the French or Spanish people; and if an army of a hundred and twenty thousand
men were taken prisoners of war by an army of enemies which was stronger, and if the chief of this army
should redeem only a few men, as ten or twelve soldiers or officers, by paying their ransom, it could not be
claimed that he had delivered or redeemed his army. Then, who is this God who has been sacrificed, who died
to save the world, and leaves so many nations damned? What a pity! and what horror!
Jesus Christ says that we have but to ask and we shall receive, and to seek and we shall find. He assures us
that all we ask of God in His name shall be granted, and that if we have faith as a grain of mustard-seed, we
could by one word remove mountains. If this promise is true, nothing appears impossible to our
Christ-worshipers who have faith in Jesus. However, the contrary happens. If Mohammed had made the
promises to his votaries that Christ made to His, without success, what would not be said about it. They would
cry out, "Ah, the cheat! ah, the impostor!" These Christ-worshipers are in the same condition: they have been
blind, and have not even yet recovered from their blindness; on the contrary, they are so ingenious in
deceiving themselves, that they pretend that these promises have been fulfilled from the beginning of
Christianity; that at that time it was necessary to have miracles, in order to convince the incredulous of the
truth of religion; but that this religion being sufficiently established, the miracles were no longer necessary.
Where, then, is their proof of all this?
Besides, He who made these promises did not limit them to a certain time, or to certain places, or to certain
persons; but He made them generally to everybody. The faith of those who believe, says He, shall be followed
by these miracles; "They shall cast out devils in My name, they shall speak in divers tongues, they shall
handle serpents," etc.
In regard to the removal of mountains, He positively says that "whoever shall say to a mountain: 'Be thou
removed, and be thou cast into the sea;' it shall be done;" provided that he does not doubt in his heart, but
It is said that all the sects which are founded in errors and imposture will come to a shameful end. But if Jesus
Christ intends to say that He has established a society of followers who will not fall either into vice or error,
these words are absolutely false, as there is in Christendom no sect, no society, and no church which is not full
of errors and vices, especially the Roman Church, although it claims to be the purest and the holiest of all. It
was born into error, or rather it was conceived and formed in error; and even now it is full of delusions which
are contrary to the intentions, the sentiments, or the doctrine of its Founder, because it has, contrary to His
intention, abolished the laws of the Jews, which He approved, and which He came Himself, as He said, to
fulfill and not to destroy. It has fallen into the errors and idolatry of Paganism, as is seen by the idolatrous
worship which is offered to its God of dough, to its saints, to their images, and to their relics.
I know well that our Christ-worshipers consider it a lack of intelligence to accept literally the promises and
prophecies as they are expressed; they reject the literal and natural sense of the words, to give them a mystical
and spiritual sense which they call allegorical and figurative; claiming, for example, that the people of Israel
and Judea, to whom these promises were made, were not understood as the Israelites after the body, but the
Israelites in spirit: that is to say, the Christians which are the Israel of God, the true chosen people that by the
promise made to this enslaved people, to deliver it from captivity, it is understood to be not the corporal
deliverance of a single captive people, but the spiritual deliverance of all men from the servitude of the Devil,
which was to be accomplished by their Divine Saviour; that by the abundance of riches, and all the temporal
blessings promised to this people, is meant the abundance of spiritual graces; and finally, that by the city of
Jerusalem, is meant not the terrestrial Jerusalem, but the spiritual Jerusalem, which is the Christian Church.
But it is easy to see that these spiritual and allegorical meanings having only a strange, imaginary sense, being
a subterfuge of the interpreters, can not serve to show the truth or the falsehood of a proposition, or of any
promises whatever. It is ridiculous to forge such allegorical meanings, since it is only by the relations of the
natural and true sense that we can judge of their truth or falsehood. A proposition, a promise, for example,
which is considered true in the proper and natural sense of the terms in which it is expressed, will not become
false in itself under cover of a strange sense, one which does not belong to it. By the same reasoning, that
which is manifestly false in its proper and natural sense, will not become true in itself, although we give it a
strange sense, one foreign to the true.
We can say that the prophecies of the Old Testament adjusted to the New, would be very absurd and puerile
things. For example, Abraham had two wives, of which the one, who was but a servant, represented the
synagogue, and the other one, his lawful wife, represented the Christian Church; and that this Abraham had
two sons, of which the one born of Hagar, the servant, represented the Old Testament; and the other, born of
Sarah, the wife, represented the New Testament. Who would not laugh at such a ridiculous doctrine?
Is it not amusing that a piece of red cloth, exhibited by a prostitute as a signal to spies, in the Old Testament is
made to represent the blood of Jesus Christ shed in the New? If—according to this manner of
interpreting allegorically all that is said, done, and practiced in the ancient law of the Jews—we should
interpret in the same allegorical way all the discourses, the actions, and the adventures of the famous Don
Quixote de la Mancha, we would find the same sort of mysteries and ridiculous figures.
It is nevertheless upon this absurd foundation that the whole Christian religion rests. Thus it is that there is
scarcely anything in this ancient law that the Christ-worshiping doctors do not try to explain in a mystical way
to build up their system. The most false and the most ridiculous prophecy ever made is that of Jesus, in Luke,
where it is pretended that there will be signs in the sun and in the moon, and that the Son of Man will appear
in a cloud to judge men; and this is predicted for the generation living at that time. Has it come to pass? Did
the Son of Man appear in a cloud?
Our Christ-worshipers, who feel these absurdities and can not avoid them by any good reasoning, have no
other resource than to say that we must ignore human reason and humbly adore these sublime mysteries
without wishing to understand them; but that which they call faith is refuted when they tell us that we must
submit; it is telling us that we must blindly believe that which we do not believe. Our Christ-worshipers
condemn the blindness of the ancient Pagans, who worshiped several Gods; they deride the genealogy of
those Gods, their birth, their marriages, and the generating of their children; yet they do not observe that they
themselves say things which are much more ridiculous and absurd.
If the Pagans believed that there were Goddesses as well as Gods, that these Gods and Goddesses married and
begat children, they thought of nothing, then, but what is natural; for they did not believe yet that the Gods
were without body or feeling; they believed they were similar to men. Why should there not be females as
well as males? It is not more reasonable to deny or to recognize the one than the other; and supposing there
were Gods and Goddesses, why should they not beget children in the ordinary way? There would be certainly
nothing ridiculous or absurd in this doc trine, if it were true that their Gods existed. But in the doctrine of our
Christ-worshipers there is something absolutely ridiculous and absurd; for besides claiming that one God
forms Three, and that these Three form but One, they pretend that this Triple and Unique God has neither
body, form, nor face; that the First person of this Triple and Unique God, whom they call the Father, begot of
Himself a Second person, which they call the Son, and which is the same as His Father, being, like Him,
without body, form, or face. If this is true, why is it that the First one is called Father rather than mother, or
the Second called Son rather than daughter? For if the First one is really father instead of mother, and if the
Second is son instead of daughter, there must be something in both of these two persons which causes the one
to be father rather than mother, and the other to be son rather than daughter. Now who can assert that they are
males and not females? But how should they be rather males than females, as they have neither body, form,
nor face? That is not an imaginable thing, and destroys itself. No matter, they claim chat these two Persons,
As our Christ-worshipers limit the power of God the Father to begetting but one Son, why do they not desire
that this Second person, and the Third, should have the same power to beget a Son like themselves? If this
power to beget a son is perfection in the First person, it is, then, a perfection and a power which does not exist
in the Second and in the Third person. Thus these two Persons, lacking a perfection and a power which is
found in the First one, they are consequently not equal with Him. If, on the contrary, they say that this power
to beget a son is no perfection, they should not attribute it, then, to the First person any more than to the other
two; for we should attribute perfections only to an absolutely perfect being. Besides, they would not dare to
say that the power to beget a Divine person is not a perfection; and if they claim that this First person could
have begotten several sons and daughters, but that He desired but this only Son, and that the two other persons
did not desire to beget any others, we could ask them, firstly, from whence they know this, for we do not see
in their pretended Holy Scriptures that any One of these Divine personages reveals any such assertions; how,
then, can our Christ-worshipers know anything about it? They speak but according to their ideas and to their
hollow imaginations. Secondly, We could not avoid saying, that if these pretended Divine personages had the
power of begetting several children, and did not wish to make use of it, the consequence would be that this
Divine power was ineffectual. It would be entirely without effect in the Third person, who did not beget or
produce any, and would be almost without effect in the two others, because they limited it. Then this power of
begetting or producing an unlimited number of children would remain idle and useless; it would be
inconsistent to suppose this of Divine Personages, One of whom had already produced a Son.
Our Christ-worshipers blame and condemn the Pagans because they attribute Divinity to mortal men, and
worship them as Gods after their death; they are right in doing this. But these Pagans did only what our
Christ-worshipers still do in attributing Divinity to their Christ; doing which, they condemn themselves also,
because they are in the same error as these Pagans, in that they worship a man who was mortal, and so very
mortal that He died shamefully upon a cross.
It would be of no use for our Christ-worshipers to say that there was a great difference between their Jesus
Christ and the Pagan Gods, under the pretense that their Christ was, as they claim, really God and man at the
same time, while the Divinity was incarnated in Him, by means of which, the Divine nature found itself united
personally, as they say, with human nature; these two natures would have made of Jesus Christ a true God and
a true man; this is what never happened, they claim, in the Pagan Gods.
But it is easy to show the weakness of this reply; for, on the one hand, was it not as easy to the Pagans as to
the Christians, to say that the Divinity was incarnated in the men whom they worshiped as Gods? On the other
hand, if the Divinity wanted to incarnate and unite in the human nature of their Jesus Christ, how did they
know that this Divinity would not wish to also incarnate and unite Himself personally to the human nature of
those great men and those admirable women, who, by their virtue, by their good qualities, or by their noble
actions, have excelled the generality of people, and made themselves worshiped as Gods and Goddesses? And
if our Christ-worshipers do not wish to believe that Divinity ever incarnated in these great personages, why do
they wish to persuade us that He was incarnated in their Jesus? Where is the proof? Their faith and their
belief; but as the Pagans rely on the same proof, we conclude both to be equally in error.
But what is more ridiculous in Christianity than in Paganism, is that the Pagans have generally attributed
Divinity but to great men, authors of arts and sciences, and who excelled in virtues useful to their country. But
to whom do our God-Christ-worshipers attribute Divinity? To a nobody, to a vile and contemptible man, who
had neither talent, science, nor ability; born of poor parents, and who, while He figured in the world, passed
but for a monomaniac and a seditious fool, who was disdained, ridiculed, persecuted, whipped, and, finally,
was hanged like most of those who desired to act the same part, when they had neither the courage nor skill.
About that time there were several other impostors who claimed to be the true promised Messiah; amongst
others a certain Judas, a Galilean, a Theodorus, a Barcon, and others who, under this vain pretext, abused the
people, and tried to excite them, in order to win them, but they all perished.
Let us pass now to His discourses and to some of His actions, which are the most singular of this kind:
"Repent," said He to the people, "for the kingdom of Heaven is at hand; believe these good tidings." And He
went all over Galilee preaching this pretended approach of the kingdom of Heaven. As no one has seen the
arrival of this kingdom of Heaven, it is evident that it was but imaginary. But let us see other predictions, the
praise, and the description of this beautiful kingdom.
The kingdom of Heaven is likened unto a man who sowed good seed in his field. But while he slept, his
enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat, and went his way. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like unto
treasure hidden in a field, the which, when a man has found, he hideth again, and for joy thereof goes and sells
all that he has, and buys that field. Again, the kingdom of Heaven is like unto a merchantman seeking goodly
pearls, who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all he had, and bought it. Again, the
kingdom of Heaven is like unto a net that was cast into the sea, and gathered of every kind; which, when it
was full, they drew to shore, and sat down and gathered the good into vessels, but cast the bad away. It is like
a grain of mustard-seed, which a man took and sowed in his field which, indeed, is the least of all seeds, but
when it is grown it is the greatest among herbs, etc.
Is this a language worthy of a God? We will pass the same judgment upon Him if we examine. His actions
more closely. Because, firstly, He is represented as running all over a country preaching the approach of a
pretended kingdom; Secondly, As having been transported by the Devil upon a high mountain, from which He
believed He saw all the kingdoms of the world; this could only happen to a visionist; for it is certain, there is
no mountain upon the earth from which He could see even one entire kingdom, unless it was the little
kingdom of Yvetot, which is in France; thus it was only in imagination that He saw all these kingdoms, and
was transported upon this mountain, as well as upon the pinnacle of the temple. Thirdly, When He cured the
deaf-mute, spoken of in St. Mark, it is said that He placed His fingers in the ears, spit, and touched his tongue,
then casting His eyes up to Heaven, He sighed deeply, and said unto him: "Ephphatha!" Finally, let us read all
that is related of Him, and we can judge whether there is anything in the world more ridiculous.
Having considered some of the silly things attributed to God by our Christ-worshipers, let us look a little
further into their mysteries. They worship one God in three persons, or three persons in one God, and they
attribute to themselves the power of forming Gods out of dough, and of making as many as they want. For,
according to their principles, they have only to say four words over a certain quantity of wine or over these
little images of paste, to make as many Gods of them as they desire. What folly! With all the pretended power
of their Christ, they would not be able to make the smallest fly, and yet they claim the ability to produce
millions of Gods. One must be struck by a strange blindness to maintain such pitiable things, and that upon
such vain foundation as the equivocal words of a fanatic. Do not these blind theologians see that it means
opening a wide door to all sorts of idolatries, to adore these paste images under the pretext that the priests
have the power of consecrating them and changing them into Gods?
Can not the priests of the idols boast of having a similar ability?
Do they not see, also, that the same reasoning which demonstrates the vanity of the gods or idols of wood, of
stone, etc., which the Pagans worshiped, shows exactly the same vanity of the Gods and idols of paste or of
flour which our Christ-worshipers adore? By what right do they deride the falseness of the Pagan Gods? Is it
not because they are but the work of human hands, mute and insensible images? And what kind of Gods are
those which we preserve in boxes for fear of the mice?
What are these boasted resources of the Christ-worshipers? Their morality? It is the same as in all religions,
but their cruel dogmas produced and taught persecution and trouble. Their miracles? But what people has not
its own, and what wise men do not disdain these fables? Their prophecies? Have we not shown their falsity?
Their morals? Are they not often infamous? The establishment of their religion? but did not fanaticism begin,
and has not intrigue visibly sustained this edifice? The doctrine? but is it not the height of absurdity?
PUBLISHER'S PREFACE.
By translating into both the English and German languages Le Bon Sens, containing the Last Will and
Testament of the French curate JEAN MESLIER, Miss Anna Knoop has performed a most useful and
meritorious task, and in issuing a new edition of this work, it is but justice to her memory [Miss Knoop died
Jan. 11, 1889.] to state that her translation has received the endorsement of our most competent critics.
In a letter dated Newburyport, Mass., Sep. 23, 1878, Mr. James Parton, the celebrated author, commends Miss
Knoop for "translating Meslier's book so well," and says that:
"This work of the honest pastor is the most curious and the most powerful thing of the kind which the last
century produced. . . . . Paine and Voltaire had reserves, but Jean Meslier had none. He keeps nothing back;
and yet, after all, the wonder is not that there should have been one priest who left that testimony at his death,
but that all priests do not. True, there is a great deal more to be said about religion, which I believe to be an
eternal necessity of human nature, but no man has uttered the negative side of the matter with so much candor
and completeness as Jean Meslier."
The value of the testimony of a catholic priest, who in his last moments recanted the errors of his faith and
asked God's pardon for having taught the catholic religion, was fully appreciated by Voltaire, who highly
commended this grand work of Meslier. He voluntarily made every effort to increase its circulation, and even
complained to D' Alembert "that there were not as many copies in all Paris as he himself had dispersed
throughout the mountains of Switzerland." [See Letter 504, Voltaire to D'Alembert] He earnestly entreats his
associates to print and distribute in Paris an edition of at least four or five thousand copies, and at the
suggestion of D'Alembert, made an abstract or abridgment of The Testament "so small as to cost no more than
five pence, and thus to be fitted for the pocket and reading of every workman." [Letter 146, from D'Alembert.]
The Abbé Barruel claims in his Memoirs [See History of Jacobinism by the Abbé Barruel, 4 vols. 8 VO,
translated by the Hon. Robert Clifford, F. R. S., and printed in London in 1798. The learned Abbé defines
Jacobinism as "the error of every man who, judging of all things by the standard of his own reason, rejects in
religious matters every authority that is not derived from the light of nature. It is the error of every man who
denies the possibility of any mystery beyond the limits of his reason, of every one who, discarding revelation
in defence of the pretended rights of Reason, Equality, and Liberty, seeks to subvert the whole fabric of the
Christian religion." B. 4.] to detect in the writings of Voltaire and of the leading Encyclopedists, a conspiracy
not only against the Altar but also against the Throne. He severely denounces the "Last Will of Jean
Meslier,—that famous Curate of Etrepigni,—whose apostasy and blasphemies made so strong an
impression on the minds of the populace," and he styles the plan of D'Alembert for circulating a few thousand
copies of the Abstract of the Will, as a "base project against the doctrines of the Gospel." [Ibid, page 145] He
even asserts his belief that:
"The Jacobins will one day declare that all men are free, that all men are equal; and as a consequence of this
Equality and Liberty they will conclude that every man must be left to the light of reason. That every religion
subjecting man's reason to mysteries, or to the authority of any revelation speaking in God's name, is a
religion of constraint and slavery; that as such it should be annihilated in order to reestablish the indefeasible
rights of Equality and Liberty as to the belief or disbelief of all that the reason of man approves or
disapproves: and they will call this Equality and Liberty the reign of Reason and the empire of Philosophy."
[History of Jacobinism, page 51.]
The results which the Abbé Barruel so clearly foresaw have at length been realized. The labors of the Jacobins
have not been in vain, and the Revolution they incited has restored France to the government of the people!
"With ardent hope for the future," says President Carnot in his centennial address, May 5, 1889, "I greet in the
palace of the monarchy the representatives of a nation that is now in complete possession of herself, that is
mistress of her destinies, and that is in the full splendor and strength of liberty. The first thoughts on this
solemn meeting turn to our fathers. The immortal generation of 1789, by dint of courage and many sacrifices,
secured for us benefits which we must bequeath to our sons as a most precious inheritance. Never can our
gratitude equal the grandeur of the services rendered by our fathers to France and to the human race. . . . The
Revolution was based upon the rights of man. It created a new era in history and founded modern society."
This is literally true. The freethinkers of France have taught mankind the doctrines of Liberty, Equality, and
Fraternity. They have taught the dignity of human reason, and the sacredness of human rights. They have
broken the bondage of the altar, and severed the shackles of the throne; and it is to be regretted that at the
centennial celebration held in this city on April 30th, 1889, the appointed orator [See the Centennial Address
of the Hon. Chauncey M. Depew.] did not realize the grandeur of the occasion, and did not, like Carnot, pay a
just tribute to our allies, the reformers of Europe, as well as to the fathers of the republic. But the people of
America will remember what the politician has forgotten. They will remember the names and deeds of their
foreign benefactors as well as of the American patriots of '76. When they recall the illustrious Europeans who
fought for our liberties they will remember the name of Lafayette; when they think of the Declaration of
Independence they will not forget the name of Thomas Jefferson; and when they speak of "the times that tried
men's souls" they will recall with gratitude the name of Thomas Paine.
Although the ecclesiastical conclave at Rome claims the power of working miracles in defiance of Nature's
laws, yet with or without miracles, they have never answered the simple arguments advanced by Jean Meslier;
although they claim to hold the keys of Paradise, and bind on earth the souls that are to be bound in heaven,
yet year by year their waning power refutes their senseless boast; although they boldly assert the dogma of
popish infallibility, yet the loss of the temporal power once wielded by Rome, and the death of each
succeeding pontiff, attest both the Pope's fallibility and the Pope's mortality. Indeed, the successor of St. Peter
is but human—the sacred college at Rome is but mortal; and faith and dogma cannot forever resist the
influence of light and knowledge. The power of Catholicism is surely declining throughout Europe; and if it
has become aggressive in our American cities, is it not because the friends of freedom have forgotten the
well-known axiom that "eternal vigilance is the price of liberty"?
PETER ECKLER.
Since I had the opportunity of hearing the speeches and lectures of liberal men, it has seemed to me that the
time has come for this work of John Meslier to be appreciated, and I concluded to translate it into the
language of my adopted country, presuming that many would be happy to study it.
In this faith I offer it now to the public, and I hope that the name of John Meslier will be honored as one of the
greatest benefactors of humanity.
ANNA KNOOP.
We know this fact of a celebrated preacher who in the beginning of the Revolution stood in the same pulpit
which we are pleased to call the pulpit of truth, and with his hand upon his heart declared that till then he had
taught only falsehood. He did more; he implored his parishioners to forgive him for the gross errors in which
he had kept them, and congratulated them upon having at last arrived at a period when it was permitted to
establish the empire of reason upon the ruins of prejudice. Times have changed very much, it is true; however,
so long as the press shall be able to combat the fatal errors of religious fanaticism, and perhaps even to some
extent prevent its violence, it will be the duty of every friend of humanity to reproduce continually the full
retractions which opposed the sincerity and conscience of the dying to the bad faith and hypocritical avidity of
the living. Guided by this intention, and ashamed to see the human race, in a land just freed from the yoke of
prejudice, give birth to a disgraceful juggling which will terminate in dominating authority, and associate
itself with the persecutions of which our incredulous or dissenting ancestors were the sad victims, we believe
it useful to reprint the last lessons of a priest—an honest man—bequeathed to his fellow-citizens
To do justice to these two works, to which we have added analytical notes, which will greatly facilitate our
researches, we will limit ourselves by giving the imposing approbation of two philosophers of the eighteenth
century—Voltaire and d'Alembert. They certainly understood much better the sublimity of evangelical
morality, and spoke of it in a manner more worthy of its author, than did those who deified it to profit by its
divinity, and who abused so cruelly the ignorance and barbarity of the first centuries, to establish, in the
interest of their fortunes and power, so many base prejudices, so many puerile and superstitious practices.
Here is what Voltaire and d'Alembert thought of the curate Meslier and of his work. Their letters are presented
here in order to excite curiosity and convince the judgment:
VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
They have printed in Holland the Testament of Jean Meslier. I trembled with horror in reading it. The
testimony of a priest, who, in dying, asks God's pardon for having taught Christianity, must be a great weight
in the balance of Liberals. I will send you a copy of this Testament of the anti-Christ, because you desire to
refute it. You have but to tell me by what manner it will reach you. It is written with great simplicity, which
unfortunately resembles candor.
Meslier also has the wisdom of the serpent. He sets an example for you; the good grain was hidden in the
chaff of his book. A good Swiss has made a faithful abstract and this abstract can do a great deal of good.
What an answer to the insolent fanatics who treat philosophers like libertines. What an answer to you,
wretches that you are, this testimony of a priest, who asks God's pardon for having been a Christian!
D'ALEMBERT'S ANSWER.
A misunderstanding has been the cause, my dear philosopher, that I received but a few days since the work of
Jean Meslier, which you had sent almost a month ago. I waited till I received it to write to you. It seems to me
that we could inscribe upon the tombstone of this curate: "Here lies a very honest priest, curate of a village in
Champagne, who, in dying, asks God's pardon for having been a Christian, and who has proved by this, that
ninety-nine sheep and one native of Champagne do not make a hundred beasts." I suspect that the abstract of
his work is written by a Swiss, who understands French very well, though he affects to speak it badly. This is
neat, earnest, and concise, and I bless the author of the abstract, whoever he may be. "It is of the Lord to
cultivate the vine." After all, my dear philosopher, a little longer, and I do not know whether all these books
will be necessary, and whether man will not have enough sense to comprehend by himself that three do not
make one, and that bread is not God. The enemies of reason are playing a very foolish part at this moment,
and I believe that we can say as in the song:
"To destroy all these people You should let them alone."
VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
It appears to me that the Testament of Jean Meslier has a great effect; all those who read it are convinced; this
man discusses and proves. He speaks in the moment of death, at the moment when even liars tell the truth
fully. This is the strongest of all arguments. Jean Meslier is to convert the world. Why is his gospel in so few
hands? How lukewarm you are at Paris! You hide your tight under a bushel!
D'ALEMBERT'S ANSWER.
You reproach us with lukewarmness, but I believe I have told you already that the fear of the fagot is very
cooling. You would like us to print the Testament of Jean Meslier and distribute four or five thousand copies.
The infamous fanaticism, for infamous it is, would lose little or nothing, and we should be treated as fools by
those whom we would have converted. Man is so little enlightened to-day only because we had the precaution
or the good fortune to enlighten him little by little. If the sun should appear all of a sudden in a cave, the
inhabitants would perceive only the harm it would do their eyes. The excess of light would result only in
blinding them.
D'ALEMBERT TO VOLTAIRE.
Apropos, they have lent me that work attributed to St. Evremont, and which is said to be by Dumarsais, of
which you spoke to me some time ago; it is good, but the Testament of Meslier is still better!
VOLTAIRE TO D'ALEMBERT.
The Testament of Meslier ought to be in the pocket of all honest men; a good priest, full of candor, who asks
God's pardon for deceiving himself, must enlighten those who deceive themselves.
But no little bird told me of the infernal book of that curate, Jean Meslier; a very important work to the angels
of darkness. An excellent catechism for Beelzebub. Know that this book is very rare; it is a treasure!
It is just that I should send you a copy of the second edition of Meslier. In the first edition they forgot the
preface, which is very strange. You have wise friends who would not be sorry to have this book in their secret
cabinet. It is excellent to form youthful minds. The book, which was sold in manuscript form for eight
Louis-d'or, is illegible. This little abstract is very edifying. Let us thank the good souls who give it
gratuitously, and let us pray God to extend His benedictions upon this useful reading.
VOLTAIRE TO D'AMILAVILLE.
My brother shall have a Meslier soon as I shall have received the order; it would seem that my brother has not
the facts. Fifteen to twenty years ago the manuscript of this work sold for eight Louis-d'or; it was a very large
quarto. There are more than a hundred copies in Paris. Brother Thiriot understands the facts. It is not known
who made the abstract, but it is taken wholly, word for word, from the original. There are still many persons
who have seen the curate Meslier. It would be very useful to make a new edition of this little work in Paris; it
can be done easily in three or four days.
But I believe there will never be another impression of the little book of Meslier. Think of the weight of the
testimony of one dying, of a priest, of a good man.
Three hundred Mesliers distributed in a province have caused many conversions. Ah, if I was assisted!
Names injure the cause; they awaken prejudice. Only the name of Jean Meslier can do good, because the
repentance of a good priest in the hour of death must make a great impression. This Meslier should be in the
hands of all the world.
My dear niece, it is very sad to be so far from you. Read and read again Jean Meslier; he is a good curate.
March 2, 1763.
I have found a Testament of Jean Meslier, which I send you. The simplicity of this man, the purity of his
manners, the pardon which he asks of God, and the authenticity of his book, must produce a great effect. I will
send you as many copies as you want of the Testament of this good curate.
VOLTAIRE TO HELVETIUS.
They have sent me the two abstracts of Jean Meslier. It is true that it is written in the style of a carriage-horse,
but it is well suited to the street. And what testimony! that of a priest who asks pardon in dying, for having
taught absurd and horrible things! What an answer to the platitudes of fanatics who have the audacity to assert
that philosophy is but the fruit of libertinage!
*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUPERSTITION IN ALL AGES (1732) ***
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