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- XI.
-
- A LETTER TO ANDREW DEAN.
-
- [NOTE: Mr. Dean, who rented Paine's farm at New Rochelle, had
- written: "I have read with good attention your manuscript on
- Dreams, and Examination on the Prophecies in the Bible., I am now
- searching the old prophecies and comparing the same to those said
- to be quoted in the New Testament. I confess the comparison is a
- matter worthy of our serious attention; I know not the result till
- I finish; then, if you be living, I shall communicate the same to
- you I hope to be with you soon." -- Editor.]
-
- A LETTER TO ANDREW DEAN.
-
- RESPECTED FRIEND,
-
- I received your friendly letter, for which I am obliged to
- you. It is three weeks ago to day (Sunday, Aug. 15,) that I was
- struck with a fit of an apoplexy, that deprived me of all sense and
- motion. I had neither pulse nor breathing, and the people about me
- supposed me dead. I had felt exceedingly well that day, and had
- just taken a slice of bread and butter for supper, and was going to
- bed. The fit took me on the stairs, as suddenly as if I had been
- shot through the head; and I got so very much hurt by the fall,
- that I have not been able to get in and out of bed since that day,
- otherwise than being lifted out in a blanket, by two persons; yet
- all this while my mental faculties have remained as perfect as I
- ever enjoyed them. I consider the scene I have passed through as an
- experiment on dying, and I find that death has no terrors for me.
- As to the people called Christians, they have no evidence that
- their religion is true. There is no more proof that the Bible is
- the word of God, than that the Koran of Mahomet is the word of God.
- It is education makes all the difference. Man, before he begins to
- think for himself, is as much the child of habit in Creeds as he is
- in ploughing and sowing. Yet creeds, like opinions, prove nothing.
-
- Where is the evidence that the person called Jesus Christ is
- the begotten Son of God? The case admits not of evidence either to
- our senses or our mental faculties: neither has God given to man
- any talent by which such a thing is comprehensible. It cannot
- therefore be an object for faith to act upon, for faith is nothing
- more than an assent the mind gives to something it sees cause to
- believe is fact. But priests, preachers, and fanatics, put
- imagination in the place of faith, and it is the nature of the
- imagination to believe without evidence.
-
- If Joseph the carpenter dreamed, (as the book of Matthew (i)
- says he did,) that his betrothed wife, Mary, was with child by the
- Holy Ghost, and that an angel told him so, I am not obliged to put
- faith in his dreams; nor do I put any, for I put no faith in my own
- dreams, and I should be weak and foolish indeed to put faith in the
- dreams of others.
-
- The Christian religion is derogatory to the Creator in all its
- articles. It puts the Creator in an inferior point of view, and
- places the Christian Devil above him. It is he, according to the
- absurd story in Genesis, that outwits the Creator in the garden of
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 1
-
- PREDESTINATION.
-
- Eden, and steals from him his favorite creature, Man, and at last
- obliges him to beget a son, and put that son to death, to get Man
- back again; and this the priests of the Christian religion call
- redemption.
-
- Christian authors exclaim against the practice of offering up
- human sacrifices, which, they say, is done in some countries; and
- those authors make those exclamations without ever reflecting that
- their own doctrine of salvation is founded on a Human Sacrifice.
- They are saved, they say, by the blood of Christ. The Christian
- religion begins with a dream and ends with a murder.
-
- As I am now well enough to sit up some hours in the day,
- though not well enough to get up without help, I employ myself as
- I have always done, in endeavoring to bring man to the right use of
- the reason that God has given him, and to direct his mind
- immediately to his Creator, and not to fanciful secondary beings
- called mediators, as if God was superannuated or ferocious.
-
- As to the book called the Bible, it is blasphemy to call it
- the word of God. It is a book of lies and contradictions, and a
- history of bad times and bad men. There are but a few good
- characters in the whole book. The fable of Christ and his twelve
- apostles, which is a parody on the Sun and the twelve signs of the
- Zodiac, copied from the ancient religions of the Eastern world, is
- the least hurtful part. Every thing told of Christ has reference to
- the Sun. His reported resurrection is at sunrise, and that on the
- first day of the week; that is, on the day anciently dedicated to
- the Sun, and from thence called Sunday -- in Latin 'Dies Solis,'
- the day of the Sun; as the next day, Monday, is Moon-day. But there
- is no room in a letter to explain these things.
-
- While man keeps to the belief of one God, his reason unites
- with his creed. He is not shocked with contradictions and horrid
- stories. His bible is the heavens and the earth. He beholds his
- Creator in all his works, and everything he beholds inspires him
- with reverence and gratitude. From the goodness of God to all, he
- learns his duty to his fellow-man, and stands self-reproved when he
- transgresses it. Such a man is no persecutor.
-
- But when he multiplies his creed with imaginary things, of
- which he can have neither evidence nor conception, such as the tale
- of the garden of Eden, the Talking Serpent, the Fall of Man, the
- Dreams of Joseph the Carpenter, the pretended Resurrection and
- Ascension, of which there is even no historical relation, -- for no
- historian of those times mentions such a thing, -- he gets into the
- pathless region of confusion, and turns either fanatic or
- hypocrite. He forces his mind, and pretends to believe what he does
- not believe. This is in general the case with the Methodists. Their
- religion is all creed and no morals.
-
- I have now, my friend, given you a 'fac simile' of my mind on
- the subject of religion and creeds, and my wish is, that you make
- this letter as publicly known as you find opportunities of doing.
-
- Yours, in friendship,
-
- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 2
-
- PREDESTINATION.
-
- XII.
-
- PREDESTINATION.
-
- [NOTE: Reprinted from an Appendix to Paine's Theological Works,
- published in London, by Mary Ann Carlile, in 1820. This I believe
- to be the last piece written by Paine. -- Editor.]
-
- REMARKS ON ROMANS IX. 18-21.
-
- Addressed to the Ministers of the Calvinistic Church.
-
- PAUL, in speaking of God, says, "Therefore hath he mercy on
- whom he will have mercy, and whom he will be hardeneth. Thou wilt
- say, why doth he yet find fault? For who hath resisted his will?
- Nay, but who art thou, O man, that repliest against God? Shall the
- thing formed Say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?
- Hath not the potter power over the clay of the same lump, to make
- one vessel unto honor and another unto dishonor?"
-
- I shall leave it to Calvinists and Universalists to wrangle
- about these expressions, and to oppose or corroborate them by other
- passages from other books of the Old or New Testament. I shall go
- to the root at once, and say, that the whole passage is presumption
- and nonsense. Presumption, because it pretends to know the private
- mind of God: and nonsense, because the cases it states as parallel
- cases have no parallel in them, and are opposite cases.
-
- The first expression says, "Therefore hath he (God) mercy on
- whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth." As this is
- ascribing to the attribute of God's power, at the expense of the
- attribute of his justice, I, as a believer in the justice of God,
- disbelieve the assertion of Paul. The Predestinarians, of which the
- loquacious Paul was one, appear to acknowledge but one attribute in
- God, that of power, which may not improperly be called the Physical
- attribute. The Deists, in addition to this, believe in his moral
- attributes, those of justice and goodness.
-
- In the next verses, Paul gets himself into what in vulgar life
- is called a hobble, and he tries to get out of it by nonsense and
- sophistry; for having committed himself by saying that "God hath
- mercy on whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth,"
- he felt the difficulty he was in, and the objections that would be
- made, which he anticipates by saying, "Thou wilt say then unto me,
- Why doth he (God) yet find fault? for who hath resisted his will?
- Nay, but, O man, who art thou, that repliest against God! "This is
- neither answering the question, nor explaining the case. It is down
- right quibbling and shuffling off the question, and the proper
- retort upon him would have been, "Nay, but who art thou,
- presumptuous Paul, that puttest thyself in God's place!" Paul,
- however, goes on and says, "Shall the thing formed say to him that
- formed it, why hast thou, made me thus?" Yes, if the thing felt
- itself hurt, and could speak, it would say it. But as pots and pans
- have not the faculty of speech, the supposition of such things
- speaking is putting nonsense in the place of argument, and is too
- ridiculous even to admit of apology. It shows to what wretched
- shifts sophistry will resort.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 3
-
- PREDESTINATION.
-
- Paul, however, dashes on, and the more he tries to reason the
- more he involves himself, and the more ridiculous he appears. "Hath
- not," says he, "the potter power over the clay of the same lump, to
- make one vessel unto honor and another unto dishonor"? In this
- metaphor, and a most wretched one it is, Paul makes the potter to
- represent God; the lump of clay the whole human race; the vessels
- unto honor those souls "on whom he hath mercy because he will have
- mercy;" and the vessels unto dishonor, those souls "whom he
- hardeneth (for damnation) because be will harden them." The
- metaphor is false in every one of its points, and if it admits of
- any meaning or conclusion, it is the reverse of what Paul intended
- and the Calvinists understand.
-
- In the first place a potter doth not, because he cannot, make
- vessels of different qualities, from the same lump of clay; he
- cannot make a fine china bowl, intended to ornament a side-board,
- from the same lump of clay that he makes a coarse pan, intended for
- a close-stool. The potter selects his clays for different uses,
- according to their different qualities, and degrees of fineness and
- goodness.
-
- Paul might as well talk of making gun-flints from the same
- stick of wood of which the gun-stock is made, as of making china
- bowls from the same lump of clay of which are made common earthen
- pots and pans. Paul could not have hit upon a more unfortunate
- metaphor for his purpose, than this of the potter and the clay; for
- if any inference is to follow from it, it is that as the potter
- selects his clay for different kinds of vessels according to the
- different qualities and degrees of fineness and goodness in the
- clay, so God selects for future happiness those among mankind who
- excel in purity and good life, which is the reverse of
- predestination.
-
- In the second place there is no comparison between the souls
- of men, and vessels made of clay; and, therefore, to put one to
- represent the other is a false position. The vessels, or the clay
- they are made from, are insensible of honor or dishonor. They
- neither suffer nor enjoy. The clay is not punished that serves the
- purpose of a close-stool, nor is the finer sort rendered happy that
- is made up into a punch-bowl. The potter violates no principle of
- justice in the different uses to which he puts his different clays;
- for he selects as an artist, not as a moral judge; and the
- materials he works upon know nothing, and feel nothing, of his
- mercy or his wrath. Mercy or wrath would make a potter appear
- ridiculous, when bestowed upon his clay. He might kick some of his
- pots to pieces.
-
- But the case is quite different with man, either in this world
- or the next. He is a being sensible of misery as well as of
- happiness, and therefore Paul argues like an unfeeling idiot, when
- he compares man to clay on a potter's wheel, or to vessels made
- therefrom: and with respect to God, it is an offence to his
- attributes of justice, goodness, and wisdom, to suppose that he
- would treat the choicest work of creation like inanimate and
- insensible clay. If Paul believed that God made man after his own
- image, he dishonours it by making that image and a brick-bat to be
- alike.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 4
-
- PREDESTINATION.
-
- The absurd and impious doctrine of predestination, a doctrine
- destructive of morals, would never have been thought of had it not
- been for some stupid passages in the Bible, which priestcraft at
- first, and ignorance since, have imposed upon mankind as
- revelation. Nonsense ought to be treated as nonsense, wherever it
- be found; and had this been done in the rational manner it ought to
- be done, instead of intimating and mincing the matter, as has been
- too much the case, the nonsense and false doctrine of the Bible,
- with all the aid that priestcraft can give, could never have stood
- their ground against the divine reason that God has given to man.
-
- Doctor Franklin gives a remarkable instance of the truth of
- this, in an account of his life, written by himself. He was in
- London at the time of which he speaks. "Some volumes," says he,
- "against Deism, fell into my hands. They were said to be the
- substance of Sermons preached at Boyle's Lectures. It happened that
- they produced on me an effect precisely the reverse of what was
- intended by the writers; for the arguments of the Deists, which
- were cited in order to be refuted, appeared to me more forcible
- than the refutation itself. In a word I soon became a perfect
- Deist." -- New York Edition of Franklin's Life, page 93.
-
- All America, and more than all America, knows Franklin. His
- life was devoted to the good and improvement of man. Let, then,
- those who profess a different creed, imitate his virtues, and excel
- him if they can.
-
- THOMAS PAINE.
-
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- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 5