The G.o.ds of Greece, being purely human, were so far related to Christianity. That, too, is a human religion; a religion which makes it its object to unfold man, and to cause all to come to the stature of perfect men. Christianity also showed them G.o.d in the form of man; G.o.d dwelling on the earth; G.o.d manifest in the flesh. It also taught that the world was full of G.o.d, and that all places and persons were instinct with a secret divinity. Schiller (as translated by Coleridge) declares that LOVE was the source of these Greek creations:--
""Tis not merely The human being"s pride that peoples s.p.a.ce With life and mystical predominance, Since likewise for the stricken heart of Love This visible nature, and this common world Is all too narrow; yea, a deeper import Lurks in the legend told my infant years That lies upon that truth, we live to learn.
For fable is Love"s world, his home, his birthplace; Delightedly dwells he "mong fays and talismans, And spirits, and delightedly believes Divinities, being himself divine.
The intelligible forms of ancient poets, The fair humanities of Old Religion, The Power, the Beauty, and the Majesty, That had their haunts in dale or piny mountain, Or forest by slow stream, or pebbly spring, Or chasms or wat"ry depths;--all these have vanished.
They live no longer in the faith of Reason.
But still the heart doth need a language; still Doth the old instinct bring back the old names."
_The Piccolomini_, Act II. Scene 4.
As a matter of fact we find the believers in the Greek religion more ready to receive Christianity than were the Jews. All through Asia Minor and Greece Christian churches were planted by Paul; a fact which shows that the ground was somehow prepared for Christianity. It was ready for the monotheism which Paul subst.i.tuted for their mult.i.tude of G.o.ds, and for their idolatry and image-worship. The statues had ceased to be symbols, and the minds of the Greeks rested in the image itself. This idolatrous worship Paul condemned, and the people heard him willingly, as he called them up to a more spiritual worship. We think, therefore, that the Greek religion was a real preparation for Christianity. We have seen that it was itself in constant transition; the system of the poets pa.s.sing into that of the artists, and that of the artists into that of the philosophers; so that the philosophic religion, in turn, was ready to change into a Christian monotheism.
It may be said, since philosophy had undermined the old religion and subst.i.tuted for it more n.o.ble ideas, why did it not take the seat of the dethroned faith, and sufficiently supply its place? If it taught a pure monotheism and profound ethics, if it threw ample and adequate light on the problem of G.o.d, duty, and immortality, what more was needed? If ideas are all that we want, nothing more. That Greek philosophy gave way before Christianity shows that it did not satisfy all the cravings of the soul; shows that man needs a religion as well as a religious philosophy, a faith as well as an intellectual system. A religion is one thing, a speculation is a very different thing. The old Greek religion, so long as it was a living faith, was enough. When men really believed in the existence of Olympian Jove, Pallas-Athene, and Phoebus-Apollo, they had something above them to which to look up. When this faith was disintegrated, no system of opinions, however pure and profound, could replace it. Another faith was needed, but a faith not in conflict with the philosophy which had destroyed polytheism; and Christianity met the want, and therefore became the religion of the Greek-speaking world.
Religion is a life, philosophy is thought; religion looks up, philosophy looks in. We need both thought and life, and we need that the two shall be in harmony. The moment they come in conflict, both suffer. Philosophy had destroyed the ancient simple faith of the h.e.l.lenic race in their deities, and had given them instead only the abstractions of thought. Then came the Apostles of Christianity, teaching a religion in harmony with the highest thought of the age, and yet preaching it out of a living faith.
Christianity did not come as a speculation about the universe, but as a testimony. Its heralds bore witness to the facts of G.o.d"s presence and providence, of his fatherly love, of the brotherhood of man, of a rising to a higher life, of a universal judgment hereafter on all good and evil, and of Jesus as the inspired and ascended revealer of these truths. These facts were accepted as realities; and once more the human mind had something above itself solid enough to support it.
Some of the early Christian Fathers called on the heathen poets and philosophers to bear witness to the truth. Clement of Alexandria[266]
after quoting this pa.s.sage of Plato, "around the king of all are all things, and he is the cause of all good things," says that others, through G.o.d"s inspiration, have declared the only true G.o.d to be G.o.d. He quotes Antisthenes to this effect: "G.o.d is not like to any; wherefore no one can know him from an image." He quotes Cleanthes the Stoic:--
"If you ask me what is the nature of the good, listen: That which is regular, just, holy, pious, Self-governing, useful, fair, fitting, Grave, independent, always beneficial, That feels no fear or grief; profitable, painless, Helpful, pleasant, safe, friendly."
"Nor," says Clement, "must we keep the Pythagoreans in the background, who say, "G.o.d is one; and he is not, as some suppose, outside of this frame of things, but within it; in all the entireness of his being he pervades the whole circle of existence, surveying all nature, and blending in harmonious union the whole; the author of his own forces and works, the giver of light in heaven, and father of all; the mind and vital power of the whole world, the mover of all things.""
Clement quotes Aratus the poet:--
"That all may be secure Him ever they propitiate first and last.
Hail, Father! great marvel, great gain to man."
"Thus also," says Clement, "the Ascraean Hesiod dimly speaks of G.o.d:--
"For he is the king of all, and monarch Of the immortals, and there is none that can vie with him in power."
"And Sophocles, the son of Sophilus, says:--
"One, in truth, one is G.o.d, Who made both heaven and the far-stretching earth; And ocean"s blue wave, and the mighty winds; But many of us mortals, deceived in heart, Have set up for ourselves, as a consolation in our afflictions, Images of the G.o.ds, of stone, or wood, or bra.s.s, Or gold, or ivory; And, appointing to these sacrifices and vain festivals, Are accustomed thus to practise religion."
"But the Thracian Orpheus, the son of Oeagrus, hierophant and poet, at once, after his exposition of the orgies and his theology of idols, introduces a palinode of truth with solemnity, though tardily singing the strain:--
"I shall utter to whom it is lawful; but let the doors be closed, Nevertheless, against all the profane. But do thou hear, O Musaeus, for I will declare what is true."
"He then proceeds:--
"He is one, self-proceeding; and from him alone all things proceed, And in them he himself exerts his activity; no mortal Beholds him, but he beholds all.""
Professor c.o.c.ker, in his work on "Christianity and Greek Philosophy," has devoted much thought to show that philosophy was a preparation for Christianity, and that Greek civilization was an essential condition to the progress of the Gospel. He points out how Greek intelligence and culture, literature and art, trade and colonization, the universal spread of the Greek language, and especially the results of Greek philosophy, were "schoolmasters to bring men to Christ." He quotes a striking pa.s.sage from Pressense to this effect. Philosophy in Greece, says Pressense, had its place in the divine plan. It dethroned the false G.o.ds. It purified the idea of divinity.
c.o.c.ker sums up this work of preparation done by Greek philosophy, as seen,--
"1. In the release of the popular mind from polytheistic notions, and the purifying and spiritualizing of the theistic idea.
"2. In the development of the theistic argument in a logical form.
"3. In the awakening and enthronement of conscience as a law of duty, and in the elevation and purification of the moral idea.
"4. In the fact that, by an experiment conducted on the largest scale, it demonstrated the insufficiency of reason to elaborate a perfect ideal of moral excellence, and develop the moral forces necessary to secure its realization.
"5. It awakened and deepened the consciousness of guilt and the desire for redemption."[267]
The large culture of Greece was evidently adapted to Christianity. The Jewish mind recognized no such need as that of universal culture, and this tendency of Christianity could only have found room and opportunity among those who had received the influence of h.e.l.lenic culture.
The points of contact between Christianity and Greek civilization are therefore these:--
1. The character of G.o.d, considered in both as an immanent, ever-working presence, and not merely as a creating and governing will outside the universe.
2. The character of man, as capable of education and development, who is not merely to obey as a servant, but to co-operate as a friend, with the divine will, and grow up in all things.
3. The idea of duty, as a reasonable service, and not a yoke.
4. G.o.d"s revelations, as coming, not only in nature, but also in inspired men, and in the intuitions of the soul; a conception which resulted in the Christian doctrine of the Trinity.
The good of polytheism was that it saw something divine in nature. By dividing G.o.d into numberless deities, it was able to conceive of some divine power in all earthly objects. Hence Wordsworth, complaining that we can see little of this divinity now in nature, cries out:--
"Good G.o.d! I"d rather be A Pagan suckled in a creed outworn; So might I, standing on this pleasant lea, Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn; Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea, Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn."
Chapter VIII.
The Religion of Rome.
-- 1. Origin and essential Character of the Religion of Rome.
-- 2. The G.o.ds of Rome.
-- 3. Worship and Ritual.
-- 4. The Decay of the Roman Religion.
-- 5. Relation of the Roman Religion to Christianity.
-- 1. Origin and essential Character of the Religion of Rome.
In the Roman state nothing grew, everything was made. The practical understanding was the despotic faculty in the genius of this people.
Fancy, imagination, humor, seem to have been omitted in the character of the Latin race. The only form of wit which appeared among them was satire, that is, wit used for a serious purpose, to punish crimes not amenable to other laws, to remove abuses not to be reached by the ordinary police. The gay, light-hearted Greek must have felt in Rome very much as a Frenchman feels in England. The Romans did not know how to amuse themselves; they pursued their recreations with ferocious earnestness, making always a labor of their pleasure. They said, indeed, that it was well _sometimes_ to unbend, _Dulce est desipere in locis_; but a Roman when unbent was like an unbent bow, almost as stiff as before.