SECTION V.
"Extreme unction," however, to a burdened
soul, was but a miserable resource, after all, in the prospect of
death. No wonder, therefore, that something else was found to be
needed by those who had received all that priestly assumption
could pretend to confer, to comfort them in the prospect of
eternity. In every system, therefore, except that of the Bible,
the doctrine of a purgatory after death, and prayers for the
dead, has always been found to occupy a place. Go wherever we
may, in ancient or modern times, we shall find that Paganism
leaves hop after death for sinners, who, at the time of their
departure, were consciously unfit for the abodes of the blest.
For this purpose middle state has been feigned, in which, by
means of purgatorial pains, guilt unremoved in time may in a
future would be purged away, and the soul be made meet for final
beatitude. In Greece the doctrine of a purgatory was inculcated
by the very chief of the philosophers. Thus Plato, speaking of
the future judgment of the dead, holds out the hope of final
deliverance for all, but maintains that, of "those who
are judged," "some" must first "proceed
to a subterranean place of judgment, where they shall sustain the
punishment they have deserved;" while others, in
consequence of a favourable judgment, being elevated at once into
a certain celestial place," shall pass their time in a
manner becoming the life they have lived in a human shape." *
In Pagan Rome, purgatory was equally held up before the minds of
men; but there, there seems to have been no hope held out to any
of exemption from its pains. Therefore, Virgil, describing its
different tortures, thus speaks:--
"Nor can the grovelling mind,
In the dark dungeon of the limbs confined,
Assert the native skies, or own its heavenly kind.
Nor death itself can wholly wash their stains;
But long-contracted filth, even in the soul, remains
The relics of inveterate vice they were,
And spots of sin obscene in every face appear.
For this are various penance enjoined;
And some are hung to bleach upon the wind,
Some plunged in water, others purged in fires,
Till all the dregs are drained, and all the rust expires.
All have their Manes, and those Manes bear.
The few so cleansed to these abodes repair,
And breathe in ample fields the soft Elysian air.
Then are they happy, when by length of time
The scurf is worn away of each committed crime
No speck is left of their habitual stains,
But the pure ether of the soul remains." *
In Egypt, substantially the same doctrine of purgatory was
inculcated. But when once this doctrine of purgatory was admitted
into the popular mid, then the door was opened for all manner of
priestly extortions. Prayers for the dead ever go hand in hand
with purgatory; but no prayers can be completely efficacious
without the interposition of the priests; and no priestly
functions can be rendered unless there be special pay for them.
Therefore, in every land we find the Pagan priesthood
"devouring widows' houses," and making merchandise
of the tender feelings of sorrowing relatives, sensitively alive
to the immortal happiness of the beloved dead. From all quarters
there is one universal testimony as to the burdensome character
and the expense of these posthumous devotions. One of the
oppression under which the poor Romanist in Ireland groan, is the
periodical special devotions, for which they are required to pay,
when death has carried away one of the inmates of their dwelling.
Not only are there funeral services and funeral dues for the
repose of the departed, at the time of burial, but the priest
pays repeated visits to the family for the same purpose, which
entail heavy expense, beginning with what is called "the
month's mind," that is, a service in behalf of the
deceased when a month after death has elapsed. Something entirely
similar to this had evidently been the case in ancient Greece;
for, says Muller in his History of the Dorians, "the
Argives sacrificed on the thirtieth day [after death] to Mercury
as the conductor of the dead." * In India many and
burdensome are the services of the Sradd'ha, or funeral obsequies
for the repose of the dead; and for securing the due efficacy of
these, it is inculcated that "donations of cattle, land,
gold, silver, and other things," should be made by the
man himself at the approach of death; or, "if he be too
weak, by another in his name." * Wherever we look, the
case is nearly the same. In Tartary, "The Gurjumi, or
prayers for the dead," says the Asiatic Journal, "are
very expensive." * In Greece, says Suidas, * "the
greatest and most expensive sacrifice was the mysterious
sacrifice called the Telete," a sacrifice which,
according to Plato, "was offered for the living and the
dead, and was supposed to free them from all the evils to which
the wicked are liable when they have left this world." *
In Egypt the exactions of the priests for funeral dues and masses
for the dead were far from being trifling.
"The priests," says Wilkinson, "induced
the people to expend large sums on the celebration of funeral
rites; and many who had barely sufficient to obtain the
necessaries of life were anxious to save something for the
expenses of their death. For, beside the embalming process, which
sometimes cost a talent of silver, or about 250 [pounds] English
money, the tomb itself was purchased at an immense expense; and
numerous demands were made upon the estate of the deceased, for
the celebration of prayer and other services for the soul."
* "The ceremonies," we find him elsewhere
saying, "consisted of a sacrifice similar to those
offered in the temples, vowed for the deceased to one or more
gods (as Osiris, Anubis, and others connected with Amenti);
incense and libation were also presented; and a prayer was
sometimes read, the relations and friends being present as
mourners. They even joined their prayers to those of the priest.
The priest who officiated at the burial service was selected from
the grade of Pontiffs, who wore the leopard skin; but various
other rites were performed by one of the minor priests to the
mummies, previous to their being lowered into the pit of the tomb
after that ceremony. Indeed, they continued to be administered at
intervals, as long as the family paid for their
performance." * Such was the operation of the doctrine
of purgatory and prayers for the dead among avowed and
acknowledged Pagans; and in what essential respect does it differ
from the operation of the same doctrine in Papal Rome? There are
the same extortions in the one as there were in the other. The
doctrine of purgatory is purely Pagan, and cannot for a moment
stand in the light of Scripture. For those who die in Christ no
purgatory is, or can be, needed; for "the blood of Jesus
Christ, God's Son, cleanseth from all sin." If this be
true, where can there be the need for any other cleansing? On the
other hand, for those who die without personal union to Christ,
and consequently unwashed, unjustified, unsaved, there can be no
other cleansing; for, while "he that hath the Son hath
life, he that hath not the Son hath no life." and never
can have it. Search the Scripture through, and it will be found
that, in regard to all who "die in their sins," the
decree of God is irreversible: "Let him that is unjust
be unjust still, and let him that is filthy be filthy
still." Thus the whole doctrine of purgatory is a
system of pure bare-faced Pagan imposture, dishonouring to God,
deluding men who live in sin with the hope of atoning for it
after death, and cheating them at once out of their property and
their salvation. In the Pagan purgatory, fire, water, wind, were
represented (as may be seen from the lines of Virgil) * as
combining to purge away the stain of sin. In the purgatory of the
Papacy, ever since the days of Pope Gregory, FIRE itself has been
the grand means of purgation. * Thus, while the purgatorial fires
of the future world are just the carrying out of the principle
embodied in the blazing and purifying Baal-fires of the eve of
St. John, they form another link in identifying the system of
Rome with the system of Tammuz or Zoroaster, the great God of the
ancient fire-worshippers.
Now, if baptismal regeneration, justification by works,
penance as a satisfaction to God's justice, the unbloody
sacrifice of the mass, extreme unction, purgatory, and prayers
for the dead, were all derived from Babylon, how justly may the
general system of Rome be styled Babylonian? And if the account
already given be true, what thanks ought we to render to God,
that, from a system such as this, we were set free at the blessed
Reformation! How great a boon is it to be delivered from trusting
in such refuges of lies as could no more take away sin than the
blood of bulls or of goats! How blessed to feel that the blood of
the Lamb, applied by the Spirit of God to the most defiled
conscience, completely purges it from dead works and from sin!
How fervent ought our gratitude to be, when we know that, in all
our trials and distresses, we may come boldly unto the throne of
grace, in the name of no creature, but of God's eternal and
well-beloved Son; and that that Son is exhibited as a most tender
and compassionate high priest, who is TOUCHED with a feeling of
our infirmities, having been in all points tempted like as we
are, yet without sin. Surely the thought of all this, while
inspiring tender compassion for the deluded slaves of Papal
tyranny, ought to make us ourselves stand fast in the liberty
wherewith Christ has made us free, and quit ourselves like men,
that neither we nor our children may ever again be entangled in
the yoke of bondage.