This he insisted upon, in the clearest language: he would
have no other gods before him. They could march abreast with him,
but none of them could head the procession, and he did not claim the right
to head it himself.
Do you think he was able to stick to that upright and creditable position?
No. He could keep to a bad resolution forever, but he couldn't keep to
a good one a month. By and by he threw aside and calmly claimed to be the
only God in the entire universe.
As I was saying, jealousy is the key; all through his history it is
present and prominent. It is the blood and bone of his disposition, it
is the basis of his character. How small a thing can wreck his composure
and disorder his judgement if it touches the raw of his jealousy! And nothing
warms up this trait so quickly and so surely and so exaggeratedly as a
suspicion that some competition with the god-Trust is impending. The
fear that if Adam and Eve ate of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge they
would "be as gods" so fired his jealousy that his reason was
affected, and he could not treat those poor creatures either fairly or
charitably, or even refrain from dealing cruelly and criminally with their
blameless posterity.
To this day his reason has never recovered from that shock; a wild nightmare
of vengefulness has possessed him ever since, and he has almost bankrupted
his native ingenuities in inventing pains and miseries and humiliations
and heartbreaks wherewith to embitter the brief lives of Adam's descendants.
Think of the diseases he has contrived for them! They are multitudinous;
no book can name them all. And each one is a trap, set for an innocent
victim.
The human being is a machine. An automatic machine. It is composed of
thousands of complex and delicate mechanisms, which perform their functions
harmoniously and perfectly, in accordance with laws devised for their governance,
and over which the man himself has no authority, no mastership, no control.
For each one of these thousands of mechanisms the Creator has planned an
enemy, whose office is to harass it, pester it, persecute it, damage it,
afflict it with pains, and miseries, and ultimate destruction. Not one
has been overlooked.
From cradle to grave these enemies are always at work; they know no
rest, night or day. They are an army: an organized army; a besieging army;
an assaulting army; an army that is alert, watchful, eager, merciless;
an army that never relents, never grants a truce.
It moves by squad, by company, by battalion, by regiment, by brigade,
by division, by army corps; upon occasion it masses its parts and moves
upon mankind with its whole strength. It is the Creator's Grand Army, and
he is the Commander-in-Chief. Along its battlefront its grisly
banners wave their legends in the face of the sun: Disaster, Disease, and
the rest.
Disease! That is the main force, the diligent force, the devastating
force! It attacks the infant the moment it is born; it furnishes it one
malady after another: croup, measles, mumps, bowel troubles, teething pains,
scarlet fever, and other childhood specialties. It chases the child into
youth and furnishes it some specialties for that time of life. It chases
the youth into maturity, maturity into age, age into the grave.
With these facts before you will you now try to guess man's chiefest
pet name for this ferocious Commander-in-Chief? I will save you
the trouble -- but you must not laugh. It is Our Father in Heaven!
It is curious -- the way the human mind works. The Christian begins
with this straight proposition, this definite proposition, this inflexible
and uncompromising proposition: God is all-knowing, and all-powerful.
This being the case, nothing can happen without his knowing beforehand
that it is going to happen; nothing happens without his permission; nothing
can happen that he chooses to prevent.
That is definite enough, isn't it? It makes the Creator distinctly responsible
for everything that happens, doesn't it?
The Christian concedes it in that italicized sentence. Concedes it with
feeling, with enthusiasm.
Then, having thus made the Creator responsible for all those pains and
diseases and miseries above enumerated, and which he could have prevented,
the gifted Christian blandly calls him Our Father!
It is as I tell you. He equips the Creator with every trait that goes
to the making of a fiend, and then arrives at the conclusion that a fiend
and a father are the same thing! Yet he would deny that a malevolent lunatic
and a Sunday school superintendent are essentially the same.
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