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It remains, before we come to the story of the new religion, to note
some of the tendencies at work, when it appeared, in the old religions
whose leading features we have surveyed. The new religion came into
existence on the morrow of a political revolution whose effect was
world-wide, the transformation into a personal autocracy of the
oligarchy which, through the power of Rome, controlled civilisation.
That revolution was itself the last of a succession which, through
nearly three centuries, had slowly changed the main conditions of
social life, and in changing these had influenced the religious ideas
and practices of a whole world. In those three hundred years there had
been at work a continuous steady pressure working towards the political
unity of civilisation, and destroying, as it progressed, the
multitudinous barriers to freedom of thought and intercourse which the
rivalry of a hundred states and cultures had thrown up in sheer
self-defence. It had worked most powerfully for a more generous
philosophical conception of man's relation to his fellows, and had even
given the beginnings of a setting of fact to such philosophical
theories as that of the universal brotherhood of men. This gentle and
more generous spirit passed from the philosophers to the very citadel
of particularism and privilege -- the law, and the revolution was
reflected in the first western legislation that can truly be called
social.
And, it needs no stating, this new force, bred of a new political and
social unity, influenced no less strikingly the traditional notions of
religion. For the intellectuals of Paganism there was that new thing
the moral philosophy of the Stoics; and while some turned in
desperation from the critic-riddled mythologies to the despair of
scepticism, the neo-Pythagorean philosophies with their teaching of a
divine providence and their liturgy of healing and purification
attracted others. In this pagan elite we have the spectacle of a
doctrinal enthusiasm reflected in, and influenced by, every form of
intellectual activity, seeking restlessly but untiringly a system which
will satisfy both intellect and heart. One of the most striking
examples perhaps of this coincident doubt and desire, of the prevalent
alternation of credulity and scepticism is Cicero. Cicero, conservative
and respectful to tradition -- no embittered liberal in revolt like
Lucretius -- who, in one mood, invoking his genius to move the people
to gratitude for Jove's safeguarding of Rome can speak as a theologian,
appears in quite another guise in his philosophical writings and his
private correspondence. Do the gods exist? The question, self- found,
he proceeds to discuss it. "No doubt it is hard to say 'no', if the
matter is discussed in a public reunion. Amongst ourselves. . . nothing
easier than to say 'no.' I am myself one of the pontiffs. I really
believe we ought to preserve with jealous devotion all the ceremonial
of the public cult. For all that, I should like to be able to prove to
myself that the gods do exist, not the mere likelihood of their
existence but to prove it as a certainty. I have so many difficulties
troubling me in this matter that sometimes I come to think that really
there are no gods." The like interest, the same anxious desire, finds
an echo in all that was best in the literature of the time. Virgil,
Plutarch, and Seneca most of all, reflect it in a kind of continuous
ground rhythm that once in a while rising to the surface swells their
genius to its full.
What of the crowd, the vast mass of Pagans? Here, too, the new spirit
of brotherhood showed itself in the innumerable associations --
collegia -- for mutual assistance.
We note, too, the decline of certain cults. But the traditional
paganism survives, still a force if only in the weight of its inertia.
Especially does it survive in the local cults, the worship of the
special protecting gods of the town, of the professions and trades and
of the family, and in the cult of the dead. Local patriotism is here
their inspiration, and their ritual observances become a matter of
civic duty -- a reflection in religious matters of the rich and varied
municipal life that was for so long the Empire's main strength; and the
obligation of worship presses universally on every citizen. Even the
elite who find their spiritual salvation in far different ways bow in
practice to the prevailing spirit; and Seneca can end a devastating
criticism of the cult of the gods of the Capitol with the practical
recommendation that every wise man will worship them, not that this
pleases the gods, but because it is commanded by the law.
And this traditional paganism remained for the mass of its clients
substantially the same, anthropomorphic, a hero-worship, a magical
cult, undoctrinal, unmoral, idolatrous. Philosophers might, by
allegorising, seek to refine and purify it; they might give the myths a
higher meaning through symbolic interpretations. But philosophers are
rare. The average man has his bread to earn and lacking the time, if
not the aptitude, for speculation, gives himself generally to the
practice of life as he finds his fellows practising it. Hence
polytheism survives the criticism of the thinkers, and the myths their
ridicule; and idolatry remains so widespread, so universal a fact of
life, that the pagan elite can mock at it as unsparingly as the later
Christian Fathers. And with the universal idolatry there still
flourished the old superstition and the old obscenity which the
idolatry preached, only too often, from a hundred divine examples. "I
am well aware," the words are those of a pagan, Denis of Halicarnassus,
"that many philosophers explain allegorically the greater part of these
filthy fables. But this philosophy is the possession of a very few
only. The mass of mankind, the ordinary folk, accept the stories in
their worst sense. Either they despise gods whose lives are so
depraved, or, since the gods themselves are shown not to abstain from
them, they come to the pitch that they do not recoil from the very
vilest of vicious deeds." It is not unfair to say that the survival of
this old classic paganism was due "in great part to the feebleness of
its control over moral conduct, character and the passions, to the
sanction it gave to every surrender to the beast that sleeps, alas, at
the heart of each one of us."
Paganism's idea of God had in it no element of grandeur, of holiness,
of sanctity; and in its practice, adoration and love could find no
place. It was in fact little but a mentality, an attitude of mind which
went with a certain routine of ritual. Though it accompanied every
action of life, it did so only as an empty gesture, barren of
influence, powerless to affect life itself or thought. Nevertheless the
founder of the new political regime, Augustus, saw in it a means of
control, a source of power, which, patronised, fostered, protected by
the state, might become, because of its universal diffusion through the
vast empire of so many races and tongues, a permanent reserve of
support. Hence his vigorous and continued attempts to restore and
reform it; his rich endowment of its temples; and his own public
assiduity, and that of his successors, in the observance of its rites.
There is attributed to one of his counsellors, Maecenas, a speech which
sums up the new state policy in religious matters "Honour the gods
according to the customs of your forefathers, see to it that others
honour them too. As for those who would introduce among you any strange
novelties of religion, hate them and let them feel your hatred. . . ."
Such novelties there were indeed to be, for underneath the universal
state-protected Hellenistic Paganism the old cults of Egypt and the
East were once more slowly stirring. With their ideas of spiritual
purification, of redemption from sin, and of personal immortality,
expressed in a ritual incomparably seductive, these cults were later to
do much to transform, yet once more, the religion of the populace; but
for yet another century they were to-move only very slowly, their
influence as yet hardly felt outside the underworld of the great cities
of the East. Of greater immediate importance, in the first century
A.D., was the new cult of the State itself, now in course of slow
transformation to a worship of the reigning Emperor, and rapidly
becoming the most popular cult of all.
Emperor worship was not a Roman invention. It appears, long before Rome
was a power, in ancient Egypt, and it was sufficiently widespread
throughout the East for Alexander to use it as a means of consolidating
his conquests. The generals, who on his death divided up his Empire
among themselves, took the practice as part of the legacy and it was
already an established tradition when, in turn, these kingdoms fell
before the Roman power. Roman philosophy, associating immortality with
the great heroes of humanity -- an immortality they shared with the
gods -- may have prepared the way in the west. For the hero lives for
ever with the gods, soon he comes to be likened to them, to be
considered after death as one of them. But once more it is in the east
that the beginnings are to be found, in the cult there rendered to the
different generals and proconsuls. Thus at the beginning of the second
century Flaminius, the conqueror of the Macedonians, is associated in
196 at Chalcis with the cult of Herakles and Apollo. A century later
the custom is general and Cicero can cite a cult of Verres as a count
in his famous indictment, and make it a boast that he himself refused
the proffered divine honours during his proconsulship of Cilicia. The
Civil War helped greatly in the development of the practice, and the
assassination of Julius Caesar was the occasion of the first official
divinisation, the law of 44 B.C. which decreed to the dead hero the
title of "Divine." In the Civil Wars which filled the next few years
the rival leaders generously appropriated to themselves like honours --
all but Octavian. With characteristic caution he waited until with his
final victory the honours came to him more surely than if they had been
self-conferred. The title of Augustus conferred by the Senate in 27
B.C. had in it already something of the divine, and soon there began at
Rome a private cult of the Genius of Augustus. In the provinces
progress was more rapid, and altars were erected even during his
lifetime to Augustus himself, though at Rome itself it was not
customary, for yet another century or more, so to deify the reigning
sovereign.
With the emperor there was associated in the ritual the goddess Rome;
and presently the two became confounded and, worshipping the emperor,
the citizen worshipped his country. It was not merely in a spirit of
servility and flattery that this new imperial cult originated and
developed. Round it there clustered from the beginning a host of nobler
associations. There was thankfulness for the peace and prosperity that
succeeded a century of bloody civil war, appreciation of Augustus as
the deliverer from an age of anarchy; there was something of the
sentiment of pride of race, almost of patriotism; and in this cult all
the popular veneration for the majesty of the State's power found a
natural and congenial expression, until in the end it became the very
touchstone of loyalty and good citizenship. It was of all cults the
most popular; and, excelling all others in the pomp that surrounded its
celebrations and in the prestige of its priesthood, more than any other
it came to stand as the established religion of the State.
It is not, however, in the development of any one particular religion
that the most characteristic feature of the religious life of this age
is to be sought. More significant, and of ultimately greater
importance, is the tendency of all these cults to amalgamate. The new
political unity; Rome's new role as the capital of that new unity, the
city where the vast Empire's innumerable religions were to meet and to
live together, and through which as through a great clearing house of
culture the hundred fashions of thought and life were to pass, and to
return, refashioned, to the distant provinces; the quasi-official
propaganda of the Roman religions; all fostered this new levelling
tendency. Rome had conquered Carthage and Greece, Asia Minor, Syria and
Egypt, and in turn those ancient civilisations, like some captive
mistress, were to enslave their conqueror. The subject peoples brought
with them into the Empire their gods as they brought their other
cultural habits, and the strangers soon appeared in every city side by
side with the native deities, sometimes in rivalry, sometimes roughly
identified by a similarity of myth or an identity of divine function.
Sometimes the different religions co-existed in a strange companionship
that was unconscious of basic incompatibility, or again, combining,
they gave rise to newer cults.
This tendency to assimilate and level the cults of the world, which was
at work throughout the countries ringed around the Mediterranean Sea,
began unmistakably to show itself after the conquests of Alexander. It
developed with ever increasing vigour for the next four or five
centuries. The nature of the pagan cults assisted the development. They
lacked organisation, lacked a body of religious doctrine and
consequently there was in them no place for anything corresponding to
an Act of Faith. The clients of the different gods were not therefore
"members" of the cults as a Christian is a "member" of his Church.
Remembering also that Paganism's one obligation was observance of
ritual, it is easy to understand the speedy development of this
syncretist tendency. Nothing could have been more congenial to the
nature of Paganism. But it would be erroneous to suppose that
Syncretism made for greater simplicity, for a real unity that would
take the place of the old confusing multiplicity of gods and cults. The
final result of the movement was confusion greater than ever. It
introduced new complexities, and, by its juxtaposition of gods,
multiplying ever more and more the number of dwellers on Olympus, it
made rather for polytheism more and more hopelessly. For the one
Jupiter whom the ancient Roman knew, there were now, to the delight of
the sceptic, half a dozen -- as often as not rivals -- to conciliate
whom simultaneously called for considerable tact on the part of the
pious. So for example Xenophon records how, on his return from Asia, he
sacrificed in turn to Zeus Eleutherios and to Zeus Basileus. All in
vain. Matters were rather worse than before. He learnt from one learned
in such affairs that the jealousy of Zeus Meilichios was the obstacle,
and hastening to propitiate the last, he finally received an answer to
his prayers. Thanks to the syncretist development "Ideas become more
indistinct; but no single idea of divinity clearly emerges. This
theocrasia. . . did nothing for monotheism but a great deal for
scepticism and the darkest superstitions."
In the six hundred years that lay between Nabuchodonosor's final
destruction of their ancient kingdom and the coming of Christianity,
the Jews had suffered under a series of political revolutions. Their
Babylonian conquerors had fallen to the Persians, and the Persians to
Alexander. Alexander's Greek successors had, by their attempted
suppression of Judaism, roused a revolt that resulted in an independent
Jewish state and finally this had fallen to the Romans. Each of the
political systems under which the Jews had lived had left its mark on
national characteristics, but none had effected a change equal to that
which resulted from the years of exile that followed the conquest of
Nabuchodonosor. The exiles were indeed allowed to return by the Persian
who conquered Nabuchodonosor's hapless descendant, but the Jewry of
post-exilic times was a new thing, and the restored national life was
no mere resumption of the old.
Henceforth there were indeed to be two Jewries, for not all the exiles
returned, and from the Babylonian captivity the historian has ever
before him this dual development of the race and its religion. The
colonies of those who chose permanently to exile themselves from
Palestine were for the most part, originally, in the valley of the
Euphrates the land of the captivity; but later, and especially in the
years that followed the conquests and death of Alexander, it was the
countries of the hellenic culture, more particularly Egypt, that
attracted them and Alexandria itself became a second Jerusalem. With
the Roman conquest of the East, and the consequent political unity of
the whole Mediterranean world, the Jews spread into the Latin West. All
the Mediterranean countries now knew them, as they themselves could
boast. There was a colony of 10,000 (men alone) at Rome in the reign of
Tiberius (A.D. 14-37) and about the same time they are reckoned at one
in seven of the population of Egypt. Harnack estimates that they formed
7 per cent. of the total population of the Empire in the reign of
Augustus.
The Jewry of Palestine and that of the Dispersion are equally important
in a study of Christian origins, for the Palestinian Jewry was the
birthplace and cradle of the new religion, and the Jewry of the
Dispersion was its first means of propaganda, the bridge by which it
entered the world of Paganism outside Palestine. The two Jewries were
greatly affected by every phase of contemporary religious development;
they were affected in widely different ways. For the exiles who
returned to Palestine, there had followed a full restoration of the
forms of the pre-exilic religious life. Jerusalem was once again the
Holy City, the Temple was rebuilt, and the prescribed routine of daily
sacrifice and ritual prayers was resumed as though no calamity of war
had ever interrupted it. The main effect upon this Jewry of the contact
with the religions of their conquerors, had been to strengthen and
confirm its own traditional faith. Especially were these Jews
strengthened in their hold on the doctrine that Yahweh is God and is
alone God. The old fight of the Prophets against idolatry is never
again to need renewing. In none of the Prophets who follow the
captivity is there any reference to it as a national sin. Yahweh is
more clearly seen as the Creator and Preserver of all mankind, and if
known in an especial manner to the Jews, knowable to the rest by His
work of creation and His providence. More than ever is emphasis laid on
the fact that He is the God of Holiness, of Justice in the moral sense,
requiring in this an imitation of Himself in those He has created. The
political catastrophe has served to emphasize that something more is
required for future salvation than the mere fact of birth into the race
of His choice.
Man is body and soul, is immortal, and around his relations with Yahweh
his Creator, through the Law set for his observance, there now begins a
whole world of new speculation and thought. Man's universal inclination
to evil, his weakness in the presence of temptation to wrong-doing, are
a legacy from the failure of the first of mankind, Adam. But the
weakness is not fatal. An observance of the Law is possible and will
ensure salvation. Observance of the Law is possible, but it is
increasingly difficult; for one of the chief results of the exile has
been a cult of the Law for its own sake, a cult that has gradually
overlaid its first simple austerity with a mass of deduced precepts
such that only the scholar trained in the Law can safely find his way
through the mazes, and the Law begins to cover the minutest detail of
all the myriad acts of life. To teach the law, to interpret it, there
has gradually grown up the "corps" of the Scribes. They are an
extra-levitical religious force, standing to the priesthood much as the
new law cult stands to the Temple liturgy of sacrifice; and the
foundation of their prestige is their service in the dark days of the
captivity, when, deprived of that liturgy, Jewish piety was saved by
study and meditation on the Divine Law.
This cult of the Law was now perhaps the chief force in the religious
life of the Palestine Jewry, and in its most enthusiastic devotees
developing ever more surely into a barren and exaggerated formalism. It
was not, however, the only force in that life; and the Jew, torn
between the consciousness of his own weakness and the austere fact of
the well-nigh unobservable Law, about which the Scribes in their many
schools disputed, turned for consolation and encouragement to the mercy
of the Law's author. Since the captivity there had gradually developed
the notion of an individual responsibility in spiritual matters, and
along with this a sense of Yahweh’s providence as a quality by reason
of which men, not merely in the mass, as a chosen nation, but even as
individuals, were important and matter for the Divine Concern. Side by
side with the cult of the Law there was a cult of the Psalms; and in
the interior life thus fed and stimulated, the pious Jew escaped at
once the deadening formalism of a merely external law observance, and
the consequences of a fatal identification of the Divine Lawgiver with
His unauthorised human commentators.
The role of the prophet diminished; and with the death of Malachi there
began a long period of four centuries in which the Jew, while the
different pagan empires disputed his kingdom among themselves, lived
spiritually on the riches of his past, giving himself to the twin cults
of the Law and the life of interior holiness and to meditation on the
manner and the time of the next showing forth of Yahweh’s mercy -- the
looked for coming of the Messias. Here speculation was rich and varied
indeed, much of it stimulated and coloured by pagan motives of
eschatology, and related almost always to the anticipated end of
Yahweh’s earthly creation. Sometimes the coming of the promised Saviour
is expected as coincident with the end of the world, as the judgment of
Yahweh through him on His defeated enemies. Another school looked for
the Saviour's reign as an earthly preliminary to the promised eternity
of bliss. After his victory over Yahweh’s enemies, he will, as ruler of
the world, transform it through justice and peace, judging mankind and
allotting to each his punishment or reward. The wicked shall be
punished for ever in flames, the good be received into paradise, a high
place where they shall see Yahweh and rejoice with Him for ever. The
Messias himself was conceived as a great prince to be sent by God to
establish His kingdom on earth, as a warrior and judge, as the king who
will reign eternally. Generally, too, he is conceived as already
existing, awaiting the day of his coming; but he is never conceived as
himself divine, nor did the general conception ever associate with his
coming and the execution of his mission the idea of vicarious suffering
and expiation.
For this Palestinian Judaism the conquests of Alexander were the
beginning of much new development. The hellenistic culture which
thereafter spread over all the semitic East could not leave it
untouched. From Alexander himself, and from the Ptolemies to whom
Palestine fell as a province on Alexander's death, their religious
institutions had nothing but protection. But the victory of the dynasty
of the Seleucid rulers of Antioch (198) brought about, with the change
of ruler, the novelty of an aggressive movement on the part of the
state to hellenise not merely the secular culture of the Jews but their
religion also. The Jews were to syncretise Judaism at the order of the
hellenic Paganism that was now their master. A national insurrection
was the consequence; and after a series of bloody wars the Jews, under
the heroic Judas Maccabeus, not only secured their threatened religious
independence, but shook themselves free of the rule of the foreigner.
The new political independence lasted for a century until, in 63 B.C.,
Jerusalem fell to Pompey's armies and Rome. It was a century of
religious revival. The hellenistic influences of the pre-Maccabean
generations did indeed survive, especially among the families of what
may be called the ecclesiastical nobility, and those from whose ranks
the leaders in public life were recruited. This was the party of the
Sadducees, who reduced observance of the Law to the minimum of what was
actually written, and rationalised, as far as they could, the ancient
beliefs. Sadducees formed a tiny colony of Hellenism in the very heart
of Jewry, controlling political life through their wealth and through
their command of the high priesthood which money had brought them.
This attitude of compromise with the foreign culture was, however, the
attitude of the few; and the mass of the nation followed rather the
influence of those jealous doctors of the Law, the Scribes. Striving to
keep themselves clear of the pagan culture's corrupting influence, they
"separated" themselves from its every manifestation -- whence the later
name by which they were called, and called themselves, Pharisees, the
Separated. Their spiritual lineage was from the heroes who had formed
the armies of Maccabeus, and the traditional religious patriotism of
the sect won it a deep and constant influence with the mass of the
Jews.
The Judaism of the Dispersion is best studied as it appeared in
Alexandria its most influential centre, the second city of the Empire,
the Metropolis of the East, the capital of the Dispersion, and for the
Jew the second Jerusalem. It is hard to exaggerate the importance of
the fact of the Dispersion in the early history of the Catholic Church.
From Antioch to Italy and through Gaul to Spain the chain of Jewish
colonies spread, and it was around these islands of belief in the pagan
sea that the first Christian groups were formed. Through the loosely
federated colonies of the Dispersion the new religion was to find a
material facility of propaganda such as no other religion could hope to
possess. In the colonies of the Dispersion the Jews lived their own
life. They did not intermarry with the surrounding Gentiles, and,
careful of their traditional cult of morality, they habitually avoided
the amusements that were the core of the pagan social life -- the
theatres, the circus, the baths. They were exempt from the charge of
public office as they were debarred from military service; and as
members of a privileged religion their synagogues received protection
and they themselves were judged according to their own law.
It was nevertheless, impossible for them to live entirely uninfluenced
by their surroundings. They became Greek speaking, for example, and
forgot their Hebrew to such an extent that it was necessary for their
own use to have their sacred writings translated into Greek -- whence
the Septuagint. With the new language they entered into contact with
all the rich variety of the world's most gifted civilisation. Greece,
its literature, its philosophy, its spirit of speculation on
fundamental things, now lay open to the scholars and thinkers of the
Dispersion. Were they to close their minds to the new influence, to
shut it out as a thing necessarily accursed, in the fashion of many of
their compatriots in Palestine? -- or was there not a means of
conciliating what was good in it with their own traditions, and so of
enlarging the sphere of their influence without surrendering what was
vital to their faith? The thinkers of Alexandrian Judaism chose the
latter alternative, and using Greek Philosophy to universalise the Law,
strove to create an entente where the corrected philosophy and the Law,
philosophically explained, should be seen as two aspects of the same
unity. The Jewish faith remained the same thing, with its eternal
foundations of monotheism and the personal immortality of the
individual soul. The best of Greek philosophy accorded here with Jewish
belief; and while the Jew accepted the philosophical allegorising of
the Greek myths and fables that made of them merely a vehicle for the
teaching of abstract truths, he was prepared, in the same accommodating
spirit, to explain allegorically, the contents of his own sacred books.
It is the idea hidden behind the fact that is the all-important thing;
the fact related is secondary. Greek Philosophy thus becomes a
religion, accepting the principle of the supernatural; Judaism, without
ceasing to be a religion, will be a philosophy, "searching beneath the
word revealed, the reasonable teaching it covers."
Religious ceremonial and liturgy lost much of their importance in this
presentation of Judaism, except in so far as they were symbols of
truth; the old notion of the true religion as meant exclusively for the
chosen race disappears, and most important of all, the concept of the
promised Saviour changes fundamentally. For these philosophically
minded Jews it is no longer a warrior, judge or king, who is to restore
the kingdom and wreak vengeance on the enemies of Yahweh, but a
triumphant, all-conquering true doctrine. Allied to this change is
another in the teaching about the end of the world. Here, though the
idea of a personal judgment is preserved, the teaching lacks the
picturesque extravagance characteristic of the Palestinian apocalypses.
Punishment or reward follows immediately on death and judgment, and the
lot then assigned is irremediable, eternal.
The greatest thinker among these Jews of the Dispersion was undoubtedly
Philo (25 B.C.-A.D. 41) and it is in his writings that we can best see
the aims and achievement of the movement and measure how far the one
fell short of the other. Here, more fully than elsewhere, can we study
the process by which, interpreting allegorically the sacred books of
the Jews, these thinkers strove to find in the Law of Moses the
principles and the completion of the philosophical and religious
systems of Greece, much as Heraclitus, [ ] strove to read Stoicism into
Homer. It is an astonishing combination of Judaism with the leading
ideas of Platonic and Stoic philosophy, learned but vague, lacking
unity, and disconcertingly contradictory even in essentials. The body
is essentially evil and by its contact with the soul inevitably soils
the higher principle and leads it to sin. Man cannot therefore escape
sin. To live well is the end of life and morality the most important
part of philosophy. Of himself man cannot live a virtuous life. His
goodness is the gift of God. Man knows God -- and ordinarily can only
know Him -- by His works, and in His attributes; but by ascetic
practices and assiduous study he can arrive at the direct knowledge of
God which is ecstasy. In this, the momentarily intuitive vision of God
upon earth, man, lifted above the good of merely intellectual
knowledge, reaches to the very essence of God and comprehends in Him
the unspeakable unity of all.
Of redemption from sin, of satisfaction for sin, there is not a word;
and the ecstasy held out as the end of life, is, from the intellectual
nature of the process which leads to it, a privilege which necessarily
can only fall to scholars and thinkers. On the other hand, although the
traditional monotheism remains intact, the use of the allegorical
method of interpreting the sacred writings -- a practice borrowed from
Stoicism -- was bound to weaken the value of the writings as records of
historical fact; and in the very success of the effort to justify the
Jewish faith by Greek philosophy there lay the danger of compromising
the unique character of that faith as the revealed religion of Yahweh
the one true God.
The new religion preached by Jesus Christ came then into a world where
religious questions were already eagerly discussed. To satisfy the
universal feeling of religious desire in its myriad aspirations and
hopes, a host of rival cults and philosophies, preached by enthusiastic
devotees, already competed. They did not die at the sudden coming of
the new thing. Far from dying they survived; some of them to flourish
even more than hitherto, some of them to vex, some to assist it: all of
them in one way or another to condition its development. In the
particularism of Palestinian Jewry it met its first great foe; and
when, thanks to this struggle, its own separate character was
established, the Pharisaic spirit survived in the first Christians
themselves, to menace from within the free development of the new
truth. Alexandrian Judaism was more friendly, but in its very
friendliness was danger, for it did not always recognise the
exclusiveness which was of the new faith's essence; and the spirit in
which, sometimes unfortunately, it strove to reconcile the prophets and
the philosophers, survived in the first great school of Christian
teachers, to assist, and sometimes seriously to thwart, the
philosophical exposition of that faith too. In Paganism the new
religion was to find a frank and open enemy, violent and aggressive in
its political aspects, inevitably so in the developing novelty of
Emperor-worship, and the most slowly worsted enemy of all in the
traditional rural cults -- cults to the lateness of whose overthrow
there stands for witness the curious fact that one of our modern terms
for heathen is the Roman word for rustic -- paganus.
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