The
Two Babylons
Chapter
III Festivals
Section IV
The Feast of the Assumption
If what has been already said
shows the carnal policy of Rome at the expense of truth, the
circumstances attending the festival of the Assumption show the daring
wickedness and blasphemy of that Church still more; considering that
the doctrine in regard to this festival, so far as the Papacy is
concerned, was not established in the dark ages, but three centuries
after the Reformation, amid all the boasted light of the nineteenth
century. The doctrine on which the festival of the Assumption is
founded, is this: that the Virgin Mary saw no corruption, that in body
and in soul she was carried up to heaven, and now is invested with all
power in heaven and in earth. This doctrine has been unblushingly
avowed in the face of the British public, in a recent pastoral of the
Popish Archbishop of Dublin. This doctrine has now received the stamp
of Papal Infallibility, having been embodied in the late blasphemous
decree that proclaims the "Immaculate Conception." Now, it is
impossible for the priests of Rome to find one shred of countenance for
such a doctrine in Scripture. But, in the Babylonian system, the fable
was ready made to their hand. There it was taught that Bacchus went
down to hell, rescued his mother from the infernal powers, and carried
her with him in triumph to heaven. *
* APOLLODORUS. We have seen
that the great goddess, who was worshipped in Babylon as "The Mother,"
was in reality the wife of Ninus, the great god,
the prototype of Bacchus. In conformity with this, we find a somewhat
similar story told of Ariadne, the wife of Bacchus, as is fabled of
Semele his mother. "The garment of Thetis," says Bryant, "contained a
description of some notable achievements in the first ages; and a
particular account of the apotheosis, of Ariadne, who is described,
whatever may be the meaning of it, as carried by Bacchus to
heaven." A similar story is told of Alcmene, the mother of
the Grecian Hercules, who was quite distinct, as we have seen, from the
primitive Hercules, and was just one of the forms of Bacchus, for he
was a "great tippler"; and the "Herculean goblets" are proverbial.
(MULLER'S Dorians) Now the mother of this Hercules
is said to have had a resurrection. "Jupiter" [the father of Hercules],
says Muller, "raised Alcmene from the dead, and conducted her to the
islands of the blest, as the wife of Rhadamanthus."
This fable spread wherever the
Babylonian system spread; and, accordingly, at this day, the Chinese
celebrate, as they have done from time immemorial, a festival in honour
of a Mother, who by her son was rescued from the
power of death and the grave. The festival of the Assumption in the
Romish Church is held on the 15th of August. The Chinese festival,
founded on a similar legend, and celebrated with lanterns and
chandeliers, as shown by Sir J. F. Davis in his able and graphic
account of China, is equally celebrated in the month of August. Now,
when the mother of the Pagan Messiah came to be celebrated as having
been thus "Assumed," then it was that, under the
name of the "Dove," she was worshipped as the Incarnation of the Spirit
of God, with whom she was identified. As such as she was regarded as
the source of all holiness, and the grand "PURIFIER," and, of course,
was known herself as the "Virgin" mother, "PURE AND UNDEFILED."
(PROCLUS, in TAYLOR'S Note upon Jamblichus) Under
the name of Proserpine (with whom, though the Babylonian goddess was
originally distinct, she was identified), while celebrated, as the mother
of the first Bacchus, and known as "Pluto's honoured wife," she is also
addressed, in the "Orphic Hymns," as
"Associate
of the seasons, essence bright,
All-ruling VIRGIN, bearing heavenly light."
Whoever wrote these hymns, the
more they are examined the more does it become evident, when they are
compared with the most ancient doctrine of Classic Greece, that their
authors understood and thoroughly adhered to the genuine theology of
Paganism. To the fact that Proserpine was currently worshipped in Pagan
Greece, though well known to be the wife of Pluto, the god of hell,
under the name of "The Holy Virgin," we find Pausanias, while
describing the grove Carnasius, thus bearing testimony: "This grove
contains a statue of Apollo Carneus, of Mercury carrying a ram, and of
Proserpine, the daughter of Ceres, who is called 'The HOLY VIRGIN.'"
The purity of this "Holy Virgin" did not consist merely in freedom from
actual sin, but she was especially distinguished for her "immaculate
conception"; for Proclus says, "She is called Core, through the purity
of her essence, and her UNDEFILED transcendency in her GENERATIONS." Do
men stand amazed at the recent decree? There is no real reason to
wonder. It was only in following out the Pagan doctrine previously
adopted and interwoven with the whole system of Rome to its logical
consequences, that that decree has been issued, and that the Madonna of
Rome has been formally pronounced at last, in every sense of the term,
absolutely "IMMACULATE."
Now, after all this, is it
possible to doubt that the Madonna of Rome, with the child in her arms,
and the Madonna of Babylon, are one and the same goddess? It is
notorious that the Roman Madonna is worshipped as a goddess, yea, is
the supreme object of worship. Will not, then, the Christians of
Britain revolt at the idea of longer supporting this monstrous
Babylonian Paganism? What Christian constituency could tolerate that
its representative should vote away the money of this Protestant nation
for the support of such blasphemous idolatry? *
* It is to be lamented that
Christians in general seem to have so little sense either of the
gravity of the present crisis of the Church and the world, or of the
duty lying upon them as Christ's witnesses, to testify, and that practically,
against the public sins of the nation. If they would wish to be
stimulated to a more vigorous discharge of duty in this respect, let
them read an excellent and well-timed little work recently issued from
the press, entitled An Original Interpretation of the
Apocalypse, where the Apocalyptic statements in regard to the
character, life, death, and resurrection of the Two Witnesses, are
briefly but forcibly handled.
Were not the minds of men
judicially blinded, they would tremble at the very thought of incurring
the guilt that this land, by upholding the corruption and wickedness of
Rome, has for years past been contracting. Has not the Word of God, in
the most energetic and awful terms, doomed the New Testament Babylon?
And has it not equally declared, that those who share
in Babylon's sins, shall share
in Babylon's plagues? (Rev 18:4)
The guilt of idolatry is by
many regarded as comparatively slight and insignificant guilt. But not
so does the God of heaven regard it. Which is the commandment of all
the ten that is fenced about with the most solemn and awful sanctions?
It is the second: "Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or
any likeness of anything that is in the heaven above, or that is in the
earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth: thou shalt not
bow down thyself to them, nor serve them: for I the Lord thy
God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the
children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me."
These words were spoken by God's own lips, they were written by God's
own finger on the tables of stone: not for the instruction of the seed
of Abraham only, but of all the tribes and generations of mankind. No
other commandment has such a threatening attached to it as this.
Now, if God has threatened to visit the SIN OF IDOLATRY ABOVE ALL OTHER
SINS, and if we find the heavy judgments of God pressing upon us as a
nation, while this very sin is crying to heaven against us, ought it
not to be a matter of earnest inquiry, if among all our other national
sins, which are both many and great, this may not form "the very head
and front of our offending"? What though we do not ourselves bow down
to stocks and stones? Yet if we, making a profession the very opposite,
encourage, and foster, and maintain that very idolatry which God has so
fearfully threatened with His wrath, our guilt, instead of being the
less, is only so much the greater, for it is a sin against the light.
Now, the facts are manifest to all men. It is notorious, that in 1845
anti-Christian idolatry was incorporated in the British Constitution,
in a way in which for a century and a half it had not been incorporated
before. It is equally notorious, that ever since,
the nation has been visited with one succession of judgments after
another. Ought we then to regard this coincidence as merely accidental?
Ought we not rather to see in it the fulfilment of the threatening
pronounced by God in the Apocalypse? This is at this moment an
intensely practical subject. If our sin in this matter is not
nationally recognised, if it is not penitently confessed, if it is not
put away from us; if, on the contrary, we go on increasing it, if now
for the first time since the Revolution, while so manifestly dependent
on the God of battles for the success of our arms, we affront Him to
His face by sending idol priests into our camp, then, though we have
national fasts, and days of humiliation without number, they cannot be
accepted; they may procure us a temporary respite, but we may be
certain that "the Lord's anger will not be turned away, His hand will
be stretched out still." *
* The above paragraph first
appeared in the spring of 1855, when the empire had for months been
looking on in amazement at the "horrible and heart-rending" disasters
in the Crimea, caused simply by the fact, that official men in that
distant region "could not find their hands," and when at last a day of
humiliation had been appointed. The reader can judge whether or not the
events that have since occurred have made the above
reasoning out of date. The few years of impunity that have elapsed
since the Indian Mutiny, with all its horrors, was suppressed, show the
long-suffering of God. But if that long-suffering is despised (which it
manifestly is, while the guilt is daily increasing), the ultimate issue
must just be so much the more terrible.
The Two Babylons: Contents
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