{p.206}
CHAPTER VI
RELIGIOUS ORDERS
SECTION I—THE SOVEREIGN PONTIFF
THE gift of the ministry is one of the greatest gifts which
Christ has bestowed upon the world. It is in reference to this that the
Psalmist, predicting the ascension of Christ, thus loftily speaks of its blessed
results: "Thou hast ascended up on high; Thou hast led captivity captive; Thou
hast received gifts for men, even for the rebellious, that the Lord God might
dwell among them" (Eph. iv. 8-11). The Church of Rome, at its first
planting, had the divinely-bestowed gift of a Scriptural ministry and
government; and then "its faith was spoken of throughout the whole world;" its
works of righteousness were both rich and abundant. But, in an evil hour, the
Babylonian element was admitted into its ministry, and thenceforth, that which
had been intended as a blessing, was converted into a curse. Since then, instead
of sanctifying men, it has only been the means of demoralising them, and making
them "twofold more the children of hell" than they would have been if they had
been left simply to themselves.
If there be any who imagine that there is some occult and mysterious virtue in
an apostolic succession that comes through the Papacy, let them seriously
consider the real character of the Pope's own orders, and of those of his
bishops and clergy. From the Pope downwards, all can be shown to be now
radically Babylonian. The College of Cardinals, with the Pope at its head, is
just the counter part of the Pagan College of Pontiffs, with its "Pontifex
Maximus," or "Sovereign Pontiff," which had existed in Rome from the earliest
times, and which is known to have been framed on the model of the grand original
Council of Pontiffs at Babylon. The Pope now pretends to supremacy in the Church
as the successor of Peter, to whom it is alleged that our Lord exclusively
committed the keys of the kingdom of heaven. But here is the important fact
that, till the Pope was invested with the title, which for a thousand years had
had attached to it the power of the keys of Janus and Cybele,1
no such claim to pre-eminence, or anything approaching to it, was ever publicly
made on his part, on the ground of his being the possessor of
{p.207} the keys bestowed on Peter. Very early,
indeed, did the bishops of Rome show a proud and ambitious spirit; but, for the
first three centuries, their claim for superior honour was founded simply on the
dignity of their see, as being that of the imperial city, the capital of the
Roman world. When, however, the seat of empire was removed to the East, and
Constantinople threatened to eclipse Rome, some new ground for maintaining the
dignity of the Bishop of Rome must be sought. That new ground was found when,
about 378, the Pope fell heir to the keys that were the symbols of two
well-known Pagan divinities at Rome. Janus bore a key,2
and Cybele bore a key;3
and these are the two keys that the Pope emblazons on his arms as the ensigns of
his spiritual authority. How the Pope came to be regarded as wielding the power
of these keys will appear in the sequel; but that he did, in the popular
apprehension, become entitled to that power at the period referred to is
certain. Now, when he had come in the estimation of the Pagans, to occupy the
place of the representatives of Janus and Cybele, and therefore to be entitled
to bear their keys, the Pope saw that if he could only get it believed among the
Christians that Peter alone had the power of the keys, and that he was Peter's
successor, then the sight of these keys would keep up the delusion, and thus,
though the temporal dignity of Rome as a city should decay, his own dignity as
the bishop of Rome would be more firmly established than ever. On this policy it
is evident he acted. Some time was allowed to pass away, and then, when the
secret working of the Mystery of iniquity had prepared the way for it, for the
first time did the Pope publicly assert his pre-eminence, as founded on the keys
given to Peter. About 378 was he raised to the position which gave him, in Pagan
estimation, the power of the keys referred to. In 431, and not before, did he
publicly lay claim to the possession of Peter's keys.4
This, surely, is a striking coincidence. Does the reader ask how it was possible
that men could give credit to such a baseless assumption? The words of
Scripture, in regard to this very subject, give a very solemn but satisfactory
answer (2 Thess. ii. 10, 11): "Because they received not the love of the
truth, that they might be saved ... For this cause God shall send them strong
delusion, that they should believe a lie." Few lies could be more gross; but, in
course of time, it came to be widely believed; and now, as the statue of Jupiter
is worshipped at Rome as the veritable image of Peter, so the keys of Janus and
Cybele have for ages been devoutly believed to represent the keys of the same
apostle.
While nothing but judicial infatuation can account for the credulity of the
Christians in regarding these keys as emblems of an exclusive power given by
Christ to the Pope through Peter, it is not {p.208}
difficult to see how the Pagans would rally round the Pope all the more readily
when they heard him found his power on the possession of Peter's keys. The keys
that the Pope bore were the keys of a "Peter" well known to the Pagans initiated
in the Chaldean Mysteries. That Peter the apostle was ever Bishop of Rome has
been proved again and again to be an arrant fable. That he ever even set foot in
Rome is at the best highly doubtful. His visit to that city rests on no better
authority than that of a writer at the end of the second century or beginning of
the third viz., the author of the work called The Clementines5
who gravely tells us that on the occasion of his visit, finding Simon Magus
there, the apostle challenged him to give proof of his miraculous or magical
powers, whereupon the sorcerer flew up into the air, and Peter brought him down
in such haste that his leg was broken.6
All historians of repute have at once rejected this story of the apostolic
encounter with the magician as being destitute of all contemporary evidence; but
as the visit of Peter to Rome rests on the same authority, it must stand or fall
along with it, or, at least, it must be admitted to be extremely doubtful. But,
while this is the case with Peter the Christian, it can be shown to be by no
means doubtful that before the Christian era, and downwards, there was a "Peter"
at Rome, who occupied the highest place in the Pagan priesthood. The priest who
explained the Mysteries to the initiated was sometimes called by a Greek term,
the Hierophant; but in primitive Chaldee, the real language of the Mysteries,
his title, as pronounced without the points, was "Peter" i.e., "the
interpreter."7
As the revealer of that which was hidden, nothing was more natural than that,
while opening up the esoteric doctrine of the Mysteries, he should be decorated
with the keys of the two divinities whose mysteries he unfolded.8
Thus we may see how the keys of Janus and Cybele would come to be known as the
keys of Peter, the "interpreter" of the Mysteries. Yea, we have the strongest
evidence that, in countries far removed from one another, and far distant from
Rome, these keys were known by initiated Pagans not merely as the "keys of
Peter," but as the keys of a Peter identified with Rome. In the Eleusinian
Mysteries at Athens, when the candidates for initiation were instructed in the
secret doctrine of Paganism, the explanation of that doctrine was read to them
out of a book called by ordinary writers the "Book Petroma;" that is, as we are
told, a book formed of stone.9
But this is evidently just a play upon words, according to the usual spirit of
Paganism, intended to amuse the vulgar. The nature of the case, and the history
of the Mysteries, alike show that this book could be none other than the "Book
Pet-Roma;" that is, the "Book of the Grand Interpreter," in other words, of
Hermes {p.209} Trismegistus, the great "Interpreter
of the Gods." In Egypt, from which Athens derived its religion, the books of
Hermes were regarded as the divine fountain of all true knowledge of the
Mysteries.10
In Egypt therefore, Hermes was looked up to in this very character of Grand
Interpreter, or "Peter-Roma,"11
In Athens, Hermes, as is well known, occupied precisely the same place,12
and, of course, in the sacred language, must have been known by the same title.
The priest, therefore, that in the name of Hermes explained the Mysteries, must
have been decked not only with the keys of Peter, but with the keys of
"Peter-Roma." Here, then, the famous "Book of Stone" begins to appear in a new
light, and not only so, but to shed new light on one of the darkest and most
puzzling passages of Papal history. It has always been a matter of amazement to
candid historical inquirers how it could ever have come to pass that the name of
Peter should be associated with Rome in the way in which it is found from the
fourth century downwards how so many in different countries had been led to
believe that Peter, who was an "apostle of the circumcision" had apostatised
from his Divine commission, and become bishop of a Gentile Church, and that he
should be the spiritual ruler in Rome, when no satisfactory evidence could be
found for his ever having been in Rome at all. But the book of "Peter-Roma"
accounts for what otherwise is entirely inexplicable. The existence of such a
title was too valuable to be overlooked by the Papacy; and, according to its
usual policy, it was sure, if it had the opportunity, to turn it to the account
of its own aggrandisement. And that opportunity it had. When the Pope came, as
he did, into intimate connection with the Pagan priesthood; when they came at
last, as we shall see they did, under his control, {p.210}
what more natural than to seek not only to reconcile Paganism and Christianity,
but to make it appear that the Pagan "Peter-Roma," with his keys, meant "Peter
of Rome," and that that "Peter of Rome" was the very apostle to whom the Lord
Jesus Christ gave the "keys of the kingdom of heaven"? Hence, from the mere
jingle of words, persons and things essentially different were confounded; and
Paganism and Christianity jumbled together, that the towering ambition of a
wicked priest might be gratified; and so, to the blinded Christians of the
apostasy, the Pope was the representative of Peter the apostle, while to the
initiated Pagans, he was only the representative of Peter, the interpreter of
their well-known Mysteries.13
Thus was the Pope the express counterpart of "Janus, the double-faced." Oh! what
an emphasis of meaning in the Scriptural expression, as applied to the Papacy,
"The Mystery of Iniquity"!
The reader will now be prepared to understand how it is that the Pope's Grand
Council of State, which assists him in the government of the Church, comes to be
called the College of Cardinals. The term Cardinal is derived from Cardo, a
hinge. Janus, whose key the Pope bears, was the god of doors and hinges, and was
called Patulcius and Clusius, "the opener and the shutter."14
This had a blasphemous meaning, for he was worshipped at Rome as the grand
mediator. Whatever important business was in hand, whatever deity was to be
invoked, an invocation first of all must be addressed to Janus,15
who was recognised as the "God of gods,"16
in whose mysterious divinity the characters of father and son were combined,17
and without that no prayer could be heard the "door of heaven" could not be
opened.18
It was this same god whose worship prevailed so exceedingly in Asia Minor at the
time when our Lord sent, by his servant John, the seven Apocalyptic messages to
the churches established in that region. And, therefore, in one of these
messages we find Him tacitly rebuking the profane ascription of His own peculiar
dignity to that divinity, and asserting His exclusive claim to the prerogative
usually attributed to His rival. Thus, Rev. iii. 7: "And to the angel of
the church in Philadelphia write: These things saith he that is holy, he that is
true, he that hath the key of David, he that openeth, and no man shutteth; and
shutteth, and no man openeth." Now, to this Janus, as Mediator, worshipped in
Asia Minor, and equally, from very early times, in Rome, belonged the government
of the world; and, "all power in heaven, in earth, and the sea," according to
Pagan ideas, was vested in him.19
In this character he was said to have "jus vertendi cardinis" the "power of
turning the hinge" of opening the doors of heaven, or of opening
{p.211} or shutting the gates of peace or war upon
earth. The Pope, there fore, when he set up as the High-priest of Janus, assumed
also the "jus vertendi cardinis" "the power of turning the hinge," of opening
and shutting in the blasphemous Pagan sense. Slowly and cautiously at first was
this power asserted; but the foundation being laid, steadily, century after
century, was the grand superstructure of priestly power erected upon it. The
Pagans who saw what strides, under Papal directions, Christianity, as professed
in Rome, was making towards Paganism, were more than content to recognise the
Pope as possessing this power; they gladly encouraged him to rise, step by step,
to the full height of the blasphemous pretensions befitting the representative
of Janus pretensions which, as all men know, are now, by the unanimous consent
of Western Apostate Christendom, recognised as inherent in the office of the
Bishop of Rome. To enable the Pope, however, to rise to the full plenitude of
power which he now asserts, the co-operation of others was needed. When his
power increased, when his dominion extended, and especially after he became a
temporal sovereign, the key of Janus became too heavy for his single hand he
needed some to share with him the power of the "hinge." Hence his privy
councillors, his high functionaries of state, who were associated with him in
the government of the Church and the world, got the now well-known title of
"Cardinals" the priests of the "hinge." This title had been previously borne by
the high officials of the Roman Emperor, who, as "Pontifex Maximus," had been
himself the representative of Janus, and who delegated his powers to servants of
his own. Even in the reign of Theodosius, the Christian Emperor of Rome, the
title of Cardinal was borne by his Prime Minister.20
But now both the name and the power implied in the name have long since
disappeared from all civil functionaries of temporal sovereigns; and those only
who aid the Pope in wielding the key of Janus in opening and shutting are known
by the title of Cardinals, or priests of the "hinge."
I have said that the Pope became the representative of Janus, who, it is
evident, was none other than the Babylonian Messiah. If the reader only
considers the blasphemous assumptions of the Papacy, he will see how exactly it
has copied from its original. In the countries where the Babylonian system was
most thoroughly developed, we find the Sovereign Pontiff of the Babylonian god
invested with the very attributes now ascribed to the Pope. Is the Pope called "God upon earth," the "Vice-God," and "Vicar of Jesus Christ"? The King in Egypt,
who was Sovereign-Pontiff,21
was, says Wilkinson, regarded with the highest reverence as "THE REPRESENTATIVE
OF THE DIVINITY ON EARTH."22
Is the Pope "Infallible," and does the Church of Rome, in consequence, boast
that it has always been {p.212} "unchanged and
unchangeable"? The same was the case with the Chaldean Pontiff, and the system,
over which he presided. The Sovereign Pontiff, says the writer just quoted, was
believed to be "INCAPABLE OF ERROR,"23
and, in consequence, there was "the greatest respect for the sanctity of old
edicts;" and hence, no doubt, also the origin of the custom that "the laws of
the Medes and Persians could not be altered." Does the Pope receive the
adorations of the Cardinals? The king of Babylon, as Sovereign Pontiff, was
adored in like manner.24
Are kings and ambassadors required to kiss the Pope's slipper? This, too, is
copied from the same pattern; for, says Professor Gaussen, quoting Strabo and
Herodotus, "the kings of Chaldea wore on their feet slippers which the kings
they conquered used to kiss."25
In fine, is the Pope addressed by the title of "Your Holiness"? So also was the
Pagan Pontiff of Rome. The title seems to have been common to all the Pontiffs.
Symmachus, the last Pagan representative of the Roman Emperor, as Sovereign
Pontiff, addressing one of his colleagues or fellow-pontiffs, on a step of
promotion he was about to obtain, says, "I hear that YOUR HOLINESS (sanctitatem
tuam) is to be called out by the sacred letters."26
Peter's keys have now been restored to their rightful owner. Peter's chair must
also go along with them. That far-famed chair came from the very same quarter as
the cross-keys. The very same reason that led the Pope to assume the Chaldean
keys naturally led him also to take possession of the vacant chair of the Pagan
Pontifex Maximus. As the Pontifex, by virtue of his office, had been the
Hierophant, or Interpreter of the Mysteries, his chair of office was as well
entitled to be called "Peter's" chair as the Pagan keys to be called "the keys of
Peter;" and so it was called accordingly. The real pedigree of the far-famed
chair of Peter will appear from the following fact: "The Romans had," says
Bower, "as they thought, till the year 1662, a pregnant proof, not only of Peter
s erecting their {p.213} chair, but of his sitting
in it himself; for, till that year, the very chair on which they believed, or
would make others believe, he had sat, was shown and exposed to public adoration
on the 18th of January, the festival of the said chair. But while it was
cleaning, in order to set it up in some conspicuous place of the Vatican, the
twelve labours of Hercules unluckily appeared on it!"27
and so it had to be laid aside. The partisans of the Papacy were not a little
disconcerted by this discovery; but they tried to put the best face on the
matter they could. "Our worship," said Giacomo Bartolini, in his Sacred
Antiquities of Rome, while relating the circumstances of the discovery, "Our
worship, however, was not misplaced, since it was not to the wood we paid it,
but to the prince of the apostles, St. Peter," that had been supposed to sit in
it.28
Whatever the reader may think of this apology for chair-worship, he will surely
at least perceive, taking this in connection with what we have already seen,
that the hoary fable of Peter's chair is fairly exploded. In modern times, Rome
seems to have been rather unfortunate in regard to Peter's chair; for, even
after that which bore the twelve labours of Hercules had been condemned and cast
aside, as unfit to bear the light that the Reformation had poured upon the
darkness of the Holy See, that which was chosen to replace it was destined to
reveal still more ludicrously the barefaced impostures of the Papacy. The former
chair was borrowed from the Pagans; the next appears to have been purloined from
the Mussulmans; for when the French soldiers under General Bonaparte took
possession of Rome in 1795, they found on the back of it, in Arabic, this
well-known sentence of the Koran, "There is no God but God, and Mahomet
is His Prophet."29
The Pope has not merely a chair to sit in; but he has a chair to be carried in,
in pomp and state, on men's shoulders, when he pays a visit to St. Peter's, or
any of the churches of Rome. Thus does an eye-witness describe such a pageant on
the Lord's Day, in the head quarters of Papal idolatry: "The drums were heard
beating without. The guns of the soldiers rung on the stone pavement of the
house of God, as, at the bidding of their officer, they grounded, shouldered,
and presented arms. How unlike the Sabbath how unlike religion how unlike the
suitable preparation to receive a minister of the meek and lowly Jesus! Now,
moving slowly up, between the two armed lines of soldiers, appeared a long
procession of ecclesiastics, bishops, canons, and cardinals, preceding the Roman
pontiff, who was borne on a gilded chair, clad in vestments resplendent as the
sun. His bearers were twelve men clad in crimson, being immediately preceded by
several persons carrying a cross, his mitre, his triple crown, and other
insignia of his office. As he was borne {p.214}
along on the shoulders of men, amid the gaping crowds, his head was shaded or
canopied by two immense fans, made of peacock's feathers, which were borne by
two attendants."30
Thus is it with the Sovereign Pontiff of Rome at this day; only that,
frequently, over and above being shaded by the fan, which is just the "Mystic
fan of Bacchus," his chair of state is also covered with a regular canopy. Now,
look back through the vista of three thousand years, and see how the Sovereign
Pontiff of Egypt used to pay a visit to the temple of his god. "Having reached
the precincts of the temple," says Wilkinson, "the guards and royal attendants
selected to be the representatives of the whole army entered the courts Military
bands played the favourite airs of the country; and the numerous standards of
the different regiments, the banners floating on the wind, the bright lustre of
arms, the immense concourse of people, and the imposing majesty of the lofty
towers of the propylsea, decked with their bright-coloured flags, streaming
above the cornice, presented a scene seldom, we may say, equalled on any
occasion, in any country. The most striking feature of this pompous ceremony was
the brilliant cortege of the monarch, who was either borne in his chair of state
by the principal officers of state, under a rich canopy, or walked on foot,
overshadowed with rich flabella and fans of waving plumes."31
We give, as a woodcut, from Wilkinson (Fig. 47 below),32
the central portion of one of his plates devoted to such an Egyptian procession,
that the reader may see with his own eyes how exactly the Pagan agrees with the
well-known account of the Papal ceremonial.

So much for Peter's chair and Peter's keys. Now Janus, whose
key the Pope usurped with that of his wife or mother Cybele, was also Dagon.
Janus, the two-headed god, "who had lived in two {p.215}
worlds," was the Babylonian divinity as an incarnation of Noah. Dagon, the
fish-god, represented that deity as a manifestation of the same patriarch who
had lived so long in the waters of the deluge. As the Pope bears the key of
Janus, so he wears the mitre of Dagon. The excavations of Nineveh have put this
beyond all possibility of doubt. The Papal mitre is entirely different from the
mitre of Aaron and the Jewish high priests. That mitre was a turban. The
two-horned mitre, which the Pope wears, when he sits on the high altar at Rome
and receives the adoration of the Cardinals, is the very mitre worn by Dagon,
the fish-god of the Philistines and Babylonians. There were two ways in which
Dagon was anciently represented. The one was when he was depicted as half-man
half-fish; the upper part being entirely human, the under part ending in the
tail of a fish. The other was, when, to use the words of Layard, "the head of
the fish formed a mitre above that of the man, while its scaly, fan-like tail
fell as a cloak behind, leaving the human limbs and feet exposed."33
Of Dagon in this form Layard gives a
representation in
his last work, which is here represented to the reader (Fig. 48); and no one who
examines his mitre, and compares it with the Pope's as given in Elliot's Horae,34
can doubt for a moment that from that, and no other source, has the pontifical
mitre been derived. The gaping jaws of the fish surmounting the head of the man
at Nineveh are the unmistakable counterpart of the horns of the Pope's mitre at
Rome. Thus was it in the East, at least five hundred years before the Christian
era. The same seems to have been the case also in Egypt; for Wilkinson, speaking
of a fish of the species of Silurus, says "that one of the Genii of the Egyptian
Pantheon appears under a human form, with the head of this fish."35
In the West, at a later period, we have evidence that the Pagans had detached
the fish-head mitre from the body of the fish, and used that mitre alone to
adorn the head of the great Mediatorial god; for on several Maltese Pagan coins
that god, with the well-known attributes of Osiris, is represented with nothing
of the fish save the {p.216} mitre on his head
(Fig. 49);36
very nearly in the same form as the mitre of the Pope, or of a Papal
bishop at this
day. Even in China, the same practice of wearing the fish-head mitre had
evidently once prevailed; for the very counterpart of the Papal mitre, as worn
by the Chinese Emperor, has subsisted to modern times. "Is it known," asks a
well-read author of the present day, in a private communication to me, "that the
Emperor of China, in all ages, even to the present year, as high priest of the
nation, once a-year prays for and blesses the whole nation, having his priestly
robes on and his mitre on his head, the same, the very same, as that worn by the
Roman Pontiff for near 1200 years? Such is the fact."37
In proof of this statement the accompanying figure of the Imperial mitre (Fig.
50)38
is produced which is the very facsimile of the Popish Episcopal Mitre, in a
front view. The reader must bear in mind, that even in Japan, still farther
distant from Babel than China itself, one of the divinities is represented with
the same symbol of might as prevailed in Assyria even the bull's horns, and is
called "The ox-headed Prince of Heaven."39
If the symbol of Nimrod, as Kronos, "The Horned one," is thus found in Japan, it
cannot be surprising that the symbol of Dagon should be found in China.

But there is another symbol of the Pope's power which must
not be overlooked, and that is the pontifical crosier. Whence came the crosier?
The answer to this, in the first place, is, that the
{p.217} Pope stole it from the Roman augur. The classical reader may
remember, that when the Roman augurs consulted the heavens, or took prognostics
from the aspect of the sky, there was a certain instrument with which it was
indispensable that they should be equipped. That instrument with which they
described the portion of the heavens on which their
observations were
to be made, was curved at the one end, and was called "lituus." Now, so
manifestly was the "lituus" or crooked rod of the Roman augurs, identical with
the pontifical crosier, that Roman Catholic writers themselves, writing in the
Dark Ages, at a time when disguise was thought unnecessary, did not hesitate to
use the term "lituus" as a synonym for the "crosier."40
Thus a Papal writer describes a certain Pope or Papal bishop as "mitre lituoque
decorus" adorned with the mitre and the augur's rod, meaning thereby that he was
"adorned with the mitre and the crosier." But this lituus, or
divining-rod, of the Roman augurs, was, as is well known, borrowed from the
Etruscans, who, again, had derived it, along with their religion, from the
Assyrians. As the Roman augur was distinguished by his crooked rod, so the
Chaldean soothsayers and priests, in the performance of their magic rites, were
generally equipped with a crook or crosier. This magic crook can be traced up
directly to the first king of Babylon, that is, Nimrod, who, as stated by
Berosus, was the first that bore the title of a Shepherd-king,41
In Hebrew, or the Chaldee of the days of Abraham, "Nimrod the Shepherd," is just
Nimrod "He-Roe"; and from this title of the "mighty hunter before the Lord,"
have no doubt been derived, both the name of Hero itself, and all that
Hero-worship which has since overspread the world. Certain it is that Nimrod's
deified successors have generally been represented with the crook or crosier.
This was the case in Babylon and Nineveh, as the extant monuments show. The
accompanying figure (Fig. 51)42
from Babylon shows the crosier in its ruder guise. {p.218}
In Layard, it may be seen in a more ornate form, and nearly resembling the papal
crosier as borne at this day.43
This was the case in Egypt, after the Babylonian power was established there, as
the statues of Osiris with his crosier bear witness,44
Osiris himself being frequently represented as a crosier with an eye above it.45
This is the case among the negroes of Africa, whose god, called the Fetiche, is
represented in the form of a crosier, as is evident from the following words of
Hurd: "They place Fetiches before their doors, and these titular deities are
made in the form of grapples or hooks, which we generally make use of to shake
our fruit trees."46
This is the case at this hour in Thibet, where the Lamas or Theros bear, as
stated by the Jesuit Hue, a crosier, as the ensign of their office. This is the
case even in the far-distant Japan, where, in a description of the idols of the
great temple of Miaco, the spiritual capital, we find this statement: "Their
heads are adorned with rays of glory, and some of them have shepherd's crooks in
their hands, pointing out that they are the guardians of mankind against all the
machinations of evil spirits."47
The crosier of the Pope, then, which he bears as an emblem of his office, as the
great shepherd of the sheep, is neither more nor less than the augur s crooked
staff, or magic rod of the priests of Nimrod.
Now, what say the worshippers of the apostolic succession to all this? What
think they now of their vaunted orders as derived from Peter of Rome? Surely
they have much reason to be proud of them. But what, I further ask, would even
the old Pagan priests say, who left the stage of time while the martyrs were
still battling against their gods, and, rather than symbolise with them, "loved
not their lives unto the death," if they were to see the present aspect of the
so-called Church of European Christendom? What would Belshazzar himself say, if
it were possible for him to "revisit the glimpses of the moon," and enter St.
Peter's at Rome, and see the Pope in his pontificals, in all his pomp and glory?
Surely he would conclude that he had only entered one of his own well-known
temples, and that all things continued as they were at Babylon, on that
memorable night, when he saw with astonished eyes the handwriting on the wall: "Mene,
niene, tekel, Upharsin."
{p.219}
SECTION II—PRIESTS, MONKS, AND NUNS
If the head be corrupt, so also must be the members. If the
Pope be essentially Pagan, what else can be the character of his clergy? If they
derive their orders from a radically corrupted source, these orders must partake
of the corruption of the source from which they flow. This might be inferred
independently of any special evidence; but the evidence in regard to the Pagan
character of the Pope's clergy is as complete as that in regard to the Pope
himself. In whatever light the subject is viewed, this will be very apparent.
There is a direct contrast between the character of the ministers of Christ, and
that of the Papal priesthood. When Christ commissioned His servants, it was "to
feed His sheep, to feed His lambs," and that with the Word of God, which
testifies of Himself, and contains the words of eternal life. When the Pope
ordains his clergy, he takes them bound to prohibit, except in special
circumstances, the reading of the Word of God "in the vulgar tongue," that is,
in a language which the people can understand. He gives them, indeed, a
commission; and what is it? It is couched in these astounding words: "Receive
the power of sacrificing for the living and the dead."48
What blasphemy could be worse than this? What more derogatory to the one
sacrifice of Christ, whereby "He hath perfected for ever them that are
sanctified"? (Heb. x. 14). This is the real distinguishing function of
the popish priesthood. At the remembrance that this power, in these very words,
had been conferred on him, when ordained to the priesthood, Luther used, in
after years, with a shudder, to express his astonishment that "the earth had not
opened its mouth and swallowed up both him who uttered these words, and him to
whom they were addressed."49
The sacrifice which the papal priesthood are empowered to offer, as a "true
propitiatory sacrifice" for the sins of the living and the dead, is just the
"unbloody sacrifice" of the mass, which was offered up in Babylon long before it
was ever heard of in Rome.
Now, while Semiramis, the real original of the Chaldean Queen of Heaven, to whom
the "unbloody sacrifice" of the mass was first offered, was in her own person,
as we have already seen, the very paragon of impurity, she at the same time
affected the greatest favour for that kind of sanctity which looks down with
contempt on God's holy ordinance of marriage. The Mysteries over which she
presided were scenes of the rankest pollution; and yet the higher orders of the
priesthood were bound to a life of celibacy, as a life of peculiar and
pre-eminent holiness. Strange though it may seem, yet the voice of antiquity
assigns to that abandoned queen the invention of clerical celibacy, and that in
the most stringent form.50
In some countries, {p.220} as in Egypt, human
nature asserted its rights, and though the general system of Babylon was
retained, the yoke of celibacy was abolished, and the priesthood were permitted
to marry. But every scholar knows that when the worship of Cybele, the
Babylonian goddess, was introduced into Pagan Rome, it was introduced in its
primitive form, with its celibate clergy.51
When the Pope appropriated to himself so much that was peculiar to the worship
of that goddess, from the very same source, also, he introduced into the
priesthood under his authority the binding obligation of celibacy. The
introduction of such a principle into the Christian Church had been distinctly
predicted as one grand mark of the apostasy, when men should, "depart from the
faith, and speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their consciences seared with a
hot iron, should forbid to marry." The effects of its introduction were most
disastrous.52
The records of all nations where priestly celibacy has been introduced have
proved that, instead of ministering to the purity of those condemned to it, it
has only plunged them in the deepest pollution. The history of Thibet, and
China, and Japan, where the Babylonian institute of priestly celibacy has
prevailed from time immemorial, bears testimony to the abominations that have
flowed from it.53
The excesses committed by the celibate priests of Bacchus in Pagan Rome in their
secret Mysteries, were such that the Senate felt called upon to expel them from
the bounds of the Roman republic.54
In Papal Rome the same abominations have flowed from priestly celibacy, in
connection with the corrupt and corrupting system of the confessional, insomuch
that all men who have examined the subject have been compelled to admire the
amazing significance of the name divinely bestowed on it, both in a literal and
figurative sense, "Babylon the Great, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF
THE EARTH."55
Out of a thousand facts of a similar kind, let one only be adduced, vouched for
by the distinguished Roman Catholic historian De Thou. When Pope Paul V
meditated the suppression of the licensed brothels in the Holy City, the Roman
Senate petitioned against his carrying his design into effect, on the ground
that the existence of such places was the only means of hindering the priests
from seducing their wives and daughters!!!56
These celibate priests have all a certain mark set upon them at their
ordination; and that is the clerical tonsure. The tonsure is the
{p.221} first part of the ceremony of ordination;
and it is held to be a most important element in connection with the orders of
the Romish clergy. When, after long contendings, the Picts were at last brought
to submit to the Bishop of Rome, the acceptance of this tonsure as the tonsure
of St. Peter on the part of the clergy was the visible symbol of that
submission. Naitan, the Pictish king, having assembled the nobles of his court
and the pastors of his church, thus addressed them: "I recommend all the clergy
of my kingdom to receive the tonsure." Then, without delay, as Bede informs us,
this important revolution was accomplished by royal authority.57
He sent agents into every province, and caused all the ministers and monks to
receive the circular tonsure, according to the Roman fashion, and thus to submit
to Peter, "the most blessed Prince of the apostles."58
"It was the mark," says Merle D'Aubigné, "that Popes stamped not on the
forehead, but on the crown. A royal proclamation, and a few clips of the
scissors, placed the Scotch, like a flock of sheep, beneath the crook of the
shepherd of the Tiber."59
Now, as Rome set so much importance on this tonsure, let it be asked what was
the meaning of it? It was the visible inauguration of those who submitted to it
as the priests of Bacchus. This tonsure cannot have the slightest pretence to
Christian authority. It was indeed the "tonsure of Peter," but not of the Peter
of Galilee, but of the Chaldean "Peter" of the Mysteries. He was a tonsured
priest, for so was the god whose Mysteries he revealed. Centuries before the
Christian era, thus spoke Herodotus of the Babylonian tonsure: "The Arabians
acknowledge no other gods than Bacchus and Urania [i.e., the Queen of Heaven],
and they say that their hair was cut in the same manner as Bacchus's is cut;
now, they cut it in a circular form, shaving it around the temples."60
What, then, could have led to this tonsure of Bacchus? Everything in his history
was mystically or hieroglyphically represented, and that in such a way as none
but the initiated could understand. One of the things that occupied the most
important place in the Mysteries was the mutilation to which he was subjected
when he was put to death. In memory of that, he was lamented with bitter weeping
every year, as "Rosh-Gheza," "the mutilated Prince." But "Rosh-Gheza"61
also signified the "clipped or shaved head." Therefore he was himself
represented either with the one or the other form of tonsure; and his priests,
for the same reason, at their ordination had their heads either clipped or
shaven. Over all the world, where the traces of the Chaldean system are found,
this tonsure or shaving of the head is always found along with it. The priests
of Osiris, the Egyptian Bacchus, were always distinguished by the shaving of
their heads.62
In Pagan Rome,63
in India, and even in China, the distinguishing mark of the Babylonian
{p.222} priesthood was the shaven head. Thus
Gautama Buddha, who lived at least 540 years before Christ, when setting up the
sect of Buddhism in India which spread to the remotest regions of the East,
first shaved his own head, in obedience, as he pretended, to a Divine command,
and then set to work to get others to imitate his example. One of the very
titles by which he was called was that of the "Shaved-head."64
"The shaved-head" says one of the Purans, "that he might perform the
orders of Vishnu, formed a number of disciples, and of shaved-heads like
himself." The high antiquity of this tonsure may be seen from the enactment in
the Mosaic law against it. The Jewish priests were expressly forbidden to make
any baldness upon their heads (Lev. xxi. 5), which sufficiently shows
that, even so early as the time of Moses, the "shaved-head" had been already
introduced. In the Church of Rome the heads of the ordinary priests are only
clipped, the heads of the monks or regular clergy are shaven, but both alike, at
their consecration, receive the circular tonsure, thereby identifying them,
beyond all possibility of doubt, with Bacchus, "the mutilated Prince."65
Now, if the priests of Rome take away the key of knowledge, and lock up the
Bible from the people; if they are ordained to offer the Chaldean sacrifice in
honour of the Pagan Queen of Heaven; if they are bound by the Chaldean
{p.223} law of celibacy, that plunges them in
profligacy; if, in short, they are all marked at their consecration with the
distinguishing mark of the priests of the Chaldean Bacchus, what right, what
possible right, can they have to be called ministers of Christ?
But Rome has not only her ordinary secular clergy, as they are called; she has
also, as every one knows, other religious orders of a different kind. She has
innumerable armies of monks and nuns all engaged in her service. Where can there
be shown the least warrant for such an institution in Scripture? In the religion
of the Babylonian Messiah their institution was from the earliest times. In that
system there were monks and nuns in abundance. In Thibet and Japan, where the
Chaldean system was early introduced, monasteries are still to be found, and
with the same disastrous results to morals as in Papal Europe.66
In Scandinavia, the priestesses of Freya, who were generally kings daughters,
whose duty it was to watch the sacred fire, and who were bound to perpetual
virginity, were just an order of nuns.67
In Athens there were virgins maintained at the public expense, who were strictly
bound to single life.68
In Pagan Rome, the Vestal virgins, who had the same duty to perform as the
priestesses of Freya, occupied a similar position. Even in Peru, during the
reign of the Incas, the same system prevailed, and showed so remarkable an
analogy, as to indicate that the Vestals of Rome, the nuns of the Papacy, and
the Holy Virgins of Peru, must have sprung from a common origin. Thus does
Prescott refer to the Peruvian nunneries: "Another singular analogy with Roman
Catholic institutions is presented by the virgins of the sun, the elect, as they
were called. These were young maidens dedicated to the service of the deity, who
at a tender age were taken from their homes, and introduced into convents, where
they were placed under the care of certain elderly matrons, mamaconas,69
who had grown grey within their walls. It was their duty to watch over the
sacred fire obtained at the festival of Raymi. From the moment they entered the
establishment they were cut off {p.224} from
all communication with the world, even with their own family and friends Woe to
the unhappy maiden who was detected in an intrigue! By the stem law of the Incas
she was to be buried alive." This was precisely the fate of the Roman Vestal who
was proved to have violated her vow. Neither in Peru, however, nor in Pagan Home
was the obligation to virginity so stringent as in the Papacy. It was not
perpetual, and therefore not so exceedingly demoralising. After a time, the nuns
might be delivered from their confinement, and marry; from all hopes of which
they are absolutely cut off in the Church of Rome. In all these cases, however,
it is plain that the principle on which these institutions were founded was
originally the same. "One is astonished," adds Prescott, "to find so close a
resemblance between the institutions of the American Indian, the ancient Roman,
and the modern Catholic."70
Prescott finds it difficult to account for this resemblance; but the one little
sentence from the prophet Jeremiah, which was quoted at the commencement of this
inquiry, accounts for it completely: "Babylon hath been a golden cup in the
Lord's hand, that hath made ALL THE EARTH drunken" (Jer. li. 7). This is
the Rosetta stone that has helped already to bring to light so much of the
secret iniquity of the Papacy, and that is destined still further to decipher
the dark mysteries of every system of heathen mythology that either has been or
that is. The statement of this text can be proved to be a literal fact. It can
be proved that the idolatry of the whole earth is one, that the sacred language
of all nations is radically Chaldean that the GREAT GODS of every country and
clime are called by Babylonian names and that all the Paganisms of the human
race are only a wicked and deliberate, but yet most instructive corruption of
the primeval gospel first preached in Eden, and through Noah, afterwards
conveyed to all mankind. The system, first concocted in Babylon, and thence
conveyed to the ends of the earth, has been modified and diluted in different
ages and countries. In Papal Rome only is it now found nearly pure and entire.
But yet, amid all the seeming variety of heathenism, there is an astonishing
oneness and identity, bearing testimony to the truth of God's Word. The
overthrow of all idolatry cannot now be distant. But
before the idols of the heathen shall be finally cast to the moles and to the
bats, I am persuaded that they will be made to fall down and worship "the Lord
the king," to bear testimony to His glorious truth, and with one loud and united
acclaim, ascribe salvation, and glory, and honour, and power unto Him that
sitteth upon the throne, and to the Lamb, for ever and ever.
This page last updated: 13/05/2008