The Two Babylons Chapter V Section II
Relic Worship
Nothing is more characteristic of Rome
than the worship of relics. Wherever a chapel is opened, or a temple
consecrated, it cannot be thoroughly complete without some relic or other of
he-saint or she-saint to give sanctity to it. The relics of the saints and
rotten bones of the martyrs form a great part of the wealth of the Church. The
grossest impostures have been practised in regard to such relics; and the most
drivelling tales have been told of their wonder-working powers, and that too by
Fathers of high name in the records of Christendom. Even Augustine, with all his
philosophical acuteness and zeal against some forms of false doctrine, was
deeply infected with the grovelling spirit that led to relic worship. Let any
one read the stuff with which he concludes his famous "City of God," and he will
in no wise wonder that Rome has made a saint of him, and set him up for the
worship of her devotees. Take only a specimen or two of the stories with which
he bolsters up the prevalent delusions of his day: "When the Bishop Projectius
brought the relics of St. Stephen to the town called Aquae Tibiltinae, the
people came in great crowds to honour them. Amongst these was a blind woman, who
entreated the people to lead her to the bishop who had the HOLY RELICS. They did
so, and the bishop gave her some flowers which he had in his hand. She took
them, and put them to her eyes, and immediately her sight was restored, so that
she passed speedily on before all the others, no longer requiring to be guided."
In Augustine's day, the formal "worship" of the relics was not yet
established; but the martyrs to whom they were supposed to have belonged were
already invoked with prayers and supplications, and that with the high approval
of the Bishop of Hippo, as the following story will abundantly show: Here, in
Hippo, says he, there was a poor and holy old man, by name Florentius, who
obtained a living by tailoring. This man once lost his coat, and not being able
to purchase another to replace it, he came to the shrine of the Twenty Martyrs,
in this city, and prayed aloud to them, beseeching that they would enable him to
get another garment. A crowd of silly boys who overheard him, followed him at
his departure, scoffing at him, and asking him whether he had begged fifty pence
from the martyrs to buy a coat. The poor man went silently on towards home, and
as he passed near the sea, he saw a large fish which had been cast up on the
sand, and was still panting. The other persons who were present allowed him to
take up this fish, which he brought to one Catosus, a cook, and a good
Christian, who bought it from him for three hundred pence. With this he meant to
purchase wool, which his wife might spin, and make into a garment for him. When
the cook cut up the fish, he found within its belly a ring of gold, which his
conscience persuaded him to give to the poor man from whom he bought the fish.
He did so, saying, at the same time, "Behold how the Twenty Martyrs have clothed
you!" *
* De Civitate. The story of
the fish and the ring is an old Egyptian story. (WILKINSON) Catosus, "the good
Christian," was evidently a tool of the priests, who could afford to
give him a ring to put into the fish's belly. The miracle would draw
worshippers to the shrine of the Twenty Martyrs, and thus bring grist to their
mill, and amply repay them.
Thus did the great Augustine inculcate
the worship of dead men, and the honouring of their wonder-working relics. The
"silly children" who "scoffed" at the tailor's prayer seem to have had more
sense than either the "holy old tailor" or the bishop. Now, if men professing
Christianity were thus, in the fifth century, paving the way for the worship of
all manner of rags and rotten bones; in the realms of Heathendom the same
worship had flourished for ages before Christian saints or martyrs had appeared
in the world. In Greece, the superstitious regard to relics, and especially to
the bones of the deified heroes, was a conspicuous part of the popular idolatry.
The work of Pausanias, the learned Grecian antiquary, is full of reference to
this superstition. Thus, of the shoulder-blade of Pelops, we read that, after
passing through divers adventures, being appointed by the oracle of Delphi, as a
divine means of delivering the Eleans from a pestilence under which they
suffered, it "was committed," as a sacred relic, "to the custody" of the man who
had fished it out of the sea, and of his posterity after him. The bones of the
Trojan Hector were preserved as a precious deposit at Thebes. "They" [the
Thebans], says Pausanias, "say that his [Hector's] bones were brought hither
from Troy, in consequence of the following oracle: 'Thebans, who inhabit the
city of Cadmus, if you wish to reside in your country, blest with the possession
of blameless wealth, bring the bones of Hector, the son of Priam, into your
dominions from Asia, and reverence the hero agreeably to the mandate of
Jupiter.'" Many other similar instances from the same author might be adduced.
The bones thus carefully kept and reverenced were all believed to be
miracle-working bones. From the earliest periods, the system of Buddhism has
been propped up by relics, that have wrought miracles at least as well vouched
as those wrought by the relics of St. Stephen, or by the "Twenty Martyrs." In
the "Mahawanso," one of the great standards of the Buddhist faith, reference is
thus made to the enshrining of the relics of Buddha: "The vanquisher of foes
having perfected the works to be executed within the relic receptacle, convening
an assembly of the priesthood, thus addressed them: 'The works that were to be
executed by me, in the relic receptacle, are completed. Tomorrow, I shall
enshrine the relics. Lords, bear in mind the relics.'" Who has not heard of the
Holy Coat of Treves, and its exhibition to the people? From the
following, the reader will see that there was an exactly similar exhibition of
the Holy Coat of Buddha: "Thereupon (the nephew of the Naga Rajah) by his
supernatural gift, springing up into the air to the height of seven palmyra
trees, and stretching out his arm brought to the spot where he was poised, the
Dupathupo (or shrine) in which the DRESS laid aside by Buddho, as Prince
Siddhatto, on his entering the priesthood, was enshrined...and EXHIBITED IT TO
THE PEOPLE." This "Holy Coat" of Buddha was no doubt as genuine, and as well
entitled to worship, as the "Holy Coat" of Treves. The resemblance does not stop
here. It is only a year or two ago since the Pope presented to his beloved son,
Francis Joseph of Austria, a "TOOTH" of "St. Peter," as a mark of his special
favour and regard. The teeth of Buddha are in equal request among his
worshippers. "King of Devas," said a Buddhist missionary, who was sent to one of
the principal courts of Ceylon to demand a relic or two from the Rajah, "King of
Devas, thou possessest the right canine tooth relic (of Buddha), as well
as the right collar bone of the divine teacher. Lord of Devas, demur not in
matter involving the salvation of the land of Lanka." Then the miraculous
efficacy of these relics is shown in the following: "The Saviour of the world
(Buddha) even after he had attained to Parinibanan or final emancipation (i.e.,
after his death), by means of a corporeal relic, performed infinite acts to
the utmost perfection, for the spiritual comfort and mundane prosperity of
mankind. While the Vanquisher (Jeyus) yet lived, what must he not have done?"
Now, in the Asiatic Researches, a statement is made in regard to these
relics of Buddha, which marvellously reveals to us the real origin of this
Buddhist relic worship. The statement is this: "The bones or limbs of Buddha
were scattered all over the world, like those of Osiris and Jupiter Zagreus. To
collect them was the first duty of his descendants and followers, and then to
entomb them. Out of filial piety, the remembrance of this mournful search was
yearly kept up by a fictitious one, with all possible marks of grief and sorrow
till a priest announced that the sacred relics were at last found. This is
practised to this day by several Tartarian tribes of the religion of Buddha; and
the expression of the bones of the Son of the Spirit of heaven is peculiar to
the Chinese and some tribes in Tartary." Here, then, it is evident that the
worship of relics is just a part of those ceremonies instituted to commemorate
the tragic death of Osiris or Nimrod, who, as the reader may remember, was
divided into fourteen pieces, which were sent into so many different regions
infected by his apostacy and false worship, to operate in terrorem upon
all who might seek to follow his example. When the apostates regained their
power, the very first thing they did was to seek for these dismembered relics
of the great ringleader in idolatry, and to entomb them with every mark of
devotion. Thus does Plutarch describe the search: "Being acquainted with this
even [viz., the dismemberment of Osiris], Isis set out once more in search of
the scattered members of her husband's body, using a boat made of the papyrus
rush in order more easily to pass through the lower and fenny parts of the
country...And one reason assigned for the different sepulchres of Osiris shown
in Egypt is, that wherever any one of his scattered limbs was discovered she
buried it on the spot; though others suppose that it was owing to an artifice of
the queen, who presented each of those cities with an image of her husband, in
order that, if Typho should overcome Horus in the approaching contest, he might
be unable to find the real sepulchre. Isis succeeded in recovering all the
different members, with the exception of one, which had been devoured by the
Lepidotus, the Phagrus, and the Oxyrhynchus, for which reason these fish are
held in abhorrence by the Egyptians. To make amends, she consecrated the
Phallus, and instituted a solemn festival to its memory." Not only does this
show the real origin of relic worship it shows also that the multiplication
of relics can pretend to the most venerable antiquity. If, therefore, Rome can
boast that she has sixteen or twenty holy coats, seven or eight arms of St.
Matthew, two or three heads of St. Peter, this is nothing more than Egypt could
do in regard to the relics of Osiris. Egypt was covered with sepulchres
of its martyred god; and many a leg and arm and skull, all vouched to be
genuine, were exhibited in the rival burying-places for the adoration of the
Egyptian faithful. Nay, not only were these Egyptian relics sacred themselves,
they CONSECRATED THE VERY GROUND in which they were entombed. This fact is
brought out by Wilkinson, from a statement of Plutarch: "The Temple of this
deity at Abydos," says he, "was also particularly honoured, and so holy was the
place considered by the Egyptians, that persons living at some distance from it
sought, and perhaps with difficulty obtained, permission to possess a sepulchre
within its Necropolis, in order that, after death, they might repose in
GROUND HALLOWED BY THE TOMB of this great and mysterious deity." If the places
where the relics of Osiris were buried were accounted peculiarly holy, it is
easy to see how naturally this would give rise to the pilgrimages so
frequent among the heathen. The reader does not need to be told what merit Rome
attaches to such pilgrimages to the tombs of saints, and how, in the
Middle Ages, one of the most favourite ways of washing away sin was to undertake
a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Jago di Compostella in Spain, or the Holy
Sepulchre in Jerusalem. Now, in the Scripture there is not the slightest trace
of any such thing as a pilgrimage to the tomb of saint, martyr, prophet,
or apostle. The very way in which the Lord saw fit to dispose of the body of
Moses in burying it Himself in the plains of Moab, so that no man should ever
known where his sepulchre was, was evidently designed to rebuke every such
feeling as that from which such pilgrimages arise. And considering
whence Israel had come, the Egyptian ideas with which they were infected, as
shown in the matter of the golden calf, and the high reverence they must have
entertained for Moses, the wisdom of God in so disposing of his body must be
apparent. In the land where Israel had so long sojourned, there were great and
pompous pilgrimages at certain season of the year, and these often
attended with gross excesses. Herodotus tells us, that in his time the multitude
who went annually on pilgrimage to Bubastis amounted to 700,000 individuals, and
that then more wine was drunk than at any other time in the year. Wilkinson thus
refers to a similar pilgrimage to Philae: "Besides the celebration of the great
mysteries which took place at Philae, a grand ceremony was performed at a
particular time, when the priests, in solemn procession, visited his tomb, and
crowned it with flowers. Plutarch even pretends that all access to the island
was forbidden at every other period, and that no bird would fly over it, or fish
swim near this CONSECRATED GROUND." This seems not to have been a procession
merely of the priests in the immediate neighbourhood of the tomb, but a truly
national pilgrimage; for, says Diodorus, "the sepulchre of Osiris at
Philae is revered by all the priests throughout Egypt." We have not the same
minute information about the relic worship in Assyria or Babylon; but we have
enough to show that, as it was the Babylonian god that was worshipped in Egypt
under the name of Osiris, so in his own country there was the same superstitious
reverence paid to his relics. We have seen already, that when the Babylonian
Zoroaster died, he was said voluntarily to have given his life as a sacrifice,
and to have "charged his countrymen to preserve his remains," assuring
them that on the observance or neglect of this dying command, the fate of their
empire would hinge. And, accordingly, we learn from Ovid, that the "Busta Nini,"
or "Tomb of Ninus," long ages thereafter, was one of the monuments of Babylon.
Now, in comparing the death and fabled resurrection of the false Messiah with
the death and resurrection of the true, when he actually appeared, it will be
found that there is a very remarkable contrast. When the false Messiah died,
limb was severed from limb, and his bones were scattered over the country. When
the death of the true Messiah took place, Providence so arranged it that the
body should be kept entire, and that the prophetic word should be exactly
fulfilled--"a bone of Him shall not be broken." When, again, the false Messiah
was pretended to have had a resurrection, that resurrection was in a new
body, while the old body, with all its members, was left behind, thereby showing
that the resurrection was nothing but a pretence and a sham. When, however, the
true Messiah was "declared to be the Son of God with power, by the resurrection
from the dead," the tomb, though jealously watched by the armed unbelieving
soldiery of Rome, was found to be absolutely empty, and no dead body of the Lord
was ever afterwards found, or even pretended to have been found. The
resurrection of Christ, therefore, stands on a very different footing from the
resurrection of Osiris. Of the body of Christ, of course, in the nature of the
case, there could be no relics. Rome, however to carry out the Babylonian
system, has supplied the deficiency by means of the relics of the saints; and
now the relics of St. Peter and St. Paul, of St. Thomas A'Beckett and St.
Lawrence O'Toole, occupy the very same place in the worship of the Papacy as the
relics of Osiris in Egypt, or of Zoroaster in Babylon.