When The Age of Reason was published in 1794, its
author was subjected to a great deal of public censure. The work, though
occasionally flawed in its reasoning, was uncompromising in its dedication to
using reason as a tool. In a style typical of his pamphleteering, Thomas Paine mercilessly,
humorously and clearly scrutinized revealed religion and the Bible. The work
was begun earlier in 1794, when Paine was being held as a prisoner by the
revolutionary government of Robespierre, and his survival was uncertain.
Since Part One was composed in prison, Paine did not have
access to a Bible. As a result, it relies more upon philosophical thought and
rhetoric than Part Two. Some of the opening ideas are expressed in truly memorable
fashion. For example, after repudiating
connection with any church, the author states “my own mind is my own church.”
(Paine, p. 6). It should be pointed-out that, while Paine claims in that
passage to disbelieve the creeds of all churches, including the “Turkish
church” (read Islam), he confines his criticism primarily to those institutions
professing belief in the Old and New Testament, since these are the works with
which he is familiar. Additionally, he does not see his own Deism as a creed.
Paine goes on to discuss the Bible as a work of mythology no
different than that of any other religion, and reinforces this idea by showing
how the authors of this book used common mythological devices. About Jesus’
divine parentage, he states “almost all the extraordinary men that lived under
the heathen mythology were reputed to be the sons of some of their gods. It was
not a new thing, at that time, to believe a man to have been celestially begotten.”
(Paine, p. 9). Further on he claims “the Mythologists had gods for everything;
the Christian Mythologists had saints for everything.” (Paine, p. 9). The
implication is, if we call pagan stories “myth,” then why don’t we use the same
term for Christian stories?
There are arguments presented where, even I as a supportive
skeptic, can see a reasonable counter-argument. Paine wrote “the Christian
system of faith…appears to me as a species of atheism…it professes to believe
in a man rather than in God.” (Paine, p. 33). But if one believes Jesus was God
incarnated there is no atheism, just a belief that God took a unique form. It
is difficult to tell which of the pamphleteer’s ideas were original, and which
borrowed. The originality is more in the boldness and satire with which Paine
presents his ideas; and the fact that he was willing to place his name on the
document in full knowledge that it would create for him an unpopular legacy.
Part Two, published in 1796, is where the author truly
shines. The superiority of the second part is owed largely to the conditions of
its writing. Paine was no longer suffering the deprivations of prison where he
had “little expectation of surviving,” and he finally had a Bible in hand.
(Paine, p. 73). The now freed citizen of the United States takes exception to
the cruelty exhibited by people in the Bible who claimed to be following God’s
commandment. In particular, he objects to the passages exhibiting genocide
where the Israelites “put all nations to the sword; that they spared neither age
nor infancy; that they utterly destroyed men, women and children; that they
left not a soul to breathe.” (Paine, p.
76). Paine did not think his creator would sanction such actions, and at least
pretended to be outraged that anyone would ascribe such immoral behavior to his
god.
Paine uses the words of the Bible itself to deny that the
first five books were written by Moses. If Moses died in the second book, how
does he then write the next three books? Also, an anonymous writer of Exodus
states that no one knows where the sepulchre of Moses is “unto this day.” That
phrase indicates a time after Moses died and in which one of the actual writers
lived. (Paine, p. 83).
In regards to the New Testament, Paine exploits
contradictions between the Gospels to discredit their veracity. Discussing
Jesus’ genealogy from King David through his father Joseph, this careful reader
points out that no two Gospels agree. Matthew counts 28 generations between
David and Joseph, while Luke counts 43. In addition, between the two lists of
Matthew and Luke, only the names of David and Joseph match. The two apostles
cannot agree on whom Jesus’ ancestors were, and only one can be correct. (Paine,
p. 143). Further evidence of inconsistency is shown in Matthew’s description of
an earthquake and the rising of many dead saints, which coincide with Jesus’
crucifixion. Neither Mark, nor John, nor Luke mentions these occurrences.
(Paine, pp. 147-8). One might assume that, if the ground were shaking and
numerous zombie saints were wandering about Jerusalem, the other three writers
would have considered it worth mentioning.
Paine catalogs a multitude of disagreements between the Testaments.
But he leaves out a glaring discrepancy concerning the death of Judas. Matthew
27: 3-5 reports that Judas “hanged himself.” However in Acts 1: 16-19, Luke
quotes Peter’s speech in which Judas died in a different manner. Judas is walking in a field bought with his
blood money and “falling headlong, he burst open in the middle and all his
intestines gushed out.” Despite the entertainment it may provide believers to choose
a pet gruesome end for God’s betrayer, only one scenario can be correct.
The importance of these discrepancies is not in the niggling
details themselves, but in what they show about the New Testament. In the first
place, any claim to biblical inerrancy or divine inspiration is disproven. An all-knowing god would not inspire a book
that contained falsehoods. In Paine’s words “the disagreement of the parts of a
story proves the whole cannot be true…if Matthew speaks truth, Luke speaks
falsehood…there is no authority for believing either. ” (Paine, p. 143). If a witness
in court was proven to have lied or reported events inaccurately, it casts
doubt upon that individual’s entire testimony.
The rest of the pamphlet is more an advertisement for Deism
in contrast to Christianity. Paine discusses “the horrid assassinations of
whole nations…with which the Bible is filled,” followed by “the bloody
persecutions and tortures unto death, and religious wars that since that time
have laid Europe in blood and ashes,” and concludes “whence rose they but from
this impious thing called revealed religion?” (Paine, pp. 173-4). He goes on to
advocate for his purportedly improved belief system.
Deism, the belief that the existence of nature proves the
existence of God, is presented by the author as a religion of peace. This is
stated in spite of the fact that Robespierre, who imprisoned Paine and
instituted “The Terror” in France, made Deism the state religion, complete with
ceremonies and holidays. It doesn’t really matter what the dominant religion of
a culture professes. In a system without separation of church and state, the
chosen religion will be used to reinforce the political authority regardless of
that faith’s moral precepts.
But Paine did not believe that Deism had been “invented” by
humankind. He thought this natural religion “must have been the first, and will
probably be the last, that man believes.” (Paine, p. 179). In his mind, Deism
was simply a rational conclusion that anyone would draw by observing “the
Creation.” This of course presupposes that earlier Homo Sapiens were governed
by rational thought. Employing hindsight, we of the 21st Century can
see how a group of post-Scientific-Revolution thinkers used a form of corrupted
empiricism to contrive a religion. But the Deists of the Enlightenment had been
raised in a society where God was a given. It was too frightening a prospect to discard this long-held precept and contemplate the universe without a deity.
While Paine’s then-fashionable Enlightenment faith has
mutated over time, his criticisms of organized religion remain as contemporary
as they were when first written. As long as there is a Bible and a set of corresponding
Judeo-Christian traditions that are practiced, the arguments propounded in The
Age of Reason will continue to haunt those traditions. The inconsistencies,
injustices and superstitions, recorded in the Bible and believed by a segment of
the world population, allow the objections of Thomas Paine to remain living
ideas.
Paine, Thomas. The Age of Reason. Avenel: Gramercy Books, 1993.
For review of a biography on Thomas Paine, see: http://greatnonfictionbooks.blogspot.com/2013/02/tom-paine-political-life-by-john-keane.html
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