CHAPTER I. SEX THE FOUNDATION OF THE GOD-IDEA.
In the study of primitive religion, the analogy existing
between the growth of the god-idea and the development of the
human race, and especially of the two sex-principles, is
everywhere clearly apparent.
"Religion is to be found alone with its justification and
explanation in the relations of the sexes. There and therein
only."[3]
[3] Hargrave Jennings, Phallicism.
As the conception of a deity originated in sex, or in the
creative agencies female and male which animate Nature, we may
reasonably expect to find, in the history of the development of
the two sex-principles and in the notions entertained concerning
them throughout past ages, a tolerably correct account of the
growth of the god-idea. We shall perceive that during an earlier
age of human existence, not only were the reproductive powers
throughout Nature, and especially in human beings and in animals,
venerated as the Creator, but we shall find also that the
prevailing ideas relative to the importance of either sex in the
office of reproduction decided the sex of this universal creative
force. We shall observe also that the ideas of a god have always
corresponded with the current opinions regarding the importance
of either sex in human society. In other words, so long as female
power and influence were in the ascendency, the creative force
was regarded as embodying the principles of the female nature;
later, however, when woman's power waned, and the supremacy of
man was gained, the god-idea began gradually to assume the male
characters and attributes.
Through scientific research the fact has been observed that,
for ages after life appeared on the earth, the male had no
separate existence; that the two sex-principles, the sperm and
the germ, were contained within one and the same individual.
Through the processes of differentiation, however, these elements
became detached, and with the separation of the male from the
female, the reproductive functions were henceforth confided to
two separate individuals.
As originally, throughout Nature, the female was the visible
organic unit within whom was contained the exclusive creative
power, and as throughout the earlier ages of life on the earth
she comprehended the male, it is not perhaps singular that, even
after the appearance of mankind on the earth, the greater
importance of the mother element in human society should have
been recognized; nor, as the power to bring forth coupled with
perceptive wisdom originally constituted the Creator, that the
god-idea should have been female instead of male.
From the facts to be observed in relation to this subject, it
is altogether probable that for ages the generating principle
throughout Nature was venerated as female; but with that increase
of knowledge which was the result of observation and experience,
juster or more correct ideas came to prevail, and subsequently
the great fructifying energy throughout the universe came to be
regarded as a dual indivisible force--female and male.
This force, or agency, constituted one God, which, as woman's
functions in those ages were accounted of more importance than
those of man, was oftener worshipped under the form of a female
figure. Neith, Minerva, Athene, and Cybele, the most important
deities of their respective countries, were adored as Perceptive
Wisdom, or Light, while Ceres and others represented Fertility.
With the incoming of male dominion and supremacy, however, we
observe the desire to annul the importance of the female and to
enthrone one all-powerful male god whose chief attributes were
power and might.
Notwithstanding the efforts which during the historic period
have been put forward to magnify the importance of the male both
in human affairs and in the god-idea, still, no one, I think, can
study the mythologies and traditions of the nations of antiquity
without being impressed with the prominence given to the female
element, and the deeper the study the stronger will this
impression grow.
During a certain stage of human development, religion was but
a recognition of and a reliance upon the vivifying or fructifying
forces throughout Nature, and in the earlier ages of man's
career, worship consisted for the most part in the celebration of
festivals at stated seasons of the year, notably during seed-time
and harvest, to commemorate the benefits derived from the grain
field and vineyard.
Doubtless the first deified object was Gaia, the Earth. As
within the bosom of the earth was supposed to reside the
fructifying, life-giving power, and as from it were received all
the bounties of life, it was female. It was the Universal Mother,
and to her as to no other divinity worshipped by mankind, was
offered a spontaneity of devotion and a willing acknowledgment of
dependence. Thus far in the history of mankind no temples
dedicated to an undefined and undefinable God had been raised.
The children of Mother Earth met in the open air, without the
precincts of any man-made shrine, and under the aerial canopy of
heaven, acknowledged the bounties of the great Deity and their
dependence upon her gifts. She was a beneficent and all-wise God,
a tender and loving parent--a mother, who demanded no bleeding
sacrifice to reconcile her to her children. The ceremonies
observed at these festive seasons consisted for the most part in
merry-making and in general thanksgiving, in which the gratitude
of the worshippers found expression in song and dance, and in
invocations to their Deity for a return or continuance of her
gifts.
Subsequently, through the awe and reverence inspired by the
mysteries involved in birth and life, the adoration of the
creative principles in vegetable existence became supplemented by
the worship of the creative functions in human beings and in
animals. The earth, including the power inherent in it by which
the continuity of existence is maintained, and by which new forms
are continuously called into life, embodied the idea of God; and,
as this inner force was regarded as inherent in matter, or as a
manifestation of it, in process of time earth and the heavens,
body and spirit, came to be worshipped under the form of a mother
and her child, this figure being the highest expression of a
Creator which the human mind was able to conceive. Not only did
this emblem represent fertility, or the fecundating energies of
Nature, but with the power to create were combined or correlated
all the mental qualities and attributes of the two sexes. In fact
the whole universe was contained in the Mother idea--the child,
which was sometimes female, sometimes male, being a scion or
offshoot from the eternal or universal unit.
Underlying all ancient mythologies may be observed the idea
that the earth, from which all things proceed, is female. Even in
the mythology of the Finns, Lapps, and Esths, Mother Earth is the
divinity adored. Tylor calls attention to the same idea in the
mythology of England,
"from the days when the Anglo-Saxon called upon the Earth,
'Hal wes thu folde fira modor' (Hail, thou Earth, men's mother),
to the time when mediaeval Englishmen made a riddle of her asking
'Who is Adam's mother?' and poetry continued what mythology was
letting fall, when Milton's Archangel promised Adam a life to
last
'. . . till like ripe fruit thou drop Into thy
Mother's lap.' "[4]
[4] Primitive Culture, vol. i., p. 295.
In the old religion the sky was the husband of the earth and
the earth was mother of all the gods.[5] In the traditions of
past ages the fact is clearly perceived that there was a time
when the mother was not only the one recognized parent on earth,
but that the female principle was worshipped as the more
important creative force throughout Nature.
[5] Max Muller, Origin and Growth of Religion, p. 279.
Doubtless the worship of the female energy prevailed under the
matriarchal system, and was practised at a time when women were
the recognized heads of families and when they were regarded as
the more important factors in human society. The fact has been
shown in a previous work that after women began to leave their
homes at marriage, and after property, especially land, had
fallen under the supervision and control of men, the latter, as
they manipulated all the necessaries of life and the means of
supplying them, began to regard themselves as superior beings,
and later, to claim that as a factor in reproduction, or
creation, the male was the more important. With this change the
ideas of a Deity also began to undergo a modification. The dual
principle necessary to creation, and which had hitherto been
worshipped as an indivisible unity, began gradually to separate
into its individual elements, the male representing spirit, the
moving or forming force in the generative processes, the female
being matter--the instrument through which spirit works. Spirit
which is eternal had produced matter which is destructible. The
fact will be observed that this doctrine prevails to a greater or
less extent in the theologies of the present time.
A little observation and reflection will show us that during
this change in the ideas relative to a creative principle, or
God, descent and the rights of succession which had hitherto been
reckoned through the mother were changed from the female to the
male line, the father having in the meantime become the only
recognized parent. In the Eumenides of Aeschylus, the plea of
Orestes in extenuation of his crime is that he is not of kin to
his mother. Euripides, also, puts into the mouth of Apollo the
same physiological notion, that she who bears the child is only
its nurse. The Hindoo Code of Menu, which, however, since its
earliest conception, has undergone numberless mutilations to suit
the purposes of the priests, declares that "the mother is but the
field which brings forth the plant according to whatsoever seed
is sown."
Although, through the accumulation of property in masses and
the capture of women for wives, men had succeeded in gaining the
ascendancy, and although the doctrine had been propounded that
the father is the only parent, thereby reversing the established
manner of reckoning descent, still, as we shall hereafter
observe, thousands of years were required to eliminate the female
element from the god-idea.
We must not lose sight of the fact that human society was
first organized and held together by means of the gens, at the
head of which was a woman. The several members of this
organization were but parts of one body cemented together by the
pure principle of maternity, the chief duty of these members
being to defend and protect each other if needs be with their
life blood. The fact has been observed, in an earlier work, that
only through the gens was the organization of society possible.
Without it mankind could have accomplished nothing toward its own
advancement.
Thus, throughout the earlier ages of human existence, at a
time when mankind lived nearer to Nature and before individual
wealth and the stimulation of evil passions had engendered
superstition, selfishness, and distrust, the maternal element
constituted not only the binding and preserving principle in
human society, but, together with the power to bring forth,
constituted also the god-idea, which idea, as has already been
observed, at a certain stage in the history of the race was
portrayed by a female figure with a child in her arms.
From all sources of information at hand are to be derived
evidences of the fact that the earliest religion of which we have
any account was pure Nature-worship, that whatever at any given
time might have been the object adored, whether it were the
earth, a tree, water, or the sun, it was simply as an emblem of
the great energizing agency in Nature. The moving or forming
force in the universe constituted the god-idea. The figure of a
mother with her child signified not only the power to bring
forth, but Perceptive Wisdom, or Light, as well.
As through a study of Comparative Ethnology, or through an
investigation into the customs, traditions, and mythoses of
extant races in the various stages of development, have been
discovered the beginnings of the religious idea and the mental
qualities which among primitive races prompted worship, so, also,
through extinct tongues and the symbolism used in religious rites
and ceremonies, many of the processes have been unearthed whereby
the original and beautiful conceptions of the Deity, and the
worship inspired by the operations of Nature, and especially the
creative functions in human beings gradually became obscured by
the grossest ideas and the vilest practices. The symbols which
appear in connection with early religious rites and ceremonies,
and under which are veiled the conceptions of a still earlier and
purer age, when compared with subsequently developed notions
relative to the same objects, indicate plainly the change which
has been wrought in the original ideas relative to the creative
functions, and furnish an index to the direction which human
development, or growth, has taken.
As the human race constructs its own gods, and as by the
conceptions involved in the deities worshipped at any given time
in the history of mankind we are able to form a correct estimate
of the character, temperament, and aspirations of the
worshippers, so the history of the gods of the race, as revealed
to us through the means of symbols, monumental records, and the
investigation of extinct tongues, proves that from a stage of
Nature worship and a pure and rational conception of the creative
forces in the universe, mankind, in course of time, degenerated
into mere devotees of sensual pleasure. With the corruption of
human nature and the decline of mental power which followed the
supremacy of the animal instincts, the earlier abstract idea of
God was gradually lost sight of, and man himself in the form of a
potentate or ruler, together with the various emblems of
virility, came to be worshipped as the Creator. From adorers of
an abstract creative principle, mankind had lapsed into
worshippers of the symbols under which this principle had been
veiled.
Although at certain stages in the history of the human race
the evils, which as a result of the supremacy of the ruder
elements developed in mankind had befallen the race were lamented
and bewailed, they could not be suppressed. Man had become a lost
and ruined creature. The golden age had passed away.