Faith
credulity, superstition. An article loudly extolled and vehemently
insisted on, in all ages, by Priests and Kings.
Success has crowned their exertions. Mankind, on every occasion, have
opened a gullet wide enough to swallow the absurdest
paradoxes, the most glaring impossibilities. Only say, that
an army of soldiers was seen last night to pass over the moon,
and you will immediately perceive a vast legion of implicit believers,
making their comments and remarks on the phenomenon,
explaining it on the authority of scriptural prophecies. Nothing too
preposterous for popular credulity, which has been always fed and
cherished by the great leaders in Church and State; knowing this, on that
basis only their empire depends. Thus have nations, by dint of error and
superstition, for a vast succession of ages, yielded themselves up to the
dominion of r-y-l or priestly authority, which, in most instances, have
formed a coalition for the purpose, whereby the community
have been plunged into a fathomless abyss of servitude and ignorance, from
which patriotism and philosophy have hitherto laboured in vain to rescue
them. The faith inspired by priestcraft and
state-craft, is the prime cause of that misery and
tyranny, which, to this hour, continue to rage through the universe. The
scourges of the world are held out by priests, as
the viceregents of heaven, and the opinions and consciences of
men, till very lately, have been almost entirely directed by priests;
but as their empire is terribly convulsed by the revolution in France,
which has served so essentially to enlighten the human understanding, may
it soon be totally destroyed, and may Wisdom, Peace and Philanthropy erect
a lasting throne on the wreck of Faith, Error and Superstition!
Their reign has been too long; they have ruled with an iron sceptre. It is
time for Peace to fix her residence amongst us. The Millennium, however,
can never arrive, till faith in priests and
sovereigns be annihilated. Their interest, their ambition is war---the
grand engine of Church and State.