Woman, Church & State
Woman, Church & StatePreface. Chapter 1-5Chapter 6-10 NotesCopyright
Woman, Church & State
Matilda Joslyn Gage
Preface. Chapter 1-5
This work explains itself and is given to the world because
it is needed. Tired of the obtuseness of Church and State;
indignant at the injustice of both towards woman; at the wrongs
inflicted upon one-half of humanity by the other half in the name
of religion; finding appeal and argument alike met by the assertion
that God designed the subjection of woman, and yet that her
position had been higher under Christianity than ever before:
Continually hearing these statements, and knowing them to be false,
I refuted them in a slightresumeof the subject at the annual convention of the National Woman
Suffrage Association, Washington, D.C., 1878.A wish to see that speech in print, having been expressed, it
was allowed to appear inThe National
Citizen, a woman suffrage paper I then edited,
and shortly afterwards in “The History of Woman Suffrage,” of which
I was also an editor. The kindly reception given both in the United
States and Europe to that meager chapter of forty pages confirmed
my purpose of a fuller presentation of the subject in book form,
and it now appears, the result of twenty years investigation, in a
volume of over five hundred and fifty pages.Read it; examine for yourselves; accept or reject from the
proof offered, but do not allow the Church or the State to govern
your thought or dictate your judgment.Chapter OneThe
MatriarchateWoman is told that her present position in society is
entirely due to Christianity; that it is superior to that of her
sex at any prior age of the world, Church and State both
maintaining that she has ever been inferior and dependent, man
superior and ruler. These assertions are made the basis of
opposition to her demands for exact equality with man in all the
relations of life, although they are not true either of the family,
the church, or the state. Such assertions are due to
non-acquaintance with the existing phase of historical knowledge,
whose records the majority of mankind have neither time nor
opportunity of investigating.Christianity tended somewhat from its foundation to restrict
the liberty woman enjoyed under the old civilizations. Knowing that
the position of every human being keeps pace with the religion and
civilization of his country, and that in many ancient nations woman
possessed a much greater degree of respect and power than she has
at the present age, this subject will be presented from a
historical standpoint. If in so doing it helps to show man’s
unwarranted usurpation over woman’s religious and civil rights, and
the very great difference between true religion and theology, this
book will not have been written in vain, as it will prove that the
most grievous wrong ever inflicted upon woman has been in the
Christian teaching that she was not created equal with man, and the
consequent denial of her rightful place in Church and
State.The last half century has shown great advance in historical
knowledge; libraries and manuscripts long inaccessible have been
opened to scholars, and the spirit of investigation has made known
many secrets of the past, brought many hidden things to light.
Buried cities have been explored and forced to reveal their
secrets; lost modes of writing have been deciphered, and olden
myths placed upon historic foundations. India is opening her stores
of ancient literature; Egypt, so wise and so famous, of which it
was anciently said: “If it does not find a man mad it leaves him
mad,” has revealed her secrets; hieroglyph-inscribed temples,
obelisks and tombs have been interpreted; papyri buried 4,000 and
more years in the folds of bandage-enveloped mummies have given
their secrets to the world. The brick libraries of Assyria have
been unearthed, and the lost civilization of Babylonia and Chaldea
imparted to mankind. The strange Zunis have found an interpreter;
the ancient Aztec language its Champollion, and the mysteries of
even our western continent are becoming unveiled. Darkest Africa
has opened to the light; the colossal images of Easter Island hint
at their origin; while the new science of philology unfolds to us
the history of peoples so completely lost that no other monument of
their past remains. We are now informed as to the condition of
early peoples, their laws, customs, habits, religion, comprising
order and rank in the state, the rules of descent, name, property,
the circumstances of family life, the position of mother, father,
children, their temples and priestly orders; all these have been
investigated and a new historic basis has been discovered. Never
has research been so thorough or long-lost knowledge so fully given
to the world.These records prove that woman had acquired great liberty
under the old civilizations. A form of society existed at an early
age known as the Matriarchate or Mother-rule. Under the
Matriarchate, except as son and inferior, man was not recognized in
either of these great institutions, family, state or church. A
father and husband as such, had no place either in the social,
political or religious scheme; woman was ruler in each. The primal
priest on earth, she was also supreme as goddess in heaven. The
earliest semblance of the family is traceable to the relationship
of mother and child alone. Here the primal idea of the family had
birth.[1]The child bore its
mother’s name, tracing its descent from her; her authority over it
was regarded as in accord with nature; the father having no part in
the family remained a wanderer. Long years elapsed before man, as
husband and father, was held in esteem. The son, as child of his
mother, ranked the father, the mother taking precedence over both
the father and the son.[2]Blood relationship through a
common mother preceded that of descent through the father in the
development of society.[3]This priority of the mother
touched not alone the family, but controlled the state and
indicated the form of religion. Thus we see that during the
Matriarchate, woman ruled; she was first in the family, the state,
religion, the most ancient records showing that man’s subjection to
woman preceded by long ages that of woman to man. The tribe was
united through the mother; social, political and religious life
were all in harmony with the idea of woman as the first and highest
power. The earliest phase of life being dependent upon her, she was
recognized as the primal factor in every relation,[4]man holding no place but that of
dependent.Every part of the world today gives evidence of the system;
reminiscences of the Matriarchate everywhere abound. Livingstone
found African tribes swearing by the mother and tracing descent
through her. Marco Polo discovered similar customs in his Asiatic
voyages, and the same customs are extant among the Indians of our
own continent. Bachofen[5]and
numerous investigators[6]agree in the statement that in the
earliest forms of society, the family, government, and religion,
were all under woman’s control; that in fact society started under
woman’s absolute authority and power.The second step in family life took place when the father,
dropping his own name, took that of his child. This old and
wide-spread custom is still extant in many portions of the globe;
the primitive peoples of Java, Australia and Madagascar are among
those still continuing its practice.[7]By this step the father allied
himself to both mother and child, although still holding an
inferior position to both. The Matriarchal family was now fully
established, descent still running in the female line. Thus, as has
been expressed, we find that woman’s liberty did not begin today
nor under modern religions or forms or government, but that she was
in reality the founder of civilization, and that in the most remote
times woman enjoyed superiority of rights in all the institutions
of life.[8]And yet so
difficult is it to break away from educated thought, so slight a
hold have historical facts upon the mind when contrary to
pre-conceived ideas, that we find people still expressing the
opinion that man’s place has always been first in government. Even
under those forms of society where woman was undisputed head of the
family, its very existence due to her, descent entirely in the
female line, we still hear assertion that his must have been the
controlling political power. But at that early period to which we
trace the formation of the family, it was also the political unit.
And when peoples became aggregated into communities, when tribal
relations were ultimately recognized, woman still held superior
position, and was the controlling power in government, and never
was justice more perfect, never civilization higher than under the
Matriarchate. Historians agree as to the high civilization even
today of those nations or tribes still preserving traces of
Matriarchal customs. Even under its most degenerate form, the
family, governmental and religious rights of women are more fully
recognized than under any phase of Christian civilization. In all
the oldest religions, equally with the Semitic cults, the feminine
was recognized as a component and superior part of divinity,
goddesses holding the supreme place. Even at much later periods
woman shared equally with man in the highest priestly offices, and
was deified after death. In Egypt, Neith the Victorious, was
worshiped as mother of the gods, and in the yearly festival held in
her honor, every family took part for the time holding a priestly
office. To neglect this duty was deemed an omission of great
irreverence.[9]The most
ancient occultism recognized the creative power as feminine and
preceding both gods and men.Under the Matriarchate, monogamy was the rule; neither
polyandry or promiscuity existed.[10]For long years after the decline of the Matriarchate we still
discover that among many of the most refined nations, woman still
possessed much of the power that belonged exclusively to her during
that early period. Ancient Egypt, recognized as the wisest nation
since the direct historic period, traced descent even to the throne
in the female line. To this reminiscence of the Matriarchate are we
indebted for the story of Moses and his preservation by an Egyptian
princess in direct contravention of the Pharaoh’s orders, as told
by the Bible and Josephus. She not alone preserved the child’s life
but carried him to the king as her son given to her by the bounty
of the river and heir to his throne. As showing woman’s power in
that kingdom, the story is worthy of being farther traced. Josephus
says that to please his daughter, the king took the child in his
arms, placing his crown on the baby head, but the chief priest at
that moment entering the room, in a spirit of prophecy cried aloud,
“Oh King; this is the child of whom I foretold danger; kill him and
save the nation,” at the same time striving to take the babe from
the king. But the princess caught him away, thus setting both
kingly and priestly power at defiance, taking this step by virtue
of her greater authority, protecting him until he reached manhood
and causing him to be educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians,
in a college under her own control. Nor in the supreme hour of the
nation’s peril, when the king, too old to lead his armies to
battle, demanded Moses as heir to the throne in his place, would
she give him up until she had exacted an oath from her father, the
potent Pharaoh, that he meant the youth no harm.The famous Iroquois Indians, or Six Nations, which at the
discovery of America held sway from the great lakes to the
Tombigbee river, from the Hudson to the Ohio, and of whom it has
been said that another century would have found them master of all
tribes to the Gulf of Mexico on the south, and the Mississippi on
the west, showed alike in form of government, and in social life,
reminiscences of the Matriarchate. The line of descent, feminine,
was especially notable in all tribal relations such as the election
of Chiefs, and the Council of Matrons, to which all disputed
questions were referred for final adjudication. No sale of lands
was valid without consent of the squaws and among the State
Archives at Albany, New York, treaties are preserved signed by the
“Sachems and Principal Women of the Six Nations.”[11]The women also possessed the veto
power on questions of war. Sir William Johnston mentions an
instance of Mohawk squaws forbidding the war-path to young braves.
The family relation among the Iroquois demonstrated woman’s
superiority in power. When an Indian husband brought the products
of the chase to the wigwam, his control over it ceased. In the
home, the wife was absolute; the sale of the skins was regulated by
her, the price was paid to her. If for any cause the Iroquois
husband and wife separated, the wife took with her all the property
she had brought into the wigwam; the children also accompanied the
mother, whose right to them was recognized as supreme. So fully to
this day is descent reckoned through the mother, that blue-eyed,
fair-haired children of white fathers are numbered in the tribe and
receive both from state and nation their portion of the yearly dole
paid to Indian tribes. The veriest pagan among the Iroquois, the
renowned and important Keeper of the Wampum, and present sole
interpreter of the Belts which give the most ancient and secret
history of this confederation, is Ephraim Webster, descended from a
white man, who, a hundred or more years since, became affiliated
through marriage with an Indian woman, as a member of the principal
nation of the Iroquois, the Onondagas. As of yore, so now, the
greater and lesser Council Houses of the Iroquois are upon the
“mountain” of the Onondaga reservation a few miles from the city of
Syracuse, New York. Not alone the Iroquois but most Indians of
North America trace descent in the female line; among some tribes
woman enjoys almost the whole legislative authority and in others a
prominent share.[12]Lafitte
and other Jesuit missionary writers are corroborated in this
statement by Schoolcraft, Catlin, Clark, Hubert Bancroft of the
Pacific coast, and many students of Indian life and customs. But
the most notable fact connected with woman’s participation in
governmental affairs among the Iroquois is the statement of Hon.
George Bancroft that the form of government of the United States,
was borrowed from that of the Six Nations.[13]Thus to the Matriarchate or
Mother-rule is the modern world indebted for its first conception
of inherent rights, natural equality of condition, and the
establishment of a civilized government upon this basis. Although
the reputation of the Iroquois as warriors appears most prominent
in history, we nevertheless find their real principles to have been
the true Matriarchal one of peace and industry. Driven from the
northern portion of America by vindictive foes, compelled to take
up arms in self-protection, yet the more peaceful occupations of
hunting and agriculture were continually followed. Their history
was preserved by means of wampum, while under their women the
science of government reached the highest form known to the world.
Among the Zunis of New Mexico, woman still preserves supreme
religious and political authority; the Paramount Council consisting
of six priests under control of a supreme priestess who is the most
important functionary of the tribe.[14]This form of government is
traceable to their earliest civilization at which period their
cities were grouped in sevens, six of them constructed upon a
uniform plan; the supreme seventh containing six temples clustered
about a supreme central seventh temple. While male priests ruled
over the six primal cities the central and superior seventh was
presided over by a priestess who not alone officiated at the
central temple, but to whom the male priests of the six cities and
six inferior temples were subservient. The ancient Lycians, the
Sclavs, the Basques of Spain,[15]the Veddas of Ceylon,[16]the inhabitants of Malabar, the
aborigines of widely separated lands, all show convincing proof of
woman’s early superiority in religion, in the state, and in the
family. Monogamy was a marked feature of the Matriarchate.
Bachofen, who has written voluminously upon the Matriarchate,
recognizes it as peculiarly characteristic of woman’s government.
He also says the people who possessed the Mother-rule together with
Gynaikokraty (girls’ rule) excelled in their love of peace and
justice. Under the Matriarchal family and tribal system even long
after its partial supersedence by the incoming Patriarchate, the
marriage relation was less oppressive to woman than it has been
under most centuries of christian civilization. Daughters were free
in their choice of husbands, no form of a force or sale
existing.[17]One of the most brilliant modern examples of the Matriarchate
was found in Malabar at the time of its discovery by the Portuguese
in the XV century. The Nairs were found to possess a fine
civilization, entirely under the control of women, at a period when
woman’s position in England and on the Continent of Europe, was
that of a household and political slave. Of Malabar it has been
said, that when the Portuguese became acquainted with the country
and the people, they were not so much surprised by the opulence of
their cities, the splendor of all their habits of living, the great
perfection of their navy, the high state of the arts, as they were
to find all this under the entire control and government of women.
The difference in civilization between christian Europe and pagan
Malabar at the time of its discovery was indeed great. While Europe
with its new art of printing, was struggling against the church for
permission to use type, its institutions of learning few, its
opportunities for education meagre; its terrible inquisition
crushing free thought and sending thousands each year to a most
painful death, the uncleanliness of its cities and the country such
as to bring frequent visits of the plague; its armies and its
navies with but one exception, imperfect; its women forbidden the
right of inheritance, religious, political, or household
authority;—the feminine principle entirely eliminated from the
divinity—a purely masculine God the universal object of worship,
all was directly the opposite in Malabar. Cleanliness, peace, the
arts, a just form of government, the recognition of the feminine
both in humanity and in the divinity were found in Malabar. To the
question of a Danish missionary concerning their opinion of a
Supreme Being, this beautiful answer was given.The Supreme Being has a Form and yet has no Form; he can be
likened to nothing; we cannot define him and say that he is this or
that; he is neither Man or Woman; neither Heaven or Earth, and yet
he is all; subject to no corruption, no mortality and with neither
sleep nor rest, he is Almighty and Omnipotent without Beginning and
without End.[18]Under the Missionaries sent by England to introduce her own
barbaric ideas of God and man, this beautiful Matriarchal
civilization of Malabar soon retrograded and was lost.The ancient Mound Builders of America, of whom history is
silent and science profoundly ignorant, are proven by means of
symbolism to have been under Matriarchal rule, and Motherhood
religion. Anciently motherhood was represented by a sphere or
circle. The circle, like the mundane egg, which is but an elongated
circle, contains everything in itself and is the true microcosm. It
is eternity, it is feminine, the creative force, representing
spirit. Through its union with matter in the form of the nine
digits it is likewise capable of representing all natural
things.[19]The perfect circle
of Giotto was an emblem of divine motherhood in its completeness.
It is a remarkable fact—its significance not recognized,—that the
roughly sketched diameter within the circle, found wherever boys
congregate, is an ancient mystic sign[20]signifying the male and female,
or the double-sexed deity. It is the union of all numbers, the one
within the zero mark comprising ten, and as part of the ancient
mysteries signifying God, the creative power, and eternal life; it
was an emblem of The All.In many old religions, the generative principle was regarded
as the mother of both gods and men. In the Christian religion we
find tendency to a similar recognition in Catholic worship of the
Virgin Mary. The most ancient Aryans were under the Matriarchate,
the feminine recognized as the creative power. The wordmafrom which all descendants of those
peoples derive their names for mother, was synonymous withCreator. Renouf, the great antiquarian
authority upon the Aryan’s,[21]gives the songs and ceremonies of
the wedding. In these, the woman is represented as having descended
to man from association with divine beings in whose custody and
care she has been, and who give her up with reluctance. In Sanscrit
mythology,[22]the feminine is
represented by Swrya, the Sun, the source of life, while the
masculine is described as Soma, a body. Soma, a beverage of the
gods especially sacred to Indra, was the price paid by him for the
assistance of Vayu, the swiftest of the gods, in his battle against
the demon Vritra. A curious line of thought is suggested. The
marriage of the man to the woman was symbolized as his union with
the gods. Soma, a drink devoted to Indra, the highest god,
signified his use of a body, or the union of spirit and body. In
the same manner, woman representing spirit, by her marriage to man
became united with a body. As during the present dark age, the body
has been regarded more highly than the spirit, we find a
non-recognition of the woman, although the union of spirit and body
is symbolized in the Christian church by the sacrament of bread and
wine. During the purest period of Aryan history marriage was
entirely optional with woman and when entered into, frequently
meant no more than spiritual companionship. Woman equally with man
was entitled to the Brahminical thread; she also possessed the
right to study and preach the Vedas, which was in itself a proof of
her high position in this race. The Vedas, believed to be the
oldest literature extant, were for many ages taught orally
requiring years of close application upon part of both teacher and
student.The wordVedasignifies
“to-know”; the latter fromVidyameaning “wise.” The English term widow is traceable to both
forms of the word, meaning a wise woman—one who knows man. Many
ages passed before the Vedas were committed to writing.[23]At that early day the ancestral
worship of women—departed mothers—was as frequent as that of
departed fathers, women conducting such services which took place
three times a day. In the old Aryan Scriptures the right of woman
to hold property, and to her children, was much more fully
recognized than under the Christian codes of today. Many of the
olden rights of women are still extant in India. The learned Keshub
Chunder Sen vigorously protested against the introduction of
English law into India, upon the ground that it would destroy the
ancient rights of the women of that country. It was primal Indian
law that upon the death of the husband the wife should heir all his
property. Marriage was regarded as an eternal union, the two, by
this act, having so fully become one, that upon the husband’s
death, one half of his body was still living. The property and the
children were held as equally belonging to the husband or the
wife.Colebrook’sDigest of Hindoo Law, compiled from the writings of the Bengal Pundit Jergunnat,
’Na Tercapanchama, from those of Vasist ha, Catayana, and other
Indian authorities says:In the Veda, in Codes of Law, in sacred ordinances, the wife
is held as one person with the husband; both are considered one.
When the wife is not dead, half the body remains; how shall another
take the property when half the body of the owner lives? After the
death of the husband the widow shall take his wealth; this is
primeval law.Though a woman be dependent, the alienation of female
property, or of the mother’s right over her son by the gift of a
husband alone[24]is not valid
in law or reason;The female property of wives like the property of a stranger,
may not be given, for there is want of ownership.Neither the husband, nor the son, nor the father, nor the
brother, have power to use or alien the legal property of a
woman.We hold it proper that the wife’s co-operation shall be
required in civil contracts and in religious acts under the
text.A gift to a wife is irrevocable.The collection of East Indian laws made under authority of
the celebrated Warren Hastings, 1776, is of similar character. The
kinds of property a wife can hold separate from her husband at her
own disposal by will, are specified.During long centuries while under Christian law the Christian
wife was not allowed even the control of property her own at the
time of marriage, or of that which might afterwards be given her,
and her right of the disposition of property at the time of her
death was not recognized in Christian lands, the Hindoo wife under
immemorial custom could receive property by gift alike from her
parents, or from strangers, or acquire it by her own industry, and
property thus gained was at her own disposal in case of her death.
Another remarkable feature of Indian law contrasting with that of
Christian lands was preference of woman over man in heirship. In
case of a daughter’s death, the mother heired in preference to
father, son, or even husband.That is called a woman’s property; First. Whatever she owns
during the Agamini Shadee, i. e. Days of Marriage;...Whatever she may receive from any person as she is going to
her husband’s home or coming from thence.Whatever her husband may at any time have given her; whatever
she has received at any time from a brother; and whatever her
father and mother may have given her.Whatever her husband on contracting a second marriage may
give her to pacify her.Whatever a person may have given a woman for food or
clothing.Whatever jewelry or wearing apparel she may have received
from any person; also whatever a woman may receive from any person
as an acknowledgment or payment for any work performed by her.
Whatever she may by accident have found anywhere.Whatever she may gain by painting, spinning, needle-work or
any employment of this kind.Except from one of the family of her father, one of the
family of her mother, or one of the family of her husband, whatever
she may receive from any other person. Also if the father or mother
of a girl give anything to their son-in-law, saying at the same
time: “This shall go to our daughter,” and even without any words
to this purpose at the time of making the gift, if they merely have
it in their intention that the thing thus given should revert to
their daughter, all and every one of these articles are called a
woman’s property.Her right of final disposal by will is also specified. Her
effects acquired during marriage go to her daughters in preference
to her sons, and possessing no daughters, to her
mother.When a woman dies, then whatever effects she acquired during
the Agamini Shadee, even though she hath a son living, shall go
first to her unmarried daughter; if there is but one unmarried
daughter she shall obtain the whole; if there are several unmarried
daughters, they all shall have equal share.Property under the three forms of marriage, if no unmarried
daughters and others mentioned here, goes to her mother before to
her father; and if neither, to her husband, and if no husband to
husband’s younger brother, or several younger brothers, (if
several).The specification of gifts of intention is remarkable in
securing property to the wife that was seemingly given by the
parents to the husband alone. An equally remarkable fact is the
father’s heirship in preference to the husband’s, and the heirship
of the daughters and mother in preference to any male relative
however near, and is in striking contrast to Christian law in
reference to woman’s property. If a husband neglect to provide his
wife necessary food and clothing, the East Indian wife is allowed
to procure them by any means in her power. Maine has not failed to
recognize the superior authority of the eastern wife in relation to
property over that of the Christian wife. He says:
“The settled property of a married woman incapable of
alienation by her husband, is well known to the Hindoos under the
name of Stridham.”It is certainly a remarkable fact that the institution seems
to have developed among the Hindoos at a period relatively much
earlier than among the Romans. TheMitakshara, one of the oldest and most
revered authorities of the Hindoo judicial treatises, defines
Stridham, or woman’s property, as that which is given to the wife
by the father, the mother, or a brother at the time of the wedding,
before the nuptial fire.But adds Maine:The compiler of Mitakshara adds a proportion not found
elsewhere; also property which she may have acquired by
inheritance, purchase, partition, seizure or finding, is
denominated woman’s property.... If all this beStridham, it follows that the ancient Hindoo law secured to
married women an even greater degree of proprietary independence
than that given to them by the modern English Married Woman’s
Property Act.Property is common to the husband and the wife. The ample
support of those who are entitled to maintenance is rewarded with
bliss in heaven; but hell is the portion of that man whose family
is afflicted with pain by his neglect. Therefore the Hindoo husband
is taught to maintain his family with the utmost care. Maxims from
the sacred books show the regard in which the Hindoo woman is
held:
“He who despises woman despises his mother.”
“Who is cursed by woman is cursed by God.”
“The tears of a woman call down the fire of heaven on those
who make them flow.”
“Evil to him who laughs at woman’s sufferings; God shall
laugh at his prayers.”
“It was at the prayer of a woman that the Creator pardoned
man; cursed be he who forgets it.”
“Who shall forget the sufferings of his mother at his birth
shall be reborn in the body of an owl during three successive
transmigrations.”
“There is no crime more odious than to persecute
woman.”
“When women are honored the divinities are content; but when
they are not honored all undertakings fail.”
“The households cursed by women to whom they have not
rendered the homage due them, find themselves weighed down with
ruin and destroyed as if they had been struck by some secret
power.”
“We will not admit the people of today are incapable of
comprehending woman, who alone can regenerate them.”The marriage ceremony is of the slightest kind and under
three forms:1. Of mutual consent by the interchange of necklaces or
strings of flowers in some secret place.2. A woman says, “I am become your wife,” and the man says,
“I acknowledge it.”3. When the parents of a girl on her marriage day say to the
bridegroom: “Whatever act of religion you perform, perform it with
our daughter,” and the bridegroom assents to this
speech.The comparatively modern custom of suttee originated with the
priests, whose avaricious desires created this system in order
thereby to secure the property of the widow. The Vedas do not
countenance either suttee or the widow’s relinquishment of her
property, the law specifically declaring, “If a widow should give
all her property and estate to the Brahmins for religious purposes,
the gift indeed is valid, but the act is improper and the woman
blamable.” An ancient scripture declares that “All the wisdom of
the Vedas, and all that has been written in books, is to be found
concealed in the heart of a woman.” It is a Hindoo maxim that one
mother is worth a thousand fathers, because the mother carries and
nourishes the infant from her own body, therefore the mother is
most reverenced. A Hindoo proverb declares that “Who leaves his
family naked and unfed may taste honey at first, but shall
afterwards find it poison.” Another says, “A wife is a friend in
the house of the good.”Ancient Egypt worshiped two classes of gods; one purely
spiritual and eternal, the other secondary but best beloved, were
believed to have been human beings who from the services they had
rendered to humanity were upon death admitted to the assembly of
the gods. Such deification common in ancient times, is still
customary in some parts of the earth. Within the past few years a
countryman of our own was thus apotheosized by the Chinese to whom
he had rendered valuable service at the time of the Tae-ping
rebellion.[25]Ancient
Egyptians recognized a masculine and feminine principle entering in
all things both material and spiritual. Isis, the best beloved and
most worshiped of the secondary gods, was believed by them to have
been a woman who at an early period of Egyptian history had
rendered that people invaluable service. She was acknowledged as
their earliest law-maker, through whose teaching the people had
risen from barbarism to civilization. She taught them the art of
making bread[26]from the
cereals theretofore growing wild and unused, the inhabitants at an
early day living upon roots and herbs. Egypt soon became the grain
growing portion of the globe, her enormous crops of wheat not alone
aiding herself, but rendering the long stability of the Roman
Empire possible. The science of medicine was believed to have
originated with Isis; she was also said to have invented the art of
embalming, established their literature, founded their religion.
The whole Egyptian civilization was ascribed to the woman-goddess,
Isis, whose name primarily Ish-Ish, signified Light, Life.[27]Isis, and Nepthys—the Lady of the
House—were worshiped as the Beginning and the End. They were the
Alpha and Omega of the most ancient Egyptian religion. The statues
of Isis bore this inscription:I am all that has been, all that shall be, and none among
mortals has hitherto taken off my veil.Isis was believed to contain germs within herself for the
reproduction of all living things. The most universal of her 10,000
names was, “Potent Mother Goddess.”[28]This Egyptian regard for Isis is
an extremely curious and interesting reminiscence of the
Matriarchal period. Her worship was universal throughout Egypt. Her
temples were magnificent. Her priests, consecrated to purity, were
required to bathe daily, to wear linen garments unmixed with animal
fibre, to abstain from animal food, and also from those vegetables
regarded as impure.[29]Two
magnificent festivals were yearly celebrated in her honor, the
whole people taking part. During one of these festivals her priests
bore a golden ship in the procession. The ship, or ark,[30]is peculiarly significative of
the feminine principle, and wherever found is a reminiscence of the
Matriarchate. The most sacred mysteries of the Egyptian religion,
whose secrets even Pythagoras could not penetrate, to which
Herodotus alluded with awe, and that were unknown to any person
except the highest order of priests, owed their institution to
Isis, and were based upon moral responsibility and a belief in a
future life. The immortality of the soul was the underlying
principle of the Egyptian religion.Isis seems to have been one of those extraordinary
individuals, such as occasionally in the history of the world have
created a literature, founded a religion, established a
nationality. She was a person of superior mentality, with power to
diffuse intelligence.Moses, “learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians,” borrowed
much from Isis. The forms and ceremonies used in her worship were
largely copied by him, yet lacked the great moral element—immortal
life—so conspicuously taught as a part of Egyptian religion. The
Sacred Songs of Isis were an important part of the literature of
Egypt. Plato, who burned his own poems after reading Homer,
declared them worthy of the divinity, believing them to be
literally 10,000 years old.[31]All orders of the priesthood were
open to women in Egypt; sacred colleges existed for them, within
whose walls dwelt an order of priestesses known as “God’s Hand,”
“God’s Star.” Its ranks were recruited from women of the principal
families, whose only employment was the service of the gods.
“Daughter of the Deity,” signified a priestess.Women performed the most holy offices of religion, carrying
the Sacred Sistrum and offering sacrifices of milk, both ceremonies
of great dignity and importance, being regarded as the most sacred
service of the divinity. Such sacrificial rites were confined to
queens and princesses of the royal household. Ames-Nofri-Ari, a
queen who received great honor from Egyptians, spoken of as the
“goddess-wife of Amun,” the supreme god of Thebes, for whose
worship the wonderful temple of Karnak was founded by a Pharaoh of
the XII dynasty, is depicted on the monuments as the Chief High
Priest—the Sem, whose specific duty was offering sacrifices and
pouring out libations in that temple. By virtue of her high office
she preceded her husband, the powerful and renowned Rameses II. The
high offices of the church were as habitually held by women as by
men; Princess Neferhotep, of the fifth dynasty, was both a
priestess and a prophetess of the goddesses Hathor and Neith, the
representatives of celestial space, in which things were both
created and preserved.A priestess and priest in time of the XIII Pharaoh
represented on a slab of limestone, in possession of the Ashmolean
Library of Oxford, England, is believed to be the oldest monument
of its kind in the world, dating to 3,500, B.C.Queen Hatasu, the light of the brilliant XVIII dynasty, is
depicted upon the monuments as preceding in acts of worship the
great Thotmes III, her brother, whom she had associated with
herself upon the throne, but who did not acquire supreme power
until after her death.[32]The
reign of Hatasu was pre-eminent as the great architectural period
of Egypt, the engraving upon monuments during her reign closely
resembling the finest Greek intaglio. Egypt, so famous for her
gardens and her art of forcing blossoms out of season, was indebted
to this great queen for the first acclimatizing of plants. Upon one
of her voyages she brought with her in baskets filled with earth
several of those Balsam trees from Arabia, which were numbered
among the precious gifts of the Queen of Sheba to King Solomon. The
red granite obelisks erected by Hatasu before the gates of Karnak,
the most magnificent and loftiest ever erected in Egypt, were
ninety-seven feet in height and surmounted by a pyramid of
gold.As early as the XI Pharaoh, II dynasty, the royal succession
became fixed in the female line. A princess was endowed with
privileges superior to a prince, her brother, her children reigning
by royal prerogative even when her husband was a commoner; the
children of a prince of the Pharaonic house making such marriage
were declared illegitimate.From the highest to the most humble priestly office, women
officiated in Egypt. A class of sacred women were doorkeepers of
temples, another order known as “Sacred Scribes” were paid great
deference. The Pellices or Pellucidae of Amun were a remarkable
body of priestesses whose burial place has but recently been
discovered. They were especially devoted to the services of
Amun-Ra, the Theban Jove. Egypt was indebted to priestesses for
some of its most important literature. To Penthelia, a priestess of
Phtha[33]the God of Fire, in
Memphis, Bryant ascribes the authorship of the Iliad and the
Odyssey, Homer[34]in his
travels through that country, by aid of a suborned priest, having
stolen these poems from the archives of the temples of Phtha where
they had been deposited for safe keeping.The priestly class of prophetesses was large in Egypt, their
predictions not infrequently changing the course of that country’s
history. To his daughter, the prophet-priestess Athryte, was the
great Rameses II indebted for the prophecy which led him into his
conquering and victorious career. Known as one of the four great
conquerors of antiquity,[35]reigning sixty years, he greatly
added to the wealth and renown of Egypt.The class of priestesses called Sibyls were early known in
Egypt, India, and other portions of the ancient world. They were
regarded as the most holy order of the priesthood and held to be in
direct communion with the gods, who through them revealed secrets
to the lower order of priests; the word Sibyl originating from
Syros, i. e. God. The learned Beale defines Sibyl as thought,
therefore a woman in possession of God’s thought. The names of ten
renowned Sibyls have come down to our day. The Sibyline Books for
many years governed the destinies of Rome. Oracles were rendered
from the lips of a priestess known as the Pythia; the famous
Delphian Shrine for ages ruling the course of kings and
nations.Upon the monuments of Egypt, those indisputable historic
records, queens alone are found wearing the triple crown,
significant of ecclesiastical, judicial and civil power, thus
confirming the statement of Diodorus that queens were shown greater
respect and possessed more power than kings: the pope alone in
modern times claiming the emblematic triple crown. A comparison
between the men and women of the common people of this country,
shows no less favorably for the latter. Women were traders, buying
and selling in the markets while the men engaged in the more
laborious work of weaving at home. Woman’s medical and hygienic
knowledge is proven by the small number of infantile deaths.[36]At the marriage ceremony the
husband promised obedience to the wife in all things, took her
name, and his property passed into her control; according to
Wilkinson great harmony existed in the marriage relation, the
husband and wife sitting upon the same double chair in life and
resting at death in the same tomb.Montesquieu says:It must be admitted although it shocks our present customs,
that among the most polished peoples, wives have always had
authority over their husbands. The Egyptians established it by law
in honor of Isis, and the Babylonians did the same in time of
Semiramis. It has been said of the Romans that they ruled all
nations but obeyed their wives.Crimes against women were rare in Egypt and when occurring
were most severely punished.[37]Rameses III caused this
inscription to be engraved upon his monuments:To unprotected woman there is freedom to wander through the
whole country wheresoever she list without apprehending
danger.A woman was one of the founders of the ancient Parsee
religion, which taught the existence of but a single god, thus
introducing monotheism into that rare old kingdom. Until the
introduction of Christianity woman largely preserved the liberty
belonging to her in the old civilizations. Of her position under
Roman law before this period Maine (Gaius) says:The jurisconsults had evidently at this time assumed the
equality of the sexes as a principle of the law of equity. The
situation of the Roman woman whether married or single became one
of great personal and proprietary independence; but Christianity
tended somewhat from the commencement to narrow this remarkable
liberty. The prevailing state of religious sentiment may explain
why modern jurisprudence has adopted these rules concerning the
position of women which belong to an imperfect civilization. No
society which preserves any tincture of Christian institutions is
likely to restore to married women the personal liberty conferred
on them by middle Roman law. Canon law has deeply injured
civilization.Rome not only secured remarkable personal and proprietary
rights to woman, but as Vestal Virgin, she held the highest
priestly office. No shrine equalled that of the Vestals in
sanctity; none was so honored by the state. To their care the
sacred Fire was entrusted, and also the Palladium; those unknown
articles upon whose preservation not alone the welfare but the very
existence of Rome was held to depend. The most important secrets of
state were entrusted to them and their influence in civil affairs
was scarcely secondary to their religious authority. In troubled
times, in civil wars, in extreme emergencies of the commonwealth
they acted as ambassadors, or were chosen umpires to restore peace
between the parties. In state ceremonies, in the most solemn, civil
or religious meetings they performed important duties. They were
superior to the common law or the authority of the consul. The most
important secrets were entrusted to them, wills of the emperors and
documents of state confided to their care; offenses against them
were punished with death. If meeting a criminal on his way to
execution, he was pardoned as a direct intervention of heaven in
his behalf. Among their important privileges was exemption from
public taxes, the right to make a will, internment within the city
walls, the right to drive in the city where no other carriage was
allowed; even the consuls were obliged to make room for them to
pass. Chosen from noble families when between the ages of six and
ten, their terms of service was thirty years.The order of Vestal Virgins flourished eleven hundred years,
having been founded seven hundred years before the Christian era
and continuing four hundred years afterwards. But those women all
young, all between the ages of six years and forty, so closely
guarded the secrets of the Penetralia that to this day they still
remain as unknown as when in their charge. The order was destroyed
in the fourth century, but the ruins of their temple recently
discovered prove that when obliged to flee from the sacred
enclosure they first demolished the most holy portion where the
secrets of Rome were hidden.[38]Recent important archaeological
discoveries at the Atrium Vertae in the Forum, corroborate history
in regard to the high position and extraordinary privileges of the
Vestals. Several statues have been found representing the sacred
maiden with the historic fillet about her head and the cord beneath
her breast. Medallions worn upon the breast of their horses have
also been unearthed. The wealth of the order was extremely great,
both its public and private property being exempt from that
conscription which in times of war reached all but a few favored
individuals.The names by which Imperial Rome was known were all feminine;
Roma, Flora, Valentia; nearly its first and greatest goddess was
Vesta.[39]Sacred and secret were originally synonymous terms. All
learning was sacred, consequently secret, and as only those
possessed of learning were eligible to the priestly office it is
readily seen that knowledge was a common heritage of primitive
women. Letters, numbers, astrology, geography and all branches of
science were secrets known only to initiates. The origin of the
most celebrated mysteries, the Eleusinian, and those of Isis, were
attributed to woman, the most perfect temple of ancient or modern
times, the Parthenon, or Temple of the Virgins, was dedicated to
the goddess Minerva.Chryseis was priestess of Juno in Argo. This office was of
great civil as well as religious importance regulating their dates
and chronology. To the present day in China woman assists at the
altar in ancestral worship, the prevailing form of religious
adoration. The mother of a family is treated with the greatest
respect[40]and the combined
male and female principle is represented in god under the name
Fou-Fou, that is, Father-Mother.[41]When the Emperor acting as high
priest performs certain rites he is called Father-Mother of the
people. Woman is endowed with the same political powers as
man.[42]The wife presides
like her husband at family councils, trials, etc. As Regent, she
governs the Empire with wisdom, dignity, power, as was shown during
the co-regency of the Empresses of the East and of the West, their
power continuing even after the promotion of a boy-heir to the
throne.A Thibetan woman empire extant between the VI and VII
centuries A.D. is spoken of by Chinese writers. An English author,
Cooper, seems to have visited this region, meeting with an amusing
venture while there.[43]Under the law of the Twelve Tables, founded A.U.C. 300, woman
possessed the right of repudiation in marriage. The code itself was
ascribed to a woman of that primitive Athens founded and governed
by women long years previous to the date of modern Athens. The
change in woman’s condition for the worse under Christianity is
very remarkable and everywhere it is noticed. Among the Finns,
before their conversion, the mother of a family took precedence of
the father in the rites of domestic worship. Under the Angles, a
wound inflicted upon a virgin was punished with double the penalty
of the same injury inflicted upon a man, remarkable as showing the
high esteem and reverence in which women were held. Before the
introduction of Christianity, the Germans bound themselves to
chastity in the marriage relation; under Catholicism the wife is
required to promise the devotion of her body to the marital rite.
German women served as priestesses of Hertha, and during the time
of Rome’s greatest power, Wala or Valleda,—this title being
significative of a supremely wise woman, a prophetess,—was virtual
ruler of the Germanic forces; Druses when about invading Germany
was repelled by her simple command to “Go Back.” But under
Christianity the German woman no longer takes part in public
affairs, education is denied, the most severe and degrading labor
of field, streets and mine falls upon her, while in the family she
is serf to father, brother, husband.The women of ancient Scandinavia were treated with infinite
respect; breach of marriage promise was classed with perjury; its
penalty was outlawry. Marriage was regarded as sacred and in many
instances the husband was obliged to submit to the wife.[44]Those old Berserkers reverenced
their Alruna, or Holy Women, on earth and worshiped goddesses in
heaven, where, according to Scandinavian belief, gods and goddesses
sat together in a hall without distinction of sex.The whole ancient world recognized a female priesthood, some
peoples, like the Roman, making national safety dependent upon
their ministration; others as in Egypt, according them pre-eminence
in the priestly office, reverencing goddesses as superior to gods;
still others as the Scandinavians, making no distinction in
equality between gods and goddesses; others governing the nation’s
course through oracles which fell from feminine lips, still others
looking to the Sibylline Books for like decision.[45]Those historians anxious to give
most credit to the humanizing effect of Christianity upon woman are
compelled to admit her superiority among pagan nations before the
advent of this religion.[46]The Patriarchate under which Biblical history and Judaism
commenced, was a rule of men whose lives and religion were based
upon passions of the grossest kind, showing but few indications of
softness or refinement. Monogamous family life did not exist, but a
polygamy whose primal object was the formation of a clan possessing
hereditary chiefs ruling aristocratically. To this end the dominion
of man over woman and the birth of many children was requisite. To
this end polygamy was instituted, becoming as marked a feature of
the Patriarchate as monogamy was of the Matriarchate. Not until the
Patriarchate were wives regarded as property, the sale of daughters
as a legitimate means of family income, or their destruction at
birth looked upon as a justifiable act. Under the Patriarchate,
society became morally revolutionized, the family, the state, the
form of religion entirely changed. The theory of a male supreme God
in the interests of force and authority, wars, family discord, the
sacrifice of children to appease the wrath of an offended (male)
deity are all due to the Patriarchate. These were practices
entirely out of consonance with woman’s thought and life. Biblical
Abraham binding Isaac for sacrifice to Jehovah, carefully kept his
intentions from the mother Sarah. Jephtha offering up his daughter
in accordance with his vow, allowing her a month’s life for the
bewailment of her virginity, are but typical of the low regard of
woman under the Patriarchate. During this period the destruction of
girl children became a widely extended practice, and infantile girl
murder the custom of many nations. During the Matriarchate all life
was regarded as holy; even the sacrifice of animals was
unknown.[47]The most ancient
and purest religions taught sacrifice of the animal passions as the
great necessity in self-purification. But the Patriarchate
subverted this sublime teaching, materializing spiritual truths,
and substituting the sacrifice of animals, whose blood was declared
a sweet smelling savor to the Lord of Hosts.Both infanticide and prostitution with all their attendant
horrors are traceable with polygamy,—their origin—to the
Patriarchate or Father-rule, under which Judaism and Christianity
rose as forms of religious belief. Under the Patriarchate woman has
ever been regarded as a slave to be disposed of as father, husband
or brother chose. Even in the most Christian lands, daughters have
been esteemed valuable only in proportion to the political or
pecuniary advantage they brought to the father, in the legal
prostitution of an enforced marriage. The sacrifice of woman to
man’s baser passions has ever been the distinguishing
characteristic of the Patriarchate. But woman’s degradation is not
the normal condition of humanity, neither did it arise from a
settled principle of evolution, but is a retrogression, due to the
grossly material state of the world for centuries past, in which it
has lost the interior meaning or spiritual significance of its own
most holy words.Jehovah signifies not alone the masculine and the feminine
principles but also the spirit or vivifying intelligence. It is a
compound word indicative of the three divine principles.[48]Holy Ghost, although in Hebrew a
noun of either gender, masculine, feminine, neuter, is invariably
rendered masculine by Christian translators of the Bible.[49]In the Greek, from whence we
obtain the New Testament, spirit is of the feminine gender,
although invariably translated masculine. The double-sexed word,
Jehovah, too sacred to be spoken by the Jews, signified the
masculine-feminine God.[50]The proof of the double meaning
of Jehovah, the masculine and feminine signification,
Father-Mother, is undeniable. Lanci, one of the great orientalists,
says:Jehovah should be read from left to right, and pronounced
Ho-Hi; that is to say He-She (Hi pronounced He,) Ho in Hebrew being
the masculine pronoun and Hi the feminine. Ho-Hi therefore denotes
the male and female principles, the vis genatrix.[51]Kingsford says:The arbitrary and harsh aspect under which Jehovah is chiefly
presented in the Hebrew Scriptures is due not to any lack of the
feminine element either in His name or in His nature, or to any
failure on the part of the inspired leaders of Israel to recognize
their equality, but to the rudimentary condition of the people at
large, and their consequent amenability to the delineation of the
stern side only of the Divine Character.[52]The Hebrew wordEl Shaddai, translated, “The Almighty” is still more distinctively
feminine thanIah, as it means
“The Breasted God,” and is made use of in the Old Testament
whenever the especially feminine characteristics of God are meant
to be indicated.[53]The story of the building of the tower of Babel and the
subsequent confusion of language possesses deep interior
significance; the word (Babel) meaning “God the Father” as distinct
and separate from the feminine principle. The confusion which has
come upon humanity because of this separation has been far more
lamentable in its results than a mere confounding of
tongues.[54]In the earliest
religions the recognition of the feminine principle in the divinity
is everywhere found. “I am the Father and Mother of the Universe”
said Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita.An Orphic hymn says: “Zeus is the first and the last, the
head and the extremities; from him have proceeded all things.” He
is a man and an immortal nymph i.e. the male and female element.
The Sohar declares “the ancient of the ancient has a form and has
no form.”The Holy Spirit, symbolized by a dove, is a distinctively
feminine principle—the Comforter—and yet has ever been treated by
the Christian Church as masculine, alike in dogmas propounded from
the pulpit, and in translations of the Scriptures. A few notable
exceptions however appear at an early date. Origen expressly
referred to the Holy Ghost as feminine, saying: “The soul is maiden
to her mistress the Holy Ghost.” An article upon the “Esoteric
character of the Gospels” in Madam Blavatsky’sLucifer(November 1887)
says:Spirit or the Holy Ghost was feminine with the Jews as most
ancient peoples and it was so with the early Christians; Sophia of
the Gnostics and the third Sephiroth, Binah (the female Jehovah of
the Cabalists,) are feminine principles “Divine Spirit” or Ruach,
“One is She the spirit of the Elohim of Life,” is said in Sepher
Yetzirah.[55]An early canonical book of the New Testament known as “The
Everlasting Gospel” also as “The Gospel of the Holy Ghost”
represents Jesus as saying, “My mother the Holy Ghost, took me by
the hair of my head up into a mountain.”The wordsacredsimply
meaning secret, having its origin as shown at the time when
knowledge was kept hidden from the bulk of mankind, only to be
acquired by initiation in the mysteries, so also the wordholysimply means whole, that is,
undivided. In its ignorance, unwisdom, and fear of investigation,
mankind has allowed a division of the two divine principles, male
and female, to obtain firm hold in their minds. Prejudice, which
simply means prejudgment, a judgment without proof, has long ruled
mankind, owing chiefly to that bondage of the will inflicted by a
tyrannous self-seeking priesthood. But we have now reached a period
in history when investigation is again taking the place of blind
belief and the truth, capable of making man free, is once more
offered. It is through a recognition of the divine element of
motherhood as not alone inhering in the great primal source of life
but as extending throughout all creation, that it will become
possible for the world, so buried in darkness, folly and
superstition, to practice justice toward woman. Not legislation but
education will bring about the change; not external acts but
internal thought. It is but a few years since the acknowledgment of
a feminine element even in plants was regarded by the church as
heretical. Yet though still perceiving but partial truth, science
now declares the feminine principle to inhere in plants, rocks,
gems, and even in the minutest atoms; thus in some degree
recognizing the occult axiom “As it is above, so it is
below.”Chapter TwoCelibacyWhile the inferior and secondary position of woman early
became an integral portion of Christianity, its fullest efforts are
seen in Church teachings regarding marriage. Inasmuch as it was a
cardinal doctrine that the fall of Adam took place through his
temptation into marriage by Eve, this relation was regarded with
holy horror as a continuance of the evil which first brought sin
into the world, depriving man of his immortality.[1]It is a notable fact that the
expected millennium of a thousand years upon earth with its
material joys has ever had more attraction for Christians than the
eternal spiritual rapture of heaven. Many of the old Fathers taught
that “the world is a state of matrimony, but paradise of
virginity.”[2]To such extent
was this doctrine carried it was declared that had it not have been
for the fall, God would have found some way outside of this
relation for populating the world, consequently marriage was
regarded as a condition of peculiar temptation and trial; celibacy
as one of especial holiness.The androgynous theory of primal man found many supporters,
the separation into two beings having been brought about by sensual
desire. Jacob Boehme and earlier mystics of that class recognized
the double sexuality of God in whose image man was made. One of the
most revered ancient Scriptures, “The Gospel according to the
Hebrews,” which was in use as late as the second century of the
Christian era, taught the equality of the feminine in the Godhead;
also that daughters should inherit with sons. Thirty-three
fragments of this Gospel have recently been discovered. The fact
remains undeniable that at the advent of Christ, a recognition of
the feminine element in the divinity had not entirely died out from
general belief, the earliest and lost books of the New Testament
teaching this doctrine, the whole confirmed by the account of the
birth and baptism of Jesus, the Holy Spirit,[3]the feminine creative force,
playing the most important part. It was however but a short period
before the church through Canons and Decrees, as well as apostolic
and private teaching, denied the femininity of the Divine equally
with the divinity of the feminine. There is however abundant proof
that even under but partial recognition of the feminine principle
as entering in the divinity, woman was officially recognized in the
early services of the church, being ordained to the ministry,
officiating as deacons, administering the act of baptism,
dispensing the sacrament, interpreting doctrines and founding sects
which received their names.[4]The more mystical among priests taught that before woman was
separated from man, the Elementals[5]were accepted by man as his
children and endowed by him with immortality, but at the separation
of the androgynous body into the two beings Adam and Eve, the woman
through accident was also endowed with immortality which
theretofore had solely inhered in the masculine portion of the
double-sexed being. These mystics also taught that this endowment
of woman with immortality together with her capability of bringing
new beings into existence also endowed with immortal life, was the
cause of intense enmity toward her on the part of the Elementals,
especially shown by their bringing suffering and danger upon her at
this period.Still another class recognizing marriage as a necessity for
the continuance of the species, looked upon it with more favor,
attributing the fall to another cause, yet throwing odium upon the
relation by maintaining that the marriage of Adam and Eve did not
take place until after they had been driven from Paradise. This
doctrine was taught by the Father Hieronymus.[6]Thus with strange inconsistency
the church supported two entirely opposing views of marriage. Yet
even those who upheld its necessity still taught woman’s complete
subordination to man in that relation; also that this condition was
one of great tribulation to man, it was even declared that God
caused sleep to fall upon Adam at the creation of Eve in order to
prevent his opposition.[7]Lecky speaking of the noxious
influences of ascetics upon marriage, says it would be difficult to
conceive anything more coarse and repulsive than the manner in
which the church regarded it; it was invariably treated as a
consequence of the fall of Adam and regarded from its lowest
aspect.[8]But having
determined that evil was necessary in order to future good, the
church decided to compel a belief that its control of this contract
lessened the evil, to this end declaring marriage illegal without
priestly sanction; thus creating a conviction of and belief in its
sacramental nature in the minds of the people. Despite the favoring
views of a class regarding marriage, celibacy was taught as the
highest condition for both man and woman, and as early as the third
century many of the latter entered upon a celibate life, Jerome
using his influence in its favor. Augustine, while admitting the
possibility of salvation to the married, yet speaking of a mother
and daughter in heaven, compared the former to a star of the second
magnitude, but the latter as shining with great brilliancy. The
superior respect paid to the celibates even among women is
attributed to direct instruction of the apostles. The “Apostolic
Constitutions” held even by the Episcopal church as regulations
established by the apostles themselves, and believed to be among
the earliest christian records, give elaborate directions for the
places of all who attend church, the unmarried being the most
honored. The virgins and widows and elder women stood or sat first
of all.The chief respect shown by the early fathers towards marriage
was that it gave virgins to the church, while the possibility of
salvation to the married, at first recognized, was denied at later
date even to persons otherwise living holy lives. The Emperor
Jovinian banished a man who asserted the possibility of salvation
to married persons provided they obeyed all the ordinances of the
church and lived good lives.[9]As part of this doctrine, the
church taught that woman was under an especial curse and man a
divinely appointed agent for the enforcement of that curse. It
inculcated the belief that all restrictions placed upon her were
but parts of her just punishment for having caused the fall of man.
Under such teaching a belief in the supreme virtue of
celibacy—first declared by the apostle Paul,—was firmly
established. To Augustine is the world indebted for full
development of the theory of original sin, promulgated by Paul as a
doctrine of the Christian Church in the declaration that Adam,
first created, was not first in sin. Paul, brought up in the
strictest external principles of Judaism, did not lose his
educational bias or primal belief when changing from Judaism to
Christianity.[10]Neither was
his character as persecutor changed when he united his fortunes
with the new religion. He gave to the Christian world a lever long
enough to reach down through eighteen centuries, all that time
moving it in opposition to a belief in woman’s created and
religious equality with man, to her right of private judgment and
to her personal freedom. His teaching that Adam, first created, was
not first in sin, divided the unity of the human race in the
assumption that woman was not part of the original creative idea
but a secondary thought, an inferior being brought into existence
as an appendage to man.