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<h2> DESECRATING A CHURCH. </h2>
<p>There was a Pantheon at Rome, which was a monument of the religious
tolerance of the Empire. It was dedicated, as appears from the inscription
on the portico, by Agrippa, son-in-law to the great Augustus, to Jupiter
and all the other gods, with the same generosity that prompted the
Athenians to erect an altar to the gods that might be unknown. A niche was
afforded within its walls to every deity of the provinces whose devotees
were willing to accept the hospitality; and Christ himself might have
figured with the rest, if his worshippers did not scorn all other gods but
their own.</p>
<p>The old Pantheon still exists, and bears the name of the Rotunda. But it
is no longer a Pagan temple. It was re-dedicated by Pope Boniface the
Fourth, in A.D. 608, to the Virgin Mary and all the saints. Another Pope,
a thousand years later, despoiled it of its ornaments, which had been
spared by so many barbarian conquerors. He cast some into cannon, and with
the rest formed a high altar for the Church of St. Peter.</p>
<p>These alterations were of course justifiable. They were all made in the
interest of Christianity. What could be more proper than the
transformation of Pagan temples into Christian churches? What more
admirable than devoting to the worship of Christ the edifice which had
echoed to the tread of the priests of Jupiter? What more pious than
singing the praises of Mary and all the saints in a temple where idolaters
had celebrated the glories of all the gods and goddesses of Olympus?</p>
<p>Such is Christian logic. But if the temples of one faith may be so
transformed, why may not those of another? If Christianity had the right
to devote the temples of Paganism to its own uses, why has not modern
civilisation the right to devote the temples of Christianity to Secular
purposes?</p>
<p>The Church thinks otherwise. It is at present denouncing the
secularisation of the Church of St. Geneviève, in order that Victor Hugo,
who died a Freethinker and was buried without religious rites, might
repose in an unconsecrated place. This building is the French Pantheon. It
was secularised during the Revolution, and dedicated by the Republic, not
to the gods of religion, but to the heroes of liberty. When the monarchy
was restored it was re-consecrated, and purged of the luciferous taint of
Voltaire's dust. But now the Republic is once more established on the
ruins of monarchy and imperialism, it again secularises the Church of St.
Geneviève as a tomb for its mighty dead. The Church is naturally
indignant, but its anathemas are powerless. God does not interpose, and
the Republic is too strong. Nay, there is even a rumor that the Roman
Pantheon may be secularised also, and changed into a national mausoleum,
where the youth of Italy may bend reverently before the tombs of such
glorious soldiers of progress as Mazzini and Garibaldi, instead of
honoring the very counterfeit presentment of fabulous old saints, chiefly
renowned for their laziness and dirt.</p>
<p>The Church of St. Geneviève is desecrated, cries the Archbishop of Paris,
and special prayers are offered up to that ancient lady in heaven to avert
her wrath from the infidel city which has so insulted her. In one sense
the Archbishop is right. The Church is desecrated in the strict
etymological meaning of the word. It has been converted from sacred to
secular uses. But in the secondary meaning of the word the building is not
desecrated, but honored, by being made a fit receptacle for the mortal
remains of Victor Hugo.</p>
<p>A government decree and the removal of the cross on top of the church were
the only steps necessary to its desecration. The consecrated character of
the temple is gone. To the carnal eye the structure remains unchanged,
within and without, except for the loss of a crucifix; but it is quite
possible that a priestly nose would be able to scent the absence of the
Spirit. The Holy Ghost has fled, angels no more haunt the nave and aisles,
and St. Geneviève hides her poor head in grief and humiliation. No doubt;
yet we dare say the building will stand none the less firmly, and if it
should ever be pulled down, its materials would fetch as much in the
market as if they were saturated with divinity.</p>
<p>Consecration is, after all, nothing but a priestly trick. What sensible
man believes that the Holy Ghost, if such a being exist, is at the beck
and call of every Catholic or Protestant bishop? Can the "universal
spirit" dwell exclusively in certain places? Can the third person of the
Trinity have sunk into such an abject state as to dodge in and out of
buildings, according as he is wanted or not? Is there any difference that
the nose, or any other sensitive organ, can detect between a consecrated
church and an unconsecrated chapel? Can the geologist or the chemist
discern any difference between the consecrated and the unconsecrated
division in a cemetery? Is the earth affected by priestly mutterings? Do
the corpses lie any more peacefully, or decompose any more slowly, for the
words pronounced over the mould that covers them? Or is there any
appreciable virtue in the consecrated water, with which the Protestant and
Catholic are alike baptised, and with which the latter sprinkles himself
periodically as a preservative against evil? Season finds no difference;
it is perceived only by Faith, which may be defined as the faculty which
enables a man to see what does not exist.</p>
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