CHAPTER IV.
HOLY ORDERS.
Rites, acts of worship and sacrifices, originally performed
by each individual at his own discretion, or by each household
in its own way, fall (as we have seen) with advancing
development into the hands of professional persons consecrated
for this especial purpose. Very great importance
attaches to these consecrated persons. The place they occupy
in all societies above the level of barbarism is one of peculiar
honor; and their influence on the course of human history has
in all ages with which that history is acquainted been conspicuous
and profound. Once devoted to their religious duties, they
become the authorized representatives of deity on earth. In
treating of their consecration, we consider them as channels of
communication from earth to heaven; we have now to consider
them as channels of communication from heaven to earth.
Endowed by the general wish of all human society with a special right to convey their petitions to the divine beings whom they worship, they do not fail to claim for themselves the correlative right of conveying to men the commands, the intentions, the reproofs, and the desires of these divine beings. It is the priests alone who can pretend to know their minds. It is the priests alone who can correctly interpret their often enigmatic language. It is the priests alone through whom they generally deign to converse with mortals.
Such is the ecclesiastical theory throughout the world; and it is as a general rule accepted by the communities for whose guidance it is constructed. Exceptions do indeed present themselves, above all in the case of the remarkable men whose careers we shall deal with in the ensuing chapter, who have founded new religions independently of, or even in spite of,