Page:An analysis of religious belief (1877).djvu/158

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CHAPTER V.

HOLY PERSONS.


Although for the ordinary and regular communications from the divine Being to man the established priesthoods might suffice, yet occasions arise when there is need of a plenipotentiary with higher authority and more extensive powers. What is required of these exceptional ambassadors is not merely to repeat the doctrines of the old religion, but to establish a new one. In other words, they are the original founders of the great religions of the world. Of such founders there is but a very limited number.

Beginning with China, and proceeding from East to West, we find six:—

  1. Confucius, or Khung-fu-tsze, the founder of Confucianism.
  2. Lao-tse, the founder of Taouism.
  3. Sakyamuni, or Gautama Buddha, the founder of Buddhism.
  4. Zarathustra, or Zoroaster, the founder of Parseeism.
  5. Mohammed, or Mahomet, the founder of Islamism.
  6. Jesus Christ, the founder of Christianity.

All these men, whom for convenience sake I propose to call prophets, occupy an entirely exceptional position in the history of the human race. The characteristics, or marks, by which they may be distinguished from other great men, are partly external, belonging to the views of others about them; partly internal, belonging to their own view about themselves.

1. The first external mark by which they are distinguished is, that within his own religion each of these is recognized as the highest known authority. They alone are thought of as having the right to change what is established. While all other teachers appeal to them for the sanction of their doctrines