PAPER 87
- THE GHOST CULTS
The ghost cult evolved as
an offset to the hazards of bad luck; its primitive
religious observances were the outgrowth of anxiety about
bad luck and of the inordinate fear of the dead. None of
these early religions had much to do with the recognition of
Deity or with reverence for the superhuman; their rites were
mostly negative, designed to avoid, expel, or coerce ghosts.
The ghost cult was nothing more nor less than insurance
against disaster; it had nothing to do with investment for
higher and future returns.
Man has had a long and
bitter struggle with the ghost cult. Nothing in human
history is designed to excite more pity than this picture of
man's abject slavery to ghost-spirit fear. With the birth of
this very fear mankind started on the upgrade of religious
evolution. Human imagination cast off from the shores of
self and will not again find anchor until it arrives at the
concept of a true Deity, a real God.
1. GHOST FEAR
Death was feared because
death meant the liberation of another ghost from its
physical body. The ancients did their best to prevent death,
to avoid the trouble of having to contend with a new ghost.
They were always anxious to induce the ghost to leave the
scene of death, to embark on the journey to deadland. The
ghost was feared most of all during the supposed transition
period between its emergence at the time of death and its
later departure for the ghost homeland, a vague and
primitive concept of pseudo heaven.
Though the savage credited
ghosts with supernatural powers, he hardly conceived of them
as having supernatural intelligence. Many tricks and
stratagems were practiced in an effort to hoodwink and
deceive the ghosts; civilized man still pins much faith on
the hope that an outward manifestation of piety will in some
manner deceive even an omniscient Deity.
The primitives feared
sickness because they observed it was often a harbinger of
death. If the tribal medicine man failed to cure an
afflicted individual, the sick man was usually removed from
the family hut, being taken to a smaller one or left in the
open air to die alone. A house in which death had occurred
was usually destroyed; if not, it was always avoided, and
this fear prevented early man from building substantial
dwellings. It also militated against the establishment of
permanent villages and cities.
The savages sat up all
night and talked when a member of the clan died; they feared
they too would die if they fell asleep in the vicinity of a
corpse. Contagion from the corpse substantiated the fear of
the dead, and all peoples, at one time or another, have
employed elaborate purification ceremonies designed to
cleanse an individual after contact with the dead. The
ancients believed that light must
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be provided for a corpse; a
dead body was never permitted to remain in the dark. In the
twentieth century, candles are still burned in death
chambers, and men still sit up with the dead. So-called
civilized man has hardly yet completely eliminated the fear
of dead bodies from his philosophy of life.
But despite all this fear,
men still sought to trick the ghost. If the death hut was
not destroyed, the corpse was removed through a hole in the
wall, never by way of the door. These measures were taken to
confuse the ghost, to prevent its tarrying, and to insure
against its return. Mourners also returned from a funeral by
a different road, lest the ghost follow. Backtracking and
scores of other tactics were practiced to insure that the
ghost would not return from the grave. The sexes often
exchanged clothes in order to deceive the ghost. Mourning
costumes were designed to disguise survivors; later on, to
show respect for the dead and thus appease the ghosts.
2. GHOST
PLACATION
In religion the negative
program of ghost placation long preceded the positive
program of spirit coercion and supplication. The first acts
of human worship were phenomena of defense, not reverence.
Modern man deems it wise to insure against fire; so the
savage thought it the better part of wisdom to provide
insurance against ghost bad luck. The effort to secure this
protection constituted the techniques and rituals of the
ghost cult.
It was once thought that
the great desire of a ghost was to be quickly "laid" so that
it might proceed undisturbed to deadland. Any error of
commission or omission in the acts of the living in the
ritual of laying the ghost was sure to delay its progress to
ghostland. This was believed to be displeasing to the ghost,
and an angered ghost was supposed to be a source of
calamity, misfortune, and unhappiness.
The funeral service
originated in man's effort to induce the ghost soul to
depart for its future home, and the funeral sermon was
originally designed to instruct the new ghost how to get
there. It was the custom to provide food and clothes for the
ghost's journey, these articles being placed in or near the
grave. The savage believed that it required from three days
to a year to "lay the ghost"--to get it away from the
vicinity of the grave. The Eskimos still believe that the
soul stays with the body three days.
Silence or mourning was
observed after a death so that the ghost would not be
attracted back home. Self-torture--wounds--was a common form
of mourning. Many advanced teachers tried to stop this, but
they failed. Fasting and other forms of self-denial were
thought to be pleasing to the ghosts, who took pleasure in
the discomfort of the living during the transition period of
lurking about before their actual departure for deadland.
Long and frequent periods
of mourning inactivity were one of the great obstacles to
civilization's advancement. Weeks and even months of each
year were literally wasted in this nonproductive and useless
mourning. The fact that professional mourners were hired for
funeral occasions indicates that mourning was a ritual, not
an evidence of sorrow. Moderns may mourn the dead out of
respect and because of bereavement, but the ancients did
this because of fear.
The names of the dead were
never spoken. In fact, they were often banished from the
language. These names became taboo, and in this way the
languages
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were constantly impoverished.
This eventually produced a multiplication of symbolic speech
and figurative expression, such as "the name or day one
never mentions."
The ancients were so
anxious to get rid of a ghost that they offered it
everything which might have been desired during life. Ghosts
wanted wives and servants; a well-to-do savage expected that
at least one slave wife would be buried alive at his death.
It later became the custom for a widow to commit suicide on
her husband's grave. When a child died, the mother, aunt, or
grandmother was often strangled in order that an adult ghost
might accompany and care for the child ghost. And those who
thus gave up their lives usually did so willingly; indeed,
had they lived in violation of custom, their fear of ghost
wrath would have denuded life of such few pleasures as the
primitives enjoyed.
It was customary to
dispatch a large number of subjects to accompany a dead
chief; slaves were killed when their master died that they
might serve him in ghostland. The Borneans still provide a
courier companion; a slave is speared to death to make the
ghost journey with his deceased master. Ghosts of murdered
persons were believed to be delighted to have the ghosts of
their murderers as slaves; this notion motivated men to head
hunting.
Ghosts supposedly enjoyed
the smell of food; food offerings at funeral feasts were
once universal. The primitive method of saying grace was,
before eating, to throw a bit of food into the fire for the
purpose of appeasing the spirits, while mumbling a magic
formula.
The dead were supposed to
use the ghosts of the tools and weapons that were theirs in
life. To break an article was to "kill it," thus releasing
its ghost to pass on for service in ghostland. Property
sacrifices were also made by burning or burying. Ancient
funeral wastes were enormous. Later races made paper models
and substituted drawings for real objects and persons in
these death sacrifices. It was a great advance in
civilization when the inheritance of kin replaced the
burning and burying of property. The Iroquois Indians made
many reforms in funeral waste. And this conservation of
property enabled them to become the most powerful of the
northern red men. Modern man is not supposed to fear ghosts,
but custom is strong, and much terrestrial wealth is still
consumed on funeral rituals and death ceremonies.
3. ANCESTOR
WORSHIP
The advancing ghost cult
made ancestor worship inevitable since it became the
connecting link between common ghosts and the higher
spirits, the evolving gods. The early gods were simply
glorified departed humans.
Ancestor worship was
originally more of a fear than a worship, but such beliefs
did definitely contribute to the further spread of ghost
fear and worship. Devotees of the early ancestor-ghost cults
even feared to yawn lest a malignant ghost enter their
bodies at such a time.
The custom of adopting
children was to make sure that some one would provide
offerings after death for the peace and progress of the
soul. The savage lived in fear of the ghosts of his fellows
and spent his spare time planning for the safe conduct of
his own ghost after death.
Most tribes instituted an
all-souls' feast at least once a year. The Romans had twelve
ghost feasts and accompanying ceremonies each year. Half the
days
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of the year were dedicated to
some sort of ceremony associated with these ancient cults.
One Roman emperor tried to reform these practices by
reducing the number of feast days to 135 a year.
The ghost cult was in
continuous evolution. As ghosts were envisioned as passing
from the incomplete to the higher phase of existence, so did
the cult eventually progress to the worship of spirits, and
even gods. But regardless of varying beliefs in more
advanced spirits, all tribes and races once believed in
ghosts.
4. GOOD AND BAD
SPIRIT GHOSTS
Ghost fear was the
fountainhead of all world religion; and for ages many tribes
clung to the old belief in one class of ghosts. They taught
that man had good luck when the ghost was pleased, bad luck
when he was angered.
As the cult of ghost fear
expanded, there came about the recognition of higher types
of spirits, spirits not definitely identifiable with any
individual human. They were graduate or glorified ghosts who
had progressed beyond the domain of ghostland to the higher
realms of spiritland.
The notion of two kinds of
spirit ghosts made slow but sure progress throughout the
world. This new dual spiritism did not have to spread from
tribe to tribe; it sprang up independently all over the
world. In influencing the expanding evolutionary mind, the
power of an idea lies not in its reality or reasonableness
but rather in its vividness and the universality of
its ready and simple application.
Still later the
imagination of man envisioned the concept of both good and
bad supernatural agencies; some ghosts never evolved to the
level of good spirits. The early monospiritism of ghost fear
was gradually evolving into a dual spiritism, a new concept
of the invisible control of earthly affairs. At last good
luck and bad luck were pictured as having their respective
controllers. And of the two classes, the group that brought
bad luck were believed to be the more active and numerous.
When the doctrine of good
and bad spirits finally matured, it became the most
widespread and persistent of all religious beliefs. This
dualism represented a great religio-philosophic advance
because it enabled man to account for both good luck and bad
luck while at the same time believing in supermortal beings
who were to some extent consistent in their behavior. The
spirits could be counted on to be either good or bad; they
were not thought of as being completely temperamental as the
early ghosts of the monospiritism of most primitive
religions had been conceived to be. Man was at last able to
conceive of supermortal forces that were consistent in
behavior, and this was one of the most momentous discoveries
of truth in the entire history of the evolution of religion
and in the expansion of human philosophy.
Evolutionary religion has,
however, paid a terrible price for the concept of dual
spiritism. Man's early philosophy was able to reconcile
spirit constancy with the vicissitudes of temporal fortune
only by postulating two kinds of spirits, one good and the
other bad. And while this belief did enable man to reconcile
the variables of chance with a concept of unchanging
supermortal forces, this doctrine has ever since made it
difficult for religionists to conceive of cosmic unity. The
gods of evolutionary religion have generally been opposed by
the forces of darkness.
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The tragedy of all this lies
in the fact that, when these ideas were taking root in the
primitive mind of man, there really were no bad or
disharmonious spirits in all the world. Such an unfortunate
situation did not develop until after the Caligastic
rebellion and only persisted until Pentecost. The concept of
good and evil as cosmic co-ordinates is, even in the
twentieth century, very much alive in human philosophy; most
of the world's religions still carry this cultural birthmark
of the long-gone days of the emerging ghost cults.
5. THE ADVANCING
GHOST CULT
Primitive man viewed the
spirits and ghosts as having almost unlimited rights but no
duties; the spirits were thought to regard man as having
manifold duties but no rights. The spirits were believed to
look down upon man as constantly failing in the discharge of
his spiritual duties. It was the general belief of mankind
that ghosts levied a continuous tribute of service as the
price of noninterference in human affairs, and the least
mischance was laid to ghost activities. Early humans were so
afraid they might overlook some honor due the gods that,
after they had sacrificed to all known spirits, they did
another turn to the "unknown gods," just to be thoroughly
safe.
And now the simple ghost
cult is followed by the practices of the more advanced and
relatively complex spirit-ghost cult, the service and
worship of the higher spirits as they evolved in man's
primitive imagination. Religious ceremonial must keep pace
with spirit evolution and progress. The expanded cult was
but the art of self-maintenance practiced in relation to
belief in supernatural beings, self-adjustment to spirit
environment. Industrial and military organizations were
adjustments to natural and social environments. And as
marriage arose to meet the demands of bisexuality, so did
religious organization evolve in response to the belief in
higher spirit forces and spiritual beings. Religion
represents man's adjustment to his illusions of the mystery
of chance. Spirit fear and subsequent worship were adopted
as insurance against misfortune, as prosperity policies.
The savage visualizes the
good spirits as going about their business, requiring little
from human beings. It is the bad ghosts and spirits who must
be kept in good humor. Accordingly, primitive peoples paid
more attention to their malevolent ghosts than to their
benign spirits.
Human prosperity was
supposed to be especially provocative of the envy of evil
spirits, and their method of retaliation was to strike back
through a human agency and by the technique of the evil
eye. That phase of the cult which had to do with spirit
avoidance was much concerned with the machinations of the
evil eye. The fear of it became almost world-wide. Pretty
women were veiled to protect them from the evil eye;
subsequently many women who desired to be considered
beautiful adopted this practice. Because of this fear of bad
spirits, children were seldom allowed out after dark, and
the early prayers always included the petition, "deliver us
from the evil eye."
The Koran contains a whole
chapter devoted to the evil eye and magic spells, and the
Jews fully believed in them. The whole phallic cult grew up
as a defense against evil eye. The organs of reproduction
were thought to be the only fetish which could render it
powerless. The evil eye gave origin to the first
superstitions respecting prenatal marking of children,
maternal impressions, and the cult was at one time well-nigh
universal.
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Envy is a deep-seated human
trait; therefore did primitive man ascribe it to his early
gods. And since man had once practiced deception upon the
ghosts, he soon began to deceive the spirits. Said he, "If
the spirits are jealous of our beauty and prosperity, we
will disfigure ourselves and speak lightly of our success."
Early humility was not, therefore, debasement of ego but
rather an attempt to foil and deceive the envious spirits.
The method adopted to
prevent the spirits from becoming jealous of human
prosperity was to heap vituperation upon some lucky or much
loved thing or person. The custom of depreciating
complimentary remarks regarding oneself or family had its
origin in this way, and it eventually evolved into civilized
modesty, restraint, and courtesy. In keeping with the same
motive, it became the fashion to look ugly. Beauty aroused
the envy of spirits; it betokened sinful human pride. The
savage sought for an ugly name. This feature of the cult was
a great handicap to the advancement of art, and it long kept
the world somber and ugly.
Under the spirit cult,
life was at best a gamble, the result of spirit control.
One's future was not the result of effort, industry, or
talent except as they might be utilized to influence the
spirits. The ceremonies of spirit propitiation constituted a
heavy burden, rendering life tedious and virtually
unendurable. From age to age and from generation to
generation, race after race has sought to improve this
superghost doctrine, but no generation has ever yet dared to
wholly reject it.
The intention and will of
the spirits were studied by means of omens, oracles, and
signs. And these spirit messages were interpreted by
divination, soothsaying, magic, ordeals, and astrology. The
whole cult was a scheme designed to placate, satisfy, and
buy off the spirits through this disguised bribery.
And thus there grew up a
new and expanded world philosophy consisting in:
1. Duty--those
things which must be done to keep the spirits favorably
disposed, at least neutral.
2. Right--the
correct conduct and ceremonies designed to win the spirits
actively to one's interests.
3. Truth--the
correct understanding of, and attitude toward, spirits, and
hence toward life and death.
It was not merely out of
curiosity that the ancients sought to know the future; they
wanted to dodge ill luck. Divination was simply an attempt
to avoid trouble. During these times, dreams were regarded
as prophetic, while everything out of the ordinary was
considered an omen. And even today the civilized races are
cursed with the belief in signs, tokens, and other
superstitious remnants of the advancing ghost cult of old.
Slow, very slow, is man to abandon those methods whereby he
so gradually and painfully ascended the evolutionary scale
of life.
6. COERCION AND
EXORCISM
When men believed in
ghosts only, religious ritual was more personal, less
organized, but the recognition of higher spirits
necessitated the employment of "higher spiritual methods" in
dealing with them. This attempt to improve upon, and to
elaborate, the technique of spirit propitiation led directly
to the creation of defenses against the spirits. Man felt
helpless indeed before the uncontrollable forces operating
in terrestrial life, and his feeling of inferiority drove
him to attempt
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to find some compensating
adjustment, some technique for evening the odds in the
one-sided struggle of man versus the cosmos.
In the early days of the
cult, man's efforts to influence ghost action were confined
to propitiation, attempts by bribery to buy off ill luck. As
the evolution of the ghost cult progressed to the concept of
good as well as bad spirits, these ceremonies turned toward
attempts of a more positive nature, efforts to win good
luck. Man's religion no longer was completely negativistic,
nor did he stop with the effort to win good luck; he shortly
began to devise schemes whereby he could compel spirit
co-operation. No longer does the religionist stand
defenseless before the unceasing demands of the spirit
phantasms of his own devising; the savage is beginning to
invent weapons wherewith he may coerce spirit action and
compel spirit assistance.
Man's first efforts at
defense were directed against the ghosts. As the ages
passed, the living began to devise methods of resisting the
dead. Many techniques were developed for frightening ghosts
and driving them away, among which may be cited the
following:
1. Cutting off the head
and tying up the body in the grave.
2. Stoning the death
house.
3. Castration or breaking
the legs of the corpse.
4. Burying under stones,
one origin of the modern tombstone.
5. Cremation, a later-day
invention to prevent ghost trouble.
6. Casting the body into
the sea.
7. Exposure of the body to
be eaten by wild animals.
Ghosts were supposed to be
disturbed and frightened by noise; shouting, bells, and
drums drove them away from the living; and these ancient
methods are still in vogue at "wakes" for the dead.
Foul-smelling concoctions were utilized to banish unwelcome
spirits. Hideous images of the spirits were constructed so
that they would flee in haste when they beheld themselves.
It was believed that dogs could detect the approach of
ghosts, and that they gave warning by howling; that cocks
would crow when they were near. The use of a cock as a
weather vane is in perpetuation of this superstition.
Water was regarded as the
best protection against ghosts. Holy water was superior to
all other forms, water in which the priests had washed their
feet. Both fire and water were believed to constitute
impassable barriers to ghosts. The Romans carried water
three times around the corpse; in the twentieth century the
body is sprinkled with holy water, and hand washing at the
cemetery is still a Jewish ritual. Baptism was a feature of
the later water ritual; primitive bathing was a religious
ceremony. Only in recent times has bathing become a sanitary
practice.
But man did not stop with
ghost coercion; through religious ritual and other practices
he was soon attempting to compel spirit action. Exorcism was
the employment of one spirit to control or banish another,
and these tactics were also utilized for frightening ghosts
and spirits. The dual-spiritism concept of good and bad
forces offered man ample opportunity to attempt to pit one
agency against another, for, if a powerful man could
vanquish a weaker one, then certainly a strong spirit could
dominate an inferior ghost. Primitive cursing was a coercive
practice designed to overawe minor spirits. Later this
custom expanded into the pronouncing of curses upon enemies.
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It was long believed that by
reverting to the usages of the more ancient mores the
spirits and demigods could be forced into desirable action.
Modern man is guilty of the same procedure. You address one
another in common, everyday language, but when you engage in
prayer, you resort to the older style of another generation,
the so-called solemn style.
This doctrine also
explains many religious-ritual reversions of a sex nature,
such as temple prostitution. These reversions to primitive
customs were considered sure guards against many calamities.
And with these simple-minded peoples all such performances
were entirely free from what modern man would term
promiscuity.
Next came the practice of
ritual vows, soon to be followed by religious pledges and
sacred oaths. Most of these oaths were accompanied by
self-torture and self-mutilation; later on, by fasting and
prayer. Self-denial was subsequently looked upon as being a
sure coercive; this was especially true in the matter of sex
suppression. And so primitive man early developed a decided
austerity in his religious practices, a belief in the
efficacy of self-torture and self-denial as rituals capable
of coercing the unwilling spirits to react favorably toward
all such suffering and deprivation.
Modern man no longer
attempts openly to coerce the spirits, though he still
evinces a disposition to bargain with Deity. And he still
swears, knocks on wood, crosses his fingers, and follows
expectoration with some trite phrase; once it was a magical
formula.
7. NATURE OF
CULTISM
The cult type of social
organization persisted because it provided a symbolism for
the preservation and stimulation of moral sentiments and
religious loyalties. The cult grew out of the traditions of
"old families" and was perpetuated as an established
institution; all families have a cult of some sort. Every
inspiring ideal grasps for some perpetuating
symbolism--seeks some technique for cultural manifestation
which will insure survival and augment realization--and the
cult achieves this end by fostering and gratifying emotion.
From the dawn of
civilization every appealing movement in social culture or
religious advancement has developed a ritual, a symbolic
ceremonial. The more this ritual has been an unconscious
growth, the stronger it has gripped its devotees. The cult
preserved sentiment and satisfied emotion, but it has always
been the greatest obstacle to social reconstruction and
spiritual progress.
Notwithstanding that the
cult has always retarded social progress, it is regrettable
that so many modern believers in moral standards and
spiritual ideals have no adequate symbolism--no cult of
mutual support--nothing to belong to. But a religious
cult cannot be manufactured; it must grow. And those of no
two groups will be identical unless their rituals are
arbitrarily standardized by authority.
The early Christian cult
was the most effective, appealing, and enduring of any
ritual ever conceived or devised, but much of its value has
been destroyed in a scientific age by the destruction of so
many of its original underlying tenets. The Christian cult
has been devitalized by the loss of many fundamental ideas.
In the past, truth has
grown rapidly and expanded freely when the cult has been
elastic, the symbolism expansile. Abundant truth and an
adjustable cult
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have favored rapidity of
social progression. A meaningless cult vitiates religion
when it attempts to supplant philosophy and to enslave
reason; a genuine cult grows.
Regardless of the
drawbacks and handicaps, every new revelation of truth has
given rise to a new cult, and even the restatement of the
religion of Jesus must develop a new and appropriate
symbolism. Modern man must find some adequate symbolism for
his new and expanding ideas, ideals, and loyalties. This
enhanced symbol must arise out of religious living,
spiritual experience. And this higher symbolism of a higher
civilization must be predicated on the concept of the
Fatherhood of God and be pregnant with the mighty ideal of
the brotherhood of man.
The old cults were too
egocentric; the new must be the outgrowth of applied love.
The new cult must, like the old, foster sentiment, satisfy
emotion, and promote loyalty; but it must do more: It must
facilitate spiritual progress, enhance cosmic meanings,
augment moral values, encourage social development, and
stimulate a high type of personal religious living. The new
cult must provide supreme goals of living which are both
temporal and eternal--social and spiritual.
No cult can endure and
contribute to the progress of social civilization and
individual spiritual attainment unless it is based on the
biologic, sociologic, and religious significance of the
home. A surviving cult must symbolize that which is
permanent in the presence of unceasing change; it must
glorify that which unifies the stream of ever-changing
social metamorphosis. It must recognize true meanings, exalt
beautiful relations, and glorify the good values of real
nobility.
But the great difficulty
of finding a new and satisfying symbolism is because modern
men, as a group, adhere to the scientific attitude, eschew
superstition, and abhor ignorance, while as individuals they
all crave mystery and venerate the unknown. No cult can
survive unless it embodies some masterful mystery and
conceals some worthful unattainable. Again, the new
symbolism must not only be significant for the group but
also meaningful to the individual. The forms of any
serviceable symbolism must be those which the individual can
carry out on his own initiative, and which he can also enjoy
with his fellows. If the new cult could only be dynamic
instead of static, it might really contribute something
worth while to the progress of mankind, both temporal and
spiritual.
But a cult--a symbolism of
rituals, slogans, or goals--will not function if it is too
complex. And there must be the demand for devotion, the
response of loyalty. Every effective religion unerringly
develops a worthy symbolism, and its devotees would do well
to prevent the crystallization of such a ritual into
cramping, deforming, and stifling stereotyped ceremonials
which can only handicap and retard all social, moral, and
spiritual progress. No cult can survive if it retards moral
growth and fails to foster spiritual progress. The cult is
the skeletal structure around which grows the living and
dynamic body of personal spiritual experience--true
religion.
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