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The Anti-Christ
Friedrich Nietzsche
Translated by H.L. Mencken
PREFACE
This book belongs
to the most rare of men. Perhaps not one of them is yet alive. It is possible
that they may be among those who understand my "Zarathustra":
how could I confound myself with those who are now sprouting ears?
First the day after tomorrow must come for me. Some men are born posthumously.
The conditions under
which any one understands me, and necessarily understands me I
know them only too well. Even to endure my seriousness, my passion, he
must carry intellectual integrity to the verge of hardness. He must be
accustomed to living on mountain tops and to looking upon the wretched
gabble of politics and nationalism as beneath him. He must have become
indifferent; he must never ask of the truth whether it brings profit to
him or a fatality to him ... He must have an inclination, born of strength,
for questions that no one has the courage for; the courage for the forbidden;
predestination for the labyrinth. The experience of seven solitudes. New
ears for new music. New eyes for what is most distant. A new conscience
for truths that have hitherto remained unheard. And the will to economize
in the grand manner to hold together his strength, his enthusiasm
... Reverence for self; love of self; absolute freedom of self....
Very well, then! of that sort only are my readers, my true readers, my
readers foreordained: of what account are the rest? The rest are
merely humanity. One must make one's self superior to humanity,
in power, in loftiness of soul, in contempt.
FRIEDRICH W. NIETZSCHE.
1.
Let us look each other in the face. We are Hyperboreans
we know well enough how remote our place is. "Neither by land nor
by water will you find the road to the Hyperboreans": even Pindar1,in
his day, knew that much about us. Beyond the North, beyond the ice, beyond
death our life, our happiness ... We have discovered that happiness;
we know the way; we got our knowledge of it from thousands of years in
the labyrinth. Who else has found it? The man of today?
"I don't know either the way out or the way in; I am whatever doesn't
know either the way out or the way in" so sighs the man of
today ... This is the sort of modernity that made us ill, we sickened
on lazy peace, cowardly compromise, the whole virtuous dirtiness of the
modern Yea and Nay. This tolerance and largeur of the heart that "forgives"
everything because it "understands" everything is a sirocco
to us. Rather live amid the ice than among modern virtues and other such
south-winds! ... We were brave enough; we spared neither ourselves nor
others; but we were a long time finding out where to direct our courage.
We grew dismal; they called us fatalists. Our fate it was the fulness,
the tension, the storing up of powers. We thirsted for the lightnings
and great deeds; we kept as far as possible from the happiness of the
weakling, from "resignation" ... There was thunder in our air;
nature, as we embodied it, became overcast for we had not yet found
the way. The formula of our happiness: a Yea, a Nay, a straight line,
a goal...
2.
What is good? Whatever augments the feeling of power, the will
to power, power itself, in man.
What is evil?
Whatever springs from weakness.
What is happiness?
The feeling that power increases that resistance is overcome.
Not contentment, but
more power; not peace at any price, but war; not virtue, but efficiency
(virtue in the Renaissance sense, virtu, virtue free of moral acid).
The weak and the botched shall perish: first principle of our charity.
And one should help them to it.
What is more harmful
than any vice? Practical sympathy for the botched and the weak
Christianity ...
3.
The problem that I set here is not what shall replace mankind in the order
of living creatures ( man is an end ): but what type of
man must be bred, must be willed, as being the most valuable, the most
worthy of life, the most secure guarantee of the future.
This more valuable
type has appeared often enough in the past: but always as a happy accident,
as an exception, never as deliberately willed. Very often it has been
precisely the most feared; hitherto it has been almost the terror of terrors;
and out of that terror the contrary type has been willed, cultivated
and attained: the domestic animal, the herd animal, the sick brute-man
the Christian ...
4.
Mankind surely does not represent an evolution toward a better or stronger
or higher level, as progress is now understood. This "progress"
is merely a modern idea, which is to say, a false idea. The European of
today, in his essential worth, falls far below the European of the Renaissance;
the process of evolution does not necessarily mean elevation, enhancement,
strengthening.
True enough, it succeeds
in isolated and individual cases in various parts of the earth and under
the most widely different cultures, and in these cases a higher type certainly
manifests itself; something which, compared to mankind in the mass, appears
as a sort of superman. Such happy strokes of high success have always
been possible, and will remain possible, perhaps, for all time to come.
Even whole races, tribes and nations may occasionally represent such lucky
accidents.
5.
We should not deck out and embellish Christianity: it has waged a war
to the death against this higher type of man, it has put all the deepest
instincts of this type under its ban, it has developed its concept of
evil, of the Evil One himself, out of these instincts the strong
man as the typical reprobate, the "outcast among men." Christianity
has taken the part of all the weak, the low, the botched; it has made
an ideal out of antagonism to all the self-preservative instincts of sound
life; it has corrupted even the faculties of those natures that are intellectually
most vigorous, by representing the highest intellectual values as sinful,
as misleading, as full of temptation. The most lamentable example: the
corruption of Pascal, who believed that his intellect had been destroyed
by original sin, whereas it was actually destroyed by Christianity!
6.
It is a painful and tragic spectacle that rises before me: I have drawn
back the curtain from the rottenness of man. This word, in my mouth, is
at least free from one suspicion: that it involves a moral accusation
against humanity. It is used and I wish to emphasize the fact again
without any moral significance: and this is so far true that the
rottenness I speak of is most apparent to me precisely in those quarters
where there has been most aspiration, hitherto, toward "virtue"
and "godliness." As you probably surmise, I understand rottenness
in the sense of decadence: my argument is that all the values on which
mankind now fixes its highest aspirations are decadence-values.
I call an animal, a species, an individual corrupt, when it loses its
instincts, when it chooses, when it prefers, what is injurious to it.
A history of the "higher feelings," the "ideals of humanity"
and it is possible that I'll have to write it would almost
explain why man is so degenerate. Life itself appears to me as an instinct
for growth, for survival, for the accumulation of forces, for power: whenever
the will to power fails there is disaster. My contention is that all the
highest values of humanity have been emptied of this will that
the values of decadence, of nihilism, now prevail under the holiest names.
7.
Christianity is called the religion of pity. Pity stands in opposition
to all the tonic passions that augment the energy of the feeling of aliveness:
it is a depressant. A man loses power when he pities. Through pity that
drain upon strength which suffering works is multiplied a thousandfold.
Suffering is made contagious by pity; under certain circumstances it may
lead to a total sacrifice of life and living energy a loss out
of all proportion to the magnitude of the cause ( the case of the
death of the Nazarene). This is the first view of it; there is, however,
a still more important one. If one measures the effects of pity by the
gravity of the reactions it sets up, its character as a menace to life
appears in a much clearer light. Pity thwarts the whole law of evolution,
which is the law of natural selection. It preserves whatever is ripe for
destruction; it fights on the side of those disinherited and condemned
by life; by maintaining life in so many of the botched of all kinds, it
gives life itself a gloomy and dubious aspect. Mankind has ventured to
call pity a virtue ( in every superior moral system it appears
as a weakness ); going still further, it has been called the virtue,
the source and foundation of all other virtues but let us always
bear in mind that this was from the standpoint of a philosophy that was
nihilistic, and upon whose shield the denial of life was inscribed. Schopenhauer
was right in this: that by means of pity life is denied, and made worthy
of denial pity is the technic of nihilism. Let me repeat: this
depressing and contagious instinct stands against all those instincts
which work for the preservation and enhancement of life: in the role of
protector of the miserable, it is a prime agent in the promotion of decadence
pity persuades to extinction .... Of course, one doesn't say "extinction":
one says "the other world," or "God," or "the
true life," or Nirvana, salvation, blessedness .... This innocent
rhetoric, from the realm of religious-ethical balderdash, appears a good
deal less innocent when one reflects upon the tendency that it conceals
beneath sublime words: the tendency to destroy life. Schopenhauer was
hostile to life: that is why pity appeared to him as a virtue .... Aristotle,
as every one knows, saw in pity a sickly and dangerous state of mind,
the remedy for which was an occasional purgative: he regarded tragedy
as that purgative. The instinct of life should prompt us to seek some
means of puncturing any such pathological and dangerous accumulation of
pity as that appearing in Schopenhauer's case (and also, alack, in that
of our whole literary decadence, from St. Petersburg to Paris, from Tolstoi
to Wagner), that it may burst and be discharged ... Nothing is more unhealthy,
amid all our unhealthy modernism, than Christian pity. To be the doctors
here, to be unmerciful here, to wield the knife here all this is
our business, all this is our sort of humanity, by this sign we are philosophers,
we Hyperboreans !
8.
It is necessary to say just whom we regard as our antagonists: theologians
and all who have any theological blood in their veins this is our
whole philosophy .... One must have faced that menace at close hand, better
still, one must have had experience of it directly and almost succumbed
to it, to realize that it is not to be taken lightly ( the alleged
free-thinking of our naturalists and physiologists seems to me to be a
joke they have no passion about such things; they have not suffered
). This poisoning goes a great deal further than most people think:
I find the arrogant habit of the theologian among all who regard themselves
as "idealists" among all who, by virtue of a higher point
of departure, claim a right to rise above reality, and to look upon it
with suspicion ... The idealist, like the ecclesiastic, carries all sorts
of lofty concepts in his hand ( and not only in his hand!); he
launches them with benevolent contempt against "understanding,"
"the senses," "honor," "good living," "science";
he sees such things as beneath him, as pernicious and seductive forces,
on which "the soul" soars as a pure thing-in-itself as
if humility, chastity, poverty, in a word, holiness, had not already done
much more damage to life than all imaginable horrors and vices ... The
pure soul is a pure lie ... So long as the priest, that professional denier,
calumniator and poisoner of life, is accepted as a higher variety of man,
there can be no answer to the question, What is truth? Truth has already
been stood on its head when the obvious attorney of mere emptiness is
mistaken for its representative.
9.
Upon this theological instinct I make war: I find the tracks of it everywhere.
Whoever has theological blood in his veins is shifty and dishonorable
in all things. The pathetic thing that grows out of this condition is
called faith: in other words, closing one's eyes upon one's self once
for all, to avoid suffering the sight of incurable falsehood. People erect
a concept of morality, of virtue, of holiness upon this false view of
all things; they ground good conscience upon faulty vision; they argue
that no other sort of vision has value any more, once they have made theirs
sacrosanct with the names of "God," "salvation" and
"eternity." I unearth this theological instinct in all directions:
it is the most widespread and the most subterranean form of falsehood
to be found on earth. Whatever a theologian regards as true must be false:
there you have almost a criterion of truth. His profound instinct of self-preservation
stands against truth ever coming into honor in any way, or even getting
stated. Wherever the influence of theologians is felt there is a transvaluation
of values, and the concepts "true" and "false" are
forced to change places: what ever is most damaging to life is there called
"true," and whatever exalts it, intensifies it, approves it,
justifies it and makes it triumphant is there called "false."...
When theologians, working through the "consciences" of princes
(or of peoples ), stretch out their hands for power, there is never
any doubt as to the fundamental issue: the will to make an end, the nihilistic
will exerts that power...
10.
Among Germans I am immediately understood when I say that theological
blood is the ruin of philosophy. The Protestant pastor is the grandfather
of German philosophy; Protestantism itself is its peccatum originale.
Definition of Protestantism: hemiplegic paralysis of Christianity
and of reason .... One need only utter the words "Tubingen School"
to get an understanding of what German philosophy is at bottom
a very artful form of theology ... The Suabians are the best liars in
Germany; they lie innocently .... Why all the rejoicing over the appearance
of Kant that went through the learned world of Germany, three-fourths
of which is made up of the sons of preachers and teachers why the
German conviction still echoing, that with Kant came a change for the
better? The theological instinct of German scholars made them see clearly
just what had become possible again .... A backstairs leading to the old
ideal stood open; the concept of the "true world," the concept
of morality as the essence of the world ( the two most vicious
errors that ever existed!), were once more, thanks to a subtle and wily
skepticism, if not actually demonstrable, then at least no longer refutable
... Reason, the prerogative of reason, does not go so far ... Out of reality
there had been made "appearance"; an absolutely false world,
that of being, had been turned into reality .... The success of Kant is
merely a theological success; he was, like Luther and Leibnitz, but one
more impediment to German integrity, already far from steady.
11.
A word now against Kant as a moralist. A virtue must be our invention;
it must spring out of our personal need and defense. In every other case
it is a source of danger. That which does not belong to our life menaces
it; a virtue which has its roots in mere respect for the concept of "virtue,"
as Kant would have it, is pernicious. "Virtue," "duty,"
"good for its own sake," goodness grounded upon impersonality
or a notion of universal validity these are all chimeras, and in
them one finds only an expression of the decay, the last collapse of life,
the Chinese spirit of Konigsberg. Quite the contrary is demanded by the
most profound laws of self-preservation and of growth: to wit, that every
man find his own virtue, his own categorical imperative. A nation goes
to pieces when it confounds its duty with the general concept of duty.
Nothing works a more complete and penetrating disaster than every "impersonal"
duty, every sacrifice before the Moloch of abstraction. To think
that no one has thought of Kant's categorical imperative as dangerous
to life! ... The theological instinct alone took it under protection !
An action prompted by the life-instinct proves that it is a right
action by the amount of pleasure that goes with it: and yet that nihilist,
with his bowels of Christian dogmatism, regarded pleasure as an objection
... What destroys a man more quickly than to work, think and feel without
inner necessity, without any deep personal desire, without pleasure
as a mere automaton of duty? That is the recipe for decadence, and no
less for idiocy ... Kant became an idiot. And such a man was the
contemporary of Goethe! This calamitous spinner of cobwebs passed for
the German philosopher still passes today! ... I forbid myself
to say what I think of the Germans.... Didn't Kant see in the French Revolution
the transformation of the state from the inorganic form to the organic?
Didn't he ask himself if there was a single event that could be explained
save on the assumption of a moral faculty in man, so that on the basis
of it, "the tendency of mankind toward the good" could be explained,
once and for all time? Kant's answer: "That is revolution."
Instinct at fault in everything and anything, instinct as a revolt against
nature, German decadence as a philosophy that is Kant!
12.
I put aside a few skeptics, the types of decency in the history of philosophy:
the rest haven't the slightest conception of intellectual integrity. They
behave like women, all these great enthusiasts and prodigies they
regard "beautiful feelings" as arguments, the "heaving
breast" as the bellows of divine inspiration, conviction as the criterion
of truth. In the end, with "German" innocence, Kant tried to
give a scientific flavor to this form of corruption, this dearth of intellectual
conscience, by calling it "practical reason." He deliberately
invented a variety of reasons for use on occasions when it was desirable
not to trouble with reason that is, when morality, when the sublime
command "thou shalt," was heard. When one recalls the fact that,
among all peoples, the philosopher is no more than a development from
the old type of priest, this inheritance from the priest, this fraud upon
self, ceases to be remarkable. When a man feels that he has a divine mission,
say to lift up, to save or to liberate mankind when a man feels
the divine spark in his heart and believes that he is the mouthpiece of
supernatural imperatives when such a mission in. flames him, it
is only natural that he should stand beyond all merely reasonable standards
of judgment. He feels that he is himself sanctified by this mission, that
he is himself a type of a higher order! ... What has a priest to do with
philosophy! He stands far above it! And hitherto the priest has
ruled! He has determined the meaning of "true" and "not
true"!
13.
Let us not under-estimate this fact: that we ourselves, we free spirits,
are already a "transvaluation of all values," a visualized declaration
of war and victory against all the old concepts of "true" and
"not true." The most valuable intuitions are the last to be
attained; the most valuable of all are those which determine methods.
All the methods, all the principles of the scientific spirit of today,
were the targets for thousands of years of the most profound contempt;
if a man inclined to them he was excluded from the society of "decent"
people he passed as "an enemy of God," as a scoffer at
the truth, as one "possessed." As a man of science, he belonged
to the Chandala2... We have had the whole pathetic stupidity of mankind
against us their every notion of what the truth ought to be, of
what the service of the truth ought to be their every "thou
shalt" was launched against us.... Our objectives, our methods, our
quiet, cautious, distrustful manner all appeared to them as absolutely
discreditable and contemptible. Looking back, one may almost ask
one's self with reason if it was not actually an aesthetic sense that
kept men blind so long: what they demanded of the truth was picturesque
effectiveness, and of the learned a strong appeal to their senses. It
was our modesty that stood out longest against their taste ... How well
they guessed that, these turkey-cocks of God!
14.
We have unlearned something. We have be come more modest in every way.
We no longer derive man from the "spirit," from the "god-head";
we have dropped him back among the beasts. We regard him as the strongest
of the beasts because he is the craftiest; one of the results thereof
is his intellectuality. On the other hand, we guard ourselves against
a conceit which would assert itself even here: that man is the great second
thought in the process of organic evolution. He is, in truth, anything
but the crown of creation: beside him stand many other animals, all at
similar stages of development ... And even when we say that we say a bit
too much, for man, relatively speaking, is the most botched of all the
animals and the sickliest, and he has wandered the most dangerously from
his instincts though for all that, to be sure, he remains the most
interesting! As regards the lower animals, it was Descartes who
first had the really admirable daring to describe them as machina; the
whole of our physiology is directed toward proving the truth of this doctrine.
Moreover, it is illogical to set man apart, as Descartes did: what we
know of man today is limited precisely by the extent to which we have
regarded him, too, as a machine. Formerly we accorded to man, as his inheritance
from some higher order of beings, what was called "free will";
now we have taken even this will from him, for the term no longer describes
anything that we can understand. The old word "will" now connotes
only a sort of result, an individual reaction, that follows inevitably
upon a series of partly discordant and partly harmonious stimuli
the will no longer "acts," or "moves." ... Formerly
it was thought that man's consciousness, his "spirit," offered
evidence of his high origin, his divinity. That he might be perfected,
he was advised, tortoise-like, to draw his senses in, to have no traffic
with earthly things, to shuffle off his mortal coil then only the
important part of him, the "pure spirit," would remain. Here
again we have thought out the thing better: to us consciousness, or "the
spirit," appears as a symptom of a relative imperfection of the organism,
as an experiment, a groping, a misunderstanding, as an affliction which
uses up nervous force unnecessarily we deny that anything can be
done perfectly so long as it is done consciously. The "pure spirit"
is a piece of pure stupidity: take away the nervous system and the senses,
the so-called "mortal shell," and the rest is miscalculation
that is all!...
15.
Under Christianity neither morality nor religion has any point of contact
with actuality. It offers purely imaginary causes ("God" "soul,"
"ego," "spirit," "free will" or even
"unfree"), and purely imaginary effects ("sin" "salvation"
"grace," "punishment," "forgiveness of sins").
Intercourse between imaginary beings ("God," "spirits,"
"souls"); an imaginary natural history (anthropocentric; a total
denial of the concept of natural causes); an imaginary psychology (misunderstandings
of self, misinterpretations of agreeable or disagreeable general feelings
for example, of the states of the nervus sympathicus with the help
of the sign-language of religio-ethical balderdash , "repentance,"
"pangs of conscience," "temptation by the devil,"
"the presence of God"); an imaginary teleology (the "kingdom
of God," "the last judgment," "eternal life").
This purely fictitious world, greatly to its disadvantage, is to
be differentiated from the world of dreams; the later at least reflects
reality, whereas the former falsifies it, cheapens it and denies it. Once
the concept of "nature" had been opposed to the concept of "God,"
the word "natural" necessarily took on the meaning of "abominable"
the whole of that fictitious world has its sources in hatred of
the natural ( the real! ), and is no more than evidence
of a profound uneasiness in the presence of reality.... This explains
everything. Who alone has any reason for living his way out of reality?
The man who suffers under it. But to suffer from reality one must be a
botched reality.... The preponderance of pains over pleasures is the cause
of this fictitious morality and religion: but such a preponderance also
supplies the formula for decadence...
16.
A criticism of the Christian concept of God leads inevitably to the same
conclusion. A nation that still believes in itself holds fast to
its own god. In him it does honor to the conditions which enable it to
survive, to its virtues it projects its joy in itself, its feeling
of power, into a being to whom one may offer thanks. He who is rich will
give of his riches; a proud people need a god to whom they can make sacrifices
... Religion, within these limits, is a form of gratitude. A man is grateful
for his own existence: to that end he needs a god. Such a god must
be able to work both benefits and injuries; he must be able to play either
friend or foe he is wondered at for the good he does as well as
for the evil he does. But the castration, against all nature, of such
a god, making him a god of goodness alone, would be contrary to human
inclination. Mankind has just as much need for an evil god as for a good
god; it doesn't have to thank mere tolerance and humanitarianism for its
own existence.... What would be the value of a god who knew nothing of
anger, revenge, envy, scorn, cunning, violence? who had perhaps never
experienced the rapturous ardeurs of victory and of destruction? No one
would understand such a god: why should any one want him? True
enough, when a nation is on the downward path, when it feels its belief
in its own future, its hope of freedom slipping from it, when it begins
to see submission as a first necessity and the virtues of submission as
measures of self-preservation, then it must overhaul its god. He then
becomes a hypocrite, timorous and demure; he counsels "peace of soul,"
hate-no-more, leniency, "love" of friend and foe. He moralizes
endlessly; he creeps into every private virtue; he becomes the god of
every man; he becomes a private citizen, a cosmopolitan... Formerly he
represented a people, the strength of a people, everything aggressive
and thirsty for power in the soul of a people; now he is simply the good
god ... The truth is that there is no other alternative for gods: either
they are the will to power in which case they are national gods
or incapacity for power in which case they have to be good.
17.
Wherever the will to power begins to decline, in whatever form, there
is always an accompanying decline physiologically, a decadence. The divinity
of this decadence, shorn of its masculine virtues and passions, is converted
perforce into a god of the physiologically degraded, of the weak. Of course,
they do not call themselves the weak; they call themselves "the good."
... No hint is needed to indicate the moments in history at which the
dualistic fiction of a good and an evil god first became possible. The
same instinct which prompts the inferior to reduce their own god to "goodness-in-itself"
also prompts them to eliminate all good qualities from the god of their
superiors; they make revenge on their masters by making a devil of the
latter's god. The good god, and the devil like him both
are abortions of decadence. How can we be so tolerant of the naïveté
of Christian theologians as to join in their doctrine that the evolution
of the concept of god from "the god of Israel," the god of a
people, to the Christian god, the essence of all goodness, is to be described
as progress? But even Renan does this. As if Renan had a right
to be naïve! The contrary actually stares one in the face. When everything
necessary to ascending life; when all that is strong, courageous, masterful
and proud has been eliminated from the concept of a god; when he has sunk
step by step to the level of a staff for the weary, a sheet-anchor for
the drowning; when he be comes the poor man's god, the sinner's god, the
invalid's god par excellence, and the attribute of "savior"
or "redeemer" remains as the one essential attribute of divinity
just what is the significance of such a metamorphosis? what does
such a reduction of the godhead imply? To be sure, the "kingdom
of God" has thus grown larger. Formerly he had only his own people,
his "chosen" people. But since then he has gone wandering, like
his people themselves, into foreign parts; he has given up settling down
quietly anywhere; finally he has come to feel at home everywhere, and
is the great cosmopolitan until now he has the "great majority"
on his side, and half the earth. But this god of the "great majority,"
this democrat among gods, has not become a proud heathen god: on the contrary,
he remains a Jew, he remains a god in a corner, a god of all the dark
nooks and crevices, of all the noisesome quarters of the world! ... His
earthly kingdom, now as always, is a kingdom of the underworld, a souterrain
kingdom, a ghetto kingdom ... And he himself is so pale, so weak, so decadent
... Even the palest of the pale are able to master him messieurs
the metaphysicians, those albinos of the intellect. They spun their webs
around him for so long that finally he was hypnotized, and began to spin
himself, and became another metaphysician. Thereafter he resumed once
more his old business of spinning the world out of his inmost being sub
specie Spinozae; thereafter he be came ever thinner and paler became
the "ideal," became "pure spirit," became "the
absolute," became "the thing-in-itself." ...The collapse
of a god: he became a "thing-in-itself."
18.
The Christian concept of a god the god as the patron of the sick,
the god as a spinner of cobwebs, the god as a spirit is one of
the most corrupt concepts that has ever been set up in the world: it probably
touches low-water mark in the ebbing evolution of the god-type. God degenerated
into the contradiction of life. Instead of being its transfiguration and
eternal Yea! In him war is declared on life, on nature, on the will to
live! God becomes the formula for every slander upon the "here and
now," and for every lie about the "beyond"! In him nothingness
is deified, and the will to nothingness is made holy! ...
19.
The fact that the strong races of northern Europe did not repudiate this
Christian god does little credit to their gift for religion and
not much more to their taste. They ought to have been able to make an
end of such a moribund and worn-out product of the decadence. A curse
lies upon them because they were not equal to it; they made illness, decrepitude
and contradiction a part of their instincts and since then they
have not managed to create any more gods. Two thousand years have come
and gone and not a single new god! Instead, there still exists,
and as if by some intrinsic right, as if he were the ultimatum
and maximum of the power to create gods, of the creator spiritus in mankind
this pitiful god of Christian monotono-theism! This hybrid image
of decay, conjured up out of emptiness, contradiction and vain imagining,
in which all the instincts of decadence, all the cowardices and wearinesses
of the soul find their sanction!
20.
In my condemnation of Christianity I surely hope I do no injustice to
a related religion with an even larger number of believers: I allude to
Buddhism. Both are to be reckoned among the nihilistic religions
they are both decadence religions but they are separated from each
other in a very remarkable way. For the fact that he is able to compare
them at all the critic of Christianity is indebted to the scholars of
India. Buddhism is a hundred times as realistic as Christianity
it is part of its living heritage that it is able to face problems
objectively and coolly; it is the product of long centuries of philosophical
speculation. The concept, "god," was already disposed of before
it appeared. Buddhism is the only genuinely positive religion to be encountered
in history, and this applies even to its epistemology (which is a strict
phenomenalism) It does not speak of a "struggle with sin,"
but, yielding to reality, of the "struggle with suffering."
Sharply differentiating itself from Christianity, it puts the self-deception
that lies in moral concepts be hind it; it is, in my phrase, beyond good
and evil.
The two physiological
facts upon which it grounds itself and upon which it bestows its chief
attention are: first, an excessive sensitiveness to sensation, which manifests
itself as a refined susceptibility to pain, and secondly, an extraordinary
spirituality, a too protracted concern with concepts and logical procedures,
under the influence of which the instinct of personality has yielded to
a notion of the "impersonal." ( Both of these states
will be familiar to a few of my readers, the objectivists, by experience,
as they are to me). These physiological states produced a depression,
and Buddha tried to combat it by hygienic measures. Against it he prescribed
a life in the open, a life of travel; moderation in eating and a careful
selection of foods; caution in the use of intoxicants; the same caution
in arousing any of the passions that foster a bilious habit and heat the
blood; finally, no worry, either on one's own account or on account of
others. He encourages ideas that make for either quiet contentment or
good cheer he finds means to combat ideas of other sorts. He understands
good, the state of goodness, as something which promotes health. Prayer
is not included, and neither is asceticism. There is no categorical imperative
nor any disciplines, even within the walls of a monastery ( it
is always possible to leave ). These things would have been simply
means of increasing the excessive sensitiveness above mentioned. For the
same reason he does not advocate any conflict with unbelievers; his teaching
is antagonistic to nothing so much as to revenge, aversion, ressentiment
( "enmity never brings an end to enmity": the moving
refrain of all Buddhism...) And in all this he was right, for it is precisely
these passions which, in view of his main regiminal purpose, are unhealthful.
The mental fatigue that he observes, already plainly displayed in too
much "objectivity" (that is, in the individual's loss of interest
in himself, in loss of balance and of "egoism"), he combats
by strong efforts to lead even the spiritual interests back to the ego.
In Buddha's teaching egoism is a duty. The "one thing needful,"
the question "how can you be delivered from suffering," regulates
and determines the whole spiritual diet. ( Perhaps one will here
recall that Athenian who also declared war upon pure "scientificality,"
to wit, Socrates, who also elevated egoism to the estate of a morality).
21.
The things necessary to Buddhism are a very mild climate, customs of great
gentleness and liberality, and no militarism; moreover, it must get its
start among the higher and better educated classes. Cheerfulness, quiet
and the absence of desire are the chief desiderata, and they are attained.
Buddhism is not a religion in which perfection is merely an object of
aspiration: perfection is actually normal. Under Christianity the
instincts of the subjugated and the oppressed come to the fore: it is
only those who are at the bottom who seek their salvation in it. Here
the prevailing pastime, the favorite remedy for boredom is the discussion
of sin, self-criticism, the inquisition of conscience; here the emotion
produced by power (called "God") is pumped up (by prayer); here
the highest good is regarded as unattainable, as a gift, as "grace."
Here, too, open dealing is lacking; concealment and the darkened room
are Christian. Here body is despised and hygiene is denounced as sensual;
the church even ranges itself against cleanliness ( the first Christian
order after the banishment of the Moors closed the public baths, of which
there were 270 in Cordova alone). Christian, too, is a certain cruelty
toward one's self and toward others; hatred of unbelievers; the will to
persecute. Somber and disquieting ideas are in the foreground; the most
esteemed states of mind, bearing the most respectable names are epileptoid;
the diet is so regulated as to engender morbid symptoms and over-stimulate
the nerves. Christian, again, is all deadly enmity to the rulers of the
earth, to the "aristocratic" along with a sort of secret
rivalry with them ( one resigns one's "body" to them
one wants only one's "soul" ... ). And Christian
is all hatred of the intellect, of pride, of courage of freedom, of intellectual
libertinage; Christian is all hatred of the senses, of joy in the senses,
of joy in general ...
22.
When Christianity departed from its native soil, that of the lowest orders,
the underworld of the ancient world, and began seeking power among barbarian
peoples, it no longer had to deal with exhausted men, but with men still
inwardly savage and capable of self torture in brief, strong men,
but bungled men. Here, unlike in the case of the Buddhists, the cause
of discontent with self, suffering through self, is not merely a general
sensitiveness and susceptibility to pain, but, on the contrary, an inordinate
thirst for inflicting pain on others, a tendency to obtain subjective
satisfaction in hostile deeds and ideas. Christianity had to embrace barbaric
concepts and valuations in order to obtain mastery over barbarians: of
such sort, for example, are the sacrifices of the first-born, the drinking
of blood as a sacrament, the disdain of the intellect and of culture;
torture in all its forms, whether bodily or not; the whole pomp of the
cult. Buddhism is a religion for peoples in a further state of development,
for races that have become kind, gentle and over-spiritualized (
Europe is not yet ripe for it ): it is a summons that takes them
back to peace and cheerfulness, to a careful rationing of the spirit,
to a certain hardening of the body. Christianity aims at mastering beasts
of prey; its modus operandi is to make them ill to make feeble
is the Christian recipe for taming, for "civilizing." Buddhism
is a religion for the closing, over-wearied stages of civilization. Christianity
appears before civilization has so much as begun under certain
circumstances it lays the very foundations thereof.
23.
Buddhism, I repeat, is a hundred times more austere, more honest, more
objective. It no longer has to justify its pains, its susceptibility to
suffering, by interpreting these things in terms of sin it simply
says, as it simply thinks, "I suffer." To the barbarian, however,
suffering in itself is scarcely understandable: what he needs, first of
all, is an explanation as to why he suffers. (His mere instinct prompts
him to deny his suffering altogether, or to endure it in silence.) Here
the word "devil" was a blessing: man had to have an omnipotent
and terrible enemy there was no need to be ashamed of suffering
at the hands of such an enemy.
At the bottom
of Christianity there are several subtleties that belong to the Orient.
In the first place, it knows that it is of very little consequence whether
a thing be true or not, so long as it is believed to be true. Truth and
faith: here we have two wholly distinct worlds of ideas, almost two diametrically
opposite worlds the road to the one and the road to the other lie
miles apart. To understand that fact thoroughly this is almost
enough, in the Orient, to make one a sage. The Brahmins knew it, Plato
knew it, every student of the esoteric knows it. When, for example, a
man gets any pleasure out of the notion that he has been saved from sin,
it is not necessary for him to be actually sinful, but merely to feel
sinful. But when faith is thus exalted above everything else, it necessarily
follows that reason, knowledge and patient inquiry have to be discredited:
the road to the truth becomes a forbidden road. Hope, in its stronger
forms, is a great deal more powerful stimulans to life than any sort of
realized joy can ever be. Man must be sustained in suffering by a hope
so high that no conflict with actuality can dash it so high, indeed,
that no fulfillment can satisfy it: a hope reaching out beyond this world.
(Precisely because of this power that hope has of making the suffering
hold out, the Greeks regarded it as the evil of evils, as the most malign
of evils; it remained behind at the source of all evil.)3 In order
that love may be possible, God must become a person; in order that the
lower instincts may take a hand in the matter God must be young. To satisfy
the ardor of the woman a beautiful saint must appear on the scene, and
to satisfy that of the men there must be a virgin. These things are necessary
if Christianity is to assume lordship over a soil on which some aphrodisiacal
or Adonis cult has already established a notion as to what a cult ought
to be. To insist upon chastity greatly strengthens the vehemence and subjectivity
of the religious instinct it makes the cult warmer, more enthusiastic,
more soulful. Love is the state in which man sees things most decidedly
as they are not. The force of illusion reaches its highest here, and so
does the capacity for sweetening, for transfiguring. When a man is in
love he endures more than at any other time; he submits to anything. The
problem was to devise a religion which would allow one to love: by this
means the worst that life has to offer is overcome it is scarcely
even noticed. So much for the three Christian virtues: faith, hope
and charity: I call them the three Christian ingenuities. Buddhism
is in too late a stage of development, too full of positivism, to be shrewd
in any such way.
24.
Here I barely touch upon the problem of the origin of Christianity. The
first thing necessary to its solution is this: that Christianity is to
be understood only by examining the soil from which it sprung it
is not a reaction against Jewish instincts; it is their inevitable product;
it is simply one more step in the awe-inspiring logic of the Jews. In
the words of the Savior, "salvation is of the Jews." 4
The second thing to remember is this: that the psychological type of the
Galilean is still to be recognized, but it was only in its most degenerate
form (which is at once maimed and overladen with foreign features) that
it could serve in the manner in which it has been used: as a type of the
Savior of mankind.
The Jews are
the most remarkable people in the history of the world, for when they
were confronted with the question, to be or not to be, they chose, with
perfectly unearthly deliberation, to be at any price: this price involved
a radical falsification of all nature, of all naturalness, of all reality,
of the whole inner world, as well as of the outer. They put themselves
against all those conditions under which, hitherto, a people had been
able to live, or had even been permitted to live; out of themselves they
evolved an idea which stood in direct oppositionto natural conditions
one by one they distorted religion, civilization, morality, history
and psychology until each became a contradiction of its natural significance.
We meet with the same phenomenon later on, in an incalculably exaggerated
form, but only as a copy: the Christian church, put beside the "people
of God," shows a complete lack of any claim to originality. Precisely
for this reason the Jews are the most fateful people in the history of
the world: their influence has so falsified the reasoning of mankind in
this matter that today the Christian can cherish anti-Semitism without
realizing that it is no more than the final consequence of Judaism.
In my "Genealogy
of Morals" I give the first psychological explanation of the concepts
underlying those two antithetical things, a noble morality and a ressentiment
morality, the second of which is a mere product of the denial of the former.
The Judaeo-Christian moral system belongs to the second division, and
in every detail. In order to be able to say Nay to everything representing
an ascending evolution of life that is, to well-being, to power,
to beauty, to self-approval the instincts of ressentiment, here
become downright genius, had to invent an other world in which the acceptance
of life appeared as the most evil and abominable thing imaginable. Psychologically,
the Jews are a people gifted with the very strongest vitality, so much
so that when they found themselves facing impossible conditions of life
they chose voluntarily, and with a profound talent for self-preservation,
the side of all those instincts which make for decadence not as
if mastered by them, but as if detecting in them a power by which "the
world" could be defied. The Jews are the very opposite of decadents:
they have simply been forced into appearing in that guise, and with a
degree of skill approaching the non plus ultra of histrionic genius they
have managed to put themselves at the head of all decadent movements (
for example, the Christianity of Paul ), and so make of
them something stronger than any party frankly saying Yes to life. To
the sort of men who reach out for power under Judaism and Christianity,
that is to say, to the priestly class-decadence is no more than
a means to an end. Men of this sort have a vital interest in making mankind
sick, and in confusing the values of "good" and "bad,"
"true" and "false" in a manner that is not only dangerous
to life, but also slanders it.
25.
The history of Israel is invaluable as a typical history of an attempt
to denaturize all natural values: I point to five facts which bear this
out. Originally, and above all in the time of the monarchy, Israel maintained
the right attitude of things, which is to say, the natural attitude. Its
Jahveh was an expression of its consciousness of power, its joy in itself,
its hopes for itself: to him the Jews looked for victory and salvation
and through him they expected nature to give them whatever was necessary
to their existence above all, rain. Jahveh is the god of Israel,
and consequently the god of justice: this is the logic of every race that
has power in its hands and a good conscience in the use of it. In the
religious ceremonial of the Jews both aspects of this self-approval stand
revealed. The nation is grateful for the high destiny that has enabled
it to obtain dominion; it is grateful for the benign procession of the
seasons, and for the good fortune attending its herds and its crops.
This view of things remained an ideal for a long while, even after it
had been robbed of validity by tragic blows: anarchy within and the Assyrian
without. But the people still retained, as a projection of their highest
yearnings, that vision of a king who was at once a gallant warrior and
an upright judge a vision best visualized in the typical prophet
(i.e., critic and satirist of the moment), Isaiah. But every hope
remained unfulfilled. The old god no longer could do what he used to do.
He ought to have been abandoned. But what actually happened? simply this:
the conception of him was changed the conception of him was denaturized;
this was the price that had to be paid for keeping him. Jahveh,
the god of "justice" he is in accord with Israel no more,
he no longer visualizes the national egoism; he is now a god only conditionally
... The public notion of this god now becomes merely a weapon in the hands
of clerical agitators, who interpret all happiness as a reward and all
unhappiness as a punishment for obedience or disobedience to him, for
"sin": that most fraudulent of all imaginable interpretations,
whereby a "moral order of the world" is set up, and the fundamental
concepts, "cause" and "effect," are stood on their
heads. Once natural causation has been swept out of the world by doctrines
of reward and punishment some sort of unnatural causation becomes necessary:
and all other varieties of the denial of nature follow it. A god who demands
in place of a god who helps, who gives counsel, who is at bottom
merely a name for every happy inspiration of courage and self-reliance
... Morality is no longer a reflection of the conditions which make for
the sound life and development of the people; it is no longer the primary
life-instinct; instead it has become abstract and in opposition to life
a fundamental perversion of the fancy, an "evil eye"
on all things. What is Jewish, what is Christian morality? Chance robbed
of its innocence; unhappiness polluted with the idea of "sin";
well-being represented as a danger, as a "temptation"; a physiological
disorder produced by the canker worm of conscience ...
26.
The concept of god falsified; the concept of morality falsified;
but even here Jewish priest craft did not stop. The whole history of Israel
ceased to be of any value: out with it! These priests accomplished
that miracle of falsification of which a great part of the Bible is the
documentary evidence; with a degree of contempt unparalleled, and in the
face of all tradition and all historical reality, they translated the
past of their people into religious terms, which is to say, they converted
it into an idiotic mechanism of salvation, whereby all offenses against
Jahveh were punished and all devotion to him was rewarded. We would regard
this act of historical falsification as something far more shameful if
familiarity with the ecclesiastical interpretation of history for thousands
of years had not blunted our inclinations for uprightness in historicis.
And the philosophers support the church: the lie about a "moral order
of the world" runs through the whole of philosophy, even the newest.
What is the meaning of a "moral order of the world"? That there
is a thing called the will of God which, once and for all time, determines
what man ought to do and what he ought not to do; that the worth of a
people, or of an individual thereof, is to he measured by the extent to
which they or he obey this will of God; that the destinies of a people
or of an individual are controlled by this will of God, which rewards
or punishes according to the degree of obedience manifested. In
place of all that pitiable lie reality has this to say: the priest, a
parasitical variety of man who can exist only at the cost of every sound
view of life, takes the name of God in vain: he calls that state of human
society in which he himself determines the value of all things "the
kingdom of God"; he calls the means whereby that state of affairs
is attained "the will of God"; with cold-blooded cynicism he
estimates all peoples, all ages and all individuals by the extent of their
subservience or opposition to the power of the priestly order. One observes
him at work: under the hand of the Jewish priesthood the great age of
Israel became an age of decline; the Exile, with its long series of misfortunes,
was transformed into a punishment for that great age during which priests
had not yet come into existence. Out of the powerful and wholly free heroes
of Israel's history they fashioned, according to their changing needs,
either wretched bigots and hypocrites or men entirely "godless."
They reduced every great event to the idiotic formula: "obedient
or disobedient to God." They went a step further: the "will
of God" (in other words some means necessary for preserving the power
of the priests) had to be determined and to this end they had to
have a "revelation." In plain English, a gigantic literary fraud
had to be perpetrated, and "holy scriptures" had to be concocted
and so, with the utmost hierarchical pomp, and days of penance
and much lamentation over the long days of "sin" now ended,
they were duly published. The "will of God," it appears, had
long stood like a rock; the trouble was that mankind had neglected the
"holy scriptures" ... But the "will of God'' had
already been revealed to Moses.... What happened? Simply this: the priest
had formulated, once and for all time and with the strictest meticulousness,
what tithes were to be paid to him, from the largest to the smallest (
not forgetting the most appetizing cuts of meat, for the priest
is a great consumer of beefsteaks); in brief, he let it be known just
what he wanted, what "the will of God" was.... From this time
forward things were so arranged that the priest became indispensable everywhere;
at all the great natural events of life, at birth, at marriage, in sickness,
at death, not to say at the "sacrifice" (that is, at meal-times),
the holy parasite put in his appearance, and proceeded to denaturize it
in his own phrase, to "sanctify" it .... For this should
be noted: that every natural habit, every natural institution (the state,
the administration of justice, marriage, the care of the sick and of the
poor), everything demanded by the life-instinct, in short, everything
that has any value in itself, is reduced to absolute worthlessness and
even made the reverse of valuable by the parasitism of priests (or, if
you chose, by the "moral order of the world"). The fact requires
a sanction a power to grant values becomes necessary, and the only
way it can create such values is by denying nature.... The priest depreciates
and desecrates nature: it is only at this price that he can exist at all.
Disobedience to God, which actually means to the priest, to "the
law," now gets the name of "sin"; the means prescribed
for "reconciliation with God" are, of course, precisely the
means which bring one most effectively under the thumb of the priest;
he alone can "save". Psychologically considered, "sins"
are indispensable to every society organized on an ecclesiastical basis;
they are the only reliable weapons of power; the priest lives upon sins;
it is necessary to him that there be "sinning".... Prime
axiom: "God forgiveth him that repenteth" in plain English,
him that submitteth to the priest.
27.
Christianity sprang from a soil so corrupt that on it everything natural,
every natural value, every reality was opposed by the deepest instincts
of the ruling class it grew up as a sort of war to the death upon
reality, and as such it has never been surpassed. The "holy people,"
who had adopted priestly values and priestly names for all things, and
who, with a terrible logical consistency, had rejected everything of the
earth as "unholy," "worldly," "sinful"
this people put its instinct into a final formula that was logical to
the point of self-annihilation: as Christianity it actually denied even
the last form of reality, the "holy people," the "chosen
people," Jewish reality itself. The phenomenon is of the first order
of importance: the small insurrectionary movement which took the name
of Jesus of Nazareth is simply the Jewish instinct redivivus in
other words, it is the priestly instinct come to such a pass that it can
no longer endure the priest as a fact; it is the discovery of a state
of existence even more fantastic than any before it, of a vision of life
even more unreal than that necessary to an ecclesiastical organization.
Christianity actually denies the church ...
I am unable to determine what was the target of the insurrection said
to have been led (whether rightly or wrongly) by Jesus, if it was not
the Jewish church "church" being here used in exactly
the same sense that the word has today. It was an insurrection against
the "good and just," against the "prophets of Israel,"
against the whole hierarchy of society not against corruption,
but against caste, privilege, order, formalism. It was unbelief in "superior
men," a Nay flung at everything that priests and theologians stood
for. But the hierarchy that was called into question, if only for an instant,
by this movement was the structure of piles which, above everything, was
necessary to the safety of the Jewish people in the midst of the "waters"
it represented their last possibility of survival; it was the final
residuum of their independent political existence; an attack upon it was
an attack upon the most profound national instinct, the most powerful
national will to live, that has ever appeared on earth. This saintly anarchist,
who aroused the people of the abyss, the outcasts and "sinners,"
the Chandala of Judaism, to rise in revolt against the established order
of things and in language which, if the Gospels are to be credited,
would get him sent to Siberia today this man was certainly a political
criminal, at least in so far as it was possible to be one in so absurdly
unpolitical a community. This is what brought him to the cross: the proof
thereof is to be found in the inscription that was put upon the cross.
He died for his own sins there is not the slightest ground for
believing, no matter how often it is asserted, that he died for the sins
of others.
28.
As to whether he himself was conscious of this contradiction whether,
in fact, this was the only contradiction he was cognizant of that
is quite another question. Here, for the first time, I touch upon the
problem of the psychology of the Savior. I confess, to begin with,
that there are very few books which offer me harder reading than the Gospels.
My difficulties are quite different from those which enabled the learned
curiosity of the German mind to achieve one of its most unforgettable
triumphs. It is a long while since I, like all other young scholars, enjoyed
with all the sapient laboriousness of a fastidious philologist the work
of the incomparable Strauss.5At that time I was twenty years old: now
I am too serious for that sort of thing. What do I care for the contradictions
of "tradition"? How can anyone call pious legends "traditions"?
The histories of saints present the most dubious variety of literature
in existence; to examine them by the scientific method, in the entire
absence of corroborative documents, seems to me to condemn the whole inquiry
from the start it is simply learned idling.
29.
What concerns me is the psychological type of the Savior. This type might
be depicted in the Gospels, in however mutilated a form and however much
overladen with extraneous characters that is, in spite of the Gospels;
just as the figure of Francis of Assisi shows itself in his legends in
spite of his legends. It is not a question of mere truthful evidence as
to what he did, what he said and how he actually died; the question is,
whether his type is still conceivable, whether it has been handed down
to us. All the attempts that I know of to read the history of a
"soul" in the Gospels seem to me to reveal only a lamentable
psychological levity. M. Renan, that mountebank in psychologicus, has
contributed the two most unseemly notions to this business of explaining
the type of Jesus: the notion of the genius and that of the hero ("heros").
But if there is anything essentially unevangelical, it is surely the concept
of the hero. What the Gospels make instinctive is precisely the reverse
of all heroic struggle, of all taste for conflict: the very incapacity
for resistance is here converted into something moral: ("resist not
evil !" the most profound sentence in the Gospels, perhaps
the true key to them), to wit, the blessedness of peace, of gentleness,
the inability to be an enemy. What is the meaning of "glad tidings"?
The true life, the life eternal has been found it is not
merely promised, it is here, it is in you; it is the life that lies in
love free from all retreats and exclusions, from all keeping of distances.
Every one is the child of God Jesus claims nothing for himself
alone as the child of God each man is the equal of every other
man... . Imagine making Jesus a hero! And what a tremendous misunderstanding
appears in the word "genius"! Our whole conception of the "spiritual,"
the whole conception of our civilization, could have had no meaning in
the world that Jesus lived in. In the strict sense of the physiologist,
a quite different word ought to be used here. ... We all know that there
is a morbid sensibility of the tactile nerves which causes those suffering
from it to recoil from every touch, and from every effort to grasp a solid
object. Brought to its logical conclusion, such a physiological habitus
becomes an instinctive hatred of all reality, a flight into the "intangible,"
into the "incomprehensible"; a distaste for all formulae, for
all conceptions of time and space, for everything established customs,
institutions, the church ; a feeling of being at home in a world
in which no sort of reality survives, a merely "inner" world,
a "true" world, an "eternal" world... . "The
Kingdom of God is within you"....
30.
The instinctive hatred of reality: the consequence of an extreme susceptibility
to pain and irritation so great that merely to be "touched"
becomes unendurable, for every sensation is too profound.
The instinctive exclusion
of all aversion, all hostility, all bounds and distances in feeling: the
consequence of an extreme susceptibility to pain and irritation
so great that it senses all resistance, all compulsion to resistance,
as unbearable anguish ( that is to say, as harmful, as prohibited
by the instinct of self-preservation), and regards blessedness (joy) as
possible only when it is no longer necessary to offer resistance to anybody
or anything, however evil or dangerous love, as the only, as the
ultimate possibility of life ...
These are the two
physiological realities upon and out of which the doctrine of salvation
has sprung. I call them a sublime super-development of hedonism upon a
thoroughly unsalubrious soil. What stands most closely related to them,
though with a large admixture of Greek vitality and nerve-force, is epicureanism,
the theory of salvation of paganism. Epicurus was a typical decadent:
I was the first to recognize him. The fear of pain, even of infinitely
slight pain the end of this can be nothing save a religion of love....
31.
I have already given my answer to the problem. The prerequisite to it
is the assumption that the type of the Savior has reached us only in a
greatly distorted form. This distortion is very probable: there are many
reasons why a type of that sort should not be handed down in a pure form,
complete and free of additions. The milieu in which this strange figure
moved must have left marks upon him, and more must have been imprinted
by the history, the destiny, of the early Christian communities; the latter
indeed, must have embellished the type retrospectively with characters
which can be understood only as serving the purposes of war and of propaganda.
That strange and sickly world into which the Gospels lead us a
world apparently out of a Russian novel, in which the scum of society,
nervous maladies and "childish" idiocy keep a tryst must,
in any case, have coarsened the type: the first disciples, in particular,
must have been forced to translate an existence visible only in symbols
and incomprehensibilities into their own crudity, in order to understand
it at all in their sight the type could take on reality only after
it had been recast in a familiar mold .... The prophet, the messiah, the
future judge, the teacher of morals, the worker of wonders, John the Baptist
all these merely presented chances to misunderstand it .... Finally,
let us not underrate the proprium of all great, and especially all sectarian
veneration: it tends to erase from the venerated objects all its original
traits and idiosyncrasies, often so painfully strange it does not
even see them. It is greatly to be regretted that no Dostoyevsky lived
in the neighborhood of this most interesting decadent I mean some
one who would have felt the poignant charm of such a compound of the sublime,
the morbid and the childish. In the last analysis, the type, as a type
of the decadence, may actually have been peculiarly complex and contradictory:
such a possibility is not to be lost sight of. Nevertheless, the probabilities
seem to be against it, for in that case tradition would have been particularly
accurate and objective, whereas we have reasons for assuming the contrary.
Meanwhile, there is a contradiction between the peaceful preacher of the
mount, the sea-shore and the fields, who appears like a new Buddha on
a soil very unlike India's, and the aggressive fanatic, the mortal enemy
of theologians and ecclesiastics, who stands glorified by Renan's malice
as "le grand maitre en ironie." I myself haven't any doubt that
the greater part of this venom (and no less of esprit) got itself into
the concept of the Master only as a result of the excited nature of Christian
propaganda: we all know the unscrupulousness of sectarians when they set
out to turn their leader into an apologia for themselves. When the early
Christians had need of an adroit, contentious, pugnacious and maliciously
subtle theologian to tackle other theologians, they created a "god"
that met that need, just as they put into his mouth without hesitation
certain ideas that were necessary to them but that were utterly at odds
with the Gospels "the second coming," "the last
judgment," all sorts of expectations and promises, current at the
time.
32.
I can only repeat that I set myself against all efforts to intrude the
fanatic into the figure of the Savior: the very word imperieux, used by
Renan, is alone enough to annul the type. What the "glad tidings"
tell us is simply that there are no more contradictions; the kingdom of
heaven belongs to children; the faith that is voiced here is no more an
embattled faith it is at hand, it has been from the beginning,
it is a sort of recrudescent childishness of the spirit. The physiologists,
at all events, are familiar with such a delayed and incomplete puberty
in the living organism, the result of degeneration. A faith of this sort
is not furious, it does not denounce, it does not defend itself: it does
not come with "the sword" it does not realize how it
will one day set man against man. It does not manifest itself either by
miracles, or by rewards and promises, or by "scriptures": it
is itself, first and last, its own miracle, its own reward, its own promise,
its own "kingdom of God." This faith does not formulate itself
it simply lives, and so guards itself against formulae. To be sure,
the accident of environment, of educational background gives prominence
to concepts of a certain sort: in primitive Christianity one finds only
concepts of a Judaeo Semitic character ( that of eating
and drinking at the last supper belongs to this category an idea
which, like everything else Jewish, has been badly mauled by the church).
But let us be careful not to see in all this anything more than symbolical
language, semantics6 an opportunity to speak in parables. It is only on
the theory that no work is to be taken literally that this anti-realist
is able to speak at all. Set down among Hindus he would have made use
of the concepts of Sankhya,7and among Chinese he would have employed those
of Lao-tse 8 and in neither case would it have made any difference
to him. With a little freedom in the use of words, one might actually
call Jesus a "free spirit"9 he cares nothing for what
is established: the word killeth,10 a whatever is established killeth.
'The idea of "life" as an experience, as he alone conceives
it, stands opposed to his mind to every sort of word, formula, law, belief
and dogma. He speaks only of inner things: "life" or "truth"
or "light" is his word for the innermost in his sight
everything else, the whole of reality, all nature, even language, has
significance only as sign, as allegory. Here it is of paramount
importance to be led into no error by the temptations lying in Christian,
or rather ecclesiastical prejudices: such a symbolism par excellence stands
outside all religion, all notions of worship, all history, all natural
science, all worldly experience, all knowledge, all politics, all psychology,
all books, all art his "wisdom" is precisely a pure ignorance11
of all such things. He has never heard of culture; he doesn't have to
make war on it he doesn't even deny it ... The same thing may be
said of the state, of the whole bourgeoise social order, of labor, of
war he has no ground for denying" the world," for he
knows nothing of the ecclesiastical concept of "the world" ...
Denial is precisely the thing that is impossible to him. In the
same way he lacks argumentative capacity, and has no belief that an article
of faith, a "truth," may be established by proofs ( his
proofs are inner "lights," subjective sensations of happiness
and self-approval, simple "proofs of power" ). Such a
doctrine cannot contradict: it doesn't know that other doctrines exist,
or can exist, and is wholly incapable of imagining anything opposed to
it ... If anything of the sort is ever encountered, it laments the "blindness"
with sincere sympathy for it alone has "light"
but it does not offer objections ...
33.
In the whole psychology of the "Gospels" the concepts of guilt
and punishment are lacking, and so is that of reward. "Sin,"
which means anything that puts a distance between God and man, is abolished
this is precisely the "glad tidings." Eternal bliss is
not merely promised, nor is it bound up with conditions: it is conceived
as the only reality what remains consists merely of signs useful
in speaking of it.
The results of such
a point of view project themselves into a new way of life, the special
evangelical way of life. It is not a "belief" that marks off
the Christian; he is distinguished by a different mode of action; he acts
differently. He offers no resistance, either by word or in his heart,
to those who stand against him. He draws no distinction between strangers
and countrymen, Jews and Gentiles ("neighbor," of course, means
fellow-believer, Jew). He is angry with no one, and he despises no one.
He neither appeals to the courts of justice nor heeds their mandates ("Swear
not at all") .12 He never under any circumstances divorces his wife,
even when he has proofs of her infidelity. And under all of this
is one principle; all of it arises from one instinct.
The life of the Savior
was simply a carrying out of this way of life and so was his death
... He no longer needed any formula or ritual in his relations with God
not even prayer. He had rejected the whole of the Jewish doctrine
of repentance and atonement; he knewthat it was only by a wayof life that
one could feel one's self "divine," "blessed," "evangelical,"
a "child of God." Not by "repentance, "not by "prayer
and forgiveness" is the way to God: only the Gospel way leads to
God it is itself "God!" What the Gospels abolished
was the Judaism in the concepts of "sin," "forgiveness
of sin," "faith," "salvation through faith"
the whole ecclesiastical dogma of the Jews was denied by the "glad
tidings."
The deep instinct
which prompts the Christian how to live so that he will feel that he is
"in heaven" and is "immortal," despite many reasons
for feeling that he is not "in heaven": this is the only psychological
reality in "salvation." A new way of life, not a new
faith.
34.
If I understand anything at all about this great symbolist, it is this:
that he regarded only subjective realities as realities, as "truths"
that he saw everything else, everything natural, temporal, spatial
and historical, merely as signs, as materials for parables. The concept
of "the Son of God" does not connote a concrete person in history,
an isolated and definite individual, but an "eternal" fact,
a psychological symbol set free from the concept of time. The same thing
is true, and in the highest sense, of the God of this typical symbolist,
of the "kingdom of God," and of the "sonship of God."
Nothing could he more un-Christian than the crude ecclesiastical notions
of God as a person, of a "kingdom of God" that is to come, of
a "kingdom of heaven" beyond, and of a "son of God"
as the second person of the Trinity. All this if I may be forgiven
the phrase is like thrusting one's fist into the eye (and what
an eye!) of the Gospels: a disrespect for symbols amounting to world-historical
cynicism.... But it is nevertheless obvious enough what is meant by the
symbols "Father" and "Son" not, of course,
to every one : the word "Son" expresses entrance into
the feeling that there is a general transformation of all things (beatitude),
and "Father" expresses that feeling itself the sensation
of eternity and of perfection. I am ashamed to remind you of what
the church has made of this symbolism: has it not set an Amphitryon story13
at the threshold of the Christian "faith"? And a dogma of "immaculate
conception" for good measure? ... And thereby it has robbed
conception of its immaculateness
The "kingdom of heaven" is a state of the heart not something
to come "beyond the world" or "after death." The whole
idea of natural death is absent from the Gospels: death is not a bridge,
not a passing; it is absent because it belongs to a quite different, a
merely apparent world, useful only as a symbol. The "hour of death"
is not a Christian idea "hours," time, the physical life
and its crises have no existence for the bearer of "glad tidings."
...
The "kingdom
of God" is not something that men wait for: it had no yesterday and
no day after tomorrow, it is not going to come at a "millennium"
it is an experience of the heart, it is everywhere and it is nowhere
....
35.
This "bearer of glad tidings" died as he lived and taught
not to "save mankind," but to show mankind how to live. It was
a way of life that he bequeathed to man: his demeanor before the judges,
before the officers, before his accusers his demeanor on the cross.
He does not resist; he does not defend his rights; he makes no effort
to ward off the most extreme penalty more, he invites it ... And
he prays, suffers and loves with those, in those, who do him evil ...
Not to defend one's self, not to show anger, not to lay blames ... On
the contrary, to submit even to the Evil One to love him ....
36.
We free spirits we are the first to have the necessary prerequisite
to understanding what nineteen centuries have misunderstood that
instinct and passion for integrity which makes war upon the "holy
lie" even more than upon all other lies ... Mankind was unspeakably
far from our benevolent and cautious neutrality, from that discipline
of the spirit which alone makes possible the solution of such strange
and subtle things: what men always sought, with shameless egoism, was
their own advantage therein; they created the church out of denial of
the Gospels ....
Whoever sought for
signs of an ironical divinity's hand in the great drama of existence would
find no small indication thereof in the stupendous question-mark that
is called Christianity. That mankind should be on its knees before the
very antithesis of what was the origin, the meaning and the law of the
Gospels that in the concept of the "church" the very
things should be pronounced holy that the "bearer of glad tidings"
regards as beneath him and behind him it would be impossible to
surpass this as a grand example of world-historical irony
37.
Our age is proud of its historical sense: how, then, could it delude
itself into believing that the crude fable of the wonder-worker and Savior
constituted the beginnings of Christianity and that everything
spiritual and symbolical in it only came later? Quite to the contrary,
the whole history of Christianity from the death on the cross onward
is the history of a progressively clumsier misunderstanding of
an original symbolism. With every extension of Christianity among larger
and ruder masses, even less capable of grasping the principles that gave
birth to it, the need arose to make it more and more vulgar and barbarous
it absorbed the teachings and rites of all the subterranean cults
of the imperium Romanum, and the absurdities engendered by all sorts of
sickly reasoning. It was the fate of Christianity that its faith had to
become as sickly, as low and as vulgar as the needs were sickly, low and
vulgar to which it had to administer. A sickly barbarism finally lifts
itself to power as the church the church, that incarnation of deadly
hostility to all honesty, to all loftiness of soul, to all discipline
of the spirit, to all spontaneous and kindly humanity. Christian
values noble values: it is only we, we free spirits, who have re-established
this greatest of all antitheses in values! ....
38.
I cannot, at this place, avoid a sigh. There are days when I am
visited by a feeling blacker than the blackest melancholy contempt
of man. Let me leave no doubt as to what I despise, whom I despise: it
is the man of today, the man with whom I am unhappily contemporaneous.
The man of today I am suffocated by his foul breath! ... Toward
the past, like all who understand, I am full of tolerance, which is to
say, generous self-control: with gloomy caution I pass through whole millenniums
of this mad house of a world, call it "Christianity," "Christian
faith" or the "Christian church," as you will I
take care not to hold mankind responsible for its lunacies. But my feeling
changes and breaks out irresistibly the moment I enter modern times, our
times. Our age knows better ... What was formerly merely sickly now becomes
indecent it is indecent to be a Christian today. And here my disgust
begins. I look about me: not a word survives of what was once called
"truth"; we can no longer bear to hear a priest pronounce the
word. Even a man who makes the most modest pretensions to integrity must
know that a theologian, a priest, a pope of today not only errs when he
speaks, but actually lies and that he no longer escapes blame for
his lie through "innocence" or "ignorance." The priest
knows, as every one knows, that there is no longer any "God,"
or any "sinner," or any "Savior" that "free
will" and the "moral order of the world" are lies
: serious reflection, the profound self-conquest of the spirit, allow
no man to pretend that he does not know it ... All the ideas of the church
are now recognized for what they are as the worst counterfeits
in existence, invented to debase nature and all natural values; the priest
himself is seen as he actually is as the most dangerous form of
parasite, as the venomous spider of creation. . - - We know, our conscience
now knows just what the real value of all those sinister inventions
of priest and church has been and what ends they have served, with their
debasement of humanity to a state of self-pollution, the very sight of
which excites loathing, the concepts "the other world,"
"the last judgment," "the immortality of the soul,"
the "soul" itself: they are all merely so many in instruments
of torture, systems of cruelty, whereby the priest becomes master and
remains master... Every one knows this, but nevertheless things remain
as before. What has become of the last trace of decent feeling, of self-respect,
when our statesmen, otherwise an unconventional class of men and thoroughly
anti-Christian in their acts, now call themselves Christians and go to
the communion table? ... A prince at the head of his armies, magnificent
as the expression of the egoism and arrogance of his people and
yet acknowledging, without any shame, that he is a Christian! ... Whom,
then, does Christianity deny? what does it call "the world"?
To be a soldier, to be a judge, to be a patriot; to defend one's self;
to be careful of one's honor; to desire one's own advantage; to be proud
... every act of everyday, every instinct, every valuation that shows
itself in a deed, is now anti-Christian: what a monster of falsehood the
modern man must be to call himself nevertheless, and without shame, a
Christian!
39.
I shall go back a bit, and tell you the authentic history of Christianity.
The very word "Christianity" is a misunderstanding
at bottom there was only one Christian, and he died on the cross. The
"Gospels" died on the cross. What, from that moment onward,
was called the "Gospels" was the very reverse of what he had
lived: "bad tidings," a Dysangelium.14 It is an error amounting
to nonsensicality to see in "faith," and particularly in faith
in salvation through Christ, the distinguishing mark of the Christian:
only the Christian way of life, the life lived by him who died on the
cross, is Christian ... To this day such a life is still possible, and
for certain men even necessary: genuine, primitive Christianity will remain
possible in all ages .... Not faith, but acts; above all, an avoidance
of acts, a different state of being.... States of consciousness, faith
of a sort, the acceptance, for example, of anything as true as
every psychologist knows, the value of these things is perfectly indifferent
and fifth-rate compared to that of the instincts: strictly speaking, the
whole concept of intellectual causality is false. To reduce being a Christian,
the state of Christianity, to an acceptance of truth, to a mere phenomenon
of consciousness, is to formulate the negation of Christianity. In fact,
there are no Christians. The "Christian" he who for two
thousand years has passed as a Christian is simply a psychological
self-delusion. Closely examined, it appears that, despite all his "faith,"
he has been ruled only by his instincts and what instincts!
In all ages for example, in the case of Luther "faith"
has been no more than a cloak, a pretense, a curtain behind which the
instincts have played their game a shrewd blindness to the domination
of certain of the instincts ... I have already called "faith"
the specially Christian form of shrewdness people always talk of
their "faith" and act according to their instincts ... In the
world of ideas of the Christian there is nothing that so much as touches
reality: on the contrary, one recognizes an instinctive hatred of reality
as the motive power, the only motive power at the bottom of Christianity.
What follows therefrom? That even here, in psychologicis, there is a radical
error, which is to say one conditioning fundamentals, which is to say,
one in substance. Take away one idea and put a genuine reality in its
place and the whole of Christianity crumbles to nothingness !
Viewed calmly, this strangest of all phenomena, a religion not only depending
on errors, but inventive and ingenious only in devising injurious errors,
poisonous to life and to the heart this remains a spectacle for
the gods for those gods who are also philosophers, and whom I have
encountered, for example, in the celebrated dialogues at Naxos. At the
moment when their disgust leaves them ( and us!) they will be thankful
for the spectacle afforded by the Christians: perhaps because of this
curious exhibition alone the wretched little planet called the earth deserves
a glance from omnipotence, a show of divine interest. ... Therefore, let
us not underestimate the Christians: the Christian,false to the point
of innocence, is far above the ape in its application to the Christians
a well-known theory of descent becomes a mere piece of politeness ....
40.
The fate of the Gospels was decided by death it hung on
the "cross." ... It was only death, that unexpected and shameful
death; it was only the cross, which was usually reserved for the canaille
only it was only this appalling paradox which brought the disciples
face to face with the real riddle: "Who was it? what was it?"
The feeling of dismay, of profound affront and injury; the suspicion
that such a death might involve a refutation of their cause; the terrible
question, "Why just in this way?" this state of mind
is only too easy to understand. Here everything must be accounted for
as necessary; everything must have a meaning, a reason, the highest sort
of reason; the love of a disciple excludes all chance. Only then did the
chasm of doubt yawn: "Who put him to death? who was his natural enemy?"
this question flashed like a lightning-stroke. Answer: dominant
Judaism, its ruling class. From that moment, one found one's self in revolt
against the established order, and began to understand Jesus as in revolt
against the established order. Until then this militant, this nay-saying,
nay-doing element in his character had been lacking; what is more, he
had appeared to present its opposite. Obviously, the little community
had not understood what was precisely the most important thing of all:
the example offered by this way of dying, the freedom from and superiority
to every feeling of ressentiment a plain indication of how little
he was understood at all! All that Jesus could hope to accomplish by his
death, in itself, was to offer the strongest possible proof, or example,
of his teachings in the most public manner. But his disciples were very
far from forgiving his death though to have done so would have
accorded with the Gospels in the highest degree; and neither were they
prepared to offer themselves, with gentle and serene calmness of heart,
for a similar death .... On the contrary, it was precisely the most unevangelical
of feelings, revenge, that now possessed them. It seemed impossible that
the cause should perish with his death: "recompense" and "judgment"
became necessary ( yet what could be less evangelical than "recompense,"
"punishment," and "sitting in judgment"!) Once
more the popular belief in the coming of a messiah appeared in the foreground;
attention was riveted upon an historical moment: the "kingdom of
God" is to come, with judgment upon his enemies ... But in all this
there was a wholesale misunderstanding: imagine the "kingdom of God"
as a last act, as a mere promise! The Gospels had been, in fact, the incarnation,
the fulfillment, the realization of this "kingdom of God." It
was only now that all the familiar contempt for and bitterness against
Pharisees and theologians began to appear in the character of the Master
was thereby turned into a Pharisee and theologian himself! On the other
hand, the savage veneration of these completely unbalanced souls could
no longer endure the Gospel doctrine, taught by Jesus, of the equal right
of all men to be children of God: their revenge took the form of elevating
Jesus in an extravagant fashion, and thus separating him from themselves:
just as, in earlier times, the Jews, to revenge themselves upon their
enemies, separated themselves from their God, and placed him on a great
height. The One God and the Only Son of God: both were products of ressentiment
....
41.
And from that time onward an absurd problem offered itself: "how
could God allow it!" To which the deranged reason of the little community
formulated an answer that was terrifying in its absurdity: God gave his
son as a sacrifice for the forgiveness of sins. At once there was an end
of the gospels! Sacrifice for sin, and in its most obnoxious and barbarous
form: sacrifice of the innocent for the sins of the guilty! What appalling
paganism ! Jesus himself had done away with the very concept of
"guilt," he denied that there was any gulf fixed between God
and man; he lived this unity between God and man, and that was precisely
his "glad tidings" ... And not as a mere privilege! From
this time forward the type of the Savior was corrupted, bit by bit, by
the doctrine of judgment and of the second coming, the doctrine of death
as a sacrifice, the doctrine of the resurrection, by means of which the
entire concept of "blessedness," the whole and only reality
of the gospels, is juggled away in favor of a state of existence
after death! ... St. Paul, with that rabbinical impudence which shows
itself in all his doings, gave a logical quality to that conception, that
indecent conception, in this way: "If Christ did not rise from the
dead, then all our faith is in vain!" And at once there sprang
from the Gospels the most contemptible of all unfulfillable promises,
the shameless doctrine of personal immortality ... Paul even preached
it as a reward ...
42.
One now begins to see just what it was that came to an end with the death
on the cross: a new and thoroughly original effort to found a Buddhistic
peace movement, and so establish happiness on earth real, not merely
promised. For this remains as I have already pointed out
the essential difference between the two religions of decadence: Buddhism
promises nothing, but actually fulfills; Christianity promises everything,
but fulfills nothing. Hard upon the heels of the "glad tidings"
came the worst imaginable: those of Paul. In Paul is incarnated the very
opposite of the "bearer of glad tidings"; he represents the
genius for hatred, the vision of hatred, the relentless logic of hatred.
What, indeed, has not this dysangelist sacrificed to hatred! Above all,
the Savior: he nailed him to his own cross. The life, the example, the
teaching, the death of Christ, the meaning and the law of the whole gospels
nothing was left of all this after that counterfeiter in hatred
had reduced it to his uses. Surely not reality; surely not historical
truth! ... Once more the priestly instinct of the Jew perpetrated the
same old master crime against history he simply struck out the
yesterday and the day before yesterday of Christianity, and invented his
own history of Christian beginnings. Going further, he treated the
history of Israel to another falsification, so that it became a mere prologue
to his achievement: all the prophets, it now appeared, had referred to
his "Savior." ... Later on the church even falsified the history
of man in order to make it a prologue to Christianity ... The figure of
the Savior, his teaching, his way of life, his death, the meaning of his
death, even the consequences of his death nothing remained untouched,
nothing remained in even remote contact with reality. Paul simply shifted
the center of gravity of that whole life to a place behind this existence
in the lie of the "risen" Jesus. At bottom, he had no
use for the life of the Savior what he needed was the death on
the cross, and something more. To see anything honest in such a man as
Paul, whose home was at the center of the Stoical enlightenment, when
he converts an hallucination into a proof of the resurrection of the Savior,
or even to believe his tale that he suffered from this hallucination himself
this would be a genuine niaiserie in a psychologist. Paul willed
the end; therefore he also willed the means. What he himself didn't
believe was swallowed readily enough by the idiots among whom he spread
his teaching. What he wanted was power; in Paul the priest once
more reached out for power he had use only for such concepts, teachings
and symbols as served the purpose of tyrannizing over the masses and organizing
mobs. What was the only part of Christianity that Mohammed borrowed later
on? Paul's invention, his device for establishing priestly tyranny and
organizing the mob: the belief in the immortality of the soul that
is to say, the doctrine of "judgment".
43.
When the center of gravity of life is placed, not in life itself, but
in "the beyond" in nothingness then one has taken
away its center of gravity altogether. The vast lie of personal immortality
destroys all reason, all natural instinct henceforth, everything
in the instincts that is beneficial, that fosters life and that safeguards
the future is a cause of suspicion. So to live that life no longer has
any meaning: this is now the "meaning" of life .... Why be public-spirited?
Why take any pride in descent and forefathers? Why labor together, trust
one another, or concern one's self about the common welfare, and try to
serve it? ... Merely so many "temptations," so many strayings
from the "straight path." "One thing only is necessary"
... That every man, because he has an "immortal soul," is as
good as every other man; that in an infinite universe of things the "salvation"
of every individual may lay claim to eternal importance; that insignificant
bigots and the three-fourths insane may assume that the laws of nature
are constantly suspended in their behalf it is impossible to lavish
too much contempt upon such a magnification of every sort of selfishness
to infinity, to insolence. And yet Christianity has to thank precisely
this miserable flattery of personal vanity for its triumph it was
thus that it lured all the botched, the dissatisfied, the fallen upon
evil days, the whole refuse and off-scouring of humanity to its side.
The "salvation of the soul" in plain English: "the
world revolves around me." ... The poisonous doctrine, "equal
rights for all," has been propagated as a Christian principle: out
of the secret nooks and crannies of bad instinct Christianity has waged
a deadly war upon all feelings of reverence and distance between man and
man, which is to say, upon the first prerequisite to every step upward,
to every development of civilization out of the ressentiment of
the masses it has forged its chief weapons against us, against everything
noble, joyous and high spirited on earth, against our happiness on earth
... To allow "immortality" to every Peter and Paul was
the greatest, the most vicious outrage upon noble humanity ever perpetrated.
And let us not underestimate the fatal influence that Christianity
has had, even upon politics! Nowadays no one has courage any more for
special rights, for the right of dominion, for feelings of honorable pride
in himself and his equals for the pathos of distance ... Our politics
is sick with this lack of courage! The aristocratic attitude of
mind has been undermined by the lie of the equality of souls; and if belief
in the "privileges of the majority" makes and will continue
to make revolution it is Christianity, let us not doubt, and Christian
valuations, which convert every revolution into a carnival of blood and
crime! Christianity is a revolt of all creatures that creep on the ground
against everything that is lofty: the gospel of the "lowly"
lowers ...
44.
The gospels are invaluable as evidence of the corruption that was
already persistent within the primitive community. That which Paul, with
the cynical logic of a rabbi, later developed to a conclusion was at bottom
merely a process of decay that had begun with the death of the Savior.
These gospels cannot be read too carefully; difficulties lurk behind
every word. I confess I hope it will not be held against me
that it is precisely for this reason that they offer first-rate joy to
a psychologist as the opposite of all merely naive corruption,
as refinement par excellence, as an artistic triumph in psychological
corruption. The gospels, in fact, stand alone. The Bible as a whole is
not to be compared to them. Here we are among Jews: this is the first
thing to be borne in mind if we are not to lose the thread of the matter.
This positive genius for conjuring up a delusion of personal "holiness"
unmatched anywhere else, either in books or by men; this elevation of
fraud in word and attitude to the level of an art all this is not
an accident due to the chance talents of an individual, or to any violation
of nature. The thing responsible is race. The whole of Judaism appears
in Christianity as the art of concocting holy lies, and there, after many
centuries of earnest Jewish training and hard practice of Jewish technic,
the business comes to the stage of mastery. The Christian, that ultima
ratio of lying, is the Jew all over again he is threefold the Jew
... The underlying will to make use only of such concepts, symbols and
attitudes as fit into priestly practice, the instinctive repudiation of
every other mode of thought, and every other method of estimating values
and utilities this is not only tradition, it is inheritance: only
as an inheritance is it able to operate with the force of nature. The
whole of mankind, even the best minds of the best ages (with one exception,
perhaps hardly human ), have permitted themselves to be deceived.
The gospels have been read as a book of innocence ... surely no small
indication of the high skill with which the trick has been done.
Of course, if we could actually see these astounding bigots and bogus
saints, even if only for an instant, the farce would come to an end,
and it is precisely because I cannot read a word of theirs without seeing
their attitudinizing that I have made an end of them .... I simply cannot
endure the way they have of rolling up their eyes. For the majority,
happily enough, books are mere literature. Let us not be led astray:
they say "judge not," and yet they condemn to hell whoever stands
in their way. In letting God sit in judgment they judge themselves; in
glorifying God they glorify themselves; in demanding that every one show
the virtues which they themselves happen to be capable of still
more, which they must have in order to remain on top they assume
the grand air of men struggling for virtue, of men engaging in a war that
virtue may prevail. "We live, we die, we sacrifice ourselves for
the good" ( "the truth," "the light,"
"the kingdom of God"): in point of fact, they simply do what
they cannot help doing. Forced, like hypocrites, to be sneaky, to hide
in corners, to slink along in the shadows, they convert their necessity
into a duty: it is on grounds of duty that they account for their lives
of humility, and that humility becomes merely one more proof of their
piety ... Ah, that humble, chaste, charitable brand of fraud! "Virtue
itself shall bear witness for us." .... One may read the gospels
as books of moral seduction: these petty folks fasten themselves to morality
they know the uses of morality! Morality is the best of all devices
for leading mankind by the nose! The fact is that the conscious
conceit of the chosen here disguises itself as modesty: it is in this
way that they, the "community," the "good and just,"
range themselves, once and for always, on one side, the side of "the
truth" and the rest of mankind, "the world," on
the other ... In that we observe the most fatal sort of megalomania that
the earth has ever seen: little abortions of bigots and liars began to
claim exclusive rights in the concepts of "God," "the truth,"
"the light," "the spirit," "love," "wisdom"
and "life," as if these things were synonyms of themselves and
thereby they sought to fence themselves off from the "world";
little super-Jews, ripe for some sort of madhouse, turned values upside
down in order to meet their notions, just as if the Christian were the
meaning, the salt, the standard and even the last judgment of all the
rest .... The whole disaster was only made possible by the fact that there
already existed in the world a similar megalomania, allied to this one
in race, to wit, the Jewish: once a chasm began to yawn between Jews and
Judaeo-Christians, the latter had no choice but to employ the self-preservative
measures that the Jewish instinct had devised, even against the Jews themselves,
whereas the Jews had employed them only against non-Jews. The Christian
is simply a Jew of the "reformed" confession.
45.
I offer a few examples of the sort of thing these petty people
have got into their heads what they have put into the mouth of
the Master: the unalloyed creed of "beautiful souls."
"And whosoever
shall not receive you, nor hear you, when ye depart thence, shake off
the dust under your feet for a testimony against them. Verily I say unto
you, it shall be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrha in the day of judgment,
than for that city" (Mark vi, 11) How evangelical!
"And whosoever
shall offend one of these little ones that believe in me, it is better
for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he were cast
into the sea" (Mark ix, 42) . How evangelical!
"And if thine
eye offend thee, pluck it out: it is better for thee to enter into the
kingdom of God with one eye, than having two eyes to be cast into hell
fire; Where the worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched." (Mark
ix, 47)15 It is not exactly the eye that is meant.
"Verily I say
unto you, That there be some of them that stand here, which shall not
taste death, till they have seen the kingdom of God come with power."
(Mark ix, 1.) Well lied, lion!16 ....
"Whosoever will
come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow
me. For . . ." (Note of a psychologist. Christian morality is refuted
by its fors: its reasons are against it, this makes it Christian.)
Mark viii, 34.
"Judge not, that
ye be not judged. With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you
again." (Matthew vii, l.)17 What a notion of justice, of a
"just" judge! . . .
"For if ye love
them which love you, what reward have ye? do not even the publicans the
same? And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others?
do not even the publicans so?" (Matthew V, 46.)18 Principle
of "Christian love": it insists upon being well paid in the
end. . . .
"But if ye forgive
not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses."
(Matthew vi, 15.) Very compromising for the said "father."
"But seek ye
first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things
shall be added unto you." (Matthew vi, 33.) All these things:
namely, food, clothing, all the necessities of life. An error, to put
it mildly .... A bit before this God appears as a tailor, at least in
certain cases.
"Rejoice ye in
that day, and leap for joy: for, behold, your reward is great in heaven:
for in the like manner did their fathers unto the prophets." (Luke
vi, 23.) Impudent rabble! It compares itself to the prophets. .
.
"Know ye not
that ye are the temple of God, and that the spirit of God dwelt in you?
If any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy; for the temple
of God is holy, which temple ye are." (Paul, 1 Corinthians iii, 16.)19
For that sort of thing one cannot have enough contempt ....
"Do ye not know
that the saints shall judge the world? and if the world shall be judged
by you, are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters?" (Paul, 1
Corinthians vi, 2.) Unfortunately, not merely the speech of a lunatic.
. .
This frightful impostor then proceeds: "Know ye not that we shall
judge angels? how much more things that pertain to this life?". .
.
"Hath not God
made foolish the wisdom of this world? For after that in the wisdom of
God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness
of preaching to save them that believe .... Not many wise men after the
flesh, not many mighty, not many noble are called: But God hath chosen
the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen
the weak things of the world confound the things which are mighty; and
base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen,
yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are: That
no flesh should glory in his presence." (Paul, 1 Corinthians i, 20ff.)20
In order to understand this passage, a first rate example of the
psychology underlying every Chandala-morality, one should read the first
part of my "Genealogy of Morals": there, for the first time,
the antagonism between a noble morality and a morality born of ressentiment
and impotent vengefulness is exhibited. Paul was the greatest of all apostles
of revenge ....
46.
What follows, then? That one had better put on gloves before reading
the New Testament. The presence of so much filth makes it very advisable.
One would as little choose "early Christians" for companions
as Polish Jews: not that one need seek out an objection to them ... Neither
has a pleasant smell. I have searched the New Testament in vain
for a single sympathetic touch; nothing is there that is free, kindly,
open-hearted or upright. In it humanity does not even make the first step
upward the instinct for cleanliness is lacking .... Only evil instincts
are there, and there is not even the courage of these evil instincts.
It is all cowardice; it is all a shutting of the eyes, a self-deception.
Every other book becomes clean, once one has read the New Testament: for
example, immediately after reading Paul I took up with delight that most
charming and wanton of scoffers, Petronius, of whom one may say what Domenico
Boccaccio wrote of Ceasar Borgia to the Duke of Parma: "e tutto
Iesto" immortally healthy, immortally cheerful and sound ....
These petty bigots make a capital miscalculation. They attack, but everything
they attack is thereby distinguished. Whoever is attacked by an "early
Christian" is surely not befouled ... On the contrary, it is an honor
to have an "early Christian" as an opponent. One cannot read
the New Testament without acquired admiration for whatever it abuses
not to speak of the "wisdom of this world," which an impudent
wind bag tries to dispose of "by the foolishness of preaching."
... Even the scribes and pharisees are benefited by such opposition: they
must certainly have been worth something to have been hated in such an
indecent manner. Hypocrisy as if this were a charge that the "early
Christians" dared to make! After all, they were the privileged,
and that was enough: the hatred of the Chandala needed no other excuse.
The "early Christian" and also, I fear, the "last
Christian," whom I may perhaps live to see is a rebel against
all privilege by profound instinct he lives and makes war forever
for "equal rights." ... Strictly speaking, he has no alternative.
When a man proposes to represent, in his own person, the "chosen
of God" or to be a "temple of God," or a "judge
of the angels" then every other criterion, whether based upon
honesty, upon intellect, upon manliness and pride, or upon beauty and
freedom of the heart, becomes simply "worldly" evil in
itself ... Moral: every word that comes from the lips of an "early
Christian" is a lie, and his every act is instinctively dishonest
all his values, all his aims are noxious, but whoever he hates,
whatever he hates, has real value ... The Christian, and particularly
the Christian priest, is thus a criterion of values.
Must I add
that, in the whole New Testament, there appears but a solitary figure
worthy of honor? Pilate, the Roman viceroy. To regard a Jewish imbroglio
seriously that was quite beyond him. One Jew more or less
what did it matter? ... The noble scorn of a Roman, before whom the word
"truth" was shamelessly mishandled, enriched the New Testament
with the only saying that has any value and that is at once its
criticism and its destruction: "What is truth?" ...
47.
The thing that sets us apart is not that we are unable to find
God, either in history, or in nature, or behind nature but that
we regard what has been honored as God, not as "divine," but
as pitiable, as absurd, as injurious; not as a mere error, but as a crime
against life ... We deny that God is God ... If any one were to show us
this Christian God, we'd be still less inclined to believe in him.
In a formula: deus, qualem Paulus creavit, dei negatio. Such a
religion as Christianity, which does not touch reality at a single point
and which goes to pieces the moment reality asserts its rights at any
point, must be inevitably the deadly enemy of the "wisdom of this
world," which is to say, of science and it will give the name
of good to whatever means serve to poison, calumniate and cry down all
intellectual discipline, all lucidity and strictness in matters of intellectual
conscience, and all noble coolness and freedom of the mind. "Faith,"
as an imperative, vetoes science in praxi, lying at any price ....
Paul well knew that lying that "faith" was necessary;
later on the church borrowed the fact from Paul. The God that Paul
invented for himself, a God who "reduced to absurdity" "the
wisdom of this world" (especially the two great enemies of superstition,
philology and medicine), is in truth only an indication of Paul's resolute
determination to accomplish that very thing himself: to give one's own
will the name of God, thora that is essentially Jewish. Paul wants
to dispose of the "wisdom of this world": his enemies are the
good philologians and physicians of the Alexandrine school on them
he makes his war. As a matter of fact no man can be a philologian or a
physician without being also Antichrist. That is to say, as a philologian
a man sees behind the "holy books," and as a physician he sees
behind the physiological degeneration of the typical Christian. The physician
says "incurable"; the philologian says "fraud." ...
48.
Has any one ever clearly understood the celebrated story at the
beginning of the Bible of God's mortal terror of science? ... No
one, in fact, has understood it. This priest-book par excellence opens,
as is fitting, with the great inner difficulty of the priest: he faces
only one great danger; ergo, "God" faces only one great danger.
The old God, wholly "spirit," wholly the high-priest, wholly
perfect, is promenading his garden: he is bored and trying to kill time.
Against boredom even gods struggle in vain.21What does he do? He creates
man man is entertaining ... But then he notices that man is also
bored. God's pity for the only form of distress that invades all paradises
knows no bounds: so he forthwith creates other animals. God's first mistake:
to man these other animals were not entertaining he sought dominion
over them; he did not want to be an "animal" himself.
So God created woman. In the act he brought boredom to an end and
also many other things! Woman was the second mistake of God. "Woman,
at bottom, is a serpent, Heva" every priest knows that; "from
woman comes every evil in the world" every priest knows that,
too. Ergo, she is also to blame for science ... It was through woman that
man learned to taste of the tree of knowledge. What happened? The
old God was seized by mortal terror. Man himself had been his greatest
blunder; he had created a rival to himself; science makes men godlike
it is all up with priests and gods when man becomes scientific!
Moral: science is the forbidden per se; it alone is forbidden.
Science is the first of sins, the germ of all sins, the original sin.
This is all there is of morality. "Thou shalt not know"
the rest follows from that. God's mortal terror, however,
did not hinder him from being shrewd. How is one to protect one's self
against science? For a long while this was the capital problem. Answer:
Out of paradise with man! Happiness, leisure, foster thought and
all thoughts are bad thoughts! Man must not think. And so
the priest invents distress, death, the mortal dangers of childbirth,
all sorts of misery, old age, decrepitude, above all, sickness
nothing but devices for making war on science! The troubles of man don't
allow him to think ... Nevertheless how terrible! , the edifice
of knowledge begins to tower aloft, invading heaven, shadowing the gods
what is to be done? The old God invents war; he separates
the peoples; he makes men destroy one another ( the priests have
always had need of war....). War among other things, a great disturber
of science ! Incredible! Knowledge, deliverance from the priests,
prospers in spite of war. So the old God comes to his final resolution:
"Man has become scientific there is no help for it: he must
be drowned!" ....
49.
I have been understood. At the opening of the Bible there is the
whole psychology of the priest. The priest knows of only one great
danger: that is science the sound comprehension of cause and effect.
But science flourishes, on the whole, only under favorable conditions
a man must have time, he must have an overflowing intellect, in
order to "know." ... "Therefore, man must be made unhappy,"
this has been, in all ages, the logic of the priest. It
is easy to see just what, by this logic, was the first thing to come into
the world : "sin" .... The concept of guilt and punishment,
the whole "moral order of the world," was set up against science
against the deliverance of man from priests .... Man must not look
outward; he must look inward. He must not look at things shrewdly and
cautiously, to learn about them; he must not look at all; he must suffer
... And he must suffer so much that he is always in need of the priest.
Away with physicians! What is needed is a Savior. The concept
of guilt and punishment, including the doctrines of "grace,"
of "salvation," of "forgiveness" lies through
and through, and absolutely without psychological reality were
devised to destroy man's sense of causality: they are an attack upon the
concept of cause and effect ! And not an attack with the fist,
with the knife, with honesty in hate and love! On the contrary, one inspired
by the most cowardly, the most crafty, the most ignoble of instincts!
An attack of priests! An attack of parasites! The vampirism of pale, subterranean
leeches! ... When the natural consequences of an act are no longer "natural,"
but are regarded as produced by the ghostly creations of superstition
by "God," by "spirits," by "souls"
and reckoned as merely "moral" consequences, as rewards,
as punishments, as hints, as lessons, then the whole ground-work of knowledge
is destroyed then the greatest of crimes against humanity has been
perpetrated. I repeat that sin, man's self-desecration par excellence,
was invented in order to make science, culture, and every elevation and
ennobling of man impossible; the priest rules through the invention of
sin.
50.
In this place I can't permit
myself to omit a psychology of "belief," of the "believer,"
for the special benefit of 'believers." If there remain any today
who do not yet know how indecent it is to be "believing"
or how much a sign of decadence, of a broken will to live then
they will know it well enough tomorrow. My voice reaches even the deaf.
It appears, unless I have been incorrectly informed, that there
prevails among Christians a sort of criterion of truth that is called
"proof by power." Faith makes blessed: therefore it is
true." It might be objected right here that blessedness is
not demonstrated, it is merely promised: it hangs upon "faith"
as a condition one shall be blessed because one believes .... But
what of the thing that the priest promises to the believer, the wholly
transcendental "beyond" how is that to be demonstrated?
The "proof by power," thus assumed, is actually no more
at bottom than a belief that the effects which faith promises will not
fail to appear. In a formula: "I believe that faith makes for blessedness
therefore, it is true." ... But this is as far as we
may go. This "therefore" would be absurdum itself as a criterion
of truth. But let us admit, for the sake of politeness, that blessedness
by faith may be demonstrated ( not merely hoped for, and not merely
promised by the suspicious lips of a priest): even so, could blessedness
in a technical term, pleasure ever be a proof of truth?
So little is this true that it is almost a proof against truth when sensations
of pleasure influence the answer to the question "What is true?"
or, at all events, it is enough to make that "truth" highly
suspicious. The proof by "pleasure" is a proof of "pleasure
nothing more; why in the world should it be assumed that true judgments
give more pleasure than false ones, and that, in conformity to some pre-established
harmony, they necessarily bring agreeable feelings in their train?
The experience of all disciplined and profound minds teaches the contrary.
Man has had to fight for every atom of the truth, and has had to pay for
it almost everything that the heart, that human love, that human trust
cling to. Greatness of soul is needed for this business: the service of
truth is the hardest of all services. What, then, is the meaning
of integrity in things intellectual? It means that a man must be severe
with his own heart, that he must scorn "beautiful feelings,"
and that he makes every Yea and Nay a matter of conscience! Faith
makes blessed: therefore, it lies....
51.
The fact that faith, under certain circumstances, may work for blessedness,
but that this blessedness produced by an idée fixe by no means
makes the idea itself true, and the fact that faith actually moves no
mountains, but instead raises them up where there were none before: all
this is made sufficiently clear by a walk through a lunatic asylum. Not,
of course, to a priest: for his instincts prompt him to the lie that sickness
is not sickness and lunatic asylums not lunatic asylums.
Christianity finds
sickness necessary, just as the Greek spirit had need of a superabundance
of health the actual ulterior purpose of the whole system of salvation
of the church is to make people ill. And the church itself doesn't
it set up a Catholic lunatic asylum as the ultimate ideal? The
whole earth as a madhouse? The sort of religious man that the church
wants is a typical decadent; the moment at which a religious crisis dominates
a people is always marked by epidemics of nervous disorder; the "inner
world" of the religious man is so much like the "inner world"
of the overstrung and exhausted that it is difficult to distinguish between
them; the "highest" states of mind, held up before mankind by
Christianity as of supreme worth, are actually epileptoid in form
the church has granted the name of holy only to lunatics or to gigantic
frauds in majorem dei honorem.... Once I ventured to designate the
whole Christian system of training22in penance and salvation (now best
studied in England) as a method of producing a folie circulaire upon a
soil already prepared for it, which is to say, a soil thoroughly unhealthy.
Not every one may be a Christian: one is not "converted" to
Christianity one must first be sick enough for it .... We others,
who have the courage for health and likewise for contempt, we may
well despise a religion that teaches misunderstanding of the body! that
refuses to rid itself of the superstition about the soul! that makes a
"virtue" of insufficient nourishment! that combats health as
a sort of enemy, devil, temptation! that persuades itself that it is possible
to carry about a "perfect soul" in a cadaver of a body, and
that, to this end, had to devise for itself a new concept of "perfection,"
a pale, sickly, idiotically ecstatic state of existence, so-called "holiness"
a holiness that is itself merely a series of symptoms of an impoverished,
enervated and incurably disordered body! ... The Christian movement, as
a European movement, was from the start no more than a general uprising
of all sorts of outcast and refuse elements ( who now, under cover
of Christianity, aspire to power) It does not represent the decay
of a race; it represents, on the contrary, a conglomeration of decadence
products from all directions, crowding together and seeking one another
out. It was not, as has been thought, the corruption of antiquity, of
noble antiquity, which made Christianity possible; one cannot too sharply
challenge the learned imbecility which today maintains that theory. At
the time when the sick and rotten Chandala classes in the whole imperium
were Christianized, the contrary type, the nobility, reached its finest
and ripest development. The majority became master; democracy, with its
Christian instincts, triumphed ... Christianity was not "national,"
it was not based on race it appealed to all the varieties of men
disinherited by life, it had its allies everywhere. Christianity has the
rancor of the sick at its very core the instinct against the healthy,
against health. Everything that is well constituted, proud, gallant
and, above all, beautiful gives offense to its ears and eyes. Again I
remind you of Paul's priceless saying: "And God hath chosen the weak
things of the world, the foolish things of the world, the base things
of the world, and things which are despised":23 this was the formula;
in hoc signo the decadence triumphed. God on the cross is
man always to miss the frightful inner significance of this symbol?
Everything that suffers, everything that hangs on the cross, is divine
.... We all hang on the cross, consequently we are divine .... We alone
are divine .... Christianity was thus a victory: a nobler attitude of
mind was destroyed by it Christianity remains to this day the greatest
misfortune of humanity.
52.
Christianity also stands in opposition to all intellectual well-being,
sick reasoning is the only sort that it can use as Christian reasoning;
it takes the side of everything that is idiotic; it pronounces a curse
upon "intellect," upon the superbia of the healthy intellect.
Since sickness is inherent in Christianity, it follows that the typically
Christian state of "faith" must be a form of sickness too, and
that all straight, straightforward and scientific paths to knowledge must
be banned by the church as forbidden ways. Doubt is thus a sin from the
start.... The complete lack of psychological cleanliness in the priest
revealed by a glance at him is a phenomenon resulting from
decadence, one may observe in hysterical women and in rachitic
children how regularly the falsification of instincts, delight in lying
for the mere sake of lying, and incapacity for looking straight and walking
straight are symptoms of decadence. "Faith" means the will to
avoid knowing what is true. The pietist, the priest of either sex, is
a fraud because he is sick: his instinct demands that the truth shall
never be allowed its rights on any point. "Whatever makes for illness
is good; whatever issues from abundance, from super-abundance, from power,
is evil": so argues the believer. The impulse to lie it is
by this that I recognize every foreordained theologian. Another
characteristic of the theologian is his unfitness for philology. What
I here mean by philology is, in a general sense, the art of reading with
profit the capacity for absorbing facts without interpreting them
falsely, and without losing caution, patience and subtlety in the effort
to understand them. Philology as ephexis24 in interpretation: whether
one be dealing with books, with newspaper reports, with the most fateful
events or with weather statistics not to mention the "salvation
of the soul." ... The way in which a theologian, whether in Berlin
or in Rome, is ready to explain, say, a "passage of Scripture,"
or an experience, or a victory by the national army, by turning upon it
the high illumination of the Psalms of David, is always so daring that
it is enough to make a philologian run up a wall. But what shall he do
when pietists and other such cows from Suabia25 use the "finger of
God" to convert their miserably commonplace and huggermugger existence
into a miracle of "grace," a "providence" and an "experience
of salvation"? The most modest exercise of the intellect, not to
say of decency, should certainly be enough to convince these interpreters
of the perfect childishness and unworthiness of such a misuse of the divine
digital dexterity. However small our piety, if we ever encountered a god
who always cured us of a cold in the head at just the right time, or got
us into our carriage at the very instant heavy rain began to fall, he
would seem so absurd a god that he'd have to be abolished even if he existed.
God as a domestic servant, as a letter carrier, as an almanac man
at bottom, he is' a mere name for the stupidest sort of chance
.... "Divine Providence," which every third man in "educated
Germany" still believes in, is so strong an argument against God
that it would be impossible to think of a stronger. And in any case it
is an argument against Germans! ...
53.
It is so little true that martyrs offer any support to the truth
of a cause that I am inclined to deny that any martyr has ever had anything
to do with the truth at all. In the very tone in which a martyr flings
what he fancies to be true at the head of the world there appears so low
a grade of intellectual honesty and such insensibility to the problem
of "truth," that it is never necessary to refute him. Truth
is not something that one man has and another man has not: at best, only
peasants, or peasant apostles like Luther, can think of truth in any such
way. One may rest assured that the greater the degree of a man's intellectual
conscience the greater will be his modesty, his discretion, on this point.
To know in five cases, and to refuse, with delicacy, to know anything
further ... "Truth," as the word is understood by every prophet,
every sectarian, every free-thinker, every Socialist and every churchman,
is simply a complete proof that not even a beginning has been made in
the intellectual discipline and self-control that are necessary to the
unearthing of even the smallest truth. The deaths of the martyrs,
it may be said in passing, have been misfortunes of history: they have
misled ... The conclusion that all idiots, women and plebeians come to,
that there must be something in a cause for which any one goes to his
death (or which, as under primitive Christianity, sets off epidemics of
death-seeking) this conclusion has been an unspeakable drag upon
the testing of facts, upon the whole spirit of inquiry and investigation.
The martyrs have damaged the truth.... Even to this day the crude fact
of persecution is enough to give an honorable name to the most empty sort
of sectarianism. But why? Is the worth of a cause altered by the
fact that some one had laid down his life for it? An error that
becomes honorable is simply an error that has acquired one seductive charm
the more: do you suppose, Messrs. Theologians, that we shall give you
the chance to be martyred for your lies? One best disposes of a
cause by respectfully putting it on ice that is also the best way
to dispose of theologians .... This was precisely the world-historical
stupidity of all the persecutors: that they gave the appearance of honor
to the cause they opposed that they made it a present of the fascination
of martyrdom .... Women are still on their knees before an error because
they have been told that some one died on the cross for it. Is the cross,
then, an argument? But about all these things there is one, and
one only, who has said what has been needed for thousands of years
Zarathustra.
They made signs in
blood along the way that they went, and their folly taught them that the
truth is proved by blood. But blood is the worst of all testimonies to
the truth; blood poisoneth even the purest teaching and turneth it into
madness and hatred in the heart. And when one goeth through fire
for his teaching what doth that prove? Verily, it is more when
one's teaching cometh out of one's own burning!26
54.
Do not let yourself be deceived: great intellects are skeptical. Zarathustra
is a skeptic. The strength, the freedom which proceed from intellectual
power, from a superabundance of intellectualpower, manifest themselves
as skepticism. Men of fixed convictions do not count when it comes to
determining what is fundamental in values and lack of values. Men of convictions
are prisoners. They do not see far enough, they do not see what is below
them: whereas a man who would talk to any purpose about value and non-value
must be able to see five hundred convictions beneath him and behind
him.... A mind that aspires to great things, and that wills the means
thereto, is necessarily skeptical. Freedom from any sort of conviction
belongs to strength, and to an independent point of view ... That grand
passion which is at once the foundation and the power of a skeptic's existence,
and is both more enlightened and more despotic than he is himself, drafts
the whole of his intellect into its service; it makes him unscrupulous;
it gives him courage to employ unholy means; under certain circumstances
it does not begrudge him even convictions. Conviction as a means: one
may achieve a good deal by means of a conviction. A grand passion makes
use of and uses up convictions; it does not yield to them it knows
itself to be sovereign. On the contrary, the need of faith, of
some thing unconditioned by yea or nay, of Carlylism, if I may be allowed
the word, is a need of weakness. The man of faith, the "believer"
of any sort, is necessarily a dependent man such a man cannot posit
himself as a goal, nor can he find goals within himself. The "believer"
does not belong to himself; he can only be a means to an end; he must
be used up; he needs some one to use him up. His instinct gives the highest
honors to an ethic of self-effacement; he is prompted to embrace it by
everything: his prudence, his experience, his vanity. Every sort of faith
is in itself an evidence of self-effacement, of self-estrangement. .
. When one reflects how necessary it is to the great majority that there
be regulations to restrain them from without and hold them fast, and to
what extent control, or, in a higher sense, slavery, is the one and only
condition which makes for the well-being of the weak-willed man, and especially
woman, then one at once understands conviction and "faith."
To the man with convictions they are his backbone. To avoid seeing many
things, to be impartial about nothing, to be a party man through and through,
to estimate all values strictly and infallibly these are conditions
necessary to the existence of such a man. But by the same token they are
antagonists of the truthful man of the truth.... The believer is
not free to answer the question, "true" or "not true,"
according to the dictates of his own conscience: integrity on this point
would work his instant downfall. The pathological limitations of his vision
turn the man of convictions into a fanatic Savonarola, Luther,
Rousseau, Robespierre, Saint-Simon these types stand in opposition
to the strong, emancipated spirit. But the grandiose attitudes of these
sick intellects, these intellectual epileptics, are of influence upon
the great masses fanatics are picturesque, and mankind prefers
observing poses to listening to reasons....
55.
One step further in the psychology of conviction, of "faith."
It is now a good while since I first proposed for consideration the question
whether convictions are not even more dangerous enemies to truth than
lies. ("Human, All-Too-Human," I, aphorism 483.)27 This time
I desire to put the question definitely: is there any actual difference
between a lie and a conviction? All the world believes that there
is; but what is not believed by all the world! Every conviction
has its history, its primitive forms, its stage of tentativeness and error:
it becomes a conviction only after having been, for a long time, not one,
and then, for an even longer time, hardly one. What if falsehood be also
one of these embryonic forms of conviction? Sometimes all that
is needed is a change in persons: what was a lie in the father becomes
a conviction in the son. I call it lying to refuse to see what
one sees, or to refuse to see it as it is: whether the lie be uttered
before witnesses or not before witnesses is of no consequence. The most
common sort of lie is that by which a man deceives himself: the deception
of others is a relatively rare offense. Now, this will not to see
what one sees, this will not to see it as it is, is almost the first requisite
for all who belong to a party of whatever sort: the party man becomes
inevitably a liar. For example, the German historians are convinced that
Rome was synonymous with despotism and that the Germanic peoples brought
the spirit of liberty into the world: what is the difference between this
conviction and a lie? Is it to be wondered at that all partisans, including
the German historians, instinctively roll the fine phrases of morality
upon their tongues that morality almost owes its very survival
to the fact that the party man of every sort has need of it every moment?
"This is our conviction: we publish it to the whole world;
we live and die for it let us respect all who have convictions!"
I have actually heard such sentiments from the mouths of anti-Semites.
On the contrary, gentlemen! An anti-Semite surely does not become more
respectable because he lies on principle ... The priests, who have more
finesse in such matters, and who well understand the objection that lies
against the notion of a conviction, which is to say, of a falsehood that
becomes a matter of principle because it serves a purpose, have borrowed
from the Jews the shrewd device of sneaking in the concepts, "God,"
"the will of God" and "the revelation of God" at this
place. Kant, too, with his categorical imperative, was on the same road:
this was his practical reason.28 There are questions regarding the truth
or untruth of which it is not for man to decide; all the capital questions,
all the capital problems of valuation, are beyond human reason .... To
know the limits of reason that alone is genuine. philosophy. Why
did God make a revelation to man? Would God have done anything superfluous?
Man could not find out for himself what was good and what was evil, so
God taught him His will. Moral: the priest does not lie the question,
"true" or "untrue," has nothing to do with such things
as the priest discusses; it is impossible to lie about these things. In
order to lie here it would be necessary to know what is true. But this
is more than man can know; therefore, the priest is simply the mouth-piece
of God. Such a priestly syllogism is by no means merely Jewish
and Christian; the right to lie and the shrewd dodge of "revelation"
belong to the general priestly type to the priest of the decadence
as well as to the priest of pagan times ( Pagans are all those
who say yes to life, and to whom "God" is a word signifying
acquiescence in all things) The "law," the "will
of God," the "holy book," and "inspiration"
all these things are merely words for the conditions under which the priest
comes to power and with which he maintains his power, these concepts
are to be found at the bottom of all priestly organizations, and of all
priestly or priestly-philosophical schemes of governments. The "holy
lie" common alike to Confucius, to the Code of Manu, to Mohammed
and to the Christian church is not even wanting in Plato. "Truth
is here": this means, no matter where it is heard, the priest lies
....
56.
In the last analysis it comes to this: what is the end of lying?
The fact that, in Christianity, "holy" ends are not visible
is my objection to the means it employs. Only bad ends appear: the poisoning,
the calumniation, the denial of life, the despising of the body, the degradation
and self-contamination of man by the concept of sin therefore,
its means are also bad. I have a contrary feeling when I read the
Code of Manu, an incomparably more intellectual and superior work, which
it would be a sin against the intelligence to so much as name in the same
breath with the Bible. It is easy to see why: there is a genuine philosophy
behind it, in it, not merely an evil-smelling mess of Jewish rabbinism
and superstition, it gives even the most fastidious psychologist
something to sink his teeth into. And, not to forget what is most important,
it differs fundamentally from every kind of Bible: by means of it the
nobles, the philosophers and the warriors keep the whip-hand over the
majority; it is full of noble valuations, it shows a feeling of perfection,
an acceptance of life, and triumphant feeling toward self and life
the sun shines upon the whole book. All the things on which Christianity
vents its fathomless vulgarity for example, procreation, women
and marriage are here handled earnestly, with reverence and with
love and confidence. How can any one really put into the hands of children
and ladies a book which contains such vile things as this: "to avoid
fornication, let every man have his own wife, and let every woman have
her own husband; ... it is better to marry than to burn"?29 And is
it possible to be a Christian so long as the origin of man is Christianized,
which is to say, befouled, by the doctrine of the immaculata conceptio?
... I know of no book in which so many delicate and kindly things are
said of women as in the Code of Manu; these old grey-beards and saints
have a way of being gallant to women that it would be impossible, perhaps,
to surpass. "The mouth of a woman," it says in one place, "the
breasts of a maiden, the prayer of a child and the smoke of sacrifice
are always pure." In another place: "there is nothing purer
than the light of the sun, the shadow cast by a cow, air, water, fire
and the breath of a maiden." Finally, in still another place
perhaps this is also a holy lie : "all the orifices of the
body above the navel are pure, and all below are impure. Only in the maiden
is the whole body pure."
57.
One catches the unholiness of Christian means in flagranti by the simple
process of putting the ends sought by Christianity beside the ends sought
by the Code of Manu by putting these enormously antithetical ends
under a strong light. The critic of Christianity cannot evade the necessity
of making Christianity contemptible. A book of laws such as the
Code of Manu has the same origin as every other good law-book: it epitomizes
the experience, the sagacity and the ethical experimentation of long centuries;
it brings things to a conclusion; it no longer creates. The prerequisite
to a codification of this sort is recognition of the fact that the means
which establish the authority of a slowly and painfully attained truth
are fundamentally different from those which one would make use of to
prove it. A law-book never recites the utility, the grounds, the casuistical
antecedents of a law: for if it did so it would lose the imperative tone,
the "thou shalt," on which obedience is based. The problem lies
exactly here. At a certain point in the evolution of a people,
the class within it of the greatest insight, which is to say, the greatest
hindsight and foresight, declares that the series of experiences determining
how all shall live or can live has come to an end. The object
now is to reap as rich and as complete a harvest as possible from the
days of experiment and hard experience. In consequence, the thing that
is to be avoided above everything is further experimentation the
continuation of the state in which values are fluent, and are tested,
chosen and criticized ad infinitum. Against this a double wall is set
up: on the one hand, revelation, which is the assumption that the reasons
lying behind the laws are not of human origin, that they were not sought
out and found by a slow process and after many errors, but that they are
of divine ancestry, and came into being complete, perfect, without a history,
as a free gift, a miracle ... ; and on the other hand, tradition,
which is the assumption that the law has stood unchanged from time immemorial,
and that it is impious and a crime against one's forefathers to bring
it into question. The authority of the law is thus grounded on the thesis:
God gave it, and the fathers lived it. The higher motive of such
procedure lies in the design to distract consciousness, step by step,
from its concern with notions of right living (that is to say, those that
have been proved to be right by wide and carefully considered experience),
so that instinct attains to a perfect automatism a primary necessity
to every sort of mastery, to every sort of perfection in the art of life.
To draw up such a law-book as Manu's means to lay before a people the
possibility of future mastery, of attainable perfection it permits
them to aspire to the highest reaches of the art of life. To that end
the thing must be made unconscious: that is the aim of every holy lie.
The order of castes, the highest, the dominating law, is merely
the ratification of an order of nature, of a natural law of the first
rank, over which no arbitrary fiat, no "modern idea," can exert
any influence. In every healthy society there are three physiological
types, gravitating toward differentiation but mutually conditioning one
another, and each of these has its own hygiene, its own sphere of work,
its own special mastery and feeling of perfection. It is not Manu but
nature that sets off in one class those who are chiefly intellectual,
in another those who are marked by muscular strength and temperament,
and in a third those who are distinguished in neither one way or the other,
but show only mediocrity the last-named represents the great majority,
and the first two the select. The superior caste I call it the
fewest has, as the most perfect, the privileges of the few: it
stands for happiness, for beauty, for everything good upon earth. Only
the most intellectual of men have any right to beauty, to the beautiful;
only in them can goodness escape being weakness. Pulchrum est paucorum
hominum:30 goodness is a privilege. Nothing could be more unbecoming to
them than uncouth manners or a pessimistic look, or an eye that sees ugliness
or indignation against the general aspect of things. Indignation
is the privilege of the Chandala; so is pessimism. "The world is
perfect" so prompts the instinct of the intellectual, the
instinct of the man who says yes to life. "Imperfection, what ever
is inferior to us, distance, the pathos of distance, even the Chandala
themselves are parts of this perfection. "The most intelligent men,
like the strongest, find their happiness where others would find only
disaster: in the labyrinth, in being hard with themselves and with others,
in effort; their delight is in self-mastery; in them asceticism becomes
second nature, a necessity, an instinct. They regard a difficult task
as a privilege; it is to them a recreation to play with burdens that would
crush all others .... Knowledge a form of asceticism. They
are the most honorable kind of men: but that does not prevent them being
the most cheerful and most amiable. They rule, not because they want to,
but because they are; they are not at liberty to play second. The
second caste: to this belong the guardians of the law, the keepers of
order and security, the more noble warriors, above all, the king as the
highest form of warrior, judge and preserver of the law. The second in
rank constitute the executive arm of the intellectuals, the next to them
in rank, taking from them all that is rough in the business of ruling
their followers, their right hand, their most apt disciples. In
all this, I repeat, there is nothing arbitrary, nothing "made up";
whatever is to the contrary is made up by it nature is brought
to shame ... The order of castes, the order of rank, simply formulates
the supreme law of life itself; the separation of the three types is necessary
to the maintenance of society, and to the evolution of higher types, and
the highest types the inequality of rights is essential to the
existence of any rights at all. A right is a privilege. Every one
enjoys the privileges that accord with his state of existence. Let us
not underestimate the privileges of the mediocre. Life is always harder
as one mounts the heights the cold increases, responsibility increases.
A high civilization is a pyramid: it can stand only on a broad base; its
primary prerequisite is a strong and soundly consolidated mediocrity.
The handicrafts, commerce, agriculture, science, the greater part of art,
in brief, the whole range of occupational activities, are compatible only
with mediocre ability and aspiration; such callings would be out of place
for exceptional men; the instincts which belong to them stand as much
opposed to aristocracy as to anarchism. The fact that a man is publicly
useful, that he is a wheel, a function, is evidence ofa natural predisposition;
it is not society, but the only sort of happiness that the majority are
capable of, that makes them intelligent machines. To the mediocre mediocrity
is a form of happiness; they have a natural instinct for mastering one
thing, for specialization. It would be altogether unworthy of a profound
intellect to see anything objectionable in mediocrity in itself. It is,
in fact, the first prerequisite to the appearance of the exceptional:
it is a necessary condition to a high degree of civilization. When the
exceptional man handles the mediocre man with more delicate fingers than
he applies to himself or to his equals, this is not merely kindness of
heart it is simply his duty .... Whom do I hate most heartily among
the rabbles of today? The rabble of Socialists, the apostles to the Chandala,
who undermine the workingman's instincts, his pleasure, his feeling of
contentment with his petty existence who make him envious and teach
him revenge .... Wrong never lies in unequal rights; it lies in the assertion
of "equal" rights .... What is bad? But I have already answered:
all that proceeds from weakness, from envy, from revenge. The anarchist
and the Christian have the same ancestry ....
58.
In point of fact, the end for which one lies makes a great difference:
whether one preserves thereby or destroys. There is a perfect likeness
between Christian and anarchist: their object, their instinct, points
only toward destruction. One need only turn to history for a proof of
this: there it appears with appalling distinctness. We have just studied
a code of religious legislation whose object it was to convert the conditions
which cause life to flourish into an "eternal" social organization,
Christianity found its mission in putting an end to such an organization,
because life flourished under it. There the benefits that reason had produced
during long ages of experiment and insecurity were applied to the most
remote uses, and an effort was made to bring in a harvest that should
be as large, as rich and as complete as possible; here, on the contrary,
the harvest is blighted overnight .... That which stood there aere perennis,
the imperium Romanum, the most magnificent form of organization under
difficult conditions that has ever been achieved, and compared to which
everything before it and after it appears as patchwork, bungling, dilettantism
those holy anarchists made it a matter of "piety" to
destroy "the world," which is to say, the imperium Romanum,
so that in the end not a stone stood upon another and even Germans
and other such louts were able to become its masters .... The Christian
and the anarchist: both are decadents; both are incapable of any act that
is not disintegrating, poisonous, degenerating, blood-sucking; both have
an instinct of mortal hatred of everything that stands up, and is great,
and has durability, and promises life a future .... Christianity was the
vampire of the imperium Romanum, overnight it destroyed the vast
achievement of the Romans: the conquest of the soil for a great culture
that could await its time. Can it be that this fact is not yet understood?
The imperium Romanum that we know, and that the history of the Roman provinces
teaches us to know better and better, this most admirable of all
works of art in the grand manner was merely the beginning, and the structure
to follow was not to prove its worth for thousands of years. To this day,
nothing on a like scale sub specie aeterni has been brought into being,
or even dreamed of! This organization was strong enough to withstand
bad emperors: the accident of personality has nothing to do with such
things the first principle of all genuinely great architecture.
But it was not strong enough to stand up against the corruptest of all
forms of corruption against Christians .... These stealthy worms,
which under the cover of night, mist and duplicity, crept upon every individual,
sucking him dry of all earnest interest in real things, of all instinct
for reality this cowardly, effeminate and sugar-coated gang gradually
alienated all "souls," step by step, from that colossal edifice,
turning against it all the meritorious, manly and noble natures that had
found in the cause of Rome their own cause, their own serious purpose,
their own pride. The sneakishness of hypocrisy, the secrecy of the conventicle,
concepts as black as hell, such as the sacrifice of the innocent, the
unio mystica in the drinking of blood, above all, the slowly rekindled
fire of revenge, of Chandala revenge all that sort of thing became
master of Rome: the same kind of religion which, in a pre-existent form,
Epicurus had combated. One has but to read Lucretius to know what Epicurus
made war upon not paganism, but "Christianity," which
is to say, the corruption of souls by means of the concepts of guilt,
punishment and immortality. He combated the subterranean cults,
the whole of latent Christianity to deny immortality was already
a form of genuine salvation. Epicurus had triumphed, and every
respectable intellect in Rome was Epicurean when Paul appeared
... Paul, the Chandala hatred of Rome, of "the world," in the
flesh and inspired by genius the Jew, the eternal Jew par excellence....
What he saw was how, with the aid of the small sectarian Christian movement
that stood apart from Judaism, a "world conflagration" might
be kindled; how, with the symbol of "God on the cross," all
secret seditions, all the fruits of anarchistic intrigues in the empire,
might be amalgamated into one immense power. "Salvation is of the
Jews." Christianity is the formula for exceeding and summing
up the subterranean cults of all varieties, that of Osiris, that of the
Great Mother, that of Mithras, for instance: in his discernment of this
fact the genius of Paul showed itself. His instinct was here so sure that,
with reckless violence to the truth, he put the ideas which lent fascination
to every sort of Chandala religion into the mouth of the "Savior"
as his own inventions, and not only into the mouth he made out
of him something that even a priest of Mithras could understand ... This
was his revelation at Damascus: he grasped the fact that he needed the
belief in immortality in order to rob "the world" of its value,
that the concept of "hell" would master Rome that the
notion of a "beyond" is the death of life. Nihilist and Christian:
they rhyme in German, and they do more than rhyme.
59.
The whole labor of the ancient world gone for naught: I have no word to
describe the feelings that such an enormity arouses in me. And,
considering the fact that its labor was merely preparatory, that with
adamantine self-consciousness it laid only the foundations for a work
to go on for thousands of years, the whole meaning of antiquity disappears!
. . To what end the Greeks? to what end the Romans? All the prerequisites
to a learned culture, all the methods of science, were already there;
man had already perfected the great and incomparable art of reading profitably
that first necessity to the tradition of culture, the unity of
the sciences; the natural sciences, in alliance with mathematics and mechanics,
were on the right road, the sense of fact, the last and more valuable
of all the senses, had its schools, and its traditions were already centuries
old! Is all this properly understood? Every essential to the beginning
of the work was ready; and the most essential, it cannot be said
too often, are methods, and also the most difficult to develop, and the
longest opposed by habit and laziness. What we have to day reconquered,
with unspeakable self-discipline, for ourselves for certain bad
instincts, certain Christian instincts, still lurk in our bodies
that is to say, the keen eye for reality, the cautious hand, patience
and seriousness in the smallest things, the whole integrity of knowledge
all these things were already there, and had been there for two
thousand years! More, there was also a refined and excellent tact and
taste! Not as mere brain-drilling! Not as "German" culture,
with its loutish manners! But as body, as bearing, as instinct
in short, as reality ... All gone for naught! Overnight it became merely
a memory ! The Greeks! The Romans! Instinctive nobility, taste,
methodical inquiry, genius for organization and administration, faith
in and the will to secure the future of man, a great yes to everything
entering into the imperiumRomanum and palpable to all the senses, a grand
style that was beyond mere art, but had become reality, truth, life .
. All overwhelmed in a night, but not by a convulsion of nature!
Not trampled to death by Teutons and others of heavy hoof! But brought
to shame by crafty, sneaking, invisible, anemic vampires! Not conquered,
only sucked dry! ... Hidden vengefulness, petty envy, became master!
Everything wretched, intrinsically ailing, and invaded by bad feelings,
the whole ghetto-world of the soul, was at once on top! One needs
but read any of the Christian agitators, for example, St. Augustine, in
order to realize, in order to smell, what filthy fellows came to the top.
It would be an error, however, to assume that there was any lack of understanding
in the leaders of the Christian movement: ah, but they were clever,
clever to the point of holiness, these fathers of the church! What they
lacked was something quite different. Nature neglected perhaps
forgot to give them even the most modest endowment of respectable,
of upright, of cleanly instincts. . . Between ourselves, they are not
even men .... If Islam despises Christianity, it has a thousandfold right
to do so: Islam at least assumes that it is dealing with men ....
60.
Christianity destroyed for us the whole harvest of ancient civilization,
and later it also destroyed for us the whole harvest of Mohammedan civilization.
The wonderful culture of the Moors in Spain, which was fundamentally nearer
to us and appealed more to our senses and tastes than that of Rome and
Greece, was trampled down ( I do not say by what sort of feet
) Why? Because it had to thank noble and manly instincts for its origin
because it said yes to life, even to the rare and refined luxuriousness
of Moorish life! ... The crusaders later made war on something before
which it would have been more fitting for them to have groveled in the
dust a civilization beside which even that of our nineteenth century
seems very poor and very "senile." What they wanted,
of course, was booty: the orient was rich. ... Let us put aside our prejudices!
The crusades were a higher form of piracy, nothing more! The German nobility,
which is fundamentally a Viking nobility, was in its element there: the
church knew only too well how the German nobility was to be won ... The
German noble, always the "Swiss guard" of the church, always
in the service of every bad instinct of the church but well paid
... Consider the fact that it is precisely the aid of German swords and
German blood and valor that has enabled the church to carry through its
war to the death upon everything noble on earth! At this point a host
of painful questions suggest themselves. The German nobility stands outside
the history of the higher civilization: the reason is obvious ... Christianity,
alcohol the two great means of corruption .... Intrinsically there
should be no more choice between Islam and Christianity than there is
between an Arab and a Jew. The decision is already reached; nobody remains
at liberty to choose here. Either a man is a Chandala or he is not ....
"War to the knife with Rome! Peace and friendship with Islam!":
this was the feeling, this was the act, of that great free spirit, that
genius among German emperors, Frederick II. What! must a German first
be a genius, a free spirit, before he can feel decently? I can't make
out how a German could ever feel Christian....
61.
Here it becomes necessary to call up a memory that must be a hundred times
more painful to Germans. The Germans have destroyed for Europe the last
great harvest of civilization that Europe was ever to reap the
Renaissance. Is it understood at last, will it ever be understood, what
the Renaissance was? The transvaluation of Christian values, an
attempt with all available means, all instincts and all the resources
of genius to bring about a triumph of the opposite values, the more noble
values .... This has been the one great war of the past; there has never
been a more critical question than that of the Renaissance it is
my question too ; there has never been a form of attack more fundamental,
more direct, or more violently delivered by a whole front upon the center
of the enemy! To attack at the critical place, at the very seat of Christianity,
and there enthrone the more noble values that is to say, to insinuate
them into the instincts, into the most fundamental needs and appetites
of those sitting there ... I see before me the possibility of a perfectly
heavenly enchantment and spectacle : it seems to me to scintillate
with all the vibrations of a fine and delicate beauty, and within it there
is an art so divine, so infernally divine, that one might search in vain
for thousands of years for another such possibility; I see a spectacle
so rich in significance and at the same time so wonderfully full of paradox
that it should arouse all the gods on Olympus to immortal laughter
Caesar Borgia as pope! ... Am I understood? ... Well then, that would
have been the sort of triumph that I alone am longing for today
: by it Christianity would have been swept away! What happened?
A German monk, Luther, came to Rome. This monk, with all the vengeful
instincts of an unsuccessful priest in him, raised a rebellion against
the Renaissance in Rome .... Instead of grasping, with profound thanksgiving,
the miracle that had taken place: the conquest of Christianity at its
capital instead of this, his hatred was stimulated by the spectacle.
A religious man thinks only of himself. Luther saw only the depravity
of the papacy at the very moment when the opposite was becoming apparent:
the old corruption, the peccatum originale, Christianity itself, no longer
occupied the papal chair! Instead there was life! Instead there was the
triumph of life! Instead there was a great yea to all lofty, beautiful
and daring things! ... And Luther restored the church: he attacked
it .... The Renaissance an event without meaning, a great futility
! Ah, these Germans, what they have not cost us! Futility
that has always been the work of the Germans. The Reformation;
Liebnitz; Kant and so-called German philosophy; the war of "liberation";
the empire -- every time a futile substitute for something that once existed,
for something irrecoverable ... These Germans, I confess, are my enemies:
I despise all their uncleanliness in concept and valuation, their cowardice
before every honest yea and nay. For nearly a thousand years they have
tangled and confused everything their fingers have touched; they have
on their conscience all the half-way measures, all the three-eighths-way
measures, that Europe is sick of, they also have on their conscience
the uncleanest variety of Christianity that exists, and the most incurable
and indestructible Protestantism .... If mankind never manages
to get rid of Christianity the Germans will be to blame ....
62.
With this I come to a conclusion and pronounce my judgment. I condemn
Christianity; I bring against the Christian church the most terrible of
all the accusations that an accuser has ever had in his mouth. It is,
to me, the greatest of all imaginable corruptions; it seeks to work the
ultimate corruption, the worst possible corruption. The Christian church
has left nothing untouched by its depravity; it has turned every value
into worthlessness, and every truth into a lie, and every integrity into
baseness of soul. Let any one dare to speak to me of its "humanitarian"
blessings! Its deepest necessities range it against any effort to abolish
distress; it lives by distress; it creates distress to make itself immortal
.... For example, the worm of sin: it was the church that first enriched
mankind with this misery! The "equality of souls before God"
this fraud, this pretext for the rancunes of all the base-minded
this explosive concept, ending in revolution, the modern idea,
and the notion of overthrowing the whole social order this is Christian
dynamite .... The "humanitarian" blessings of Christianity forsooth!
To breed out of humanitas a self-contradiction, an art of self-pollution,
a will to lie at any price, an aversion and contempt for all good and
honest instincts! All this, to me, is the "humanitarianism"
of Christianity! Parasitism as the only practice of the church;
with its anaemic and "holy" ideals, sucking all the blood, all
the love, all the hope out of life; the beyond as the will to deny all
reality; the cross as the distinguishing mark of the most subterranean
conspiracy ever heard of, against health, beauty, well-being, intellect,
kindness of soul against life itself ....
This eternal
accusation against Christianity I shall write upon all walls, wherever
walls are to be found I have letters that even the blind will be
able to see .... I call Christianity the one great curse, the one great
intrinsic depravity, the one great instinct of revenge, for which no means
are venomous enough, or secret, subterranean and small enough,
I call it the one immortal blemish upon the human race ....
And mankind reckons
time from the dies nefastus when this fatality befell from the
first day of Christianity! Why not rather from its last?
From today? The transvaluation of all values! ...
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