Chronicles (A Magazine of American
Culture), April 1996
Monotheism vs. Polytheism
by
Alain de Benoist
Introduction and translation by Tomislav Sunic
Can we still conceive of the revival of pagan sensibility in
an age so profoundly saturated by Judeo-Christian monotheism and so
ardently adhering to the tenets of liberal democracy? In popular
parlance the very word "paganism" may incite some to derision and
laughter. Who, after all, wants to be associated with witches and
witchcraft, with sorcery and black magic? Worshiping animals or
plants, or chanting hymns to Wotan or Zeus, in an epoch of cable
television and "smart weapons," does not augur well for serious
intellectual and academic inquiry. Yet, before we begin to heap
scorn on paganism, we should pause for a moment. Paganism is not
just witches and witches' brew; paganism also means a mix of highly
speculative theories and philosophies. Paganism is Seneca and
Tacitus; it is an artistic and cultural movement that swept over
Italy under the banner of the Renaissance. Paganism also means
Friedrich Nietzsche, Martin Heidegger, Charles Darwin, and a host of
other thinkers associated with the Western cultural heritage. Two
thousand years of Judeo-Christianity have not obscured the fact that
pagan thought has not yet disappeared, even though it has often been
blurred, stifled, or persecuted by monotheistic religions and their
secular offshoots. Undoubtedly, many would admit that in the realm
of ethics all men and women of the world are the children of
Abraham. Indeed, even the bolder ones who somewhat self-righteously
claim to have rejected the Christian or Jewish theologies, and who
claim to have replaced them with "secular humanism," frequently
ignore that their self-styled secular beliefs are firmly grounded in
Judeo-Christian ethics. Abraham and Moses may be dethroned today,
but their moral edicts and spiritual ordinances are much alive. The
global and disenchanted world, accompanied by the litany of human
rights, ecumenical society, and the rule of law—are these not
principles that can be traced directly to the Judeo-Christian
messianism that resurfaces today in its secular version under the
elegant garb of modern "progressive" ideologies?
And yet, we should not forget that the Western world did not
begin with the birth of Christ. Neither did the religions of ancient
Europeans see the first light of the day with Moses—in the desert.
Nor did our much-vaunted democracy begin with the period of
Enlightenment or with the proclamation of American independence.
Democracy and independence—all of this existed in ancient Greece,
albeit in its own unique social and religious context. Our
Greco-Roman ancestors, our predecessors who roamed the woods of
central and northern Europe, also believed in honor, justice, and
virtue, although they attached to these notions a radically
different meaning. Attempting to judge, therefore, ancient European
political and religious manifestations through the lens of our
ethnocentric and reductionist glasses could mean losing sight of how
much we have departed from our ancient heritage, as well as
forgetting that modern intellectual epistemology and methodology
have been greatly influenced by the Bible. Just because we profess
historical optimism - or believe in the progress of the modem
"therapeutic state"- does not necessarily mean that our society is
indeed the "best of all worlds." Who knows, with the death of
communism, with the exhaustion of liberalism, with the visible
depletion of the congregations in churches and synagogues, we may be
witnessing the dawn of neopaganism, a new blossoming of old
cultures, a return to the roots that are directly tied to our
ancient European precursors. Who can dispute the fact that Athens
was the homeland of Europeans before Jerusalem became their
frequently painful edifice?
Great lamenting is heard from all quarters of our
disenchanted and barren world today. Gods seem to have departed, as
Nietzsche predicted a century ago, ideologies arc dead, and
liberalism hardly seems capable of providing man with enduring
spiritual support. Maybe the time has come to search for other
paradigms? Perhaps the moment is ripe, as Alain dc Benoist would
argue, to envision another cultural and spiritual revolution—a
revolution that might well embody our pre-Christian European pagan
heritage?
Tomislav Sunic
Nietzsche well understood the meaning of "Athens against
Jerusalem." Referring to ancient paganism, which he called "the
greatest utility of polytheism," he wrote in The Joyful
Wisdom:
There was then only one norm, the man and even people
believed that it had this one and ultimate norm. But, above himself,
and outside of himself, in a distant over-world a person could see a
multitude of norms: the one God was not the denial or blasphemy
of the other Gods! It was here that the right of individuals was
first respected. The inventing of Gods, heroes, and supermen of all
kinds, as well as co-ordinate men and undermen - dwarfs, fairies,
centaurs, satyrs, demons, devils—was the inestimable preliminary to
the justification of the selfishness and sovereignty of the
individual: the freedom which was granted to one God in respect to
other Gods, was at last given to the individual himself in respect
to laws, customs, and neighbors. Monotheism, on the contrary, the
rigid consequence of one normal human being—consequently, the
belief in a normal God, beside whom there are only false spurious
Gods—has perhaps been the greatest danger of mankind in the
past.
Jehovah is not only a "jealous" god, but he can also show
hatred: "Yet, I loved Jacob, and I hated Esau" (Malachi 1:3). lie
recommends hatred to all those w ho call out his name: "Do not I
hate them, O Lord, that hate thee? and am not I grieved with those
that rise up against thee? 1 hate them with perfect hatred: I count
them mine enemies" (Psalm 139: 21-22). "Surely thou wilt slay the
wicked, 0 God" (Psalm 139:19). Jeremiah cries out: "Render unto them
a recompense, O Lord, according to the work of their hands. . . .
Persecute and destroy them in anger from under the heavens of the
Lord" (Lamentations 3:64-66). The book of Jeremiah is a long series
of maledictions and curses hurled against peoples and nations. His
contemplation of future punishments fills him with gloomy delight.
"Let them be confounded that persecute me, but let not me be
confounded: ... bring upon them the day of evil, and destroy them
with double destruction" (Lam. 17:18). "Therefore deliver up their
children to the famine, and pour out their blood by the force of the
sword; and let their wives be bereaved of their children, and
be widows; and let their men be put to death" (Lam.
18:21).
Further. Jehovah promises the Hebrews that he will support
them in their war efforts: "When the Lord thy God shall cut off the
nations from before thee, whither thou goest to possess them, and
thou succeedest them, and dwellest in their land" (Deuteronomy
12:29). "But of the cities of these people, which the Lord thy God
doth give thee for an inheritance, thou shalt save alive nothing
that breatheth" (Deut. 20:16). Jehovah himself gave an example of a
genocide by provoking the Deluge against the humanity that sinned
against him. While he resided with the Philistine King Achish, David
also practiced genocide (1 Samuel 27:9). Moses organized the
extermination of the Midian people (Numbers 31:7). Joshua massacred
the inhabitants of Hazor and Anakim. "And Joshua at that time turned
back, and took Hazor, and smote the king thereof with the sword: for
Hazor beforetime was the head of all those kingdoms. And they smote
all the souls that were therein with the edge of the sword, utterly
destroying them: there was not any left to breathe: and he burnt
Hazor with fire" (Joshua 11:10-11, 20-21). The messianic king
extolled by Solomon was also known for his reign of terror: "May he
purify Jerusalem for all gentiles who trample on it miserably, may
he exterminate by his wisdom, justice the sinners of this country...
May he destroy the impious nations with the words from his mouth."
Hatred against pagans is also visible in the books of Esther,
Judith, etc.
"No ancient religion, except that of the Hebrew people has
known such a degree of intolerance," says Emile Gillabert in
Moise et le phénomène judéo-chrétien (1976). Renan had
written in similar terms: "The intolerance of the Semitic peoples is
the inevitable consequence of their monotheism. The Indo-European
peoples, before they converted to Semitic ideas, had never
considered their religion an absolute truth. Rather, they conceived
of it as a heritage of the family, or the caste, and in this way
they remained foreign to intolerance and proselytism. This is why we
find among these peoples the liberty of thought, the spirit of
inquiry and individual research." Of course, one should not look at
this problem in a black and white manner, or for instance compare
and contrast one platitude to another platitude. There have always
been, at all times, and everywhere, massacres and exterminations.
But it would be difficult to find in the pagan texts, be they of
sacred or profane nature, the equivalent of what one so frequently
encounters in the Bible: the idea that these massacres could be
morally justified, that they could be deliberately authorized
and ordained by one god, "as Moses the servant of the Lord
commanded" (Joshua 11:12). Thus, for the perpetrators of these
crimes, good consciousness continues to rule, not despite
these massacres, but entirely for the sake of the
massacres.
A
lot of ink has been spilled over this tradition of intolerance.
Particularly contentious are the words of Jesus as recorded by Luke:
"If any man come to me, and hate not his father, and mother, and
wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life
also, he cannot be my disciple" (Luke 14:26). Some claim to perceive
in the word "hate" a certain form of Hebraism; apparently, these
words suggest that Jesus had to be absolutely preferred to all other
human beings. Some claim to see in it traces of Gnostic
contamination that suggest renouncement. despoliation of goods, and
the refusal of procreation. In this context, the obligation to
"hate" one's parents is to be viewed as a corollary of not wishing
to have children.
These interpretations remain pure conjecture. What is certain
is that Christian intolerance began to manifest itself very early.
In the course of history this intolerance was directed against
"infidels" as well as against pagans, Jews, and heretics. It
accompanied the extermination of all aspects of ancient culture—the
murder of Julius of Hypati, the interdiction of pagan cults, the
destruction of temples and statues, the suppression of the Olympic
Games, and the arson, at the instigation of the town's Bishop
Theophilus of Sarapeum, of Alexandria in A.D. 389, whose immense
library of 700,000 volumes had been collected by the Ptolemeys. Then
came the forced conversions, the extinction of positive science,
persecution, and pyres. Ammianus Marcellinus said: "The wild beasts
are less hostile to people than Christians are among themselves."
Sulpicius Severus wrote: "Now everything has gone astray as the
result of discords among bishops. Everywhere, one can see hatred,
favours, fear, jealousy, ambition, debauchery, avarice, arrogance,
sloth: there is general corruption everywhere."
The Jewish people were the first to suffer from Christian
monotheism. The causes of Christian anti-Semitism, which found its
first "justification" in the Gospel of John (probably written under
the influence of Gnosticism, and to which many studies have been
devoted) lie in the proximity of the Jewish and Christian
faiths. As Jacques Solé notes: "One persecutes only his neighbors."
Only a "small gap" separates Jews from Christians, but as Nietzsche
says, "the smallest gap is also the least bridgeable." During the
first centuries of the Christian era anti-Semitism grew out of the
Christian claim to be the successor of Judaism, and bestowing on it
its "truthful" meaning. For Christians, "salvation is of the Jews"
(John 4:22), but it is only Christianity that can be verus
Israel. Hence the expression perfidi, applied to the Jews
until recently by the Church in prayers during Holy Friday—an
expression meaning "without faith," and whose meaning is different
from the modem word "perfidious."
The
origins of modern totalitarianism are not difficult to trace. In a
secular form, they are tied to the same radical strains of
intolerance whose religious causes we have just
examined.
Saint Paul was the first to formulate this distinction. With
his replacement of the Law by Grace, Paul distinguished between the
"Israel of God" and the "Israel after the flesh" (1 Corinthians
10:18), which also led him to oppose circumcision: "For he is not a
Jew, which is one outwardly; neither is that circumcision, which is
outward in the flesh: But he is a Jew, which is one inwardly; and
circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the
letter; whose praise is not of men, but of God" (Romans 2:28-29).
Conclusion: “For we are the circumcision" (Philippians 3:3). This
argument has, from the Christian point of view, a certain coherence.
As Claude 'Tretmontant says, if the last of the nabis from
Israel, the rabbi Yohushua of Nazareth, that is to say Jesus, is
really a Messiah, then the vocation of Israel to become the "beacon
of nations" must be fully accomplished, and the universalism implied
in this vocation must be put entirely into practice. Just as the Law
that has come to an end with Christ (in a double sense of the
word) is no longer necessary, so has the distinction between Israel
and other nations become futile as well: "There is neither Jew nor
Greek" (Galatians 3:28). Consequently, universal Christianity must
become verus Israel.
This process, which originated in the Pauline reform, has had
a double consequence. On the one hand, it has resulted in the
persecution of Jews who, by virtue of their "genealogical"
proximity, are represented as the worst enemies of Christianity.
They are the adversaries who refuse to "convert," who refuse to
recognize Christianity as the "true Israel." As Shmuel Trigano
notes, "by projecting itself as the new Israel, the West has
given to Judaism a de facto jurisdiction, albeit not the right to be
itself." This means that the West can become "Israelite" to the
extent that it denies Jews the right to be Israelites. Henceforth,
the very notion of "Judeo-Christianity" can be defined as a double
incarceration. It imprisons "the Christian West," which by its own
deliberate act has subordinated itself to an alien "jurisdiction,"
and which by doing so denies this very same jurisdiction to its
legitimate (Jewish) owners. Furthermore, it imprisons the Jews who,
by virtue of a religion different from their own, are now
undeservedly caught in the would-be place of their "accomplishment"
by means of a religion which is not their own. Trigano further adds:
"If Judeo-Christianity laid the foundations of the West, then the
very place of Israel is also the West." Subsequently, the requisites
of "Westernization" must also become the requisites of assimilation
and "normalization," and the denial of identity. "The crisis of
Jewish normality is the crisis of the westernization of Judaism.
Therefore, to exit from the West means for the Jews to turn their
back to their 'normality,' that is, to open themselves up to their
otherness." This seems to be why Jewish communities today
criticize the "Western model," only after they first adopt their own
specific history of a semi-amnesiac and semi-critical
attitude.
In view of this, Christian anti-Semitism can be rightly
described as neurosis. As Jean Blot writes, it is because of
its "predisposition toward alienation" that the West is incapable of
"fulfilling itself or rediscovering itself." And from this source
arises anti-Semitic neurosis. "Anti-semitism allows the anti-Semite
to project onto the Jew his own neuroses. He calls him a stranger,
because he himself is a stranger, a crook, a powerful man, a
parvenu; he calls him a Jew, because he himself is this Jew in the
deepest depth of his soul, always on the move, permanently
alienated, a stranger to his own religion and to God who incarnates
him." By replacing his original myth with the myth of biblical
monotheism, the West has turned Hebraism into its own superego. As
an inevitable consequence, the West had to turn itself against the
Jewish people by accusing them of not pursuing the "conversion" in
terms of the "logical" evolution proceeding from Sinai to
Christianity. In addition, the West also accused the Jewish people
of attempting, in an apparent "deicide," to obstruct this
evolution.
Many, even today, assume that if Jews were to renounce their
distinct identity, "the Jewish problem" would disappear. At best,
this is a naive proposition, and at worst, it masks a conscious or
unconscious form of anti-Semitism. Furthermore, this proposition,
which is inherent in the racism of assimilation and the denial of
identity, represents the reverse side of the racism of
exclusion and persecution. In the West, notes Shmuel Trigano. when
the Jews were not persecuted, they "were recognized as Jews only on
the condition that they first ceased to be Jews." Put another way,
in order to be accepted, they had to reject
themselves; they had to renounce their own Other in order to be
reduced to the Same. In another type of racism, Jews are
accepted but denied; in the first, they are accepted but are not
recognized. The Church ordered Jews to choose between exclusion (or
physical death) or self-denial (spiritual and historical death).
Only through conversion could they become “Christians, as
others.”
The French Revolution emancipated Jews as individuals, but it
condemned them to disappear as a "nation"; in this sense, they were
forced to become "citizens as others." Marxism, too, attempted to
ensure the "liberation" of the Jewish people by imposing on them a
class division, from which their dispersion inevitably
resulted.
The origins of modem totalitarianism are not difficult to
trace. In a secular form, they are tied to the same radical strains
of intolerance whose religious causes we have just examined. The
organization of totalitarianism is patterned after the
organization of the Christian Church, and in a similar manner
totalitarianisms exploit the themes of the "masses"—the themes
inherent in contemporary mass democracy. This secularization of the
system has, in fact, rendered totalitarianism more
dangerous—independently of the fact that religious intolerance often
triggers, in return, an equally destructive revolutionary
intolerance. "Totalitarianism," writes Gilbert Durand, "is further
strengthened, in so far as the powers of monotheist theology (which
at least left the game of transcendence intact) have been
transferred to a human institution, to the Grand
Inquisitor."
It is a serious error to assume that totalitarianism
manifests its real character only when it employs crushing coercion.
Historical experience has demonstrated—and continues to
demonstrate—that there can exist a "clean" totalitarianism, which,
in a "soft" manner, yields the same consequences as the classic
kinds of totalitarianism. "Happy robots" of 1984 or of Brave New
World have no more enviable conditions than prisoners of the camps.
In essence, totalitarianism did not originate with Saint-Just,
Stalin, Hegel, or Fichte. Rather, as Michel Maffesoli says,
totalitarianism emerges "when a subtle form of plural, polytheistic,
and contradictory totality, that is inherent in organic
interdependency" is superseded by a monotheistic one.
Totalitarianism grows out of a desire to establish social and human
unity by reducing the diversity of individuals and peoples to a
single model. In this sense, he argues, it is legitimate to speak of
a "polytheist social arena, referring to multiple and complementary
gods" versus a "monotheistic political arena founded on the illusion
of unity." Once the polytheism of values "disappears, we face
totalitarianism." Pagan thought, on the other hand, which
fundamentally remains attached to rootedness and to the
place, and which is a preferential center of the
crystallization of human identity, rejects all religious and
philosophical forms of universalism.
Alain de
Benoist is editor of Nouvelle Ecole, an academic journal
published in Paris. Tomislav Sunic serves in the Croatian Ministry
of Foreign Affairs.
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