June 15

There are 2 entries for this date: Jean Meslier Mark Twain (Quote)

    Mark Twain (Quote)

    Mark Twain (Quote)

    ā€œMan is the only religious animal. He is the only animal that has the True Religion ā€” several of them. He is the only animal that loves his neighbor as himself and cuts his throat, if his theology isn’t straight. He has made a graveyard of the globe in trying his honest best to smooth his brother’s path to happiness and heaven.ā€

    ā€” Twain (1835-1910), "The Damned Human Race," from "Letters from the Earth" (1909)
    Photo by Everett Historical, Shutterstock.com
    © Freedom From Religion Foundation. All rights reserved.

    Jean Meslier

    Jean Meslier

    On this date in 1664, Jean Meslier was born in Mazerny in the Ardennes, France. Meslier became the village priest in EtrĆ©pigny, where he served for 40 years. He is noted for leaving, on his deathbed in 1729, a several-hundred page manuscript titled Testament:Ā Memoir of the Thoughts and Sentiments of Jean Meslier, which denounced Christianity and all religion, calling it the “opium of the people.” He was an early exponent of communal values and an advocate of radical equality. Though the manuscript was suppressed by the church, it was circulated illicitly.

    Meslier is the originator of the quote, often attributed to Denis Diderot, that the world will be free when “the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest.” French philosopher Michel Onfray said of Meslier in his Atheist Manifesto (2005), “For the first time (but how long will it take us to acknowledge this?) in the history of ideas, a philosopher had dedicated a whole book to the question of atheism. … The history of true atheism had begun.”

    Voltaire published an “extract” of Meslier’s magnum opus in 1761, selectively edited to make it seem as if Meslier was a deist like Voltaire instead of the atheist he proclaimed himself to be. The memoir was not published in its entirety until 1864. As of this writing, no full translation is known to have been completed. Despite its incompleteness, Meslier’s work was influential in the French Enlightenment and widely read by 19th-century American freethinkers. (D. 1729)

    “How I suffered when I had to preach to you those pious lies that I detest in my heart. What remorse your credulity caused me! A thousand times I was on the point of breaking out publicly and opening your eyes, but a fear stronger than myself held me back, and forced me to keep silence until my death.”

    ā€” "Testament:Ā Memoir of the Thoughts and Sentiments of Jean Meslier"
    Compiled by Eleanor Wroblewski
    © Freedom From Religion Foundation. All rights reserved.

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