P946:8, 85:4.1
Mankind has worshiped earth, air, water, and fire. The primitive races venerated
springs and worshiped rivers. Even now in Mongolia there flourishes an influential
river cult. Baptism became a religious ceremonial in Babylon, and the Greeks
practiced the annual ritual bath. It was easy for the ancients to imagine
that the spirits dwelt in the bubbling springs,
gushing fountains, flowing
rivers, and raging
torrents. Moving waters vividly impressed these simple
minds with beliefs of spirit animation and supernatural power. Sometimes a
drowning man would be refused succor for fear of offending some river god.
P947:1, 85:4.2
Many things and numerous events have functioned as religious stimuli to different
peoples in different ages. A rainbow is yet worshiped by many of the hill
tribes of India. In both India and Africa the rainbow is thought to be a gigantic
celestial snake; Hebrews and Christians regard it as "the bow of promise."
Likewise, influences regarded as beneficent in one part of the world may be
looked upon as malignant in other regions. The east wind is a god in South
America, for it brings rain; in India it is a devil because it brings dust
and causes drought. The ancient Bedouins believed that a nature spirit produced
the sand whirls, and even in the times of Moses belief in nature spirits was
strong enough to insure their perpetuation in Hebrew theology as angels of
fire, water, and air.
P947:2, 85:4.3
Clouds, rain, and hail have all been feared and worshiped by numerous primitive
tribes and by many of the early nature cults. Windstorms with thunder and
lightning overawed early man. He was so impressed with these elemental disturbances
that thunder was regarded as the voice of an angry god. The worship of fire
and the fear of lightning were linked together and were widespread among many
early groups.
P947:3, 85:4.4
Fire was mixed up with magic in the minds of primitive fear-ridden mortals.
A devotee of magic will vividly remember one positive chance result in the
practice of his magic formulas, while he
nonchalantly forgets a score of negative
results,
out-and-out failures. Fire reverence reached its height in Persia,
where it long persisted. Some tribes worshiped fire as a deity itself; others
revered it as the flaming symbol of the purifying and purging spirit of their
venerated deities.
Vestal virgins were charged with the duty of watching sacred
fires, and in the twentieth century candles still burn as a part of the ritual
of many religious services.