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Evolution of Theology: an Anthropological Study by Thomas Henry Huxley
page 41 of 80 (51%)
xxviii. 35).



An escape from the obvious conclusion suggested by this passage
has been sought in the supposition that these bells rang for the
sake of the worshippers, as at the elevation of the host in the
Roman Catholic ritual; but then why should the priest be
threatened with the well-known penalty for inadvisedly beholding
the divinity?

In truth, the intermediate step between the Maori practice and
that of the old Israelites is furnished by the Kami temples in
Japan. These are provided with bells which the worshippers who
present themselves ring, in order to call the attention of the
ancestor-god to their presence. Grant the fundamental assumption
of the essentially human character of the spirit, whether Atua,
Kami, or Elohim, and all these practices are equally rational.

The sacrifices to the gods in Tonga, and elsewhere in Polynesia,
were ordinarily social gatherings, in which the god, either in
his own person or in that of his priestly representative, was
supposed to take part. These sacrifices were offered on every
occasion of importance, and even the daily meals were prefaced
by oblations and libations of food and drink, exactly answering
to those offered by the old Romans to their manes, penates, and
lares. The sacrifices had no moral significance, but were the
necessary result of the theory that the god was either a deified
ghost of an ancestor or chief, or, at any rate, a being of like
nature to these. If one wanted to get anything out of him,
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