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CHAPTER XXVIII.
ANOINTING WITH OIL OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN
THE custom and ceremony of anointing with oil by way of imparting some
fancied spiritual power and religious qualification seems to have been
extensively practiced by the Jews and primitive Christians, and still
more anciently by various oriental nations. Mark (xiv. 4), reports Jesus
Christ as speaking commendingly of the practice, by which it was evident
he was in favor of the superstitious custom. The apostle James not only
sanctions it, but recommends it in the most specific language. "Is any
sick among you, let him call for the elders of the church, and let them
pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord." (James
v. 14.)
The practice of greasing or smearing with oil, it may be noted here, was
in vogue from other motives besides the one here indicated. We find the
statement in the New American Cyclopedia (vol. i. p. 620), that
anointing with perfumed oil was in common use among the Greeks and
Romans as a mark of hospitality to guests. And modern travelers in the
East still find it a custom for visitors to be sprinkled with
rose-water, or their head, face and beard anointed with olive oil."
"Anointing," we are also told, "is an ancient and still prevalent custom
throughout the East, by pouring aromatic oils on persons as a token of
honor. . . . It was also employed in consecrating priests, prophets and
kings, and the places and instruments appointed for worship." (Ibid.)
Joshua anointed the ten stones he set up in Jordan, and Jacob the stone
on which he slept at the time of his great vision.
p. 205
The early Christians were in the habit of anointing the altars, and even
the walls, of the churches, in the same manner as the images, obelisks,
statues, etc., had long been consecrated by the devotees of the oriental
systems. Aaron, Saul, David, Solomon, and even Jesus Christ were
anointed with oil in the same way. David Malcom, in his "Essay on the
Antiquity of the Britons," p. 144, says, "The Mexican king was anointed
with Holy Unction by the high priest while dancing before the Lord."
(Vide the case of David "dancing before the Lord with all his might."
Dr. Lightfoot, in his "Harmony of the New Testament," speaks of the
custom among the Jews of anointing the sick on the Sabbath day (see
Works, Vol. i, p. 333; also Toland, Sect. Naz. p. 54), as afterwards
recommended by the apostle James, as shown above. This accords exactly
with the method of treating the sick in ancient India and other heathen
countries several thousand years ago. For proof consult Hyde, Bryant,
Tertullian and other writers. The custom of anointing the sick,
accompanied with prayer and other ceremonies, was quite fashionable in
the East long before the birth of either Jesus or James. One writer
testifies that "the practice of anointing with oil, so much in vogue
among the Jews, and sanctioned by Christ and his followers, was held in
high esteem in nearly all the Eastern religions."
The foregoing historical facts furnish still further proof that
Christianity is the offspring of heathenism.
from Crucified Saviors
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