The most eloquent testimony given this little book is the fact that a second edition is made necessary only a few months after the publication of the first edition. Favorable comments and letters of recommendation from men and women eminent in literary and scientific realms, and commendatory reviews in periodicals of high standard are, I think, sufficient cause for the belief that "The Tyranny of God" forms a necessary cog in the machinery of intellectual thought and progress. Even those who bitterly oppose the book admit that it possesses the power to make its readers think. Of the many opposing reviews and adverse criticism of "The Tyranny of God," If to tell a man the true nature of a disease from which he is suffering, with the hope that he will seek a cure for his malady, is pessimism, then I am a pessimist. Is the use of a danger signal at a hazardous crossing, for the purpose of preventing disaster, pessimism? If to literally "hold the mirror up to Nature," disclosing Nature's utter disregard for the life and feelings of man, as a warning against the extravagant and useless propagating of life, is pessimism, then surely I am a pessimist. If a fervent desire to help Man, instead of wasting time in prayer to "God," is pessimism, I am a pessimist. If to think, to investigate, to express one's If to expose sham, hypocrisy and fraud; if to open the mind and free it from fear; if to stimulate the intellect, and work for the Here instead of the "Hereafter"—if all these are classified as pessimism, then truly may I be called an arch pessimist. "The Tyranny of God" was written to express the truth as I see it—to portray life, not as we would like to have it, but as it actually is. Millions are still like frightened children, afraid of their own shadows. Fear of the truth is the greatest deterrent to its acceptance. Joseph Lewis April 14, 1922 |