The Christian Creed; or, What it is Blasphemy to Deny by Annie Besant

(7 User reviews)   3118
By Abil Kile Posted on Nov 15, 2025
In Category - Adventure
Besant, Annie, 1847-1933 Besant, Annie, 1847-1933
English
Ever wondered what you're really signing up for when you say you're a Christian? Annie Besant, a woman who caused quite a stir in Victorian England, takes the core beliefs of Christianity and holds them up to the light. In this book, she asks a simple, dangerous question: if you deny any part of the official creed, are you committing blasphemy? It's not an attack on faith, but a deep, logical look at its boundaries. Reading this feels like sitting in on a heated, brilliant conversation from over a century ago that still rattles cages today. If you've ever questioned the 'why' behind what you're supposed to believe, this will grab you.
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believe very many parts of the Holy Scriptures are of divine authority. Still, as we are to be imprisoned and damned for not believing this, we must try, and we had better examine a little more exactly what we are to believe on divine authority. Only some of our imposed feats of _leger-de-foi_ will be examined. Those who can accomplish these will not bungle over the rest. It is of divine authority that god made “a firmament in the midst of the waters” and divided the waters, putting some above it and some below, and this firmament is “heaven” (Gen. i., 6—8). This heaven has windows in it which let the rain through (Gen. vii., 11), and when these windows are closed the rain stops (Gen. viii., 2). It has doors, through which the manna was rained down on the Israelites (Ps. lxxviii., 23, 24). This “sky” is very “strong,” as is indeed necessary remembering all it has to support above it, and resembles “a molten looking-glass” (Job. xxxvii., 18). Another reason why it should be very strong is that god has “set” in it the sun, moon and stars. Some of the stars are large and solid, and require a very strong setting. My unbelieving reader, you may have some difficulty in crediting all this. You may argue that the sky is not strong at all, but is only a vast space, and that to apply the word strong to space shews gross ignorance. Divine authority says the sky _is_ strong, and if you persist in believing facts instead of the Bible, you will at least find Newgate strong and its space limited. You may argue that the stars are at very various distances, and cannot all be set in one arching roof resembling a molten looking-glass; that when it rains, the rain is due to condensation of watery vapor within our atmosphere, at a distance of at the most very few miles, and not to the opening of any windows at a distance of many billions of miles; that the firmament must be at least 5,480,490,000,000 miles away, as the stars are set in it, and the nearest fixed star is at that distance, while the furthest is beyond calculation. All these contentions of yours are facts, I admit, but they fly in the teeth of the fictions which are of divine authority; and as Mr. Justice North is armed with full power to vindicate the divine authority, you had better, if you want to keep out of gaol, give up the facts and pretend to believe in the fictions. It is of divine authority that god made grass and herb and fruit tree on the “third day of creation,” the day before he created the sun, two days before he made fishes and birds, and three days before he made animals. In the face of this it is a mere trifle, my dear sceptical reader, that no herb could yield seed, no fruit tree could yield fruit, without the aid of the sun. It is quite true that a plant without the sun-rays can form no chlorophyll; that without chlorophyll no starch, no reparation nor growth of tissues can proceed. What are these mere botanical facts beside the divine authority of the Holy Scriptures? It is also true that in the study of fossils no traces of all these grasses, herbs, and fruit trees are found precedent to all animal life. That the earliest living thing which has left a trace was an animal, not a plant. That fishes precede fruit trees in the fossilised history of...

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This isn't a novel with a plot, but an intellectual journey. Annie Besant lays out the fundamental statements of the Christian faith—the creed—point by point. She examines what each line means, from the nature of God and Christ to the resurrection and eternal life. Then, she poses her central challenge: if someone disagrees with or doubts one of these essential points, does that make them a blasphemer? The 'story' is her methodical, often fiery, argument against using dogma to shut down honest questioning.

Why You Should Read It

What's amazing is how modern this feels. Besant champions reason and personal conscience over blind obedience. She was writing in a time when leaving the church could ruin your social standing, and her courage shines through. You don't have to agree with her conclusions to be fascinated by her clarity and passion. It makes you think about how we define 'true' belief in any community, even now. This is the kind of book that doesn't give you answers, but better questions.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone interested in the history of religious thought, free speech, or fiery Victorian intellectuals. If you enjoy writers like Christopher Hitchens or Richard Dawkins, you'll find a fascinating historical precursor in Besant. It's also great for book clubs looking for a short, debate-sparking read. Just be ready—it might challenge some long-held assumptions, which is exactly what a good book should do.



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Steven Martin
2 months ago

Text is crisp, making it easy to focus.

Kenneth Smith
7 months ago

Not bad at all.

Michelle Sanchez
1 year ago

Great read!

Robert Rodriguez
1 year ago

The layout is very easy on the eyes.

Lisa Nguyen
1 year ago

I came across this while browsing and the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Highly recommended.

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