by Henry Drummond
To Preach Good Tidings unto the Meek:
To Bind up the Broken-hearted:
To proclaim Liberty to the Captives and the Opening of the Prison to Them that are Bound:
To Proclaim the Acceptable Year of the Lord, and the Day of Vengeance of our God:
To Comfort all that Mourn:
To Appoint unto them that Mourn in Zion:
To Give unto them--
Beauty for Ashes,
The Oil of Joy for Mourning,
The Garment of Praise for the Spirit of Heaviness.
"WHAT does God do all
day?" once asked a little boy. One could wish that more grown-up people
would ask so very real a question. Unfortunately, most of us are not even
boys in religious intelligence, but only very unthinking children. It no
more occurs to us that God is engaged in any particular work in the world
than it occurs to a little child that its father does anything except be
its father. Its father may be a Cabinet Minister absorbed in the nation's
work, or an inventor deep in schemes for the world's good; but to this
master-egoist he is father, and nothing more. Childhood, whether in the
physical or moral world, is the great self-centred period of life; and
a personal God who satisfies personal ends is all that for a long time
many a Christian understands.
But as clearly as there comes to the growing
child a knowledge of its father's part in the world, and a sense of what
real life means, there must come to every Christian whose growth is true
some richer sense of the meaning of Christianity and a larger view of Christ's
purpose for mankind. To miss this is to miss the whole splendour and glory
of Christ's religion. Next to losing the sense of a personal Christ, the
worst evil that can befall a Christian is to have no sense of anything
else. To grow up in complacent belief that God has no business in this
great groaning world of human beings except to attend to a few saved souls
is the negation of all religion. The first great epoch in a Christian's
life, after the awe and wonder of its dawn, is when there breaks into his
mind some sense that Christ has a purpose for mankind, a purpose beyond
him and his needs, beyond the churches and their creeds, beyond Heaven
and its saints--a purpose which embraces every man and woman born, every
kindred and nation formed, which regards not their spiritual good alone
but their welfare in every part, their progress, their health, their work,
their wages, their happiness in this present world.
What, then, does Christ do all day? By what
further conception shall we augment the selfish view of why Christ lived
and died?
I shall mislead no one, I hope, if I say
--for I wish to put the social side of Christianity in its strongest light--that
Christ did not come into the world to give men religion. He never mentioned
the word religion. Religion was in the world before Christ came, and it
lives to-day in a million souls who have never heard His name. What
God does all day is not to sit waiting in churches for people to come
and worship Him. It is true that God is in churches and in all kinds of
churches, and is found by many in churches more immediately than anywhere
else. It is also true that while Christ did not give men religion He gave
a new direction to the religious aspiration bursting forth then and now
and always from the whole world's heart. But it was His purpose to enlist
these aspirations on behalf of some definite practical good. The religious
people of those days did nothing with their religion except attend to its
observances. Even the priest, after he had been to the temple, thought
his work was done; when he met the wounded man he passed by on the other
side. Christ reversed all this--tried to reverse it, for He is only now
beginning to succeed. The tendency of the religions of all time has been
to care more for religion than for humanity; Christ cared more for humanity
than for religion--rather His care for humanity was the chief expression
of His religion. He was not indifferent to observances, but the practices
of the people bulked in His thoughts before the practices of the Church.
It has been pointed out as a blemish on the immortal allegory of Bunyan
that the Pilgrim never did anything, anything but save his soul.
The remark is scarcely fair, for the allegory is designedly the story of
a soul in a single relation; and besides, he did do a little. But the warning
may well be weighed. The Pilgrim's one thought, his work by day, his dream
by night, was escape. He took little part in the world through which
he passed. He was a Pilgrim travelling through it; his business
was to get through safe. Whatever this is, it is not Christianity. Christ's
conception of Christianity was heavens removed from that of a man setting
out from the City of Destruction to save his soul. It was rather that of
a man dwelling amidst the Destructions of the City and planning escapes
for the souls of others--escapes not to the other world, but to purity
and peace and righteousness in this. In reality Christ never said "Save
your soul." It is a mistranslation which says that. What He said was,
"Save your life." And this not because the first is nothing,
but only because it is so very great a thing that only the second can accomplish
it. But the new word altruism--the translation of "love thy neighbour
as thyself"--is slowly finding its way into current Christian speech.
The People's Progress, not less than the Pilgrim's Progress, is daily becoming
a graver concern to the Church. A popular theology with unselfishness as
part at least of its root, a theology which appeals no longer to fear,
but to the generous heart in man, has already dawned, and more clearly
than ever men are beginning to see what Christ really came into this world
to do.
What Christ came here for was to make a better
world. The world in which we live is an unfinished world. It is not wise,
it is not happy, it is not pure, it is not good--it is not even sanitary.
Humanity is little more than raw material. Almost everything has yet to
be done to it. Before the days of Geology people thought the earth was
finished. It is by no means finished. The work of Creation is going on.
Before the spectroscope, men thought the universe was finished. We know
now it is just beginning. And this teeming universe of men in which we
live has almost all its finer colour and beauty yet to take. Christ came
to complete it. The fires of its passions were not yet cool; their heat
had to be transformed into finer energies. The ideals for its future were
all to shape, the forces to realize them were not yet born. The poison
of its sins had met no antidote, the gloom of its doubt no light, the weight
of its sorrow no rest. These the Saviour of the world, the Light of men,
would do and be. This, roughly, was His scheme.
Now this was a prodigious task--to recreate
the world. How was it to be done? God's way of making worlds is to make
them make themselves. When He made the earth He made a rough ball of matter
and supplied it with a multitude of tools to mould it into form--the rain-drop
to carve it, the glacier to smooth it, the river to nourish it, the flower
to adorn it. God works always with agents, and this is our way when we
want any great thing done, and this was Christ's way when He undertook
the finishing of Humanity. He had a vast intractable mass of matter to
deal with, and He required a multitude of tools. Christ's tools were men.
Hence His first business in the world was to make a collection of men.
In other words He founded a Society.
IT is a somewhat startling
thought--it will not be misunderstood--that Christ probably did not save
many people while He was here. Many an evangelist, in that direction, has
done much more. He never intended to finish the world single-handed, but
announced from the first that others would not only take part, but do "greater
things" than He. For amazing as was the attention He was able to give
to individuals, this was not the whole aim He had in view. His immediate
work was to enlist men in His enterprise, to rally them into a great company
or Society for the carrying out of His plans.
The name by which this Society was known
was The Kingdom of God. Christ did not coin this name; it was an
old expression, and good men had always hoped and prayed that some such
Society would be born in their midst. But it was never either defined or
set agoing in earnest until Christ made its realization the passion of
His life.
How keenly He felt regarding His task, how
enthusiastically He set about it, every page of His life bears witness.
All reformers have one or two great words which they use incessantly, and
by mere reiteration imbed indelibly in the thought and history of their
time. Christ's great word was the Kingdom of God. Of all the words of His
that have come down to us this is by far the commonest. One hundred times
it occurs in the Gospels. When He preached He had almost always this for
a text. His sermons were explanations of the aims of His Society, of the
different things it was like, of whom its membership consisted, what they
were to do or to be, or not do or not be. And even when He does not actually
use the word, it is easy to see that all He said and did had reference
to this. Philosophers talk about thinking in categories-- the mind living,
as it were, in a particular room with its own special furniture, pictures,
and viewpoints, these giving a consistent direction and colour to all that
is there thought or expressed. It was in the category of the Kingdom that
Christ's thought moved. Though one time He said He came to save the lost,
or at another time to give men life, or to do His Father's will, these
were all included among the objects of His Society.
No one can ever know what Christianity is
till he has grasped this leading thought in the mind of Christ. Peter and
Paul have many wonderful and necessary things to tell us about what Christ
was and did; but we are looking now at what Christ's own thought was. Do
not think this is a mere modern theory. These are His own life-plans taken
from His own lips. Do not allow any isolated text, even though it seem
to sum up for you the Christian life, to keep you from trying to understand
Christ's Programme as a whole. The perspective of Christ's teaching is
not everything, but without it everything will be distorted and untrue.
There is much good in a verse, but often much evil. To see some small soul
pirouetting throughout life on a single text, and judging all the world
because it cannot find a partner, is not a Christian sight. Christianity
does not grudge such souls their comfort. What it grudges is that they
make Christ's Kingdom uninhabitable to thoughtful minds. Be sure that whenever
the religion of Christ appears small, or forbidding, or narrow, or inhuman,
you are dealing not with the whole --which is a matchless moral symmetry--
nor even with an arch or column--for every detail is perfect--but with
some cold stone removed from its place and suggesting nothing of the glorious
structure from which it came.
Tens of thousands of persons who are familiar
with religious truths have not noticed yet that Christ ever founded a Society
at all. The reason is partly that people have read texts instead of reading
their Bible, partly that they have studied Theology instead of studying
Christianity, and partly because of the noiselessness and invisibility
of the Kingdom of God itself. Nothing truer was ever said of this Kingdom
than that "It cometh without observation." Its first discovery,
therefore, comes to the Christian with all the force of a revelation. The
sense of belonging to such a Society transforms life. It is the difference
between being a solitary knight tilting single-handed, and often defeated,
at whatever enemy one chances to meet on one's little acre of life, and
the feel of belonging to a mighty army marching throughout all time
to a certain victory. This note of universality given to even the humblest
work we do, this sense of comradeship, this link with history, this thought
of a definite campaign, this promise of success, is the possession of every
obscurest unit in the Kingdom of God.
HUNDREDS of years before Christ's
Society was formed, its Programme had been issued to the world. I cannot
think of any scene in history more dramatic than when Jesus entered the
church in Nazareth and read it to the people. Not that when He appropriated
to Himself that venerable fragment from Isaiah He was uttering a manifesto
or announcing His formal Programme. Christ never did things formally. We
think of the words, as He probably thought of them, not in their old-world
historical significance, nor as a full expression of His future aims, but
as a summary of great moral facts now and always to be realized in the
world since he appeared.
Remember as you read the words to what grim
reality they refer. Recall what Christ's problem really was, what His Society
was founded for. This Programme deals with a real world. Think of it as
you read--not of the surface-world, but of the world as it is, as it sins
and weeps, and curses and suffers and sends up its long cry to God. Limit
it if you like to the world around your door, but think of it-- of the
city and the hospital and the dungeon and the graveyard, of the sweating-shop
and the pawn-shop and the drink-shop; think of the cold, the cruelty, the
fever, the famine, the ugliness, the loneliness, the pain. And then try
to keep down the lump in your throat as you take up His Programme and read--
TO BIND UP THE BROKEN-HEARTED:
TO PROCLAIM LIBERTY TO THE CAPTIVES:
TO COMFORT ALL THAT MOURN:
TO GIVE UNTO THEM--
BEAUTY FOR ASHES,
THE OIL OF JOY FOR MOURNING,
THE GARMENT OF PRAISE FOR THE SPIRIT OF HEAVINESS.
What an exchange--Beauty for Ashes, Joy for
Mourning, Liberty for Chains! No marvel "the eyes of all them that
were in the synagogue were fastened on Him" as He read; or that they
"wondered at the gracious words which proceeded out of His lips."
Only one man in that congregation, only one man in the world to-day could
hear these accents with dismay--the man, the culprit, who has said hard
words of Christ.
We are all familiar with the protest "Of
course"--as if there were no other alternative to a person of culture--"Of
course I am not a Christian, but I always speak respectfully of
Christianity." Respectfully of Christianity! No remark fills one's
soul with such sadness. One can understand a man as he reads these words
being stricken speechless; one can see the soul within him rise to a white
heat as each fresh benediction falls upon his ear and drive him, a half-mad
enthusiast, to bear them to the world. But in what school has he learned
of Christ who offers the Saviour of the world his respect?
Men repudiate Christ's religion because they
think it a small and limited thing, a scheme with no large human interests
to commend it to this great social age. I ask you to note that there is
not one burning interest of the human race which is not represented here.
What are the great words of Christianity according to this Programme? Take
as specimens these:
LIBERTY,
COMFORT,
BEAUTY,
JOY.
These are among the greatest words of life.
Give them their due extension, the significance which Christ undoubtedly
saw in them and which Christianity undoubtedly yields, and there is almost
no great want or interest of mankind which they do not cover.
These are not only the greatest words of
life but they are the best. This Programme, to those who have misread Christianity,
is a series of surprises. Observe the most prominent note in it. It is
gladness. Its first word is "good-tidings," its last is
"joy." The saddest words of life are also there--but there as
the diseases which Christianity comes to cure. No life that is occupied
with such an enterprise could be other than radiant. The contribution of
Christianity to the joy of living, perhaps even more to the joy of thinking,
is unspeakable. The joyful life is the life of the larger mission,
the disinterested life, the life of the overflow from self, the "more
abundant life" which comes from following Christ. And the joy of thinking
is the larger thinking, the thinking of the man who holds in his hand some
Programme for Humanity. The Christian is the only man who has any Programme
at all-- any Programme either for the world or for himself. Goethe, Byron,
Carlyle taught Humanity much, but they had no Programme for it. Byron's
thinking was suffering; Carlisle's despair. Christianity alone exults.
The belief in the universe as moral, the interpretation of history as progress,
the faith in good as eternal, in evil as self-consuming, in humanity as
evolving--these Christian ideas have transformed the malady of thought
into a bounding hope. It was no sentiment but a conviction matured amid
calamity and submitted to the tests of life that inspired the great modern
poet of optimism to proclaim:--
"Gladness be with thee, Helper of the world!
I think this is the authentic sign and seal
Of Godship, that it ever waxes glad,
And more glad, until gladness blossoms, bursts
Into a rage to suffer for mankind
And recommence at sorrow."
But that is not all. Man's greatest needs
are often very homely. And it is almost as much in its fearless recognition
of the commonplace woes of life, and its deliberate offerings to minor
needs, that the claims of Christianity to be a religion for Humanity stand.
Look, for instance, at the closing sentence of this Programme. Who would
have expected to find among the special objects of Christ's solicitude
the Spirit of Heaviness? Supreme needs, many and varied, had been
already dealt with on this Programme; many applicants had been met; the
list is about to close. Suddenly the writer remembers the nameless malady
of the poor--that mysterious disease which the rich share but cannot alleviate,
which is too subtle for doctors, too incurable for Parliaments, too unpicturesque
for philanthropy, too common even for sympathy. Can Christ meet that?
If Christianity could even deal with the
world's Depression, could cure mere dull spirits, it would be the Physician
of Humanity. But it can. It has the secret, a hundred secrets, for the
lifting of the world's gloom. It cannot immediately remove the physiological
causes of dulness-- though obedience to its principles can do an infinity
to prevent them, and its inspirations can do even more to lift the mind
above them. But where the causes are moral or mental or social the remedy
is in every Christian's hand. Think of any one at this moment whom the
Spirit of Heaviness haunts. You think of a certain old woman. But you know
for a fact that you can cure her. You did so, perfectly, only a week ago.
A mere visit, and a little present, or the visit without any present, set
her up for seven long days, and seven long nights. The machinery of the
Kingdom is very simple and very silent, and the most silent parts do most,
and we all believe so little in the medicines of Christ that we do not
know what ripples of healing are set in motion when we simply smile on
one another. Christianity wants nothing so much in the world as sunny people,
and the old are hungrier for love than for bread, and the Oil of Joy is
very cheap, and if you can help the poor on with a Garment of Praise, it
will be better for them than blankets.
Or perhaps you know someone else who is dull--not
an old woman this time, but a very rich and important man. But you also
know perfectly what makes him dull. It is either his riches or his importance.
Christianity can cure either of these though you may not be the person
to apply the cure--at a single hearing. Or here is a third case, one of
your own servants. It is a case of monotony. Prescribe more variety,
leisure, recreation--anything to relieve the wearing strain. A fourth case--your
most honoured guest: Condition--leisure, health, accomplishments, means;
Disease--Spiritual Obesity; Treatment--talent to be put out to usury. And
so on down the whole range of life's dejection and ennui.
Perhaps you tell me this is not Christianity
at all; that everybody could do that. The curious thing is that everybody
does not. Good-will to men came into the world with Christ, and wherever
that is found, in Christian or heathen land, there Christ is, and there
His Spirit works. And if you say that the chief end of Christianity is
not the world's happiness, I agree; it was never meant to be; but the strange
fact is that, without making it its chief end, it wholly and infallibly,
and quite universally, leads to it. Hence the note of Joy, though not the
highest on Christ's Programme, is a loud and ringing note, and none who
serve in His Society can be long without its music. Time was when a Christian
used to apologize for being happy. But the day has always been when he
ought to apologize for being miserable.
Christianity, you will observe, really works.
And it succeeds not only because it is divine, but because it is so very
human--because it is common-sense. Why should the Garment of Praise destroy
the Spirit of Heaviness? Because an old woman cannot sing and cry at the
same moment. The Society of Christ is a sane Society. Its methods are rational.
The principle in the old woman's case is simply that one emotion destroys
another. Christianity works, as a railway man would say, with points. It
switches souls from valley lines to mountain lines, not stemming the currents
of life but diverting them. In the rich man's case the principle of cure
is different, but it is again principle, not necromancy. His spirit of
heaviness is caused, like any other heaviness, by the earth's attraction.
Take away the earth and you take away the attraction. But if Christianity
can do anything it can take away the earth. By the wider extension of horizon
which it gives, by the new standard of values, by the mere setting of life's
small pomps and interests and admirations in the light of the Eternal,
it dissipates the world with a breath. All that tends to abolish worldliness
tends to abolish unrest, and hence, in the rush of modern life, one far-reaching
good of all even commonplace Christian preaching, all Christian literature,
all which holds the world doggedly to the idea of a God and a future life,
and reminds mankind of Infinity and Eternity.
Side by side with these influences, yet taking
the world at a wholly different angle, works another great Christian force.
How many opponents of religion are aware that one of the specific objects
of Christ's society is Beauty? The charge of vulgarity against Christianity
is an old one. If it means that Christianity deals with the ruder elements
in human nature, it is true, and that is its glory. But if it means that
it has no respect for the finer qualities, the charge is baseless. For
Christianity not only encourages whatsoever things are lovely, but wars
against that whole theory of life which would exclude them. It prescribes
aestheticism. It proscribes asceticism. And for those who preach to Christians
that in these enlightened days they must raise the masses by giving them
noble sculptures and beautiful paintings and music and public parks, the
answer is that these things are all already being given, and given daily,
and with an increasing sense of their importance, by the Society of Christ.
Take away from the world the beautiful things which have not come from
Christ and you will make it poorer scarcely at all. Take away from modern
cities the paintings, the monuments, the music for the people, the museums
and the parks which are not the gifts of Christian men and Christian municipalities,
and in ninety cases out of a hundred you will leave them unbereft of so
much as a well-shaped lamp-post
It is impossible to doubt that the Decorator
of the World shall not continue to serve to His later children, and in
ever finer forms, the inspirations of beautiful things. More fearlessly
than he has ever done, the Christian of modern life will use the noble
spiritual leverages of Art. That this world, the people's world, is a bleak
and ugly world, we do not forget; it is ever with us. But we esteem too
little the mission of beautiful things in haunting the mind with higher
thoughts and begetting the mood which leads to God. Physical beauty makes
moral beauty. Loveliness does more than destroy ugliness; it destroys matter.
A mere touch of it in a room, in a street, even on a door knocker, is a
spiritual force. Ask the working-man's wife, and she will tell you there
is a moral effect even in a clean table-cloth. If a barrel-organ in a slum
can but drown a curse, let no Christian silence it. The mere light and
colour of the wall-advertisements are a gift of God to the poor man's sombre
world.
One Christmas-time a poor drunkard told me
that he had gone out the night before to take his usual chance of the temptations
of the street. Close to his door, at a shop window, an angel--so he said--arrested
him. It was a large Christmas-card, a glorious white thing with tinsel
wings, and as it glittered in the gas-light it flashed into his soul a
sudden thought of Heaven. It recalled the earlier heaven of his infancy,
and he thought of his mother in the distant glen, and how it would please
her if she got this Christmas angel from her prodigal. With money already
pledged to the devil he bought the angel, and with it a new soul and future
for himself. That was a real angel. For that day as I saw its tinsel pinions
shine in his squalid room I knew what Christ's angels were. They are all
beautiful things, which daily in common homes are bearing up heavy souls
to God.
But do not misunderstand me. This angel was
made of pasteboard: a pasteboard angel can never save a soul. Tinsel reflects
the sun, but warms nothing. Our Programme must go deeper. Beauty may arrest
the drunkard, but it cannot cure him.
It is here that Christianity asserts itself
with a supreme individuality. It is here that it parts company with Civilization,
with Politics, with all secular schemes of Social Reform. In its diagnosis
of human nature it finds that which most other systems ignore; which, if
they see, they cannot cure; which, left undestroyed, makes every reform
futile, and every inspiration vain. That thing is Sin. Christianity,
of all other philanthropies, recognizes that man's devouring need is Liberty--liberty
to stop sinning; to leave the prison of his passions, and shake off the
fetters of his past. To surround Captives with statues and pictures,
to offer Them-that-are-Bound a higher wage or a cleaner street or
a few more cubic feet of air per head, is solemn trifling. It is a cleaner
soul they want; a purer air, or any air at all, for their higher selves.
And where the cleaner soul is to come from
apart from Christ I cannot tell. "By no political alchemy," Herbert
Spencer tells us, "can you get golden conduct out of leaden instincts."
The power to set the heart right, to renew the springs of action, comes
from Christ. The sense of the infinite worth of the single soul, and the
recoverableness of man at his worst, are the gifts of Christ. The freedom
from guilt, the forgiveness of sins, come from Christ's Cross; the hope
of immortality springs from Christ's grave. We believe in the gospel of
better laws and an improved environment; we hold the religion of Christ
to be a social religion; we magnify and call Christian the work of reformers,
statesmen, philanthropists, educators, inventors, sanitary officers, and
all who directly or remotely aid, abet, or further the higher progress
of mankind; but in Him alone, in the fulness of that word, do we see the
Saviour of the world.
There are earnest and gifted lives to-day
at work among the poor whose lips at least will not name the name of Christ.
I speak of them with respect; their shoe-latchets many of us are not worthy
to unloose. But because the creed of the neighbouring mission-hall is a
travesty of religion they refuse to acknowledge the power of the living
Christ to stop man's sin, of the dying Christ to forgive it. O, narrowness
of breadth! Because there are ignorant doctors do I yet rail at medicine
or start an hospital of my own? Because the poor raw evangelist, or the
narrow ecclesiastic, offer their little all to the poor, shall I repudiate
all they do not know of Christ because of the little that they do know?
Of gospels for the poor which have not some theory, state it how you will,
of personal conversion one cannot have much hope. Personal conversion means
for life a personal religion, a personal trust in God, a personal debt
to Christ, a personal dedication to His cause. These, brought about how
you will, are supreme things to aim at, supreme losses if they are missed.
Sanctification will come to masses only as it comes to individual men;
and to work with Christ's Programme and ignore Christ is to utilize the
sun's light without its energy.
But this is not the only point at which the
uniqueness of this Society appears. There is yet another depth in humanity
which no other system even attempts to sound. We live in a world not only
of sin but of sorrow--
"There is no flock, however watched and tended,
But one dead lamb is there;
There is no home, howe'er defended,
But has one vacant chair."
When the flock thins, and the chair empties,
who is to be near to heal? At that moment the gospels of the world are
on trial. In the presence of death how will they act? Act! They are blotted
out of existence. Philosophy, Politics, Reforms, are no more. The Picture
Galleries close. The sculptures hide. The Committees disperse. There is
crape on the door; the world withdraws. Observe, it withdraws. It
has no mission.
So awful in its loneliness was this hour
that the Romans paid a professional class; to step in with its mummeries
and try to fill it. But that is Christ's own hour. Next to Righteousness
the greatest word of Christianity is Comfort. Christianity has almost a
monopoly of Comfort Renan was never nearer the mark than when he spoke
of the Bible as "the great Book of the Consolation of Humanity."
Christ's Programme is full of Comfort, studded with Comfort: "to bind
up the Broken-Hearted, to Comfort all that mourn, to Give unto them that
mourn in Zion." Even the "good tidings" to the "meek"
are, in the Hebrew, a message to the "afflicted" or "the
poor." The word Gospel itself comes down through the Greek from this
very passage, so that whatever else Christ's Gospel means it is first an
Evangel for suffering men.
One note in this Programme jars with all
the rest. When Christ read from Isaiah that day He never finished the passage.
A terrible word, Vengeance, yawned like a precipice across His path; and
in the middle of a sentence "He closed the Book, and gave it again
to the minister, and sat down". A Day of Vengeance from our God--these
were the words before which Christ paused. When the prophet proclaimed
it some great historical fulfilment was in his mind. Had the people to
whom Christ read been able to understand its ethical equivalents He would
probably have read on. For, so understood, instead of filling the mind
with fear, the thought of this dread Day inspires it with a solemn gratitude.
The work of the Avenger is a necessity. It is part of God's philanthropy.
For I have but touched the surface in speaking
of the sorrow of the world as if it came from people dying. It comes from
people living. Before ever the Broken-Hearted can be healed a hundred greater
causes of suffering than death must be destroyed. Before the Captive can
be free a vaster prison than his own sins must be demolished. There are
hells on earth into which no breath of heaven can ever come; these must
be swept away. There are social soils in which only unrighteousness can
flourish; these must be broken up.
And that is the work of the Day of Vengeance.
When is that day? It is now. Who is the Avenger? Law. What Law? Criminal
Law, Sanitary Law, Social Law, Natural Law. Wherever the poor are trodden
upon or tread upon one another; wherever the air is poison and the water
foul; wherever want stares, and vice reigns, and rags rot--there the Avenger
takes his stand. Whatever makes it more difficult for the drunkard to reform,
for the children to be pure, for the widow to earn a wage, for any of the
wheels of progress to revolve--with these he deals. Delay him not. He is
the messenger of Christ. Despair of him not, distrust him not. His Day
dawns slowly, but his work is sure. Though evil stalks the world, it is
on the way to execution; though wrong reigns, it must end in self-combustion.
The very nature of things is God's Avenger; the very story of civilization
is the history of Christ's Throne.
Anything that prepares the way for a better
social state is the fit work of the followers of Christ. Those who work
on the more spiritual levels leave too much unhonoured the slow toil of
multitudes of unchurched souls who prepare the material or moral environments
without which these higher labours are in vain. Prevention is Christian
as well as cure; and Christianity travels sometimes by the most circuitous
paths. It is given to some to work for immediate results, and from year
to year they are privileged to reckon up a balance of success. But these
are not always the greatest in the Kingdom of God. The men who get no stimulus
from any visible reward, whose lives pass while the objects for which they
toil are still too far away to comfort them; the men who hold aloof from
dazzling schemes and earn the misunderstanding of the crowd because they
foresee remoter issues, who even oppose a seeming good because a deeper
evil lurks beyond--these are the statesmen of the Kingdom of God.
SUCH in dimmest outline is
the Programme of Christ's Society. Did you know that all this was going
on in the world? Did you know that Christianity was such a living and purpose-like
thing? Look back to the day when that Programme was given, and you will
see that it was not merely written on paper. Watch the drama of the moral
order rise up, scene after scene, in history. Study the social evolution
of humanity, the spread of righteousness, the amelioration of life, the
freeing of slaves, the elevation of woman, the purification of religion,
and ask what these can be if not the coming of the Kingdom of God on earth.
For it is precisely through the movements of nations and the lives of men
that this Kingdom comes. Christ might have done all this work Himself,
with His own hands. But He did not. The crowning wonder of His scheme is
that He entrusted it to men. It is the supreme glory of humanity that the
machinery for its redemption should have been placed within itself. I think
the saddest thing in Christ's life was that after founding a Society with
aims so glorious He had to go away and leave it.
But in reality He did not leave it. The old
theory that God made the world, made it as an inventor would make a machine,
and then stood looking on to see it work, has passed away. God is no longer
a remote spectator of the natural world, but immanent in it, pervading
matter by His present Spirit, and ordering it by His Will. So Christ is
immanent in men. His work is to move the hearts and inspire the lives of
men, and through such hearts to move and reach the world. Men, only men,
can carry out this work. This humanness, this inwardness, of the Kingdom
is one reason why some scarcely see that it exists at all. We measure great
movements by the loudness of their advertisement, or the place their externals
fill in the public eye. This Kingdom has no externals. The usual methods
of propagating a great cause were entirely discarded by Christ. The sword
He declined; money He had none; literature He never used; the Church disowned
Him; the State crucified Him. Planting His ideals in the hearts of a few
poor men, He started them out unheralded to revolutionize the world. They
did it by making friends and by making enemies; they went about, did good,
sowed seed, died, and lived again in the lives of those they helped. These
in turn, a fraction of them, did the same. They met, they prayed, they
talked of Christ, they loved, they went among other men, and by act and
word passed on their secret. The machinery of the Kingdom of God is purely
social. It acts, not by commandment, but by contagion; not by fiat, but
by friendship. "The Kingdom of God is like unto leaven, which a woman
took and hid in three measures of meal till the whole was leavened."
After all, like all great discoveries once
they are made, this seems absolutely the most feasible method that could
have been devised. Men must live among men. Men must influence
men. Organizations, institutions, churches, have too much rigidity for
a thing that is to flood the world. The only fluid in the world is man.
War might have won for Christ's cause a passing victory; wealth might have
purchased a superficial triumph; political power might have gained a temporary
success. But in these, there is no note of universality, of solidarity,
of immortality. To live through the centuries and pervade the uttermost
ends of the earth, to stand while kingdoms tottered and civilizations changed,
to survive fallen churches and crumbling creeds--there was no soil for
the Kingdom of God like the hearts of common men. Some who have written
about this Kingdom have emphasized its moral grandeur, others its universality,
others its adaptation to man's needs. One great writer speaks of its prodigious
originality, another chiefly notices its success. I confess what almost
strikes me most is the miracle of its simplicity.
Men, then, are the only means God's Spirit
has of accomplishing His purpose. What men? You. Is it worth doing, or
is it not? Is it worth while joining Christ's Society or is it not? What
do you do all day? What is your personal stake in the coming of
the Kingdom of Christ on earth? You are not interested in religion, you
tell me; you do not care for your "soul". It was not about your
religion I ventured to ask, still less about your soul. That you have no
religion, that you do not care for your soul, does not absolve you from
caring for the world in which you live. But you do not believe in this
church, you reply, or accept this doctrine, or that. Christ does not, in
the first instance, ask your thoughts, but your work. No man has a right
to postpone his life for the sake of his thoughts. Why? Because
this is a real world, not a think world. Treat it as a real world--
act. Think by all means, but think also of what is actual, of what like
the stern world is, of low much even you, creedless and churchless, could
do to make it better. The thing to be anxious about is not to be right
with man, but with mankind. And, so far as I know, there is nothing so
on all fours with mankind as Christianity.
.
There are versions of Christianity, it is
true, which no self-respecting mind can do other than disown--versions
so hard, so narrow, so unreal, so super-theological, that practical men
can find in them neither outlet for their lives nor resting-place for their
thoughts. With these we have nothing to do. With these Christ had nothing
to do-- except to oppose them with every word and act of His life. It too
seldom occurs to those who repudiate Christianity because of its narrowness
or its unpracticalness, its sanctimoniousness or its dulness, that these
were the very things which Christ strove against and unweariedly condemned.
It was the one risk of His religion being given to the common people--an
inevitable risk which He took without reserve--that its infinite lustre
should be tarnished in the fingering of the crowd or have its great truths
narrowed into mean and unworthy moulds as they passed from lip to lip.
But though the crowd is the object of Christianity, it is not its custodian.
Deal with the Founder of this great Commonwealth Himself. Any man of honest
purpose who will take the trouble to inquire at first hand what Christianity
really is, will find it a thing he cannot get away from. Without either
argument or pressure, by the mere practicalness of its aims and the pathos
of its compassions, it forces its august claim upon every serious life.
He who joins this Society finds himself in
a large place. The Kingdom of God is a Society of the best men, working
for the best ends, according to the best methods. Its membership is a multitude
whom no man can number; its methods are as various as human nature; its
field is the world. It is a Commonwealth, yet it honours a King; it is
a Social Brotherhood, but it acknowledges the Fatherhood of God. Though
not a Philosophy the world turns to it for light; though not Political
it is the incubator of all great laws. It is more human than the State,
for it deals with deeper needs; more Catholic than the Church, for it includes
whom the Church rejects. It is a Propaganda, yet it works not by agitation
but by ideals. It is a Religion, yet it holds the worship of God to be
mainly the service of man. Though not a Scientific Society its watchword
is Evolution; though not an Ethic it possesses the Sermon on the Mount.
This mysterious Society owns no wealth but distributes fortunes. It has
no minutes for history keeps them; no member's roll for no one could make
it. Its entry-money is nothing; its subscription, all you have The Society
never meets and it never adjourns. Its law is one word-- loyalty; its Gospel
one message -- love. Verily "Whosoever will lose his life for My sake
shall find it."
The Programme for the other life is not out
yet. For this world, for these faculties, for his one short life, I know
nothing that is offered to man to compare with membership in the Kingdom
of God. Among the mysteries which compass the world beyond, none is greater
than how there can be in store for man a work more wonderful, a life more
God-like than this. If you know anything better, live for it; if not, in
the name of God and of Humanity, carry out Christ's plan.