Seven Cardinal Virtues
Seven Cardinal Virtues
1. WISDOM
The 'Seven Deadly Sins' formed the theme of a former volume of this
series, and it seems natural to follow that course up with a new one on 'The Seven Cardinal Virtues.' The idea of the seven deadly sins is, that among
the innumerable sins of which human beings may be guilty, there are seven of
peculiar virulence, from which all the rest can be derived. And, in the same
way, the idea of the seven cardinal virtues is, that among the countless
excellencies with which human character may be adorned, there are seven which
overtop the rest, and from which all the rest are derivable. The adjective
'cardinal' refers especially to this latter point; it signifies that these are
the virtues on which all others hinge.
For instance, in the one
with which this first chapter will be occupied — wisdom — six virtues are included according to one ancient author, and no
fewer than ten according to another.
The idea of cardinal virtues is an exceedingly old one. It occurs in Plato
and Aristotle, and from these famous philosophers it descended to the Greek
philosophical schools. From the Greeks it passed to the Romans, being prominent
in the writings of Cicero; and from them it passed to the Fathers of the
Church.
The Greeks, however,
only counted four cardinal virtues — wisdom, courage, temperance and justice.
According to them, these were the four sides of a perfectly symmetrical
character, and the man who possessed them could stand foursquare to all the
winds that blow. In the Old Testament Apocrypha these four are also mentioned,
and a Jewish writer of the time of our Lord, Philo of Alexandria, compares them
to the four rivers that watered the garden of Eden — so do these fertilize and
adorn human nature. Christianity, however, introduced a nomenclature as well as
a conception of virtue of its own. Many virtues are mentioned in the
New Testament, but there are three which occur constantly, as comprehending in
themselves the whole of Christian character — namely, faith, hope and love.
When the Fathers of the
Church began to build their systems of dogma, of course they selected the
stones out of the quarry of the Bible; but they were also powerfully under the
influence of Greek philosophy, and especially of Aristotle; and, in
constructing an ethical system, what they did was to take the triad of virtues from the New Testament and add to it the quartet
derived from philosophy, and thus there emerged the seven which we are to
discuss in the following pages. Perhaps in thus combining things having diverse
origins, they did not sufficiently consider whether the old virtues were not,
to some extent, identical with the new; but, for practical purposes, no great
harm is done if a bit of the ground, here and there, is gone over twice; and it
is of distinct advantage to be reminded that Christian character has a natural
foundation, though, of course, even the heathen virtues are modified when they
appear in the mosaic of Christian
character.
Sometimes the name of
cardinal virtues is restricted to the four virtues of the pre-Christian
philosophers, whereas the other three are named the Christian or the
Theological Virtues; but certainly the latter are cardinal also — that is,
hinge-virtues — and it is convenient to have a single adjective for designating
the whole seven.
We begin our study of
the seven virtues by speaking of WISDOM, and I will speak of it,
first, as a Vision of the Ideal;
secondly, as the Finding of the Way;
and thirdly, as a Lesson to be Learned.
first, as a Vision of the Ideal;
secondly, as the Finding of the Way;
and thirdly, as a Lesson to be Learned.
I. Wisdom, a Vision of
the Ideal
Wisdom is the foremost
of the virtues. It is the lamp-bearer showing the way to the rest. Its
principal business is to understand the goal to which they should all
strive, and the point to which the whole course of life should tend.
When Thomas Carlyle was
an old man, he said to someone, that he was often pondering the first question
of the Shorter Catechism, 'What
is the chief end of man?' with its wonderful answer, 'Man's chief end is to glorify God and
to enjoy Him forever.' Every Scotsman has known this question and answer ever
since he can remember; but few may have reflected on the reason why this should
be the first question. It is the first, because it is taken
for granted that the foremost inquiry of a rational being will be about the
purpose of its own existence. In point of practice, this is often the last
question rather than the first. Still it is a sublime fact that the first seed
of thought dropped into the mind of a whole nation, should be a question like
this, which tends to make those to whom it is addressed ponder on the purpose
of life.
Why have I been born?
Why am I alive?
Why should I wish to go
on living?
These are the thoughts
suggested to the mind by this first question of the catechism, and it is in
thoughts like these that wisdom has its birth.
That which in the old
language of the catechism is called 'the chief end,' is exactly the same as in
modern language we call 'the ideal'; and every modern mind can appreciate the
importance of the question, 'What is man's ideal?' for no belief has more complete possession of
the modern mind than the necessity of ideals; and the maxim is common that, if
you wish to find out a man's moral worth, you have to find out what his ideal or chief
end is.
Perhaps it might be said
of many men, that they have no ideal. And this is their condemnation. They have
no object in life; they have never reflected why they are alive. Their
course is determined, not by their own choice, but by the blind forces of
appetite within, and of conventionality without. Such may truly be said to be
dead while they live; for surely in such a vast and perilous enterprise as the voyage of life, the first duty of every one who claims to be a
man is to be aware where he is going.
But, from another point
of view, it may be said that every human being has his own ideal, whether he is
aware of it or not. In every mind, consciously or unconsciously, there forms
itself by degrees some supreme desire to which the thoughts are ever tending
and towards the attainment of which the endeavors are ever set. It may be power or pleasure or pride orprestige or possessions — or some special form
of one or other of these.
The drunkard is not aware of the hold his vice has on him,
but drink is the object to which his reveries and designs are ever bent. The miser does not know himself to be the slave of money, but it absorbs his
thoughts by day and his dreams by night. The woman of the world would not confess to herself that social advancement is her idol,
but year by year the passion for it burns in her blood and determines her
conduct.
In this sense ideals are innumerable, and it is by their crossing and clashing, their
vehemence and urgency — that the myriad-colored spectacle of existence is
produced. But most people's ideals are, for the most part, unconscious, or, at
least, unavowed.
The ideal of the first
answer of the Shorter Catechism is a very high one, 'to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.' But, if we are to have a conscious and an avowed
ideal, how can we pitch it lower? Can we be satisfied without having the
approval of God in this life, and the prospect of spending our eternity with
Him in the life to come?
The essential thing is
that we should know and avow what we intend to be and to do in this world, and in which port we intend to arrive when the voyage is finished. This is wisdom.
II. The Finding of the
Way
Wisdom is concerned . .
.
not only with the goal — but the way to it;
not only with the end — but the means for attaining it;
not only with the ideal — but with the real.
not only with the goal — but the way to it;
not only with the end — but the means for attaining it;
not only with the ideal — but with the real.
A pilot guiding a ship
up a river in the dark, sees afar off the shining light which marks his
destination; but, if he is to arrive there, he has to mark a hundred lesser
lights by which his course from point to point is indicated; and, if are neglected
these, his ship would be aground long before he was half-way up the channel.
So, suppose a man has
chosen the goal indicated in the answer to the first question of the Shorter
Catechism as his own, this supreme purpose includes many subordinate purposes —
such as . . .
the development of his character,
the discharge of his duty as a citizen,
the discharge of his duty as a Christian,
the discharge of his duty in the family,
his success in business, and so on.
the development of his character,
the discharge of his duty as a citizen,
the discharge of his duty as a Christian,
the discharge of his duty in the family,
his success in business, and so on.
In fact, as the pilot
has to be watchful at every bend of the course, at every encounter with a
passing ship, and at every change in the state of the tide — so has the wise
man to choose his path every day and every hour.
He has to compare and to weigh and to judge.
He has to appropriate
the good — and reject the bad.
He has to discern what
will help — and what will hinder.
He has to pitch upon the means that will take him, not only to the ultimate end, but to the
several halting places by the way.
The Latin name for the
virtue which the Greeks called wisdom is Prudence, and this change is
characteristic. In the process of passing from the one ancient language to the
other, ideas frequently lost something of their loftiness and delicacy. The
Romans were a practical people, and they aimed low. Taking for granted that the
end of life consisted in getting-on, they restricted the task of wisdom to the
means of attaining it. Such a debased wisdom has never died out of the world,
and Bunyan has embodied its characteristics in Mr. Worldly Wiseman.
But there is a prudence
which is not ignoble, but an essential part of wisdom. If we would reach the end — even the highest end — we must use the means.
We must know the facts
of the world. Facts are stubborn
things. We may make them either
our friends or our foes, as fire may either be a devouring element or the force
that carries us and our burdens at the rate of sixty miles an hour; and as
electricity may either be death-dealing lightning — or the means to carry our
messages round the globe. We may set nature up against us, or we may convert it
into a friend and helper — and wisdom consists in doing the latter. Still more
is it displayed in dealing with human nature.
We have to realize the
purpose of our life, not in a vacuum or a solitude — but in a world of men and
women, and every one of those we encounter may either further our aim or retard
it. Every human heart is a mystery, and human nature is a great deep. In
nothing is wisdom more displayed, than in knowing men and women, and in so
treating them that they may favor instead of opposing our advance.
In one word, we must know and obey the laws of God. On all objects and on all
events, the laws are written in hieroglyphics which the wise man can decipher —
but the fool misreads or does not see at all.
Not only is there a
narrow road and a broad road to be chosen once for all — but at every step
there is a right and a wrong, and a choice has to be made. Conscience within and God above whisper, 'This is the way — walk in it!' And blessed is he who thereupon walks straight
forward, even though at the moment it seems to be into the jaws of difficulty.
But, if reason and conscience and God say, 'This way!' and a man believes he is going to happiness by
walking in the opposite direction — that man is a fool!
III. A Lesson to Be
Learned
It was a question
discussed of old in the philosophical schools of Greece, whether wisdom can be taught. There is more of an intellectual element in it
than in the other virtues, and wisdom has sometimes been so conceived as to make
it the peculiar property of men of talent or genius. Nor can it be denied that
some people are from birth more akin to it than others. Who would deny Plato's
gift of intuition into the laws of the moral universe, or
Shakespeare's
instinctive discernment of human nature? But, if wisdom consist in the choice of the true end of life — and in the use of those means for attaining it placed by Providence at our disposal, then must
it be the privilege and the duty of every person, for not one is intended or doomed
beforehand to miss the end; and, therefore, wisdom must be capable of being
acquired.
How, then, is wisdom to
be attained?
Partly by precept. There have been many wise men in the world before us, and vast
stores of wisdom have been accumulated. These are to be found partly in the
tradition that comes down to us by means of speech, as, for instance, in the proverbs which fly from mouth to mouth and descend from
parent to child. These 'maxims hewn from life' are the concentrated essence of
a nation's wisdom, and there is no nation which does not possess proverbs of
its own. Our own nation is especially rich in them; and it is one mark of a
wise man to acquire these spontaneously, and to speak in proverbs.
Then the store of the
world's wisdom has been largely garnered in books, and, although a fool
may read hundreds of these without becoming wise, any one with the germs of
wisdom in him will grow wiser by means of books — if he chooses them well. A
book like Bacon's Essays shows how much wisdom can be packed into a hundred
pages. Burns in his 'Letter to a Young Friend,' can distill the essence of the
wisdom into a few lines.
The Bible as a whole, is the Book of Wisdom. Several books of the Old Testament are spoken
of sometimes as the Wisdom Literature, because they frequently deal by name with this
subject; they are poetic books; but the prophetical books are in a still higher
sense a Wisdom Literature; and even these pale before the remains of our Lord
and His apostles in the New Testament.
Anyone who aims at
wisdom should take as his motto the verse in the first chapter of Joshua, only
applying it to the whole Bible, 'This book of the law shall not depart out of
your mouth, but you shall meditate therein day and night, that you may observe
to do according to all that is written therein; for then shall you make your
way prosperous, and then you shall have good success.'
Secondly, wisdom is
learned by practice. It is, as I have said, partly an intellectual virtue; but it consists much less in knowing, than in doing. Wisdom is slowly
accumulated by experience, and, like the pearl which forms where the bivalve
has been wounded, it frequently springs from pain and misfortune.
Other virtues shine most
attractively in youth, but wisdom is the special ornament of old age; and it
compensates for the drawbacks of this period of life.
Best of all is wisdom to
be learned through imitation. 'He who walks with wise men shall be wise,' says the Book of Proverbs, 'but a companion of fools shall smart for it.' It is not, indeed, so easy as such advice might
imply, to get into the company of the wise; they have their own friends and
companions, and may be jealous of intrusion on their privacy and on their time.
But there is, at least, One who will not cast us out; and His friendship is
more certain to make us wise than that of any other. One of the names of the
Savior is Wisdom, and He, it is said in Holy Scripture, is made
of God unto us wisdom. He places no bounds to the intimacy we may
seek with Him; and, if we are thus made wise unto salvation, there is little
fear but we shall be welcome to other wise companionship even in this world;
while in the world to come we may reckon on a humble place in that society of
which it has been written, 'Those who are wise will shine like the brightness
of the heavens, and those who lead many to righteousness, like the stars for
ever and ever!' Daniel 12:3
2. COURAGE
There is no name which a
well conditioned mind more abhors, than that of coward, and every young man covets a reputation for being courageous. It
is a favorite occupation of boyhood, in hours of reverie, to dream of
situations in which the dreamer performs heroic exploits and earns the applause of the astonished onlookers. Of course, the
probability of anything of the kind ever happening is not seriously entertained
even by the boy when he is fully awake, and it disappears altogether as soon as
the walls of reality begin to close around the growing mind.
But it is good that the
dream has been there; the stronger the aspirations after the heroic in a boyish
mind, the better; in fact, in some shape these ought always to survive; and,
although the form of their realization may be totally different from the
visions of youth, yet they will receive fulfillment in every true life.
1. None the four virtues of the ancient world, nor
the three of the Christian world, were picked at haphazard out of the total
number of human excellencies. Although the connection between the two groups
may be indeterminate, the connection between the members of each of the groups
is of the closest. Especially is this the case with the subject of the first
chapter, and that of the present one; and I wish the connection to be noted, because the course will make a
deeper and more lasting impression if its different members form themselves
into an organism in the mind of the reader.
What, then, is the
connection between wisdom and courage? Wisdom, as we saw in last chapter, is chiefly
concerned with the object of existence; it fixes on the supreme good which we decide
to pursue. And courage is the force by which the obstacles which impede
this pursuit are overcome. It is a kind of indignation, which blazes out
against everything which would prevent it from going where duty calls. It is
the club of Hercules, or the hammer of Thor, with which we clear the path to
the goal.
It is highly important
to keep this connection between wisdom and courage in view, because it
enables us to distinguish between true courage and its counterfeits, of which
there are many. No sailor is more resolute in facing the stormy seas, than is
the pirate in tracking the booty on which he has fixed his avarice; but we do
not honor the resolution of such a human shark with the name of bravery; we
call it ferocity. No confessor, championing the truth in the
face of principalities and powers, is more sure of his own opinions than is
many an ignoramus, who, gifted with nothing but self-conceit and a loud voice,
shouts down the argument of all opponents; but we do not call such noisy stubbornness by the name of courage; we call it pig-headedness. The assassin of President McKinley took his life in his hand and
must have been more certain of having to die for what he was about to do than
is the leader of the most desperate forlorn hope on the field of battle; but,
whatever his master motive may have been — whether it was an overweening vanity
and craving for notoriety, or a malignant hatred of capitalism — we do not
count his act a brave one. It sends to the heart no thrill such as a brave act
excites, but quite the reverse.
The truth is, the raw
material of courage is neither beautiful nor admirable. It exists in brutes in
greater measure than in men. No soldier attacks with the violence of the tiger;
no hero stands his ground with the pertinacity of a bulldog. As the clay
requires to have another element transfused through it before it can assume
shapes of beauty, so the animal instinct requires to have something higher
added before it becomes truly admirable. And this addition is that which wisdom
supplies, namely, an end worthy of pursuit. Courage is the power of going forward in spite of difficulties to
reach a chosen and worthy object.
2. Although wisdom is the primary virtue in the
order of logic, courage is probably the primitive one in the order of time. It was the first virtue — the first which mankind exemplified,
noticed and extolled. In both the Greek and Latin languages the very name for
virtue itself is manliness, or valor, and the evolutionists
would probably demonstrate that all other virtues are derivable from this one.
The original arena of
courage was the battle-field. The earliest heroes of all nations are the
valiant who have performed exploits in defense of their altars and their
hearths. The Greek poets and orators were never tired of extolling Thermopylae, where three hundred brave warriors rolled back the whole power
of the East.
The lyre of the Roman
poet emitted its most subduing notes when he told of Regulus, who, when sent home by the Carthaginians, who held him in
captivity, to negotiate a peace for them with his fellow-countrymen, counseled
the senate to make no peace, but to carry on the war more vigorously, and, when
his heroic courage had prevailed, went back to Carthage, in fulfillment of his
parole, to be exposed to the torrid African sun with his eyelids cut off, and
rolled down a steep place in a barrel spiked with nails. 'He pushed aside,'
says the Roman poet, 'the embraces of his chaste wife and the kisses of his
little children, and would not lift his face from the ground until the
trembling senators agreed to his proposal, and then through the ranks of his
weeping friends he hastened back to exile, well knowing the tortures which
awaited him there, yet as mirthful as if he had been going to one of the
retreats of luxury and beauty on the southern shores of his native Italy.'
In modern times, in like
manner, the Scots have their Robert the Bruce, and the English their
Nelson, the Tyrolese their Andreas Hofer and the Swiss their Wilhelm Tell. Nor
has this primitive sentiment yet died out, as we see by the circle of fame
which in our own time has surrounded the names of a Moltke and a Gordon.
In battle, man risks the
most precious possession he has — namely, his own life. All men instinctively
cling to life, and dread death as the worst of all evils, because it sums up
all earthly losses in one; and when they see a General Gordon, with nothing in
his hand but the staff, going about in his business in the very thick of shot
and shell as coolly as if he were taking the air in a flower-garden, they feel
for him an admiration which knows no bounds.
Here again, however, the
question arises, wherein true valor
consists. In some cases,
recklessness of danger may be a mere animal propensity. A celebrated general
used to say, that in a thousand men there would be fifty ready to run any risk,
and other fifty ready to run away on any threat; while the nine hundred were
neither brave nor the reverse, and it was a toss up which of the two fifties
they would follow.
In others it may be the callousness of custom. The veteran enters the breach with much the
same indifference with which any other laborer goes about his day's work. Some
of the bravest soldiers have been the most timid to begin with, like that one
who, when reproached by a rough companion for trembling, replied, 'Yes, I am
afraid; but, if you had been as afraid as I am, you would have run away long
ago.' Here we see the true soul of valor peeping out; it is the mettle in a mind inspired by a great end, whether this end be called duty, or loyalty,
or patriotism. The truly brave man is
he who loves some worthy object so much, that he is willing to risk everything
— even life itself — for its attainment.
3. In the eyes of primitive man, the only hero was
the warrior. It was a great step in advance when it was recognized that there
is a valor of peace, no less admirable than that of war. The Roman Cicero
already says, 'The majority consider that military life is superior to that of
civilians; but this opinion must be confuted, for in civil affairs there are
opportunities of valor even more brilliant than in war.' This is the voice of
civilization, and the great lesson of modern times.
We know now that the physician, who goes from house to house and bed to bed fighting an
epidemic, and exposing his own life, and perhaps that of his family, every day
to danger — is as worthy of admiration as the soldier who walks with
intrepidity up to the canon's mouth. It is not without justification that the fireman, rescuing women and children from burning houses at the risk of
being crushed by falling beams or tumbling walls, is as popular in the reading
of the young as the soldier or the sailor.
The statesman who maintains the cause of humanity in the face
of the frowns of the multitude and in spite of the danger of being turned out
of office; the journalist who refuses, notwithstanding a diminishing
circulation, to make his newspaper the organ of a public opinion which he
believes to be wrong; the judge who sentences a titled favorite of society to
the prison with the same impartiality with which he would dispose of an
ordinary criminal — such are the heroes of civil life.
But we must bring
heroism down to still more lowly acts; for the pure ore of courage is often most abundant where it is least discerned
by untrained eyes. The widow who, when the breadwinner has been taken from
her side, does not surrender herself to despair, but resolves to face the world
alone and bring up her children in honesty; the man who has failed in business,
but, instead of forever harking back to the glory of his prosperous days,
adjusts to his new circumstances and refuses to let go his self-respect; the policeman who rushes into a barricaded room to grapple
with a madman — these are the brave of the modern type.
The bravery of the
soldier is a momentary effort. By one charge, which is over and done in
an hour, he earns the admiration and the gratitude of his fellow-countrymen.
But the most difficult heroism is that which is
long-continued, the strain never
relaxing year after year, and the struggle requiring to be constantly renewed,
and this is requisite in modern life merely to preserve our manhood intact.
The pressure of conventionality is constant. It is continually seeking to wear
down our individuality and reduce us to the level of mere specimens of a common
type. Even at school the force of practice and opinion is tyrannical, and the
schoolboy dreads being anything different from his fellows.
As life goes on, the
tendency to be a mere echo of others, becomes more and more pronounced, and any
deviation from what society prescribes and expects is treated as a crime. They say that in city life especially this obliteration of individuality is the rule; while in the country men grow up
with their own features and can express their own opinions. In the town we are
all pressured into the same pattern, as if we had dropped from a machine. Oh
the weary repetition of the streets, the monotony of the crowds that stream
together from the gates of our public works, the artificial and mechanical
sameness of the drawing-room! It is a life-long struggle for a human being, to
be able to say, 'I am what I am' — to look the world in the face and, without
oddity or arrogance, maintain and express a mind of his own.
For this, a man must be
often alone with himself — he must be able to enjoy his own company. Many are
afraid of themselves, and betake themselves instinctively to crowds; but it is in the crowd that the features of
individuality are rubbed off, and one becomes a cipher and a nonentity. It may seem a strange
test of courage to set up, but it is a genuine one, when we say, that he is a
brave man who can look his own inmost self steadily and long in the face,
without blenching.
4. No arena affords greater scope for courage than
religion. So it has been from the beginning. If you wish to see a hero, look at David approaching Goliath, not in the armor of Saul but in the faith of
the God of Jacob; or look at Elijah, on Carmel, standing alone against the world.
In the New Testament look at Stephen on the field of martrydom, or at Paul passing through a hundred deaths. Every century since then has had
its martyrs — down to those, numbering thousands, who have recently sealed
their testimony with their blood in China.There is no extreme of courage
beyond martyrdom; yet often have tender
and delicate women for the sake of their faith, and for the sake of their Lord,
braved the worst that the hellish ingenuity of Catholic inquisitors, or the
brutality of the roughest soldiery could invent. This is the most perfect illustration of
sacrifice for a noble end.
The necessity for
courage is inherent in the Christian religion; for the world is instinctively
its enemy. There are innumerable degrees and forms of opposition — sometimes it
is violent and brutal, ready to grasp at fire and sword, in order to annihilate
what it abhors. At other times it is scornful, using the weapons of satire and
sarcasm. And there are times when it actually professes Christianity itself,
and only objects to a spirituality which they consider to be fanatical, and an
austerity which is extreme. But everywhere and always, the spirit of the world
is hostile to the spirit of Christ, and the courage requisite to stand up
against it may sometimes be greater when the opposition is soft-spoken than
when it is boisterous.
Another thing that makes
courage a necessity to the Christian, is that his Lord and Master demands testimony from him. 'You are my witnesses,' says Jesus to
one and all who have believed on Him for salvation; and the word 'witnesses' is
the same as 'martyrs.' Every Christian is a
possible martyr. Circumstances are
conceivable in which he would either have to lose his life — or cast away his
Christian hope. The world is not yet so improved that anyone who is loyal to
his Lord should be able to escape scot-free. There is a great deal more of
persecution still going on in the world than many people are aware. In every
city there are works and shops where anyone making a decided profession of
Christianity has to run the gauntlet of ridicule and annoyance. And there are homes, too, in which, under the safe cover of what
ought to be tender relationships, the stabs of aversion and malignity are dealt in the dark.
This is the cross of
Christ, and it takes courage to bear it. But let none who are bearing it be ashamed, for it makes them the
associates of the heroes of every age. The greatest of all martyrs was Jesus himself. Never was there purer courage than His; and it
was courage even unto death. He bore the cross and despised the shame, and
there is no way of getting so near Him, as suffering for His sake.
Coleridge tells a
striking story of a young officer, who confided to him that in his first battle
he was absolutely demoralized with fear, until his General, Sir Alexander Ball,
the friend of Coleridge, grasped his hand and said, 'I was just the same the
first time I was in a battle,' when, at that touch and these words, his
timidity vanished in a moment and never returned. It is an instructive as well
as an affecting incident, suggesting what the mature might do for beginners in
the warfare of the Lord.
But the best
encouragement is in the touch and the word of the Lord Himself. Ay, and He also
can say, 'I trembled once like you,' as He remembers Gethsemane and the wilderness
of temptation. "For we do not have a high priest who is unable to
sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every
way, just as we are — yet was without sin. Let us then approach the throne of
grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us
in our time of need." Hebrews 4:15-16
3. TEMPERANCE
Let us begin, with a
word or two about the connection of the virtues.
Wisdom, courage,
temperance — these are the first three of the seven cardinal virtues, and they
are closely connected with one another.
Wisdom chooses the end of life — the goal that
has to be reached.
Courage fights down the enemies and overcomes the
obstacles which present themselves in the path to the goal.
Temperance has to do with the enemies within — with the lusts and passions that war against
the soul.
Many must feel that for
them, these internal foes are the real enemies. No doubt in everyone's lot,
there is a share of temptations coming from without; but a whole army storming
on the citadel from the outside, is less formidable than a single enemy within the walls. And who has not such an enemy?
The danger of temptation
lies not so much in its own strength, as in an affinity for it within the soul;
for this is a traitor that will convey the key of the gates to the
attacking forces. Who is there among us who is not aware of some weakness in
himself, that gives temptation its power and its advantage? In some of us this
native or acquired bent towards certain
sins may be so strong that we
hardly need to be tempted, but may almost be said to tempt the tempter.
Who of us would like to
unveil to the public eye all that goes on in his own imagination in hours of
solitude and reverie? Are we not ashamed of
it? Do we not wonder at ourselves? Like serpents weltering in the dark depths
of some obscene pit, lust and passion turn and twist, inflate themselves and
rage with mad violence — and they lift up their heads after being wounded
apparently unto death a hundred times! It is with the control of these unruly
elements in human nature, that temperance has to do; for, if they are not
overcome, the goal will certainly be missed.
I. There are voices at present which deny that
temperance is a virtue. Holding the only law of life to be development, they demand for every power the fullest expansion, and they ask
why capacities of enjoyment have been bestowed on us by nature, if they are not
to be satisfied. Often has the thirst for strong drink been thus vindicated;
and bacchanalian poetshave poured glittering shafts of contempt on
those who avoid too scrupulously the boundaries of intoxication, or try to
impose abstinence on others. With nearly equal frequency, has the privilege of nature been claimed against the Christian law of chastity — which has been represented as an outrage on reason, and a cruel
and arbitrary limitation of the joys of existence.
But such doctrines are
contradicted by their fruits. The unbridled indulgence of desire, soon ends
in both physical and moral destruction. For a short time, indeed, the
remonstrances of conscience and reason may be drowned by the revelry of lust;
the songs of bacchanalian pleasure may shake the air with applause; goblets may
foam, eyes sparkle, and laughter echo; but soon the roses wither, and in place
of the beaming eye — there grins the horrible eye-socket.
No one has ever given
more eloquent and daring expression to the claims of liberty in the use of the
wine-cup than the poet Robert Burns; but his own end, in its inexpressible
sadness, was a commentary which even the most thoughtless could not mistake. If
among the masters of song there is one in modern times who, for the perfection
and inevitableness of the lyric note, deserves to be placed in the same rank as
Burns, it is the German poet Heine, and he employed his transcendent gifts in
glorifying and vindicating fleshly pleasures; but the long years which he spent
at the close of life, buried alive in his mattress grave, as he called it,
taught all Europe, with a force and a pathos which nothing could have exceeded,that
the end of those things is death!
On the contrary,
experience shows how beautiful and beneficent, when subject to control and restrained to their own time, place
and function — are even those parts of human nature which, when uncontrolled,
tend most inevitably to corruption and destruction.
As fire, when it breaks loose and rages on its own account, carries swift
destruction in its course; but, when restricted within certain bounds, it warms
our rooms and cooks our food; it illuminates our towns and drives our
locomotives.
Or as water, when in flood, roots up trees, carries away houses and sweeps
the crops from the fields; but, when confined within its banks, drives the
wheel and floats the barge and rejoices the eye, either by its placid flow or
by the splendors of the cataract. So the very qualities which, when
unregulated, waste and brutalize life may, when subjected to the control of
temperance, be its loveliest ornaments.
Thus the man who is
prone to conversation may, by making unrestrained use of his power, gradually
become a bore, from whose garrulity everyone flees. Whereas the restrained use
of his tongue would cause him to be looked upon as the possessor of a
delightful gift, by which all who knew him would be disposed to profit.
Nothing is, in this
respect, more remarkable than the instinct of sex — one of the parts of our nature with which the virtue of
temperance has most to do. When emancipated from the law of God and the law of
modesty — it brutalizes more quickly and more completely than any other form of
indulgence!
But, when is obedient to
the laws of nature and of God, it blossoms into virgin love, the most exquisite
flower of human happiness. And subsequently, in the form of wedded love, it is
the very essence of those kindnesses and joys which make the home to be the
center of attraction to the heart, as well as the basis of the whole fabric of
society.
Thus is intemperance
demonstrated to be wicked, and temperance to be virtuous — by their patent and
undeniable effects.
II. The necessity for temperance is based on the
fact that the constitution of man is composed of many parts of different
degrees of value and dignity, on the harmonious working together of which his
happiness depends. It is as in an army, where there are many ranks, from the
general to the private soldier. How would it do in a battle, if every soldier
were to act on his own initiative, no one waiting for the word of command? Even
if every man were loyal and brave, and acting for the best, as he understood
it, the whole army would become a scene of immeasurable disorder and fall an
easy prey to the enemy.
It is as in a ship or a boat, where every sailor or rower has his own place and his
own work. In a race on the river, when the prize for oarsmanship is about to be decided, how would it do if every
oarsman considered it his right to let himself go and pull with all the
strength at his command? This would correspond exactly with the theory of those
who hold that every part of human nature is entitled to unrestrained
development; but it would work havoc on the river and entail inevitable defeat.
If there is to be any hope of victory, every oarsman has to consider his
fellows and keep his eye on the coxswain. He must do nothing for his own glory or
gratification, but regulate the amount of force he puts into every stroke, by a
calculation of what is demanded of him at that particular point at that
particular moment.
So in ourselves there is
the broad distinction of the body with its parts and the soul with its powers.
The body has its own dignity and its own rights; but the soul is manifestly superior. Yet the body is constantly endeavoring to
assert itself and get the upper hand. Hence the need to keep the body under control, as Paul phrases it. Then, among the powers of
the soul there is the utmost variety, with many gradations of dignity.
Some powers are near
akin to the body. Such are the appetites, of which the chief are these three — the
appetite for eating, the appetite for drinking, and the appetite for sex. These are common to
man with the brutes, and are specially apt to become unruly and violent. So
much is this the case, that the word temperance is sometimes restricted
to the control of these alone.
At the opposite extreme
from these animal propensities, are such imperial powers as conscience and reason; while in between come
the feelings, some of which are more noble — and some less noble. Thus, the
feeling of reverence which we entertain for God, and the feelings of affection of which the chief arena is the home are noble.
Yet there are many feelings, such as the desire for money or the desire for
praise, which, though not base in themselves, tend to baseness.
Temperance, then, is the
control of the lower animal propensities, by the higher powers of conscience and reason. It is the force of will, by which all are kept in their own
places and compelled to do their own work. When the habit of temperance is thoroughly formed — every excess is instantly
checked, and every reluctant power promptly stimulated. Thus the whole being
develops steadily and acts harmoniously; and the effects of temperance ought to
be internal peace and external beauty.
III. The self-control just described, can neither be
won nor maintained without severe and continuous effort, accompanied by many a
failure and many a new beginning. In more than one passage of his writings,
Paul speaks of his own heart as a scene of civil war, the more earthly
principles contending with the more spiritual — and of this struggle, no man who breathes is wholly ignorant.
Everyone has his own
besetting sin. It may be a tendency
bequeathed by ancestors, such as a cursed craving for drink. It may be a peculiarity of temperament, such as
a liability to uncontrolled fits of temper. It may be a habit acquired in years of youthful
folly and immorality which still clings to us, although the past has been
blotted out by repentance. It may even be allied to what is noble and good, like some forms
of pride. But there it is; and we have to wrestle with it all our days. It
seems to me there is encouragement in the reflection that this conflict is
going on, in one form or other, in every heart. This should make
us sympathetic towards others, and hopeful about ourselves. Others whose distress has been as
desperate as ours, have conquered — and why should not we? In this respect, we
are compassed about with a great cloud of witnesses.
Every time the unruly
appetite is indulged, it becomes stronger, and its next victory will be more
easily won! But every time the will,
directed by reason and conscience, gets the upper hand — it is itself
strengthened, and its next effort will be more prompt and successful. Such is the law of the battle. It is by the growth of the will in vigor,
swiftness and perseverance, that victory is secured.
Yes, this secures the
victory, but not this alone. Paul, in one of his epistles, compares this moral
struggle to the Olympic games so renowned in ancient Greece; and he says that
everyone taking part in these games was temperate in all things. The training undergone by athletes in preparation for these
games is proverbial. In Greece the fixed period for training was ten months;
and the discipline was most severe. It could not be relaxed for a single day;
otherwise the benefit of the preceding time was lost, and some rival would get
to the front. But the candidates for the honors of the arena, did not go about
from day to day, all the ten months, complaining of their hard lot. They took it as a matter of course; and what they thought and
talked about was the prize they expected to win — the chaplet of green leaves to be placed on their brows amidst the applause
of admiring Greece; and the privileges of many kinds which they would enjoy for
the remainder of their days.
Temperance becomes easy
and even exhilarating, when the prize to be won by it is great enough. "Everyone
who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown
that will not last; but we do it to get a crown that will last forever!" 1
Corinthians 9:25
What father of a family
has not observed with reverence and amazement, the superiority to the most
urgent demands of the body, such as sleep, exhibited by a mother when nursing an ailing child? Temperance is easy, when there is a strong enough affection
involved.
The terms of the moral
struggle we have all to wage, may be suddenly and completely altered by the
entrance into our consciousness of the prize to be won, or of the
person for whose sake the sacrifices have to be endured. For the believer, the prize and the person have the same name — Christ! The victory is
difficult, and yet it is easy.
To obtain the control
over an unruly passion, or to disencumber oneself of a besetting sin — may be
painful as the plucking out of a right eye and the cutting off of a right hand.
Jesus does not deny it — the words are His own. Yet His yoke is easy and His burden light. How is the contradiction between these
two statements to be reconciled? The answer to that question is the secret of
the Gospel, and blessed are those to whom it has been revealed.
4. JUSTICE
In the preceding
chapters I have taken pains to point out the connection between one virtue and
another; and the three already discussed — wisdom, courage and temperance — are
very closely related. But the connection of the fourth, justice, with the other
three is not so close. Those are virtues of personal character; this has
respect chiefly to other people. No doubt, without wisdom, courage and
temperance a man cannot cultivate justice with any success; and, on the other
hand, the earnest pursuit of justice will react favorably on these other
virtues.
But, on the whole, while
the three first cause him who is cultivating them to look continually within —
this fourth causes him who is exercising it to look continually without, and to
consider what he owes to other
people.
For justice is the rendering to every one of what is
his due. It is the virtue of
man, not as he stands by himself, but in his place in society. In order to
understand his whole duty in regard to it, a man has to remember his relations
to all other human beings — his superiors, inferiors and equals — and his
connection with each circle of the social organization — such as the family,
the city, the nation and the church.
As man has relations to
creatures beneath him and to beings above him, besides those to his fellow-men — the idea of justice might
be stretched so as to include behavior to the lower animals, and also his
duties towards God. Indeed, in some modern books, cruelty to animals is discussed
under justice.
Duties towards God form
the greater part of justice; but, on the whole, it is better to limit the scope
of justice to the relations of human
beings to each other.
This is, in itself, a
wide field, for it comprehends the mutual duties . . .
of parents and children,
of husbands and wives,
of brothers and sisters,
of friends,
of neighbors,
of clergy and laity,
of employers and employed,
of rulers and subjects, and
of others too numerous to be mentioned.
of parents and children,
of husbands and wives,
of brothers and sisters,
of friends,
of neighbors,
of clergy and laity,
of employers and employed,
of rulers and subjects, and
of others too numerous to be mentioned.
If anyone were a model
of justice in all these respects, he would be a perfect man. Hence justice has
often been spoken of as the whole of virtue.
While the definition of
justice as the rendering to every one
of his due seems a very simple one
— it is in reality not so simple as it looks. This you realize as soon as you
begin to askexactly what is the due of any one in particular. Every such question is
complicated by the question hidden in it, What is my due? — for the bias in favor of self too often confuses the
verdict.
You may lay down a
proposition like that embodied in the American Declaration of Independence,
that everyone has an inalienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness; but you are immediately pulled up by questions like these: Is that
man entitled to life — who has taken the life of another? Is a lunatic to be
allowed liberty? Does not many a man's pursuit of happiness — involve misery
for other men and women?
In short, what is
anyone's due, and especially, what is one's own due in any relationship of life
— can frequently be ascertained only by close and unbiased inquiry. In order to
be trained not only to perform acts of justice but to have a habit of justice, ready to act on every occasion, we require to put
ourselves to more than one school of justice and learn the lessons there
imparted. Let us inquire what these SCHOOLS OF JUSTICE are.
I. The Justice of THE
CIVIL LAW
So essential is justice
for the welfare of all that, wherever men have risen, even in a slight degree,
above the savage state — they have employed their best wisdom to declare what justice is, and their united strength to enforce it.
In early Rome what were
called the Twelve Tables were set up in the market-place, where they could be
read by everyone, and they told in the plainest words, what were the duties of a citizen and what were the penalties of the infringement of
them.
As civilization
advances, the picked men of the nations are formed into parliaments for the
purpose of defining the rights of the different classes in the community.
Law-courts are erected, judges and juries sit, and lawyers argue for the
purpose of applying to particular cases what has been laid down in general in
the law of the land; while the whole apparatus ofprisons and punishments exists for the purpose
of sharpening in the public mind, the consciousness of the majesty of the law.
In every country these
institutions form a school to which the citizens are put, and in which they
learn almost unconsciously multitudes of things which they must do, and
multitudes of things which they must not do. In most cases the schooling takes
effect almost as perfectly as the schooling of nature by which every one learns
very early in life, not to stand in the way of a heavy falling object or to
bring the hand too near a fire.
Most of us have never
been in the clutches of the law of the land, and it may not occur to us once in
a year, that this is a danger we have to avoid. But, for all that, the law has
been our schoolmaster, teaching us to do no wrong to our neighbor, and to
fulfill the promises, formal or implied, we have made to him. Our
unconsciousness that the law and we have had anything to do with each other,
only proves how well its work has been done.
II. The Justice of PUBLIC
OPINION
The law of the land in
any modern state is an embodiment of the experience of centuries, during which
multitudes of the acutest minds have been giving their best strength to define what justice is. In the law of our own land, streams of wisdom
mingle, derived both, on the one side, from the classical nations, and, on the
other, from our ancestors. Yet, with all that has been done, the law of the
land is an extremely imperfect embodiment of justice, and one might remain for life securely outside the
clutches of the law — and yet be an unjust man.
Of the holes in the network of the law of the land, a striking illustration was
supplied a short time ago in one of our cities. One who had occupied a high
office in the municipality was summoned into court to answer for a use of his
position which, if it became common, would corrupt the administration of the
city through and through; but it turned out that what he was charged with
doing, is no offence against any law in the statute-book. Of course I am
expressing no opinion as to whether the particular person accused was guilty or
not of what was alleged against him, but the case is a curious instance of the imperfection of the law of the land.
Nor is it always the
greatest wrongs which the public machinery of justice is directed against,
while those it neglects are trivial in comparison. On the contrary, the law often strains at a gnat while it swallows a
camel. For example, if anyone
were to defraud his neighbor of a shilling, the law would lay hold of him and
set its whole machinery of police, judges, lawyers and prisons in motion for
his punishment. But the same person might, by the arts of temptation carried on
for years, make his neighbor's son a debauched drunkard, or his daughter
unchaste — and yet escape altogether the notice of the law! That is to say, you
may not touch your neighbor's purse — but you may break his heart with impunity, as far as the law of the land is concerned.
This shows the need of a stricter school of justice, and this is furnished by public opinion. A man may keep all his days out of the hands
of the police, and the law may never have a word to say against him — but
society may know him to be guilty of acts which it sternly disapproves, and will not allow
to be perpetrated with impunity. He is not fined or imprisoned, but society
frowns on him, he loses his character, and the doors through which access is
obtained to the pleasures and honors of life, are shut in his face. Thus
silently, but sternly, does public opinion punish the man who is known to be a breaker of
the eighth commandment (you shall not steal;) and the woman who has broken
the seventh (You shall not commit adultery). And, on the
whole, this is a beneficial check on passion and selfishness, while it does
much to render society a more habitable and peaceful place than it would
otherwise be.
III. The School of
CONSCIENCE
Public opinion, like the
law of the land, leaves holes in the network of justice which it weaves. In
fact, much worse can be said of it — it not infrequently commands what it ought
to forbid — and forbids what it ought to command. In illustration of this may
be adduced the law of honor which, not long ago, forbade any member of the
upper class to decline a challenge to engage in a duel. At the opposite extreme
of society, it is still considered dishonorable not to treat visitors to strong
drink on festive occasions.
Of course it might be
alleged against the CIVIL law, too, that it has often commanded what it was
wrong to do — and forbidden what was right. As, for instance, when the early
Christians were forbidden to worship the Savior and commanded, on pain of
death, to bend the knee to the images of heathen divinities. But a false
verdict of public opinion is more difficult to combat than a wrong
statute.
The appeal from it,
however, is to the CONSCIENCE of the individual, in which there is erected another school of justice, and a very venerable one.
Let anyone, when not
sure what is right or wrong, retire with the question into the solitude of his
own breast, let him rid himself of passion and party spirit, and ask himself
what he ought to do; and, provided he really wishes to learn the truth, he will
seldom fail to ascertain what is his duty. It is a far finer and more severe
type of morality, which is taught in this school of conscience, than in that
either of public opinion or the law of the land. And it is the great object of
religion to strengthen the
conscience, teaching men to feel
that, confronted by it alone, they are in a more solemn presence than in any
law-court, however high, or in whole theater of spectators!
It was to the conscience
that Jesus appealed, when he framed the Golden Rule, "Do unto others, whatever you would like them to do unto
you!" Matthew 7:12. This golden maxim is the
soul of justice!
IV. The Justice of CHRIST
As I have just quoted
the Golden Rule, it might be thought we had already obtained Christ's
contribution to justice. Among other things, Jesus was a moralist, contending
earnestly for righteousness and justice between man and man, and between class and
class. He was the heir and the successor of the prophets — those stern
denouncers of wrong — and He emitted many rules of justice, this golden one
among them; yet this was not the chief benefit He gave to the virtue of
justice.
There are some things that
make it easy to render to certain people all that is their due, or even more.
In railway-traveling, everyone has noticed the attention paid by guards and
porters to those traveling first-class. When royalty is in any city, all the
arrangements of traffic give way to its convenience, and the citizens vie with
one another in placing their services at the disposal of the royal visitors.
Just so, there is not a
town in the world where the well-dressed do not receive more courtesy than the
ragged. This is human nature — and in many cases it may be contemptible.
But Jesus endeavored to
secure fair treatment for the common man, by raising the universal estimate of
him. He treated the common man with respect and consideration.
Now, to the mind that
has taken in the teachings of Christ, the very humblest belong to that humanity
which He took into His heart and for which He gave His life; and it is
impossible thus to see our fellow-men through Christ's eyes — without having a
fine and powerful motive for treating them with justice.
As the discussion of our
theme has been pretty abstract in this chapter, it may be advisable to finish
with a practical illustration. What would our four teachers say about what is due by employer to employed —
and what is due by employed to employer?
First, the teaching of
the LAW OF THE LAND is very brief, but decisive. It simply says to the master,
'Pay what you owe,' and to the servant, 'You shall not steal.' And, as simple
as this teaching is, there are those to whom it is the thunder of God.
Secondly, PUBLIC OPINION
goes a good deal beyond this, though its voice is divided. There is a public
opinion of employers, which the employer hears perhaps too exclusively — and
there is a public opinion of the employed, which the employee hears perhaps too
exclusively. The former urges the stern application of the law of supply and
demand of labor — while the latter counsels to take advantage of the employers'
need of laborers.
But there is a wider public opinion which decides more impartially. It frowns upon
the employer if he is not at least trying to provide the best
conditions of labor which others have been able to allow in his business. And
it censures the laborer if, instead of doing his best, he follows a
'work hard while the boss is watching' policy. This wider public opinion is imperfectly informed, and therefore makes
mistakes; but, on the whole, the influence which it wields is invigorating.
From its blunders,
employer or employee can appeal to the third tribunal mentioned — his own CONSCIENCE.
Let him ask there, as an honest man, what he ought to do, what God wishes
him to do, and what he would wish the other man to do him, if places were
exchanged. And then, if he is loyal to the decision of his conscience, he can
hold up his head and brave public opinion, however hostile and unanimous
against him.
Last of all, what is the
message of CHRISTIAN PRINCIPLE to master and servant? It will remind the master, that his servants have an immortal destiny, and constrain him to
minimize or abolish things, like Sabbath labor and excessive hours, which
secularize and brutalize. While servants, as they toil, will hear a voice behind them
saying, 'Whatever you do, do it
heartily, as to the Lord and not unto men!'
I do not mean to say
that even with all these sources of light, the question of justice will always
be an easy one. The reciprocal rights of corporate bodies are particularly
difficult to define. But, at all events, it is by letting the instructions of
these four
teachers play upon the mind, that
the level of public justice will be raised, and the individual prepared for
appearing before that solemn tribunal, where the sentences of this world will
all be revised, and a just verdict pronounced from which there will be no
appeal. "For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that
each one may receive what is due him for the things done while in the body,
whether good or bad!" 2 Corinthians 5:10
5. FAITH
In the opening chapter,
I explained how the cardinal virtues came to be reckoned as seven. The idea of
cardinal virtues belongs to the ancient world, as it existed before the
appearance of Christianity. But the classical thinkers counted only four —
wisdom, courage, temperance and justice — the four already discussed.
Christianity, when it appeared, gave the foremost places among the virtues, not
to these four which were the choice of the philosophers — but to the three well
known to every reader of the New Testament — faith, hope, and love.
It was much later, after
Christians also had begun to be philosophers, that the ancient quartet and the Christian trio were joined, so as to produce the seven virtues as we now think of them.
Few things indicate more
clearly how great was the change effected by Christianity on the thinking of
the world, than the fact that it adopted an entirely new set of virtues; for virtuesare simply excellencies of manhood. The change indicates that the type of man
which Christianity tries to produce, is radically different from that aimed at
by pagan philosophy. Someone has truly said, that the final test of every human
system or institution, is the kind of man it produces.
It might be argued,
indeed, that Christianity did not change the virtues, but only altered their
names. Thus, it might be maintained, with some show of reason, that faith is simply wisdom under another name, that hope is to a large extent identical with courage, and that love has a considerable resemblance to justice. But, while in each of
these cases there is a certain likeness, the unlikeness is more obvious, and we
must, I think, conclude, that Christianity taught
mankind to admire a different set of excellencies from those set up for the
admiration of the ancient world; and that the man it strives to form, is a different type of man.
I may be reminded,
indeed, that Christianity has adopted the pagan virtues as its own; and this is
true; but it has adopted them in addition to its own. And the
three new ones are its own choice in a sense in which the four old ones are
not.
It is not, indeed, to be
thought that Christianity created these three virtues. It is not to be thought
that human beings did not exercise faith, hope, and love before Christianity
appeared. Man has always been a being who has believed and hoped and loved. But
what Christianity did, was to recognize the value and importance of these
mental acts or habits; and it supplied them with new objects on which to exercise their powers. Faith, hope,
and love are the taproots of the
plant we call man — but Christianity
transplanted the tree into new soil!
Of the three distinctly
Christian or theological virtues, as they are sometimes called, the first is
FAITH.
In the eleventh chapter
of Hebrews, where we find the most express definition of faith given in Holy
Writ — it being defined as 'the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of
things not seen' — a brilliant attempt is made to represent the whole history
of religion as a process of which faith was the inspiring principle. The heroes of the Old Testament are made to
march past in long procession, their exploits are enumerated, and in every case
these are attributed to faith, as if this had been the power which produced
religion and all its manifestations.
In the New Testament, in
general, faith occupies a foremost place, and especially in the writings of
Paul. The apostles were all sensible that in Christ, a great new force had
entered the world; and faith was the element in man, by which it was
appropriated. When in modern times, after centuries of observation,
Christianity was re-discovered at the Reformation and preached afresh to the
nations by Luther, Calvin, Knox, and the other reformers, faith again became
the watchword, and it was through the reappearance of this virtue in men's
hearts and in their characters, that the rejuvenescence of Europe took place.
After that great
movement subsided, a stage of development ensued in which faith became an
object of speculation more than a living power. Men inquired about its nature,
and disputed with one another about the elements of which it is composed. Thus
many strange opinions came to prevail, some of which hang, like cobwebs, about
the general mind to this day.
Thus in the eighteenth
century, when religion was at the lowest ebb in England and Scotland, faith was
understood to be the habit of believing dogmas which the mind could not
understand, and this submission to the authority of the Church, was supposed to
be exceedingly meritorious. But anything more unlike faith, as it is
represented in the Bible or as it has prevailed in the heroic periods of
religion — it would be difficult to conceive. If in the minds of any there
still lingered any remains of the notion that faith is a shutting of the eyes of reason, and a blind trusting to church authority — I advise you to sweep such rubbish out of your
minds. True religion wants to shut no man's eyes; its mission is to open them.
It was in opposition to
that view of faith, that the evangelical doctrine was developed in which most of us were brought
up. In evangelical preaching, faith held a very prominent and honorable place.
Those who can remember the more earnest type of preaching prevalent a
generation ago, will easily recall the frequency of the appeal, 'Only believe —
and you shall be saved!' But there was a tendency to narrow faith to a single
point and to restrict it to a single act, namely, trust in the sacrifice of
Christ for the forgiveness of sin.
But, however important
this may be, it is far from expressing the whole genius of faith. If you go
back to a character like Luther and listen to him speaking about faith, as he
was incessantly doing, you realize that in him, it was the bursting forth of a
spring of energy, which spread sunshine and fruitfulness over the entire
landscape; it was a habit of the whole man, the actions of which kept all the
functions healthy and happy. Faith is wronged, when it is only conceived as
something demanded of us on pain of perdition. Faith is the most natural, the
most health-giving and joy-giving of all experiences.
If I might attempt a definition of faith, I would be inclined to call it the response of man to God — to His revelations, His promises, and His
offers.
1. As has been already said, faith did not come
into the world with Christianity, and it is not even peculiar to religion.
Faith is a human function, which every human being is exercising every day in
regard to multitudes of objects. Whatever lies beyond the range of our own
immediate observation, is an object of faith. How do those of us who have never
been out of Europe, know that such places as Africa, Asia, and America exist?
It is by believing the testimony of those who have been there; or it is by seeing
objects, like black faces or white ivory, not produced in this country, and
inferring that there must be other continents besides Europe from which they
come.
Our knowledge of all the
events which have happened in this world before our own generation, is due
to faith. We believe the testimony of those who have placed them on record.
And all our knowledge of
what is taking place in the world of our own day, except that which is
cognizable by our own five senses, is obtained in the same way — by testimony,
which we accept by faith.
Thus you see how vast is the sweep of faith, and how large a part it plays in everyday
life. Of course, testimony has to be sifted. It is not all worthy of belief; some of it is true and some false; and it is the
part of the wise man to sever the wheat from the chaff, believing only that
which is deserving of credence.
Now, among the various
testimonies which come to us from many quarters, inviting us to believe in the
existence of things we have never seen, there is the testimony of God, certifying to us His own existence and His
character. His testimony takes many forms:
Partly it is in His
WORKS, "For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities —
his eternal power and divine nature — have been clearly seen, being understood
from what has been made, so that men are without excuse!" Romans 1:20
Partly it is in His
PROVIDENCE, for we know that we have not brought ourselves into existence, and
that the sweetness of life which we taste is not of our own procuring.
Partly it is in
CONSCIENCE, where a holy and righteous will, above our own, is daily announcing
itself.
We are quite entitled to
test these evidences; this is our prerogative as reasonable beings. But, if
they stand the test, then this Supreme Being is entitled to the homage of our
soul — to our admiration, trust and worship — and this is faith.
Have you ever thought
what a change it would make, if you believed with all your heart and soul and
strength and mind, that God exists? This one belief would alter everything.
Some may even think that it would change too much — that, if we realized God as
he really is, we could think of nothing else. This I do not admit. The thought
of God should be to the best of our thinking — like the sky to other objects of
the landscape — always there, blue, serene, unifying. In His presence,
constantly and steadily realized, everything would find its right place — it
would be easy to do right, and difficult to do wrong. In fact, the problem of
life would be solved.
But alas, we lose sight
of Him; earthly objects shut Him out; we often do not even wish to retain Him
in our knowledge, because of the imperativeness of His claims on our
conscience. But it is the office of faith to overcome this godlessness, saying,
in the words of the psalm, 'I have set the Lord
always before me!'
2. God does not merely stand at a distance,
silently appealing to man through His works. He comes near and speaks in
intelligible words; and His words are promises.
It will be remembered
how large a part was played by the divine promises in the experience of
Abraham, the father of the faithful. God promised him a land and a seed and a blessing; and the faith of
Abraham was exhibited in laying hold of these promises. In order to do so, he
had to let the world go — for the abandonment of things prized by the natural
heart, is always involved in the grasping of those things to which faith
applies itself. But he steadily followed the star of the promise wherever it led him.
Among the successors of
Abraham, this cleaving to a divine promise through good and bad report, through
fair weather and foul, was so prominent a characteristic of faith, that the
writer of the eleventh chapter of Hebrews sums up their biographies in the
words, 'These all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having
seen them afar off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced them, and
confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth.'
At all times the life of faith is one of response to the promises. These are
contained in the Word of God. The reading of God's Word is one of the most
native habits of a Christian life; and the dealings which the soul thereby
keeps up with God, consists to a large extent in appropriating the promises.
But the great promise to
which faith attaches itself, is that of the life to come.
Apart from special Scripture revelation, man has only dim notions of immortality. And
some thinkers, like Socrates and Plato, before the advent of Christ and apart
from the Bible, followed such natural light as was given to them with a wistful
and noble eagerness. But it is in the Word of God, that the unveiling of life to come has taken place; and in Jesus Himself, who has
spoken to us distinctly of the mansions intended for our future habitation, as
one who has been there and is familiar with them. It is, therefore, to His
blessed words, above all others, that faith responds, when it rises up to claim
possession of its heritage.
This action of faith,
also, has to overcome obstacles. Not only may doubt arise as to whether even
the testimony of Christ is credible — but the things that are temporal engross
our time and attention, and, above all, we shrink in cowardice from the kind of
life imperatively demanded of us, if we really have immortal destiny. Who does
not feel that it would change everything, if he believed with his whole soul in
his own immortality? It would supply him with a totally new standard of values.
Many things which the world prizes and pursues — he would utterly despise; and
many things which the world neglects — would be the objects of his most ardent
pursuit.
The world to come,
because invisible, is to the unbelieving multitude, as good as non-existent.
But it may shine as attractively before the eyes of the soul for a lifetime —
as the prize does for the moment in the eyes of the competitor in the games.
This passionate response to God's grandest promise, is faith.
3. It may seem a little forced to distinguish
between God's promises and His offers; and I will not deny
the charge, if anyone chooses to bring it; but I make the distinction in order
to emphasize the personal element in
God's dealings with us. He comes nearer to us
than even a promise brings Him. Person to person, He makes us offers.
His grand offer is His
Son, whom He offers to the world as its Savior. This world is full of sin and
misery, and it is in desperate need of someone to save it from these evils.
Reformers and theorists are not lacking. The world is like an invalid with a
disease of many years' standing, who has tried many physicians and spent much
money on them — but is nothing better, and is rather growing worse. Is there no
balm in Gilead? Is there no physician there? God Himself comes to the rescue,
and His remedy is nothing less than His own Son!
It is only expressing
the same truth in another form if we say that Christ offers Himself to every
man. When a human being feels himself to be a sinner, condemned by justice and
exposed to the loss of his eternal soul — then he feels the value of the offer
of a Savior. But even one not so ripe for salvation as this, might be awakened
to the true position of affairs by the mere fact that a Savior is offered to
him.
As a person who has been
in an accident, on awaking and seeing doctors, nurses and weeping relatives,
becomes aware that something serious has happened; so a thoughtful man,
realizing that Christ is offering Himself to him as his Savior, might well ask,
why he needs such an offer. The Son of God, it is said, gave His life for
sinners — but how did I stand in need of such a sacrifice? What have I done
that I should require an atonement to be made for me at such price? What danger
am I exposed to, that the Son of God should have become incarnate to deliver
me? Along such a line of reflection, anyone might come to realize the value of
Christ.
Who does not acknowledge
that the life and death of Christ form the mightiest event that ever happened
in this world? The Son of God, incarnate! The Son of God dead upon the cross!
What then is that to me? What am I getting out of it?
Christ is not dead, He
is living still. He comes to me and offers Himself as my Savior. And, when my
soul rises in humility and timid gratitude to accept the offer, feeling it to
be the greatest opportunity I shall ever have in time or eternity, this is
faith.
In this lecture I have
been less desirous of giving an exact definition of faith, than of commending
it as an act or habit to cultivate. And, in conclusion, I should like, with the
same end in view, to mention one form of faith that lends itself to easy cultivation.
If any is unaware how to
begin to exercise faith, the easiest form of it is prayer. This is a response to God's revelation of Himself; for he who
comes to God in prayer, must believe that He is. It is a response to God's
promises, for one of the principal arts of prayer is to plead the promises. And
it is a response to God's offers — the best way of replying to Christ's offer
of Himself, is to speak to Him, and this is prayer. A single genuine prayer —
and the life of faith is begun. We have God's own Word for it, 'whoever calls
on the name of the Lord shall be saved.'
6. HOPE
Let us begin, as usual,
with a word or two about the connection. The three Christian virtues — faith, hope
and love — are very intimately connected.
Faith belongs more to
the intellectual,
hope belongs more to the will, and
love belongs more to the emotions.
hope belongs more to the will, and
love belongs more to the emotions.
Faith is a vision of the
spiritual and eternal world;
hope is the effort of the will to secure the objects which faith reveals;
love is the glow of desire for these objects, and sets the will in motion.
hope is the effort of the will to secure the objects which faith reveals;
love is the glow of desire for these objects, and sets the will in motion.
In strict logic, love
ought to be treated before hope, but we naturally reserve it for the last
place, following the example of Paul, because it is the greatest.
1. Hope is with many people a matter of
temperament. They have the temperament which is called hopeful. Certainly there are some people who seem to see by nature the
sunny side of things; they are always expecting good success, and they rise
like a cork from beneath the attempts of misfortune to depress them.
The opposite temperament
is the melancholic. As the name indicates, it is disposed to
gloomy views, it sees the bad side of everything, and is always anticipating
evil rather than good. As someone has wittily observed:
If two men touch a bee, the one gets honey — and the other gets stung!
If two approach a bush, the one gathers a rose — and the other is pierced by a thorn!
If two men are gazing at
the same quarter of the sky, the one remarks only the black cloud — the other only the silver lining.
Certainly it is a
precious heritage to be born with a hopeful disposition. The man who, when it
is midnight, always remembers that the dawn is coming; and in the
dead of winter keeps his thoughts fixed upon the spring — is a wise man, and, in nine cases out of ten, events will
justify his confidence, for the wheel of fortune turns around, and the part of it which is the
bottom only requires half a revolution to be the top. The tide of opportunity rises at some time to everyone's feet, and the
hopeful man is best prepared to take advantage of it.
Most people require a
little bit of success to make them hopeful; a little encouragement, a little
sunshine is all they need to cause all that is best in them to expand and to
extract from them their best work. But there are those whose hopefulness is of
such a buoyant order, that they can go on hoping even when everything is
against them, and obstacles and reverses appear actually to add to their good
spirits. Such natures are invaluable to any cause; they carry a breeze with them wherever they go; the gloom passes from men's faces at
the sight of them, and is followed by smiles; discouraged adherents rally
again, and the impossible becomes easy.
It was attributed to the
late Earl of Beaconsfield, as a quality invaluable to the party he led, that
his hopes rose in proportion to the difficulties he had to encounter, and that
he was never so brilliant as when his back was at the wall. But one sees in the
condition of the opposite political party at the present hour, how rare is the
power of maintaining a spirit of cheerfulness and steadiness, in the cold shade
of opposition.
Temperament may be the source of hope; but its origin may be
deeper, namely, PRINCIPLE, and this is better. This is the peculiar
quality of Christian hope, which is not the perquisite of those endowed with a
certain temperament, but may, on the contrary, be the attainment of those most
disposed to melancholy; for the reason of it is not in themselves, but in
Another.
2. When the attitude of the mind to the future is
spoken of, we call it by more high-sounding names; the hopeful state of mind is
called Optimism — and the reverse Pessimism. Philosophers are generally understood to have risen superior to
such frailties of human nature as temperament, and to be able to contemplate
truth with calm and unprejudiced eyes; but this supposed superiority may be an
illusion, and the bias of natural
disposition probably asserts itself
in them as in other people.
At all events, among
thinkers there have always been both optimists and pessimists. In the ancient
world one sage was called the laughing philosopher — and another the weeping
philosopher; and these adjectives might be applied with equal propriety, to
rival schools of our own day.
PESSIMISM feels in the
marrow of its bones, the heavy and the weary weight of all this unintelligible
world. It dwells, with an excess of sensibility, on the destructive element in
nature — on the earthquakes and storms, by which the intelligence of man is
baffled and chaos brought back again; on the immeasurable conflict in nature
between the strong and the weak, in which the latter must go to the wall. Above
all, pessimism dwells on the misery and aimlessness of human life — on the
prevalence of disease and the inevitableness of death — on the stupidity of the
country and the depravity of the city — on man's inhumanity to man, and on his
still more appalling cruelty to womanhood and childhood.
It is the mood of
Solomon in Ecclesiastes, as he moves from scene to scene of human life, but can
find nothing new under the sun — nothing to relieve the monotony of existence —
but declares that all is vanity and vexation of spirit.
In most minds pessimism
is only a mood easily blown away by the zephyrs of enjoyment, or the sturdy
blasts of activity. But some have allowed it to harden, until it has become a
doctrine and a creed.
There is a philosophical pessimism which maintains that the evil in the world so
far outweighs the good, and that it is so hopeless to expect any real
improvement, that the rational destiny of the human race, would be to disappear
by a simultaneous act of suicide. One would naturally suppose such notions
incompatible with Christianity. In fact, those who hold pessimistic opinions in
a doctrinaire form, are usually disbelievers in an
overruling Providence.
But, strange to say, one
of the most widely diffused religions of the world is thoroughly pessimistic in
spirit. Buddhism looks upon human existence as evil in itself, and as so great an evil that the true ideal of man is
relief from the burden of personal existence through reabsorption into the formless All out of which he has come.
OPTIMISM is the reverse
of pessimism, and it is far more characteristic of the modern world. It is
sometimes said that the golden age of the ancient world lay behind, whereas
that of the modern world is in front. The golden age of the ancients was a scene of peace and plenty, produced
without man's aid and to be enjoyed without exertion. But the golden age to which the modern man looks forward, is to be the creation of his
own foresight and industry, and idleness will be excluded from the earthly
paradise. Whatever it may be due to — whether to an instinct of the more
energetic races, or to the wonderful improvements and progress witnessed in recent
centuries — the belief is almost universal among the Western peoples at least,
that there is a good time coming, and that the course of humanity will continue
to be upward and onward.
Philosophy has sometimes
tried to find in human nature, a reason to justify this belief; but the great
majority concur in it without any close inquiry into its grounds.
It is usually said that
Christianity is optimistic — and this is true. But it might also be said that
Christianity is pessimistic. It does not believe in any inherent law of
betterment in this world. It looks upon human nature as fallen and incapable of
its own salvation. Left to himself, man would grow worse, instead of better. But through this very pessimism, Christianity is
led to optimism; because, despairing of man — it lays hold upon God, and it cleaves to Him with all the more tenacity, the more
conscious it is of the deep gulf into which it would fall without Him.
3. Thus by two pathways we have been led to the
conclusion that hope for man is not inside himself — but outside of himself. It is not subjective — but
objective.
Of course, as a feeling it is subjective. A classical author says, 'Hope
is pursued by fear, and is the name of an uncertain good'; and this is
profoundly true when it rests on nothing but temperament or sentiment. It is
different, however, when what it clings to has a divine guarantee.
This divine guarantee,
Christian hope possesses. The objects to which it is directed are revealed in
the Word of God. Thus, Paul says, 'Through patience and comfort of the
Scriptures, we have hope.'
In fact, God Himself is
both the inspirer and the object of hope. Hence He is called again and again in
Scripture 'the God of hope.' So the Son of God is called 'Christ our hope'; and
in another place Paul denominates Him 'Christ in you, the hope of glory.' These
are sufficient indications of the source whence Christian hope is derived, and of what imparts to it stability.
The feeling in our heart may come and go, but the object outside remains the same yesterday, today and forever; and, the
oftener we return to it, the more will doubts and fears fade away!
Whether it is the future
of ourselves as individuals or the future of the world we are contemplating —
it is equally true that Christ is our hope.
Consider, first, our own
INDIVIDUAL future. If our future is in our own hands or dependent only on other
human beings — we must be in the greatest uncertainty about it; for who can
tell what a day may bring forth? But, if it is out of our hands and in God's hands
— how safe it is, and how confident we may be about it! If God has begun a good
work, He will complete it.
As the arc of a circle,
however fragmentary it may be, carries on the mind to the perfect whole, so
Christ's work, though now imperfect, always looks onwards, and contains the
promise and the potency of perfection. Painful even as may sometimes be our
depression on account of our failures, when we think of our lives as our own
work — we have only to consider them as His workmanship, in order to be assured
that our character will one day be without spot or wrinkle or any such thing.
In the same way, when we
are thinking of the WORLD AT LARGE — of its condition and prospects — there is
overwhelming cause for sadness as long as we regard it as of man's making, or
of our own creation. But take in the fact that Christ has entered into human
history, and that He is now controlling all events and guiding them to a
foreordained outcome — then depression evaporates, and we glory in the progress
of the kingdom of God. The Father has given the kingdom to the Son, and the Son
must reign until all enemies are put under His feet. The little contribution
which we call our life, is taken up into this whole and glorified in it.
So is the work of our
Church, or the work of our generation. In itself it is trivial, but, in the
place where God puts it, it is indispensable; for it is the link binding the
past to the future. It is an arc of the circle of God's purpose and Christ's
achievement; and the grandeur of the whole is in the fragment.
I often think of the new
consciousness of time Christianity imparts. A Christian man thinks not
only of what he is doing today, but of what that which he is doing today will
be doing a hundred or a thousand years hence!
4. Not only is Christ called our hope in
Scripture, but the vitality of this virtue is specially connected with His resurrection, according to the saying of Peter, God 'has begotten us again
unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.' What is
the reason of this? How does Christ's resurrection especially kindle hope? It
does so because it is the most authentic glimpse ever afforded to mankind into
the eternal world.
The instinct of
immortality is innate in man; so much so that even pagans, like Cicero and
Seneca, could argue for its trustworthiness from the fact of its universality. And other noble heathens, like Socrates and Plato, developed
impressive arguments in support of the doctrine. It is a beautiful belief, and
the best of human beings naturally incline to it. Yet in all ages, while so
doing, men and women have been tormented with a doubt due to the fact that none
ever actually came back from the other side of the gates of death. Why should
not the gates of adamant be opened from within? Why should not one at least be
allowed to appear — even for an hour — a representative person, worthy to be
the mouthpiece of all the dead?
Such is the
irrepressible longing of the human heart; and the answer to it is the
resurrection of Jesus from the dead. He was the representative man, worthy to
appear and speak for all; and He showed Himself after His resurrection by many
infallible proofs.
But the resurrection of
Jesus is only like the claw of a prehistoric specimen, from which the skillful naturalist can construct the whole animal. If the
resurrection is true, then immensely more is guaranteed. The life to come, in
all its essential features, is rendered indubitable; and hope proceeds to fix
its tentacles in it.
In Scripture Christian
hope is called by such names as 'the hope of eternal life,' and 'the hope which
is laid up for you in Heaven'. As Peter, who has been called the apostle of
hope, as Paul may be called the apostle of faith, and John the apostle of love
— speaks of 'an incorruptible inheritance, undefiled, and that fades not away,
reserved in Heaven for you.'
Undoubtedly this future
inheritance is the supreme, though not the exclusive, object of Christian hope. In the apostolic age, at the
commencement of Christianity, it laid extraordinary hold of the hearts of men.
So occupied were the early Christians with the priceless inheritance of which
they were about to enter, and the splendor of which threw all earthly
possessions and prizes completely into the shade — that they were in danger of neglecting
their homes and their business, and Paul and others had to urge them to think
with more moderation on the subject. So eager were they not to be kept away
from it, that they not only willingly faced the persecution and martyrdom by
which they would be carried more quickly there, but even courted them; so that their preachers had to warn them
against rushing at their own will upon death!
All this is changed now.
The world is too much with us, and it is so real to our apprehension, that
the other world appears shadowy. The hope laid up in Heaven does not captivate us much. Why is this? Perhaps it is because we
take our profession of religion too easily; we are too afraid of giving
offence; we provoke no opposition; we do not take up the cross and follow
Jesus. The result is, that we are comfortable and not persecuted. Ay,
but we pay the penalty of our comfort. Our spirits grow dull and earthly; and our
hope loses its intensity.
When Christians were
sacrificing everything in this world for Christ, the world to come was exceedingly credible and delightful. I have
no doubt the day may come when, Christians being persecuted for their faith,
the hope of Heaven will again be as great a power as ever!
Hope is a great power,
when it is realized. It is no mere idle expenditure of emotion on distant
objects, having nothing to do with the present. To think often of Heaven, breeds
heavenly-mindedness. Those who intensely
desire to be in Heaven, instinctively make themselves ready to go there,
realizing that Heaven is a prepared place for a prepared people. As John says,
'Every man who has this hope in Him purifies himself, even as He is pure.'
Paul calls hope, 'the
anchor of the soul.' When the winds of passion are blowing, and the billows of
temptation rising, and the darkness of doubt brooding — the soul is ready to
drift onto the hungry rocks. But the recollection of the immeasurable prize to
be won or lost in the hereafter — steadies it and enables it to avoid the
danger, until the day break and the shadows flee away!
7. LOVE
Henry Drummond entitled
his little book on love, 'The
Greatest Thing in the World,' and the vast circulation which it secured in every part of the
globe proved how the suggestion had appealed to the general mind. But he was
only following the hint given in the saying of Paul, 'The greatest of these is love.' And Paul was only following in the wake of
Jesus, who, when asked, 'Which is the greatest commandment in the law?'
replied, 'You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all
your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and great commandment. And
the second is like unto it, You shall love your neighbor as yourself.'
The belief that love is the greatest thing in the world, may be called a growing conviction. The more
mature the mind of mankind becomes, the clearer is its verdict to this effect;
and this is the judgment of those most entitled to express an opinion.
Inferior minds have,
indeed, different ideals; and in earlier ages other qualities were placed far
before love.
Thus, strength long had its worshipers, and it will always have
them among the immature and unreflecting — who bow the knee to physical
development and material resources.
At a more advanced stage cleverness was considered the greatest thing in the world;
and there are still multitudes who testify unbounded admiration for the
intellectual force which can crush an adversary, or the adroitness which can
circumvent him.
But, while the notoriety
of the hour may rise loud around those distinguished for strength and
cleverness — it is found, when the clamor subsides, that the abiding homage of
the human heart can be given only to those who have served their circle or
their generation with the ministry of love. 'Love never fails.'
1. It is one of the most amaze evidences of the
goodness of the Author of our existence, that in the scheme of Providence there
is provision made, between the cradle and the grave, for the supply of the
individual of many different kinds of love in succession — while the heart, on
its side, puts forth one new blossom after another to the very end.
We open our baby eyes on
love, with which we have been already surrounded before we were able to
appreciate it — the love of parents. Then, as the family fills, and its connections
multiply, we are enriched with the love of brothers and sisters, cousins, and
other relatives. When we emerge from childhood into that period of life when
the currents of the heart are most copious, we begin to experience the love of country and of comradeship.
Friendship springs up with those of the same gender, and a still dearer tie
with the opposite gender. This tie finds its consummation in marriage; and then follows the love of offspring,
with its manifold lights and shades of joy and pride, anxiety and sorrow. To
some it is given to experience the love of grandparents for grandchildren; and at even a later stage a fresh bud may burst
on the old tree in the love of great-grandparents for great-grandchildren.
Even these are not all
the kinds of affection of which the heart is capable; but these are enough to
show that under the one name of love, many feelings are included, which really
differ widely from one another.
The love, for example,
of those of the same gender — is exceedingly different from that of people of
opposite sexes; and a person who has experienced the one may have very little
idea what the other is like.
One or more kinds of
affection may be omitted in the development of a human heart through no fault
of its own, but through the appointment of Providence; and such an omission may
not harm the growth of an affectionate nature; but the heart cannot miss any of
its legitimate opportunities without suffering loss. And, as a rule, those are
happiest whose development has been most normal — the heart unfolding each new
blossom as the season for it arrives, and every kind of affection being
experienced in full measure.
It is sad for a child
whose parents are alive, never to have received in its fullness the love of
father or mother, or never to have given its own love back in return. It is a
kind of mutilation, and must leave the whole nature permanently impoverished.
If any kind of love is denied to us providentially, it is well to make up for
the loss by loving more amply in some other direction. For example, one who has
no brothers or sisters, should have all the wider a circle of friends.
2. Henry Drummond, in another of his books, 'The
Ascent of Man,' has written with great beauty on maternal love, which he evidently regarded as the
choicest flower and blossom of earthly affection. He traced its history down
through the dim aeons of prehistoric times, from the jealous instinct of brute
mothers — to its most perfect refinement in the womanhood of the Christian
world. And he showed that this instinct for the preservation of life of others,
had been the great counterpoise to the instinct of self-preservation.
Thus from immemorial
ages, there has been woven into the web of the world's history, not a single
but a double thread — not only the struggle for existence, often degenerating
into cruelty and violence, but the struggle for the existence of others, marked
all along its course by self-sacrifice.
And so it has come to
pass, that the world has been, not merely a field of battle and butchery — but
a scene of heroism and ever increasing beauty. Whether or not we accept the
assumption that maternal love of today is a development which has grown from
millennium to millennium, until it has reached its present depth and tenderness
— at any rate no man who has enjoyed the privilege of watching it at close
quarters — its purity, its passion, its cooing happiness and elation, the power
it imparts to the mother of overcoming sleep and rendering the most menial
services with cheerfulness and dignity — will fail to bend before it in lowly
worship and acknowledge that, if there is one divine thing in this world, it is
a mother's love.
But even those kinds of
affection which have been less celebrated, have their honor and value. The
love, for instance, of brother and sister may be of exquisite
tenderness, as it may be of priceless profit to both parties, when he, the
stronger, learns gentleness by stooping to her weakness — and she, the weaker,
acquires courage and strength in the effort to keep step with his career.
There are few figures
more touching in human life than such a sister, as Dorothy Wordsworth, the
companion of her brother engaged in achieving a difficult and noble life — work
in the eyes of the world, which she is furthering all the time with the ministry
of frugality, practicality and good sense, content to remain invisible in the
background, her unselfish heart satisfied with the honors that are falling upon
him.
The love of friends has had ample justice done to it from the time
of David and Jonathan, down to our own time, when Lord Tennyson has — in In
Memoriam — raised to his friend, Arthur Henry Hallam, a monument more enduring
than brass. In this poem we see what friendship can do to quicken anyone's best
powers and to develop all that is noble in character. For a superior friend's
generous expectations are a standard to which one's own achievements must
strive to rise — while, if his character is of the right stamp, his presence
serves as asecond conscience, administering the requisite check when
one's own conscience is for the moment remiss, and forming a tribunal before which one cannot appear with a base
purpose.
Of course, however, it
is love between man and woman which is love par excellence. It is this that poets speak of as the one experience which, if
obtained and held, makes life a success, but, if missed, makes all a blank!
In works of imagination,
love occupies the same place as Christ does in sermons: it is the element on
which the savor of the whole depends.
In sober fact, this is
in many respects, the greatest thing in the world. Never is a human heart purer
— purer from selfishness and purer from animal desire — than when it falls
honestly and thoroughly in love. Nothing marks a more decided and undeniable
advance in civilization, than an improvement in the mode of conceiving what
love is, and in the modes of carrying on the relationship. Nothing is such a
spur to the exertion of all a man's powers, as the desire to provide for the
fruition of love. A pure love, housed in a happy home, is, next to the grace of
God — the best blessing any man can win.
3. Though, up to this point, I have been speaking
of many kinds of love, these have all been between man and man. Is there no
other of which the heart is capable, and for which it is destined? Yes, there
are objects of love for the human heart both below and above man.
Of the objects beneath
man much need not be said; but I will not miss the opportunity of remarking in
passing that the affection of the Arab for his horse, of the Indian for his
elephant, of the shepherd for his dog — is a sentiment creditable to human
nature. The treatment of the lower animals, is one of the most accurate
measurements of the stage which civilization has reached in any country.
Cruelty to these dumb companions of man's earthly lot, hardens the heart and
coarsens the character. Few movements can be more acceptable to the Creator,
who pours out His love on even the humblest of His creatures — than the
societies formed in our day for promoting kindness towards animals.
But it is of love at the
opposite end of the scale I wish to speak — love to beings above man.
Even so wise a
representative of the ancient world as Aristotle says, 'There is no such thing
as love to God; it is absurd to speak of anything of the kind; for God is a
unknowable being.' It is impossible to conceive words which could bring out
more clearly the contrast between the circle of thought within which the
ancient world moved, and that wherein those move who have obtained their
notions of the universe from the Bible.
Even in the Old
Testament God is a being who loves, and loves intensely: 'Like as a father
pities his children, so the Lord pities those who fear Him.' 'Can a woman
forget her nursing child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her
womb? Yes, they may forget, yet will I not forget you!' 'Yes, I have loved you
with an everlasting love; therefore, with loving kindness have I drawn you.' 'I
will betroth you unto Me forever; yes, I will betroth you unto me in righteousness
and in judgment and in loving kindness and in mercies; I will even betroth you
unto me in faithfulness; and you shall know the Lord.'
In the New Testament the
revelation of the love of God is carried much further, until it culminates in
the incomparable saying, 'God is love.'
It is often said that
any modern child acquainted with the rudiments of science stands on a far higher level than Aristotle, though he was the
most scientific head in the ancient world, so far have the discoveries of
modern times left the ancient world behind.
And it is just as true
to say that any modern child acquainted with the Bible stands high above
Aristotle in the knowledge of God. To Aristotle God was, according to the
sage's own admission, an unknown being. But to those who have the Bible in
their hands, He is a being known, living and infinitely loving; and this
renders possible the budding of the noblest blossom of the heart — the love of
God.
Just as a human heart is
born with the kinds of love already discussed — love to parents, love to friends, love to children, and so on — potential
in it, waiting only for time and opportunity to burst and develop, so every
heart is born with the capacity of loving God; and this must, in the nature of
the case, be the highest and most influential of all such capabilities.
But the sunshine which
opens the bud, causing the potentiality to become actuality — is the love of
God revealed and realized. So John explained its philosophy, 'We love Him —
because He first loved us.'
I was much struck by
this testimony of someone as to his own experience: 'All that I ever heard —
and I heard much — about the love of God was to me mere sound and smoke — until
I realized that the Son of God had given up His life on the cross to redeem me
from my sins!'
There is no doubt that
this is the way in which most people begin to love God, if they love Him with
reality and with intensity. It is not only that the love of the Father is
supremely and finally revealed in the gift of His Son; but in Christ Himself, the
divine love shines forth in the most affecting and attractive of all forms; it
shines out all along the course of His life with increasing brightness — and it
blazes from His cross! We, therefore, love Jesus first, and then the Father —
we come to the Father, through the Son.
There can be no doubt
that, ever since He was crucified on Calvary, Jesus Christ has commanded the
love of tens of thousands in every generation, and that the strength of
Christianity at any time, is accurately measured by the number of those who
love Him, and the intensity with which they do so. If the question be asked, 'What is a Christian?' many answers could doubtless be given. But is
any of them more to the point than this: 'A Christian is one who loves Christ!'
Sometimes this love
dawns upon the heart with sudden rapture, similar to that which, in the
relations of human beings, often accompanies what is called falling in love. But this sublime happiness is not given to
all. Many who undoubtedly love Him, have no recollection when they commenced to do so. The essential question is not,
however, how love began— but whether it is growing. And love to Christ grows exactly by the same means as love to
anyone else:
by being constantly in His company,
by speaking often to Him,
by gazing on the beauty of His character,
and by not forgetting all His benefits.
by being constantly in His company,
by speaking often to Him,
by gazing on the beauty of His character,
and by not forgetting all His benefits.
4. It cannot be denied that zeal for God, has
sometimes been associated with cruelty and hardheartedness towards man, as, for
example, in the Roman Catholic burning of heretics, and the torture of witches.
But such cases are
exceptional and unnatural. The normal effect of love to God, is love to man.
Drummond has drawn attention to the fact that the correct translation of a
verse quoted already is not, 'We love Him — because He first loved
us,' but 'We love — because He first loved us.' The love of God realized, leads
to all kinds of love, because it breaks down the natural selfishness of the
heart, which is the great obstacle to every kind of tender feeling towards
others. Is it not a contradiction in terms, to speak of loving Christ — when we
do not love our fellow-men?
If the word of Jesus has
any weight with us,
if His example, in any degree, influences our conduct,
if His spirit has even faintly entered our heart —
then we cannot be loveless to our fellow-creatures.
if His example, in any degree, influences our conduct,
if His spirit has even faintly entered our heart —
then we cannot be loveless to our fellow-creatures.
'This commandment have
we from Him, that he who loves God love his brother also!'
In spite of the satire
so frequently poured from the pulpit and through the press on the behavior of
Christians to one another, the fact is, the feeling of true Christians for one
another is very deep and tender. Let them meet anywhere — even in the ends of
the earth — and recognize one another as Christians, and their hearts leap
together at once, and there is nothing they will not do for one another. If
they hesitate to give such recognition, it is because they are not sure of
their ground; but let them be sure, and kindness follows immediately.
It is, indeed,
impossible to feel for the ungodly, the same love as for those who are brethren
in the Lord. But all men are the recipients of our humanity and kindness.
On this subject let me
quote a few words from the same author with whom I commenced this chapter.
Addressing a band of missionaries, Drummond once said: 'You can take nothing
greater to the heathen world, than the impress and reflection of the love of
God upon your own character. Love is the universal
language. It will take you years
to speak in Chinese or in the dialects of India. But, from the day you land,
that language of love, understood by all, will be pouring forth its unconscious eloquence. Take into your new sphere of labor, where you
also mean to lay down your life, that simple charm of love, and your
life-work must succeed. You can take nothing greater, you can take nothing
less. You may take every accomplishment, you may be braced for every sacrifice
— but, if you give your body to be burned, and have not love, it will profit
you and the cause of Christ nothing.'
By James Stalker, 1902
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