(logo)
(navigation image)
Home American Libraries | Canadian Libraries | Universal Library | Project Gutenberg | Children's Library | Biodiversity Heritage Library | Additional Collections

Search: Advanced Search

UploadAnonymous User (login or join us) 
See other formats

Full text of "The war and the church : and other addresses ; being the charge delivered at his primary visitation, 1914"

 Il):" 
C' 
 
f- 


.' 


I'" , 


"A'b; Å: 
! _'" I 


j, I 


,,I 


I , 



 
. 
 '( : -
î . f:t fj 
, .'r.( . 


'ì. . . 

 


, , I 


t 
I' 


\ 
I' 


... t 


'
, . I 
, J: 


1)1) 


,J 


I, f' 
. 9 
l 


I I 



L1BRARY S1. MAPY' COLLEGE 



 


- \ I". ,t IIr ' 


. 



 


l-- þ' I 



- '\ 




THE WAR AND 
THE CHURCH 


AND OTHER ADDRESSES 



BY THE SA
IE AUTHOR. 


(Fifth impression, completing 12,000 copies.) 


THE BASIS OF 
ANGLICAN FELLOWSHIP 


IN FAITH AND ORGANIZATION 
An open letter to the Clergy of the Diocese 
of Oxford. 
SIXPENCE NET. 


PATRIOTISM IN THE BIBLE 


TWOPENCE NET. 


A. R. MOWBRAY & CO. Ltd.. 
LONDON AND OXFORD 



THE WAR AND 
THE CHURCH 


I I , 


AND OTHER ADDRESSES 


Being the Charge deli1Jered at his primary 
Visitation, I 9 I 4- 


BY 


CHARLES GORE, D.D.-;-D.C.L:;-LL.D 
o 
BISHOP OF OXFORD 



fo I <6 72> LrBRARY ST. MARYIS COllEGE 
9 
Go 


9 ""- 0 0 f\ 
J_ (.J . 'J 


A. R. MOWBRAY & CO. LTD. 
LONDON: 28 Margaret Street, Oxford Circus, W. 
OXFORD: 9 High Street 
MILWAUKEE, U.S.A.: The Young Churchman Co. 



First impression, 1914 
New impression, 1915 


\ ç - t-f
 3 


" 



PREFACE 


The addresses contained in this volume have 
just been delivered as a charge on a Visitation 
of the Diocese of Oxford and circulated to the 
clergy. But in the hope that some part of 
them may be of interest to some people beyond 
the diocese they are also being published. 
I have added to them an essay on the place 
of symbolism in religion, reprinted from The 
Constructive Quarterly of March, 1914, though 
it has no direct connection with the addresses, 
because I so frequently read statements which 
suggest that if an element of symbolism is ad- 
mitted in any of the clauses of the Creed it 
must be illogical and unfair to limit its applica- 
tion. The purpose of this essay is to show 
that the very arguments which justify the 
recognition of symbolism in some clauses of 
the Creed prevent its legitimate application to 
others. And I am re-publishing it here in the 
hope that it may obtain, even at such a time 
as this, a little attention. 


C.OXON: 


All Saints' Day, 1911. 


v 




CONTENTS 


Chapter Page 
I. THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 1 
II. THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 21 
III. OUR TEACHING OFFICE - 40 
IV. SACRIFICE AND NATIONAL PEN 1- 
TENCR 59 
V. CHURCH REFORM 78 
VI. CHURCH MEMBERSHIP 96 


THE PLACE OF SYMBOLISl\l IN RE- 
LIGION - - 112 


vii 



THE 
WAR AND rrHE CHURCH 


I 
THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


A bishop's Visitation is his inquiry into the 
efficiency and soundness of his diocese: its 
officers, its apparatus, and its methods. I have 
had nearly three years to make acquaintance 
with this diocese; I have had the ungrudging 
assistance of archdeacons and rural deans; 
I have made careful inquiries on particular 
points through the rural deans and directly. 
Thus I should have been prepared in the usual 
way to review the situation and seek to for- 
mulate our policy for the immediate future. 
But across my preparation there has fallen a 
"visitation" of a different kind. God has 
visited the sins of Europe by suffering them to 
lead to their natural issue in a tremendous 
war. This visitation is so overwhelming, and 
preoccupies so inevitably all our thoughts, that 
B 


LtBRARY S1. MARy/S COLLEGE 



2 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


it is at this moment impossible to seek to win 
your attention for many matters which would 
have interested you in ordinary years. I have 
decided to go about my Visitation, and to meet 
you at the different centres. But I cannot but 
begin from the point on which all our thoughts 
are fixed-the war. 
The call of the war has stricken this nation 
into a sense of unity and fellowship, the like 
of which neither we nor our forefathers of 
many generations have experienced. I may 
take it for gran ted, I dare say, that we are 
all of one mind in believing that it was our 
duty to engage in this war, and, having engaged 
in it, to see it through with all the concen- 
tration of forces which we can command. 
Thus, apart from our common duty as citizens 
in this emergency, there are duties which fall 
specially upon the church and the clergy, and 
which come home to us without any effort- 
I mean the duty of organizing the force of 
persistent corporate prayer, about which I 
shall hope to speak to-morrow; the duty of 
giving the authorities - civil, military, and 
naval-all the support which we can in our 
parishes; the duty of supplying chaplains for 
the navy and army; the duty-or should I 
Dot say the privilege ?-which falls to the 



THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 3 


parochial clergy of providing services, at what- 
ever personal inconvenience, for camps not 
fully equipped with chaplains or for the 
soldiers billeted in our different parishes. 
There is also the duty of acting vigorously, 
and in co-operation with the public authori- 
ties, so as to afford sufficient and prompt 
help for those whom the war plunges into 
distress and poverty, whether through the 
breadwinners being called away to the ser- 
vice of their country, or through scarcity 
and unemployment. I Next to those actually 
fighting, and to those who bear the responsi- 
bility of public authority at this anxious 
moment, the burdens of this war, as of every 
war, will fall most heavily upon those who 
have least to say to it, whose thoughts and 
interests are always utterly alien to questions 
of foreign policy, who feel themselves in 
matters of peace and war to be entirely at 
the mercy of other people-the poor and 
generally those whom we must consent to 
call the working classes. 
Of these and the like duties we are con- 
stantly being reminded. We are not likely 
J I bave recently been asked to remind the parish clergy 
how much Lord Kitchener requires their help for the wives 
and dependents of soldiers in securing for them their separa- 
tion allowances (iee Diocesan JI agazine, October, 1914, p. 148). 



4 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


to forget them. But meanwhile there is 
another duty much harder to fulfil, a duty 
which cannot be postponed, the duty of seek- 
ing to interpret the purpose' of God at this 
tremendous crisis of the world's history, and 
of organizing in the nation a common mind 
among those who above all things are anxious 
to know our Lord's will, and so to prepare 
that the issue of the war may serve the pur- 
poses of the kingdom of God. It can hardly 
be necessary for me to remind you of the 
great difficulty of fulfilling this duty. The 
thoughts and feelings which patriotism inspires 
legitimately fill our minds and imaginations. 
But this is not enough. I am sure that if we 
simply yield ourselves to these thoughts and 
feelings we shall fall disastrously short of 
what our Lord would have us think. The 
Bible is full of patriotic emotion; but even 
more conspicuously the Bible is full of a great 
warning against the sufficiency of patriotism, 
against the sufficiency of the thoughts natural 
to flesh and blood. Some of the most con- 
spicuous figures in the Bible, like Jeremiah, 
are called to the truly terrible vocation of 
appearing as unpatriotic, as men who "weaken 
the hands of the men of war," who "seek 
not the welfare of their people, but the 



THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 5 


hurt.":r And our Lord Himself required His 
immediate disciples-Simon the Zealot amongst 
them-to accept so fully the doom upon their 
nation as being God's inevitable judgement, 
that they could await, without an effort to 
avert it, the ruin of their city and temple, 
and watch the approach of the day of disaster 
with an awful joy: "Then look up and lift 
up your heads, for your redemption draweth 
nigh." Personally I can conceive of no trial 
greater than, in an intensely patriotic nation, 
to be called to play what would be regarded 
by the nation as an unpatriotic part. Merci- 
fully no such call is on us to-day. We can 
wholeheartedly yield ourselves to the stream 
of patriotic enthusiasm which is sweeping so 
mightily through the nation. But that is not 
the ,vhole of our duty. Unless we are alto- 
gether to fail to correspond with the divine 
purpose, we must be also in a real sense 
detached. We must recall the tremendous 
rebuke which our Lord addressed to the 
religious leaders of His people, "Y e cannot 
discern the signs of the times," 2 or "How is 
it that ye know not how to interpret this 
time? " 3 If we are to catch the voice of 
God, there must be detachment and reflection 
I Jer. xxxviii. 4. 2 S. Matt. xvi. 3. 3 S. Luke xii. 56. 



6 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


and conference: as when of old "They that 
feared the Lord spake often one to another: 
and the Lord hearkened, and heard, and a 
book of remembrance was written before 
him, for them that feared the Lord, and that 
thought upon his name." I 
Yes, we may depend upon it that we shall 
not realize God's purpose and correspond 
with it, unless we, professing Christians, are 
making a great effort for detachment of mind. 
We are praying with passionate desire for 
the success of our arms-for the defeat, if it 
be God's will, of Germany and Austria. But 
suppose the end attained, suppose the moment 
come when the hearts of the whole com- 
munity will burst into the joy of victory- 
victory and the spirit of victory do not 
commonly put a nation into correspondence 
with God. We look back to the time after 
Waterloo when we had done so nobly; when 
we felt ourselves to be the saviours of Europe 
as well as of our own country. Was England 
ever in a worse condition morally and reli- 
giously than then? If, on the other hand, 
anxiety and failure in war have, as constantly 
happens, a purifying power on a nation, yet 
we cannot pray for failure nor desire the 
I Mal. iii. 16. 



THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 7 


lengthening of the tremendous strain. What 
I am sure that \ve need to do without delay 
is to look as deeply as we can in to the causes 
of this tremendous visitation, so as to be 
ready not only to fight the war through, but 
also to learn the deeper lessons which it is 
meant to teach us. 
We seem to be face to face to-day with one 
of the most startling instances in history of the 
insolence which is bred of intense racial pride, 
when it is supported by what seems like an 
overwhelming strength of military organization. 
We seem to see in Germany the spectacle of a 
nation dominated by a military caste, indoctrin- 
ated by a false philosophy, giving itself over to 
be possessed by the spirit of militarism and 
making it its religion-degrading the God and 
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the common, 
impartial Father of all men and all races, into 
a German War God. We go back in mind to 
the old sentiment, \vhich is both Hebrew and 
Greek, about insolence in men and nations, 
and the divine vengeance which lays it low. 
If Germany falls in this war we shaH recog- 
nize the divine judgement on insolence. But 
we shall be indeed short sighted and unspiritual 
if we let ourselves think that" all we have to 
do is to crush Germany, and that the insolence 



8 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


and idolatry of Germany are all that the world 
is suffering from. I No; what we are suffering 
from is something far more widespread than 
the German Empire. Is it not the case that 
what we are in face of is nothing less than 
a breakdown in a certain idea and hope of 
civilization, which was associated with the 
liberal and industrial movement of the last 
century? There was to be an inevitable and 
glorious progress of humanity of which science, 
commerce, and education were to be the main 
instruments, and which was to be crowned 
with a universal peace. Older prophets like 
Thomas Carlyle expressed their contempt for 
the shallo,vness of this prevailing ideal, and 
during this century we have been becoming 
more and more doubtful of its value. But we 
are now witnessing its downfall. Science, 
commerce, and education have done, and can 
do, much for us. But they cannot expel the 
evil spirit from human nature. What is that? 
At bottom-love of self, self-interest, selfishness 
individual and corporate. 2 As a theory the 
J I should wish to refer to a truly noble and Christian 
article called "What are we fighting for?" in the Times 
Literary Supplement of September 17th. 
2 I make no apology for speaking of corporate selfishness. 
What the French call selfishness "à deux ou trois," the 
selfishness of a family in pursuit of its own interests, or the 
selfishness of a class or of a nation has really, when analysed, 
the liame moral quality as the selfishness of an individual. 



THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 9 


philosophy of selfishness has been often ex- 
posed. But, to an extent that it is difficult to 
exaggerate, it has been the motive acknow- 
ledged and relied upon without shame or 
apology in commerce, in politics, and in 
practical life. Our civilization has been based 
on selfishness; our commerce on competition 
and the unrestricted love of wealth; our 
education on the motive of self-advancement. 
And science and knowledge, made the instru- 
ments of selfishness and competition,. have 
armed man against man, class against class, and 
nation against nation with tenfold the power of 
destruction which belonged to a less educated 
and less highly-organized age. We have been 
becoming conscious, as a nation, of the rotten 
basis of our civilization, but it has none the 
less dominated. Recently it looked as if it 
were to lead to a bitter war of classes at home, 
a civil war of capital and labour. Instead of 
that we have got a war of nations on a scale 
such as the world has never hitherto witnessed, 
which is devastating Europe and destroying 
human lives with a quite unprecedented 
destruction. 
But what I want you to recognize is that 
the temper, the motive which has so largely 
dominated our civilization at home, and which 
c 



10 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


has been organizing class against class for civil 
war, is exactly the same temper as, between 
nations, has been dominating international 
politics, calling itself the "balance of power," 
and arming every nation against every other 
till an outbreak of war became only a question 
of time and occasion. It is something far 
wider and more general than the particular 
form of the disease which is horrifying us in 
Germany. How far the destruction which is 
the fruit of this war is going to proceed we 
cannot tell. How many millions of corpses 
are going to lie on the battle-fields, how many 
Louvains are to perish, how many peaceful 
Belgiums to be laid waste will depend on how 
long the war lasts. But then the question is- 
Supposing the war over, supposing that we 
and our allies are utterly victorious and two 
vast empires are humiliated to the dust, is it 
all to begin again? Like France after Sedan, 
like Russia after its defeat in the far East, is 
the humiliated nation to begin again to build 
itself up from the ground on the old principles? 
Are other empires to dominate the Continent 
of Europe and the world for a while till 
insolence betrays one of them again into intoler- 
able aggressiveness, and another universal war 
ensues? 



THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 11 


Some of us see the chief security against this 
in the progress of democracy-the government 
of the people really by the people and for the 
people. We believe that the old Latin saying 
is substantially true-" quicquid delirant reges, 
plectuntur Achivi." The mass of the workers 
who suffer most from wars, though the spirit 
of nationalism may enter into them also, and 
fill them for a time with enthusiasm for a war, 
yet on the whole will always be on the side of 
peace; so that the more really democratic our 
governments become, and the more the interests 
of labour become international, the greater will 
be the security for peace. I am one of those 
who believe this and desire to serve towards 
the realizing of this end. But the answer does 
not satisfy me. I do not know what evils we 
might find arising from a world of materialistic 
democracies. But I am sure that we shall not 
banish the evil spirits which destroy human 
lives and nations and civilizations by any mere 
change in the methods of government. Nothing 
can save civilization except a new spirit in the 
nations. It is selfishness, unlimited acquisitive- 
ness, competition, which has armed individual 
against individual, class against class, nation 
against nation. Science, commerce, and edu- 
cation all tend naturally to fellowship, to 



12 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


binding together men and classes and nations. 
But where the spirit of acquisitiveness, selfish- 
ness, and competition prevails, they simply 
arm this evil spirit with weapons of greater 
destructiveness: they do but aggravate a 
thousand times over the evils of warfare. 
But there is another spirit which, however 
imperfectly, has really claimed the allegiance 
of mankind: it is the spirit of fellowship- 
a spirit which teaches us that individuals and 
classes and nations are endowed by the creative 
love with different gifts, not to hurt and outwit 
and overrule one another, but to supplement 
and help one another in a beneficent co- 
operation. This is the old message of 
Christianity. My point is that the con- 
spicuous breakdown of a European civilization 
which has been in the main based on a false 
principle, affords us a fresh opportunity for 
preaching the true. Are there not to-day ears 
to hear? For instance, at home we seemed, 
as I have said, to be on the verge of a tre- 
mendous class war, a war of capital and 
labour. The great European war, with its 
imperious exigencies, has for the moment 
healed all labour disputes, and stricken us 
into a real unity and national sense of brother- 
hood. Cannot we use this opportunity to 



THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 13 


realize that we were making a terrible mistake? 
"Sirs, ye are brethren." Is it too much to 
hope that when we get time to think again 
about our labour conditions, we shall be willing 
to ask ourselves not how little need this class 
or group or individual yield, or how much 
can the other class or group or individual 
successfully claim, but what is really just as 
among brothers, what is right in a body cor- 
porate in which the weakness of anyone 
member is the weakness of all? I can con- 
ceive this changed spirit of brotherhood, the 
spirit which is now at work because of the war 
between landowners, farmers and labourers, 
between employers and employed, surviving 
the war and helping us to approach what had 
become the terrible menace of a class warfare 
on a quite new basis. But I am sure it will 
not do this unless we realize how much was 
amiss amongst us, and make the most of the 
changed spirit which has begun to work. If 
this changed spirit can gain a new prevalence 
first in one nation and then in another nation, 
depend upon it, it will spread beyond national 
boundaries, and build European or world peace 
upon some infinitely securer and sounder basis 
than the balance of power and the mutual 
terror of one another's armaments. 



14 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


Is this talk about universal human brother- 
hood vain talk? I do not believe it. There 
are many who have for years past been saying 
these things. It is the common spirit among 
the best of the working classes; I do not say 
it of all of them, but I am sure that, though 
they are not now for the most part attached 
to our organized religious bodies, the best of 
the working classes are thinking and feeling 
along these deeply spiritual lines about God's 
fatherhood and human fellowship. I am sure 
that this horrible war, when it is ended, will 
let loose a vast flood of purifying emotion, 
feeling, and thought, and a profound disgust 
of war and of the military spirit in nations. 
I feel sure that at home the new spirit, the 
gospel of brotherhood and peace, will wholly 
take possession of the Nonconformists, and it 
will fire multitudes of Churchmen in England. 
It will gain a vast accession of strength in 
America. Who can tell what uprising of revolt 
against a military autocracy and the military 
spirit may not follow the downfall of the 
present régime in Germany? Doubtless, then, 
this new spirit will command, in the world at 
large, quite new force and importance. But 
it will matter enormously what is the temper 
and tone of the ancient churches, and whether 



THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 15 


they are preparing themselves for a new de- 
parture. What will be the mind of the great 
national Church of Russia, which may occupy 
in the future a position of far greater influence 
than it has ever occupied yet outside its own 
boundaries? What will be the mind of the 
Roman communion, the Church of France and 
Belgium, which has so strong a tradition of ,the 
influence of the church upon the world? What 
will be the mind and policy of Benedict XV? 
And with a special sense of responsibility we 
must ask ourselves whether our own national 
church will really, in its corporate life, in its 
common sentiment, yield itself to the glorious 
but tremendous task of proclaiming afresh 
the gospel of brotherhood, and rebasing our 
civilization on the basis \vhich alone can have 
the blessing of Christ. 
There are two attitudes possible of the 
church towards the world. There is the 
attitude of saying that the world, the common 
social life, is hopelessly corrupt and deaf to 
the voice of God, and we must go out of 
it. That is not, I think, the attitude which 
has inspired the monastic movement or 
the movement of the religious communities 
generally; but no doubt it was a dominant 
motive at certain moments of their history. 



16 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


It is an attitude of mind, let us acknowledge 
it, which, especially at certain periods, has 
a great deal to say for itself, and to which 
I believe even civilization owes more than it 
commonly recognizes. But I may take it for 
granted it is not our attitude. We want to 
mix in the common life. 'Ve refuse to give 
it up in despair. We want to be the salt of 
the earth, which keeps it clean by a pervading 
contact. Well and good. But if the salt has 
lost its savour? If the church itself acquiesces 
in a worldly ideal in common life and com- 
merce and education, if its own religious 
membership is made possible for men without 
their worldliness and selfishness feeling itself 
under continual and sharp rebuke, if it tries 
to combine the worship of God and of 
mammon, does it not fall under the stern 
and tremendous judgement of its Master? 
I am sure, sure with a terrible certainty, 
that we have been too often walking along 
this easy path. What I pray with all my 
soul is that, under the enlightenment of this 
terrible war, coupled with the warnings of 
class warfare which were in our ears before 
the war broke out, we may wake up to 
the fact that we have been acquiescing in 
belonging to a civilization which rested on 



THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 17 


a fundamentally anti-Christian basis, without 
any adequate consciousness of antagonism or 
adequate protest. What I pray is that we may 
hear afresh the call of Christ, and, with an 
energetic repentance, begin to co-operate with 
that great movement within the church, but 
also in great measure alas! outside it, which 
is seeking, and will be seeking with a new 
vigour and determination, to rebuild our 
modern society on the basis of brotherhood 
and not of selfishness. It is not possible for 
us to deny that on that basis alone is it possible 
for a nation or a civilization to be built which 
in any sense can claim the name of Christian. 
Fifteen hundred years ago, when the bar- 
barians were battering on the gates of Rome 
and the cities of the empire; when the hearts 
of Christians were failing them for fear, all 
over the Roman world, as they watched the 
crumbling of the mighty empire of which they 
had come to believe themselves to be the 
protectors, S. Augustine amidst all the turmoil 
set himself to think; and he was ready with his 
message before he died. It is at bottom the 
message about the two civilizations which 
I have been trying to reproduce. There had 
always been, so he reflected, a civilization, 
a city of this world, built upon a false basis, 
D 



18 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


on the basis, that is, of self-love, and exhibiting 
itself in refusal of God, in insolence and mutual 
hostility among men. Of such a civilization 
the world, S. Augustine felt, was now witness- 
ing a downfall. But there was also in the 
world another kind of society, the city of God, 
which we shall never see perfectly realized in 
this world, but which the Catholic Church 
exists at least to embody and represent. This 
civilization is based on the true regard for God 
and man, and is a community of all nations 
and classes and individuals. It is the Civita$ 
Dei. S. Augustine, I say, had his message 
ready and published before he died, and it 
was enormously influential. It is not too 
much to say that it was the source of what 
was best in the ideals of the Middle Age, as 
well as of some of its mistakes. Under the 
influence of our unhappy divisions we seem to 
have lost the whole sense of a Christendom 
and a catholic church-a great fellowship with 
a common mind, inspiring and restraining 
nations as well as individuals. And is it not 
exactly this sense that we must set ourselves 
to recover? We recall Mozley's great and 
famous sermon on War. It is a profound and 
solemn utterance. But is there not one thing 
which we ask for in vain in it-the lack of 



THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 19 


which makes a great difference? I mean the 
sense that, within the area of Christendom, 
and even the wider area within which the 
Christian gospel has influence, the church of 
Christ is meant so to embody the spirit and 
principle of Christ as to act as an effective 
witness against the spirit of selfishness and 
selfish competition, whether in individuals, 
classes, or nations, unmasking, rebuking, re- 
straining, and correcting with a felt authority. 
And if the Christian church had been anything 
like what it ought to have been, would there 
not have been-I do not say a common govern- 
ment over nations, but a common sense in 
nations, taking effect in councils and con- 
ferences, and bearing constant witness to 
a unity wider than the nation? 
Will the church to-day have its message for 
a new moment in history ready when it is 
needed? Depend upon it we shall have a 
unique opportunity of proclaiming again the 
tidings of the kingdom of God, as a present 
power in this world, as well as a hope of 
another world, as soon as the war is drawing 
to an end and the world is asking "What 
next? " We have before our eyes in Germany 
to-day an even startling spectacle of a nation 
possessed with an idea. That idea we believe 



20 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


to be false, even devilish. But the antidote to 
false ideas is true ideas. Can we to-day in 
England and our English Christianity so labour 
that a true idea can take possession of our 
minds with a compelling force, and through 
us really and effectively minister to the coming 
of the kingdom of God? 



II 
THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRAYER 


No one can accept the witness of our Lord 
without believing that there is no human 
faculty more productive of real results than 
prayer. The great intention of God is the 
bringing in of the divine kingdom; and it is 
in response to prayer that the kingdom is to 
be brought near and to come. And in subor- 
dination to this great end there are multitudes 
of things which God knows that we need, 
and which He would fain give us, but which 
He cannot give us unless, with the persistency 
which belongs to all real work, we ask for 
them as sons of our Father, who when we 
ask for bread will not give us a stone. At 
this moment we are filled with an anxiety 
the like of which has not for generations 
absorbed and concentrated the heart of the 
nation. We desire passionately to help our 
country, to win victory for the allies, to 
redeem the bloodstained world, to bring back 
the blessings of peace, to bring about such a 
spirit as shall prevent the recurrence of the 
21 



22 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


scourge of war, to strengthen the cause of 
justice and right for which we confidently 
hope that we are fighting, to weave a web of 
divine protection around our soldiers and 
sailors, to comfort and help the sick and 
wounded and those whom the war reduces 
to poverty and need. All these things can 
be accomplished by prayer as well as by 
visible means: nor need we hesitate to follow 
the souls of those who die in battle or on 
their beds into the unseen world, and plead 
there for mercy and peace for the departed 
as the Christian church has ever done. This 
is then the first conviction for us to have 
vividly in our minds, and to use all our 
endeavours to impart to others-I can do 
work by my prayers; I can help as effec- 
tively as soldiers and sailors who are fighting, 
or statesmen who are planning. 
But there is a second lesson, perhaps a more 
difficult lesson, which we have to learn. Our 
Lord, in His teaching about prayer, seems 
to have had two objects: first, to encourage 
in His disciples a boundless belief in the 
efficacy of prayer to obtain real results; and, 
secondly, to lead them to feel that the efficacy 
of their prayers would depend upon their 
learning to pray aright-that is (as He ex- 



THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 23 


presses it in different places) to pray the 
prayer of "faith in God" as He really is; I 
or to pray as only one can pray who abides 
in Christ and has His words, His teaching, 
abiding in him; 2 or who prays after the 
" manner" of the Lord's Prayer, that is, 
entering into its meaning and observing its 
order; 3 or who prays "in Christ's name." 4 
I suppose we do not need to be reminded 
that we cannot cause a prayer to be in Christ's 
name by merely adding at the end of it the 
words "through Jesus Christ our Lord. " We 
interpret best the phrase "in the name of 
Christ" if we think of an ambassador speak- 
ing "in the name" of his country, or of a 
commercial traveller speaking "in the name " 
of his firm. We mean in each case that the 
representative, who speaks in the name of 
another, expresses not his own plans and 
wishes, but the mind of the greater person or 
body whom he represents. He prays in 
Christ's name who has learnt to make Christ's 
mind his own. 
This is, doubtless, a very difficult lesson 
for us to learn. We feel the meaning of what 
our Lord says to His disciples, "Hitherto 


J S. Mark xi. 22. 
3 S. Matt. vi. 9. 


2 S. John xv. 7. 
4 S. John xvi. 23, 24. 



24 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


have ye asked nothing in my name "-so 
many things in their own names; so many 
things which were the expression of their own 
personal and national desires, but "nothing 
in my name." We know what the prayers 
are which it comes natural to us to pray 
to-day. We know how earnestly we pray 
for the preservation of our soldiers and 
sailors; we know how passionately we pray 
for victory. And, believing that our cause 
is just, we can pray for victory, "if it be 
thy will." Loving our friends, we can pray 
for their protection. But we can never allow 
ourselves to forget that there are many things 
which we desire rightly, which may not yet 
be according to God's will. When our Lord 
said, "The very hairs of your head are all 
numbered" the words follow immediately on 
the intimation, "They shall deliver you up, 
. . . some of you they shall cause to be put 
to death." I Our friends may be protected by 
God, even if they have to suffer and die. 
The real efficacy of our prayers depends upon 
our learning really to desire what our Lord 
desires: to pray first for those things which He 
certainly means to give. This, as I say, is 
an extraordinarily difficult lesson to learn, 
I S. Luke xxi. 16-19. 



THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 25 


that of praying after the manner of the Lord's 
Prayer: really subordinating our natural and 
national longings to those divine ends which 
may come about in ways most repugnant to 
flesh and blood; really desiring, above all 
things, the coming of the kingdom of God. 
God, "whose never-failing providence order- 
eth all things both in heaven and earth, " 
has a purpose through this war-a purpose 
which, no doubt, will be difficult for us to 
learn; and the end of our prayer should be, 
above all else, to generate that spiritual 
atmosphere in which the minds of men may 
once again, in true and deep repentance, be 
ready to learn the purpose of His love. 
"Hallowed be thy name, Thy kingdom come, 
Thy will be done, As in heaven so on earth"; 
and only then, "Give us this day our bread 
for the coming day." The object of praying 
is not to persuade God to alter His mind; I 
it is rather to liberate the hand of God to 
do, through us, that which He wills to do, 
to give us the blessings which He wills to 
give, but cannot do, cannot give, until our 
hearts are ready to desire and our minds to 
receive and our wills to correspond. 
I "Our prayer, " says S. Thomas Aquinas, "is not directed 
to change the divine intention; but that what God intends 
may be obtained by our prayers."-S. Th.2a. 2re., 83, 2. 
E 



26 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


For the moment our habitual individualism 
is overcome by a great unifying need. That 
is a great help to prayer, for it is concordant 
united prayer, the prayer of many minds in- 
spired by one spirit, which has the greatest 
power. At all times it is our greatest help 
in prayer to renlem ber that we are not alone. 
The intercession of Christ, our great High 
Priest, and the intercession of the Holy Spirit, 
binding up with Him His whole body in one 
fellowship of supplication, is always going on. 
There is one great prayer - the prayer of 
Christ and the prayer of all His people, the 
glorious saints and all the blessed dead, and 
all the company of the living joined together 
in Him, that is always being prayed. When- 
ever we fall to prayer we should remember 
this: that we are not isolated individuals 
crying in the dark of the vast and unin- 
telligible universe; nor arrogant individuals 
trying to impose our ignorant desires upon 
the All wise; but that we are joining in the 
expression of one great will and desire-the 
will and desire of Christ-which is one day 
to become absolutely and universally effec- 
tive. Filling up all the gaps in our inter- 
mittent prayers, and supplying all the defects 
of our wandering thoughts and worldly or 



THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 27 


selfish blindness, that great prayer-the prayer 
of Christ and His saints united in His spirit- 
is around us and about us to avail against our 
weakness, to correct our blindness and to 
perfect our imperfection. 
This war, then, plunging us into a profound 
sense of our need, binding us, as nothing has 
for many years availed to bind us, into a 
realized fellowship, constitutes, as we all feel, 
a quite new and special call to prayer, united 
prayer in the name of Christ for the accom- 
plishment of His will. It gives to every 
pastor a ne'Y opportunity for leading his 
people in prayer and teaching them about 
prayer. And it gives me an opportunity of 
saying what I had in any case to say about 
our churches as U houses of prayer" on a new 
basis. 
I would say, then, to the clergy and lait}, 
alike-let us set to work afresh in this time 
of deep national and human need to read 
some one of the many books about prayer; I 
let us study afresh the wonderful wealth of 
teaching about prayer which is to be found 
I I would name Andrew Murray, With Christ in the School of 
Prayer (Nisbet), a book which I have found specially useful, 
though of course it is not written from the- point of view of 
a Churchman; also Worlledge's Prayer (Longman's Oxford 
Library), and my own little book, Prayer and the Lord's PraJ'er 
(\Vells Gardner). 



28 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


in the Bible and in those models of spiritual 
worship, the great Catholic liturgies; so that 
we all may pray better, and that we who are 
teachers may equip ourselves afresh to be 
teachers of prayer, teachers as they can only 
be who are themselves advancing learners. 
I would say also: Let our churches all 
stand open. The special dangers, which led 
to so many churches being closed recently, 
are over now, thank God; and there is a 
quite fresh opportunity for getting people to 
feel it a natural thing, when they can get a 
little leisure, to go and pray in the church. 
There are so many people in town and 
country who have not the advantage of quiet 
homes. I hope, moreover, you are all adopt- 
ing tbe suggestion of having the church bell 
rung with solemn strokes at the hour of noon 
as a reminder of the call to prayer. 
We have been supplied by authority with 
special prayers for use during the war which 
seem to me on the whole excellent I both for 


I The only criticism I am disposed to make is upon the 
second special collect for use in the Order of Holy Com- 
munion, "0 God, who hast taught us." It is a good prayer, 
but not very like a collect. At celebrations specially in- 
tended to be "in time of war" I sanction in this diocese the 
use of the following collect translated (or adapted) from the 
Sarum Missal: 
o God, the ruler of all kings and peoples, who dost both 
by smiting heal, and by forgiving preserve us; extend unto 



THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 29 


the regular services and for prayer meetings 
of different kinds. I hope we may seize the 
opportunity to get rid of some of the stiffness 
and formalism which has beset our church, 
and to learn something of the blessing of 
prayer meetings. In the regular services, I 
hope you will use frequently the biddings to 
prayer which are provided for use in the 
Eucharist at the Offertory, and also the 
special clauses in the Litany. In connection 
with Matins and Evensong and in prayer 
meetings I think there is no way so good of 
commending special needs to the prayers of 
our people as the method of naming them 
from the pulpit, using the freedom we are 
allowed in bidding to prayer, then leaving 
a space for silent prayer, using a few collects, 
and summing up the petitions in the Lord's 
Prayer. This method is far more profitable, 
I am sure, than that of introducing collects 
into the course of the service. And in this 
way we can always commend special needs 
to our people without waiting for directions 
from authority. But also I would earnestly 
beg you not to lose the present opportunity 


us Thy mercy at this present time, that peace being restored 
by Thy power may be used for our amendment; through Jesus 
Christ Thy Son our Lord. 



30 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


of advancing the cause of the daily recitation 
of Morning and Evening Prayer. "All 
priests and deacons are to say daily the 
Morning and Evening Prayer either privately 
or openly, not being let by sickness, or some 
other urgent cause. And the curate that 
ministereth in every parish church or chapel, 
being at home, and not being otherwise 
reasonably hindered, shall say the same in 
the parish church or chapel where he minis- 
tereth, and shall cause a bell to be tolled a 
convenient time before he begin, that the 
people may come to hear God's word, and 
to pray with him." I ask you: has not your 
experience since the war began been such that 
you would not wiIlingly have lost even one of 
the daily services? Have you ever felt the 
daily psalms and lessons and the litany to con- 
tain greater comfort and strength for your soul? 
And if you feel this, cannot you make a fresh 
attempt to get your people to feel it ? 
Some of us, and I am one, desire the revision 
of our services. I think the proposals of our 
Convocation, the Upper and the Lower House, 
to be, not without exception but on the whole, 
good, and I desire their enactment (as optional 
at first) with whatever adjustment is found 
necessary of the proposals of one house to those 



THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 31 


of the other. But meanwhile let us make the 
best of the Prayer Book as it stands. 
If I may mention a detail, I earnestly hope 
that we may speedily abolish our excessive use 
of monotone. Let us, as often as we can or 
find desirable, sing or chant the part of the 
service that is meant to be sung. But let us 
make an end of monotoning what lies outside 
the liturgical forms, as for instance, any prayers 
we may say in the pulpit or in the vestry; let 
us say in a natural speaking voice the pre- 
paratory portion of Morning and Evening 
Prayer (from the beginning down to the end 
of the first Lord's Prayer )-unless it be in very 
large churches-as its nature suggests and our 
liturgical teachers have advised us; let us say 
in the same way the concluding prayers after 
the third collect; let us teach our choirs to 
follow the lead of the clergy, and not to sing 
the Amen or the response when the priest says 
and does not sing the prayer or the versicle; 
and in sung celebrations of the Holy Eucharist 
let us follow the use (for example) of the 
church of the Cowley Fathers, and leave great 
parts of the service to be said in a natural 
voice. Such rules are in accordance with 
liturgical precedent and are, I aID sure, more 
edifying than the constant monotoning. 


LBRARY ST. MARY'S COllEGE 



32 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


I would make two other suggestions with 
regard to what is sung. (1) I have been in 
small country parishes where the psalms are 
beautifully sung, but it is not always so. It 
is difficult to sing the psalms intelligently and 
intelligibly. "r ould it not tend to edification if 
in a good many parishes, especially country 
parishes, we were to revert to the old fashion 
and to say the psalms and sing the Glorias? 
I cannot but think that that would be more 
edifying in many places. (2) My other sug- 
gestion is this. Is it not really excessive to 
have as many as five hymns in connection with 
Morning or Evening Prayer? Surely three are 
sufficient at an ordinary Evensong, and four 
when there is also a procession. 
No\v I come to the Eucharist. I am sure 
that we may congratulate ourselves on the 
revival \vhich has been going on, and still 
continues, of the sense that this is "the Lord's 
own service" for the Lord's Day. We ought 
to be fam iliar, and make our people familiar, 
with the origins of Christian worship. There 
is nothing that moves me more than the 
accounts we get from East and West of the 
Sunday worship of the ancient church; how, 
Sunday by Sunday, the Christian body came 
together for their united service of praise, of 



THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 33 


instruction by the reading and explanation of 
Holy Scriptures, of intercession, of communion 
with God and \vith one another in Christ and 
by His Spirit; and how the instrument and 
centre of this great weekly renewal of their 
spiritual life was the oblation of the elements 
of earthly nourishment-the bread and wine- 
and their consecration to be to the church the 
body and blood of Christ, the effective repre- 
sentation thus nlade of the great sacrifice, and 
the Holy Communion in the divine gifts. I 
want Churchmen of all kinds to be animated 
by a strong determination that we will repent 
of the great mistake which we have made in 
letting anything else than the Holy Communion 
be regarded by our people as the chief or 
normal service of the Sunday morning. Do 
you say that tradition is strong the other way, 
and that our people are conservative? I know 
it, and I \vould not offend them. But I think 
we forget ho\v much tradition has changed 
within less than a hundred years. The Evan- 
gelical, and still more the T ractarian, move- 
ments effected immense changes in what was 
popularly accepted as the proper order and 
kind and manner of Sunday services-changes 
some of which we may wish could be recon- 
sidered. Any way, the changes have been 
F 



34 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


very great, and changes as great may be made 
in the future by careful guidance and careful 
teaching. The service of Holy Communion 
is the great service of Christian fellowship 
with God and with man, with the living and 
with the dead. And the intense feeling of 
fellowship which animates us at this moment 
will, I am persuaded, if rightly used, draw 
men to the al tar. 
I realize that we must try different experi. 
ments as to the hours at which, and the manner 
in which, the Holy Communion is to be cele- 
brated on Sundays. There is no reason why 
the chief service should be at eleven o'clock. 
I have my own ideas as to what is most 
desirable, but I do not propose to trouble you 
with them at the moment. Only I beg you 
to make a renewed effort, according to the 
wisdom given to you, to make the service of 
Holy Communion understood by your people 
generally to be the chief and normal service 
of the Sunday morning, the great act of 
Christian loyalty, Christian worship, and 
Christian fellowship. 
There are, I find, still some parishes in which 
there is not a celebration of the Lord's Service 
on every Lord's Day, a good many where it is 
not celebrated on every Saint's Day, and a few 



THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 35 


where it is still not celebrated on Ascension 
Day. I beg you to use the opportunity of 
the present awful time of need, with its deep 
and wide desire to approach the throne of 
grace in the most acceptable manner, so that 
everyone of our parishes may have its service 
of the Holy Communion on every Sunday 
and Saint's Day. Even in the smallest parishes 
there will surely, at such a time, be com- 
municants. 
But I will take the opportunity of saying 
a word about the second and third rubrics after 
the Communion service, taken in conjunction 
with the first rubric before the Communion 
service. No doubt these rubrics require the 
communicants to give notice of their intention 
to communicate on each occasion, and would 
have the clergy not proceed in the service 
unless, even in the smallest parishes, there be 
four, or three at the least, to communicate with 
the priest. The intention was that we should 
have nothing but general communions. That 
intention has been found impossible of exe- 
cution. I would not allow the principle of 
the communicant giving notice to fall altogether 
into disuse. I should like notice. to be required 
each Easter. And more certainly I would 
require every person who comes newly to 



36 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


reside in a parish or frequent a church to give 
notice of his or her intention to be a com- 
municant. I should hope that some day we 
may require that that preliminary notice should 
be accompanied by a certificate from the former 
parish that, if it has been so, the newcomer has 
been a communicant there. Meanwhile the 
requirement of the rubric has been long ignored, 
and, that being so, I think it is not necessary 
nor quite fair for the curate to refrain from 
celebrating on a Sunday or Holy Day if the 
numbers of proposing communicants unhappily 
fall short of the required minimum. As things 
stand at present, if a priest gives notice of 
Communion on a Sunday and does not require 
the intending communicants to give notice of 
their coming, I think he may celebrate without 
counting the number of communicants. But I 
hope we shall adhere steadfastly in will and 
judgement, as well as in fact, to the principle 
that in every church the multiplication of 
Communions must depend upon the supply 
of persons who present themselves for Com- 
munion. I cannot countenance the continuance 
of a celebration of the Holy Communion on 
a day or at an hour when normally, or on the 
average, there are not a sufficient number of 
communicants beside the priest. 



THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 37 


As to Communions on ordinary days of the 
week, there are one or two things I should 
like to say. I would have every parish priest 
be known by his people to be more than willing 
to celebrate on any day when any group of his 
parishioners wishes for a celebration. If it can 
be foreseen, let them be encouraged to mention 
their wish on the previous Saturday, so that 
notice of the celebration can be given on the 
Sunday in the ordinary course. Again I am 
persuaded that in many parishes we might more 
often try the experiment-at present almost 
confined to Ascension Day-of a very early 
Communion at five o'clock. There is an 
appreciable number of people who can come 
to Communion if they are able to come quite 
before the day's work begins; and I think that 
for some people there is no time when they 
are more likely to make a well-prepared 
Communion than early on a l\10nday morning 
when they have had the Sunday leisure to 
prepare. We are too wooden and conventional 
in our arrangements. We ought to try 
experiments. 
My brethren of the clergy, I do from my 
heart desire and pray that we should take the 
opportunity of the present urgency of national 
need, and the stirring of men's hearts and 



38 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


feelings by the war, to make every parish 
church a school of prayer, and the centre and 
home of all the best aspirations which are 
finding admittance into our minds and hearts; 
and what is learned and practised in a time 
of emergency may become part of the cus- 
tomary heritage and practice of the faithful. 
It was a great encouragement to me, and 
I wish to hand it on to you, to learn that one 
of the wounded in our Oxford hospital had 
reported that he heard more than one officer 
reminding his men, when under a hot fire, 
that "people in England are praying for us." 
And, finally, let me recall to your minds 
the fact, that whatever uncertainty may attach 
to the question of our Lord's attitude towards 
war, at any rate He gave us the definite com- 
mandment to pray for our enemies. And I 
hope that we shall not let ourselves forget to 
pray for the Germans, even while we pray for 
victory over them-that God's best blessings 
may, in His own way, come upon that great 
people. I 


I The following prayer (see next page), with others, may 
be obtained from :VIiss Lucy Gardner, The Collegium House, 
92 S. George's Square, London, S. W. I think others, beside 
myself, may find it suggestive. 



THE OPPORTUNITY FOR PRA YER 39 


A PRAYER FOR GERMANY 


Give Thy blessing, 0 Father, to the people of that great 
and fair land, with whose rulers we are at war. Strengthen 
the hands of the wise and just, who follow charity, and look 
for justice and freedom, among them as among us. Drive 
away the evil passions of hatred, suspicion, and the fever 
of war, among them as among us. Relieve and comfort the 
anxious, the bereaved, the sick' and tormented, and all the 
pale host of sufferers, among them as among us. Reward 
the patience, industry, loving-kindness, and simplicity of 
the common people, and all the men of honest and good 
heart, among them as among us. Forgive the cruelty, the 
ambition, the foolish pride, the heartless schemes, of which 
the world's rulers have been guilty. Teach us everywhere 
to repent and to amend. Help us so to use our present 
atBictions which come from us and not from Thee, that we 
may build on the ruins of our evil past a firm and lasting 
peace. Grant that, united in a good understanding with 
those who are now become our enemies, though they are 
our brethren in Christ, they and we may establish a new 
order, wherein the nations may live together in trust and 
fellowship, in the emulation of great achievements and 
the rivalry of good deeds, truthful, honest, and just in our 
dealings one with another, and following in all things the 
standard of the Son of Man, whom we have denied, and 
put to shame, and crucified afresh upon the Calvary of our 
battle ground. 


Among the apochryphal "sayings of Jeaus" (Grenfell and 
Hunt) is this, "And pray for your enemies. . . . He that 
to-day is afar off shall to-morrow be near you." 



III 
OUR TEACHING OFFICE 


There can be no question that at the period 
of the Reformation the intention of the leaders 
of the Church of England, which they shared 
with the leaders of the Reformation generally, 
was to bring the teaching office of the ministry 
-the preaching of the word-into the first line 
of importance. It was felt that in the mediaeval 
idea of the ministry the sacerdotal functions 
had been exaggerated and distorted. Among us 
these sacerdotal functions were not repudiated, 
but retained. But the prophetic or teaching 
office was to be brought into high relief. This 
was quite legitimate. It was restoring the 
balance as Scripture and antiquity had set it. 
There have been in the Church of Rome great 
teachers, like Estius the commentator, who 
would have redressed the balance of emphasis 
on the functions of the ministry in the same 
sense. "The chief function of the bishop or 
of any shepherd of souls," says Estius, "is the 
preaching of the word of God." I 
I Estius (Van Est, died 1613) Commentar;; on 1 Tim. iii. 13. 
I have Quoted the whole of the remarkable passage in Orders 
and Unity, p. 156. 


40 



OUR TEACHING OFFICE 41 


But the lamentable thing is that, in spite of 
all the stress laid in the Prayer Book on the 
teaching office, we have in our part of the 
church been so unsuccessful in fulfilling it. 
Of recent years we have been spending much 
pains on the teaching of children, and on 
preparation for confirmation. About that part 
of our work I shall be speaking directly. But 
if we think of our young men and women of 
all classes growing up and going out into the 
world; if we think of our emigrants going 
out to make new nations, in Canada or some 
other of our dominions; if we think of the 
fathers and mothers of families confronted with 
the duty of teaching and helping their children; 
if we think of the mass of readers, of all classes, 
who listen eagerly in novels or journals to the 
prophets of the day, we cannot feel with any 
degree of satisfaction that their minds have 
been really furnished with a reasonable know- 
ledge of the meaning of the Christian faith, or 
that they are now looking to our pulpits hope- 
fully as a source of enlightenment and guidance. 
There are exceptions, of course. But I think 
if you were to talk to those who have to do 
with the student movement they would tell you 
that the young and ardent spirits with whom 
they have to deal, if they attend our churches, 
G 



42 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


feel very much like sheep that are not fed in 
the majority of cases; and there is a widespread 
feeling of disappointnlent among fairly thought- 
ful people of all classes. They feel that they do 
not get the help for their minds and lives that 
they ought to be getting from our sermons. 
Doubtless it.is for us preachers a difficult time. 
It is a time of widespread mental unsettlement 
-a time when the old faith has to be reinter- 
preted in terms of new needs and startlingly 
fresh inquiries and possibilities. And I am 
speaking about this matter to-day because I 
am sure that this great war will intensify the 
perplexity of men's minds and deepen and 
broaden the need for help. The old question 
-how, if God be Almighty Love, the world 
can be what it is to-day, in the slum and on 
the battlefield, in the ways of vice and selfish- 
ness, and in the council chambers of nations 
and churches-this is a question which will 
press upon the conscience and mind of every 
thoughtful person with increasing force. No 
doubt the strain is felt in some places more 
than in others; but in all places, in the smallest 
country places, there are some doubtful and 
anxious hearts and minds. 
I venture to think we clergy need, every 
one of us, the courage to explore the depths 



OUR TEACHING OFFICE 43 


of doubt and anxious questioning. We need to 
be much better listeners than we are-listeners, 
either directly by being men of such sort as 
that people can speak easily to us about what 
they really feel, or listeners indirectly by 
reading the popular prophets, the men and 
women writers who have a vogue, mostly not 
because of the solutions which they offer to 
the problems of life, but because they put into 
words the difficulties and repugnances to what 
is understood to be orthodoxy which people 
commonly feel. I think that a great many of 
us clergy give people the impression of a lack 
of intellectual courage. We seem to be men 
who take refuge in the traditional phraseology 
because we have not made the venture of 
thinking freely. But there are books in the 
Bible, like Job and Ecclesiastes, which en- 
courage U5i to think very freely: which would 
assure us that the road to faith is by freely 
thinking, and not by refusing to think. We 
have no chance of helping people, unless we 
let them feel that we really know what they 
are thinking about and talking about amongst 
themselves. There is no likelihood of our 
stirring doubts: the popular literature does 
that. What we have to do is to show that we 
have felt and thought, and that we have found 



44 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


in the Christian faith light for the intellect as 
well as strength for the heart. 
Moreover, it is not enough to broach the 
questions in our mind: to read some suggestive 
book or article about the character of God, 
or the trustworthiness of the Gospels, or the 
question of miracles, or the elements of truth 
in religions other than our own. The question 
must be thoroughly faced, and we must with 
all the faculties of our being seek to arrive at 
an honest decision-not in a day or a week 
but (shall I say?) in a year. May I give one 
instance? I fancy there are a great many of 
us whose preaching about the Old Testament 
is paralysed and rendered meaningless, because 
we never make up our minds whether we 
really and sincerely think that the old position 
of Wordsworth and Liddon and Pusey still 
holds, or whether we are convinced that the 
modern critics have, on the whole, proved their 
case. Let us decide in whichever sense, at 
each point, our honest judgement finally inclines. 
Only let us recognize that we must come out 
on one side or the other, if we are to have 
any power as teachers or preachers. Intel- 
lectual decision after due consideration is a 
great moral duty and a considerable element 
in the Christian character. 



OUR TEACHING OFFICE 45 


You know that in an "open letter" which I 
addressed to you at the beginning of the year 
and which I should wish to be considered as 
part of my present charge, I urged strongly 
that there are certain in tellectual decisions, at 
which if a man's mind forces him to arrive, 
he cannot any longer with due regard to public 
sincerity continue to exercise his ministry. But 
conscientiously and reverently we must run the 
risk. We must not retain orthodoxy by either 
refusing to thin k or by shrinking from decision. 
If we are to preach the faith so as to help 
people, we must preach it as men only can 
who have felt the difficulties, and whose faith 
is the faith of the church because they have 
found in that faith the best solution of all the 
needs of our complex intellectual as well as 
moral being-because personally they believe 
it to be true. 
Of course, I know that to most Englishmen 
intellectual labour-the labour of thinking-is 
the most irksome of all tasks. We prefer any 
"business" to study. But when we read the 
service of our ordination we recognize that we 
are, by Him who called us, pledged to life-long 
study. We can only be teachers if we give 
both young and old the impression that we are 
ourselves always learners. We may not like 



46 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


reading-we may not enjoy facing intellectual 
problems-but we must do it to the utmost of 
our power, or be judged with the man of one 
talent who could not face the risks or take the 
trouble of using it. 
There is another thing which I would say 
about the matter of our sermons. Let us see 
to it that each sermon conveys a definite 
message. Sermons may be of different kinds. 
They may be expository - explanations of a 
passage or text of Scripture. I am sure, 
indeed, that there is no way in \v hich we can 
help people more than by carefully and sym- 
pathetically explaining the Bible, whether going 
systematically through some portion or book, 
or by explaining the lections of the day or 
some particular text. Or they may be sermons 
on subjects: in which case we need carefully 
to mark the limits of our subject and to show 
that we understand the objections to the view 
we are going to enforce, and can state them 
candidly and sympathetically; before we seek 
to refute them or to substitute a better view. 
But the great point is that our sermons should 
be about something in particular, and produce 
some definite impression. I think nothing can 
be more useful than a sermon, or a series of 
sermons, on the Holy Communion, as sacrifice, 



OUR TEACHING OFFICE 47 


as communion, as fello\vship: but surely nothing 
is more futile than to drag into almost every 
sermon at the end an allusion to Holy Com- 
munion and the duty of coming to it. Let 
the real human and divine meaning of the 
sacrament be brought home to men's hearts 
and minds and imaginations, not only by the 
spectacle of worship, but also by careful 
teaching: then we can entertain a just hope 
that they will desire to be communicants, and 
regular communicants; but the constantly 
reiterated brief admonition to come to the 
comIDunion introduced at the end of a sermon 
almost as a matter of course is, I am persuaded, 
absolutely ineffectual. 
I think our chief privilege and opportunity as 
preachers to-day is to refound the convictions 
of those we teach on the central verities of the 
Creed and the New Testament. The question 
at the root of most modern controversies is not 
whether there is a God, but what He is. The 
paradox of Christianity is that God is love. 
No one will ever really believe this doctrine 
till he feels what a paradox it is. It has been 
a popular idea that the belief that God is love 
may be taken for granted, and that, inasmuch 
as this is what chiefly matters, the dogmas of 
the church are superfluous encumbrances upon 



48 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


the simplicity of this religious conviction. But 
I think nowadays people who think at all feel 
that here is the heart of the religious question. 
Is it true that the tremendous force which 
made and pervades the universe, this awful 
and mysterious energy, is really Love, pure 
unadulterated Love, really our Father and my 
Father? I think there is a supreme need and 
opportunity for teaching people how distinctive 
and unique is the Christian idea of God, how 
it came into men's minds through the prophets 
of Israel, how it reached its consummation in 
Jesus Christ. We need to let them feel how, 
beyond all reasonable question, Jesus Christ 
claimed authority to teach men infallibly the 
truth about God: how He commended a 
doctrine which seems in itself so improbable, 
in view of all the pain and confusion of the 
world, by Himself entering into all that pain 
and confusion, by being Himself the Man of 
sorrows, enduring in mind and body every- 
thing that has ever seemed to men an argument 
against God's love, with an unflinching con- 
fidence of trust: how not only did He teach 
about God, but led Hi
 first disciples and, 
through them, all the world, to believe in 
Himself as manifesting God, as being truly (so 
they came at last to hold) God incarnate; 



OUR TEACHING OFFICE 49 


translating the remote and unintelligible God 
into the intelligible lineaments of a human 
nature: how when this dawning faith of His 
first disciples suffered and quailed under the 
shock of His seeming failure and under the 
terror of His cross, it was reconstructed upon 
a basis of everlasting security by the evidence 
of His resurrection: how this miracle, just 
because it is a physical miracle, is (as Westcott 
emphasized) essential to the faith, because it 
proves that the power which made and rules 
the physical world is, in spite of all seem- 
ing failure, on the side of Christ; that love 
and po,ver are at bottom one and the same 
thing. So men are led to see that the dogmas 
of the Creed, the dogmas about Christ's 
person and His miracles, are not a cum ber- 
some decoration upon an otherwise self- 
subsistent building, but are in truth the sub- 
structure on which alone the faith of mankind 
in God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, 
has been effectively reared and can per- 
manently subsist. 
It is upon this distinctively Christian idea 
of God, the Creator and the Father, that the 
whole sequence of Christian ideas and doctrines 
depends. The articles of the Cbristian creed 
cohere with one another, and depend upon the 
H 


..... . u..Y"'T 


RV/: ""("1 1 r""rr:; 



50 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


doctrine of God. I I am sure that by careful 
preaching we can help people to feel this, 
not in learned language, but in language which 
appeals to common people's hearts and minds. 
And I can hardly imagine a time when we had 
a better opportunity than we have now for 
bringing home to men's minds the meaning of 
half-forgotten Christian verities. 
Do not the sights which are under our eyes 
to-day, at home and abroad, inspire us to teach 
men afresh the meaning and horror of sin? Is 
not the powerlessness of Christendom to-day 
to bear any collective witness a good occasion 
for teaching men again that a Catholic Church, 
binding nations and classes into a real fellow- 
ship, was the intention of Christ? Is not 
the widespread yearning after fellowship an 
opportunity for teaching men again the real 
meaning of the church as the body of Christ, 
and the real meaning of the sacraments? 


Now I must proceed to speak of that very 
important part of the teaching office with 
regard to which I have made special inquiries 
of the clergy-the teaching of children. If we 


I I have tried to develop the idea of the separate meaning 
and mutual coherence of Christian doctrines in a tract, The 
Solidarity of the Faith (Longmans, 6d.). 



OUR TEACHING OFFICE 51 


confine our attention to the period of the school 
age, the results of my inquiries are on the 
whole satisfactory. As regards the religious 
teaching in the church day schools, it is possible 
that we may improve our syllabus, and of course 
there is division of opinion as to the desirability 
of inspecting the religious teaching of a school 
by means of examination. I am not proposing 
to deal with either of these questions at the 
present moment. Nor am I going to discuss 
the merits and drawbacks of the religious 
teaching in Council schools. My present point 
is this only: if we confine our attention to the 
school age, I cannot doubt that we have very 
great occasion for satisfaction with the result 
of the religious instruction in the church day 
schools on the whole. I am not sure that I am 
satisfied with the part played in this religious 
instruction by us clergy. Many of us frankly 
say that we do not teach ourselves because the 
lay teachers teach better. But the inspectors 
and the parochial clergy in their returns to me 
bear witness to the zeal and efficiency of the 
lay teachers and to the high level which is 
attained in the results. 
As regards the Sunday teaching, there is, 
I have no doubt, advance being made in 
catechizing in church, not, indeed, as the 



52 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


Prayer Book desires, before the general con- 
gregation, but in a special children's service in 
the afternoon, whether or no the method be 
the method of S. Sulpice or some adaptation 
of it. I have no doubt also that progress is 
being made in our Sunday school teaching and 
in using the Sunday school to lead up to the 
catechism. That appears to be the best plan 
in most parishes; to make the most of the 
Sunday school in the morning to lead up to 
the catechism in church in the afternoon. 
I have no doubt that we owe a great debt of 
gratitude to our Sunday School Association, to 
the Sunday School Teachers' Training Week, 
which has been held at different centres, and 
to the Clergy Training Week, which has been 
held at Twyford now for four years, for which, 
and for all that he has done for our Sunday 
teaching work, we owe so great a debt of 
gratitude to the Vicar of Twyford, Mr. 
Acworth. 
I have had in my life lamentably little to 
do with the teaching of children. And, as 
a consequence, I think other people are much 
more likely than I am to speak with authority 
on the subject. I confine myself to saying that 
when I study carefully the reports before me 
of our teaching of children, I get an impression 



OUR TEACHING OFFICE 53 


of advance being made both in weekday and 
Sunday teaching, and I should feel full of 
hopefulness about the future if we could 
confine our inquiry within the limits of the 
school age. But this is what we cannot do, 
and when I proceed to ask the most important 
question-how far does the teaching given in 
church day schools, Sunday schools, and cate- 
chism in church really lay hold of the growing 
souls of the children so as permanently to 
influence their adult lives ?-the answer which 
I receive is not on the whole very encouraging. 
Some of the best of us feel something like 
despair. I 
In great measure we are hindered in our 
judgement by our inability to follow up our 
pupils. In our country villages the girls and 
the boys in most cases go away from home. 
They leave school, they are confirmed, and 
they go. If I ask a careful clergyman how 
many of those confirmed in the last ten years 


I Almost all the clergy report to me that in districts where 
there is only a church school, there is among Nonconformists 
"no demand" for separate teaching for their children. I often 
hear that "the bishop's prize" has been won by a Noncon- 
formist child. In certain districts Protestant parents send 
their children quite willingly to Roman schools where they 
are handy. This implies, I think, not so much that the parents 
are really willing that their children should absorb the teaching 
in question as that they do not think they will absorb it, but 
only " learn " it and forget it. 



54 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


in his parish have remained communicants, he 
can mostly give me no trustworthy answer, 
because so large a proportion in country and 
town have vanished out of his ken very soon 
after being confirmed. But so far as we 
can judge, the impression-not the uniform 
impression (for there are very bright ex- 
ceptions), but the general impression - is 
discouraging. The lads and young women 
who seemed so promising when they were 
at school, and when they were being prepared 
for confirmation, are absorbed by their homes 
and by their class into the old traditional 
level: and all our efforts seem to be swallowed 
up. The tradition of the homes and the 
tradition of the class have swallowed them up. 
This is the common complaint as regards 
not only the religious instruction but the 
whole instruction and influence of day school 
and Sunday school alike. We have been 
accustomed on innumerable platforms, when 
we have emphasized the importance of the 
religious education of children, to quote 
a saying of some Roman Catholic bishop, 
"Give me the children to teach, and you 
may do what you like with the adults." We 
must cease to quote that saying. It has been 
proved to be a fallacy. To a degree hard to 



OUR TEACHING OFFICE 55 


exaggerate, the mental disturbance of the 
period of puberty, coupled with the change 
of environment involved in emancipation from 
school and going out to work, obliterates the 
influence of school. The influence of the home 
and of the "mates" conquers, and our labour 
seems to be in vain. 
This is a very great problem. Continuation 
schools, when they are accepted into the sphere 
of our elementary education, and Bible classes 
and other classes corresponding to continuation 
schools, will doubtless supply part of the 
answer to the problem. But not, I think, the 
main part of the answer. 
The main part of the answer will be found 
in a truer idea of education, both secular and 
religious. The memory of a child appears to 
be the most easily developed and the most 
superficial of his faculties. He can learn and 
forget with marvellous ease. That which 
sticks is that which has stimulated the reaction 
of his heart and will: that on which he has 
learned to act for himself: that which, out of 
school, has become part of his individuality. 
Everyone knows how hard it is, especially 
in villages, to develop and maintain individu- 
ality. But it is worth any labour to do this. 
After all, there are differences between the 



56 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


children: there are boys and girls with re- 
markable characters and tastes. When such 
appear, we ought to think no pains wasted 
upon them. The labour world will be in- 
fluenced through their natural leaders among 
themselves. If you get to know the best of 
the workers, you are disappointed to find how 
few of them are Churchmen. But many of 
them were children of the church. Probably 
they were rather remarkable boys and girls. 
Only they seemed to feel that their aspirations 
and ambitions were not sympathized with or 
encouraged, and they went off to where they 
thought they could find more sympathy. It is 
a common story. I cannot help feeling that 
,ve want to spend a great deal more pains 
on cultivating individuality and giving it all 
encouragement: bearing with the crudeness 
and conceit of youth, and striving to encourage 
and help more than to instruct or repress. If 
there is to be progress, especially in our villages, 
we must set ourselves with all our might to 
develop individuality. 
And now for my last point. The development 
of individual capacity is hindered by social 
conditions which, in town and country alike, 
depress the young man and woman with an 
almost overwhelming force of pressure into 



OUR TEACHING OFFICE 57 


the old ruts. This is especially apparent when 
you take the young man at the age when he 
wants or ought to want to be married. His 
conditions crush him back. Putting the matter 
conversely, and having regard for the moment 
to the country only, I would express a confident 
hope, that if we had a sufficient supply of 
adequate houses in the country and better 
wages and freer access to land, and security 
of tenure for land and house, and the freer 
and more hopeful outlook upon life which 
would go with these things, we should have 
a far richer development of character. The 
present conditions depress character and in- 
dividuality. Grace, it is true, may triumph 
over circumstances, but we have no kind of 
right to maintain the manifold hindrances to 
the purpose of God which our present system 
involves. And we have no ground for saying 
that conditions could not be improved. It is 
selfishness and indifference and lack of courage 
,vhich have brought them about and which 
maintain them. 
This, then, is what I wish to have impressed 
upon the minds of Churchmen and of the clergy. 
All our labour upon education, secular and 
religious, will fail to produce any general fruit 
unless we set ourselves courageously, in com- 
I 



58 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


bination with all men of goodwill, to secure 
social reforms on behalf of the workers in 
town and country, in accordance, as far as 
possible, with the workers' own wishes, so 
that they may be trained not to act under 
orders, but with freer opportunity to take 
the management of their own life. And I 
pray, almost more fervently than I pray any 
other prayer, that, before it is too late, we, 
the clergy of the Church of England, may 
wake up, in far larger numbers than at present, 
to our duty of taking a side courageously and 
intelligently with the movement of socia] re- 
form, treading the road on which in Ireland, 
in Germany, in Belgium, and in France the 
clergy of the Roman Catholic Church have 
already shown us an encouraging example. I 


J l\1ay I invite tbe clergy to read The Priest and Social 
Action, by Father Plater, S.J. (Longmans), 3.1. 6d.? I have 
no doubt that the picture painted by Father Plater is somewhat 
too rosy. I think I could introduce some darker shades into 
it. But I think the Roman clergy have acted corporately in 

ome countries more courageously and effectively than we 
have donc. 



IV 
SACRIFICE AND NATIONAL 
PENITENCE 


Among the emotions which we are sharing 
to-day, stirred in us by the experience of the 
war, there is none deeper than the en th usiasm 
which we feel as we witness on a vast scale 
the reality of sacrifice-self-sacrifice for the 
country. We have watched the troops of 
lads going from our villages, and the recruits 
from the towns, and the young men whom 
we have complained of as too fond of pleasure, 
the product of our Public Schools and Uni- 
versi ties; they have gone to the war and to 
the prospect of wounds and death with such 
light-hearted readiness. I could not put into 
words what we feel as we watch them go. 
And we know what their mothers have 
thought and said. And we know that among 
their sisters -nurses and helpers-there is the 
same eagerness for sacrifice. "0 God, my 
heart is ready; my heart is ready." There 
is a splendour of sacrifice being shown for the 
S9 



60 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


honour and safety of England which is lifting 
the whole country to a higher spiritual level, 
and which gives us who stay at home, who 
perhaps have not even brothers or sons and 
daughters to give up, a good deal to think 
about. 
The kind of self-sacrifice in the cause of 
one's country that we are witnessing is not 
indeed distinctively Christian. We have seen 
it burning with a splendid flame among the 
Japanese, and we recall the glorious examples 
of it among Greeks and Romans. But if it is 
not confined to Christianity, it reminds us 
that Christianity takes this capacity for sacri- 
fice for granted, and has made sacrifice of a 
most distinctive type and on most distinctive 
motives the normal type of Christian life. 
The enthusiasm for the war which we all 
feel has led in a few of the clergy to what is, 
I think, a mistaken form of sacrifice. It has 
led to some of the clergy volunteering, or 
desiring to volunteer, as soldiers. On this 
subject I read the archbishop's letter with 
great thankfulness. " By every line of thought 
which I have pursued," he wrote, "I am led 
to the conclusion that I have been right in 
maintaining from the first that the position of 
an actual combatant in our army (or navy) is 



SACRIFICE & NA TIONAL PENITENCE 61 


incompatible with the position of one who has 
sought and received holy orders. The whole 
idea which underlies and surrounds ordina- 
tion implies this." On this subject the judge- 
ment of the Christian church has been almost 
unanimous-that it is not lawful for the clergy 
voluntarily to fight. Of course, it is a differ- 
ent matter where, as in France, the law of 
their country regards the clergy as reservists 
and compels them on emergencies to come 
back into the ranks. To this compulsion the 
Christian church has submitted; but this does 
not touch the point that the church universal 
has forbidden the clergy serving of their own 
will as soldiers. I And the prohibition means, 
I think, a good deal. Military enthusiasm in 
times of national danger is overwhelming. It 
is like the enthusiasm of religion in a whole 
nation at certain specially susceptible epochs 
of history. It pervades the whole atmos- 
phere. It carries all before it. It inspires 
to great sacrifices, but also it has shown in 
all history a strange power to blind the 
eyes and harden the heart. Thus, even at 
periods of great national necessity it needs 
counterpoise. 


I See S. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theol. 28. 2re., quo 40, 
art. 2, where the prohibition is presented and defended. 



62 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


Our Lord, we may say with Mozley, in his 
famous sermon on War, takes patriotism for 
granted. But He presses upon men some- 
thing which is different from patriotism and 
must control and regulate it-an ideal of the 
divine kingdom based upon methods and 
maxims as far removed as possible from the 
ordinary methods and maxims of war; and 
His doctrine of God, the common Father of 
all, no longer admits of anyone nation or 
empire regarding itself as a chosen people in 
the midst of "lesser breeds" or less important 
races. 
Before our God, and in the felIo"vship of 
His Christ, there is neither Jew nor Greek, 
Barbarian nor Scythian. God's care is for all 
nations equally according to the diversities of 
their gifts. There is to be a fellowship of all 
nations on an equal basis in a Catholic Church. 
This is what the Christian church has always 
seen when it has been true to its Master. 
But, as we were recently reminded in an 
admirable and most Christian article in the 
Times, I this is an extraordinarily difficult 
doctrine to keep in remembrance in an 
atmosphere of war. Thus the war spirit, 


I Times Literary Supplement, September 17th, "What are 
we fighting for?" 



SACRIFICE & NATIONAL PENITENCE 63 


even at the best, needs counterpoise. It is 
the special function of the clergy, occupied in 
their proper ministry, to maintain this. Even 
at such a moment as this we must say, "We 
will give ourselves to prayer and to the 
ministry of the word. " We will seek to live, 
with special alertness of mind, at the feet of 
Him who said to the first of His apostles in 
an hour when He was the subject of the 
grossest physical violence, "Put up the sword 
into the sheath." It is our privilege in every 
way to support our soldiers and sailors in a 
just war, and to encourage recruiting, and to 
bless the recruits, and to pray for God's 
blessing on our arms, bringing to bear upon 
the war the whole power of organized prayer, 
public and private. But it is our duty also 
to remember the perils of military enthusi- 
asm, and to keep our minds full of the ideals 
and laws of the Lamb of God, Jesus of 
Nazareth, so that there may be a steady 
and quiet and constant counterpoise to the 
emotions of war. 
I have spoken of the clergy. A more 
difficult question has been raised about the 
duty of candidates for holy orders. Ought 
the man whose vocation is for the ministry 
and whose mind is steadily set to fulfil it, to 



64 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


turn aside and postpone his ordination in 
order to offer himself for the service of his 
country as a soldier? Here again the mind 
of the church has been steadily against his 
doing so, voluntarily/It has had so pro- 
found a sense of the incompatibility of shed- 
ding blood with holy orders that, in its 
ancient canons, it has declared that even 
those who in the execution of their public 
duties as soldiers or even as magistrates have 
taken human life or condemned men to death 
are to be forbidden to go on to ordination. 2 
It has pointed to the popular soldier saint, 
Martin, who, after his baptism, though he 
remained by request in the army for two 
years, yet, when the occasion for fighting 
came, refused to fight and withdrew. 3 The 
Roman Church to-day has elaborate "dispen- 
sations from irregularity" and regulations for 


I See Thomassin Vet et 1lova eccl. disc., index, under the 
words, "milites et militia." 
2 Thomassin, op. cit., pars ii, lib. i, cap. 66, sect. 10: 
" Usque adeo abhorret ecclesia a fundendo sanguine, reorum 
etiam quos leges ipsae addicunt, ut ne eos quidem qui justitiae 
huic scelerum ultrici linguas manusque commodaverunt, in 
ministris haberi velit incruentae suae et caelistis vietimae." 
(" The church has such a horror of shedding blood, evcn 
in the case of criminals condemned by the law, that it has 
refused to have men who have given their hands and tongues 
to this avenging justice among the ministers of its bloodless 
and heavenly victim.") 
3 Sulpicius Severus Vita, 3, 4, P.L. xx, 162. 



SACRIFICE & NATIONAL PENITENCE 65 


those who are candidates for orders and are 
compelled by state laws to serve in the army. I 
I suppose that such a formal rule has been 
subjected to many exceptions; and it is in 
itself open to so many objections, that I 
would not by any means have it brought 
back into force as a rule amongst us. But 
I think it has represented a deep and right 
instinct in the church. I could not myself 
put any pressure upon the conscience of a 
young man who feels himself, candidate for 
holy orders though he be, overmastered by 
the sense that he must serve his country's 
need in arms-I would let him go with a 
blessing. Nor should I have any hesitation in 
letting him resume his studies when he came 
back nor in ordaining him, when he is pre- 
pared; but, on the other hand, I would give 
all the encouragement I can to our candidates, 
especially those who are already at theological 
colleges or just going thither, to abide by 
their realized call and to pursue their pre- 
paration, even if they have to bear the 
accusation of cowardice. I think they will in 
this manner show the truest and highest 
courage, and that there is no better way in 
which they can serve their country than by 
I Gasparri de sacra ordinatione 
 540 fr. 


K 



66 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


preparing themselves for the ministry of the 
gospel. I 
I have felt bound to turn aside to this subject 
of the relation of the clergy and candidates 
for holy orders to military service, but now 
I want to bring your thoughts back to the 
moving spectacle of self-sacrifice-unselfcon- 
scious, unostentatious, but deliberate, volun- 
tary, and unflinching-which our youth to-day 
are exhibiting. I am quite sure that it ought 
to produce in us clergy and laity , who for 
various reasons cannot go as soldiers, the sort 
of holy rivalry which shall in the years to 
come make a great difference in the life and 
witness of the church. You know that many 
besides Macaulay have reproached our English 
Church for lack of self-sacrifice, and have 
I The tendency to go for a soldier which has been so appar- 
ent among candidates for orders has appeared equally among 
medical students. The Times of October 26tb quotes "alarm- 
ing figures" from Cambridge-64 entries this year instead of 
116 last year. The writer adds, "Those of us who have the 
duty of advising our young men have done everything in our 
power to keep medical students to their studies." Of those 
who have remained he says, "It has been very hard for 
these young men to curb their natural desire to do what their 
companions are doing. They have been subjected to much 
ignorant comment. They feel that people are saying to 
themselves, 'That man ought to be at the front,' but they 
are doing their duty, and among the heroic things this war 
has produced, not the least heroic is the action of those 
students who have had the courage to sacrifice their ambi- 
tions and to stick to their course, for the sake of our poor 
suffering humanity." 



SACRIFICE & NATIONAL PENITENCE 67 


contrasted it with the Church of Rome, in 
which they have seen altogether more of the 
same heroic spirit which belongs to soldiers. 
They have not denied to us the glory of kind- 
ness and goodness and faithfulness and all the 
circle of domestic virtues. Only they have 
not seen in us the school of the heroic spirit 
-the school of sacrifice. 
Now, in part, these reproaches belong to an 
older day. Where, it was asked, is to be found 
in the Church of England the splendid sacrifice 
of the religious orders-the life of voluntary 
poverty and celibacy and obedience ? Well, 
since Macaulay's days these and the like re- 
proaches have been in part removed. The 
sacrifice of the religious orders has been 
revived among us-nowhere so abundantly as 
in this diocese, where we have six or seven 
religious communities of men and women 
which have produced a profound impression 
on the life and the ideals of the Church of 
England. And in a measure we may thank- 
fully claim that, beyond the area of this special 
vocation, religion and sacrifice are again associ- 
ated in our minds in such a way as would 
make it impossible now for anyone to write 
about the Church of England as Macaulay 
wrote. Moreover, we are a very "unshowy" 


LIBRARY ST. Jv\ARY'S COLLEGE 



68 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


people. We desire, the best of us desire, to 
he rather than to seem. Behind the show of 
comfort there is a vast deal of very real 
self-sacrifice; and in innumerable country 
vicarages the married priest with his family 
(and how much of what is best and noblest in 
our records does England owe to the families 
of the clergy!) living in the straitest circum- 
stances, with uncomplaining dutifulness, offers 
to God, I am persuaded, as noble and glorious 
a sacrifice in His sight as any monastic cell can 
show. 
Nevertheless there is truth in the reproach 
aimed at us; and just at this season we do 
well to heed it. For instance, the Roman 
Church has been magnificently helped in the 
maintenance of religious education on its own 
lines because it has been able to draw upon 
a vast store of voluntary sacrifice. Men have 
been found in multitudes who felt that they had 
the vocation to be teachers for Christ's sake 
and His little ones, and who, without hope or 
prospect but their work and their faith, have 
given themselves for teachers, wanting nothing 
for it but their barest living. There is hardly 
anything in modern Christendom nobler, or 
more successful in attaining its end, than the 
institution of the Christian Brothers; and the 



SACRIFICE & NATIONAL PENITENCE 69 


women's Teaching Orders do not fall behind 
them. Why have we never struck anything 
like this store of deli berate and joyful sacrifice, 
with all our talk about the supreme importance 
of religious education? There has been some- 
thing lacking. Again, how do matters stand 
to-day in the field of missionary endeavour? 
The inquiries that I have made for my 
Visitation convince me that, though there are 
still some parishes where almost nothing is 
done for the work of the church overseas, yet 
there has been an immense advance in our 
response to the missionary claim. There is 
a far more widespread interest: far more in- 
telligence given to the propagation of the 
universal gospel: far less stupid scoffing at 
the missionary cause: far more, and more 
systematic, prayer: and a far greater readi- 
ness to contribute money and to recognize such 
contributions as a regular part of the normal 
duty of a Christian man and a Christian parish. 
We owe, in fact, an immense debt of gratitude 
to the ' , Forward Movement" for overseas 
work, the initiation of which is our chief claim 
to distinction among dioceses in recent years. 
Yet in spite of all this that is satisfactory we 
must acknowledge that, with all the increase 
of need and of knowledge, the number of men 



70 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


and women, laymen and priests, who are 
offering themselves for work abroad, I do not 
say specially from this diocese, but from the 
church as a whole, is yet sadly inadequate. 
And knowing what we know of the circum- 
stances of the church overseas, we cannot 
regard it as fair or reasonable that we should 
have in this diocese of 690,000 inhabitants 
about a thousand clergy. I Now what I pray, 
what I from my heart desire you to pray, is 
that the glorious spirit of sacrifice which has 
animated the volunteers for this war and lifted 
to a higher plane the whole level of our common 
life, may not fail to produce in the church a 
blessed rivalry: and that along all the different 
paths of vocation we may be witnesses in the 
years to come of deeper and broader streams 
of sacrifice than we have ever witnessed before. 
Truly as '\ve read and meditate on the 
Gospels we see our Lord standing over every 
human soul that is a candidate for discipleship, 
expecting, eliciting, and then welcoming and 
blessing sacrifice. Truly He did intend that 
sacrifice should be one special and arresting 
characteristic of His religion. Truly no society 


I Population 690,137. Clergy beneficed 636, assistant 
curates 179, other licensed clergy 153, resident with permis- 
sions 39, total 1,007 . 



SACRIFICE & NA TIONAL PENITENCE 71 


of men which claims to be part of the church 
of Christ can be content to be less than brilliant 
in sacrifice. 
Sacrifice, real and also visible, makes a deep 
appeal to the imagination of men. There is 
nothing which wins men's hearts more than 
the spectacle of a priesthood which visibly em- 
bodies the spirit of sacrifice. Besides the 
reality there must be its visible expression. As 
I move about the diocese, I see frequently the 
large vicarage or rectory standing in a beautiful 
garden, which speaks of the ideal of a clerical 
country gentleman. The idea of sixty years 
ago was that it was essential to have a resident 
clergyman in every village, however small; 
and that if there was only a good parsonage 
house, a man would always be found to "take 
the living" without regard to the smallness of 
the income. Now we have come to doubt the 
ideal, and to know that the anticipation has 
proved less and less true. We feel that it 
'\vould be better for ourselves and for our 
people, on the whole, if our parishes were 
larger, and if each incumbent had a living 
wage. Thus I know that to the present-day 
incumbent of many a parish the large house 
is a mere burden upon his straitened means. 
It embodies and represents an ideal now anti- 



72 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


quated by new conditions, and also an ideal 
which never was easy to reconcile with the 
divine pattern of ministry. I wish from my 
heart that we could get rid of many of these 
expensive rectories, and house our clergy in 
a manner which would represent to the im- 
agination a truer picture of the Christian ideal, 
and of the actual facts of the incomes of our 
clergy. 
But, most of all, I feel that a change is needed 
with regard to our bishops. We have, I dare 
say, all read the tract which was called The 
Fatal Opulence of Bishops. You know well 
enough that a bishop's life in these days cannot 
well be an easy life. He has every inducement 
to a life of sacrifice. Still the great house and 
the income of 
5,OOO makes a disastrous im- 
pression upon the imagination of people, 
especially of the working class. It is a most 
real stumbling block. I believe it ought to be 
removed. May I explain briefly what I would 
do ? The plea for these large incomes of 
bishops is that so much is required of them. 
Yes: but why should that be paid out of their 
private incomes? Let some suitable sum, say 

2,OOO of what is now the bishop's income, 
become a diocesan fund in the hand of lay 
trustees. Let them be required to pay the 



SACRIFICE & NATIONAL PENITENCE 73 


necessary expenses of the bishop's office, such 
as the salaries of his officers, his travelling 
expenses, his legal expenses, the expenses of 
the ordinations and other diocesan gatherings: 
and let them also put at the bishop's disposal 
a very considerable sum for charitable ad- 
ministration of which he should give account. 
This fund would be then neither in appearance 
nor in reality any part of the bishop's own 
Income. 
Then as to the great house. I think every 
diocese should have its great house, which 
might or might not be the present bishop's 
palace, a great house which should be avail- 
able for gatherings of all kinds for diocesan 
purposes and for retreats for laity and clergy. 
The bishop could use this in various ways, 
and the Diocesan Fund would keep it up. 
In it the bishop could have his own apart- 
ments and his chapel. Then the bishop's 
income might be really a very modest sum, 
like the income of most bishops in the church 
outside the Established Church in England; 
and a really great cause of scandal and mis- 
understanding would be removed. I have in 
my own mind considered this particular cause 
of stumbling and the way to remove it some- 
what in detail. But I will not trouble you with 
L 



74 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


the details now. My desire is that we should, 
as a church, set ourselves to disembarrass the 
clergy of those outward marks which to the 
imagination of men, and especially to the great 
mass of the workers in town and country, 
associate our ministerial office with the symbols 
of wealth and ease. 
There is one other point on which I desire to 
speak to you to-day. 
The anxieties of this great war have truly 
thrown us upon God. We are feeling very 
widely the value of prayer. Moreover, the 
circumstances out of which the war arose 
have caused us to feel, and I think rightly to 
feel, that we are fighting for justice and the 
rights of weaker nations and the cause of liberty 
against a monstrous spirit of aggressive and 
selfish and cruel militarism which has for the 
time possessed the soul of Germany. There is 
all the greater need therefore that we should 
not be Pharisaical, that we should not be 
saying, "We thank God that we are not as 
those Germans." Are there not with us, even 
with us, sins against God? The prophets of 
Israel make a tremendous claim upon the 
worshippers of God that they should bethink 
them whether, God being what He is, they are 
fit to approach God and inquire of Him. For 



SACRIFICE & NATIONAL PENITENCE 75 


He will not be "inquired of" by the wilfully 
disobedient. To all this body of prophetic 
teaching there is serious reason that we should 
give heed to-day. This is as great a moment 
for corporate penitence as for corporate prayer. 
You know what our national sins are. You 
know, for instance, how slowly we are making 
way in combating sweating or the underpaying 
of our workers in our industrial life ; and how 
stern are the warnings of Holy Scripture that 
"to grind the faces of the poor" disqualifies 
any nation-and we are all responsible, if we 
are indifferent or acquiescent-from approach- 
ing God. Again, you know how from time to 
time some anxious question of an employé in 
a place of business reveals to us a widespread 
commercial dishonesty, or how some public 
scandal discloses a distressing prevalence of 
illicit commissions. Again you know how 
terrible is the hold which drink still has upon 
us and how awful its ravages. The Czar's 
decree, abolishing the retail sale of vodka 
throughout his dominions, at a vast initial 
sacrifice of revenue, has overwhelmed us with 
shame. For in the days of the war we have 
learned that drinking has been increasing 
terribly among women, owing apparently in 
great part to the wives of our soldiers, who 



76 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


receive their allowances and, while they have 
the money, have nowhere but the public houses 
in which to satisfy their excited feelings and 
craving for news. And we know that it is not 
without cause that Lord Kitchener has appealed 
to our patriotism not to tempt our soldiers to 
drink. And in such a distressing emergency 
we feel how little we, as a democratically 
governed country, can do or have done to 
counteract so serious an evil. Once more, you 
know the terrible prevalence of sexual sin-the 
vast number of girls, mere children, who aTe 
corrupted; and, I must add, the vast number 
of cases in which girls or women are rather the 
tempters than the tempted to sexual sin. You 
know how both without and within married 
life the artificial prevention of conception is 
becoming nothing less than a national habit, 
descending from class to class in the social 
scale. Surely on these and many other grounds 
there is the gravest need for national penitence. 
We clergy ought to know before we speak: 
we ought to know what it is that is actually 
going on among our people. We ought to 
choose carefully the right occasion for speaking. 
But we ought not to be content with vague 
talk about sin. With much self-preparation and 
prayer we ought to strive to unmask the forms 



SACRIFICE & NA TIONAL PENITENCE 77 


of evil, and so to awaken the consciences of 
men and women as that they should feel that 
if they want God to protect them and their 
cause, truly they must cleanse their lives and 
hearts so that the hands which they lift up in 
prayer may be really "holy hands." 



V 
CHURCH REFORM 


We have been, and are, living in a period of 
profound social change. It has been of late 
years unusually rapid. If we are to judge from 
previous experience, we should conjecture that 
the vast war of nations in which we are at 
present engaged will lead to social changes in 
European society even deeper and more rapid 
than those to which we had been accustoming 
ourselves. Now a society which, like the 
church, claims to be continuous and to carry 
down the ages a continuous and constant 
religion, turning "the heart of the fathers to 
the children, and the heart of the children to 
their fathers," must be prepared especially in 
an age of change, while it clings to what is 
unchanging in its faith and system, to adjust 
itself, to reform its methods, to remove scandals 
and abuses, and to interpret the old faith to 
the wants of a new age. This is what is meant 
by the familiar demand for church reform. 
There are particular reforms which we should, 
I dare say, be unanimous in demanding: for 
78 



CHURCH REFORM 


79 


instance, we should, perhaps, most of us be 
agreed that the power which still remains with 
private patrons of "livings" to sell the advow- 
son, that is to sell, as an ordinary piece of 
property, the power of presenting in perpetuity 
to a cure of souls, is intolerable and ought to 
be altered. No one would tolerate the con- 
tinuance of such a power, if what were con- 
cerned were a professorship at a University 
or a head-mastership of a school. Again, we 
are all agreed that there is still an excessive 
difficulty in dispossessing of his benefice a 
clergyman who, by the confession of all good 
men, has shown himself unfit to hold a cure 
of souls. Again, we are all agreed that the 
so-called representation of the clergy in the 
Lower House of Convocation is profoundly 
unsatisfactory and unfair. For example, from 
the area of this diocese there sit in the Lower 
House the Deans of Christ Church and 
"Tindsor, and a representative of each of their 
two Chapters, and the three archdeacons; 
while the ,,
hole body of incumbents (636) are 
represented by only two proctors; and the 
unbeneficed clergy are not represented at all. 
Again, we are agreed that the representation 
of the laity does not interest the mass of our 
people, and in particular does not interest the 



80 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


working classes, who feel that they have no 
real share in the management of affairs. Once 
more, it is an admitted scandal that, when the 
liberality of church people has provided the 
means of dividing an overgrown diocese, there 
should be so great a difficulty in procuring the 
necessary Parliamentary sanction. These are 
examples of commonly admitted abuses. 
And those who have thought most deeply on 
these things have come to the conclusion that 
the best method of reform is not to attack 
each abuse in turn and seek to pass through 
Parliament a Bill to amend it. The root of the 
mischief is that the church has lost the power 
effectively to express its mind on these and 
all subjects which concern its common life, 
and to reform itself. There can be no doubt 
that the church from the beginning believed 
itself to be, by the will of its Founder, a society 
with the power of "binding" and "loosing," 
that is legislating to prohibit or allow, with 
a divine sanction: "What things soever ye 
shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: 
and what things soever ye shall loose on earth 
shall be loosed in heaven " ::r and also a society 
with the power of applying its laws in dis- 
ciplinary action upon its members-that is, of 
I S. Matt. xviii. 18. 



CHURCH REFORM 


81 


absolving and retaining sins-also with a divine 
sanction: "Whose soever sins ye forgive, they 
are forgiven unto them; whose soever sins ye 
retain, they are retained. "J This legislative 
and disciplinary power has been lost, or largely 
lost, in our church, because there are so many 
things which it cannot do without Parliamen- 
tary sanction, and the process of obtaining 
Parliamentary sanction is an exceedingly cum- 
brous and ineffective process. 
If we seek further to examine the conditions 
of this difficulty, we find that the explanation 
is certain. We inherit from the Middle Ages 
the tradition, quite alien to the first age of 
Christianity, of a single society which is both 
church and state, or, to put it otherwise, in 
which church membership is the necessary 
condition of political privilege. When at the 
Reformation we in England threw off the Papal 
authority and claimed to reorganize our church 
on more independent national lines, no change 
whatever was made in this fundamental idea. 
The church and the nation of England were to 
be the same society, and if the church was to 
be, in a new sense, subject to the king and 
restrained by the Parliament, on the other 
hand, Parliament no less than -king was to be 
I S. John xx. 23. 


M 



82 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


an organ of the church. Political privileges 
and liberties were to belong only to members 
of the church. The one society was still to be, 
in different aspects, nation and church. 
This condition of things has now wholly 
passed away. Changes in political and religious 
opinion; the universal acceptance of the prin- 
ciple of religious toleration-these and the like 
movements have wholly antiquated the state of 
things in which a man must be a Churchman 
in order to exercise the privileges of a citizen. 
As a consequence it is now absurd, in the 
highest degree to talk about Parliament as 
represen tative of the laity, or as the Lay Synod 
of the Church of England. In Parliament or 
out of it the church is only one of a great 
variety of religious bodies. If the governing 
authorities of the country to-day want any 
religious or educational work done, they have 
to appeal not to the church only, or the clergy 
of the church, but to all the religious bodies 
with all their different ministries. And 
Parliament, consisting of members of all 
religions or none, cannot pretend to be, and 
(to do it justice) does not pretend to be, a 
body suitable for legislation in matters affecting 
the church in particular. 
In view of such a changed condition it is 



CHURCH REFORM 


83 


concluded that the church, as it cannot con- 
tinue in a healthy state without government, 
must resume its inherent power of self- 
government. There are those who would 
say: well, in that case, it must be disestab- 
lished; it must cease to be or be called the 
National Church. This position I am not 
going to discuss. There are a great many 
Churchmen who feel passionately the advan- 
tages of such a national recognition of religion 
as is secured by an established church, who 
yet declare that they would sooner have dis- 
establishment than that the church should 
remain in its present bondage. But they doubt 
the necessity for disestablishment; and they 
point to what is certainly the fact, that the 
demand for disestablishment is weakening 
rather than strengthening in the country as a 
whole. And they dispute altogether the 
position that the restoration of self-government 
to the church, under the supremacy of the 
Crown, need carry with it disestablishment. 
What has happened and what is happening in 
Scotland seems to them to vindicate the possi- 
bility and the reasonableness of an established 
church retaining or regaining its proper spiritual 
liberties. Those who feel in this way have 
procured the appointment by the archbishops 



84 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


of a very important committee on the relations 
of church and state, to consider how the church, 
consistently with establishment, could recover 
real legislative and judicial freedom under the 
control of the Crown and with due regard to 
the proper functions of Parliament. On this 
committee, of which Lord Selborne is the chair- 
man, this diocese is very amply represented. 
It contained the honoured name of Sir William 
Anson, whose services in this world, alas! are 
no longer ours. It contains your bishop, the 
Dean of Christ Church, Lord Parmoor, one of 
the members for the University (Lord Hugh 
Cecil), and Mr. A. L. Smith. It is a thoroughly 
representative body of men, and it is working 
hard in the preparation of its report. I suppose 
that the chief business of such a committee will 
be the establishment of a great Church Council, 
or the provision of the scheme for its establish- 
ment-a Church Council such as can really 
claim to be the Church of England by repre- 
sentation-that is, a body really representative 
of those members of the nation who deliberately 
are and intend to be members of the Church 
of England. Granted such a body, the claim of 
which to be what it professes to be could not 
be reasonably disputed, many of us are full of 
a great hope that such a body could effectively 



CHURCH REFORM 


85 


claim and obtain the legislative freedom neces- 
sary to inaugurate and carry particular reforms. 
But it is felt on all sides that no such claim can 
be effectively made unless there is real and 
adequate representation of the laity; and, I 
must add, unless the representation of the laity 
can be so arranged as that it should not appear 
to be the representation of a class, but as fully 
and really the representation of the workers as 
of the wealthy. 
Of course, all who care for church reform 
recognize that our representative system, as it 
exists at present, is profoundly hindered by 
the feeling that our church assemblies-par- 
ochial, diocesan, provincial, and national- 
have no real power; and people will not take 
pains to attend bodies which they feel to be 
in the main nothing better than debating 
societies. I have no doubt that it is the 
sense that they have important business to 
do, and the powers necessary for doing it 
effectively, which accounts for the fact that, 
in the case of the Wesleyan and other Non- 
conformist bodies, the attendance at church 
assemblies of their lay members puts us to 
shame. I went this summer to Leeds to 
speak on the co-operation of all Christian 
bodies in social work at an open meeting in 



86 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


connection with the Wesleyan Conference, 
and when I was there I was assured that 
the attendance of the laymen from all parts 
of the country, throughout a whole week of 
exacting meetings, had been constant and as 
full as that of the ministers, though the lay 
representatives were largely men prominent 
and active in business or politics in their 
own districts, who could only with difficulty 
arrange for a whole week's absence from 
their ordinary affairs. I dare say quite as 
good a record in lay a ttendances could be 
shown by non-established churches of our 
own communion. This serious ground of 
weakness-the absence of real power - is 
what we seek to remove. 
But meanwhile our existing system of repre- 
sentative church assemblies is preparing the 
way for better things, and it is upon our 
existing Convocation and House of Laymen 
and Representative Church Council, and 
Diocesan Conferences and Synods, and 
Ruridecanal Chapters and Conferences, and 
Parochial Church Councils, duly reformed 
and reorganized, that we must seek to build. 
And, in particular, we must lay the basis of 
a representative system in a proper suf- 
frage. No\v, since the Representative Church 



CHURCH REFORM 


87 


Council was established, ten years ago, we have 
had such a suffrage. The" qualified persons" 
who alone were to vote for the parochial 
representatives, and indirectly to elect to the 
Diocesan Conference and the House of Lay- 
men, were to be those in each parish who 
\vere either actual communicants or had the 
status of a communicant; that is, who were 
baptized and confirmed, and did not belong 
to any religious body which is not in com- 
munion with the Church of England, and 
who were not otherwise debarred from 
communion, and who also had signed a paper 
to say that they were in this sense qualified 
persons. Great stress was laid in the Church 
Council, when this suffrage was initiated, both 
on the possession of a distinct qualification 
and on the readiness to profess the qualifica- 
tion by signing the paper. The body of 
persons signing in each parish was intended 
to correspond to the body of people who 
were really and deliberately Churchmen, 
leaving out for the moment the question of 
the women. I have made for my Visitation 
careful inquiry about the number of persons 
signing in each of our parishes, and I admit 
that it has been to me something like a shock 
to discover in how many parishes we have 



88 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


practically not yet made a beginning in bring- 
ing this church suffrage into effect. There 
are 656 separate parishes in the diocese. Of 
these, in only 182 parishes (28 per cent.) has 
the declaration been signed at all. The total 
number of male communicants who are 
returned as having signed is 1, 396. To this 
total should be added some persons from 
twenty-two parishes in which" very few" are 
said to have signed. The total must be some- 
thing considerably under 2 per cent. of the 
whole body of our Easter communicants. 111 
the great majority of parishes the system has 
not been put into effect at all. "No interest 
is taken in it," I am told; or "Those few 
who attended the meeting to elect ruridecanal 
representatives were well known and there 
was no need for them to sign"; or U There 
is the greatest objection to signing any paper." 
As \ve stand to-day there is no doubt that our 
representatives in the I-Iouse of Laymen are 
not validly elected at all, for the basis of 
election has been generally ignored. 
Now, as you know, this year the whole 
scheme of election has been reconsidered 
and amended by the Representative Church 
Council. Three important changes-all in my 
judgement, great improvements - have been 



CHURCH REFORM 


89 


made. (1) Non-resident attendants at any 
church can enroll themselves to vote with 
the parishioners, if accepted by the parish 
authority. (2) It has been left open for the 
diocesan conference in any diocese to deter- 
mine that the lay members of the diocesan 
conference shall be elected directly by the 
parish, so that each parish shall have at least 
one representative. (I fear that our diocese 
is too large to admit of our taking advantage 
of this opportunity.) (3) All women (and not 
merely ratepaying women) have been admitted 
to vote on the same terms as men. This 
change seems to me to be required by justice. 
I am sometimes conscious when I am reading 
expositions of the aims of the ' , Women's 
Movement" that some day I may be brought 
into collision with it. For I believe that 
there is an essential headship of man over 
woman which neither physiology nor Scrip- 
ture will allow us to ignore. There are, 
therefore, certain aspirations after the equality 
of the sexes to which I cannot assent. But I 
see no reason why women should not have, 
and the strongest reasons of justice why they 
should have, the vote. I am not here con- 
cerned with the political vote, but the vote 
in ecclesiastical matters in which they have 
N 



90 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


always shown a zeal and interest which puts 
men to shame. 
Other changes were made at this year's 
Church Council of minor importance. I have 
mentioned the three most important. The 
council deliberately reaffirmed the require- 
ment that '
qualified persons" should not 
only possess the qualifications, bu t should 
sign the paper to say that they possess them. 
N ow I proceed to express a very strong desire. 
I earnestly desire that every incumbent next 
spring, when new elections are to be made, 
shall diligently put the present system of 
election into force and work it to the very 
utmost of his power. I beg every incumbent, 
by due notice and after giving the fullest 
explanations to the parishioners generally and 
to individuals, to summon the meeting of 
qualified persons, men and women, at the 
proper time and to cause them I to sign the 
paper which affirms their qualification; and 
then to form from the papers so signed a 
roll of qualified persons, male and female, for 
his parish, which can be open at any time to 
inspection; and then, in the future, constantly 
to correct it and keep it up to date. I would 
have every clergyman study the rules care- 
l Either at the meeting or previously. 



CHURCH REFORM 


91 


fully in good time before the meeting and 
make a determined effort to carry them out. 
They will doubtless be supplied to all in- 
cumbents, and they shall be also published 
in the Diocesan Magazine for January. I will 
give any assistance in my power, if doubt is 
felt as to their meaning. I want you all to 
realize, both clergy and laity, that we are 
really seeking to form a roll of those through- 
out the country who are full church members. 
And all our future action in reorganizing the 
church will be based upon this roll. I am 
well aware that there are objections felt to 
signing anything. You will do well to form 
a body of people ,villing and able to explain 
to everyone in the parish of every class, 
who is qualified, the importance of signing, 
and to overcome objections. 
I kno\v that the process of signing on, and 
the interest in all church assemblies, will be 
much stimulated when we gain real powers 
of legislation and action. Meanwhile, I hope 
that the new method of diocesan finance will 
impart some fresh interest to ruridecanal and 
diocesan conferences. 
But I feel sure that the root of interest for 
most laymen will be in the affairs of the 
parish. I hope that at no distant date we 



92 THE WAR AND THE CHURCH 


shall have Parochial Church Councils with 
real authority. I am glad to observe that the 
new movement in financial administration is 
already bringing more such Councils into 
existence. At present about 10 per cent. of 
our parishes appear to have Church Councils 
of some sort. - I believe, in spite of difficulties 
and hindrances, that a Parish Church Council, 
with gradually growing powers, is a valuable 
asset. I will give any help I can in formu- 
lating rules for it till such rules are provided 
for the whole church. Meanwhile I hope to 
see a steady extension